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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-07-12 - Orange Coast Pilot7 • ire aze·s • DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 12, 1973 VOi.. U. HO. lfl,• • 5ICTtoNS, • , ...... • • • • CdM Youth 100 Attend Linda O'Keefe's Rites Conducted By ARTHU~ R. VINSEL Of !ti• O.Ur l"l!Ot llflf which poetically list the duties. joys, changes and sorrows of human life on earth: ''A time to be born and a· time to die ... "A time to mourn and a time to dance ... " Her parents had requested them -. - I • I • • • . . ' Jury Fr~~-Fire House BOneJr -of Nudity Hap , ' • • • • • • • • Girl's , Slaying Freed • Ill -. -uoat Blast ·vi~tim Police Free Ex-Ja11ito1·; Clues .A-sked .. The release or Peter Richard \Vooten, arrested for questioning in the strangula- ti on slayin.t: six days ago of Linda Ann O'Keefe, \\;as announced Wednesday by Ne"'J>Orl Beach police. A Oct. Capt. Donald Oyaas said the case had net been presented to the Orange County District Auorney's office because of insufficient evidence to link \Vooten to the crime. Quoting !rom the Old and New Testaments. sometimes With quivering tones, a gray-frocked Lutheran minister recited the centuries-old Christian doc- trines of good, evil and irmoccnce \Vednesday. in a funeral farewell to Lin· da Ann O'Keefe. specifically. , "That is all we are going lo have to say at 1his time." he said in refusing _to elaborate on the terse statement. The murdered girl lay in a casket covered and surrounded with scores or floral tributes, flowers one mortuary man said were as movingly beautiful as any he has ever seen. A crowd of about JOO attended noon- time rites in Pacific View ~1emorial Park. overlooking the ~larbor Area com- munity \\'here she was born, christened . raised, schooled and slain by a strangler 43 days a(ter her 11th birthday. The major landmarks of her brief li£etime were almost all visible from the crowded chapel. "Linda Ann was born Ma y 24, 1982." intoned the Rev. Lawrence Fruhling. of the Lutheran Church of the Master, where her parents, ~1r. and Mrs. Richard O'Keefe once taught Sunday School. ''She was baptized as an infant. On Ju- ry 6, she passed from this life ... " He opened his sermon in the fto,ver - periu(Ued room with the 23rd Psalm, a traditional comfort to mourners. He moved on into the rhythmic, philosophical pas~ages of the Book of Ec- clesiastes, Chapter 3, Verses 1 through 9, i Coast Weather It'll be a carbon copy of today, Friday, according to the weather service, with low clouds through much of the day clearing In lhe afternoons to 67 degree readings at lhe beaches rising to the low Mis inland. INSWE 1'0DA Y TtDO aqUanautJ plan to spend 10 dat11 aboard the sUnkan ht:t· ur11 lhter Andrea Dor!CI. f'O/lect· i1tQ 1"Jlttablt art work~, sl1lp ba1lkl. a silver plaque and two propeUers . Sterry Page 25. --• \ "There is a time to love," continued the stiffly standing clergyman in his own fashion. "And I am sure -in certain circumstances -there is a time to hate. "I don't believe GOO wills 'these things' to happen. But He permits them to ha~ pen," explained the Rev. FruhJing. He reminded mourners that Christ Himself said while God created heaven and earth. I-le chose not to interfere with nature's laws, but to give man freedom IS« RITES, Page Z) Fire House's Dancer lnnoce1tt On Nudity Counts By CANDACE PEARSON 01 fll• 0.11' Plllt Steff Playwright \Villiam Shakespeare once wrote. "All !he world's a stage." Attorney KeMeth Scholtz drew upon that phfl050phy \\'ednesday to conVince a seven-man, five-woman jury Jn Orange County Harbor Judicial District .Court that the Fire House night spot in Costa Mes a is indeed, one of those stages. The jury In Judge Archie Walters' courtroom found Schollz' client, nude dancer ?.1arsha Sue Crump, innocent of 16 alleged violations of Costa Mesa's anti-nudity ordinance. • The law passed by the City Council In early Atay prohibits nude employes in places that serve food and beverages but a llows nudity in theaters. There was never a question in the trial that MLu Crump, 25l had been nude on s1age when Costa ,. esa poUce officers raided lhe Fire House May, 11,)4, 14-and June 5. • ·• ' • Prosecuting attorney Jim stober CflO" , tended she was in a bar and lfid it was. "immaterial" whetherimlnot tfCOhol was • served. By Aolay 11, the Fire Houite at ·117 E. 17th St., was serving only soft drinks but stlll had a sign readln1 "bar" outside.on the red-"1d·White striped building. "They them5elves called It 1 bar and never the twain ahall .meet~" Stotler argued , adding that clUb olltcl ....... td the aign to read_ "theater',' tn ·ua1 "so they'd have the defense." Stotler drew the word theater on a piece of paper, walked to __ _.a wall in the (Ste •'IRE~ Pa1e Zl . ' ' ' ' ATTENDANTS CARRY NEWPORT HARBOR BOAT BLAST VICTIM TO WAITING AMBULANCE Costa Mesa Yachtsman Lights Cigarette and ln1t1ntly Becomes Hurmn-Torch Mesa Yachtsman Survives Spectacµlai· Boat Blast A Costa Mesa yachtsman miraculously escaped death today \vhen his 41-foot cabin cruiser expk>ded in Its Balboa Marina berth, blowing, his blazing body into Newport Harbor waters llke a human firebomb. The $20,IXX> vessel was a total loss following the 4:55 a.m. blast,. but its skit per Was llf(:kier. Edward C. Oeorr. 31 , of 463 Fair Drive, was listed in stabilized condition at 1-loag MefDOrlal Hospital shortly after ,he was admitted. Dazed and in. shock from burns and lacerations, Deorr instinctively 'began swimming and started across the 100. f~wlde harbor channel toward Linda Isle, screaming for help. "I lit a cigarette ;and now I'm over here oo this boat dock and r don 't know how t got here," tbe stunned victim told Linda Isle resktent,,s who raced outside to rescue bitn.' • Newport Beach Fire Department • penonnel said people Uvtng at 18 and 99 Linda Ille hurled oot a bouyant boot teat attached to a rope and the injured, struggling man cau1ht 11'. They towed him in , while Newport Beach police a11d the Orange County Harbor Patrol responded to help. flarbor Patrol Sg1. llarry \\1right said the fireboat was on routine patrol when a sudden red glow lit the sky in the direc· lion oC the Reuben E. Lee paddleboat rcslaurail1. "\Ve ,we~f }he firpt l!Jlil$ on the scene and started pumping \vafcr on it," he said. The blast. Sgt. \Vright added . disin- teqrated .a l2·foot dinghy atop the shat- tered cabin structure in tA•hich Dcorr lit :1 cigarette. apparently i g n It i n g ac· cumulated bilge fumes, according to. firemen. Ambulance crewmen on the scene by 1his time splashed 1hc blast Vlctim \\'ilh purified water to \Vash a\fay lhc satt by this time agonizingly caked In his cuts and bums. Oeorr was also given oxygen for shock and smok~ inhalation, aggravated by his panlckey swimming. He suffered .first and second dt~~ burns over lils beck, cliest. neck and shoulders. in addition to lacerations sus· taincd by being blasted lhrough.Jhc debris. --~~~~~·-~~~~ St. Louis Fire Guts Ar1ny, Navy Perso1utel Files OVERLAND. ~lo. (AP! -Fire s\\.·cpl rhrough the sl11:th noor or lhe ~1ili1ary PerflOnncl Record Center in lhis St. Louis suburb 1oday. destroying thousands of records on pre-1960 service personnel. Fire fighters from eight suburban com· panies \lo'Cre still battling the blaze more than nine hours after it broke .oul i.D lhe t\\·o-block-long structure. They reported the blaze,~·as limited lo lhe. top noor, but "'ater and smoke damage w e re spreading be lo"'. lls cause "'as not immediately kno"'n. but arson was suspected . A spokesman said the building's sixth floor rontaincd recorm of Arm y person- nel "'ho scr\'ed prior to 1960. On the fifth noor. !he spokesman said. are records of Navy personnel prior 10 the same dale. "\Vhatevcr isn't burned Is as "'Ct as can be," said Army Col. \\'esley C. Scarborough. Arn1y ofnclals in Washington said many of the records stored at the • spr3Wling cenl.Cr are not dupUcale<I elsewhere. ._ "Some of I.hem are full file copies of Anny Personnel. ~ are not duplhUed." said Col. Leonard Reed. Two nremen were hospitalized tor IS« RECORDS, P•gc %) -' • • He did, ho~'ever, issue a special plea today for anyone who may have seen Linda Ann during lhe crucial Friday afternoon and evening period in her disappearance. • "We've run upagainst a bJank "'all." he said. "Someone must have seen her." The vic tim left Lincoln Intermediate School about I p.m. for her home at 602 Orchid Ave .. Corona del ,..far. and was found strangled in a muddy ditch beside up1>er Ne\\•port Bay nearly 24 hours later_ fingerprint analyses from Wooten's American.flagged bedecked sport coupe 1\•ere delivered to detectives shortly before noon \\'edneSday. They had been expressely interested in these results. \vhich quickly Jed to freedom for \Vooten. a Polish orph.1n t1doptcd and brought to the U.S., where he is no1\' an unemployed janitor. The 197:! Corona 9t'\ !\1ar High School graduate \\.'as laken into custody ~1onday at his Second Ave .. apa1;tment by a team of dcteclivcs. The heavily decorated residence which include an American flag on the wall - an appa rent symbol of his adopted homeland -apparently yielded nothing \1hich might add to his difficulty during a S<'a rch by detectives. So far. aulhorities have not disCfosed \\·hat led them to \\'ant lo talk to Wooten about thE!' O'Kecfe '1nurder. _ ~leanwhile. Capt. Oyaas emphasized the n1anhunt is cootinuing without a slo1\'dO'>\'l1, by a five-man detective team hended by Sgt. Don Picker . During the first three days, it in 18't f\tURDER, Page !) QUICK RO UNDUP FOR iltUST ANG , llelpin~ you sa~e is a Daily Pilot classified goal. Look at a typical bargain you could rind : 'iO ~fUSTANG Grande. Air. pis, p/disc brakes. x.lnt. cond .. $2250. (Phone No.) The first elasslfled ad readci: who came to look at it .bought the car. 'lJe'a happy; the advertiser's happy: am the Dally Pilot ""as happy to help into U~ \ bargain. If you have a-bargain &o llst, t'tl!I a Daily Pilot Ad-visor. She'll be hap- py lo help. The direct line -6U-iif11, -• I • ' • Z' UAlt. t ftl l OT Ex-POW 'Unfit' Due To Illness - OCEANSIDE (AP > -Marine LI. Col. EdisOn W. Miller or Tustin, a fonner -.fOW ...ac.cused. 9[ mi!ICOnduct by hif pritlof\ commander, should be dfichorge<t - due to inqu('ies and illness be suffered in confinement , a mcdJcal board says. Miller, from nearby Tustin, was declared unnt ror turlher servlce by thr Camp Pendleton tttedlcal Evaluation Board, a P.1arine .spokesman said Wednesday. The Secrelary of the Navy currently is reviewing sllegaUons by Rear Adm. James Stockdale or Coronado, asserting Miller arxt Navy Capl. \Valter Wilber of Crossroads. Pa., were guilty of mutiny, 1iding the enemy, failure to obey an order and allied charges such a.s at-. ter:npting to stir disloya lty among pruoners. A final decision on Miiier's physical flt· ~ ness wlll be made by the U.S. Navy M~ical Board in Washington, OC.'1 the MiiioeS said. flis case will come up In - the next four to slx weeks, the spokee:man said. Milter sa_td earlier that he repeatedly exposed himself to punishment in a North Vietnamese prison camp and had been threatened wilh death by his cap. lors ~ause or his "vigorous action" in oppo1mg harsh and Inhumane treatment to.prilonen. ~ ~. July 12 ,197' New York Congressman Faces Bribery Cha~ges F ro111 Page 1 RECORDS ... treatment or smoke inhalation but there v•ere no other reports of injuries. °" ll•ntlletlp• 'Lapworth Sloops Take Race Lead By ALMON LOCKABEV Of tM Dlllf , .... Stiff The Cal..fOI are beck. The famed Lapworth-deligned &loops, winners of three previous Tran1pac races, took over first and second place on corrected time Wednesday u the northeast tradewindl (mhened and began kicking up a surfing sea. • Handicap leader was F. T. Opper1nan's Kolohe from Waikiki YaCtH Club. In sec- ond place was George Thorson's Ariana, Los Angeles Yacht Club. Kolohe is a Class C entry and Ariana is in Class 0. Kolohe was about 14 miles ahead of Ariana on the rhumbl ine. McanY;hHc. the race for line honors in Class A tightened up as the big boats were pushed up to hull speed by the freshening trades whi ch were blowing 18 to ~ knots and 30 in the gusts. Windward Passage logged a 237-mile day to place her 891 miles from Diamond Head, but Ragtime~ and Blacktin had evin better ~hour runs to narrow the gap. Ragtime put 247 miles under her keel to move · within 11 miles of Windward Passage. Blaekfin had a 24J..mlle day and \Vas 11 miles behind Ra gtime. seas took their first casualty or 'he race WedneS4fay as Larry Poulton1& ColumbU- 38 Defiant from OaklaM Iott her rudder . The etCJOi:LV~l TrW'lqullUy wu &tand- lng by while Dt!lant's crew attempiled \o jury•rlg a rudder and remain lo the r~ llandicap slandinas, with 900 ml lea to llonolulu: ' OVERAl.L -I I> Kolohe, 1,138; (2) Ariana, 1.J52: (3) ltnprobable. l.072.; (41 Nefertl, 1.1o8; ($) Tenacity, 1.152. Cl.ASS A -Warrior, 1,020; (2) Min ~tic: 994 ; (3) Lightning, t,060: 141 Ragtime, 902 : {$) Robon, 992. CLASS R -(I) lmpr~bable, t,OT2 ; 12 ) N11lu IV. 1.079 : (3 ) Sanderling IV, l,158 ; {4) Nererll . 1.108: t5) Starwagon. 1,172. CLASS C -II) Kolohe 1,138; (2) Tenacity; 1,152: (31 Blue Slrenk, 1,146; l4) Mit resss rl. 1,173; (5) Ahsante, J,176. CLASS 0 -11) Arlana, 1,152; tl) Illusion, 1,156 : (3) Moon Day, 1,176; (4l Witchcraft. 1,178 : (5) Woodwynd, l,20Z. ' Annexation To District Okayed, 3-2 Miller, a jet pilot., said when he was shot down his beck and an ankle were broken and several joints were sprained His left wrist wu paralyzed for severai monthl from a beating when he tried to escape IOOn after bis capture, he added. NEW YORK (AP) - Rep. Bertram Podell (l).N.Y.), was accused In a federal indictment today of receiving $41.350 in bribes to use his influence with federal agencies for a Florida air taxi firm seeking approval of a regular The center. about 20 years -old, con· tains about 56 million records of current a~d. former military personnel, a statutea provide , in addition to varying m1htary spokesman said. The light airs of the previou s two days plus the drifter at the start apparently wiped any chance of a new elapsed time record by any or the Class A speedsters. The first boat to finish would ha ve to make it by 10 p.m. (PDT) Friday to erase the ~xlsting record of 9 days, g hours and 6 minutes set by Windward Passage in 1971 . The freshening winds and mounting By .JACK BROBACK 01 tlt1 Daity l"fllt Sl9fl Annexation of 22.400 acres to the Santa 1'.fargarita \Yater District was approved Wednesday-by-a 3-2 vote of the .Local Agency Formation Commission. MIQer also had stated that "as a result of all those injuries I expect that my cam;r ln the Marine Corps wil l be temunated due to medical disability." The former ~w. hns been assigned to the Manne hospital at Pendleton during ~ '™:dical evaluation. His 30-year-old wire filed for divorce soon after his ~m. The couple have five sons . ·Watergate Pane) Sends Nixon Last • Papers Request WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate Watergate committee sent President Nixon a letter today that represents the last oppcwtunlty for the White House to pro-. yoluntarily p&jlef! the J/!"101 1,...wantS, committee sources said. 1 The committee wiU vote to subpoena the presidential papers i( the White House turns down lhis last request the 101ttces,aald.:.Mxdn'IU1 weet rel~ jq tum over the papers. ' 1be aources said the. committee's seven senators agree tha{ an atterllPt to obi.Bin the presidential papers muilt be made, but that they hope to avoid the constitutional confrontation that could result if the White House were to attempt to quash the subpoena in the court. Rufus Edmisten, a principal aide to chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr. (0.N.C.), said' there was hope of a quick White Houle response to the letter, possibly to- day. The .cOmmittee met for an hour in private this morning and scheduled a seaond close<kioor meeting for the June}). eon recess to discuss the matter of pr~idenlial papers. The m e e L i n g s bracketed the appearance before the committee of former Alty. Gen. John N. f\titchell . Front Pqe 1 MURDER •.. volved JO men working 12 hour shifts, or about 360 man hours. while the live special detail detectives continued the job. • Clilwn volunteers inclu~lng Boy Scouts aided in the 14-hoor search for Linda Ann lvhich lasted overnight and included door- to-door visits until her body was found Saturday afternoon. OU.N•I COAST IT DAILY PILOT T~ Or....,. (NII D .. 11.T PILOT, •till wl>ldl II W!ltblMd "'' NtW1·Prn1. It 11111111"'911 o., ni. Dr•"ll• c .. 11 Pv1t1i.io1rtt C-ll'f. hlM rl tt R I!""" .,.. PVOUollel, M ..... l y .,,,_II l'r .. y. IOI' Col11 M.... HeWJIOl1 .SeKll, Hlll'lllnoltfl e1«11/F-llhl V•ll"(, l ...,.,1 ••di, l .... k>e/kdlll .... Ck n 1111 Cle..,..,,lt/ $4111 Jw"' C.pl1tr-. A 1111111 '"'°"''' '"'"" It j1U11111'-' S.IUtdlyl aN lurldlYI· fM "lrlt!ptl 1N111lllftf"11 Pll"I 11 fl IJll Wt~I a.r Strltt. Cotti Mntl, tal!10t11i., n.x. Robert N. W11lll l"r .. 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C1m.rllll. ~i.11911 W ftfl'lolt n ... l'l!lllll'll'l'J IW llltll U.11 fl'!lllllll'fl fl'l!lllllY •1tlMlll!!I n.• _...,.., ~ L------~--' p~lson .tem11 and nnes, that coi:iviction Of about 2,000 employes, ooJy security d1squahfies a defendant from holding any guards and maintenance personnel oc- • federal government office..___. _cupied-the-building-at the-fire+--Onset From Poge 1 Florida-Bahamas roUtc. · Also indicted on conspi r8cy and other charges were Podell's brother, Herbert S. Podell, and' Martin Miller of Miami Fla., fonner president of Leasing C.Onsultants Inc. the parent corporation of now-Oe!unct Florida Atlantic Airlines. 1 U.S. Attorney Paul J . Curran said that R~p. Podel11 scheduled to be arraigned In Manhattan Federal Court July 23. was indicted as the climax of a two-year-ln- ve1Ugation by the FBI and members ot the U.S. Attorney's Official Corruption Unit. Podell has contended be was acting legally as a congressman representing a cmstituent, and· not Illegally as a member of Congress being paid to act as attorney before a federil agency. Podell was ·accuaed ,of soliciting more than 157,000 and aciually getting 141,350 in bribe peymentl that were concealed as legal fees from airline officials to the law firm, Podell and Podell, and in the form of • cbeck to tbe CiUztns committee for iliO llHIR!ion1>11lertranrl'l>dell. ' In retum for the alleged bribes, Podell "pressured and attempted to lnfiuence officials" o( the Civil Aeronautics Board, Federal Aviation Admlniatration and Departmell~ of Stale, and !raveled to the B~ in December 1968, to try to In- fluence Bahamian officials, Curran said. Vlolatlons -of federal bribery and con· flict of lnterest slatutes, as well as false statements to the FBI and perjury before a grand jury, as recently as May 4, were alleged. The federal conflict of interest !latute makes it a crime ror 1a member of Congress to receive money for services in a proceeding before any federal agen· cy. The bribery and conflict of interest Rancli Guard To Be Charged Witli Murder Mitchell Says President Has 'Lowered Boom' WASHINGTON (AP) -John N. P..titchell Insisted to a skepµcal Democrat today Jhat President Nixon had been "~owering the boom" this year by ousting aides and · officials implicated in lhe Watergate and other wrongdoing. '."'e former attorney general, in his third day of televlsed testimony belore the ~nale Watergate committee. said two m that category are H.R. Haldeman and John D. Ebrllchman. The President ae<epled their ....i,na. lions from the White House staff April 30, calling them "two of the finest public servants it has been my privilege to know." He allo said their reaignaUOns were not-evidence of. wrongdoblg on their part. Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, (D-Hawail) asked Mitchell what evidence he saw thai the President had taken aetk>n after last Mareh 21 , wben Nixon says he first heard serious accusations that id· ministration hlgber..ups were Involved In the scandal. "I am trying to find out where the Presldent has, since le.aming of these activities, lowered the boom " Inouye asked. ' MJtchell mentioned the firing of White It~ counsel John W. Dean III and the resJgnalions of Haldeman, Ehrllcbman, Egli Krogh and Jeb Sl\Jart Magruder from government posts. Inouye said he didn't see much evidence that the boom bad been kw.·ered on anyone but Dean. Mitchell implJed that the resignations of Haldeman and Ehrllchman were not fully voluntary. In re1ponse to a question by commltiee Chairman Sam J . Ervin Jr., (0.N.C.), Mitchell admitted tha t by not telling Nix· on what he knew of wrongdoing In the White House he bad placed Nixon's political fortunes above the President's constitutional duty to uphold lhe laws. He also said under questioning by chief By TO~f BARLEY couMel Samuel Dash that he would have ot "" 0.11, '1111 si.tt told Nixon everything he knew about the Orange County Sheriff's Deputies said \\'atcrgate matter if Nixon had asked they would seek a murder cotnplaint to-him after the election. "I \\'OUid have laid day against ranch hand Robert Corl "\Vhip" Slatton, 41, tn the alleged slay1ng out chapter and verse, everything I knew \Vcdnesday of an Ortega J-lot Springs about it.'' But he stuck to his assertion trespasser. that the President never inquired about Slatton \\'SS lodged in coonly jail the matter or Mitchell. who had been his \Vedncsday night after treatm ent at the attorney general and his campaign direc-tor. · Orange County A·ledical Center for cuts and bruises he received In an appnrent Dash asked a long series or questions flight from the shooting scepe, devutlcs abou t the extent of P.1itchell's active ill* said. vo\v~".1ent in the Watergate cover-up, "If we get our romplaint !oday \\'C v.•ill rece1v1ng mostly denials as ans\\·ers. prooably arraign him in municipal court Afilchcll said he never heard any sometime Friday,'' Sheriff's Capt. James discussions about the possibility of tap- Broadbelt commented this morning. ;,Our ping the Central Intelligence Agency (or investigation Into the shooting Is still money to support the \Vatcrgate dcfen- golng on." dants or pay their bail. Several witnesses to the shootoul on •le said he never heard about any im- Starr Ranch property off the Ortega proper approaches to U.S. Di~t!'iel Judge Highway have already Identified Slatton "--Charles Richey , who Is presiding In the as the man sporllng a white sombrero Democratic Party's $6.4-milUon lawsuit gun be-Its and revolvers who told them h~ for damages stemming from Watergate. owned the land, flashed a badge and He conceded that ~al~~man and ordertd them to leave lmmedintcly. Ehrllchman had shared his active con· Wllnesses said that Dennis Clnhn 21 cern" that Nixon not be told about of J..a f\·Jirnda; was-one of several y~uni "White House hof'l'Ol"s" that Mitchell said men \\'ho told Slatton that his badge he wanted kept secret .. nlcan1 nothing to them and 1hey Intended But he denied detailed knowledge of to carry on enjoying the !lo-degree whot· l~aldeman and .EhrUchman had Wf!ters; at the Son Juan spa. been doing about It, s~ying he fir!l learn- They said Slatton sllot Glahn at ed ~f their alleged nct1on1 when he heard point blank range through the chest in 1he t~tnnony berore the Senate committee. ensuing rracas ran tor his .)ccp and ncd "I've htard more from testimony up rrom the sctnC. · here than l knew •t the particular time," Deputies nld they traced Slnuon he said. through the lletnse number jotted down On the Richey matter, '-11tchell said he by witnesses and contacted tum at Starr had participated In 111 number of Ranch headquarters about nva houri discussions with Roemer McPhec, a later. ' Washington lawyer who Dean says made Officers said the ranch hand sur· ou(-of.court cont1cl1 "1th the ju<tet. But rendered without Incident. l\lltchell said McPhee merely orrel'td his Officers said Slatton. 31671 !\IC!& Drive, opinions about how Richey would act. Trabuco Can~on. suffered minor Injuries ba1ed on a Iona frlendShlp w1th the judge when lls jeep overturned b\ll he was able and not on any Improper contacts wtlh to right the vehicle and rt!lum to 1he him. lie Mid If ?.tcPbee made tmprOpcr ranch hou se. contacts he didn't tell l\fltchc\I. • shortly alter midn ight They escaped \\ithout injury. The center was Sealed of{ by federal agents and military personnel after the outbreak of the fire. From Page 1 RITES ••. of choice. Freedom to be good. Freedom to be evil. By whichever he chooses, the minister said, each man determines his eternal destiny. "We live in a world where evil does ex- ist. And evil is oor occasion for being here today. "There is a higher force than man however," the Rev. Fruhling declared: ackling that no matter how horrified sor· ry, gu!it·ridden or lilied wllh seU-b31red the stayer now may be, he must reckon yet With God. And he clled Jesus' comforting words in the Gospel ol St. <Matthew> • .. The. little Ohes !hall ttiot perish but ho.ve everlasting life." The emotional impact was clear on the faces of mourners of all ages. There was a meek little handful of uniformed Girl Scouts. Class:mat~s from Harbor View elementary and Lincoln IJntermediate schools wept. There _ were tight-lipped men in bl~k suit$. White-haired women - sobbed. An open grave waited in a grassy swale hlih up the hill from the chapel. amid green pines bobbing in a rising ~an breeze, as the July overcast began to burn aW3y. Folding chairs lined up alongside for a small, strictly private family farewell, however, remained empty Wednesday. The famUy chose to wa it a while. Bee1· I-leir Sentenced SAN JOSE (AP) -Carl A. Miller, 29, heir to the Miller Brewing Co. fortWJe. has been sentenced Jo a 180-day jail term after pleading guilty to misdem-eanor auto theft. FIRE HOUSE •.. courtroom and asked the jury to ''assume on the other side or the wall is a bunch of nuns ." . The sign doesn't change the nUJUlery into a !heater, he said, in his closing statements. "Do they , shoot pool in the lobby of Crauman's Chinese Theater?" he a!ked at one point, referring lo a coin-0peraf'ed pool table in the Fire House. A theater, Scholtz told the jury in his summation, "isn't limited to a particular concept .'' It doesn't have ·.to ha\1e a box office a curtain on the stage or even a stage, Scho.ltz argued, pointing out small Pom- mun1 ty theaters, theater-in-the-round, cabarets and Las .Vegas entertainment as examples of variety. · sCboltz .4 then todk1 the same paper Stoller had used and drew ''bar" on the other side. "If-I put my sign on the wall o~~ .nun1\Cry," he sald, walking over to tl'Mcourt!'Oom wall, "It won't turn 'it irlto a bar either.'' " Poli~e Stated purpose of the annexation of the acreage \Vas to conserve water in the·- area. It iS located south and east of the Ortega Highway, east of San Juan Capistrano and north and east of San Clemente. · The property is largely hilly and remote from any present development. Opposition to the armexation came from the Orange County Grand Jury and the Environmental Coalition. The jury called for an environmental impact report, a study of anticipated development and caut ioned against ex- cessive lowering of the underground water table. Some 1,900 acres of the land is in San Clemente but in a remote area lo the · north or city development. The city did not object to the annex ation. The land is part of Rancho Mission Viejo owned by the O'Neill family. The · balance of the Santa Margarita District covers the other sections of the rancho. Tom Blum, representing R a n c h o Mission Viejo "said the land is now in an agricultural preserve and no develop- ment is 'Planned for 10 years ormore. "Safe~~ Tliief in B each, A g ency's Lair HUNTINGTON BEACll police are seeking the thief who broke into the city hall safe Wed11esday night and made off with an undisclosed amount or money . The burglary occurred prac tica lly in the police department's back yard. The safe was localed in the finance department which is housed in the buUding next to the police parking lot. l DET. BILL BRUCE said this nioming tha t the burglar either figured out the combination or the safe was left unlocked . He said.finance department employes were trying to calculate the Joss from the theft this morning. "I don't kno\v how much was taken. but il wasn't very much," the delective added. BRUCE DID NOT speculate on ho\v the thief got into the office where the safe is located. Nobody Sells GE Refrigerators For Less Than 1)u/t(a.t> I ADD A GE AUTO·MATIC ICEMAKER "LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE·· RAISED ELSEWHERE" NOW OR LATER SAVE 8/G IY' CU. ,T. "MO-f'•Of1 111,ltltlUTOll:.fl•llllll • ai1g ,,_. CU. (llT ... NO.(llllOST" •1(111110111.t.TDlll·l'l\IUlll OIANT tl.I Co. ''· NO (llllOST l.&11'' SIOl.ay•llO• lll,lllOlll.t.TOll.., ·~·,:LL ewE ~DUN LAP TAl<E te~1;jt~~E 543-7788 TnADE·ltJS 1815 NE\',1PCRT BLVD. fO DAYS CASH Wh h .......... CrtiriUt Downtown Costa Mesa -Fh. 548-7788 Deity Pllef St.ff "'91• 191 WOMEN FLY AWAY FRIDAY IN ANNUAL POWDER PUFF DERBY Mrs. Ruth Dilg of C•pistrano Buch and "P11ehli" Check Mlip F QUr Coast Women Fly In Poivder Puff Derby By HILARY KAYE 01 tll• O•il'I' PllM 119" One hundred and ninet:Y-one women will take to the air on Friday the 13th, embarking on a coast·kH.'oast journey from Carlsbad to Elmira-Corning, N.Y. The ~men, including four from Orange County, "will be competing in the 27th annual Powder Puff Derby. The oldest and longest air classic for \\·omen, the derby includes contestants from 29 states, and five foreign coun- tries. Pilots and co-pilots range from grandmothers to high school students inc· cluding three mother-daughter teams. Orange County, with four entrants, has a long history of being well -represented in the race. 1bon Griffith and Trina Jarish are Costa Mesa pilots, Ruth Dilg is a co-pilot from Capistrano Beach, and Esther Grupenhagen will be flying from Allaheim. None of the .local contestants is a novice at compeUng in the Powder Puff Derby. Miss Jarisht bu flown seven dei-bles, Mrs. Grif£ltb and M r 1 . Grupenhagen have participated In three, and this is the aecond attempt for Mrs. Dilg. Mrs. Dilg, co-piloting a Bellanca Super- Viking 17-31, says she always wanted to fly, "but didn't have the time ot op- p:irtunity." Jn 1989, however, Mrs. Dilg and her husband had chalked up enough hours and received their licenses. · "It gets you off the freeway," said Mrs. Dilg, "and it can take you to farther away places in less time." A short while ago, Mrs. Dilg and her Fallbrook pilot took off on an "avocado nm" -flying along · the route distributing 400 pounds of avocados to race officials, Ninety-Nines (the women's pilot organization) and city officials. When the women decidad to check out the course and spread a little Southern California cheer, avocados were chosen because Fallbrook, the hometown of the pilot and the sponsor, Is best known as an avocado town . Mrs. Griffith also new her V35B Bonanza overt he route with her ~P:ilot. "·We. flew the route in May, and it'll prob- '-ably help us sintee le was a cloudy day and the weather is supposed to be cloudy in the 19est at the end or this week," she said. • Oscar Chief Named LOS ANGELES (AP) -Film producer Walter f.:1irisch ia the new president or the Oscs:r awardinJ ACademy of P.!otion Pictures Arts & Sciences. P..1irisch, chosen Tuesday night, won an Oscar in 1967 for "In lhe Heat of the Nigh\." VETERAN RACING PILOT Mesa's Thon Griffith Mrs. Griffith's husband. George, also is a pilot. and has been the official starter of the derby for the past three years. When Mrs. Griffith is not racing in her plane, she is a pilot for her husband's fll'm, the Griffith Company. Both Mr. and Mrs. Griffith, who have Jived in the area since 1947, have flown in many races. Mrs. Griffith, with 1,105 flying hours logged, said that she has flown about 15 races besides the Powder Puff spectacular. ln her two previous Powder Puff attempts, she has placed third and 10th. . ~1iss Jarish, "'ho will fly a Beechcraft Bonanza V35A without a ~pUot, has flown 1,700 hours. A pilot since 1966, ?t1i~ Jarish was appointed to the Women's Advisory Committee on Aviation in 1972. l\;lrs. Grupenhagen has been Dying since 1962 and is a flight instructor at Aviation Facilities in Fullerton. 'Nie Anaheim pilot has logged 2,000 hours and will be flying a Grumman American Traveler AAS. The race begins Friday at 9 a.m. and must be completed by Monday, July 16. Planes are handicapped 1ccording to size and power. Coo.testant.s are competing for $U,S75 cash prizes, \\ith $5,000 going to the win- ner. Pilots will stop at various check· points along the way to insure a safe flight. 'Feature Creatnre' Book Program in San Clemente A variety of children's reading pro- 1 grams are being spon!!Ol"ed this summer by the San Clemente branch of the orange County library to keep children interested ln reading "·hile school is out of session. • Usinl the theme. "\Ve to'eature Q:eatures." the librarians will award tree moVle tJckels to youngsters v.·ho read 10 or more books from the library this summer. '!he movie "Phantom Tollbooth," will be shown Aug. 31 at Marco Foriler Joo'°" High School to 1tudents who earn- ed Uclcet.s from the San Clemente, San J\1111 Ctplstrano and Dana Point br•n<bes of the library. '!he library ls al9o booting two storybook 10Sl!ons. Picture slorlet for preschool children are road every 'Iburs- da1 at 10:30 a.m., and folk and fairy tales are read e~ery Thunday at~ p.m 'l1le atorles are told by volun- mothers and library assistants, and the turnout at the sessions has been good. librarian Mrs. Lois Wellman said. ?lirs. Wellman is also planning a serlea of puppet shows in August. to be performed by Joan Burt. who bas manipulated the pupptts for tbe library's program for the pa!t two years. The summer reading program. a seg- ment of the "Read Around the Ye.Ir'' program ii aJso in proc~. - FAch lllGl!th the Ubrary 8llllOlllat a different topic, and librarians urp the dli1drm to read M> books on eacb topic every month. ... "'Ibis pll the childre Into 1ttu they nonnally _, e>plort. We'Y< hod 1 really good reception and both pannll and chiklrtn are tnthmt.utlc about U. It's just 8llOther way to get the childl't1l into the 115rary all year lone," Mra. Welman uplalned. 'Escorts' Were Paid T"Witness ... LONDON (UPI) -A naUlly drtslled buainetsman testified today that girl ''eloilrtl'" provided by singer Janie Jones "didn't appear to me to be call-girls or prootltutes," b•" he gave one of them $290 just the aamt. · The man, wearing a smart gray suit with a black and white check tie was .. identified only as "Mr. S". ' He WU the fourth witness in a mushrooming C8!e against Miss Jones and two a><lefeodants tbat i>lgllh with investigatioos into sex -and-money "payoll" to British Broedc:uting Corp. (BBC) personnel and spread to char, .. involving attempted murder, poiJorung and blilckma.il. Aliu Jones, 34, faces 216 separate charges, most of them concerned with abetting prostitution. Three of her girls have testified about orgies organlzed by h1iss Jones both in her Lendon house and in luxury hotels. The escorts were · introduced as newspaper girls, university students, photographers. And indeed they were," "l\1r. X" said. '"Ibey didn't appear to me to be call-girls or prostitutes." He was asked about testimony from "Miss B" that girls \\"ere frightened into doing as Miss Jones asked by threats of "heavies" and references to "one of the girls being cemented under a bridge ." "lt would hardly be appropriate for hostesses to be under that kind or pressure when they voere entertaining;" he replied. "I never saw anything to sug- gest such a situation." "l\k. X" said he usually gave the i::x· corts 20 pounds ($52 each) for en· tertaining his business clients. He gave' one of them 100 pounds (S260) because "I thought she was much too young to be in· volved in anything like that. She was short of cash and I gave ·)ler the money to make her buu orf to Scotland to her parents." The businessman estimated he had Irvine Hires Two New Principals An elementary school principal and a high school principal were hired ~1onday night by the Irvine Unified School District Board of Trustees following an executive (private) session. Mrs. EJizabeth H. Graffis, a resident or Newport Beach and currenUy principal of an elementary school in Santa Ana , was hired for the new Culverdale Elementary School. Gregory W. Cops of Santa Ana, cur- rently employed with the Huntington Beach Union High School District, .,.. hired as assistant principal for in- struction at University High. Board Approves Zoning Change A change in zone from agricultural to single family. residential of 17 acres ad- joining San Juan Capisfrano was a~ proved Wednesday by the Boan! of Supervisors. The property is on the west side of Del Obispo Street and opposite the termina- Uon of Camino del Avion. David Moore, planning department or- ficial said property to both the north and south of the 17 acres was now zoned for single family residential use and largely developed. Anne E. Quackenbush and others v:ere listed as owners of the land. The change in zone was supported by the Citizens for Action Committee or Dana Point. . Severed Siamese Twin Succumbs NEW YORK (UPI) -A three-monlh- old girl who was separated from her dying Siamese twin sister last Saturday in an attempt to save her life died \Yednesday morning. Or. Donald Klotz , head of the medical team attending the infant 'at Downstate 1'1edical Center in Brooklyn, said the three-pound child's death "'as due to "a multiplicity of o v e r w h e I m i n g com- plications." The first twin, who had suf- fered respiratory failure, died after the operation four days ago at the hospital's neonatal center. The two girls. who were not identified, were joined. from the navel lo the breastbone and shared vit81 organs such as the liver, diaphragm, and parts or the intestinal tract. ) Tug Resc ues 3 ' As Boat Sinks LONG BEACH CAP) -Three persons nre rescued by a commercial tug boat Wedoetday '"ben their cabin cruiser sank, the Coat au.rd reported. The boat .went dqwn aboot four mil•• from shor< bet-. Point Arguello and Point ConctpUon. The three ":ere transported to San LuJ1 Obispo and v.·ere reported to be In good condition. The Coast Guard said Wiiiiam Plink of Sallnu, owner of the as.root Marlin II , u11ed hJs radio to ask for help At about noon when the water reached the deck. Plbtt's com)llntons wtre not Identified. Th11rsdl)', July 1'2, 1'173 - UPI Ttl"4!0M JANIE JONES EN ROUTE TO LONDON COURT ON VICE RAP Singer F•c•s 26 Charges, Including Operating Prostitution Ring paid ~11iss Jones nearly $10,000 ··mostly for providing escorts." Miss Jones. wearing a floy.•er-panemcd \\"hite dress and a green hair ribbon. took notes as '•i\ir. X" gave evidence. He was followed into .the v.•itness box by a. da rk·haired girl wearing dark glasses and a wedding ring, identified on- ly as "tvliss C," \vho said she '·had sex for money " at ti.1iss Jones' instigation. She described in detail the first OC· casi~,-when Miss Jones ··said to get into television, I had to be nice to this gentl eman and he y.·anted to sleep Y.'ith me." As three other girls had done. she testi fied P.liss Jones once told her "to dress in a school urtiform -'vhich I didn't -and I \vas told to be like an 11· year-old girl" for sex with o.ne "client." As other wttnesses had. she described group orgies in SY.'ank London holels. "At Claridges. there must have been about 12 girls and approximately 12 men," she said. ''1bere y.·as sexual ac· tivity between all the men and all the girls as far as I know. r sa\\• sexuaJ in- tercourse take place bctY:een one girl and one man . . . . "On another occasion at the \~ltite House {a hotel), there y.·as a group of girls and it was in the form of a party. Sexual acti vity took place at P.tiss Jones' sugges1ion." Ne ,v 'G ol<l Ru sh' Fever Grow ing In Calif or1tla SAN BERNARDI NO (AP ) -Gold fever. the infection that bro u g ht thousa nds of settlers to California in the 1840s, is experiencing a mino r rebirth in al leasf ty.·o counties. official!i say. "ti.1aybe it's a rebirJh of !he old fe\·er. The re is no doubt there is' gold out there, geillogic.ally speak ing." said Sam Italia, geologicnl engineer for th e San Bernardino County assessor's orfice. l1alia said \Vednesday that l<l3 claims \\'cer filed Jast month bringing mining and prospecting activity in the county to the highest level in the past decade. The gcolof!ist said most of the claims were filed in the Calico area near BarstO\\' and the Ord P.·loontains Y.'eSl Of Lucerne Valley. A gradua l increase in the number of claims riled in Ri\'erside County was reported by Assessor frank Seeley. He said most of the pannm are heading for the Sant a Rosa ~lountains south of Hemet, the Colorado River north of Blyttre, the Gavila n Hills and the Chuck\\'alia ~fountain'! wes t or Blythe . $ DAILY PILOT jS Lion Slain By Woman To Save Boy RAPID CITY. S.0, (AP ) -''I said " prayer that the good l..ord "·ould give me the !)trenglh and the right spot," said the grandmother \\•ho stnbbed to death a moun1aln lion that Y.'aS mauling her I ~'1· ~·ectr---0ld-grandson. "He was just ripping the baby apart.'• said P.lrs. Peter Underdahl of Anoka. ~tinn .. in an intervieY.' \\'ednesdtty. The infan t \\"as attacked on Tuesday \\·hen the lioness leaped through the side 1\·indo\\' of a motorhome his mother y,•as driving. ··All I kepi saying was 'bring me a knife, bring me a knlfe,' " said l\lrs. Cnderdahl. 5.:1. a slender woman \\'ho stands about fi\'e feet. "finally. n1y hull· band handed me a butcher knife and I jammed it in and twisled it and the lion \\·ent slack, and I knew I had pierced the heart." Jason Co\1'dcn, the s<m of a.tr. and a.trs. James Cov.·den of Anoka. oy.·as listed In serious but stable condition at a hospital here. • orficials said the t\l.'O-year-old lioness \\'eighed 120 pounds and Its head was sent to the state health departn1ent for rabies tests. a.trs. Co\\·dcn y.•as driving the vthkle through a tourist attraction called "Bear Country" abOut eight miles south or Rapid City vlhen the incident occurred. Visitors arc allowed to drive through the fenced park \\'here v•olves, buffalo and mountain lions roam freely. ~lrs. Underdahl sakf \he family Y.'a5 gi\·en a set of park rules that advised keeping the \\'indows shut. ~lrs. Underdahl said her wdaughter, Judy, had opened the side \\indow of the motor home to photograph the lioness, \yin!t IO feet a\\•ay. _ ''It "'as just lying doun as calm as could be" she said . Then, hfrs. Underdahl said. the baby moved toward the window. "I think it was the quick movement and the baby's size .. .those animals at- tack anything smaller and V.'eaker than they are." a.1rs. Underdahl said. She said the lioness jumped through the· y.·indow, over the mother's lap and pin· ned the baby between the seats. "He \\'as lace do\\'TI and the lion \\'al'! .. right on top of him. biting his head and sholJlder. \\1e could hardly see Jason .'' she said. . ~lrs. Underdahl said she called to he!"' husband in the rear of the trailer and he brought her an eight-inch butcber knife. "I \\'as raised on a farm. and 1 know something aboul killing animals. I knew the \•ital spot was right under the shoulder,·• said Mrs. Underdahl, who stabbed the animal repeated\y even though it y.·ent limp on the first thrust. Bhutto on Tour KARACHI. Pakistan I AP) -Pre!ldtnl Zulfikar Ali Bhutto of Pakistan left Karachi today for a 12-day .four of Italy, th e United Stales and Britain. ---- :JI. J. (Jarrell ~ SEMI-ANNUAL SALE Continues ... ~~ DreSb Inspired By A World Of Richness And Romance .... Of A Glorious Spain In A Forgotten Time. • .... S•I• Door Chest $499. $425. 8. Kin9 Bed $251 . $215. C. Night St•nd $185. $159. ••. s 99 .••. Dresser $599. $499 . ' Many Other Drexel & Heritage Collections Now at SALE PRICES H.J.GAI\1\ETT fLlRNfl11RE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR OE~IGN ER S Opn Mon. 2215 HARBOR BLVD. Th, ... & F•i. E.u. COSTA MESA, CALIF. :... . - wit• To m arpltiae . "::': .. ., -'Fhe-Standards- Are Laid Down COURT BEU DEPT. -The United States Supreme Court came in with a re- cent decision that has been widely hailed in our region by the forces battling against dancing girl nudity in local night spots. In effect, the high court said that com· munity or regional standards ot what's right and moral can prevail rather than some sort or natiOflal standard. Well, the question of these communlty standards WCflt to a test of sorta that concluded only yesterday at the Harbor Judicial District Court in Newport Beach. .. T~. Jub' 12, l'l'll Cattle Doomed Ex pert Reports Food Prices Low WASHINGTON (UPI) -Today's record food prices are really . "decep- tively low," and consumers will be shocked wben tbe food Industry finally pmerllll-the ·tn.,...,.n.-has -1><en •-bin& duriq the temporary price freeze, a 1eading industry eiecutive has wamed <Joncrea. c. w. Coot, chalrman ol General Foods Corp., tn a wire sent to all memben .ol ~ July 3 and .- publlo yemrday, warned I.be !awmakm DOI to be misled by "';!.~ out ol Agriculture De reports this week that farm prod on may set new records this year. Fqod chain e:r:ecutive Ca . Adamy sald prices will jump' at leas! 15 pen:ent after the freeze. COOK SAID that be<auae ol pul and present coo.trol systems, current retail fOOd prices are -.i oo raw farm prod- uct Jl!ices far below the actual current 1..;osf Of. raw pn)Qucts. - report forecasting inm8led productioo. said they expected some further increase in food . prices after ceilings are relaxed. But they 8dded ~ potential big harvest ol grains and soybeans-would eue the situation by spurring increases In livestock and poultry productioo 'begin- ning In the fall. C.OOk said bis forecast was ba9ed on the assumption that Phase IV would permlt the food tndultry to pan all c:oot in· creases on to consumers. If 'it doesn't, be said, the result will be a sharp drop in food supplies because processor> and clistributon will slow their oper9tlons. He called for a temporary food export em- bargo and abandonmeDt of impart · restrictions oo dairy products. AT ISSUE . WAS A young lady named Marsha Sue O'ump, 25 years old, from Newport. She was charged._ by C.OSta Mesa authorities with dancing 16 or so times .in nothl.ng more than booties to protect her form from the chill interior of a Mesa night spot known as the Fire House, out at 117 E. 17th SL -Starved cattle owned by Mali nomads in Africa found water in the neighboring country of Upper Volta, but no food. These cattle, the only valuables possessed by the impoverished tribes, will probably die after drinking water on empty stomachs. "When sharp commodity price in- creases are reflected at retail, as ultimately they must be, the resultant rise in food costs ts certain to 'shock con- sumers ... Even excellent crop prospects this year will not be sufficient to curb th.is spiral significantly," Cook warned. Senators R eject Foreign Serv~ Nixon A ppointee WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senale Foreign Relations Committee has r~ jected President Nixon's nomination of G. MeMurtrie Godley as assistant secretary or state for Ea.st Asian and Pacific Affairs. Miss Crump had been busted -if you'll .P""IOO the ezpression =.under a new city law which Mesa aty Attorney Roy June had dutifully copied from a similar ordinance created by our DA Cecil Hicts and his Deputy DA Orella Sears, both noted smutfigbters. It bad been successful in court tests. Death Plane Pilot 'Hero' "For, tbeSe reasons. .. food prices are destined to rise sharply' this year regardless of provisions for control that may be incorporated in Phase IV regula- Uoos. We believe the consuming public should be made aware ~ this distasteful prospect now because we fear many con- sumers expect food prices to hold steady or )Xl6Sibly decline ooce new aop estimates are in," Cook said . Chairman J. W. Fulbright (0-Ark.). said Godley, as ambassador to Laos since 1969, showed too much enthusiasm for U.S. military involvement in Southeast Asia. This law recited that it shall be unlawful for yoUng ladies to dance au . natural in any place other than a theater. · Thus the issue was drawn and the chief protagonista: showed up in tbe Newport municipal court: Prosecutor Jim Stot1er for DA Hicks and the forces against nudi· ty and defense attorney Kenneth ScOOlb: for Miss Crump and the Fire House ·-·Paris Air Cras li Toll R ises; Flier Gets Praise By a 9 to 7 vote, the c omm itte e mittee rejected Godley's appointment but askeQ the ~retary of state to give him another assignment . not related to follies. • -JURY SELECl'l.ON was r a the r painotaking from the panel ol 23 - spect.ive jurors offered to judge the issue. 1bere were a 11unber oL ...._n--oo bot.b lides. --~ ln the eod, however, a jW'y ol seven men and five women were selected. Most we"' ,..war folks. sort ol furtyish. Soon after the trial got under way, it became dear to observers that there was ~ to be ll~Ue argument about whether -or DOI Miss Crump had r-> frolicl<illg .... away on the Fire House stage in a state ol undrell. She waa naked okay, both sides -to agree. Rather, &he question was going to be 1 whether or oot the Fire House itself is actually a theater for the performing arts. YOU WILL RECALL this is the one e:<· emption from Costa Mesa's Don't Go Naked law. Well, the ~ prosecution contended that the outside OI the place looks like a red· and-white barber's pole that went crazy and the !inside 1ooks like a bar. · 1be defe&.e contended that their place has entertainers, a stage, lighting and seats just like any other theater. ' Thus the issue was drawn. ·'IliE! jury went out. It stayed out less than one boor. When the jury came back in, it decreed that M'm Crump was innocent on all 16 allegations. mus vou ~IUST assume the jury ac- cepted the thesis that the Fire HOU!e is oo different than Laguna's Festival of Arts stage. or that or Soil.th Coast Repertory Theater or any downto'kn moYie house. 'Ili.is will give the forces against nudie entertainment something new to ponder in the area o( community standards where it may be possible that juries feel their Jaw enforcement officers shouJd be spending their time in other areas. After all , it you can't trust a 1ocal mid· dle-aged jury to judge community stand- anb, whO can you trust? From Wire Servi<.'fl SAULX.·LES-CHARTREAUX . France -The pilot of e Brazilian Varig airliner was .hailed today as a hero for the skilJ- fully executed crash landin'g of his Dam· ing '8irliner. ~ers who rushed to the wreclCage in a lettuce field outside this Paris suburb said the victims died strapped in their seats, choked unconscious by fumes and then burned by the flames that started in a restroom and flashed J et Bomber Crashes In Nation al Park ZION NATIONAL PARK, Utah (UPI ) -An Flit jet fighlel'-bomber craslled In Oames into the side of Deer Trap Moun- tain Wednesday, narrowly missing park headquarters and Zion Park Lodge. through the aircraft, fed by lhe emergen· cy oxygen system. Firemen who broughl out the blacken· ed bodies said many were in the correct position for a crash landing -heads down and knees togeth~r. D()C'l'ORS FOUGHT today to save the liveS of the seriously ill among the 12 SW'Vivors of the Boeing 7rfl jetliner. One survivor died in a hospital today bring· ing the official death toll to 122. All the survivors were crewmen. Among the badly jpjured was the pilot. Gilberto Arujo Da Silva, hailed by Fren~ today as a ~ ~or guiding the plane past rows of houses to a safe landing. "He \li'aS nerveless - a hero." said one ne\li'S broadcast. Among those killed were Filento S . 1t1uller, president of the Brazilian Senate and the preSident of the military regime's off i c i a I Arena Party; Agost~ dos Santos, ooe ol Brazil 's Long San~inary Fug itive Says He Lived in. Belfry LEESBURG, N.J . (AP) -Did he or didn't he? That's the question people here are asking of a young fugitive's story that he spent the last two years hiding in the beUry of the 169-ye ar-old U n i t e d Methodist Church. William H. Hughes t01d' police or a two- year stay in the bell tower after his ar- rest Monday night. HUGHES WAS apprehended after a fonner c®rch custodian, H e n r y Vanaman, stopped by the church to retrieve a Bible. He spotted Hughes darting out the back door. Hughes' former mother-in-law, Ann Peterson, did not belive his story - ''Nobody could impose that kind of thing on himself." But the man who probably knows more about lhe church than anyone else, its minis ter, said it was possible Hughes ' tale was true. "The church is never locked," the Rev. Robert llignett explained. "There are bathroom facilities and it's warm in there." THE REV. Mr. 11ignett added one possible hitch -"I don't know how in the ~·orld he could stand the sound of the bell ringing." The 28-year-old Hughes, thin , long· haired and bearded, told police he had hidden in the tower since ~tay 1971 when he jwnped bail while awaiting trial on charges of larceny and breaking and entering. Many people in town believe Hughes hid in the church, but they doubt he spent the entire two years there except for short excursions he says he made for ex- ercise and to scrounge food from gardens and unlocked homes. Parts of U.S. Sizzling Souther1i Half of Nation U1icomfortably Hot Today ·" " .~ "' "' "' ·" ·" "' ... "' .~ .' ~\ .. ~ .... !.I \~ LOS A'N•llt• )9,17 ' " "'9 wtATMlt fOIOC:MI I> JO.oo NCWOlllCAN• ~ .. !AMI 1101 Jolt> ~lAIH lraf.,J~NOW r7T";'J .._ .. 1. ~·H(M'lt$ --,: II OW CoaNtal We.i11ter H•rv 1\IMhlM too.y. Llfll'll v1r11blto winds "lgnt •nd motnlM hours Meom- h'ljl w"!lrty 12 to 1' knots 111 &lier- ,_ l'odlY Ind Frldey. Hh;Jh IOOly '" llJIPll!'f" '°"-Co.1111 l!l<Tl1111'1111fr r1t19e from 6.1 la 71. Inland ~1tu..e1 r•nve lrom 61 to 7l. W•ler amptr1t11re 1-t. Sun, llfooto, Tides TMUJllDAY seeond hlQh ... , ...... l:OI p,m, S.• S«ond low .......... 1:4& p.m, 2.• •1tlDAY F!~I tll;h ......... 10:6' 1.m. l.7 Flr1! •-• , , ••... , , l :ll 1.m. -0.4 51Kond 111i11 ., •.••• ,. t :U p,rn, &,O S.cOfld low •.. , •.•. 2:1l ll.m. 2,S Sun •r .... S:51 1.m. s.11 1:06 p.m. M-Ill-•:II p.lft. S1!1 l:20 1.m. l 11Jffl ~i(1ll DELIVERY SERVICE Del•e~ ~ Ille Dai~ Pi~l is giJallllleol ...,..,_ • ,. .. Ill .... ,. M1f 'J 5;1 Ja.. al M ,. Uf' • ii "'Pl • .,.., tall •• .... "" l;JI ,. ~ • -.,: " ,. ... ll(lift 1"' arr Iii' I •-• tn11J, • I u. S.U,,ul.i1~llillltlnlt'1 1' ,.. '* n i.t• 1111 111.a lelejjmts ....... ...., ......... 641~321 __ .... .. ........ .. .. ...... ~ 1221 Sii CIMrla. Clflslr• ltlCl. s. JUI C.Slll!L .., ,_ ... -\ .... ...., .. 491-1420 leading pop sjngers in the 196Cls; in· dustri~list·yachtsman Joerg Bruder and veteran joumatist Celso "Ribeiro, an ex· ecu:tivo. of the Sao Paulo newspai>er ~O Estado. 'I1lree American, Bernard Regan, Elio Rosa and Vole Rosa were also listed among the dead. Addresses were not known. The plane was only two miles -90 seconds ny1ng ume -from Orly Airport at the end oi a 5,800 mile night from Brazil when it ditched, "like a bomb,'' acoording lo one witness, because of a fire which a survivor said started in :1 rear toilet , apparenUy as a result of a short circuit. 'PRF.SIDENT NIXON mef for two hours with his cabinet .Wednesday on plans f0< a Phue IV antl-inflatloo pro- gram to follow tile temporary freeze. A •pokesman aald the new plan will be an- nounced "relatively IOCll," although no final ~have yet been~ OD It. Nl:r:on said in a statemem sent to Congress Wedneoday on the subject' "My ultimate goal -a goal I believe we can and must meet -is to return this cowitry ·to a strong and free market system.'' ""' Agriculture Departmeot off i c i a 1 s , . following release this week ol a crop Southeast Asia. · "There are vacancies in Europe," Fulbright said. . BY A in Vo1 TO ~I vote, the committee recommended Senate confinnation or William H. Sullivan, assJstant secretary of state for East Asia, as ambassador to the Philippines. Fulbrlght made the same objection to Sullivan's assignment because of his "in· timate association with U.S. policy in Southeast Asia" and also proposed that another assignment outside the area be offered him. IT'S OUR SECOND ANNIY SARY-AND WE'RE CELEBRATING BY PASSING THESE TERRIFIC VALUES ON TO OUR CUSTOMERS e S"°'Js eTweeds • Dupont 501 e A iltron e HI.Lows e Nylott -e Pl ush Shots • Commercia l ONLY s3 · PER Sljl. YA RD! VALUES TO $8.95 THOUSANDS OF YARDS TOM"' CHOOSE FllO ... LU.DING NAM~ BRANDS! BRING IN YOUll ROOM MEASUREMENTS - Lay A'Ways . Availabl e REMNANTS ... , • .-fl '" Stecll: IUp N 1h11J IDIHE• 2~~L STORE HOU RS: • Shags • T0tt• CHI e Duf!CHll T ... Nyloio • Sculptures e Polyester • Tri Color ....... 5""' S"°'Js ONLY s4 PER Sljl. YARD VALUES TO $12.'5 s.::'tffsE &CHOICE OF N COLORS 0 PRESSURE OR- COME ONS! PAD & LABOR UNCONDmDNALLY GUARANTEED Terms \ _;qila. > ...... r-_ . ........ .. ................ S..11 .. Bank Flnancln9 CARPET WAREHOUSE lllWPOna,., MIKE'S ,. ' 124 E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA TEL, 645-4330 · • ' . ' • '.• • . . :· ;. .· ' Secret' Jury Pick Opposed SAN FRANCISCO (APJ - The judge pmtdlng over the mass murder lrlal of Herbert Mullin hu been asked IO vacate his order baMing the press and the public from the jury &election process. STATE A1,1'Y. Gen. Evelle J. Younger-Wednesday filled a peltition asking the state Court of Appeal IO order Santa Cruz County Superior Court Judge Counting On 3 Toes SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A Pleannt Hill man has been convlct<d of !Y•dlng Induction for send· ing a friend who was missing three toes to take his draft physical for blm. U.S. District Court Judge Spencer Willisms set sentencing Friday for Richard Dean Perrier, 20. Perrier pleaded g u i 1 t y Wednesday to a charge of failing to report to in- duction and no contest to the evasion charge. Ship T-rip Dela yr.cl By Threat LOS ANCEL.ES (API -A bomb-threatened tTUise ship whh 300 passengers aboard resumed Its voyage to Alaskan wate rs early today after two searches failed to turn up any evidence of e1tploslves . ~1ARINE EXCllA NGt.: operator _Tom Ramos said Wednesday night that a young man's voice reported over the telephone: "There ls a bo mb Hayakaivcf Post Fil~d LOS ANCEL.ES (UPI) -1'rustct$ of the 19-eam· pus Calitornb. S t a t e Unl"ersity and Colleges \Vednesday appointed Paul F. Romberg co aucceed S. I. liaya kawa as presldtnt e1f San Francisco State. Hllyakawa, a seman· tlcist, won national fame ior . his hard line stand against st udent rad icals !I nd d e rl)onstrators. Romberg was appointed rounding presklent o I ~kersfield State College ln 1967. Thurtd1y, Ju1r 12. Jq7) DAIL V Pt LOT 5 GOP Aide Admits Payments to Left SACRAMENTO (AP I -A RepublieU 11de admlts that he made secret payments to left- wing candidates for lbe st,te legislature last year and that he converted GOP checks into postal money orders to con- ce.qJ the source. btlle.I this wa1 standard operatioi p roce dure of Oemoerats" in fina'.ilclng con-- s er vat Ive Am e r i can Independent Party candidates. "We figured '4'e had been beaten in 1970 because it had been done to us." he said. 545-4430 • 642-6389 145 E. 18th Street, Costl Mesa, CL 92627 OFFSET PRINTING OVER NIGHT OR WH ILE YOU WAIT Camera Ready Copy -Black Ink on Electrostatic Pl1tes § I ~ 100 Copies ................ , Low as $1.80 ~ 8'h x 1 l , 20 lb. white, black ink ",'· THE IZ-YEAR-otd DeLoog, " who hM collnr.Jength blond 1000Copies . , .... , .. , . , .... Lowas$7.50 ;; hair. said he wa! assigned the 8'h'x 1.1. 20 lb. white, black ink '' job as go-be1wecn wllh the :i Charles S. Franich to discon· '----------' tinye the unique i.n-(hambers jury selection he began ~fon­ day, the opening day of Mullin's trial. I on board the SS J\.fariposa in ~----------' In a lengthy Associated Press interview W~ay. ~·rank Del.ong, an employe ol 1he Republican callCll! of the state Assembly, described how he got into the business or provid.in& secret funds for Peace and Freedom party candidates ·and bow the pay- ment.I: were concealed . Pe-ace and Freedom party BUSINESS CARDS '' "because I think they figured t $6,00 -r 1000 BLACK. BLUE or RED INK \' t had a higher tolerance for 0 ,..... '2 P.1ullln Is charged with murdering 10 persons in one three.week period last winter. Faculty Pay . Hikes OK'd He has pleadl'd innocent and , innocent by reason o! in sanity. LOS ANGELES (AP ) - Efil-ly Wednesday, Franich Members Of the S t a t e revealed that Younger's of~ice Uni ersity ·and Colleges Board told him it would "lake ev Trustees have approved precaution to make t ls $34.7 million for faculty and public." Desplte the threat of support staff pay increases. a writ, the judge s~id, "I am The action Wednesday in· not going to give In to any eluded a $20 million pay in· pressure." He continued private j u r y examinations crease ~ckage for 15,000 Wednesday with 12 jurors ten-teachers tn _the 19-campus tatively seated and selection sy_st~ and hikes worth $14. 7 f It t · r gress million for 12,000 persons in o a ema es m P 0 · support classifications such as SANTA CRUZ County Dist. campus doctors, carpenters, Atty. Peter Chang said he plumbers, e I e ctr i c i an s. would inslst that the selection locksmiths and maintenance continue. men. "It is unprecedented that the luggage department. I am not kidding." The threat was reportes! to officers aboard the 563-foot liner. then just clearin g Los Angeles •!arbo r. The ship was · turned aroiffia and brought back to port. Coast Gua rd Lt. Jim Clarke said the ship's crew made an 'Immediate search of the vessel while it was returning to its berth and followed with another search after it docked. No explosives were found dur· ing the 2Y.i hour delay in port, he said. CLARKE SAID that no ex· tortion threat y.•as made by the caller. lie said the case had been referred to the FBI, which declined to discuss the case. the attorney general come in on a mass murder case without coming in at the re- quest or the prosecution." he said. "I don't think the at- torney general has an y business slicking his face 'into a murder tria l of thi s magnitude three days after it Reinecke 'Changing Tune' on ITT Song h83 slarted." The attorney general's peti· tion contends Franich's order violates the First and Sixth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution and sections or th e California Constitution covering the same rights. THE FIRST Amendment guarant~s freedom of ex· pression and speech and the Sixth guarantees a speedy and public trial for the accused. SACRAMENTO (AP ) -Lt. Gov. Ed Reinec ke says that state telephone records show he phoned then·Atly. Gen. John l\1itchell twice in June 1971. THE REPUBLICAN lieutenant governor's state· ment Wednesday referred to the time period when he now says he told Mitchell of an of· fer by an l·n t e rna t ion a I Telephone & Telegraph Corp. subsidiary to provide up to $.J million to fi na nce the GOP convention iii San Diego. Last year when Reinecke testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee, h e swore under oath that he did not pass on the information about the proposed IIT con- tribution until Seplem?:>er 1971 . Si nce then, the 49·year--old state official has changed his account to say he told Mitchell -of the offer about three n1onths earlier. Dellum Eyes Son's Case 111 Robbery hippies tha n the average §' 5 Day Delivery ~ Renublican. '' ~ •-PHOTOCOPIES ~ He added tha t he had a ',' DeLONG was the first "very hang-loose, v e.r y t~ B'h x 11 .10eachcopy ~ Republican source to confirm friendly " relationship y.·ith ~~ B'h x 14 -.15 each copy :~ reports of the secret P&F leaders and that he 5 4~ pa yments. Bui be said he believed they could be trusted 8 TYP ING 1 • ARTWORK • NEGS & PLATES ~~ transferred only about $800, to keep the source of their · .. , .. ~. not lhe $3,500 to $5,000 describ--funds secret. §'~ BINDERY SERVICES ~ ed in earlier reports. "We felt they had more to PICK·UP & DELIVERY SERVI CES ~ \VA SHINGTON (AP) He said the secret fundlng lose than we did as far as em· . ....,.,._,..,...,.,....,,.,.,....,,.,,"'°'~=---.i<" Rep. Ronald Dellums (D-started as ''a reacUon to our--barrassment,!-". he expla\nedl~. _.,,_,.. -~ Calif.), says he is trying to---------------------------------------- sort out the facts in the circu1ns tances surrounding the arres t of his 16--year--old son in connection with an+ Oakland armed robbery. IN A ST ATEl\1ENT issued Wednesday. Dellums said he is trying to "make sense" out of the July 5 arrest and detention of his son Michael. Dellums said the youth had appeared at a probation hear· ing in Alameda County on charges of armed robbery. "\Vhen I ta1ked 10 the pro- bation officer las t \\'ee kend. I learned that the case v:as serious, but "that the evid ence did not indicate concluslvelv who the guilty party was.;. Dellums sa id . "l was told the fingerpripts were being tak en and would not be analyzed un· ti! Thursday of this week." ON WEDNESDAY, Oakland police confirmed Dellums' son was arrested but declined further comm ent on the case. "Obviously f don't have all the facts at this rin1e ... Dcllums said. · A Positive Step lor Lom111ur11 ty Medical Care f or /RV /NE Res1dpnts and Their Neighbors THE WESTERN WORLD FOUNDATION HOSPITAL NOW UNDERWAY ON A 138 ACRE SITE NEAR UCI is a not-for-profit Community Service Hospital, established by Western World Foundation, a certified, tax-exempt non-profit Foundation In contrast to the many big-profit physician-owned proprietary hospitals (and certain pseudo non-proprietary hospitals) in Orange County, not one of the Western World phyaiciana can make a nickeltrom the hospital operation or appreciation in the value of the land or physical aaaeta of the foundation. Neither can members of the lay board ao benefit Thia ia juat the start of a Major Medical Center What i• the truth ,. about overbedding7 ' HARDWARE STORES Rarely before has a major comprehensive medical center been planned from the ground up. Most existing distin"guished centers have "grown up" from an especially skillful group of medical and allied personnel. Western World has such a group and as the demand for medical care increases other outstanding pro· fessionals will be attracted to Western World's center. In the area Western World will serve there are currently no avail able hospital beds. A- recent editorial in the Orange Coast Daily Pilot clearly explains the truth about over· bedding for the area this hospital and medi· cal center will serve. This is what the Pilot said: • 84.95 22" DELUXE ROTARY MOWER Pressure Washer Kit Attach to · garden hose. Kit incl. nozzle, extension, suds, container, storage box. 14 feat ures easy·1itt starter,3 1i 2 HP Briggs and Str atton gasoline eng ine with remote thrott le corr trol; 360° baff led deck; side ejec tion; washout port; a " 'wheels; height adjus ters; fold· ---------.. ing handle. Comes completely ljlll•••••'l'!•lllllf ;: assembled. TD 223 "Nile Owl" And Battery FLOATING LANTERN [uY.g~AC) ... -.------~~~ ·~ 299 SIAMESE SHUT-OFF I I -~~ 199 Gives just a touch of light....;.. for Floats in water:..... ideal for boaters, Use two hoses from one faucet! campinr, children's room com-fishermen, ete. Plastit case, wa· Incl udes end-cap to shut off one YARD GUARD 169 Protects picnic and barbecue areas-foiger iets the pests up to 20-11. away! 161\-oz. 1601 What about planning Counc ii approval? Health Planning Council approval is not requ ired for hospita ls whic h do not use govern · ment fund s. Western World applied for appro· val only so that its high quality medical care could be a reality .{o;:.,_Medi·Cal reci pi ents, as well as for those more fortunate. How will Weatem World affect UCl7 ''If the proposed master plan of health facilities and services is adopted as it is now dra wn -and its reco mmendations be made into state law -two distinct classes of citizens would enlf!rge in Orange County. ''One class would be those persons fortunate enough to live in the established communi· ties of north Orange County who have the lion's share of county hospital facilities -26 of 35 hospitals ~ and beds -3,765 of 5,071 io the county. "TJ1e other class would be those wfJo presently live in the coastal and southern portions of th e county where the bulk of the coun ty's new residents are expected to live. "The Orange County Health Planning Coun· cil, wh ich proposes the master plan, says baldly tl1at no more hospital or nursing home beds will be neecled for 10 years. That doesn't seem realis tic in view of population estima tes we 've seen." How did Western World get atarted7 paniori, etc. 1ncl. 6V batt. 90S terproof swilch. Incl . bait. l295-S nozzle. Chrome plated. N-78C ·lwiii~~-=:::ir----~ SMOKEY JOE '-T:I!DR"' Western World was started before the Califor- nia College of Medicine moved .to UCI. Present members of Western World Medical Founda· tion's Board were instrumental in bringing it here. from the beginning, Western World has supported a UCI teaching hospital and con- tinues to do so. This is vital if the UC/ medk:al college is. to be more t han second rate. How- ever, the job of a teaching hospital is to teach and conduct research -not to take over community medical care from community physici~ns. There are good reasons for this: The rapid gi'owth pattern east of Upper New· port Bay (in the area now occupied by the City of Irvine) caused some farsighted physicians 6 years ago to e)C p1ore the possibility of health care facilit ies for that area. Before other hospitals began enlarging these physicians en· listed the support of a num ber of community lea ders. Financing t o date has been by local fo undations and publi c spirited citizens. Tha founding of a distinguished medical center is possible through the farsightedness of tho Irvine Company. I • • • KETTLE 16.95 New smaller 13" grill plus collapsible leg construe· tion fol-compact take· along -ideal for picnics or as a second unit. Tight· fitting cover; dampers for heat control -close to smother coals for re-use. Blac~ porcelain finish. , SHOO ELECTRIC · 188 Charcoal Lighter Sale way to start b1rbecues or lirepl1ce fires withou t mess, odor ·or !!are-up. 52SW. 77VP RAID 139 House & Garden Spray Kills bu1s de1d! Completely ufe for hum1ns. pets. foods. 13\\· oz. spray ean. 1671 0,.. M......,-friday t .,._, P"' Setontay ···-·-···· ' ..... P"' S•odcry ............ 10 .,._,.pm University medicine ia high-coat medicine •.• and it should t;;e. Patients in university hospitals must stay longer periods to instruct students and interns. Also teaching hospitals must engage in some research and experimenta· tion to be an effective teaching facility. But it is costly. While bed charges in private hospitals in Cal ifornia range from $63 to $105 per day, bed charges in teaching hospitals range from S140 to $200 per day. Want to know more? No w in preparation "Building a Great Medical Center." If you would like a copy when it is off the pr~ss, drop us a line. WESTERN WORLD MEDICAL FOUNDATION DONALD S. BURNS . CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD . . 833 DOVER DRIVE, SUITE 25 NEWPORT BEACH, CA. 92660 • D ARY PILOT EDITORIAL P AQE .. Sharing the Tax Bite Orange County's Increase ln assessed valuation .ibould be good.newsJor JllOSt taspayers. MosL9f the increase is attributed to new developments, bOth com· mercial and residential. There was little re..eva1U1lion of existing properties. Since jroperty tax rates are applied to each $100 of assesse valuation, the val uation increase provides a wider base over which to spread the tax bite. Thus taxing agencies should be able to reduce their rates and sUU garner tb·e same revenue. The nine percent increase in assessed valuation or property in Orange Co unty could add up to a reduction of six or eight cents on the county tax rate, in addition to the estimated 16-cent reduction already discussed in initial budget 'hearings. Municipalities throughout the county will enjoy similar boosts in assessed valuation, rangmg from a 2 percent increase in Laguna Beach to a whopping 43 per· cent in the new city of Irvine. Growth may have its drawbacks, but at least it does provide more pocketbooks from which to extract the ever-rising cost or govern ment. P etroleum Probes The petroleum industry is due for some close e~­ amination in coming weeks. State and federal authon- ties apparently are takin g. ~s dubious a view o~ its ii:t· volved operations as the c1t1zen who suddenly finds his favorite corner gas station going out of business. To date about 1,000 stations acroas the country - mosUy independents -have closed their doors. Some 2,000 more are expected to follow suit because of inade. quate supplies. · . On opposite sides of the country, the state of Flonda and a federal grand jury in Los Angeles have initia~ed actions against the oil firms. The .federal Cost of Livmg Council also has announced its intention to monitor the industry from oil well to gas pump to check compliance wj th the price freeze. . The CLC would like to know if the fuel shortage 1s rtal and where the suppllea are aoing, in lddlUon to checkin& for price violator&. A recent spot check by the lll!A!rnaflli!venue-S.rvice found 6S-gb"1taUobl in SouU.. em California in non-compliance with price regulations, overcharging by from one to six cents per gallon. The grand jury probe will look into pricing and marketing prictlces or oil firma in Callfo~ Arizona, Nevada, Oregon 'and Washlngton. To this end, documents and confidential files of five major companies, cover- ing marketin& acUvities back U> January, 1969, have beeJl subpoenaed. • Meanwhile, the state of Florida has filed an anti- trust suit agaillSI 15 major oU companies, charging COD- spiracy to create the nationwide fuel crisis, drive ind• pendent ·dealers out of business and maintain high gas- oline prices. 'The suit seeks a break-up of big oil companies, con- tendin~ they now control the entfre industry from the time oil comes out of tbe ground U> the time gu is sold at the pumps, thus engaging ·in illegal monopoly and unreasonable restraint of commerce and trade. Denying charges of monopoly, the oil firms insist they operate on tbe basis of honest competition an d maintain increued demand hu cniated the . fuel short: •·age. The Florida suit asks tbe federal court U> force the companies to divest themselves of exploration, drilling and producing activities and limit them to refining, dis- tributing and selling petroleum products. Sounding a similar note, Sen. Henry Jackson (D- W.mt.), chairman of the Senate Interior Committee, is urging Congress U> look inU> the possibility of splitting up big oil companies, as well u reviewing the industry's special tax incentives. \yhlle the current guollne shortage may be causing some inconveniences, the end result could be beneficial. The average citizen bas found it difficult to accept the validity of the sudden gas shortage. With government authorities evidently sharing his doµbts, it may be that tbe com bined probing will spoUight the real problems and assure a square deal~ around. Lobby Overrules Highway Hazard Dear Gloomy Gus Rules of Evidence Weighed Carefully Forty-four assemblymen don't give a Qamn about your highway safety. Just before they skipped town they voted to permit 14-foot wide mobile homes to be h&Uled on California's roads. 'Jlhe width or a highway lane is 12 feet. That means th06e mobile monsters are two feet wider than the lanes, Try that on yoor family car some dark night. On a crowded freeway or a narrow bridge! Tho.se 44 assembly- men voted ·'Yes" on AB 422, authored by Walter Ingalls {I). Riverside). Th ey played fast and loose wilh your life and yow-safety despite objections by the Cal· ilontla Highway Patrol and tbe state de- partment of public works. Back in 1971 -72, Patrol and public works crews tested the safety factors in- volved in hauling 14-foot wide mobile homes. They towed a 14' x 63' monS!er t,000 miles over all types of highways and through all kinds of traffic. THEIR recommendation: 14-footers on the highways are a major hazard that should not be permitted. The two-foot overhang increases the risk of side-swipe collisions. (Highway lanes are actually designed for vehicles and loads 8 feet wide, to pr0vide a cushion of safety between passing vehicles.) The extra trailer width also impairs visibility and causes rapid speed and lane changing that can result in a~ts. The big mobile home sections_do _pot keep !.-peed with the free flow of traffic ; that causes slowdo'A'IlS and speedups by other vehicles. The Patrol found that the monsters ere l'SpeciaUy dangerous on tVlO J a n e highways and on multi-lane freeways with impaired roadside shoulders. But. forget all that. Vote the bill out. anyway~ ASSEl\IBLVl\1AN Ingalls. and lobbyists for the mobile horne manufacturers. argued that other states allow the 14-foot \\idth. They conlend California com· panies are losing business because they l'annot compete ror the wide-home ( RUS WALTON J business. Assemblyman Robert Badham (R- Newport Beach} supported the bill. He asserted t h e issue as .''economic equity" for the mobile home industry. Well, the issue is highway safety. And, free enterprise does not convey license for highway carnage. Assemblyman John Vasconcellos (I). Santa Clara) fought AB 422. He insisted legislators must decide whether they are in Babylon "to serve the public or the mobile home builders. To whom do the highways belong? Are they for the sale movement of the people -or, for the special interest groups?" The mooster trailer bill got out of the Assembly through a strange series of maneuvers. Legislative procedure took a ride. 111E BllL was passed by the A s s e m b 1 y Transportation committee without a quorum: passed by a vote of 12·2 with only five members present and voting. It passed Assembly Wa)'! and Means, 12-4, after Assemblymen John Burton and Willie Brown. both D-S.F,, informed com- mittee Democrats that "Ingalls needs this bill in his di strict." There are several large mobile home manufac- turers in Ingalls' Riverside district. Obviously, that was more important than the millions of Californians on the highways. 'Ibe bill was rushed through the full Assembly; the second of three man· datory readings was waived. On the roll call. lhe vote was 44-11 -20 more votes than the number of assemblymen present and voting. Highway safety groups, such as the AAA, will ,now try to stop the monster bill in the State Senate. So far the whole thing is an Indictment or lhe way things are done these days in Babylon. It gives credibility to the belief that some legisla tors are moved more by lobbyists than by the best interests of the people. The people have no spokesnet>, and no special favors to dispense ; only taxes. Prosecuting the President Watergate Daffy-nition: Where the ketUes art calling the pots black and birds of a feather are being scattered to the four winds. G. S. GINfrlr Gift _,. -llWMlttMI .-, ~ ..... "" ,.........., retied ... Wl.w!i .. 1111' _,.,.,. ""' ,_. "' """ t. OIMlllY 0.. Oalty Plfat. WASHINGTON -The significance of a boring, legalistic discussion of the ruJes of_ evidence by the senatorial lawyers <Hr the Erxin committee may have escaped the nationwide television jury at the close of testimony by John Dean Ill. For those who were either baffled or bored. what was being talked about was whether or not Dean'1 evideoce would be 'Affluent' Society Has Anpther Meaning Today When we use the word "affluent" to describe American society, we ought to be a little more precise as to what we mean. As a society of consumption, we are enormously affluent; u a society of pos.!ession, far less so. This is no small distinction. For in- stance. the bottom one-fifth of the population gets only five percent of the national income; and these 20 percon1 or Camilles have no Ii· quid assets what· ever, beyond what happens I<> be in their pockets. The next 30 percent in economic slratum hold liquid assets under $500 per family. So that the bottom 50 percent of American families hold less than 3 per- cent of our liquid asseta. And u for real property, this same 50 percent bave..an average equity of less than $2,000 in the homes in which they live. A FAMILY, In order to have any measure of security, is suPPo91!d to have at least two years' income in assets to be able to weather financial reverses. Yet, we have to go the top 10 percent of in· come-earners before we find people whose assets begin to equal one year's income. And to the top 1 percent to find families whose eqwty and property holdings keep them in the style io which they have become accustomed. What it all boils down to is that well over ao percent of the people have no (smNEY J.HARRI~ equity or debt interest in the productive system of the U.S., and no stake in the aystem except ~ precarious jobs - ~ous because getting rid of people ls the fastest and cheapest way of cuttmg costs lo an economic pinch. TBlS SrnJA110N ii what accounts for the gr.at paradox of our society: al· Ouence combined with anxiety, in- fiallonary s~ combined w l t h resentment over high prices, and ex- pensive color 1V sets combined with meatless dinners. Everyone has money and charge cards, but few have expecta- tions that can sunive the loss of a job or the drying up of a charge account Our grandparent.., oo the contrary, were relJ,tively free or auch anxieties and tensloas because they were more of a aociety of possession than of con- awnptlon .. 'Ibey lived sparingly and -limited tbelr needs, but they generolly owned their homes or farms or shops, and rould ride out an economic stonn without dependence upon corporate car,leoe or govenunent benevolence. t seema clear to me tAal we have to find a way to give more Americans a genuine and deeply-rooted stake In the capitalistic order, so that "affluence" becomes more 1 matter of "owning" than or "spending," and so that the peo- ple as a whole conk to have a vested interest ln America. (rucHARD WIISO~ admissible in pr""Oreeuting the President oC the United Stat.es for a crime, or trying him in the Senate on impeachment by the House. And the general conclusion in the committee was that Dean~s testimony would be admissible if the President were being tried for conspiracy to obstruct justice. 1 THE EMPHASIS ls on the word con· spiracy. Ob the direct crime of obstruct- ing jtlstlce, Dean's testimony might be no more than in dir· ect coollict with the President and thus fail His testimony on the intricate set or circumstances im- plicating the Presi- dent might never 1 reach the jury. He could testify as to his implicating contacts directly with the President, but not on his contacts with H. R. Haldeman, John Ehrlichman, John Mitchell and numerous others, on a hearsay basis which wove the \\'Cb of presidential in- volvement. Senator Sam Ervin was, in effect, tell- ing the nationwide television jury that it was hearing evidence which would be ad- missible in court if President Nixon were on trial for conspiracy to obstruct justice. By inference, it could be concluded also that if, President Nixon were on trial in the Senate for "high crimes and misde· meanors" the admissibility of Dean's testimony would also commend ltse!I to the legal .sensibilities of_Chi.ef Justice Warren Burger, who would be presiding at such a trial. THE SHOCKING significance of this brief discussion is now being more clear· ly widerstood as Dean's testimony is analyzed. For it is evident that in their discussion the senators, as \\'ell as the majority and minority counsel of the committee, had in their minds the con- tingency that the President would be brought to trial in some way. Majority counsel Sam Dash has prepared what amounts to a legal brief on the admissibility of Dean's testimony on a count of conspiracy to obstruct justice. In this formulat ion, the acts by President Nixon limiting his in-house in- quiry on national seeur:ity grounds, the effect of invoking executive privilege and separation of powers, the p u b 1 i c statements of his press secretary, could be presented as a consistent pattern or presiden tial irivolvement in a conspiracy. This · would be supported by Dean's testimony on the President's probable knowledge and implied intent. M;INORITY counsel Fred Thompson made ·the important point that while 'hearsay might be admitted in evidence, a reading of the Presideht's mind by Dean would not be admissible evidence. But it was clear that Senator Ervin's<Niew on admissibility of yVtually all of Dean's evidence in a eod!piracy trial was the prevailing view in the committee. 1lnls, it can be imagined that at some point down the road Dean might bargain for a plea of guilty on one of the many crimes he has confessed, giving in ex~ change his testimony against the Presi- dent of the United States on a charge or crimipal OOnspiracy. OtHer testimony yet to come, beyond that d! Conner Attorney General John Mitchell, may supply additional facets of circumstantial involvement which would be deemed admissible in court on a con- spiracy charge such as that to wbich one Nixon official has already pleaded guilty. IN mE extremely important technical legal sense, therefore, the committee under Chairman Ervin's chairmanship is laying the basis for a criminal pros- ecution which might include the Presi- dent, or for his trial before the Senate. There is nothing haphazard about this, y,·hatever may be said about suspending judgment Wltil all the evidence is in, and whatever complaints about the hearsay nature-ol the evidence. The legal baSiS for prosecution is being laid carefully and with much forethought. None of this can have escaped President Nixon's legal mind. A factor he will hav e to consider is whether or not, despite his pleas ol in- nocence. there is an actionable case against him in the stricUy legal sense. Quotes Taylor-Burton Split Crushes the Last Illusion lJyman Jampol, L.A. Pb y 1 Jc a I tbcrapJst, 011 exercise -"Jogging gets you up early and gives you bad feeL A better way . ' . is gentJe, euy stretch- ing." Herbert Bauer, Davis -"The time may yet come when mankind wlll realize that kllllng solves no probletll3, that wars can only be lost , never won." WASHINGTON -I~ Jove no longer. as Henry Kissinger would S<IY, a \'lable op- lion? Liz Taylor and Richard Burton have broken up, but thi s isn't Just another movie star marriage smash·up. This was one marriage we cared about. If they could make it, there was hope for the mt o! us. We cherished f.b. and Burton ~ause lt "'Ill obviou!I to anybody'Who had the price of the National EnQWer thlt theirs WUD1t fhc idealiZL-d romaQCC which we can't beUeve In or ev~ make (I.In of. We used to ridJcule .hose tlnds or roman-# ces ln secre1, embar'- rassed expedollon of beiog part or one. Thal was a loa.1 time 'P!go. ·Now we're reolletlc fftOU(b I<> oee what's unre1ll1Uc. Now we UYe 1n ttxual and romanUe ir"""""'7--W~ doo't uu..t each ot.h~ o.nd we don't trust ounclvcs. The. other day Marvin Mandel. tht Governor of ~taryland. issued a press statement -yuk, what a way to end a marriage -saylng he was splitting o!J from his wife of more than three decades. fie sald they'd talked It <Net and they 'd agreed he should rtm0ve himself and marry the woman he lovtS. Jt iOUnded llke Edward VJll's •~ dicaUon. and lots of people laughed, and they 13ughed more when lJhe issued lltr ilatement saylng she didn't know the Orst thing about it, and ht hadn't men· tloocd It when he got oot of their bed that morning. Ugh! 'J\renty mlllion Amtrican men. conl<!mplatlng the •me act, mUJt have !olt as H he had upooed lhtlr lnl<nlion1 lo thclr wives, and 40 rnillkln American women must have had their !etn rein-forced. That man, ibol pan.-, lhlt htlpmate, that flthu, thl1 kwer, tblt husband, lhlt peno11 whom I've lllowtd to 5hape the ombifnc:o of my I~•. !hat rotten falte lace 11 malting roady to dwnp me 1t the Cint evid«lct ol a •I· ging 1>!>5<m. WllEN politicians can kick thttr wi~et ( VON HOFFMAN ) out of the covemor's mansion -or try to, anyway -and still hope for re-elec- tion, thtn truly no aoclal sanctiona1 no ootslde force pushes lnword to ma!ntoln the union, and we are made to entrust ourselves to our perfldlous m1tes . Sex 14 st .. ping oround and msrrt111e Is ltbop- plng around, and no more rt!......,. to the -trap. Havt you noticed bow huJblnci.wll• jotd ha•• cbanledl They -1<>--m-be!ng .wet on eodt odttt aod with -other, but 11 the !Int llllJ 11 --true, the -llmoot 111'/tr 11. 'Ille -port of the bo•lne• i.. lhlt .. -ell lbl< IDd otlll ... must hlf'e our exdullYt, ~an*-m1te1. /Sarne -llld they -1i1n·1 and 1<1 up --~ -obortly Jnolt clowa llllo aell of couplet living ~. qull'l'tl!ng and jelloua. And ollitrs thliu&IM to ti• lh<maelves tofl•lher through the bofld or perhaps bondage or conunon nesh of children, and when that dldri't "-ork, the Lesbians walled and caned to the straight womfll ·to come live with them 90 they wouldn't be hurt by men and some few women have Md they ha•• been burl by other women. EVERVWllEllE, It aeems, people complaill that love dies on them, th< fresh fun fades, as maybe It always did, but now tbe partner• move on, freed of the constraints to cleave to each other ln hatred and boredom but ol>o fret<! of the ,_alty I<> find GUI II love can be IOlld when no loacer crisp. The lul ellort In lhll direction -tbt 8aturti.t1 ,qllt mat .. 1wapptng plrti!I. Well, In ...,.., to )')Ur questloll, Mr. lnqulriog Reporter, which I 1-yoo)I put in your new9(>tper being as It miCbt belp othen the. "'IY it helped us, it's orgies that have avtd our marrtace. Orgled out, but etttolnly noi· '" haLSttd, we take ICOtch leave, claw 1t each other In the divorce courta or ...,.,..ie Iii • d•lllud ...,, I<> II" forth ll1d r.nd another with ..trim Jo fall 1gsln. But not exactly, becauSe there \\·ere Liz and Burton, the example or how a bnd marriage can be good. None of us knew how bad or how good. Alt we knew is that they fought in publlc places. and we imagined that our defi- ciencies were theirs. We imagined drink . }ealcJusy, lechc!.ry, a thousand midnights of the mind, humiliations, she gone to ratty indulgence, he to arrogance and waste, but they must have needed each other, must have loved each other, and u long as they did we J\ad reason to think there was someone in .some olfice, in ...., party, in 1101DO dassroom, who could put up with eoch of us and with whom we could put up, lovin( ind ICl"ltdling ll1d !O'OIJDing and maklna ocenH but loving and making' rocoo- dllatlons, too. Liz and Burton gone bust, the re- malnlng romance we could believe in wlthoot r .. tlni silly; lben mml•1• I• for getting com/Y. ror plumping the pillow• (IQ tho death bed, and ror 1dmittin1 th•t for living or dylng, !or ,...... grander than ~mo\ole Jtan or stars-ol ony J)ther kind, love Is ~ longer a viable option. GIMM COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. \Veed, Publ.i.thtr T/101M1 Keevil, Editor Barbara Kreibich Editorial Page Editor The cdllor1al ;pa."f! of lhc Daily P,lot tttkt to inform and 1Umulate rnctera by P~tlne on thla: pqe dtvttat fcomm,.ntary · orri 10p!cs or m. tlfttt by qndlcaifd mlutnn1tt1 and cartoonlltt, by P"Mdlna a fontm. 1or retdtrt' Vftl and: by )lftlefrtll'llf du. nCW1P1ptt01 oplnklfts and W.U on eumnt toplca. The f'dltorlll optnkq of Ute Daily Pl.lot appear only in the edhoNI rolumn at the top 0( the Pill•· Opinkms ecpetwd by the cof.. l,ltJ'lnfttl and CU100rll$tt and le«« wrtttra an their own and no~ mmt of h:lr vten by ltht Daily Pilot-ldbe- -· '.l'hursday, July 12, 1973 \ • • Thurwla7, July 12, 197) DAILV PILOT . Building Leak-proof Offi~e Cox •• • • • • • ••CLIP & SAVE• • • • • • • "° • Man Held 17 Hou,rs In Error WASlllNGTON (UPI) -In lhe wl aiJ: weelts special Watergate pr_o__jfCUtor Archibald N. Cox fiis been building a leak·prool head· quarters offi~, apparenUy designed lo keep him fl'Q__m being victimized by the same ki..t of spying and sabotage that triggered the Watergate scandal. Veteran Suh Rescued From Scrap CH ICAGO (AP) -'nte ~versides, a veteran Wotld War 11 submarine credited with sinking 29 Japanese ships and darnag~ 15 more, will retire to a musewn instead ol a scrap heap. 1 The Combined Great Lakes SA!'.i FRANCISCO IAPl -A Naval Aaaociailon hol launch- Saratoga businessman was ar-en a Save Our Sllversldes rested at the airoort and jailed 1 campaign 3imed at rest()fing fo r 17 hours until San Mateo-the rusty sub as a museum County deputies discovered piece. they had the wrong man on a The Navy this wtek turned rob~ry w11rrant. says the the sub over to the associa- sheriff's office. tion. a oonprofit organiz.ation, James T. Craig_ 49. an au to in dockside ceremonies. parts manufacturer, said he on hand for the ceremonies would sue several police agen-'"'as the Silversides' first cies after he spent the night in wartime skipper. 'Retired Rear "a filthy, overcrowded cell Adm. Creed Caldwell Burl- with 15 other persons" at ingame, 68, of Mount Redwood City. Pleasant, S.C., commanded Spokesmen for the San the vcese1 when lt sailed out tJ Mateo County Sheriff's office S:in Francisco Bay on Us and San Francisco airport maiden.voyage in 1941. police blamed the San Fran-BtD"llngame calll'd t b e cisco Police Dcpartm.ent and Silversides a "symbol of its computer for Inaccurate in-American integrity" and said rormation-leading to the false it w~§_fitling she should 11relt arrest. her ... weary bones here. in _The San Francisco Police Chicago, Where she apent the blamed airport police for oot better part of her Ute." requesting more detailed in- formation . Craig was stopped ~1onday · at s·p.m. at the San Francisco Airport by airport police because he did not have a 1973 registration sticker on his license plate. A San Francisco police computer showed a rob- bery warrant for a James T. Craig. Craig was taken to San 1.1ateo County Jail in Redwood City and booked on the war- rant. It wasn't until after 10 a.m. Tuesday, his lawyer obtained his r e I e a s e, and profuse apologies from the police, he said. CdM Graduate Earns Degree Tom Kier Jr.. graduated with a B.A. in History from California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo. He will continue work for hll secondary teacher's credential and a Master's in F.ducallon. A graduate of Corona del Mar High School In 11168 itnd Orange Coast College in 1970, be ls the 90n of Tom N. Kier and the late Mary E. Kier of Corona del Mar. You are cordiaUy invited to RB '73 Fall Preview at every RB showroom-store. On t>iew, the newest, , brightest looks from the recent home furnishin gs markets and original designs from the RB factory put together in RB designed decorator room setting1. See the styles, the fabrics, the fin ishes , the col.ors, and the accessories you'll be wanting for your home t/1is fall . Ow· fre e decorating serolce is available to assist you In planning your selections so that you can count on earliest poulble de livery of advance merchandJse. ..... WAT•..-nm-a 1aw.- _., ... ,.,lllllli•MDICMl'l.tl""11'.t· .. ~' a.UWt&•·-lm._.,t ,_. __ •ntU:DlCOMJOSKJlllCll • "'°DUMJrT·ez1:tSWWWI .. ,_, Kids Like To A-sk Andy • elevators J 1 lmmedlately monitoring the TV screens. subsequent cover-up: the ac-• tracked on ooe ot three Vlsttors are screentd and tlvltlet of the \Vhite ll~ • oblcure televilion cameras, workers Inside must wea'r "plumbers" for med to plug • monitor«! by t'A·o guards ln a i.n..i 11 . 0 l'k security leaks. und tho role doorlesS and unmarked en· u.ouges at a limes. ut un 1 e they playt.od in lhe burglary of • • ORANGE COUNTY PIANO SERVICE • ' • • • Cos and • Ital! ol about ao llW)WI and 20 clerical wort... ba'fe laken over JllOlt of tbe aintb !Joor of a new downtown building t h r e e blocltl nortboul ol lhe Whllt -· lryway off IO the side. Any = ~~~· [J~.~~~ the om.,, ol o poychiotrilt lor • PIANO TUNING & REPAIR vbi~:wt>o ~t beAd for he • Daniel Ellsberg: -campaign • · r • the e ay or to the only watching during 1 Senate contributions: dirty trick! and • • W•terpteJ1earlngs. There arc S other prlVate otnce on the on1y three sets in lhe offices sabotage: a:nd the ITT an· • -Your atisfaction Guarentttd • A.ND WHILE a persisteftt telephone caller could even- tually fiDd their nwnber from information, there •re few otMr ••YI the public would know of the location. 'nle of. fice is not llsted on tbe direc- tory in lho lobby ol llle building, nor ii a notice po11ted ... lhe Jtinlh Door lllell. But anyone emerglng from one of four ninth noor floor ls Im mediate I y ·~ and Cox. aides saJd, rarely Utrust case. by • proached by one of the guards. watches. prefetTing Inst ead to In addition the orfice is • rely on transCrlpt.s provided by coord inating the cose ogainst • Master Piano Tuner & T echnici1n • THE GUARDS also monitor the committee. fi noncier Hobert L. Vesco. • • an elaborate system o t v.·hich is bcin~ prosecu ted by • DOnald D. Tiffany • burglar alarms hooked up ta COX EXPECTS to add thn C.S. attarncy far lhe • • d®rs_&DdJQ....\j'IP-t ... Mtt<t on !ll~ another 25-per&ONI to bi.s staff, ~Ulbern.Jtis1ril'l of Ne"' York. • CALL ,831.()860 • windaws. At night, special at-but already he has formed five r.1001 of the en1ploycs. one any movement in the ball, points of his investigation : the the idea tht•y v.111 be there for • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. tachments alert the iuard! to task forces covering the main aide said . havt-sign<!d on with • 0 even if they happen oot to be Watergate brea.k-ln itself and at least two years. ~~~~~~~--~~~~.-.;...__..:.:.....~~~~~;:_~~~~~~~~- I ' ee For to celebrate the opening of our Newport Beach office Save up to $24 a year!• When you open a Checking Account for $100 or more at our Newport Beach of- fice on or before August 31 , 1973, arfd mainmin a $100 minimum bal - charge . If your minimum balance falls below $100, your account will ' be transferred from Free Checking to o ne of ou.r other convenient chec ki ng account plans. '"free Pers o nal Checking" could • ance, yo.um get tree pers.onal check-!C~~== Ing. You'll be able to write as many checks as you want each month and never have to pay a monthly service save some of our customers up to $24 a year and some customers of other banks even more. Be sure to visit us during Open Hol_ISe week July 9 through July I} ' Open a Savings Account We're giving away for$~ or m,ore and ('.i: 10 HEAD TENNIS RACQUETS! receIVC ••• FREE... .,,/~, 10 TENNIS BAGS! 48 CANS OF YOUR CHOICE OF 1. "The Book of Tennis" by the editors of World Tennis Magazine, 2. Two cans of Tennis balls, 3. Sunset's, ''Beachcomber's Guide to the Pacific Coast," 4. Sunset's, "How to Fish the Pacific Coast,'' s. Sunset's, "California Wine Country,'' or 6. Sunset's, "Seafood Cookbook." Free drawings for Vclluable Prizes On "lucky Friday the 13th"I. Fill out your entry and put it In the entry box in our lobby before 4 p.m. Friday, July 13. You need not be pres- ent at the drawing to w in. Drive-up window banking hours 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. Monday- Thursday. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Fridays . ·. TENNIS BALLS! FREE for everybody! A copy of "STAN SMITH'S TENNI S TIPS." Regular banking hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday-Thursday. 1()a.m. to 6 p.m. Fridays. Refreshments! will be served all during Open House Week. Our two drive-up teller windows mean fast service without even leaving your car. Or when you come into the bank, 1here's a large parking area for our customers. e Bank of California 1<401 Dove Street, Newport Place, Newport Beach, California 92660 (714) 833-3511 Warren P. Thompson, Vice President and Manager easy. ............ ~tU. ....... f.0.1.C. \ I 8 DAILY PILOT QU1ENJE By Phil lnterlandi ,, C .. , .. t -•..,•• "'""~•"· 1.._, ltJ). W..t.I '""'" • ._..,t ..,l'hc l u1cr11a[ l{t:\'l'll Ut: Scrv1\.·C t ailed. J{un lor \lJUr Ille!" · Fears Arrest .... Nude Pe1~former -To Foresal{e U.S. ' Ex-POW Gets Bonus-a Wife Six·)'e<1 r Vietnc1n1 Prisoner to Wed Nurse CHICOPEE, Mass. CAP I - Air f'or('t Capt. JMtph ~1111111.an is drawing & dividend fron1 net•rl} six \'l':lrs spent as a pr1$0nt>r of \\'at in North \'i~·1n:1m \'."hile undergoing tre:ilmC"rl af!flr hi.~ release. lhc 31-~•enr-old ni!Qt n1rt a \Yestovt>r Air f orrr A<1S<' nurse. Cap1 i\Iary Bund11 of Lafayrllt-. Ind. Capt. ll und:i JOined ·the nurse corps mnrr than a ~·e11r befo re :O.lilligan "'ns shul do"'"· 1'he ('(}upl c has announced p!:.ins lo rn:irry at the base or the SOvlet Union a co l- lcctloa of lndliln pottery and jewflr sod a drum and knchi"a doll. the latter model· cd after a deified. ancestral spirit of his tribe. * KEl\'TFIEl.D. Cal if. (AP) - A bandana around her head to kf'CP her curls out of the 11·ay., I.aura \Valker. 12. works in an electronics labrirator~'. on~ of 00 gifted children lured from \·acation playgrounds to col· lc>~e classrooons bv a fl('\\' pro· gr;im :>·t !h" ('ollr~e or ,.1arin. ('hnpcl lat('r f h is monlh. c ) before .\1ill11:an enters ll ul(!'?rS PEOPLE liniVl'r~ilv ifl the f·ilt t•ri{if'- Air FO"I'" . .-oonsor~hio. fi e is ._ _______ ...; won the nation's highest nw11rd tor battlefield heroism in Vietnam in 1969. Complcllng his final )'ear in Industrial arts and engineering at San Diego State UnJverslty 'unde~ an ArlT'.y program. he's due 10 graduate next month. The fnther ol two , Dun&l!,an. 39. lhinks his return to colle~e "will help me understand the younger · m.en coming into the Army." "I believe the sludcnls are n1ore Cree-thinking and rea dy to question '.''hat's put to lh,.111.'' Dunagan added. "I think that's the basic dif· fcrent between the '70s and the early '50s ." fro1n Annandale, N.J. -* * "I've never done anyt hing ATHENS ~AP1 -Beauty ALBUQ UERQ UE. N.~1 . IA P) like .this before. but I made n had ist 0\\'fl reward for -An Amcric:in Indian is on radio.'. said Lau,.a. "It gc!s leelvlsion actress and model his 11·nv ro Hussia bearin~ eight stations. I really like it." Amanda Jones of Evanston , gift s. fl(' is Barrv Pais."l no. 14. Another of 1he youngsfer s fll.. h('re lo compete in the junior high school pupil and 1vorking at college level is l\.liss Universe contest. Said an Acoma Pu()hlo Indian. Troy Fotchman. spec ial izing the brnwn·haired , brown"{!yed I/r's thr onl.v Indian a1no11g in speed read inc: and media 2b-year-old. ro ~'ru1ni:: A'llcricans planni ng c,;pJo.ration. l·le r instructor. "Being chosen Miss USA or to spend 3 1 ~ weeks at an in· Jny Stryker: "She's 12. and doing well in this contest, or lcrnational youth can"J) on lhc she's done in 111·0 ~'eeks what even winning it, is nQl the Bla('k Sea. sponsored bv the some of my college students most important think !or me. National Council of Soviet-work on all scmeste.r.' \Vhat. matters is that through America n Friendship. lnc . il all I managed to C{)me to Barry left \\lcdnesda y tor an * G.recce. For money and work orientation course in Roscoe, SAN DIEGO -fAPI reasons it would have been N.Y .. and is due in t.Toscow J\1aj. Kern Dunagan took time impossi ble otherwise. next wl'Ck. out !ron1 ('oltege tG win the "l\.1ost people think that ac· w~t f"\Cll(&:!> 1'.ic. ~·,ao~ \..unc:.\. J: .I.5~ DORE S d;~\U'U\t '? ~V.\!. we.a.r~ ~n~ ~hlOO!:. +t'OM T\.\E $\.\\R\ .S1'LE :!>3.3 e . ' '1 ~ ' . • ple.o..se jo~ US. cU noon . iao\A' I\ l..1 ~ '"'-. d'1tteraru IS~'DCRES 33 3 b~ !aide. ~.-: nc.w,-o"t bc.o.c.\.. PITTSBURGH (U PI\ -Add the name " Valerie Craft to the list of casuallies resulting from the U .S. Su pre me Court's tough new anti-0bscen· ity ruling. While in Russia . on behalf of l\1edal of 1-lonor -quite a bit tresses are rich, but it's only being used as a pawn by local the United States Barry will of time. He Jen junior college ~he bi g stars that OOn't mayors. district attorneys. ~P".''':'"'~nl'_'!lbe~N~a~t~io"'n"'-al~M~u~seu"""m"--~;n1_'!195~1 ~to~jo~;n"_l_th~c~A:'rm~y ,~an~dl_s~t.".ar~'~'e~!~' -------~~~ councilmen and elected judges!· seekin g to further their own careers. I \Vas arrc~ted in Kenosha because of two ('Oun· cilmen. I wa'sn 't dall('ing nude." Valerie . chosen 1972 '-1i:ois Nude America at a nudist camp in Roselawn. Ind .• said she also was ar· rested a year ago i n Evansville. Ind., but was the first performer in Indi ana history to be acquitted or public indecency. A forn1e r Miss N u de America. Valerie told a news con(erence she intends to foresake U.S. nightlife forever and lake her 37 ·22·37 dimensioru1 to Euro~cause the court ruling gave local of· ficials greater leeway in dete~ what is ob.scene. "I ust?d to appear totally nude, but now J have 10· wear • Bandaids ">n my ni pples and a G-string," said the 22-year.old former Pla.vboy bunny from Chicago. ., She said she intends to leave for an engagl'lrlleJlt in London after cl05ing t:1Cr' show July 21 at a local club, after a tW().(!ay appearance in Jowa City and after her Uial Aug. 10 in Kenosha. \\!is., ~n charges of If convicted at Kenosha, she said she could be sentenced to as much as 10 years in prison. Insisting she is innocent, Valerie said she would never appear in a pornographic prir duction and personally prefers "old Clark Gable and Jean Harlow movies. that sort of thing." nude and rasciV.ious dancing. 0 R A N G E ·1 WYE MY 1•rore.,ion. but C O U NT y I'm a little woniied I might be arrested again,·· sakl Valerie. F A I R "ActuaUy. my show was basically mUd. 1 started out -~wnti Ii tffilltlonal costume-act D-1 S-C:-O U N T and, as soon as I'm nude , I just posed. Now. -"" got to be T I C K E T 5 really careful. I can't even do AT ALL bumps and grinds." HARBOR CENTER To demonstrate her· sin-STORES eerily. the brown-..ered brune~·j~~~~~lf!ll'~· ~~"!"'~ le wore a revealing .halter.and-I..; slacks outfit to the .news con- ference and was accompanied by her husband, Ear\ Kitover, a Chicago chair mantLfacturer. "I know everybody thinks this is a publicity sturf.. but I could have come in tte r.e nak· ed." she said. "This whole porno bit is a matter or politics. "BECAUSE OF my nzme and publicity I'm afraid .of ' ·-l--''"''"~=·~··7....._•·· ;~~ i 1. amama OIWIGE ~ CQlII OLll CCUNtt Miil llm 'l3 rm. I .m.TS-15 Fosr, Thorough, Guoronreed Real Estate Sales and or Broker license TRAINING Phone lor Free Folder I ANTHONY SCHOOLS HAlllOI CENTll n• M•Alr Cenltr Ct•ll Mn.a, (llilen1l1 '1t. 17141 t7t•2JSJ 1711 S, lrwkh11r11 St. ..... ~"'' C11. ,,... Ph. 17\41 776·5100 REFLECTIONS •• Reyn Sheffer "For th•y can c:onqu•r who belln"• th•Y c1n ... " Virgil 11tis "Id prov1•rb lrlls us !lint tht' first nnd forrroost requl.~i tr ror ~ucc~11 . is 11~•' lndlvidunl's l'H•Hef Hl his nh!llty 111 l'l•ach n rlPsircd 1-:UAl It Ont•sn 'l 111-cNisarily folln1\· that fa\U1 el1111<' is an 11uto· llllt l lt• j.':UIU'llrlll'i' tlf ~UCf'f'SS. Exprrlcnt({. knn1vlc>d ll.C' nnd n1 un v "th<•r busir \110IS IX'· I culir;1· In th<' jnh 11L h:1nd niusl br nv11!111bl•'. f[1111•1'V1'r. a ~/iun1inl{ 1hr1t thr individual loO<i~f'~~f'~ All 01• f~U'l Of l hC 1 nf'(!P11~11ry tuuls , bC'lll'f then h1•('um1...; II tnajnr ftil'll)r ill rcalizln£: any chO!!r.n 1t1l81. UlltsUS Cbildm 1·11100 hUr I I'm ~~~~~~~~~~;11 \V,· ah1 11)o; pro1·i1lt• a l'Om· r pli•lr, l.l"l'i;Onal nnd dill'nlfied FOR ADVERTISING IN OUT 'N' ABOUT PHONE NORM ST AN LEY 642 -4321 ' ' '"'!'\'\Cl' f<>r cvl'ry f11mll y 1vhn ~··•·k~ fl\U' hr lp. Our fri,-.nrtly vrt ··fri rient i:1·rvi('r 1~ !'I'll· {1,•ri•r\ \.\·1Th "'"Ill con<.'t'l'n fnr lhl' r<'t.·Hnl:'!l of 11111$<' 11e Rr·rvr cStttsFF€K mokTU.t.KY LAGUNA IEACH 976 SOUTH COAST HIWtiWA't' 494·1 IJS SAN CLEMENTE ISJJ NOlTH El CAMINO ~EAL ••t-0100 ONEYWELL PENTAX SPOTMATIC II with F 1.8 LENS e SUflf:ft·MULTl·COAT£0 TAKUMAll! lfNS e THll!OUGH THE LfNS METERING e X, ffl, HOT SHOE WITH SHOCll·flltEVfNTING SAFETY SWITCH e SE.lf·TIME.lt • ASJ. RANGE. FROM JO TO JJOO 259.95 MFG . LIST PRICE 349 .95 S .~EC ' .; . . 'f'ff '8111111 WITH PURCHASE OF SP II . ,·CAPROFL66 ' STROii ·· · :: , . , · COMPLEM WITW 'BATTERY RfC~.AR~R : • Qu/ck Ch1r11 El1ct1onic Flas"h •Bult!· In PC1Co!tfKlln1 Cord • Bu llt·ln Nic1d B1t1n1 • , • • 120 VA~ 8'11try (;h1r11r · indl;,1se · •·, 1 ' '' · I. • , JJ.95. Y.\LU! . ' " BAUER C1M SUPER 8 MOVIE ' r. ' :, • . • J ~o.::. »-. ' ti t • ... J, " ". ' .. . ' • ' l i ~· COLOR PROCESSING WITH JUMBO COLOR PRQfTS FROM KODACOLOR, GAF OR FUJICOLOR 11 IXPO!llR.1 fllM 229 .Yi~LL PENTAX TILEPBOTO LENS · ·:1 13SM M SMCT F3.S ,. . . • Mulll·Co1Un1 C11ts Slll'flct fttfltclio11·· Tr1111mlls up lo 50% Mort l llhl • ---~I 'i ' ,, -· ' "',. I\!" • Ullr1YiOl ll R11 s .,. Rtlltcttd • Suptr· Mull l·Co1tl111 Is 1 H1tde1 . Tou1ht1 Co1tln1 109~95 MFG . LIST PRICE 179.95 • BUILT·IN NICAD BATTER'f' WITH RfCHAltGER • BUILT IN ELECTRONIC E'f'E • COLOR CORRECTED FS., LENS • DOUBLE EXPOSURE PREVENTION e MADE IN U.S.A. 79.95 OUR REG . PRICE 19.95 JUMIO COLOI /(;./lii.ii'r. K41& IESULA STIOll e Hot Sllot or Jt11. Fl••h SJ e With Bvllt·ln Nl·CM a1t•r1 .encl Rtc:h•llt • R1t1c l•1 In 10 Stc1. e G1114e nllMtr Sl (IHI, SI ASA fll•) 11.S llllSTOL AT SAN Dll4K> HWY, -PMONI tff.JJ7J MON •• TUii, • WID •• THURS. • SAT. -10. 6 Fii. 11 • t ; SUN. 12 INeet1J t• I • • • even1 Yo u see, we have more services than other banks. Not t hat you'll use theni all. Yo u won't. But it's nice to know every banking need imaginable is covered. And under one roof. More likely, you'll be into things that make day-to-day living simpler. Like the services we describe below. Of course, of greatest importance is how we view the banking relationship. It colors everything we do. Courteous personal service: We fee l banking is a person-to-person matter. So we value the human touch. With us, your needs are as individual as you are. That's why pe rsonal service has always been important at Bank of America. Personal Choice Checking and Savings: We have four checking plans to choose from. Beautiful scenic checks, too. And we offer many different savings plans. For example, our regular savings account gives you in-and-out flexibility. And our three new Investors Passbooks earn you 6V2o/o annually for a two and one-ha lf year account, 6% for one year, 5V2o/o annual interest for 90 days. $500 minimum d!!pos it. Simplified monthly statement: This statement simplifies balancing your checking account. We call it the Timesaver® Statement. It can even include a summary of your savings accounts and other information if you wish. You can tell at a glance where you stand. -·•""' •'11'1 "l.U ... •lf•ll,.. \ • esc1ssors ' ' Three ways to finance your car: Only Bank of America gives you th ree different ways to finance your car. Ask your auto dealer about our Auto-Magic Financing, the rock-bottom monthly paymen t plan., Or about leasing. · Then there's our regular auto loan. We've made more of them than any other.bank in California. See your dealer or local Bank of America. Of course, we make lo~ns for just about anything else you can· think of, too. Red Carpet Service: Our own special system to serve you promptly; save you time. And nobody peers over your shoulder when you transact your business. Most of our offices have it. Automatic Transfer Service: . . . Makes regular savings deposits or loan payments for you automatically, from your Bank of America checking.account.·Saves time, simplifies things ... Especially helpful when you're ill-or· out of town. · Buy 1ny !mount of Bank of Ar:nerica Travelers SS,000 of Travelers Cheques would be $60.00. With 1 Cheques up to $5,000-payno more !hen aS2.00lee. this coupon-goad 11 any Bink ol America office in ..._ b For example, the normal I 'Vo charge for purchasing California-you would save $48.00. I I I I I I I I • OFFER EXPIRES SEPTE~BER 28, 1173 .. NAME (Pl.EASE PAINT) • I I I I I I I 1. \ More offices up and down the state: No other bank can say that. Wherever yo u live or shop or work, yo u'll always find us close b)'· o you can cash a ch eck wheneve you want. Also, we can transfer you checking and savings accounts wherever you move in the state -save you time and red tape. BankAmericard f For everyday shopping convenience, special occasions or emergencies. Good throughout California, the_ United States and around the world. One monthly bill helps 'you keep track of expenses. • 3 great couppn offers: These coupons represent some real banking valu e.s. • Big savings on Bank of America Travelers Cheques. • A free Family Financial Planning Kit-fir st-rate help in'planning family goal s. • Your first order of 200 scenic or other premium checks -free. You can see why we think you should bank with us. Mo re services mean greater scope to meet your needs. As you grow, we're with you. Eve ry step of the way. Let's get better acquainted. m BANK . • OF AM.ERICA for the busness cJ liv'ng Bank of America Offices: Fountain Valley 17430 Brookhurst St., Fountain Val le'f Cosla Mefa · ... S48W 19thSt.,Cos1a Mesa Soulh Coasl Town Center 3300 Bristol St., Costa Mesa Harbor-A.dams 2701 A Harbor Blvd,, Costa Mesa lrvlne Campus 4201 Campus or .. Irvine Newport Beach ~444 Vla ltdo, Newport Beach Newport Center 500 Newport Genier Or., Newport Beacti We1tclltt PlaUI 1016 lrv1ne Ave .. Newport Beach Brookhurat·Ad•ma 10121 Adams Ave .• HuntinQton Beach Beech-Atl•nte 21022 Beach Blvd .• Huntlngk>n Beach Huntlnoton·H•rbouf 3166 Admiralty Or., Huntington Beach Main •nd Elll• 18691 Main St., Huntington Beach Sprlnod•l•Edlnger 15672 Spr1ngdate St. Huntington Beach .. -·- ' JO DAILY PILOT 'A' Test Security I Tightens PAPEETE, Tahiti (AP) Thursday, July 12, 1973 Utilities Report Southland Facing Critical Shortages LOS ANGELES (AP) -"WE ARE considering what next May if aomethinf lln't Tum out the lights, use the we call a 'rolling blackout.' done soon. barbecue for cooking dinner, This would be a curtailment of "This" would obviously be forget the television set and power on a neighborhood-lo-only a temporary solution. And don't bother setting the alarm neighborhood bnsis. We would probably a complete solution simply tul'(l the power on for would be nuclear power clock: ~ Angeles f~ces a an hour or two some time dur~ plants. Why, if a major critical power shortage. ing the early momlng hours. nuclear power plant had been DAY CARE This pl•n •Dows ftmilie• to leove loved ones of •ny •99 duri119 the doy to '9Ctivo tho finest supervised core, nouri.hing mo.ls, end ,... hoblllt•tion if required. F•minos can be confident thot •I ,.,,.ices •re rendered in •• •trnosphoro of sociobitoty end friendly compotobility wltli potients tnd st•ff. At tho dose of th. doy, your loved ont is reedy to return home with tho ftmily. : .. ==~---.._Jiiir~W!ii!§ll Vhhfl ..._. w.ac ... hMtfy M..., CeM"8111c..t H..,...I 11411 ~ c., ....... ClfllhW ..... 4tW716 '· ~ French pollce took precautions 1 today against any attempt by topponents or li'rench nuclear test! to hijack a French plane a1\d ny it over the test site in lhe South Pacific. With the first ex:plosion in France's 1973 test series ap- parently imminent, armed guards were put on all French commercial planes Oying Into This •was the w a r n i n g There would obviously be approved iil1 a timely manner Wednesday as representatives' -~lim~it~ed~incon~'Gven~ie~llCi!~~t~o~the~~y~ea~r&~ag~o~,~w~e~w:oo~l~dn:'~l~be~-ln~~~"'!'!~~~~~~~~~"'!'!~~"'!'!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ of Southern California power . public. And I'm talking' about this room today." ( __ B_RI_EF_S _) and out of Papeete. All passengers and their bagg&fi!'.e were clolely searched at the airport. A French order barring all unauthorized ships and planes Cram the seas and skies for 72 miles around the test sUc in the Mururoa Atoll took effect :·at' ·midnight Tuesday. But weather observation ships that left Papeete last Saturday were not expected to reach the Mururoa area before the weekend. Therefore it was believed the first blast would not be , set orr before the weekend or nei::t week . e Airlines WASHINGTON IUPll -An illegal $55.<m cash campaign contributi on American Airlines claimed was solicited by President Nixon 's persOAal lawfer.; ~ been ~!ij[tled by the Committee to Re-elect the Presldeiit. A spokesman for t'fie cam- pagn committee's f In a n c e division said Wednesday a clteck for the amoun t had been sent to th& airline. e Belfast Deatla BELFAST (UPI) -Police found the garrotted body of a man in a Roman Caholic area ot 1¥fast today while bonfires bunied in Protestant areas to celebrate a 28.1-year-old vic- tory that m,de them the dominant rorce _i!L_ Northern 1reland. Police said the man, who was not identified, w a s strangled with barbed wire. e V.S. Attacks PHNOM PENH, Cambodia lllas1ermb1d? Peter Raia, 44. was ar· rested by FBI agents Wedne8day as the al- leged mastermind of an international ring that attempted to dispose of $18 million in stolen and counterfeit securi- ties. Soviet Je-iv ,- lssue Aired WASHINGTON IUPI\ - Chairman ·J. Willi am Fulbright or the-Senate Foreign Relations Committee said \Yednesda y t9at main- taining warm Soviet-American relations is more important than challenging the treatment or Jews in Russia. "It is simply not within the legitimate range of our foreign policy to instruct the RUMians in how tQ_ t.reat. tJ]eir own peo- ple:· ·Fulbright said iq_. a speech prepared for t h i Arnerican Bankers Associa- tion, "any more than it is Communist Party I e a d e r Leon.id I. Brezhnev's business to lecture us on race relations or on such matters as the In- dian protest at Wounded Knee.'' companies testified at a Public Utilities Com~ion hearing looking into the grow- ing power problem. Some spokesmen, such as • those with Southern Call!omla Ed \900, said a power shortage would aflect residents as early as next May. Others, including a vice president of San Diego • Gu It Electric. said their fuel oil supplies were sufCicient through 1976 but expressed concern for the rest of the state and the nation. ALL AGREED, however, that unless new sources of power were found, or unless variances in existing air pollu- tion laws were permitted, there will be severe power cutbacks. Ed Myers Jr., a vice presi- dent in charge of Edison's communications and energy • m a n agement departments, spelled out the problem in nont~hnical terms. '"Right now we are limited to wing low sulphur fossil rue ls for the gener-atlorr of ·· ·• ;;;;. . power in-oor-pfents. We are· ·• ; · .. hoping to be allowed to use high sulphur fuel. That 'would be the simplest solution . "We used to spend $2 a bar- rel !or low sulphur fuel Crom Indonesia. Now it's $6 a barrel and you can't buy any at $7 for all practical purposes." \Yhat would sho rtage mean? (AP) -American planes at-I.~~"'!'~ t a c k e-d "·insurgent positions south of Phnom Penh today in !Upport of encircled Cam- bodian battalions . and other government forces battling for two small· bridges. U.S. 111 and F4 jet !ighter- bombers concentrated their attacks 10 miles south ol the capital near the junction or Highway 3 and Rural Route 38 and in the vicinity or the two small bridges seven miles to the east of Route 38. e llfls1ln9_Gl1 SAIGON fUPil - A search team descended \Yednesdav by cable from hovering U.S. Air Force helicopters through a jungle canopy in mountains about 190 miles from Saigon and recovered remains or Americans missing for six years. Brig. Gen. Robert C , Kingston said in a statement that the remains were taken to an tdenllflcatl on laboratory in Thailand , where he co111- mands a unit charged wilh ac- counting for 1.363 Americans listed as missing in actfon in Indochina and 1,100 unreCOffl'ed known dead. J Look_, IM 111q ·~~ill _...._ ........ lMndl • Dinn. Menu. CUP I SAVE T1tESE VALUA8'.E COOPOllSI NEWPORT BEACH, 3110 N•wpo" B(vd. HUNTINGTON BEACH, 9791 Adtmo , FOUNTAIN VALLEY, 16155 Horbw lllvd. • SHOP 'TIL 9 TONIGHT THE AMHllST • bft 1 , ............ ,... "'"" pk· ·t.re hi II C-P!Cf tn1lfted lhnh111ho W11l11-t..~-C"*"-t. Tlto11 I 01 chonie -a••r tG"/o S.lld Stm.. Solid Star. S11per Yldff R-.. T11Mr. C111· tombed t1111I ... A11to-tk Tint Guord C1111trol. 5" 1 J" Speoker. A_LSO AVAILABLE, (CALL FOR PRICE ) !2) MOOEL D4030 19" DCAG. TABLE MODEL (2) MODEL D4032 19" DIAG. TABLE MODEL (2)MODEL D474D 25" DIAG. TABLE MODEL (I) MODEL SD2550 25" DIAG. TABLE MODEL WITH REMOTE CONTROL INTERESTED IN 1974 MODELS? ASK ABOUT MODELS AND PRICES FUl.1. FEATURE 17" Dl~GONAL .:PO_llTAILE , .. , ' SA(E ·PRICE SAVE· $50. S29995 Medtl 7120 • A QUALITY SET TH.R°bUGHOUT THIS FINE JVC SET INCLUDES PRESET STANDARD; COtOA -CONTilo.L. (PSC) AUTOMATIC FINE TUNING CAFTl 'INTa'GRA,..D CJRCUITS (IC) PLUS PLU"'IN PRCUIT M!IDllLIS•POlt EASY SERVICING. HANDSOME WALN°?i GRAINID,' BINET,, , 1 , JVC J ' . ' •• SONY ' , ' .. BIG SAVINGS ON LAST FEW 1973 RCA's IN STOCK 18'' Dioga..a~ RCA 'S IJG.SCHIN COLQR PORT ABU THAT'S !ii.SY· TO·IUY • ,_,.,...._ c..W .,..... ,..;•1 pembJe -: ~::;.' .. ~=·.:.":c':~':@$27995 "'od•'" for ...., MfYklllf • Yhd caler fff• llltli ,_. ' ,.,_. ceMr hlbe -NOW IN STOCK ! ! • . -. 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CLARICON ''Electronics for the liome'' t'u. Ster"' - 275 E. 17th St. COSTA MESA 6:42-8882 Cell For Senlce ... ....~ ' 'HOlln; Dally t-6 i .Thur. 9.9 s..1 .. n. ...,._ ,.,._, 'J-• fl ts' e Oae '"' loltor , .. , .... e 011e yHr portl warruty • ffw.,... pkt11re t11be .•.. ,., -• ..... _,r1ca • 'OM.,... ...... ncJte...,. . , ... -.... ...... . e Frlelldly, perM11ol Mnlce - we KNOW a•r prlld.crs e11tl Mel ..... wlHI SllYICI CfJlflllCillll ·111 c11111'11sll .. llllEJIESI I i .. ' ... ~ ~- ·' Thursda~, Jul~ 12, llJ/J u.dL Y PILOT J / Mistake Raid Charges Fly -Gcnui11e IND l~N JEWELRY AUC IO N EDWARDSyD.LE, 111. (AP) • In a suit nled In U.S. -An Edwardsville man has District CoW1 in Sprinlfield. fUed a $1.6 million IUit clahn... John Meiners, fl, alleged lng federal narcotics agents agents from a federal unit in broke into his home, ter-St. UJuis broke into his farm rorized him and put him In jail home April 20, pla"'4 a 111111 to for four dayso his bead, handcuffed him and It was lhe third allegation of jailed him for four days. His miltaken drug raids I n suit said he was then released southern Jlllnois. without charge. the Justice Department wa.s informed or the aUegations in mJd-Ma,y and forwarded the lnlormailon oo tbe U.S. distriCl attorney in Springfield. Atty. Gen . Elliot L . RichardJon satd a grand jury which will convene in AJton Ju- ly 2G will investigate., in ad- dition to the two Collinsville other allegations they too wi ll be subjl'<'t to the grand iury in vestigation. The tY.-o ralds in Colllmville have resulted In a Sl million damage suit against t h e government by l\1r. and 1\1.rs. Herbert Ciglotto and a SI00.000 suit by !\tr. and l\trs . Donald Askew. FRIDAY, JULY 13. 7 :00 P.M. NO W..T -NO auu1v1 0Vll SJ0.000 '"'411t11toR -' tll• 11,.~,, GlNUINf INDIAN Jtwttl'I' ANO Alfl,ACTS. l'hl•olo, l 1111l, liopl, ~loo. ,,,.,..,.y OlO 'AWN PIKES, DO NOT Miil Tllll ON[ JAKl'S AUCTION 2722 No. MAIN-SANTA ANA (7t 4) J43·4941 raids, whether there were1--------------------------- other such incidents. In a related deve~t, l\feiners said the agents bad ~ ' · the government announceQ in no warrant, ransacked his C1ialle1ige the Ne ·ws Quiz '·\'. Washington that It tuLJ 5US"" house and fired their weapoos ==r;-· _ --~ for 30 days without pay dur_ing t~ raid. The DEA spokesman said this woukl Iuclude the Meiners complaint:-T"h e spoltesman said he was not aware of any other raids, but if there are -. seven agents IDVOJYea In the-A'SfJi'ikisman !Or'Oiet>ffig . on Sat;u riia.y's ·Family Page .,.....~~ • ''If you really like the picture I drew, Grondmo, how come .YOU hung it inside your closet door?" Death Driver? Caller Harasses _ Victim's Parents CHICAGO (AP) -In recent unsuccessful in tracing the ~ks ,Ann l\1oore has been calls. -getting '"telephone calls from a Mrs, Moore said a man Call· man who says he was driving ed her.,. on June 21 and said he the hit-and-run truck that kill· had seen the accident but ed the Moores' lO-year--0ld didn't want to get involved daughter, Denise. with the police. She convinced "He is a malicious man," him to call her lawyer. He dJd, Mrs. Moore said. "He thinks but wouldn't give his name. he is God and can make me In the first call Mrs. Moore atop chasing him. But I tell said the caller said he believed him 1'm goirig to keep . arter--the-:-J)trson who killed Denise him." did not know that he had done , Denise was hit by a red it. But six days later the same semitrailer truck on March 8 voice was on the phone, this as she left the restaurant her time admitting he was lhe parents operate . That driver. r_estaurant is now boarded shut. Denise's portrait is nail· ~ eel on the front door and her parentll say they now devote their time to finding her killer. Mrs. Moore and her husband Freeman began that search by '4 placing a n advertisement seeking witnesses to their daughter's death. "Be thinks lie b God and can make me stop cllaalng lllpa. But I tell lllm I'm going to keep after lllm.' "My ads are getting to his ~ feeling of guilt," Mrs. Moore said of the man who has been calling her. "He figures that if he harasses me, I'll stop advertising.'' Police say they have been "Apparently you didn't get much from your ad," Mrs. t.foore quoted the man as saying. "I waited fer the ix>lice to get me, but they didn't." The Moores continued to F lk D place the ads; the caller 0 s rop became more cruel. "Sometimes he calls and T S asks to talk with Denise," she een on said. "Then he says: 'Denise is here with me. She's not dead . She's alive.' On Highlvay p~ons'"':=ain°':z.t'!:J.. ~ keeps saying. 'You can't -get BAKERSFIELD (AP) -An Denise back.' I'm 00· idJot. I exasperated Oregon father, know I can't get her back. tired of bis son's nagging to "I've had four months of return to Anaheim following a horror," Mrs. Moore said. "I vacation, turned the boy loose Jost my baby. She meant on Highway 99 near here, everything to us, '.and I'm police said. trying to learn to live with it. Tho father of Gar)i Lewis, '-'But I think fer the sake of J~. was quoted as saying. "lf all humanity this kind of man you want to go back. go back should be stopped.'' yourself '' 1'iiiiiiOiii0iii0iiiiOiii0iii0iii0 .. I Tht:1 boy wa!i picked up 11 Tuesday night by a Highway Patrol officer, who took him to COLLEGE two mistaken raids i n Enforcement Administration Collinsville April Z3. -DEA -in Washington said • • • , . When,all the smoke h.as cleared away, the difference between one cigarette and another comes down to just this: taste. .For many years, the smokers of.America have known Winston tastes good like a cigarette should. ·But what is it that makes Winston taste so much more real and rich? The reasons are not very complicated. Still, we believe they are rather meaningful to anyone who smokes for pleasure. · a nearby all-night restaurant. The boy's family was there, suffering lron1 a change of heart, and getting ready to return and search !or the •.... 1 PHARMACY . I -abandoned bo) .. 4411 ,,Ir Dr, '"mrl~-··-·:.:::: •• 11. _Good_tohacco ••• and what must The ~rfect combination of filter and flavor. OUicer Wallet Pasc(t ad· vised Lewis that the Kern Count)·-d~trtct attorney ·takes 1a dim view ot fathers who turn childreri loose on the high\vays. Cntt Ml'M 54f.Dtl • PRSSCRIPTtoHS ' : ~~.?i~R •:s;~~L: e HUOSON VITAMINS e ·JOIST STOCKINGS eCAMl"SU~TS D9'1Y"1 s.mc. • MllfW Chl1"91 WAGNER CARPET CLEANING COMPANY EXl'ERTLY, GENTLY, EFFICIENTLY BRIGHTENS, RESTORES, PROTECTS ANY FARBIC, ANY TYPE including SHAG SATISFACTION GUARANTEED LOWESt PROF. PRICES COMMERCIAL ---DOMESTIC We Cle1n CARPETS RUGS DRAPES UPHOLSTERY . ' RE,AIRS A JANITORIAL SERVICES ARRANGED Pldc·Up •nd Deu-y Arr ...... for All Items C:IHMCI In our P11nt . ... tlooowNo 492•4414 15 y..,. ht ........ Try Saturday's News Quiz We Dare You be done to it Winston seeks out costly Vinmge Leaf, the most near ly- perfect tobacco on the market. We are not alone in our search for fine tobacco, but we like to think we buy more 'of it than ·anyone else. Then we age our tobaccos, like fine wine, in wooden casks. This makes them mellow, and enhances their natural flavor. And you can taste the difference aging makes when you light up a Winston. Fdter-Blend ••• the unique recipe for great taste. · Select, aged tobaccos are just the beginning. Winston specially processes and carefully blends these tobaccos, according to a unique recipe: Filter-Blend It's a fonnula known, literally, to jlJst a handful of men. It results in a richneM of taste, and fullness of satisfaction that more ilia1' justifies the secrecy surrounding it. ' The last thing you want a filter to do is filter out the tas te of your cigarette.That's why Winston spent a small fortun e marrying ou r own modem white filter to the Filter-B lend recipe. The result is the kind of filtration most smoker., prefer: a filter that does its job without getting in the way of the taste. A little more freshness every time you light up. It would be a was te of the ra re tobaccos, the time- consuming aging process, the meticu lous blending and painstaking manufacture if a Winston we re to reach you in the fonn of a stale cigarette. You should kn ow, then, that thanks to its popu larity, Winston is likely to be th e freshest cigarette you can buy. So that th ere's more going for you in a Winston th an just taste. There's freshness. .And that's every bit as important. / Now ask you™'lf one simpl e question . If you smoke for pleasure, and pleasure means good taste. isn't it time you . were smoking Winston? Winston Fl l.TER ·CIGARETT ES Wmstori tc1:stes good like a cigarette should. . I Warning , The Su1geon General Has Oete1mined Thal Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Heahh. / ' O •t >' • l •l'"O~tl lOl•CCO CO. - 20 mg,"ter', t.4 mg. nicotine av. per tige1e11e. FTC Repon FEB.73. • . ' ' ' ORANGE COUNTY FAIR DISCOUNT TICKETS AT ALL HARllOR CENTER STORES l 2 DAIL. Y PILO r Story A ward Sherry Angel or Estancia High SchooJ;"COsta Ptfesa, wan a cash award in a journalism contest sponsored by USC's School or Jou rnalism . Pwfiss Angel's story concerned. USC's 43th aruiual Newspaper Day, and had been printed in her school newspaper. MID -SUMMER SPECIAL famous Hlc~ory Fa.nns of Ohio BEEF STICK® SUMMi:~ !i:AUSAGE Fuel Fears Few State Tourism Hot SACRAMENTO CAP) Fears of a g83 shortage are hurting tourism in Nortbem California, but e I s e w h ere there's nary a clue of a crisis, the Division of Tourism has reported_, · Overall. the .state's 1thlrd largest Industry is "very healthy," said Gerald L. Baker. slate _manager or tourism development. Baker said a s pot check of tourist businesses shows that a "moderately good to very good " summer is shaping up. percent, and a 17 percent in- crease in the use of facilities at Yosemite National Park. ONE REPORT from a na- ~lonal tourist firm was called .. astounding" by Baker: The firm's New York office "\id that 90 percent of the packag- ed toUJ'a that hav~ been going abroad are this year going to California. For the future, foreign tourists are seen as a tucralive source of income for California, Baker said. "Take Japan. Th'ere are 1.3 million Japanese traveling abroad every year, and their ''word-ofo!ll(Klth reporta:'' from early vacaUoaera. "We tbtnk tbe people who went t. Europe -and aaw bow little their clollan would buy will infi""""' ~ who plan vacaUona in the late •wmn and fall," Baker aaid. "AUIO, THE Europel}ll Who came here hoping lo< a bargain will go back home saying that they found on.," be added. callfornla'a promotion ef. forts are being concentrated on, the "high-yield" travelers whom Baker describes as foreigners, airline customers and businessmen. The airline travelers come mostly from the Midwest, East Coast and South, an·d thit h•119 up •• 1hown it 14" long. $331.00 BEST BECAUSE ••. TWO LOCATIONS TO si:itVE YOU- So11th Co.If Pl.ui I TJi. M•ll of Ort n9• 540.1111 6]7.1111 COSTA MESA ' ORANGE You Won't Find Greater Versatility or Selection! IANKAMERICARO ~AASTER CHARGE REGULAR $2,59 LB. In one area, the gasoline fears have worked to California's advantage: The Palm Springs Convention and Visitors Bu reau reports that L-Os Angeles residents are going there to vacation instead of go~g oo to Las Vegas. ' N 0 R T H E R N CALIFORNIA'S visitors come largely from the Pacific Northwest, and largely by automobile, Baker said in an interview. Foreign touri8ta a ·re 1ee1a a• • 111· erath•e aouree of ineoille for Call• fornia. FURNITURE they tend to take two or three "-.....1 trips .a year rather than one. Businessmen, be said, iend to ' '-================================================================= NOW$2~~ WHOLE STICK $2.29 LB. ipendmont. ,_ "Tourists in a camper spend $6 per. day per person," he number is growing at a said. "The camping areas are phenomenal rate. -45 percent already operating near capaci· from one year to another. ty. So that's not the high They spend $425 per visit, priority target," he said. compared to nearly $200 for The division co n s i d e r s .tourists from the · United tourism as "a Io g i c a I Try Saturday's News Qui We Dare You Prices effective thru July 22nd Great for P'icnln, Vacation, Ioele hclclncr, etc. One motel in the Eureka area reported a 36 pen:ent drop in business so rar this month rompared to last year, after a 10 percent slump in June. Other California a r e a s receive far more vjsitors by air. he said. Overall, 16.~ million out-of·state visitors are expected to spend $5.2 billion in California this year, he said. Only agriculture and the Kingdom , and sor'newhere __ j•~l~te~rna~ti~v~e·_·~to:..::•th:::::•r:_::fo~nns=~o~fE==~================================ between $125 to $225 for out~· growth. state Americans," Baker said. Now l COlt'fflliHt Loccrtlo1t1 WESTCLIFF PLAZA 17tll & llYINE -NEWPORT llACH Opn: Mon.°Frl. 10 ...... t :)O-Scu. 'rU 6-:--Su•. 12·5 fOWN • COUNT•Y SHOPPING CENTE• -OllANGE Across from S.nl• Ar. F•~l!lon $q11•re 62 l'AiNION SQUAlll! -LA HA•llA AMlllCA'S LU.DIN• CHllSI slOllS ... a e r o s p ace-eleclronlcs in· '. duslries are larger. The brightest spots in the survey include a 40 percent in· crease in San Diego hotel revenue so far this year, a spurt in South Lake Tahoe motel reservations of 25 to 35 THE CAIJFORNIA state government only r e c e n t I y started promoting tourism in a big way. until 1972, the Division of Tourism's budget bobbed ·along below~ $95,000 a ' year. Then it waa boosted to the $300,000 bracket. By com· , parison, Baker said, Florida's budget of $850.000 last year rose to $1.7 million th is year. Baker thinks California will benefit later this season from Whoo...eee! You'll hoot for joy when you see how much you'll save on a discontinued Sylvania model. U you're a wise buy et and act quic~y you can own a magnfficen~ Sylvania for much less than it's really worth. ' SYUIANIA l?DLDR Madtt CC 31!1 YOUR CHOICE ' · FAMILY SIZE TV e Big It" d iagonal"picture • Color Bri9ht 85® picture tube for a sh arp, bright color picture • Gibraltar 95® chassii for solid state performa nce and reliability • AFC push-button locks in fine tuning- " perfect picture even when you change channels e Telescoping dipole VHF, bow.tie UHF antennei SAVE $40 sgaaa G ibraltar 90™ chassis for sol id.state reli ability. Perma-Lock,™ the anti.goof color tuning system. Wise Buy Sylvania portable black & white TV model MU20b2. Personal sized l,b" d iagonal scre•n. Memory VHF Fine Tuning remembers the cor· rect setting on each channel. Plus detachable sun screen for outdoor viewing. Contempory style Sylvania model CL224 IW in Walnut grain lin ish. Mediterranean style Sylvania model Cl2247P in Pecan grain fin ish. This model is a lso avail able in a Dark Oak grain linish ICL22470AJ. MANY OTHER MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM -BUT HURRY! d avis@brown TELEVISION e STEREO e APPLIANCES e SALES e SERVICE' e SINCE 1"47 ' 28 Year 8 of lnte9rlt11 & Dependablflt11 COSTA MESA e HARBOR AREA EL TORO e SADDLEIACK VALLEY ....... , 411 E•1t S•••nt••n+h Stt•tt El Toro Ro•cl t t Fr11w•y INtJt to St•·Onl Otily 9·9, Sthlrcl•v ''' Otlly '·'· S•lurd•v 9-6 tJ7.JtlO '<lr ......... RADIO DISfATCHED FACTORY AUTHORIZED TV & APPLIANCE SERVICE PHONE H8·3437 . " are }40ll a Miss teenage J\rrsica® girP. • a.ts~ joi1 the COi lles1 pidc ~ Ma 1lry blank at ant Fashion ~ae store ~ AppbOOns rrust be in before ALvst 4, IJ73. For flt H let' i 1faniation cal C714) 5422368 FASHION SQUARE -. Sar llaAra Fastioo ScJ.ae GrOYe liee.\eYS at IVlain l\'e1C ftueen Suzanne Plummer. the beautiful Miss Cape May County, has been named Miss New Jersey and played the piano in 1----1:elent-eompetit1on:-0b- viously, that's nol all that won it for her. In the Service _Airman Rayinond O. \Vuco, son of. !\tr. and ri.:lrs. Walter Phillip \Vuco of 6 3 6 2 Marcel\ena Drive, Huntington Beach, has been assigned to Sheppard AFB, 'fcx.. after completin g Air Poree basic training. The airman has been assign- ed to the Technical Training Center •at Sheppard f o r specialized training in aircra ft maintenance. Airman Wuco is a 1971 graduate of Jiuntington Beach High School. U.S. Air Force Capt:Jin Thomas A. Owens, son of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Owens of 220 E. 10th St., Flora. Ill., has received his second award of the Disti nguished Flying Cross for 2erial achievement on a mission over North Vietnam. Captain Owens earned the medal as an F'·4 aircraft com- mander in September 1972 when he helped provide pro- tection for a stril<c force at- tacking a heavily defended 1nilitary storage complex. He as honored •in ceremonicS" at Nellis AFB. Nev., \vhcre he now serves as an instruct.or pilot with a unit or the Tac- tical Air Command which p~ vides air support for U., ground forces. · Jtis wife. Sherrard, is the daughter of Worth'BaJ.>bil of 1967 Vista Caudal , Newport Beach. Airman First Cl ass David L. Badowski , son of Mr. and Mrs. Nick .J. Rad.,wski of 6292 \Vinslow Drive. Huntin~on Beach. is a member of an organization \Vhich has earned the Aerospace Defense Com- mand's highest unit award. Airman Sadowski is a radar repairman at liamilton AFB, Calif., with lhc 184th Fighter Intercept or Sauadron. The 84th -which flies the F-106 Delta Dart interceptor aircra1t -is a part of the 26th Air Division that has received the award for oustanding achieve- ment. Airman BadO\\'Ski is a gr~du· ate cf Marina High School. Airman Raymond G. Rain- vnle. son of !\1r. and tirs. George R. Rainville of 8792 \V::llker St., Cvprt$5. has bern assigned to Chanute AFB. 111 .• after completing Air Force basic training. The airmnn has been assign- ed to the Tec hnical Training Center at Chanute for specialized I raining in aircraft maintenance . Marine Pvt .. Janice L. Cox, daughter of 1.fr. and Mrs. Harold M. Cox of 17187 Santa Fe Circle, Fountain Valley. graduated rrom basic training for women at the r..tarinc Corps Recruit Depot at Paris Island, S.C. She is a 1973 graduate ol Founta in Valley High School. DRURY LANE ANTIQUES 22J Aw. 0.1 Mar 51111 Chlrita11tti ARE MOVING IN JULY - w .. tch for A11.,ou11e11m1nll • Wearever save save 19.99 wearever 8 pc. cook.set 39.95 Old fashio ned quality with contemporary styling end convenience. Heav~ wrought aluminum for even heat dist~ibution. ~olorful porcelain exteriors. Set: I and 2 qt. co~ered sa u~epons, 5 qt. dutch oven, 7" and I O" open fry pans. Bentboase Tllund.ll, .i.~ 12, 1971 DAILY rlLOT JJ . \ ~ Clab West Bend hy the set on ~ookware save 1$.H 7,. pe. club cook.set 28.88 Heavy aluminum with easy-cleen Sunroy interior, In Harvest Gold and Avocado. Heat resistent, su re- grip handles. Set: I and 1 'h qi. saucepans, J,lfi qt. dutch oven, IO" open fry pan. .. save 4.H west bend 7 pe. cookset 39.95 Scandia desig n with glazed porcelain on steel. Eertfi. tone color, easy-clean interiors. Set: 11/2 qt. end 21/i i qt. saucepans, S'h qt. dutch ove n, 93,4 " open skillet. Bentwood major savings on dinette sets save SO.H "penthouse'' chromaglass 249.99 By Certified. Reg. 2?9.99. 4-4 " round toble in smoked glass with chrome finish. Smokey acrylic backed chairs covered in plu sh harvest gold nylon velvet, Other up- holsteries available. Five pieces. save 30.H ''noveaa'' dining set 149.99 By Metolcroft. Oval 36"x48 "x60" mar-proof toble- top with single 12" leaf. Frame in lemon, poppy or black. Simulated ca ne back in Bentwood style. Vinyl print sea ts in cane ~ttem in matching frame colors. Reg. 179 .99 . save 20.H ''bentwood'' dining set 129.99 • . . By Certified American. Reg. 149.99. Populor Bent- wood look in sturdy steel frame. T oble is 'r2"x "48"x60" with one leaf. Frame, top, chairs in choice 169.99. Housewares, 95 Mail and ph one orders invited. ANAH EIM NEWPORT HUNTINWTON l iACH ORANGE, MA.LL OF OkANGE CE~klTOS 4'44 N. Euclid 171 4) 511 °1111 47 F•thlo11 ltl111d 1714'1 644-1111 7777 Edl1191r Aw111w1 1714) lt2.)lll 2100 N. Tu1ti11 Str11I 17141 ttl-IJll 100 let C11titot Mill 111JI 1.0.0411 SHOP 10 A.M. to t :JO P.M. MONDAY THROU6H FIUCAY. SATU-DAY 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON t• I P.M. i . ' ' Thund11, July 12 ,1q73 I... lfl. B!fd F e1nales Strike Office Sparks _ Most tiuslness man agers agree it's the female employe who•s most likely to start trouble '1n an office. Still, they say they'd prefer a majority of girls in their employ rather ~ an all-male staff, Althoogh, the yOWlg ladies create some tension, said tension tend~ to make everybody work· harder, particularly the men, they believe. Fascinating, it tactua l. 1be old plantation bosses down in Trinidad prohibited their slaves [rom talking in the fields. So said slaves sang to one another in a fo~rench Creole dialect called patois. That's how calypso got started, says our Language man. Any chicken inspector worthy or the title ca n tell whether a hen will .by white eggs or brown eggs just by looking at said hen's earlobe!i. Brown earlobes. brown eggs. wtUte. white. Approxima tely three weeks' salary, that and no more is ~ow much the bridegroom-~be should budget for his girl friend's diamond engagement ring, according iO some expert opinion . .Am ·aJSo asked the whereabouts of the longest paved highwiiy in the world. That wou ld be the s,cm-mile stretch across canada. Incidenta lly, it's lined with picnic sites every 50 miles and supervised campgrounds just about every 100 miles. LOVE AND WAR -In a study of wive! married to men '!fho e arn more than $100,000 a year. researchers tound that 93 oui ot 100 such ladies were still married to I.heir fint huSbands. A fa irly high · figure . Still, our Love and War man says be's not surprised. Lack of money leads to most matrimonial breakup$. It's a relatively rare woman who.can't get along with an old boy who brings home about $2,000 a week, daresay. Address tnail to L. /t1. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. Social Security _ ' . Benefits Raised WASHINGTON (UPI I President Nixon has signed legislation Increasing. Social Security benefi ts by more than five percent to compensate for the impact o( innation on the buying power or the elderly. The mea.ure, effective next June, also Increases from f12,000 to $12.600 the' 1nax- imum wage base on which Social Security taxes are im- posed. "THE CRITICAL feature of th.is bill for almost 30 million Americans is an increase in Social Security benefits of more than five percent next year in order to meet the ris- ing costs of living." Nixon said iu a written statement issued by the White Ho~. Legislation enacted last year provides automatic..cost of Liv- ing boosts in Social Security benefits beginning in January, 1975. The new bill advances the cost of Jiving increases to June, 1974. The \Vhite House estimated benefits would in- crease between 5.6 and 5.8 percent next year, \Vi th the first checks to be paid in July. TltE SOCIAL Security in- crease v.'as attached to an amendment on a minor bill by Congress in the closing hours before it began it's July 4th recess. The measure \\'as a com- promise which t h e ad- ministration agreed to a~pt after tfu'eatening to veto a more generous version. The bill -also increases from $2,100 to $2,400 -effective next Jan. l -the amount of money an individual may earn without a reduction-in Social Security benefits. THE BILL. IN addition, raises welfare benefi ts for more · than six million aged , blind, and disabled recipients. The increases. also intended to compensate for advances in the cost of living, lift the monthly payments from $l30 to fl40 for an individual and from $195 to $210 for a couple starting next July. · In a separate action, the President signed legislation extending t e m_p o r a r y in- creases in railroad retiremenf benefits from June 30 until the end of this year. This measure also permits men with 30 q.iears or railraod employment to retire at age 60 with full pension. ANOTHER PROVISION of the Social Security bill re- c;iuires states to supplement federal welfare benefits to make su re no r eci pi e nt receives a benefit cut when welfare programs shift from state to federal operation at the end of this year. 10-SPEED RACER! FACTORY DIRECT! 7488 '" Corto" WE GUARANTEE WHAT WE SELL 511 OU R "'OLLIS" LINil Performue• •ltd 9••1lty Ho tMktofr.ld lit 'r•IM! • Co•,t.t. u .. ef l o•ri"t Acc .... ticl • F.Mo• '""'' Ab1t Loci! "Polk• lrtdorMd" & Co•rlote hn'k •I •• -WESTERN · IMPORT PRODUCTS llffi 531·3130 tfOUlllt GAILY f.t CLOSID TUllSD.i.Y SAT, t4 SUH, IM 16543 Brookhprst, Fountain Valley • • Deepwate1· Ports a Savings? PORTLAND, Ore. IAPl - Deepwater West COast ports that could hand&e giant oil tankers might end up cuttinl the cost of transporting oil ln- to the Vnlted St.ates by aa much as l2IO miJUon a year ,_it bas been reported. develop detp\\•ater p o r t Deepwater facllitiea also facll!Ues on the West COast," woulJI lilltially cut Into the the report sald. busi.Dels being done. by the "Using a smaller number or ports now hand.lin1 o i I larger tankers v.·ould reduce ablpmenta on the West Coast, cong~ in shi ppin1 lanes it cooehaded. and decrease tile probabili&y ' Savings in the OJ>lt of oimMSive oil 11>llJJ ~ bf transportlilg oil tnta"tbe con- colllltons and grounClin,gs. liguoua states would resuJt from ba vin1 deepwater West Coast ports whether or not the Alaska oil pipeline Is built, the report said. THE REPORT said creaUon or deepwater port facilities could adversely arrect the en--vironment of areas where they,,-------~--- ~~n.w _.,, ~ 1•/J,, PRELJ~QNARY findings for a report to Cohgress by the U,S, Anny Corps of engineers were issued by the corps' North Pacific Division ofric:e. n.ey "'ill be reviewed in Washington before being sub- mitted to the House. would be located but would Ask Andv reduce l h e envlroMlental • "'SO-· t HAPP~N 'It> Llllt'E &!ROS ~ - ··- "By or before 1980 there will be great economic incentite to --· disadvantages of ports now Kid L h••dling oil shipmen ts with s ike To s1nallcr veSsels. , .. The ears of today are gulping more gas than ever before and the cost of gas today is gulping more of your budget than ever. In fact, the U.S. Department of Transportation says , th_at it costs you around 15¢ to drive-one'TTlile:-lt-you think-that's expensive, you're right! It's getting to be a pa"1 in the wallet. But there's an alternative. The bus. For 25¢-less than it costs to drive two ll)lles -you can ride the "Two- Bit" Bus Line. Comfortably, economically and painlessly. Next time, fry the "Two-Bit" Bus Line. We'll make getting there a little easier to swallow. ! JOIN US FOR SUNDAY IRUNCH 119111 tiger ·; ,. •• TAURANT ,ft ••••••••••••• ,.. ••• {Jj NOW SERVIN& LUNCHEON 11 ............. re-.- • ~ins .•. Ride the' ·Bit'' Bus Line • r ORANGE COUNTY TRANSIT DISTRICT ' For Information, or bus !f""i,.f'io'r:" ""'1'"l "7 '--, --~, ..... A',,_,..., £t i ~2e E. Ws shlng:on Ave .. ... 1.~ A ;:i, t... .............. -... I';! ...... 1 \I ... , o11 1· ....... 4 ' •••noaa • • 130 Make Citizens' Pledge SANTA ANA -Sl>n and Strlptt In hind, 41 Nlid<ntl o1 14 Orange Cout communities became American citizens \Yedn e1d1y In county courthoU&e Clt(emonlts_ that saw them lhed their tles io 20 nations. Also repre1tnted w e re Laguna Niguel with thr ... El Toro with two and Laguna Stach, Los Alamlto.s, South t..agunaJ C~istrano ~acb, l\.1klway Clty, Irvine, P..tlsslon Viejo and Dana Poinl , ead\ with one resident. ... The Philippines and Egypt. Bonltaet. 2 2: 3 2 Con1lncnta.I 1be Orange Coast's new Ave.. Costa MC!U: Ann American,,, in order of the Loui$e Clark, 16772 ChaMel contributing nations, art: Lane. Huntington n eac h ; ADEN -Mohsin APcfulla CAtherinc Hsu Ridley, 189.11 Salem Yara, 820 Ceatfl St., llate St., Founlain Valley; Apt. 9. Costa fl.1tsa. Kenneth McKenzie \VlllOll, BOLIVIA -liugo Soria. 23:1 ! 9679 Lark Circle, Fountain S. Britsol St., Apt. 20. Costa Vall ey. P.'fesn. GREAT BRITAIN, th c CANA DA _ Phyllis Jean OTHF:R BR ITONS: Gerald traditional major provider of nd J b Al T Arian Aiers Tav\or. 33232 Sea a o n an urncr. 2lS21 Knoll. Dana ro'1·n1 ·. G•"enll1'an ne"' Americans, i.lgain topped lmpala Lan e, HLmtington " the list with 14 Orange CoasL Beach: Stephan Gyurik. 1701 Rosalind \Vaybourn. 214-lllh residents breaking their ties to l\larlin \Vay. Ne"'porl Beach. St.. Hunlington Beach: Gladys the Crown in the onlh that Rene Louis Russette. 20502 Heid. 6822 Oxford Drive. llun- - OA!LV PILOT Joineo by 12 pthcr Oange County residents they pledged allegiance to their n ew homeland In the presiding judge'• packed courtroom and then joined three Superior Court judge& and represen- tatives of five welcoming organizations for !he tradi- tional group photograph in the Plaza of the Flags. calts for "the renunciation of Salt Air Circle. Huntington tington Beach: Junie and John allegiance to all lore I g n . Beach and Brian Clifford Kenneth Chong, 1615 Baycliff princes." 1'.lcCool . 6022 tllilton Circle. Circle. Corona de! ~I a r : 4~ RES IDENTS OF 14 ORANGE COAST COMMUNITIES BE COME CITIZE NS Another 82 AllO Pledged Allegi~nce In Pre1iding J udge Bruce Sumner'• (center) Courtroom Presiding Judge Bruce Sum- ner of Laeuna Beach wu join- ed by two recent appointees to. hlJ bench In ceremonies that called for Judge H. Warren Knight of Newport Beach lo lead the Jlledlt ol allejlance •n4 Jud&• ll:vore!t w. 01t1re1 of Ila a.-i. iq .,..k on tbe ~1 or cllbenahlp. · Canada, anolher lrad.itional" }luntington Beach. ~targaret and Thom:1s Brian contributor, was represented CHILE -Maurice Peter Parkinson, 90U Annlk Drive, TltE NE111ERLANOS -Constantine and Fon1enko.' 2-1831 La Drive, Laguna l'igucl. Luba ******************• •* * 1!11 ftYe hlnMr ClftldJam. The Elplnou, llUI Ar 11 n Ito n ~~!'tfi'l~iso:.e~~i N::~~ Lucy Yvonne Schrader, 232 E. Netberlandt was the former Lane, Huntin&ton Bea~. A 21st st., Costa Mesa: Agnes Vida * * home of four new Americans CHINA -Samuel Lam, ve., Space 34. Costa Mn•. aod four a er man -born 1424.J Utrillo Drlve1 Irvine. JAPAN -Sayoko Niluwa, t11arijke Sussman, 2 9 6 1 2 SWEDEN -Slolan Kl1v1 l'tlki~ GUt thtl_r links with PENA1ARK -Pre be n 2460 Notse Ave., Cotta Meta: Deervale Circle, L •I u n a 1-tultln ror Ttlo1n11' Valter lblt nJllon. S'a n d o r L.11 use n, 11i a Slchlko Kirk t r , 2041l NJ 1uel ; Edu a rd 1 nd llullln, 2675' Callo f\lurla, Japan and Mexico each Marguerlte Ave ., Cot·ona del Ever1led8, Muntln1ton .lklach • "Wilhelmina Eva ll en d r I k a C11pl11r11no Se11ch . ' wtrt rtpl'llented by thrM Mar. and l)hiauko M1rk1, 424 1 Far· Burcm1n1, J42UJ Twl1 St, El SPAIN -~1onls<'rral Mun· DR. HAkOLD F. Leeslma, new citizens and Soviet Russia EGYPT -· Carmela Khat-riu1har Ave., Apt. 2, Los Toro. cinl , 4512 Prelude Drive, llun· pastor of Lake Hills Com-was ,the former home or a tab, 21861 Kiowa Lane, 1-lun-A amitos. OKlNA\VA -Kath I ce n tinaton Beach. munity Church, Mlssion Viejo, Laguna Niguel couple, Luba lington Beach. KOREA Ed w u rd i\1clton. 18431 Tan1:1rind St., WEST GE RMA NY -Erika delivered an invocation to an and Constantine Eomenko. FRANCE -Danielle J\1aric SooChung Kim, 21311 Fleet Fountain Valley. Andrea, 23863 Calle G<inador ... audience that jncluded one BoMand, 1930 Whittier Ave., Lane, Hunlington Beach. THE PHfLIPPINES Mlasion Viejo; Ruth 1-lutlon. * resident from his community. 0 T H E R NAT J 0 NS Costa Mesa. a.tEXICO -Isreal 11.lendiola, Romeo Canlas Jaramillo, 521 32242 Stonington nond, South Representatives of th e represented, each with one GREAT BRITAIN -Edith 7861 tl1cFadden, l\1idway City: Tris A\'e., Corona del J\·lar. Laa:unn; Go.rtraud !\1aJick. * League of Women Voters, the former1 citizen, inc I u de : Vina Wilson, 1973 Newport Erika Silvia Gelke. 9 6 I 4 PERU -f!.tilagros Garcia 7611 VolgA Drlvo, lluntington * American Legion and Its aux-Bolivia1 Spain, Korea, Chile, Ave., Space ~f, Costa J\1esa: S1noke Tree. Fountain Valley Sayan, 16772 Summcrcloud Beach and Gertrude P.lclanic * iliary, the Daughters of the China , Sweden, Aden. Peru, Kathleen Elb:abcth and and Jose Luis Ana ya, 8831 Lane. Huntington Beach. f'ower1, 2672 Nido \\!a y, • BU EMA PAii( Mercury Savings BldQ., Valley View at Lincoln * HUNTINGTON BE ACK Mercury Savings Bldg,, Edinger al e~aefl * TUSTIN tAercmy Savings Bldg., I Nine Blvd. al Newport Ave. * LA HABllA·FULLERTON Mercury Savin(ls Bld{l., lfnperial Hwy. al Harllof' * CAllSON Mercury SIViflQS Bldg., Avalon Btvd. at San 01~0 Frwy * ********************* American Revolution and the Denmark , Okinawa, France, Doug las Alfred Rob er t Derck. 1-luntington Beach. SOVIET RUSS I A Laguna Beach . Elks Club delivered welcomingi--------------"---------------=-------------------''----------------------------- speeches during the naturalization proceedings. Huntington Beach.topped the Ii.st or Orange Coast com- munities represented at the ceremony with 17 Oil City residents accepting citizen- ship. Nine new citizens hailed from Costa 11.·tesa. five drove from Newport Beach for the ceremony and-four n e w Americans listed fast growing Fountain Valley as their home. · For the Record Births DeRth Not ices (AU DILL R<!l/Mn 5. C1udltl. A~ )1, Of US S. TolltKI 51 .. S..ntl Al'll. ~It o! dt411>, J\flY 10. 1f7J. Survl'1<1 bV wilt, C:llarlllllt: two !4n1. Thurm1n, of .Nortn Hof!vwood: LN C1udlll, UHN1l1; tllree d1oq11ter1, M1r' C•ml!Ot'll, Fullerton; 81r1Mr1 011'•11, S1nll l'>nl> M1rlorlt Knoll, Alll.,., l'llM 1r111de:fl!ldr111; lour 11r11t-gr1r!dchlldrtn. GrtW,ldl s.rvl«I• Friday 11 AM, 011~d1 e, C1me11rv, Gl1M0r1, wl!h Rev. C0Mt1nllno S•llo' oftlcl.t!!,,g. 8 1 t t BrtMldWIY Mortu1rv, Olrtc!Orl. DAVIS Perry M. 01v!1. AQt 96, ol 301' COll9qe A~ .. (0111 Mt~I. 01!1 of dellh, J uly 11, l~7l. Survfvfll t>v v~111 Anne, ol !tie hGme1 M>n. Huber! 011v ,, or .. on; tour r·~R'!Chlld•~n: nln1t or11l·111r1r><klll1drton. krvlu1, Frld1y, ~ PM, Btll BrDad'wav r i-nl)f!I, will! Rev, Wlll!1m AclOl'I Ill· flcl1ll1111. 1n1ermen1. 01•wood (f'"t!•rv. •"'tflwtirlh. llell Broedwav Mortu1ry, OlrKlort. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF ~tORTUARY 4%7 E. 17th St., Costa l\lesa llH8ll • BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Coron1 del !\far fl'3-tc50 Costa l\fesa 64&-!4%4 • BELL BROADWAY l\tORTUARY 110 Broodway. Cosio ~fcsn lJ 8-34!1:: • DILDAY BROTH ERS MORTUARIES 17111 Beach 81\•d. Huntington Beach 84Z..7?71 · 244 Redondo AYe. Long Beacb Zll-f31.l l45 • • Mc:CORMfCK LAGUN A BEACH MORTUARY 1706 Laguna Canyon Rd. _4N-Ml5 • PACfFfC VI EW l\lE~10RIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 1500 PacUlc View Ori\'t. Newporl Beach. Calllornla 144.1790 • PEEK FMULY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7811 Doi• Ave. Weslmluter ll3-35!S • S!llTHS' MORTUARY 127 Main St. 1h1n1151.t4:i39aeach POLY & STllL 81LTS Peerle11 Quality! STIEL . 195/14 IJJ" f 71114 STEEL 671114 205/14 STEEL 215/14 136" H7f/14 STIEL 205/15 ·G71/1S STIEL 215/15 H71/1S s -1430 L71/1S 235/15 6.4511 4 6.5011 3 878/13 7.35/14 E78/14 7.75/14 F78/14 8.25/14 G78/1 4 8.25/15 G78/15 8.SS/14 H78/1 4 llt1 i rf1yol Orig. E qtrip. sjf18s~ G70/1S 20S/1S 170/14 llS/14 170/14 17S/14 170114 19S/14 170/14 171114 F60/1 S f60/1S l60/1S m COSTA MESA GAllDlN OllOYI LA HAlllA 1.e..e l,_ll11r1t tOot wtllllltr &1¥1. 3005 HARBOR ILVD. !ttrMr ol Whinier • fcor-Wntmln,\ltr llld BHtfl C corft., of l~ker Gftl HariMr 1 •"Cl B~llu•1I (714) 5 5 7·8000 17141-IJO-J200 674°)666 Hr11r{orl1tl l'l .. 1tr r Trr 011r t1nlo101tr ,olitf ii to lltttfr '''"' r••· If Y•• ho•t o "41'tltio11 1011crr111l•1 tr•· lll11ct1 or 11r•icr1 rrr1dtrff It''"· ,tt111 coll 011r Director of (f'91•Mtr Atf1lr1. Mr. S . .lrob io11 Ill JI I P1·17J7 tr It\. 1211. ti .,., 1hould 1tll •ti ti yoor 1111, o "aoi11 Chrck" wilt br htft4 11111ri1111 o l1t1r Crli••ry ot thr t 4•trth t tl ,,r, •. IUINA PAil!( 'ULLl.TON 2'N2 Llll(ol11 tlv•. un '""' llfClld comtr ti Lfri<.01!'1 !I llO(-HOlll'I el •nd lt.11(1111 Jl lvt11fd1 l'r-.,-1 171 41 126-SS~O 17141 171·0100 • $2895 ANY SIZE BELOW SIZE F60/J4 f60/J5 860/13 17141 6)f·4321 Full Siu U.S. Cars Rer. DRUM TY PE • • I I -· ~ Why Othen Can't COmpete ' ' ' Ru• Johnson is the r~h A Storekeeper That's '. Knowledgeable, Courteous,,Dependable, ·Friendly & . '(Villing to serve. 1'!--1•r• •1ne.-of the things RUN kMPI ' • ...,.MllfllCNIO MAiffR CllMGll: ---10'28 lrvlf)•· Newport Beach. California 926e0, Phona 642. 7Q61 ('(11'/((Jfl , . \ flfU' fit1ro( bca1/11fvfl.f, Clrl/,in. 1v111ll'/np<>rar) 1t'Oll'l11!J, 17 Jtttel, • l0111t hU/11111 rnfl1·rmt>i1lf1f1 /li ~1ft l'l'J$f'.t and l<t1/r1r/ul t 'ur/am Mttd~. ('Qmp/f'l,:'l.v :,11;.1,,.~-<'"' ft{f 6 111.:;(J CHARLES H .. BARR Wllldift Plua. 211 ·Marine Avenue. Nnrpori Jteadl, c.Iif. Balboa l&laad, Calif. Be.nkAntericard !\fas ter Chaii;e MIMllll AM111tftA111·•IM JOC1arv I + I h " --~ene-s.;e~-s epping a.t its finest! OPEN THURSDAY AND MONDAY EVENINGS as a dress. In 9abar· dine-like dacron poly- ester. A carrying c • s • co,... And so lightweight- perfecl travel. Yellow, green and navy. $60.00 I WESTCL!FF PLAZ,O. & THE NEWPOR1ER INN Opt11 Monclty A Thur1dty E'l't llin91 Get into the Swing for Spring in a new _pair of high rise Baggies. I -~J · Stc)RTSWEAR cmon'S \VcstclilT Pla za. 171h and Irvine, Newport Beach, Calirornia92660 • • HALLI DAY'S • SUMMER s A L- E STARTS MONDAY JULY 16 \1~1: .. :1. NEW LOOK IN C&D CUP BRAS s7&0 TO $800 Veta's INflMATl APPAHL W...llff , ...... ·""'''"'"" Phone 642-1197 OPEN THURSDAY & MONDAY EVENIN6S ·'- ' " .. • ! , ._' "" t Child Needs Protect ion SIOriet by AWSON DEERR Of ... o.ltY PllM ..... \\'ho are the 20,000 youngsters who will come under rile pro<ecUOo ol the Orange County Probalian Department this ye1U! According lo the deportm<nt, they emerge from all races, economic levels and geographic locations. 'Ibey come from tbe inner city, newly emerging bedroom commuajtl~s, unin- -eorporated fural areas of the county and the resort cities, as well. They could be anyone's children. Even yours. And they cannot be defined simply by thei r actions. "1bere are -a thousand reasons why a child might come under the protection of the juVenile justfce system,'' said Sharon Lightholder; Slaff aslistant. O<;: probation <leperllnent. 1 , · • , ':EV!f'Y 'ciuid is dlfiererlt. Evcry•famiiy IS different,~·has:n:s o;m 'Wlique proh-- 'lems. We. must • examine the' specific situatiali· whidrbrings·ihe· ybungster to Uie attention of the probation department 1n its entirety as v.·ell as in its social con.. ...... VIOLATIONS "A curfew viola lion may be vie"'"·ed as one of the less serious situations Ythich could bring a youngster to the attention O ran9e County Probation Department offered ih ... ol the juvenile justice system," she said. "HO\\'ever, in some situations the curfew violation may be a symptom of problems at home -the -ch1td's way o( asking for assistance and avoiding his unpleasant lllaie si.tuaUon. ''For example, if the youngster's parents do not 'care for him ap. proprlately because they are both .a1cob0uc,-the.. child's -escape onto the streets rnay be less severe for him thun remaining in the family home. "However, when that youngster is on the. streets,, he · poecs community prob- lems because of the mischief he may get lntO and because of the community's responsibility to protect him from the ac· tions of others." INVOLVEMENT How does the department become in· volved in the.Jives of these children? !fbtte·are •. three general categories into "''hich these chlldren fit. as defined by the Welfai'e arid In'stitulions Code -the dependent child, the predelinquent and ,the-delinquent. "The dependent child," she explained, ''is the victim, a child who needs protec- tion from a hostile environment." These children may be phy:i;ically abused or come from a home which en- dangers their health and safety. · ~erviees to more t~an 22 ,000 ·' .i.J-uvenile Justice ·.~ ' -. --:~system E.~Pl:ained"· ~Few ~Orange QJunUQns ~ klxt~. ;~:~ Thi~ ~arin~ is similar to the baii:bear. where the juvenile probation department. ing in adillt Court . • is' located. If the. juvenile pleads innocent or asks Juvenile Court and some of the area o,Uices are located in the Manchester ~pl.ex in Orange. ·'Jbere are area of- fi~s througl)out the county .t6 better serve county residents. for a trial . .at any point, he is granted. a . ' trial .. A pretrial hearing system, used for on- ly the past two years. b8s greatly recfuc.. ed the juvenile court trial docket. At this An evel' smaller number are .well vers-hearing, the judge or referee, the minor, · ~ .in howl \h~ ji:xenile. jusJice . sys~-; ~~··and ~tomey· ,are tile only. ones oPerates.1 / ', ·· .· .l ,. f. ·~·iP~....... . ··• ._ .-· :~~;beg~ Witti ,an ••aPpt~-~.,-· At. thls Point the .con~ed parties can hlit'iot'~;.;hWi~\aii't.;, ··~iol' .. ~~tilelo b6tb. . .. ··'·""' ,, ' fded by the police, schools, parents or any v.·it.hout going through a trial. ~ not interested person. resolved at this poiht go to tri al. Preliminary investigation is made by DIFFERENCES ari intake office1 within the probation Juvenile court trials differ from adult department He interviews the minor and tiis parent.! tc determ.int wha t the ~ific problem is. proreedings j.n several \l'ays. First, there is oo such thing as a jury trial for a minor. Decisions are rendered I by a judge or referee (as is possible in adult court) but minors can be defended by attorneys, however. , youn9sters in 1972. , "ll can be a one-lime occurttnce," she explained, "or a long-standing con· diUon." A one-li me incident might be, for ex· ample, a child placed in Albert Sitton Home or fosler home v.1\ile a p<lrent recuperatt>S from hospHalization. 'Mlls could happen if there v.·cre no relatives living nearby and lilerally no other source of help b_ut the probation department. UNACCEPTABLE BEHAVIOR "A prcdellnquent is a young person who is behaving ill a manner {vhich is unacceptable to the community, although · not illegal were the youngster an adu1t. "f'or example. adults are not required 10 attend school , be in by curfew hour er reside in the parental home. Jn conlrast. those under 18, are expected to ~Ve.in a certain way which v.•il) ol.fer them the instruction and prerequisites to. bCcome _productive, law-abiding citizens.!' A delinquent.'. however, breaks statutes v.•hich v.·ould be a crime if the same act were comm itted by an adult. These run the gan1u1 from shoplifting to auto theft to murder. "Although .the circumstances sur· rounding each yo ungste.r must be carefully evaluated before the court acts to protect the yow1gster and the com· munity, the resource of the California Youth Authority Is available only to those youngsters v.1ho arc delinquent. f'rcdelin- quent or dependent children arc not aUov.·cd, by statute, to be committed to that fucUity. PROTECTION "Our job is to provide total protection for these youngsters. But the community somelinies must be protected trom the mino r as v.·cll . We have to achieve a balance between v.·hnt is good for the community and wtult is good for the child." She added, "In determining the best p.1 th to take to aid the youngster in .rehabilit ation and to assist the famHy tn staying together. the probation .deparl· ment must evaluate the youngsCer•s '1- • fense and his capacity for change as well as the resources v.'hieh are available ti:> ::~::~..;::._~,ii:-~ ·Who~ is clearly Within o~r the th1'$,! legal definitions which would allow tbc syslctn to aid him . "It is the responsibility of the ~ bat ion dcparlment to determine "'h•t assistance can be given to the youngster and then implement the direcl1ves of the Juvenile Court to improve t b c youngster's life.'' 6men BEA ANDERSON, Editor Tllurldar, Jvlr 12, lt7J ,.._. 11 '_ 1' there is no legal case, or if the mat· tff can be handled without court action. rJ, petition is filed . 'I1le family may be ie!erred at this point tc counseling, ' Mpther county resource, a private school or, other private resources. Second, there is no bail be<:ause the delenUon. hearing provides this protection for the Youngster who is not e~ed. to have the financial resources which a bail system Would necessitate. Ultimate Goal: Reuniting the Family ALTERNATIVES Another alternative lo court action is informal probation, which is supervision for up to six months ·by the probation 4epartment upon agreement of • the yclmgstc.r ·and his parents. 1'lf the minor is detained,'' said Sharon li,htbolder, of the department,. "the in· take offieer bas 48 hours to !ile a petition ~ the court after application is made for it. ''This )\o'OU.ld mean . for example, if a juvenile were picked up by lhe police, the 4l4tour period would begin to run at that point. , A petitiolJ outlines the charges Which bring the j.>oungster to court." Jf the intake <>fficer decides that the child should he detained at Juvenile Jlall, a oourt appeani.nce must be made within 24 -hours after the petitioo is filed with the court. JI the J .... lle is not detained, a court elite will be scheduled for him within two "' lhn!e wteks. IN cusroDY 11 the )'OU!lgSler Is In custody; the ntJ<t step 11 the detention hearing iD' w!Uch the juvtnile court judge or referee reviews Ibo Intake officer's report and hear~ arpmenta lot and agllinst detention. 1bere are specific legal requirements which must be niet before the . juvenile can l>q detalned. Third, the cordidenliality of the child is protected. "A/. Ibo clispool1iooel bearing, ·wbid> la like the liefncnciltg hearing in adult court, the comPlcle investigation Of !:.tie case. is presented to the court in, 'the report compiled by the probation depart· ment. "11tls report," she explained, ''inbl~des an pertinent facts about the 0ffefl6e which brings the minor to court, the minor hirmel£, his' famUy, his ~ . ' munity,,.the resources available to them and the minor's attitude. RECOMMENDATIONS " "The report also contains a reoxn~ mendatiQn to the court as to how• the rehabllitaUon ol the minor and ~ reuniting ol the lamlly may best be a<> complished, while Protecting bolli· tbe minDt and the <»mmmlity'." ~ The Judp -bis --' Trouble in a family can be a vicious cycle. Each new· problem feeds lhe existing one. "\Ve want to break the cycle ol. ~ lem, reacticm, bigger problem, bigger reaction," said Sharon Lightholder, staff assistant , Orange County Probation Department. "Our ultimate goal is to reunite the family. To do this, we have to see the whole picture. We have to know the ch1ld -who he is, what tie is, what bis family si[uation is like, what hi s aUitudes are and what resources he has to draw upon." Each minor is treated as an individual. . There are no set fonnulas that dictate: you did this and this so we'll put you here. "We devise an individual assessment program lot .. ch youngster. We try to w<rk with tho family wheneYer possible to remedy the aituation." ' on the "'POr\ and all other Information OPTIONS OPEN ..-nted lo the toUrt,by the minor, his What options are open lo the probation pertntl or attorney, as well 111• kt-department?.~ rormatiOO oubmilted by the probatlon One is <'<IUJIS<ling. department. ~ ...... "Sometimes we can take care of the Cou<t order> ai;e then carried out by l\foblem. with ramlly counseling. berore the probation d"J>lll'lm«lt lo lid U.... -Ibo pn>blem !l<t• too oerious," she «· )'OW!g-and pro!eat tho Cl0tlll!llllll1. / plllned.; Another option is informal probation. "This essentially. is a voluntary con· lracl between the probation officer, the minor and his parents, agreeing to pro- batioo supervision for up to a maximum of six months. "If things work out," she ex plained, "that's it. There is no couf1 ac,tion . IJ it doesn't work, lhere are o th c r alternatives." Formal probation is one of several alternatives which are reviewed and evaluated by the court. "Probation requirements are a reasooable extension of the wa y the child is behaving. ll is simply a court-Ordered backup system for u•hat responsible parents u'Ould normally require." CONDmQNS Conditions include Obeying the Jaw, liv· Ing In a place approved by the parent> (usually at home), attending school regularly and obeying a specified curfew. Probation may alsO require the minor to avotd speeified people 8nd places. For exam~e, a minQt' into drugs might be forbidden to hang out at the place where he formerl y bought drugs. ''IJ 3 youngst~r is Involved in gong.ac-- liviOe,,, he may be ardertd not 10 associate \\ilh other youngsters \\"ho have JOO him astray in the past ," she said. "1'11<! court can order counseling for lhe minor and his famil y. The job of the probation department is lo carry out the orders of the cow-t. '' Another option is placement in one of the county's juvenile inslitulions. INSTITUTIONS Juvenile Jtall is the county'~ only true security facility for minors. Juveniles can be placed in the hall on a tem"(X>r ary basi~ while awaiting a court appearance or fot a longer time. "The other county insli lutions are less sccurt lht"ln juvenile hall, v.•hich is realistic for a res idential fucility. \Ve cnn work this way bc<:nusc ,.,.c have excellent institutional staff, and the youngsters in any or the residential racilitics are aware ol Whal Is expected of them and respond responsibly, due in part lo mutua l respect.'' Juvt:nJle llall and other county fa cilities have a complete educational sys1em operated by the Orange County Department of Education. "Schools whhin tile h1cililies are not vacuums. Eac h bas a vocaUooal lr&ining aDd regular school progrnnl. Some students live in the community, in their ov:n homes. but continue to attend school ln on e or our residential facilities." RANCll STYLI'.: There are three counly-opcrated ranch programs. Joplin Boys Ranch and Rancho Potrcro arc located in Trabuco Canyon. Joplin offers a regular high school program plus training in vocations ranging Crom agriculture to the trades. Several trade Wlions -plumbing, cloo- lrical. carpentl)' -participate in voca- lionul programs. The ranch raises Jla iry und other agricultural products for several C1lunty fncili!ies. Joplln residents are boys from their mid·to-late teens. Hant ho Potrcro offers a junior high school progrllnt for boys In their early H.•('flS. The Los Pinos Boys Ranch, located in the Oeveland National Forest near. Elsinore. focuses on conservaUon an<l ecology projects along with regular school v.'Ork. Residents build hiking and nature trails and firebreaks1 but do rvJ' firefighting. Two 24-hour residential programs iri' 5anta Ana art lhe David R. ~1cMilllon Scllool and 1he Youth Guidance Center. l~ach offcri; n run program of schooling and eounscHng:- IS.. TRANSITION,-Pap II) Mutter's Helpers: Cneerfulness, Cookin By JO OLSON Of .... o.u~ l"llet ll•tf Mutter to c u stom e r : "Cheese and ham? You're going to get fat." Mutter to departing cµatomer: "Behave yourself, Carl." . Customer to 1'1 u t t e r : "That's good bread. You don't tal-hOmcmade bread too ofteil." · ltfutter to customer: ''Help yourself. 'Have some more." This easy banter i s characteristic of 1'1 u t t e r ' s care, which is presided over by Mutter, GerQ'lan C o r motl)er, (pronounced "mooter"), who is in reality llildegard Provence , a pleasant German woman who knows no strangers. In fact, there are no strangers ;µnon_g ber cUentelc. U you are new to the cafe you are a stranger only when you first walk in the door. Most customers are regulars and the ceUar after the bombing. They finally were rescued and lived for the next three years In the cellar, supported by the earnings of ber ailters, one 2;2 and one 17, who boll\ had lull-time jobs. One of her silten. a secretary for n photography buslnes.s. ofteri took Hildegard to her office while ahe worked. · The cameras aiit developing equipment fascinated her so much she began to eir:pcrlment on her own. "My sister bought me a good camera and I bought lenses." lUldegard reminisced. "Then I became a magazine photographer. t took lots or pictures of children." Arter reading that England needed female wor kers to bolster its post-war recovery, she and lour friends were ac- cepted as factory workers. This was not a pp ea ling , though, so she entered nurses' training in England. -she-knows-mO!t-by their first name. After working another year in England as a nurse she \vent back to Germany and " from Page 17 • • • Transition Smooth . . 'The residential facilities are warm, pleasant places, ''Mrs. *htholder said, "while pro- ing security for t h e y ngster. They are not at all al they were pictured in the l~nn~~~~i~s. about juvenile tf.Each has a dedicated staff J:ich assists each youngster in resolving his problems so he can return to the oorrpnunity U a productive citizen." She feels they are doing a great job with both educa· tfonal and social problems. '1ilere are excellent pnr gams in remedial reading which is a bl.g problem in all ol our faclliUes. • "·Poor reading skills is one of the tnOll esltnsive educa· tk>nal problems among the children we serve, a n d sympton\atic of other educa· tional problems." • l.n addition to c o u n t y facilities. there are private placements. PRIVATE OP'nONS . There are privately operated facilities, some operated on a boarding school concept. and ~roup homes with 15 to 20 1uvenlles living with parent figures ln an expanded home situation. Juveniles also can be placed with relatives. "The probation department must know all of the resources or the family. the county and the state if the court orders • Then, the juvenile is less likely to have more troubles. is less likely to come buck. "We go as far as we can, do ns much as we can to return the chi ld's life to that of the regular child." The predelinquent. she said, can be placed in any of these alternatives, just as the delin· quent can. The main dif· fereDCe is that the predelin- que.nt can't be placed with the Califcrnia Youth Authority. Placement for the dependent child can, be made with AJbcrt Sitton Home, Orange, the only facility operated by the county for them, wfth foster homes, ' relatives, or in the family home under \he supervision of a rrobation of Deer. ''Sitton is a temporary home for these children w h i I e wailing for placement with relatives, return to their own home or being assigned a foster home." · Delinquency pre'-;ention is the goal of the CQ/nmunity ~icm Project, a 'ftderally .funded national model for suburban delinquency preven-- tion. • .,_, In Orange County, Fountain Valley and Placentia were chosen ; the former as a rapid--1 Jy growing new bedroom com· munity and the latter as a small, established old-style ci-ty. . "Probatil:in . Y.'elfare a n d health departments each pro- vidc advisors and both pro- jects operate with I o c a I rcsourCC's in a cooperative n1anncr." · Thev offer several activities and ·services perhaps not other.vise available including tutoring on school subjects. Participation is on a voluntary basis and is much like in· for1nal probation. Probation department staff v.·ork with various com· munlties lo use resources to prevent delinquency and solve current problems. "We help them to identify communlly needs and gather the resources to solve in· dlviduaJ PfOble~." "Our Job' Is to protect lhe child. There is no set way of handling any sltuaUon. There are so many .factors to take into consideration. "But we do want to break the cycle. in the way that st.-en1s best. \Ve want to help the juvenile and his family find the way most workable for them to lead a normal life, within the law." She concluded. "Unless this cycle is broken, the dependent child may become t h e pr ed e Ii nq uen t , and the..- predelinquent may become the delinquent and thus the law· breaking adult. "This is a tragic social waste. which early and effective aid can radically reduce.'' placement so that we mayt~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I most effectively carry out the court's order." "A prime consideration Is __ the proximity or the facility or - program to the home of the ----- --~ n1inor. We want to reunite the family. While the child is Jn al !i~~~~~~~~~~.., ... ..,.,,""::~:..f"::~:--zl facility. he is changing 11nd 'j . l 1 o·o 0 growing. His famil y. hopefully, is changing as well. ORDER "\ "We don't \Yant to m11 ke .... 1 II: •L. s1rangers of the child and his ~-:1;: ""'eaut1n1I paren'-'.'" (1 Stif:k-on She explained, "The transi-YOURS ': tion from institution to home \ LABELS should be smooth , so the farnl- ly can get its rquillbrl111n. I • TODAY! Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Order For Yourself or • Friend May be used on envelopes as return addre11 labels. Also very handy as identification labels for markin9 personal items such •s books, records, photos, etc. L•beh stick on 9 l1ss end m•y be used for m1rkln9 home canned foc.:d items. All libels •re printed with stylish Vogue type on fine qu1lity whit .. gummed paper. The friendliness eases the tiredness of the day, both for Hildegard and her patrons. Her weariness is from getting up early to begin work at 6:30 a.m. and from baking bread, cooking and cleaning all day. Her customers' weariness is from coping with traffic and the frustrations of their jobs. NO CHOICE This is a pleasant tiredness for Mrs. Provence. however, because .she is a restauranteur by choice, a choice she may not have been able to ma ke in her native Germany if she still were living there . She knows very well the feeling or being hemmed in and il is a reeling she does not want to have again. For her, it was during World War JI when her parents were killed in their own home dur· ing an English bombing raid. Her father had equipped the cellar or their home with all they needed for survival, in· eluding beds, a stove, food and water, but was upstairs put· ting out a fire when the bomb hit. Her mother had refused to leave her husband 's side so she was caught in the ex- plosion. also. Hildegard and her two sisters, safe in t h e i r stronghold below, huddled for three days waiting for so- meone to free them from the rubble which sealed them in Hiidegard Provence kHpt cafe cu1tomer1 h•ppy by prep.11rln9 hu rty MUN O••· •!teudel •Ml hom•m•d• bread. During brNkt _t h• ch•t! with the cUentel.,_John Rau •nd Swede Fr•ndMn--.:. an this ocation._ 7 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH HALF-YEARLY CLIARANCI GREAT SELECTION OF BOUTIQUE SPORTSWEAR -TOPS-BLOUSES- , ANTS-JACKETS-DRE SSES-CO A TS - U NG ERIE-BAGS . UP TO 1/2 OFF NOW #7 Fashion l1land, Newport Beech Opt11 Mo11dty, Wtd11ttcl•v. Th11rtd•v & Ftld•v 'Tll f 1JO St lwr_d•v 'Tll 6 P·'"· -Swndtv 12 to 5 back to the mq:ailnt, "Hor Never PlanninC ta be a tn spite of the hours or Zu." for a yw . l'tlltaurant owner, she had peeling potatoM, kneadlng She then heard tbll a frltnd eaaed low Ille bu&iaesl by dough , wullinll dlah<o and of her father'• needed a belplnl a friend whO owned it. scrubbing noon, Hildegard is secretary ln Iran for 1 yur, "My friend alwl)'I ukt I'd happy with hlr life l n so sbei convinced b1m thlt lbe made a terrlflc c o o k , ' ' America. wanted ~job and C»Uld dolt Hlldeprd aald, "But I Dever "It's very hard work. You even thotJ&b ¥e had no wu a coot or baker in have to pitch ln and do secretarial tnlnlng. Germany." everything," she sakl of her Meanwhile} ahe had a pplied Her involvement in the cafe cafe. "It's no gold mlne but it for a visa lo _come to ~ prov~ fortuitoul because it feeds us. 'Ille United States United States so she went became her "bread and -but~ has been very a:ood to me. l tMtck to the 'm1gazlne and ter" when her husband died would nevei Uve In Germany worked for a two and a half ' shortly after she bought it. again. years while waiting for It to Thick 11ices of homemade "You can make a living here come through. During thls bread (all her bread is if you want. It ls very hard in period she also did free.lance homemade) and "enough to other countries. You art a free photography. eat" are her trademarks; as person here." Finally. the day came when are btr friendliness · and con--She oornmented that the she could depart for America cern for her customers. Watergate inc Iden t Is and be rewtited with an awtt "I've never met a person ·1 ''disgraceful" and "a ablme," in Corona del Mar. didn't like," the aa1d em· but that "worse things happen Here, her nurses!' training pbaUcally. "We get very nice in other countries." was put to wie when she found people in here. We have doc--Hiklegard Provence, "mut· a job at Hoag Memorial ton, lawyen, car dealers, ter" to many besides her son. Hospital. Presbyterian, and kkll and truck drivers." Steven, 12, is happy with her here also she met hir hus· On the wall are nearly 75 customers and friends and band, Don, who said "Just color .snapshots of her they are happy with her, in don't tell me your troubles" regu1ars, whose namf!! ·and spite of all her kidding. when she asked if she could professions she knows and who She docs make a mean \ purchase the cafe three years In tum help her when help is-streudel and hefty loaf or ago. needed. bread. SIZES • 141/2 -261/2 • l/4 to l/2 OFF There'1 o. ttoreful of 1umm1r savln11 wait~ Ing to be .napped upl find raclu a nd rocks of a ll the latalf fa1hlon1 In your 1peclal sizes. Get Ml for aavl n11I le here early. e NOKEN SIZIS COST A t,1ESA-1 BOS Newport Blvd . (Nortll of 11th StM'etl HUNT INGTON BEACH-84 Hunt ington .Center fNolt to h 1•er llot.l PULLIJITON-124 0,........r Metl, .. O'flf9"'-'1" It Herffr Ill••· • Tllwt. • Pri. 1t·f -, . ..., • WIHI. • i•t. 10·6 .............. .....___...~ • ' 300 .YARDS 100% POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS Choose trom J lar ge selecl ion·of prints, solids, and fancy fe turized weaves in this fine assortment of machine washable knits. LOAD UP NOW AT THI S LOW , LOW PRICE' BR IGHT ACRYLI C SCREEN PRINTS ORIG'IU.[..ll.l!Y&i'------·-----·~-~!l:I 100% FINE COTTON SCREEN PRINT S C.Ro.;U,ll : .• IY~O), ____________ \,."J NO IRON T-S HIR T KN ITS 100o; KNITTIN G WORSTED Yard 1.22 1.22 L22 66 MENS PANT-S NOW $ Dr~s and casual stvle1 in polye$- ters. cordurQYs. denims, tweeds, knits. Good size range -29 lo .42 in wide setec:.tion of colors. 99 ORIGINAL $5.99 to $12 .99 HOME FURNISHINGS: ·18 ONLY QUILTED BEDS PREADS 10 ONLY WOVEN BE DSPREAD S Oft~ ... "------· JO ONLY TIER CURTA INS ·------~~;" HOME ' DECOR 20 STY LES LIGHT FIXTURES ·-------···---···· .. ---·-----\J.1 9.88 11.88 2.88 1.22 VJ OFF SAV·E ·-SAVE • SAVE UP TO 30°/o ON SMALL APPLIANCES TOASTER S -BLENDE RS -CAN OPENER S ALL FACTORY REP AI RED OR FLOOR SAMPLES PYRE X' WARE : o·:.::~\71·.".,,=. ,1., • -1,,~ ,, ·-----·'-' 25°/o OFF CAMERAS 5 ONLY COS INA CAMERA ( F. 1.8 LENS) -----------'133.88 ~.~~-~y MAN~YA 1000 DTL CA'.'.'_~~,A 1166,88 3 ONLY COSINA B·l POWER MOVIE CAMERA '150.88 ; ONLY GAF MOVIE CAMERA f 1!i.Wt.;1------"i!.'o 3 ONLY GAF MOVI E CAMERA ~!iJ.tl'·' lO().'l GIRLS & INFANTS ;(loONLY GIRL'S BODY SUIT S ~{·.·~"-------"'' 95 ONLY GIRLS NYLON SLEEPWEAR oe". ~ 120 ONLY' GIRLS JEANS ··so .as '24.88 300 ONLY IN.FANT FASH ION PAJAMAS 1.88 1.66 2.88 2.44 1.88 otit..~fkjf \(],'/ 200 ONLY INFANT PANTS Oii"·~' 'o\),11 Thurwt.y, Jutr 12, 197} DAILY PILOT J9 SIDEWALK TOY CLEARANCE! .·3000 TOYS Gigantic Clearance All Discontinued toys now reduced to make room for new tall toys. SAVE Big while quant ities last -All repri~d & grouped by price for easy selection. ORIG . 97° to 1.97 NOW 5oc Inflatabl e Furniture l l Vc" Twist N Turn Dal i Fash. Acc. IP:'." Doll Randy Do ll & Clothes Silty Droopy Asst. Sc ribbler Board Balanced Baton Kooky Kal ei doscope B/:O Dune Buggies Printing Set Mickey Mouse ·Punch Ba ll Rub-Ons Doctor & Nurse Kit Toten Shoulder Bags Plastic ans Asst. Dinner Set Asst. Toy Flash Camera Tea & Dinner Set \ BucRle Up Asst. Papin Fresh Doll Randy Doll Grippers 6" Wild Cars ORIG . 1.97 to 2.97 NOW $1.QO In a Minute Refill s Nursery Set x/Oo ll Mickey Hand Puppets Terry Cloth Pups Ezee Riders 7" Cycles The Gripper Romper Stampers Puzz le Block Asst. Big Shot Rifle 17 ONLY RED /WHITE/SLU E BASE BALL GLOVE ORIG .1.97to2.17 NOW $1.50 Va nity ~·.ake-up Asst. Ac tion Jackson & Outf its 11" Baby Ange l Do ll Lil Joker Doll 8" Baby Shoofly Lil Bidget 8" Baby in Cha ir Barbie Best Buy Fa shions Stuffed Bear Ass t. Color Forms Sesame St. Play Doh Odd Kin s Asst . -Asst. Puzzle Double Troublt Mac Truc k ORIG . 2.97 to 3.97 NOW $2.00 Tin y Tender Love Lazy Dazy Tiny Tear s 12" Snook y Doll Howdy Doody Pu ppet Hai r Styling Mannequin Stuffed Panda Stuffed Sitting Asst. Hatch-A-Puzz le Al l in the Fami ly Ga me Wendy Weather Girl Gi ant Tape Mea sure ORIG . 3.97 to 5.99 NOW$3.00 12" Nicki Doll 12" Bob & Babe tte Asst. Stuff ed Giant Turtle Plays/one Creation s Snoopy Gam e Whittle Away Ouij a Board Game PlaySkool Postal Stat icn Fisher-Pr ice Cloth Book s Lone Range r Guo Bi9 Sl ic ks ORI G. 5.97 to 9.97 NOW $5.00 Poo l N' Pins Shaker Mak er Ha iry Bunch Paddle Pool Lucy Tea Party Gam e Dbl. Holster Set Lone Ranger Db le Holster set Raggedy Ann Deacon Bench Ar1ists Ea sel SHOES 65 ONLY BOYS ASSO RTE D S.TYLES -4.00 '7.88 l·> ·~ Sf.H.:tfi.--·-····-·--·--.. 5.88 100 ONLY WOME N'S ASSOR1ED PUMPS e~·· .1.~::J---·--·----'-~:: GOLF BALL CLEARAN CE SLA ZENGER PLUSou.>0•-----, .. LEE TR EVINO FAUL TLESS:.,, •. i,. • .•.• , BIL LY CA S PE R~.,;.:.i 1.., ·-""'~ .. 3• ONLY HORSE SHOE SET c.): ... ,,., _______________ ,,~ .. •8 ONLY BADMINTON SET C.~19.('i.--------....... ,.,, 28 ON LY BOWLING BAGS t~IJ.r.fl•--------->o." 3 SETS MEN 'S VOIT GOLF SET 3/1.00 3/2.00 3/1.50 3/1.00 3.44 5.88 2.97 5.88 144.88 HOME ENTERTAINMENT 2 ONLY FAMOUS BRAND 19" COLOR T.V. 99 88 •..• .,.,. _______ ... , '2 . I ONLY PANASONIC F.M./A.M. DIGITAL BTRY. RADIO Oftt,a:t .. '--------'N:. 7 ONLY COMPONENl' SHELVING C•IO.'-•.t>---~~ .. 152.88 114.88 132.88 1500 PAIR ME N'S & BOYS VINYL 199 UPPER BO AT SH OE S Pair HEAVY VINY L UPPER WITH RUB BER SOLE 8-0 ONLY WOMEN'S CAS UALS r~ • A..1t-1;1·----------------··' . '>ONLY MEN'S DRE SS & CASUAL ~. ".1-1 It ,j ··----------·-------- 10 ONLY MEN 'S KNIT KICKER \ .. \1• "·"---·-·---·-------· .. -.• ' 120 ON LY FAMILY FABRICS 90YS BOYS 90 ONLY SHIRT & >LAC K SETS i.• . .;. ·1------~""' 1'0 ONLY BOY S JEANS 700 ONLY BOYS SPORT SHIRT S CPIG.alf4.4'---------- 170 ONLY BOYS SW EATSHIRT S -.~11:.1 ··------·-' '4.00 '10.00 13.98 '3.00 2/'4.00 2/5.00 2/3.00 2/3.00 SANTA ANA STORE ONLY! ' l • " ~ • • , • . • ~ • • ,, ... ,• • TIRE CLOSEOUT DEL UXE BELTED 1 ,·;~.·-·---- DE L.UXE; PLY NYLON ~-.,.,;.;~·~ ---·---·-· ' 2+2 PREMIUM POLLY & GLASS BEL TS 11.!l 1'.l"I ' __ ,,., ________ , __ .._ ___ --··-··--· .•• 19so 2500 limited sizes.& quant1ly availabi lity REDUCED! WOMEN 'S SWIMWEAR 5ss 7aa gas Many styles in these groups-som e are _ manufacturers close outs-many reduced from our own store st ock. SAVE! MENS 1400 ON LY MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS r p• .t •-'11!-----·--- 80 ONLY MEN'S SPORT COATS ........ ·--·--. ----- 170 ONLY MEN 'S DRESS SLACK S . •. ------· ' WOMENS •OS ONLY FRAGRANT ROSE S r ~ '·------·-· _:-, 600N LY LACEY KNIT SWEA1ER -~ ' .. ____ .. _______ , _____ . 110 ONLY BOUCLE SW EATER S .i'" "·------.. -------·--· .. ---' .• 36 ONLY JUNIOR PANT SE TS .:l.lt·~.'C ··-·-···---··--· _,_,,_ ..... -~· 60 ONLY FAS HION BLOU SES • < • 4 .. 1.ti-····-·-----·--·-... -~ 2/5.00 '25.00 '8.99 '1.66 '5.88 '3.00 '15.00 '5.00 190 ONLY SPORTSWEAR COOR DINATE '2.44 99c '3.50 200 ONLY WOM EN 'S SCARV ES 'I.'!--------·-•-~ .. 18-0 ONLY WOMEN 'S HAN DBAGS ! -.. ___ ----___ .. __ '• 81 ONLY WOMEN 'S QUI LT ROBE \ . ----·· --· --·--- 20 ONLY ASSO RTED LOUN GEWEA ·".'iJ'----·-----· '4.66 '7.88 WOM EN'S DRESSES 200 GREAT VALUES GRO UP l • .. t•• 0 . -------·-· - GROUP lie•· ''"~ '-··- GROU P 111 • 7.88 12 .88 . 15.88 STATIONERY & LUGGAGE 80 ONLY ASSOR TE D ADULT GAME S ... ..... _______ - lO ONLY MINI DRAW POKER --·~Ii 90 ONLY META L FOOTLOCKERS 8Sc '1.32 •a.as •• C:~NTA ANA STORE ONLY 3900 so . BRISTOL-JUS T NOR TH OF SOU TH COA ST PL AZA • DAILY PILOT Thursd_,, Jul, 12 ,197J - -Gemplainer Won't Be Smothered With Kisses EAR ANN LANDERS: Wbal'J with the kisslng in CaUfomla? 1 moved to let"'" lroor N,w En&Jond and I have, kissing in Calirorni•? -PLEASE DON'T KISS ME, KATE DEAR KISSLESS : Vo11 raltled lbc \\'roa-eag:e, Oearle. I'm o kl1ser myself. And so far, I baven'l bad uny t'O mplol.n11 . Even in Boslo n. married dauahters" who have "Had It" My mother ha1 bid me pqed at club and are "Just Plain Tired" of their meeUnp, tbe tbelter and once at a ftcaler y..,. Utblacl IOlllldl ia. a ,em. I.loin lo ldm. "adhesive-tape" mothers? Surely )'OU ballpark. Sbe Crtqu81dy calll me wbtn I recefve such letten. If not -here's the am vtaltJac: friends. My hulbend 11 a Don't flunk your chemistry int. Lov• fint. Nlnt to put up with ber bloodhound tac-I• more than one ... or glanda calling u My mother lives two blocks Crom ua. lies. He 11)'9 sht'• a lick woman and I another. If you have trouble making a n more kissing 5lnce I arrived here 1ri..J_ snw In all the 40 years I lived in ~land. '" P-3 brought up >in Bo6lton, whtre a s''fucans something. Bostonlaos don't everybody they know. Jn Boston friends meet they shake hands. If a format affair, they smile and nod. WR is reserved for relatives or in· tihla.te friends. Whal nbout this, Ann? W~ do you think of the Indiscrimina te Perhaps lhere Is more kl1sWa in California t>etause 1>eopl e tend to be: more casual out there: With your at- titude, bowever. you PouJdn't !lave any 1rouble. Your emphasis on "propriety,'' as expre~sed la °{lib lifter, probably comes lbrougb load and clear. I caa't Imagine caSual acqulntaaces smothering YOU wllb kisses. DEAR ANN LANDERS: You have printed several lettcr11 from mothers who are fe<I up wllh the selfish and ln- corulderate demands of their married daughters_ .These moJh.e.rs hayeiigM.d_ themstlves ''Had It," "Just Plain Tired.'' and ''Too Much Is Plenty." She phones me at leaat twice a day, muat be compualonate. I know be ia l!SUllly It 's more. J can't tell you how risbt but J .un flDd It very hard to take. di&tinctlon ~ need Ann's bookJet, 'Lovt many times I have walked into the house l'm not utln& for advice, Ann . J just another. If you have trouble making 1 and heard the phone tiPctnl. Her first wanted. you to know that aometlmee the distinction you need AM'S boolUet, i•Love words ar.e, "Where have you been? I've lboe ii on tht other foot , and -IT or Sex and How To Tell the Difference." been....trymg-loffreach ytiu' for aa bour..!!--PINCHES --When l ask what ls wrong she Nys, DEAR J.P.: Of course your mother Js Seri<I. along, self-addressed, stampod "Does aomethlng have lo be WRONG? I aJet. Healthy love allows breathing envelope with ,your request ,rld 35 cent' Why doo 't you print some letters from just want to know where you are." sp.ct. It doesn't track down and sur-in coin to the Daily Pilot. Golden I Date A brunet{~ the Stuft Shirt and a ramUy_.,,reception in the Newport Bejll:h home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth ,G. Harrison marke<f the 1gqlden wedding anniversary ol her, pa[ents, J\1r. and Mrs., Ar R . J\fontgomery of Hunt~ngton Beach. 1" The Montgometys were·-~ ried in Ul23 Jn the old 1'~irlt Christian Church. santa An8. They lived in Santa Ana and then moved to Bea eon Bay, J\'ewport Beach where he aerv· ed as lrcasurer ol the oom- .mwUty association for a . -number of years. I-le is a member of the Silver ~ Cord Masonic Lodge . ;ind recently was awarded a 54-year gold certificate from the Santa Ana ·American Legtori Post. He owned' an · automotive busi ness in Santa Ana f()f' 40 years. Mrs.v Montgomery was a member o( the Santa Ana Ebell Club for many yea rs. and they are membe.rs of the Santa Ana Fint Presbyterian Churc . Aaslsling with the Celebra· !Ion were the hon orees' grandson and wUe, J\lr. and J\.fn._ David R. Harrison and thelr granddaughter. Cindy Jo Harrtlon. ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATED ' Mr. ind Mrs. R. A. Montgon"Mr y Summer J eddings , Coast Couple Exchange Vows . , CARROLL-BURMEISTER St. l:.llke's Lutheran Qlureb, 'Ve1lminster was the se tting for the ma rriage ceremony or Pamela Kay Burmeister and Thon* Michael Carroll. '!be.bride, daughter ol'1Mr. and Mrs. Herman c . Bunnellter o ( Huntington Bcacb, was attended by Mrs. Jamel Hickey, the Misses Kareri Lunden, Connie carroll and Clndy Jacobsen and Mr.s. -Bud Denbaugh. Karen Carson was -(the-fiower glrt and J\lichael Underdown-served as ring ~arer. James Stearman was the best man, and ushers were • J !\like Rippon, Steve Stortz and l\('vin l\teDonald. The bride Is a graduate of Chino High School a n d California State Univ('rsity. F'u ll crlon . lier husband studied at Servile High School , 1\nahcim and Orange Coasti College. They will reside in I Newport llcach. NICHOLS-GLADDYS I Dr. R1chard Allen Nichols of Corona dcl ~1ar and Alexa ndra j A1arie Gladdy& of Stanton C.'(· changed vows and ri ngs before the He\'. llousas J. Rushdoony in Chapel of the Palms, \\'est wood . Steve Underdown, Hickey and .__..__.. •• ~ __ _, i\lrs. Arthur Anderson and Attil!a Lothrigel attended the daughter of Mr. and J\'lrs. Anthony G ladd y s o f }laz:1rdville. Conn. and the son of J\1rs. Allen A. Nichols of South Bend, Jnd. and the late J\lr. Nichols. Dennb Cleveland. The bride Is a graduate or l\Jarlna High School. Hun· tingtOh Beach and attended Orange Coast Co llege. Her \.busband is the son of l\frs. George Klei n o f \Vestn1inster and J a m e s Carrotl of Lon g Beach. Ite is a graduate or Westminster High School aod earned a BA in business from California State University. Fullerton .. ' They will make !heir home in Anaheim. ' RIPPON -STORTZ Car'\)lyn Sue Stortz of Newport Beach became the bride of Do nald Craig Rippon during ceremoni<'s conducted by lhe Rev. Dr. James Hulett in Christ Church by the Sea, Ne\\'Port Beach. • She is the daughter of i\l r. and t.frs. Charles Stortz of Chino and her hust><&nd's BERi\ARDO BERNARDO BERNARDO iii\\1e h ll\'C more o(them ORd al lewer prlu~ tll•• anyone . I• the world . ' •11 P~IHION ISLAND MRS. CARROLL parents are ti.tr. and J\1rs. J. l>onakl Rippon of Anahei nt. Mrs. Charles Cargill \\'as the matron of honor and Steve Rippon was the best man. 1 he bride graduated from Southern Connecticut State Coll<:ge and teaches , in Be llflower. }fer husband earn· ed his degree at Notthwestem University, Evanston, Ill. Bridesmaids were ~1 rs . Diane Caston, J\·liss Pan1ela Allen and Miss Rhonda llein. while 1'im~rly Caston was the fl ower girl. Ushers were .... ,THElllll~ •• •L-IDal · 4f i~k~f1 W'GrM~., 0( QNIO SOUTH COAST PLAZA-COSTA MHA FIEEIRI,_: •THOSE BQRN ON THE 13th •THOS E BORN IN 1913 •ANY POLiCE MAN .or FIREMAN WHOSE BADGE ENOS IN 13 ' •ANY PURCHASE AT HICKORY FARMS ENDING IN .13 •ANY HICKORY FARMS REGISTER TAPE ON THE 13th READING SlJ.13 ...aLPllZE EVEN THE UNLUCKIEST WIN WITH THIS ....... BEEF STICK 11··0Fl ~~ -· 1 m!! REG. • ... PRICE \k""1'1 tHlllK Yl)U Y( GOT TM( UfltlUCllll S' '*0V( VOUll LUCll 011 fl!IOA1 fHf rJ-. l'I' WAtlOJfG UllV(JI OUll lAOotllS Al c fi~~~~tl.t:!:.~~m t rlOtl II Siii I>< ... l"rtlWIY 01"1,. OAILY1 INIV l lflr Cllwrcll '111 t•- Daughter's W ~!er Bed Dang~r Warning . . Attracts Buoy Friends TJle California State Department or of cOnsumer Afiairs warns consumers or a dangerous 0 oven mitt. it Jjy ERM'A DOMBECK -:---, Most parents talk about a generation gap, but few can describe it. Some visualize it as a \Vidc cavcrll lined , wit h wall·t~wall hair or a bottomless gorge With Alice Cooper echoes. · AT WIT'S END ,. My gap i!i a small one in sit.e ... seven feet wide, seven because it reminds me of Dr. feet long. weighing three tons Stillman's diet and the lime I and filled with water. It ar-almost drowned on it." rived the other night wit h my "Look , if you'll just try it. daughter from college in a U-Lie back and see how great it H~ul and is called a water feels on your back." bed. "I'm sick,'' I gasped, "I No matter where I stand in knew I shouldn't have set it in· the State, I can see the water 10 motion. You know how bed. nauseated I get when Jacques "Let me see if I unders14nd Cousteau winds his Watch. you." I said to my daughter .. Help me." "You want to spread lhis "Help you what?" she piece of plastic on the. shrugged. "You've onlygotone bedroom noor, stick a garden hand" on the bed. Here, lie out hose nozzle in that little hole flat." on top an11 turn the water on The kids helped me roll my all the way." body Into t!J middle of the "Don't worry, Mom ," she bed where 1 bounced up and said. "It's unsinkable." down like a rubber-duck in a "It's statements like that hurricane. that prompted the captain of "I'm freezing to death " I the Titanic to buy a dress for said. ' hin1self before they left port," ··1 told you to put hot water I said. into it." "'Vhat don't you like about ··1t snlells like the lost & it?" she asked. "Docs it lake found of the YJ\fCA," up loo much room?" '"That's the bleach. You'll ''No nwre than the Gulf of get used to it." 1'1exico. I think it bothers n1e 'Vithin minutes, my body was in a straight prone posi- fti)n and the rolling had stop- ped. There was bu o y1a n t stillness. _ ';J'ldn't I t'ell ioU you'c;l lo'f'.e it?' beamed ll)Y· diugbter, ·"Lind that you ll,OU!dn't want to get out Or it!" At that moment, we seemed ~o close, I didn't know how to ,tell her my long toenail had hit a snag and the snag was leaking. . Drug Council The mitts, labeled as a ''delyxe deco- rator style 9~.eq. mitt," Benhar Manufac- turing Co.~ City of Commerce" was found t9 be exiref11ely dangerous when used around Jie.,t. .' TestOd ·by the department, the mitts, made .of polypropylene (but mislabeled as cottO:n) melt at 310 degrees and char at 350 degrees. The mitt shrinks as it melts, conforming and sticking to the hand, .making it difficult to remove and can seriously burn the wearer. • NEW YORK (UPI)-The Drug Abuse Council \\"ent lnto business just one year ago "to seive as a voice of• informedlC :--:;;;;;-;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:- reason 01. a national problem ~~ ,_.. exacerbated by myths, fears f BM'H and desperate solutions," the . · Ford Foundation reports in it& newsletter. Established 'by four foun. dations,' the toqricil· recently received $399,364 more from the Ford Foundation for the coming six morith5. ' SHOPS · MARTEX TOWEL SALE ~EVERYTHING FOR THE · BATHROOM T-11s. "'I., ~ Qf11l111 Incl I ,.,... ... line If ICCli .. rlofl The council spent its first .. year building up a bank or reliable Information on drug abuse and trying to improve the llnes of communicallon among the hundreds ' o f organizations in the field. 31 FASHION ISLAND 644-2353 tANllAMlllCARD MASTIR CNAlel COSTA MESA-2200 Harbor Blvd.-Kmart Plaza GARDEN GROVE -12041 Harbor Blvd. ELSE' the "Pants Lady" \vill ~ at our Costa ~1esa stor~. 2200 liarbor Blyd. 1n Kmart J>Ja za \Ved .. 'July 25th 10:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Be Here! NONWOYEN INTERFACING WHITE 25 ¢ 4S" Wide ONLY Yd, Full Bolts THE PRECISIO N FIT PANTS CLIN IC OFFEREP AS A FREE SERVICE TO YOU CLEARANCE! $1.67 Valuo-Polyseter/Cotton CLEARANCE! Elie' of C•liforni1 th1 P1nt1 L1dv 1th th1 11win9 world on r;,, with h•r hot 111w p1il1rn, for knih 111d w11w11. Shi h11 9011t lo i ll l1119th1 lo cr1.,t1 1 ""'"'btr of br1nd nRw 1ll-1it1, multi. 1tyl1 p1n t1 p1 tte1n1. H1r "Knit 'n' Fit P1nhlyl11" i nd "El11' J11n1" li111 includ11 1 '"1d1ty of e•cifl119 l11hio111 which i911i!1 th1 1nlh111i11ffl of th1 hom1 ''"'''· s1ed. VOILE PRINTS 57~d. For Cool •nd C•refree ·SUmmer Fashions • SPORTSWEAR • TREMENDOUS ASSORTMENT OF ALL TYPES OF SPORTSWEAR ANO PLAYWEAR FABRICS. CHOOSE fROM SOLIDS, PRINTS ANO NOVELTIES. • PERMA PRESS OR WASH 'N WEAR • VALUES UP TO $1.95 50¢ Yd. 45 Inches If ON BOLTS 11/ldo . • DECORATORS SPECIAL e FULL BOLTS-Rog. to $2.98 -yd.~8 inches wide . LINEN and COTTON - H1r p1tttr111 1r1 .,;rtu1ll, foolpro&f, •~•" for !~1 110!•!00· t•ptrl111c1d. Som1 "'"' tl1rl1, 1om1 1rf with 1l11ti11d w1i1f• b111d1 i ncl tOl!ll with t!pp•": 111 4 r1fl1d wjth 1uch pr1ci1io11 111d with 1i111plifi1d !11tft11ctio111 th1r1 :1 no 1111d to p1nic 11 DRAPERY· HOMESPUN II Pel'•'-N•llf'tll 94~ .. Cele! p.., A11, ...... ....... th1 lho119ht of 1twi1111 with w11v1t or •Ntt. , . .. ' e HIGH FASHION-AT LOW·LOW PRICES! . . ' ' JUST ARRIVED-IN READY TO WEAR-.nd MARKED $160.00 to $110.00! ACRYLIC SWEATER KNITS ••• Just $194 rt FOR COATS -TU RTLI NICKS -SHIAfM ••nsn -SMOltT s11·n ., PULl.Ot'llS. "' NOW . TMIS PllCI CAM"f LAST I I COSTA MESA -2200 Harbor Blvd. -642 -2340 • GARDEN GROVE -12041 Horbor Blvd . 537-1270 \ • . ' ' ; • • ' ' • ' • I Tltur$di_y, July 11, 197) DAILY PILOT % J Horoscope: Pisces ·Separates Fact 'I" " OVERWEIGHT?.i ({) " 56 LB. LOSS IN 40 DAYS FRIDAY JULY 13 By SYDNEY OMARR ARJES (March 2l·April 19): Contncts, money. prestige - tt1ese coold combine. Key now is to be analytical. Look bel'lealh the S\Jrfacc. Find reasons for events. TA URUS !April 2G-May 2010 Your philosophical views could connict with those of family member. Realize that a cJash ol ideas can be exciting and Erin McKim Mc Ki ms Tell Troth The engagement of Erin . Louann 1\1cKhn and Dale Edward Hood has been an- nounCed by her pa rents. Mr. and Mrs. Will iam McKim of Costa Mesa. The bride-to-be, a dietitian 1vho attended Calirorni a State University, Long Beach, Is planning a Dec. a "'edding in First United Methodi s t Church, Costa 1\1esa. Mr . and Mrs. Walter Hood, also or Costa Mesa, are parents of the fiance \\'ho graduated from Estancia High School. SHARON REAUME November Rites Set Mr. ant'.! J\1rs. Ar l h u r Reaume of 1\1ianti, for n1cr Lido Isle residents, have an- nounced the engagement of their daughter. Sha ron Anne Reaume to James R. \Velty of San Diego. The betrothed are planning a Nov. 17 wedding in Our Lady of Ml.· Carmel Cat h o ! ic Church. Newport Beach. The future bride is a graduate of Newport Harbor High Sehool and California State University. San Diego. Her fiance. son of l\1r. and 1'.1rs. John Welty of San Diego. is an alumnus of i\>lount Miguel High School. San Diego. and CSUSD. l~e also earned his MBA at CSUSD. Rites Planned Deborah Daust and James E. Voelkl Jr. are planning lo n1arry Aug ., 11 in the r~1rs1 Christian Church. Anaheim. Parents of lhc bride-to-be are Jack Daust of Sierra l\ladre and Mrs. Delores Daust of Whittier. lter riance's parents are !\Ir. and l\1rs. James E. Voelkl of NewpoM Beach. Miss Daus! is a graduate of Whittier High Sehool. and Mr fiance , a graduate of Mission Viejo Aigh School. now is serving In the Army in \\'est Germany. UFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY .... , ... _ ""' -t:l:I .......... . e .... ,. ... -•••·•31t constructive. Don't ho Id grudges. GE~UNI CMay Zl-Jwic 2010 See through schemes. What Is built up as a "surt thing" could be based on house or cards. Know ii and respond accordingly. CANCER (June 21.July •:?21 : Stud y Gemini message. \Va it and observe. Be aware of le gal ra1nilications to actions. pro- jects. Stick to what you kno w. LEO (July 23·Aug. 23 1: Avoid extremes. Check dlcl. / f3221 -1 0 Re\'iew nutr itional rt-- qu lrtn\ents. Fln lsh as i~ ment. Refuse to be wedded to past. Broaden horiions. YIRCO (Aug. 23-S<pt. 22 to Travel plana are reatured. Vacation acti\1lty c o u I d · dominate. Leo individual of- fers sound advice. Key nO\V is to be recepl Ive. Be in- d('pendent. not arrogrant. Put forth or iginal ideas. t.18R',\ (Sep!. 23-0ct. 221: Unorthodox money proposal HOUSE PAINT • W!tn'I bli•t•r or pul;-. • Cleans wp •a'Y with water. · e For howM and !rim. • 600 Calors. OUR REG . 6.97 . 3 PIECE STUCCO SET •Includes frame, eJ1• tension handle, and roller cover. OUR --· REG. 'ii 1.49 SET BEST _ . LAWN FOOD •New mini-pelleted lawn food for all lawns. •Covers 5000 •q. ft. 9ra11 or 10,01)0 sq. ft. dichondra. n! ... 30 LB. HOUSE PLANTS • A•sotted indoor plants could be beneficial. Follow palh of intuilion. What suf· ficed in p.ist may bt ou~ moded. Know It and b.ise ac· lions accordingly. SAGITTARIUS I NO\', ZZ· Dec. 21 ): Be \\'l'l ry \\'here ~tey, valuables, personal possessions are concerned . Friend confides Indiscretion. Dpn't cast Cirst stone . l\1istakes could OL'CUr if you are 100 deJlendcnt on others. Be a\\·arc of flnc llrint. born but you do kllO\\' ~·hnl )'OU W3nt to RC<.'Ompllilh. ~( Under Med lc•I Supervision •t the 'I AQUARIUS fJon. ~ft>b. 18 1: Oomeslie adjus1n1enl I! indkaled. Ae<."ent al so b on \\'hat happens be hind sctnes. Chlldren could be Involved . ' Omega Clinic · . ' SC.'ORPIO (Oct. 13-.Nov. 21 ): You are able to walk through and over obstacles. Pnth a hnost seems miracul f>usly cleared. Aspects are lighter aod you 1neet peopl e at social affairs. One who seemed in- different now offer s v:ilid ex- planation. ' C.'Al'RI CO ll N ! Uec. 22-Ja n 191: You arc able nO\\' 10 n1akc \'&luahlc conlat'IS. )'oo get results. Some term you stub- PISCES fFeb. 19-~larch 201: 't'ou may be S<'einl! "\t uatlons . individuals ln light uf nonreali· ty. Key is to !ii'pnr:llt' ract front fancy. to knu'-'' dlffcren('t' hetweffi in1uilioo and "·1shlul thinking, BIG 13 OZ. · • PKG. OF SO ·~.ill~ PEGBOARD SPRAY PAINT ,\ ,! \1 2 • u .. ~!!~~n•, I ~~;;..Q"!"!'!!::~-. wtihty room; workshops :,. and gorages to hong iHMI practicolly ~i:iything. .. , .. . ' .. ·.· ' ' . . ' . . • HOURSo 9o00 • 7o00 CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT AUTO AIR CONDITIONER RECHARGE KIT • Stey cool· replace FREON by yeurHlf and M»v•. • Easy ta "·'•· e With •P4cial 1af•ty check valve in base. ... ~-.,n ;:I EA. NATURAL llEIGE SHADE SWAG •Attractive bwrlop covered •hode with multi-tone trim. •Include• all hatdwore. ou• • nn IEG . I .II EA . "" . ~ I SAVE NIAILY .( . • Build a patio, ba .. b·q~e, · ··.• · :<, fence ... many building uses. • Made of durable concrete. • Attractive natural red color. ;1· sAYk 1, I, 7.11_ ti \ 1' ~ill~ ~ SURFACE MOUNT MIDICINE CABINET • 11 inch •i1e-:- • '•!,.heel 1toinle11 400/o! \ I J, CEDAR OUR REG. 8' t 5111S ~·) •1111 IS.ff t::I EA . MOCla oJJHI 3 JAmcll-OUlllO ..... 1 ''·· ..,., fl ,,,, 19" ..C .. AIH nc••••• ou•nG ,.,, ..... •led e Nalurol !!!!!!!! '. ~ liiiil ' < ' ---, -· • ' -• • • . ,, ... .. •!IL . ·~ .,. " -11• '· ' .. •In 4" containers. Brighten wp yowr day! I ;1: I I ,. •First O"ality cedar. • Greot for gord•n need1 ... for tomatoes, flower•, elc. • Ideal fot decorative bord- ers arownd flower gardens ond trees. ~4~n:. DOUBLE HIBACHI •10" x 17" deluxe double grill hibachi. • 27" wtowght iron legs. • '1•tol handle• with cast iron and chrome plated 'i~··!nn ... DELUXE GAS ARBEQUE ;;;,;;;:;:::i;::;~r · Complete with two torv- ing end ttayt. • 'ermanent lavo rock brlquette1 • 1 "'2 ~" ~ •• xS foot. 'yl OUR REG. 39• EA . I PATIO DOOR 12260 I . OAIVIY 1.0U\IAU • • NORWALK A•ISTOHI l l \ID. et $TUOllAKll M l 1111 Ol ttS PllNU • 'OMONA • WOODIAND Milli •SI NO. Milli 12t40 ¥1CTOtY l lVO. --· •CIOll "°"' --IM&llOCIC M>IJJ,tf ' 90POUND ROLL ROOFING •By John Monto/ille. •Mineral faced. •Choice of three color1: Silver Gray. Green or Cedor tone. co .. ~ ... •n' AT S.49 ;:I ROLL -· •SANTA ANA ,, .. , >lOt so. llllfOl c;HA,1't'AM AVI. IU\fl .. UOf l \llU\lfOO' ,._ IQ\ITOI CO•" 'l•la • GUDINA 11'99 10. W1S1111' IJJJJ TlllGl.t.'" ID. r.N•T 10C.t.t•nO t t.IOC:•l '"" Ml NO 00 tOUU.Ud ..• e Long lasting California ledwood. • SwrfClced four •ides. •I FOOTERS ! SCREEN DOOR RESCREENING KIT *"' ... "'""· 10Jl1 MAOJotCKIA MFWMMW> I U. "''°'I '-OM UIO•..o-it .. lfUI Miii HUNTINGTON llACH lONG IUCH 7IOO IOIHOll 2ll71.SOUTHS1, , .. '· , • ZZ DAJL Y PILOT Tl'lutsdQ, July 12 ,1973 WHITE t5%1ff--~­ f8'S l I01S' _G ,_ .. •o ,," .............. ·: . ·3.97 K •t Shirts · · · ·' · · · · · · · · · · · · ' , 1 e·rry ni p ·. mos . ;·; ..... r • " ...... ·S.88 to lA.97 Broodclol<th ·t ~/~cks .• ' ............... •.. 4.49 to 6.97 ooub\e "' •• , •.. · • • • • • · • c::011;;·;~-l~.},!'n !5~ ftiJ 1U t r & cotton; sohd col· ~Riel t.991• 3.97 No iron pol1es e stripes. s-M-l·XL ors, contr asting • · 5 99 .3.99 to · . d Solid Swimwear ..••..... ·.3.97 to 6.99 . ,. . . " .. EVBIY SINGLE PIEG! ~0~n a;ockets . · • • • • • • • · · · · • ·:::::::. 2.97 to;-: . Wolk Shorts ....................... 3.00 to 99 W. k pants ... • · · · · · "· • • • · • ~ 4.79 to 5. . or · · ·.. · 6 97 · W k Shirts ... · · · · · · · : · • " " .... 2.50 to · IOMnulftC RIMI!!! 11ave It ID that can't be beat Morel tor \l's the clothing sa11e w bom babies to a • .-, ... ot EXllA SAVINGS-OFF •Ri or rt Shirts .. · · 6 97 . Sleeve Spo . · . . .. . 2 .50. to · Short ve Dress Shirts .. '. 2 88 to 6.97 Short Slee t & Dress Shirts. .. . 3 99 · . togs or ne · n between. Lu .. eve['j\h1ni · · · ents and evertone 1 '\\ find a sen- thei{ g{eat ~an~~d{ a\\ \he \a\est s\1\es~o~izes lor e~ert famous \b{aonll~ion ol co\ms., st1less ~U{ g{eatest tasb1on Sleeve Spor .. 1.9B to · ~ong & Solid 1ies .............. 4 99 to 9.97 sat1ona c tamily. llon t mis membe{ ol yom . _fancy Assortment of Sweaters • 1 :99 to 3.97 -, clearance ever\ . large I'd 1onk 1ops ....... fancy & So I - BO'<S' ~ ........ 2.97 to 5.97 . . .. ..... .. 1 39 to A.97 Sweaters .. . Shirts • • .. • . . 97 Sleeve Dress 1 29 to A. Short-K 't Shirts · · .. ·' ' A 97 short-Sleev.e · ni 2.47 to · Broadcloth Paiamos · ·::::::: 1.00 to 5.97 Jr. Boys Boxer Pants . . . . . . . 3.BB to 6.97 Plaid flair Jeans , .... : ...... 1.78 to 2.97 1 k 1ops · · · · · · ·. ',' 5.BS to B.BB an io-Way Suits . . . • 4.29 Jr. Boys ••... , ..... . Denim Jackets • • • ·::.... 2.49 to 6.99. Nylon Jackets . . . . . 3.97 to 6.97 Baseball Jackets . '·;. :· '3.97 to 6.97/!;;.-o-....,;; Corduroy Pants . . . . 2.97 to A.97 Western Jeans ..... ·,· 5.97 to 7.91 slack Sets · · · · • · • [)~~lm Jeans Jr. Boys/Boys 1 99 to A.99 •••••••• • • • • • . -~ssoltlBI souns' PR\Nl _S~~~~~! Boxers and .1ams I colors and sizes. ' .,._ ,0w oiscoullT Q15D/-lff fRl{1'J,t9t•S.tt (. 1111 CHAIGI IT ... USf rout CllOl1 CAIO 1•D'sol MEN'S QUALITY DRESStSPORT SHIRTS oo: OUR REG. DISCOUNT PRICE Solids, patterns, stripes; long & short sleeve. Knits in· eluded in this group. Sizes S·M·l·Xl and 14 to 17. ..a: frenc:hCocdcJngforAmtricOns-Oiat'1 •••••••••••••••••• 5.95 1.00 .50 Nooh's Ark ............................. . Medi\erraneon Cooking for Pltowre-McDowell ••• ,, •••• 6.00 3.98 1.99 Front iersman of West .......•. ""''''''"' Traditional British Cooking for Pleasure-Morrin ••••••••• 6.00 3.98 1.99 Sea Horse ..................... .".,.0,,,,• French Cooking for Pleo11Ke-Reynold'1 ••••••••••••••••• 6.00 3.98 1.99 Rum Pum Pum ..................... ,,.,.~ Italian Regional-Boni. ••.••.••••••••••.••••••••••••.•• 19.95 7.95 · 3.98 learn About Book Series ........ ;.,,,,,. Meat Cookery in Coior ............ ,,,,_,,J•••u ·•·•••·•••6.95 1.98 .99 Dr. Seuss' Horton Hears a Who ..••. ,,.,,. Sunset MMttJ Cook look •••••.••••••••••••• · •••••••.••.••• 7.95 -• 5~96 Gfeot Bottles of History -Trenton-'••••· Mcntering the Art of Frtneh Cooking-Julia' ChlkJ •• : •••• 12.50 9.38 All Golden Hord·Bock Books, .. J.:.,.,,, • Good Housekeeping Cook look .•••••••••••••••• : •••• :.8.50 6.38 . ·"• -Homes & Garde.-. Famous food-Fomoui Ploct1 .. 6.95 5.21 AIJ •S: amllllll•: The New World ..•.... ,.,,.,,.,).,,,,.• ••-·· Ill tr •-" E ,__. of G ~--· 3 9S 1 00 .SO Cameo Art Books·•·· ...........• ;~•••'•' ,_,.. us onro nc:yc. ~·a Oro.nU'D . • ...... •. •. · · · · E I r' M · • ••-IT Udall 1' 9S • 98 2 49 ltp ore s ops ···················•••••' tCO I '""tiono tlOIUf'el -'• •• •·• •• • • •' •. •• • ,., ~. • N h • . nd F•-·--of •-~-R" kit IS 00 7 9S 3 98 art ,.,merican I ion Art ..••.•• ,~,,·,,• ~ ~~ ":'~~,,. -te • • • • • ·'''' •'' '' '· ·''' • • 1 ·95 · 1 • .. .1. The Life & Times S&ries. , , , , •• , ···•••••• • .-E:'" DQQIU......... ••. . . . . . . . • . . . . • . • • • . . . . . • . .~ .ate . .v!U: lor 'p~·•-of •~-CI'-198 99Song1ofJohMyCa1h ... ,,,,,.,,,.,..,,,• IO'lllrl fVl'I~ '"""" ... °" 0 ~····················~······· • • Ii h of Bobb D I ' • TL. r-.~ o·--~----3 95 1 98 99 OQfOp "f "f y On ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1111' ~. I ,,_,,.,..................... • • • The u.--·l ' . f1CP1Jllll.flll _ __ : ~ s. l ........................ ~··;·· Specjol Stloctionol RondomHaulO & Knopf lookt ................................ 51% If llN All PDSJEU .. Valuttupto •••••••••• 7.9.5 · .50 3-(lx • 7-14 2 Pc. Bathln6 S..lts •• .2.(J()lo 3.97 3-6x • 7·14 Shorts •••••••••••••• 2. 97 to 3. '11 3-6x • 7-14 Tennis Dre,..s ..... .2.00to5.97 J-6x • 7-14 Short Sets ........... 2.99 to 4,99 3-6x-7-14 Body Suits ........... 1.99 to 3.99 3-61< -7-14 Shortalls ............. 2.00 to-4.97 I J.6x. 7-14 Polo Tops ............ 2.97 to4.97 3-6x • 7-14 Polotm> Pants ....... 5.99 to 8.99 3-6x -7°14 Nylon.lockets ........ 1.99 to 3.99 Girls Bek1 •. , . , .••• , ...... , ...... l. 97 to J. 97 3-6x -7-14 Ponts Sets. ........... 4.99 to 7.99 Girls 7-14 SW...ten ............. 2.00 to 6.97 3-6x • 7·14 Scoot... Sldrts. ....... 2.00 to -4.97 Gkla 7°14 Sl11pw-............ 1.99 to 3.99 ~ • 7-U Pants ••••••••••••••• :l.97 to 8.97 . CHARGE IT tODAY . WIMOttOI , r.ii ....... CAii .,, •• •IUSTllCUltlC• f ~ 111 t•""•• •• ISl IUI cmu11i1n Clll11 lllMS FOR YOUR . SHOPPING CONVfNIErlE Jiil C .. E IT TDDAYI ' ' . ' • . ' . •• .. : . • • • • -- 'a: i hurM!ay, July 12, 197) WHITE FRONT ·•If APPARR SlASHED SAlE SlAl\lS t\IUl\SDA1, JUl 111\\l 10AM piece o1 apparel in o~r 1 ·iy 1ashion department am1 . i.· the must be cleared . out .w1t111n. t weeks. Sale is dehnetly . next wo . that's ' limited in time: once gone, . ' it ... so hurry in tb_day f o~ the best selection\ Don'rm1ss out._;, Misses Coord' · APPAREL Ladies' Jam . '"ates ........ . L d . a1cas " "· .. ·.. 3 99 a 1es' Jam· . · · · · · ·•. . . . · · · to 9 99 01ca s · · .. · · 2 · Misses' Nylon ets ................... : 99 to 3. 99 Misses' p I Pant Sets · · · · · · .3. 99 to 4 99 Ny/on & ~:rye~~er :qnt S~.t~:::::: . '.' '· · · · · · .. 5_'99 . .. . ic Ribbed S ........... 14 99 · · . . . . • Weafer· T.,. • . ... • •••••• 1 vps . . . . . . .. . . . 3 ... . . . . . . . . 99 .... LADIES' SHORT SlfEUE . . . 4. 99 5. 99 J,~~uir,"1~o0i short sleeve sweat. KNIT TOPS • LOW DISCOUNT PRICDI UMlllD BAlf llME ie~;e's"ffYLlic b1fn~r:U~/e"&d poly-25·0~1.""'"'"'· '" . ·m· Pas-· 70 OFF We must cl • • • . room -for aeart our floors to make All Long S/e Alt Pinafore eve.Blouses ..•.•..• ota/fy AU NEW fMflLY Fi new, exciting DEPARTAffllt ca··MHION Alt S k s. ·" · · · ·.. . '· · .3.99 to 6 99 moc t · .. ·· 3 · Junior Ac ~ps. · ................... 99 to 6.99 Junior p ry/1c Halters .....••••••... 3. 99 to 6. 99 . ants ••••••...••••.•.•••••.• 2. 99 to 3. 99 "'••rS AUS.· 17 ..... 5.99 to 14.99 p~SE ASSORTMENr ••• Baay I ....... ••••••··· ...•.•. 3.2S 1.00 ORIG. PUB. AT .SO Robert L. Stevenson's Kidnapped ..•••• , •••• , .•• , •..• , ..•• 1.60 ,,,,, .. ••J·••••····••···· .......• 1.49 .75 D. OeFoe's Robinson Crusoe •..••.•.••••••..••. ,,,,,,, •• , 1.95 , ·•••••'''''',, •••••••. 3.75 1.00 .50 R. Kipling's The Jungle Book ...• , •. ,,, •• , •.•.•••••• ,,, ••• , 1.50 •••••••!'''''''''''''''3.25 1.00 .SO R. Kipling's Captain Courageous .•.•.... : •••••.•••••••••• 1.50 • ~;,,,,, •••••••••.....•• 1.50 .89 -~5 Shokespear's Series of Plays .•....••••••••• , •••••••••••.. 2.75 ...................... 2.50 i.oo .5o SPORTS· ~.-.•••••••..•.•••• 1.95 .49 .2S • ·• ••• .: ••• ,. • •.•••.••••...•.• 25 % OFF A Pictaral History of Surfing ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,, •• 4.95 ........ ' . . . .. ~ •••••••••••••••••••• 19.95 ·~ •••••••••• , •••.•..... 2.98 oii•••''t••••••··•••••6.9S •-'••'•••••••••••••····· 9.9S ............ , •••••.•. 2.98 .....•• ' 6.99 1.49 2.95 3.99 1.98 People In Boats .•••••••••••••••••• ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,3.95 3.50 BO IT Yomw: .7s Proctical Handyman's Encyclopedio .,,,,,,., ••••••••••.•• 3.95 1.48 Popular Mechanics Do It YourM11f ..•••••• ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, •• 3.95 2.00 Chilton's Repair & Tune-Up -Volkswagon .•• ,,,,,,,,,,,4.95 1.00 Chilton's Repair & Tune-Up -Opel ..•.•.••..•••••••.•• 4.95 1972 Auto Alrnonoc , •• ,,,,,,,,, •.••••..•••••••••••• ,,,,.1.95 .so PBS I llAJllE: REG. PRICE .77 .77 .77 .77 .79 2.99 1.99 1.39 1.39 1.99 1.99 1.00 ••••.••••••.•••••••••••• 4.95 •• , •••••••••••••••• 7.95 ••••• 1.00 1.98 1.98 ,99 Animals of the World,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, •• , •• 3.98 2.49 .99 Treasury of Cots ,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ••..•••••••••••• 2.98 Treasury of Dogs •••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,, •••••. , .•••.... , •••• 2.98 ~····················· .6.95 llJ Pmll I The World of Nature Series .••••.•.•• , ..•.•..••..•.••.••• 2.95 1.00 1 JidJB' WEAR Ill JUVENILE FmlBRE TBOi ,. . SALE PRICE .39 .39 .39 .39 .;o 1.50 1.00 .70 .70 1.00 1.00 .so 1.25 1.•9 1.49 .50 Tots Knit Dresses •••••••••••••••• 2.99 to4.99 Gi~s 7-14 Panty &Slip Ser ....... l 97!o 3.97 · . ... " • • • Tol1 Short Sets .................. 1.99 to 3.99 Infants Jump Suits .......... , •••. 2.39 to 2.99 . Tots Copris ........................ 1.00 to 4.97 lnfonls Body Suits ........ y ..... 1.99to 3.99 Tots Shorts .............. , ....... 1.00 to 2.99 Infants Drosses .... , ....... , ..... 3.39 to 5. 99 Tots Body S,u.its ...._...~, ..•. , •••.• 1.00 to 2.99 New Born Dresses .•• , •••••••••• 3.99 to 4,99 Tots Denim Joclr:ets ,,,, •• ,, •.•••• , , .. , • , 2.99 lnfonts Pant Suits .••••• ,,, ••• , •.. 3.00 to 4.99 Tots C~pri Sets ................ ~. 1.99 to 4.99 Infants Playweor ................ 2.00 toS.97 . COSTA -MESA tile bod ' carefree and ohs UITI n assorted col ny on and Polyester 1 Y suits of 1 • o versa-ZS% up several at thii;~;dd white. Pick· O IJlrf •scou~t Price! REG lO f"j PRICES 'f 9°91scouNr • 104,99 Materni1>, t M ., ops . aternity Sh · " · · .. . . .. .. 3 .M orts · ·" .99 to 5 99 Maternity Pants. : ............... 2. 97 to 5 91 aternity p " · · · .. · .. . 4 9 · Mater . a~t Sets. . . . . . . . . . . . 9 to 7. 99 Lad' n1ty Uniform Sk irt ... B.49 to l l. 99 La !es Smocks..... . s ...... 4. 97 to 6.-97 L d!es Pajamas .... . . ........ 5. 97 to 8. 97 ad!es Long Gowns .......•.. 3. 97 to 5. 97 tad!es Baby Dolt p .••••••.. 2. 97 to 4. 97 ad!es Kaftans... oiomas .. 3.57 to 7. 97 tad!es Straw Ha;db ...... S.99 to 7.97 od!es Body Briefs ogs .3.0o to 5. 97 Ladies Fu// st· ....... 2. 97 to 4 97 Lad· rps.···· I 97 · !es Half St; s · · " · to 3. 97 ladies Bikini' pp . : " .... I. 97 to 3 97 d. antres 6 · .a ies Shorty Gow . . . . Be to 1. 97 ns .. 2. 97 to 4. 97 3088 BRISTOL ST. · San Diego Freew1 y 1t Bristol ., LADIES'. QUALITY BIKINI PANTIES, SLIPS and 1/z SLIPS TAKE A BIG EXTRA oo: STORE HOURS : MON. thrv SAT. 10 to 9 SUNDAY IOam to 7pm • I • DAILY PILOT Thunday, July 12 ,1973 Summer Fun Groups Keep Calendar Full YES USC Juniors A luncheon In the Corona dcl f\1ar ho1ne of t.1rs. Donald Clarke Tuesday. July 17, will be given to welt'Ome new members of the Orange Coun· ty Chapter, Universily of Southern California Town and Gown J unior Auxiliary. They are the Mmes. E.c.·· Burns, James Dalton. Dennis Geiler. John Ha m i Ito n , Richard Hare. L a w r e n c c Hauser. Lance Larson. Chris ~·lelchior. ~1. W. Patterson and Lawren Rittenhouse and Miss Julie Peek. Mothers' Group Psychologist Bill Heard and two asaociates from the North Coast Mental Health TeaQ'l o! Huntington Beach will be speakers at the next meeting of the Mothers Morning Out club. The group will meet at 10 a.m. Tueado.y, July 17, in the Pountatn Valley Center. This is 11: newly formed group and its purpose is to provide mothers a place to meet for a few hours while making new friends and hear· ing speakers. All mothers are welcome. There are no dues. but a nominal fee is charged for baby-sitting. Secretaries lnstead or a bu siness n1eeting, Orange C o u n l y Chapter of Executives' Sec'retaries will attend the Angels-Indians baseball game Tuesday, July 17. Warm-up time wUI be at 6 p.m. nnd buf· fet dinner will be served at 7. AARP Fred ff. Dewey, regional representative of area 9 will answer questions about the American Association of Retired Persons when he is a guest of the Hunlington Beach Chapter. The group will meet at t p.m. \Vednesday, July 18. in 1he !\1urdy Park Community Ccnler, flunlington Beach. Dewey also will discuss plans for the AARP·NRTA PEERING AROUND UNIVERSITY HIGH School graduates Ja1nes Hinton and David Caillouette n:.-ceived $50 book scholarships to Sad· dleback College fron1 the Irvine Juni or \\'oman's Clu b. Adding intercs l Wa!i the ar· rh•al of the IUchartl Kenned)'" or San Cle1ncnte in their 1911) auto. Twins' Moms Food Stomps Pay Postage DTERY OUR BIG SHOE SALE IS NOW IN PROGRESS .•• DON'T MISS IT! TERRIFIC VALUES THRUOUT THE STORE 225 E. 17th ST.-COSTA MESA 548 2778 PUB~IC NOTICE rUBLIC 1'0TICE the rules • • • Shop .the .. specials.' A1aybe it seems obvious, but \\'hen Columnist Sylvia Porter tell s hei-readers .something like : wa tch newspaper ads for bargains, she always goes the extra step. She asked questions of some of the food Industry's lenders and found out savings can an1ount to many, many times the 41h ~O predicted rise in overall food prices. That's econo1nlc advice you can believe. Test It for yourself. Check the SJ>tCials In the bar- gah~laden ads of the Wednesday Food Section every week in the DAILY PILOT. And ii you want more lips on getting you r money 's worth. read Sylvia Porter's "Money's Worth" column appearing sev· crnl tilne~ each week In lhe financial pages of the .. DAILY PILOT. The One That Means Business DAILY PILOT PUBIJC NOTICE PUBLIC "OTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE • • rUBLIC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE • • . . • •• • ! I t .. • .. ; • . ' f • • OAILV PILOT 25 Accident Victim Believes Air Bags • Ill DETROIT (UPI) -John R. Beauchamp is convinced the e:rperlmental air bag system in his car saved him from serious injury when he slam· med into a parlted automobile at almost 25 mUes an hour . Beauchamp reeelved only minGt facial abrasions as he pitched forward into the in- nated air cushlon -the 10th system bu worked in an aC: cldent. BEAUCHAMP, H , of suburban LJ.vociia, ul.d be "klbd of dozed" as he enc.red a West Side llelrOlt in- tersection, bit control of the car and then into the parked auto. He 'WU driving one of 1,000 cars equipped by GM and Beauchamp A id he is con· vlnctd the air bag system ls useful because it requires no action by either the driver or front seat passengers. Unless the 1imetable ls delayed, all 17&.model cars will be equip. ped with such a passive restraint syste1n. "The bags can1e out so rast, bag system a1 lint to the ex· a pessenger'• air bag dtployed I can't even recall U there "''•~ tent th.at I wasn't sure If it and slightly Injured the a bang," he said. "One mo-would '!\'Ofk," he uld. "I'm woman passenger. ment ·you wince and thty're very deflnltely a devotH now. out. And I didn't even IOM! my I think the proof ol the system G!\1 llAD PLANNED to pro- glasses." iii in the operation and now l vlde air ~gi as an option on Beauchamp said he used know ii "'orb." 100.000 or Its 1974 models, but seat belts in his wife's car lw Jn addition lo G~f's 1,000 said government slowneu Jn than 50 percent or the time le.st cars. Fqrd has a fleet of finalltlng specifications ror and alnlost ne\'er used the 780 cars now on the road. The shoulder harness, re.lying on two test neet.s ha\'e recorded 1est dwnm ie!I has held up Ule the ai r cushion system to pro-256 accidenl s, 10 or them project. II has also delayed tect the occupants. severe enough to cause lhe air building up to I mllllon cars -Ume in more than 26 ml1Uon miles of testing that the then leased to several cor--~ ••1Tm~ic11tE bags worked porations to test wider actual "eTY well," he said. "They did conditions. "'hat they were supposed lo do .-An inrrequent-tJSer-of· seat-and ·kept-me away --from-·the belts in hia. wile's · car, windshield. • ------cushions-to-lnfllt.e..arulcusbion _with_a.i.r bags ln 1975 GM "I WAS LEERY of the air the ~pent!. In one iMtance, says. Smile, There's Gus If the administration's denial that it is cpnsidering rationing gasoline is correct, then this smile posted on the gas pump of a small grocery store· in ~l ow· ery Branch, Ga. will stay up and the frown will go in the garbage can. Li11er · A11dreu Dorla · • 'Divers to Oaim . Ship's Treasures a total work time of eight hours per man. The habitat was ·designed and buil t by, the aquanauts and their support-team. It will pro- vide the two men with lighting, fresh water, bunks. food and po"'Wer for life support systems. Special to the Dally Pilot LOS ANGELES -Two former Navy-train e d aqµanauts using the recently perfected technique or satura- tio,n diving will e m b a r k next 'Vednesday on a J!klay underwater salvage expedition at the .Atlantic ocean site of the sµnken lu xury liner An-CRITICAL SURF ACE sup- drea Doria. port will be supplied by a The aquanau ts, Christopher portable master control con· De Lucchl. 22. and Donald sole room attacheO tO the Rodo,cker, 'Z'I. said at a news tender ship, the 83·f.oot Nar· . . ragansett, a salvage and __ .,_.,.-~_.,,._.,_.,.-~.,_,._.,_.;-,..,,,._.,....., research vessel. Seekltlfl under•. The Andrea Doria was known as the pride-of the sea t re••ure i• taot Jta~an Lines and a Ooating art wltho11t risks. gai~~t 17 years ago , on July ~ 25. 1956, she collided with the corlferer1ce _ Wednesday that previous attempts to salvage valuables from the ship failed due to the limitations of tradi· tional diving techniques. ''DIVERS Wuo used the Scuba free diving method w~f'e hindered by decom· pression time lim italions," De Lli&ihl said. "Divers could worlt only for about 20 minutes before returning to the surface via deeomPression waiting periods at various depth in· tervals." .They will live inside a com· preMion chamber on the bot· tom of the Atlantic, 240 feet below the surface and 45 miles south of Nantucket Island for the entire IO-day period. 13.000.too S\Ved.ish StockhohTI . The coll ision left a gaping hole, estimated at 40 feet across the top and reaching downv,.ard through seven of thC Doria's 11 decks. Twelve hours later the Italian ship lay on her side, nestled into the ocean floor. FORTY ·FIVE were dead or missing and 1,661 Andrea _Doria passengers and crewmen we re rescued. Five crewmen aboard the Stockholm were reported lost. "For all these years. the Andrea Doria has been called the "Mount Everest" for pro- fessional divers," Rodocker said. Treasure could be con· siderable. After study of the ship's BREATHING a mixture of plans, press clippings and 92 percent helium and 8 per· shipping documents t h e cent oxygen, they \viii with· aquanauts have 2eroed in on stand underwater pressure six mai.h salvaging areas. sofne eight times great.er than Four of these involve ship surface pressure. ·They will banks with a r eported undergo decompression only $1 ,llS,000. Then there is the ·once, when they return to the ship's art ln th e fonn of surface at the end of their nietalllc scul pture, particular· mission. ty a silver plaque valued al )\}!lie living in their J2-foot $250,000. The two bronze ship long hab\t'al, lhe aquanauts propellers valued at $35,000 will b-e able to set out on two eaoh couJd provide additional "'" ... , 1 3 c ••• ,.~ 1~ •••.• INSIDE FROSTED BJ!).6S _ 60, 75 or 100 wall bulbs for long lasting &ervice. A greal buy-so hurry in now and •ave! • • • • ~ $ I ~ ~ ~ ~ §: 113 I !Pi MISS CLAIROL• ~ ~ . SHAMPOO-IN ~ ~ HAIR COLOR m .~ffl/ftl!fl/!/l/!lflf///ij/!f!J!jljl/f!l/flff!f~ I $S ~ 3:.113 i i ~ ~ ~ il:i NYLON PANTYHOSE ~ ~ Sl'leer and clingy for lovely ~ regs. Wanted shadea. Sli n ~ ~ P/A. T/XT. ~ !!il ~ ~!lfl/11/l!f/lfllj/!flf!lrl/!flfi/fll/!fl/f!/f~ I ~ 1-...!:'~ :~.-. ·=1113-0l00FF_ 1_f~-Z{ 111!-1~ 'r -~ 7C I ~~~· I . . ~ ON ANY MAJOR ·~"'_!) I APPLIANCE I __ -oR -FURNITURE DURING THIS SALE! ASSORTED ASSORTED ASSORTED . DRESSES WOMEN 'S CHILDREN'S BUY TH E FIRST SUMMER SUMMER ONE AT OUR LOW SALE PRICE. PLAYWEAR & PLAYWEAR & ,. to a• SPORTSWEAR . SPORTSWEAR Get 2nd dress for. 1 _3c .313 213 ASSORTED ASSORTED ASSORTED MEN'S GIRLS' BOYS ' . SPORT & SUMMER PLAYWEAR & DRESS PLAYWEAR & SPORTSWEAR SHIRTS SPORTSWEAR 313 213 21~ . ASSORTED PLASTIC 20 LB. TENNIS GARDEN BAG OF HOSE CHARCOAL SHOES 112" x 50' 21a, 1 13 1 13 JVl'I' 4 I •]I) ,!: l"l• l ll~f 1 11:1• All YOU CAN EAT! ~ 113 I ~ FISH DINNER I ~ French fries. creamy tole· J ~ slaw. hot roll and butter. ~ You can have seconds, loo! ~fjl/ffffl!ff'jljrJ//ffffl/l//!f//fflf/i/fj 1300 I GRANTS 13" TRAIL BIKE 'I 'lf!lfiJ!HlfJ/'U!R/11.f/!/lflfff//!fl/!/lf!fl~· 1 --..1vaging .. xcumonnn1aY"for-treas --r £ -~ l ttf II . ~ I ~ ~ ~ I 'See by Today's ~ l · Want Ads ~ 1 ~ ~,.. " I l .• L~ THIRSTY COTION.. • • ~ • MOUNTAIN property' 3.03 DISH CLOTHS ~ acreoi In the Julian aJTa W1IUe-weave. Plaid pat· ~ or San I>lego County, ~ Lovely nrel'. torn, ataotted colora. ~ 'l/l/J#/Hillll/Hllj/fll/f#lll/lf!flff'~ DD YOU HAVE A CHARGE! • GOOD PRICE ror an •n· tlque llC(U8.N) Oak extentiOn table. ft hfl8 ~ teas. $165. Tht 6 matching oak chairs art" $160. ~ceUt!nt con- dition Md prh.T. the more for your moneysworth store HUNTINGTON BEACH -BROOKHURST AT ADAMS STORI HOUR S, OAoL V 9.: 0 to 9 -SUNDAY 10 to 6 • ASSORTED CANOY BARS FRIDAY, JULY 13'h ONLY! ~ ~ ~ i§ ~ ~ !§ $ I '· -· ... ~· • . ' I ' • . •, , " • • , .- DAILY PILOT ' It's So11ae K•nd of Bot . \ Youngsters across the couiitry play it cool as sum- mer heat sets in. At left, two youngsters slide down dam spil!Way al Indianapolis' Eagle Creek Reser- voir. Not to be outdone, a teen-aged girl frolics in rapids near Somerset, Wis. And, a young Kan~ City bicyclist stays cool with ride through water fountains. 'There's a Lion. in Motel Room' DEL MAR CAP) -f\.fotel Hollywood told them he let his Clements, who trains six big cats in a local show, pUt it guests co.mplained that 0 a lion is roaring," keeplng them awake. In a room, sheriff's pet lion climb into lhe room thro:ugh a window after open-. ing its cage on the ground outside. back in ~ cage with thel------------------------------otbers and.. returned to his room alone. deputies tound the 5~pound During the night, the 11· cat. year-old animal set up a Stanley Clements of North · stead,Y · moan-like h o w l . "Then everybody go.t back to sleep," !W sheriff's officer said. --D OPElllllG RAYSIDE CS•TER July 2•11 MARINERS -..., •• 0 • " Cl :! . '· d' ..,,,. ... ~ l) LOA?' "' --1 : : ::::f :::~~::::.~1!1·!1·1·:1-111.'1 .. 11.11·:···11··1·1·1111:·::._1;-:::·; .. :,: ... ::::; ti t' • SAVINGS ADDS TO ITS ·FLEET *** Now conveniently located in Bayside Center at J~boree and Bayside Drive. *'** * DO•'T lllSS THE BOAT * Aak about our Special Surprise NEW HIGHER INTEREST RATES 5~3 Regular Passbook Accounts 5%3 $1,000 Minimum -90 Day Certificate 6!43 $1,000 Minimum - 1 Year Certificate 6%3 $5,000 Minimum -30 Month Certificate 7~3~$l;ooo Minimum 4 Year Certificate • • .. .. " .. FOUNDED 1953 MARINERS SAVING.S AND LOAN ASSOCIATION A Subsidiary of Capital Alll1nct Corpor11ion 1024 Bayside Drive• Newporl Beach • Cali(ornia 92660 (7 14) 6424000 • Hours 9 am to 4 pn1. Fridays until 6 pm. MAIN OFFICE: WESTCLIFF AT DOVER, NEWPORT BEACH .. • the broadway adventurers club value-travel 18 "'hat our tours· are an about •first class and deluxe .· · -"•·porterage, tranfers, tips hotels •guaranteed emergency ~~ •all flights on scheduled return flights • airlines • bilingual osorts and •round trip airfare included dty hosts • fuU sightseeing, • broodway charqe many meals convenience* ha wall a days, I Island vie CDnllntfllll Alrlll'!fl.. O. s-rturn -ry S..turd•y. 1'1111 !IP.~ IP, scvrk• 1 nights Honolulu, plus Pe•rl H•rbor , ·Cruis•, sightseeing. Upgrade •veileble. I night •t Ku•i is optionel, plus 24,50 ..... • 8 dcrp. 3 lll•ds. I night Hilo, 2 nights Kone, I night Keu•i, l n'lghts Honolulu. Upgr•de •v•ileble. From .... $329 e 15 days, 4 fslancls. I night Hilo, 2 nights Kone, 2 nights Maui, 2 nights Kauai, 7 et Honolulu. Upgr•de •v•il. From. $405 europe european adventure London, Brussels; H•idelberg, Innsbruck, Venic•, Florence, Rome, Stres•, L•u· senne, Luceme •nd Paris. Full sight- seeing, Rhine Steamer Cruise. Depar- tures through October 5th. e 4 Capital Swl119 I Giid II, 15 d•y•, London, Lisbon, Rom• or Medrid, Peris. Thurs. thru Dec. 20. From $637 • Gale Jet SwllNJ, 15 d•ys, 8 cities, from $533 e Pot••t of E.rope, 22 days, 13 cities, from $151 .. I viii MalUNI AlrllMt. •'-i · mex eo An;tln d~e. WelcofN. eotklell IHI MUI tour. 0 mazatlan gala .·: ' 8 days, 7 nights s199 .. . , -European pl•n OR Americen plan, from· $249. Includes welcom• merguerite,' village sight-seeing tour, trensfen * tween airports/hotels, 2 me•ls • .d•y on .' the Am•ricen plan. e Mexico Cit'( . Gale, 8 days, 7 nights, from $245, _, ~ nights M•xico City, l nights Gu.ad.: ' lejer•, from $275. or <4 nights Mexi~r' City, l nights Puerto Vallarta, front;. $215. Dep•rt Frid•ys • e Jet Set, 8 d•ys, 1 nights, 3 citi•s, from $215 e Me1lco GaM, 15 deys, 14 nights, 6 citi•s, from $461 • Mcaat'-i Gala I Delux• l ,. I days, 7 nights, from $259 • Make C.. bdal Clrde, 14 days, 13 nights, 6 cities, from $477. the golden elrele 23 days .... s744 Visiting London , Holland, Belgium, G~~ many, Austria, Italy, Switzerlend Ila~. cerne I •nd Pa ris. DepertuNs throu~' Nov. ]. · • ... • n. GrOMI TMr, 29 days, '' citiif'· included in the 8 countri•s visitff,~ from $958 • ~ ~ • • Spain, Pan ..... No. Afrlc., 22 d.y;.: 13 cites, from $744 e ScandlfMIVla, 15 deys, 7 cities, from $951 • ..... .. -......... 22 d•y .. 7 ' cities, from $1065 world·wlde cruises ec.t..._ CnlsM -featuring Sit- mar Cruises I liberi•n Registry I Vie Na- tional Air Lines. Includes •II m••ls on ship, plus trensf•rs end potter•g•. Every Frid•y, from July 20th. • TSS Pc•wW, I days from lo1 Angeles, from $355. C.lling et Sen Juen, St. Thomes, Santo Domingo, Port- Au-Prince. • Mexico -f••turing Sitmer Cruise'• Cliberi•n Registry I. Includes ell me•lt. on ship. Departs from September 21st e TSS Fcllnea, 1 d•ys from Los ~;i geles, from $280, celling on Pu•rto Ve,; latte, Me1et•len. Special I end 10 d.f' cruises eveileble. •'. ., • TSS """"° 14 days from Los Alt- g•les, from $560. Mexico end c.ntral' Am•ric •. 23 days •veileble from $920.. t-~p==a~c:n!i::c~,-o==rie==n~t.---.-~~-.,-11-p_a_•_d~.-an~~--4-~ •" ........ ,lut I% f•ll •ltd ••rwlct orleat adveu'11re _sll63 Visit includes Tokyo, Kyoto, T elpei, , 8en9kok, Singtpore, Hong Kong. De· pertures through No¥embtr. • KolNllll K.,.,, 15 days, Jep•n only, from $120 • ~ hclllc AdYOotwo, 22 d•y•, from $1J4t e Clodo -A<IY•lao, 2l d•ys, from .$1411 :~=~.~·~·~·~··· ..... ,, ..... ,,....,. . ......... fr .... llMI • M-1 tfiM .... tl ell ,,. ,.., •.W9" • Fr.. .... a.., priOf ...... ... ,..,. ..... _ .... fif"' .,,,.. Pfll>ClllllMJ. I I 1t1a_llwmy A._••~ CWJ P.O. lorlltli, i...A ....... cA tout ' WI INVIT• COMPAIUIOfh LQ US ltUIM Y0u l'1t•• COlOI: lllOCMUlt• OP Tit• POU.OWINe TIMM • ---·--·--·-----·-·· t - N•m• ..................................................... ~ Address ............................................... ;~ 1 City .................... State ........ Zip ..... :,~• ' ' e Phone ............ Depl. 611.0CPD.7/fr' ·-----·--··--................... __ . .................................... ....., ........... ..,,.,.., ---_,_, .......... 21 .... .,...,..,.._ ........ -· Ir sit M......., ~Ill w "( .. ,.. """' .......... . ............... " ..... ~ . c..,... "<-'· . :,. ' ·'· " .. ' l j .. DAILY PILOT J7 Judges Rule: No Prisoner Surgery DETROIT (UPI) -A tht<e-lad< of knowledge on lhe sub- judge panel has ruled thal J«I. peychosurgery 10 alter violent F U R T HE RMORE, lhe behavior cannot be performed Judaes said , voluntary consent on persons belng held in· Is ooi possible because tile pa- v o I u n ta r 11 Y in mental tlent Is In an "inherently hospitals, coercive atmosphere e v e n jects in prllons or mental hospitals. "Now the patient comes first." said Gabe Kalmowlti or ~1ichigan Legal Services, -.·ho filed the suit on behalf of a man identified only as "Joh.11 Doe." been selected for bra l n '' L'iVOLU~'TARl.LY oon- surgery by ~rne.st Rodin, o fined paUenls cannot realOfl neurosurgeon aod a professor as equals with the doctors and al \\'ayne State \Jn\verslty. 11dministra1ors O\'er whether n ie patient originally gave 1 ·he y 11 h o u Id u n d e r g o his conse nt to the surgery but psychosurgery." withdrew it when the lawsuit The judges observed that was atarlcd In his name. "'gO\'emment has no power or "ln.stltutlonallzation tends to right to control m Inds . In their ruling. the \Vayne though no direct pressures • . , County Circuit court judges may be placed on him." 1 "+ said a knowledgeable consent An attorney for the patient IUS CLlENT, a 37·year-old strip the Individual or the su p-thoughts and expressions. If former n1cnta\ p<ltient at Ionia ports which permit hin1 to 1he r·irst Amendment protects ~ ~ to psychosurgery ln an at-In the case said the unanimous ~mpt to-alter:-violent beha\•ior -decision sets a .leg4'1 precedent is ''l itera ll yimpossible " ror all high ri sk ex- Stale llospHal. "'as accused of n1a1ntain his sense of self-the frredon1 to express ideas, the rapc-sJa~·ini; ol a studenl worth and the.value oJ his Qll'_n il_n_ccessarily follo_ws that it nurse in Kalanl3ZOO Slate l)hysical and m en t n I in-n1ust protect the freedom to 1~•(, £-i. _because ol an almo!I universal perimentalion involving '"b- .1 .... I .. . llospital 18 yea rs ago. He hA<l tegrhy," 1he ruling said. gene rate those ideas.'' ~-~-"-'.'---~~"----~"'------~~ :: ---} ..,_ .·.,, I ~.. ··--L ' . )..._ i&!~ .,n..:·"c..~~ " Baby Bottles M<iy Be Hazardous SAN FRANCISCO (APJ - Parents who allow their babies . . to suck on bottles filled with fruit juice or milk may be ruining their children's upper teeth, dental researchers say. Maily pediatricians through -· ignorance fail to warn parents against allowing babies to use plaatic bottles filled with • ~amel~rroding liquids as : pllcifiers, scientists reported. at the American Society of PrevenUve D e n t I s t r y con- vention here Tuesday. ' "If the bottle is-filled_\vith. any fluid -except water -in whi ch bacteria can grow . it iurns to acid and decalcifies the teeth," said Or. Stephen J. - Moss, chairman of New York State University's pedodontics department . The lo"'cr teeth are pro- tected, Dr. l\1oss said, because the tongue usually rovers them while a baby is engaged in prolonged sucking. Dr. Arthur L. Alban, lec- turer at the School o r Aerospace Medicine, told the .cowention_ thJlt tbe__c t' al period for a baby's teeth is at six months. He said the teeth niight look perfect then despite the presence of active bacteria "'hich eventually will cause such severe damage the uppe r teeth may be destroyed. "\Vhen mothers bring children with \·cry bad teeth in to see me and the children are under age three." Or. Alban said, "you can be sure that 80 pefcent of them "'ill be whnt we call 'nursing bottle-mouth· babies." 2640 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA OPEN DAILY 9 TO 6:00 SUNDAYS 9 TD 5:00 CLOSED WED. JULY 4TH BOSTON and ROOSEVELT FERNS Exceptionally beautiful, f u I I and graceful focal point for any room . . . Rog. 8.95 NOW 5, 98 ... Many more indoor and outdoor ferns including: Japanese Lace. 1-lawaiian Tree. P!eris. \.Voodwardia, Dicksonia, Leatlter a11d Su.iord f'e rns. Decorati ve Vines Great for "'alls, fences or trellis. Espalier In formal or informa l patterns. 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'lbe first volleys in the fight -which had been forecast Jast yoor by opponents of the would virtually make it a zon- ing agency for the entire state. UNDER THE plan, the new commiSsion would designate areas of "critical state con- cern" on the basis of en- vironmental factors, he~ and safety reasons or because vital facilities are on or near the land. It could also choose the areas in which develop- ment would be encouraged. _ ,.,.~ ,.a.tDne Initiative-as the ·meuu:re's • natural outgrowth -will come in pu6lic ·bear~ illll ,to be slaged this fall by tbe Southern 'Cali!o;rnia legis-- lator who is chairman of the- Assembifs Planning nd Land Use €'4mmittee. A n o t h er unprecedented responsibility of the new agel'!· cy would be to devise methods or compensating individuals when gov.ernment a .c"fi 0 n s ,cause a loss of equity due to removal of the right to urbanize property. Local governments would be compelled. to abide by the statewide policies the com- mission would make, with the only appeal from the five-- member board being to the i But. Paul Pri olo , a Republican from the Pacific Pallsadel .area of Los Angeles, [ SOUTHERN ) rocus courts. IN PURSUING all these functions, the new body would firmly mallitains that bis ~ replace the current governor's poaal for a State Land Use Office of Planning a n d afCommter thisSle.ocoasn ~ .. I nbodot. , . .,m.ode1ed . Research, the present State ... Lands Commission and would "IT'S LIKE comparing ap- ples and· oranges," be said in an interview. "Propositioo 20 bun't affected my idea at all. We're proceeding as i f Proposition 211 didn't exilt." But Priolo's auerlion that his measure isn't 'being· In· flumced by the Coastline loitlaUve is ill conflict with comments he made at a meeting o( the Sou t hern California Association o f · Governments in February. "The coastal commissiom: IN a start .,," he said then. ''It seems absurd to do (com· prebensive land~ planning) in just one part of the state, but specifically rule it out in other areas." TB E ASSEMBLYMAN'S claim that his new proposal wun't sparked. either by Proposition 20-or the climate tbe iaitlative created is most Hkely an attempt to avOid the brickbats which are likely to come from developers, land- owners and oth& interests unhappy wilb the coastal measW'e. That opposition bas already shown itself ao hostile to the new idea Priolo is pushing that the fourth.term assemblyman won't intially make his pro- posal in the form of a bill, but rather bas readied a "pre- print" of it. "lt's becll tough to get a coosensus on this," Prio lo said. "So I've decided to delay it and present a prl!-"print in- stead of a bill. We can hold hearings on a pre-print just the same as if it were a bill.1' The element of the Priolo proposal which is likely to pre>- duce the strongest opposition when hearings begin is the section giving th e planned commission ~uthority t h a t take over the role of the state Real estate commis.9ioner in Jand regulation. \; As a first step in asserting its_Jcontrol, the new com- miSsion would ma'ke a statewide plan singling out all areas of "critical state con-cern ... The planning aspect of tbe Priolo proposal and its calling for a state-group which could oversee local land-use decisions are its only direct similarities to t h e com- missions set up under Proposi- tion 20. But most observers of the new c o a s t a I commlssions believe the final plan they present to the Legislature in 1976 will propose a permanent coastline commission much like the one Priolo enviSions. IT CLEAR. therefore,· that the difficulty Priolo has had in "getting a consensus" for his legislation is due to the op- position of the same interests which fought Proposition 20 ind which had earlier sue· ceeded in killing coastal con· servation bills in t h e Legislature. Those interests bad warned last year that passage of the initiative would lead to efforts to lessen local control in other parts of the state. Although the fact that Priolo ls currently making his p~ posal in prl!-"print f o r m assures that there won't be definite action in it this year, it's clear the push for statewide land·use planning has begun. And even if the plan doesn 't make it through t b e Legislature, the publicity it will get in hearingS there and arowxl the state means there is a real chance that another strong initiative accomplishing the same ends will be before the voters fairly soon. Indians Vow Battle ' ~--------- Over Motel, Eatery EL CENTRO (AP ) -A Quechan Indian leader says the tribe 1VOUkl use physical f~ to keep a restaurant and .molel from being built on land lobe Indians claim befor'e ownenhip of the land is set- tled. Elmer Savilla, president of the Quedlen Tribal Council, 11111 the Imperial County Plllloing Commisaion thal ODUl1I Off the federal govenm- mt lhoukt !elUe ownership or t:bl land west of Winterhaven, Colll., near the U.S.·Mcxlco ............. ·" 'J1lo Southern p • c If i c Railroad Co. which holds a right-of-way on the land, ha s leased 7 ~2 acres to developer C.C. Rambo, who wants to build a truck stop, festaurant and motel. The. planning com· mission was meeting to con- sider a zoning ·change. ·"The tribe doesn1t intend to back off any more," Savilla said. "We will use physical rcrce U necessary, but we lrt- tend ~ hold onto this area un· lil it is decided who the owner is." lie 1ald the railroad hnd no right to lease the righf.<lf·way to ~bo.. • ' Black ·& Decker Versatile 1 /4'' Drill Drills all materials quickly and accu· rately. Well-balanced and easy to use. Model 7000. New Spray-Aire Faucet Attachment -,,.Unique triple action •.• swings, sprays a nd aerates. Re aches corners of sink. Fits most spouts, 139 Golde.n Vigoro Lawn Fertilizer 'Greens·up' your lawn quickly ... keeps it green lo nger. Wo n't 'burn ... odorless, tool Doesn't attract flies and bugs either. No polution-causing leachi'!9· I See Ch!r Com,lete Selection of Blad& & heller Power'T Olils Turner Replacement -Propane Tanks Here'~ the replacement tank for .your propane torch., Sol- ders Cir1softens efficiently. "' 88,c lamp Lyter 87·5 Wcitt Household Timer Plugs right into wall outlet! 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MUNI.CH, Germany (AP)-••r.ty ankles held by Pat Matidorf, formerly of the buit. My knees hurt. My back 1¥u'ts. J University of \\'lsconsin. He said he never made more jumps but I have wouJd do it by the 1976 Olympic Games jumped> better. I predi~ 1 will jump 7 in·~tontreal. But he didn't think he \rould feel 10'2 inches." "--f'lic'1' .,, . ~ h . h .~ 1.ed do it so soon. • me,-uras -t e-\VUl"U--8PP 1 ------Xfter ·h"'e"'cl~e~a~re~a~l'h~e'b8=r~aa1,1~he~reco=n1 to Pwi&bt Stones, the newest y,·orld beat· height, on a pleasunt and \Vindless night, er If records. . he leaped off the mat and jumped into ™ l!~year~ld Clend~le resident, how-the air with his bands over his head. .evs, says he ,is only boaste~. Then he )ogged triumphantly around the ~ spoke Wednesday rught after he track _ and the crov;d cheered. le~ 7 feet 61,i inches in the high jump, "For two months, I've been psycbCd on&qparter inch more tfian the former out thinking about the world record," he world record held by fellow American exclaimed. "But-I did not anticipate Pal M&tzdorr. breaking it here." \fhefl he cleared the bar on his final Asked why he di?n't try for a.n even try,, he ha4 the stadium spotlight all to greater height. after his record jump, hi~lr -.he was the last oompetitor re-Stones said: "You always want to go out mi lnjng id the track meet among the a winner." Untted States, West Germany . and Before Wednesday, his best jump was Switzerland-L except for the crowd of 7-5. Then, on bis third jump·, the 6-!oot-5, ab&!t 20,(M)),;y,•hich roared its approval. 170 pound youngster cleared 7-5 1/4, before «i1Jy4 last \week. in a West German sha ttering Matzdorf's mark. 7-10 1h .. with Reynaldo Brown secoad al 7-41/4 and Tom Woods third at 7-<llh, Jt alS& helped the U.S. gain a 93-86 lead over West Germany in their two-day dual meet competition, \vhlch ·ends loday. S\\'it1.crland also is competing, but the w:i~-pQint1otal-..mly-i~-rounting'ilgaim the Getmans in a separate meet. The Americans also dominated three other men's events, flnlshing 1·2 in the 10,000.meter run, the 400 meter hurdles and the UICI-meter dash. Ted Castaned::r ·- \ron the 10,000 meters in 28:30.6 wi th Jeff GallOY.'ay second. Jim Bolding took the 400-meter hurdles in 49.3. foUowed by Robert Gasselman. And-Steve: Williams sped to a 10.3 victory in the 100 meters, with Herb \Vashington tbe ruMcrup. Other American men's winners y.•ere Leonard tlilton in the 1.500 me ters in 3:37.7 and Al·Feucrbach in the shot. put at 68-II ~~. telM'lsion intervie\V, Stones predicted he Stones' record-smashing effort led 'a t- \\'OUld brefi< the \vorld mark of 7~1/4, 2-3 American sweep in the higll jump, Over-all, the American men held a 60- 46 lead over their German counterparts. y,1JiJe 1he U.S. women trailed 1the German girls 46-33. DWIGHT STONES CLOSES HIS EYES AND GOES FLAT OVER BAR AT WORLD RECORD 7·6'h. ' •· -I~ll · Work Faster, $ay,s Halos'-Ryan ' ·BALTibfciRE (AP) -Fireballing Ni.Jan Ryan thinks throwing fa ster may ,be "the way tq. regail) his winning tOO.cti. ·But by raSter, Ryan doesn't mean vc}Ocity, and t-hat should come ~s a relief to.¥!merican League batters. ,."): may try to work a little taster. It se~ed like. after the 'third inning, when I t6ok "Jess time between pitches, I \vas doigg better," said-Ryan, who Jost his lltii. game against 10 victories when the Calllornia Angels were trounced 7-1 by the .~ltimore Orioles Wednesday. "But I'm not about to try anything drastic," added Ryan, though sucti measures may just be called for to put Net Settlement him back on 1he victory 'trail. The Angels opeq a four-game se(i~. in ~ ~troit tonight, with Bill Singer .going~for:"-· his 15th \vin 0£ the season against the _Tige.rs' Mike Strahler, who has gps~d a 3-2 mark since he was traded by the Aitgels to Detroit'.· Despite striking out 11 ,in the six in- On TV Tonight CJaannel 5 at 5 nings he WOrked, Ryan lost his eighth game in his lis!. 12 decisions, and the trend has him worried. "All I know, is I'm going to have a hell of a second half. If I get above .500, I'm never going-to get back to it," he said. Ryan says he knows exactly what hi s problem is. ·'ti.fy control seems to be a mystery. That's definitely \V~t hurt me tonight. H~' Pes Dl•mme.d Some pitches I could hit a spot and some . I Jnissed by more than tv.·o feet. It was like the difference between nigh t and . day," said Ryan who walked six Orioles WARSAW· ,(AP) -The-Intemat1onaJ. ·to insure himself constarit trouble. Lawn Tenills Federation, already'batUing ~ Ryan walked three, one with:""ihe bases the AssofiatJon of Tennis .Professionals loaded in the fourth, and walked Rich for the · run of the ~otid tournament Coggins before Boo._..g Powell's seventh circillt, ii facing a new foe -World homer of the year-in the sixth made the Team 1TF:_rtnis. · , • soore 6-1 and doused any Angels come-~ 1 JuneJ:iCan prganization, \Vhich back hopes. hoJ>1!~'.t9 feature. teams· COJ!lposed .or Ryan doesn't Olink thett is any way a somt-.of!1'flhe big· names m tenrus, fastball pitcher'Ii ke hiril!elf can regain "~titU et a real 'threat to the game." control except by ~ing to prayer. said ILTF presidfnt Allan Heyman "I'm not going to ta:ke anything off my \'Veitnesday. . . pitches tl} compensate for getting the ball At !tie opening of its annual meet1~g. oyer." he said. "I'll just have to con- the IIJI'F passed two major preventive centrate more. And , try to work a little Jegislatrons designed to take a harder faster." line· on 'furthe r brushes with the ATP : -TJ)e ILTF gave its managing com· mittee wilimited pbwers of suspension for ' ant ~layer who enters a contrict which conflicts with JLTF tournaments. World, Team Tennis play Is ·sCheduled to begin nf:xt season, and \k. toUr would conflict with such m,ajor ILTF events as the-European circuit and the Davis Cup tournament. • -The Federation added that it expects players to represent their countries when asked to do so - a statement seemingly addreSsed'to the recent furor over Pilic's suspension .. I ' CALll'ORNIA 1br ~rbl Pln Wl, ct $ O I o !umbn'. It I ALTIMORE H rhtlll $ (I I I 3 1 1 • l 0 1 2 ' 1 I 2 $ 2 l 0 J 1 l 0 I 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 ' (I 2 ' 3 0 (I , AIOl'n1r. 2b ' o 1 o C01111lns, rl Robln!llln, <Ill ' a 1 0 Bl1lr. cf Ollver, rf ' o I o p_.u, lb E"ll'Sleln, rf ' o 1 0 Davls, dh St1nlOQ, If ' O 0 0 Wllll1ms, c G1H1ghtr, 3b ' 0 1 0 Henclrlc:k1, c Meal!, i.s 2 1 l 0 Grid!, 2b L~1111s, ph l 0 I (I RoblnlOl'I, 3b Torbot\'I. c 3 II 2 0 l!lel11nsi...-, lS $Chll<lblum, ph o 0 0 o Cvellfr, p RYen.P 0000 (I 0 0 0 Hessler, p o O O o TO!lls 35 l 10 0 Tcta11 31 7 Hl 7 C1lllO!'nl1 B1111mcre H. Rvan l'l8Uer Clll'llar L,IU-11 W,5-9 000 1110 000--1 020 !It Ollf-1 1~H.1t l!1taa so ,,,,,,, , 2 1 1 I 2 2 t 10 I 0. J 6 BiJJaamer Vndaunted UPI T ....... OakllUld 's Oeron Johnson tries to take out Huntington Beach's Jack ifroh'l"'er at second base In last night's game. Brobamer avoided John son Co make play but Cleveland lost, 9·3': ---- THEN WIDE·EYED STONES GASPS IN AWE AS BAR STAYS UP. ' Sarazen Gets Hole-ii1-one; Fregosi on Move Again TROON, Scotland -Gene Sarazen . the most sprightly 71-year-old star in golf, skied the ball into the cup on 1he eighth hole Wednesday for . an amazi ng holc-in- one during the first round of the British open Championship. "The moment l punched that five iron to the green I knew the ball was going in· to the cup," said the stocky veteran. "I'm glad my bole-in-one was filmed - nobody y,•ould have believed that I'd have done it otherwise, 11 Sarazen said. Swim Record the California An gels Ike. 10. 1971 , in a deal also Involving pilchrr Nolan Rya n. Frcgos:i \Vas used sparingly by the n.tets thi s Yl'Rr at third base and shortstop, batting .2;1-l in 45 gan1cs. Last ye ar he balled .232. Smith Cruises BAASTAD. S\veden -Top-seeded Stan Smith or Pasadena cruised into the sec- ond round of the $75,000 S \V e d i s h Jntemational Tennis Championships \Vednesday with a 6-3. 6-2 victory over Jolquln Loyo--~fayitol Mex ico. Dodgers' Singer Strikeout Leader L9S 'ANGELES (AP/ -The first thing Don Sutton \\'<ls told \rhcn he n11~rcJ1ed of! !he 1nound after beating St. Louis ~ad Bob Gibson \\'as that he'd thro"11 151 pit ches. , "How many?" he askc<I . "I thre11' 151? Who in the world do I think 1 am, Nolan Ryan ? I'm not supposed to thro111 that many." But he did, and a good many of them \\'ere strikes. Sutton slruck out 12 Cardinals, the fourth time in his career he's whiffed 12 batters, and also took over the National League lead 1n strikeouts with 130 en route to a 3-1 Dodgers vi ctory \Vcdncsdfly night. · He needed three of his strike-outs in the ninth inning. thou1:h. 1\•hcn t1vo singles and Sutton's Prror on a pickoff try put the tying run at second base. He then stn1ck out. in order. ~·like Tyson . pinch ·hitter Louis ~lelendez and the dangerous Lou Brock. He fanned Brock lhree times. The Dodgers, back to a 51,.~-grune lead .· Weiskopf Sets Scorching Pace In British Opei.1 TROON . Scotland (AP ) -To1n 'Veiskopf ripped five more strokes off par Y.'ith a 67 and took the early second· round lead today in the British Opell Golf Champioriship with a 36-hole total of 135. \Veiskopf, the first·round leader with a 68, held a three-stroke lead ove r U.S. Open champion Johnny ~1illcr who shot a 68 today for a mid~ay .total of 138 on the par 72. 7,064-yard Old Course at the Troon Golf Club. Jack Nicklaus and Bert Yancey, tied for second with 69s after the first round , each were fou r-under-par after 24 holes. 'Vciskopf played 16 in final nine holes in drizzling rain. \Veiskopf, who has been enjoying a great year on the U.S. pro tour, wasted little ti.me in attacking par in the second round as he carded two birdies on the rirst four holes. He then picked up t1vo more birdies in the next five holes and went nine und l'r by rolling in a 10-foot putt on the 34th hole. ~f iner, who "·on the U.S. Open \Vilh a fantastic 63 on the final round. birdied No. 7 on !he front nine and then added three more birdies on the back nine -at Nos. 10, JI and 16 -for his 68 which tnadc him the leader until Weiskopf came charging home. \Vl}ilc \Veiskopf and i\1iller had big rounds, Arnold Palmer. who \\·on the British Open here in 1962, was having Jots or trouble. Palmer , just rour stroke s off the pace with a 72 after the first round, went four strokes over par after 27 holes \\•hen he took a seven on the yar 3, 120-yard eighth hole -the '".Posfagc Stamp" and v1ent out in 40. 11vt·r Cincinnati and San Francisco in the '.'l ntional LcagiJc ~\'.tsl. ~>fll try.IQ.make it two straight And fivl' out ot six \\ins tonight when Andy 1'ft'sscrsmilh . 7·6, op- poses Lhe Ca1·ds' f{ich Folkers.-2--0. JL"'ill be the Cardinals' fina l regular season 'ap- pcarante. in Dod ger Stadium in 1973. Of the ninlh inning. \1·hich has been Sutton·s downfall in four of his last five starts. he said : "If I'm going to throw that many pitches I guess t will have trouble in the ninth. Anyway, if that's going to _.the case. I'll just ha\'e to go out and give eight strong innings and I'm sure --------------- Dodgers Slate All Ga"'" e11 Kll'I I'*) Jvtv 11 51 loul• at LOii llnOeles July 11 Chl(allC II LC\ A-lft July u (nic100 a1 LM A1"9~1..,, J~I¥ IS Cllkil90 "' Loi. A,,.,..!n J:Sl P."'· 7:.U '""" •:U P·"'· 1 :SS fl·"'· -------nuinngcr \\l altt'r Alston "'ill think of ~on1cthing." Sutton 11·ou nd up pilching a SC\'en-tut- ~cr. but the Dodgers \\'ere restricted to three hits by lo.5er Gibson, now 8-9, and rcliever Diego Segui who pitched" a hilless seventh and eighth. One of the hits was \\1illie Davis' 13th homer or the year -IO or lhe home runs coming in Dodgers Stadium -in the first inning. Bill Buckner had \\·alked and then Da vis hit a line drive dowt'i the righlficld line, the ball actually striking the foul pole. . In the fifth a l\'alk to Dave Lopes. Lopes' 26th steal of the year and Buckner 's si11gle made it 3-0. Sutton tosl his shutout in the seventh \\'hen the Cards. limited to tY.'O singles 1he first six innings, bunched three singles for a run , Tyson 's single scoring Ted Simmons. Afterward, Alston ad- n1itted he 1ras impressed y.·ith the 37· yea r-old Gibson. "It's the best I've seen him in a Jong time," sa id the Los Angeles manager, ''but tv.·o walks hurt him as much a.s the hits." • ST. LOUIS LOS A"'Gl!"l..EI atrllrlll .. r~rM 8_1PCk.U SOO OLap..,,,l'b 3 1111 S•umo<~, 1D • 0 ' 0 Bucll111r, II l 1 l I McClr..er, 10 3 0 0 II WO.~b, cl • I I 1 Torrt, Jo • O 2 O Firr1uscn, c l O O O Simmon•. c • 1 I o WCr•wtcrd, rf J o O o JCruz,cl _,JO lOCtf,lb J OOC c .. rbO, rl J o 1 o G•rwi~. 1~ l o o o lyscn, u • o 1 I ltu.,111. u l o o t G•OtO<t, p 1 0 0 0 S\l!!ot>, p J 0 0 t Dwv~r. pto I O O O Scgul,p 0000 Mcitf1del, pl'I 1 0 0 0 To•~I$ 3' 1 1 I To111s 21 J l 3 St. LC\111 000 000 100 -l Les A.n11eln 200 010 00• - l E-Tyson, SUllOll. LOB-St. U..,11 •.LOI Ang1tu ), 1-ltt-W. Oavl1 !l ). Sil-LCOC•, J. (•ul. .,_ Segur L. a.t 511llon II/, If·) l -]:ot. A.-2 .. 539. I~ H It Ell et SO ' J J J , ' 200 00 • tllll 12 TWINS' BA .NE SET TO JJA TTLE T RIBE ~'flNNESOTA -\Vestminster's Eddie Bane tries for the third lime to not ch his first major league ,·ictory when he takes 1hc mound tonight for ~1innesota's Twins in the second ga me of a doubleheader aga inst Cleveland. Bane, \~·ho pitched brilliantly but was involved ih a no decision in his first at- tempt and then \\'3s shelled by the New York Ya nkees. is due to face ex-Yankee ~'like Kekich, 1-3. BERLIN -East Germany's Andrea Ei(e set a European swimming record or·tbe Women•s-200-mcter backstroke \Vith a time of 2:22.3 Wednesday, the East German news agency, ADN reported. Riggs Starts Psy~h· Early Nastase Rolls GSTAAD. Switzerl and -Ilie Nastase, tj)e Romanian star who wa s upsel last \Veek at WimbJcdon , trounced Koyoshl Tanabe or Japap 8-0. 6-0 ~ednesday ln a ·firlt:round . match ol ~~wiss lnterna· Uooal ,Tennis Championships. Fregosi Traded NEW YORK (AP) -The New York Mets Wednesday ct09ed the book on one of lhelr lout ..-u1 tradt> by send· ing infielder Jim Fregoal to the Texos Rangers for a player to be named later. Fregosl. 3!, b11d come to the. Mcu from NE\V YORK t AP ) -Billie Jean Kir!g. the bouncy "old lpdy of tennis," held down the net 80 Bobby Riggs, the Utile hustler, r:oµld jump it with ease. "I don'~ need that.'' sald Riggs, reign- ing iodignity. He tippy.toed over, neverthciess, but i[ he bu his way it'll be the last time he'll coooeda anythlng to tOO reigning 1Vlmbledon queen . Wilh $100,000 on !be line, h<l's out to prove that· a M-year-old has·becn who pq.ps vttamtn pills llke peanuls, ('an be1U the v..'Ol'ld's best woman 26 years his junior. · --'Mle match.~Riggs:::ha "bffn dmmlng about for months became a reality "I can·1 just play for money ... s~ said \Vcdne sday when Jerry Perenchio. the at a nev.•s conference at a ~11d\own promoter who lhrives on spectaculars. ~1anhatlan tennis club. "I have to play agreed to put up the casll !or the biggest for a cause, and I think v.i>mcn were put single payolf in {he history or tennis. dqwn when Margaret got beaten. She Only the date and site have yet to be blew it. I figure I'm better than Bobby set, but Pcrenchlo, who promoted the and 1 ~an beat him. 1971 heavyweight title fight ·between '11'11 even give him some Geritol.'' Muhammad All and Joe Frazier, prom-.. "What make., you think 1 can't psych ised the details would be announce:d you the y.·ay I did fi..1.Q.rgaretZ" asked soon. Riggs. who "'on \Vimbledon and the U.S. "That 'was The Fight and this ls gohig Championship in 1939 and the U.S. title to be The A1atch," he 68id. agBln t\ro years liitc.r. IUggs lrlcd to bait Billie Jean long "I !t'lvc pressure and A1argarct before he hooked fl.1.argarcl Court in a docsn ·~." replied the carrrp;:i f'gncr for JI0.000 ~lotheris Day fluco. F'inally Mrs. equal pay for equal play . "I think 1 King . proved tha\ ot Wlmblc<lon." I I • U.t wkiLV PILOT Mesa, Edison, Newport Win Mu1tangs Retilin: No. 1 Spot • ,,i Harbor Loop Tritons Trip Mesa; Three Tied for Lead Surging Edi>On ktpt pa .. with league leadU..-C:O.ta Meta by pasting Huntin&ton Beach, 17-1, in a Harbor Alea ba!eball game Wedne.day at Edison. Costa Ptfesa maintained its I \2 aame edge, however. with a 2-0 victory over Corona del Mar i.n the first game at Costa Mesa Park, and ln the finale Newport Harbor t r ipped Estancia, 9-S, in nine inning s. FV Falls In Polo Tilt Edloon'• Mike Meehan had I which WU stowed aftu six no-hitter through five ~a innings due to darkness. o• A six·run outburst by the Chargers in the tint inning put the game away, Mike McCoy singling to open Ille In- ning and Edlsoo adding five singles in succession after a sacrlfice bunt. '" l" " I" • Jeff-Nichols hid a nm ~ ducina: double and Joe Morado and held Huntington Beach to • a two-run double as Edison ad· just three hits In the game, ded nine rons ln the fourth in- Legion Baseball San Clemente A nlnf. Rlclc llalbcft'• filth ln-nlni triple -..! Ille final .two run.t for Ediaon. A tr1ple by Ed VJparoll and 5an Clemente High's Triton! atngle by &an Terry in lhe have scrambled the Laguna sixth inning accounted' for Beach High summer basket- HurWington Beach'• run. ball league following their e:J- c.o&ta Mesa's Muatano got SPORTS 56 conque!t of previously arother' excellent p I t c b I n g unbeaten Costa Mesa Wedneo-~ lroni Brian day night. eo.telloe, a tbrff.hltter.-to _._ --i;'he vlctocy puts Sa n· notch thelr ninth win of the Clemmte, CQeta ltofesa and summer agaln1t only one Arby's Zips Mission Viejo'a Red unit, a 58-defeat. 50 victor over host Laguna O:>steltoe struck out seven Beach, in a three.way tie for and· was nevtr Jn real trouble the lead with 4-1 records. In going the dlstance for the To 73.51 University gained its firlt Mustang win of the cami)aign in the Costa s. Mesa JCOred the night's opener, putting down game's on]y runs in the Urlrd T Mission Viejo's Gold team, 44- innlng. Bill Valentine walked rt"umph 38, to keep the latter wlnle'5. · and came around on a double Coach Stan DeMaggio }las by Don Tryon. Tryon moved imerted full court man-to-man arolind on a palr ot passed Arby's Ann'y and A & c prmure, a running offense balls. Properties are tied for second and a tough board game In the Taylor with 22 al\d 10 points. Dodd, a 11-i, 225-pow>der who is expected to handle some of the quarterback duties for San Clemente 's football team In the fall, chipped in with six points and numerous re- bow>ds. -Laguna's leaders in scoMng were Mark Rathbun and John Willett, each with 10 points. University's ftrst win was paced by Jeff Giese and Jim White, both scoring 14 points on six field goals and a pair of free throws. F0W1tain Valley Hi g h · s water polo team droppid third straight one·soal game, falling to Foothill, 5-4, ht the Wedneo- day night varsity league at Downs MV, 3-0 <;orona del Mar's Mitt pl(lce wttll 5-2 reco~ in the San Clemente attack and it Wilkinson struck out seven Costa Mesa open summer proved t.oO much for Mesa ln a u"'"'"''; 1w~ ,, and held Costa Mesa t!) three basketball league following rough conlrontitlon. ~!;.!'11 , 2 ~ Estancia High. The"' losini Barons trailed Dan Fo\\•ler and Terry when pitcher Joe Jan ton bits. ~ routine triumphs Wednesday San Clemente's 6-7 Ted a;~:: 3, l • Dave Los~th's triple with night at Estancia High. Kalota, 6-5 Dan Dodd and M r.r::" 1 g 3 throughout the game, but cut Neilsen combined to blank reached base oh 8 single and the margin to one goal mid· Mission Viejo on four hits as scored on a wild pitch after OA'ay in the final quarter. Jhn the San Clemente A team took workfug his way to third. Davidson, Scolt Nelson, Peter Westminster jumped to a Weschsler end Dan Luttrell all a 3"-0 victory in American t\\·o-run advantage in the first the bases JOOae(f arid two out Arby's coasted to a '13-51 -Jeff-Foreman -hit-the boards ~.~~ 1 o J in the seventh enabled Estan-vict.ory over Red Carpet and took ~mmand of the 10"1'Min1.,. v1,1~'o.1•"(•120 cia to send its game with Realty which willed in the game at the outset, raclng to Mlll•r '1 ~ ~ Newport into overtime, but the socond1 half with only five a 19-11 first periQ<I advantage. co~ ! g g .. " i Tan scored four times in the players suited up. . Both teams played a passing ~:T~."°" 2 1 1 (( ndldi lOCIO 1 S 3 1 ninth on four singles and three 1 Jack and George Trotter led game on o ense a ea_ ng Hq_v•l 3 o 1 ' Estancia errors to win. the rout with 16 and 14 points. the winners in the scoring col-10111' I<•,. 11, d~irt~ 1 :ia A & C Prope-rtie8 took com-uniil were Kalota and Dave ~\!'t:/.7 ~ 1l 2 1t = ~ had ooc ,. goal for Fountain Legion baseball action inning but Fullerton rallied for Valley. -\Vednesday. three runs in the fifth and four The victory 1o1'3S Foothill's Jn other games involving in the seventh for the victory. """""'" •Mcti 11, .. , '"' th'rd tr lght Scott Bradley walked, stole ll _ s a . . Orange Corut area teams, San second, took third 00 an error r~=~: ~ I 8 : : lb other games Wednesday CteiDente' B tell to host Los and scored 00 1 slngle.-.by cl'!"'""' lll ~ o o ! hight El Dorado ran its mark· Alamitos, 5-2; Fountain Valley Gary Rungo to start the game i_rn:~'·.~ ' ~ i to 3-0 with a 7.3 win over Long A-.........t a 7~ t decision to for Westminster with Rungo •=r· ;' 12 : ~ : mand from the outset in disposing of ~ Orange' C:O.St Alumni, 81"5, which dropped . the looers to 4-3. Vikings Edge Saints; Beach Wilson; Buefla Park ... "W'""' • 1 Tot•• t 1 i 1 handed Los Amigos a 74 set-Foothill ; and Westminster lost .... soonng-. ater on a ~ ••-11n back ; and Millikan edged ~he vi~t3..ing Fu 11 er ton bun~ by Bill Whiteley. M_,,, rt :' f 11 3 ~ Chaffey in overtime, 5-f. · ~g,ers,"-• ,_1t111 V•lltY u1 ~=11•!1; er 1! i I 1 Mike Contreras, Wendell Kallenlterger, Rod Snook, Jim · :il':,:\:r1:.b~~ ·Barons Sufi er Def ecit • Fowler a JW11·or·to-be. •t ,, , , r.i Hltttwi,d. If ' 1 2 Water•·polo-acfioncotitlilues · ~ ~· • .. C•lf Cr --~., .,~I o· , c~. tr i I I • Dana Hills High, struck out six G1r1f11e1; ·11:1 • 1 o N1t11o11, <I • . o Friday night with the frosh· Mission Viejo batters in seven ,",•,rd!Nln, sa ' •' •' •, )l:~~'C <I ~ f Y ' soph teams in act1·on at Estan-,·nrun· gs, and Nei·•----me.on ~1~~ )b ~ 0 , 0 siok .... c 1 o I • · F I · V II •--J UteU ,.., Slllm1i1, 2D 2 I I 1 •MOf'"tdo, It • , • cia. oun am a ey 141•8 es to finish the job for San Jora•n. c l o o 1 Dftrotl•n. " 0 0 0 0 with Buena Park at 6:30, Clemente. ~~':.:~.;~" i i ~ ~ ~=~~2D j l i ~ with Contreras the-·'Jeader '- wtth 18. ~-= --· Orange Coast Alumni-was · led by Craig Falconer, Steve Jacobsen and Butch Rollins with 20, 19 and 18 counters. Newport Harbor faces Costa 8.11 Spr' eel S Rflttwr. as 1 o 0 1 S<hl•rtitrl, tb 1 2 o o I '"fman start an ,,,,,, ,, • • • sc""'9r. 111 s 1 1 1 occ ••-, .. , Mesa at 7:15, Est an c i a "' IHl'I 11r 111111_. Mffl'l•n. • s 1 1 ... ti 11 ,, '" en••-Foothill at 8 and Clemente of right with a solo , 11 • To,.11 31 "15 ts F••~ontr r • 1 20 e-e~ homer to Center fie1d at the r:ooi11111 004 000 :m-1 s 3 ,_.. w 1""'ru Mc:<:l•k•~ i o o 2 University meets El Dorado at Bonita Canyon field in San """""'" V•lltY,. 310 OOtl-4o ' 5 ~ri:!.."""" lnc:ll .:002w.!.:i~ 11 : :.~=fl : r i 1: a:~. Cfemenle on the second pitch W..llftlllfter U) .. , 111111 c ....... MW (I) ... , 111111 ~°'~nnbO i i I 11 and that was all lhe winners &tadl•Y· ,, l 1 I a NCIOI~. "' l •• ! 0 Tott!• 27 11 7 65 G. 11:\lftDO, c • 1 A 1 Jon"'°'1. as o Ao& c ,...,.,..., {llJ.. needed. kl re=~ rf 2 i J ,' ,f ~"'r ... 1~f i g 1 : Ambro1lell 1 ~ 'f :t Scott Mi OS singled home IUe11tre11, 3D 0 lthr..,~ rl 1 o : o IC1ll•nt1tro1r 1 O 3 1• Fowler, who had singled and I:J~~ '" !, o g' •,' :?'"'M°o.r •. c ? 8 1 8 w.'~,,~r ',' •,' •, 1 ~1,' LONG BEACH ·-Marina High 's Vikings captured their secOnd game of the campaign Wedn~ay night in the· Long .Beach City College summer ba.sektball league, co m I n g from behind to post a 49-41 win over St. Anthony. Fountain Valley continued winless, but was.impressive in Registration -, ___ ., -- a 7uf'shlb0er10Uing neach Jordan. Marina's.-.victory was led by Keith Koeller'! 19 counters and Drew Harker's 10 points. Fountain Valley's Dan Malane played Jordan's 6-5 Larry Hudson nose-to-nose and scored 2S points over his rival. Friday's slate at Long Beach finds Millikan and Fountain Valley meeting at 6 p.m., followed by the Marina· Long Beach Poly game at 7. moved to second on a walk to 5""111411'' 11 o e.1ucNimD1 ,, o o ! o -lo;. ll:llf>O(I. II 1 a 0 D t· JOll•UOl'I, lb 1 0 0 Contrtr•• • 2 1 11 Neislen in the fourth inning. loomtr, 11 0 0 0 J ~~=~·1lb ~ g 0 g ~;,r;' ~ g l J Registration for the next -., t ~,.,,. v1111y f'4) And a single by Ken Donohoe r o1111 sc-•r i1111lllfl• u l s a,...,, • o o o o Tot111 ' c lt l 10 •1 two-week t en n ,· ,. class M•••'• OF •, . ", ~ • .. " • ( d I tll • S.Maqrt,c; 1 0 10 H•llllrM:A ,37·2'. ., 11 a ter a ouble by Fow er Full. Dodffr• aoo Q ......, 1 2 Totals u o l o .,,..,. •• ..,,., on 1, ~ ~ b h Hill .loll ' 1 i scored the final run in the w1i1m1n11tr 200 ,l)]O 01...J 5 , c .. ,, MIN II) 19 , 111111 .-.rbOD•ll ? 0 ~0 '4: sponsored y t e Costa 1'-fes~ t=.11e1:r 1 ~ 3 eighth. ••• ,,._,. • u1 ¥'1 ... 11n21. rt 1 o o o ~~owiki ·: ' f 1g Tennis Club is .set Saturday at .?:r~"1 } ~ ~ " ' • • .. Rich Rommel struck out 13 l•f'IOttf, u ·~. ; •1~ ~r~. ~ i ~ ~ A J. Troti.r • 0 1 16 TeWinkle Park. 101•1• ,,.,. 11, L,,.~ 14 batters in .a losing cause for ,C,'!!1.'·, ct , '• , ,0 s~t.· 11~ i g ~ 8 ~=~ ; & ~ 1: There are three divisions, '•'•-."•'•'•'•', '•'• ',,' "•• ',.' = .," Mater Dei High's unbe8ten summer I e a g u e basketball record was snapped Wednes- day night at Santa Ana College as Santa Ana Valley ~corded a 47-45 conquest in the Santa Ana College-sum.- mer league. "'" The winners' Mike O'RoarU hit from the free throw line.ii\ the buzzer to break a 45-'all situation and provide ~ Ana Valley with a 7~ 1QOP mark. .~ ·Mater Dei, "Which is' also in- volved with Santa Ana ValJe}' In the Costa Mesa -Dept. league at E!tancla, ls'll- 1. ..:.- Bmtdon McCaughey and Steve ~1.artindale were the leading sCorers for JI.later Dci with 13 and 12 counters. . .... Coach Jerry Ta r d i e •y- MonarcM are back in action tonighl at Estancia in the Mesa circuit, facing Garden Grove at 8. M• • V' • M• S ' ~Wlldl, <f 2 O t O G. Trolltr 1 0 0 11 " ISSJO!l le.JO. kt "Y'j i D • 0 0 0 fl•r1111trdl, JD 3 0 0 0 ll•Dei 1 0 ' 2 he . . t ~· t . nd Mtr111• C4tl M-· h'J t F 18. J, N•hot1, ~ ' o o o 1nc1111, 1, 2 0 1 1 TOT1l1 " s 11i gJMer, in ermo:uia e a Va~:w F!;thnf ran:' :~ ~~s;;:r,, t 1' II ! i'r.=?';."• ~ : g lo ... Ctl")ltt AHlty !SJl n "'! ildvance, with classeS set on losner ., I~ l'f'g Ip .. II"' "' ' """"' ,, 0 0 s. ewn11trc1t. 211 1 ' o ,.,."'' 1 o 1 1 the hour from 7-10 a.m.,~ 1-2 it"n~r•f : ~ ,;i Mte•U1111tv ! 1 t 13 overceme two-run deOclts on s~v•l, u , I ~o1m11, If o o o t l••..,m•• • 2 o io and ..... • • "°'uer 9 , l M1r11nc1111 ' o • u two Ciccalions and hand Foun· "'f.';.'J,f."""°" :i! I J o ~:=:11,c~ ? g g g i1.y1°'" I ~ ~ ll p.m. g.7 p.m. iue lessonst. H•"''' ' ! ' ff/ ~""' ~ g : ! Mlltr Dtl" (U) taln Vallly a loss. S<n "' '""'"" Mt;;'li,.,., ~ ; ~ ~ w~~~1 . 21 t 1l 1t ~~~ w~~ay oost $lO for <.1Qi~1~ 2f j 1g J 1~;"'' ; g ~ ~, Rlek Case's single followed sen ct..,_,, ooo OJO 01H ~ .;.. ,_.. •r 11111""" •-~"~·'~"~'~:::,' 2"~·~··.:·~'~"':::.'· ----------·-------~··~"~"~·~"~'~"~'~'~""="~·~"~"~'·c_ ___ ~":":":..... _____ ~"'...:..'~":": by Jour .. :trllb accounted for A~";-11'111:.i .. = "f1~ 'Ju COl'Oll• d .. Mer ooo ooo ~ 11j ~ r.o Fountain Valley runs In scA--w.~ --'M" •:::_. ,m:",:;-' ' l , SPOR_ TS SINCE 1924 · ..__, the first inning, and Wade MmM Vlll9 ffl fvll~ c1 ~ 1' ~ ~ tilSl'UIAml Horsman dro\1e in two runs Rlehlrd$«1,» r:"o": .. ~if.fi.p ~ ~ Ii ! TY mn IP9TI wltb a triple and came home ~:10~, ~ & Y J i~.:,.~~-c j l 1 rLIRll on a sing!~ by Jeff Hatfield in ~~'uf ~ g g : =· 1f ~ 1 i 1 I WJ~::t;;;:r the fOW"th, M<G1rrr. '' 3 o t t PavtKll, ~ $ 1 ~ g ...,_ ..., Los Alamitos scored twice in V:~:;:or,~· 11 3,, ',• ',, ',c 11~~· rt ,: ; , 3 ~ ""l:iii both the second and third in-McCi rlt!Y. llil •tt•Kt. u1 I~~ '""' ~' •' " , ',., . J _ _ nings to put away San , .. c.._-. ., UI t:~.;'.;1~ 0~ :, ',• 200 ! Clemente B despite a good hit-••,,.,... 11-1110 111 o liMMil t IJllN, 711 1 i ~ : Mortoll I ~ mum ' f'_Mft u ting performance (rorri ~fark SP!'lllOIMn. 3D ) l I I ~rn~. ~ : ; O : alU»tt nm 1J s ~~ro. w11o gathered three ~i~r:lb 1~ 0 1 I ~~~:~. !.; 'ig o.'i· 1 !, rm Jm 1-15 hit! Jn four trips tO lhe plate, Mlkl05, e O 1 l Tamlin, P 0 ICIDt'td San Clemente's final ~· <1 ~ ; ~ ~ ~~1~A~11~111• p11 Mllll L7I nuaa .... UD siJl&le by Corky Fisher. To!llJ ._ "' """"" 32 ' • l "1:i~1':"' 2tl l1 s ' ' f*' I Pnl San Clemente's only other r "' • •ur. ~ ...,.. r " • "::=:=:':"~~~-~-~~:'_:'.'.":_:'_:_ __ 111ll ___ c_a_m_e_ln'-th=•c...:.fi~fth::_='n=n=in~g~,--•=•;:~~~:'•:•v:~:~~:'•:..:l::..:l::..:rit:::l:1....,::.~l~l--':~r~,;~"'~~~""'-~:"'~,.~:..~"~!:~:::2:_!':'..!..~ DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS '66 V•lk1w.,.n .. ,,...,,AM llP~ $677 (fl:lUtJ) '61 Ml.'1t•"1 ...... t S ...... llUle $977 '71 Chry1ltr New,.tt .. .,11,.,, tllt• 1rt111, •Ir c1Hilit111!1&. ....... !f .. lrit. A Vtry C"-~ (If, 1-977'° U1.0C11 72 OW1 Cutleu STATION WACM>H ...... T,_,. ,_ ''"""' Mrc....,. .... , $2777 -... CM.I-, .. .., ............. w °"'' 3277" • Baseball Standings AMEr.ICAN LEAGUE New York Boston Baltimore Detroit ~'filwaukee Cleveland Oakland Kansas City An1els ~finnesota Chicago Texas Eu& Dfrllloa W L 19 41 15 39 43 38 45 42 43 43 30 57 West 01\islon 49 39 49 42 4' 40 44 41) 45 " 30 5.1 w .. _..,..,.._ 111timor! 7. ""''ti l 01~1•"" t , ci.....i1"" J l)!llnflO\• ] llCKlllOO 0 Oe1ro11 u , Tn1s 2 IAtt.tlllfff •. 1(1~slt Clly 1 Ntw YM\ J, (Mc."° I , TH•'t'• ...... Pct. .5l4 .536 .531 .517 .500 .345 .557 .538 .529 .524 .523 .353 GB l rn 211 4 1711 111 211 3 3 171,.] .fllltl" (Sl"9ft' 1"'4) .. Otlrtil (l lP•P!lflr ).JJ Otlr.1..-.cl (I M 1·51 11 Mllwlull" {Sllfo!I M l· ("velancl /Wtlea. S-1 11141 l(et<f.tl'I l·tl 11 Ml"- l'ftOll !~ ......... ,.. O.ll 1(1~••1 t ill' (0•'90 Ml ., New Yori! t~ 4·1! Tt••n f(l~dl 1·11 11 llo.1!on IP1!tl1> •111 e.1tttroor. IJ~· '·11 If .Cftie.to I~ '"' '"..,.., 0-#.Mtlll II 0.t!"ell CM\'fltlld 11 Mllll'lfW!I ••lllmtt• 11 ClllutO 0.ltltl'llt 11 M11'Nltilt.., 1(1-1 (!" fl Ht# Ycw- Tn1• fl &os!Oll I NATIONAL LEAGUE East Dtvlalon Chicago St. Louis ~·lontreal Pittsburgh Philadelphia New York W L 50 38 44 41 41 43 39 44 39 47 36 47 West rnvtsloo Dodaen Cincinnati San Francisco Houston Atlanta san Diego 55 34 49 39 50 41) 48 44 41 50 31 56 DMNrt t, SI, LOI/II 1 H ... 19-ll 7, N"' Ytr' t S.11 lfrtnc:IKo 1 CllklotO 1 ,.~•1tc111pN1 '· Au1t111 s l.\tfrfr.tl 4, CIMl-11 J PU"buf'tfl 10, S.n DJ-J T....,.._ Pct. .568 .518 .488 .470 .4i3 .434 .618 .557 .556 .522 .'51 .356 GB 4\J 7 g1,2 10 II \2 511 51\ 811 15 23 St l tul• (Folk•r• 1.01 ti °"'"" 1Mt1atr• 1mllfl 141 Holnlvtl (Fond'! IMJ 11 'llllMtlflfllt !lonborl 7.1) PJ111t11,t~11 <W•lklf' 4·1) •t s..n Olno {KltO't' S•t l _____ .._ _____ _ , ............... Clll<-•1 ~ """'l'lln ,, '"'lltOIMillll ll'Otllf'ttt II All.,,.1 !OW Yori! 11 ClllCIJ'Wltll "' lwl• 1t $,In °'"' 'lfhburo~ •t Ml'+ ,r.,\Cltct <r~. ~ JISHllMAlll nn· sou HI~ BOOTS .. 131s amT HI MTl.Oll 'WADERS .. .19'' 2K Off II WI LOTS I WfflC ONLY TABLE TENNIS TABLES 'h i11t:ll ~·to• ,,._ti_h<lll'wrf 11t1i. .. y To•I• llO, Ji.JO Our S,.Cltl Prict 39'' .. DllCOllTllMI IPIDO SWIM SUIT SALE (SANTA ANA SfOll) ~so:, 1 WHIC 'ONLY FAMOUS MAKE ,,,,.., MtnliO>I Mf1. "4.111.J BACK PACKS a.11 111 th• Wtrlit.lest ...... ,, frofll• JllG. 51 .tS Speciil )250 SPORTS Mil NATIONAL STRIPED SPORT SHOES RIG. 12.tS 6'' 11M1TrD srocrc LEATHER J ACKn SALE S°'o °" • Tryly r • .t "'' IMtt ,_11 .. ll:t ef .... 11111 ..,. • .,. """ h•of-H11~··' .. -,. ..,_._ .. ,.. .. thh ~,. 24 Hl. SPORT PHO~E 675-2545 GOLF CLUB SALE ODD'S 'N ENDS 'WOODS , '625 V1lvt1 te 11.00 IRONS 465 Vth.Mll ft 10.00 I .HIADS . NIW' XRI l'lllHIS UCllT CVl•OM 3600 HTLON ITIUNO CUSTOM OUT IT•UHO 3995 .. • • lrtWll! left Httvy Vinyl lttcktt tni Cltthl"t 111•11.1J.ts ...... . a•s GIYI YOUR HLf l llElK JOIN US ANO GO llSNJNG ENSENADA TRIP • Ovr 11••1 l111•M1ff f,1, I-• 6100 ,,,_,, July 2111 {Sol.I O..•li11• ltt b1trtC1tio111 J11lr 13111. '-ck•tl• P,.1t• ,_, T•I, 11 $6.S.OO. l11cl111't1 •II ,,.,..,. ,.,i..1io ... !Pll9ht 11111d h•l hot l 1111k -Mtalc•n ,;,111111 ,.,11111-All "'" ktt -,..11 u111 Oth11t O.w11 •"4 loclt- Trl' l•tt.1•111 l•I• Sufi.Mt lw111h1f, , Juty 22, ' FIS.HERMEN ~200/o OFF ON LURES • .. -1 ·- Th11t5clay, July 12, l fl73 Orange Coast Crew Rows dt Dublin This Weekend A chanp in envinlnment altributed lo a .....,. loa IUllOIJI Orange Coul Coller• _.. at Enaland's Healey Royal Regatta 1llt week1 -and that was the big reuon Why the Bucs didn't fare very well. 1bat's the Of)lnion of OCC crew coach Dave Grant, say1, Pirates publicist Jim Carnett 'tho writes from England. ' • OCC was ous~ quickly in the ltenley -- ' CRAIG SHEFF llqatta last Wednesday, losing lo lbe Loodon . llowing Club by two boat lengths in lbe llngle elimination race. Orange Coast took an early. lead in the race, holdihg a six-seat advantage at the half· mile mark The lead was a single seat after ~uarters of a mile. Then the London crew caught the Sues and slowly pulled away. •t thought we rOwed quite well, u Grant relates. "We just didn't have enough bulk to beat them . Everyone in our boat has lost at least 10 pounds since we've been here and that weight loss took its toll at the end of the race. • 0 We haven 't been sick over here, in fact we've been very healthy. The weight loss is \.. . ;e Second Annual HB -Cycle Races Set 'l'1le second annual Huntington,. Beach Bicy- cle Grand Prix, expected to draw more than 500 cyclists -some from as far away ~ Japan -will be held Aug. 19. . :-The race is co-sponsored by the city recrea· ~ and parks department and the Orange Q>unty Wheelmeq and Raleigh Bicycles of America, Inc. Separatuaces will be held for local cyclists .not belonging IO lbe bicycle league. These races will be held ln various age and bicycle categories. Bicyclists may register the day of the grand prix. Entry fee is fl. The first race will begin al 8 a.m. Further information may be obtained by calling the city's recreation and parks depart· ment, 536-M86. • .. ~ due to the change in environment and food," acids Grant. The OCC coach says he expecu: hll rowen lo be In lop shape for lhe anaual Dublin Regatta this weekend. They'll be rowing qainst top English and Irish crews. * * * Es:cept ftr trulptrlallon, Golda Wat. Col- lqe buet.U co.ell Fred Hitver PYI hll trip &t-Japu willl-• .J_C.-&eaJn .aelt J,11.mm~ .. all tel. Food aad -lag II all ,., aad he's la .................. .....,....llolt -paid by tlte blterudtul U.., Elb . or RoCary c1.i.. llo9ver nys be wen't know for IOmt Ume If be'D tab jlllt a Golden West team or a JC alklar -tlqtlll lo J-. • It all de,... '" the .....-. U a Jap-uese alktar team II tt.ed .,, diai "-'er llgaftl .. 'D toad vp wllll ptayen from differ· eat collept. Bat if tt•1 jast oae Japanese college &eam, then he'll take Goldtll West playen aoly. DUBLIN REGATTA NEXT -Despite their e arly loss at the Hen-for this weekend's Dubli n Regatta in Jreland. Fron1 left, are Alike Quotable quote department: ley Regatta last week, Orange Coast College's crew is working hard ~toore, Jim Clarkson, ~lark Southwick, Curt 1-loYt and Greg Tyson. From Tom Hermstad, Golden West aqua--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~1p;o;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;;;;;;, tics coach, recently returned after a lt!ave of ~ absence in Europe: "Bruce Bradley did a • DON'T DISCARD THOSE :~:.~;~·~:i;~.in!:i;:.~:i:,~~~ -reterse11 lo Defencl . ·l:JCI -Hosts OLD TENNIS SHOES!! the conference. Golden West wasn't expected to win the conference, but he really pulled lbe:.'..\~~'.s.wa1erpo1001ymp1aninthe U.S. Pro. Drag Title '68 and '72 Games, recently acquired his real estate license and probably will go into that field -a1tbough Hermstad feels he would make an outstanding water '"'POIO and swim coach. Herm1tad also reports that Kevin Williams , Golden West's outstanding: breaststroker tbe past two seasons, ha1 accepted a 1cbolanblp lo the University of Alabama. And Ed White. one of the better JC goaHes last year, ls going to Sn Jose State. Former Huntington Bea~h. High standoot Jack Brohamer, who has had his problems this baseball season with Cleveland, banged out a couple of hits Tuesday and slammed a home run Wednesday against Oakland to raise his average from .19'l to .203. Brohamer, who was named the top rookie second baseman in the American League last year, has been used very sparingly in the past two months by Indians manager Ken Aspromonte. The ex-Oilers flash· will be at ,fulaheim Stadium Monday through Wednesday as the Indians and Angels wind up their season series. Seattle's Herm Petersen got on the wi~ track a year ago in the sixth annual U.S. Professional Dragster Cham- pionships at Orange County International Raceway and he'll be back July 21 to defend his title. · Until his victory 12 months ago itHhad.t>cen·a long, tedious grind for Petersen, who trek· ked from h.is tiome ·in the Northwest acrOSs the na tion in search of glory on the drag strips -withou t a great deal of success. Billed as the "Northwest Terror" he jumped into the spotlight with his surprise vic- tory at Orange County and among his victims was Don .. Big Daddy" Garlits,..,. in the first race of the event. "I'll never forget ii," he recalls. "y,•e had a new, short • car and none or us knew wha t lo expect. "But I just went·ahead and did the best I could." The championshi p an d clincher of !he major slice of !he $40.000 purse came against Tom ;'The Mo n goose '' ~lcEy,•en or Fountain Valley y,·ho was on a winning streak at the time and ~nsidered the heavy favorite. ' Petersen whipped him and set the low elapsed time of the meet with a 6.24 second clock- ing. Petersen's confidence is well taken, but awaiting his ap- pearance are area standouts such as Garlits and l\fcEwen. Neither has ever y,·on this event, but obviously v1ould like to add it to their long list or accomplishments. Scrimn1agc Area residents will have an opportunity to see one of pro ' foot b a l l's great t st quarterbacks in action, Satur- day, July 28, when the San Diego Chargers ho ld their first public sc ri1nn1age at UC Irvine. I John Unitas. a!ier 17 year.s 'A'ith the Baltimore Colts, will I be doing the signal-calling for the Chargers in lhe 2 p.m.1 scrimrnage to be held at the UCJ track· stadium.. T h e scrimmage is being sponsored by the Big I Booster Club. the offici al sportsboo:ster club of I UCl Adm ission will be $2 for 1 adul ts and $1 far children. I TURN ON TO TENNIS During the Summer Progr•m •t the COST A MESA TENNIS CLUB 10 LESSONS s.mo . UNDEl THE DlllCTION OF TIN~IS P'IOS •.. e RUSTY MOORE and MIKE DUNN e REGISTRATIONS: JULY 14 fCom• ••riv for •11ur•d •nroltm•ntl e Morning e Afternoon e Evening Cl•11e1 • Beginning -Intermediate· Adv•nced JUNIORS ind ADULTS IM lnlel'INlllM c•ll ..... COSTA MESA TENNIS CL\11 -117.ftll The Chargers of co:ich Harland Svare are beginning 1~'!"''!"''!"''!"''!"''!"''!"''!"''!"''!"'~'!"''!"''!"''!"''!"''!"''!"''!"''!"'~ 880 JUNIPERO DR., COSTA MESA Try Saturda.y's News Quiz We Dare You their fifth year of tr ainl.nlt" at UC Irvine and Svare has scheduled t'A·o-a-dav y,·orkouts for his 38 player Squad, Yi'ilh drills at 9:30 and 3:30. • Sepulveda and H1wtttorne IUIHA 'AttK Se11cti 111nd Or1ngettirof'lb ' , • • :J2 DAILVPILOT Bellmar Captures Goll Title Mike Bellmar clicked for a H-Mle total of 20L to capture IDp honors &mday al the 27lh annual Pot Litter golf cha~ piooship at Meadowlark Coon- lry Club. Bellmar broke Curtis Sir- ford's standard or 205 and was S1'USS PROPER DISTANCE ON LONG PIJTTS Diroction is the prime: concern on abort putts-say. under 12 fcct-but proper distance becomes primary on Jooger attempts, wbcrc tbrco-putling i& 1 stronger dan1er. 1bc only way to develop a feel f~ proper di si:ince is to actually prac- tice these pull~ Gradually it will .Checking Out Area Women's G~lf The Meia Verde women's golf club held a low gross-low net tournament u ltt game of the week recently. Oora Oonalcboo look low •ross honors In A flight with an 84, while Shirley K100er'1 75 took low net honors. other low net placers In the flight in· eluded Betty Hamre (78) and Joan Chamberlain (77). followed bY, M41'Y Vander held for the firSt time Friday C and D were Carolyn , were sue Ewers and Celrolynn Sommen (52~), Flo Covell evening. Termed "Super ball ," Walbridge, Trudy Bone. Millie Wal bridge at 55, ropowed by ($4), Helen Hodges (SS) and VI it's a tourney that requires a Stevens and Anna Lee Schoel· Kay May at 57 and Fet9 O'Oara (S61h). mixed foursome with men hit· tltr. Sproul at 58. J Stu Dudley won the thlrd ting from the championship TW.rd place finishers rwere ln F 11 g ht p, · flight with a 581n With Olah tees and v.·omen teeing off Jeanne Griffin, Peg ~rts Bartholon1ew was low gross -Morgan finlshln&~leCOOd (60). from the-ladles' tee. and: Marjorie Thatcher and 79. Bobbie Shartler -won- .. ,_ I •"-J Ra-·L-SI Lillian DeShazo. net bonors at 57, lrailed ,,. ... Oii ~"" O ~-Jeaone Griffin and Phylh In a water holes tournamePt Sally Owsley captured lhe Stafford al 53 and Maxine •-Id lh'-k by hers ol Fem Sproul, Phyllis Staf-three months Jong !Unger •tt:" m wee ·mem r ~ E.leen w bum d Slr1'ckland al 59. t~ M'--lo •VI )o • 01u, 1 nee an Tournament with a klw gross '"' ~ n e women 5 GI · T I d I FUght C low gr-· cha.;:,. If I b r--r-. •-d the ona a mage capture score of 69 while Fern Sprou 's u,,.., .. ._ _ th!._tt ~s ~tier than_run-_ nerup Kemp Richardson, who came in wlth a 204 lo edge John Rlchanillon (205) for sec· ond place. come. Firsl judge· your line lo thc..hok antl aim the putter along it. 'J'hc.oft. after forget about line and com:tn· tratc merely on making lhc ball fm-.~ . o , o o .. o P..~· '·i> 'o ~ is h just a few inches pnst th_e cup. ,.0 • o o o 41 o In 8 flight, Mary Ratckin and Marge Williams tied for low gross honors with 95s, Wfiile"'""EllieKftiOn's 73 and a 77 for Lee Lowrey topped the low net scores. C flight low gross honors went to Dot Morris wlth Grace Hooker, Dot Jones and Phyllis Kaliher placing 1-2-3 for low net honors. gl 0 netc u (.33~) f<oll~edry by""',.. fli ght honors in the VfOmen's 71 won the low net tourney were Joyce Roberts and P ow ' ow µicy club flak tourney recen tly at held recentJ al Rancho San Roberts at 83. Vivian 'frour~ MacDonald...(33.~)-and..Nadine =<-7'""s r..-Y"'=R•..-· man was w1ne at"5"W"'-11~ Maze (l4Y.i). <auci,iy an oaqu.n .. ..vuuu y oaqum. , ..-u o: Next on the agenda for Club. Low nel ,vinners· In the her closest pursuer was l.® members or the women's club Runnerup in flights. A, B, Ringer competition in Flight A (Stt GOLF, Page 33) is a best ball or twosome r----'---=---'---'---'-----'---------'--- , In the handicap diVision it was Jim Tartar taking the A flight with a 215. followed by Joe Greenfield (216) and Ken- na Smilh (217). 'lbe B fii.11ht was won by Joe Severino (223). He edged the • C lfl'•™"rt.-S,...Mm • IRON OUT THOSE IRON SHOTS! Arnold P•lmtr's boOkl.t "Hittiff the Irons" t ivu championship tips to h•lp sharpen your lron·shot ttc:hniQue. Send 20c •nd a stamped, 1eturn envelope to Arnold Palmer, In e1r1 of this news piper. trio of Paul Young, Dennis -------------------- Angel and Harmon Jbhnson , all with 225s. Dennis Porter "'on "the C flight wlUl a Z24. followed by John Heath (228) and Jim Margala (2.11). Don Smith fired a 244 to grab 0 flight laurels, followed by Jim \Voods (249), Bill King (251 ) and Bill Hannon (252 ). Trout Plant SAN BERNARDINO -Big Bear Lake, Green VAiiey Lake, Greogry Lak·e. Jenks Lake, Greaory Lake, Jenks North Fork ), Santa Ana River, Santa Ana River South Fork. RIVERSIDE -Hemet Lake. Soccer Match Slated The chan1pionship soccer team or Israel. Hakoa,h, will take on a lean1 of All-stars from the American Soccer League in an exhibition match Thursday, July 19 at S.1nta An.a Sladium. Kickoff time will be 8:30 p.m. Hakoah, one of the smaller clubs in the Israeli national league, nevertheless fought its way to the country's title and five members or the team will ~on Israel's World Cup tcarn next fall. Opposing them \viii be a team of All-stars which will include Arturo Go n z a I e s c:arcia, a former top player in ~·lcxico City who no\v starts with the Dcportivo ~1exico team of San Juan Capistrano. the California state cham- pions. Tickets will be on sale at $5 at the gate or $4 advanei! sale through Scars, Ti c~k et r on, Montgon1ery Ward and May Co. stores. Children under 12 will be ad- n1ittcd free. 4-1'/y l'ill;e•r Cord Rre YouRMOST POPULAR SIZE! FOR MID-SIZE CARS: f l TS MNNMOOEl.SOF • Torino • Buick Special • Fury • Falrlane • Montego • F-85 • Impala • Monie Carlo • LTD Previously the group had held an even holes tournament with SC()res on the even holes counting toward a w a rd s . Verda Shielry was the A flight \\'.inner with a 00 fOllowed by Mfil-ge Hayes and Maryann Dyer. In B flight, Marge Williams edged Peg t\.faull and Ellie Kitson for honors, while Doris Buckles was the C flight \\'in· ner follOwed by Enna Bendel and Dot ltforris. SeaeUff In a field strokes tourna- ment held by members of the Huntington Seacliff ladies golf club, Terry Cami llo won the first flight with a 46Y.i. ·Cheri Thomas, Rosemary Erickson and ltfarilyn Jones tied for sec- ond with 50s. Tn the second flight, Hazel fi.1ollica won it 'A'ith a 52, 1\lesday. · El Niguel Anne Teel and N e I Townsend put together a 73 for first place in Flight A, at Tuesday's Partner's Relay in go lf action at El Niguel Coun- try Club. They outdistanced the teams oC Dorothy Howard and Kay Horn and Sue Edison and Bet- ty Speilman for the honor. The Howard-llorn and E di s o n • Speilman combos each con1- piled 7JY.zs. _ Flight B honors were shared by Dorothy Eckhoff and Judilh Eriksen and the team of Betty Himmelsbach and P a t t y Spring. Each duo recorded 784: whlle Edith \Vray and Margaret Sibbert recorded an 80. In a three-way tie at 801h were the duo of Helen Willard and Mrs. J. C. Hunter, Midge \Vhite and Lucy Parsons. and Lola Collier and Fran Hansen. A twilight golf event will be FOR LARGE CARS: """"$ '* f1 TS .M~NY • Q\dS •\-Bird • f\1\11era sonne\li\\e FOR SMALL CARS: f11s tAAMv MOO[l?> ror. Pinto •La Sabre • . • c~ntudan • MarQUIS Gremlin • Vega • : ~averic~ • o~~~~r~ oart • Nova • • Mustang WHITE SIDEWALLS $3.00 MORE EACH CUSTOM LONG MILER • tough 4-ply polyes ter cord for long wear and a 9.~l'f'~--\ r-sm-o.o.1h•r•id.•--------------•iiiiiil r.;..~.J.:·f-· v\,. ~'I TRUCK -CAMPER MOTOR HOME SAYE 10.00 to 30.00 A TIRE LUBE & Oil CHANGE '1565 T;~; --~-11!1 ••h11 ~:~ifls·"~?..::... llQ. Slt.ICJION OP SIZIS SID PllCI SIZI ,.ICI Wl 'lL LUllllCAtl YOUll CA• AND CNliNOI INOOll Oil , ,llClf INCLUOlf U, TO t Quit.Ill 0' ou .. 1.nY on .. WHEEL BALANCE 4•• 149 ''"' WllOlffS ... ., .. · · "·" '"·"·' · · '"'' WHEEL . 7H·IS . , .. Jl.tS 171·16.5 ,, 47,16 51! I! '"·" · ·· · "·" ........ · · "·" ... ,.l,......NJ-_..._ 11o:r,-;:-;:-,r,-,,..,._,.,:r.:-•-•:-tr "L u""'t 12-1&.s . , If.IS •aou~•• ¥.t.Lv1 ,,l ,f,t.tlTOl.tl lllf HIAYT DUTT SHOCKS 99~, ·- DELCO & HIJACKER AIR SHOCKS 34~0 BRAKE RELINE~ 40,000 MILE GUARANTEE LINING AND LAIOR ·-.......... , ·-····--· ·-. .,... ... ........ •YAlAflTll • •ie, Ul.U 2495 11•. DllCll ,.. ~..,... ............... ,.., ..................... ... -....--........... -, ... ?Giilll ..... , •• ,,,., ,., ......... ...... ......... ,,.. ., ................. potftH, ..... wm .. ,.,...... ff I , ___ .... •spe1•11 ee 1111'"'9 '1t'"'91tfy, It.,... , ............ .,.,, '81ff•••• ............... . . . ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS Phones 646·4421 540-4343 JONES TIRE SERVICE 2049 HARBOR BLVD. lat lay! .. ,.,. COSTA MESA ,.--MOUltS --, • ··"'· ... jl.lft, MONDAY lhl'f lllllOAY SAT Ult DAV • •.I'll. M s ,.m. If you want Goodrich, you'll just have to r .emember Goodri ch. . . - ' I I ANGLERS! G fOR 'coME Tf~io:nE flSKING '(OUR s REELS. GEAI\! ROD ' LURES -LIN_ES0~~~1:~& sAVINGSI ~•-AT W 1111ctivllHJIOUOH IPlClAL pwtCll ... JULY 1 S11'4 IUNO 1 • FllESH WATER TACKLE BOX v PENOUIN 115 REEL AND BERKELEY B90 ROD Superbly matched for precision handling · the rod/reel combo you'vti olwoy• wonted I HUCK FINN CLOSED FACE REEL & 5-FT. ST. CROIX ROD -or HUC FINN 103B REEL & 6-FT. ST. CROIX SPIN ROD COMBO Perfectly bolonced -greot rod/reel combos for the kids this summer. PENN 720 REEL ANO OUICK 7-FT. SPIN ROD COMBO A combo to delight th. heorl of any angler l Beautifully crafted, perfectly bolonced · and who! o buy ot this price! A NEVER BEFORE OFFER A super volut ! Pick up on extro to use for odd1 ond ends. OUI IXPllTS WIND 11 PltOfllllONALLY Ll1 WITH ou• AUTOMATIC MACHINIS GARCIA BONNYL LINE , ·50 . •NY 210 I I : I{ . I \ ,ll •NY 1 SALTWAnl fnlH WATIR lllL lllL . ' PKG , ,,. Of v 6 .. , •••••••·••••••· ,, EACH PENN 500 , REEL FILLED WITH LINE A HANDFUL OF WORMS There'• nothing greoter !hon dipping into o bcirrelful o' worms ! A never-before offer! ... MANDFfll UJllT1 OtU MANDfUI. I'll COW'OM 1mc;nn TlllOUGtl SUNDAY, JUlY 1STM VALUE TO '5.00 ZEKE'S FLOATING BAIT or PAUTZKY'S BALLS O' FIRE Toke your pick of Zeke's Floollng Boil or Poutzky's Boll• 0 ' Fire (Green Lobel)· now. UMIT 1 2 JAIS IAOl ltte I'll CCMtlPOtl 1ma1n ,,... MIOAY, , .. , JSTM ••• REG. ~1.09 • • STORE HOURS: MON. THRU FRI. 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M, SAT .. IUN. 10 A.M. TO I P.M. ' . ORANGE T~TIN .SANTA ANA 1155--..,NEW,()ttT AVE~ lli7 S. IJlJIJD.L.SJ N, TUSTIN at FlftSTITRlf.T •1 ti-cARTHUR ,ho,.., 131. rt10 l't>one~ 13?.&ttl l'ho11r. !5&7·3311· LA MIRADA SHOl"PING Cl.NTlll NOW, 4 STORll IN OR!INOE COUNTY ' -' ,. ' ' ' • "RST A~BACORE-Jim Bridges (second from left) sbows off the first albacore of the season landed by a · member of the Balboa Angling Club. Wife Lois (left), sons Steve (center) and Bil1. and Peggy Green accompanied him when he caught the 22-pounder Friday. Alamitos : Racing i Entries What's Doing Outdoors JIM NIEMIEC ~j ~-The firs.t a lbacore of the sportfishing season was weighed in &.::"::. ~~"P!' ::;n:: lat~ last week with due honors bestowed upon its captor Jim ''1•sT llACE -o y1r1h 2 ve•r Bndges. *' An-•nc.e. Pw" s1.1DO. · Bridges owns and skippers the boat Honey operating out or IH~Jc:•c:~., Newport, and he, landed the 22-pound 1ongfin some 130 miles, 180 1~1 fMrvt co) Kllltl'ltl degrees off the jetty. The albie hit a trolled feather while Bridges v .:i ~~,~~'(;' Treawrel and his son were on a two-day trip working the area known as en Bo Jl1111tes lJ. MllUUG•l the "Dumping Grounds." ~ 10· Morr1$) • d r 1 ~~ 1~. H•rt> No other albacore have been reporte_ caught as o ear Y Alamitos Racing Results FOi" Wtdn~•'f Cl11r a. 1'111 PtRST RACE -3.50 yards. 3 year old• & uD. Cl1lmln;. Purse 11800. Wff WOP (l-l•rl) '5.to 16 . .0 10.?0 A!11 Crlc~atl (W•loh!l 23 . .0 10.'6 R!lollrl"ll Aoc~tl (C1rOOlt) 1.60 Tlmt -11.SS Al$0 ran -Mellow Moen, Oeckattar, Salurd1y Htro, Bla1en1, Mr. A1t10 Ze1IH. All1e Mee~. On Tnt Beam. Scr1!Chtd -Ker• MckH, S•lnl'5 Ban j<J. Tt••s Va91, Fire 2. ' • rm: B•d~ CR. B•nksl this week although there are lots of boats oul scouting. Word a<:OND: aAC• -U> Vll"d,. l year ' · -.., · -ki ' oio.. c1a1mln(I. PurM s1.t00. c111m1ng was passed by Anglers Center 1n 1"ewport that veterans pper · ·s1 ·ex1ct1·-.:..-s.w" W•p a '-Al• =• 'lH~i>..-1 turned commercial fisherman, Spike Taft, predicts a late sea-cridcau. P•ld '91~~ P91"s Cllt9 l1r (0 . Knlgtit) son. ., SECOND ltACE -l50 Vlrd,, 2 v11r ltlltl nll (J. DttVft) f J ho Didi.. Chilml"ll. Puru lll!Oa. Bailllw't Bon (J. AlcNrdd Taft added that he felt that aU the game ish WOU d S \V Jon Breen ~ ~11 l~·:~f:::l up in ,\ugust. Who's to argue with a man who has spent as many ~;1~:lu~;•/cird11I•l 1·'° ~:: ~:: Mirian Guv (It. ea1>k•I years oo the water as Spike? Taft is in town to reoutfit his boat Qu111er Bender tBan~sJ 3.l<l Hldd• Ba v1141 10. Morrl•l for another run at the albies. ::::~: :. l::;: ftllltD RI.Ca -MIO y1rdt. 2 yter AhG ran -Miss TOfl Link. April ol6. Cl•lmlna. Pvr~ Sl,800. Ctalmln; G d .,1 hf I A Thrfl! Bari, Jedi let, Zan'• iun ~c~. P!'1CI' $4.oDO. The 20th Ctnlury Plumt>-Ofl r S ftfJ JI rea Ma~ktd M1rlt!li1, Swaps Bir. t\:f l lmti CA. B1nk1J Fair to good ban, barracuda and bonito fishing is on band u~~;::,~~ -win~~~h•r~~.·'· .... ~:~ ~.~~~· c~~~.1 for party boat anglen departing the harbor. Botb Art's and the EM1111h, Ev•n Up. ~:r'e!'t ~!i~'~E~;:;~1 Pavilion are running bo~ls out to the fishing spots daily and are THtllD ll:ACI!! _ 110 v•rd~. 1 ye•• s-neh Mooll (J. W•rdl offering a variety of trips. c!dl & up. c1a1m1ng. Purst suoo. T~ llOU llTH ltACI: -u:) yard,. 3 year A few yellows are also being nicked up from under the kelp Fuller comcany. aid$. Clalmlnt. Purse Sl,900. Clalmln9 t'" TOI> Side (Pagel !.to 3.10 J.10 Pl'ke '2,.SOO. Tht Cllppr eipren Con!· pattiel. Jeff Barcla_y of Orange County landed t\\'O nice yellows SPltdle Nl!Jhl (Ga•:•J 1.~ 6.oo -d ll • 'd h k J Mr. JffPiler (Ban1t1l 10.•0 silila'i Giek ""(s. TrNsurel whlle cutfng a Krocodlie lnre while r Ung outs1 e t e e p. Tlrna _ M>.91. C"bangc (R. &anksl Al$0 r1n -Catch Oeek, Ge Ftcs1le Ctilh MOcllllll (J. Ward) Big l' e llo1cs at San Diego Go. Gr°""y Gn1mpy, Lanov1n Sir, M~e SOWPci &1r CO. Morris) vao Oocl. "•Chant (J. Ma!Sudal Though there aren't a lot of yellowta;I being caught out of s.cratcned -Ror.1c.et Re11m, Gyp Fee, L s Ptte CE. G1ri1) . PaPP6 Wins, Sc11C1Ptr $J)Orl. c Art 10. Knl9hll San Diego those that are biting are in the 28-t.o 35-poond class. . Show (J. Alchllrdsl A d" to p c . . t F' he • Landin th r Land's Best IH. P1geJ ceor mg at OVlCt a JS rman s g, ere are 1nH aACIE -a vanh . ., v•ar more bluefin being brought to gaff than yellowtail. Covici added o . c11rm1r>11. PurM st.800. c1a1m1nt that big Jog barracuda bass and some white sea bass are mak-M.ooo. Tht l'rlll ~. . f he • h Tl~r oc. Ha!:fl . mg up the rest o t catc . T k';1.,1f~·~~(eNrdsl San Diego landings are a\Lernating scouting trips out to the ~ 'N' Clever fD. C•rdot•l albacore water and aU·report excellent conditions on the outside. .s Lb~~\:1~.<~;.,~~~110 The new albacore-tuna feather being marketed by Luhr Jensen he ttous.. IJ. MalsudaJ should be a hot one if past changes in head design and Cf?lora· XTN ltACE -•OO yards. l Yttr tion hold true for this year as they have in the past. ~& up, Cldlrnlng. Punt S2.000. ming price S1,000. v , Lind• oc Haro Second. S1cordfi1h llooke(I. · r Sim 10. Morrl•) s Pony <J. 11:1c111rds1 Tbe second swordfish of the yet young season was checked R. Fern (R. B1nk1) s n R.ock <e. G1r11> In Salorday at Balboa Angling Club, reported Helen $mltb. Pfo. :J::~":'.T'::.1 (~~·J:~":r)r•) fesslonal angler Ted Naftzger, aboard his boat HusUer landed a BfP."SPY 10. KnlliJflO •pounder while fishing olf the east end of catalina. It took P"INTH 1tAce: -«JO Y•rd•· 3 year Nafl!:ger one hour and 36 minutes to boat the bUlflsb that bit a cllll.. Allow•nct. Pursa Sl,50D. Thi J Id l)wgl•• Aircraft Co. 1Mnqeman1 Club. arge squ . Btfn•ltf 10. Knight) . ~:e:'::'.."::-4~~rT~':a.7!'~Fa1 Large Bluegill in Lakes for~<~.1·~:1in1~mlthl Good act.ion is reported on all · panfish found in Southland ,....;1~c;J~('J~1wardl Jakes as warm water bas forced _the trout .to seek the ~eep cool "'"chla IJ. OrtYtt'> water. Stringers of large blueg1 U, crappie .and catfish to 20 :ac1S:::1'fi<.'~;~j1 pounds are common from Jakes in Southern California. The best ,,,...,,. aAc& _ a yan1 .. 3 yur actioo appears to be taking place in San Diego County, but lo-°* ' ""' c111m1n11. PurMI rt.100. cally Irvine is consistent for good catches of wann water species. r ';!~ .':;"i°,;. ""'''" Trout action ;, rat..i as lair at Hemet, Silverwood and Big et o?.'f't ~~· ~~? · Bear with the bulk of the catches coming out of water around c1ab11w iJ. W.n11 the 30 foot depth. Anaheim will close its gates this weekend for A19rt <J. 1ticMrctsl f tbs · rd t I t the ttli ha . 2_.S~lnt 1c. s.m1111 a ew mon m o er o c ean ou se ng sins. ~°:rd cs"T"""')'> High Sierra action is slow as heavy angling pressure on lakes .'NTH (R._ .. nk• and streams is cutting into the per rod average. The high coon· uc• -""° yards. :a vaar k . lak . l f II b k' d . .-a. ""· c111m1"'. Pur~ s1.t00. try pac -m es are cons1sten or sma roo 1es an ra1n-=~w"'!'~~ J::!.;,,> bo~s, ~bile even higher up the mountains, j:Oldens are offering ""'••111tem (L. W"9hfJ frur action. =-• ':: !~: ~~:w1 Kokanee are hitting at Lake Tahoe, but here a guide is J~01r~1",:~~1Kn10110 needed for an -angl~r to take hohmehoany amdounk t o1redfishb.1Lake i mo Pa1ro1 111:. B•nk1J trout are also movmg around t e s re an now ga c an- ac• 8GY' (J. Wardl glers are taking a few in the 11-to 17·"""nd bracket ..-Ror.kll (0. C•rdcil) . t"""' ; , J. Boy IJ. or1ytrl • Fishing at most or the wa rn1er resort areas 1s reported as b slow due to extreme heat and water skiers. One exception v:ould be the river area below Glenn Canyon. OLF Virgil Foy and Roy Davenport of Costa Mesa spent four ... 1 • • • days oo the river and caught 16 rainbows whose estimated total 1~ · weight exceeded 60 pounds. The pair released most of their catch , (COnllnued from fage 32) to fight again but saved a seven-and eight-pounder to take home "1Jey al 60. In+ Jl'light D, as proof of the-food..fishing. · llleep, Wracebum scored a • jroSS 82 while Helen Webb Gun• Should Be Repaired -..slow net a·t 57. Second low Don't wait 'til lhe last minute to get lut year's gun problems • honors went to Betty repaired. Take your gun into your favorite sporting goods store ifakernore and E s t e 11 e and bave It repaired before the season begins. Nimrods who wait ~~in.son at f>S. 'IU the last mlnllle to have their work done a1llally bave to shoot .• r.u1· the low net tourney, a harrowed gun Come opening day. Jeanne Griffin and l!orothy Wdght trailed Fem 's 71 in Flight A with 14s y May was third at 75. Flight B, Peg Roberts off top hollors at 77. ' towed. by VI Saxton at 79. On', Phyllis Stafford, and ,' nnie Sturgis were third at t ight C was headed by rlene Collins at 75. In se- d Mre Kay Leutweilcr. i.u WW.y and Eileen ""8cet.Jm ii 80. -ifa\alie Matthews was" the t D champ at 81 but Just $troke ln front or Betty more and two ahead of !illUan DeShozo. Deep Sea Fish Report NIWPO•T CArT'f LaftCll119I -31 •n;len: n bllrracuc:t•. 111 t>Onllc, 3"8 c1llco bllu. l yl'Ll11Wlall, (D•'fff't ltiCll9rl -1U ar>11len ; 10 blrracllda. 111 bclnlto, 1.olt tallco INK. I yeUOWlall, 6 rock COlf, l h•lltMJI, Sl!AL a&ACM -117 1fl!ll..-1: l,'70 MM bllu. 11 llO!llto. ..... -m 1ng!""1: 10 bar•llCllG" 1,17' ~Ito, lo Und IMU, 1 wtlllt -llttt, 1~ Ni111>1!1. Lott• lt:ACM {ltl~ ,.,.,, -tS llf'I01ar1; 4't ulld IMU. I oiirracue11, • tlOflllo, ...... -'' •ng!tr1: ~ llOrl!IG, l'OU•TM ltACE -3SO yards. 2 ye1r old,, All-ance. Purt" \'1000. Tl>e Soulhtm can1ornt1 • Davi$ Pleati119 Comp1ny. Cindy EllJll'aH llCnlghl) 10 . .0 4,.-:l 3.00 J.20 1.~ 3.40 Wll(hln' H1141r (Hlrll Whlt1rd Of Ott (llanksl Time -11."6. Al•ci ran -Ca!!llOPJ, Pt;ulu•, Lillie .oandY Mae, lttbel Orum. No i.cr•tcl>ts. FI FTH ltACI! -350 y1rd1. 3 ye~• olds "& \IP. Cl1lml1111. Pur$1 S220!I. TM Cl'll!VV ChlM Ltl;!UI. Don 8 1r'1 1m1111 CRlchlrd1) Mr. UPHI (8~kll The Covnt (C1roo11 ) Tlma -11.U. 6.00 3.IO .. ~ "~ ··~ '•.IXI Al$0 r1n -Oonl1 Btt Good, Deep Tonto. Niie Train, Aun Moon Run. SNo i.crll{l'lf!S. SIXTH ltACE -350 "Vard1. 3 ~e•r otdl. All-ance. PurH $2000. Ocldw"k~ (Bankll t1.00 10.40 7 . .0 Rocketll llml!I (WbUCll) IJ.ol(I U.lll I'm RO'l'al (Harl) 5.00 Time -18.19. AlloO ran -Nev1d• Dolly, Mr. 01•· moncl Moon, Rlvtnlde Golo, Sunsnint' Rockirfli!, llk• A Ft1lner. Caroontnt. Cache's Copy. Scr1lched -Jwout Pride. Comln' Aller Me. Fl!>I N Finey. 15 E••cl• -J-Odd1m1ke1' & J-Rockelt• Llmft1, '"•id IS11.H. SEVENTM RACE -«JO Y•rd1. l year olds & \IP. c111m1no. Pur11 SllOO. The Downty Emllltm Club. Fltll COPY (Tre1surel •.611 2.811 2 . .0 Rocky !laach Hink {Pl!ltl J.10 l.00 Noor Moen IC1rdol1) J.00 Tlmt -2(1.32. AISG r•n -•acic On M.111>, Lucky'1 O'loY, A Goin' Min. EIGHTH ltACI -3$0 yaros. l year GJ<11 a. "'" Cl1lmlr>11, Pur•• $2000. Bre.idsllck (W1rdl 9,40 1.00 '·'° . 7.IO 5.CIO Don1 Mtar (l(nlghl) · Gtron!mc1 MlyOI'" (l!!ll~kelJ "~ Time -lt.t6. Al10 r•n -Fl1bbtr, Plll(lld In, Wiich Cretik Chic, 81ottby a1o1:1, ZOI'· bll'i C1ll, S~t TM Vcf. No s~ratthttl. 55 E••d• -t·lra1dsllck -7·Don• M1ar. Plld Slf0,00, NINTM It.ACE -3$0 yardt. 3 ye•r okl$. Cflll"l'll"ll. PurM S22QO. Shilrp Lulu (Treewrel O\lf>t'(lffOQO lll•llllfl OllJMl'i NIM• !K~IOM!l Time -11.11. 52.llO 11.20 1.20 '·'° ,_oo '~ Al10 ran -Alcketll P1rr, Hy O~•rOrlYa, Wl\ln Yurhol Yurh(ll, Plta1u1e hit, C1rGJ's D•eam, Hal•IY Vin 81r, Strtteller Bars. Scratched -Mldnl9n1 SPttd, 81nk Of Oregon, Wi tch A's F1n,y, tf l(~acll -2·Sh1rp Lulu '• 1· DI!,..._.., P1I• tm,oo. NEWPORT LEASES 2411 Wett C..t Hfttlwoy Leasing ell Vehicles 645-2202 I i/ .. ·-J- i'\' · 1~ Ii p1 ' . : ' OA.ILY l"rt.01 :J:J tents _. ................. ,, ..... ..... i lf£,l.J8 ''Olympic'' i • • --:·MODEL 14'0 . 720. The CffltlCt: .tt l'16'6" Trit Ol't'fttllK t9nt ,nwi••" : tlttpi"t 111u1rt•r1 IN ' .mall l•milr: •tr thrt• tiults. · • :: SPECIAL : •GRANT'S s59•• • _. PRICE :: ; ........................... : GRAN.T'S PRICE SPECIAL •7•• .~ ---- The Grant Boys Carry MORE Coleman Tents Than Just About Anyone Else in the West! See the 'Grant Boys First and Save! : ................................ ~ i [@,/,/lfrl "Holiday''! • n. -iw.i..., ,_, ~-...... -, ·-" • r. ""' ..... """" ••••• _,. ...... " it '"".,. t.. Tff. 1\n• '"''· •• lllllt 1•11 ti it wi1• HI•• 1t..1-w1n 4111,. •Ill 111•1 ho IM II .. fMI If •f •H"lt f l • • ., .. ,_..,,If • I . • .co tmiln l3x10 Holid1y .. $79.88• :colem1n 12x9 Holid1y ... $69.88! :col!f'lil" 10x8 Holid•y ... $59.aa: ......................... ~ tems and designs to fit Mery taste. And tvtry pockatt»ook. Thtra art bigs for tht s .. Mntd camper an4 tM c11u1I beginner. Moon J010A700 COUMAll CAMP OVEN w .. , .... Qltlll.. ...,,.... ••• • ... u •• 1tt'l'U, tlutrk kl •l•tn, I" .... ,ft. 111• ltfll 141~111•11 11ul ioko •M• ""' ••'f Ito <UI l~fl"'l'"lltf, f•I .. 1111 ,., HIT 11...,.. i•t ••• llfllfl. G•AN1''1 S,ICIAL NICI MOOll 10DA1K 1,..clrltttl,.11 .... •it"'tlt•-1\11". Mtlt •t-11 1toi'•. '•ti (IJHlly-1 I /I ,lfll, l•111l•1 "- -t ~t•rl " tilt••~••. M1oi.:H °"'t•t-2'00 I VI••· hll••·-..... ,. ,..11•11111', •ltMl!lty. $11" CU.lll'S S~ICIAl ,.llCl COLEMAN PIOPANI MOHL ntf'ltt .,..11ic111Ht: •-11..,.. .. -, ... 11.1,.. C.aa.apsfOVl 11f1". '"' c,"'11y-1 ,i.11. ,.,.., ,,.._, t..1 .... "'"' •11• Mr•, Mfft•"' o.l .... -1 ... fU/ • $13" MODEL 5410·101. Optf1tt1 .,, eu.wt·s l,ICIAl "Kl f 'I bl '· •I MOOll tt•1tt •fl"lf;.u11_, llM t11...t1t-6", "-It"' rom • tpoll t ,.., '' er -1J"9". '"' ,., .. 11,-J ,i.11. 1.,..111111-• .,.,,. .. reflll1b l1 bulk fink. F••-•It• ..... ,,...,_, o..tr,:-llJOO ITV/••· f101., .. -ut11 11.,. PR" ., .. 111 •., ""' ••foll• $14,, °f'llrlt llkkal pl1t1d lfOWt •fllttll •Hltot. G•A•f'I 1,ICIAl "l(t 'I . . ·1 Ii ~ • 1 ·-, : · . ... . .': ' I'• ... " • ' j 1 . : . .. ,,. .. lli!I i ·:· I ;, , ':~ ' " .. " ' . ! '" "· ... '·i' ;',. .. ;:-. : l ' ·. ~ .. '· ~ ". \.~ ~ . > ' : fl I top, ri bbed c1st bottom, ~'**''"''**'"**''"''**'"**''"''**''**''"''*...,""'*) folding wind b1ff l11 whh clip wlrt supports, two spring••ction logglt btch•t for 11curlnt lld. GIANl"S SP'ICIAL NICI MOOO. 5140·700 COLIMAN TEFLON 11• GRIDDU Vtr1•t.ilt add.on for 111 Celtm•n tfOYll , Thkk c11t •luminum cllatrlbut11 ht1t tvtn1y, Tefl on U• tOll;lll prtYl!llt f.oif from slicking. Rtce11ed grooYt •round cooking 1urf1ca 1llow1 dry '°ok· int- ., •• l.IO••d O~J•M ,,_,..,~ GIANT'I $"88 IHCIAL I -· TIUSCOPE COTS ... •c•tnt •••• ALSO A'f'Al\A"I Ho. 11 cot-Dtublt hcktr C.t $11.11 NO. 11 ccn- Pa4•4 Cet $1 3.11 N0,7ao <Of-Hll.h lulr "r>lot M n._hn ctiaiN $1.11 MOOU fi404•7J1 ALUMINUM ONE-BURNER LP-GAS PICNIC STOVE Thft txtrtm•IY ctmp1ct unit compltmtnlt !ht m1rk•f cr11t1d lly th1 11p1ndl11g popul1rity of plcnlc1, eutdoor · p1rtl•• 'ind cookout•. U111 Coltm•n LP·Gt• In dhpos•blt c1rtridg11. lights i111f•t'lily. H11t1 up f11t, l11y t. cle111. OUNT'I -'"CIA& Nt<l ) ' . . ~ U DAI LY PILOT Tlwndlf, July 12 ,l q,_ AMWI by DClllCJ Wlllley I " TUMBLEWEEDS by Tom K. Ryan IF YOU'VE AW~l&HT, ~lACKIE! IF 'rt'Xl \\OO'i EXTI::ND ME NO Clll!l'IT, I OOf NO RECOURSE i!Of 10 Uf(.llPAil! GOT 111E ASSe:TS1 i l'VE GOT 1)1~ ! .. • . - .. • . • . • • • • . • ' . • • " MYASSl!1SJ . MUTT & JEFF RGMENTS NANCY . TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Room 6 Moist 10 T1lon 14 Ship'1 lowut ''"' 15 Indeed: Irish 11!1 l1tvi1n city •• 17 New Ze1l1nd •· n1tive : 18 Shon cut: 2 words 20 ~:,1or L'f1' -~-21~Maater of • Educ. 22 Sheep!lke 1• 23Nitricor . •cetic 25 Yields 27 o·f rev• ' . • • .. 30 With tender •••••• c•re 31 Prevent 32 Wa1 ln •ccord 33 Bob !»it 36 8011on •••• 37 Goof ' 38 AloM : Preti• 39 Number 40 Ends one's sleep 41 111 capital i1 Valletta 42 Breed of SWlil"Q-0.tJ 44 E){!reme P•leness , .. •s ··-··· cnee&e aandwich Ye1te1day's Putlle Solved: 41 Long n1rr11ive A.J G A.S SE 48 W en known 49 Anim1I 1nclo1ure SO Tree 54 In a loving manner 57 Lllv1en1I P. 58 Sp1nlsh p1inter 59 Smudge 60 Go1der 61 Cowhand's steed 62 G1e11k province 63 ··-·Age DOWN 1 Bodv ot an organism 2 Kind of 12 Representa· tive 13 Merchandi11 19 ..... geometry 21 Length unit 24 Animal veh1cl1 25 G1rments 3 African plant 26 At all times 4 Fai t pir1te 27 Ench1n1!1d ships 28 Conies' 5 On : Comb. 29 Tellers" form e Old·hat tUSt?merl • 30 Fabnc 7 Unproduc1tv1 32 M d 8 Parent: · 1 e Qutpl lnlorm1tl 9 American writer 1cr Cowardly 11 "You're.1 ....•. ···-I" 34 Preposition JS ~1ale animal 37 Curie 38 Bold: Rere 40 Ralph ·--·• Emerson 41 Magnitude: Atlcb1. 43 W11rns 44 Be profitable 45 Grind with the 1ee1h 46 Shakespe1re chantcter 47 Vogue 49 Mari's nickname 51 Toron10 foo1b111!er: lnlo1mal 52 Mmtgage 53 Femaltt animal 55 United States Navv: Abbr, 56 ••• C11r1111s · N, Amer. watltf~ course 57 Vehicle 10 11 12 13 6 " ' 7/12173 • l lQUI D .1 • ~I , ' i 0 oo PEANUTS by A! Sm!th by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller .:-~:.:~~-~ .""-.. ··- He r ·real name was !Xlrothy Fledermaus. But all her friends called lier •Dee:' - JUDG E PARK ER SAM, l LOVE YOU ..• THAi 'S WHY I DOH'i WANT YOU INVOLVED IN MY PROeLEM S ••• E&PECIAl.LY I SUPPOSE SO! I-IE SEEMS TO !<.HOW EVERY M OYE I • M AKE ••• W HERE I GO ... Wl-IOM I SEE! WITH RICK LASSITER! • MISS PEACH A C.A~& ?! A 9 1"THD.AY CAK I!', ~ FOi< M4 . I I 11 \ .. · ,. : .' '"..)J OF COUl5E, All:TM.Jll:! 'PIO VOlA THINK Wl'O FOl<IOIT ANYTHING ·M IMPOltTANT A~ YOOlt. l!lll<THDAY? DICK TRACY · 81A'T oFCCX.C~, i'HO(AGM, Ti.e' fCONDMY !!>lllNG WHAT IT I~ ... .. DOOLEY'S WOILD GORDO MOON MULL1NS ANIMAL CRACKERS IJA.E, ,..,'5 ~OOQ 1&~IR BeS1" ~ITTeR ... by Char1es M. Schulz Thus, s he was frequently rnferred to as ".Pee Fledermaus." ' '~ I 00 YOU T~ONK HE MAV HA'iE GOTTEN IN TOUCH W1TI-\ THE JUDGE ANO KATHE RINE? ., \! ~ -y - by Harald Le Daux 11'5 CERTAINLY POSS16L.E, BETS.Y! WH Y DON'T YOU CALL. KATHERINE A ND A6K WHETl-IER HE'S t--~" CONTACTED THEM ? by Mell by Chester Gauld • li •• lj !. " it . ' ' ! j • I .,, ....... . ,,.._.. _ _ ,,, __ _,._...,,,_ '"fHaMMlil L4 .... ~AMU.t : by G111 Arriola by Ferd Johnson by RCICJer Ballen ~. THE GIRLS 1',~2 "Act..U,, I WM loilc te take ap awlJiunlmg W. aumner, but1Moldeddedlo1-lopai11Uq-l-10 m ... better la a llDICt." DENNIS THE MENACE • • I .t I I ' -~·-'" YOU CAN'T TAKE A "VACATION.~OM ' DlllTAL HU.UH l Irr TlllY GU.NT, R.P'h Proper dl•ntal by{,:icnc is a 36.5 dny job. By adopling a fcv.· nq.(• habits you can hl'lp ellml~te plaqul' and cavi. tic11. ;\fe all kn(1\I.' aOOut dc- cay,1J:>ut \\'hat about plaque? Thls:'fs a c.:omblnation of bac-teria~~ d food 1.vhich collects on t.c h along the gu1n lint>. If no rcmovf'd it \\•Ill dC'- stroy 'the bonry sup1:iort. al·oun , ; youl' lee th and health , -t l' c t h may be loosened and los~. Brusbin~ helps rPmove plaque -but CRnnot r(,'l'l7h crevices l)('T.11·f'Cn tl'clh. D1s- closurc tablcts, d lssolv('Cl in -~ the----mou th-.1>h~l11.t--whcrc.... pl3que-. has lx>cn missed in b1·ushing. Dental floss· can•, then · be used · to rcn1ovc that 11•hich' has been left .. YOU -OR .YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US 1vhen you need a dell\'Cl'y. \Ve 1vill de- liver promptly 111ithout extra charg{'. A great nu1ny 1-,cople rely Qn . ns fcir thC!ir health needs. \V{' \\'clcome requests · for tlcllvr.ry s er \' i cc and ' charge ncC1'lunt!'l. · PAR K LIDO 'HARM.ACY 351 1'~1pttal Raid Newport leach'. 642-1580 ,,,.. Dtflvery .J11111p Predk!ted Higl1e1· lnte1·est On Mo11gage Due \\'ASlil NG TON /Ar) The Federal llescrve Board and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. boosted the rate ceilings on s a v i n g s deposits one·half of I percenl on assbook savin s accounts FINANCE Honie buyers v.•ill have 10 pay higher in1crcst rates on their mor1gages as a result or the jjOvcrnn1ent's move last week boosting the rate ceilings on ~savings-accountr.acrordln-g·tp the chairman of the Home Lonn Bank ·Board . an by rug er am~OO : savings i:e.rtincates with tons· Ecoiiom:c \\IJllLE O.ECUNJNG to predict how much of a jump in lhe hon1e inortgage rate is possible, TI1omaS R. Bomar, the chief regulator of savings and loan associaUons. said: "The amount of the rate in· creases could be significant." AUTO MATIC GARAGE DOOR OPENER SALE OliANGE COUNflES VOLUME DISTRIBU'rOR LOWEST PRICES! lndallation lo Se••ke Gora9e Door Mordwort' Replac;od 642-34'90 Sea Coast Builders Supply 1651 Placentia, Costa Mesa er matur1t1es. The Bank Board " raised its ceiling on passbook accounts by only one-quarter of I percent. BOTH 'nANKS and savings and loan associations now will be permitted to pay savers any interest rate they want if savers are willing to deposit at least Sl.000 for four years. Varian Taps Distributo1'._ Varian Data Machines of Irvine has appointed Sho\va Information systems of Tokyo as exclusive computer distribulor for Japan and South Korea. Recently established as a ne\Y J a p a ne se·O\Vne d distributing operation. Showa \Viii devote its prin)ary efforts to promoting the Varian's line of minicomputers. systcrns, and various c o 1n p u l.e r peripherals. • Club Sets July 111eet The July rneeting of the Economic Club will be held at the Golden Bull Restaurant. El Toro. at 8: 15 a.m. July 20 ac- cording to Arlhur Giguere. vice president of the clulJ . The program v.•ill be based } on the First Nari onal Cit y. B..<tnk Of New York's monthly tape "The Sound of the Econoiny.'' The t aped discussion is n)oderatc-d by John Daly and is participated in by the bank's key economic executives. The discussion will consider aspects of the price freeze as applied lo "'ages as v.·ell as prices and the ex- pectation that fu ture controls v.·ill be tougher in selected sec- tors of the economy. The breakfast cos t is S2.75; reservations arc rcq_!JeS~cd by phoning 586-2020. ,. - al •. On new certificate accounts $10.000 m1n1mum . yields Tll11nday, J11ly 12, 1973 DAi l V PllOI 3 'Job Problems' OVER THE COUNTER NASO Li1tint1 for Wtdnetday, July 11, 1973 Of W 01nen Aired fnoo:.. -t•H-1•·•' ,., i ··Ou...i Ct It 10 ' l•ll'IO .. Ill 111 ' \\1ASlfl NGTON tAPl -i':x· perl.s agreed In congressional lcstlmony that v.'on1en enm le!!s and ure n)ore often unemployed than men. but dis11greed this \Yctk on the reasons f()r this. Wffrlfll 0¥ 1"-N• •ll>ftn ll'' l , !1•1111 (11 I • l•VIOf .-••'• ~·, llon•I .-.uoc!tllOl'I ot r1•n~ J ~. ll••cm Toi.cm 4\o •' • ~u•lll•• ON•ff.. •--L.I 1 11 ~M !tO t {tt•n• .i•, •·• • ••• \1111• •114 011,, • .ico co '"' H~' Jt tyl'l'IU 11 • u~ T "'' DC 11. •'• JOb prospects ~"°'" OY °"'"'""" ........ 211') ,, !lltM P•< I -. in. tl••n l'• '" , c-itr IMl•l•ra lO A11loJI 1lW J'-. M...:11'11 fq >-!• t Towlt Ml t t ;, Econorn1st.s Barbara R. 1101 o,,,., ., o1 " Crt."1• '! 1 -·1tt<1 Eltt 1!1. ••'·I'"" c.r ll' I ~ o . ( h ""I I r 'I°'' l t•ll.,11 0 Mtd ... 1·· llell uni.-I •• q •. • .... ,.. •• ~. ucrgman o I e v.11 ver11 ty O I mt 1 ,~ o<l§t•• G"'"' "'-" 1 •, 1 ••• ,.,,., 1. ,,, ''" i.x.t" 1101o 10• • • ,. I d nd r I A lont 110 11-11' 1110:1\IOI O••Dll k ... ''• 11,.,, &R QI.~.,,_., "" ,,, •.. ",try an 3 3U • ''''"' m1rw;uo, "'"''~Gr•\ Adv 11, f ll 111~.J .Ml ~· Jtl> Uni C•o• Tio I' S I • f 't' •h I dowl'I Of c~mn1li >1tt Cn b l-. lt ltNJ Eo X'' )1)1, Un!Oll SPI 1&'~ 11 . amue son o i• assnc ttset s .ion: • ..., oo "°' H•"11 ew it 11 R.l>tl<'• ci.1 n" 1.1, v,.11r1 T11 s .. , IMll tute of T e ch n 0 I 0 g y ;~:~-::~~.. It h/ti r1:~11 F~~ ~t~ u:~ ~=:~~· r! l~ :~: ~~ t:. N~ ,l .. ,r,· disputed the Stein and \Vhll· UtDVST•L•LI I •rlvn p ••• ,,, 1111 ..... ~ .. , 10" \1 Vnl• FO• IS I'' ANO IJTILITlll Ht•"'r R ,:: :~: lllKO.• .Pl'\ II It' l V•w Mool ••• 51, man rational!' as did Rep w..:in•1t11Y fl•"'1" ~1 ,., , llu11 ~·o• u •, "'" VtOM Mo s1~ •'· ' ' J\/1¥ 11, 191J UtoCl'...c! ( ' $ \ ~• 6' V > 61, 1 , E'CON0'1fSTS fR0~1 ~lurthn <:riffiths 1 0.~tich.\, 1111 1o•~tt,1110 M~ '~' • &0• •111 ;;: ,·..,:~c•ovt ,~,1~1 ~ ' · 1oc11111~1 ? '• ni.. 11ent0t0 l'O ?211 ~•1•"' (p 1 un iversities and those heading who c~1aired th.e J 0 i n I ~:r:o t~ u;~ i1:: ri:~!~ c 1i ~1• tt::.::~:· !1' ~ .. ~rc~o.~IX;, : ... ,~. lip Ille l'r-1·dent 's COu11·1·1 of E-nomlc r -mm111-h•ar-.,,_ Ill~ l b ~·111~ver rri; ?Jt , t.cll<t<I In ijj,, tt·~ "'11"" 5•• ,., ••• "'"' ·'-"v ....u .... "' Alliio T,1 It\~ 19 ti:,;1 Mio "11 \co11 Inn 11 11>, lf•lv&f S< ''~ •'· Economic Advisers discussed ings. Auv~ ll• ,,, I Hv.ou c 11 .. 11•. Xon1L G '" ,,, Yo1 s,.,,.. 11 ,,, Am l>r>')l '!"I '~ t1v•1er (: l\ 1 ?l" \<•IOI'\ I< 111 • I~• Wtll> '°'G ll'• I~' the reasons for the econoinic ,. Au<.• 1 l'' l"n~ w•• It'• 19"lscr1n•~ 1 ,..,. ''• '"' .,., 1•· M' ' '' •o ' ' •• , .• , Jll'> ll',\eA •v''" 19 •. M'• W• .. nn 1 •'• ''• µrobten1s of \\'Otncn. THE'' CONTENDED ex· ,.~ E•'D• )n: 1t~ 1;;r:,,..... ,,, n, iv "'l••e" ''" ''"we"" •~ 3•• • .... h f I d d" . . . b 1>m F'intt ll ,,,~, '"''" (•II •1 •I \vn11 1•~ '" • ,, .• w"'"'" '" '" lf('r...crt Stein. c ai rtnan o re1ne an 1scrun1natory JO Am Fu•n ''• ,., init•< i" .~. ~·· 5,,,.., u11 11 tJ1, wtioo w1 u1, i p . the council. and colleague segrc j!ation v.·ns to blame for ~':J.ir\G•t: ~;~ ~~: :~:mliu.,,~ ~~',• 1 ~~!1~~~~w'P ~,: ~:: w::~~ ~; 1;~ 1~~ i\tarina \\'hitman said up lo 30 v.·omen earning so n111ch less:~ J~t,,· ?~:: ~1:: l~.~.~v c~ ii:~ ·i~ !~J''!~; :J:; ~::: ~!:1 ."~~ ~. ~:· percent of the over-all v.·age than n1cn -onl)' 47 percent as !~~~., ,., 1:: ·~:: ~~·~;.~ ~ , • , .. ''""'"~ ::~ :r· ~~::~--:: ~ 1r· lJ> "'P betll'ccn n1en and women 11 much bi• the latest firi ures -A~<"' e '" ''•Jt1 1>1rfr l'• •'1 ~1•n~c1r 1 11 1 ... v1o•c P1· "'• ,,.., O ~ 1>PS Inell 11' 1 1j" Jo.lvn I.' Ii 1~'• ~!~ tf.-il1 I •'~ I•'~ Wl1>t I> T i. , >i mny be caused b)' discrin1ina-and tor having n1uch hi"her "'d" Mv1 ,,. 1• 1<.; ... ~. 10'• 11)'• ~·~,. ..0.1,. 7<1, u >. w1ic Pt • 1t'. t••• ' .. Atro llu• 10'• 11 K•I••• c l'' • ~1•N 11 ..... ' ••• w_, L t~ "'• 17•• lion. Jobless rates. ""<:IW H• 1t•• 1 '•It••··,. r~ '• s•, ''••• N ~ ... ''• wo,i<t s .. 10 100. . . l>•vl<I• tt~ t l(,.SlwOd !t 11'1 ~l'Qf T~ JJ•. t• WrlQ~! \'/ •\? ~ But they cited other factors Ste1n-\Vh1tn1:in and I h e Au11 col• iti, '°'•«.., L"''" 11 11•, ~.,.,,.. C1 ... •··If,,.,,, '" 1•• *' . ' . . . f I 1'11 G• LI l•'> l •'•l(~y 0.ol• s~ • .,,, \yner r.. '" 1n•, >'rlln "'' J1 J7'· they considered O)Orc dcc1s1ve. un1vers1ty pro cssors-a so A1110 ''" 11" 11•. <•1•• ~L> 131, IJ•. 1 ... .,,. .-,, ·· ,., )1""1' ro 1'' 1·. .f. II h d" ed h th lhe 6•1•0 1110 ... S'• f'( Cv•t t'. /lo f~"" C•g l" ... Zion• v'•~ 11· ,, s1>cc1 1ca y t e years a 1sagre on w e er 11.,1,0 w• 11'• ,,,, '~'" 1.,, u,,,",',". __ ....... _ __ __ d f he . b . b · . t · 1·1y 6"~'' ft fl '-• lli ><MS told won1an spen s out o I JO econom ic a1ners o equa I so1c1 ... n 1.. 1 Hl'<"~"" u1 i. 10 l" tl t A II 1narket. Thcy said thi s for wo1nen "''ere "·orsening or •,~1,","(;.1,' ~·~ l~·· OQ•• Pr 10 11 I '' J 0# e ve . " " , , ~•u"90' I '• S ncga tivelv affects her ruture unprovlng. i:~~.,11:u ?~.; f;,\<u1•"' E• t:! t·. i1E.w 't'OllK 1v,,1i _ 1,,. 10 ,.,,,..1 -s ....... " ?S'' 161' -!~8$~,r I? 11 • •Olv~ •IOC•• "~""° ,,.., llit Ol[ ,,,.,,., BaYltu ... t>o "tll<t Tl )I We<ln•ecl•Y tJ lU(1.l•t<f Qy N..O.SO. •,•,~l,cM,,' •,:•, ,•,, :.,wior c 12', )~ 8111..,. aid A1koO Chit. "" 8G li'• 19·. Ptnn Or,.n 1<17,\00 5-16 l·l6t l·I• Ben!lv LI 7•'· 1S'-\ -:~el if1 12•) IJ E.<!V«lr E.tv1 lSJ.~ 211<. 19•,_,. '· !'.') [;g ~!::~ .. :lotrtv'"' 'l1• I\. R•nl< Orpn l)UOQ 11 II '•' '· f\lbtl (o I'· n.,Lll (Jirno 710 T'o An~eu1 llVI(~ 100,iOO 46'• d '•-I, Illa Orm 91, 10•, .In< tla•I i '• 6'• Fun' ~e"" t •,600 1010 10'•-f-I . Food Price Slowdo,vn Bir<! son~ ?•" ?S'• Lion (IS• ••• •'o ~pee"• P~V\ ll . .00 1•'• IS ~ '· BOii E;vn• 11'• 19•,•0<•l!e '50'• ~l'> Am E~p 13.900 ll'o Sftlo-"t llaolf> NII 1~>. 10•1 ~at"ll'$ (o SI '> '.J 8&nl<•n>tr ~6,iOO '1'" d\\~ I • BrenCG I JI \> 11 Y.id (ia1 It'.-II'• Kloo!Gl<f Min IO.IOCI tl~ 16Co-f-I Brtnk• In \0 1a••Y.•I Rny .S'• S•1Cm11Jns Am lt.300 tl \o IJ>o-r '• B•own Ar ~·· 6''1Y.ol!ckl lll'• Jt•. fl1Kktll! ll>o !I'• M•rlr F•t t61o 16>, NA.~D Yoluf"lt TOO•V. 6.511.lOCI lllKkOV 6 6'>Mt•V Kv 7~·· lO'· A, .. ~ .. ,~. t li Seen With Crop New s \VASHINGTON lAP J -A _ report by the Agriculture Department p ;. e d i c ti n g fa·rmerS wil l harvest niore corn and soybeans this year is raising hopes in the 1\lixon ad- ministra1ion that the rise in food prices can be__.§IO\\'ed. • 8ur1>0 SI ll'o not Cmcl< JI '• t0'• ~tl lne• "Nl NO ONE SAYS that grocery flu!lt• M ll'· 3t'•Y.t0u•• 1•'• 1l•· vntn1nued 1tro . . C•n> T•o 21~1 ll'· .Y.eo<"' ll'> u•, Tot11 JOit prices v.·111 go dov.'ll soon . but ,,01 sow •'• l'• Med""' "" ~'" f I c .... YtllS 16'•16't 'ol.,1<J In i•• I '• the prospects o arger crops 1nrnp P1 9•1 10\1 1,1.,1.,. F• 11•. 11•1 Used to tum Out "'eat. milk ~·.o',',,A 19,, 19••M11.00, " " Gah1ers & Loser• "" •"• ~·, pl• G~• 1l >1• --_ - -_ ---- nd ~It v could m•atl a C.h-em Co ll'• :lt'•Mlnn Ffll ) I'• New 't'or~ (V PI) -ln. 1Q(1ow!n~ u.,. ::t r 'U r. '-c111 II• Ir 1c•, 111. ',\"1!ul to 19 ~ ro• illllW~ 1n., •lock• Ill•! h•ve g~l"e;i 1n.r rnore gradual rise. Ch•h S« 161 111 MOie• ," ,',1" ~?:•1 mo•• •no 10•• lht rno•t baM<f on Pt•~•"' ,. , Vloore • .. •of c~df>Ue on '"' Over-IM-\..OU"!O• L.1rcier crops al.so suggest ~j~l~e~ .. ~~~,' ~: ""°'"'"c 21;~ ~~;• "'''~"' ... ouo•e11 l)y me NA.so. h "· LJ . ed S L.~ o' \.\~IQI I 1() · ·• Nfl ~no;!. ~•CO'll~e tlll"l)ft tro !""" I al luc ni t tales mav 11e 1•0w,c~1> lI•' ]~) ...,:.i Ell• 61• ,,, <1llfprenct t1e1....,., r1i, o•evlou• t•~• b•o able to let up in a fe1v n10nths ~1 -~11: 10•: n•:\~11 ~~·~1 •,. :~Plitt 1n11 '~·· tu•re<11 i.n 1>111 o•i<t ,., Tl p 11' 21' •f ~ b ¥ I' I GAINl:llS on rationing ·soybeans and on'tt111,. 1~,: 111:'11 Md' tC• 10 1,1, 1 BH<n Pr>o10 s Jt.-'• u11. :so.• • 1 , 111-> 11'} NI •!en! 6 1 1 Tox1nv Imp~ •"* .-1~a Uo 35.0. Other protein roodstuff ·to· ~].fl to 16';011•,;~·"",",m,· 1'01'•:~:• l Mt<1 Tru1! "'" I '•~ '• Up 111.• . •utch R ~'• .,,., ew o , ' , .. • Enerqy (v ul• '"' I"• VII ,S,• foreign buvers. gu•• Nott uti 111-•. '~no, -,G~ -',' • 1:1? 1 ·T~u• <.cornr1n l'•+ \, Vo u .o · E' · · · &nl tn!I 13'o 23•• "'• a " t 1 O Ene•QV Con•• 1•1-1 111 VO 1•.l xport restnctions were put •n•v 11,1 1 •• 1~, "lkcle• In '!' .,!!• , concwt '"<•o • ... 1 ~u11 :u.1 tho od ct tl b . Otrt Drt1 5"' Nltl"n "' 19,•-;-• l (mptrvhn Co Hl'~• 7 U1> 21.l on se pr U s reccn 'Y } 0•111 Dt• 1"• J'O ..ilthe" fl '19 •JO • , t>11K1ea• R••c 1•., " vo· n.1 the adminiStratiO" 10 OSS Ure Oe111 ~n 3S~, l6\1 NorDtlr,,. ,'01~~ ,'0a;'it 10 Mlcnxlal• CP l'o ~ 1> VD 11 .1 Oe<ll 0 & 7·1 I'• "'' ,_.,.., ' 1 11 APlllbrn FOOi! )>; • •• Uo 20,0 C'nough for American livestock Otc"'" 1n •I'> ••• !'!o~•," '•' ~,,_<1','·11 11 oani.orwn w1 J , ~ ', VD 20.0 ' Ot-111 AR SCI SJ •UC' t • 13 D•n•e• won1-)\1 f-~I VO 19.0 and poultry prodUCCrS Until Oel~I ln!I SI'> 6 .'.>a~w<f ti s;• ,·,~i I• FunkSHd .OSb IO'to +. 1>• Uo U.I . Oelu•e C J I 31\o 0-:""n O• ~ • • 1S .Y.lq A•SOO: 10 ll • 7 Uo 11.? ne1v crops come 1n. 01.,., Cr• 11\1 11 Ocetn E• ' ,',, 1• s11•ccni. tnca ,.,..._ 1 up Lt.7 Ol1m I-Id 10•; ll'l'o0c...ar Ml l" • 11 011•1\ot l.OQi" 1•,.-p , Vp 11.t O!ck ... f! 711'.' 19 OllSl'I L<il 11 •• ,. 11 ft..-r Mno .O!D I() ... , .. , Ull 17.• SOARINGEXPORTdema"d 81vrt 5<• 11'•1ll'>:>1llvv M 1'. 11:~,,~UCl••~ale t6 l'1•-•,Vo 16,I · oculel lj l S1i :>h ffH~ 1!• I,'> 20 \/lctrl• Sl•llon •'•I-11, UO 1'.I for "·heat corn and soi•beans Do11• Ge" 1~• ?!>II CCMo• 1•' u,. n 0111• co•c si.+ '• uo 1s,• ' • 001111ld• Jt\. 1•'· Ormont s:• ~ • 11 "'"'" Sele"'' 1'>"' 1 U1> 15,1 has helped boost feed costs Oow Jons '11,, :18~0 .... ,.,vr 6,• 6~1 ?j Octen s--11~r1 . •'•' ,,, v11 u .\ Oo't'le OB 11 • lj Ov~'' flA • • ') 14 (;"'°("'1>1• ::;..-, , t, VO i..l here at home and hns been Ou,.kln O p , . 1'111, <.•11 S'> f" s O<lvuev inc • 1 ,,. Up u.) . ed . Eton Liii> 31!'• Jt'• p.,11,1 !Ir ~r. ~ •• LOSEllS men tion as an important eout E• ?,•,·.~ ,.,, ~· P1t<•• '3'! ~·~ 1 t •1>.>n• Co•cn 1••-'• 0 11 u.• f t · I .1 food · · El P•to J t P-c G8m t~\o 19,,, 7 NOit (oo-p S' ~-Oii 17 ) ac or 1n re a1 price in· Et "'uc11 ''l '"" P..:: L"m :l"~ 3•'• 3 c1,,.T,Ru ...,, 1 ·= \• on 11 1 Ene<ov C 1\.1 j'I P1!.o llr<I r•o 11; ~ '" ou 10) creases. EQu s&L 11 1 111 Pan o-oi I"• 111• •, •,1r1>e,~o ','\ ;:;:_ ·~ 0 11 '' H' •h fed · be. g f!hln " I•\~ 7S1) Poul Rev 1~'• 16'o ;:: 1"1' 0 · bta~ed ~or ~~ce~u~~:ck '~v E~t(i.i~~ 1:~ 1~,: =~1·~:·(:\ 1r~ 1I:~ 1 ru .... b~1":"s;:: i:;;.= i:: ii ~:: . F1lr Lnt 61> 1 p~., N 5., 1, 1''. 9 (rU1(!-..r Re• l '-"> 71 farmers on breeding stock for F••lon e1 11v. 21 "'•G.."-w 1•t'. i••• • Se>1•~1 M11t1 c •·~-'• Olf F1rm Br U '• lJ "" ll•H 'Y" ?'" IO Vt•lsy1m• C11 1'1-1• Ott 1,1 hogs and chickens meaning Favi D•a 5''1 01~ ... 1•0 Lw ~·; 1,; n lotLlncoln F~I l '•-" Ot1011 7,1 ' Fl...amt U 111~ 11,,.., ~ •\ ,,~ 11 ln!1><m1tlts In l'•-'• 7.1 that production Of pork and F~I 60$tn 1~ 16'".' "'l''"'ov l' ' ?O•', 11 G•t~l>lc Scltn t !-1• OH '·' , I•! T•Fln 21''' 211:."' , ~· I• MO••t lnelll•" P .--'• W,t •.I poultrv v.111 be reduced soon. 1~1 wi1F "• 1,J::• Pl;:~'.~ ,;.: ,.,~ 11 re11ronlt• S•v l '>--'• (5'.i1 6., ProCcssors and fa rmers also ~l~01~1rii l~'\ 11..,; ...... 1 "'~ i ·~ I"~ 16 Ad••n Ml<roo 110-:: • 6·~ FU k ,,.,, 11•· Pt>o•t "'" 1 q 0 17 Ctrm1n (o•o F•-on 6. have blamed the Nixon price F~e~' o1 1": 1 •1 "-"' r;~•f "" .. 11 P~"'•• "-" l••-:: gn '·1 F k El 9' 9'0 "'""'fJ ,,,., lP'o I' OJSI' ln11t1 w•• l'o-OI '·? freeze for prcdietcd shor1ages F~:::d• 10,! 70,, "'" ,.., , ... 1'" 10 1180H°"'" .09 1"-:': o:: i · food j" Fril'lld It 23'> ij'I, P••""'•~-1•, µ, 11 0..,!Ql.\ed l~tl ' -~' in some supp JCS . Frltcll " 1"0 17:, Pu•n c.0 n unotr Se• Ind 6 -~: 011 ,,, \V "t h t bl t'I · F(Ol l"dE !°'7'0 •'·1 ••1·••231Ct•JICM ,GS~ 1'o-Ott ,_, I 0 u SU s an 1a 1n· Full•• H 1 • ., U•A .... ~,· ~~ •• • .. ,, Omeo& "I""" 1'•-:: &:: ~-1 creases in grain and oilseed Funt s" lOl. 1011 Ov•k• cr. I"' . .,,, 1"5 Sl•U11""' er. 6'~- production this year. orfic ials believe that American con-~ fil-J' _ ~ sumers v.·ould be headed for serious supcrn1arkel shortages by next winter and el'en . sharper cutbacks in export ,. .. - MUTUAL FUNDS - ' •• shiprnents to foreign buyers . • ' .... i l • .. $5.000 m1n 1mum . 30 month s yields $1 ,000 m1n1mum yields 1 yea r Now all existing and new Passbook Accounts earn: Plus: • % Interest on all accounts is compounded daily and pa id quarterly. Fre e Sale Deposit Box· I Free Photoc0py Service I Free Travelers Cheques I Free Not ary Service I Free Note Collection· 'w1!h oua!lfy1n9 balance ~ .. '/~ . iii! THE BIG M K:i:·l::lil· . . MUTUAL . SAVINGS .. Corona del Mat: 2867 E11t Co11t Highwarl 675·5010 •. For more Information call: Aooert D Manager As1on NtW Vor~ -F<ll• IATON & i~~' F<t 16.1'9 !&.ff A:••er9 F .... l ,r. T H E AG RI C ULTURE lowlnQ Is , li,i ol HOWAllO: '""" t t" 1 '6 o.4J '"""f Iii \' . ~!d 1n<f tS~Ottl pd· lh!n "" •.o 10.UJl-l•n ~·II -.ll ~.11 SaQOI!•• 1.11 'I Department says. however ,,, on 11ou1u•1 Gw•~ F 1J.1s u .11 '"'""'" 1 •.•• 1J.6• ::,,.,.,, Fo o...s 9.2• ' Fun<ls •5 1""'"" OV 1ncm• S,tS 6.IO l't'~TONE: X llUl $11 I.OS t ,I} that fanners fought off severe 1r.e N1'5D nc SPKl1 F 6.IO 1..u """ '" ••·•• 1t.1 1 l<.UDDtcllt FDI : --51<:~ Fa 11.'9 ll.•S 1.1111 dl IV.ti 11.J4 lf'ltr Inv H.12 16./1 "·ea ther last spring 'and now we•n•5d•l EM•Sla 9.65 tQ.SI Lu•1 .,, •. n '·"" &111nc: 16.JO 1,.111 -Ju!v I!, 19J EOIE Sp ro.tl70.1J Lull io.> 1.06 7.ll I.om 10 «11000 plan to have 6 percent more l id A•• El'C MGMT Ollf': 1.u11 111 ~-" &.2• saec•I 28jf 78:1' f d ADMl.ALTV : E:Q!V Gr 1,s& · Cu~I ,ii:I 22.ISlS.06 St:l<I L6¥ •.ic l ,11 acres o com an 24 percent Grw'" •.11 •·•' E-ot• Pr 1.t:t t..u•t :.t 11.00 11.0. 1ecuR1TY FDI: ·•~ f h I '"'°"' J."4 l .'" Fn<I l>m 1.31 1,99 C.ull $) /.ll I.Ill E1111l1y ll.6 3-SI more SO}ucans or arves 1ns.-rn 1 VI '·!' lorf! Gt 11.c~ n.1~ c.u11 !M J .• s 1.1. 1nvts1 1>.S9 1.t1 Iha" ·," 1972 l>Qv!w• •.ll •. 1 Uvn ff! 16.15 ''' AllClllO .. :ia .. 11 uu ... F 6-:1111 6.U • Aeln<1 Fd I.I/ 1.91 m~•o l.00 POl••I J.ll J.n S&Ll:CTl:D 1'01; A~lf'I• In 1l.6J U.911 ner<1v 11 .1~ 11.16 icn•c'' s.tl 6.S6 Am 5~, 1 ... 1.t• Alu!ure 1.ll l.ll Eovltv F J.l• 900 Kn~r G•n t:n /.6S Ol>o F<I l .IO l.IO AGE I'd •.6~ •.13 F81rllll 1.61 ,•.,>01 Lndmr~ 6.1' 6.ll S~ S~r1 11.'l !J.•l Al l!lft!e 11.061 7.97 Fm 8uft t • .O Ltll• F<I S,01 s,CI Senti""! 9.SO 10.h All)l't• Fa 17 11 1• 50 FO'd RR~ I.It LEX GllOV": $er!U~ F 11,t• 11.01 Arntll> F '·f •.9'1 l'IDl!~ITV (.11 LMI• IS.JO 16 IS SHAlllHLO GRf' ! ~:;: ~~~~ ~:3' ~'J6 G11tt,,~ure11 tts '" G•w•" 6,0I ~.•~ corn~t J.11 l.•~ llM EICPRl:SS . (to!•! 1l 0J11J0]7 Rtuc~ 13i:41 •.JI En1~, S.•I 5.•I FUNDS : ~onlr• •'n . li~IV FO 5.11 s." Fltt ,,. l.61 l.96 (~~Ill / 16 I 1S y SSK 6'91 119 Liff lnlv I.ti i .to M••or T,lO I.ff lm.oon i 's1 t'31 f ll !'n . Linc: till) 1.QJ I.ti Lto111I L S.fJ •. "'1 I nv~!"' g'ft:) 1"1g E"t• 1 ·11 Li_nq !'no J,21 P~<t Fa 6.81 7.•t ~ I -·11 i1t E ~ff)I 10°1911 to LOOMIS SHIRA•SON FDS: sotc ,. s 1'u F11nd l s'tO 16°t:l SA'l"L EI : A,aarc; 11.0i It.I) ,.~oo:(;,,~ ··ff 6°J1 l'u,11n t'1t 10·0, Cep Ov 17 YI 11.St !f'l(om 11.1.S 11.11 ~~ ~~fi fti iii F1~~ic~ALri:~ ifll L~.~:~:1"''1=::: 1::~ ~~:~:n 1!:li 1ti: AmN1 Gr 71' , •S PllOGRAMS: ""' a .. s l-00 J.2~ llGMlo ,UNDS : A'°'CHO• ' . Fin Oyn l .9.1 l 95 6nd <:ltb t.91 10.ll C.o 511• 1.31 1.0l Staff Cuts Recorded By Firn1 GllOUf" Fin ln<I •.ll •.31 LulM•n 1~08 ll,.U Inv 10.15 11 .20 Executive Industries Inc. C•at•l" '·" •.XI Fin 1"' s.11 s 57 Lv1nn In ~-'° >O.JJ r-.1 l.'KI 1.6J h • ba d h FnO In~ (JJ l>I \/tt>I J.10 l.kl MAGNA ,UHDS: Ye<1t11r l ,lQ ,.01 A n a e1m· SC motor ome G""'" 1.10 1 .. u 1,1Fo u1 10.;~ 11.11 C•oMI 1.61 1.'6 Smi!n a •.•9 , 6• r I h ed lnccm 1.7• 1.tl FlllST lr..:cm 1.n 9.W sa l&G• 10.il tO.ll man uac urer. as announc ven'"' 1.ti ~.it tNVEST011.s: 3 1 1>11orm 11• ~s1 ~0 G•nF \'i <n ' edu t• f I ff a ld CUr W~ N•ll 11.tl 11 7J OIK Fa S,U 6 /.f.tn~tn J,to • 10 ~.,,-01 In• 9i i,oJ r c 1on O sa I • 1>i1•cn lll JU Grin Fd 69'/ '~'MH Gw• 111 !11 )W lnv G 1_1J •.~) re"' •roduc1·0" 1>11E sioci. F '-f>l 131j"'"'' co: lio~• in 11.1~11.21 I' I · HOUGltTON: h t l~ulll (•L (1) Frt~rn J &l 1 \,A >o,c!t~ •.ol !.IQ These adjustrncnls v.·cr.c ',","',, •, ',·',',· s.in FOlluM GllO P: 1nd1> F 1.11 1 •1 S&P •no 6.tJ 6 •l /,II 1gy ~nd 1~.f~ 1~-~~ 11-.~,.!. r: 11 2017 lo STloTE IND Gll r · made d~ie to the softness 1n i'~~sci i·~ tl: ~c.111mrn1 1:" ,·H ~1\S FNr~.:111,,,1 51:':.,fa tf~ 1·':; the retail ma rket and current BLc GI" 11 u11.~1 is """" s n ~ n MIG 11 u,, 11 P•oci•• , ., s n . COM.tll•O"S. Th ·, S ·.·.~-,~ !0.16 10.M l"an Gr '•• I.IS MIO 11"11 1•:~1 SI F' IG• t:lJ ,:.,_, econon11c ' ~ '1 9 l.,s PQUHDt:RS MFO 11 •1 •• 1J i i "' In( • u '1• ed . . he. d I B•Yr~ "' $.5' 5,fJ G•OuP: . 1S l.'(0 i>'t¥ 1• 9~ ~·••e ~" t1.JI •l.•u r uct1on 1s ing ma e O lleacn 1-11 1~.;~ ,g·;J f'~'i),'; 1~·i6l 1~ 13 ,,...111 Iv 110 110 sr1:•0M1<N · FtiS· keep sales nnd inventory ~:~~~K 11 ·1·11 ·1~ F M1u~t at ,,,,~ .. 1n~r 11os 11 ,c1 A.m tnd 1.111 .1 B ~ ~ •'tia i1.1 " SllfCil 1~:1"l 11:nlMl<1 A.m S.10 5 51 A~!<I FO t ,, 1.11 balanccdandtokeepthecom-11:,0~1; ''' 5·11 F'"'"'a F 1.n t.3111~r1v Fo 11>1s11l!l rnve•! 1.11 1.31 B 'FO '.Qlo's1 FRA"'ICLIN MSB F<I IJ6~!l6t STE.IN 1101: FOi: pany on scht'<iuled to meet its 8~~" " 1 19 l.•t ·11.oup, ,M.i &nG 9M JO$l ll•l~n(, 10.16 20.1, nd f d els flULLOCK ' O'°'T( 7 ~? t 15 MIF Fd 16S 1,1, (ilpl<f t .'10 9.00 current a uture eman . l'UNDS: Gwtn sr '·'1 s 1Jl11-,1F Grn • ~~ o.6~ S•oc t.. u .11 u )1 Ille COmp'"v ' •. Id 8~tl Fo U.09 1J."3 fr l11tm !r) ,11) M..0... QI • 0 1,11 $~5 GllOUP : • ' (di! Fd 21.12 n II u~ G~ s 9.IS O.M MwOm '" ~ tCl 9 ~I ""'''~ i_to 0 ti Tho COffi"°"Y eXnt>CIS J une 01~ snr l.~ •.01 lillllti• i.16 5.l&Mut 5~r~ l•"'-1 •66 lncoo-n I.Os 1 ,1 '"' I"' t"" !'lll"'a t ,U; 10 !l Ut!llll~ S.7t i '!Mull l " 1 l'O 1 Kl 5mf"llt l .ll t,!J 30 n1nc·mon1h results to be "'Y ..,.., 1cJ111 1s i;i ~ c 111 •H ~.•NJ' 1n11u ~~ 9.so fttnn1 6ot '~' l!rnll"' 9,•7 9.'1 R1 Eolv •.71 •.61 NAT SEC FDS: Svncro F 6 JS 4.t < available shortly Th ese CG Fv~<I f .17 10 11 F~• LIEa !1.38 17.U B•l•n< (ll 11' ,TMR ..O.p 1.11 I" ' (to Tri,. l0.ll11.e1F<!l.\I di> •.<M 9,(M 60<U 5r •I) )ltllf<1.pr G •:~ f.J.l results "'rll refl ect a favorable cen1 s~. 11,11 i..lt FUNOS 1"'c" 01v.11n 1,. J.1<1 low•• c J.u · · · · d CHllHNINC GllOUP: '°'O' ~I• ~01 6,~I T r~11 (~II ~19 9 ~1 pos1t1on 1n sales. earntncs an FU NOS : comm ! ~ ',", 1r..:om , ;1 s 10•'•••1 "" 'as 10 1, · h h I S~lr..:d 1~•~11 0 '"'0~' 1.1~ '~!tit•;, 1•1111)fu()Qr M 1oic10 .. earn1ocs per s arc, t c con1-enc1 "~ , 11 ,., 1n<1u• t• 10 1~ 11 1s 0,.,.,n ~# 111 101" cc. , 111 1 ~ ' led Com \I~ !?7 1.lt Piiot 1_11 7.AO NEV. E"'G Lf!J XIII• Cl /&I .,, pany repor . G.-w1n soi i.~~ttw• 1.ol 1.01 Eci~a~ is13 111ci ut11!ltd ;, ti • 1nccm !Ill 1.ll E S-$1' J•.Oj r~ .. ·lt!'\ 10/1 II ~· U11l•Uf\d •-Ila '·" Saecl ,1,6 1.11 ,. Sc< ~..46 6 .. ~·,,. I& ... )/" UHION Sl!llYICI! \fifth.tr 6tt 1.M 11.0UP SEC: NE.A Ml 9'1~ ?'•s GROU P: CHASE Alloe'• F S.s.I 6.lQ ,_.,., c;eno ~'IO • ~ 8td S lw 11,'6 1• 11 B I IOSTON: ·-fl•I Fno 1,1• • 6l Ntuwin ~-u I)' N~I/ •n~ I.J I • OJ' (t}•t I" Fn<IBO\ Jll 111 (OtllM~ ll.ll l,,li'°'tWIOn 1)461)~1 Un(•ot 13.)f )(i .. r~r. jO ~~ l 6!&~"'j\~ 1:·~r1•·:ft.1w Ptt1 1ll9 1•6l WM11•1 11:11 13:)1 Llo yds To Acquire SF Stock $ '1 • .1•2 ~·0)G11aro lf.OTlto Ntw Wit ld 11.Ull)I UHITIEO l'UN.D J: (~ F<I 1oj211'.SO HAM!LTON G11.,, Nitnl8' U M l•.~ A<t.-m /,Q) 1,10 COlONlloL """" '·°" ••l N~1l l~!r ISJI u 11 8na "'" l.I J •.J• f!UNDi· G•w!ll 663 11sCK•~r1Q 61'1 ~U Con! 11"1 9.11 10;1 convtf • . .o 1c 11 l11torn s'.tl 6.U Om10~ I .lS I u Con! f11t •.It ~O t3 E<1Ull¥ JI;; J 41 llertwel 1~.40 IC ,..) 1 8 '<•ii I~ ti 11 11 II lntGm 1),11 U H Fund t~jlC l•lllrl L'r 111 1,11 ne Witt 1~.1116.ll klt11c 673 7.311 Grwtn ~, &:•6 H~b<KI J.ll a U Of>Pl:NHM f!O: Y&nod 6,tl 1.11 ln(em 9 ~S 1~ 'II 1<-.• I 12 Oo 1'1"' t ~ !O '' USAA (• 10.61 10 01 V~n1ur l Ge 3 ~ Hol/IQt 1 SO 1.M Ol'I ""° I~ I 11 U~ Gv!S l~.0610.ll \ Qlum C. 101110,IS!"IQ••ce lo."oCl10.~j 011 Tm' 6~1 ~tJ IYALUI: LINE 1"0$ . OMMONWL TH l"'t><I Co f ~· IQ."3 OT:.' ~"< t /! IQ'' Y~I Lnt l .09 j.Jl llUST: llt'O Or 6 91 l.il P~r~ml 1 U I JI VAi In( •.li • /1 A & 11 I.Of, 1,llllnt taAm 1J U U )e P~ul Rf• 6 •1 1 ~\ Lov Glh '-~ &.~~ Sn.cial to the Daily Pilot l 1 1' 1 ~I'~' B~•I 1 10 1·1.11 Pa•'"' r s 01 s s1 "~' '"" ).07 J J• •' !MAG o• t >0 110 ln<I F.t_m J.IJ ,ta I'& 1,•wf l 11 t ~· YANCE cmo lo • ~) 1 40 lnttl•<ln &Al J.Ot P"'l!n S1 6 S1 ,,!, $1'NOl:lll' OAKLANI) -A defi nitive ""'o &d '!> •.ostn Inv~'' u:;,1.~1,.,,11~ "d 111 Ul tnve11 lot 111 om:o FO T.;J ',, .,.'1,f'I c. i l I.St Pt ... SI 9 '' '·" YS Cctn l,XI I.II agreement has been signed ~M•d t.G' t04 1n1 co,. 11 1 13," p1" ,,, 1:t1 sP<K1 •.AO 1.q oni Inv 11.00 1!,)l lnv GYtd l" 6/tll"ION•Ell FD: Y11<1r&h <.!t I°' und er which Uovds Bank Lid. ...,n QH •.tl J.3• lln• 1nc1i.; ,·•,, ,,·,, Pion c.. i .11 1 u \1•1111•0 1.11 11 • , QnM! Jn I 11 1 21 n• 6Q' ! . · Pion Fd 11 li 17 t0 Ytn• 10!'0 S." will acquire \Vorld Airways Ofttr•n 1 ,, 1.u HVEST Pion• 11 1."t1 • u v",1~ , l r• •. 10 ' 5 h Id ( ~~"b c IJ.Sl 14.61 COUNSIL P!•nnd • IJ • \<! Yl!o,no o~ S,7S S.15 Inc. B 9!l. percent o Jng O """ ,u t·'J 6.18 1•~, m t1·?~ ,1.;11 ••ii GllO 17:,11i.•> w.11J1 ar t,3.1; 1.01 h I di I k (Fi 1 w11 Olv ,d '" •1>! tv ... ·c i1ct: llOWI• W••h Mv 11111111 t C OUIS an ng S 0C 0 rS ••~ l.11 t.ll I tf.1\j"c {f,~, O""'" 13.0IJ 13.ot W•itt_ Tf\ I '.-f0:•1 .\Vestern Bank &-Trust Co .• 81~0,.:"'ttl! rtis" 01i. ttt os · ~= ~~ 1$·;j 1~ '~ ::~u~~ TON San Francisco . ror $1 15 million g:t:' F ::.:: ::.~ 181Pr'"0 •:* t .. 't ~rovfo1 fO: !·P.1 r::i~ ~·" n-o: 146 million pounds sterling). ~·~~ 1 s:·n sf:n f~~·1 1:.:. l8:U p~~ a; , ~, 1 ~;i ~r:9r t~:U 11 ., The joint Slfltemen\ W:IS •Kl ~p 1tl1 1.1J V~(~•t :·t:11:11 :ufNi.'M IO,), l, !~U~fy 11'1011.7' made by Edv.·ard J, Daly, ··--~,ij. ~l-p (lf l"S~~\ -~1 .it ~e,s.: 10.1,11.1-u~:n~ l~:;tll:D cha irman of \Vol'ld AIN·ays. E11r~ ~~ 1! '~~ 1i·:l f~~ :.i1 t~ ~~"' 11·&; 1::~; .;z~":'y-.,., ):~ ,.,_ 03kland and E O Faulkner .,,, Lv u: u# l,.-,1 u1 j 6, c ...... 111 •O.I• 11"' w 11M (l, J • ! " • ' ' • ' p lfl(1'1 1. 1· ff'tl Sii t .)t l•.M 1"1: t ,Of t.1t H:O•" , .. chairman of Lloyd!! Da1\k. i'~ ct"' ''" 1 1i1t• "ni;1 10J1 10 •• '"~ ''' 10.~1 11,.;1•~ , s ,i, 8. M~ l.10 , l"'I Fllftot • '6 j 1• Vii•• r '•1 lQ "f••ftl¥•tl•f'ld London . England . ~tf , O• ui cr1 1 11 Gwtl! 1 •1 l! vo.~n • •l 10 '' ·-~Y•ll~~·~ • DAILY PILOT s Securities Scheme Uncovered _by FBI NEW YOl\K (UPI) -A 4+ r------..... I year-old New Jersey man was arrested by FBI a g"t11 ts Wednesday for •llegedly mastennlnding a scheme to 1-,,.-~aiipOScOf more liin Slr • '. million in sioten and coun- terfeit securftlcs jn Callrornla and abroad. An FBl spokesman iden- tified the suspect as Peter llaia of North Bergen, N.J. THE ARREST, the FBI Mid, was result of indictment returned July 10 by a federal grand jury in Manhattan in FINANCE Evelynn Jacobs, 1.oS" Angeles, and Louis Gittleman, 67, also Los Angeles. which Raia and IS others - Including seven Europeans - were charged with conspiring to dispose of more than $18 million in stolen and coun- lei'feit securities in Belgium, California, Italy, Panama and Switierhmd. Among the charges against Raia were conspiracy and in· terstate transportation 0 r Biggest Win-e:t:JL Teamsters Get stolen property. FBI agents also arrested in Florida, Dominick Mantell, 55, ol. Emerald Hills, Hollywood ' Fla., and in California, Jerry Mire Jacobs, 29, of Arcadia, Gallo Contract -·4 Pesticide . Firms Face "· lndictmerits LOS ANGELES (AP) - Four Southern Ca Ii for n i a firms that manufacture pesticides and other poi.M>ns have ·-been charged with criminal violations of the . federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticid e Act, the U.S. attorney's office said Tuesday. THE CHARGES involve failure to register products with the federal government, adUlteralion of the products and mislabeling. Defenclaots are A r d e n Ma~air Inc., City of Industry ; Georgia-Pacific Corp .. City of Commerce: Medical Chemical Cof£., Santa Monica ; and AM· VAC Chemical Ille., formerly Alco Ole.mica] Co., Artesia. MODESTO (AP) -Its con· tract with giant Gallo Bros. winery proves the Teamsters union "does repre~t 'field workers .. " a_ spokesman says. But Cesar Chavez of the riytil United Farm Workers Union • pledges to fight what he calls :·~'unholy alliance." ''IT PROV~ to us that we know what the fann workers want and we're using realistic approaches in· obtaining it," said Jim Smith, a r ea TcamsterS supervisor, in an- nouncing the contract Tues· day. "It should settle the ques· tion once and for all for the public that the Teamsters union does represent field workers rather than the paid protesters out on the line." Smith said fieldhands at the world's largest winery voted 1~1 to approve the contract whlcb will pay $2.76 an hour lot field work and $3.57 an hour for shop mechanics. The expired UFW contract had minimum of $2.40 for field COMPARE COMPuter Assistance to REsearch nil II one of the computer cbarts tbat COMPARE pro- dltcel oa selected •tocks and lndutrtn. Wbatls U? llow does It wort? How ca n I use it ln my Investment sele<:Uon? Row do I Dad out more about COMPARE? DATE: TIME: PLACE: SPEAKERS: A ltch11ic•I t ppro1ch to tlock m1rli1t tlml119, dtYtlop1d by D11n W l!ttt I Co. 1h1r thrtt y ttr 1 of r1111rch. UJin9 1 compultr, it m111ur11 mo• mtnhnn of ttock 1nd lnch11td1l tr1nd1. Iv combinin9 th1 till"fing 1l9n1l1 o4 COMPARE with fu11d1,.,1nt1I r1111rch. Attend a Lecture Sohr .. ,, J•ly 14. 1 t7) 10:00 A.M, V.tncfe l•IM CMMIH ._...,.,.t 140ll 11 T..-. toff ~ ... Hlth ._......, ... ·-J_ OoMrtr For r111r¥1fio1n, c1ll 494·071 r.---- work and '$3.0S for mechanics. \.rn:E PAY SCALE will move upward to $3.18 and $4.1.4 by the end of the four-year ciffi!'" tract, Smith said. --:--_ -.,.. -- Chavez: contended the con· tract "is detrimental to the conaumer and can be ruinous to the small groWer. It gives Gallo more price fixing control where he already has an overwhelming control of the wine induWy." The UFW may seek a federal anti-trust investigation of the "'inery, Chavez said while meeting with his union's pickets at Gallo ranches near here-"I lb.ink this total control of shelf space is certainly grounds for an inve.1Ugatioa of anti-trust." T h e Me x ican-American l¥f!1 labor leader a I so threatened to challenge Teamster representation peti- tions 1n court and to boycott Gallo wines. Timberland Exchange Announced Special to the Dally Pilot LOS ANGELES An· nounccmcnt of an exchange of timberland s between Publishers Forest Products Co. or California, a subs idiary of Times ?\1irror CO., and Southern Pacific Land Co. was made Tuesday by Samuel J. Robinson, Publishers' presi- dent. Exchange of its timberlands in Siskiyou County in Northern California for timberlands in Shas ta County represents a major step in Publishers' forest land con'solidation pro- gram. The exchange makes possible a more concentrated forest management effort in an area relatively close to the f Firm Pays In Stamps \ '· • Wedn,esday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange~ Market Advances Over Wide Range NEW YORK (AP) -:-Stock market prices soared \Vednesda.y over a Wlde spectrum, raising hopes Iha! !he rally, wblch began Monday, might be dlffer· en! from !he short lived ones or lhe past slx·month bear market. liut . the analysts sald only time would tell whet.her the rally could be sustained over more than a.few days. The analysts said !he sp.rk !hat had set ore the nlly and kept it afire was the strengthening of the dollar overseas. The dollar, battered badly last week. was bolstered .hr, news that it would receive support on an unspec1f ed level from the Federal Reserve and some European central banks. s AJlV PILOT . " • ." .. ------- \ DAILY PILOT Thursda1, July 12 ,1973 TV IDGlllJGHTS Strike Over KCJET e 8:00 -"Abnbam Uncoln." The first talki.ag picture made by silent film master D. W. Griffith, starring Waller Huston as Lincoln iD a screenplay by Stephen Vlncent Benet. More TV Rerum SRC Opens Drama· t -1 ABC D · 10:00 -Streets of San Francisco. Two tllbermen 1cclden t1Uy witn... the smuggling of alieD women, resulUng·ln th' death orone of tlte men. Karl Malden, Michael Douglas. Due This Fall? The summer season of livioa: l))tater along the Orange ea.st -seti under way tonight as South Coast Repertorf unveils it• thJrd corusetUtlvt world premiere (whi ch has to be a local record of some sort), an original drama titled, appropriat e ly enough, "Adrienne's Swnmer." ' •• CBS IJ 11:30 -"Damn Yankees.11 A \Vashington fan (Tab Hunter) roots like the devil fo r hi.s team, and tile latter gives him a chance to help the Sen· ators overcome the Yankees (1950s edition). Gwen V~~ Ra y \Valston, J~ St~e~ •• By BOB TUOMAS LOS ANGELES I AP ) With the writers' s t r i k e againsL the film producers set- tled, the television networkll are scrambling to meet the deadline. for the opcnlng oC the fall season . Chances arc TV viewers \41111 be ""atcl1in& more of what they will be getting all swn· ., TV DAILY LOG mer: reruns. Last week's settlement or the 18--week Writers Guild of America against the movie studios brought a wave or Thursday optimism in the network head- quarters that the 1973-7.f sea.son v•ould be able lo begin more or less on schedule. Erl)IJS111wHleefllrt1 But the networks stil l face m Mevle: (ar) ""' fMflPf problems. ltltiln"' (1111s) '49-Wl)'flt MO!· Ewning ris, Jtnis P•iit. Negotiations will resume in 1 1 • s... New York this week for a set- '•• JULY 12 1:•1:::itfla tlement of the writers' str ike ""-••••mGDllllM t:OO-l'Ii CIS Tiii,.., Ml'llr. (C)-a&a.inst_ the ~etwo µL ()) 9""' · -IJlJ °'Tiii Cm" tcom) '69-Mi· themselves. Said a Guild gAlpl ._..II Matts vs. DI-.. !:~ Yort, Rlt• Tushlnrton. A popu· s~kesm;:n, "The talks were troltliprl. Cont'f f1'11m 5PM. llr BrillSh iock slnier, ind 1n Eni· goin g_ well last week, bul the (j).....,llEMt'tf.._ lish flolftf·thild 111 dr1wn to 1 negollators had I'! b~~ak off 0 ..... a.I W Allll 1111sttr musicl111 IM his knowltdp because Of exhaUSl!Oll. 11111 Ailiblllln ill Ille :sitar and tor spiritu11 en· *'"' H1ht1nmtnt. • ONLY LIVE-tape shows are i. hrM D 9 m.,..... 1ht c.1111" involved ln the dispute with a 'r 'I r • • ...... (R) ~ llOllSIOI f1111 Offic• the networks. en.. ...... Fra• Blld!fil Is tM object of 1 tis-llardest hit of the networks .. Cl)....,...,_ lurbtd m•n's f~ntnils wlltn lhl is NBC, which has long relied , 8 ... : CC) t9) ...... • ..,, rtctlm • win of '"°"""'°"' on the ma}or s t u d i o s , • • MW' (CIM) 'IS ,..llltl9 alb. particularly Universal, to sup-~ 0.'7111 HidlNL ({} .. tlf , .. Ufl " (l)Cll .... WtltefCtaMlhi fJ Cil ED._I F• ''Su~itloll" pl y its series. llMM .. WTfMI (R) C.ln• w1ps w1r 1piMt the Shooting generally starts in l11 ..,,.,....., , fears of s11vt 1tbof111. ind con -April or May on filmed shows ........ ¥ic:ts forced to won: 111 • mlne-~ for the fall season. 9 ltl '"" n.c '• btlitvt Is curwd. Rtselltduled Ira On ly three of Lhe NBC series I Ulill.., 11rt .. t. were being made by com· ..... m ...... t.11• .....,.. panics wh ich had agreements ·· II._. 'hMtn Ill D .._4t AllltllilJt StllfU "·ith the Guild: "Sanford and eta...... t:JOG"""' Son," and two new shows, ,... m••""" ., ....... n.tla11 "Lotsa Luck" with Don\ · Cl)--*: CC> car> "llf., I El'!>c.-lr DelAJise and "Diana" starring I• 1111...;.......-(c:M)9-10:0DD!Jltl ... 111t"'9..., (R) Diana Riggs. · ........ PhJlllDnltif'. Winl•111 Comad llMt Maney SIMtt• NBC plans to re-eva luate its (I)....._....,. fll'Sf. ' schedule plans and perhaps I .... ., u.! • m........ move the fall lineup from the 11,lt ti M1ri1 ot "'DlltlM1kb,. (ti) A Plft II to compete with o t h er networks' earlier star t i ng times . However, since NBC depends rnqst heavily on movie studios for production of series, many shows may not be ready on time, a spokesman-said. - IF A DELA y occurs, the network will go ahead with \vhat is ready, eliminating the traditional "premiere week" for unveiling new shows. Instead, the spokesman said, some series would debut later in the month. ABC is still maintaining its scheduled Sept. 8 start for the new season, but it will be a struggle to meet the deadline. Such shows a5"''Ma r cus Welby, M.D.", "The Odd Cou· pie," "Kung Fu" and "Owen Marshall" are produced by the major studios. "'Ibcre 's oing to be a lot or overhme earned· by studio workers," com1ne nt e d a Wr iters Guild spokesman. CBS stuck lo its goa l of a Sept. 11 season start. Most of the network's series are supplied by producers that had signed with the writers: ''All in the Family," "'The Mary Tyler Moore Show," "Tiie Waltons," ''Cannon," "Barnaby Jones," etc. "MEDICAL Center" and "MASH" were struck, as was "Here's Lucy.'' But Lucille BaU's production company was not, so she was able to stockpile scri'pts. --- One matter still threatens t~e new television season: the Directors Guild of America is negotiating with the film studios for a new contract. But industry sources were hopeful that the forn1ula for settling the wri ters' strike might saUsfy the directors as "'ell. NetD Allison Pamela Shoop plays the role of Allison Mac- Kenzie in NBC.TV's daytime serial drama "Return to Peyton Place," a role played on the screen by Diane Varsi and in the first TV version by Mia Far· row. TV Prvhes 4-day Week Described by its author, Intermission Tom Titus illiam-blng;--as_,,'a play· of "Follies" i.Slleing-dire-cted way-but-the Huntington Beach psychological terror," It deals by occ drama instructor John Playhouse nlready has ln· wlth a woman in a secluded Fertacca. Curtain time is 8; 30 nounced auditions for its first beach house terrorized by each night in the college production of the new seuon threatening phone calls. Sort auditorium. _ director Kent Johnson will of a cross between "11le In-* ·~-~ nocents" and "Wait Until hold tryool! for , ~lUS Dark." FOR GOLDEN We s t 's Flower" on July 21 at 7 p.m. Barry Koron makes his "Midsummer Night's Dream." and July 22 at I p.m. at the directorial debut at SCR with director Charles Mitchell has playhouse. 21 10 t.1ain St., Hun- " Adrienne's Summer," which landed a GWC alumnus, Peter tington Beach .... six men and spotlights amt.her newcomer, Conway (who four years ago four women are needed for the Elizabeth Herbert, in the title played the leads in "'A Street-comedy, which opens Sept. 7 role. Completing the east .are car named Desire" and for five weekends. Steve De Naut, June Winslow, "Tartuffe") and Renata Florin A record season in advance Susan and Rochell e Savitt; Bill (whOse GWC credits include membership sales is forecast Brady and Paul Gracey. top roles in "Rain," Taming of at t he Laguna Moulton The thriller, staged through the Shrew" and '1The Visit"). Playhouse, where more than a grant from the Office for Other major roles in the 2,000 season tickets for 1973-74 Advanced Drama Research, Shakespearean comedy have already have been ord~red. . --will-be-presented Wednesdays -becn...a.ssigned...to-Dan..Baerg the-goel~is an all-time record through Sundays for the next Don Hayes, Janet Gould, of 3,000 members, a n d three weeks with an 8 o'clock Roland Barajas, F r a n k playhouse officials ar~ con- curtain at SCR's Thlrd Step Pendle, Bill Durkin and Jim fident it will be surpassed .. Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd., Luse. Completing the cast are the f i r s t three plays o! Costa Mesa. Reservations 646-Dan Cartmell, Kim Cole, Jim Laguna's new season will be 1363. Boyd, John Conlogue , "Ah, Wilderness," "Last of * Margaret Copp, Ida Hen· the Red Hot Lovers" and The pros and cons of the four-day work week as prac· CASTING HAS been an- liced in Southern California n0W1ced for both the Orange will be examined by the Los Coast College production of Angeles Collective Monday, at "Follies" and Gold en West derson, Bruce J eri c i au , •'Life with Father" with the Charlie Matheis, Jim Reeves, other three to be annoUnced Share Searcy, Chris Adams, later .... KCET Channel College's ''A Midsummer 7:30 p.m. on • Night's Dream," both or which 28The segment provides a will go on the boards Aug. 1-4. history or the I a bo r Playing the princi pal roles in "Follies" will be· Doyle moven1ent's fight for ~ ,40-. hour "·eek, along with looks at M~ and Pat ~anusov three finns that have SUC· as one of l~e t~o cou~les w~o cessfully .adopted four-day 40-J hare an evening of nostalgia hour weeks and one rex-at an old Broadway theater pcriment that fizzled. marked f~r destruction and Other features will include Ja.mes Shirley and Blanche an intervk!w by Ciji Ware Mickelson a.s the ~ther coup.e. Bi ll e tt wit h Barbara All ~t ~ss Mickelson are Partridge, author ot "Bargain making the1.r DCC debuts. HWlting in LA," and a repprt Beverly ~rett takes the on bread-making by Wina top supparting role of Carlot- Sturgeon ta, while Barbara Dvorett. Mike Silliman and Eve Kerns. --·--------- GWC set designer Robin Huber plans dramatic lighting, electronic music, wind and fog effects to give the show an unusual impact. Curtain times will be 8:30 on Aug. I. 2 and 4 with a family night set for 7:30 on Friday the 3rd in Golden West's ·_ eommw1ity Theat~r. • * BACKSTAGE -The old season is hardly out of the m MANN THEATRES All TMUTillS COOUD IY ,,,....no.. NOW PLAYINr. R1s1avEo SEATS On Sjll &:30 'Iii 1:30 Fri .. Sat. Sun. No11 MARLON BRANDO I :~~._. i =:::.. 91 s. Ffl!ICh. • scheduled Sept. 24 target date ..-J 11111 ... n..11 A ... fishlr111111 tcci6eflttlly witness !ht ,_ _ _....,_lLfolU!ria ... "'" -. '"""'" ~ •1•• -·· ...... Pasadena Drama I ..... nU1orit1 011 1rt Miillt-i111 la tilt de1th of Ont DI tht · Rick Golson, Lori Furtner and Dave Dunlap play the leading characters in Uleir yoWlge r days. Others in the OCC cast incl ude Ross Lynn Tepper, 11-•W. ,.,_-.,. all•-SI. 525.lSN .itL pans ,X ";:~,.::..~~~ U1111rd;j•hS'°' MON TKRU iHURS. 8 P.M. fRIDIY 1 l g,45 SAIUROAY 2-l l "45 SUNDAY 1-5 l B .... ""li.Nt Miit, Gr*-'· rntn. • . -fJ _, (<) 11"1 .,., - .... ~ Ill litdlNllt" (com) '62 -Jilft i• ls:hls ...., Hutton. Pllull '1tatisi. •.,•~111~,.1 a ..... ..., youq litlll.Hlllt rs or•r to • • tht JlplMSI outliw who 1111 Mell Mt 8 fMC It. ..... (I) A Mil· ,_..... ,,,_, 111pplils 111 11'1 ollscurt ' .. Dlllr, """'1'° A • .,... illllCI ki•tt. hcitlc. ---·-·---.--... ..., .. .... '--+"'----· IJ)O.' ... ----~ "' .. .... CR).. .... • er. .... ·-- "' ,..,. ". ,.... .... Juloulr 1:: .::= to ""' .... Ml"( ....,., ,_ all • • •• """'"'. "'11111 ..... ., ... ,." ... B ""'""-GD_/...., . Cll _...... · ll:llllUlll'llD:C!l•.., ·-$ -: CM .... CDCIJl!lllll-_ _,., _. ("11 'S.-e ... ...,..,... *''""'lilt l'M. Cl)Ptfll .... 11 di............. • ,,.. If Ctlllll•••CI'• ......... ·-,-·--....... {ifn) '56--Audit MlllPhJ', 11""11 ....... ._ "'CMftWI" (R) llnh, JtH Morrow. '1. I . ' AP I .,.. ............ ,.. ll:tsea.-M ,.,._ ~ • "di'"""•• 11:119(1)ca tat. llhllir.· tc> ...._ .111p• ii~ JkfllL ,......, (mus) 'Sl-T•b Hu/lltr, • .... Gwt1111 Yfldon. Jun St1pkton, Rlf • 'ht ..... ,..., W11stoR. A• l'lid, 111kldle-apf Ill• i• ... (f)Ta. ...... (R)ilhtl lllt-Ml 1111m1ka1 deal with tht Dlwll tr ..... as 1 '*"· slletl: tnt who tnd i1 t11nslonntd into 1 JGllftl llrst ' ' ' '. • c:..-.. • '9llllfttlc dtr 11tt to d1ss bill pll1f:I wtHI letds ttMI Sen· """7-llitlJirJl!lll.Jofti lettm tlon; to Ille penn1nt. """"' ror 111111 w .1o11, • ..,_ a a m""""' Clnlft e. e DI .... ...,, .... D llltN: "'U•llllJ F~f". ll!IJS) 'SC MIC o..b, G""' ~pt & • 1ttt -hulettt Go9clffd. Wlll1t111 sytvts- r1'9, .lfll £asln.11ftd ChMdl I Ill'. "*" pn1. • D CD ""._ •.,... (C) (Ztlf) ....... n .. !Ml" (CIMll) '61 -SlllO., MIC· tDT1 Ttlt tlil T1utll L1!111, AJl11 Min, Michie! C1in1. OJ Ntws Shlrt.y M1elJl111 port11JS s1wen dil-11.«I ({) Mtntlll 014111 ftflnt WOIMft wllh II m1nr Ill•· 0 Mtvit: (C) "'nil DllH1w'1 Jl)'lls. ht ttiilf ntmin1lion of the DIVPllf" (W91) '54-Jim Divis, f11M«11 ""'" Mt 1plnst 1 Paris ll:tlly Ryt11. 11"*"°"""· m Alfflll lfildtc:itd: Pmlrth fJ CJ) ID .. "' ... "Th• Nlrflt 12:MI m MIM: "lllMMI hluct" (com) "°"' i.mf" (W) lltfll tufflliftl I '52 -Gl111is Johns, D1¥1d Mimi. ~ "' Ill M 1utomobll1 Ktl-Georrt Coulouris. *"'· Jllfli 1a trNt911 lfl 111t 11ome 1:00 (})DD Cll ""'' ot Dr. cti. .. wtio, tlofts irith llis D tt1pw.y hhl PfltMl'ltillffl btl!J, Is 1111rtiM for l:'S 11 ...... : (C) '1lll lmlln ,,..,. ""'*'· (lftS) '57-smJ 8t1dy, Anflt 8111-• =· -..... • p,_ .. ..,. 2:00 tD AIJ.Mlsht Sllw. "Cri•illtl l ... • ta.1Hln .. 'Jlf ... "'StMlllf' lifi11,.e.n." f.I ....... Mllriql l :IOIJMM: ....,.. ef c.w.-. m Cllp911u (dr•) ·s~v111 .lohn1011, V111 Miln. I I Friday DAmME MOVIES .... (<) ___ l•"l 'tz-sffW1rt Gt111pr,Sy!Y1 KMcln1. Jt.ll(J)"Tllt ............. <•> ~ -Rock Huftd'MH'I, Piper Lturle. D "f'llt ....... (wts) '52 -Rod C.mtrDll, J1111 Nitti. ll:tlD ..... ,., ZIM" (1111) 'tl l-4tusti l11111110nt, '°"' Nt1!. "TIM U." {dl'1) '5Z-P1ul H11111ld. 1:9 ID "'Crbh" ("'P) '5G-Clry Cirlnt, JDllfttTW. l:JO Q (C) ''GIHI ......... (fOlfl) '59 -Audre1 Hepbu1n. Antllonf Pertii11s. J:OO Cl) IC) "f• ii Atll'Ulct'° (mus) '63--£1\lb Prtsley, UnYll Mclrns. (ij "N111111tf M1rl1tll" (m~) '35 -Helton [ddy, Je1nn1t11 M1cOon· 1ld. J:)O CJ (C) "fitt WHb ht I h flM"" (tom) '62 -Red Buttons, Fabian, 8trtiara [din. 4:00 II IC) -rM Purple Pllil" (d11) 'S~lllOIY Peck, Win Ml11 111111. 4:Jt (I) S11M ts IQ litti111 KOCE , CHANNEL 50 Playhouse'.s Filial Curtain Caroline \Volfe, Larry King, Virginia Cleveland, Romara Black. Debbie Struble, Joe Funicello, Julie Garvin, Peggy Griffith, Mickje Revenall. San· dra Leigh Neill, Rebecca Sordelet, Steve Warner, Karen 7.oellner, Richard Rowland. Irwin Lawton and Jeff Thirloway. PASADENA (AP) -The Pasadena Playhouse , a hi storic training stage and tgltimale theater, w i 11 me a film making center for an evangelical religious group if financial negotiations are completed. the P11sadena Star-News has reported. The transaction would ring down the final curtain for the Playhouse, first founded in 1916 and at its present location since 1925. A theater launched at the site three years later was so acclaimed it was sometimes called "the back door to Hollywood." Of late, however, recurrent financial troubles plagued the theater which once drew to its stage the likes of act-Ors William Holden. R o b er t Young, Victor J\1ature and Dana Andrews. Closed three years ago iind sold at auction, its revival with new em· bellislunents had been the cur- rent dream or William Converse Jones and his King Development Systems. "I OFFERED the Bank of America, which got the prop- hn Gul•r• Yvttt• Mhltlevx "THE NErTUNE FACTOR" ..... John Wayne "RIO LOIO" IGl Contl"uous Dall1 Frotn 2 7100 AM 1 O:JI AllO erty t h r o u g h foreclosutt, $100,000 as a down payment to save it for my group while I completed negotiations with some f the business operators who w ted to lease parts of. the new v lure,'' Jones said. But Dav L. Ghent, presi- dent of t e United States Colleges In mational, of[ered the bank $3 000 cash for the property, it w 1eamed by the Star-News. "The bank •<'Cepling the said, "and in the b pparently i3 fer," Jones not? They are business and sell this prop. et out of the real BANK OFFICIALS had no statement. but a Bank of America employe who wished his identity kept secret con· firmed that negotiations with Ghent are WJder way. Ghent, who recently left ror Europe, could not be reached. Employes at his office said they knew nothing about the transaction. Associates said Ghent was involved in the Melodyland Christian Center at Anaheim. He "''as reported to • .have bought the theater tent, once the site of major concerts and rock shows. for the Rev. Ralph Wilker s on , the newspaper said. Associates s.ii.id thllt Ghent planned to use the Playhouse for the prod uction of religious films for television and theater -apparenlly in line with the 'beliefs of the Youth With a J\1ission organizatlon which Ghent supports. Peppard Stars HOLLYWOOD (UPI) George Peppard wil l sta r in "Nel\•man,'' an a ct i on n1e\OOrama at Universal Pic- tures. 'Jsland HolfU~' Uau•s .. ,...,. PauRloa 1"11131 ., ....... C.11 (7%4) 673-SUS For Rn•rwrtfons, Ere. Beeinnine June ~6 s.n1e Ant Frwv, ""' Cti.'""'" °''"" • 547-eot 1 SHOWING NOW! • ,. ORANOI CO:HIT "THI SILVIR IOX & SA~ DAVINPOIT" IG) • • PlAli Co.Nff "'TMI Mt.YI• JOlC & SAM DAYINP'Oar fOI OHN·DlllY 121M •.M.. ~­F•ff••r 11 I•~•• St. S4 3313 .. ""'--~ -Ill.AT Ma••lll --·1 ... ,& All SEATS S4.00 a[11·• ·uuiuomlr \1'9!0 ......... • f llUI ,':'"( llCI llUWI· VII IYI TECHNICOLOR ~~°' .,,,.._., .... °"""l!IM"-r•e-.l'lt. 0..,,N._......_ •W "SILVER IOX" AU MAn Wll NTI t 1M 4 MtY Ol.T U.T • IUN S;,...,JO "flDDlll OH nu ROOP' ' ·' .. ,.,,,,..,. .... ,. "AlllJOCAn" -l~IUii.J:J~ "10NO Of' ™' SOUfW' ,• I ' • • Ja1.z Fest Will Be Back to New York • NEW YORK (AP) -A> the last notes or the lo-day Newport Jazz Festival in New York fade , impresario George Wein is thinking that he prob- ably blt orr more than he could chew this year and lost money. But he enjoyed hlmsell' tremendously and he·s making plans for next year. 'J'\le last concert, a sellout at 16,000-seat Nassau Coliscu1n on Sunday night, starred Aretha Franklin. Duke Ell· ington and Ray Charles. AFTER 11 YEARS in Newport, R.I. -all but the fint few years run by Wein - and two years in New York, Wein says the festival will be bac;k in New York again next year. "You get wrapped up in a thing in your life and there's nothi ng else you can do. ·New York is still the fountainhead . 1be world is interested in whal happens in New York," be aald. Profits £rom jazz festivals he presents in other cities around the world will have to offset thls year's losses here, Wein added. But in the future there'll be some changes made, as the song says. Next year the jazz festival \\o'On't compete with itself. During this year's Festival, there was just too much happening at the same time. ON JULY 3, f0r example, there were two reunions of the Count Basie band in Carnegie HaJl, at 6 and . 10. At Philharmonic HaU, from 7:30 to J.1:30, there waJ a jatt salute to popular songs. And at Shea Stadium, in Queens, Stevie Wonder, the Staple Singers, Ramsey Lewis and Billy Paul were on. al 8. And Wein won't be booking arternoons and outdoors. "We lost over '100,000 alone in Cen· tral Park 's Wollm a n Amphitheater," Wein said. The amphitheater holds 8.000 persons and the largest cro\\.'d at seven concerts -six in hot sun and one in rain -was 1,0oo. "We had major ta I e n t there,'' Wein said, "we could have taken those musicians and had two or three concerts . in Carnegie nearly sold out. "AFTERNOONS IN New York aren't like afternoons in Newport. We used to have 3,000 to 5,000 in the afternoons there," he recalled. ''The July 4 concert in the Louis Armstrong stadium was disawointing. Paid auendance was about 6.000. It holds 16,000. It should have drawn 10 or 12,000, It just shows af· tempon concerts a r e n ' t wanted." Every year. Wein tries to change some things he did the year before. This year there was no repeat of last year's g~I shows. But there were three "concept concerts," - "The Life and Times of .Ray .. Charles," "A Jazz . Salute 'tO th'c--.Alnerican Song" and "Jazz Cabaret." Wein thinks this is a direc· lion .the festival should take. even tbough there w a s Wlanimous agreement that the ENTERTAINMENT Ray Charles evening. with its play by James Baldwin that h::id nothing to do u•ith Ray Charles, was a failure. More tickets "'ere sold for Carnegie and Philharmonic halls than last year. Wein said. But next year he is going to be one-directional in puuing an evening's ·concert together. because the Weather Report and Return to Forever concert went' better than th e l\1andrill and Duke Ellington concert. The latter two have entirely different rans. "IN NEWPORT the varied forms or music \\.'as a formula that seemed to catch. llere, they're more selective," he said. The l\\'O midnight jam sessions, in 6.000-seat Radio City J\.1uslc Hall. were sold out and nearly sold out. ''It's the best place possible to bri ng in the avant-garde players," Wein said. "Everywhere else they did no business. There. they broke it up." Concerts at the Apollo· Theater in Harlem. the im- presario noted. "were up and down. When Dave Brubeck and Carmen l\1eRae were th ere, it was nearly filled. When the people weren't so famous . it fell off. I think primarily, though. the au- dience for jau is while. The audience for soul is black. Tlmrida7. JIJly 12, 1973 DAIL V PILOT 38 Movie C@stu1nes Live o.- EDITOR'S NOTI: -The director scrtatn.'I'. "\Voffl- robel'' Can /u11 1tlll count 011 l>flckle1 to .twa.s11? f·lenry XfV baU oowns? n e.tpilt co11cer11 about tile decli11e and fall of lloll11Wood'J cos• t-ume collectlot1, a l oi of the. old flt1n wt?ar is still around. By 808 THOMAS LOS ANGELES (AP) Whf:n lhey need buckles to swash or llenry XIV ball gowns , film directors can still gel them these days -despite the ra'o"ages or time on silk and satin. Costumes that ex c i t c d millions during the 40s might be aging faster than the plots of some late. late movies. and a le~g lady's few extra pounds 1night endanger a seam here and there. But many of the ol d 'cos· tumes are still available. despite recent concern that an artifacts auction by one or the major studios signaled the decline and fall of llollywood's costume collection -largest in the world. The much publicized auction of MGM artifacts '"'o years ago seemed to symbolize the breaking up of the big studios. Sold to the highest bidders were Judy Gitrland's red slip- pers from "Wizard of Oz.,. With the excep· tlott of ltlGltf, tlte wardrobe depart• tne.ttl• are hanging In there. Greta Garbor's regal gown rrom ' ' Qu ee n Christina ." Clark Gable's trenchcoat of "Comrade x:· getting older. No matter what great care yo u take or them , costu1nes will deterio rate. I kno\\', because I use many of them for charity fashion sho\YS. I've used a gown 1 designed fo r l\.lac West in 'She Done Him Wrong,' and it is being held together with loving hands and hope.'' But a chec~ at several studios indicates Iha\, \Y ilh the exception of MGl\.1. lhe w a rd robe departments are hanging in there. UNIVERSAL, busiest of the studios in television filming, continues to maintai n a large depa rtment to service both fea tures and TV. Burbank Studios. the combined plant for \Varner Brothers and Col umbia. has converted a sound s1age for wardrobe space. Columbia~ \\'C al.so do a lucr<ilive business in r12ntals. enough! to carry the Slaff and overhead .·· Paramoun~t also docs a li\'i.'· ly rental business. \\'ardrobc chie f \\/alter Hoffman says. "We can supply anyt11ing that n prodUl"Cr would need. \\le have so1ne1,1·hcre between a n1illion ;ind l\VO n1illion l-'QStUlllCS, and in 1967 the inventory wlL'\ \'::llued somewhere around $3.5 million to $4 miUion. ·•PERIOD costumes arc becoming more and more and more valuable all the time. n1uScun1 . Otherwise th..: Fox collcclion remains intact. "\\'e generally ha\'C abOut 25 people working in the dep..'lrt- ment." says Fox "'ardrobe head Courtnev If :as I a 111 . "\Vhcn we h 'ad filn1s like 'Hello, Dollv' and 'Tora! Tora~' "'e c1flploycd from 100 to 125. l\lnst of !ht' 'ol'ardrobc is 1nodcrn, for se ries like 'lloon1 222' and 'l\.1ASH: bu! 'o\'C ::ilso did TV'~ 'Anna anri the King' from our \\"ardrobe.:' Only J1,1G~·I among 1hc major studios no longer n1aintains a wardrobe dcpurt1nent. Sin~c the ?pcfalion is on a ""'E Ill.RE .('()~tttn1ers on a paying basis. there seems to free l::incc basis for each pic-bc no reason to di spose of the _ __ .. stock." T\\'O years ago 20th Cent ury Fox sold 2~0 of its old cos· tunics to Debbie Rey nolds. who also bought many of the .i\IGM re lics for a proposed HELD OVER l11rt .... 11.ld1 • . e turc ." explalned L1nds lo )' Parson! Jr.. in charge Cf :s1t1dlo operntions. , "For period 1>icturt'!I like 'The "Ian \\'hQ Loved Cat D:m- cing,' we get a large i1Ill0Uf'lt front \\1ei.1erli Costume. For modern fi11ns. IAC buy c~ rron1 the stores. At 1he end pf the picture!! the actors C81l bu.~· 1lielr 1,1•:irdrobt at 50 to to lk'•'t\'nt of our co!ll . \\'cstcrn Coslurne stands re:id~' to help other studk>!'ll \l'hicJ1 11\Jght dispose of thtir .... ardrolx' (l('p.'n1ml'nts. For l'.I ~ ('l1rs tlw con1~1ny h3s been supplying flhn f'on1p;1nie~ with l'\'Crylhing fron1 (•t>at!'ll or arn1or lo bikinis. SA VS \\'ESTEB'\ C:o~tumt President John (~Iden: "If \lo'e don't have it. \\'e'll rnakc it." \\'c~tem ha.~ 01 l'r a million hanging costtuncs, and Golden t'Xflt'.'CLS n1an~· of them to be used once again. "films go in cycles. Lately rhere has bcen n trend to pornography which doesn't re- quire costumes. But I roresee a tn>nd to fan1lly pictures. and l'Ostumes will be needed once rnore." H inglc Signs llOLLYWOOO !UPI) -P•l Jl ingle has signed to play a n1ajor role at Jl,·lGJl,1 in "The Super Cops" starring Ron Lt'ibrnan and Da vid Selby. NOW THRU TUESDAY PAUL NEWMAN '" The Thirties Return IT .\PPREAREO the huge wardrobe departments of the studios were remnants or a long gone era. New film· makers wanted lo depict con- temporary subjects, for which actOPS could wear their O\Yn clothes -or none at all. "During \Vorld \\'ar 11.1' says wardrobe head Jack Delaney, "l\1r . Warner saw that costumes \\'ould be hard to get so he bought out the United Costume Company. \\'e still have all those costumes. plus what \Ve ha ve made for movies oV'Cr the ye ars and \\'C added Colu1nbia 's wardrobe . mostly modern clothe1. Bli111p Fihn "THE MAN WHO LOVEO CAT DANCING" "JUDGE ROY lfAN" ... JAME,S GARNIR KATHARINE '9:051 "THO.Y ONLY Kill NEW YORK (AP) -The dancing was cheek-to-cheek, one-step, two-step, lindy and jitterbug. And the music was the dancingest as the Newport Jazz Festival in New York held a "Thirties Ball ." When some 3.000 persons weren't dancing Monday night fu the Roseland Ballroom to Count Basie. Duke Ellington or Woody Herman, th e y crowded around the band- stand. Or, if the music brought back memories, they sat back in chairs 8nd reminisced. George Simon. a critic for Pitetronome .magazine in the late 1930s. recalled the first time he reviewed ·the Basic ALSO CALL 893-758J and Herman bands. It was on the san1e night, with the two ba'Ods on alternate bandstands in the Roseland at its former location on Broadway. That night he gave Herman an A minus rating and Basie a B. Tuesday night? "Both A." And the Ellington band got good rating, too. One obServer said; '\Duke usually used tr> go on last. He took the final best, highest note the last band blew and he went on up from there. Basie is going to have to go some to top him tonight." It wasn't a conies!. lt was a dance. But there's no · doubt that a certain spirit of com· petition spurred the players in ALL NEW EXCITIN& SURFIN& FROM ALAN RICH "SALT WATER WINE" 7:JO & 9:l0 E~h E't•1li119 WHO Ill OONI E WIOF !PGl SllEI~ DYAN IKHAID CANNON llNJAMIN < J\J IJ\( f\lfK M.l>t-0~ Al A[AV, Q)TA V()A • 179 4141 • • NOW AT BO~HtEDWARDS CINEMAS ' a \ the most talked " ABOUT FILM OF OUR Tl"!_El · ----BILLY~JAC~ ..,..,_"'"~,-TOM LAUGHLIN· DELORES TAYLOR 11 • -19th RECORD RED SKY BREAKING WEEK AT MORNINC" each band to really come 011 strong. Film companies s i m p I y cou.ldn't afford costume epics such as Cecil B. DeMille once made. The few spectacles being filmed were shot in "Not only do "'e supply cos- tumes for \Varners a n d HOLL Y\VOOO !UPl l Universal Pictures bugdeted $5 mHlion ror the procl11ction of "The Hindenburg." a sto~· of t~ drigible fro1n its maiden \'oyagc to its crash. ALSO Richord Horris "MAN IN THE WILD~RNESS" rG THFIR MASTUS" -u.i.C1TY -AHO SOUTH COAST Cou!MAl -TUESDAY * (UIDIES ANO GOLDElt .I.GERS) -Ol"•H 'TIL tr• l".M. flerman 's band had an ex- uberant vocalist n a m e d Herman. Ellington had his regula r singer. Tony Watkins. He also had Alice Babs. whose big number was scatting to "Jeep's Blues." Basie had Jimmy Ricks turning "For Once in My Life" into big- band blues. Spain and Yugoslavia. wher.c,p;;.,..ii __________ ii";,o..,..o;o;;;;ii"ii";;;;i'ii"ii"ii"~ the governments s u p p I i e d armies and the costumes were cheap. '@ Jbuth Coast Rt;pertory MYST•RYI ORAMA! E>CCITEMEltT I "ADRIENNE'S SUMMER" NOW THRU JULY 29 -WID. THRU SUN. I l'.M. 1111 NEWl"Oll T, COSTA MESA l"OA: ltESERVATIOltS, CALL-' ... IJ•t Ricks came on just after drummer Sonny Payne thrill- ed the audience on "What's Ne"•?" and the whole Basie band S\\'ung its fam ous "April in Paris." - "Costume pictures are all being made in Europe," says famed designer Edith Head. "And since. the decline of glamor in films, clothes are no)l~"'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"=========::=:::::=-1 longer important. "Meanwhile, the st udios' collections of costumes are .UlBERi RdROCCOLI .~ fi.l.q~y S!,UZ~J.~ ; ROGER. JAMES M OORE BOND 7 1r ·· IAN FLEMING'S 6 "UVEAND-LErD,E" [I ·1"" ··u-o'' ····::: iJ ri"\;111 .l Un1ledArflsts c.~~NE~9.~~N~~"l ffi ·•1 THE MECHANIC ....... ., .. -(PGJ ~ •. , ... _.so~i•11_ ~ EMPEROR OF THE Lee Ma,,;n ERNEST NORTH BORGNINE h:I J.;.YES EARL JONES "THE GIEAT WHIT( HOPE" • •• • • • •• . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .. .. . • • 9f II(;" tlL"O 111 •1L~•S ' • ,, CO•"~"'*'• • 1"• .. OotUO tW• PREMllR ENGAGEMENT The prl)l9KtiYe ownef'\ d Moxy'J Co Wino'!, Pirtsbuftlll\ f'o GEN/£ /IACl(MAN t/i;'~ SC/1.J?J:.Q~D\l'I """" 11os.m [RI®' IN THIA.TR( TWO ·~·· ······· .... • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • 11\Jll\(f\HK • • • "•7 (1flOt1 • HVN H N e.fON t1f.•C.. O "~>~(J ll AT A[JA~~ ',OS I.A ~{~A • 979 4141 ALSO CALL 847·6017 !'ml.i ~t~ • {i!O cti• ........... 1""1fl.c.ol,OI'' IJ <> ,,.,._ ............. - ••"I•~ ' - • -,. ... ~-.. STADIUM •3 :.;, .. ~=.lu.:!Ji:'..9 -,,,,,,_,_J .. ~. STADIUM ·4 .-.;;. ....... 1<,.,...1' ••l.l:-.- 3rd PA!Ml!RE WEEK .......... • ..... R:'=:-i MIMt . '"' "Song Of The South" ( G) "CAHILL-U.S. MARSHALL" ... "HANG '~M HIGH" IPGJ ''FRIENDS OF EDDIE COYLE" ... 'LADY SINGS THE BLUES'.' (R) "l£T THE GOOD TIMES ROLL" ... "EYIL ICNIEYEL" ll'GJ ' ' LOVE STORY FO i< r.u vs 'hHO CHEAT Oro WIVES G!oo•Qe SeQal Ii'!! -"·~ ~ •.-~ WITH TATUM O'NEA.l AS "ADDIE" PLUS· BURT REYNOLDS RAQUEL WELCH IN "'UZZ" l•Stuo,.. l~'"""tl ',.it WPOll T {!lt llll . .. . ...... ... . . ........ . ..· '•• EDWARDS HARBOR -•:·:,2 Jame\ CoOtJro 1<ri~ Kr1~t0Herwri Sot> Dyl.an 11'1 "PAT GARRETI AND BILLY THE KID" ~t.l..0....1.• • ,...,,.., v .· @<»G - "1u1 -"ChiHw Co1111•ctlo11" IN ! .. I W fC,f M IN ',!I" •I N f ! .. ::(c4.,~:4 ············· Wt ll•••llNS l r • "' t.U ( 1)1" w• "'' !E.T'W( lH ::::u,: ;".J,";";,' •. : R'll ••() ·;;: o;p; •• ·~·~;4·1 1, • • • • • • • . . . -. . .. ( l\flf\1 f\lfR HA~iQ~ .t.1 A(IA ... \ l Oi l• vf~A · 91-. •••1 • .. .:.'ii!: ' ' •, 11D*< :.ou:iot• lOO .. ~ .. -·• ....... ~·· ........... -NOW"' aorw CIN(/IU.S Plu s -Burt Reynolds Oyan C•nnoo IN\ "SHAMUS" l'°) EDWARDS TWIN CINEMA THE WESTBROOK BROOKHURST ON WESTMINSTER AVI . 1 9lKS. SO. Of GARDIN GROVE fWY . 530-4401 "Pete N' Tillie " (PGJ tt'• tJt:~:. l\~ ll! 1Ji1uJ, ~ • .\.HRl'tXi '"'. 1 ,t)ll'lfUM Ptu\ Tl'lt! Roo Ootr• "GODSP!LL" (G) Thundl)', J11ly 12 ,1973 The Bluest Marketplace on ·tt.e· Orqe Coast .... , & Morine ·~ 900. 9W .ln ... 111eo• -' • • • • ' • 700 • m DAILY Pl•Oi CLASSIFIED ADS ""' .... s.,,loo . • • • .• lllO .... .... -'""""· • • • • llO • 199 r~iol . . . . . . . . . 200 . m ............... ,300 .... ..... '°' '°" . . . . . . KK> • 124 Lmt & Found • • • • • • • s.so • 57" M9rc~ .•. • •. ' ' , IOQ • .., You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678) ' One Cal I Service ~st Credit ApprOval SchooAt and '""""''°" . . . S1S -.599 ---·.' .600·6'9 ERRORS. Ad .. rtl .. ra should chock their llds dilly & report 1rrora lmmodl1 .. ly. Tho DAILY PIL01 11suma li1blllty for t ho first _ ....... _ ..... Incorrect lnM:iiriilliioiiniioiinl~Y~· ~~~~~~~l ;;Ge:;;"";r;•;' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;G~.,i;;.,.;r;•;' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;/?;;;;;;l~Gei;iiii-iiiiii"~' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiGenli;ii;i;;iro~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I _....... 1r;ei[ _....... I~ OUR 24th YEAR _ . ~ Offering MNlce , - only experfence can provide DOLORES-IN THE BLUFFS Wander tbru the wide, lovely greenbelts, or enjoy the clean, heated pools. This exclusive area oUers ~acious & safe living, with its privacy always patroled. This beautiful Dolores has many extras incl. lovely wet bar, extra windows & 2 patios. $67,500 LOWEST PRICED EASTBLUFF But not the lowest vaJue. Xlnt area, close to Fashion Island, Corona del Mar schools &: lge. shopping center. 4 Lge. bdrms., 2 baths. $59,500 0.. of tho Bost Homes In: Old CdM. \Vithin ·sa1t air sniffing Ciistance of the ocean (;, block!) This 45' R-2 lot bas exquisite Moorish architecture, 2 bedrooms and den home that was recently rebuilt. Modern features in 8n old world location. A $108,500 investment. UNlfUI HOMIS Of CORONA DIL MAit, 615·6000 A lhtl .. ef '-t hNy U~l()UI: t1()MI:§ G.eneral MEADOW HOME 2 Homes on 1 lot In beautiful Lake Forest - a EA~E nev lh>pping. 3 Bdrm. 2'1S Bath home with One • 3 BR, 2 BA + One · the many quality extras 2 BR, 1 BA, -4 ptagM, TOP that ~ke a house a borne. R.Elfl'AL AREA. No vaca. $43,500 -Call 586--0222 cy, CALL tor - 10 -. eANYTIME e '"'3928orE,,..6444543 Lochenmyer' !;> ~ ii I ,, TAX SHELTER • AND A HOME TOO! CHESTNUT STREET DUPLEX (SHARPl- $31,tlOO PACIFIC STRl!'ET DUPLEX (0.K.1- $31,500 BIRCH STl(tEET DUPLEX Spanish -~~~~:-----· ! (G0RGEOUS)-$U,500 TWO SEPARATE HOMES ION ONE Courtyard A Mission Viejo 3 Bdrm. hon1e that haii l!O very much to offer. A Patio on three side!!, a good view and only $38,900. Thls Is 11. clean, drea1n home. Phone us no\ .... 580-0222 LOT)-427,500 l I REALTORS . General General ' • Half gone In halt a year and the rest will not last long. Hurry to see this distinctive Newport Beach development of condominium homes, built·in clusters around handsome courtyards. Eight superb models, each a masterpiece of luxury, comfort, convenience and quality construction. Sundecks. fireplace, wet-bar, elegant Master Suite, Sun-Liteo kitchen, private enclClsed double garage. Recreational facilities Include heated swimming pool, lighted tennis courts, sauna, therapy, pool. All exteiior building and grounds maintenance provided. Satisfy your curiositrsee Newport Crest today! From Pacific Coast Highway i1nd Superior AWflue (Balboa BlvdJ. drive up Superior to Ticonderoga, and dlrectly t'? Newport Crest lnformr:itlon Centu Te~: (714) 64&.6141 Sales Office open dally 10 a.m. to sunset ...... 0-................ ~-. • C!i\-:::r 11.i..tH.Gr-tc.._~<>-en.IC--. --= _ _... __ ... _lo .... _,,..,...._ ...... _ .................... _ _....,. .... ______ .,.._.n.. __ "·~""-_ ...... ______ ...,.,.... ... __ _ General General BAYSHORES-ON A QUIET STREET ... is a world of living in this 3 BR., 3 ba. charmer, remodeled last year. Low maint. yard. Just listed. A bargain today at $72,500. Bob Yorke ANYONE FOR A SWIM? See this dell~btful 3 BR. & family rm, home with,pool & 1awzzi. The price is right, too! $79.500. LaVera Burns BEAUTIFUL LIDO ISLE Channing Jrg. home w/3 bdrms., !am. rm., dining rm;; superior corner location. 3 Lit- tle words ... lovely, luxurious & lasting. $129,500. Muriel Barr IT STEALS THE SHOW Enjoy bayfront view from this two-story 6 BR., 4 bath "nautically oriented home with pier & slip. $325,000; Completely remodeled. Gary Knox · LARGE LIDO ISLE HOME Exciting home designed for family living. Children's area separate with own family rm., living & din. rms. with parquet floors. Six Bdrms. Two lots. $179,500. Charlene Whyte PRIME . LIDO NORD LOCATION Pier & float will take 50' boat. 4 Bdrm ., 4 ba. Expansion plans available. Immediate occupancy. $185,000. Kathryn Raulston EXECUTIVE ESTATE 4 Bedrooms, famlly room, sharp Deane Bros. Lake Forest, on huge lot. Won't last at $55,000. See it t oday! Pete Hallock l3J.0700 --Coldwell,Banker ~ '44-2.430 Sle -port Contor Dr., N.11. QUALITY BUil T CORNER HOME-NORTH COSTA MESA 3 Bedrm 2 bath with real hardwood floors, plaster walls and heavy shak~ roof. Gr~at location close tO everything. Vacant and ready for your inspection. Priced only $31,500. OLD CHARMER NEWPORT HEIGHTS COTTAGE -Sharp 2 bedrm, 1 bath, with lots of paneling, large brick fireplace and hardwood floors. 127' deep R-2 lot with alley access. PS: Don 't miss the unfinished guest house! TOWNHOUSE SPECIAL-$22,500 PERFECT FOR EASY LIVING-Only one year old-This one's in delighUully sharp condition. 2 Bed.rm, 1 bath, North Costa A1esa. Throw away your lawn mower and en- joy the weekends. AsSumable 71h % loan with payments only $177 per mo. including everything. , "0 HERITAGE REALTORS 546-SllO Opon EYH. BAYCREST BEAUTY -'NEW umNG Located In a lush, landscaped, established neighborhood. Outstanding 4 bdrm., 3 ba., family rm.; sensibly priced at $69,750. LAGUNA PACESETTER Lovely, open view of the hillsi this large 3 bdrm, 2 bath newer home is priced at $41,500 & ready to go! ASSUMABLE 7°4 V.A. LOAN. VIEW OF HARBOR LIGHTS "HARBOR VIEW HILLS" Located high on the bill, offering full enjoy- ment of the view of Newport Bay & Pacific Ocean. Lusk bit. 3 bdrm., family rm., dining rm., with a htd. & filt'd. pool & jacuzzi; on a profess. lndscpd. lot. Offered in fee at $99,000 CORBIN· MARTIN Coll Anytime ** ** ** *TAYLOR CO.* FABULOUS SPYGLASS HILL Wonderful NEW home for a lge happy fami· ly! Sp&cious entry hall w/circular stairway. 4 lge bdrms, lge FR, DR & huge finished bonus room with balcony. Rm for pool. Com- plete ldsc. You own the land! $125,000.~ 7 TWIN LAKES CIRC. OPEN DAILY 1"·5 "Our 28th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin HUi t Road ''Overlooking Big Canyon Cc.untry Club'' Park-Uke Yard PLAY BALL! Huge concrete patio plus Formal Dining Roon1, a Family Room, 4 Bdrma and 2~ Baths make delighUul living for the large family. ONLY $41,000 Call 586--0222 STEAL THE SHOW: and enjoy this lovely home: new carpets and drapes, family room or 1orma1 din-ina room, but what ~ value Ibis 3 bedroo111. Z% bath, tl.rep1ace borne is! Large patio for your entertaining pleasures. AU )'OUl'S for only $31,fiJ. , 644-7270 I OHi \I 1.111 ~O\ " . ' VIEW, VIEW, VIEW Watch tbe boats by day and harbor lights by night from YoUr own living n:iom. The ULTIMATE '" FEE ..,,. '--'B=A=c=-K-B=A"--Y--1 l'rship, luxury on-the-water .. NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 SIX-BEDROOM Gonoral Genaral "SAN VALARDE'' 1,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Beautiful Spanisl't Model on :=·.:_=:a•~' 4 BEDROOMS Pool, -gUIU'd, '°'' POOL $Jjp avaUa~c. CHANNEL REEF. CALL FOR appoint· GAME ROOM moot. -• -• -, • ---...• ,$95,000. 644-7270 many bonwi: extra.I too numerous to me nt ion . Gigantic master bedroom suite, private 40' garden patio, crackling stone wood· burning fireplace, with gas oflnJa 36/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT Linda Isle Waterfront • Beautifully redecorated 5 BR., 4 ba. borne 'vi th downstairs waterfront mstr. BR. suite, lge. game rm. or study. Kitchen w /eating area. Mexica~ tile flrs., beam cell's., lge. dock & boat slip. $175,000. For Complete lnform•tlon On All Homes & Lots, Plu .. Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boysido Dr., Sul .. I, N.B. 675-6161 1G ;;.;•:;;no.:;rc:•;;.I _____ ii : G;•;•;•;r •;I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; VACANT AND CLEAN 4 Bedroom, 2 B a th s, F'in!plaee. CJose lo San Diego ~·ay and South Cout Plaza. \Valk to IChools and shopplJl&:. Loca-1 tlon is west of Brutol and '°""'Of"""-· A &rga;n for $26,500. Call 646-0555. INVESTORS I Start your real estate pyramid with this Investment opportunity in Fullerton Large R-2 lot Home rented Good locatioll $20,$0 -1.-0w down! HARllO'R REALTORS SrNCE 1944 quiet street In one of Mission ViC'jo's bC'st areas. Up.graded carpc:ls a n d drapes. 2~1: Baths. 161,250 - CaJJ Today. 586-0222 When you list with US, YOUR HOME ls ad· log atart~r, ·family room, slate entry way. \Ve invite )'OU to compare t h I s Newport Riviera 2-ctory for fe1llures and value at only $35,500. Pleue call tor an appointment to Inspect this ti .......... 516-2313. ~ Lak Fo vertised in Home tor e rest Living maga%ino in lfil TH£ R ESTJ\T ii Lovely more than 900 areas -and customen are Gardens all around and 8tJrt to you as refer· located nC'ar the major raJ.s t.rom oor 4Tl af- shopping a r e a s -The fll'iates of NML.S. VETERANS rreeway Is convenient and -,..,.=;;=~~7'c--:-I DOWN ~~~ t!,~~. Ca~i:~ru!n~ Harbor Hi9hland1 ~, 4 sR°':2 ~+ iam. rm~home Jet us take you to view fan-Beauty w/16' x 38' 11/t pool, Lo- tastic location. 58&-0222 HARBOR HIGHLAND g cated in North O:.ta MftMI. BEAtrrY -an a.bllolutely . price oriy Sll,~ .. Brine smashing 3 bedroom. and ~ letter ot elqrtbilit)'! "SPLASH IN THE SUN" pool home with a specla:I N rt family retreat in t h e IWpO bedroom wing. The plan-If tings and pool can be youra as aoon as you wi.sh. TraOO'erred owner needs shOrt escrow. Call us to tee thla choice properly in one of the best school districts, (1nytlmo) listed at $54,000. I !!!!!!!!!!!11 .. !l!f!!!!ll•!!!!!~i 6714"41 673-4400 ~~~~iiiiiiii~~~iiiiiiiiiiilwant Rd tt:!Nlts ..... 642..5678 CLASStnED will tell lt! MACNAB IRVINE MESA VERDE Spacious 3BR/FR + 12x15 bonus room for bobby or office. 2 FP. wall-to-wall book· cases. Extra lg. lot. Room for boat & camper. $56,000. (Y36) DOVER SHORES-VIEW fBR's-study-FR w/wet bar-formal DR. Dramatic & exciting glass enclo"sed "la- goon" pool & waterfall. $149,000 incl. land. Walter King 644-6200. (Y39) NEWPORT HEIGHTS Sharpest home in the Heights Area. Quiet Street-comer lot.--O>mpletely redecorat. ed . Owners have purchased new home-- reduced in price. OPEN FRI. 1·5 p.m. 444 Lenwood. CY21) LIDO ISLE LOTS 3 contiguous unllnproved IQl.s on Via Lido Nord. R·l zoned. Sale of lease. Great terms. Gloden Fay 64U235. (YlB) [Irvine j .. 1 •• _ _,c , • HI --f42•IUI 1141~ ..... ·UOO . General General VIEW HOMES PORTOFINO MODEL 3 Br, bonus room/sleeping Ioli, formal dining, lush carpeting, lots of Spanish We, charming Brick patio w/overbang. Adjacent toJ,"~ PALERMO MODEL Like ne\v 4 bedrooms, family room, fonnal dining, wet bar; up-grade carpets, floors. Perfect !or' your family. $12,500 DON'T BUY TIL YOU SEE THIS Charming waterfront home, 3 Br., family rm , with pier & floa_t, enclosed patlo, comer lot, park-Wte set- Ung--Squeaxf clean! _ ------_ ..J'4,5.ft .. _.Y.Q~LQWH..L.Al!..IL _ --· __ HARBOR VIEW HOMES REALTY B33-07BO JCitl,.. COATS '~WALtce REALTOR$ --5<54161-44141- (Qpon Evonlnfsl ... ' JOIN THE • 'SELLERS CIRCLE' --SP-ACE FOR YOU ••• ·--~ a=-; r-;:e-; ~ ~ ~ ~ ·~ If you sell a service and don't advertise in the DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're doing business the hard way. The Service Directory (classifications 600-699 in the danified ad section daily) gives you an advantage you get through no other advertising medium. It reaches customers who are ready to buy. Be there when your prospects come into the market looking for the services you have to sell. If your service isn't listed, we'll start a category just for you . Pick up the-phone right now and reserve your space in the "Sellers Circle" ... Your Direct line to Directory Results 642-5678 CLASSIFIED AD DEPARTMENT OAU,Y PILOT 4 f I -·-I~ I -·-I~ I _.... I~ I -·s. I~ I -.... l~ I - .... s. l ~ Immac. 4 BR, tam nn, nr golf coune, courty&rd en. try, big eor lot, rm for pool, boat or R.V. $3'6,500 . (}y,ner/ Agt. 979--6148. EASTBLUFF GET A 'CHARGE' out of your DAILY PILOT WANT AD NOW HONORING Master Charge and • II DIAL 642-5678 ' I -• • • • . . . . • • • • • • .• ..__,. I I -. Thu'1dly, July 12 ,1973 ' . _ ..... -"'""" _,,,Mo _..,_ -[ I, 1~1 [ _..... I~ I -·-.. 1 :-.~~ .•. l';;;o;;"";;'';';;n;;V;;;•l;;ley;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I ;;;H;";;"';l;;"';';o;n;;B.;;;;•;•;;h;;;;;; I Laeun• &Nch · ~ iii[ iiiii~iiiii-, iiiil] [jj~ I iii[ iiiii I~ ]~[ l~I 1~1 Newport luch _l•_-_m.;.,._,._,-:..~-•'1Y;;.:.._;..1';.o': MoR'::~' Dosort 174 Money to LOlln 140 Hou,.. Un furn, Newport - ' -· ~ .... ·> ' . " c I ~ .. I • .. . ' l . . I . '·" ' . . I. • ,, ' R!PO $150 DOWN 2 or 3 BR To1vnhouse, hge run1pu11 roo1n dhle ~ar, •wlnt pool, few leJt. llvrt')'! &ST-9144 or 84i-44l1 First PIOMOr RHlly Huntington BNch .COOL BEACH AREA SpackM.ls 3 bedrm home, ceramic tile entry. Xtrn large yard \11th big pntlo atta. $4l,950. BIT OF THE OLD WEST , , • ii; sUU he.re! \\'11'rc ii;tlJI .91.'!Vlng our Gl's, *1 conH' on In llll<t a.sk to tee thi• ~UI. 3 bedim 2 l>l\th ho!l)e thnl'11 3.lmOllt Me\\' "ith 11.Jt the xtras in; Ul\.\'flS, car· ))CIS, drapt!I, a.nd llll tM J:00<1 thi11f."S u~ \\lt>!ltem eN enjoy. Only ,33,500. nncl any GI c!l.n buy. CA LL 8'«N317. WESTERN LIVING ... al his ~. Swlrn in your benut. u· x 36' pool, drive 5 n1lnut('8 M d HUt1' or l'llOP at nutt.r by lluntini!IOn Cell· tt>r. Thl!I bt>aul. 4 l)()(lrn1, 2 hllth borne \\'ilh han-lly·no. n1aint, is u hold·u1> nr $34 .900. C \l..L &47-35M. THE FRIENDLY STREET . , reatwoes a 3 b«lrn1 2 bath !an1ily hon1r. \\'Hh 8J1 t.1AGNU~JCENT t.fONARCH BAY TERRACE hi>mf: "''ith llP«tacuhu· ~can view. SOI)) aq. ft. ~ bd•·m., 31, bnth. AU redwood & gl;w;. Pool & j111:u"tzl. Benurlful hil!Jlide i!ellitt¥, Otrc:rcct ot $310,000 GRUBB & ELLIS 1 ~,.ltor1 2.863 E. C!!I, Hwy., Cd~t 675-7080 EXCITING ••• •• Clu·is Ahr.I d<-.,.Utn in Y.1JOd & glt\Sll. 3 DR. CUSlQ!ll home. fully la l"ll:bictt pi:d & f('n~d yard. Atl'iUlll c" I r y \Ya y lt'll<lll to exciting living. Just reducc<l. $62,0'.Xl. vHtan REAL ESTATE BRAND NEW WEST CUFF $65,;750 P11v1Jtc drive thru IRON CATES to i;ecludcd pW1<llke aroun<ts-in prilne \VesfClilf E!llates. llan<I h(!\vn door tu\tl ru111quc 1nll't'Or«I entry. Elegant parlor "'ilh ceiling hlsch tlrcplac<'. J1idc-tt-\\11Y mil.'lt.<'r sui1c. Llbr'llry & rnu~ic (•hrunbcr~. G u e l! 1 quarHlrs v<'ilh privatc> cn- lt'tll'IC(' and bath. Counnc1 kilchcn. Banquet 10111111.J d lnin;;. 1-:n1er1nJners pallo, lui;h go.iii~ tulcl privutc 1'Qurt,yar1I. Bruild f'le\V on 1nn1'1ic!. BET'l"EJ{ HURI{Y! Cal l~.0.1, IORI \I LOI \II\ P["1l t()t./~ * BAYCREST * LAST CHANCE!! 1 t TD L Cot!• -. . l308 nio. ll'hy "'"" s oa ns . DY OWNER. E.1egu.nt c w1on1 DELUXE 4-PLEXES The t'Qulvalcnt of firs:! & lunl EASl'SJDI-; <I BR. 2 BA, tplc, built 4 BR + .!Kc t'a.1n Rm, Our lender M)'ll he will bold rnoruhJ: ront 1nakcs tlo1\'!' UP TO DS% pool. ntW palnt & cptis I luge L.R , FO'l'nmt Dt'l, :2 the lntete•t rot~ WllU July pyn1cnt. & you take title tu 2 TD L thJ'l.lOUI. N<'lli' sehool11, boy' A ~Ia.~tc•r lilt + 2 h'Plct. Coin• 15th, lKI llURRY! The11e thh! new rwi U1; vacant 2 lit)', nd oans club, }12.). Lea!lt' •. incldg plctcty private 28' covered deluxe unll11 have frplc'is, 3+2 tn l..'.Lke Arrowhead. """I S<'I'\', G7J..0797 aJI 6 ~ou!door livi.ng area with-lu~b -c,-c,ntraJ_bcal, _dWtwa.sl».'rs,_ Crp1e dra.., '"tilt· bcn111 t"'""' ) landscaping. Owner wUI fl. air conditioning, bll·Jnis, tile ed ~ell, ·1i1'Un11. 'JI u g; Lowest rates Or1n9e Co. l\J.F.5A Verde, 3~Bl't, 2 Bi_\. Mnl-e responstble buyt..-. bl.1U15, CnCIOJ!ed iaragcs. p!nellw, fWllatiHc viC'A'. S.ttler Mtg. Co. 1rp)c, D/W~ !ICJ'ee~-Ul Prlncipa.ls only 1t45-7'j{l(I Ideally located neur 11ho~ 213/986-4617 l'Ollect Afon-Frl, '42·2171 545-0611 tlOUO, nc"' drp5 &-..vfw ~ ping, &ehools, frwys. Only 0 00 •-·t H bo :n Jrfe· back;yd, Nr. AChla,., Newport Height• $&1.5or wllO'.~ Do"·n. M UNTAIN .. pro11erty 3.w ..,.,,-.. ng :tt r-area ·yn. 1no. Owner 540-3368 Open HouilC Oaily 10 to 6 acres, Juhao urea. San Money Wanted 250 I PRIME AREA Son1e thing nlCflr; n coiy 3 BR., 2 ba., "'llh used bl'ick fr1)lc.; lots of c..-uphotu•thl & pant.Ly. Room for pool, Car. on nUcy. $'H,500. CAl.L E> '46·2414 ~ &!ALTY N,., Ntwport Po1t Office HOLIDAY GARDENS, l2ll2 Diego County Full prk . .e LRG 2 Br, $140. A.190-vcwof S. Hasler, Cttrdcn Grove $13.500. Low as $135 down. "'ANTED: Private party to ocel•kn 3 th~ S~.li&U 2$lB6;· S I. I S."!G-1832 •.• 'd l ~A.I \\'a t(I 11.1lf'l, "· par 1n9 nve1tment ~J;so83'er ..,1 rust d""'""· Agt. Fee. ~1714•130 Corp. 638-5662 Out of State Prop. 178 <>' AVAIL Aug:-1:~. "-:Ba-clic~lo-r PHl1\IB klc.. Lag. Bch. 5 •10 ACRF. COLOFV\00 Mortgages, house 11·/y11.rd , lnclds retrig, units. Block lo shOpping & RANCH Trust Deeds 260 s1.1'e, ul.il 1)(!. $!).) me. beach, 1.'0n1p\, rc(urbiishcd. ASSU~ilE PA Y ~ll::NTS f1.i8-2182 Principals only. $134,950. Prin. b.1lanC<" ot SG.i23.0S PUT YOUR MONEY *:? a0=R","1~B~A~.-,-,,,-1~-1~1u-,,-.. ~,1. 83<H237. ' m ii.y be asswned by n1aki11g TO WORK FOR YOU! No pets or No Ch11<Jren. Industrial Property 168 2 back 11ymnts of $69.74 al Central Joe. 548-2613. 6~3<,t. intert'Sf. Orig. price Earn 10% inter~st <ln well-Fountaln Valley--- SS,72.i Trcn1endous invest.; secured 2nd Trust Deed11 on -·--·--- QUJET CUL-DE-SAC Sf-::T· TING -Form('l' model, -4 bedroom trilevel with par· quet floor and \\'et bar. $43.950. C'at-in kitchen. J\.fom & Dncl 1190 Clenneyrc St. Harbor View Homes 3BR 28A FR & DR CARMEL HOME and GAROEN ~ 4 ACRES su.ltable for raJ"K.iii,ng, recre-';?ranac el?unl'Y real estate. 3 BR, 2~J BA. giguiltic runi---I z:ma • a11011, etc. Nr. fast-g?'O\vhig :SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. pus nn all bltni; l,)\\' S\Vhn • ,..... La.Junta. Beaut. roll.in& hills • (714\ 556-0Hl6 pool, kid~ OK. 'Only $275 ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~~:/\Veil located corner. Present w/lrces, grass·& VlC\V of 3 4500 C1:1.mpu.s Dr., N.B. mo. No rec. Agent 8<12-1421 '"Ill enjoy tht> no-\vork-491-!147'.l !">49-0316 1 incon1e $1400. per mo. Great mounL i·anges. J-lw1ling, • n~d ..11.tmo~he.1'(' a.nd JUST LISTED-- p1ivacy or tins nfC'c s1i:r. 1 . . Mobile Home1 For S•le potential • "'ill ·divide. Ap. f.ishing, & skiing nearby. No JiAVE 2 small :?nd T.D.'s. Huntington Beech PECKY· PANELING! Enclosed outdoor p a t i o room, J bedroonL'I In 1500 i>,q fl of space tor $30.000. 1nrui'.tcr bcdrm. Tiicri··S Large, lm:~ry d~1plcx in mint roon1 to i·arde n on !hi~ con~!.. 1vuh bcauL c:ai·dcn huge l()t. SJo.900. c ALL 1mr10. Shr:rt 1valk 10 ~uch. 963-5621 on n·cc lined s tr('(.'t, 111 one TOUR WINNER UJ::ST Ci\Rl\·J~:L IN IJEVEL- OPL\J ENT~~·l l . .1.u ndjae~nt to gret:onbeh. llira1a l<l~pg. S111M:"rior L'Ond & 1leror : \Vall- papel' 1hruot1t, 0l'USln1 cl rps &: rods. "i\1isslou" C"nlry tile, J)cl :i.Jar shade:;, outdoor sho1rcr, laund ry sink in gar, con1pletely p!un1IX>d dark· 1w n1 for pho1ograplrer, cedar paneling & shulters. prox $1.25 sq. f1 . dO\\'ll paymt'11t, no pre-pay-Wilt sell at dJscount. Roy McCardle Realtor n1l!ut pcnu.lly, Cnll c:oll~t CAPRI Realty &14-7525 3 ~E.DROOM, 2 Bath, BE A UTIFUL Hunting ton 1'110 Nc1vl)(lrt lllvd·., C.M. for Sieve: f303 ) 384-~72. bu1lt1ns, c a r. r. e t 1 , Beach, at o~an. Adult iik. 2 548-7729 1 O ACRE UTAH I . l~ d r • P • I , CU -de-.:.sac 125 CAIL 9G8-145G ' of Coron;-i d(•I i\·lar',i; fines! l\lstr BR . 2 BA, din rn1, air I•""'""'""''""'""'""'""'"""' HouNt for Refit ' e street. Childr.n OK. al'c:ts. An xlnt buy at $110,000. ~~w 499.2100 rond. Lndscrxt, fenced, sci.!-CHOICE M-1 CORNER RANCHmE . · _ $260. per mo. ASK clean oven, pool, :: o If Sou!h East Corner Euclid ,tt FOR DALE '62-4471 ('(n)N«,", $15.000 Pvl. !inane-Talbert St. F.V. Com'l. ok Assume Payments <' Ag • ing avail. 673·5915. 1.~ mile from San Diego $;1,700. origina1 price, may he HOUMI Furn11hed 300 _ c-'~·~~------ NEWPORT BAY F'r11-y, \\'ill sell at tax as-assumed by making 2 back $200 UP. 3 & 4Br. No lease Neiv 2 BR. 1 BA dollhouSt'. ~~pprais. l\IcCormick, payments o( $40.64 and 6albo1 Penin1ula required. Others avail. in Adull park, privale beach. assuming principal balance Orng Cly. Call Dept of $16,500 ~Jti?n Lots for Sale 170 of $3.500. at 7r;., interest. :2 B~LBOA PENI~ ~yfl'ont T r.a 11 1 p ortation, Gor9eou1 SUMMER FUN Contemporary LA CUESTA CAN BE YC?URS today in Ex:tensive use of quality \Vood OPEN 1 to 5 EVERY DAY OR 644-2542 ~I ~='-'=~;c,; ___ .;;.o ; Iirs N.W. of Salt Lake City, a B~, 4 BA. Pier, float. 213/62(}-{."JlO fro1n 9-3 10 by .JO in UDO v111a&e 11.,, A're M2 Lots U1ah -just off State Hwy. Avail July,14 & Sept l. \\'kdnys. Park, 2 Br. (ully furn, 1.. .. No. JO near the famous hun-Weekly. 673-2039 '=="""=~-~-~- thls fantasiu· vacant pool & glass. FC'lltlll'C'S cathedral BY THE SEA hon1('. 3 Bd:rm~. 2 bath.'!, bcnn1ed ceiling. G1'l:'a l ocean 1937 Port Trinity Pl. s torage area. patio, o1l'ners Pn"me Lo'ati"on ting & fishing ireas of EXQUISITE 4 BR; 2 BA, has parking 67:)-2879. .. Utah.and the fa n1 0 us Costa Mesa ev<'rything. Avail. 7115. EL DORADO roon1 for a boat and n1ueh I ,vic11•! 3 bdr1ns, :: baths. 'MODEL n1ore, and \1'ould you bc\il"'Ve f'aniily rm f i I'(' p 1 11 c (' OLDER HOMES 24x60 ADULT park, :? BR. Level i,: acre ~12 lots in easy Sa\\1:ooth li1ounta1ns. CALL $325 Lease •. 962·8851 & fam rm. :? bn, fully crptd. access area. U!ili!ies in COLLECT }'QR RON, (801) 3 OR 4 ~fos. Avail in11ned. 968--62~'5-~---~--I only $29,900. Ca!\ quick! • S&t,000. brk'. 49-1-800.t · Over 3000 sq rt 1vith 1300 sq Oii'l'l(!r an.xiov11. CALL TARBELL 1. 25 yea.rs old, R·2 . t\\'O lx'd· 1w n1s e1u:h. Beachsirle area.. 01\'llC'l'S say "p1>Cse11t all offers.'' appliances $15/iOO. 5'&7516. Sll"('Cl. Near main s treets. 532-5182. Beautifully furn 3 BR, 2 BA ALONE on lot 1 Br hse, gar. I Use almosl anytliing on Mesa· Vc1'dc. S\vim'g pOOJ. ·Also \l'alk to wa!er 2 Br. ft bonus l'OOln. J.1<mt bcauti-Stl-9:i71. f\tl home In area. Exquisite· TRADE YOUR ly decorated, custom draJ)C5.1 EQUITY shag carpcts, 1'epara!e fam·, FOR TIUS. gol.ll.C?lL" !jpiral Uy. -on, Cl;ll-dc>-·S<!J! tot. ·In· · stalrc~se fTnnclscan Foun-' clude1c pool-table, wafer tafu Horne. Lo.'lds of up. _ softeftet• and inuch, much grading. CALI. 842·93'i1. more. 3 BEDROOM 1 BATH ,, 1ll ilge Reill Est ilte •H-4471 ( :::. ) 546·1103 BRING your POOL TABLE ror this beaut. 2 BR condo. Bonus nn is 20' X :20'. :? car encl. gar.. bltins. xtra cablnets, shag crpts. Adul1 occupied. Fronts greenbelt &: steps to pool. RED CARPET REALTORS. ~- "Wife Ins-nee" Ne-.vly decora1cd 4 BR, :2 BA delight, shag crpt, bltns, dining, huge garage • mani- cu1"fd yard! Pe1'SOtlrl'llit:Y here! £ager owner a~ $34.500 • 10~;, doY.'11 OK! t 6*8400. KEPO:i~r:SSlONS :or infornn1tion ond location oC Uic·sc •'ltA & "Ii\ homes. l'Ol tac! • ,KASABIAN Re"al E1tate '62-6644 SELLING YOUR HOME? GU1\R.ANTEED-51\LE CASl1 IN 4S flOURS ·All inf confidffrtial Agent 963-2941 e HURRY &: S\\'li\1 e in this pt'Nitige 4 bcdrm, fan1ily rm plus fo1ma1 din- ing 1m . 2t! bath. $-19,9.lO. • ,ATTI • WALKE• tlAl. l•wt tnil Beach UJvd., H.B. CALL 1142-1418 BY ol\•nel":-Accepting PJ'O"' motion, 1nusl sell. 4 to 5 BR., din. &. fain. nns. & bonus nn. Your \\'Otk Is done: sprinklers, pa ti o , block wall: upgraded all areas. l l\1onths o Id . 963-2803 IDEAL for lrg fa n1ily, hn· mac. 3 BR, 15x:20 den {<Ith BR; + finished Rill'. (bonu r> rm) else to all seh\11 & 11hppng. avail nov.•. $34,500. &47-1905. HUGE UJT. Ur;e' your Gr. SC!llers \\'ill help finance. CALL 842-9311. BEACH LOVERS COUNTRY: FRENCH ELE- GANCE, sets dcror in 'this rambling ocean retreat. l·land rno11:m.>d 1flcs in foyer, louvered doon, cus- to1n drnpt's and \raH cover. ings, BRAND NE\V CA·R-1 PETS. 3 den !izc bedt'OOnls lnctuding a n1ammolh mas. 1er suite and vnnity'. Coun- trr kitchen 1vi!h all the latt>fll r e.n1ure s plus a BREAK1'~AST ROOJ\.l Huge patio BILIJARDS ROO~f. Loads of sqtt~ footagc>-. Despara·1e tranSJerred 011'n· er ha..<J just li!led at an un· believa'ble \~' prict' ol $:'ii,900. BKR, 962-55U. CAREFREE LIVING In Otis almost ilC'\V 3 bdm1., .11~ bath co1ldo, c lose to everything. $29,500 8.JG.-1351 or Huntington H•rbour * \VA TERFRONT HOME 2400 sq. ft. 4 Bdr1n. 36 ff. bc>at slip. BY 0\\'NER. 71~: 846-.'lTil . Irvine IMPRESSIVE Spaci<xN twc.-story home in one or ltvinr.'s ne111."~ pllln· ned con1n1uni1.iC"S. Large for· n1al clininR rooin. family roo1n >Ai lh firepli:u..'i'. rlnishcd l)OllUS 1\10f11, '"'ufd be-5U1 bdrn1., 2'.~ baths, and 11 pren1ium location. 01vncr 11'i!1 gi''':. in1p1eclial<' cwxu· pant'Y. $;X1,00(J. Vision- ired hill F'RE S lfLY painted throughout. 3 BR, 15x20 dt>n 14th BR~ + l':iriishM gar. REALT\' (bonus rn1) I Blk fron1 A Con1pany \ViU1 Vision ~1arina High Sehl. 5751 Cas-Uni\'. J"nrk Center, lr.-int' tic, avail rlO\\'. $34,500. Cull Anytin1(', 552-ThOO 847-1905. Ofr i(·C hours 8 Ai\l lo fl P~T DREAM COTIAGE 4 BR, 2 BA , elosc to ht•11ch. 1lf.~T VIE\V iN--TURTLEflOCK HTLLli 0\llch i•lf'an. Only $33,iOO. Rcoutiful 4 Ar. cxc>cutlvc .\gt. Chris, Afl. fl P~I. home 189 500 o'" ""1 8-t&-.'191i2. . ' . ,,....,....,,,, Lagun• Beach O\VNER. I BR. bonus rn1, :: -~-------- bath, $3."iOO do..,,.·n. Assu1nf' * OCEAN VTE'\V * GJ $.1'lfl n10. l"rc1111ige area ffUJl'C', IX'<'nn vie·\\' liv. n 11 . nr beach. &.tl--UO.l Or w/f'rpl; din area. 2 BR, den &~714;') evr.11. .._ g u<'s l rn1, \\'/\v cnrp, BY 01\'Mr -Gian ~far 4 br, :2 thn.iout. Central k i t . bA. frplc. crpt. dra, crp!d \\'/rangt-01'C n, di.i;h\\·stu·. kilcht'n w/bllln11, cul-de-See this OtK'! $.l.l,500, sac, :2 blk to ~hl. shopping ~fission Realty 49'Hl731 A: park. $11/iOO. 962-4321 BEAUTtl"UV. locotion • MUST SELL 2 Bdrn1 "Sea SOUTH LACUNA. 1 h\ock 1-favc>-n" hon1c, f<'"' blk11 to bench. Nc\\·ly rcmodclC'(! f'l"on1 ocenn on Bu~hn.nl nr. 2 &h·n1, fnrnily rn1. I0.1'.1:"\' Adams. $2tl,900. i\fnke ofr. dP.ck 11•fl)(-e1tn vle1v. Gut'i<t O\\'tl.l'/Principa.I~ fl II I y. ll['ll. $62,:100 llrtn. B~· fi\\'ll('r. 962-574'1. C(ltl 499--1201. \Vouhl ron- J...AROE 3 iui atrium hon1<? sid1•1· J1u1n111£'r rrnlal ~ nl!IO. w/pool, famfly + formal CHAJlJ\.!ER, FIXER UP- dining rn1. low mnint, ,yd. PER, $5R.500. Vici\', 3 BJ~. :2 $51.000. 84,.,.l!W bas, (f1)1C, hrdwd flt", OCEAN brcttell, be a c h , f rtndl dilon, bri<'k pntlo!I, iachOols. 3 Br. ramUy rm, 11mA.ll 2 .iy, close ln. O\\·ncr lge ))ltio, .22041 Hula Cir, 497·1.272 •1!»·1021 968-4341. Panoramic View Leguna Niyuel O\VNER, 3 Br,' 2 Ba, \Vet bar, Vu, cpfs, drps. $47,000. 495-5$32 BY Chvncr. 3 Br; 2\.! Ba on large 101, $39.950. 49;;-0-~2 Lido l1le RARE CHARM English Country f a 111 i I y hon1e. 60 1'"t. lot. •I Bdrms./lmths. lfus::c Iii', nn., rec. rn1. & din. rn1. $152.500 LIDO REALTY 2. 40 years old 4 bedroon1 bayt'ront 11·ir)1 two guesl 1'00n1s.-Pri1"atc bcaC"h and dock. Can be bought 'for JK'f · haps ·tJ1ousands belo'v ask- ing pliet". Call tii5-7225. 19x8~~· Tc1Ty. Travel pack. lhese lo!s . buy one or a ll. Ranche1, Farms. Pool table. Uill & Pool serv. $16.5. View of Ocean 3 Br, Xlnt condition. a/c, all 0\1·ncr anxious. Call today. _G::.;.•~o~•·~·=------~l;;;IO incl'd. $400/mo. 557-0282. $235. Agt. Fee. 53&-2575 x lr.is. $2()00. 6-15-<1782. $1.25 per sq. f'!:. Anyone Hunt.ington Buch 2 BLOCKS l'ron1 ee·ach. 2 Br. 38' 110M.E. Lido Villgc qualifies. . 40 ACRE . 2 Ba., -Crplc. dish\vasher, \Vater!ro_nt Park, NP. $3.500 2 Acres . ~OLO. RANCH l BR house, rear of tor, l' priv. pa!io, nu buildin or· Best offer. &16-.1242 ASSUME PA·YMENTS S:duJt 1piddle aged or older, $225/mo. 968-6263 ROY1\L Lancer 20' by oo· on Commercial Site Principal ·balance of $67'23.08 no pets s biles !o beach $1.:?5 Ir ine golr course-HB. at beach, Pri1nc>-IOC:ition for s!ores, may be a.<;sun1ed by n111king 1110. + clea111ng fee $50.1 ;:;;y;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j Sl5.T::i0 <714) 536-495.1 fast food. mtel. ~car · San 2 back pa.yments of $69. 74 atl-i:53&-:';;;1~78~3"c:-,,-'""'°"""~-~ I' Diego Freeway. High traffic 6\f:~C. inte1-est. 01iginnl price ALONE on Jot J Br hse. Also 3 BR. 2 baths •••••••• $265 count. Ol\·ncr says sell. \Viii $87'25.00. Tren1endous invest-C.M. $80. Balboa _ ivalk 1:o 2 BR. 2 ba ............. $325 I [.8/ consider IJ·ade or build to n1ent ~1.titable for ranching, water, Bachelor, util pd. 2 BR, 2 ba. den. A/C, •• $275 R~~lt, StJil, or tern1s. , 1-eereation, etc. Near fast Agt. Fee. 53&-2575 3 Bil.. 2 ha, air·cond .•. $275 ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiii I Commer-1"al Lot gro,ving La Junta. Colo. L B n 3 BR. 2 ba., tl<-n .••••• $475 "' Beauliful rolling hills wilh ~~ eac 3 BR. 211.i baths .. : ..... $450 Lc\•t>I, buildable con1n1ercial t..........._· xi · f 4 BR 21 ba 14""/= Acreage for 1ale 150 I lot for user or hold ror in-·~~;;. gra~s . at \'lt'\I' 0 2 BR, Northcnd. walk to '~ • al (". ·' ~ -..Jl,J , -ves11ncnl. t-.'ear Garden ~hl'CC' .n~unt;un rtlllf?.'S. hunt· beach, $25. per day. 'lil Sept 4 ~It, 2 ba .•••..... $450/500 LUCERNE Val_ley t J 1 . 8,7._ Grove Ft'CCll'fl_y_ ""d '"n 111g, f1sh1ng and skung near· 15. \\e ·Have Sun1111er Rentals 3377 Via Lido. N'pl. Beach * 473.7300 * (T('S f l d ed RJ 2~ "" "" by. No do1•'n payn1cnt. No 494-826? V' ' 4 BR . 1700 SQ. FT. a o an .1.on .. ~. Diego 1''rt.-e"·ay. On bound-prepayn1(•11t pcnaH)'. Call -1s1on- I $!12,000. Fol'm din r nl-\\'et Altnost one n11le of high\vay ruy line of \VeSuni.nslcr ancJ Collect for Steve (303) 2 Bdrn1~ frplc, $220 per nlO. Meia del Mar bar, l\vo patios, h 11 in tro.ntage. ~ water a.ii;:a. Fountain Valley. Pr it' e 3!!<1·5172. Yard, in Canyon, ----------vacuum, 3 car gar1 ext. Price .$79J per acre with $39 500 '197-2292 before 8 an1 1·1 244' 1v· d ~ '. 20',o dow". 646-0467, Allon , .546 1600 N •-LOOK WHAT 1 1 es. -111 "'aiu .•.• ane, Redden. .. AVOCADOS.CITRUS ewport P9aCh Q;redhill $44 950 WILL BUY! I I Ne\l'port Bl'ach .. ' C INVESTMENT Spccic~lh:ing it: 211.l to 160 . ,. ' EARL FUSS EL 1\1 AN ommerciel acrC' plantc<I or soon !() be $1JO • UUI Pel. Nice Bach, i\1y quality-bull! 3 Hit w/ R.EALTOR Property ISi DIVISION pl,•1-..0 "-'""''!'. lro''' E.-n. C.£_1una d_c.."i J>..1ar. Gru_ • & Pool. large S\\'Ji\1 POOL, plus 64~3500 .... , '-"' ,.._ ... ., ~..., · 51··-ULil Pd y extra 22' x 14' CLUBROOr.1 dido lo Ventura. Call Doug 10 • . · .te\I'! I Br. REALT\' A Con1pany \Vith Vision Uni1'. Park C~ntf'r, Irvine Cnll ,\nytinie, 552-7500 Office hours 8 Ai\ol to 8 Pi\-1 . in beaut. EASTSIDE area. * OCEANFRONT * DANA POINT C·1 at Rancho Consull ants, \\·/lit-ck. Victoria Beach. \VALLED IN PRIV~\CY ! !or , PARADISE 180' fl'o m by 1.28' deep. Del Nc>-1vpor1 B c a c h, <714) .L.~na. , lea.~ $450 n10. 11'/ ......... 1 SC'lv.J I 7.IXXI Sq. ft. of \l'OOll & c harn1 557-2520 or 676-5-115 on 11·knds $22.J. -lnunac. 2 Br. Gar., 1,.,,,. Obis po Road nmr n1arina. """""'""""'"""""""""""I· pat10. l blk beach, Nc1vpot1. O\VNER 545-5050. -· duplt>x. S.121J,OOO. Xlnt si1e. \VeJJ trafficked RHl-Estato Wanted la" NU·VIEW REN.TALS _ . . , Mei• Verdi• LIDO REAL TY a1Y.a. Asking $90,000. Subn1it :.:.;:=;..::.::;-::;;;:.:~::=::...:~-.:.iim~'·;·40'2::"°'=~~0~,.:.._~~49-l":lc~~·'!flR :i or 6 ~rn1.~ .•• _.. : ....• $375 3..177 Via Lido, N'pt B;·ach olf<'r. 646-1231. R.-4 LOT I WIL .L 3 BR, 2 :i ba ........... •$315 * 673 7300 * 1............................ ---$80 · UTU., Pd. C.M. Alqnc <I BR .. 2~fu balhs ...... ~: $425 -~-~~-~-~--1 Condominiuml ) Sa.1 lcn1cnte. La1~c tnod<'rn GUARANTEE TO SELL on lol 1 Br. hse, H.B. • I * S.O.S. * -2 br hon1c w/room for 5 ad-. YOUR HOJ\IE _ Balboa, Ottan vu, $12j. Agt. sun on S.."U'ld or youi· ow11 for 11le 160 clitional units. Ocea n vie"'· 2 1~ 30 DA\'S. Fee. 979--8430 lge. sundeck & have 3 exn·as --L~U-IT-s'""'x-· -, --.=-~....;..:.;b I.licks to beach: $'19,500. ;...1111 Cush ttdvanC\'d. Hou••• Unfu ,n, 305 *COUNTRY CLUB* *VIEW* * Overlooking 18th hole 'l.l oh l 1Pll1L * ~ Bedmon1s, 5 baths * l..itrgr ,i:amc. rn1 .• '-c !'t\Kly * 5,000 Plus square feel * O.L5lon1 s pltl \t"V(>I * Pools & fountain * Privacy, space. qualicy and good taste. $1~.000 . LAWSON REALTY *675-4562* uni!s for income. · • Pan, """·""" Y tcnns. Owner 714: 613-1947 ,-.:.:.;_:.:;:_::.:;:,::.:.::. _ _;,:.:;:cl 01vner, 3 BR. 3 B.-i., nu las! 0, 213_. 37,2814 Agrnt .............. 847-66121-0ceanfront. $125.000 "-,,... G 1· BALBOA BAY PROP =pt. carpets, drapes. patio. SAN MORITZ ,o;,•:.•c.•:c'..:.•-;....------1 • $5000 under market, Ava.ii COSTA Mesa R-2 lot. ne\V 1· * 673.7420 * &10-1090 duplex, $480 per 1110 .. ap-CRESTLINE lot $1000 ca.sh ~ug. proved for 8 more units. or tratlc up on ]ate sn1iill WALK TO BEACH E-SIDE C.i\f., 1 Br., Den Total price $7 9,9 5 0. !,.~·~,k~-u~r~-~8~42~-5~14~2~.~~~ .... TENNIS, PdOLS, CLUB lrplc, $18,00) as is. 6-42·15.50 O..\·nct•/Agt Co rn 1v e 11 , \•cry c]('an 3 BR. l~i baths. or 644-5800 Ext. 30.1 ~!rs. 5-10-1823, :>17-6791. ---1lPuilur "SINCE 1946'' .l sl \\'cstern Bank Bldg. Univ<'rs1t:v· Por~. Irvine Days 552-7000 Nights RENTALS Aportments Mountain, Desert financial Duplexes FOR lease, Big Irvine Ter-l '11n1ily rrn., fq)lC'., bltns, ,.:.:A~da~;~'·:.....~----~ carp., drapes. $47,500. Income Property 166 LUXURIOUS 3 BR, fan1 1m, CAYWOOD REAi, TY quiet cul-de-sac, Ill a n y * .548.1290 * Resort 174 ~-;;;;;;;;;;-~~~ Houses race Hr11ne, 3BR, 3ba, fan1i----------'-ly, dining, huge kitch, pool, PACIFIC PROPERTYS HIDEAWAY IN v;ew. !500 ;ndds ganlen°' xlrru;. O\v1ier. $ 4 8 , O O O . 1 --979-<856. ON THE WATER S\VI!\1 POOL HOJ\1E? Sec CHANNEL REEr' -01~11 adl'. under M:ES1\ DEL your (11~11 :? Br. :! ba. Condo. ?>1AR. O\\·ner 545-5050 !\1arble. n1i!'rors, lu."\. Pool. boat slips, sec. g'l1a1·cl. Mission Vieio Mission Viejo 4-Bedroom Villa 0\\•1ier $145,000. 673-3:JJ5. BA YSHORES Cozy Cotta~e 2 pri beaches, 2BR, 1BA 11'/patio, yrd. boot stg + 1wn1 to expand. 2 5 9 5 A reduced bea uty -$41,500. Cre!tview Or. Open daily Rela'X, let the Club cle an 1-Zi. your pool and plnn son1e fun -~-------- parties and excurskins for HARBOR Vll'~\V HO~fES your fnnilly. Tiic !\laster PORTOFINO on pcri111cter, 1 Suite "·ith \ts Roman Bath year new, m11ny e:11;tras, 3 offers n1axi1num seclusion· Br, 31n Ba. Bonus l'OOm . and i;:nrdrn entry. Great f C!C'. SS!l.500. 0 W NE R yard for childz·cn and en· 6'14-4<1·t8 for npptmenl lc>-rtnining. \\'itliin \1•alking * BRAND NC'"' 3 BR. 21i rlis1nnt·c>-(If ~'hoois. shop. BA. Condo. 'v/Bont Slip. :2 ping, park and theatre. car gar. All fl ppliance,;. Pllutll' To<lny. ;186--0222 Crpts & drps. Sale or U nsc. 213: 287-0023 or 2 1 3: 287-8723. flARBOR Vfe-;.-h o 111 ~ 1\fonnco 1\1odcl upgl'ad1•rt throughout. by 0\1•ner. 19J7 Por! Trinity Pl. NB. Days &~103 eves & \Vkends, &l-l-249S. -·--· Tahiti Hotel Busine1• 41} 'v. l9th St., Costa i\1esa Jl()Ol service 645-8845 ' I E 1854 S. Coast HI\')'. Lag una 7"'=~~~· ~~---Lo price. Good in\lest111cnt B G 8 AR Opportunity 200 __ ' 4 BR. 2 Bn. frplc, builtins, a nd 1\·ay of life. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;: co~,, •,!ES.,\ or''lCE-·tul.ly earptd. drap e s, N H b "d Sleep six or n'Klre at thi.9 ,, ' " r -Id ew ' ri es vacation spot. S"·i111 tn Big • Cocklail Lounge Sl5~1 dn S120 -Bachelor & I BR. Apts. ;111 ren, snla1l pets ok, 1<10 Acre lsl<1nd Bear Lake just 2 blocka e l']cc. Secutity, 21) yrs Furn, gd cond. all util pd. .i43-1429 or 837-9115 • :?9'i9 Acrl' Island n1vay and think aboul the e Rc>-lig\ous Book Hobby $140-$15().$185 • 2 BR hSl'S 1v/ CONDO 2 BR, 2 BA. avail Also building •lots. hot('! and irintcr run! Just $9,600 • s i·orc gar·s ,'{-ya11.ls. Sonll' for 8-1, no children, $265 . i\1arinn s ilt's, beachC'S. and \\lon·t tast Jong a! this e l·leulih l \'ilaniin/Ccn'I kids & pets. ~J.-11 -?.G7:J. or S.?~5-45U hlr. hotels. B1ukrr. I p1•icc! Call us. 386--0222 Slore $16J -2 BR. )'louse 11•/gnr &.1 co~"~"='~ga"n=·~-~--- 6T.r671 2 5,i&-Si96 Holland Bui. Sales ('net Y<!fd. Paint 1 & Save! Laguna Beach 7 UNITS $75 000 I 645-4170 5-lo--OGOS 2nd n10 s rent fl't't?. ___ , _______ _ -· 1 °' 1200 · 3 BR. 3. BA. 4-PI~'· $165 . I BR. """ beooh. I " . -EARTlf\VORht CROWERS ~Jm;e~ crp\s, dr ps. Child1·en ~\ld/pcl 1\·~con10. E.xceilcnt starter or 1·etire-\\'ANTED! fine. Carport: • $27a -Charmuig Ocean viC'\V n1en1 units, 1 block fron1 I CALL 64a-Olll :? BR 2 pah·..... ........, , Good-pa,.v in!?,: hon1e Business! •• • ""• ,..,,ec. Coast t-111-y. \Va 1 kin g Guaranteed Market! Free , ~ $31;, -, 3 + fam, 2 Ba. 2 dis!ant'l' to 1111 schls & infornisttion! \Vrite Bonanza $~~GUN1A =~}\(~/ OF~CEh lrplc s. Yard, db.I gar, 01:et1n shop'g Newlon Bait Farms. Inc., · · . · . ear ac · Vu! Sparling Investment Elk Grove, Calif. 95624 S1ovc, refJig, lrids 'pct ok. NU-VIEW RENTALS Corp 4••5442 'IOUNT'N ho J ~ ~ k ~~~~~=~=~-1$190 · 1 Br. run1 or unfurn. 673 40'" -~~'-' • -'' nic o.,,.. r .,a DELl!~i!= 1ueat shop, ow11et' View. Quiet cpl or single. -'· ,.., ol' 494-32.JS 16 U. BY OWNE~ :non squ~re feel, 4 story sa~·rtfK'1n~. Es!bld, profit· $215. 2 BR o,,.-c1· gar Bl1ns 3Blt, rl'plc, 1·en1odcled 167 16 Fnn1 units, nJI 3 BH. 21 ti.~~ si'.;~3'13 ~~552-llfoOIXI 1Lbl1• C'lit'n!el.c. Unique D 1\V. Con~idt•r lot1i>c1. ' Chiquil«. 1¥13: 287~341 BA. unful'n, Costa i\1esn. ~hop. \Vestcl11f a I' ea . $375 . 3 + Den. 01....::nn vie\\', 1"~do~s, ~vat! July 15. Lsc flcnt sch ed. al i36,500 gross. Lake Gl'e~ory Cha i el • l.ake . :>-18-6738 F1•plt', 1»1tio. deck, kids /pct. $.150 1ncld111~ gardener. TC'll pny u1il ~25000 clm1·n ''icw 2 Bit 1 1 ~ BA lr/pJ A CUTJE! Thrlfl·D-Lux clry ALSO SU:\4\fER RENTALS OCEAN Vu . Arch B(•ach on ;uu price Or 'szin.ooo. "., rurnishc<I $26,500 821-4142. f'lcane1-s g, laundi·y ngcncy. CALL 494-\'."191 Hcights.3 lg. br, 2 bn, bl!ins. $191<1/m<>. pyn1nts. At $251,;, Like 10 Trade'? (Jur Trader's Days 6•1~7408, nit es * LANDLORDS * frplc, lease S3G(J. mo. Call exµ. st1011·s 18% Sp("ndablt>. Paradise column is for you! 979--847,1. ~~HEE JtENTAL SERVICE 499-:m!O \\/rite D.J.I.. Box 2<154. C.i\1. !i lines, 5 days for $5. Call DIST: \\'oultl you like a LANDLORDS•. Laguna Hill1 9'1626. today · · · 642-56i8 business or your 0\1·11? You ""·------·---- don't need an ollicc !o start. \Ve Speclalizl' In Ne1t'J10r1: NE\\I J Br, 2 Ba, cnttl AIC. BY O\\'Nf:R. 3 BR. 2 bath Se1•\lle hon1e, fully carpeted IV·~hfl~. ('\l~ton1 drapcos, IOatl<'d ll"l'X1l'flS, !137·6736. Newport Beach $© \\.~}A.-l£ £2l'S " Full 01· part tln1c R.'I0-2776 Bench e Corona d~I Mt.r e Rcnt{lse. opt. S27a per mo. BEAUTY SHOP, c 0 s l a & La~na. Our Rental Ser-83.l -1103 ; 552~9.103. i\1es.'l . O\vn('J' operated, good v,lce is ~REE; to You! Try Leguna Niguel clientcle. Xln area. 54()...-000(), Nu.Vlei\•. _ _ THE BLUFFS 3 nn. 21: b:i . ('tld uni1, Doln1·1·s P l::in. r lus. 0 pc n Country (;1't't'nbcJt. Q\\'llCr, $67,500. &J0.().118. SUPER CONDO $·1~1.cro LU.\". J Br. 2 Ba by lhc bay. Pools, pullln:; g1ttn!I & n10re. Call ()('nison Assoc. G7~731L .,f"VACANT CONDO *, (;ard~·n."> • Po()!, '.l UR, 2 llA. I $ f:t,000 Low dn11•n or 11•ill H.-111 \\' Op!ion TO Bur . ' GT.\-~1il (I\' G 12-.1/}Jj , I \\'F::'ITCl.I ~,.. \rlltn~ Condo ~7'J.500. 2 br. den, mQ.Slc>-r + ~ult'' w/trplc, pool. pl"lvtttr. Decorlllor'i, hon1£', 646-12.11 . Ouple!xcA near the ocea n l\fil~s Lnnon. Realtor • 673-8JG.1 • S\Vli\f POOL llOME? ~I adv. unck'r i\1E:SA DtL ~f AR. OwJxlr ~:;..oo.~ I That Intriguing Worcf Gome with o CfiucHe f4il•ll ~t CLAY I , '0llAH 0 Reorro110• l•tt•rs of lht ,,,..--....... ~--.... lour scrombltd WClfds be- low 10 f0tm lour simple WOl'ch. I CUPONE 1 1 I I 1 1 I I· r 1 1 ct i I ! ~~TT~O~O~D-~U-~1 ! A wotc.h repair lhop lhof's ' I' / / / d;ffe«nt , They employ o psy - --. . . · c.hiotdst who psyc;hoonolyzes . 1 ----------clocks. 1·•l ·~~~~T-'l~K~N...:;E_T_-ll O Complere f~e (hV(k!t ciuoted _ I I _J I I . bt lilli11g In the mlu1rig word . '-...l.-.L.-"-.L..-'-~ you deo;tlOP lrt>ITI step No. 3 below. f9 f'l!INT NUM9Efff0 lETltRS IN THESl .SQUARES 1'~\·c>-s -5-10-8182 NU .. VIEW RENTALS NEW Sea TerTace Twnhsc Investment ;;';',i,4030 or 1!'11-:l:?·IS Ocean vi<'w, :? Br. 11; &. ;:;;O;p~p~o;:•;•;•;;n;lt!;;;;;;;;;;2;;2;;0:/:C;o~ro:n~o;;;:d;•;l:-:M;•~r:;:;:;;;:: / rlrps, crpt,'. 2 C!Jo!. 111laeh, ~tu'agc, P!l-1IO. Pr,1. beach. ~ l>oc)I. te11rus .cour1,1 Privacy. "EXC. INV~.i\IENT Qp. ft ;r * ft * • Security, $.'\2.) L <"a ti e . POR11JNITY. 2 -640 ac. Deltt'\:e 3 BR .. J BA, llugel-i.6'4-i-'-l~7'~'7~·~~-----' pnrN'!J~ contiguous to Rancho O\\'OCr's uni!, In nc1v du-Mesa Verde Cnlif. · SS00.00 per lie. Finest pie:<, be.-i.m elng, view. Near . Term!{ • J AC LAND CO., betu .. il, p&tios fireplace no 3 BR, l ~~ Ba, $.250 mo. II\C. ftc>-allors PH: li14) pclll, $425. n10'. Avallt1;blc's.1. Parli&lly furni!lhcd, fcnCf:'d ~-2216." 67:).6900 yrtl. Crpls, drapes. a·~i5. Money to Lo11n 2ii * --• -~ ~ _.!_ _ * Newport Be•ch DON 'T BORROW ;,=~ ' THE Bl~UFFS Foni·rm honic, n e VI. I y I Bl.. f1·1.'\" .u1ttnbe1t. 2 'TIL YOU .CALL US ! 1-et1rcornH~d. :2 blocks tm111 p~11u.1:. ~.J.~ 100. l~~r. Call Bo1·ro\\' 011 your ho111e l"fiU lly biiz Co1'0ua Bc-:'tch. Call Ev1·~ 6_0'~,...,,=· -'~· ~-~­ lor any .uood purl)OS('. Sl'n'· 64+.1375 art 4 pin. \\'ESTCLtF"F" 3 Br. ~ Ba h~ IfS· Angele~ County tor l.ARGE 3 Br .. 2 bl'I.: dbl. c11_rpet il1"11pcs. c It n n: over 20 ye(ll'!I ond NO\V tn gnr. Wnlk 10 slore~ & btach . S,fiO/~ Y.early lease./ EvC1 Ora11gr Counlyl , ~ $400. Yrly. Lease ~7 ~ SIGNAL t\10 11i'GA(;b l'O. Boyd Rcnl!oni 673-5936 POOL, lovely g41rdcn 3 br 3 • [714) ;:;s-0106 b; ·-·--;.,._ '. 4.~ Campus ~ve NA Cotta ~ n. H•t· + .. ~. '-"'"•"'•1t. ·"!II _,..,.' •---.2508 Uruvers1t;y, ~. 2ND T D ,,_ I BR. Fni:d yard, rar. otf. • NE\V BAYFRONT 3 fUlt .. ID _.In.'«. o.dUlt epic, no pets, bdtrn. :? flrit h. $42)/f..tO, Yr- PRNATE FUNDS AV,\Jl.., $180. 5$.8251, 548..!G. l,y. •19~>0615 or 673-5TI9. Any Amount , • 2 BR, 1 ~. T0\\'11110\lMr.' 'l'F.ARLv :l BR-:-2 ha., 2 t'Rt * Call 67J...4CM BKR. sm. Pool, p111lo, lAmge, 1tor., blln'J;; $3."1'l 4 RR., tam · dl.sh,vashtt. &.tw974. rm, $400 Bkr~l200 BY Own. Vac. 4 Br, :2 Ba, Spac • .f BR. dln m1. fan1 nn, $9:i0 rln. T.O. 'ntA 7'n~ trp1c, rtlOl:I klleh. 2600 sq ft, D)"mnls $2'16fmo. 8.t',-1100. Near Beed! & 1\fonc~h ii32:9'03,=.·=,...,-,,..,....,.= &y 1J:llOP 1\1~. $72.tiOO. ,.,,~10CEANYJEW, 1mmae. 3 Br. Owner, Prin. olt!y, 4934S4l. family rm. palk>. By OWl\er. Need" "Pildir1 Plat.-e &n ad! S42.000. 968-4341, CAO 642-5678. arc CANYON SUPf'r \11flW OOIV 3 BR + 280:f• $130,000 Prln only. 6'!().-0009 llave so1nclhlnst-)'Oil u•nnt ltl tell! Cltift'ili~ AM do .II \\'f'll • call NO'V fN:Z.5678. " UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lET TERS =. 10 GET ANSWE~ SCRAM·LETS' ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900 _,....... ...__....._ NO poinlJJ. no penallit11. f~ BRAND 1 '.'.>'' :! BR, 2 BA. 1800 J.:l!\JUERl.Y. S4.j01mo, npprnl,nl. lo\r'-mies. ft'lsf. cpi.s, drpg. ·& CVCT}'thlng! -3 er Hnrbot' View; lfom· lt1VC'$IOl't Thrtft 639-6411. $2-IO 1)(!r mo. r.47~1. ~tr. S....al11. sro.ssoo I I .. ( --- $1f0 • 2 BR. 1 Bk bee.ch, Bllboe.. Sliwe, retna. Nu crpU, $3110 • Ut!f Pd. Cute I< nl"' 2 8ft w/p.r. 2 blkt ocean! $eo • 3 BR, 2 BA. frptc. Omml Okk.'!' home, Pl!tlln P!. NU.VIEW RENTALS m"8lO or 494·3248 W 90ATSLIP .. tu..x"Ul'ioull 3 Br. 2\1 Ba conOO. Yrty lie. $57'5. nlO. Sfm. witho11t 1Up. No pets. $15-7851. BLUFFS Condo, finest green belt. Dek>res end model, 3 Br. 2% ba. 2 patloe, pool, •1mo yevly lease. "'6-Q114 THE Blu!f11. New 3 BR. lush <ID!'a. Leax. $550 mo. Avill. lmmed. 644-7662 Bkr. Newport HMfhft $160. 1 BR. SEPARATE HOUSE ·~· BRAND new townhouae 3 Br, 21,ii Ba, club facll incl. (1) 599-2362 or att 4, 599-3518. S•n Ju•n Capistrano VILLA GE San Juan Townhouse, 3 Br, 2 Ba, fenced patio, bu\UMlns, shag carpet, on stream near lake, grounds maintained, $325. per month. 495-5259 Westminster 4 BR + den, LR. fam rm, din Rm, 21,i bl!, incldg 1ardener, • $ • o o. n4: 5.'!6-<422. Condominiums ·Furn. Newport lleKh 315 • lltl ! -~-I~ ! - MO¥ Uiolum. J6S ~-Untvm. I~~! ---· ~I~.;,. I - 365 ~--------400-Office Rollt11 440 L"t•I Nollcos c-. Oro ALL \11"1JmES PAm COmpare before >'O'l J'tt'lt CUstom detimed, fe1turtoa:; • Spacious lr\tctwm With ln- dlttct Jiaf'lttrw • Separw.te din'a: ~ • Home-like a1orage • Private pa~k>1 • OOtied lf&ragl' "'/storage • P..farble pullman e Klng-az Bdtins • Pool • Barbequ~ -1\11'- rou~cd ~~th plush land· 11(,"8.pJng. Adul!s. No Petr. LARGE 1 BR, S1&5 2 BEDROOM, $205 365 w. Wlhon 64Z.19n LOW WEEKLY RATES ExocutlYO Suites 2010 -port Blvd. Costa Met. '42·2611 STUDIOS & 1 BR'S C-.. -Lido I... r I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l •• 2 BR. \'early. Udo £ASTSID£. cloie '° ll"IOJMJ, I v.111 not bl! f"Hpon.'ilble ror PA.IR ptt'Kriptioo II Uf\ cues1 nn .• re1r ot 2 Bdrm. PRESTIGE any <k-blv but n1y ~~·n. u ... e t"lli.SRS e thick blk framc-11 • •GENEROUS• ON TEN ACRES • Apt1. fum./unlurn. Leue F\ftplace I priv. patios. Poolt Tennis Contnt'I Bkfft, 900' Sea l...an1 Cd!wl 6H-26U tM•cArtbur nr Cout HwyJ ' '""-.D&LUXE APARTMENTS Air CA.ind • Frplc's • 3 S1vim- mill& Pools • lleatth Spa · Tenn.ls Courts -Cym and Billiard Room. l BR. }'roni $1;.() 1 BR & Den r~rom Sl90 2 BR from $210 • 2 BR. Tv.·nhses 'l'"'rom $250 bland. 100 Vla AnUbts, N.B. 6Trt-.12'11 or ( 1 ) 626-<115;, Mesa Verde Mtne tn fn)nt. Qule1 OFFICES Beth. ~'n llllrg,11.tC'lr c&M' -t"nd ne4."hborhood. Furn. Pre.lcr Fountain Valley, &luli· ~~~~~~~~~~! Calta ~ten ll.S. nr lrl'ltlll: elderly II t r • on . Ca.U ful new buildina, ground ,-('(>Urll/Pl'lliting IOI. &ii....;m 613-457'. floor. 3,000 square feel, 1 lhti1cript.ion on out11htc-- $9ii. f'URN., .eparate en-wUI dJvlde in!u amallcr PwsoMl1 <'Uf'I. . t"?r rr1um or any loform: .. •REWARD• tranL"f', uOlltle., priv. pa1k> ontce.. ~ J)('.r 11quare ";••···--~~~i>-fA-l£ bnM11 q, on (•an1-~:~ 1~~1l~nJ;~!~ ~~~~ 0~,n~ DLX 2 It S Br., 2 Ba. Encl It bath. ~3436 loot, includeti carpets, I 11111 of \\'e•h~m Jllgh &t.ool, Approx , 2 ini·lw."' ht duimril"r, i;ffr. $16l up. Rental ore., •-o~ .. -.-,~H~ ..... -~----4~1~5 drape•. all ulllille&, JMI· Perton•l1 530 A1mhl!ln1. lltl~ '73 Cht'~l('r "ilh Jt_>\\~lrd h111i1j•td1ur UI JO!l5 l\ta~ Ave. 5'16-1.0M. !Or l>t'rvice. Call JH11i1yn ----------1 Cnty, J\•nn . lie. No. JSO'Q. 1 -•" 1 k N •---h Stovall (1141 832-S440. NOTICE or lm.cnt ''' call f(lr Call ~7788. l't'nlcr: 11 !ii), Kv•" · °' et ewport --VACANCY for elderly lady 1 ~~~~~~~~~~·I . h\'11!> 1ir1 i•h1<ui1 JiJifil'O!I.. th" THE NEW in lie. Guesl hon1t•. Good t '--BAYFRONT OFFICES 1~~mpl Uon or bood5. f h-st \\'1111'F. lonit hah'Cd fe>nml<' lliu:e 01 11 nli·k~·I tni1rrih1·•I food Rrved. 6'*6-3191 Cnt;illl~~ ChtlJ'Ch . 792 Vil'-J)art San1oyed ~tlxtun'. ,\p-In 1111•1p1 t"l.A. 'Th•"SI• ftrr BA\'\VOOD APART~lENT$ Summer-Rent•l1 420 Pm~9Ulett. ~!@kl.nit iona, ~ta flh•sa . County of J'l~----1~'.1:5 • Wl. -«""1plv '11..i1 •• ;u1~I lit HI In N{'v.'port Beach are Balboo Bny in Ne1\·port 0?'1ftge, ~lall' of Ca!Uorn\11 fluffy cttrl"'<I tu.ii. \'\'11' moint"-nt.o;c ,1i_ tilt' lo-;:,, 1:1 11: ready. The sales ottiee is SUMMER RENTALS Beach. Various slz1• aulltS "''I\ ctill for redt'n1ptlo11 all kl\·:tbh·. Trnint'd lu 11i1 in ,,..plac-eflblt-. l' l. J:,: As 1<: .I open 1\ally from 10 Ai\t to u loW a.~ $120. per nlOtl, In. noti'tl *-'CU~ lly fl bond rn.r ~?703 p• L~~s" "-I " h · • 30 PM h .. , Sleeps 4 -From $70/\\'k. In ...... d ·i· · 11•..,,~·n.cnt und4!r Bank of · • • ...., .... ~ ,.._. 11 u YOl..1 !•\{', v: ' , l\o111t:J\J1 ur .,,vd. July 1.-'>uu~ rap, C(ll, uti il1('s. Anlt•ric8, Tn.1111 No. 144'19. COCK,\POQ. mnlt'. youn;:. il!1Y inlur1nn,110f1 . li-12·:6S!I le 5an Joaquin Hills Rood. Sleep$ 6 _ !-)\nn $95/"'k. janllOriaJ 1en.•ic,~ ~lonthly All bond holdt'ra are hf:rein fden!lly. V1c CMpn10,n & E\'f'!I, & Y11'l:"it .. nflll. __ _ 644-::gss I g or ICU4.". 3700 NC"-·port Blvd., .,_ h Bl ·" -.-S etPf -From Sll5/wk. notified ol th.• !111~11 to """"" ''"·· :S 111 nto11 • REWARD 1BR,1 baa ... , crpts, d-. ALSO AUG., SEPT.&: N.B. Bl2'20. ''" ...... •--n1 "·-"·,,of Aum•11 ~1!'-~17 taft . 6:~ P.~1 ... 3 I ~ '~ E O '' •>\..,, UUfl{"' .... -, 337-3189 l~""N.· 4 p .!\I. , .. an1e )'Ollr pru·1• IJl'lllfl• bihlna, inckis gar. lar. \VINTER REr\'TA~ * WAT RFR NT * 1 ~1. 19n. All bonds tQ hf __ -"' __ --. itU\•t·r .:ni~ 111 .,1• 1,,11 .,_,i,. patio. All utU. pd. No pets. Bkr. 6'i:i-a800 Prime klicatJon, N f! w po r I J)t'e11"~1led to Bank n f P.~E Ge_i_in.an Shor1 luur OoG rnu~t h:u·i' /r uhn i<lk•l ... $1.90 n10. Uiffi Haven Plal'<'. SHARP I BR HOUSE Beach. Large •utte. Good A1!'enc11 Trusr Dt·pt .. Box Pointer. \·11". Racil: &,·Rd ., d:uly. J uih \i.~u,; J.l-J ~~7~~t et g ht•. Con1pletely tum !ncl u1il. parklnf,:. tl50 n'°"rh. ' 2152. lbs A~ek>s .90051 . Ju· Ju_ly 9th, r-lt>\1 ~rt Beach. H~·ttltY. ltioi2 lkM ··h 8h1I TV, gardent>r. Prestigt? an"a. Bill Grundy, Re•ltor 11,1. 110th.0 19.j3. H1ch,f·11YJI .c. SD-5000To est. T·.~. Ask for 11.n. 847.J..?JG or .•a:i.~w . DELUXE 3 BdMU Apt. A 3 lhruLnborD SJ50 :W.l Bayiddc, N'pt. &-11.ch a lli, la1r1111tn o 0101 n1. ------j SJ50 /P.10 A 1 I 513 ug. ay. · * 67' '161 * Ho;,.rd. !-'irst Ch r is t i an -·. . ~ LOsr 7-6, 197'3, 1111 b!k. nur • rnEE Li-, · . 'n. ease. To tUpon. cple, No pets. "'""" ....... h f C .1 ,1 li'NO. Sm1 nu~lt' dot.! 11/flea Iv ruU •·i'O"'', i''rni <·ur j ~ ''''"' W. Bay, Ne"ix>t1 Beach o ~1""'~ 1..11urc o os a" e!l.'l. roll .. ,. B-••t ,, 11 I k · · ,. · e i'"Y\EE Utilities \VT\f:!f' • .,,.,... """'· STOHt-~' OR OFFICE . -.-. '" . ... '." • 1 • 1 \\'11~ "'t•aring 11o hlh· nee wl I MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE e Full Kitchen 886-4832 clays or 883-29t3 NE \VP O R T I s l 1t n d Newport & Bay Center ~1Jl.L\ LI(.~.~. l·.O itreaks, vie. 7~11 :.;,.,,i:, I· r l..o!lr hi·1"-~'n P.tnL,'11011 2·MIO Harbor Blvd., C.~f. nights ($a~rruu·tU!_Xl_!__ \\'8tl'rfront e.pts. 1-BR $17;, 2052 Ne"-pot1 Bhid., C?.1. * SPIHITUALJ:o,'T * \Vi:.stmins1cr & ~I i I n n . &' il<·11~h Bh"<I . \\'arl'l('r ~ e Heated Pool l714) 557-802il OCEAN VIEW \l/K/2-BR Sa!O "'k. f\1onthly 525' A\•all Aug. 1. Pkg. Util. Spiritual _rl'11.dingi1 JO ani-lO \\'t>stinllu;!l'r. 892-5.~7!1._ Sl:•t!•r. S!i.00 1\:wnrd for h•·r : ~u~~~esa·-:•, OPEN EVERYDAY 4 BR, uppt_r <hlple."I: & gar, or 10 wk special rate. Dock &16-1252 or 6-14-ZllS 11111. ,Arl~1<~ on. all ntuth:l'!I · F'OUNO tiny mall'.'·!larl f.1t1nx l'l'tur'r1. 11·1:!-4\l:i. , • Pl"""' .,._......... ....... lloura: Fri-Tues 10-S al al7 Collon, Newport avail. 54.s-659'l FUU.. ~VICE 312 N. f,I C;un1no Real. Sa~\ ki1t en vlc1nhy Vi~·lorill SI., ~I JJST 2 IRl<l I SE-F'RS . "'"""' ~-vi ... c Wed. ii:. ThW's. 10:7 <" .. __ '" I ~'J"" -=..n. CI t' m <' n t l' •192-9136 C I '1 "--·• I I · • · ~ • ' • I ~"''""'· 1 ear S(>, ..,,., nio. LAGUNA Beach, View, 1 Bl. _ Westcliff Buikli!!9 492·'I03•1 · ' , os a "Mia. ''""""11 ov n$: Lt,:. 1nnlL'. ~n1 fr. Vic. ul $10 WEEK • UP More Room-Le11 Money agt. ~93'16. ocean;-i.-BD. house +-M"P Corner \Vestcliff Drive & .• ~-. • care. Hou~rokt11n....6-M;.$..I~. lint~. lktr·"96.'f::2S10. t - e Studio &: 1 BR Apls. COME aee a re11.I garden * * BAYFRONT • p r iv. rn1 & balh, $135 v;k. NWPT Il'vinc Blvd .. Ne \V p 0 r t NEE'.D crew . lor . 6-8 n10. FNO lml long hr..lr r111. Tt~n l&i1iliii1illiiilili••• • 'IV &: P.fa.ld Service Avail. apt! Like UvUw in a hoine Beach & Pier. New 3 Br, 2 BCll l BO. duplx, t bl ocean Bcoch. Mr. It 0 111 a rd cnusc to C11nb~nn nbonrd "'/blk fltrea.k11 . \Vhite f\111\'S r------~ • Phone Service-Htd. Pool fol' $162.SO/MO. 2 BR, ii,-. Ba . Yearly $ 5 5 o I m 0 , $85 ""' July. 642-1272 645-6JOI. 26' sail boat. Prrr. fcn1 Vic. J-luntingto11 lh1rbour. [ If l• J,i • Children & Pet Section BA. 2 prk'g places, priv 979--0631, 6#-4510 BEACH apt 1 br, rurn, (rpl, 21-30, send nnme, address&: 59'l-l736 1Mtn.:1ion 2376 Ne"lvpot1 Blvd., CP.t patios & rec areas. Wilson OFFICE Space for rent, pl"10111: 10 Pol. Clbbon.~. PO FOUND large bla<'k & l\'hitrl;mmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiii ~91:>5 O!' ,,."......,.. Gard .... ~ on Wll>0n St W VISTA del Lido luxury Bay-opposite Corona del 1.1ar Lease, S7S n10, nr Ne"1Xlf1 Box 2603, Fullt>rlon. !®3.1. n1bb1't . I "•PP>'"•"·,,, .. ,· .. ·,. ......,....,.,, ....... ·• · front. Sp."tcious 1 Br, 1 Ba. stale be8Ch. Sec. gate. Bl\•d on Broad\\·ay c M ., " ' "" * LARGE 1 BR * of Harbor. No chUd./pet. "-•r bl"" Pool •Ip •vot'I Rents bu wk or 1110, ,.1._;.,,,1• · · · NEED 90meonc to Mui furn. ly Viry:iniu 1'111.('(', CO$la S h I I 2283 Fountain Way East ~ ue· • · J ""'" to rlagstaff, Ariz. before riteso. Call M8-286U c , oo s Crp1s, drps, disposal, J>tiv. ...,,_...,..,, Ut,jl_1 pd. Yrly lsc. $475. 833-l69l. B · R t I ••5 A 1-v \Vhl C/O tn1tructlon1 S7S' patio. See to appreciate! U'OQ"'_..., 615-3464.· BALBOi\ Island next to usiness en • -ug. :>. • tc, f"OUND on P.fain SL in ll_µnr. $135/nto ~·1 ~-"-St I rth be N SI 8 Genertt l Del Iv ry, lkh Jul :\I 11.! 1 f' • . I · ""' .......... .., ., HARBOR GREENS FOR rent: yrly lease. S2Sj No Y· e\\'. · ecps · NEW SHOPS Capistrano Beach. . ; . Y • n : 11 e . e· *Sw1mm1ng Lessons* Apt. D, Of. 645-2651. Ftll'tt & u-•·-Fr $!30 1"!¥). 3 BR or 2 +den, 2 BA, Pai king. $200 Weck, July, ---~ ----k1ngf'Sr, pll'ase 1tll'-n11fy. Si , U 1- BACllL $120mo incling. Ulil · '"~"· 3 bl"-Call p A"• & Sept s~~~fO ,\ f•w chOt·-·ho-•1,·11 PROBLEl\I Prt'l,(nanc\'. Con· SJ6....66l5. : 1 ''' J.:lll\ll' e«·ooon1y. Bach, 1, 2 I 3 BR's. Modeb ~ from ocean. eg--.. · · •.r•:i · .. ~ " .-~ " fidenl. s y mp at ·h 1• tic GoOll Llltilll'lUk:t' <01· patio, pricing, Mature Open 10 'ul 7 pm. 2700 KY Johnson 892-6691 or LOVELY 2 BR lw'tl house, available at Village Fair, pregnancy l'Ollr1.SC'lln~ Ahor· l\tALF. Gcrman Shcpho•rcl ~1u1Hn1'r fun' l pcnon, no pets, 261 ?.fesa Petll!Dn Way, CM. nr. J-lar-c61'HIO!l8-=~~~=-~~-•close to beach. Cdl\1, July il5 1100 South Coast ll\\)'. Uon & adoplions ref.. l''CllrlnJ;:' flea ('Ollnr., Vi<• BLUE DOLPHIN I Dr. 646-7342 bor Blvd. &: Adams. ON T~IE BLUFF nr Hoag to Aug 12, reliable people, Laguna. APC1\Rl:: 612..-1 136 Hun~ing!1Jn 8<-h. Ne l' d SWIM SCHOOL 2 BR. Du 1 H 2BR 2 641-7902. 4~ n1e<hcat1on, 00.k'0.1. P ex furn. l\e\vly 546-0370 osp. BA lownhse. PREGNANT'!' Th 1 n king l~J:t:l Be11M\ lilvd. decon.ted shag c arp e t, . '"".1E VICTORIAN" Bl tins. d/w, encl gar. LIDO ISLE, delwc •IBR, :ffiA, SHOP & OUil..-e space-ror abortion? KOO\\' all !he faC'I! 1''f?UND t·utc long~t'l.'d .._'l'l\.\' • 71-k A<J2·20'21 BAYFRONT exec i~ 1 br adult;A only, no .-pets $150. 2 r._-t•• $210fmo. 'AOULTS'-NO 2 sly, \\'/garden & patio. ll'aliC in rilission Viejo Aulo first• Call Llf"E WNE-ZI k1!tl'n. Fen1ale. Vic or 23rd TF"'NfS 1 . . f <tii· • '· 548--4160, ews &: wknds nr v:/gar. A.dlts, crpts, Pcts-Adull area. 64?-4381 Avail July 14-Scpl. 3, eves PlaUI. Good Jo'rwy ollran1p-· --· & 1)1$lifl'. Ne"•porl &arh •01 ,.,._"'01\S. onner U all ·dee, newly dee. Pool. LA dtp1, bllns, hu.'d yr d 644-1895 or 5'18-9470 A\'ery Parlrn·ay. Call Chvncr hrs. Stl-aa22. 6"6-3!92. · o! H.rdlt1n1.h; player "111 $600 mo lse. 6 7 3-114 4, RG. l br, "11n beds, iclee:t Wfpatio. Wtr. pct Call 2 BR .. 1 ha. Frp1c. Steps to p I Bi 83L-l400 GET \\'EIGHT 0 1'-,.-& l\{'('p . . teach bl·g:: lntn1: adv. S7.50 673-8800 for bachelors. SI p oo I . -betwn 1 & 5 636-4120 ocean. Yearly; $300 month OCEAN bl!'echl'ront, ~'\101'1. au ·azeau. · 11 blt ~·like Turin's P.O.P. Sll9RT halrl"d blac_k kitt<"n '-: ttr. Call lilch 557·3970. Co.Ml • Adults. $IB5. s.13-9633', 1993 667 ''C" Vict0ria St. , .$160. Ask for ~like 2 -2 BR Apts, 2 DA. SW STORAGE/Shop, 3 6 x 3 S., p ork C 11 \\'1th red l'Ollar \\1lh bell!l. . ~om1nrumt Church St. JONES REALTY 673-6210 11o·k. 741 Oceanlront, Laguna. O.H. door. 220 V. Nr. N'pt -;.f:i5Q1 w s. " found July 4th. Call afl('r s. l-1;\VE fui~ learning the .httes1 Unfum. 320 t"""B~D~RM"'="i'---~=~-** 3BR., 1% BA ** •Subl•-·-_ 1 BR.• Ph: 494-.J.279 or 494-4601 Post Ole & ?ifariners ~lile. j 6-12-1938 Newport Beach dalll..'f'S. !':i«nuiier i;pec1al 111 furn. apt. $150. mo. ~e, newly decor. encl. """' l l75 / Agt 646 24!4 I. AlfrNI Rankin, an1 sole · · lesson.~ for S29. Call Ardellt>I Fount•in Valley Heated pool. Adults only. patio, bltns, crpt, drps, Avail Aug. 1st. $190/P.10. CORONA del Mar turn. C<ll-a mo. · · · · O\l'Tll'r of RANKIN PAI NT· f'OUNO beautUul bro"' n c.!Lli 4~·79'11 or 43S·7J3tJ. . ------~---I No pets. 548-9548 Close to everything. $l70 Call 6454605. tage. sips 6-8, SlOO wk. "TilE FACTORY" has shops ING co.. l9'JS Poniona, puppy, aboul 6 . nlOllths, PRIVATE-S\\i lMl\ilNG& I 3 ·BR, 2BA. bltins, trplc, 2 BR furn apt. pool, car port, mo. 868 No. 1 Center SL * YEARLY. 3 BR. 2 ba., AvaJI. no~hru Labor Day. avall. from S90 mo. Jn Can· Costa ~ll"58. houscbroken. Vlcln11y Hun-0 1V 1 NC LESS 0 N s l •--t yd dbl •~ •---t ho Ad I I -•m N ·"'a h' Agt. 673-u.u ncry Village, 425 30th St., tlnglon Beach, 96S-5666. , . • , u-."'= • gar, ~· nlO, c...,,,., o s ps. u ts no LRG 1 BR apt. $125. Partly ,..,w .,....., mo. eaI c · NB 673 961)) or 6'12 8520 ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. TAUGll 1 i\T ~'OUR HO~I C: 557-5640, QI' "'knds &: eves. pets. lMl Pomona, CM. tum, $135. l\Iature woman. Property House &12-J850 BA Y!-'"RONT & BOAT DOCK · · • · · Phone 5'12_7217 01. 11o·rite C!Rl .. 5 bike found, "le S.E. 6H-19i6 (213) 328-5738 Ltt•-· & Qui t N · 4 Bdrm. 2 Da. ~..ivare bench 3 NE\V SHOPS • OffiCf's. ,.._~ Costa P.1e!IR -~==~~---1 "'3 gar. e · r. Newport Heights "'' P.O. Box 1223, ....,.,1a P.Irsa. * ·.~ •• 13 * IT.AC!! OIE.SS. E ~ p ,, ,. ;1 Huntin......,n BHch Huntintton 8Hch mrkts. 1922 Wallace, Apt. B. $300 wk; $800 4 "'eeks Aug. Lai,"Una Beach. ()c(oan side ..,.....,... Pl ••• ... ""18. J"'Y 28·Sep1. 8. "'2·'"'l H•N V• ptkg 40' ::.=1 SWINGING COUPLES ayer. J\!ik for Hon. AftC'rl .,........,... GARDENApt-2BR,newly w <l't .>.>.> ~·' ' ... ...,.,. YNG8Jack&whitefemale ·5p.-~I.·m.2107, • 3 BR, 2~1 ba .. din nn, close $145-$165 SPAO.OUS 3 BR, 2 BA. Cpts, dee. Hfpool. Adults. No LIDO Isle· -13ayfro11t. cnjoy IDEAL loc. in Cdl\1 for small Call "Leah" 2-H p.01. cul -\'Cry alfectiooatr -1---------- to beach, 2 car gar & patkl, BACHELOR & 1 BR., drps, reirlg, dshwshr, beam pets. $1.B5fmo. &12-251'1. the view of the boots. 2 BR, gtfl or greeting card ::;hop. 1338-1511. \'ir. Henry1 on B1istol The•tric•I 580!, $240 n10. 962-2721 ~~id~lc~&ri~ ~~~ cell., trplc. $230 mo . S•n C•ement• incl. color tv. 675-4646 Call: 673-9010 SWINGING SINGLES _61,..lll39 aft 6 pm ~ Newport Beech ____ clof!eta. Ree. ball, pool & 642-4000 before 5 pm • BALBOA Peninsula House or lndustrhil, Rentll 450 Call "Ll'11h" 2-8 pm 53D-1%i0. FOUND brown fe 1n a I,. RECORDING STUDIO l -pool tables, sauna baths. McKendry. WHITE Water Coast View, apt, sleeps 8. SUO Weck up. F II C I' Dlll'hshunr.I. Red rolbtr. vie. i.i houni. S15. per hour. j ~~ Neis!a B~t" 2~ See for )'OUfSell. lT.111 $140 UP 2 Br. 3 Br, 2 Ba Sundcdc, 28R, 2BA. adlts, 962-8680. nw EASING am 'f ounH ing of Mac,\rthur & Birch, San-1 Block rntt-s. · · Af'i t II ip. Keelmn Ln, U b1.k W. of Pool, bl11ns, play yard, 1996 1 ~'~""'-Bue~_no_V_'-"-'~· _S_.C_.__ • * 2 BR. apt. Lido l!!le. 100 N'i:-: L 636-5060 or >IS-3643 In Ana. Call ~:-Hlli. I ~laste11f!i: 01~,. Cal!sc1lc-t1 ~ts~rps.Sal:i:r.Ler::: Beacb,l~l!~A~fSlater). ~pie ~ve.1 ~~ 2212 San Ju•n C.•pistrano Via Antibes, N.B. GT:i-3222; Huntington Beach SWINGING SINGLES S ~IALI~ "'hire poo:ile !QtJnd 2-4-K·lti 1rt1cks available 213: 287~23 or 213 ; O'O..,..,....,, lege o. • <l'fV"VW~ (11 ~. NEW M·l on 17th St., Co!lta J\tcss., ca.JI Sl'l1Ki1edge Ravrds 287-8723. $140 -ULTRA NICE Apt 6 ThfMAC 2 br, new crpts. dra, 3 BR upper'. duplex. Ocean J bJ.l... from Ocean. Avail 94() Sq. Ft. & UP Call for t'nfo "8 JITT• •••i~ nl'ar Sa\·-Ofi Dnli::11. Pleasc Ti'l \\'. 19th s~·1.. COtlila Mell\ Pool b,1. •· """-V -~ ~-\Vknd ue · "' ,,,,,,,.. ......... coll, <•n'l k-p. "'' '"0 1. 6' 3 , s. 4 Gardens. Sauna. ms, no pe~ or c ............ n. u . ......., mo. Vt""• s, July ilh·Aug. 4th. 3 br, 2 ba, ll11milton & Ne1\'land ""' ~ F'LAIR.. Class + View. Nu 2 Tenni8. Private ·pat io . Prefer quiet mature couple. 10.2. 34443 Via Espinoza, $150. \\'k. 6T~85.11. 646-0697 or SU.OSl9 ~JR2°1~~c,:~: "~·~!~rn!~ FE~L\LE .Beagl<"-Fn<'I ~ 0111 ~l~~teaF:.~,~: ·E ·ii~~~.~~ ~;;~~l;~:~·: I;f.~~ Bch. sn-t<GG ~:fili. i1r~~ ~;:I ·,~~~., ....... ~~.".".~~;;~ .. ". ". M~i~'""·"~"::::'" 1 :::~~~:~:~-'" 5s:s L::" " "'"'"' &t<-nl ~ss11 -:..-]~i Dup exn um. 3'S $95 pel' month. ~7056. closed gar. $175/mo. 154i Furn. or Unfurn. 370 ~~"""~~-~-~=I door, ideal tor laboratol)', * F URNisffEo Bachelor Elm Ave, Apt C, C.M . Vacation Rent•'• 425 SZ-10. t7Th \\'hitticr 51. Cl\1. * * ~1F:n. Hlk <Jolt. f" e 111 1 ~ ... Newport leach .;;,\·t UNF1JRN. 1 &: 2 Br. Garden Corona del Mar 1300 SQ. IT. S180, 1193 \Vhit-INTRADAT A l.abtremer "Senliog," "1st iJa bysitt1ng •~· F I D/W 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; OCEANFRONT APT., sleep! tier St. Days 646-5033 or QUA LIT y m n t ch,, In ht'l.ck flay. Rec. SC-<•r· -~---=------!DD l~'"-to -ttn. $"'"-" SllO/mo. 557 or 646-.... ..., ~· l'J> c, • pnv. O avn t'l 7 1 •o 7 71 $'150/wk 1 ~~ .,.. """' ......, ..io• Uo $165-$190 557 2841 ' · · -· &ltj...()SjJl eves. w/PHOTO 111 h,ites on front shouldrr, BABY SnTING: Lie'. agCK :l mD to pt. 14, then $150 L19una Buch pa • · -3 BR.2ba.Oceanview,walk aJ90 8-4 to 8·11 $175/ivk, --.~1 BIRCH, NB "-Largclll In Cali!'' 1W<><hl med. Rttl'n. :l4S-020:1 'O:.12. 1-·un 1111entlon . Ph.I mo. ~2152 2BR, 1% ba, 2 sty apt, pri 10 betlch. $500 Mo. 1420 \Vest Oceanfront, N.B~ _., (Call NO\V lor FRLF: AAnl· ~11. ~7 Brookhurit f.· Dupl •••• Unfvm. 3SO LAGUNA Beach, Summer patio, pool, no pet1, $165, 735 Call: 673-3663 642·2'253 Ews. 548-1930 2000, 2000, 3600 sq.ft. or coin· I fll l 1. PEf .1 N I Adami rental, steps to ocean, Joann St. ~1450 , 'KE OF THE WOODS So ho thereof. Ava.ii . JO\ 73. pc pro con prollpec l\'e ts''' L'tll, back n1ille, ~=~·~------1 S I ~ • · rd ~,1 ,.....~.. n1atch. 2.1 hrs, • hot1se 1~1. dttla"'ed. l)isap-I LJKE kitb1! I \\'OU.Id like to C0tta. Meu pecla rates for remainder 3 BR, 2 ba. Delux apt. Ne1\•ly Oregon, La.kelront mountain Mr. Baumga ner . .,.. -.,.,,..., 714 . !'>t l-3738 I l .. A G;~'l-628.1 pc·u~t vie. El ~:ncanto & babysll fVI' )"OU. 75c hr. SMALL 1 br duple'<, trpl, ~~)'Sepr,e.:;t~ntals ~~~gh~ ~~· mo. Npt i~b~. "ti::k J. '$~00~~: ~~r~H~~E-PA~~~~· ~~r!:~Ji\i~ S~.cln1 C: u rl ~!:lni. ~,;, !.."i~<l! Dana ~~~ lncl. Call Clrin.y patio, 1 aduJt. yr I Y · lido Isle NEW 1 & 2 BR. Drps, crptg, 613-0797. 836-ll!W or S4S-l 479 'Pa11111'r' 8 3 6 -1111 nr ~l-0&).I MG-0200 BABYSl"TT=U~N~G--. -,-,.-,-,., $155/mo. UUI pd. 336 E. pool, bbq, gar. Adults, no 1 'll'~~'li'~""""""""""'I R~o~n~t1~l~•-•~o~Sll~•~r~oc..__:!4~30 1600 sq. ft., $225 ='>'1~1·179 KITTEN, female, 12 "·k.<1; old, hou5e, day or ni.:ht, loving 21th. ~. 2BR, 2BA, brick frp!c, dbl pets. 376 \v. Bay, C.M. I Costa Mesa Costa 1.Tesa, 646-Zl30 ~~~~~~~~~~~! carmt>I & gn'.')' y,·/black care, II')(. flll'll ~·d. 64~299. 2BR, new pa.int, drapea & gar, winter rental, $375 plus ** T"'u c:a.rwr girls looking lrl hi • --carpet. $1'15 mo. lnclds gar utll. 2J.3.793-M27 Dana Point for 3rd 10 share huge Npt. Rent1ls Wanted 460 [ al s pell. 11o· te chin. Yil• BABYSTTIIN°G In our honl<· ... .... ~-"'-'-=.C...-----THE EXCITlliG , ~t ~ •-~ ·I Balboa Bl"d & Sapphire dn}'S and nighls, All a~ &: gardener. ~ aft 6 N--.. BNch PALM MESA APTS Bch. apt. ..... -""".. Ave Bal 1!\I s.~ -eo•" !-·~-..---·------PANOR.Af.lIC Ocean View. • Call bern·n S.30-7 p .m. ~fATUREpro f essio nal ·• · • . or 11o·eloome. 962-i216 ' pm 1 -3 Br Dpbt blln •~1 2 'J!NUTES TO NPT. BCH . ·~ =~ "--1--···-Lldo •-le I :~iiiiiiiimmmm;;.;;;;1 673-3683 ask for Sherri. l.c:"'=='="occ="----1 Hunti-a.ch BACH. w/kitchen, crpted. ....5 ., •u ·· 0' FURN OR NFURN ~ ~ ''"" ..... , .... .,......... . "' arpet Servlc:• I;;;;;;;;;";; .. ";;;;""";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;: 1 Adi ts, no pets, perm. Nr Ba. Bldg lea than 1 yr. old. . ' U . area dwe Ung starting Sept. SIOO. Rf.:'\\',\f{D Black Ccx·kerj 11 beach ·1 $225 204 Close to beach & harbor. Unbelievably Jare:e apts , Rl\I mate 11o·anted: Cir! 0 .K. P.e lerence11 Prov l de d . fcwnd (frH ads) SSO s1)1tniel ~I ale.' wearing flea JOHN 'S Ct1J1)('t "'1 Upholstery NEW 3 BEDROOM 291.h St. ut1, mo. Very dlx. $300. 499-2895. huge pool, Jacuz:i eif'Ct bit-$60 for J uly, SOO for Aug. 213-823-8.is.l or 2ll-541-1210 collar. Vlc: ~1os.s St & Coast 'On Shtunpro frN' 8<-olt:h· 2 badl lose<I pri OCEAN VIEW, 1ge 2 Br. 2 Ins, shag crptil. drps, sauna Nr. Bch. 4G4 N. Np\ N.B. \VAN1'E0 2 or 3 bedroom l!~Rr:IAN GNly llou~1rl _fnd II\\' y. Lost 6 / I 3, guard !S.11] i{l!'tardt1nts•. age bl ~ex build!'::/;,: ~~I~:S. ~~!.,J, B~a~ Ba, crpts, drpg, bl.tns, ~lc.GA~£r:;ts, no pe~s. SlSO ri-tATURE male "'anetd 11;hr 4 house in Cos ta J\1esa or 1 r. Pl{'a.~ call :io l!l-1916 4!l-H7i'9/97!}-2880, Oei;T'ca.M.•n; It a.II rolot· pc1' mo. :P.lanagl'l' at 313 • sel'V, pool. 'The Mesa, 41.} N. balcony, encl. garage. $100. 1 1~EDR~J. F:~ $lS5 BR hsc, H.B. S90 per mo. + Ne"ix>r~ r~th $1~. Have rar!y mornmg. LOST Old f:nglish Sheep dOJ: gk~hlcrk'rs &ti.I 10 n1lnu11• Osw'i'O, lluntington Beach. Newport Bl., N.B. 646-96&1. 837-3927 or 837-5178. 2 BEDR!'<f. From StS5 c"~'~"~· =,..._~7"=·,,--,.-""'= :~64 eta e re erences. !RISI! Seller, vie. 11.B. Bro-frn1 puppy 4 n'lO. Black & ach for " te cal"pl•I" 5364152 2 BR, Nr bch. 5109 River. OCEAN views, wlk to bch, 2 Unfum AplJi A-iail Jo'l'QJn $10 ... FEMALE to sh11re 2 Bit · '' · ok hursl & Adam!!. 96R.Alr'i3. \\·lure l blk e11.r flea collar S!•\'I' )•)tl r money hy SIJVln.: I!~~~~~!!!!::'.:~~ :il60 BR, furn or u.n f urn 10 SIS LESS. iurn apt. in Co!(!a l\lcsa. LOCAL busineSllman "'li.nl~ 1'--0UND: Gr<'y p 00 rl I e only. Lost Ba.lboa P('nin n1e (•ltlrn trip!I. \\'Ill cleun Newport a..ctt -~uo~~fi'P..Y lease. Pvt. $22G-$250. mo. Bkr. 496-5121 Yc..u're-right.-lly;!y're under-* 6f6..8736 * 10 rent hou..o;,e In San Juan \\'e!!IClifl arra. 51fi~l77. ' PA\·i1Jiton vie. 675-?39"1. /!\•in,; 1;n .. mninst rrn ., " · d' i =1 'I Dr Garage• for Roni 435 C•po Capo"-•-" or Da--11~1·AnD T •11 11 hall 11.l. Any rm. $7.50. * ON nIE WATER * Duplex 2 BR. n ew I y decorat~. only $285 per mo. 2'T SLIP AV AIL. Call eves: 613-2182, 640-8496 N Hei h Fountain van-pnce . .,., h esa . ' Ix: U I .... BLACK & ll>'hi!(• pup, !ihorl .... . oy "'" e ()()()( e. ('t)l!C'h SlO. Ch11ir $5. 15 ""ll. -"llW'-'po"'-r~t~"'-'g"-"l~•---I -, {5 blks from Newport Blvd.) Point. Has one small chilrl hair, Fountaln Valle)', near s.mall brown i>JJ?l on left <'Xp. ls ,~hat counui, ~~1 CLEAN l or 2 Br. Adults, no pets. ~ kit. S135-t150. 2421 E. 16th St. NB ~180L FOR Rent, immed. occup. 546--9..lil.60 f'OR motor homes, trailer, _&_pet~p to $WO., 492-2667 G<'n1ro. 962·8290. !l:Ulf'. Vic. WM'lf'r .t.i n1<.·lh1Jd I IJ•) "'Ork n1ysclt. 3 BR, condo, f.rplc, pool fa (', 'I1IE EXCITING boat, elc. Ui48 Newport WANTED 2 Bdnn home or F'OUNIJ • Bo}'!! hlkf'. Vic ~f"'°1 61<hunt. Call 531-7:)77 Good rl'f. 531--0101. Nr schools & sh PP n g, PALM MESA APTS Blvd . Cl\I. 548-9766. eves duplex \\'fyard. S 1 6 o, a 4!H..2859. MINUTES TO NPT. Bc'it. 644-1061. Reliable renter!!. References _Balel\ric Sehool. 7>l!J-2:J26. Jo'' E p,~ ALE m in i at 0 r c C1 rpenter YEARLY $350 . t blk ocean. H ti '•-h Bach, l & 2 BR. from $150 1 CAR Storafi:e Garage Sa>. available ~ befol'e 5 ?.IALR!. Australian Shephcrd. Schnauzer l '~yrs r<'rl col· I--.~.--------· I 3 Br 2 Ba Vdrp trpl un ntfon -•c mo ··7 9833 Hun!I gt p.m. fnrl \\'amcr & Bolsn Ollca . I v·.. !\I' .' VI• Nf~\\', r(•modl'I, rr11ml' R. -•. ' patio.' c~ River'. San Clemente Resident Hotel I '-"'--"'=-'--."'-'C.-.---A'dulCs, No Pets. Be~ch ~a n on -H.B. U'enMruc lir. 1116-37~7. nr, •~. ission ~jo. finish, !lhll'C!I, offlcr11 A· S.n Clemente _... $79 SO -r mon Full HouH Now-Will 1561 ?.fesa Or. I BR fu1'tl apt. N'pL an-a _8~8 hnn"'~ cic. Cu!ltom 11o·ork lij-iliii'•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I q~et-:--secure • •CClpt appllc•tlons ·for 15 blks from Newport Blvd.) Office Rent1 I 440 8/1-approx SI.JO n10. lfa,·e t"ND: 10 . Spd blkt> Vic. \VlfERF. 111 Eli1Alx-th? Liti· Lic('ni;t~I. 962-1961. 11 Fu . . fu I ~9860 1~ "'t'll trained. t>\·C's !-~arbor l_l ~h. Please Iden· gh'y Siam<'sc type rem:ile --CABINETS/ __ _ \\.~a,{', .... uti1,_·1 """",-service. ture V•C•nc ,,. * CASA VICTORIA * Cd~I · 2700 E. Cs! Hwy, 4000 66--2583 lily. &12 .... ::.5.12. cat. lml ln No. J ""Una. I . ~-J(') .~~·~ ~"' ....., ance 0 every. IOr 11 · d · f -CARPENTRY _ .. ~. 1 &: 2 BR. Furn & Unfu rn. aq. · or m · suites rom TEACHER needs reas. un· BL.ACK &: white female cal Oiff Dr. Call 497-2098. 41 """"' . it4 Del Mar, S.C. 1, 2 ~l3 :: Apt Carpets, drape11, DfW, TV ~900 ~: fll.:i!__ro m ~7c ~r furn house by Oct. \ .. ase found vlclnit),'. Corona LOsT: Lf:e bhtck Lnbrndrir ;all 'YI~ ~1641' VILLA YORBA ant. Pool, etc. 525 Victoria :. ·~iiy':"'6'7 ¥~4 ~ 2 ~ Cdl\1, Lag. B: NB. SW-278i Highlands, 675-59-11 dog namrd Jack. ViC'. 2149 :it1NOH hon1~ r<'1~.11rs. l'hnn 360 Apt. Unfum. 365 St at Harbor, 01. 642-8970. Charles \V. Ma.!len, owner/ ADULTS want lo lease l'ND: Caliro Klllen·Brnul. Oc-ean U'ay, Laguna, Sat, blrll: -C11rprnll) -Pa.inllfl\; NEW See. T~ Apts. Sal5. l:luntington Beach Newport &Ne~ modern 2 br, 2 ba house in Y.'/cast on ba1·k I~. Vic. 213 Junl" 30. Reward, 49-1-2814 -T1l1·. Cflll :rJO..Xfl(l·~-- to s.n;, month. Walkway to (714) 142·M22 kr. ~-::;:"':;::'•:h:borhood:::::· :~::::-:,;_.:':;'":l;;;;S':· :'73-lf:·:;:;':'°:· ;;;;;;;;~I WRITE Jong ruurM, blW. c,\r..Pt.:NTR\" ocean, beach Laguna N\gucl NEWLY decorated 2BR. ll<'W SUMMER-WINTER ~~-si:'5~se Jt6o• 230' t:: ~ eyed c111 lound .,..k a'tfl. vie A~!) GB.'IEH.AL REP>\ Ir: A'M'RAC. 2 br u.ppcr. flrplc, 49:J..OOOl.. shq crpts, drp1, bltn stve, YEARLY Oelcict offices. c r pt ., ~· ~a Vista. & Princess, • • 6T'~lll • • pr, utll Jt· no pets. l blk to S.lboa lsl•nd · lrotit free refrig. $16.1, lnlant Ani ta's Renlals. Bkr. generous parking. Ne\\'J)Ort T d 1 Pa d• · n rmente. <192-9761 Cement, Concrett bch. Av I for \lo'\ntcr rental!---....;..--;____ ok. no petl. Inquire at Apt. 21))5 Balboa Blvd. 673-2058 Beach. Nr. Bay. 6~700 ra er S ra 1se r.tALE blk Lahratk.lr vie SAn--Sept_.;,,,,!5lh.. $7.00 per mo. 2 BR Luxury Split Lev~! No. 4, 1601 Ah1.bama or call bkr. ,·i.· 111 Ana ,\ve. & Dclmii.r. J)ATIOS. \\'Slkll, d~. Saw. 61"~ Carden Apt Prlv. te.rn.ced 53&-1396/53&-4810 1700 WESTCLIFF OR. DESK gpace available S50 c.r.1. Rl'"'Rl'<l. 548-4243 hri:ak, l't'move le n>plac:e lal .... Penlntul1 11ettlng, overlooking canyon 2 BR, nel\' cpl.I., &. dl:apc!, 2 BR.. l & 2 BA, Bltn ap. mo. \Viii provide furnllui'e I" nes 646--036.'I. C<lt!Cl'Cte, :'>~fOT ~I. & bay, ~ blks to beach. prage, pool, $160. No ~p~H~o~n,..~~· ~Poo~l~. ~6'~2-627~~·~,.~~ 1 at $5 mo. Aru"'t'!.ring: service I l.Osr 7/!l, Yellow Lab, Frm. CF::irE:O.'T & Block \\'urk. SU WllK & UP Beam cett ., tropical atrium. children. Lndry faclt available. 17815 Beach Blvd. "N<!'mll", L.Aguna, v I c \~ttll. JlolhOfl, !tldf'\\•alkll, Ptr. e $ttpln& Rooms Stove, refrig, dltnvr, &: laun· ~=--"'84~7~ Huntington Beach. &lz...1321 tt" mes A I b <'r t son 's. R1:ww'<I. By hr. hi' Joli•. 6'1&8915 e .JIOUltket1Plnl Room1 ~r· m-'1829 or 2 BR, apt. tre1hly palnted, ltent•lt jf ,a) cusr. DESIGN 1100 aq.ft. 49.1-1.14·1 _ •Cen1en1 \Vork • I • Oce_a~ Vtw Apts -'C'----~-=~ crptd, clO&Od gai', pet &: rorncr. Suitable store/of· GER?.1 . .Short Hair Poln!er con1mt'rl.'if1l k l'l.'!1ltlt-n(111l BALBOA INN LITE airy roorriy 1 br, $200. tmaU child OK $145. mo. fit.Ts. Fronts on We.stcHU dollars m11le, bm & ~·hih'. plsr Lie &: Boni!. * ~ • 1 1~ Ma.in Sln!<et ...,, 1 yr. 'eaae. l'nclds utll, 841-8149 Dr. NB, Air Con<!. plenty ~urn. Rew. 536-2 920, Child C•re m.8740 ltove, refrig, crpt, curtains. **2 BR. stove, l story, no _R_...,,. _______ 400_ pkR;. 111:15 \Ves-tcllff MS-9a86 .i.'),.6..6(}13 ---------Avail. C.OUple prefen-ed. -· -J Sh.r1>-R1d1cor.,_. Call emi or wkend ~ pet., ROOMS $20 wk up w/kit $30 WANTED: RE firm aeek1 '--------------------'!LOST Slttrno'SC fl'm, ~111ctv-CHIUJ 1•r.rC' n1y ho1nr , fJ.. .. 3 sa 2 BA, conv den, trp1c; •YE••• v _ •'·-·t 2 L-$145 mo. 548--0524 wk up •pts. Chlldrn & pet a.ppl'Ox. 400-fj()Q 11'1· fl. Cosl<t 1 BR 3 Bl f'• '"' In 11bdomt'n, Vie. \Ve~tllff pr11ahl<1, 111n1ure 1von11111 ~ poNrch l Jrg 'l&r~ter-w/Pt":'Nr"" s hoocp9;i1:ich. -WALK TO BEACH IC.'CtCMio,:i;0~N~Blvd., =;"'p;p ~~tA.!v F~ ~~\~l::o~~,~~: Ot'.'lux.,:\ti. ~e I: ~01: i\EtvAR~· 4 91 • 719 I ~g~·~~~ l't-cken(I~ f11l! rtiOf, r ocean · 835--3437; eves A: wknda. 1 It: 2 BR. Crpt/drJ>tS. blt·lns. · .mr;riw, ~·· 830-n:M 1mn~ Ix.+.. Gd JOC'. \Vant bk1Jc 11 Ac on II~')' 18 l=--,~..,..------tachts. Atlulll only. &t&-1335 pr. 308 16th. 536-5086. ROOMS $25 If. up . part TTl\I. NB boot h d Rwthtn.: Sp;.p. f()f' l(w,.j LOST 7/l. Amazon PEUTOt. Contr•ctor ptt mo Yrly. May oonaider 1~8~R.~~P~ENTHO==~USE=-. -N~ ... -L Beech O\i!rlooking IJarbor' " CORONA DEL MAR Mt ~·units ·;~ ~28~ ~e-'t.µ 000 ~ 3..16-79M blue & )'t'llow on t1crul, 1..rg1--------- for July 1Ummer rental. I -~ ....... ==-".;;.;.-'-'"----I Ocean. Mi blk to ocxan. 2500 De:lwce 425 1q. n. oUlce ' · ' ' rnward. ea.JI 493-4838 JACK T11uli•nt'. r ~ NI Ir , 64M211. ~~ ... • drpsPh.· .!..,J?"~ Pool. LA.CUNA t1tate 11·-... on Seaview, CdM. BROKER 6151100 MV.OE 'Gt . \-, Ton F'ord ~Il..UOATl r•G'•ac"'i ic, Al-'9 LOSTbiiCLJtbi:rd tl!.rrirr .,-..~, llrhl, :aJ yn exp. Lii' (....,.. •1 Mw I·= _:/frpl·. ··.~ ~•-••. acttS Of ma In 1":i"n e d ~··~R'S BR. own ba & FINE al"-. N • w port >k:lrup, Auto. ~ 6 cyl ,..,,e, wan mpl'O\'dt vie Gk>Alttr 4 Harbor Co6t.a B-1 260072. ~ly \\"ay Cu on. .. .._..,.Y _....., Poot It Oct »uw•.L ...... "'. '«' 8' cabo\w 1. .. mpn-or ~tkwlal RE. $29~1 cq. l\ieia, 64~1938 ' 0"47'7-'.-0lJ.16='------- 1 .R HOUSE ·~-h--Mo/' --& ... ..,.,., •· an~ enL Kit privl, patio. Y•rd. Beach, on W. Cout """'>'· VW u .. N ~ motor home dw~ ;;;;;; SHARP ~ ~,, •• _, .....,.....,, vln1a. Oote to beach " Good loc. ~1mo. -=•o~. Good ""' .. kJna. Reuonable. .,.... · REWARD Electrical tum .• Incl utll, TV, llal Plnchin R!tr. 675-0n. 1boppln1 Lee 2 BR 2 bl!i _, _,...._ a-.o 1.cl,;..... · 615-52':>'1 3 pm , 83846SI. 1--------- 9olboa lsllftd Apt!. Furn. J:J;oi;j;.,.;,r WANnD to buy UJo&.now a.pt. w/a~nlties. siiO Mo.: .J"URN. J'OOm •·tth bath &.. .,.,... NEW 6' CAMPER SHELL, ~10BILE home kit in Palm i..a.t Collir. P.fak 546-IT'll F. I. Et'TRICL\.'IJ, llct'l\Rd, 1 -Cll!l'fJ~~;., · -1:.: fui'nlfutt A:;~~ rib A P&rtlally fum., lncl. util. kite.It. ~v. !:Jon-smoker. Nr. 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB ~'Ol1ti S200. '69 SJIAS"TA Detcrt Cl'tt'flll, Joe. on iroU or new number. bondt'd. Small J<>bl, n1ainl II A·-" A • -, .... ,,_ rruonable Mature 111duJ1'. 41U-4653 or DCC. ~1~. 1980, 912, 756 A 540 Sq. :t"l. TRAVEL Trailer, 13' \\--Ortti :o.~. Value $18,500. P'ay LOST: 1f3, 1 vr le.mt Irish repairs, s.I~. vau.. UI·.., ., ... .._., ,.,.._. .. , .... ~neula ,.nur broker . ROOPtf, nice hl)ITI('. BMrd & Ample parlclnJc. Utll, Baum· S700. tN1M ror TO. frt't'Zl!I', >If $8800., Equhy snoo. for Sc1tcr wft:Ol i flf'a tag, vfc EU::C'TRICAt ConirnC1nii. C•ta MeM $125/mo. Yr. 1.,, Luxulious n1111lng care oplte>nal. Nr. 1ardner, 541-5032. :fir, organ or ! 64&-5.566. ~"-'!")' xd. tauto. 640-1000. H.B. ne~·11.rd. ~1907 Rrs. Cnmin. lndWJt. Uc. lMMAC\11.J\TE, bfaulltul, 2 Y!:ARLY cieJm. JSR~ 2BR ocea.nfront a pt. P'rlv. bdl &: bus, C.M. 612.2389. •l60 SQ fl. In 3 otn~s at 42c a DANA Point oeffn v1ew 7+ l'J Acm 'R·l 166 lolsl In t'El\1l.. Afghan Hound, 8rt)f'I No ,20011-t 615-03.j7, 812-0'ntl BR, pool. qu\et atnw»phere, A dfn, 2 BA. sto\'t Is DIW, pool. fmmed. O cc up . SPACIOUS w/blllh, block ft . AJl"P0'1 locallon. Av1.il ..Crt.'t w/luxury home It Boon1ing ~ntll P.f a i-i 1t . old, VI~ Corona del lol1ir, Gardening bltnl, J.156. 6'S-697il ~ parld"J. Prtl. edits. 49'--3330. frrun beach, :kJ9 Colton, Sil. Like now, 567-1200 ('UC!lft bouM', can dlv\f~. Ready now. Slb0,000 f"'r'ff:/ !."'~w~ar!:!d!:_.~6:!!T,.~7!_!+~1:_1 _~=\'.'.:.;..=="--:-:::-:-:- 8£A,UTJ1JRN_ 2 BR,-1175... m ~,;, Bay Ave., NB, EW l-2 SR ApU. Ocean N.B, Call ati 6, MS-439'1:. (J]iOICE C.~I . offic,., tli64 rnide lot Tl>w, property or r. "·ant lncom~Hom~r LOST in Co81J1 -M~ P.lNO Complf'te l.n"'1 .t. 0,_rdt'ning ---1 i.m ct11 .• pool. -•• .,....,~ vtcw, i b!k '''ood• Co\~, The "YcUow Pa.Res'' o1 .V..B Newporl Blvd. Mr. A.a-? Box '57i, Dana P6'fnr:.-!i'acht, Ownr 1el 9%>-Til9. Ot KEYS. Rewinf:J... . Sm,lce -JW.ulrr1g A Cle11nu~. pets. ~-1'IO Ya11:::.;'ll=-:ftnd=.;.1t;..l;..•..;O;..•;;;•=llod=-·..::~=--.:;S300=.::"'°=· =""'=· .::-== cllwincd, ... s-iuma.. n1uM :,.IS-0)21.: M&-68*> Phone 6--12-00'75 Jln1 t$-OKI,; f \ • ,,, .. Tliutsda1. Jult 1? ,197) ..__ !!!!!!._• "!!!!!!!'-' a!"!!!1_..:,~mJ~.I' ~, ~. "'~" ~lfiIJ~J [ ~ .. ~'""''~•=• ~l!DJ~IJ j I it•=•_ JfiIJ I "Obi • JfllJ I ""''"•• ![ill I • el )Slat' ][DJ n1;;;;E~~: I:. ........ :.:.~ I ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 1.:;;;;;;;;~;~;;m•;;~~ · ....., w-. M. , 11• ljG• ...... P lvn:Wnt Help w ... tod, M&, 71 0 l -Hol-p~W-.... _, ... ,.,M,_&F-7~10H~-.. -·.w-.... ,_ ... ~·-M-&-~-71-~0 I Hole ~en~ M & , 710 H!p w--. M & ~ 71f Help WM!od, ~!!ME DICAL AS515TAHT * GARDEN E R * L.R. O'Tts PLUMBING ASSEMBLERS ii DENTAL ASSISTANT FOltll.Al>Y KEYPUNCH 11 >"" h•"' a pl..,.nt ,,.... Mow, td&e A i@n'l 8&rtlell-Remodelil & Rt p.tlrt, Wa1tr Pl'C!ciaion nl«ftankaJ U!i«'m· f"tc paid. \\'ork if\i d~ SportMwtv mfl:, NB. SaJ&o-OPERATORS 80091lty i enJot' hdPiaR bw cart. E>cPtri l deP<'.'nd-hc11krs, dllpou.11. furnaces, bty, 110lderlttg, or drill Pl't'ill: "'kh time for RIJI. A9slst open • ltftdf· &f2.3471. f\lll It p&rl time. 2nd '-3rd others, put )'OU!' MM 10Worie , •tile. Most area. dshwaAhn. 642.-Q63 MIC &: t lCprrlencc rcqulrod. CIRCULATION dmt'IJt tn 8 new ~ at roREJCN C.r hrtl counter lhi:fu. Recent~ on for 2 bu.s)' doc1on In Mr Pr.mpt-f'" Ett B/A. Compl4:tc Plumbilli, O:.e lnRrument Ccrp, $451), Ahlo tr-e pot:ftiofts, Call man, gl't'al opportunUy for 029 129 or key~. Coocl ~Y new offictl. Call Pt.. m7117 SCrvlct. m4 Plllcenlla Ave., CM Ann 01rftUt, ~. Coo. a dv nncemcnt w/111,pidly ~'Oi'k'lnl corxtitJom 8hlft dif· CIOrla GrQy, ~JO.~~ H led 51-. W k TOTAL SERVICES CO. 642-~ -nvl Career Employ. A2ency, li'O"'itl&" chain. Apply In f<'n!ntflll t Wttkff.d itftfl-al Personnel ~ .... ...., I h'Not Wh:r'1 o:I ~Uoor Plumbing' ~paln ASSEMBLERS TRAINEE 3400 Irvine Bavd, NB. penon ar-11758 Beach Blvd. t1vt. Integrated inttlCoa'J>., Harbor Blvd., CM. • E 646--0971 or 641J..J809 Etectronl<' -female trainee. DISHWASHER ruu. Time Office Clrl, 10 2'J83 Faln.1cw Rd., Of. MEDICAL FRO T 1 CAR 'i1twin9!All•r•li1n1 No exl)(•r. nt'C. full !line, Nite !fhift $400, 10 $500/n~. lflke phnne orders. type, &: OFFICE I' ~E~~wS:.o~"~;;r:~P~I---''-------dar1. SI.SO to .rtatt. M9.o2·1l. + frlnae beneflt•. Apply In Ille. Call Mr. Reynolds, KEYPUNCH &auriful. oltice in lf"9l: Jo. '"""'inM ,lt'ORGJIT your 111 probk•mi, ASSNT. MANAGER MALE OR FEMALE "",,.On at Ambro!lta. 501 64.~-739t /or Jtllervlew bet 8 cation. No \\'t.-Ckend. Start I "1111-.. ~ anytime 534-1187. Vlcki'1 Orlitinuls Is ht~. 30trh ~ NB a .,.,..... C.11 Linda ~ ... E ~n!nst, 1t1.lk»1na. re-~J· ritatw-e t.'Ou1Jle to munu,a:e ~.. · · Top SS$ -.,,,, • .._, I a:p. Ing, or choose fi'Om her ex. Aetl.lll opt. compJpx: in New. DISHWASHER * GARDENER * All shifts tt.vallftbli• 5'JD.6005, CoMtal Pl"nonncl • American G•rdntr quislte M'lf.?<'tlon or ready to port Beach. No peti or The Daily Pilot has an opening in the cir-Jl\ill lime, Bavarian Bakery, a. your own hs hvlne $1Q-1·~ _AF:r· 2790 lltu'bor Blvd., __ Maintenance, C'lettnup, wear. 177 Riven.Ide Ave., children Malnt<1"""1Ce t'X· cuJation department Ior a beginner to man· 658 El Camino Real, Tustin. Full or p/ll1ne In )'Our NEVE~78f11. ~Park TErlt.PO·l-"C;:~:;.·-----~~ Landscaphui &: Sprtnklrr NB ~ JX!'T' required. Apt. + salary. age a small district of boys and girls, deli· DOMESTIC Help George own tu'e•. Hlah income. A FE AT P.tODF;LS needed, "'iii train. Service. Call 66-1930 Alter atlon...,_..2-.5145 \\'rite Cllltllified Ad No. 611. Allen Byland Agency, 106-B Gueranteed Cwtomer1 Tempo Temporary Help part 11me eves. call 53t-6t98 * Creative G•rdenlng Neat, accurate. 20 years exp. Da.iJy Pllo!, PO Box 1560, vering, collecting and selling newspapers. E. 16lh st., s .A. 5'!1..0395 No c .... Down •i,=•;;f1,;c•;;P;om"=-----,--,,,::I Expftr. Irishman. CINnup, T 1 1 1 Costa l\te.. Ca. 9"£26. Full time, permanent positions with regular DOORMAN Earn Now, Pay Later KITCHEN HEii t.tORNJNG ne"'Spaper auto Matnt, Lan<hcaping, Sprlnk· __ e_•_•.,._•;_on_R_op,_•_• __ ASS ISTANT mllflagen:. Lux. raises and full fringes including personal btwn 21·27 )T., ""'u dressed ffl.Ol12 route tor The Reaf.11.er. ll'I"& lnstalled/repalr. 646-1072 J.. 11.dults apt1. Good potenlii.I & ed Costa Mesa. Approx. hrs. COMPLETE I and 1 ca Pe COLOit TV Repairs. Fast, for management. Couple use of company auto. Apply in person to groom · Fun or part GELCOATERS, expcr, SS.00 AP~Y IN PERSON 4-6AM daily. Xlnt PT ~ • ::~t. ~~~kJ~nm~;,~~'. ~~:tit.~: gu~ rrr:~:~l~r 1~~'. ~~:'t, ~~:'!t1Me~~ly Pilot, 330 West Bay rui~~1~t~J! & !, ~frt' .. : ~:~.~I~:-"'17 ~~~~ NB ~i~2:re;~ 64$-6987. Pltf -A-:---~M;C7~,.ha-""c-Newport Beach 1631 Placentia, Cl\1 needs 3 aucndant salesmen. General S.rvices uto ec ftlC DRAPERY Installer, only GENERAL OFFICE LADIES Nite &: Eves. shlfls. Exp. & HOME Rtlpelr. AU Types, In· 111 • 1 Busy Toyota agency in llunt. lhe best need apply. 1-fust Fine local com.pany ln Irvine IS-~ hrs. per week. You Ref'• req'd. Call for app't. ci<tdi pl b' L1...,10111t , f Bc:h. 1W!\.'l'i11 class A Line be capable of making $300 a oomptcx, family-type atmo5. choose l'i>un:, Pleasant en· 540-1307 · ng elec.. um ing, ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~ mlld'I. "'Ith good lmpot't ex-H•lp WantH'. M & F 710 Help W1nted, M&F 710 >A'i!ek. lif ust be clean cut & pl!en!'. Type ln\."Oices & help ·1 ~~=:;:;~O~R~T=E~R~IN=No-pe.inting, cabinets, shel~s. per. 1 .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; presentable v.·/ov.TI vehicle. !'he secrela.i')' IO the presi-joyable custom't!r scrvlc~ NEWP Minor a.lleratlons, fixture f or a penn. job with the best CARPENTERS needed _ CaU 5'1l-2080 bet 8: w & 5. di-nt. Start S42;i. CaH Linda near honu~. Good earning op. Needs Atlddle aged or older repair & Install. e1c. Ttme & Job Wantad, M.le 700 of benetltll, call i\1r. Snlilh, general. Newport Beach e Cross country =~=~--~~~~ Ray, ~. Coe.Ital Per-Portunily. Call Mn. Brown male gardener for perm. material. No job too small. !M7·8a.xi. Area. ti.fr. Anthony, 645-26n Drivers D1RAPER~d"'Ork ~m. ;--~n 90Mel A'""""""Y, _ H-..-.. at n 4: ~3260. position. No rihone calls 642-1400. YOUNG man 19 ...,'OUld like ---------or exper or trnlnee s 111 o~"" .. ,...., .... ....,, please. Apply ill pel'IOll •. Ask AMB I T I O u SCo 11 e ae ~\Mle!lll w/P.U. Haulh~. painting, window washing, anything, Reas. Ra l e s 557-7266 job in exchange for running CASHIER ' • Foremen all positions. Beach Drapery Blvd., Cltf, for Clay Ellis 1 head car/cash. Ask : D en i1 is AUTO Mature, able to wol'k Sat & e M•naf1rS Service. 900 \V. 17th St., GENERl\.L Qf(ice Work, 1YJl:-kEGAL__S_E.CREI ARY_ .. prdener.-)___J.101-Jamboree1----I 841-~. WANTED Experlenc.t Sun, also variable hours. e Assemblers Costa Mesa Ing, fil ing, 10 key adder, Jiie TRAINEE Rel .. N.B. * BOAT WAXI NG * Exp., reJeorenc:'H, qua!. ma· terlals used. lie. •4719 979-14:>, MR. F'IX·IT Eleet.·Plwn blng·Painting Repairs.Rea90nablc ·-· YARD projects, h a u 11 n g, local moving " window wuhlna:. (Ov.,-11 t r u c k ) """31911. Job Wanted, Female 702 S.rvlce Mono~er for Kenn Rima llarch.\·a.re, 2.666 e Molders DR YCLEANING finisher, bkkpng, accounts payable. Fine attorneys ,~;u tra1nl;ii;;;~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ol HarborBlvd .. Cl\1. e Inspectors experienced or traine e, Apply. AM 8-W, 1644 sharp individual witJi good NtJRSES NEED he.Ip at home ? \Ve loc•f G.M . Deil er1hip. CASHIERS. e.~perlenced. El I R4 ma le or fen1ale. 644-0893 Sopenor, CM skills. Eam whne you learn, RNI LVNs & AID E t haVi' aldc5. nurses, Good pay and percent· Toro area. Golden Bull • Ge Repairmen Call Sally Hart, 54(Mj()j;), ' h o u s ckprs, con1panions. •ge and car, Send resu-Restaurant. SJO..-O.WO ask for All 3 Shifts GIRLS-GIRLS Coastal Personnel Agency. Jtot.i>ltaJ Start Reller • Hon1cn1akcr11 U pjohn. me to Claiilfled Ad Mr. Pearrow. 'Ve 'Viii Train Electronics 2790 Harbor BIV<I., Cl\f. \\'ork The Days & Shlli. ~17~1 MacG-or Y•cht Corp Easy fun job. Day or night. p Good p #503c/o DAILY PILOT Cl.J'A lttslDE ~ntaJ assn't. 163i -Pi11.centla, C.M. • WE'RE ON No experl('nce necessary, LEGAL SECRETARY \'ou refer.. a,y. COMPANION , gd. cook & P.O. Box 15'0 Cost• ~,pe1 ~~ .. ~~!· ""1nt salary. will Ira.Jn. You must be 18. For corporate ge n(' r a I No Fees Ot Rebates. rlriver, free to tr'8\"el by ~ ~ hour or n10nth, local ref. Mei•, Ca. 92626. -Apply In person noon tll 6 counsel. Good IBM & Homcma.k!"J'S-Upjohn 673-1586 A"•-CIY1l E"-c--$'"v CUSTODIAN· THE GO'. pm. Z1l2 Harbor Blvd., shorthand skill.II required. 1800 No. Broad\\'8.y, S.A. " ..., . ..,. "'""" ....,.,, Costa Mesa. Xlnt salary. Call 833-9002 S47 ""1 PRAC. Nurse employed at LOT BOY Gen'I Acctng ltlgr to $Li K $589-STIS Per Month - present, wish pltime. Later Need px~rll)'nt-etl lot boy for Elec. Technician lo $15K ~'!.!a:ttyall~en ~or ~~ Varian Data Machines has GI~ F'RIDAY • 00 ex· ~1::'1.s:::=k:::::: ~':; lull time. 613-6403 C»sta Mesa Auto Dealership. ~~~troll ~ngr to $1t4·SJ~ School Dlsn1ct, ~1r. Shinkle, dln,.~~td'ed"al;•,te •. 2.'n~'!s lfooori.;~ penence able t9 drive, will vielle priv rm. o I de r NURSE AIDES R.N. de''·-, •·tl.llm• Dr'• Sc:-e: Don Crevier. ~"re anes • 0 ~ v .. ,..., .... ., ...,'5 lral $2 25 h chi! h IRVINE ,-~ , K ~A-.. '" •u Cl -'· ""'........ •.i.,,· 24618 Onisanta, P.fission 1 h -·"'' 1 n. · r. rn, mother om e, .._ .. & 3rd sh'-1 -~ho" """"" "' ey ""''-"'ce oftlce position. Have 11-1ed. &. TIIEOOORE ROBINS e." .,......,.. ,,..... Vlep' . Ca. 92675. Deadline or t e oppo ....... Y 0 Ape:< Employment Agency light cleaning, J.a u n dry. ~"" ....... t-"" • ._.. q!Wity locks_ &-repair!!, 24 OB M.pltal i:<p. fi46-3657 FORD Kl'ypun<:h 10 $56S becoming a part·of the ex· '1810 C Ne"_'Ort Blvd .. C111 Wet!kend1 tree. Start at $30. 1 d.,.., Exvacation.._...~ II.buck< hr. emerg wrv. tree In-· 1"'·" • ' · · ~ , · • ~·-sec:· $600 "J:.:"::.IYc_.::12::.·~-----. citing computor industry. <!.c:. A .. ..,... eave per .,. ... cz-n:u llf)e<:tion 5o'l..A166 Help Wanted, M &_f 710 :niO ~~r1_!!\"CI., · !\fed Fmt.Ofc, P/t $.1.00 hr. -CUTTER \V I nttd f • ...,.,.....,_, . weekly. 493-'59«. not ~ssar).. Parle L'i do '""" Gal l'Tlday/shrthd S550 Sport<r.\'t?Br' mfg. NB. Salary e e KE YPUNc·H: -GIRL Friday, General oUlce LOOKING. for a Babysitter, Flagship Convatescent een. I Hou11., ~ GET RID OF UNSIGHTLY , TRASH A DEBRIS $12 1 LOAD . COLLEGE '1 S11JDENT 548-<i428 32' FURNITURE Van for A A A A A A Slncl! our office burned down, operating b<1>l \\'C can thru th~ an1M•ering 1 e r v J <: e . 546-Zl lS until v.·e relocate. flave excell!"nt positions as aJ\\'8 )-'S. Liz·l-'lurel-Ruth·l<aren & Lor! AUTOl\JOTIVE -' lttan Fri· l\.ted Claims Exam $600 open • steady. 642-l4?2. OPERATOR work, bookkeeping exp. No live in, for 1 child, 9 yrs old. ter day for PU/deliv; new &. Receptionist S550 !1/h . .Matury woman. Start NB. ~16 466 Flagship Rd NB u~ car lot upkeep. Bnris, Finance M-Trnc $520 Data Processing f'Un. 1 yr. exper. on~· 059&. $400. Takata Nursery, 780 LOT man . Ori·--. ~.11 ... ~" ·• I I II .,. l\fust do own veri...,.1ng Bak c •1 V'C• • u "'""'°"'" lOSp ta :tation. c,te. Tom Sec'y (Escrov.') 10 $600 G ard er, ·" · & -·• ti'me. Phone S' F "' Sn Cl TRAININ make ""Ur own drum c s, ........ an1p o , n en1ente. New at.'COunts chic $500+ e SEC::VRETARIES GIRL for Gcil'rl ottice °"urk, 557~ NURSES RN&. LVN full or Contact Jack Kelley. TelJer trne to $500 5 day wk, tun Co. beneri!s, "'IACH!Nt~ _ GENERAL part time to v.mic' la at· 16 Typing 60 wpm, shrlhnd 80, Equ 0 La " o • BABYSITI'ER needed. Paid Eso.:ro\11 Loan Procsr to 10 INSJRUCJOR at least 3 yrs. exper. al ppty employer,_ · To operate ntachine shop for tractive co n v a I e 1 cent I loca1 turn haul• Ir: aen'l haulina. 548-1862. ~ MOVING, hauling, clean.ups. I Reas. ra\ea<oll. StudentJ . 1 Free est. 832-T:lSI --· .. -· . "'7--.-..,ullng-by student. Large truck. Reas. SM-1816 or 534-2l&t I SKIPLOADER It dump truck , work. Concrete, asphalt sawing, breaking. ~n10. CLEANUPS, remo\-e dlrt, . trees, ivy, dri~'8Y5-1l'Bd· I Ing. 841·&6, Uc. 2«1182. r t GEN 1faulln&'. 'lne/Shrub lrltn. Gar A: Yd cleanup. ' Est. 531..Q77, 557-690-I. l 1,H;;;-co-'=:;:;"'::;;"::.:l"f~-- SUPER eiticlertt Cal-ctudent : •eeks N . B .-1'.;dM I hOusecleanlng, $3.00 pPr ' hour. Ews. 5'44-5677. C•rpet CIHnl"I I Floor Coro & Windows I Dutch hlalnt. Serv. 537-1508 HOUSECLEANING. Fa st , , efficient, meticul o u s. 1 References. 548-1191'. Clean your apt. \\'hile )'OU .,.~ or pl ay. Reasonable. • 979-5371 . In!lured Quality Cleaning Carpets, Floors. Windows * Frff Est. 64$--3695 • Ironing I IRONING in rn.y home. $1.25 .... -. I call s.JG.2241 ' PEEBLES J anitorial & 1 !I-faint. Home-Orfice?-indus· trial Oeanina. 615-3™. Landscaping 1,.ANDSCAPE, G a rd e n malnt .... dean.up, sprinklrs. Lie. W790. 646-6852 Mosonry BRICK Ver.een, patios & 1\·alks. Slu1npstone A: block fencing, concret~ work & Ule entry v.·tys. 96.l-ISS5. Painting & Paperha ngi"I CO~IP'LETE l lou.o;c Paintlni:. Cu!irom int.. 1\'CBlhl'r·proof exterior. No job 100 !Ulla!!. CERl\IAK PAINTERS • ~7-3296 • tNT/EXT. PAINTING LO\V COST H I G H QUALITY FREE ES'T'l~fATES 675-:1110 *PAINTING* It Pf')'ll lo cull profe1s1onohs. For frtt l'.!il. ~118 No \\'asH~ * WALLPAPER * \\'hen >"0•1 call "l\.Jac" 548· 1444 l?\'l!S. PAJNTJNi. & repn ir. 35 YT~ ~·orkmanshlp aunr. Take ~ advantnge of my · exp. t ~7056. ; PROJo,. patnrtt, honest "''Ork, l"f'B.'I. lnt/e.~1. frf'<' est. Ref1J, :W8·2'i:i9, 642-3913. EXTERIOR S.l75. 2-i;tory $475 Lie. Bon(!. lrt8. .. &12~21:-W • P~A~l-N~' T;..::17\C.Reu, rlean, , reliAl>le, Lk"d, ln!I, w/Refs. Fret Est. 6M 140. I FTP.sf CLASS PAINTTNC -': f papel'hanflng P.xl 1' Int. ' l'rte esllm"le8 m..5294 i Pl1•ter, Pata., Reptlr l * PAT0,1 Pr..ASTERING * T ,fl J .. I ~-u z ltCl/IJDliltf • ,,,_,Ar,_, ""'° c-..., °'· . "'"""" ._.. Acn111 ,_ 0-0.• C.....q A,,,.n PhoM .u6-JIJI A CC 0 U N T ANT-Nc°"'port Beach area-Generalist "'ith supervisory capability analyis • statements . ex· per. can Jrubslitute for dr· grec.1'. ln1medla1e need, P.O. Box 2830, NC\\-port Beach, 9'26liO c/o Mrs. Jeffery ADULT, responsible person to opearte parking lot sweeper. HaU day &lturd11ys, tull day Sundays. $'~261 1 * AllS"'el'ing &-lviCC* F'ull time, part tinw .t: graveyard. 557-7777 --APARTMENT-- MANAGERS Eiqx•rienced. f'or 18 Unit Building In Runti.ngton B<-a1-'h. \\~rl1e Classified Ad •896 Daily Pilol, P.O. Box 1560. Co!rta l\1~. Calif. 92626 APT l\tGR-1\tlN DUTIES Li"-e in $70 off rent. 14-2 hr unlt3. Pool. Adlts, no pets. ltlature \\'Oman p r e f ' d 642-9520 APOXY Adhesl\-e mfg. needs exp compounder, f/t days . 1\l&.ture, high r.chool grad. 548-5125. ARE )-'OU a housewife ill· te~sted in supplemental irt· nursery attcndcnt f or NEWPORT • SOFTWARE gwlfl Beach, cal1 494-859-5. growing Costa Mesa Co. hospl~al . Good W&J81 &: chw·ch i;ervlces. Christian Perionnel Agency CONTROL CLERK GIRL; Driver -19·25 yrs. old, Tools, dies, & short '"" benefits: Call 642-241-0. Ask won111n uge 25 to 50. Cult • .,., D D N B Overseas Motor Parts, 1990 prod. Exp'd lathe, mill, fo,.l\.1r. Sny. dcr or apply at &42-1936 _,, o;;2~31/g'' • · Do YoU know all about data 2nd shift, KeypUnch e:1.-per. Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa surface grinder, etc. · 144.J Supcnor Ave., NB BABYSITI'ER for 2 glrls. I •-Wll ... ~-'"'"'""_"' 1 enll1•, Punch <:arcb or paper .i-eferred~ E H GROUNDSMAN. Cole Instrument Corp. NURSE'S AIDES needed, ·-~~~: 11·~= ro:·i f~I: CLERICAL w~ kZtai =~~~ -t~fJs~RlT~R -. G~~~i8s PLEAD~N alM Pla='ve. C~t ::~~a c!trac~~. ~o~ 5~·9718. tra.i~ to; a company using! 6 mos. exper. & related 16J•s=• P-· -ith l\.fACHINE S""P help wanted" ,.:do."e:""'l•:::·~~-~~=-1 or su_,ying one 01· niore o edu " -ri · I .,. ,.,.. .,.. """' .. .., ·1: BABYSITI'ER. Older Y.'On1nn the above products? Intel'· cauon, .,....,.e-up, SJmp e Send wtittcn resume to Sad· Operator for lalh.e, mflling NURSES A.ids -all •hifts. occrui. e\"<'S & ovt-rnighl. ASSISTANT _ .. · · · · th ink line drawing & operate n1achlnc or drill .,.,.._.. Beverly lt1anor Co n v cMt.·u 1n JOIDll1g a team at ''slat'' camera. dJeback Valley Uni l ied ~ ... ~~ ... inust dri\'r "'/O>A'n car. rumi training councs for e INPROCESS School. District, Mr. Shinkle, 642-1391. 858 Production ~Ital, Capistrano Bftch. 613-1737, 534-1180. Pmec offeni penna.nmt em· sales operations and systems INSPECTOR 24618 Ctirlsanfa, Mission Place. Newport Beach. i86. BABYSITTER -high schJol ployment, pe.id vacations personnel on how to get the Viejo, Ca. 92615. DettdU.nc MACHINIST TO 0 L NURSING girl, days, Crl,\f area. alter 6 months, plus one most from the best data 2nd sh.If!, 2 yrs, exper. July 12. lt~R. J?aY work, Call LVN FOR RELIEF .Call 67l-OJ76. \\·ccic po.id time off at Olrist· entry syst.l'ms available? lf Inspect cables, e h ass is• H •1 Iii u __ 1 for interview, S . 9 P f.1, M9-J061 BABYSITTER needed for 3 nuls. com)'.l6Jl)' pajcl life, hos-)-'OU get along "1th people circuit boards. etc. Olpl • Y ~ eas 548-5435 children 7_14. San Juan pital. surgical medical and and have experience ot the e RECEIVING Service l -'"-"CMA~II>-~M7o~TEL.=~--I 2 OFFICE GIRLS Capo, pool avall. 493-2689 de111a1 benefits-. Execllent I !YJX' "·e are looking for, INSPECTOR Is looking ror women to Apply Executive suites NEEDED BAB\'SJ'J'TJNG & lite hotn;c.. ;:!~rig pot::.tions and ~fs~~~ 1~e v.ith &alary 2i;~ti~g =~t =~: e~~: ~=· &Sal:~~e~dv~ 2080 NCwport Blvd .. C.l\t'. Radio telephone dispatch kee~. call al!er 6 pm. PERJEC e ELECTRO tising exper. helpflJI. Musi l\fAINTE.NANCE ~arpenter -. Must be 25, able to drive !IGl-9435. \\'Ill perform a varicly or MECHANICAL have car & typewriter. experienced, ,JOumeyman Apply Jn Person · "Bac--r7bo-y-·"D"oo_r_m_a_n-I clerical du1ies including 1yp. ASSEMBLERS 547-31195.. level carpenter. Cap8:ble of YELLOW CAB CO. lrJR" various )'("port~ and BUSINESS SYSTEi\1S repair.c o n st r u c t 1 on & 186 E. 16th, Costa Mesa Apply in Person 1naintalning department files till3 i\rnistrong Avenue Jst & 2nd shifts. All level HOTEL Reservaikln Clerk, alteration or Sc hoo 111~;;;:;~,.:::::::c===~ ALLEY WEST and records. A major por. Irvine !ll(hlstrlal Complex positions open °"ith. a min. 6 exp'd, Alrpoi1er Inn 1-lotel, buildings and [ixtures. Ap-08/GYN. oUice requires "106 W Oc f lion or the time 1\'ill be s""nt Snt•I• .,.o, Calt'f. ~0,-nlOs. related ex per. hvinc, contacl Dick I-Ian· ply in person Capistrano back office gil'I, al90 front " ' ••n ront on data ll_roct?Ssing input';nd An eq'~j' Qpportu';rl;y e DRAFTSMAN nan, 833-2110 Unified Schon! 0 is tr i ct, office & iniw·ance girl. Newport B•ach ou!pu1. Requi1-es ex celJen1 cniploycr mi f I yr. exper or related school· HOUSEKEEPER, care of 26la:i Victo1·Ja Blvd., Capo Please send resume to P.O. Ask for !I-tanager clerical {'XpericnCf'. Apply ing incl. logic drawina: &. an home & 3 children, 5 days a Bch. Box 3992• Long Beach. BARl\fArD -family t~ or conta<:t ; Data Proc•sslng interest in. \earning P.C. week. Own transportation. MAINTENANCE 0 UT G 0 ING rec e J> bar, 5-18-9242 VI k k I s T. Knight Control Clerk work. Tunlerock area. 9~3942 SET UP MAN tionist/Girl Friday for busy Lounge. 1791 ~; Nev.,--pon (T14l 541).8340 F I d' o Co d • PLANNER or 83.l-3893 alf 6 PM. • sctiool office. Sclf-starta', 81\'d,, CTll PERT EC or en ing range . nta ---------Penon v.ith niechankal ~. must type. Shrlhd desirable, pl'OCe'Slrini; nm1. Knowledge BA degree in Business ·---------1 Pf'!' 1 k!am set f BAR.lttAID • Family type of 10-key adding machlne. Adn1inigt:ration \'1th 1·2 yrs. · 0 . ·up .0 12 1110. Start $5600 . )T • liar, ~92-12 Vt k k i , s BUSJNESS SYSTF.lt1S Ac<.'OUnting &/or data entry producUon control exper. INSURANCE SALES ::;umc~~ecn:~~ ':::1~\13443 Pacific View l.ourigc, 1791 !~ Newport exp. drs1rable. Call 5-~ background helpful. Equal =,:~~'--~---Blvd., Cl\f. 17112 Annstrong Avenue or 64&i42:> for app't. or !lend If you meet any of these No c.."p nee., earn while you Oppty Empl,.._.. Appi,y 630 PARKING attendents neat BEAUTY Opcralor ...,./or Sanla Ana, Calif. resume to Integrated Da1a qualifications & are looki:ng learn part tlml? eves & \V 1-th ~t~·M -appearance, )8 or over. ;tho f n ; Cl . nn cqu:i.I cpportunity Corn., Box ,-11. Costa !i-lesa, for a position with a com-Im · . • . • 1 • a esa. 644-1700 es t 5.15 \\ ut o 0\\ flK, assiqUC? t'mployl?r m/f ... th t ff '".' ds, full tlme "'hen qua11-MALE Hel Wanted Ken· , . . Coiff"-CM "'·"' =~ -•1 92627. _pany a ol ers: fird "P -·· • ~. ~ e E I t · tuoky Flied CMckcn, 693 S. PART TIME TELLER 6. 541).8182. CLERKS DAY 1\·aitress °"·anted. apply XCe en Fannel"!I I~surance Group Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach. 2"~B°'E"A~l/T0=1'°et~A~N~S~.-w~/~so-mc-I MARKET BASKET in person. Lo"'C!s BBQ Pit. 1 benefits Ed Lani * 540-1834. Apply after 1 pm. Exct"llenropportunlty tor an rollowing, hotel salon. fla\·e imm«tlate openings 30j6 Bristol Cl\f. e C • • MANAGER TRAINEE experienced teller to ...,'Ork -___ Jro-__ 253_4 ____ ! due to rcn1ode ling in 1he DELTVERY OF DA I L Y OmpetiflYe ~ ~ rt¥-* 30 hrs. per l\'eek Mon-'Fri PILOT SUND Y ONLY TO F~ paid. Join !he exeiting In N' s-~ · 0,...n,,.. County,-, fo " ,,._ . A 1 pay _, ., our ewpon ,.,,..,,. · -..,,~ '"' ' " NEWSP RRIE PERSONNEL Wu1~d of fashion with top. "t h pe-1iem:ed: APER CA RS IDl lltt. ta: " ust ave a n1inimum of 1 JN SA.i'l CLE l\.1 ENT E e Modem 1"'~V ll"&C. notch company. College deg. )T. tcUer experience. 9Jould romc? It 110 lhe qu.iekest & BOAT son1etln1es lhe nl o 5 I fascinating fielcl ls tashlon /MECHANIC merch:u'lflislng. If you like fvn & !he opportunity !O IUld RIGGER earn up IO $100. wk ad· F.xperle11(."e nee. 0.11n tools. dltional Income Cl\l l ritr. Phone • 615-3880 Sellers or J\fr. PhllliPI!. 1---.Boe"•;'I 'iR-'e°"p"'o'ilr"m:::::o'-n-- 494-3993 or 494--77TI. i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiil j \\'ntcrfront f'Xper. pref'd. Perm. Full tin1e. l\1usl have short hair & clcon ret.'Ot'd, ASSEl\ffiLERS ELECTRO MECHANICAL ASSEMBLERS e Worti with rhe best! VARJAN DATA P.IACHINES. a top quality cornpany in l\fini computer fi eld has ~"ttal openings for electro· 111t'(-!1aidcal a.4.~blei•$. 1st & Zncl ~hlf'I ~. Required n~ 11 111inhnum of 6 mos. l't'lnled ex-per, in onr ot !he follOI\'· lnA' area~: C omponent prepar1t!lon & hAnd aolde1·· Ing &-assembly Of prlnlecl i·ircuil bollrds. 0 I h !' r de~lred areas of expcr. are c11.blu1g & 1v1re \\Tap. • Im111edlate opcnlnQ:t! • ~cellent bl!oolits! e Gro111 11·ith U5~ Apply In pcnion or contact J~y 1''\lll~r VDM Var ia n D•ta M•chin•1 Irvine 21n Michelson Dr. llJ..2400, e xt 336 Equal O~por. Emeloyer Bll.l'kie'11 Boo t Yard, Nl'11 .. port Jknd1. BOOKKEEPETt l.1tg'\lnn. Bench plant o! AJ\A-1 fim1 requires depen· d11hlc:. nccuratc person to Prt'parc repo11a for horn!? office covering alla.spects of operation. !ivy detail. $150. v.k. Call 497-1741 BOOKKE·E-~P~E~R~­ Pan time, 2 or 3 d~ per wic., !Otalin& 60-10 hl'li, l1('r mcnrh, to harwlle account!I rt'(:('IVllble, llN:'olUllS pn~·able billing. A1>ply 176i1 Irvine? Bl1·d., SUite 114. TUS'tin. liOOKKEEPER. P,'lrt tln1c. f::-:p. h..-IPlll! but no! U('f', l\ppl y in per!l<ln 1he Slngt-1• Con1pany, 2300 H ft r b or Bl\'d., Cosla l\lt'sa, 11.11 equal op~rtur~it~ en1ployer. BOOKKEEPER F C CPA ortl1~ all phaM?s of bookkeeping, sale11-payroll lases. Thro trlel belanc<'. k110\1•lcd1te or mA<"hloe hook· keeping hel11ful. 5•18-6733 BOOKf..'EEPiR for gro1vlng company 11'1lh 1\' o r k I n g kno"·tedge of ri a y r o I I , pa,yablee le r~tivables. 5'1Hl3<. * BR"'E=K"'F"'A"sT=--c"'oo""'K Expe-r. Good Pl\)' " houri. l\1usl 00 cll.'M le rw'AI , Ap- ply In Pt'r'!IOn, ~rl &. Sirloin, 59:tO \\1, Cotui:t !Iv.')'., N.B. CARPl:."NTER -temporary. 60 days journeym•n level. Capablt! of I'l'Pfllr con· ASSEMBLERS struction & ttlteratiot\"I of • Gl'OcCry Clerks • Produee Clerk$ e Liquor Clerks • Part tln1e Chccke~ lntervie\\'8 v.<ill be \Ved· nesday, July l Sth, 9 am thru 4 pm. 2975 I lal'bor Blvd. Costa J\lcsa 21.:1: ~r.i00 Equal Oppo11unit:y E111plo~-er CLERK TYPIST CLA-VAL CO. Has lmmecliatl? Opcnirn;:5 in purchasing &: gC'TlCral offi ce F.xf)('r1rn<:c·d Only Ext•ellcn t Co. Bc1\Cfl ls 1\npll' S 11111.4 pn1 1701 Placentl• Coata Mesa (714) 543-2201 Equnl Oppor En1ploycr n1 /f tiOMMERCIAL TELLER Experienced UNITED CALI FORNIA BANK 2712 W. Cot1t Hwy, Newport Be•ch 646.2431 An EquRI Opportunity En1ployer COOK Ut clas.<i dinner ("()Ok w1exp, In heevy tood prcpn.rat.lon. C311 Chef rl't'd. &M-1700. COOi\ • Apply in ~rton 301 N. Tustin. SAntA An1t. AREA. l\fUST LIVE IN • • • SERYICES•AGENCY lnlid~lated tield preferred or type 45 "'Pill. TI1i!I i1 a pro. ARE,\, REQUIRES USE facilities so retail experience. SaJ. motable position Ii; will 01', STATION \VAGON OR Aftrr 5 PM By Appolntmenl a.ry to $833. Aiso fee jobs. eventually ...,'Ork into fuU VAN AND VAL l D Please apply in persok n Accoontaot·Dearee to nsK Call Gloiia Gray 540-6056, time. Exceltent v.-'Ol'idng DRIVERS LICENSE. OON-or contact B. Kral a Control Engr, t8SEE to $12l< Cousrat Penonnei Agent.'Y, ronditiong & fringe benefits. 1'ACT HARRY SEELEY, VDM Sec1lite ~hrthnd to $625 2190 Harbor Blvd. CM. For app'l please call: Mr. 330 W. BAY ST .• COSTA l\fature Sec'y to ~ MA'NAGER TRAINEE Rohr at 833-3600. O";E05.'.,'_.~ PHONE 492-4120 Exoc. Secretary -Out t -•1 · GLENDALE , ...u-._,6 , Sec'y 10 Controller to $750 S auu ng opportunity to Pnyroll-Constr to $750+ advance to managerial posf. FEDERAL DELIVERY n1an, 2 days "ttkly suitable for retired man, gd drivl?r, Bedn! l\fachine Tool Service. Ill E. 16th St., C.l\f. 548.Sm. DENTAL Assistant, cleaning instruclion, x-rays &: some h'Ont office. No ri-smoker, Pref under 30. 644-0611 Varl•n D•t• Miichine1 ' Irvine 2722 Michelson o,. 133-2400, ext 336 F.qual Oppor. Emplo~·er Sec'y/RE U!gal 10 $650 lion In J0.6J days. Our cur· Recept Gen'I Ore to $550 rent n1 an a g c r s cam SAYINGS F c Bk /Con 1 •onn SI000-$1500 mo. Must have · · pr s r. 1~ direct sales cxpc~ence. 500 N Ce ~ Copy Typist ....,,. Call,. 11 9 e\\'po11 ntn-vi-. File & l\.fall Clerks $360 1•lr. Newman 79-5222 Newport Beach Girl ~'riday to S650 MANAGER-COUPLE An Eqi1AI Opportunity Purch1Scc'y. no sh to $600 !i-fanage A ritllintain indi· Eniployer \o·arious P·T jobs to S3.00 hr. vidual storage fadllty in Peyroll/P•rsonnel Clrtc Electronic S.lesman C.\.LL TRISH HOPKINS l~unt. Bch, New 2 BR on ~lust be exp. In m~ DENTAL Assistant Exper. JERRI \Vlll1TEMORE s.ite apt. tree + Wary, Call all facets of Pt\)'roll records ('hail'liide to \\'Ork 15 to 20 1$17K 488 E. 17th St. (at lrvinel Of weekdays ~l!nl.. (straight t1me, ineftltive hr11. ptr 11·k In Newport Experienced Suite 224 '42-1470 l\.tANAGER trainee's/AsSJ'll. pay, job time-, labor <ft.ttrl. . Beach pt'llcllee. 646-2481 Highly l\totivn.tcd ..,_ Al'-~ 11 A I • I bution co....,,·~ 1n t -\\·esrctiff 1 --w• Ml +a '&"' 1 ntanagers. pp y a ... er pm . ...,~ pu 0 F; NT A L A s 11 I I I 11 n 1 , Kentucky Fried Oiickc11, prep.) &. aD retOrd k~ chaiNildc, some front desk, P~l'ICI ~~ncy JANITOR 69J S. Coast H"'Y·· Llguna for the pcnonncl fllnto&n. full lln1e lnclding Sat. F.xp 1651 E. Edinger. S.A. . . Beach, 2929 E. Coast H"'Y· (In&Ul'Ml<e, unk>n benefits, pref_:__Salary_!>f)C.2!:_~335.'.l._ (Mnri<.,211!..£.tnter' F~U hm<", Pofl\IM>n includes Corona d~I Mar. ii'Orlcmcn·11 comp., Pttll>fllK"I '"-.>V tile noor &: carrict 1naln1en. . foldersl \\'<' lll"e a pt'Ol'nl DF,;:"'TAL Astihi:I. 1 yr. ex· EMPLOYMENT a ni~c. Iniitied, opcnini:. Park l\IAN to ...,·urk tu!! time in ncnt fuml1 urc mf w/xtn1 perienet. full lime, Foun· Lido F1uphip Conva.l~ent ren111.I yard. Neat m appear. ·ki nctftl •·. ~-lain Vall~v. COUNSELOR Center )V/ncat handwriting. \Viii \l'O\ ng co on11 .,.;..,.- Call 839-9660 Due to lhc "Xpall!!lon of our 4 .. -Fl hi Rd NB train. Apply n10ma, 1930 ftls. Schaefer BI'OA. Inc., o ENT AL A~stant. r~-orrlrr, 11'1' 1\·tll tntln ~h111·11 JtJ .1:'2dQ14 i Newport Blvd., Of. ~~ ~llton 'Y818!M~ Call perlcnced, chlllr 11idc. X · Cl\l"('('r~rlen1ed fl('l'SOll to in. MARKET BASKET ana or app t , Rays. Spanish helpful, fr-lcrvic\\· & screen applicants JANtTOR for lull .lime oWce HM immediate ~nings due PEOPLE ARE f!llCI lngt' benefits. 8.15-2383. fol• natlono.l!y·kl1011'11 com· clcnnup. l\.fust work hard & to remodeling Jn Oraagc \Vhen you call on them ll DENTAL ASSIST' ANT fX\l\l<"S. Call Jcllfl Brown, be r l' Ii ab l f'. Expc!-ri~ County area: 11!1 ,AVON Represcn1a1Jve. Orthodontic orrl~. \1• 11 'i M0-6055, Cou1aJ Pe"90nn('I prefcrttd. Please contact. . l ~u 11 have hln & make traln, typing nee. Call ~· ~ Hlll'bor Blvd., iCN PhfU'maceuti1?8.111, Inc. SERVICE DELI CL.ERK friends 1ellln1 our famowi 832-5060 =""'===---~-I 2727 Campus Dr., Irvine, n4 We IU'e tee.king &n Individual procluett:. To learn how euy · ESTABLISl lt:D janitorial 811-2500 who Is familiar '"'Ith It Is to start. call: DENTAL Au;mnt • Chair. 00111pen,y WM1' good men equal oppor1unlt)' emp)oyM-prePtrtd foods, etc. 5'16·5341 or $40-'ltMl 5idc. At leaS1G1110 c;11p. 11.B. lo full ti & part time llN't1. S.1&-3MO fS.10 NTI., p: r maiw~ lo L JAl'lITOR, Ille maintenance, rRESil >~ISff PERSON .... ~~.:. sales opportunity 5-8 pm). E _, e.mp ~n I/time. Over 21. Apply In An C"xptrlenced filll pel110n '-"lll'tl'l'.r night, 1:30 p.m .. i>E'NTAL 11\"GIENIST for xpenentetf pref!'rrcd, but peraon fluntlngtOn Beach lo CUI, rlllet. and displa)' Tuc"ay, July 17, ISSO ~all I H fl()f HJ!Cntint. Wiii trnln Cc..nv,Jescent Hospit!l)88U fish. 1-Iotl Importantly, \\l(l E. 17th. S.A. 541-MM. ehlldren·s A.,.,.... st n un· rlghl men. Call 6'1&-8363. norlda St .• 1$.8 8.41-1515. art ~ki .... indl,iduala °"'ho Ylll9ll tJnotnn Bt'ach. 1-17-2566 • EXPERIENCED •-"~ ·-&-· 1.1111urance JUNIOR SALESMAN1 CAIP dcal directly with pe<>-DENTAL AMl111atll • Oral secretary, call for ap-Earn _ .. _,.,,, -r week ple. Rulty, Inc surge!")' & X-ray experk!nce. polntmtont, 496-2114 •-... ~ Immediate opening. 6'U161 (70 V.'Orkll\lt lf!Pr IChoot •nd Qualified applicant' apply R.E. SAJZSMEN DENTAL recepUonllt tx· Ft-;i:.v ex~~~ on Saturdtl)'I getting new \\-'ednad•)'. July 18th, 9 •m Why oot 11wk In Ult hottnt. CU.ltomen tor the DAily thn.i 1 pm a r • a 11 u n t I n1 ton !"rienood 3 ~· per v.-·ttk. mach~. To $2.2.i hr. Pilot. Thia: hi' not a pa~r · ~ch/Fountain Valley. L<i I All types. Free estimate• C.11 MIH82!!. i Plumbine If yw are a 100)-over 25 ~hool bulldtn.-11' & fbclul't'•. a11d v.'O\dd llke a fun 30 hr ply in per"°" Caplslrnno v.~ job °"1th a !tl'l11lU f\lrt !tied School D I 11 I r I c I , COST ACCOUNTANT Local dtvi•~n ot Mt1 mr~. co. need~ accountant, f'Xp. In job l'Olll ltJa. Prt~llae pn.. 1ltion. Salary to UK. Ca.II Olorla Grl\Y, ~. CMst· al Pf'l'IKmTM'I ARCncy, 2700 llt.rl:IOr Blvd., Cr-1, Call n4417 · A.m"'o' CEN"'e•.~8ni1,~. CM route and don not Include 2975 li•tbOt Bl vet u1 train )'OU! Call Pf)R DENTAL o!lriM:ant 1vtrn1n1. "-";!:"..'.;...... " d<'l lverles or collecting. Colla MM& ~lcNnmco, VI t. LAGE ·nu1n1 I )-T expcr, In gen'! -~=~:;::,=~-\\'1? have optnlnt• In South· '714: 54~3282 REAL ESl'ATE, 9ti3-458T denUsuy, 49J·U78. FIBE RGLASS WC!$1 Cmta Mesa and South !"iual Opportunl!y Emplo)'er &tmke Room For o.dcb'" PLUMBING REPAIR No job t.oo •ma ll • • g.l2-3JJ8 •• , Stu kfle Item .•. -f.U..$678 -' and nowlt)I comptlny, pleue 26126 VlctOl'I• Bh'tl., cqm• and kif! u11, 9 to U:30 Capl1trano Beach. AM. (jo(den·• )laa1c Y.'1.00, 5 llnt1, 5 day• lot !'J bucks. fl! W. ltih st, CM. tUL Call 6'2.¥18. '-""-"'=-""-'='---- Uke 10 Trade? OUr Tnl.dcr'• Xlnt opporiun1ty tor qu!tllfied lluntlnglon Beach on?)'. f'flt Profit Is attaJned w!Wtn ••. e:tean out the! Janat Par&dl• oolu mn ta: for you! man. lftnd laminating, gel Appl)' now! 968-964,1. )'1)\1 atU lhroud\ result...stt· ••• rum that JUnk Into CUh $ Unrs, '5 day1 for SJ, Call cot1t1ng, toueh 21 IJetc. Min Sell t~ ofd 11utt Buy tbe MW dNt ~Uy ___ p tfot Clauliied "'llh a Daily Ptlot Ol.llifted !Oday •• , 64l-6f1I 2 )'fl txp. ttq .• ,,,,. M. t:lutf. Aat. ~ ad. Call 642-5811. ""'"""'""""'-""'-""""'---·· I ( • , I 1(1] I "'*' -J[ll] I Dll I RECEPTIONISTS rull tiine &: part time JX)Si- tions avail. in1n1ediately. Typing & filing expericnC'e preferred. Park Lido f1l\g· .ship Convttles<.-ent Center, 466 }'Jagshlp Rrl., NB 6'12.8().J4 RECEPTIONtST $550 No lypl.ng. F'ee paid. \VC!rtctiff Peraonncl Agency 1651 E. 'Edlngel', 'S.A. lt.fark III Ccntcr) 5'1Z-8&36 Also ~~{'(! Jobs RECEnlONJsr -Legal officr, typing, Laguna -"-"-''-· 837_-!."='""'=-R EST AU RA NT help: lfost:css. mairl'e'cl, 1~'tlileN, 'valtresses. Phone for appt. Cyrano's Nc"-port Center, -RNs .t. LVNs FlJU. & PART Tl?.lE 546-1966 ROUTE SALES Large National Co. Is looking for pem1ancnt lllablc proplc . Excellent starting: ule.ry. If interested Cnll: 114, n4-033o *SALESMEN* Do you lake "Sal~mcn wnntcd" eds wil h a grain of salt? Can't aa.y I blame you. I fol lowed up a few n1y11CU in the past. The job seldon1 lived up to the clnim in the ad. Do yoursel f a favor &. f')(· pion! this cne. If you'd like to make ST.10 a week hn- mediately, with rin eye to much n10rc in the future. I'd like lo 1alk 10 you. If your qunlUlcatlon!I n1otch our requiremc-nts, this could be the career }'tlu've been looking for. Interview hppointment IG-4 P~i. "'eckdayw, $3182. SALES MANAGER Ca.rttr-n1ln&d lady 10 man- age ,V.ATl\INS \\'holPSflle Distribution C~trr fron1 hl'r home. Suptrvl!ll" t.: supply M.l(>!dadieg. \\'r lroln nt our ~. $700) + ~nmtna eopporrunHy. Call l\ll'K. Pal· tel'IOt'I at 114: 826-:1360. Sain ladles Senior Secretary SH-00, type70, Please contact: ICN' PhruTnacruticals, Inc. 2727 campus Dr., Irvine 833-2500 ,\n Equal Opportunity Employer SECRETARY No shorthand. Handle sec- retarial duties for market- ing dep't. J·landle press re- leru>l.'f':. Company reimbursecs fi-e. Gro"ing company "ith grtoat chance for l""dJ>ld pro- 1notion. Salary to $600. Also rr~~ jobs. Call Linda Ray, 540-fi05S, Coastal Personnel A~llCY, 2790 ~lnrbor ~vd., CM. SECRETARY Fee paid. Good typing & ~horthand can put you 10 \.\'Ork in this 1)rc1tige posi- tion wilh top i\"B company, l::xpericnce in aerosp11.("(' en- gineering dep't. a plus, S1art S600. >\l!D ree jobs, Cali Gloria Gray, 540-GQj,=;, Coast. Ill Per'90nnel Agency, 2790 ~orbor Blvd., C~I. SECRETARIES VOLT ln1t1nt Personnel Temporary Service 38·18 Can1pW1 Dr., Suire 100 NC\.\'tJOrl Bl'aCh 545.4741 F.qnal Oppor. Employcr ' ' ------ I~ ANTIQUE 8Cltct c a r v t! d "'ood fi'llntt, bcautlf\11 fair t1c. 873·1616 DELU>."E GE dble f'a!I~. 11tlll under $2.j(), call 6.a~ O\"fn Wur. FRIGID,\IRE u 1; cu fl. Looks MW A In ;ood cond. soo. 847-9770 KEMofORE rie.ct. dryer. 2 ><e•"· Xlnt cond. S'n . • 963-16$7 • ' REFRIGERATOR, GE 2dr. bot1om frttier, a\'OCado, perfect. JOO. •M--2735. Kt.'"N~10RE R u I o m • I I c wuher $.'iO. Cllll Le; 5.i.i- i"22 After 6 P.M. ) I~ I l I • --c= ,. I~ [ r-doo lli1 I l§l l~""'-""'-s.~J§l I -•s. l§l I -~-~I -.... l§ll _., .. 1@r _ .... 'l§l 9711 l;A~u;_;5,.,~.~; .. ~,..,~~~t;10;~._~~u~-~~:~~"°;1~A~ ..... ;;~.,...~~~~i"°~ -· llifi!/i-k• 910 SUP, at 407 Eu t Edpwtlb!r. Balboa.. Up to 32' lonl:. 10' wlde. $100 per mo.. ('14) 52.>-lU.1 d&yl, r2Ul 987-1336 t\'f'I •61'X ~'SLlP • Avail. Aug. hi. Lido Area • Call: 645-21'20 • • loota, Spootl I. Ski 911 1 IT' WElMAN SKI BOAT - ' 8ef&utifUI. Bel'ki!'ley ~I • .327 , Ole\')' wlth extras. 8ki1, 1 lite jae.kctll, fully equl1iPN1 ___ , and ~ go. \\111 lll!J , olor Hoo.1os Sale/R•nt t40 NEW '73 Vivt Mini Motor Home Fully s.;;1r Cootl\lved "''ith mnac, OV('ll, double slnk, dual "1~. on a 1 Ton Dodge Chas.sill and nluch, ntuc:h moroe. {V~J- $6595 ptwi: tax & Uc $95.61 por m.o. 20~ DC>wn. SI n10. C11.~h l>t"k'e , $7007.70. OcfCITed Payment Price $9t12.78. ·A.P.rt. 10.64. Trucks 961 Autoa, l-1od Imp••·~ FIAT 9711 Aus ... '!!!.!!!• l'AN'lllA -~-----1971 >'OllD ........ XL T. AUDI ·~ IOn I~ and Jin h. i\me.r!;o llbc.Nr:IM• •nd alum. eo.mper. 80U1 19adqd "'hh eittns, rully sclt-O'ln- 11lne<1. Like new condttkln aod must be ll'en to be ap- pri!Clatcd. 23,000 nllle~. \\llll se-U sc~r111i::. • Phooe ~19-<WS • '71 AUDI JOO LS.l<lr. •uta '6'! -121 .,.T .... " 45,001 '71 Pl,TEU 11'8.nii, l'lidu., IO miles, rac. m.L nu Otts tn& ad CQnd. tory "1uTt')i. orig. owner. $l50 ca.II 551-Mt& ~C;-:•,,"1=6•:2-<::'::196~===:;-1°70 FIAT 121 Spyder, Gokl. I 7500 ORIGINAL MILIS AUSTIN AMERICA 11100, &•i2-9130 1-10 pm E•c.llent Condition .......... l'ully .LMdod '71 t AUST!N-Amerlca, XI"' HONDA Coll Ml9s; 6:•, P.M. L'Olld. 30 mpg. 33.<XKI nil. , •WI . $WO or nearest of t er · HONDi\ Cll.r llres! ~ rtt.dlals 6~, & mat< """ $UO used. Ilk• l'OlSCl:IE VOLXS'#AGIN CHIVIOLIT FOJD, ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1-~72;j'Cc; ... ~vy;l.1m;;;,.;i1;.-"84 FAlRLANE w..,,, R/H, I '67 IUG CUI..., Cpo. P/r, I ownc,, newly '£1>11 •· V • A d Po St lrana. I: enc. vs. ~~liOcl>' i $751. ~ Mii -o, uioma c, , .... w ttr'· 1-Jotn. Xlnt 2Dd Cfll" or 557 1975 ' ""' and b<akes,.i~ Alr '"''"'" waaon-13 0 0 , • O>nd., V"myt Root, AMl>'/1.1 ~ after 5 pm r Sl:ffeo, ooe °"'Pl!r, very low FORD ~·rl '72 '-· ii ... ••·v ~-bl m:ltew&'e clten ... a ptn. """' et , ...,... m n. ""' "' ............ new re t · •. One oy,mr, R&.H, grun cam-motor. Wheel bearfn&'t. (683FWX) . ..._ • Pl"1' ipl.rro1•1 • rear bun1per tire!!, battery. Pair of ' ..,.,,._ •<>'JM E -·'ltlo Stevem 15" Coax la I EXPLORER etc. ~· " conu n - 71 SPORTS CUSTOM Super Piharp, 4 SJ»d. rad & h~a!cr. NCI\' 12 it 16.5 tires. SZ700. or br.#t oUer. * 892-1832 * AUSTIN HEALEY now, E""ry kl'1d of """· 5-f;-1820. spealrers, $700. 5-1$..4271. ()fl Arter a. 54M987 ·55 PO!l,SQIE Speedster, '67 vw SQUAltEBACK Alr HUNTINGTON GlEMUN 1 for balance du<'. 549-26~. F18ERGL..ASS, 14' Ski boa/, s.;. hp, trailer $6.i(I. or bc!ll. JOSS A\>e. Carm~lo. So SC, 492-31-13 EXPLORER OF HUNTINGTON BEACH '56 Cll EV 18' V11n; '63 eng. Runs good, tandcn1 \\'his, 1 panel«! & Insulated $&'.l(I. 55l-l31ll, Xlnt cood _,ncw.J)Qul"~lc,t: condiUonlrw, radio, heater, IEAC.t:t 65SC eng,' late ni:ldel trani · 'new-um~·E>c~ntl'Cc>i\-~T Bea h 01 d-~ 170·GRJ<.."'MLIN,-28,000 .n1i.les, -- ax I e , S S 51(} O ft r D\ , dfUon. Mu.t .ell $850. Call l~GTO~"l BEACli xlnt eond., SOOO. or $'100 & '66 AUSTIN-SPRITE '7\ llONOA 600 stick llhift:- Xlnt cond. $650. 19,000 mllr11, $500. 536-6745 6'13-S(H3 after 5 p.m. ' 13' CLASS. open bo\\', 125 mere, $1900./ofrer. •191..8400. ' Xlra prop., good lrlr i\-1 ' oond. 16' SKf boa.I, 283 Chevy & Trajler, xlnt cond, $1300 or beSI offer. 6Ta-8163 18801 Beach Blvd. s.t2-S80.1 HU:0.'1'1NG'f0~ BEA.Cl-I e SALl:S e • SERVICE • e RENTALS e . EXPLORER ,OF HUNTINGTON BEACH '61 111 TON Pickup, V-8, \l'/can1per sl>ell . auto trans, xlnf rubber. $730. 645-3485 alter 7 o'clock pm V•n• 3~;;;;;;;;;;:;;: 118801 Beach Blvd. M2-8803 '73 Newporter DIMtte ]i HUNTINGTON BEACH Surfer MOTOR HOMES Sexy \\>\th Mng \\'l1cels, \\1ick> Comport, Solo/ Rent 920 'CAMP.ER '65 Chev. ~' ton, 4 "" ··;peeo trans, % rear end, nu 1 11hock1, nu 8-ply tlre1, air, 8 Ft. cnb o\'er Open Road $1600 847-6514 '.\VE rent Cabover Cnn1p!!r!l. -Mesa Camper Salelli 2036 Harbor Blvd. Of. &46--4002 Cycln, lllcM, Scooters 92S Sp•edway Bike R:kklen only ~' SM90fl by Danny B<!cker, Barns quick chlnge hub, assorted ll)>f'OCk· ets and gear chang<'s. Best ol t\'eryttiing. --51288 "~ call Bud-Ryder nt NEWPORT IMPORTS , 3100 W, Coast Hwy., N.B. • "'42-9405 MUST tell ea: 1972 Suzuld ·TS 250, m50 ml, like pew, asking $550 or bC'r;t ofter. AFX>llo, Pncesettcr, Bar c n, Jan1borce, Robinhood - \Vc've got 'ctn at KEN DON MOTOR HOMES Oval Tire~. ca.rpets and paneled, porthole' wtndow, Mai1 nn Ice OOx, 11lnk, dlnel\t', Au1on1alic trans., V·8, on 11 Dodge! 0111ssls, (va37009 J. $4895 p!us tax an~ tic 101 N. Jfarbor, S.A. $84.6' per mo. 554--00ZJ 20~(, Do~·n, 66 mo. Cai;:h 1951 FORD School Bus, l\1ed. Priee $52iUO. Defel'red ~i.e. 22', cuslom bit inlo ~('nt price $6635.90. comp!. self contaieed l\fotor A.P.R. 10.85. lfome. Hot & cold running • EXPLORER water. loilet, sh\\'J', stc!reo, OF etc, Excel cond thru out, HUNTINGTON ~· paint, ('ng & tires. T1t1- ly unique. P.Iu.st see to ap. BEACH pree. 714 -<19-J-8960 l.8S01 Beat-h Blvd. 842·.~ 1973 Di.Ko\·erer and Sundial JIUNTJNGTON BEACH Motor Hom"6 for rcnl, make '~2 Doclfll Surfer Ven l'C!H!l'Vations for Sumn1er V-8, Au1omatle, carpeted and 111)\1', Phone l\'liss Bt>nnet "at -pu.neled, low mileage one Bob longp1't! Pon : i a c , ~r runs like He\\'' (2t2· 892-66.51 er 636-'1.f!OO. 1 f'YA1.' ' RENT ,C22' Con1n1anderl SI~ $ms-~ 5 comiort, compJ self cont. plus tax &:. He Gen & air, $18.'lwk. $350 2 $69.01 per mo. "'ks, + Sc mile. pri ply. 20'.1 Do\\•n for 48 1110. Cash 213-596-2472. P1·ice 1~ lax & lie S3177.70. 197Z-1 TON Dod&e 21' mini Defen'('(I payment prlC<! motor home, Jo,1• nll's. $39<lS.02. APR 13.64. Loads or xtru, like ne1v, EXPLORER 83'<-0186, OF ~-B~MW-~~i JAGUAR LEASE A 1973 BAVARIA GOOD SELECTION OF USED BMW's 'Tl BAVARIA t>en10 .,, zOo2 '1J XI02 '69 ""' '69 1600 '67 2000· CREVIER BMW Sall.':$ • Serv'ice • Lea:ring 208 \.V. ls/: St., 8an!a Ana 135-3171 ORANGE COUNTY'S O~DEST ' 0 . SALES-SERVICE-LEASING OVERSEAS •DELIVERY ROY CARVER, Inc. 234 E, 17ll1 St. Cos1a l\Iesa 5§444.1 LEASE A '13 B,\YARIA Den\O • Serial •3132993 for $166.41 per n1onlh • OEL ot' buy fo1· $8.299. Bob Mcl•ren, BMW, Inc.'' (71~J'fl7"Sll24 - CAPRI '71 .1ag_, V·l2 E Type Coupe B. R. 1rroon, loaded. local car ((16278\V), $6666 ~lltu q111" 111 111111', 'Vl\!1J' """' ... • .~ •• " . '71 XJ.6 Sedan "5able Blsqu intt:'f'lor, loaded, ~llill'l't, 13154B\\~. $6789 '°" ll t.11 <I '"'• lll1tl1il '· croon, """ , ,,, '72 XJ6 SEDAN, air, am/(m, elc .. lmn1ac. ~ dl.y11 642--0-152 nltes. JENSEN JENSEN Interceptor ml, very clean. 833-2316 MAZDA lI, lo * Mozdo '7f Rotory * $66 MONTH 36 1\lONT•rs O?EN LEASE lVllr acu!PJ trai!c-hts CAO. ~IR. Ji'RY 842-6666 Hunt. Beach 714-416f-2186 Sff at 2219 "897~ after 6:00 prn. · 1 , take over pymnl• on OAC & Vermont St., ,\nahelm. ·s.;; VW 1300 aq bk xlnl mech '70 CHEVY Qincoww Wagon can bo seen at 515 E. EXCEPTION.AL '66 Porsche, ~ nu Urei n:blt ena PIS. P/B, Pl'!\'ln., al Balboa, 613-5920 ·912 Nu p&int, nu Kooll needA' bo¢y work Sun o:ril. .. !ull cover int. Io.am rebuilt ~ nu casU\a" A_ 557-9589 pads'. Lu& rack w/cow.r. JEEP oil cooler • .nu distributer VW p TUt ~· 2'"way tail aate.1-~--------1 etc. ~2885 e~ or cc, n"':i ~~-n.~torn-=. Tritt hitch I. plug. 546-6!85, '65 JEEP \Ya.gonee.r. Rblt 6-12-4127 Aik for Nancy. GlaSll fenders other parts $2lll5 or oUer. eng. & trans., 4 wttl drive, PORSCl!E '72 _ 914, auto, 5.\7-1898 aft 5.' ' '73 MON:TE Caril;l. gold, clean, air cond, $1800. air, .J.6.cm mi. Pri Pty, $4500 '70 vW BUS Lo ml b!lt white Vlll11 root. !N.'lvel 545--0122 or best o(fer ~ ... 1 ' . bucket .aeata, arn/bn, a.Jr, "71="-°"'TO~Y"OT=A~La-nd'"""'O-.U=-"sc-rl <.vuu. owner, camping bed beau. riding &; cond, mu.st 'I' 6 ~ · 831>-2197 frame, curtains t n c 1 'd , sett famll,y enterg 534-230& Hdtp. all extnu. ,IAN nn, PORSCHE. 1965 SC Qm. SlS:.O. 963-5353. . . • '197-W71 berore 11 am. vertlble Kopis, xlnt oond. '70 V\V. Navy blue. Good ~/~~~~): ~ ~ '56 .JEEP Sta. \Vag. 4 whl. $2800:. Alt. 6 or wknda. condition. $1500. 613-8827 all hp, :x.o c:o:i .. vS, tUroo. drive. V-8, Wg tires, ?tta.ny 49-~lMl I. 1. • ...1 1 ... .:.. · ~•---extraa. !\lake oner. 968-8238. . -----'70 PO.RSCHi:. Sporto. 9llT. •72 BUG, fact air, 22,000 5.l2.-9'1W. '65 N~SON Patrol, compJtly Lo JTU, an1/fm mag, \vhl.S, n1ile•. 4 new radial tires ESTATE Sal "g: 0 ner rebtnlt.· New· tires, top, $5400. 49.J-21Qi. $1900. 645-0316. • ~10 Cbevelle~" 2o~r, J5,oOO stereo. $1»'.l. 645-7969. aft 4. ·59 PORSCHE. Rcbtl eng. n1iles, V-8, air, nu tires & ln,.,ac, cond,. in & out VOLVO brakeo. IJ9SO, 962-0834, " LINCOLN $1900. 613-8423 'Ga CHEVY Malibu. 327 cu in 1973 911-S, WHITE Porsche r· H" INK blt., •aJr """"'· """"""· * 1964 LINCOLN,* Targa, Stereo. custon1 paint Call aft 6 pin Convertible. All power. 714-527-1258 714; 968-3447 Good condition. ' TOYOTA s·o New Toyotas ln..Stock Beat Price IJ1Cl'9CIHS! ~. ECONOMY 10·12~Mir.Au~11u'"""" ""'su7ver:--;c""...,,"'.' ~ .. ~"-' black vin top, A/C. auto,1 ___ ~=~-~~-~-- WHILE WE HAYE 40 ps/pb, 12,lro mL pr! prly '72 MARK 4, whit• w/v!nyl , 714:5'5-o2'1"a4, $2995. 1.op, burgundy mter., fully . '64 BELAIR Chevy Wag, 9 equipt., nm/fm stereo, tilt NEW VIII.VOS IN . ...... air, ps,,pb; runa real ~J:Jkl• mold,, mu.I sell. .... 'ell. 537-f>.110, 64f..4954. ·~ BE(. Air Wagon, V-8, '55 LINCOLN . Capri, one STOCK auto Rldt. Needs a little. owner. Lo M1leaee .. Very $350.00. 91'&-2323. clean & neat. 1t1ake offer. ~'UALmu Sport epe .1 '°'"'"'>-i'°"137"""=~-~="1 · I•-!.' Auto~ Pit., P/b. A/C. Xlnt: '10.MARK Ill, like nu, 23,000 LlllU $]JOO/best offer. 642-3980 mL ~·ncr, All extras: YDlfD ' CHRYSLIR . LINCO; ~ :xe<llcnt -~ ' . ~"Mr. Clarke, ~1471~ 1966, u.-. C,>l, . 646-9j03 Cf:EAN ·s; Oirysler N<w M ST N -.- '67 VOLVO lM s: Xlot htech YOl'ker , all air It po\\·er. U A G oond Needf &Ome body Below1 wholesale, 837-1246. \\'Ork: Auto. 8 trk tape, new r IMMAC. '66 Fastback, 2+ 2, •= H bo c '! -~9303· ""'' 19'0 962-6837 "0NTINENT •L . V-8. 289, auto, RIH , P.S., ~uw • ·merA ........., ar r, ·" . --· · · ""f' . • . A new Urea· & brakes, reccn1 • ·WE' BUY * '61 VOLVO * '71 UNCOLN cng. o'hauL Xlnt cond. !&>;, Very Clean. Exe. Trani. 536-8400. MAZDA """-Alao. . .!.ll.-Suzukl.'J'S 400, only 130 nil., lhown>on\ new, uk'c S925 or best oHer. (213) 891.-888.t aft 6:30. e New Luxury LIFETtf\tES HUNTINGTON 23-25', Immac~ Sip$ 6 "Com· BEACH fort11.bly", air, gen, stereo, 18801 Beach Blvd. S42-8803 pvt mvnr, 838--0900, Tustln HUNTINGTON BEACH 25' EXECUTIVE m o to r ---.=""~O"='- 17331 Beach BL 842<1656 , IJ50, * 507-1571 MARK" Ill "·..,=-""MU=ST=AN=c~.~18~m-pg-. NOW OWN THE BOB LONGPRE US'ED Autos, Uaod 990 · Manual -. . omall v-s, FABULOUS 1973 MAZO ---..,,.---run Power,'""""': interior, 50,lro miles, N""8 paint. CAPRI A IUICK VlnYI •Top, >1""1hc Groen 492-7602 \\'ith 2,000 4 cylinder or V-6 JOYOJ AS tinish. fS47HHS). Lo"'" low 0'66~•"'ru""'sr~AN=G~wl~th--pts/s~ •&' •' .I e BICYCLE SALE e NEW JO SPEED ITALIAN 13JCYCLES $59.95. Boach Bicycles. 806' E. Balboa Blvd., 675-7282. Authorir.ed l ilSJIIKI dealer. K•w•wki Thr" J.50; 'TI; 4,000 orig. mi.: Clean. Mark 495o-400J or Gail ~71Gi (day5) s.57-7461. SUZUKI 185. Oranae. !,100 ml. Xlnt cond. $473 or -offer. 8-12-}.150 C\'(!S &: anytime wkrids. T3 \VOMBAT Maverick , shockl cu8lotn chamber •P.P.'s foat and reliable xlnt oond'., n1ust sell 536-Z179 bon1c Cor l"Cnt. Fully S<'lf CAMPER ronlalncd. 6 l2'-2:l50 '70 ForrJ SUpcr Van, bed, 1!l72 OPEN RoA.d Dodge 36ll. !!>'ink. ice box. d1"eS.!ef', de.sci, $1,9.'iO. 673-8800 01' 847.0138. Dual 1'.'hls, S€'lr cont., 81~ 6. '-""="""'='"'="''-"-'-c,;.=, ll,800 mi. $7700. 968-4514 •n FORD Cho.teau, Blue & OELUXE WINNEBAGO \\'bite, xlnl cond., all extras. "" 29,(QJ mi. $3700 or best of. ~ltr lime. rent 640-0482 N.B. ft'!'. 6Ta-J590. ·59 rono van. \\'/1vindm\. .. , 6 cylinder r;Uck, x.lnt gaa 15' ARISTOCRAT. Beautiful mi .. 44,Cn:J mi, $1500 or bst condition * Relrigerator, 1 "0°'"11c,'·~''-''.....m=-:.""'"-=~~~ * Range &t Oven * Sleeps '68 CHEVY Van. R/H. Good Six, * Sink, * 30 gal. eond!Uon, $1200. After 6 pm, 11-'Sfer Tank, itr Leveling 64&--8529. Jacks, * E-Z Lift llitch '1'164=· ~,,=o~R~o-v~,-,-. -Cn~m-.. -, * Trailer J\1oving Dolly, type, 11•/bed &: cnblncts, Included. * l\thrors In-nice. $650. S.15-2 142 Eve5. cludt>d. -GREAT FUN C,\1\1.PING _ E..'<CELl.ENT '71 FORD Supe_r Von, Xlnl CONDITION _ $1.150. ~fech. cond. $2300 Art 4:30 *: S4S-tl9a * \Vt'!ckday!I, 963-5314. r 945 engine, \viu1 or without -SERVICE FIRST-'67 BUICK Spttlal. Blue. ~UY BELOW p/b, auto. trans, ~ d-, -·p som '"Ill ,.... Ist Street at the 28,000 miles. Ramo, air. Old aft 6 wkdya any t Im e e>.v ••M"' • e • · ''" !"A-ta" •'•• i·-·~. Lady Crom Phllade~-hla WHOLESALE PRICE vlkl'!nds. ' , • roof or landau top, pov•er •:><U• • •• .,, ALL 1973 MODELS disc brak~. style steel 2001 'E. 1.rt Slrref IN STOCK prev ious O\\'r!e.r. Ex lent Harbor v w '67 A!UST;\N_G F'a~ba.dc, 289, \\'heel, radial llres, bucket San1a Ana 558-7871 eond. 114 E. 20th St., ApL • • 4 spd, wide titt1/mags, scats. ORDER YOURS '72 RX2. i\fint --... , >lust i.4, 0.1. 548--0297 aft 5 pm. real clean, J129j. 6'73-8577 ·~~ '68 11u~_s lSill Beaci1 Bh-U. NO\V. Sell! Goin& away to college. •....-.. pom..·agon, cen· lluntington Beach l !liiS i\IU!>'Ti\NG GUSTAFSON 4 •pd, R/H, 8 trl<, Vhzyl tral air, heator, p/~ p/b, 14• u•• Very Clean, Rc""'nable top. Extras 847~ radio, nu litts, xlnt cond. ~ Olli· 64&61&1 Lincoln-Mercury GOING to Europe! '72•Muda '1970 TOYOTA Con>na, • dr, ll500, 84>-13118 E '67 ,c,oNTINENTAL '68 >lUSTANG GT, 302 4-spd. 16800 Beach at Warner Rotlll")' \\rag. Vlnyl top, auto. radio, very Io w CADILLAC x c e e. n t conchUon. Ex· \\'/air, $1300. Call Dale Huntington Beach ~t\o14 Air. Xlnt. $3.100. :1!~i.ta~~~;; ~ ----------1 ~71is.milea.ge:. Mim sell. 557-7392 Tues.·Thun. ~= !f IJ:.'lJrti~~ "'M""E=1='c=ED=-E=s""'"""'1~E~N=z '68 TOYOTA, R/11, • .....,, EL DOR.ADOS" ·n roNT'L 2 DR. Air, Ol:DSMOllLE Stick. Bucketa, •-M-1...,ns. 14 TO CHOOSE Ant-FM, tilt whL 2%,000 m1.1---,,_·---~- •71 CAPRI 4 spd. deluxe con· New brakes, v a 1 v e s. COUPES.CONVERTIBLES $4100. ~18 e v e 1 : ~ea il Service sol• lnw mL $1900. o' bcsl SO USED 30+mpg, ""'""'27, • St&-7'88. O~DSMOBILE ofloc.. M/\V/}' 842"'615 MERCEDES. '72 TOYOTA Mark II StaU'" DE VILLE$ , GMC TRUCKS Nikki or any day arter S wn--. I }1•• • .......i ~.,::.v1 CORVAIR HON Pm, 846-'l196 --"· u v, eqwp~~ ~ 31 TO CHOOSE DA CARS ON DISPLAY A11e, 6 pm 96:1-22'16 "NI ERS""' Sharp New Car '71 TOYOTA MARK II j]g~~~ 19116 ix>RVAlR llionz.. au1o, ,. V " • OLDS DATSUN 10 KAWASAKI, lOOcc Trail Bos8, .xlnl cond, n1us1 sell, make oUer, 536-0887 or s.42-7388. EQUALIZER HJTCl-f, brand new l" x 2" $100. hllch plat- form for 1969 lhru 1973 Plymouth, Dodge, Chrysler Sta. \\'ag. Up lo 900 lbs. tongue \\-'9ighf . A1ust sell SEiO. Ph: 962-7067 Auto Le•slng 964 1---------D_l_SCO_U_N_T-,-,.,~.,-1-._-"-a-,k-lO $ SALE $ Trade-ins " WAGON .· "CONVERTIBLES Xlnt Cotstl l'hru-out.. ne-.v , 2850 lfa.rl;>or Blvd. AUIO Trans. (903CQQ) ~Jany excellent bOJ:ora pa.int, titta, brake8, JS.50 Of Qo8ta l\tesa 540-116411 Comins In Every Doy $1 fff Oiok~ ol lnteriOno beot oUor, -, PINTO 68 TRIW.1Pll Trophy, 250 ·cc. 8treet model. very good cond. $375. 962.-5849 or '53(;,'6811 "B" Ignition 11y1tcms sa\·cs DATSUNS Ask About Our Unique (Cloth • ieatl1et> COlVEnE U1ed Mercedes L••1• F1tctory air oonditionln: '73 FORD Pintot 2 dr led .. mileage, pl14ts poinb, in-NEW DEMOS 1973 stalls t>aslly, 644-5893 510,5 Pl•ns Full JKM'er -Ololce of: '62 CLASSIC: Clean, $12.50. like new, only 2SOO mi., au10 fOTORCYCLE Ir! (I bike) . s;;o, Car luggage carrier, 'Vinyl CO\'ef' with locks $25. after 4Pr.t call 567-71TI' AlR.STREAl\l-lT SeU con- !nlned. Incl hitch &: brake wiring. $1500. F i r m , 49'2-1579 Auto• Wanted 961 Pickup House of Imports Sto.-.o A>f/FM radio 549-1114.. trans. A/C, vinyl """· Cru:u1e oontroJ 546-36C2 tinted gllWI con1pl., lux 6862 ltfanchcster, Buena Parle '65 TOYOTA l..A?\'DCRUISER Trunk opener ol: more DODGE decor group, $$90. 1ituat BULTACO Alplna, itlnt • cond. smo. ·n &\taco Sherpa.. fast, dependable, $450. &l:Z..2749. t12~ SUPER Ot>an Triumph 650. 5 spd trans. 6" ext. frnt end. IT cxh,1, only 1500 nll. •Must •ell! 64~ T r•ilers, UtiUty 947 f\IOTORC\.CLE :: rail trailer $150 zo F1ov.·er. c.:ir. Auto Service, Parts 949 TOP DOLLAR PAID IMMEDIATELY FOR ALL FOREIGN ; * ·n HONDA CB 175 * • Reasonable offC!I', V\V'S ,f: I111por1~. Rl'pair CARS Call 5.l:;..{1879 o.ft. 6:30P!IJI. '71 HODAK!\ lOOB. Super rn1 R~.sonab!c & tttiara.n1c-ed WE ARE IN Blll &. P~;~~1on1oth·c DESPERATE NEED · pi5tonl!. R(!('Cf valves, 2 _carb. $2-700'! G.---,-""-"""'--~95-0 OF GOOD, CLEAN eneral FOREIGN CARS * 'TI KA\VASAKI * 3;,Q Bi.It' Horn. $500. 673-8616 STOP \\'a."lng your car. USl' TOP DOLLAR-PAID ,\ciifinish ne1v Ac r y I i c FOR OR NOTI 'jl} HUSKY 360-8 8p:t Xlnt C'Ondltion. Lo price of $.iOO. 673-1658. cleaner ruKI polish. Call Call oMcome In to !ec us. 71 ' ' " 2 · 32 31 °' EWPORT 713/128-3397. '13 BULTA()). 350 pursang 1 $89:). 2096 Harbor, OJsla Mesa (Al llamllton) '63 BSA Chopper, clenn & Avlo1 tor SM' 1§1 ·dependable, like ~" Rick Truck• 962 61J..5607 or 5'12-14.§8. ---------1n HONDA T.10, 3.000 miles '69 EL CA1\IINO SS 396, nt'\\' ; Include!! $400. in cxtra8. hrakes, f)ftinl, s h o c k s , • $~. cash 675-256.1 rlutt'h, uphol s1cry, lmmac! 'tll!i TRJmfPfl 1100R. 15,000 61.r-1,0<52~· -------;mi, chrome rrnmc plus ex·r 'T2 C1£EV ·~ T Pickup. p/~. '. trus. '$600-641--03-lj auto, n1;igs. hvy rlty equip, , * '72 KA\Vi\SAKI 500 * 8hcll, 12.(Q) n1i, xlnt cond. ;>::Int Cond. $850 or best offer. \\lhlslc ~aft 5pm , 645-4ii74 'S!J FORD VS, ~ Suprr :12 TTUl\rPH :;{)() Daytona Vnn Cnn1per. P/U l:rnde. , $100 cash do\\'n. take over 1 .,,=...,,=""'''~'"°32~1,,;-:---,--,. . paymls. 494-342!1 •EL CA1\11NO '70, 4 spd, HONDA CL 70 ps tpdb, SS 300, priv party, Like ne\\•. $200 $1800. 6-10-8189 836-1073 er 8.1..'\-.3...i(52 '72 FORD ' PU. Heavy duty )72 RED \'am. 650 ec not 4:<4, r2:-io. :\Ira~. 2G,OOO 111!. t"--e.n 1,000 ml. Sll.iO tlrrn "Good~-=''~~·~"~·~"~,.,-'~'~•7 __ _ call Skip ~ '63 0.IEVY \~ 1011. n1ns :.• '72 llONDA ?.50 CB, 5t000. new tires. Carpe11ter'5 I $325, 96l-'19&t, coll bctv.ttn ,"""~=",,•;;".;.""';ok'=, ""»;;7""""9'7~-,­ U ant I: 1 m. '73 O.fEV, '' T. Pick up, hvy JUMPlr cualm Bonni. ·70 duty w-1<>01 box. $..1100. q, chert')' cond. t.tusl llCe l.nguM '194--5()72 to a~latc. 5:!1-4629. 1if" RANCHERO.~.~v~,,~. ~.~,~s. '71 HONDA 350 Arr. map, camper. llhell. ·Xlnt c:ond .. call before 5 pm $000. 6'73-03)9 .. • • sn:-7593 * '68 CHEVY 1, ron, good co!ld. Must sell. $1'100. or be!lt ofter. 5,j6...()j67, rn OSSA Stllcto Z-iO. Xlnt running oondlllon. SSOO. CAii 644-1403. Jack llo Homo• 935 IMPORTS :;100 \\I', Coast Hv.')'., N.B. 642-9405 \\1E PAY TOP OOLLAR FOR TOP USED CA!t.S lf your car Is extra clean. see us Clnt. BAUER BUICK 2925 J-larbol' Blvd. . Costa Nesa 979-2500 Jl\fPORTS \VAl\'TEO Ornnge County's TOPS BUYER BJIL f\IAXF.Y TOYOTA 1&181.Bt'ach Blv :. H. B<aeh Ph. $147·85.>:i \VE U'UY l~IPORTED AUTOS BEST PRICES PAID I De•n Ltwft Imports 1966 llarbor , C.l\f. 6'1&9303 TOP CASH for clcnn late model t'lll'!I anti lnJCk81 Howard C .hevrolet ~facArthur and Jamborcct Ne\\'fXlr1 Beat h 8.13-0355 JUNKJ.._ca9'1 we ntftt. Free to1\i1Y(, rf1lc clct1T1i~. 2-1 htt. 494-\003 ext G<.i \V.t\~'TF.O VW'S RUNNING OR NOT ~910 or 5.10-4700 Autos, lmportoc 9711 ALFA ROMEO 610's All J\lodcls il Colon to Choose }'rom. :'ir111pJ11 l D.!1!.1111 -:-. . ·" '". . ·~--'. ' . ' ' . un the Santa Ana Frwy • AM/F~t llterro, fverything All In lnunaculate oondition • ' sell S51-IDM> 523-7250 brand new. Call 67l-3004.. Largest aeh!ction in , ONE owner. ·n Pinto lledan JIM SLEM0.,5 '68 TOYO'l'A corona: deluxe, o,..... County .., DOOOE Dart. v-s, :m _ >nnt condition. 10 thous <"" :~"'· Good cond. $050. Nali•n Codlllac '""" air cond, pb/po, ...,., plus mil.., 1,1,825, Pbono IMPORTS AtrrHORIZED DEALER cond.. $59.5. or off er, 492--0312 · MERCEDES BENZ TRIUMPH ,2600 HARBOR BL., •69-co1707RN~ ~ .. vs i~-~P"'L"""Y~M"'"'O=UT=H--I AtrrllOR!ZED · COSTA MESA L'~ -· Wag\)n, , _____ _;,_,;,_;.;.:_ 1973 DATSUN$ M0-9100 .• · n..-... _· ...... air, & an exirU, raCfc &: toe ,,.., P SALES & SERVICE '67 T!UU>JPH T R4 A, 7.;;o-==-.v"-~"..-~~N~-:'I bar. nu Urns, 1 owner 3600 ~ LY. Sport Fury, leu ALL MODELS Jim 51.emoM Coo"cit;b1o, "'11 bar. mags, '72 llOUGHAM ml, ll900 612-7469 '""lne, Make or<.,, tor all o' P:<tras. $1000. 675-m8 paru ~2627 JN STOCK Imports VOLKSWAGEN 4 DOOi 1DOO DODGE Wagon, R/H, · " , P/S; P/B; runs good 1100. PONTIAC BARWICK IMPORTS 1301 Quall Rolls·Royco 'Trod•ln Call 847-5:i66 att 7 pm, 33375 Camino Capistrano N~~::ach '66 SO. BK. $495 \\'hite \\'Ith black vinyl top, '60 DODGE Piooter 2 doot LEAS~ OR BUY San Junn Capbtrano ENTER FROM ?.facARTllUR 1 __ 6_7'_~_72.i~·~'~01"=6'13-~249-1_·_ black leather interior; and hardtop, make ;, f te r . •71 thru •73 Ponl!acs .,, :z3375A:;o~l~:'.5 mog 1971 MERCEDES 280 SE. Rum·~vlaxJ, lull ""'"'s,sa,5 ~FALCON ~NTE RIAOSCS \Vhl5, Becker A 1\1 / F l\t Air. Power wt n do w 11 . e 84&.:w4S e ..-v ' di • le Metallic green. Llke new! (8SlETE) '""" l!arbo Bl"~ s E>rro, ra o "' s reo BEST OFF' ER. Ca I J '69 VW $quarrbac:k, auto, ROY: CARVEi I '6;; to' A L C 0 .-... r vu, al Fair cassette. Bumi orange col-G75-l907 xlnt cond. $150f. ' 1 ftC. rad' N • autotrans, Drive O>s:ta Mes& 546-SOll or. X\11t co1ld. $ 4 4 5 o. 897-6078 ,.__,: .. ~ ... · E. 11th St. IUC' ........ sn-«rro~ eood-Good Urea. 196; GRAND PRIX "2-9980, 1624 AnUgua \Vay, '&I J.IBZ 230 S~ Roadster. \.AIOI.a ,., .,_._..,, · Newport. Concotitse, 1 or a kind. 2 '11 V\V 4U, 26,ttll mi. ·• FORD Gold w/black vinyl top SJ ~-7=------· I tops. n1usl sell lni--... a.<Jklng $2100. '70 00~. df:' vl~I~, Leather tnodel • 1',ully equip. Pvt. ·n 240Z. 1 O\\'ner, nt\v li.J6-.Jl8l, 9G2-'12£3 ""-" 645--3232 or 645--0454 '$eal5, VfuyJ top, tape par1y must aell thint car as radials, n1ag!, a m I ! m '&i BUS reblt 1700 cc ...... ine recorder, Car ,Jg loaded. '67 FORD LTD, R&H, air, .,soon as possible! 5.'i2-r.>.l2. stereo tape, auto, air. lo J\lB .. '73 280 Sedan, aulo, 7 NA_..~ .,..... """"'" ~~.,· . $3700. 49'.Hll07 1tereo tape, a""ail now. iriJO. 'T2 PONTIAC Cat a I In a mlleagt'.' $3650. 642-3392/ months, 14,(Q) mlle11, lite. '-~ ''"" """'Y ... u111. 68 833-<ri80 wk-days, ~1946 67'";,-3008, blue, p/\v, $799.'i a;2..9178. $650. 6T:>-fill.6 ~LEET W 0 0 D eve l wknda. Broaujham, P/ window8, "\Vhllo "'cphan"·" over. You don't ~ ... • .,..,., .... '70 V\V SqiliiflliCX.-lii'ind t 1'1~'Prl . .a.lr,._pwr, '70 =RD .... -.:. -·· SOii ru· . am/Im stereo. air, vinyl i:.1 o.a 111::;1.-u ..... ~u U . cl _ I eroo, 1;,u. • prty rv .__.aie • . top, $3 700 or bRt cllr running your botl:se. TUrn "Draw Fast" \vhen )'OU new l'efl, air, tuper can. 9Q..Q003 afternoons. mileage, sell cheap. Nu 962-6988' · them Into "(:ash" ... M!ll place an ad in 1he Dally 833-1087: ~eve. ~ .. "' ""' valves brakes &ood eond l:<i;C';i~;;;,-;;,,,---~-1 them thru a Dally Pilot Pilot \\l.a.nt Ada! call llO\V A Kood \\•ant ad is a good t1. w-· 1• ELDORADO '$14.50 'MS-8852' · ·n GRAND Ville convt lac. cla95lfied ad! 642-5678 veatlT)Cnt Everything lncludhig turt-'""" • ' ' air, tape pla,ver, actua'1 mi. ~=='"'r~~~~~~-~;;· ~~::~~~;:;~~·~ij~=== / ~r. Da.)' 642·3Ul eve& JIG FORD a.ia.-oe .... soo 4 dr 21.000. beau. COnd. orig 673-7778, . hrdtp, Air, p/s, di a c . owner. $2,600. ~ · TA G · E-.:>-~.k, 1986 CADIU.AC CPe. df:Ville. = New tires. ,SS50. '73 LEJ\tANS Delux '4 door S R. AZ. ~ '-!' Xlnt lh•P'· S!,llo. See at SUPER 'Cle 1961 F1 rd air, p/a, p/b, B<qand,y: ' BrCU.YJ.l'Oll.ANr---T----~ '7th St&: Balboa mw .. NB. auto trl.n. ::;,.. I.Dre a~ • 6000 ml. $3800. 64lr1650 alt ~ ,:ti': M Ywr Doitr AdMfr GutcN 1'< sur.":,u.. caJI aft 5 Pm. 673-1738. Must• see t~ Qpredate. c°fii1;.;,5·c_6'13-41311;;:;;~;,·'""""'"""~~-~Nl ,, V A«ortlfng to the S!ort. "Y" ocf, 11 ~ '67 EL Dorado. Viit)l1 top, Gary, 641>6185 aft 7. 70 GRAND Prix, $2700., nu . 2• ,_11•1 To develop .meSS09e for Friday, .._18.U2P • full JM)\\·er, aJr cond, amffnl '70 FORD· XL Convert, P/B & tires, v/top, PIS, 6J.73-80.a2 reod"#Ol'dsc.cmspondlrgtorunbm stereo, reblt q , $2400 ..... A ..... aeat•' ~ Jape air, am/tm, 4.lM, prlpty ofyourZodiocbirthaflJ\, SG-0122' ~-~ ... 3 •'<'<..U I 831-1545 ' 1 Put 3t c.ontoct 4I ~ '68 'ELDORADO, all -..., p./pb, lmmac oond. $211)). 1964 aONNEV!" ~ :ze. 32To 61TodoY'• ..... ~. 83Q-.S'f48 ...c. Conv., 3 Don't 3J I.. ~)Sat1si1.& cruJae control. 59,000 mi, •n COi.JN'mY Squk.e great concl, $275. ; =., ~~ ~liOI' :; ~lculry $2650. 551·%J05, 49'J..3971. .shocks A brakes Pty.'fi.w 613.-1·194 76 ~a-tlfl" ,3,7 ~"," ... ,~1 ";";;;;;;;; '10 CAD. DeVJlle. Loaded, Xlnt cond. Air. 's 3000·; '67PON'J'.lACTempt>sldelux ........ .......... "' 1 · Xlnt oond. Best ctftt. Evt1. ~ radio, all' $695 • .rt 5· 30 402 I Toe Jlo-c.orr.. 61Acffl'"'-~1871"'8850 di.ya. •72 G"'•'"•, ...__._ Sq"'-Olion "'ay, Park LkJO, NB f~ 39Y-ftll(.«t r~,. ,..,..,~ u.uii: 101t,1.-. AOAttroct 70~ ~ 1 0'\1NER. ·Cadillac w.,.._ fW.1 tJO'A'et', air, '68 CATALlNA9Pu.\VllgOI\. ;ir,-• !~=<Ot ~~·• Convertlblt. Grett lh•pe. Pl\\:, 1tirel. ndia.11. Below Air ronrl. PIS, I:' brks. lJ h .c:l I..... 73Witlt $400, &16-1707 Book. lt&-0783; 979-0850 $973/Best ofitT. 673-18. t;r::......lc ~~ 5~~ '11) CADTU.AC Coupe de 1973 GR.AND Torino WagOn '87 GRANO Prix 3 speect fl.Ill 16Aeft!M AIY--' 76~tlnf V11fe, -~I ()O\''er', xlnt cond. 1"ded, r.ck A Puett 7700 J')(M'tT, alr. clean, xlnl Ccl1cl 17Yw "7~ 77~ S'™I. 673-89 mUea. $3995 MT-1621 ' $6l0. ~ • ~:~kttllq ~~' *" ~~ 'St CAD CIJV, a.JI xtrM Inc. '61 10RD LTD \Va1. Fae T·llRD 20Mia 50A IOTN air, ltece11tl)' painted, $.EIO. air, I pus, 30,000 mi, 2nd,, _____ ..;,;: __ _ 21 ~ Sl ,,, II Of ~1531 OW'ntt ...... -AH• '·69 • 22A Slt~ USuptrikial ' '.,._,, -, • DR F'U.11 po¥.'tr, must """"' """' ., ..... _ CAMAIO '69 LTD, 2 ~. """''· cood, .. n. s.. a1 Texacc s""°"' ~AM ~y-t4TO'O'Otd 1----------1 PIS.P/8. Air. Jade Gl'M\. Cor Bell!Ch BI vd f: SJ..58.1-4 · ~~ ~~wtr H!:.itkiri '10 CAMARO. Xlnt cond. $139.). Qria. Qv.ner m..o163 Yorkt<M>n. w rr. Mll)'flo~-er "''lr.3~1\A . On Udo Ptnln., .100 h. r1'0n1 bay, 64'-2251 Afll'r 5 Pl\I. ny ct.,, la tbe B£S'(' DA fTo run an ad! Don't delay, . call today 64~. vtlGO 11Fttm 51o.,i,. 17Lfol Vrry lo\v nillf11ce, $2399. FOR aale 1966 Ford Galaxy VEGA I~ CltJ.;\'. f;I Can1lno, $600 '72 ALJ<"A Romeo O.T.V.. AlfQ;.2J g~ 5:~~ =~~ \\'kda,v& 97Ml1' •It -~, 2-door, p/a. p/b, air cond. ";:;;'7.:;:;::":'"':':'""'.""---1 <l.~G:i7 •Jr. 5. yl!llow ~·/blk, 5 ap~I. 1por1 'uif 11 )Oc;,, '°'" tollfk"""'Y ~· &!lltlnte. J $100. can ~7623 J973 v&e;;\ Kambo. k" "' The fostest llr8w ltt ltM? \Vest. 1•1J1n1, Bihnrln llhock1, nu ~ io. I&. II\ 7 fll ·e.s Z.28 CA}.tARO; 43,CQJ '67 "GAI..M'Y 500" GT, tinted g11111 c • 4 ipd • .• 11 Dnilv J 11lot CtaS&lfiM ~lichelln XAS, must 11el1. ----~~=·'"'"'=='~':':''&:::<lool==IJ3l=A:d:":'~:::'-':::N:":"":':'~=t:;=~----n1Ut1, xlnc cond. New tlrn, ~ mllft ~ ecw-.t cuh.or pjOO. :b: ~~$ ltlt. ,A"'d"' . .:;~"12'-'~=:_· ____ _,_6:::1'-=.· :::21'1!):::·::_______ n1ap. ~ mo pmll. H>-JfiOT, 6T3·2988. · « I ! • •• ' 7 • • San Clemente Capistrano EDITION Today'i!i Fl•al N.Y. Steeks VOL. 66, NO. 193, 4 SECTIONS, 62 PAGES ORANGE .COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1973 TEN CENTS ---Mesa.n Escapes-Death as Boat-B1owtr1:o Bits-. ' A Costa ,Mesa yachtsman miraculously escaped death today when hls 4\.foot cabin cruiser exploded in its Balboa Marina berth, blowing his blazing body Into NeY.'port Harbor "'atcrs like a human firebomb. ~The $20,000 vessel "'as a total loss rollo)Vfng the 4:55 a.m. blast, but its skip- per was luckier. Edward C. Dcorr. 31. of 463 Fair Drive, • ire .f!anch Sltootittg \\'SS listed in stabilized condition at Hoag Memorial Hospital shortly after he was admitted. Dazed and In shock front burns and lacerations. Deorr instinctively began S\l'imming :i nd started across the 100- foot-wide harbor channel toward Linda Isle, screaming for help. "I lit a cigarette and now I'm over here on this boat dock and I don't kno1v how J got here." the sturmed victim told Linda Isle residents \\'ho raced outside to · rescue him. Ne1vport Beach Fire Dcf,artment personnel said people Jiving at 98 and 99 Linda Isle hurled out a bouyant boat sca t attached lo a rope and the injured, struggling man caught it. They towed him in, wh.ile Newport Beach police and the Orange County Harbor Patrol iesponded to help. azes Sh@riff to ·Ask ' "-·~~~~~~~~~~~- Harbor Patrol Sgt. Harry \Vright said the fireboat was !)n toutine patrol when.a sudden red glow lit the sky in the direc- tion ot the Reuben E. Lee paddleboat restaurant. "We "'ere the first units on the scene and started pumping water on it," he said. The blast, Sgt. Wright added, disin- tegrated a 12-!oot dinghy atop the shat· tered cabin structure in "'hich Deorr lit 11 cigarette, apparently i g n I t In g ac- cumulated bilge hones, according to firemen. Ambulance crev•men on thc scene by this time splashed the blast victim with purified "'ater to "'ash a"'ay the sail by ·lltls lime agonizingly caked Jn his cuts and burns. Oeorr "·as also given oliygen for shock and smoke inhalation, aggra\•ated by liis panickey s"•irrunlng. He surfercd fi r11t and second degree burJls o\'cr hi s b..ick, chest, neck and shoulders. in addition to lacerations sus- tained by being blasted through the debris. . Names or .he destroyed boat moored at 201 f;. Coast llighway and the Linda Isle residents who rescued the victim ?.'ere not immediately available . St. Louis --Personnel .--·-- Man be Charged Unit Burns OVERLAND, ~10. !AP) -Fire swept through the sixth lloor of the ~filitary Personnel Record Center in this St. Louil suburb today, destroying thou.'8.lldl of records on pre-1960 service personnd. By TOi\I BARLEY ot !tit DlilJ ,llol Sllff Orange County Sheriff's Deputies said they v•ould seek a murder complaint to- day against ranch hand Robert Carl "\Vhip" Slatton . 41. in the alleged slaying \Vcdncsday of <in Ortega Hot Springs trespasser. · Slatton \\'as lodged in county jai l \\1ednesclay ni&ht after treatm ent at the Orange U>unty ~1edical Center for cut s and bruises he received in an ap parent Hight from Uie shooting-scene, deputies said. "IC \Ve get our complaint tod ay l\'e y,•ill probal>IY arraign him in municipal court sometime Fr.ida.y." Sheriff's Cu pl. Jumes Broadbelt C<Jmmcnted this 1norning. "Our investigation inlo the shooting is still· going on." 1 Several witnesses to the shootout on Starr Ranch properly off the Ortega High\\'ay have already identified Slatton as the n1an sportin g a "'hi te sombrero. gun belts and revolvers who told them he owned the land . flashed a badge and ordered them to leave irrimediatcly. \Vitnesses said that Dennis Glahn, 21, of La Mirada, was one of several young men who told Slatton that his badge meant nothing to them nnd they intended to carry on enjoying the 110-degrcc waters""3t·the·San Juan spa.· "They said -Slatton shot Glahn ·at point blank r8nge through the chest in the ensuing Cracas, ran for his jeep and fled (rom the scene. Deputies said they traced Slatton through the license number jotted down by v.•itnesscs arrd ~nta~tcd him al Starr Ranch headquarters about five hours later. Officers said the ranch hund sur- rendered \Vithout incident. Officers said Slatton, 31671 Mesa Drive. Trabuco canyon, suffered minor injuries when hs jeep overturned but he was able to right the vehicle and return to the ranch hou~. InvestigatOrs. said Slatton had no more right on the Hot Springs property than the youths he contronted and was not authorized by the Starr Ranch to gua i;d IL Their records show that Slatton was due to appear Aug. 9 in South Orange County 1\1unicipal Court to ansv.w charges Of posing as a deputy sherif!. auault with a deadly weapon and possession or a blackjack. nme charges were filed after an alleged incident Feb. 12 at Ortega Hot Rents Rolled Back BERKELEY (AP) -The Berkeley ci· ty council has rolled back rents to their August, 1972 levels and frozen them there for 4S days. QUJCK RO UNDUP FOR MUSTANG Helping you save is a Dail y Pilot classified goal. Look at a typical bargaln you could find : '70 MUSTANG Grande. Air. pis, p/disc brakes, 1lnt. cood •• l2250. (Phone No.) The flrll classlfi<,d1 ad reader · who came to look at it bbught the car. He's hippy; the advertlatr's happy; and the Dally Pilot wu happy to help lnlo the bargain. tr you have a barsain to list, call a O.lly Pilot Ad·viaor. She'll be hap- py lo help. The dlrecl line -112-1671. Springs in which bathers cootronted by 1hc colorfully clad ranch hand said he drC\V a bl ackjack and struck several of them \vhen they refused to leave. An officer said a bather told ·him : "it v.•as like a scene from 'High 1\loon '. Here this guy can1e up, legs apart and hands ISee SllOOTING, Page 2) Sewage Spill Quarantines Creek Lagoo1i TI1e San J uan Creek lagoon has been quarantined to swimmers by the county health department as a result of sewage seepage caused by Tuesday night's fire at Kinoshit.a Farms in San Juan Capistrano. The body· or water separating the Doheny State Park day-use and camping area became contaminated when the fire burned a transformer, causing a 4G- minute power outage that stopped pumps at the sewage plant near the lagoon. -"i\f1 .. ·estimated 50;000 gallons Of ra\V sewage flowed int(_) San ·Juan Creek which empties ihto the ocean. Howe ver, a sandbar near the mouth or the creek prevented the sewage from flowing into the ocean and contaminating beaches. according to Hugh Kimball, manager of the Dana Point Sanitary District. The quarantine was issued as a "precautionary. measure," said Kimball . He said that workmen chlorinated the water and took samples, which are being analyzed to determine how many sewage organisms are still contained in the water. Reports on the \Yater analysis are ex- pected to be released Friday, Kimball said, and the quarantine will be lifted then if the reports Indicate the water has be~n effectively treated. · Swimming in the lagoon is still not en- couraged , said Robert Stone, director of envi ronmental health for Orange County. "Actually, the lagoon shouldn't be used for sw imming at any time, and no swim- ming signs have been posted in the past,'' he said. * * * Arson Believed Cause of Two San Juan Fires Arson is suspected in two separate blazes-which erupted in San Juan capistrano's ranching areas earlier this week, county fire officials said today. The $.1,200 blaze which dtstroyed thousands of vegetable crates along A!_ipaz as well as a snlaller blai.e which threatened a barn the same evening both could have been lntcntiooally set, spokesmen said. No ~da cxl.at. as yet lO per901la who may have set the blazes. ... • Fire omi:1a1s are .~ly ~ because o( Ille ""-fire datil<r ·evf: dent thls tfmc or year. T~ major blaze destroyed lhc crates storecj at the corner of Allpu and Avlon Tuelday noon. That evtning the bam al Ortega Highway and Ganado Road ai.o _ ~gan burning. Damaae to that structure waa minimal however. .r-" • • urt T•""""' .. THOUSANOS OF RECOROS OF SERVICEMEN OESTROYEO IN ST. LOUIS STOREHOUSE FIRE -. Blaze Still R1gin9 in Huge ~uilding Storing Military Filn of 56 Million Men _.-- LAFC Approves Annex 22,400 Acres Marked for Sarita Margarita District By .JACK BROBACK Of lt!1 0.llY """ S'9tl Annexation of 22.400 acrl! to the ~nta ~1argarita \Valer District ,,·as approved \Vednesday by ;:i 3-2 vote of the Local Agency Formation Commission. Slated purpose of the annexation of the acreage v.·as to conserve water in the · area. It is located south and east of the Ortega Highway, cast of San Juan Capistrano and north and easL of San Clement e. The property is largely hilly and remote from any present development. Opposition to the annexation caa1e from tbe Orange County Grand Jury and the Environmental Coalition. The jury called for an cnvirohmental impact report , a study of anticipated development and cautioned against e:<· cessive lowering of the underground water tabl e. Some 1,900 acres or the land la in San Clemente but in a remote area to the north of city development. The city did not object to the annexaUon. The land is part of Rancho ~fission Viejo owned by the O'Neill family. The balance of the Santa ~1argarita District covers the other sections or the rancho . Tom Blum, representing R a n c h o Mission Viejo said the land is now in an agricultural preserve and no develop- ment is planned for 10 years or more. The property is used for grazing and citrus groves which use 2 million gallons of water a day. Fritz Stradling, attorney for the water district said one reuon for the merger was the need ot. rnw Industries in the area for 100,000 gallorul of standby water supply a day to comply \\'ilh conditions of a U.S. Govemment contract. There is ooc other research firm ht the area. Philco Ford Aeronu tronic, which bns no additional "·att:r need at this lim(!. 1be district gets aJJ Its waler now froR) 1he 1111derground bosln but ls afHllalcd with the Munldpel Water District of °'111111<> County and i;an ··obtain piped-in w1ter in the tulutt. The county's l,SOO..cre Prtma· Oc!- che9Cha landfill lite. ii in the 21,000 8Cl'tl and Blum said Ille dlstr1ct would supply water to the dispoAal station and later to ' the reaiot)al park planned for lhc prop-erty. ·...__ ~ Blum assured lhe commissioner1 that ' no urban use or the land "·~ ant icipated . But this did not satisfy Dale Secord or the Environmental Coalition who called the move "a lirst step lo"·ard ultimate devclopm1.'l1t. ·• He ::..'lid the co.'l lition \\·anted furt hcf study of Jn1pacts o~t future use of the land and feared population gro\\lh. Approval or th e annexafion \Vas grantC'd on a motion by SuPcrvisor IJa\ id Raker. an LAFC n'M!rnbcr. I-le "'as joined Uv Rohcrt Ballin and Louis Reinh:trdl. ~Oppc.sing \\·ere Chairman Clifton ?ilillcr and i\lrs. Hee Bun1:ip. Cle1nente Study Told Mosquitos in Water Termed Impossibility By JOllN VALTERZA 01 JIM it.Hy 'II" S11tt A top-ranking scientist v.·Jth the Orange County ~1osquito Abatement Distrlc stated flatl y today that it is "virtually imposs ible" for Sa n Clemente l'•ater taps to contain mosquito larvae. The declaration this morning came from the distri ct"s vector ecologist Gilbert Challet who strongly rebutted assertions by a nurseryman lai1t week that a batch or wigglers came from his \Yater tap earlier in the da y. "\Ve inspected the entire water treat- ment sys tem in the cily and evaluated the capacities and there is simply no "'a)' that the larvae could have bred in the system,'! Challcl said. The reason, said the scientist, lies In the amount of Ume it takes for a wiggler to develop. "It takes JO days.in yery still water for larvoe to develop, but in San-Clemente's sys tem a million gallons of water a day is the average output. "But the city'• storage capacity ls only about P>,000 gallon• so that means that the whole systt.m ls Dusbcd in less than a day. "Its impoMlble for wigglers to develop," he repeated. Earl "Red" Harmon. however, ha! been just as Insistent. Last Thursday the angry bUsinessman -wbo ot~ has t pcirred over •tater matters With the city -pro4uced a glassful of live "'igglers \\•hich he said appeared afte r be ran his tap (or 15 minutes. At that tlme llannon insisted that other persons had experienced the same phenomenon, "\Ve asked "'ho on the next day:· Chnllet said . "But so far ,,.e ha\'cn't found another "·atcr user "'ilh-thc same problem,'' he aCded. Challet said that in hi s career he has never seen wi gglers coining through wa ter taps. "1'\erc are instances in other areas 'A'hcrc water transmission facll11\es could allow for some to seep In, but that's just not the case in San Clemente.'" the ad<k.'<I. The sub!tance of the ecologist's rtport as \\'ell as the results of a brooder probe by the San Clemente city staff are cer- tain to come belorc city councilmen next \\'etk. The panel -admitting shock and diSbellef at Harmon's as9C:rt ion - ordered the full ·scale lnvestlgalloo into lhe ph'Cnomenon. Beer Heir Sentenced SAN JOSE !AP) -Carl A. 1t1iller. 2ll, heir to the Mlller Brewing Co. fortune, Ms been sentenced to a 180-day jail t¢fm afttr pleading guilt y to miMlemeanor auto I.heft-. fire fighters fron1 eight suburban com- panies "'ere still battling the blaze more 1han nine hours after it broke out in the t\\'~block-long stru cture. They reported the blaze "·as limittd to the top noor, &lit water and smoke damqe · W e·r e spreading below. Its cause wu not immediately knnn, _ but arson was suspected. A spokesman said lhe building's liJ:th floor contained records ot Army person- nel "·ho sen•cd prior to 1960. On the filth floor, the spokesman said. arc reeords of Navy personnel prior to lhc same date. "\Vhatever isn't burned is as wet as can be." said Army Col. \Vesley C. Scarborough. ;\rmy offi cials in Washington aaid many or the records stored at the spra1rling center arc not duplicated clsel'·hcre. , "Some of !hem are full file oopies or Arm y personnel. 111ese are n o t dupliated.'' said Col. Leonard Reed. T\VO firemen were hospitalized for treatment or smoke inhalation but there were no other reports of injuries. The ~nter. about 20 years old, con- tains about 56 million records or current and forn1er military personnel , ·a military spokesman said. Of about 2.000 employes, only security t,ru3rds and maintenance personnel OC· cup;ccl the bui lding a1 the fire's onset shortly aft er 1nidnighl. They escaped "'ithou t injury. The center "'as scaled off by federal agenis and mllilary personnel after the outbrea k of the fire. Factories Reopen ~IONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (UPJ }-This capital's morning rush hour reutrned to norn1al today with full bus service carry· ing \\'orkcrs back to factories that had been clos<.'CI for more than two \\'eeks by a general strike protesting the new rule by decree govemmenL Oraage <:east Weather 11'11 be a carbon copy of today, Friday, according to the weather service!, with low clouds through much of the day clearing in the artemoona to 67 degree readings at the beaches rising to the low 80s inland. INSIDE TODAY Two oq11anauu plan to spe1td JO days aboard tlte sunken luz· vry lintr Andrta Doria, rollect,.. h10 valuable art worlu, .ship ba11kJ. a silver µlaqric and two propelltrs. Stor11 Page 25. L.M. ••ff II C11oflnlltl I C'-l'*9 *"' -~:.":.,., = OMftl .... le:.. IJ ••11•1•1 ,... • •Mtrt~ »Jt "IMMt lW1 ........... 11 .... .. ,, ·~ ltnt(t ,, ' • ' • • ' _,, • • • ,. • • ~---'--... -............................... j I I ' .. llUJrldiy, July J2 ,197J -==~· . -ln•11N ic ie11t Evidence Suspect • Ill Girl's ·-Death Released The release o! Peter Richard \\l ootcn, arrested ror queStlonlng In the ·s1rangu!a· tlon slayi ng six days ago or l.inda Ann i---u'.Keclc__waLILDDO.UOCC~.dnJLsd_J.!Y by Newport Beach pollct. A Det. Capt. Donald Oya u said lhc cue had not been presented to the Orange County District Attorney's offlt:c because of insufficient evidence to link Wooten to the crirne. ·'That is all we arc going to ha\'c to .;ay at this lime." he said In refu sing to elaborate on the terse stalctncnt. fie did, however, i~sue a special plea today for einyone who may hRvc seen l,.lnda Ann during the crucial ~'riday afternoon and evening period in her disappearance: • * * * Newport Girl Eulogized; 100 Attend By ARTllUR R. VINSEL ot lt1t D•lt~ l"Hol 11111 Quoting from the Old and New Testaments. somelimes with quiv1:ring tones. a gray·frocked Lutheran minister rec ited the eenturteg.old Christian doc- trines of good, evil and innocence Wednesda y, in a funeral farewell to Lin· da Ann O'Keefe. -. The·· murdered girl lay in a casket covered and aurrounded with scores of t=-~'""'"orn'"I-fl'ttllf~owm-one-mortuary man said were as movingly beautiful as · any he has ever seen. Big Desert Tortoi se t -Di scovered '4 A crowd or about 100 attended noon· time rltet Jn Pacific View Memorial Park, overlooking the Harbor Area com· munity where she was born, christened , raised, schooled and slain by a strangler 4.1 daye after her 11th birthday. The major landmark• of her brief Ufellme were almost ::ill visible from the crowded chapel. Random Gunfire Hits 3 During LA Rock Concert Lapwortli Sloops Tak e Ove r Lead •1Unda Ann was born May 24. 11182," intoned the Rev: Lawrence Fruhllng, of the Lutheran Church of the Master. where her parent1, Mr. and Mr11. Richard O'Keefc once taueht Sunday School. "She waa baptized aa an infant. On Ju. ly 8, she passed from this llfe. , . " He ()P.el"led bis sermon In the flower- petfume4 room'with the 23rd Fsaln\i a traditional comfort to mournet1. He moved on lnto lhe rhythmic, philosophical pa1;a1e1 of the Book of Ee· clesia1tes, Chapter 3, Ver~s t throum9, which po<Jlcally list Jlle dutll!a . changes and iorrow1 fbf thumaht\i •dn earth: "A time to be born and a time to die ... . "A lime lo mourn and a time lo dance ... " l:ler pnrents had requested !hem specifically. "niere: I! a lin1e to Jove." continued the 1t1rny stand ing clergyman In his own rashloo. "And I am !Ure -In certain circumstances -there.js a time lo hate. "t don't believe God "Ills 'these things' to happen. But •le permits them lo hap.. pen," explained the Rev. Fruhling. He reminded mourners that Christ fllmself n ld whUe God created heaven and earth, He chose not to Interfere with nature'• l<11ws, but to give man freedom of choi ce. F«!edom to be good. Freed.01n to be evil. By whichever he chooses. the minister said, each man detcrmln11s his ct11mal destiny. ''We live in a world where evll does ex· 1st. And evll Is our occasion for being here today. "There Is a higher force than man. however." the Re v. Fruhling declared . addlng that no matter how horrified, 11or- ry, gu ilt-ridden or filled with seU·halred lhc slayer now may be. he n1ust reckon yet with God. And he cited Jesus· comforting wor<is in the Gospel of St. ~1atl he.,.,·. "The llttle ones shall not perish but hnve everlartlng life.·• ou••• COAST IC DAILY PILOT T1'le Or-C..tr (WULY PILOl, •I"' _,,!di 1, COft'IOinotd tr. Nt .. ·Pr .. ,, b 11Ultll11'1ed by 1111 OrMlle C~t Pllbli.,llift9 C-n'I'. ~ r•i. .. llloow irt pUbllshtd, M_o, "'""911 il'r1N1. l6r Cotti Mtw, N........ eteftl. tfUl'lll"l!lon 1-..C:/l/P-t•ln Vti'-ty. LlllllM IM<ll. 1 ... i...1 ... ltbltt -S.01'1 '"'"""''/ Sin Jvtn C•Mtlr.,.., A 11r!911 "'.,...' t'dlli.n It ...,.11111 .... ,_,,,, •'Id $1,111\1•"· Tl'l9' ~ln(INI tl!Dlltftlrtt ,11111 h fl JJO Wu! 11'1' Street, C..11 M-... C.Hlonol1. m 1111 ll:ob1rt N. W11~ Pr .. lltl'll, llW PuOHlfll' J••• II:. Curl1y Viti il'•Hl4itrit .,_ 0-11 Ml/lll'lt Tholl'it• K11,.u ••111r Th1M11 A. Mvr,hl111 M1"1tlf'll ldtltr Cti1r111 H. Looi ~Uthtr~ I'. Nill A.Ml1ltnl Ml,,..I ... IEdill'I a.c..-...om.. JOI N1rtlii El 'i,11111111 1111 1. t 2e11 °""' °'"'" Clt!f Mtte1 1ll WW.I t1y ,,,_ flll"""IMrf 1 .. e11: UN ,.,....., hv,.._,,, """"'"'*" etK111 '"" •••(II ft.wino~ UfllM ... e111 m '""' .. .,.,.. N••••• f7141 '42-4)11 C'-HIM Al'9ftW., ••Z·l,7t s. c .......... hit••t•llfll , ........ •t1-44Jt LOS ANGE LES iAP I -R1ndom gun· (Ire Interrupted a rock music conctrt. islrlklng at leut three teen-a1er1 ·and stampeding a crowd of about 600 panic· lltrlcken per10111 ln the Watt• dl1trlct. Of Transpac Pollof . aaJd tha concert hid been In prolftlli for about an hour Wednelday nl&fit wtlen · tour youn1 men auddenly fired about ao round• with handiUJll, ·~ parently at random. They 11ld city Housing Authority auarde malnt11n1n1 aecurlty at the con- cert saw two 1lrl1 and a boy shot durlna the bedlam. However, the extent or their lnjurles could not be determined beca1.11e the three were driven away from the open concert 1lte In private vehicles; authorities added . NY Congressii.an Accused . ' . J Of Taking Airline Bribes Police said today that none or the three had reported to any local hospital for treatment. They said two men, arrested by Hous· ing Authority guards, were booked for in· vestigation of assault with a deadly weapon. They were lde.ntlfled a1 Jiarold Lloyd W11ishington , 21, and Aaron \Vashington. 18. Police said it was not i1nn1ediately kno.,.,,n \Yhethcr the men '~ere related . From Page l SHOOTING. • • hovering over hill hi ps just the way they do in the movies." Slalton appeared rr.equently before hr represented ranchers in the San Juan area and dc1nanding action to halt ! rcspassing in lhe Ortega Hot Springs scclor. ScvcrAI trespassers have bct!n arrested during that lime on a "aricty or drug and indecent exposure char11es. Sheri ff's of· ficers said the area has also been used l8 a rendezvous by runaway juveniles from throughout the coonly. La usky Faces Tr iaJ UIJA~fI lAP) -Ailing underworld liaurc fl.feyer Larui ky n1ust stand trial despite a heart condition, a federal judge says. U.S. District Court Judge Joe Eaton said that prosecutors will supply 'at government expense a cour1roon1 nur~e and a cot so Lansky, 71 , can rest. to about four hours a day. to nboul forr hours ~ii day. Saddlehack Picks Board President John Lund of South Laguna has been elected president of the board of trustees of SoCldleback Community College at the annual organl&atlonAI meeting this week. Lund succeeds Patrick Backus of Dana Point. Backus was presented a rtsolu tlon by the board thanking him for his achievements during his tenure. New vice prtsldent for the board will be Hans Vogel ·of·Sanlt·Anl, Donna Dor· ry wlll be clerk. The vote was unanimous on 411 three ofClces. .Got His Wish Bo y, 8, to Be Buried iii V11iform ALBANY, N. Y. !AP) -Eight-year-old John Guiry, who alw1ys wanted to be a policeman, wUI be burled In 1 pollct unllonn. The son or Mr. and ~1rs. John f<,. Guiry of suburban Colonie died Tuesday ol leukemla . Th e boy collected more than 1,000 J>Olice patches, received honorary membership In a number of pohce agencies and on his frequent tr1ps to St. 11cter's Hospital In Albany he sometime! wore a state trooper's hat pulled down over bis eyes. Nobody Sells GE Refrigerators For Less Than ADD A GE AUTO·MATIC ICEMAKER NOW OR LATER SAVE BIC ' 14,I CV, •T. •1'0.f'•OST 111,fllOlll.\TOll-fllll•lll t1.6 cil. PT, "Jrl0•flll0'1'• S3191 fl 01.IMT t>_. C•. flt. MO •ltOIT s•19n llllllllOlllATOll·l'llllll& SIOl..-,4101 llll'lllG•llATOll U to DAYS CASH CALL 8 WI!.. With ~,.,,. ' • 1 ' . ' c...,,ttM, 1'71. 0.1,,.. c.o.ir l>Wlltfl"'9 "-,.-.,'· Nt Mws '""'" llhltlr11..,.._ ....... •"" .. ......,.,,...,....." ...... ill =-tt ~.: = .-Clll ..... loCMd rll• ,_,.,. H lf ff C•ll Mtw Clilltoml1, l'*C'r11111or1 tw (.lrtltr n U IMl!lllt'1'1 .,. IMll Mi.IS mMfll11'1 ""ltlfln• •ttlMlicMll MM MOii/Mp, Funeral se rvices will be held hero Friday with tour policeman IS honorary pallbearers, one or them his good friend , Colonie police officer Ronald Krosky. "He always wanted to be a policeman .. That'! all he talked about," said Krosky, who visited him three or lour Um11 a week In the hospital and at home. DUNLA P TAttE c 1t Authorl1od 543-7708 TfiAD~ 1••5-~ ~-- OE SERVICE " " ~ ~ • • John wlll be burled In an honorary Coionie aergun1'1 uniform , KroskY._ said. • 1815 NErJPORT BLVD. . Downtown Costa Mesa -Fh. 548· 7788 • . - •• . , U,.I TI ....... Big 4--Negotiators Four men flank United Auto Workers President Leonard \Voodcock (center) all UAW vice·presidents -who will be vitally important in negottations be· tween the UAW and auto companies beginning l\ionda)'.-,.hey are (left to right) Douglas Fraser, Chrysler negotiator; Pat Greathouse, agricultural implement firms; Woodcock; Ken Bannon, head of Ford team and Riving Bluestonc, in charge of General Motors bargaining team . Dollar End.s Fraud in Wheat 3-day Clinib In Trading Sale Suspected LONDON (UPI ) -The U.S. WASillNGTON (AP) -The dollar Thursday halted its chairman or the Senate in- three day upward climb and v es tigations subcommittee floundei'ed downward on world says he cannot accept the money markets when there J u s t i c e Department ·s con- was no sign that government clusion that no fraud was in- banks were interveni~ to volved in last year's Soviet prop it up. wheat sale. crop. No dollar val11e was given for the new shipment. The total value of the 1912·73 grain and soybean exports tG Russia. totaling nearly 19 million tons , was about $1.l billion , t h e department's ..report said. "The Americans 'tte tryi "A ~IOST unfortunate·5crics 1-,a~~~~-10-talk--the-dollar-up-rather· -naaaeclS:ions Wer~ made In than pull it up," said a bank -t grain deal " Chall-man • oUicial in Paris. He ac~n (0-Wash.J, The dollar drop~ to 4.08'25 said Wedn ' y. fr~ncs on the Pa,ris marke~ at "I am simply not at this ·rru.dday from its over;i1ght time prepared to conclude that price of 4.17 fr~ncs. It shp~d all of the bad decisions were to 36.325 Belgian francs .m the result of bad judgment," Brussels: to . 2.8425 Swiss Jack.son said. "There is the francs ~n Zurich. to 2.3710 very real possibility that olher marks 1n Frankfurt ~ 8!1 factors may have been in4 low~r tha~ Wednesday nights volved." cloSlJlg prices. Jackson's subcommittee is "[f no support com~s sooo probing the 42&-million-bushel for the ~ollar I. e~pec~ 1t to fall sale of last July and August . back qu!te a bit. said a Lon-Meanwhile, Wednesday, the don foreign exchange dealer. Agriculture D e p a r t m e n t In Belgrade, the Yu~oslav 1 ased. new fig u r fi s in-government a~ 1t was re e . . . revaluing the dinar by 3.7 dlcatmg that the Soviet Union percent upward· against the ha.s. bought n:iore than 7.8 dollar and devaluing it by 3 milh~ metz:ic tons . o f percent against the West American gram for delivery German mark. The dollar fell by next summer. from 16.62 dinars lo 16.00 and ACCORDING TO a depart· the mark rose from 5.78 ment spokesman the grain will dinars to 5.95. come mostly from this year's COMPARE COMPuter Assistance to REsearch This is one of lhe computer charts that COMPARE pro- duces on selected stocks and industries. Whal ls U? How does II work? llow can I ute It In my lnveslmtnt selectkln? Uow do I rind out more about COMPARE? DATE: TIME: PLACE : SPEAKERS: A f1thnic;1I approech to ifoc .• m1rk1t tlrnh19, d1¥1 lop1d by 01111 WIHtt I Co. 1fl1r thr11 v11t1 of r1111rch. U1in9 • comp11ttr, lt l'f'lttuirti l'f'IO· ment..rn of tfock •nd incl111tritl trtnd1. 1.., co111bl11lng th• timing 1Jgn•l1 of CO MPARE with f11nd1111111t1I r11t•rch. Attend a Lecture S...r4..,, .l•ly 14, 1971 10:00 ..... Yelette~ .... C'"'941en a..tll•,.et 24031 11 T-. .... ....... Hiik StrM Her4y_. .,...... .... Delterty -· .,_ ·--DE.AN WlttER. -.ca. IHCG~ ....... ,,_8TOQC .. l!Ntm.M. For Hous e Farin Bill WASHINGTON (UPI) The House Wednesday _re. jected warnings of a possible veto of a big farm bill and voted to keep in the measure a provision that would escaJate farm support price leve ls over the four-year life of the bill. AN ADMINISTRATION drafted am•endment to eliminate the so--ca I I e d escalator clause" w a s defeated on a .239-174 vote ~ despite a warning from House GOP Leader Gerald R. Ford that rejection of the com- promise offer means "the bill will not become Jaw." The action came as the House spent a second con- secutive day on the massive m.easure and appeared ready to put off a final vote until Thursday. Fa.rm Labor Problems Force Sale? LOS ANGELES (AP ) Airline owner Halli s Robert:: says he has sold about $4!> million worth of San Joaquin Valley farmland to a Texas- based. oil company. primarily because of farn1 labor union problems. JlOWEVER, THE Lo s Angeles Times said this week that Roberts, a business associete of San Diego finan· cier C. Amholt Smith, and a spokesman for Superior Oil Co. or Houston gave con· rlicting reports when ques· tioned on the details of the sale. "They paid us all cash."· said Roberts, who has bor· rowed heavily from SmiUH:on-- trolled U.S. National Bank for the farm operation and for Goldeo Wes t Airlines, an in· trastate commuter line based in Newport Beach. • Douglas' President . . ~' -.. • Complete New York Stock Li st • TOU CAN'T TAKI A VACATION faOM TAL HEALTH W tu•Y •Lt.NT, l .Ptt Proper d1 ·nt&.l hy~len•' !)o a 365 day jo1J. Uy 11dopl1111.: a fe\lo-heY.' hubiL~ ~uu l'Bll h1•l.I' elhnlnat(' t11/1qu·· nncl C11\·1. · ti~. \\'c aJl knu\\ ahout d<>- Cll.\' bUt. w11u1 11l>oul plaqu1.."! 1'1il~ i!I a co1nt)l11nliori ut bar- l('ri1,1. and food \vhich CU11l'cts on "'tplh .qlon(; th•• i,:um line. If net rcirnuvcd il 'viii lil'-ahvi, thb boncy support aroul\d tynur lt>t'lh a11d hi"albtv t t' e t h may he lOOAh'<l Jind lo§\. Bry1hlli:£: help•: t"f'mb\'l' plaque but cnnnot reach crevices lx-t\1·<"en H:'<'lh. Dis- elosliM't 111blots. dissolved in thi.> mouth shn\1' 1Yh{'r1• plaque has tx><'n missed in brushing, [k>n1al floss cnn thC'n loo used to ri!n\oYc thnL which ha~ t>ce.n left. YOU OR YOUH DOCTOR CAN Pl-IONE US '"h"n you need a dcll\'ery. We "'ill dl'· llvl't' prOmplly without l"Jl:ll"ll charge. A gree.t many fl"OlllC rely on us for their health nee&. We 1velcome .requrst. .. tor dell very Bf' T v i c e and charge account!!. PARK LIDO "HARMACY U1 Hosplt•I RN4 N._,.rt a .. ch 141·1510 t ... I ' "'" o.u ... ,,, . • ' •'' • " '' ' • ' 11 . .. • lt0••p Predieted Higl1e1· lnte1·est 011 Moi~g!!ge Due ll'ASHI NGTON rAPI Home buyers \\'ill h;;ive to J><IY hi gher intl'rcst rotes on tht•lr n1or1 gag~:-1 as :i result or the gove1·n1ncnt's mov.-lost week booslltig 1he rate ('Cllin,c:s on sa,·ings: arc."Ounts, acc.-ord ing to the cti;iirman or l.bc llO!lli:. Lo:.in Hank Bon.rd. \l'lllLI:: OECLI NING lo J)l't-tllcl ht)~· much o( a jump in tht• ho111c n1orti.:agt• ralc is possible. 1'hon1t1s R. Bomar. thl' {'h1ef rcgulntor of savings and loan associuUons. said : ··The a1nounl of th~ r<1te in- ci·cascs could be significant." The F'edc.ral Reserve Board ;uKI the F'ederal Deposit Insurance Corp. booStl'CI the. r:i te ceilings on s a v l n g s deposits Otlc-half of I percent on passbook savings accounts ~tnd by higher 1unounts on gavings certificalC$-\11Ub long- er maturities. The Bank Bo.'lrd rniscd its ceiling on paS!!book ticcounts b~ only one-quarter of I percent. ' HOTH BA NKS ;ind savings :ind loan associalions now Ydll be pc.rn1 illcd to puy savers ilny interest ra le they want if savers arc v.·illing to deposit at least $LOOO for four years. Yarian Taps Distributor Varian D<tla fl•lachines of Irvine has appointed Showa Information systems of Tokyo as exclusive computer distributor for Japan and South Korea., , , Recently established as a new Japa.riese-ow n ed distributing operation. Showa will devote its primary eHorts to promoting the Varian·s line of minicomputers. systcn1s , and various compu t er peripherals. • DOW' • SS.000 m1n1mu m. 30 months yields SI 000 m1n1mum yields SS n11 n day 1 yea r • FINANCE • . ' . , . .. . . . .-• OAJL Y PILO T :J5 • I 'Job Probkms' OVER THE COUNTER NASD Ll1tl .... for Wednotd•Y• July 11, 1973 Of W 01nen Aired •-~''-i.t•,1" c j \' .l.~t.=' !"; 16 lJI~ lampa\i '~•~l!J .. ·~,lt1".!.!'!.111 H•. l'I( ff''fffiR•IM 1 l:t:'n1 '1-. •1-t WASliJNGTON (APl -Ex- perts agreed in congressional testimony that women eam less and are 1nore often uncmploylod than rnen. but dlsagreed thls week. on 100 rf3801lS for this. t:CON0~1ISTS Jo" R 0 f\1 universities and those heading up the President's Council of t"conomic Advisers fiiscussed ~~~-&:.Jt!..~ :r: ntc; ~ 1111 11 •ye;..: 1Mlm 1"1,Q 'l~nv DC ~~ f~! Job ~-•. ••• .... ;::;;: 11 A~ MW "" 11f;£; ,te I~ 1 ·~ >,I• .-. I''...,.,....,._ (l!Mlttll DV<l1'· ~ tt""'fl' 1£1 • owlt Mt ~_mlstl Barbara R ' ='"' on:.-·111~; = 1 ... e:i.c . l ~ 16\li r•n (II (11 Jn · . <i.a (£•1Wfl Nwtl R.it l}f)I¥ 1 lt't fM tl~ lP.f: IO!.l-Bergman of the Unlvt.1·sity of tJl'tlt.t n. ~JJ: """ "ft ''"' 11:.-111.-1 J~ r111 uc.,. 1'; ,:- Maryland and Paul A . ~::11 "::.:'"'!~ ~:r' Act¥ ,~, :r:~ '::1 ~" i.rt; u~ci:, /!' 1~>! SamUt)SQn Of f\1l!$S8ch~elf.I = .~ 'd;•w•;;. .. H:f.:: £~ ftY.I ff :::r gr. ff!\ r.~ tl~~I ~ r:~ 6 ~ •-•tltUte of f h n I 0 g y '"°''i.efll KIW l'f.tll fnk H .. 111~ aoUlttt e UY ia1; US 8k NI ~ LU4 e C 0 lr.....-<l\otll. HM!l!I 8r 1111' ltVt Rouw Co l:tlto I){~ US Trt l. I 10\<r d'1sputed the Sleo'n and Whit· INDU$Tll lAI..$ H1r1vn ,. .... ~ R-• FM 10\~ 11 Uni¥ I'd• 15 M .... AND U1'1LITllS H.,pt, II tt: Jn, ttuotkr iPh 11 1tVt Unv Mob! 1io .5'• man rationale. as did Rep. Jw-, ,,~. ,•,•, ",:fi\:~ F1 ,~ lllu11 S10Y 11\'I 1••• v1e1M Ho S\'I ,._. uh 11 •1 .... C •Ill sao1 111t.d1 &t) '1" v.,,.., sn ru 1~~ tl.1artha Griffiths (l).~fich.) .... ~, ,Tl:A~~,,LM~ 'l0"",&v.s1r1n1 co 1•, I va" D1t •v.101 . J I .. tu•·~· 2'l , ..... '' \!" sam1n11 l~ l Ml Vs Sl>e:k ~ •. •,li who chaired the o n t Ai•• Ahr 17\.'J l''!li" ••ctl c se11_, n » v lorf s1 1 ... -. Allco LNI 1•111 1 ~. Wll ' kl>oll In 1M 21~~ to $\II :S~ I'~ Economic Comm11lee hear-~,' .. , .. •,w. ilt': 1, ~::rierMIQ fl~ ij14 Sco11 inn 11 111o1. Vltu•I :sc 7Vi 11:. • Ai • C '''"3\/o ScOl!IL G S~~ •'• ol S/>08 11 lf1h Econornic --the reaspns (or thi! Cconorilic problen1s of women. 1ngs. f.llv11 tt' • ,.,,_ v•r1 c ,, .. • " scrlPm....H 1u~ 1tv. Waah NG 1)\9 1l' • Am-A ~ "'" --,. Scrllito-1 llli "'' 111.-Jllt tt''"'°""-A Ar rlt !\" 1111111 WI! 1,·.~ ll,, ~ .. ,.,..kl It'll. 'lOVt w •• mn I .... ~ CONTENDED AmEI Lto \~ trw:h ,..ud " •• i 13" ,., bt> A• l'• • THEY ex-·-~·~ i7h iln lnlor•~ IC. 71. SY t.Wrch .. ~'! t . • .. "'" ... 11 ;m 11 c 41 n · Svm•Ur 16\lo JI'• W-· I'\ ..., tr~me and discrlminalory job ~~ F~~ 7v. i ~:.,, £~ w. j\lo s.wn uo t1 t 1>oa IN•lttt w• '""' 15~ Club Sets July ilfeet The July 1nccting of the Economic Club ~·ill be he ld at the Golden Bull Res1aurnnt. El Toro. at 8: 15 a.m. July 20 ac- cordin'g lo Arthur Giguere, vice president of the club. The program v.·ill be based on the First Nat ional City Bank of New York's n1onthly tape ·'The Sound of lhe Economy." The ta p ed discussioo is modcra tt::d by John Daly and is participated in by the bank's key economic executives. The discussion v.·ill consider aspects of the price freeze as applied 10 wages as v.·elt as prices and the ex· pectation that future controls will be tougher in selected sec· tors of the economy. The breakfast cost is $2.75: reservations are requested by phoning 586-2020. Herbert Stein . chairman of the council. and colleague "'" :11\-o t G u 1., 1 \~ SIM\lr Co "• ,,,.. ennci M l~I 1$0.. segregation was to blame for ~~Ir Grs": 1,,'° '"'-'~:""Ai,..' ,.,. 5..., s11ororw •'~ ~1 sic,• '" ''• v . h I ...,., ~ 25\li KVr I .~ A 1 11 \flT\ll9CIA IOl~ 11V. II Put>! 1S U\o'O ~la rinu \\'hitman said up to SO women earning so muc ess !;;: w'~~ 1~ 111. 1~'I"' co 11i . ,,,, ~n ... fol• .HV. '"" W"'~ F" JO•• 'Xl\l I .7 06\. ,,..., 1 nd A :n.. ;1;, srnci Pao u · 1~·~ llt•"'' t ,..._ 1n"1 per<.'Cnt or the over-all wage than men -on y percent as ::Vin J\, ,1~ J~t,:.sb •~ ti.~,.,,. '''' 1s w11,n •· · ,,.,, 11• .. ''" d • h b th I t t fi r s • "· E 914 ~1 , ... A1rFr J<o 41'1 sr111Nlv 1 1S u~ lac n• ' it•'• 1 ... gap ~I ween rnen an womf!n mue y e a es 1gu ~ -Ars"'inco nVi 111) J0i.ivn M ,. 16>w \t<1 """'' 111., 1 ~1, w•n• "' r '''~ 15 rnay be CaUSt-d by diSCrimina-and for having much higher Ardn Mvf 13~ ljlo ~11-S{ ig~ 1r' ~:~~ :::. 2~\l 2;~ ~::i ~~~ :;1(; :;~ · · bl I Arro A~I It \ 0,:. 11,1 vir ft S'•• $\.t ~llftk ,.. ~ ~'~ f''o Wortlf J\v 10 1(1•: t1on. JO ~ ra ~s. d h :~~?:a r 1:11~ 9 t:~,~od 16 16\r.i s1roe Ttc lll.'o 1' rlC1111 w 41'\' 5 But th~y cited other fa_c~ors ~te1n-.\Vh1trnan un I e :ti'°G;o~ l? · ~i! .'<~ z=:: 11ii 1ia ~~;~ ,.c~ :~ 1~:~ ~:;r0,. {.~ 3~ Jl~ they considered more dec1111ve. un1vers1ty professors a Is o A11to Trn 12 ll'• •yn Fb u 1. 13l./o c,~~.., "" ,..~ ~ ... 11eo1r <o '"" ~"· ·r· II b d' •• ; h •k •k 81ird 11.10 s•.:r. Sl.t •v Cust 6lo 1U Tallv Cr11 J~~ ,,, Zions Uth ?ll'> ?\I spcc1 1ca y t e years a 1sagrt:t:U on w ei.uer ,, ... e &11rcr wr 111. ,,,, (oJ'lt '"' 13 , ll;\41 ------------- h ··• . ba . I al't B•k•r Ft !" 11\.1 oCMS IMI J"• •V• woman spends out of t e J.,., economic rners o equ 1 Y B11own L 1 1\0 <n•119 v1 1• 1' 1narket . They said th is fQr women \\'ere worsening or l!~v B\~ ~~ t~11 <:.:• 11J1~ 2: 10 ltlost Acth'e negatively affects her future improving. ::~sRtt n~ r~ ~Mp~: S'• 6, NEW YORK (UPI) -fl>e 10 mo•t "') '"!!" F 1$~~ 'M'1 .lflCltl l~'le; ii~ 1d lvc &tocks trlded on Ille OTC m.u\el BIV ••• t~ .. \ •nc:• 11 10 WednH'd•v ., wppUtd b~ ,..A$0. Beelltll F •l.t S, "•Wier ( :JJVI 30 V•w"'9 •I• APM Clllf, • SI d Bekln (p 6'h 6 • -~•Y BaY 18 '19"'6 Potnn Oltsh 241,J!_)V !-16 !-l•+l·f6 F d P • Benllv Ls 1•:... 1l"" .·tGQer Pl 12'• 13 Educar Ecu1 JSJ..00 211>,, 1'1/o+ '• 00 rice ow own If~ [ii !}:; ~~~ :a,.grim~ J~: ~;~ !~~:u,01~scn :M.'l: u~. !}i:.!. ,~; "' Orm t1h 10,, line 190111 s~. 61 • Funk StoG ~~.·~ J~~~ l~l•:j: I 1; .''' •-l''• >>•.,· LIOll CIS• '~• 4~ Speclr1 PllYl '"' ' •• ,., •" 191, odlte 50'1> SP.r Am E•11 7),900 57!• 5''1\-~. •-th ~p 1.r. 201'1 LQIWS Co s,,','.' ~., •• ',',oo"'•'o~,, 'M•~ (16,JCO 4?' ... '1'h+ 1 ~. sfenco 1 11111 22 Mid 6•• " " 60.100 U'1. 16\lo +l llrlnk• In 10 101:0 al Altv .S\'o S~O Cmblns An> Sf,300 l]I~ IJ1.~· '• &rown Ar 6'~ '"' •lltkl 3i~~ 39.;,, Butkbe 1]~ 1•'• M1rll Frt ·~ ... 16lo NASO Volutne TOllav, 6.!U,100 Buctev • '"' ••v Kv l~' • :JO'• Aavance& 9/S Seen With Crop News \VAS~llNGTON tAPI -A reporl by !he Agriculture Departn1cnl predicting farmers "'ill harvest more corn and soybeans this year is raising hopes in the Nixon ad· ministration that the rise in food pr(ccs can be slowed . .. Burno s1 211'o 111. Cmck li<ro .o\. oecunt~ 1riJ NO ONE SA VS I hat grocery 1B~~er~: M:1 ~:t M:J~:.,v \jt~ \!~: u'¥o'::~ :Jlll prices v.•ill go doWll soon. but 1111 Sow ••• Sl'o 1rn "\;: ·:~1------------- the prospects of larger crops ~pvii;,~ 1:U lat{:::~~ ~~ 11•. 1a~. _.i_ • - ed I I .1k 1oance A 19\• 1••• MllliPO• ... ., 611i11ers --. &JVSers us to urn out mea . m1 inan1 co •'• •~1 MPls Gas n~~ 1• i - d II Id n a nem Cp lJ'• 10'0 Inn Fib S S1 Nlw York (UPI ) -The loUOWl"!I 1111 an pou ry tCOU mea 111 er I• W!• •n• \'\l;Qul <.P tt'> 101. lllllws t~ srocks htar 1>11va 9e1neo 1he inore gradual'risc. Chris See ,.. ''' .. ..!', ,•,n 11,,. n,,. mosr ano 101.1 111• rno11 b1H'd on percent ,.. ....,.... 13 7.1'\:. ol ehan1le on rn~ Dver-lhe.(.Ollnle r Lar .,.er crops also suggest >1111 v A ~1"< l!l0},'• "lorr1.,, n 11t ''I? m•••" •• quo1ec1 bY 1n. NAso .. 1lu1t the United States may be Cl~7~co ·1~ hi~ J~\0'0.1~ 1~~ '~i di~:;~~" ~!~'~f~. ~~:,~s 1~~. l!l~ able to let up in a fe\v months ~~1 sn~ 76V~ v•t. ~~t \.16~~ :\~ :;! price and th• J•~N1£~s 1111 t><d price. . . d 'MWTI P 21'• ~~,, ""•Cr 10 11 8 3 < " "0 On rallon'ng soy"hans an -11111 p u '4 JS'-a .. , "•"••·• ...,_ 1 eacn Plloto s 1,+ • "" ..,. ~ -· ,,,~" " 6 , ~ 2 T111<anv 1mJK ~•+ 11'o Uo u .o h te• food t ff I Cousins 16'~ "N'1e<l11"1 9 3,\0•, 3M!Q fr~•I wts l•o i-'• UP 21.0 ot er pro Ill s u 0 Ero!.S Co 16\!r 11'4 Newll Co 10\'> 11~. 4 E,,..,.•llY Cv Uli t11+ 1>.. Uo 25.9 , foreign buyers. c~~1""Nol' ,t~ 1!~t ,,E";l.1G! 16\o 1 •\~ 5 T11Uv Corpr1" l"'i 11 u11 15.o Export r"strictions were pu t Dane lntt 2l~'o 23'• ,..;,o1.i tn 1t . 1tr: t f~~:J. 1:3:.;~~ :>o:o l\'",_.~! ~!} "' 01nlv M I • l\o Nlt!Sftl -. ,?!:~ !'!• I Cmplrvlsn (p 10\~ 2 Up ZJ.$ on thos'e products recentl y by 8:1! ~ ~~; t ... "4l••s•11 • ··-· ,,..,, , Hucle•r Rfi< Pt+ "' uo 22.1 --the administration to_assur.e. B:::~~~n:--J6Y, N~dsl~IG If~ lt'V: :? x~~='·F~ -cr~· ... "; ~~--J~:~ eoough for American livestock Decor II\ •l'I ·~· ~oxe," '•" '6 , ,,., 12 O•nkt•Wll wt J 'h uo :io.o ·--_1 Deklb AA! ~ Jl• ·~UC' • 1>:. , .... ll O•n~e. Wohl~ J'• \.'• Uo l~.o ·ngs .and poultry producers until o.int Intl sYt • ikw.i 0~ .~:~ ,t~•" FunkSeed .osn 10\.+ no u11 11.1 . ,~ O.lux-e C 37 31'1:. tin r ... ,.. • 15 MtQ Anoe .'/O U + 1 U11 11.? new CrOps CCme tn; Olam Crs 11•,~ 12 Octan E~ 6,, I 16 Sllltonlx lncp 'I'>+ I Uo 1.1.1 Olam Hd 10'1 11~~ OcP'lllr Ml J0,~ ',:,1. 11 Olfsllor L1>4!sl 11.+ H~ Uo 11.9 Olck A 8 :Ml~ 'Jt Of!sh LQS • . 11 8evr Mn{I .Ollb 10 + IV> UP 17.6 SOARING EXPORT demand 8~~1,,1scr li"" ~~'1 r;11"!:"9,"~ "•· 17" 19 SUC1•r<1a10 .111 J•~• '• UP 16.I ""''' oo• > ,.. oU oColll ,!,; 1,~ 'JO Vlcld1 Stetlon I'•+ l'• VO 16.7 for wheat corn and soybeans ""' " • , "' 21 0111e · co•P !••+ '4 Up H .• • Oonalds 241/• 2./.1~ rmil/IJ J l(~ Z,} n.vlsual $clenct 11,+ 1 VP U.4 has helped boost feed COSIS ~e J~~ \lv. n~· ~~v~A , , 23 Oc•"' Flshrls 1!1+ l'o U11 11-l here at home and has been ountln o 2>0 3 n111e C•p ,~r(t _;; J~ ~~'~:" ~:/ ~ ~ ~ ~: J::i • • . . Econ Lab 38'~ 39'' PIM! Br u~ • ,.,,.\ LOSEllS ~entl~ed as,1 ~~lffi~rt~nt ~r"p.ic," ~\~fl~ ;~e'G11m ~'lt ~f'a, 1 'C1bln1 COlch ~~r ',\ DU I S.• c~~~~s'.n reta1 price 1n-!br~;;£ 1~~ 1f~ =~0 ~~ J;~ J~ ~ ~f?~~:~~' !.:= ~ gn ~!:! High feed prices are being ~'""" A 24\lt 1t" P1u1 ltev l\~ '"~ 5 A~ B.....,, 11 1·-·~ 8!1 ::! blamed for the cutback bv E~~~.1~~ ~:; 11t~;;~.~vr:s 11'' 1~l ~:uper6~si:: 1~;:='~ °'' 1.0 • F1lr Lne 6\1 1 ll•w N f;v Ii 11,: I Crvlcher At1 S'o-V. Otf l,B farmers on breeding stock for F•rlon El 11y. 21 "•Gi"-w 1,1, ,.., • Splr11 Metal c 11>-'" ~\ 1.1 . Form Br 1?\. 1] "•• HI ,. :ro•: 11,.~ 10 Varlsys ms Cp l~::: ~! 011 ~·~ hogs and chi.ckcns. meaning ',',:!!,.•, ~ ,•,• ,•,,~. •,•,;ro Lw ~l· 1i\ 11 ts!llncaln Fn• 0,, · ·-" ·N 5 • ..; "'' n lntormalics In l '•-L• 1.1 that production of pork and Fs1 BOlln IS'.> t6V.p 1n_rtn~v -:!'! ,.,. 13 Graohlc sclen 11~ •• 011 6.7 . hi T~F!n 11'• 12'4 '" , •Mo ""' 10 Moxie lndv1tr _,,,_ \'I< 011 '·' poultrv will be reduced soon. 111 W•IF 1'1 !!' 111:'.:;-' 1~., 1,,., 1 .,~ 1s Te11ron1cs srv l 'n-'• 011 6 1 · F!Jca Inc 10 1"'' ~ 16 Ad MlcroO l'J-'" 011 6.0 Processors and farmers also Fla reieo 17\" 11•1t 0 ''"" "~ ,.,, , .. ~ c "" c 1;.,_ \o 011 6.1 . ''' k 12\! l]\~ "OOll !Jr" < <H; 11 IY"'•n 1..orp 0 , 3 have bla1ntd lhe Nixon price Fein~' 01 1''~ u·~ "·~1 r...if ~ •.• ~" 18 Pa..,ex Food• l'~-'• ' '· F k El ~·· "l "'""''' :1•~ 11>~ 19 LISF lnv11 w!S 1'0-1li Oii 6.l !reeze for1oodpredicted1. shortages ~~:~1 1 c ~~; ~t~ ;;:~:.~:-•r 1;;;; 1;:~ i1 ~~t~:1~Q 1~ ~'"= ~ &:: }:i 1n some supp \CS. FrlKh R u ... 121~ Port» '°ftP · n Unele<" .se.. 1~" • -8f: · \v .l.h t bl tlJ ' F1FdE 6~1'~ •l·'&l7·1'2JKe\'lrCnt .05b f'..-'1 '·' l o U SU S an a in-F!;ie, ·H ll\lt 11v, "'-~·· ,.~ • "" 1• Omeoa Alnh., 1'•-1. 011 J,6 creases in grain and oilseed Funt Se• 1ov. 1CS1o o. .. ~, ('1> , ..... 19· 1s s11119111er B•• ,..,,_ ·~ 011 s.s production this year. officials ~ believe that American con· 1~ -. ~ ~ -r- sumers would be headed for , serious supermarket shorteges by next v.•intcr and even sharper cut~cks in export s: shipn1cnts to foreign buyers. MU1'UAL FUNDS ' ·" Ntw York -Fol· EATON & enus Fd 16.ff 16." Revert F 6.86 7.!oll T H E • G R J C ULTURE low!nq is a 1111 of HOWAltD· ,,.,~~ '"' 1.10 •·"' "ontrt ~'.'•• ~.'1,, " bid •n<I ••ked orl, Sein Fd · t .'5 10.Jl Han ~•II 8.J~ 9. 1~ S11111t•• • -Department savs however ce• on Mvtu•I Ciwlh F lJ.U 1•.ll J()orat" ?•.~· 2•.6• '>cuu• Fd b . .wi ~.2• ' . . Fullll• •• QUO!ed bv tflCme s.,$ •. 50 KE'fSTONE: )tllus So 8.0.S 9.4> that farmers fou ght off severe tlll NASO Inc:. Soaclt F 6.80 7 . .0 l.USI l.11 II.I• It.II )\.UODt:lt ,',' .• ',',,,,, --Srck Fd 11.'9 13.65 r..u~I 11~ l\>.11 Jl,3' 1n1r ln1r \1·cather last spring and now W•-•d•! Eber110 t.68 10.loi cvu 11• •. ,1 9.UO t1111nc 1&.20 16.20 Julv 11, 19] EOIE $p 'IO.ll 711.13 !..VU kl 1.06 1.73 !..om 10.«110.o!O plan to have 6 percent more Sit! Alt El'C MGMT GllP : !..US• k1 s .•• 6 .•• SPK•I 211.J'/211.~ f d 2 AOMlllALTY : EQIV G• 7.5' ... CU'St .:01 n IS lS.CM SIXI Lev ..... 4.11 acres o corn an 4 percent Grwt11 •.2• •.67 EQ1v Pr 2.93 i..ust :.2 11.w 1~.06 )IECVttlTY FDS; •~ f h t lflCom 3.6.t 3.99 Fnd Am l.Jl 1.99 Cui! SJ I.JS 1.11$ E<1\ll!y1 32.6 J.51 more soy~ans or arves lnwrn 1.n 1.6-l 1o•e• .p,1 12.os 13,10 !..u•r so J .• s 4.21 '""''' ~» 1.n than in 1972 Adviser •.13 •.H llun " 14.IS II.Pollo 4.JO •.11 ulrr• F 6.211 6.U • Aelnl Fd 1.11 1.90 m•n:i 3.60 J.9] Polilrl l.•2 J.73 SELIEC1'EO FD$: Staff Cuts Recorded By Firni Aet"• In 13.'3 lo.to ne•o ¥ 11.:U H.16 Kn lekr S.97 6.·SI Am 511• 7.96 7.96 AfUIVrt l.ll l.&3 Eaul!Y F ,1.1•, t.00 Knk r Gm 6." 1.65 01>9 Fd 8.80 1.ilO 1AGE Fd 0.64 0.13 Folrlld .6 ,1 ~i Ln,,mrk 6.21 6.IS Sol Stir• 12.0312.0l llll5tlltt 11.0>6 U.91 Fm Bur• 9 . .0 ·-Lef\X Fd ).01 S.07 Sant!nel 9,}5 10.311 AJDllll F<I 11.11 U.50 Fe<l RAS '·'' Le x GllOUI': Stntry F 12 ....... OJ A"'C~D F 4,!.0 4 '1 l'IDlfLITV' !..P Ltdr U :Jl 16 75 S,..AREHLD GAP • llm OV•!. tzl (Z) GI.DUI': Grwtll &:Oii 6:61 Corn1t J.11 LU Am Eotv l (' •.16 IB;g,11~•b 1'~ 1~·~' Resrch ll.00 U.21 En•tpr 5.•T 5.9~ AM e:PllE5 ontr1 I 71 . Llbtv Fd S.41 ).91 Fiii "" J.62 J.96 Fi!'ND I: /26 l\S v 5Sec 4ta 729Llle lnlv I.GI i.60 H1rt1r 1.JO I.ff ifff.., 1:M t~l ;;, 1!J1 11:to t!;:&J.~: t~ l.6' s~ii~~~N ~~~s :t~ 1 AS~ocGnh lll ::n ~~n 1'·:: lt·fl 5t:l>LEJ~ 12.$9 11.H ~= l~:li :::~~ A"' lnsln 1~ ,:,5 Salem F i.O'l i.tz Mvtull 14.0I 14.•7 lnve1t 9.01 t.91 Am lnvtl l tl ''1 Trer><! 73.l6ll.5J LOllD A88: Sh Dee11 11.711 1.71 :~r!JL• ;'.2: 1:~1 ~/iN~~~~~~\i.ts l-95 :E1'~:._ l'.~ 1ill 1~:~a"c '"~~!:: GllOl/1'' Fin Ind 4.31 4.l1 lu!IN!rn i'Ui.4111.'S Inv 10.~ 11 20 Executive Industries Inc. ca1>1a1 · ,,,. 4.70 F n Inc 5.SJ s.51 "vinn In ~ . ., 10.ll Trir 7.90 a:6J A h • b ed h Fnd Inv (1\ !1) Vf'f!I ].SO l.IO AGNA l'l/HDS: Ve<>1u• 1.30 '-01 n IX e1m-as motor ome G•w•h 1.10 1.•• htFd v1 1a.s9 11.57 c111ta1 l.61 l.96 sm11~. B 9.69 9.69 ra t h ' , ed ln<Offl 1.14 7.91 FIRST rncom 8.77 t.5' SB l&C.r 10,IJ 10 BJ manu C urer. a. announc venivr 1.!8 s.64 INV l!STORS' p1111rm 1.1i e.s1 so GenF (II (i> .'.I rcduclion of staff and cur-W• Natl 11.67 U.79 ~11c Fd s.u s.1>:1 Manhtn l.90 •.'JO )wst Inv 7.98 'i.U ' A!lf'C.11 ) .. ~! l.tlfl rtl\ Fd 6.t'l 7.SSMtt t Gwt (IJ (!) )Wtn• G 61l 661 rent production AXE 1oc1t F 1.6J •.:w. MASS co: 5ovr In 11:1s 12:21 . · ,..OUGHTOH: hi Multi ltL (II Fretm 7.ll 1.58 )ot!tlra , 1,,5 s 10 These ad1ust1nents were F,ooo, •, •,·t,, •,·f. ',0,.",M~ 0~0°,,~b 11 1n<111 F 1.11 1 . .u S0&P 1no 6.o 6:4.J . un . "" . . M••• F 11.N 11.JI TATE IND Gll:P· made due to 1he sof!ness 1n S•«k s.11 ,, 6 101 Fnd 1.10 1. o MASS FNCL: l.tin'l Fd 4,M s.O. . AJf! Sci • 01 •.36 Colum '·" J.99 MIT II.II 11.11 Dl•t1ll s.10 ~ j / the retail markel and current BLC Gtll 11 J6 10L!! F21 F0vn<1 t~ til MIG 11.tJ u.11 P<ogrs •.69 s:n · nd " Th · Bab5on 10.ft l ·"" 0n ' MIO ll.JI U.iS Sr l'r IGr 4.$5 • economic co 1!1ons. 1 s B<lvroc 1, 9 1.65 " gto1D!!'RI MFO 11.tJ u.11 u Fr inc t.14 9-r. reduction is being made to ::;;~~~ l~ l:~GJlrwY:· 5.2i ,•,·~M~r~~ t~ 1lt~1;·T:i~11~~i?:AN-1J.Ji~~i~ k I d . 1ee1cOll JO.ff 10.98 lncom 11.61 ··~ 11 "05 11'0J A 1no · eep sacs an inventory B••oe< t: 11.20 "-'' F Mtu.i 1.t 9,74 MM~,11e~ '"' ,·, .~ ,, •,.12 l.k1 b I ed nd h Bttltshr 4 oe o.16 F SDKll I0.'211.tl •d .. m · · » .11 1.11 a ane a lo keep I e com-sonos1t in s u Fou•lll F t.il t.l1 Mcinv ~o 10.1s 11.20 51;En.' 1.:12 1.11 pany On Scheduled (O meet its c~:..tdn ttt 1~'.U !';:~~~~IN ~~BB~~ lf.~ lo:r, Balanc RO~J,Dj:,, d r I d d BULLOCK ~NTC 1 61 l.3J MIF Fd 1.65 1.ll C11olll 9,90 9 90 current an u ure cman s. FUNDS: wth sr ,:,, 1.IJ M•F Gr11 ,,30 1.65 stac« 10.11 i.)1 the con1pany said Bun Fd 12.69 11.to r tnc"' Ul (r) MuOm 1}1 •.10 s.11 111 GltOUf': • . C<ln F" 21.11 73.18 l/5 Gv s 9.IJ 10.68 MuUm '" b.90 t.61 Grwrn S.to 6.•7 The ccmnany e>pects June 01v Shr 1 j·66 •.01 u111111e 5.26 5.76 Mvt Sh•~ U.66 11.61! Inc~ 1.os i.81 r Natw<I n 10.n 011111• S.21 S.76Mvrl Trs l.'i!I I.to Smm.r •.ll 9.\l 30 nine-1nonth results to be NY v.., 10:3111.ls 11;" c10 •·' '·" Nai 1n11u •.50 t.50 Tac1>n1 6.0ll 6.67 , B•nhm f.42 9.•2 Rf EatY •.22 ,,,2 NAT SEC FDS: Svno:r"O F 6.15 6 9, available_ shortly. These ~~o F1u,~ 1 1~J~ lY:al ~~ M~·~: 1:i: 1i:~ g~ncs, ~~j5 ~~:9 ~~. •& :J.: :~ results vnll reflect a favorable lent Shs 13.1111.Jt ,U NDi INCP 01v111n J . .st. 1.19 r.,....., c J.IS ,..._ · I · d CHANNING GlllOUP : Ptet St~ •.OS •. 61 T•an C•p 11' 901 postuon 1n sa es. earnings an Fl/NOS: comm ,.~ ·~ lflCorn ,,,, s.10 Tr1v1 EQ t:u1o:1, earnings per share, the cam· G~nc~d 1~:t: 1~::: I:'' 10'.75 1?:,s ~~~n 5' ~·~ ~·l~ ~1°'CcH 1~·; 'li: Plus: Interest on all accounts is compounded daily and paid quarterly. Free Sale Deposit Box· I Free Photocopy Service I Free Travelers Cheques I Free Nolary Service I Free Note Collection· "" > po led Com ~tk 1.21 l.lt P!lol l.lJ 1.IO HIEW 11!,..G Lio· ' :!Olh Cl 1't1 ill'l! l'~I y re r . Grwlll 1.07 j·~ P,;' ..... v I.OS 7.61 EQullv 15.ri. 11.10 Unlflt.d Ii) (j ) lflCom ~.10 -» E S·S P 10.tJ Grwlll 10 71 11.60 Unll\lfld I 611 9 .. Spocl 1.66 1.11 Sec ,_ .. '·"Sidi 11M 11 ft u ... tDN SE1tV1c E" ve~!vr '·" 1.... ROUP St(: NEA Mt 9.-.! .:,s GllOUP ' CHASE All<llt I' S.51 6.10 Niu CHOI o to 4 ii Brd 5 Iv 13."6 l0.11 Ll d B k SOSTON: 811 Fnd 1.89 l.6J N:euwt!l ~·211 1' N~ll tnv 1.31 t.ot Oy S 'lJ' Fnd 8os 1.12 1.11 Com Stk H.1'11.!6 Newton n:4613'.6 Un C~p1 Ill 910 (., ... Fron Co S.Ol S.09 Silh FAm 4.11& •."6 NW Ptrs 1J ~ U 6J Whl/181 u'13 1J.J1 I I \ • •• I ' ~ ~ • le -r lj I . ~ ~ r~ . i THE BIG M MUTUAL SAVINGS Cbrona de/ Mar: 2867 East Coast Hlghway/675-5010 For more Information call : Rober! D Manager AS!Of'l To Acquire SF Stock Speclul to the Dally Piiot Sf\Tr •• 6.~1 '·ft ~<lh tna 19.6119.61 N~ IWl(f 1f 111J'.l• UNIT I D ,·.·~Ho.'s: c~1 Fd 1~J~ 1tiil H~~1L1'0N12o8&P:·'° Nl(t\I•• 14.66 \l,l6 A,cc11m ,., 1.10 COLO,..IAL Fu"d •.CM •. ,,Nest Jvtt U.31 15.Jl no I'd 1.13 8.U -=uNDS: Grwlh 1·~ 1.2S OceenQ 6.t2 6.11 ~\lflt ~w 9,J110.27 Conver o . .o 10.21 !Mom ,9 6.53 DmaQe l .JS 1.o1 on• nc t.lt 111,ll E11unv 1.11 >.~ H••lw•I I . t0.-10 NO:ll Id ll.,l 11.St lnco"' 11.1' lo.So ~lln<I f.9 1D.1A ed l.v 1.21 7.'1 One Wltl 16.111•.12 k lent l.7J 1.311 Grwln <.• .... fdl)tq 7.12 1.U OPPENHM l'DI Ve~ .. ,, 'l• !tl(om f.61 l!f, """ j-'12 Oo Alm t.t1 10.1' USM C1 10 '110.~1 VHOtUr l.06 Htrlll!I .50 1 ... 00 Fna 1.116 1.1) us G"1S 10.06 l0.,1 Colvm G 10.&J 10. S Horact 1j.io11 'l0.00 Oi:i T..w 6.01 ~,6) VALVE LINl l'DS: COMMONWLTH 1 .... 1 Co .!o-110 . .0 0TC kt t.11 105' V1I lt11 41,0I 5.51 TRUST: Imo G< o.tl 1.61 P••lrfll 1.6' 1.ll VII Inc •.JS •. n A .. e 1.0I 1.11 •~c loAm IJ.11 u.:w. P1ul R •~ •.• 1 1.51 LIY Gtn •. )6 l"' C I" I, ltl( Bost j.10 6.61 Pves1n1 F S.Ol J.Sf VII Soc: l.01 .:k ~ ~· ,,50 '·' ltld l'Am .n ,_,. ... Mvt t.1, ,_,. VANCE omp o '·] S. lf\tl'Qon '·'° t.OI P111n SQ •• l1 t.S7 SAND ERS: OAKLAND -A definitive orno d I t.o.s 111 1nv111 ll.tt'2.•2 PhH• Fo ft! \ti rn ... 11 1.0t '·'' agreement has been si1tned =~Flf .:04 l::! l~rt~ ~ ,1.ir 1t:i: ~:;:a sf,. ;:r, ·" t:.C~"'" ::= ~:~ on• Inv 11.00 ILH Inv Gu d ,.~ •.It ,IOHllll l'D: Vllllt1)11 •..S' $ Q? under i.vhich Lloyds Bllnk Ud. ~~t'•~ 1Jl J·~3T ~: 11001,e 1,:n 11:u ~\: ~~ ,,·ll,;:~ ~:.,"?'fDtO ~~ 1:11 will acquire \Vorld Airways onlT, '"c ,'", ,', ,~i.•,,1, Plttnr 11 1.62 t.41 •rl" 1 j 1l 1.10 I .. ~ 5 I h Id' r M" j·l ·'1 .. .. Pl11111d 1.ll t.J.I Vl•11g c;;r ,,s 1.25 nc. S l1U'. perccn 0 1ng 0 wn 0111 . s !·" •o•m 1,12 1,91 l'LI GRO 11,15 n.tJ ~-u~• 0, 1 '' !·" the out~landing slack of f.'irst :=~iv 1J{ .:n ::K-!'f. l:~ ~}! Pl,!!1~ RD~l'oe u.01 w:r~ ~ l~:S~ lo~; W I B k & -··t Co El.AW.I.Ill loo••sY ORDOP. "'"' Er• 1 ti 10 ,. JltLL tNOTDN C'S em an I IWI .. OROU,1 ' l Gia t.M '. NW Hor ··o:i .:qi <JllDVP: San rrancisco. for $115 ~Ilion ~i.!1 " ::ll·'0 ll~1 I ,,N !:~ !:.t'l Pro Fd 1:a. •n E001or 10.S1t n.~1 6 'II' nds II · •I• T ' •. 'l•I '"10,J! Pro"'1dt l.t' • I t~vu t.n 100t I~ m1 ion pou !lier gl. t:111Vt11h $t ,,,."":.e J!91=2 11,,,,:,.PrO'l'd G1 1.ri ,_,. MG-ro11 11.•111:11 11'te joint statemt:nt was ~· co 1t:t 1t ~i.v ~ 'l:lJ =orNi~ 1•·1111 11 t~c=:~ 1f:~ u.,. made by Edward J Daly <exei E td 11 I'!•" '-'2 S.JI l'UNDSr we111v 11 .11111"' . ' RI Yl'Ul Oi II i:ver 10.1,11,h ="" 10.tt l>.01 cMinnan of World Airways. ~011 ~ '8: 11: = ::81 !:!'l c;:=1"' ,1_r, 1•1.rr w.:"{1111 ~:r, \:~ Oakland , and E.0. Faulkner. :I L• 1.. 'l·~ ~ .. , u• ,!·r: .,.., "·"' ·" i:'.I"' •• !·" !"' h I f Llo d B k o ltl(m 1. ' frf l Ml H'' I~~ Inc '!lo 1·" fliKonl ·" ·" cl a mlonoanE ol nd )' ' an . !!A c~ '1·~ 1 : :~ ~~"; t' 1"'1:,: l!l~•11 '" ''l) ·~: .. ~~~rv1d~.J. tl ''' ,()ll( , ns fl . !!~ii ~ G• ~ '/lw 1 IP Cv•tll ~ ll """''" , 1~ 1" •11,.vrf"•hl• \ ' .. 1 • " ~ •N ~ " i " : ' I • ' ' ' • • ' ' • ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' • • • i Thundlf, .hill 12, 197l Thursday's Closing Prices-Complete-New York Stock -Exchange List ' Price of Stocks Largely Mix~d NEW YORK (AP) -Blue chips lagged behind and !tock market prices were generally mixed Thursday In moderately acUve trading. ' The performance of the market was generally egative, but. analysts said they were encouraged by the fact that a broad base of stocks was getting play . lead o10ju.sL tb.e_glamo10us •od...stocg with (n· stitu~onal mtel'elts. That, they said, indicated wider publtc. participation. Stock market prices opened generally lower to- day as the dolla~ weakened on forei gn markets. The llJar~et had rallied strongly for the three days be-gmrung Monday. .... -.. lt·I Clldu ~ L..w I.All (Ill , $C DAILY PILOT 31 , ! DAllY PllOI . ' < .. • :1 .. • !i •• •' .. • ~ l • I • • • , J J • , • I - DAii. V..PILOT -lhurMlQ', July 12: ,1973 Strike Over TV mGm,IGIITS KCKT • 8:00 -11 Ahtaham Lincoln." The first talking picture made by silent film masler D. W. Griffith. stArring Walter Huston as Uncoln ill a SOttnplay by Scepben Vlneent Benet. More TV Reruns SRC Opens Drama -ABC D 10:00 -Street& oL.SanJ'l:an~. Twg !lsbermen acddentally witness the smuggling or alien women, resulting in the death or one of the men. Karl Malden, Michael Douglas. CBS B 11 :30 -"Damn Yankees." A Washington fan {Tab J·lunter) roots like Lhe devil for his team, and the latter gives him a chance to help the Sen- ators overcome the Yankees (1950s edition). Gwen Verdon, Ray \Valston, Jean Stapleton. TV DAILY LOG C'i) D 5'tw de JM Aofu Thursday ai MoM: (211r) "lkc Youn"' lrothen" (WH) '49-Waynt MOf- Eveni ng ris, Janis P1i1e. JULY lZ t:JOmMmiriUillstlow Ell) Dt• .. J:00 u 0 D IE mail m..... 9:00 ti (() CIS Ttlursd., Mtvlt: tC) 00 t1i Jkwl (?hr) "1llt luru" (com) '69-Ml-D Mpl 11•11 An1els 'IS. DI-chtel York, Rit1 lushingt0fl. A popu· troit TI11t1. Cont'd lrom Sl'M. lat British rock sinaer, and an En1·' Cl) c.rbtlip ff Udle'• fttlMI \ish tiowtr-chHcl are drawn to • 8....., DIM• AIM mister muslci111 !Of his knowltd.,;1 m 'f1ll ~ in !he sitar and for 59irih11I en· m Stir,,. lithtenment f.I a..''"'' D 9 m lronlWt 'The C1Ue1 .. fD MM11rsq. l.lql (R) Chit! Ironside letts Officer S DfM!st.pt Jrlfl 8eldin1 is the object of 1 dis- 1:•(1) ......,,.._.. turtled man's lantnies when she a...-.: (C) (90) .. .._ " ..,. nceiw:s 1 series of 1nonymous 1 WM MW" (awn) ''5-An!llHI calls. flHllcella, 0.IJllt MlcMlln. ti) I • flw YHI' Lile Cf) CIS ... Wall• Cronkite O (}) Q) l•I f1 ''Supenlition" . 9 IM t• ft Trwll (R) ~ine waies war 111tftst th1 ~...,. lrllfll Sllllw feats of sl1Ye laboftrs ind con· . m ... lllftll victs fc.rud to wolt; in 1 mine 111>'7 fll Sit'"' Tiiie T• believe is turstd. Reschtd111td rtflll '9 LIJllll 6't t · .,,st week. 111 ,.......... m s,ui1tl L111rva1t ,., ... • D~ This Fall? By BOB THOMAS LO! AJ>IGELES CAP) ::.. With the writers' s t r i k e agAlnst the fllnl producers set- tled , the television networks are scrambling to meet the deadline for the opening of the fall season . Chances are TV viewers wiU be watching more or \1•hat !hey will be gelling <ill su1n- n1cr: reruns. Last week's sculen1l·nt ur the 16-wl-ck Wr iters Guild of America against the. n1ovie studios brought a "'ave of optimism in the nt•twork head· quarters that the 1973-74 season wou ld be uhle lo begin more or less on schedule. But the net111o rks still face prob!cn1s. 'Negolia tions 11•ill "rcsumc in New York this wee k for a set· tl ement or the wri ters' strike against the networks themselves. Said a Guild spokesman, "The talks were going well last week, but the negotiators had to break off because ot exhaustion ." ONLY LIVE·tape shows are invol ved in the dispute with the networks. lfardest hit of the networks is NBC, which has long relied on the major r~:-t u d i 0 s ' particularly Udiv.Crsal, to sup- ply its series. Shooting generally starls in April or May on filmed shows for the fall season . to COlllpele with o t ll e r network.'i ' earlier st a rt in g times. However, since NBC depends roost heavily on movie litUdios ror production of seriel, many sboW11 may not be ready on time, a ..!J>Okesman said. IF A DELAY occurs, the nelwork "'ill go ahead with wh at is re11dy, eliminating the traditional ··premiere week" for unveiling new shows. Instead . the spokesman said, some series would debut later in the ,month. ABC is still maintaining its scheduled Sept. 8 start for the new seasoo, but it will be a struggle to meet the deadline. Such shows as ''Mar c us \\1elby, M.D.". "The Odd Cou· pie," "Kung Fu" and "Owen Marshall" arc produced by the major studios. "There's going to be a lot of overtime earned by studio workers," co mm e nt ed a Writers Guild spokes man. CBS stuck to its goal of a Sept. 11 season start. ~1ost of the network's series are supplied by producers that had signed with the writers:· "All in the Family," "The ~1ary Tyler Moore Show," '·The Waltons," "Cannon,·· "Barnaby Jones," etc. "MEDICAL Center" and "l\.1ASH " w'ere struck, as was "Here·s Lucy." But Lucille Ball's production company was not, so she was able to stockpile scripts. Nem Allbo•• Pamela Shoop plays the role of Allison Mac· Kenzie in NBC TV's daytime serial drama "Return to Peyton Place," a role played on the screen by Diane Varsi and in the first TV version by Mia Far- row. TV Probes 4-day Week The summer season or living theater along the Orange Coast gets under way tonight as South CoMt Repertory unveils Its third consecutive world premiere (which ~as to be a local record of some sort), an original drama lilied, appropriate ly enough, 'jAdrieMe's Summer." Described by its author, William Lang, as "a play of -psychological terror," il <leals with a woman in a secluded beach house terrorized by thr~atening phone calls. Sort of a cross between "The In- nocents" and "\Yait Until Dark." ·Barry Koron makes his directorial debut at SCR with "Adrienne's Summer." which spotlights another ne\vcomer, Eliza6eth Herbert, in the title role. Completing the east are Steve De Naut, June Winslow. Susan and Rochelle Savitt, Bill Brady and Paul Gracey. The thriller, staged throi.igh a grant .Crom the Office for Advanced Drama Research, will be presented Wednesdays through Sundays for th& next lhree weeks with an 8 o'clock curtain at SCR's Third Step Theater. 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. RescM'ations 646- 1363. * .The. pros and cons· of lhe four·day work week as prac· ticed in Southern California will be examined by the Los Angeles Collective Monday, at 7:30 p.m. on KCET, Channel CASTING HAS bee.1 an· .nounced for both the E>fiange Coast College production of "Follies" and Golden West J College's "A Midsummer Night's Dream." both of which ""ill go on the boards Aug . 1-4. 28. . Playing the principal roles in "Follies'"'will be Doyle A1cKinoey and. ·Pat Manusov as one or the two Ci)uples who share an evening of nostalgia at an old Broadway theater ' Intermission Tom Titu$ ''Follies~-being~directed-way bot the Huntington Beach by OCC drama instructor John . Playhouse already ~s _an· Ferzacca. Curtain time is 8:30 nounced auditions for its fll'S1 each night in the college production of ftle new seaSo/1 auditorium. _ director Kert Johnson will * hold lryolJlS ror ··eactu.< FOR GOLDEN west • s Flower" on JulJ 21 iii 7 p.m. "Midswnmer Night's Dream," and July · 22 at I p.111. at the director Charles f\fitche\J has playhouse, 2110 &lain St., Hun· landed a GWC alumnus. Peter tington Beach .... six men and Conway (who four years ago four women are oeeded for the played the leads in "A Street· comedy, which opens Sept. 7 car na1ned Desire" and for five weekends. "'Tartuf£e") and Renata Florin A record seasoo in advance (whose GWC credits include membership sales is forecast top roles in "Rain." Taming of at th e Laguna Moulton the Shrew" and "The Visit"). Playhouse, where more than Other major roles in the 2,000 season tickets for 1973-74 Shakespearean comedy have already have bee n ordered .. been assigned to Dao Baerg, the goal is an all·tlme record Don . Hayes, Janet Gould, of 3,iloo members, a n d Roland Barajas, F r a n k playhouse officials are con· Pendle, Bill Durkin and Jim fident it will be surpassed. . Luse. Completing the cast are the f I r s t three plays of Dan Cartmell, Kim Cole, Jim Laguna's new season will be Boyd, John Conlogu·e, "Ah, Wilderness," "Last of Margaret Copp, Ida . Hen· the Red Hot Lovers" and derson, Bruce Jeri c i a u , "Life with Father'' with the Charlie 1'1atheis, Jim Reeves, other three to be announced Share Searcy, Chris Adams, later .... Mike Silliman and Eve Kerns. --·---------- G\YC set designer Robin m Huber plans dramatic lighting, electronic music, wind and fog effee ts to give the show an unusual impact. Curtain times will be 8:30 on Aug. I, 2 and 4 MANN THEATRES All THOTW COOllD IY lllfalOllATlqN with ·a family night set for 7:30 ·on Friday the 3rd in Golden_ West's Community NOW PLAYING GB 1n1rt .,....,. e> o Sbtw di A1e11ftd11 Sueru • IJlll lucill !:JO 0 ..... Only three of the NBC series were being made by com· panics which h<1.d agreements~ with the Guild: "Sanford and 1Son ," and t"·o new shows. ''Lotsa Luck" with Dotn ()eLuise and "Diana" starring Diana Riggs. One matter still threatens th'e neW'l~levision season: lhe Directors Guild of America is negotiating wilh the film studios for a new contract. But industry sources were hopeful that the formul a fo r settling the writers' strike might satisfy the directors as v.·en. ·The segment provides a history ol the I a b o r movement's fight for the 40- hOur. week, alqng with looks at three · !inns that have suc- cessfully adopted four-da y, 40- hour Weeks and one ex· periment that fizzled . Theater. matked for destruction arid - James Shirley and Blanche BACKSTAGE* _ The old RESERVED S(ATS on Safe 5,30 'Iii UO · frl.; Sat., Sun. J10011 J:9eCIJ OID,.... •(EMucMcNllllilna (I) _, CC) (?IN) • .., °"' I 11!> ....., . Other features. will include ah interview. by Ciji Ware B.i ll e tt with Barbara Partridge, author of ·"B~rgain Huntrng in LA ," and a report on bread·maklng by Wina Mickelson as the ottrer coup.c. · h di r the ,.\.11 but ~tiss Mickelson are•r_sc_•_50_0 _" __ •_'_.:_Y_0_"1_0 __ 1 let A WMr ......,.. (COlll) '66-10:00 0 lj§) a;) 0.11 M1rti1 ~ (W) M Hope, PllJnit: Dltl1r. Willi1m Conrld 1nd N1ncy Sifllt11 I ---......,. f\ltsl -·"'""'' emm-tLMlaJ OO T--. e 1 .._." luMlle D ()) m StrMt1 11 s.1 rrtneb-e 11,1 1 a...... ct "tlelthw1tdl". (R) A pair ti e _, (ID IN n..11 A MW lish1~n 1CCi~nt1tly wilnm 1111 11-Plrt Illies with Erica WiltOl'I, smu1111n1 af 1hen wom1n, 1ttull· ....._ 1ultloritJ Oft 1rt llllCllt· in1 hi th• death of one ol 1111 worlf ...i Thlcrie M•R. Gflek cool· mtn. \ .. NBC plans to re-evaluate it s sChedule plans and perhaps move the fall lineup from the scheduled Sept. 24 1arget date Pasade1aa Dra11ta making their occ ~ebuts. Sturgeon. -.,....... ,.....,_ o-' ct> ""' "'" -e•.a t• u......r (com) '62 -Jim G!1 T• •allta ..... Huttoq, P1ul1 Pttnl.1ss. A bun!lint m .... ..., )'OUlll l"leut•nant is otcl111d to l!Rd th1 Japanese ovtliw •Ila Im \M1 Playhouse's Final Curtan1 Beverly Dvorelt · takes the top supporting role of Carlot· ta. while Barbara Dvorett, Rick Gol son, Lori ·furtner and Dave· Dunlap· play the leading characters in their younger days .. Others -in · the OCC cast include Ross Lynn Tepper, Caroline Wolfe. Larry King. Virginia CleVel(Uld, Romara Blac.~. Debbie · Struble. Joe Funicello. Julie Garvin, Pegg)' Griffith. Mickie flevenall, San· dra Leigh ·Neill, Rebecc~ Sord<llet, Stcv.e \Varner, Karen Zoellner. Richard Rowland. Irvt'in Lawton · and J ef f Thirloway. 1:118,... ........ (II) '"A Mil· r1idin1 Anny SllPPfllS t11 1n 9blcun 1111' Dlllr ~-A* symlrol islMd ill tht Pacif1e. PASADENA (AP) -The tdfW lftlllftS ·WlcWt, to nc.1111 CS ...,... Pasadena P I a y b o us e . a ::... .,.., ..wt -.!Id~ f1iliiw tt:JI IJiT• lld historic training stage and ro ...;...•, Minn (i)O..-., ..,_. legitimate · theater. w i 11 GTM aUtalM• (R) c1111 Btad-ma...,...lttip flshint becon1e a fihn making center i., ,,.,, IWI • lllllMnd's jltlOUlf' m VIMs • c.tlld9 for an evangelical religious ID .. ....,. 1 mittd l'llltl'll ll'Oll fll) Tllirty Mh111tu Witll... group if financial negotiations flli!lc Ill with laitip .... ti. €fJAcMp1111•t are completed. the Pasadena a .... ~,..,....._ Gm ,.._/Splftl Slar-News has reported. ((),.._iMt-11:1Dllr:'I0"1'lfn(DK•wt The transaction would ring D -$ lllft: (nf) 00 (J) ®I fB ""'* down the final curtain for the ,... ...i 91 Mn" tdT•J '56-0 Dte $Ws! ...,.nd Playhouse. first founded in R.-t Tly\Or, Burl 1fts. @ "'"'. Mistn 1916 and at its present location a Llt'1Ill•1 Dtt1 II Tnitti or Const11110C:tt since 1925. A theiter launched GTWlht ID""": "YIOl'ld lA MJ Conllf"' a1 the site three years later •.,.... (dr•) ·~11c1it MurpflJ. B1rb¥1 was so acclaimed it ' was e kdll ewe.. "Ch1rrild1~ Cll) R'"'1. Jelf Morrow. -i0l1lelimes called "the back A Mtlk•·st,it rodeo 1t1turin1 P«· 11:15 fEJ"Ciltta 34 door to Hollyv.1Xld." ~ iJ two "dlarro'" ... tt·30 IJ{J)CIS ui. Mlril: ft)"°""' *'Pili• in ....,trlln Skills. • ,.....,.. (mus) •sg..T1b H11nt1r, Of late, however>. rectirrent t!I.., Gwenn Vll'Gon, .lttn St1pleton, RIJ financial troubles p.lagued tbe erty t h r o u g h foreclosure. $100,000 as a down payment to save it for my group while l completed negotiations with some of the business operators who wanted to lease parts or the new venture," Jones said. But David L. Ghent, presi· dent of the United States Colleges Jntematlona\, offered the bank $.110.000 cash for the property, it was learned by the Star·News. "The bank apparently is a~g the offer." Jones s3id, "'and why not? They are in the banking business and very anxious to sell this prop- erty and get out ol the real estate busines,,." fB DI.,._ f..itf w1iston. An l'lid, mkldlt·11td blSI· theater which once drew lo its 1• 8 Cl) TM • ...._ (I) Ned Belt· b11 tin makes • de1I pith tt11 Dt'lit stage the likes -Or actors BANK OFFICIALS had no 1' (lll$h H 1 shy, sillnt tyP1 w111 1nd is tr1nslonned int~• JOlll'l lifst William 11oldeo. Robert statement, but a Bank of c:on¥inm 1 10n11ntlt city sill to t l1ss bt1t 'pl1ytr who lulls 1111 Sin· Young, Victor ~1ature and America employe.,who wished min)' ltlm b1 usln1 lowt letters ators to !he penn•nl. • Dana Andrews. Closed three his identity kept secret con· w1ittM for him by Jolln·Boy. o ·OJ)m Joltnny C.~n years ago and sold at auction, finned that negotiations with a .QI m'" ...... ...., .. I 0 Mowle: "Unllolr flelt" <1n11> '54 its revival with new cm-Ghenl are under way. Mac Dim. Cl1d,s ll11!1ht ' the -P1ulette Goddard. wmilm Syifts· bcllishments had been the cur· Pips, till· Ualfs, ind Chuch & ter. rent dream of W i 11 i am Ghent, who recently left for Cfiolll IU•SI. I 0 rn llW; Cmtt Converse Jones and his King Europe. could not be reached . g Mlwtl: 1c1 {2fl;r) uw..111 TiJHS Employes at his office said ,._.. (i;om) '61 -Shirley M1t· m lt Ttlt tM lrlilt-[)cvelopanent Systems. they knew nothing about the U!M. Altn Arllin, Mlcltttl Ctine. ti) Nm transaction. Shh111 M1tl1ln1portr1ys1evtn dil· J2:00 (iJ MJislltl Dillon "I OFFERED the Bank of . Associates said Ghent was f111nt wom1n wi!h as m1ny Iii•· fJ Movi•: (CJ "T!" Oull.W1 America. which got the pro~ involved in the Melodyland bought the theater . tent. once the site of major concerts and rock shows. for the Rev . Ralph Wilkerson, the newspaper said. . Associates said that Ghent planned to use the Playhouse for the production or religious rums for television and theater -apparently in line with the 'beliefs of the Youth With .a Mission . organization which Ghent supports. Peppard Stars HOLLYWOOD (UPII George Peppard will star in '1 Ne~'man," an a ct ion rnclod rama at Universal Pie· tu res. · 'l•l•nd H~lidoy' Lcavc1 Bal~oo 1'11vlllon Jloll31at9a.m. Call (7i4) 67J•SZ4S J"or R ... rNlions, Etc. Be1fnnfne June 16 stY,lts in th is 1x1mlnat ion of lht D1u111trl" (wes) ·~Jim D1'1i1, [i=::~~~~;;:;;~11 Christian Center at Anaheim. modetn fem1!1 ·set 111inst • P1rl1 Kelly 1!)1n. · I~ fie "'as repotled to have bfd;1round. m Alfrlcl fllttflCOd PflMftts 11--------------------------------------1 fJ CD m Jffd Squad '1h• Hl1ht lZ:lO m Mowle: "lsltlld RtlllCI" (tom) HotdS Terrol" (R) Aflar Mlerln1 • '52. -Cl111is Johns, DIYld Nive~, frJd\lfed l•I In 1n 1utomobilt ICCi· • Geo<te Coulouris. dent. Julie'lis l[Mlid Jn lhi homt l :OO (J)QQ'])Nrws of Dr. Cll1se who,, 11on1 with his O His':•.,. P1bot PttlJ'llnt w/1• 1<111\1, is m1rked tor 1:45 II Mtvil: (C} '111t Jltttless ltted" 111urftr. (wn) 'S7-Slott Brtdy, Annt Bin· II Mlpl's """' croft. m 1t1.i111 r11111 • OffllpK z:oa m An·•strt "-'= '"Cri111ift11 1 ... Q) LI St!'Ofl .IMll '!If,,. "!Unify & Urill.,COIM" m Wltlff•ll Htatlnp l :lO II Morie: "Yltbb ti Eridelltt" t1J C.,..litl1 · (df•) ·~van JohftK111, Vert M1ln. Friday •DAYTIME MOV:ES t :lO 0 (C) "S..14111H tt SMl1" {ldY) '62-Stew•n Gr1n111. S11v1 JCo$cln1.j 10:00 (}) '1h1 Ctldtll l ltdt" (Id(! 'Slj -~ocl1 Hund1an, Piper l•urlt. I) "Fort OU11" (WIS) '5Z -Rod C1meron. J1n1 H11h, IZ:OOO "0.11111 ~ fdra) 0Sl-Hu111 llt1UfllOlll. Tom H111. "Till U." l :JG f) (t) '°CfHn tl1ultlls" (ro111) '59 -AIUl rtJ Htpbutn, AnlhonJ PmiM. J:OO ()) (C) 'Tin lll au,ulca" (mllS) '63-£.twis Prt)lty, UrWI• Andrtu. fif "'"t111lllJ M11iftb" (mu') ·35 -Nelson [ddy, JeanneUe M1cDon· lid. J:30 O (C) "flwt Wae~t \R 1 l1lloon" Ccom) '6Z -Red 811tt011s, f•bian, B11b111 [den (dll) '52-P111I H1nrtid, j 4:00 11 (C) "Thi Purple 1'11111" (d11) 1:00 m "Cri1is'° (l!l)'I) 'SG-c.'1 Ciint. ·:i~retory Pee~. Win Mln Thin . .lou JU/If, ! 4:30 (}) $tll)I as llli'M liitin1 KOCE. CHANNEL 50 len Ga111r1 Yvette M lmi11ux "THE NEPTUNE FACTOR" AllO Joh" W1yn11 "RIO LOIO" IG) Contlnuou1 D•lly From 2 7:00 And 10125 ALSO I S•nt1 Ant Jllrwv.111tr Cti.ttfN" °''"" . 547-IOl 1 OlltANGl CO.HIT "THI SllYU fOX l SAM DAYINPOlT" !GI ...,.,....., "ftlt IKvrt rox I SAM DAY'fNPOllT" (G) Of'lN OAlll' 121~0 P,M. lliw.,-$klll r.-.. a, •I L11m°" SI . S2S.J~2fi S•nDl•1or...,. •t•.1~1""'>1 962·2411 S.llf• """ , ...... , ...... Cl\•IW'l•n lilw. 551-7022 '" fW$ • -""*"' -KT Al MOIHING ... """",., .... , .. I: ~MARLON BRANDO '* X """"'Ulllll~u i ·•· 1 ioiaiotu 1u n It !!l'tl~h MON. lffRU lHURl. 8 P.M. fRIDIY 7 & !,45 · SATURDAY ].] ' 9'45 SU•DIY 1·5 I 8 A~i. SEATS S4.00 ONEMALANO ..... 1"41.Mll!">llUD: •, ~S·7.01 ·~ I llLll ,.., ilCI AllllWI ·VII IYI TECHNICOLOR·" ~..., "-"''™""''•-G.'"C, o ......... __ •• "SILVER FOX" South Coast Plaza II Ml'll ll!W .... 11 "'AlllSTOC All~ Mlt II 1'iW->.ll•4f>•M "50NO D' Tiii 50UIH" ROSSMl\l\R ""' '"' """'"' ll~Oltl. .... S..·IMt 7 . . I • -• Lagu~a -.Beaeh ' EDITION • Today's Fl•al N.Y. Steeb VOL. 66, NO, 193, 4 SECTIONS, 62 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1973 TEN CENTS I ~.-• Me·sa-n~Escapes Deat}i-:-as Boat Blown to-Bi-t-s A Costa Mesa .yachtsmanj miraculo.usly escaped death . today \vhen his 41-foot cabin cruiser exploded in its Balboa ~tarina berth, blowing his blazing body into Newport Harbor waters~ like a htm1an firebomb. The $20,000 vessel y.•as a total loss following the 4:55 a.m. blast, but its skip- per was luckier. Eclv.•afd C. Dcorr. 31, of 463 Fair Drive, was listed in stabilized condition at Hoag A'lcmorial Hospital shortly after he was admitted. Dazed and in shock Crom burns and lacerations, Deorr instinctiyely began SY.•imming and started across the 100. foot·wide harbor channel toward Linda Isle. screaming for help. ;,! lit a cigarette and now I'm over here on this boat dock and [ don't know how I got he.rt." t,he stunned victim told Llnda Isle residents who raced outside to re~e him. . Ne"'J)Ort Beach Fire Department personnel said people living at 98 and 99 Linda Isle hurled out a boiiyant boat seat attached to a rope and the injured, struggUng man caughl it. They towed him in, while Newpori Beach ~ice and the Orange ,County . Harbor Patrol responded to help. • • Harbor Patrol Sgt. Harry Wright sa id the fireboat "'I S on routine patrol when a sudden red glow lit the sky in the direc· lion of the Reuben E. Lee paddleboat restaurant. "We \\'e re the first units on the sceoe and started pumping "Water on it ," he said. · The blast, Sgt. Wright added. disin- tegrated a 12·foot dinghy atop the shat· tE"""red cabin structure in \\1hich Deorr llt ;i ; c_igarette. apparent ly i g n i l i n g ac- cumulatl'd bil ge fumrs . according to Circ men. Ambulance cre"'fT\Cn on the scene bv this time splashed the blast victim with purined y,•ater to wash a"'ay the salt by this li me agonizingly cak L'<.I in his cuts and burns. Ocorr \\'as also -given oxygen for shock and smoke inhalation, aggravated by his panickey s\11imming. He suffered first and second degr~ burns ove r his ba rk, chest. neck and shoulders. in addition to laCf:raUons sus- tained by being blasted through the debris. Natnes of .he destroyed boat moored at 201 E. Coasl tlighway and the Unda JaJe residents Who rescued the victim v.ere not immediately avaUable . • Ie a e-s1 n ' ' ' Recreation Discussed In Laguna Retention of the Laguna Beach Recrea- tion Department at its present ri.tain Beach location was suggested \Vednesday night by Councilman Roy W. Holm _ The need to keep the building on its present si te was und erlined by l\1 ayor Oiarlton Boyd, "'ho requested the item be placed on the agenda for a final decision at Wednesday's city council meeting. '·We are looklnlf for a few more pen- nies." said Boyd. "From a capital as.sets point or view we cannot affOTd to -OcmoliSb tliis building .'' Current plans for the development of ~lain Beach Park call for demolition of the building in October and relocation of l ec ion deP.artment elsewhere in the city. Federal revenue sharing fun s would be used to cover the cost of the THOUSANDS OF RECORDS OF SERVICEM_EN DESTROYED IN ST. LOUIS .STQREHOUSE FIRE Blaze Still Rilgi ng in Huge Building Storing Military Files of 56 Million Men , new facility. "(Vhy can't \\'e leave the building • there?" ~ueried Holm. "It's a perfectly good building." But he added that keep- ing the building "'ould be contingent on renovating the structure. Military Records Burned St.·Louis Personnel Ce1iter Goes Up in Huge Fire OVERDAND. !\·lo. <APl -Fire swept ; through the sixth floor of the ~li\itary .. Pe"fSOilne1 Record Center in this St. Louis suburb today, destroyi ng thousands of records on pre.1!)60 service Jl(!rsonnel. Fire fighters rro1n eight suburban com- panies were sUU ballling_ the blaze 1nore than nine hours 'after it broke out in the two-block.long structure. They reported the blaze \\1as limited to the top floor, but water and smoke damage w. e r e spreading below. Its cause was not immediately known. Lansky Faces T1·ial ~fIAMl (AP) -Ailing underworld figure ~teyer Lansky must stand tria l despite a heart condition, a fede ral judge says. U.S. District Court Judge Joe Eaton said that prosecutors will supply at government expense a courtroom nurse and a col so Lansky, 71 , ca n rest to about four hours a day. but arson 'vas suspected. A spokesman said the building's sixth DQor contained records or Arffi'y person- nel who se rved prior to 1960. On !he fifth floo r. the spokesman said. are records of Navy .personnel prior to the same date. ··whatever isn't burned is as \vet as ca n be," sa id Army Col. Wesley C. Scarborough. Army offi cials in \Vashington said mauy of the records stored at the sprav.'lillg center are not . duplicated elsewhere. "Som e of them are full file copies of Anny personnel. These are n o t . dupliated." said Col. Leonard Reed . Two firemen wert hospitalized for tret:itment o( smoke inhalation but there were no other reports of injuries. The center, about 20 years old, con- tains about 56 million records of currtnt and former military personnel, a military spokesman said. Of about 2,000 employes , only security guards and maintenance personnel oc- cupied the building at the (ire's onset shortly after midnight. They escaped \\'ilhout injury. The center \\'as sealed Off by federal agents and military pe rsonnel after the outbreak or the fire. Fire Toll Six; 19 More lnjurell WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) -Six persons were killed , 19 injured and six unaccounted for Wednesday afte r .a fire swept through a five-story brick tene· ment building , officials sai d. A search through the debris for the missing persons was temporarily halted when a wall collapsed, Injuring four firefighters in additfon to those hurt in lhe blaze. Six persons remained hospitalized. two in critical condition. Most of the others were treated for minor injuries and released. The cause of the fire was not im- mediately detennined. City t.1anager La rry Rose called !he suggestion "a major change in !he con- cept of planning J\tain Beach Park ." He warned the council would be forced through the planning process once again if the building is kept at its present site. Al Thea!, public works director. told councilmen retention-of the structure could affect plans for relocation of No rth Coast llighway during construction of th e park. Tom P.1ead, finance director. suggested the council adopt a "wait and see" at- titude on the building ·pending a decision from the county Harbor. Beaches and Parks Commission on a city request for $50,000 matching funds for a new recrea- tion facility. Those funds would supplement $70,000 in loc3l revenue sharing money for a ne\v recreation department, said J\1ead. Action on the city request will be taken in mid-August by the comm ission. Boyd said Holm had raised "a good problem'' and added the council needs to shl'l'v the community "it can conserve as well as spend ." Factories Reopen ~10NTEVIDEO, Uruguay (UPl )-This capital 's morning rush bour rcutrncd to normal today with full bus service carr y- ing workers back to factorie s that had been closed for more than two ¥i'eeks by a general strike protesting the new rule by decree government. MAY LEAVE LAGUNA Police Chief Kelly ~~~~~~~~-~ Lagu11a Cou11cil '/ OK's BTula1n u ~ Negotiations The Laguna Beach Cily Council \\'ednesday nigh! authorized negotiations for lease of the former post offiCi! building on Glenneyre Street at a cost of $t.OOO per month. "This is a good dea l." commented Council"'·oman Phyllis Sweeney. in urging cit)' lease of the 6.000 square foot buil~ing, recently \'acated by the postal service. A rncnlQrandum to lhe council from Ci· ty ~lanallcr Larry Rose noted the· cost 1rorks out to 17 cents per square foo t per month. Ot her office space in the city rents bet"''ecn 4:i and 75 cents. Rose said. eoUncilnlen (Riled to ag ree on a specific use for the facility, but discussion tended to ravor relocation of the council chambers to the building. The space now occupied by the council chambers at city hall could then be used for exp ansion of the police departme nt. Jf the cit y decides not to use the building immediately, it could sublease space to pri vate individuals and finns. sa id Tom ~lead, finance director. The n1otion by ~trs. Sweeney called for a one year lease "'ith an option to purchase the building. Owner Robert L. "Bud" \Va tk1ns is asking $105,000 for the structure. Cily Attorney Tully Seymour "·as directed to work out final details wit h the owner. Aciion on the matter "'as needed at \\'cdncsday's mee ting because a city option on the bu ilding was set to t xpire Friday, ri.trs. S"·eency noted. \\lill iam Leak, 500 Broadway, objected to the sudden action, claiming the city !Sf:e L&ASE, Pug' %1 ·Got Dis Wish Boy, 8, to Be Buried i1i U1iifor1n . ·-AU!ANY. N. Y. (AP) -Eight-year-Old John Guiry. who.always wanted to be a policeman, will be buried in a police Uniform . The son or Mr. and P.irs. Joho F. Guiry of suburban Colonie died One resident of the building, Sam Jenkins. 18, said, "I just got out a win· dow on a rope ladder. 1 don't see why everybody couldn't have gotten out. They should have been able to use the ropes." QUICK RO UNDUP FOR MUSTANG Lagu11a En1ployes Given 4.6 Percent Pay Increase Tuesday oC leukemia. , The boy collected more lhan 1,000 ~lice pa~ches, receiv.e.d hon()rary membership in a number or·pobce agencies and on his frequent trips to St. P~er's llospital in Al~y he sometimes .wore a state trooper's hat pul~dow-v~r his~~ , ,,, ". : FuDO{i~JrYi<;!'S\~i!Ji.!l!\,hJ ' p~ ... ~~~p lS r hon'*"1' I~ ~ ,. .~~c ~--J officer R n1 d Klosky. "He always wanted to be a . policeman. That's. all he talk~ about," said Krosky, who vi slted him three or four times a week in the hospital and at home. John will -be•buried ·in an' honorary Colonie sergeant's·unilorm Krosky said. Helping you save is a· Dally Pilot etwified goal. Look at a typical bargain yoo could find : '70 l!USTANG Grnncfe. Air. p/1, · p= brakts. -xlnt. cond.. , (Phone No.) ... "?":' •••• The. (lnt cl118iried ad reader who came to.\~ tt it bought (he car. He's happy: W idy<rtiltf'I happy; Ind -the Doily Pllo< -Uppy to belp Into the bargain. If ~ have a blr'11ln to lltt, call 1 0ot110.·p11oj M-mor. She'll !>&hap- py to help. ·Tllo ~lrect I~ -ift.6171. --.. • t.agunm Beach city employes \\'ednes- day night were awarded a 4.8 percent "-pay lncrt.aM!. by the city council. The in- crc~ is retroactive to July 1. Col5l to the cit)' to grant the across the board salary inrnaJe Is 1101.000. Agreement among the three city ernploye asaocl1tlons and the cooncJI conclude several moritbs or negotiations. Other benef.its granted employes are frtt use or the city-operated transit iystem and one addlUonal paid holiday ~acb )'eer, to be taken at the discretion ol the ernploye. In addition to lhe cosl of li\'l ng in- crease for all employ , the council nut horizcd rccln~sifications of two bus driver positions IG make them com- JWrable to class\£icatlons o[ tht Orange Counly Trj nsil Distr ict . The mot to t:icceptlng the revl~ '1alary scale unanlmously \\'as adopted by the cily council. The proposal earli er had been ratified by representations or the ~funlclp31 F.mployes Association, Police Assocla· lion, Jo'lre A~~lat lon and lhc city's negotl3tor, John ·&. ~leDo¥i·cll. I Tustn1 Post Application . Admitted By JACK CJIAPPEIL Of lfle IMUr f'ller lllff Laguna Beach Police Chief Joseph J . Kell y may join other top officials in leav- ing his city post, it was Jeamt'd today. Kelly has applied for and is under oon- sirleratiori for a position as the Tustin police chle.f. Chief Kelly confirmed that he is under consideration for the pc;JoSitioo as the Tuslin chief bot declined io elaborate. The T1lstin chief retired a month or ty,·o ago and since ~,ha.t time, the force has been Wldcr dlrectioo of m 9Ctinc chief, a police 1ietuenant, Kel•y aald. Chief Kelly said he had dilCUIRd the matter with City Manager i..wrmce nose but did not 'know if Rose bad talked "'ith the Laguna Beach City Council. Selection or the 'IUstin ctUe( will be made l\tonday night 1 Tustin city officials would neither con- firm nor deny reports lhat Chief Kelty had :IJ:plied for the '.position,-ciling-establiah-·---1 ed person nel procedures as the reason_ _ ll o\1'eve r. Da~ Blankenstup, assistant city ma nager. sa id 52 applications for the pos1 \Vere receh·ed and that eight of the :ipplicants were intervie¥.-'ed, The Tustin City Council will review the top lhree applicants and make a decision ~1onday, Blankenship said. Laguna Beach 1.tayor Charlton Boyd said today he had not heard about the chief's JX)SSible departure. J "I personally, without having any o~ portunity to talk with other councilmen on thiS . "'ould very much like to have hin1 stay in Laguna Beach," Boyd said. ~layor Boyd said he was pleased with the chief's work and his "willingneu to cooperate." lie said that to his kno"·Jcdge the other councilmen were pleased with lhe police chief . It ls know n however. that Chief Kelly has been less than enthusiastic at som~ sta nds the City Council has taken on law enforcement · issues. City ~1anager Rose and the City Coun- cil announced in June the mutually agreed to departure of lhe clty manager. Last year. Robert Green, finance director. left the city for a position in the East. Fire Chief James Latimer col· lapsed in his offi ce in August and has not returned to \\'Ork under doctor's orders. Chief l\elly. 55. is a retired U.S. Marine Corps Cillonel. fie was hired by the city of l..ag un:i Beach in August of 1971 and !See CllfEFr Page 21 Orange C...t • Weather JL'll be a carbon copy or today, Friday. according to the weather !l('rvice. wllh low clouds through n1uch of the day clearing in the afternoon!'> to 67 degree readings at the beaches rising to the low IOs inland. INSUHl TODA. Y Two aquanaut.I plon to spend 10 days aboard Ille su11kcn lux- uru ltn cr A 11drca Doria, rolltct- hl{} valtu.iblt art work!, 1hfp ba11k1. a 1ilutr plaque and two prpptlltrt. Story Pofit 2$. I • • • , ' ... .,.1 • ThwsdQ, JulJ 11 ,l'l1l Artists ...... -... Ready -W ares ~Lagun a Festiva l Exh ibits ·Displayed Friday t...a,una ~ach artists wtU be working l;1te tonight to prepare thelr booths and exltibits for six weeks of exhibition 1tnd sal., Iha! begin Friday. ni.i·s Friday lhe t31h. but not many ortlsts had time today to ponder what pitfall!! fate may arrange rus: th~y seur· ried 10 pr(Jpare. This year, thert are (our 111rt cxh1bi1ions Bunt Resu111es -tbat'I -man tllan 1'11 )'Ur ud thr,. "'°"' than !Ila whoo Llpna Btadl 11'1111' httlll palndnit ... • ,_ alon1 !1 P1KO near the llotel Lagunf' and called' it an art festival. In the 41 years bet\\·ecn then and now, the art scene ~s produced mone y, fai:ne, rind fights for Lnguna Ht!uch und her ar1lsti>. Newpo1·t Mm·der Suspec1 Freecl-Lack of Evidence The release or Peter Richard Wooten. were delivered lo detcetives shortly :lrrestcd for questioning In lhe strangula-before noon \\'ednesday. tion slaying six days ago of Linda Ann They had been expressely interested in O'Kee(e. was annou~ \Vednesday by Newport Beach police. these ,results, which quickly led to freedo m for Wooten, a Pol ish orphnn A Det. Capt. Donald Oyaas said the adopted' and brought to the U.S., "'here case had ~not been presented to the he is nO\'t' en unemployed janitor. Orange County District Attorney's office because of tnsufflcient evidence to link The 1973 Corona de\ ~1ar High School \Vooten lo the crime. gracfua te was taken into custody Monday ,;'lbat is all we are goiilg to have to say at hi! Second Ave., apartment by a team at this time \" he said in refusing to of detectives. elaborate on the terse statement. The hcnvily decorated residence which He did, however, issue a special plea include an American rlag on the wall -. today for anyone who may have 1'een :in apparent symbol or his adopted Linda Ann during the crucial Friday ho1neland -·apparently yielded ootbing afternoon and ·evening period in her which might add to hJs difficulty durinl a disappearance. search by detectives. "We've run upagaJnst a blank wall." he So far , authoritles have not disclosed said. "Someone must have seen her." whAt led them to \Yant to talk to Wooten n.e · victim left Lincoln lnter\'nediatc about the O'Keefe murder. Al • !'Milt, .... "' .... !oar i.u .. 11 will ba•• Ila ... opodal -11"1 color. Nearly I09 arUlll eqd ...-_ - oI them from l.aguna Buch, will like port in the 19'73 art scene. Everyt.hJn& from potlery to oil painting, water color to leather crarts, jewelry to furnlture, Mid collage to clocks wiU be exhibited. The oldest and m01t famous o! lbe fe1Uval1 ii the Festival or Arts, the patriarch of the art colony's brood of festivals. It was the Festival of Arts that started in 1932 and t'Ollstantly expanded, finally comtng to represent the "est11bllshment" in the art area. The Festival of Arts is located at 650 Laguna canyon Road and there, 180 artists and eraft.smen will exhibit dally from noon to midnight. Grounds admls!ion is 50 cents. A restaurant is on the grounds and snacks and beverages are available lrom little booths manned by Laguna Beacn youth and charity 'groups. Each evening the Pageant of the ?\1asters is perfonned by a cas t that in· eludes more than 400 v o I u n teer p e r r o r m e r s and behind-the-scenes worker a. The pageant re-creates famous art \vorks on stage at the Irvine Bo\\•\, a large amphitheater. Tickets for the Pageant have been sold ooj for months, but, returns of large blocks ot tlckels prior to perfonnance are resold at the boxomce. I • R•llt!la SJaoot·lllfJ ., • Man ·.be Charged SUSPECT IN SLAYING R1nch Hind Sl1tton J By TO~I BARL£Y , Df .. -°"'"" ,, .... It.Mt Orange County Sheriff's Deputle~ s1,id they \\'OUld seek a murder complaint to- day a~alnst ranch hand Robert Carl "Whlp' Slatton, 411 In the alleged slaying W.ectnesday ol.Jlll apparent Ortega Hot Springs trespasser. . .. Slatton \\'as lodged 1n county JDll Wednesday night after treatment at tile Orange County ~ledical Center far cuts and bruises he received in an apparent ll ight fram the shooting scene, deputies said. "ff we get our complaint today we will probably arraign him in municipal court sometime Friday,'' Sheriff's Capt. James Broadbelt commented this moming. "Our Funeral Services Held For Murdered Girl, 11 By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of lllt Dtll1' Piiot SllH Quoting from thr. Old and New Testa1nents. sometin1cs v•ith quivering tones, a gray-frocked Lutheran minister recited the centurics-0Jd Christian doc- trines of good, evil and innocence \Vednesday. in a fu neral farewell to Lin- da Ann O'Keefe. ,;She·..,:as baptized as an infant. On Ju- ly 6, she passed from this life ... " He opened his serm.on in the flower· perfumed room with the 23rd Psalm, a traditional comfort 10 mourners. He inoved on into the i:hythmic, philosophical pnssages of the Book of Ec- clesiastes, Chapter 3, Verses 1 through 9, which poetically list tile duties, joys, changes and sorrows o{ human life on earU'f: investigation into lhe shootlne: Is still going on." Several wllnesse::i to the shootout on Starr Ranch property olf the Ortega fligh"'':t)' hal'e already Identified Slatton us the man sporting a while sombrtro .• gun bells and revolvers who told them bet owned the land, nasbed a badge and; ordered them to leave immediately. ..~ \Vitnesse.s said that Dennis Glahn, 21. of La Mirada. \Vas one of several YO!f'1 men who told Slatten tha t . his ba1o1&e. meant nothing to them and they intended( to carry on 'enjoying the 1(0-dep- waters at the San Juan spa. ' They s~id Slatton , shot GlNm pt pqint blank range through the chest in t ' ensuing fraclis, ran for his jeep and flM" from the scene. _;. Deputies said they traced SJattonJ Athrough the li cense number jetted down' by witnesses and contacted him at Sta~ Ranch headquarters about five hour~ later. -1 Officers said the ranch hand sur• rendered without incident. Officers said Slatten , 31671 Mesa Drive , Trabuco Canyon, suffered minor injuries when hs jeep overturned but he was abl e toi right the vehicle and retum to the ranch house. lnvest.igators said Slatton had no more ri ght on the Hot Springs property than the youths he . con fron ted and "·as net • authorized by the Starr Ranch to guard ii. . School about 1 p.m. for her home at 602 Mi!ariwhlle, Capt. Oyaas emphasized Orchl4 -Ave;, Corona del Mar; and wes. , the manhunt is continuing without' a found 1tran1led ln a muddy ditch besi'de ·,'slowdown, by a rive-man• detective team Daily, 1'Martonette Magic" by Tony Urbano Is performed in the Festival of ArtS Forum 1'beatre. Free-fo'r-All arL classe's are offered each day fron 2 to 5 p.rri. in the Juniof Art Gallery at the ~nr of the Festival grounds. The . murdered girl lay in a casket covered and surrounded with sCQres of flare! tributes, flowers one mortuary man said were as m~v~ly beautiful as , any be has ever seen.---"A t!~_e to be borv. !Ind.~ lime to die ... Laguna Sponsors ·!Jodger Con~st The Laguna Beach Recreation Depart· ment will conduct a special bueball skills contest cane; "Play Ball with the • Dodgers'» Friday '\t.lhe high school .di&-.! mond. · upper. Newpoct Bay neaily 24 hourt later. headedJl'y. Sgt. Don E:lcker. Fingerprint anal}'ses rrom Wooten's During the first ~ days, it ln American-flagged bedecked sport caupe volved 10 men working 12 hour ahifts, or about 350 man hours, while the five Density Remains Same in Laguna R-2 · Duplex Zon e Laguna Beach planning commissioners have rejected new 11tandarcls for the R-2 medium density rtsldential duplex zone that would have substantially lowered allowable density. But commiak>ner1 jndlcated they are not ,aea.H, wllh -~, ~tandard.! of the tone u now on the tiOoU aod said future study 1eUians on the subject are in order. 'lbe vote oencllng the ~ r o A q e - amendments to 46etr 'lli'a' rrilde bY Commiasklner Larry Campbell and unanimously approved. The (l"OPOltd. changes would have pllliC· eel a mubnum density of two units ~r R:I JO , current atandardSillOWfOr one unit for each 2,000 square feet . tbe ~amendments also "'ould have allowed ooly one unit for any lot with an area less than 6,000 square fttt. A third amendment would have pro- hibited construction of l'Ommercial park- illl lots on R-2 zoned property. !\tore than 1,000 pieces of property with- in the city would have been affected by the amendments. Commisisoner Roger Lenphear sug· gested the proposals be defeated, that all R.2 property owners be noticed and fu-ture study sessions be held to consider revisions of R-2 standar-d. · Commis,,ioner Sally Belleru agreed. commenting: "T think the R-2 zone needs to be looked inta, but it ties in with park· in~ and traffic." • Several properly owners also requested the standards be defeated, claiming it v.·ould reduce property values and not provide "the highest and best use" of their properties. Application of the new standards was supported by Miidred ~!annum, who said they would be a step In bringing the s:lty zonlng law In c<luformanCt! with the 20,000 person popuh11lon goa ls of the General Plan. Ou.ti el-COAST " DAILY PILOT l ... Dl'NIM CM1t DAll.1' l"llOT, .. Ill """kfl .. C«M<Md llM ,._ ....... .. .Wll...... •t TIM Do•!IM c .. 11 PW!W.1119 Cornp111\1. ~ not. ttlltionl ••• l'Vblh,...,. M_, lllf°"'9~ ,,.,,_,, l'Or Cool• Mn•, N"'°'rt St~. Hvntlnt*" · 8Md\1Fou111•r11 V•llWI'. 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MW ti Cntt MfM, special detail detecUves continued the job. Citizen valunteers including Boy Scouts aided in the 14-hour search for Linda Ann whrch lasted ov~1ht and included door- to-door visits Until her body_wq found Saturday afternoon. Niguel Resident . To Face Court l ' ' In Many Thefts A Laguna Nigoe! bartender \\'as ~uled to be arraigned in South Coun· ty Municipal Court today on chargl!s stemming from a series of "cat burglaries;' in the walled Irvine Cove community. narth cf La~a Belcll. Jn custody is Kent Hall Willard, 31, of 29372 Las Cruces, Laguna Niguel. He sur· rendered himself ta La~a Beach Pollre ?\fonday after being infonned by his al- tamey that a warrant had been issued for his arrest. Willard faces two counts of felony burglary'. Police said more than $1,COO was taken during the May and June bura:larles in the exclu~ive oceanltont community. Dct. Sgt. Neil Purcell said Wednesday that \\'lllard submitted la a polygraph (lie detector) test and as a result the case has been turned over to the district attorney's office for prosecuUon. Purrell said identification of the suspect was made by an officer who chased the cat burglar and by a resident who routed the thief from his home. Despite heavy police patrols and stakeouls, the cat burglar crept into severa l lrvlne Cove residences and made ofr with cash as the res\denta slept. Willard, a bartender In a Newport Beach restaurant, had been arrested previously In Laguna Beach in connect~ wilh ft December gambling operation In· vesligation. Subsequently, ht pleaded guilty to a section of the penal code commonly referred to as "dlsturbins:•the peace'' and three gambling c:ounts were dropped by the di.strict ntlorncy·s office. \Villard was sentenced to one year's probation and fined $60 In February. Pay Hike Ruli11 g Due in Au g ust SACRAMENTO I AP ) Ap- praxlmately 150.000 state employes may have to wai t until lat e Augu.st to learn if the President's Cost or Living Counci l ap- proves their salary hikes in lhe new state budget, the California State Employe1 As~iatlon say• . This word ca me rrom CSE/\ President Lelloy A. Peinbcrton and gener:il mnnagcr \\falter \V. Taylor \Vedncsday In R statcnlent th ey issued after a meeting with a council representative i n Wa11hin1Jton . The t\vo men said it wlll take that long to find out if the average 12.9 perctnt rai se granted in Gov. Ronald Renaen's 1973-74 stale budget will be allowed by the. council. _. • On •Sundays at 5 p,m. the Laguna Beach Civic Ballet ·eompany will present ?\1oldavian dances. Across the street and up a little at 935 Laguna Canyoo Rold, the Sawdust Festival stands under the spreading euca lyptus trees. There artists have wrought t~ hi bitlon booths in whatever style they "'ish and a less formal atm01pbere than the Feslival of Arts pervades. Gl'OWlds admission, Is 25 cents and one ticket ts good for the'"'entire week. About 160 artists and craftamen will exhibit from 10 a.m. to midnight dall y. The Sawdust FesUVal is one of the first spinoffs from the Festival of ArU. Its originatora said they desired to get back to the original festival spirit, one of ii1fonnallty and freedom . A splnolf from the Saw<lust FeaUval is Art-4'-Fair, whole artiltt l a r g e I y represent traditional art. Art-A-Fair leader Jean Spiry defined the representational art of that eahibltlqn as "when you look at it, you know what 1t is." · Art-A-Fair '• 100 artists will exhibit on grounds oo the octan bluff at 595 S. Coa!t Higbway. lta hours are 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday through Thursday and 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Admission is free. ..._ A new festi\'&l this year ls the "Discovery Festival," 1Ull pending final approvals by the city for a temporary use o( a North Coast Highway slte at 364 N. Coast Highway, lnllllcally the birthplace ol. tbe Sawdust Festival and untll this year home for the Art-A-Fair. The Discovery Festival waa f0W1ded on the proposiUon that artists unable to ex- hibit at the three ether fesUvals should have someplace ta display. It wu called the "Rejected rejects,'' but the name was changed "because "'e bad many people who hadn't been re- jected." said Gll"l'lll Jones, who with artist Guy Bevill ora:aniZecfthe festival. About 50 artists will exhibit from 10 o.m. to 10 p.m. dally. Admission Is free. Mfulbuses will run from noon to mld· night during the slx week festival season between the exhibitions and ether poinls . of Interest In town. Fare is 25 cents. Flyi1ig Feds Laguna Champs The Laguna Beach Flying Feds col- lected a dozen runs Utis week as they rolled over the Lions to win the 1973 Lil· lie League City Champlonship. The hllllng of Ian Calderwood gave the Feds, sponsored by Laguna Federal Sav- ings, a three run le&,.d In the first inning, 1 lead they maintalned throughout the game. The final acore was 12 to 4. C..lde~'OOd alao pitched lhe wiMing game for the Feds. The losinC pitcher was Stephan LlpitOO. The Flying Feds concluded the season with a 19-4: reoord. The Lions finished 17-S. . Saddlehack Picks Board. Pres ident John Lund of South Laguna has been elected president of the board or trustees or Saddleblck Community College at the annual organlu.tlonal meeting this week. Lund suceffd1 Patrick Bac:kua fl Dana Point. Backus w11-pre1tnted a rHOlutlon by lhe board thanklnc l\lm for his achievements durtnc hl1 tenure. A crowd of about 100 -attended noon- time rites..JnJacific _View .Memorial Park, overlooking the Harbor Area CQm- ..munity where she \ was born, christened, raised, acbooled ·arid slain by a strangler 43 days after her 11th birthday. The major landmarks of her brief lifetime were .almost all visible from -the crowded chapel. "Linda AM was born May 24, 1982," intoned the Rev. Lawrence Fruhling, of the Lutheran Church of' the Master, where her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard O'Keefe once taught Sunday School. FremPage J LEASE ... shoold not enter into a lease witboqt first . knc91ng what it plans to do with · the buliding. Leak also said the praent chambers are more conv el1ient fo1' meetings, ~ince _ it adjolns city )!all. Mrs. Sweeney replied that there arc pressing needs far space at city hall and that the rental price c<>uld not be match· ed. Other suggestions for use of the building included additional office space for various city departments. • Froin Pa'e 1 CHIEF ... was one of 48 applicants ror the position . For1ncr Chief Kenneth liuck quit !he city after two years citing the op- portunity for professional advancement as the reason. • Kelly was former provost marshal of Camp Pendleton and a veteran of civilian as well as mil itary police work. !·le spent four years as a foot patrolman in his na tive Ne\I: York City. .. A l ime to mourn ana a time to dance ... " Her parents had requested them specifically. .. There is a time to love," continued the stiffly standing clergyman in his own fashion . "And l am surt -in certain circumstances -there ls a time to hate. .. I don't believe God wills '014!se things' lo happen. But He permlls them to hap- pen," explained the Rev . Fruhling. He reminded mourners that Christ H;mself said while God created heaven and earth, He chose not to interfere with nature's laws, but to give man freedom or choice. Freedom to be good . Freedom to be evil. r - By whichever he choofes, the minister soJ4. each man .~ his eternal d'5finy. I "We live in a world where evil does ex- ist. And evil is our-occasion for being h.,., today. , ,., • •1'nlere Is a higher lOl"Ce than-man howe·ver," the Re v. Fruhling decl;;;r, adding that no matter how horrified , sor-' ry, guilt-ridden er filled with self-hatred the slayer now may be, he must reckon yet with God. · -~ And he. cited Jesus' comforting words in the Gospel of St. Matthew: "The llttle ones shall not perish but h:ive everlasting life." -.- The emotional impact was clear on the f?.ccs of mourners of all ages. There was a meek little handful of uniformed Girl Scouts. Classmates from Harbor View elementary and Lincoln Intermediate schools wept. There were tight-lipped men in black suits. \Vhite-haired women sobbed. An open grave \\•ailed in a grassy swalc ttigh up the hill from the chapel. amid green pines bobbing in a rising ocean breeze, as the J uly overcast began to burn away. Folding ~hairs lined up alongside for a small, strictly private famil y farewell, however. remained empty Wednesday. The family chose to wait a while. The contest is sponsored by the Pepsi Cola Company and coordinated by the t.o.. Anaeles County Parkl and Re<:rea-• tion department. Winners of city contests advance to regional and county eventa with the . culmination in the Southern California , Championships to be held at Dodger Stadium Aug. 12. The contest has three age categories. Each boy ls scored on haw far and ac-, curately he can throw a ball, haw ac- curately he can bunt, speed in base run- ning and how far he can hit a self-tossed baseball. Age groups are: 9 to 10 years of q:e,. starUng at 9 a.m. Friday; 11 and 12 yeara of age, starting at 10 a.m. ;. and 1.3 and I( y_ears or age, start~ ~t 11 a.m. _ _. '~wards include . certihcilei 0 r . pafaiclPati'll!, medals and ticke!J to . bod&er ga1nes. . Further lnfonnation is available from 1 the Laguna recreation department . .Impact Report For Park OK'd Expenditure of $3,500 ror preparation of an environmental impact repari. for development er Main Beach. Park was approved by the Laguna Beach City Council Wednesday night. Councilmen selected the finn of Eckbo, Dean, Austin and Williams, with offices in Los Angeles, to draft the report. TI1e report must be completed before. July 23 when plans for Main Beach Park will c<>me before the South Coast . Regional ConservaUon C o m m i s s la n eslablished by Proposition 20 to control development of the O.lifomia coastline. Nobody Sells -GE Refrigerators For Less Than 1>uldM' I ADD A GE AUTO·MATIC "LOW PRICES ICEMAKER ARE BORN HERE..; NOW OR LATER RAISED ELSEWHERE" ~~ ~~ BIG 8ICGtsr Authorind GE SERVICE OIMff w c .. "" "° ,ltOIT u19n 11oa.,..110• ••••te•••roa .,. CALL DUllLAP e WE TAKE 543·7788 T!'.ADE·INS 1815 NR'IPORT BLVD. '° D" TS. CASH Wl .. A-M Croollt c.1...,-ril•, .....,,,."" '" ""'"' u . .s mt11llllt1 .,, ~II U ,U -llllYI "'lilt.,.,. 9"t!Mlllfll WM lftfl'lllllV. 'Open to Blackmail' 1.0NOON (U Pt ) -Lord Lamblon, one of two aovcrnmtnt minlst~ v.'ho quit six v•eeks aio alter admUUng af(alrs with call glrl11, was "wide open to bl11ckmall." a. four-men judicial commilslon on security said today. New vice president for the board "'Ill be Hans Voael of Sanla Ana. Danna .Ber· ry will be clerk. The vote was unani mous on all 'lhrtc offices. Downtown Costa Mesa -Pit 548-7788 ' . ' ' . .. ... - • I I I ) I \ i r .. ' • I • .. -• Sadlllehaek- • Today's Fbud N.Y. Stoeks ED I TION . VOL. 61>, NO. 193, 4 SECTION S, 62 PAG ES -ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1973 TEN CENTS ' • . , -.. Viejo 1Iomeowners~C€ase Roadhlo~-k Protest fly JAii WORTH Of .. Dalty ,. .. Stiff ·Arter meeting with the Mis5i0n 'Viejo llOmeownCrs Wednesday night. o~ ~oents to the closure or three roads at their intersection, with Jeronimo Road c8ned oft a 'third demonstration planned for lO'a.m .• today.' • .Jnetead, they he.Id a meeting at Cordillera Drive and Jeronir'l)O>to discuss aftei'natiVes that might be 8cceptable to bOth sides. J\1ontilla ~oe. Carranza Drive, and Cordillera were.closed two week.s ago.at Jerorlimo by order of t~ Board of S\!pervisors. The action followed complaints from residents on Nacoome Drive and San ,\ndres and San Roque lanes that their 5'reet~ were being turned into unsafe speedways by motorists using the streets , as shortcuts between La Paz Road and Jeronirqo. A. leaflet distributed 2t the meeting ' ' called for the following possibilities: -Open Cordillera. and install a four· way stop at Cordillera afld Jeronimo. -Open Carranza, and install a piree- way stop. -Leave Monti lla. whic h leads to Nae· come, S.'ln Andres. and San Roque. clos· ed, until 30 days after completion of Alicia Parkway. Ron Shaver. a spokesman (or the op- ponents, s:aid these possibilities were detei'mined in·an effort to bring the two sides in the issue together. • , • .a.Ml' f'llft Stflll ..,... ~ 1,;. '" ':, 1~ I ... ,,.;:.--~ ATTENDANTS CARRY NEWPQRT HARBOR BOAT BLAST VICTIM t o WAITING AMBULANCE C•sta Meu Yacht...ni'n Lights Cigarette and Instantly &.comes Human Torch -~·· . ..... ...._.~ ;, • J • 7. -~"-. '• '. r •, • ,, Yachtsman Escapes Death Mesctn. Blotvn Fre e of Boat in Ne·wport Explosion A Costa l\.lesa yachtsman miraculously escaped death . today "·hen his 41·f~t cabin cruiser exploded in its Balboa 1tlarina berth: bidwing bis blazing body into Newport Harbor waters like a m.ntail:-firebomb. . The $20,000 vessel was a total loss following tbe.4:·55 ·a.m. blast, but its s~ip­ per was luckief. Edward C.~Oeprr, 31, cf 463 Fair Drive, was listed in stabilized condition a~ Hoag 1tfemorial llcspital shortly after he \\'as admitted. Dazed· and irr shock from burns and lacerations; Deorr instinctively began !lwimming an~ started across the 100. focit-wide 'harbor channel toward Unda Jsle, screaming !or hel p. _ Lansky Faces Trial _ MTM1l (AP) -Ailing underworld figure Meyer Lansky must st8nd trial dCspite a heart condition, a federal judge sars. U.S. District Court Judge Joe Elitoo said that prosecutors will supply al government expense a courtroom nurse and a col so Lan sky, 71, can rest. Coast " , ·(, lt'll be • carbon copy or today, ~ 1Friday, according to the weather · '• servi~ wltb low clouds through much ofl the day clearing in · the , afternoons to 17 degree readings at the beaches rising lo the low aos inland. ·-"'·· -• INS~ TODAY TIC70 aquonawt.T ftla1l to tpelld 10 daJIJ aboard t~ .sunken Luz. I ury l~r Andrea Doria, roll1ct· h1g valuable art. WOTb, ship I bo•kJ, G tl.t1><r" plaque GIJ'I: two ,. ' propeUer1. Stdfu1 Pilgt . 21. . .. : L.M: ..... j 4 "\... ~ ,. ~ .............. ,. ~ ........... .,.... ,. ,__. ........ ~ .. ,. ,_... ,. ..._.,..., 11 0.... ....... 1J ..... tNI ........................ ...,, ................ ...,. .,......... JI '*"" <AW1 n..n ...,, ............. 11 ...... • _...._ fl _., ...... l?<M Ill tenk. II -..... t ,tt .. ''l lit a ciga rette and OO\v I'm over here on th.is boat dock and I don't kno\v how I got here," the stunned victim told Linda Isle residents \\'ho raced outside to rescue him. _ Neu--port Beach Fire Department personnel sai~ people living at 98 and 99 Linda Isle hurled out a bouyant boat sea t attached to a rope and the injured, struggling man caught it. They towed him in, \\•hile Ne,vport Beach police and the Orange County Harbor Patrol responded to help. Harbor Patrol Sgt. Harry Wright said the fireboat "''as on routine patrol when a sudden red glo\v lit the sky in the dircc· tion of the Reuben E. Lee paddleboat restaurant. ''We \\'ere the fi rst units on the scene and started pumping water on it," he said. The blast, Sgt. Wright added, disin- tegrrited a 12·foot dinghy atop the shat- tered cabin structure in which Deorr lit a cigarette, apparently i g n it in g ac- cumulated bilge fumes, aCC1Jrding to firemen. Ambulance crewmen on the scene by !his· time splashed the blast ·victim with purified \\1atcr to \\•ash a"•ay ~he ~It by this time. ago11izingly c_aked m. his cuts and burns. Dcorr \\·as also given o:o:ygen tor shock and smokt'.! inhalation. aggravated by his panickey S\Vimming. He suffered first and second degree burns over his back, chest, neck and shou lders, in addition to lacerations sus· talned by being blasted through the debris. Names of .he destroyed boat moored at 201 E. Coast Highway and the Linda Isle residents who rescued the victi1n v·ere not immediately available. Zone Change Interest \ P~ompts Meeting Move Expecting interest in three north· Irvine zone changes set fo r tonight's agenda , Irvine city planning commissioners wil l meet in the multipurpose room cf University High School and not in city ball. . Planning commissioners will meet at 7:30 jn the high school, 4771 Campus Drive. The zone ca.ses they'll consider tonlgbt arc: -Cooversioo or the 30-acre com- mercially zoned parcel on the northeast comer of Walnut Avenue at Culver Drive from unrestricted commercial to plarmed community zoning. The rezening is sought t>y the cily to yield more control, although the ltxt increases the building helAht limit to 65 feet. f ' ' -Rezoninl from '"a;rtCUlturat t o mi<iedtlil .... 'I""" ... _ ... ,Jtllrey. ' 1 Mad '~tween 69 lfmtdt am .w111101i1 Trailer Park. A school aite and cit)' park parcel are included ln the r.one for which approval of zoning for 150 attached k>wn house units is sought. Density totalt eight unlts per acre. -E$tabllshmcnt or a "flood . plain district" zone overlay incorporating Por- tions of Central Irvine Yid by the U.S. Army Corps or EaJinecrs to be subject to sheet flooding in lhe eve nt of a standard project flood. The cverlay zone provides for certain precautionary measures to be enforced by the city as developments within lhe area are considered by commissioners and councilmen. CommisSioners also may consider set· ting additional n1e~tings lo facllitale needs o! the general plan development. QUICK RO VN D(J P FOR ~I VST ANG llelping you save is a Daily Pilot classified goal. Look at a typical bargain you could fmd : '70 MUSTANG Grande. Air. Pl•. p/disc ~·· xlnt. cond .. smo. (PbOoe No.) 1lte nm classified ad reader wno came \0 look at it bought the car. He't "-; the Mv<rtiser'• bal'P)': and the Dilly Piiot was happy to belp into the bor1•ill, Ir you bo~ a bor1afn to list, call 1 Dolly Pilol Act.mer. She'll be hap- py to help. 'Mle dff'CI line -642-0871. · • 7• Ile said Ted l\lcConville, Orange Coon.. ly Road C.Omml.ssioner, told tilt group he "'ould accept a solution only if it were hashed between the two factions. A group or residents both ravoring and opposing the closures will meet Friday with ~tcConvllle and a represenlative from Supervisor Ronald Caspers' c(fice. Proponents of !he closures are meeting tonight to consider the compromise de t e rm i n e d at \Vednes<lay's Home- owners' mee ting. Originators cf the closure along Nae· come said today !hey feel issues were beiog clouded by the pickets. ~ "\Ve are all incon\•enienced by thc!e closures." Bc\'erly Stonebarger. 26282 Naccon1e, said. "But we don 't feel the opponents have given the thing a chance. If we ,try to change our traffic patterns it may mean .that no more streels Y.'ill have to be closed. "The safety of ou r children is still the central issue. I think son1e of lhe op.. pooenls or the .closures have lost sight or that." she said . Resi dcnls of the areo were assured by lhc county tha t emergency vehicles can ~til l go througJ1 the barricades if necessary, t.1rs. Stonebarger said. .. Nothing short of closures would ha ve kep i the ext ra cars off our streets," she added. A survey by the 1..'0unty road deparl- 1nent CtJncluded that 65 percent of the road used on the three interior streets was through tralf ic. Army Files Burn Blaze· Sweeps St. Louis Military_Center OVERLAND. !'\to. <AP) -Fire swept through the sixth noor of the. "'Mililary. .eersonnel Reco[d Center .in this St. Louis suburb today, destroying thousands cf iecords on pre-19;60 service personnel. Fire fighters from eight suburban com· pa.nies ~·ere sti ll battling the blaze more than nine hours after it broke cut in the two-block-long structure. They reported the blaze was li mited to the top noor, but water and smoke damage w e r e spreading below. Youth Freed In Slaying Questjoning The release ·of Peter Richard Wooten, arrested tor question ing In the strangula· tion slaying six day s age of Linda Ann O'Keefe, was announced Wednesday by Newport Beach pollee. A Del. Capt. Donald Qxaas said the case had not been presented to the Orange County District Attorney's office because of insufficient evidence to link \Vooten to the crime. "That is all \Ve are going lo have to say at this time," he said in refusing to elaborate 'on the terse sta tement. ~le did , fl<)\veve r. issue a special plea today for anyone ~'ho may have seen Linda Ann during the crucial Friday afternoon and evening period in her disappearance. "\Ve've run upagainst a blank wall ." he said. "Someone must have seen her." The victim left Lincoln Interme~ia te School about I p.m. for her home at 602 Orchid Ave .. Corona del li1ar. and y,•as found strangled in a muddy ditch beside upper Ne \\•port Bay nearly 24 hour s later. f'ingerprint an alyses from \Vooten's Americ:in-flag gcd bedecked sport coupe \\"Cre delivered to detectives shortly bt!fore noon \Vednesday. They had been expressely interested in these results, which quickly led lo freedom for \Vooten, a Polish crph11n adopted and brought to the U.S., ~'here he is now an unemployed janitor: The 1973 U>rona de! A1ar High Schoo l graduate y,•as taken into custody A1onday at his Second Ave .. apartment by a team (See RELEASE, Page %) Irvine Students No,v 15 Percent Minority Status Enrollment of both undergraduate and graduate students of racial minorities at the UC Irvine campus las t fall reached a record' level or 15 percent of all student s, data released today by lhe university sugges ts. Student ethnic surveys taken durin g the fall. 1972 registration showed that minorities made up 20.7 percent of the studenls attending all nirie UC campuses. The Irvine fi gures show lh3t of the 6,914 students registered four perecnt y,·cre blacks, .4 percent "'ere American Indians. 5.4 percent were Oriental and 5.2 percent "·ere of ?ilexicrut or Spanish· American descent. The 15 percent total represents I ,023 students. · . In 1968, the nrst year ethnic registra· lion data was collected, the lrvine cam- pus enrollment totalled only 3.5 percent mlnorily students, 138 of' 3,899 surveyed. That tolal Included .6 percent Black, . I percent Indian, 1.8.percent Oriental and .9 per~t Spanish 1umame. The data collected university-wide is based on responses from 8$ percent of registering stu<lent.t. Some students declined 10 answer the ethnic~ origins aurvey. - •towever, the responses at I~ lrvlne LSee ~UNORITIBS, P11e IJ • ' Its ca use was nol 'immediately k.J10Y.n, but arson was suspected. A spckcsman said lht! bu ilding's six th floor contained rC{Ords of Ar1ny pccSon· . nel who served prior lo 1960. On the fifth floor. the spokcs1nan said, are records o( Navy personnel prior to the same date. "\Vhatever isn't~ burned is as \\'et as can be,'' said Army Col. \Vesley C. Scarborough. Army official s in \Vashington said n1any of the records stored at the ~pra"•ling ccntt•r arc not ~plicated elsC\\'hel'e . "Some or 1hen1 are full file copies or ,\nn}" -p&-sonnel. !'J'hcse ar'e n o t dupliatt'd," said Col. Leonard Reed. Two firemen were hospitalized for trea tment of smoke inhalation but there y,.·ere no other repcrt s of injuries. The center. about 20 years old, con- tains about 56 mill ion reco rds of current and former military personnel, a (See RECORDS, Page %) Got His Wish Boy, 8 , to Be Burie,f iii V nif orn1 ALBANY, N. Y. (AP) -Eight-year-old John Gui ry, who always wanted to be a policeman, will be buried in a police uniform. ·1 'fhe son of l\1r. and l\'lrs. J ohn F. Guiry of suburban Colonie died Tuesday or leukemia. T)le boy colJected more than 1.000 police patches, received honorary n1embershi p in a nu·mbcr or police agencies and on his frequent trips to St. Peter's Hospital in Albany he sometimes wore a state trooper's hat pulled down over his eyes. Funeral services will be held here Friday wit.h !our policemen as hof!o rary pallbearers, one or them his good [riend. Colonie police of fleer RonaldKtosky. "He always wanted to be a police111an . That's all he talked about," said Krosky. who visited hin1 three or four times a week in the hospital and at ho1nc. John will be buried in an honorary Colonic sergeant's uni form, Krosky said. Murder Complaint Sought ht Ranch Shooting Death Ur TO\l tlAHL~\' 01 IM 0•11Y Pllol ''•II Orange Cou nty Sheriff's l.>Cpu11es said they would seek a mu rder complain! 10- day against ranch hand Robert Carl ';\\1hip'' Slatton. 41, in the alleged slayl ng \Vednesday er an apparent Ortega Hot Springs trespasser. Slatton \1•as lodged in county jail \\'ednesday night after tr('atment at the Oran ge Co unty i\fedical Cente r for cut s and bruises he receh·ed In an apparent flight from the shoaling scene. deputies sa id. "If \\'e get ou r complaint today \l"C 11ill probably arrnign him in municipal court sometime f~riday," Sheriff's Capl. James Broad.bell commented this morning. "Our investiga tion in to the shooting is slill going on." Several \\'itnesSC'i to the shootou t on Starr IU!nch properly off the Ortega !lighw<1.y have already identified Slanon as the man sparli ng a white sombrero. gun hells and revolve rs \\'ho 1old lht:m he c~·ned lhe land, fla shed a badge and ordered them to leave immediately. \\'itnesses said that Dennis Glahn. 21, of La l\lirada. w:is one of several young men "'ho !old Slatton that his badge mea nt nothing to them and they !nti•ndcd to ca rry on enjoytni:: 1 ~ 11().degrcc \\titer.~ al the So n Juan spa. They said Slatton shot Glahn at point blank range through the chest in the ensui ng fracas. ran to r his jcc1> and IJ<:d from the scene. Deputies said they traced Slatton through the license number jelled doy,n by witncsse! and contacted him at St:irr Ranch headquarters abou t fi\'C hours later. Officers said lhe ranch hand sur· rendered "'ithout Inciden t. Officers said Slatton. 31671 ~lcsa llrive, Trabuco Canyon, suffe red minor injuries "''hen hs .k'cp qvertumcd bu t he wu able to right the vehicle and return Lo the ranch house. Investigators said Slat ton hnd no more right on the Uot Springs property thun the youths he\ confronted and · y,•35 not authoriied by the it:irr R11nch 10 guard it. Their record! 1ho1v that Slatton Y.·as SUSPECT IN SLAYING Ranch Hand Slatton due to appear Aug . 9 in South Orange County ~lun1cipa l Court to answer cha rges of posing as a deputy sherirr. assauh \.\'ilh Cl deadly weapon and possession ol a bl::ickjr1ck. Those charge!! v.·ere filed alter an alleged incident Feb. 12 at Ortega Hot Sprin~s in "·hich ba1hcrs confronted by 1 he colorfull y clad ranch hand said he drew a blackjack and !llruck scvtral or them when they refused to leave. An orflcer Said a bathe.r told him : "It y,.·as like a seer\(! from '•Ugh Noon'. Here lhls guy came up, legs apart llnd hands hovering over his hips just the way they do In the movies." Slauon appcnred frequently bC!rorc he repre.~('Jllcd roiwhcra In lho San J1139 area and dema nding uetlon ,lo halt !Ste. SllOOTillOG, Pog• !) 1 • .-.....__, 1"11 .. u1 •• lhwldaJ, July 12 ,Jq /J Otitf •tw CIM,, •r MllR <,_ l!ACJi_tlG!iTENS -Windward Passage (WP) led Transpac fleet 891 miles from Honolulu \Vednesday night, but Ragtime (RA), with 90~ miles to go. and Blackrin (BF). just 913 miles ou t. were making 11 a tight race !or line honors. Warrior (IV A) wu lead- ing· Class A on corrected time with 1,020 mllea to go: Overall handicap leader waa Kolohe (KO), 1,138 miles from the flnlsh. · · On Ha11dical!! Lapworth\ Sloops Saddleback Eyes Dress Cooe Policy at Meet . Take Race Lead Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustees think "dress codes" belong in the home and not In the school. "I question why we have to have a policy on this subject. We have a law." Trustee /Chet Briner sa,id Tuesday night. "I'm opposed to being redundant.'' . ' By ALMON LOCKABEY ot ,._ DlllY PllM ltetl The C.1-409 are back. The famed Lapworth-desi&ned sloops. winners or three previous Tran.spac races, took over first and second place on corrected time Wednesday as the . northeast tradewinds £r eshcned and began kicking up a surfing sea. Handicap leader was F. T. Opperman's Kolahe 1n1m Wa\klkl Yacht Club. In sec- ood piece was George 'lborson's Ariana, Los Angelea Yacht Club. Kolobe is a Class C .entry and Ariana ls in Class O. Kolohe "was aboUt" 14 miles ahead of ~iana on the rhumbline. ~ Meanwblle, tbe• race for line ~rs in Clua A lightened up as the big boats ...... puabed up to hull •P«d by lhe fresberiina trades which were blowing 18 to ll knoll and a> ln the gusts. Wtndwud Pasa&ge logged a 237-mile day to pllce her 891 miles from Diamond Heid, but Raatlme and Black.On had effit better 24-bow' runs to narrow the gap. CQde of Ethics Won't Become Law in lrvirw Tbe proposed code ol ethics ror Irvine city offidala and city employes will be just th.It -a code and not a law. Members of the Irvine City Council Tuesday night declar<d that they do "l'l wish Infractions Of t..,. reode to ~ne crimes punishable by Jaw. Councilman WiUJam Pishbach 1sked that tht code, when· finally adoPted b:v the council, be In the ronn of a 'COUncil resolution rather than a municipal st.atute. His request was based on the ex· planation that any public· official could conceivably involuntarily violate the code and that it .,.,.as not the intent to rush viOlators through the courts. While Fishbach won support for his re-- quest from other members of the council, Councibnan Henry Quigley failed to con- vince a majority of the ~ that the code should extend to political candidates as well as those already in office. P.1ayor John Burtor said such a move could prevent many candidates from run· ·ning for office because they might not want to make 3 full disck>su re or their financial holdin gs to the public. The code, as presently drafted, re· quires all public officials to place any "substantial" financial interest on the public record twice each year. That ptovislon was questioned by both Councilman E. Ray Quigley and Burton . Quigley said be did not believe It is rlgit for public officials to be required to "bare their private business souls." City Attorney James Erickson said he would refine the code of ethics and reminded members of the council not to seize on particular words contained in the draft document. OU.N•I COAST II DAILY PILOT Tiie 0.t .... C-1 OAILY ,ILOT. Wllll Wllltfl It Cl9llllllMll Ille ,.....,.,,.,.., It N II ........... ... °'.,,.. , .... •••.11111111"" '""'""'· ........ ,. .. llH!lliN ,,.. JIUlllW., 111 .... , ... ,.. l'"r....,, .... C-11 Mt,_., N.....,,.n t.dl, 1WM~41.,, ._..,,_._,,~ v.iltY. Lll\lflol hlO, INIMI~ W a.ti Ci.-IV S... J-C.Ml1-. A ,1.,... ,....._, WH .... IJ .,.i!"*I S.l\lfllt .... W ""°"''· '""' trir;(illel llillHtlllftt lllffll II ti UI ""11 .. , &11•, C•I• Mtw. Ct lllOr!llt, nu.. Reliot r* N, W1H J1ck R. C11rl1y Viet l'rt1io.t ..,. 0--•I Mtn.ttff Thcun•1 "••~II Ed!tot ThoW11 1 A. M.111ph11'1 Mt~lnt l!toor Chtrl11 H. l1t1 Rlchtrcl '· Nill AMl1t111! M ..... lftt Ecl!N<-1 c;,..1. M-: DI WUI •t r il(ttl N"""""1 INt!lr nn NIWPM"I to\119¥1.- L"'O""" ltttll! tn l'"attol A-HWlll••f"" l ffl'lll 17111 hktl ........... ,. $111 ('"""°"' MJ Horlll El Cllltlllt ... , 1111,e.111 C114J '41-4111 Ca.NIN A"'8ttl ... 641·1•71 S.. C ....... Al hpzlMlfl! ,.,., •••• 4tl-441t ,..,,. .... ,, lfn. ~ C...t '~"" .... c_,..,,_ Nt -111r1tt. 11111\""""'· .. ltWlolt IMttWt II' ed...t"-h /\tr?lll l'Mf llf r~ Wltl\Wt tMClll ..... Mi..t• II tlll'l'rltM -· ~ tltlt _,_ N loil I I (tilt Mtu, C'.4oll~. Sl.IMCFlllllM "° ""ltr U,,, .iMrilfllfl tr "'•" IJ,U fl*lllllr1 !Nll!frr _...., ....... "'111"'1¥. t • Ragtime put 247 .miles under her keel to move within 11 mil's of Windward Passage. Black.fin had a 243-mUe day and was· 11 miles behind Ragtime. The light airs of the previous two days plus the drifter at the start apparently wiped any chance of a new elapsed time record by any of the Class A speedsters. The first boat to finish would have to make it by 10 p.m. (PDT) Friday to erase the existing record of 9 days, 9 hours and 6 minutes set by Windward Passage in 1971. The fres hening winds and mounting seas took their first casualty of the .race Wednesday as Larry Pou1ton'1 ColUOlbia-- 36 Defiant from Oakland loat her rudder. The escort vessel Tranquility was stand· ing by while Defiant'1 crew attempted to jury-rtg a rudder and remain In tlae race. Handicap slandinp, with 900 miles to 1-Jonolulu: • OVERALL -Ill Kolohe, 1,138 ; (21 Ariana, 1,152; (3 ) Improbable, 1,072; (4) Neferti, 1,108 ; (5) Tenacity, 1,152. CLASS A -Warrior, 1,020; (2) Min Sette. 994; (31 Ughlning, 1,060; (4) Raglill)e, 902; (51 Robon, 992. CLASS B -(1) Improbable, 1,072 : (2) Nalu-iv, 1,079; (3 ) Sanderling JV, 1,158; (4) Neferti. 1,109; (5) Starwagon, 1,172. CLASS C -(ti Kolohe. t,t38 : (21 Tenacity, 1,152: (3) Blue Streak, 1,146; (4) Mil"""' II, 1,173; (5) Aluante , 1,176. CLASS D - (I) Arlana, 1,152; (2) Illusion, 1,156: (3) Moon Day, 1,176; (4) Wilcbcrafl. 1.178; (5) Woodwynd, 1,202. County Applies Flood Zoning To Creek Area Flood plain ionlni was applied to the Aliso Creek wate111hed by the Bqard or Supervisors Wednesday. The designated zone extends from the southerly boundary of the Hall Ranch near the mountains to Paseo de Valencia south of the San Diego Freeway. The flood plain zoning restricts building in the area unless certain stand· ards are met to place the dev"iilopmP.nt aboue the antici pated flood area. David A1oore. plaMing department o(· ficials. said the flood zone wa s outlined bv the Flood C.Ontrol Olstrlci based on their estimate of the height of overflow \\'aters in a severe storm. The zone extends northward along Los Alisos Boulevard in the aMa north of the rreeway and includes a proposed greenbelt area. Property in the area Is largely zoned for agricultural use. The flood plain zon· ing is an overlay. Saddlehack Picks Board Pl'esident John Lund of South Laguna has been elected presiden t o( the board of trustees of Saddleback C.Ommunity College at the annual organlutlonal meeting this \\'eek. Lund succeeds Patrick Backus of Dana Poin t. Backus \\'BS presented n resolution by the board than king him for his achievements durinR his tenure. New vice president for the board \\'Ill he Hans Vogel of Santa Ana. Donna Ber· ry will be clerk. The vote was unanimous on aU three offices. from Pagel SHOOTING . • • trespassing Jn !ht: Ortega lloi Springs sector. Several trespassers have been arrested during that lime on a variety ol drug and in~ecent exposure charges. Sheriffs of. fleets said the area has also been Wied ai a rtndeivous by runav.•ay juveniles from throughout tl\r: county. Propoee;d for tru.stee. consideration was a policy &bat stated students will adhere to health, safety. and welfare laws of the state in their:Clree. "As long as we understan4 the dress code is tO. be substantially abolished." board president Vince li-1cCullough said. Superintendent William Zogg 11akl the policy might he repeating tile law, but said . it is help{uJ as a guide for ad· mlnlstrators. He suggested the policy also mentions education code sections and added a statement. "It is the intenUon of the board that dress and ~ming staftd,.rds are lhe responsibility Of' tile home:" · Trustees said they 'would consider the P.Olicy for a nm reading at their next meeting. • But they made it clear that the old days ol lists ol doe and don 't> will 1>&. gone. Saddleback Unitied and two other unified di!tricts took over operation of nrea schools July I from four districts, in· eluding the Tustin Union High School District. Tustin Union had a dress code with separate lists for males and remap s, covering items like hair, mustacties, thongs. blouse Ind dress length ind types or shirts allowed. Irvine Rejects Proposed Tax 01i City Licenses There will be no business licen11e tax in the city or Irvine, at least not one whose main purpMe Is to raise revenues, the ci· ty council ruled this week.j The council unanimous y struck down · the idea of a money-making I.ax after rectlvlng a committee report claiming such taxes in other cities have created a "negative environment for busineu." However, the Revenue and Taxation Committee's suggestion that a regulatory bu..lness permit fee be assessed. for the main purpose of e11tablilblng a "cemus system" wu adoPted by the council. It WU SUUealed that the pennlt fee be about '15 per year for all businesses. The fee would approximate the cost of ad· ministration. Councilman Henry Quigley was the lone d.isaenter oir_lhe 4-1 ~vole _for the business permit fee principle. "I find It objectionable to charge a head tax for each business," said Quigley, adding that he thought the flat fee was Inequitable because smaller businesses should pay lesir and larger businesses more. "We should have one that is equitable or none at all," he argued. A resolution, also adopted by the ci ty council , backs the elimination of the revenue producing lax and SUpPorts Irvine's goal of maintalning a "PQ.'itive business environment to encourage business and industry to locate within the city.·· • ,.,..,,. ,..,,el MINORITIES • • • campus v.·rre 1mong the hJgheJt In the system. Only 5.1 percent of ttrJstering students detllned to answer. At Berkeley, 9.S percent wouldn't answer and at Santa Barbara 27 .6 refused to participate in the IUrvt,Y. Of the t 1,984 UC Santa Barbara reg11tr'"u who did reopond, only 12.6 percent said they wert m I n o r i t y students, yielding the campus the dl1tlnc-- tlon of bein1 the lea.st lntr:trated campus in the UC system. · UC San t'rMclsco's 2,117 rqlstrants. mostly graduate studtnts and no medical studenu, yielded lhe hltbelt percenlaJIO of mlnorltlts with a total 31.1 percent •In the 1m ra11 enrollment. UCLA followed with 29.1 pe....,t of thti Bl ,__ il.-,-""""111:,m •ho an1wertd 1the 1Urvt y In· 'Open to ac .... na. dieat1n1 Ibey -· mlnOrlty lludents. UC B e r k e I e y pieced third, LONDON (UP1 J -Lord Lambton, one percentacewlM, with 21.1 perctnl or ol two gO\'trnment ministers v.'ho quit sht U ,013 rttpOl'ldlna laYin& the)' ire mlnorl· weeks ago after 1dmlttlng 11ffalr1 with ty 1tudentt:. call glrl9, \\'8S "wlde open lo blackmail," Sy1temwtde the 1urvr:y Indicate• m1rk· a four·nw n judlclal comm ission on cd lncreastt In the numbers of minoriti es security Mid today, Mini strved by th:! UC system .• . - • Bond lssue Studies Expanded Irvine planning and co mm u n i t y services commissioners met jointly Wednesd:iy night and deeidt.>d to expand the study efforts nr the city's park bond Issue consultant!. Ribera and Sue!. .Members of each conuniuion voted unanlmoUily to request the consultanl'I to consider placing two separate bond Issues before the pu blic. The two 1neasures would : -Provide financing for two or more community center buildings, one to be located In a north lrvlne cotnmunlty-size park, either near a proposed new high school building or the Valley View In- termediate school, and the second · building in the 15·acre community pa rk in University Park. -Provide the funds for the city to purchase needed city public park acreage and recreation improvements, as has been the Intent of the parks bonds study effort until now. Community Services Director Paul Brady said today members Df both com· missioners also agreed to ask the con- sultants to include an evaluatipn o( ~two particular north Irvine sites for develop- ment as community level parks. Those sites are: -Adjacent to tbe proposed new high sch6ol 40-acre site south of the Santa All!l freeway on Yale at Walnut Avenues. About 20 acres of freeway froniage land could be purchased by the city for a conr munity park, Brady noted. -Acreage contain~ in the Culver· Moulton Portion of the Village of Valley View planned community, land which would be dedi cated to the city and im· proved by the Irvine Company. Together with school site Open spice in the plan· ned vUlage, a 21·acre .community size pa"tk would result. . Brady noted, however, the high schOol slte would be more easily accessible to all residents of the city since "portions of it could front on Yale Avenue. The Culver-Moulton acreage is slighUy less aceessible. Among concerns the consultants will be asked to weigh are the matters of ac-- cessibllity, cost and the desirability of either park for locating a community center building. Some have suggested such a building mlaht be better located adjacent to a hll"h school, if It is to serve a broader segment of the community. Brady sakl Ribera and Sue will be ask· ed. to study the issues and include sug· gest.ions in their final bond measure recommendatlOn ·due in November. ' Random G_tmfire I-If r Hits 3 During LA Rock Concert LOS ANGELES (AP) -Random gun· fire interrupted. a rock music concert, striking al least three teen-agers a~d staifr'peding a crowd of about 500 panic· stricken persons in the Watts district. Police said the concert had been in progress for about an hour Wednesday night when four young men suddenly fired about 20 rounds \Ylth handguns, ap- parenlly at random . They said city Housing Authority guards maintaining security at the con- cert saw two girls and a boy shot during the bedlam . However, the extent of their Injuries could not be detennined because the three were driven away from the open concert site in pri vate vehicles, al!thoritles added. Police said today lhat none of the three had reported to any local hospital for -treatment .. • JH Attelld .Linda O'Keefe's " Rites Conducted Dy ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of !fie Of.lit" P llM 11111 Quoting from the Old aod _ New Testaments, tomclimes 1vith quivering t~s, a gray-frocked Lutheran minister , rec.lte<l the centuries-old Chrlstlnn doc· trines • of good, evll and innocence \Vednesday. in a funeral farewell to Lin· da Ann O'Keefe. The murdered girl lay ln a ·casket covered and .surrounded with scores of floral tributts. nowers one mortuary ma n said were as 11l()Vingly beautiful as any he ~s ever seen. A crowd of about 100 attended noon- time rites in Pacific View Memorial Park, overlooking the Harbor Area coml munlt y where she was born, christened, raised, schooled and slain by a strangler 43 days after her 11th birthday. The major landmarks of her brief lifetime were alr'no"st all visible rrom the crowded chapel. ;'Linda Ann was born May 24, 1962," intoned the Rev. Lawrence Fruhling. of the Lutheran Church of the 1 Master, where her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard O'Keefe once taught Sunday School. "She was~iied as an Infant. On JU· Jy 6, she pa from this life ... " He opened sermon in th:e flower· Perfumed room with the 23rd Psalm, a i traditional cOmfort to mourners. He moved on into the rhythmic, philosophlcal passages _of the Book of Ec- clesiastes, Chapter 3, Verses l through 9, which poetically list the duties, joys, _ changes and sorrows of human life on earth: ''A time to be born and a time to die ... "A lime lo mourn ' and a time. to dance ... " . Her parents had requested th.em specifically. . "There is a time to love," continued from Page l RELEASE .. · .. of detectives. The heavily decorated residence which include an American flag. on the wall - an apparent symbol of his adopted homeland -apparentl y yield~ nothing \Vhich might add to his difficulty during a search by detectives. So far, authorities have not disclosed what Jed them to wanl to talk to Wooten about the10 'Keele Jnurder. Meanwhile. Capt. Oyaas emphasized the manhunt is continuing without a slowdo\\.~. by a fivc-trlan. ~elective team hea"ifed bf Sgt. Don· Picker. During the first three days, it in volved 10 then working IZ hour shifts. or about 360 man hours, \\•bile the five special detail detectives continued the job. Citizen volunteers includin g Boy Scouts aided in the 14·hour search for Linda Ann \\'hich lasted overnight and included door· to-door visits until her body was fo und Saturday afternoon. From fage l RECORDS ... military spokesman said. Of about 2,000 employes, only security guards and mai ntena nce perSOMel oc· cupied the buildin g at the ,fi re's onse t shortly after mldnlg ht. They escaped \\ithout Injury. The center \\'as sealed off by federal agents and military personnel arter the o.!!lbrt ek of the fire . ,, .. cu. ''· ...,.on ... llllllll .. l•.t.TOll·ll•ttZll CALl the stiffly st~ndlpg clergy man In his own fashion. "And l am sure -in certain circumstances -there Is a time to hat4.'. i·1 don't believe God wllls 'these thinp' to happen. But He permits therp to hap-. n " c~lalned !Pe Rev:. l<'ru_h!ing. _ ._1• He remindfd mourners that .Christ ll!mself said while God created heaverfl and earth, He chose not lo interfere wrth na ture's Jaws. but to give man freedom of choice. Freedom 10 be good. Freedont to be evil. . By whichever he chooses, the ministeii1 said. eaob man determines his etemai destiny. J "We· live in a world where e\•U doe! e.x· ist. And evil is our occaslon for be.ins· here today. . "TI1ere is a higher force than·~. ho \fever," the Rev. Fruhling declared, adding that no matter how botrlfled, sor- ry, guilt-ridden or filled with self-hatred the slayer no.w may be, be must rec'kon· yet with God. ~ And he cited Jesus' comforting word11f' in the Gospel of St. Matthe\\·: '"The little ones shall no ~h..Jm ll:ive everlaiflni lfle." Ttie emotional Impact was clear on the faces of mourners of a)I ·ages. There was a meek litUe handful of uniformed Girl Scouts. Classmates from Harbor VieW elementary and Lincoln ~ lntermedlat6 schools ·wept. There were tight-tipped men in black suits. White-haired women sobbed. An open grave waited in a grassy swale high up the hill from tile chapel, amid green pines bobbing in a rls:lng ocean breeze, as the JuJy overcast began to burn away. Folding chairs lined up alongside for a small, strictly private family farewell , however. r:emained empty we<tnem.y:· · The family chose to wait a )Vhile. · Shopping Center ' Noise Pollution Gets City ·pl'ohe A group of Univenily P a r k homeowne111 protesting alleged noise ' pollution at a nearby shopping center. won the promise of an inquiry into the problem this week. The Irvine City Council alao ordered City Attorney James Erickson to draft an anti-noise law for the entire city. ~ The noise probl em was brought into · focus by homeowner Claire .Levy who said ·the tranquility of the neighborhood." v.•as l distUrbed by a public address system used in the _;\hopping center, noises from an electric saw, and other constructioo activities. A representative of the Univenlly Park Shopping Center on Culver Drive, and Michelson Avenue was not present at the council meeting to rebut the charges. Further complaints cited by the homeowners included noise made by delivery trucks and garbage haulers and !he intrusion of floodlighting into their backyards. The inquiry into the University Park problem will include a determination of pi>ss tbl e use pennit violations by UM!· shopping center, city officials said. Under .scrutiny will be whether landscaping was completed prior to the move-in date and whether the "adequate screening" required as a condition of the use permit could includ e construction of an artificial berm. 'The berm )'las requested by Mrs. Levy on behalf of the ~25 aff e ct e d homeowners as a means of reducing noise and cutting off the view into the shop~ing center. •IANT lM c .. ,,, ltO ,ttOIT ·-· llOl:...,..IOf ll,ll•l•ATM .... fO DAYS CASH W1tfil """ ...... -~ e WE DUNLAP T Al(E Cr•~lt Authorlaod GE SERVICE li4J.7701 TRADE-INS • 1815 NF:JPORT BlYD. Dawntown Costa Mesa -Ph. 548· 7788 I 1 ' ' 17 BuntiD111on Beaei.. Feuniain ·Valley· . . EDITION J • N.Y. Steeb • VOL 66, NO. 193, 4 SECTIONS, 62 PAGES ORAN6E COl:INTY, .CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1973 TeN CENTS • -Coast Cable TV Project Scaring Off Bidders . ' '' By TOM GORMAN Of -D9ltJ ... l1lff Five Orangi Coasl cities have ap- parenUy designed' a cable television system that is so costly and complex only ooe cofnpany ·in the country is con- 'sldering 'tackling the project. . Di~ . of the Public C a.b I e televliion Systein, which 'serves Newport • Bead!, eotta Mesa, Fountain Valley , Hunllna:ton Beach and Westminster, said Mesa Y.aclitstnan Escapes Deatli Iii Boat Blast • · A Costa Mesa_ yachtsman miraculously escaped death today when his 41-foot cabin cruiser exploded in its Balboa Marina berth. blowing his blazing body into Newport Harbor waters like a human firebomb. The -$20,000 vesaeJ.-.was "a total loss following tbe 4:55 a.m. blast, but its skip-._ per \fas luckier~ .. Edward C.-Decirr1 31,"of 463 Fair Dri.ve, was..1isted ·in stabilized condition at Hoag Memorial Hospital shortly after he was. admitted. Pt.~4. an~ in shock rrom. burns aod lacerations, Oeorr instinctively began swimmUlg and started across the 100- foot-wi4e harbor channel toward Linda Isle, screaming for be.Ip. "'I lit a cigarette and OO\V I'm over here on this boat dock and I don 't kno\v how I got here," the stunned victim told Linda Isle residents who raced outside to. rescue him. Newport Beach · Fire Department personnel said people living at 98 and 99 Unda Isle hurled out a bouyant bOat seat attached to· a rope and the injured, str:uggling man caught u: They towed him in, while Newpart ' (See EXPLOSION, Pa1e %) 0ru11e . Coast Weatller 1 _ ll'll be a carbon copy 'of ,today, Friday, according to the weather ~rvico, with low clouds through mUCh of the day clearing in -the afternoons to rt degree readings at tbe beaches rWng IO the low llOs Inland. • INSmE TODAY Two -•" pion to IJl'!!ld JO <law• aboard the .ninkim lM%· "'11' ltner Andrea Doria, r.olLO inQ volua.b~ ar' IOOrlu, shlp banka, a .tilt.1«-r plaque and two propellers. Sto1'1J Page 25, l..M • ..,.. " .. .._ " ~ • --·-... --·-" ,_, .. --. " ,_ .. .._._, " DMlll•ictt " -,._D • ...,i.1 ...... ' . -... --·---·-• ·-... -.... ..... ""~. " ·-• ........ I • ....., ..... n.,. I• ttr.ke " ............. 4. " - this morning they were concerned about the lack of bidders on lheir proposed Jl5 million project. John Bateman, general manager of lhe PCTA, said on1y one firm is considering a bid on the project and that he is ;'pesslmlslic" that other bids will come forth betore the Sept. 6 deadline. Bateman told directors there are no other bidders, because an ,estimated $5 m!Ulon to $1 million In "front m~ey" is needed to begin construction of the system. ''i\1oney is very light. now , and very few companies have that kind of money;' he said. Many companies are deciding to ex· pand their already-existing s y s t e m s rather than start new ones. he.added . "And ljlany compaDies I have talked to say, off the record, that they are afraid of our enforcement clauses,''jhe said. Newport Murder Suspect Freed-Lack of Evidence The release of Peter Richard \Vooten, arrested for questioning in the slrangula- tion slsiying six days ago of Linda Ann O'Keere, ,was announced Wednesday by Newport ~ach poUce. A Del. Capt. Donald Oyaas said the c3se had not been presented to the Orange 'County District Attohley's office beca use of insufficient evidence to link \Vooten to the crime. "That-is-all we are going to have to say at this time." he said in refusing to elaborate on the terse statement. He did, however, issue a special plea today for anyone who may have seen Linda Ann during the crucial Friday Mitchell Says President HCL s 'Lo·wered Boom' WASHINGTON (APl -Jotm N. Mitchell insisted to a skeptical Democrat today that President Nixon had been "lowering the boom" this year by ousting 'des and officials Implicated in the atergate and other, \\Tongdoing. ·:. 1be former attorney general, in his • third day of televised testimony be£on: the' Senate Watergate committee, said two in that category are H.R. Haldeman and John 0. Ehrlichman. Tbe President accepted their reslgni- tion1 from the White House staff April 30, calling them "two of the finest publlc servants it has been my privilege to know." He · aISo a1i.d thtir resignations -were not evidence of wrongdoing on their part. Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, (D-Hawaiil. asked Mitcheil what.evidence he saw that the Prt1ident had taken action after last March 21, wben Nixon uys he first heard serious ICCUlatioos that ad- Jai,nlltratlan bliJlor-apo ,..... involved in the scandal. "J am trying to find out where the President has; since learning or these activities, lowered the boom," Inouye asked. Mitchell mentioned the Orlng ot While House C01111sel John W. Dean Ill and U.' ruignaUons of Haldeman. Elu-llchman. 1tlllf Krocti and ;!eb -5!Un Mallfllder trom government postJ. • .. • Inouye said he didn't sec much evidence thet the boom had been lowered on anyone but Dean. Mitchell implied that the resi«natlon• of Haldeman and (Ste MITCHELL. P11c I\ • .. afternoon and evening period in her disappearance. "We've run upagainst a blank \Vall." he said. "Someone must have seen her.'' The viclim left Lincoln Intermediate School about l p.m. !or her hon1c at 602 Orchid Ave .. Corona del Mar, and was . found strangled in a muddy ditch beside upper Ney,•port Bay nearly 24 hours later. Fingerprint analyses rrom Wooten's American-flagged bedecked sport coupe were delivered to detectives shortly before noon \Vednesday. They had been exprcssely'interesled in these ri!sults. which quickly led to freedom for Wooten . a Polish orph~n adopted and brought to the. U.S., \\•here he is no\V an unemployed janitor. The 1973 Corona del Mar liig h School graduate y,•as taken into custody Monday at his Second Ave., apartment by a team or detectives. The heavily dec(lrated residence \vhich include an American flag on the w!ll - an apparent symbol of his adopted homeland -apparently yielded nothing y,·hich might add to his difficulty during a search by detectives. So far, authorities have not disclosed what led them to want to ta1k to Wooten about the O'Keefe murder. Meanwhile. Capt. Oyaas emphasized 1he manhunt is continuing without a slcw.·down by a five-man detective team headed bf Sgt. Don Picker, During the first three days, it in volved J() men working 12 hour shi fts. or about 36() man hours, while the five ~recial detail detectives continued the • job. · Otlzcn volunteers including Boy Scouts aided in the 14-hour sea rch for Linda Ann \\'hich lasted overnight and included door· to-door ~ until her body was found Saturdal afternoon. Magazine Deal Plans Go A '"TY .. LOS ANGELES (AP! -The publishers say announced plans for New York Magazine to buy Los Angeles. Magazine are o(f. "The negotiations v.·ere just dragging • ~I) and on and we decided to break them • Ott,1:' David Brown, Los Ange.Jes 1'fagazine publisbtr. sakl Wednesdny . But Clay Felker, p~dent of New York Magazine Co., bad an oppasite version In a telephont Interview. lie said he coiled it orr. Under the system's speei(ication.s. i( a cable Urm does not fulfill it.s contractual obligations, it y,•ill lose ownership of lhe system and' a $2.5 million performance bond. "We haYe teeth in our contract. If the cable company does not perform, v.•e have steps to take care of that," he said. "They don't like that." Only TelePrompTer. the largest cable television operator in the country, is con- Army sidering a bid on the franc~c. It cur- rently sCrves parts of Newport Beach. "I get very unenthusiaslic about hav· ing only one bid.'' said Costa Afesa City Councihnan Alvin Pinkley, a cable TV director. "H's like having to buy a car because, ifs the only car on the market. .. Bateman said the PCTA has several altCmatives i! only one bid is received. ·"Individual ci ties can ~ide to offer their 0"11 franchises. This way 3 company Files may decide to bid on a city rranchilt, ..,.. stead of one that CO\'ers five cilia, at a lot less cost" "\\'e. can also consider a clty~wned • sys te1n. or v.·e can shelve the project and hope to do better at a later time." "If I'm going to ~ nbsol'utely honest, I must say I'm pessimislic that we wilJ l't 1nore than the one bid ," he told directors. No action y,·as taken by the board, \Vhich will wait witi l its Aug. 9 meeting before mapping any further plans. Burn Blaze Sweeps St. Loui;s Military Center OVERLAND, ~10. fAP ) -Fire sv.•ept through the sixlh lloor of the 1'1ilitary Personnel Record Center in this St. 4Quis suburb tOOay, destroying thousand~ of records on pre-1960 s.ervice perS<lnnel. · Fire fighters from eight suburba n com, panies v.·ere still battling the blaze more than nine hours after it broke out in the two-block-long structure. They reported the blaze was limlte<l to the top floor , but \vater and sm<lk'C damage w e r e spreading below. Its cause was not immediately known, but arson was suspected. • A spokesman said the building's sixth floor contained records of Army person· nel who served prior to Hl60. On the fifth floor, the spo_kesman said. are records of Navy personnel prior to the same date. "Whatever isn·1 burned is as v.•et a~ can be." said Arm:t Col. \Vesley C. Scarborough. Army officials in \\'ashington said nuu1y of the records stored at, the Random Gunfire ' Hits 3 During LA Rock Conce1·t LOS ANGELES (AP) -Random gun· fire interrupted a rock music concert. striking at least three teen-agers and stampeding a crowd of about 500 panic· stricken persons In the Watts district. Police said the concert had been in progress for about an hour Wednesday night v.•hen four yowig men suddenly fired about 20 rounds with handguns, ap- pa rently at random. They said city Housing Authority guards maintaining security at the con· cert saw two girls and a boy shot during the bedlam. Hoy,·ever, the extent of their injuries could not be det~ined because the three were driven away from the <lpcn concert site in private vehicles, aulhorities added. Police said today that none of the three had reported to any local hospital !or treatment. QUICK ROUNDUP FOR MUSTANG Helping you save is a Daily Pilot classified goal. Look at a typical bargain you cou ld find : '70 MUSTANG Grande. Air. pis, p/disc brakes, xlnt. cond .• $2250. (Phone No.) The first classified ad reader y,·ho came to ·look at it bought the ca r. He's happy: the.advertiser's happy ; and the Dally Pilot was happy lo help into the bargain. If you have a bargain to list, call a Daily Piiot Ad-visor. She'll be hap- py to help. The direct line -642-5678. spra\\'ling center are not duplica1ed elsewhere. "Some or theltt are run file copies of Army prrsonnel. These are not dupliated," said Col. Leonard ,Reed . 1V.·o firemen were hospitalized for treatment of smoke Inhalation but there y,·ere no other reports of injuries. The center, about 20 years old, con- tains about 56 million records of current Poli~e and former military personnel, a military spokesman said. or about 2,000 employes, only ~ty gu~rds and maintenance Personnel oc- cupied the bu ilding at the fire's ODHt shortly after midnight. They escaped \1·ithout injury. .~ The center was sealed off·by federal agents and military personnel after the outbreak of the fire . Tliief in BeCLcli Agency's Lair HUNTINGTON BEACJI police are seeking the lhief \Vho broke into the city hall safe Wednesday night and made off with an undisclosed amount of money. The burglary occurred practically in the police department's back yard. The safe was located in the finance department which is housed ia the buildint nex t to the police perking lot. • 1 DET. BILL BRUCE said this morning Uuu the burglar either fi1Uffil out the combination or the safe was le!t unlocked. He said finance department employes were trying to calculate the Joss from the theft this morning, "I don't know how much was taken, but it wasn't very much," the detective added . BRUCE DID NOT specula te on how ·the thief got into the office where the safe is located. Lapworth-designed Boats • Takit1g Lead ·in Transpac By AL!\ION LOCKABEY 01 1M o.lly "li.t Stitt The Cal -4.0s are back. The famed Lapworth-designed sloops, "'inners of three previous Transpac race$, too k over first and second place on corrected time \Vednesday as the northeast trade"•inds freshened and began kicking up a surfing sea. 1-landicap leadt!No\•as F. T. Oppcrman's Kolohe from \Va ikiki Yatht Club. In sec· ond place v.·as George Thorsoo 's Ariana . Los Angeles Yacht Club. Kolohe is a Class C entry and Ariana is in Class D. Kolohe was about 14 miles ahead of Ariana on the rhumbline. l\tcany,•hi\e, the race for line hqnors in Class A lightened up as the big boats y,·ere pushed up to hull speed by the freshening trades. which were blowing 18 to 20 knots and 30 in the gusts. \Vlndward Passage logged a 237-mile day to place her 891 miles from Diamond 11ead. but Ragtime and B\ackfin had even better 24-hour runs to narrow the gap. Ragtime put 247 miles under her keel to· move within JI miles of Windward Passage. Blackfin had a 243-milc day and y,·;:is 11 miles behind Ragtime. The light airs of the previous ty,·o days plus the drifter at 'the start apparently "'iped any chance of a new elapsed tjme rt.'COrd by any of the Clas,, A speedsters. The first boat to fini sh would have to make it by 10 p.m. (POT) Friday lo eraae the existing record of 9 days, 9 houri and 6 minutes set by Windward Passage in 1971. The freshening v.·inds and mounting seas took their first casualty of the race \Vednesday as Larry Poulton's Colwnbia· 36 l)cfiant from Oakland lost her rudder. The escort vessel Tranquility was stand· ing by y,·hile Defiant'• crew attempted io jury·rig a rudder and remain in the race. llandicap standings, with 900 miles to I looolulu : OVERALL -(I) Kolone. 1,138: (2) Ariana, J,152: (3) Improbable, 1,072; <•l l\:cferti. 1.108; (S) Tenacity, J,152. CLASS A -Warrior. 1.020: (2) Min Sette. 994: (3) Ughtning, 1,060; (fl Ragtime, 902: IS) Robon, 992. CLASS B -{I ) Improbable, 1,072; (2) J\'alu IV, 1,079: (3) Sanderling JV, 1,15*; (41 Nt>ferti. l ,108; (5) Starwagon. l ,172. CLASS C -Ill Kolohc, 1,138: (2) Tenacity, 1.152; 13) Blue Streak, 1,148; ('41 t.Utress.'i II, 1,173; (5) Ahsante, l,1'11. CLASS D -Ill Arlana, 1,152 ; (21 Illusion. 1.156: (3) Moon Day, 1,176; (4) Witchcraft. 1.178: f5J Woodwynd, 1,%02. GAl AT CIACLE AOl.ITE ' ........ ·-··· ....... ····-· tWJO'TAUE 1""'*81.JMl) RACE TIGHTENS -Windward Passage 1WP1 led Transpac fleet 891 miles Crom Honolulu \Vednesday nlght, but Ragtime (RA ). with 902 miles lo go, and Blacklin (BF'). just 913 mlles out, we re mal<in g ii oa1w ,. • .., c-.rt .., ...,.. c..- a tight race ror line honors. Warrior (WA) was lead· Ing Class A on corrected time wi\h 1,020 miles to go. Overall handicap leader was Kolohe (KO), J ,138 milM from the finish. -..---- . ' • • Z MfLY "LOT 11o • ----,--- Martha Keepi Same Story ' WASHINGTON !UPI) -Mirtha Mlleboll n d • todOy she SIUI btllova evel'Ylhlnr lbe bas said ... ""111deat ~ and the. Waterpie 9Clndal even thou&h her hu&band haS sworn Nixon was kept ln the dark about the scope of the sclll<IJI. Mil. Mjtcht.11 told UPI ·rn a telephone conversation -as her husband John wa11 starting hi11 third day of testimony before the Senate Watcrgat wmmluee ~ that "1 stand on everything I've said prev!OUl!y.:• Wate1~gate Panel Sends Nixon a Note WASHINGTON (AP I -The Senate Watergale committee sent President Nixon a Jetter today that represents the titst opportunity for the White lfouse to provide voluntarily papers the panel wants_, committee sources said. The committee will vote to subpoena lhe presidential papers Ir the White Houee IUM'l9 down this last request, .the sources aaMI. Nixon last week refused to turn over the papers. (The ~lte House later said that Nixon hi• qreed to meet at nne future time with Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr., but declared "there will be no change" in Nixon's re- fu.sal to Jum over the papers.) The IOUl'Cel said I.be committee's severi .tenators agree that ao attempt to obtain Lbe ·presidenUal papers milst be mid'., but. that thay hope to avol<l.-the comht•dioaal confronlAtlon that could result lf the Yt'bile House were to attempt to quuh the aubpoena in the court. Rufus F.dmi.sten, a principal aide lo chalrman Sam J. Ervin Jr. (O.N.C.), said there was hope or. a quick White Jlouse response to the letter, possibly to- day. The committee mel for an hour in private this morning and scheduled a second cloeeckloor meetln1 for the lunch- eon recess to discuss the matter of pnsMlential papers. Th°e rn e e t I n g s •bracketed lhe appearance before the commfttee of former Atty. Gen. John N. M!leboll. Both the committee and special pros- ecutor Archlhltd Cox have been pres8lD'ing the President to modify hi.s tough lland aplnlt releulng preslden- Ull plpm. F~P .. eJ MITCHELL ..• EbrUcbman were not fully voluntary. In respanse to a question by committee Cbainnan Sam J. Ervin Jr., (D-N.C.), Mltchell adm.ltted that by not tellln~ Nix· on what he knew of wrongdoing 1n the White House he had placed Nixon's political fortunes above the President's COl'l!ltituti~l duty to uphold the laws. He also said under questioning by chief ~coo.Mel Samuel Dash that he would have t told Nixon everything he knew about the Watergate matter if Nixon had asked him after the election. "I would have laid out .chapter and verse, everything I knew about It." But he stuck to his asser,ion that the President never Inquired about the matter of Pifltchell, who had tkcn hls attorney general and his campaign direc· tor.- Dish asked a long series of questions about the extent of Mitchell's active in- volvement in the \Va tergate cover-up, receiving mostly denials as answers. Mitchell said he never heard any discussions about the posslbllity of ta~ ping the Central Intelligence Agency for money to support the \Vatergate deCen· dants or pay their ball. He said he never heard about any im- proper approaches to U.S. District Judge Charles Richey, who Is presiding in the Democratic Party's $6.4·mil!lon lawsuit for damages stemming from \Vatergatc. OIAffl COAST H• DAILY PILOT TM CWtllle C:...t DA.H.'f ftlLOT wltll wlllcfl It UINlll'IM 1M Nt-l'ttn, 11 l'Ubli.,,_ "' 1119 Ort"" C .. 11 l"vllfl"'lft9 C_n,. ~ ....... " ........ IM*ll......,, -·· '"""""' ,tid1y, l'W Clllll M9"', N~-1 kld'I, H¥1t!lntftrl ltecflfl'oun"h< V•llrf, u,...,.. htctl, lr,,.11'41Sllldle1Nock ..., s.... ci.-11111 hft JiNn C1olt1r1110. A 1l110r. •1t-l •ltltl! II outlll111911 '-"""'''' tM i\IN!e.,._ "'9 "ll'l(icN I ~lltfl!M ti.9nl 11 " J.-WU! .. ., 11,...1, (Hit M•1, C1l1 .... t1lt, tHM. Rob1rt N. W11il ..... ·111t•'lt lllCI ,...,.,lllM< Jtck I , C11rl1v Viet ''"id ... I t!'lll G-r11 Mo,,.._.,. Tllo"'•' K,, .. a l!dhtr lllorn1f A. M11rphlnt M-tlftt •do!Or ChtrlM H. Lt•• l lch1•il '. N1U Anl11t111 Mt1'1Glllt l:lllN-rt T1rrv Co•lll1 W11t Oltnot C_1, l!ll!ff " ............ OM&. 11•11 l11clt lo11l1•1r4 M1ilittt" A4t111u: r.o. ••• 1to. •2~•• --l ........ INClll t22 l'.,nt """""' Ge!i. Mnt: Jlt WtM .. , l"'Ml N-' 9"dl: :UlJ """" ~ ~ C...,_ .. 1 •I ,..,ti! II C1mlllt lt .. I Tll1 .. 1•• (7141 Mlo4JJ1 Cl•tnM A.,_tlll .. MloH71 ,,_ ...-or....,. c"°"" c--it• -•m ~t. ,,,,, °'""' Cttttl ~~tlt!llNI """"""'· "" -•fllritt. 1-·"-· tilhWlfl ~ tr """''--"' ..... 111 _, .. ........... wtillWI 9"Cltl "'' ......... ..,.,,.,., -· ..... '*" ........ ~ " (lt!I /NM, """'111t. ...,...~..,.. "I' c...-rltr a _ .. "*""'' "' _.. O.U -IRl\'1 IJllll"?' ..... , •• ""' .... fnl"l!lt¥. Baggage Search Victory Nearer By TOM BARLEY Of .... Otil• .-i1tt llllt A Costa 1'fcsa ttlal lawyer hos won an appellate court victory lhat Is ju!it a United Stales Supreme Court hearln1 away rrom forcing airlines to obtain the consent ot boarding passengers before searching thelr luggage. Defense allomey George Chula had the Fourth District Court of Appeals ln San Diego on his side when he argued that the conviction of client Frederick Weston Hyde should be reversed becautc his lug- gage was searched without his authority. Hyde, 19, San Diego, was arrested at that city's Lindbergh Airport o n Christmas Eve 1971 when baggage ex- amlnen allegedly found a quanUty of marljuana ln his suitcase. Hyde was tr:led and sentenced to a jail term for possession of marijuana. But his sentence was delayed when Chula ap- pealed that the search was illegal and unconstitutional. The Fourth District Court agreed and Hyde remains free on appeal bond. Chula said It is his un- derstanding the San Diego district at- torney plans to appeal the case to the na- tion's highest court. Chula commented Wednesday from his Costa A-tesa home: "It was a classic example of what is going on ever.y day in every one of the nation's airports -baggage examiners are using emergency regulations to con- duct searches for drugs and narcotics rather than weapons." Jf the Supreme Court upholds the lKal appellate court ruling, it would nlean that airport searches of passe!!_Sers' lug- gage would h~f: to be with tlie C()risent or the passenger even if, as in the case of Hyde, his baggage hid activated t~ electronic deteclion equipment. "A passenger who refUJed to submit to such a search can always be denied a scat,'' Chula said. "The decision clearly states that 'a search may be justUied to Frot11P .. e J EXPLOSION •.. Beach police and the Orange County Harbor Patrol responded to help. Harbor Patrol Sgt. Harry Wright said the fireboat was on roullne patrol when a sudden red glow lit the aky In the direc- tion d. the Reuben E. Let paddleboat restaurant. "We were the first units on the scene and started pwnping water on It," he said. The blast, Sgt. Wrillht added, disin· t•cr•ted a 12-fOjit dlnghy atop the shat· !ered cabin structure in which Oeorr lit a -;elgarette, apparently I g n i t l n g ac- cumulated bilge fumes, according to firemen. Ambulance crewmen on the scene by this Ume splashed the blast victim with purified water to wash awa y the salt by lb.is time agonizingly cal(td in his cuts and bums. Deorr was also given o:.ygen for shock and smoke inhalation, aggravated by his panlckey swimming. He suffered first and second degree burns over his back, chest, neck and shoulders, in addition to lacerations sus- tained Jzy being blasted through the debris. __ ~ Names of j}e destroyed boat moored at 201 E. Coast Highway and the Unda Isle residentS who rescued the victlm vm_ not ·1mmematety av11Jilile. Bicycle Safety Poster Contest Slated in Beacli In an effort to promote bicycle safety among Huntington Beach youngsters, the police dcpanment is sponsoring a pester contest. The contest will be open to children five to 14. Entries can be submitted unUI noon July 25. TheY will be accepted at the police departmeat or at the police range on Gothard Street near Talbert Avenue . According to a police department ' spokesnlan , the idea of the poster contest is lo ge t youngsters to think in terms of bicycle safety whllc proviC!ing the clly v.·ith posters that can be used to remind all cyclists of the rules of the road. Last mon1h. Police Chief Ea r I e ·Robitaille ord(:red a get tough pollcy for bicyc.le riders after a study showed lhllt 50 have been injured and three killed in aceid~ts so far this year. Posters entered In the contest can range In size from 11 inches by 14 inches to 22 inches by 28 inches and thou.Id tfe marked on, the b3Ck v.ith the artist's names. addren, lclephone nwnbcr. age. school and grade. Entries will be judged by a panel of community leaders to be ~leeted by police. The contest .bas betn broken into three divisions based on age. First, ~ ond and third place prizes will be awarded in each division, The winning entries will be displayed Aug. 1-4 at Huntln(lon Center Mall a1 6•'1col • bicycle safety "hlblllon: prevent air piracy -a reQuesl must be made (of the paasenger) and constnt given'.'' "God help us IC thl• happened," aaid United Air U~s 1M~ Dennis Emery In Los Angeles when uJced to comment on the cue. "IL would destroy our present survetU1nce system and play havoc with our flight pllns. '' Board ,Okays ~ 6.2 Percent Pay Raises About 1,000 employes at Golden West and Orange Coast College, from physics teachers to janitor, will face the higher cost of li ving with across-the-board salary increases of 6.2 percent. Trustees of the Coast Community College District authorized the 197S-74 in· creases Wednesday night and justified them on the basiS' of Bureau of Labor Statistics predictions or a 6.2 percent cost of Jiving increase in the Los Angeles area. The cost~f-livi.ng package excludes: raises for merit or longevity earned by the fmployes. Theoretically, the boost only allows the workers to keep up with increased conswner prices. Original budget" c!leulations ror . ttie district indicated l4at no money would be available during the · 1973-74 fiscal year for coet:«·llving increues. However, Governor Reagan's sifning of the new community college ap.. proprlatkm bill (SB I) Wedneeday gave the district additional revenue with which to ma~e the payments. Coilege district Chancellor Nonnan E. Watson said the •.i percent 'wage package includes four-tenths of one per- cent In frince benefits and S.8 percent in actual salary increases. The cost of the overall package to the district la $950,000. NegoUation.s for the wage hike were cooducted quieily and without dispute, ac- cording to spokesmen for employe groups and the administration. KeeQ.e Elected Chief of Coast College 'Erustees Worth Keene, retired postmaster of Seal .Beach, Wedpesday night was elected president or the Coast Community College Disttict Board-of Trustees. The M-year-<1ld Keene took over leadership ol the two campus dl!trict from William Kettler of Huntincton Beach, who had served as board presi· dent for the past year. Keene, of !38 16th St., has served on the board for the past 12 years. He serv~ ed as presid~t of the five-man panel in 1968-69 and in 196U4. Earlier this year he was re-elected to biS' fourth rour-year tttm on;be-board-of-trustees. -~ Cholen v!Cf! president, Wednesday night, was trustee Donald G. Hoff, of Westminster. . Coast Community College trustees govern the affairs of Orange Coast and Golden West Colleges. Police Refrain From Enforcing Parking Rule The Police department bas stopped en· forcing a law In Huntington Beach which prohibits the parking of commercial trucks, tractors, trailers and buses on strttts. Police Chief Earle Robitaille aaid the city att6mey has advised him the city code is not legal bceause no signs are pasted outHnlng the parking ordinance. The clly code , says comrnerctal \'Chicles over three-quarters of a ton (this also covers big campers) cannot be parked more than t\\"O hours .on a city street. State vehi cle code proviSions permit such a law, but also say the erea must be posted. "The attorney is currently checking the law lo 1ee if we can do it by mercly pas ling lhe m 11 j o r thorouabfares," Rob itaille 11ki. "It isn't feasible, and It "·oukt be ugly, to post every street in the city.•· The chief said patrolmen are enforctnc a city code which forbtda tht parking ol any vehicle on lhe same 1pot oo a street for more thao 72 consecutive.boon. 'Open to Blackmail' LONDON (UPlJ -Lord Lambton. one of two government minlsttrs \\'ho quit six weeks ago after admitting 1ffalr1 with' call 1irl1, w11 "wide open to bl1clrmall," • four-man judicial commlt~on on 1e®rlly nld tocll . - ' O.ltr ,llotl .llltl , ... ,. School Leader Orville Hanson, 54, is the new president of the Board of Tn.is- tees of the Huntington Beach City {elementary) School Dis- trict. He was elected Wednes- day night by fellow trustees to serve fo r the 1973-74 school year. Coastal Panel OKs Harbour Apartments A 73-unit apartment complex in ff~ tington Harbour has received a permit r-rom the Sotith Coast Regional '7.orie Con.servatlon Comm.Jssion, despite a staff n:!pon recommending denial of the pro:J- etc. Granted the construction go-ahead was K-MAW Inc. for its apartments, ·pool, recreation building and tennis courts at Sims and Pearce Streets in Huntington Beach. Commission plaMers said the project would have ~"substantial adverse en- vironmental effect," increase densities beyond what oow exists and "Ir· rctrievably" oomm.Jt the area to this land use. Led by Chairman Robert Rooney of 11untington Beach, the commission voted 9-1 to approve K-MAW's request. Planned are 12 one-bedroom, 28 two- bedroom, and 34 lhree-bedroom units in the R-2 (rilulti-famiJy~ area !or a density of about rs dwelling un'its per acre .. f'lre Boue Jury Sets Nude Perf oriner Free ' By CANDACE PEAMON Of .. o.ttt¥ , ........ Playwrlghl William Shakespeare once wrote, "A11 the world's a stage." Attorney Kenneth SChol tz drew upon that pbUosophy Wedneld.ay to convince a seven-man, five-woman jury in Orange County Harbor ludiclal District Court that the Fire House night spot in Costa Mesa is indeed, ooe of those stages. The jury in Judse Archie Walters' courtroom found Scholtz' client, nude dancer 1'1arsha Sue Crump. innocent of 16 alleged violations or Costa Mesa's anti-nudity ordinance. The law passed by the City Council in earl y 'May prohibits nude employes in places that serve food and beverages but as examples of varlety. 'Scholtz then took lhe same ,paper Stotler had used and drew "bar" Oil the other tide. "If r put my sign on the wall of a n1.p1nery.~' he·said, walk!g over tji the courtroom waU. "it won't tum It Intl a bar either." ' Col'lege District Get-s $1 Millio1i Budget 'Boost' allows nudity in theater1. Governor Reagan's signing of the new There was never a question in the trial community college appropriatioils blD that Miss Crump, ~. had been nude on has provided trustees of th~ Coast Corq. stage when Costa 1.fesa police officers m~_Uy ~liege District with an extra fl raided the Fire House May 11, 14, 26 an~ilhon with whlch to ba!ance the budset. June S. The measure, known as Senate Bill 6, Prosecuting attorney J im Stotler con-actually shifts an ad<litlonat $2 million to tended she was in a bar and said it was Iden West and Orange Coast Collese, "immaterial" whether or not alcohol was but it also curiails the district's taxln1 served. power.by abOut •1 m illion, meaning a net cBy May 11, the Fire House al 177 E. l'evenue gain of •t million, district ot~ 17th St., was serving only soft drinks but ficials said. ~ stilfh!ld a.,slSP reading "bar" outside on _for Pl'9P..Cl1Y owners. in the district, ap- the red-and-white striped bui!C!Jng. • proval of SB • will mean a reduction In · •1They themselves called it a bar and the tU rate from 83 cents to 81 cents per never the twain shall meet," StoUer $100 asaessed valuation. al'Kued, adding that club officials charl&-Trustees appeared gratified by the In. ed the sign to read ·~theater" in late May creased revenue from state sources and "so they'd have the $iefense." , · Stoller drew the ··-_. theater on a an additional •190,000 provided by the "UI U federal government for the educatkm or piece of. paper, walked to a wall in the veterans. Both will help balance the courtroom and asked · the jury to ~·s proposed $37 .a mlllion bOdget. •· "assume Qn the other side of the wall i1 a 1):u5tees originally reared 8 .SOO,ooO bunch .of.r.·uns." . deficit ~ the I The sign doem't change the nunnery ~ause. · orm1:1 system of · Into a · theater, he said, ·tn his closing community college apportiorvn:ent would statements. not have satisfied di.strict needs. ~ "Do they shoot pool in the lobby or . However, ·Dr.cornllan Thocnpson the Grauman's Chinese Theater?" he asked district's vice chancl!llor of buslnesS al- l f I In ed faJrs, reminded the bOard that a five per. at one po nt, re err ng to a co -operat cent enrollment increase still will be pool table in the Fire House. needed A theater, Scholtz told the jury in his to obtain all the state-aid funds summation, "isn't limited to a particular required to put the budget In the black. concept... Enrollment forecasts indicate a district It doesn't have to have a box office, a wide decline of two percent. District ad-. ministrators earlier this year vowed to curtain on the stage or even a stage, "beat the bushes" for additional students Scholtz argued, painting out small com-to boost aid payments. munity theaters, theater-in-the-round, 1be budget, authorized for publication cabarets and Las Vegas entertainment Wednesday night, is up about $9.Z million '-. over last year's expenditures of $28 4 OCC, Contractor Calls it Quits; P~ct Canceled rnUlion. · Renected in the increase are $950 000 for cost-of-living increases for empJo0yes and more than '5 million in new con- struction, mainly at Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa. · 'I]Je budget ls scheduled for adoption A~. 1 following a public ~aring. , K-MAW representative Ed Ross said the complex would "enhance" the •;ecplogical cnvironm~nt" of the area. becilusc trees would be planted. Richard Outwater, a professor of urban College trusu:es' and a contractor who affairs at Cal State Long Beach, said wa)ked awiy from Unfinished Orange Citizens Win. 'Cashew' Batde "the staff view of an ·unof(icial Coast College projects amounting to moratorium (in this area) Isn't very hearly $1 million formally called it quits sou nd . This has very low patential of Wednesday .night. ever being in the open space element of Coast Cominunity College District the coastal plan." trustees authorized cancellation of the Homeowners on Cashew Street tn The Orange-Los Angeles county com-contract with the Harman 8. J . Gladd ~ountain Valley have found ·that city hall mission, along with five other regional Construction Company and the payment is not such a tough nut to crack arter all. and one state panel. must develop a of $91,071 Cor work already done. They have won their battle to keep coastal master plan by 1976. Affected by the cancellation are the Cashew from becoming a through street' Rooney, a colleague of Outwater's at OCC food services laboratory, tutorial all the way from Talbert Avenue to the state university, said the area "is an cent er and faculty offices, horticulture Slater Avenue. awful long way from the beach, well building, and student center. City councilmen voted down a plan to above any traffic circulation to the Trustees authorized the advertising of ex!end .cashew through a proposed beach. We shouldn't deny permits here." bids for completion of the unfinished ne1ghbormg tract after hearing Cashew Commissioner Rimmon C. Fay remind· v.·ork by other construction finns. homeowners argue that the extensk>n ed Out\Vlter, who supervises a student The Harman B. J . Gladd firm qu it the would create a traffic har..ard in their intern program at the commission, that projects June S, alleging that the district otherwise quiet neighborhood. the "sole use of the coastal r.one isn't had refused to make payments, conduct City officials contended that the open space. Density in residential areas inspections, supervise work and failed to through street was ,necessary because has to be-considered:-'j_ ----~reVi!nt-numerous problems, dlscrepan .. .__ __ Jhe-fi.r.e-department-wanted two en- The coastal permit rone under Proposi-cies and c<irr~tions in the plans and trances to the new tract going in on 13 lion 20, the coastline initiative passed specifications. acres north of A1eadow Romes. last November. extends 1,000 yards in-District officials charged the company But councilmen voted 3·2 to approve land from mean high tide line and 1,000 with failure ~10-rollow the plans and the new tract without the extension or feet around tidal channels. speciflcatie-ns of the architect. Meadow Homes' Cashew Street. Nobody Sells GE Refrigerators For Less Than 1311'' ~ CA.LI: 8 WE ~DUNLAP TAKE Authorlnd 543-7711 TIADE-INS OE SIRVICI 1115 NEWPORT BLVD. Dawntawn Costa Mesa -Ph. 548-7788 • Sheriff I to Ul"ITI ....... JANIE JONES EN ROUTE TO LQNDON COURT ON VICE RAP Singer F•cel 26 Ch1rges, Jncludlnsr01Mr•ting Pro~titutlon Ring Payola Trial Witness Claims 'Escorts' Paid LONDON (UPI) -A nattily dressed girls being cemented under a' bridge." businessman testified today that girl "It would hardly be appropriate tor "escorts" provided by singer Janie J9fieS hostesses to be under lhat kind of pressure when they "·ere entertaining," "didn't appear to me to be call girls or be replied. "I never saw anything to sug- prostitutes," but he gave one of them gest such -a..~.tuaUoo. • t , . ~ ~ $260 just the sa me. "Mr. X" said be usual y gave the ex- The man, wearing a smart gray suit "Mr. X" said he usually gave the es- witb a black ind white check tie, was tertaining ~is.~ clients . .He &av~ ldentilled only as "Mr. S". · one ol tbMI iii! p..fu'd.! 112861 bka~ "I He was the-fourth witness in a thought she was much too young to be in- mushrooming case against Miss Jones volved in anything like that. She was and two co-defendants lhat began with short of cash and I gave her the money investigations into s e x -a n d -m on e y to make her buzz off to Scotland to her "payola" to British Broadcasting Corv.-parents." (BBC) personnel and spread to charges The businessman estimated he bad involving attempted murder, poisoning paid Miss Jones nearly $10,000 "mostly and blackmail. 'or prov·1dm· g e•~rts " Mf!S J I' ""u . ones, 34, face s 26 separate Miss Jcines wearing a Uower·pallerned charges, mo1t of them concerned with . ' _ . . 1--•--tbetting-prostttution;-Three-of-ber-girls-wbite-dreu-and.a-gr.een-ha1r nbbon,-took have testified about orgies organized by notes as "Mr. X" gave evidence. Mia: Jcmes both in her London house and He was followed into the witness box in luxury hotels. by .a dark-haired girl wearing dark 1be escon:i were. in~roduced as glasses and a wedding ring, idenUfied 00_ newspaper girls, wnvers1ty stµdents, 1 "M. C ,, ...... .d he "had pbo&ograpben. And indeed they were," Y as LSS , "'"' S8.1 1 se:a: ''Mr. X" iaid. "They didn't appear to me for money" at Miss Jones' in!tigalion. to be call-girls or prostitutes." She described in detail the first oc- He was asked about testimony from casion, when A1iss Jones "said to get into "Mia B" that girls were frightened into television, I bad to be nice to this doing as Miss Jones asked by threats of gentleman and he wanted to sleep \vith "heavies" and references to "one of the me." • r Thur~y. Jyly 12, }q73 H DAILY PILOT Murder Charg~ Ranch Hand Detained In Shooting II)' TOM BARLEY °' .. Dlttt' .......... Orange County Sherllrs depll1ies sald they would seek a murder complaint to- day qainst ranch hand Robert Carl "Whip" Slatton, 41, in the alleged slaying Wednesday of an apparent Ortega Hot Springs trespasser. Slatton was kx:lged in COWllY jail Wednesday night alter treatment at the Orange County Medical Center for cuts and bruises be received 1n an apparent flight from the shooting scene, deputies , said. •if ""e get our complaint ioday we will probably arraign him Jn municipal court sometime Friday," Sheriff's Capt. James Broadbelt commented this morning. "Our investigation into the shooUng is still going on." Several witnesses to the shootout on Starr Ranch property off the Ortega Highway have already identified Slatton as the man sporting a white sombrero, gun belts and revolvers wbo told them be owned the land, flashed a badge and ordered them to leave immediately. SUSPECT IN SLAYING Ranch Hand Slattdn County Ex-POW 'Unfit' for Dut')· Due to Illness Witnesses said that Dennis Glahn, 21, of La Mirada, was one oC several young OCE:.\NSlDE (AP) -lt-larine Lt. Col. men who told Slatton that his badge Edison W. ?.filler of Tustin, a fomier meant nothing to them and they intended POW accused of misconduct by his to carry on enjoying the ·tUklegree prison commander, should be discharged ~·aters at the San Juan spa. They said Slatton shot Glahn ·at~ due to inquries and illness he suffered in point blank range through-the chut in the confinement, a medical bOard s.ays. ensuing fracas, ran for his jeep and fled Miller, from nearby Tustin, . \\'as from the scene. declared unfit for further seTVice by the Deputies said they traced Slatton Camp Pendleton Medica~ Evaluation through the license number jotted down Board, a Marine spokesman said Rep. Podell Bribery Charge Hits N¥ Solon NEW YORK IAP ) -Rep. Bertram Podell lD-N.Y.), \\'85 accused In a rederal indictment today of receiving $41 .350 in bribes to use his lnOuencc with federal agencies for a Florida air taxi fiml seeking approval of ·a regular Florida-Bahamas route . Also indicted on conspiracy and other charges "''ere Podell 's brother. Herbert S. Podell, and ~lartin hliller of ri.Uami. Fla.. fonner president of Leasing Consultants Inc. the parent corporation of now-defunct Florida Allanlic Airline s. U.S. Attorney Paul J . Curran said that Rep. Podell . scheduled to be arraigned in ~1anhauap Federal Court July 23. "·as indicted as the clilnax of a t\\·o-year·in- \"CS!igation by the FBI and members of the U.S. Attorney's Official Corruption Unit. Podell has contended he y,•as acting legally as a congress ma n representing a constituent. and not illegally as a member of Congress being paid to act as auomey before a federal agency. Podell y,·as accused of soliciting more than $a7.000 and actually gelling" $41 ,J:>O in bribe payments that were concealed as legal fees from airline officials to tbe. law fiml, Podell and Podell. and in the form of a check to the Citizens Committee for the Re-election of Bertram Podell. In retu rn for 1he alleged bribes. Podell "pressured and all cmpled lo influence officials'' of the Ci\•il Aeronautics Board. Federal Avia tion Administralion and Department of State, and traveled to the Bahamas In December 1$8. lo try lo in- fluence Bahamian officiafs, CUrran said. Violations of fed eral bribery ~ con- flict of interest statutes. as well.as false statements to the f'BI and perjury before a grand jury, as recently as May 4. were alleged. -The federal conflict of interest statute m11kes it a crime for a member of Congress to recei\·e money for services in a proei!«ling before any federal agen- cy. The bribery and conn\ct of interest s1;itutes provide , in addit ion to varying prison terms and fines . that conviction disqualifies a defendant from holdin& any federal government office. Mino1·ities _Make Up 15% . - Of UC Irvine En1·ollment by witnesses and contacted him at Starr Ranch headquarters about five hours Wednesday. Enrollment of both undergraduate and The data collected unive rsity-wide Is later. The Secretary of the Navy currently is d t t d 1 f · 1 · It. t based on responses from 85 percent of Offl·cers sai·d the ranch band sur-1 _j gra ua e s u en s o rac1a minor ies a reviewing a legations by Rear Adm. the UC Irvine camp~s last fall reached a registering .s!udeftts. Some studenta rendered without incident. James Stockdale of Coronado. asserting tecord level of 15 percent of all students. declined to ansy,•er the ethnic origins TrOfb£icersCasaid Slatton!!• 3edlfll ~~ Dj ri~e, Miller and Navy Capt. \Valier Wilber of data released toda y by the university survey. a uco nyon, su er nunor m ur1es suggesls. H 1•• ' at the Irv•·"· when hs jeep overturned but he was able Crossroads, Pa., were guilty of mutiny, oy,·ever. ·~ responses '"'" to n·ght the vehicle and return to the . ·d· the 1 ·i t obc Student ethnic surve~·s laken durinit campus y,·ere among "the highest in the ranch \..-.. --. at mg · enemy, ai ure 0 Y an the fall. 1972 registration shoy,·ed that system. Only 5.1 percent Qf registering 1NW>e order and allied charges such as at· minorities made up 20.7 percent of the :students declined to ansy,·er. At Berkeley. Investigators said Slatton bad no more t~pting to stir disloyalty among s1udenls altending all nine UC campuses. 9.3 per~nt y,·ouldn't ans1J.'er and at Santa right on the Hot Springs property than pnsoners. The Irvine figures show that of the Barbara 27.6 refused to participate in tbe ~~UJ!= b~ u:"Z:~ :a:u:J A final decision on ?.filler's physical fit· 6.914 students registered four percebt suryey. 4 ness: will be made by the U.S. Navy we re blacks .. 4 percent "''ere American or the 11,984 UC Santa Barbara itTheir records show that Slatton was Medical Board in Washington, OC .. the Indians. 5.4 percent ...,·ere Oriental and 5,2 registrants who did respond . only ll.I due to appear Aug. 9 in South Orange Marines said. His case· will ~me up in percent y;ere of l\lexican or Spanish· percent said they were m i n 0 r l t 1 County Municipal Court to answer the ne.:a:t four lo six weeks, the American descent . The 15 percent total students, yielding the campus the distinc- spokesman said. represents 1.023 students. tion of being the least integrated campus charges -of posing as a deputy sheriff, MilleT" said earlier that he repeaLedJt In 1968, the fi rst year ethnic registra-in the UC sy&tem. au1ult with B deadly wetpon and exposed ,himlflf to punishment~ th a lion data y,·as collected. the Irvine cam-N -" v· tn · UC San "FYanci.soo's 2,117 ..-Jstranl!. possession-of a blackjack. 01u1 ic · amese pr1SOn camp and had pus enrollment totalled only 3.5 percent ·~rt Those charges were filed after an been threatened wj,th death by hts ca~ minority students, 136 of 3,899 surveyed. mMtly graduate students and no medical alleged incident Feb. 12 at Ortega Hot tors because of his' "vigorous: action" in That tota l included .6 percenl Black .. 1 student ~. yielded 'the highest percentage Springs in which bathers confronted by opposing harsh and inhumane treatmenr percent Indian, 1.8 percent Oriental and of minorit ies y,·i!h a total 31.8 percent in the colorfully clad nU)ch hand said he to prisone111. {.~;;fi)"==~~;;;-,.·~9 ~pe;r~c~e=nt~Sp;'~";is;h:s~u~m~•~m~e~.~~~==;:";:";';:9;72;;;;1a;;U;e;n;ro;:l:;tm:;e;n;;l;;. ;;,;;~=--­ drew a blackjack and struck several of 1 ----.,..--,-~~~~~~~~~~ them when they refused to leave. An officer said a bather told him: "it was like a scene·from 'High .Noon'. Here this guy came u~ le~ apart and hands -oov~s lilp!l -jii.\t the way fbeY - do In the movies." Slatton appeared frequently · before he represented ranchers in the San Juan area and demanding actioo to ha.It trespassing in the Ortega Hot Springs sector. Several trespassers have been anuled during that time on a variety of drug and indecent exposure charges. Shtriff's of- ficers said the area has also been med as a rendezvous by runaway juveniles from throughout the county. . :~J. (Jarrell; SEMI-ANNUAL SALE Continues • • • Inspired By A World Of Richness And · Romance . . . Of A 4 Co~st Women Ill Derby Glorious Spain In A Forgotten Time . 191 Take to Air Frida)· in. Powder Puff Contest By IULARY KAYE °' "" Dellr ,. ...... One hundred and ninety-one women -. will take to the lir 'I' Friday the 13th, embart1ng oo a cout·to-coast journey from carlsbad to Elmira-Comtng, N.Y. The women, inclu~ . four from Orange Count)', will be mpel41gJn the 27th 1 IMUal Powder Puff Derby. Tbe oldest and longest air classic for women, .the derby includes contestants froM. 29 stales, and five foreign coun- tries. Pilots and co-pilots range from · grandmothers to lligh school student! inc- cludlng tliree mothef.daughter teams. Orlnge'County, with Cour entrants, \las a long hiatory of being well repr.-..t in the race. Thon GriCfith and Trina Jarlall 11'! Colla Mesa pilots, Rulh Dilg Is I a>pllOI from Capislrano Beach, and Either Gl'Upellhagen will be Oytog from Anlhelm. None of the local contestants ii a novice II cmipettng in the Powder Pull Der1)y. Miss Jartsh has nowu aven -· Mrs. Griffith and M rs . GrvpienMcm hive participated in tbree..t Ind lllil ii the seccnd attempt for Mrs. ~;.. Dilg, ""11ilottng a Bellanca Super- Viking 1741, 1111 she always w.nted to Oy, "but didn't have the time or op- portunhy." In 1919, however, Mn. Dllg Ind her busbind hod chalked Up ellOUlh houn ... reeotV<d their-· "ll pll ,... off the lreefty," said Mn. OU,, "and k can take you to farther any plK'el In lea ttme." A .-i wbUe "CO· Mrs. Diig and her F.m..ot pilot tocilt oil on an "1YOCldo run" flylnc ·•long the r 0 • t • • • pilot ii.ild the sponsor, is best known as an avocado town. Mrs. Griffith also flew her V358 Bonanza overt he route with her e&pilot. "We flew the route in May, and it1J prob- ably help us since ie was a cloudy day and the •·eatber: is supposed to be c~ in the East at the end of this ~-eek," she said. Mrs. Griffith's husband, George, also is a pilot, and has been !he official starter of the derby ror toe past three years. When Mrs. Griffith is !JOl racing in her plane, she is a pilot for her husband's firm, the Griffith Company. Bolh Mr. and Afrs. Griffith, \\"ho ba\·e lived in the area since 1947. have nown in many races. Mn. Griffith, with 1,105 flying hours logged, said that she has flown about 15 races be!ides the Powd er Puff spectacular. ln her two previous Powder Puff attempts, she has placed third and IOlb. ,Miss Jarish, who wlll Oy.a Beechcraft Bonam.a V35A •i thout a co-pilot, bas OO•n 1,700 hours. A pilot since.1966, Miu Jarlsh was appcinted to the \\"omen11 AdYfsory Committee-on AvlaUon In 1972. Mn. Grupenhagen h,.. been nying Since 1962 and ls a nighl instrucior Bl Aviation Facilities in Fullerton. The. VETERAN RACING PILOT Alllheim pilot has logged 2.000 boun and Mesa's Thon Griffith will be fiyins • Grumman American Trovtlet w . '!be nee be&ins Friday at 9 a.m. and distributinC 400 pounda ol 1vocadoo to -mus> be -pleted by llondl)!. July 11. race offidils, Ninety-Nines (the women'• !:1.ian;:.:O:. bondJcapped IC<Ol'ding to llu pllot organization) Ind otty ollldlll. Coo-• an -tine !or lll,$7$ When the women doddod to ohect out c11h pr1as, with 15.1100 golna to the wln- the .,...... and spread 1•ffttle SOuthenl nor. Piiots wlll lllop It varlout check· Callromla cheer. avocados were choten points 1Jon1 the wey to lns:ure a ufe because Fallbrook, the hometown of the lligbt. -. - .... . ... Che1t 5499 . B. King Bed $25 1. C. Night Stand $185. Ore''"' $599. H.J.GAI\l\ETT fllRNlTURE PROFESSIONAL Op•• Mon, 2215 HARBOR BLVD, INTERIOR DESIGNERS lhun. & Fd, E•es. COSTA MESA, CALIF. • 84 25. $ll5. $159. ... $ 99 . ... 5499. Many Other Drexel & Heritage Collections Now at SALE PRICES 'I - • • 4 UAILV PILOT ....... Expert Reports ' ... . '\"\ ;:,~~~ .... :t;.·"; 'ft' • .. ,,,... Tam '•( .. Food Prices Low _The Standards .At·e Laid Down OOllltT BEAT DEPT. -The U.liled States Supreme Court came in with a re- cent decision that has been widely hailed in our region by the forces battling against dancing girl nudity in local nlghl spols. In cllect, the hi gh court said that com- munity or regional standards of what's right and moral can P,revail ralher 'than some sort of national standard. Well, the question of these community standards went to a test ol sorts that coocluded ooly yesterday at the Harbor Judicial District Court in Newport Beach. AT WUE WAS A young lady named Marsha Sue Crump, Z5 years old, from Newport. She was chargect by Costa Mesa authorities with dancing 16 or so times in nothtng more than booties to protect her rorm from the chlll interior of a Mesa night spot known as the Fire House, out at 117 E. 17th St. CaUle Doomed Starved cattle owned by Mali nomads in Africa found water in the neighboring country o! Upper ·Volta, but no food. These cattle, the only valuables possessed by the impoverished tribes, will probably die after drinking water on empty stomachs. Death Plane Pilot 'Hero' Miss Crump had been busted -if you1J ponloo tbe npressioo -~ a new city Jaw which Mesa Qty Attorney Roy June had dutifully copied from a similar ordinance created by our DA Cecil Hicks and his Deputy DA Orella Sears, both notttd smulfighters. It had beer::u~~~.~~' s11au be Paris 4.i r-Crasli Toll R ises; Flier Gets Praise unlawful for yaung_~ to .~ au . , . . . . • . • · ' natural in any place other thane tbeeter. Froin Wire Scnices through the aircraft, t&'.! b}i1he emergeri.·. lea3ing Pi>P~ingers · rn the 1950s; in'· WASHINGTON (UPI) -Today's record lood prices are really '"decep- tively low,"' and oon.sumers w!U be shocked when the lood Industry finally ~ on the iDcreues it bas been a-bing during the tempor~ price freeze, 'a leading industry executive has warned Coogrf&. C. W. Cool<, cbairman ol General Foods C«p., in a wire sent to all memben " CoogijS July s and made public y~rday, warned the lawmakers DOI to be'"tnilled by l'Olf hopes growing out cl. Agriculture lleporlmenl reports this ,...k that lann produdlon may set new records Ulll year. Food c!Jain ......UV. Clarence G. Mamy said prices will jump at least 15 percenl alter the -· COOK SAID lhlll beoallle ol past and present contrcl systems. curtent retail lood prices are ,_ m raw farm prod- ~ prices far below the actual curTent cost ol raw JrOCiucts. '"When sharp commodity price In· creases are reflected at retail, as ultimately Ibey must be, the resultant rise (II food COiis Is certain to shock coo- '"""'"· -.Ewe -crop _. thJi; year will not be sufficient to curb this spiral signlllcanlly," Cool< warned. "For these reuom ... food pricesi~ destined to rise sharply this ·• ,.ar regardless of provisions for control that may be Incorporated in !'hue IV regula- tions. We believe the consuming ~c should be made aware ct this dlstastOful prospect now because we few many con- sumen expect lood prices to hold steady or possibly decline ooce new crop estimates are in," Coot ·1a1d. Thu.! the issue was dt.awn and t.be chief SAULX·LES-CHARTREAUX, France cy oxygen system. dustrialist-yachtsman Joerg Bruder and protagonists showed UlJ in the Newport -11' pl.Jot of a Brazilian Varig airliner Firemen who broughf out the blacken· veteran journalist Cel~ Ribeiro, an ex-PRESIDENT NIXON met for two mLmicipel court: Prosecutor Jim Stotler V.'8S Jiailed today as a hero for the skill· · ed bodies said many were in the correct ecutiye of the Sao Paulo newspaper o hours with his sabinet Wednesday 011 for DA HJcts end the forces agaJDSt nudi· fullf executed·crash landing of his flam-positim ·for a crash Jallding -heads Estado. -1 plans for a Phase IV anti-inflation pro- ty and defeme attorney Kenneth Scholtz ing.-elMiner. dov.'Tl and knees together. Three American, Bernard Regan, Elio gram to follow the temporary freeze. A for Mtss Crump and the Fire House Rescuers v.·ho rushed to the wreckage Rosa and Vole Rose "''Cre also listed spokes?"Qall said the new plan will be an. follies. in. a lettuce field outside this Paris DOCTORS FOUGHT today lo save the among the dead. Addresses v.·ere not noonced' "relatively IOOll," although no JURY SELECTION was rather suburb said the victims died strapped in lives of the seriously ill among the 12 known. final decisiom have yet been made m it. Jll,iDltakinc from the panel d 23 pro. their seats, choked uAC'OOSCious by fumes survivors of the Boeing 7CT1 jetliner. One The plane was only two miles _ 90 Nixon said in a statement sent to specttve jurors olfered to judge the issue. and then burned by the flames that survivor died in a hospital today bring· seconds Oying lime -from Orly Airport Congress Wednesday on the subject: 1'hen were a number ol daalleol"I on started in a restroom and flashed • l!tg the offici:al death toll to 122. at the end or a :5.axt mlle flight from "My ultimate goal -a goal I believe "'e both lideL All the survivors. were crewmen. Brazil when it ditched. "like a bomb," ·can and must meet -is to return this In the enil, however, 1 jury of seven Among the badly injurj!!(f was the pilot. Bcwttfing to ooe witness, because of a country to a strong and free market men ..i five women were aelecled. Most J e t Bomber. CT a sh es Gilberto Arujo Da Silva, hailed by fire which a survivor, said started in a syslem." were~ folks, IOl't ol fc:rtyjsb. . Frenchmen today as a hero for guiding rear toilet. apparently as a resu1t of a Agriculture Department off i c i a Is, Somi. after the trial got under way, tt :~~. past rows of houses to a safe . short circuit. · following release this week of a crop becamecieartoobserverstbattherewas In Na tional P ark -·-.. ------goi"" LO be little argwnent about whether "He was nerveless -a hero," said one ·~ news broadcast.. er DOI Miss Crump had been lro!Jcking ZION NATIONAL PARK, Ulah (UPI) Amoog !hose killed were Filenlo S. away on the Fire llouse stage in a state -An Flll jet.fighter-bomber crashed In ~fuller, president of the Brazilian Senate ·of undftss. She was naked okay, both names into the side of Deer Trap Moun-and the prcsideilt or the military sides teemed to agree. · Rather, the question was going to be lain Wednesday, narrowly missing park regime's or f i c i a I Arena Party; v.·hether or not the Fire Hawte itself is headquarters and Zion Park Lodge. Ag9'Stinho dos Santos, one of Brazil's actually a theater for the perfQrmJng aria. YOO WILL RECALL this Is the one ex· empllao from <;osta Mesa's Don't Go Naked law. • Well, the pnx!«Ution oooleldod that the oublde cl the place looU like a red- and-white barber's pole that went crazy and tho inside loots like a bar. The de!moe cont<!lded that their place bas entertainers, a stage, Ughting and sesls just like any other the~. Thus the issue was drawn.: 'Ibe jury went out. 1t stayed out less than one hour. When the jury came back in, it decreed that Miss Crump was innocent oo ell 16 aUegatioos. mus YOO ~ruST asswne the jury ac- cepted the thesis that the Fire House is no dif£ercnt than Laguna's Festival of Arts stage, or that of SOOth ·coast Long San et nary Fugitive Says He Lived in Belfr y LEESBURG, N.J. (AP) -Did he or didn't he? That's the question people here are aslclng of a young fugitive's story that he spent the last two years hiding in the belfry of the 169-year-old U n i t e d Methodist Church. William H. llughes told polict of a t~ year stay in the bell tower after his ar· rest Aionday night. • minister, said it wu possible Hughes' tale was true. "The church is never locked," the Rev. Robert Hignett explained. "'I11ere are bathroom facilities and it's warm in there." THE REV. Mr. Hignett added one possible hitch """° "I don't know how in the v.·orld he could stand the sound of the bell ringing." report for.-ing increased producljon, said they eapecled some lurther Increase in food prices after ceilings are relaxed. But they added the polenllal big harvest of grains and soybeans would eue the situatkrt by spurring increases tn livestock and poultey productioo becln- ning in tile fall. Cook said his lorecast was based on the assumptloo that Phase IV wooJd permit the lood indusUy to pass all coot in- creases on to consumers. If it doesn't, he said, the result will be a sharp drop in food supplies· becauae processors and dlstrlbulori will slow their operalloos. He called for a temporary food export em- bargo and abandonmen~ ol import reslrictloos on dairy product>. Senators Reject Forei gn Service Ni xon Appointee I ' '· WASHINGTON (AP) -The 5enate Foreign -RelaU~ Committee has re- jec~ident Nixon's nomination of G. cM trie Godley as asSistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific airs. Chalnnan J . W. Fulbright (l).Atlr.), said Godley, as ambessadot· to '- since 1989, showed too much enthusium for U.S. mil.itacy involvement In Southeast Asia. By a 9 to 7 vote, the c ommittee mittee-rejected Godley's appointment but asked lhe secretary of state.to give him another -assignment not related to Southeast Asia. "There are vacanc\es in Europe," Fulbright said. BY A iniv, TO ~~ vote, the committee recommended Senate confumatlon of Wllliam H. Sullivan, assistant secretary of state for East Asia, as ambassador to the Philippines. · Fulbright made the same objection to Sullivan's assignment because of his .. in- timate association with U.S. policy in Southeast Asia" and also pro t another assignment outsi offered him. __figpcrtory Theater or any downtown movie house. This will give the forces against nudie entert.ninment something new LO ponder in the area of community standards where it may be possible that juries feel their law enforcement officers should be spending thei r time in other areas. HUGH.a WAS apprehended after a former __ cburcb._ custodian, Henry Vanaman, slOpped by the church to retrieve a Bible. He spotted Hughes darting out the back door. The 23-year-old Hughes, thin, long~ haired and bearded, told polict he had hidden in the tower !lince ~fay 1971 when he jumped bail while awaiting trial on charges of larceny and' breaking and entering. __ IJ'...S_O.UL SE.C_OND ANNIVERSARY-AND WE'RE CELEBRATING BY PASSING THESE TERRIFIC VALUES O N TO OUR CUSTOMERS After all, it you can't trust a local mid· die-aged jury to judge community stand- ards, who can yoo trust? Hughes' former mothel'-in-law, Ann Petenon, did not be.live bis story - "Nobody could lmpooe that kind of thing on himself." But the man who probably knows more about the church than anyone else, its Many people in town believe Hughes hid in the church, but they doubt he spent the entire two years there except for short excursions he says he made for ex· ercise and to scrounge food from gardens and unlocked homes. Parts of U.S. Sizzling Soutlie rn Half of Nati.on Unc omfort,abl y Ho t Tod ay c o .. t•I W"ath"r HIQ' --"!lie todl'(, LIQl'll Ylrlltlte wll!ds "l11M al!d momlnt roov., bKom- 111111 -terly It to " kfl0!1 I" all•,.. ,_,.. today 9'111 Fr+dly. High taclay In~ tOs. Co."al ''"'""""" nnge frllftl Q ld'U:~lllland ~alurH r .. frOM •• to 11. .Watw ~ahlr• 6t. S 1111, Jlfoon, T ides TMUISDAY Se<:Cllld llloll .......... S:C: p,rn.. l.t $.Kord IOw .......... 1:41 p.rn. '·' ,llDAY ,.,.,, l'tlgll •........• 10:0. ··'"· 'J.7 Fir" low . . • • . . • . • 3:31 a.m. 4, SKOlld n1111 . .. •.•• 1:4 p.m. a.o Seo:otld low ... .. .. • . 2~n p,,,.., t..s s..... • .... 1:11 a.rn.. S.11 1:06 jt.l't'I. MOOl'I lllft •:1$ p.m. Sall J:JO 1.11'\, DAILY PILOT ·DELIVERY SERVICE DelMIJ DI the Daily ~lol • l\131illlee<I _1...,, • ,. ........ ,.. ,., ., ~• ,..._ a1 • ,... an 11 ...... ,. '*"'*' .. 1:>1 ,... Salldfy • W.,i II ,. • 1111 ralt ,. CtfJ 'T I l& Slfdly, « I IA S-,. al M I CtfJ II k Df't le ,..t6nia. .... 11u. lelellla"o• ............... 141-4321 .. __ _ •-• ......... Ul·l!!I s.a...c.;su•lm. s. ,.. t.lilla ... ,., .... _ ......... 4!!·1411 • Sloogs • Twoecfs e Dupoot 501 e A""°" e HJ-Lows e Nyfoti e Plush Shogs e Commercial ONLY s3 PER s9. YARD! VALUES TO $8.95 THOUSANDS Of YARDS TO CHOOSE fllOMI!! UADING NA.ME 11tANDS! BRING IN YOUR ROOM MEASUREMENTS - • - Lay Aways Available REMNANTS .., Is Is lo -tUp ,. 111tlt RllHI• 21~~ STOlll HOURS: • Shots e Tone on • Dupont Tone Nyloft • SculpturH • Polyester • Tri Color ' e Plush Shat Shags ONLY s4 PER s9. YARD VALUES TO $12.95 S~ULESGE CHOICE OF & COLORs No PRESSURE OR- COME ONS! PAD & LABOR UHCONDITIONALL Y GUARANTEED Terms Available Bank Fina ncing ·-=· -·-............ ........... ,., """12·1 I I CARPET WAREHOUSE .. ._., ..... I MIKE'S IH E. 17th ST. COST,t. MESA TEL 1>45-4330 ._, I Record Holder Stones Sets Sights on MurtJCH, Germany (AP)-"My ankles hurt.<lfy knees hurt. My back tv.trts. I never made more jumps but 1 have jum~ heller. I predict I will jump 7 fee\ )O~ Inches." F~ some, brash is the word applied to l>Jight-Stooes, the newest world beat- ·er or records. Thf19-ye3r-old Glendale resident. how- ever,-says he is only boisterous. Sttties spoke Wednesday night after he lee1peid 7 feet 6~ inches in the high jUml\ OrJe1:Uarter inch more than the ronner worl(I record held by fellow Ameri can Pat Matzdorf. \~n he cleared the bar on his final try, ;he had the stadium spotlight all to hidlf -he y.·as the last competitor re- ~og in the track ~t among the UnitFd SUf\es, West Germany and Swit¥rland -e.xcept for the crowd of about· 20,000, which roared its approval. 'only last week, in a West Gennan teleyision interview, Stones predicted he would break the y.·orld mark of 7-6¥.a. held by Pat ?l'la tzdorf. formerly or the University of \Visconsin. He 5'T<f he would do it.by the 1976 OlymplC: Games in Montreal. But he didn 't think he Y•ou\d do it so soon. ~ter..he~cl.cared.Jhe bar at the record height, on a pleasant and wind less night, be leaped_orr the mat and jumped into the air with his bands over bis head. Then he joue<I triumphantly around the track -and the crowd cheered. ·'For two months. I've been psyched out thinking about the .,.,·orld record.'' he exclaimed". "But I did not anticipate breaking it here." . Asked why he didn't l.ry for an even greater height after his record jump, Stones said: "You always want to go out a winner." Before Wednesday, his best jump was 7-5. 1ben, on his thi rd jump, the 6-foot·S, 170 pound youngster cleared 7-S Y.a, before shattering MatzdQrf's mark. Stones' record-smashing effort led a I· 2-3 American sweep in lbe high jump, I'll Work Faster, Says Halos' Ryan BALTIMORE (AP) -Fireballing Nolan Ryan thinks throwing faster may be the way to regain his winning touch. But' by iaster, Ryan doesn't mean velocjty; and that Should come as a' relief to ~eri~an League batters. "I "13Y try to work a little faster. It . seem~ like after the third inning, when I took less time between pitches, I 1\•as doing ~Jletter," said Ryan, wtto lost his 11 ti\ game against 10 victOries when the CaJifopiia Angels y.·ere trounced 7· 1 by the Baltimore Orioles Wednesday. "Bu(, I'm not about to try __ anything drastid;~· added Ryan, though such. measures may just be called for to put t. ' N~t Settlement Hopes Dimmed . WARSAW lAP> -The International Lawn Tennis Federation, already battlii\g the Association of Tennis Professionals for the run or the world tournament circuit, is· facing a new foe -World Team, Tehnis. The, ~.tican organizatiop. which hopes to1 Seat~. teams composed of some or l ;the big names .1n tennis, "constitl!t:ft• a real threat to the ~ame" said ILT~ preSident Allan Hefman \Vednesday. At the astening or its annual meeting. the JL 'l'F passed two major preventive legislations designed to take a harder line on further brushes with the ATP: -The ILTF gave its managing com- mittee unlimited powers of suspension for any p~er who enters a contract wttich con~s with IL TF tournaments. World Team Tennis play is scheduled to begin next ,.season, and the tour would conflict with such major ILTF events -as the Europein circuit and the Davis Cup tournament. -The Federation added that it expects players-to .rtpresenl their...countries when asked to do lso -a statement seemingly addtessed to the recent furor over Pilic's suspensioo. him b~ck on the victory trail. The' Angels open a four-game series in Detroit tonight, with Bill Singer @;oing for his 15th win of the season against the Tigers' Mike Strahler, who bas posted a J..Z mtrk since he was traded by the Angels to Detroit. Despite striking out 11 in the six in- On Tl' Tonight Channel 5 at 5 nings he \vorked, Ryan Jost his eighth game in his last 12 decisions, and the trend ' has him worried. "All I know is I'm going to have a hell of a second half. If I get above .500, I'm never going to get back to it." he said. Ryan says he knows exactly \\'hat his problem is. • , "A-1y control seems to be a mystery. That's definitely what hurt me tonight. Some pitches l could hit a spot and ·some I missed by more than two feet. It was like th.e diff~rence between night and day," said RYan who walked six Orioles to insure himself constan~ trouble. Ryan walked three, one with the bases loaded in lhe fourth, and walked Rich Coggins before Boog Pov.·ell's seventh homer or the year in the sixth made the score 6-l and doused any Angels come- back hopes. Ryan doesn 't think·there is any \Yay a fastball pitcher llke him.self can regain cont.,,l except by resorting to prayer.· "J)n•not going to take anything off my pitc~s to comf>Cnsate for getting th~ ball o,·er," he said. "I'll just have to con- centrate more. And, try to \\'Ork a little faster." CALIFORNIA. •ALTIMOll:I! Hr h rbi Pinsoll, cf J I 0 Bumbrv, 11 Akim¥, 2b ' 1 0 COfflrn, rl RobhlJOl'I, cll'I ' I 0 Bl•lr, (I Ollv ... , rl 4 I 0 P-11, lb E0$1~1'1.-rf 4 l o O.vl1.. c111 Sllnlon, " ' 0 D WJIU1m1, c Gill...,..., lb ' 1 0 Hendrld<J.. c: Meoll, U 1 I I Grief!, 2b Lltnff. pl! I I 0 lloDinlOll. lb Tcrbot:e, c: J 1 0 Bfll•nt«, u Scne<lblt1m. ph 0 • 0 c....ii.r, " 11~1n,p o ao H1ultt, p O 0 O o •br llrM J 0 1 1 J 1 I 0 l 0 I 2 • ' 1 1 s 1 l 0 J I 1 0 1 0 0 • 1 l 0 0 ' 0 J I 3 0 0 l 0 0 0 0 Total• is 1 la • Totll1 JJ 7 10 7 C:•li~nl~ lllllfmore N. ll:Y•n H•Ut!r CueU•r L.10.11 w,s.t DOii 010 OGG-I 07Q 112 Olx-7 I,_ H R ER 18 50 I I 6 6 6 11 1 1 I l 1 1 t1010 J6 Vf'I T ......... Oakland's Deron Johnson lries to take out Huntington Beach's Jack Brohamcr at second base In last night's game. Brohamer avoided JollJlson to make play but Cleveland lost, 9-3. I I ~ with Reynaldo Brown aeCOQd at 7-t l~ and Tom Woods third at 7.0W.-• It also helped the U.S. gain a 93-86 lead over West Germany in their two-day dual meet competition, which ends loday. Switzerland also is cotnpcting, but the S~:i.ss:-RQYiJjg_ta) onll.J!._ ctlW1tlng against the Germans in a separafe fiieel. The Americans also dominated three other 'men's events; finishing 1·2 in the 10,000-meter run, the 400 meter hurdles and the 100-meler dash. Ted Castaned::i won the IO~OO<l m~ters in 28:30.6 · .... ·ilh Jeff Galloway second. Jim &lding took the ~meter hurdles in 49.3. rono .... ·ed by Roberl C3sselman. And Steve Williams sped to a 10.3 ''ictory in tbe 100 meters, with Herb Washington the runnerup. Other American men's winners were Leonard Hilton tn the 1,500 meters in 3:37.7 and Al Feuerbach in the shot put at 68-ll V... ·' Over·all, the American men held a 60- 4& lead over their German counterparts, -while the 'u.s. v.·omen trailed ~he Gennan girls 40-33. DWIGHT STONES CLOSES HIS EYES AND GOE $'l'C"AT OVER BAR AT WO~LD RECORD 7-61h. THEN WIDE-EYED STONES GASPS IN AWE AS BAR STAYS UP. Sarazen Gets Hole-i11-one; Fregosi on Move Again TROON, Wiand -Gene Sarazen. the mos\ sprightly 71-year-old star In golf. skied the i>all into the cup on the eighth hole Wednesday for oo amazing hole·in- one during the first round of the British Open Cha mpionship. . "The moment I punched that fi\'e iron to the green I kneY.' the ball was going in· to the cup," said the stocky veteran. "I'm glad my hole-in-one \\"as fihned - nobody would have believed that I'd ha,·e done it other,visc." Sarazcn said. Swim R ecord the Cali£ornia Angels Dec. 10. 1971, in a deal also involving pitcher Nolan Ryan. Frego.si was used sparingly by the h'lels this year at thi fll base and shortstop. batting .tl4 in ~S' games. Last year he batted .23'.!. Sn1ith Cruises BAASTAD, Sy.·eden -Top-seeded Stan Smith or Pasadena cruised into the set· ond round of the $75.000 S 1v e d Is h lriternallonal T enn is Championships \Ve<lnesday \\'ilh a 6·3. 6-2 victory O\cr Joaquin Loyo-Mayo of Mexico. Dodgers' Sutton Strikeout Leader .. ' LOS Ai GELES (Af>; -The first thing over Cincinnati and San Francisco in lht Den Sulton ·as 1old '~'hen he marched off National League \Yes1, y.•ill try to make it l.oo,,;ij--0'1<1-~:!·o straight and live out or six winS :;; tonight v.·hen Andy ~lesser.cmilh, 7-6, op- pitches. ""~'!!!"L.Jl""'-"""""'n 151 poses the Cards' Rich Folkers, 2.0. ll will '·How many?" he asked. "I threw 15-1? Who in the world do I think I am, Nolan Ryan? I'm not supposed to throvr that many But he did , and a good n1any or them ,,·ere strikes . Sutton struck out 12 Cardinals. the fourth time in his career he's whi ffed 12 l>attcrs. and also took O\'Cr the National League lead in strikeouts v.·i1h 130 en rou.te 10 a 3·1 Dodgers \11ctory \\lcdnesday nigh1. He needed thret! of his stri ke-outs in the ninth iuning. !hough. 11·hen l \~'o singles and Sutton's f'rror on a pickoff try put the lying run at second base. He then struck out. in order. i\tlke Tyson. pinch hiller Louis ~lelenclez and the dangerous Lou Brock. He fanned Brock three times. The Dodgers, back to a 5' ~-game lead Wei skopf Sets Scorching Pace 111 British Open TROO~. Scotland ( API -Tom \Vciskopr ripped fi ve more strokes off. par y.·ith a 67 and took the early second- round lead today in the British Open Golf Championship with a 36-hole total of 135. \\"ciskop(. the first-round leader wilb a 68, held a tbree-stroke lead over U.S. Open cbampion Johnny l\·tiller who shot a 68 today for a midy.•ay total of 138 on the par 72. 7.~·yard Old Course at Ille Troon Golf Club. Jack Nicklaus and Bert Yancey. liect for second y.•itb 69s after lhe first round, each were four-under-par after 24 holes. \Veiskopr played 16 in final nine holes in drizzlin g rain. \Veiskopf. who has· been enjoying a grca~ year 011 the U.S. pro tour. wasted little tin1c in attacking par in the second round as he carded two birdies on the first fnur holes. He then picked up two more birdies in lhe next fil'e holes and went nine under by rolling in a IO.foot putt on the 34th hole. ~filler. who \\'on the U.S. Open with a fantastic 63 on the final round, birdied l'\o. 7 on the front nine and lh<!n added three more birdies on the back nine -at Nos. 10, 11 and 16 -for his 68 which made bim the leader until \\'eiskopf came charging home. \Vhile \\'eiskop{ and ~1iller had big rounds, Arnold J>atmcr, who Y.'On the British Opt!n here in 1962, was having lots of lroubl<!. Palmer, just four strokes off the pace with. a 72 after the first round , \4'Clll four strokcs over par after 27 holes when he took a seven on the par 3, 126-yard eighth hole -the "Postage Stamp" and 11·ent out in 40. be the Cardinals' final "'gular season ap.- pearancr-in Dodger'Stadium in 1973. or. the ninth inning, \\'hlch has been Sutton·s doy.•nran in fottr of his las\ five starts, he said : ··1r J'en 'going to thro\v that many pitches I guess I ,,·ill have trouble in the ninth. Any11•ay, ir that's going to be the ease. rll just ha\'e to go out and give eight strong innings and rm sure Dodge r s S late All Gl lflft .., llCll'I I .. ) JUIV 12 SI 1...,1, •I LOI ~· Ju·~ ll Chi(-11 LOI Anve1., July U C ~it~ •I Liii o\ng!!I" Jul., 1s Clllc•oo •• Los A"'J'f'I•• l.ll •·"'· l :U p.m. t;JS 1'·"'-J:» p.m. manager \\'alter Alston Y.ill tbink oC somelhini." Sutton y.·oond t•fl pitching a seven-hit· ter, but the Dodgers v.·cre restricted to three hits by l~r Gibson, now 1-9, and reliever Diego Segui who pitched a hitless seventh and eighth . One of the hits y.·as \Villie Davis' 13th homer of the year -10 of the home runs roming in Dodgers Stadium -in the.first inning. Bill Buckner had \\'alked and then ,___Qttv•s hil a line dri\Pe do"n the rightfield line.' the ball actually striking lhe foul pole. ' In thc fifth a v.•alk to Dave Lopes, Lopes' 26th \steal of the year anQ_ Buckner's single 1nade ii J..-0. Sutton lo.st his shutout in the scvenlh 11·hen the Cards, Jhnlted to tY.'O singles the first six innings. bunched thMe singles for a run. Tyson's slngle scoring Ted Simmons. Atterward, Alston ad- mitted he ,1·as impressed Y.'ilh the :rt- year-old Gibson. "It's the best J\·e seen him in a Ion1 lime." said the Los Angeles manager, ''but hvo y.·alks hurt him as much as the h.its." Sf, LOUIS LOS ANGELES •b rhrM Qrllrlll ll•oc:k, U I 0 II 0 LOPe.,, 7b J I I D S•remotf , 20 I 0 I 0 Bix:kn .. , lf 3 I _I _I ,..ce.,.,,.r, 111 'l o--o o-wo.vn. cf 4 1 1 1 l orre, lO 0 1 0 F.,.gtlMfl, J I I O s,,mmor.1. c • 1 1 D WC••wl-, r1 J D o o JCruz,cf JO IOC ..... Jb JOO I C8r!JO, rf J o I O G11vey. lb J O O t l ~tM, H • a 1 I Ruu1tl, II J 0 •• GIO!.On,p JO OOS111ton,p JOOt Dwyer, pit 1 O O O Sotu!,p 0 0 00 Msleocltl, pn 1 0 0 0 Tclah U t 1 1 Toltil :Ill ) J J SI. Lou11 CCIII 000 100 -I LC$ Api;~lt! :K4 010 00• - l E-Tyson, Sutton. LOii-St. Loul• t, Lot ""91!1s >. Hlt-W, 0.V•I (ll. 58-LOPtl. J. Cr111. .,,.., Sfllul L. •.• $u1ton \'I, !1 ) t -2:GI. o\-1t,SJt. ·~ " • I!• •• 10 6Jll74 10 0 Pl 0 t 1 I I l 12 TWINS' BANE SET TO B A TTLE TRIBE i'\ONNESOTA -\\1estminster's Eddie Bane tries for the lhird lime to notch his fi rst major league victory when he takes the mound lonight for htinnesota's Twins in the second ga me of a doubleheader against Cleveland. Banc. Y.'ho pitched bril\ian1ly but \Vas involved in a no decision in his first a1- 1cml)l nnd ' then y.·as shelled by lhe New York Yrinkces. is due to race ex-Yankee i'\·like Kckicb. 1·3. BERLIN -East Germany's Andre:i Eife set a European S\l'imming reco rd. for the women's .200-metcr backstroke with a time of 2:22.3 \Vednesday. the East German news agency, AON reported. Riggs Starts Psy~h Early Nastase Rolls NEW YORK CAP) -Billie Jean King. GSTAAD S 'tze 1 nd _ u· Nastase the 'tiouncy ,;old lady of tennis ,'' held the Roma~ian"'~ia: ~ho was 1~psct Jasi • down the net so Bobby Riggs, the little \\'eek at Wimbledon, trounced Koyoshi hustler. could jump it with ease. Tanabe or Japan 6-0, 6-0 Wednesday In a "I don't need that." said Riggs, leign- first-round match of the Swiss lntcma· ing Indignity lional TCMJ.s CMmpion!hips. He tlppy·tO.ed over, nevertheless, but If Fr eg.osi Tr aded NEW YORK (AP! -The New York Mets Wedne9day closed tbe book on one of their least ouccenfuJ trades by send· Ing infiekler Jim Fregost to the Texas Rangers ror a player to be named latc_r. F'regosl. 31, had come to the Mets fron1 ., he hu his way It'll be lhe last lime he'll concede anything to the reigning Wimbledon qut<n. With tl00.000 on the line, he's out to prove that · • 55-year-old has-been \\'ho pops vitamin pills like peanwts, can beat the world's beat woman 26 years his Junior. The match Riggs has betn dreaming • ' about for J"(lonths became a rcality \\'ednesday \Vhen Jerry Pcrenchio, the promoter WhO thrives Oli spectaculars, agreed to put up lhe cash for the biggest si ngle payoff in the history of tennis. Only the date and site have ye\ lo be 5et, but Perenchlo, who promoted the 1971 heavyy.ieighl tJ1le fight between Muhammad All and Joe Fr•iler, prom· bed the details would be announced -· "That l\'A$ The Fight and this is going to be The Match,'' he said. Riggs Lried 10 ball Biiiie Jean JoTI.g before he !looked Margaret Court in a $10,000 ~1othcr's Ony fiasco. Finally Mrs. King bit. . "I can't just play for money," she said at a neY.'11 conference at a ~11dtown Manhattan tennis club. "I have to play for a cause. and I think women were put down Y.'hcn ?\.largarcl got beaten. She bl<!w It. I figure I'm better than Bobby and I can beat him. "I'll even give him some Geritol." "'What makes )'OU 1hlnk I can't psych yqu the way I did Margaret?" asked Riggs. "'ho won Wimbledon Md the U.S. Championship In 1939 and the: U.S. UUe again two years later. "1 IO\IC preS3ure and Margaret doesn't," replied the campetper ror equal P'IY for equal pl91. "I 111-.k I pro~ed that at Wimbledon." ' . • WI u .. JL't' PILOT """"'1, J•IY 12, 197, Mesa, Edison, Newport Win Tritons Trip Mesa; Three Tied for Lead I Mu.1tangs Ret.airi No. ·1 Spot Harbor Loop • i n !MJlnr Edt4on kept pK'O With ...... leading Colt& Mou by pulU!f Runtinaton Beech, 17-1, In I H1rbor Area butball 11me Wednelday et EdlllOll. COsta MH& maintained Us I 'h game edge, however. with a 2-0 victory over Co~ del ~11:1r In the first game at Costa Mesa Park, and ln the finale Newport ltarbor I r I p p e d Estancla, 9-5. In nine innings. Q FV Falls In Polo Tilt Fountain Valley H I g h 's water polo team dropped third straight one-goal game, falling to Foothill, 5-4, in the Wednes- day night varsity league at t;:stancla HJgh. The l~ing Barons trailed throughout the game, but cut the margin to one goal"' mid- way in the final ~uo.rtcr. Jim rDavldson , Scott Nelso n, Peter \\'eschsler and Dan Luttrell all .,... had one goal ror · Fountain Valley. . The victory vras Foothill's third straight. In other games Wednesday night, El Dorado ran its mark to 3-a with a 7..J win over Long ·Beach WU90n; Buena Park handed Los Amia:os a 7-4 set.. back: and Millikan edged ~aiaffey in overtime, 5-4 .. Water polo action-continues Friday night with the lroeh- tt'l'i> teazns iDAclio11_atZslao- cia. FountaiD Valley .tanaJes with Buena Park a& 6:30, Newport Harbor la~ Costa Mesa at 7:15, Estancia engag<S Foothill at I and University meets El °¥•do at 8:43. awm:i mu ~Diff !Im 'l3 r.m im:a-15 U1111 us •nun 1-u ua '*'"" DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS ·u Volluw•1•n "'""'·AM 1..i, $677 (TIXtfl) '61 Must•n1 V·•• ) S,._., 11•11 $977 f411Fll l '71 Chryt lor NNport H1nll9p, IUN tr1111, l lf tlflllltlOlllnt , ...... ..,. lhlfflnt. A Vtr1 Cit"' Ctr. 0 ,1, 197700 UHOCS) ·10 l ulck l•t•t• w~ t ,, ... ,~Ile tr-.it, IH .. rr, 1/r, ·~ t.9fttlrllfllfl'I, ,.., ...... , "'' 0 ,1, 2777" 1rt11s•r 72 otll1 Cutl111 IT,\T/ON WAOOH <It. ,,_., '"-i-..,~, I Alf-CINl"9!1Mt $2777 'ff CM. 114o<'llff P•ll~ ._...... -.,,_. C..r 0,1, 3277" fYOLIMI -. ' / EdilOO 's Mike Meehan had a wllkh w11 llloppecl alttr Ill nJnc. lUclt Duhon'• !Hth 11> no-hitttr through live Inning• Innings due to darkness. ninl triple ....-.cl the On1l two Ml...._ V"11 hll ltll '" '" . ., A six-run outburst by the nw for Edlton. '· San Clemente HJgh's Trltons Chargers In the first JM.Ing A triple by Ed Vlanarou and have scrambled the Laguna put the game tway Mike •lnale by Stan Terry in the Beach High summer basket· Taylor wtth 22 end ii points. Dodd, a 6-5, 2%>-pounder wllo is expected to handle some of the qu.arterbaek duties for Sau Cleme nte's football team in the fall, chipped In with six po~ls and numerous re- bounds. 'I '! " • ! ... ,,, ,. ~1cCoy 1ln11lng to ~ the ID-sixth lnn~ccoUnted for ball league roUowlng their ..,._ nlng and EdiJOn adding five HunOncton h's run. SPORTS 56 conque.st of previously , . I l I .,, : sln°le.s in aucces.slon alter a C:oeta M~1• Mu.stanp eat ' bea 0 •• M Wednc sac'M rice bunt. another ei;celJent P I t ch I n g ~Y ~=gt~ta esa s- Jeff Nichols had .o. run pro-perfonnance from B r 1 8 n Thj! victory puts S a n • ducln1 double and Joe Morado Cost:Uoe,. 1 . three-hJtter, to • Ctcmente, Costa Mesa and and held Huntington Beach to-a two-run double as EdillOn ad· note thetr~nmth wtn of the Ar b ' z• tiSlOi\Vicjo's Red unit, a 58- just three hits in the game, ded nine runs In the fourth ln--defea~ against only one ' y S JPS 50 victor over host Laguna Costelloe struck out seven Beach, in a three·way tie for Laguna's leaden in seori'!i were P..tark Rith&.in aiiOJOM Lit---~ ' c ... 51•111111~ the lead with 4-1 records. aod was never in real trouble To 73_51 u . . . ed 1 1. 1n going the distance for the n1vers1ty gain ts U'St Mustangs. win of the campaign in the COsta Mesa scored the night's opener, putting down game's only runs In the third T h Mission Viejo's Gold team, 44· \Villett, each with JO points. inning. Bill Valentine walked rJ•ump 38. to keep the latter winless. University's first win was and came around on a double Coach Stan DeP..taggio has paced by Jeff Giese and Jim by Don Tryon. Tryon moved inserted run court man·to-man White, both' scoring 14 points around on a pair ol passed Arby's Army and A & C pressure, a running offense on .six field goals and a pair of Legion Baseball San Clemente A L •• Cllllf MtN ' S1n Cllrn9nt• ' Mlu lon Vltlo 111:.0 • ' L= •HCll ' ' ' 117 :rcrsl rv ' • ' Mu Oii vi.lo Gold • $ • • • l : " . CMI• MeM UU .. . ' I . ' , ' • • > I • • . ' ' . 21 1• balls. Properties are tied for sea>nd and a tough board game In the free throws. Corona del Mar's Malt place wi th 5-2 reeords ln the San Clemente Jllack and it s111 Cltmt""' ru> Wilkinson struck out . seven Costa Mesa open summer proved too much for Mesa in a Ulll.,.,..,'t. 1 .. 1,., p1 '• DoOd 'l 1 Downs MV, 3-0 and held Costa Mesa to three basketball league following rough cOnfront.ation. S.,f!~11 ! 2 J, 1: Kt1o1. • •· hits. routine triu!TJphs Wednesday San Clemente's g.7 Ted W1111t ' 2 l• ~7•n 1 ° when pitcher Joe J acton Dave Loselh's triple with night at Estancia High. Kalota, 6-5 Dan Dodd and M. :Jii=,"" ! g ~ 1t R~~~ ~ g ' ' 1! • •· ,,, • ' • ' " -1 '~ . " ' " .,t li < •• ,, .. . ' Dan FowJer and 1'crry Neilsen combined to blank ~fission Vtejo on royr hits as the San Clemente A team took reached base on a si ngle and the bases loaded and two out Arby's coasted to a 73.51 Jeff Foreman hit the boerds C-:•r l 8 J To••1• sc-11., :11.~.!. Sl'Ored on a wild pitch after in the ., .. venth enabl ed Estan-Yiclory over Red Carpet and took command of the To1•1•Ml•t1o11 v1.1J'G01111 '<•1'° •• co111 M••• 111iu1' -s. -h · fll ft pf 1 San Cl1ment1 It 12 11 r. _.., Yi'Orking his \l.'ay to third. cia to send its game with Realty, \Vh ich wilted in the game at t e out.set, racing to M111er .c , J i~ \Vestmlnster jumped to a Newport into overtime, but the second hall with only five a 19-11 first period advantage. ~:. ! g g ~ a 3-0 victory in American two-run advantage in ttre first Tars scored four times in the players suited up. Both teams played a passing P•tt•rJon i l 1 ~ M h · " Legion baseball ac tion inning but Fullerton rallied for' ninth on fou r .singles and three Jack and George Trotter led game on offense and leading ~~' ~ ~ ~ ' ODaJ'C S , : Wednesday. three runs in the fifth and four Estancia errors to wln. the rout with 16 and.)4 points. ·the winners i.n the Sl'Oring col-0111' scon lly J~.~ 1 33 In other games involving in the seventh for the victory. "11111.,,.'" ... ,11 10 A & C Properties took rom-umn were Kalota and Dave ~~v~l~v ~ '!: 1: = ~ • Scott Bradley walked, stole .. r1irt11 mand from the outset in Fall 47 4 • Orange Q)ast area teams. San second. took third on an error r;;:::::r.i:. .. ~~ ~ : : : dl sposlng or Orange-Coast ... • a Clemente B fell to host Los and scored on a single by ~fo:~r. ~ ~ f f B Alumni, 81-65, which dropped JI •k • Ed ' S • ' ' Alamitos, 5-2; Fountain Valley Gary Rwgo to start the game ~\:9~.1·2b' ; : : : the losers to 4-!3. ·i in gs ge Ulnts,• dropped a 7-6 decision to for Westminster with Rungo "?~:1, P ,1 f ~ f Mike .Contreras, Wendell ~tater Oei lligh's unbeaten Foothill; and Westminster lost scoring later on a squeeie •"• c1,, Kallenberger, Rod Snook, Jim summer l ea g u e basketball ~:r:.~~'~Fuii e r ton bunt by .. :~.~:~-, ~~11.rf ;':'· 11~~.:.i! :i~~r!r1i:":Ubtem= Barons Suffer Defeat ~eo'Y11rdru;hls.ns~~~i:ecr:s~ Fowler. a junior-to-be at •11 r 11 ,... ~r=: ,,, with Cootrttas the leader ege as la Ana Valley Dana Hills High, struck out six a:~r.~. It i I f g ~=~·,•: I with 18. • recorded a 47-45 conquest in M. . v· . bat•a . Hudmll\. u 1 , , , w .. 11.,., '' o o ! Or g Coa t Alumni was LONG BEACH -Marina a 73-64. setback to Long Beach the Santa Aria College sum-1ss1on M!}O u::rs m seven s111or, P ~ 0 0 I Mfe.,, c • 1 1 an e s High' v ·k· lured th · J dlD 1 innUlil and N 'ls6t 1, ,._, tt:if c ~ _ 1. ' i o Jed· by Crai Flio:mer Steve s J 1ngs ~~P e1r or . mer eague. . .. ~ to finb~ the·etjob ~~ s!~ .... !~,~ 1 ·: f 1 9=~ 11 i LL: Jacobsen a!d Bufuh 'Rollins second game .of~ campaign ~1arina's victory was led by .The winnen;' Mike O'Roaric:e ' Clemente. . ~=~n~ ,, , 0 ~a 1-:if~ 'Pt--, 1 1 l-wtlh-,o;l."9 anifl8 counrerr.---Wedneeday._pigbt...in the.Loog_Keith-Koellv.:& 19 .....c®Jl~lJromJ.h~t Bill Springman started San R~~f,j u .~ : : l s~llfffef. • 11, ~ l ~ ~ occ .,11111111 Beach City CoUege summer and Drew Hirker's 10 points. the buzz.er to break a ~11 Clemente orf right wtth a solo '''" .., 1111111111 r " , M..ntr,· P J i 1 F••con... 1 " 1 71: •: ;g basektball league, coming 'Fountain Valley's Dan situation and provide Santa Dh4 Tet• • s-11., lllfll11t1 31 1 15 u Mce1osk1... 1 o o i from behind to post a 4g_.-4 t Malene played Jordan's 6-5 Ana Valley with a 7--0 loop =: '&:1o:iern~~d i;t ~~ ~:~~~ln v.11 .... 200 m ~ l I ~~r.:n11a1on 1••c11 30,r~!-.1; 1j : f'.~~:;:n ; 1 ~ 1; win over St. Anthony. Larry Hlidson nose-to-nose and mark. Clemente on the second pilch wn1m1111"r u1 ,......, .,. M•r 11> ~01~::c.bo i } i 1l Fountain Valley continued srored 25 points over his rival. Mater Dei, which is also in· and that was all the winners f1r1dl1y. cf ;' r ~ r~ NCIQIWI, 2ll '111: .. ,,~ Tot•!• 2111 1 65 Winless, but was impressive In . Friday's slate at Long yolved witt. Santa Ana Valley eeded ~fl,~~~·,~ ~ : f & ~:i.,::!:"c1 " 3 g g • a c '"r11"'111' 111~ " pf tit Beach finds Millikan and 1n the Costa Mesa Recreatloo n Scott. Miklos singled home ~t::.:~·1 ~ ~ 1 l ~~~~. ri 1 g g g :~~:!~r ; g fl~ r~ountaln Valley meeting at 6 Dept. league at Estan,a, is 6- Fowler, who bad singled and !:!~ 'D : g g o :~·~o.oor3:. c ~ g 1 °1 ~=v ! A 1 ~~ Reeistr a ti on p.m., followed by th e AJarina-L moved to se('Ond on a walk to ~;"1~~' 11 : g g g eu11<1111mp. r1 a o o ~ir'•r•• : t l 11 ._, Long Bea ct\ Poly game at 7. Brendon }otcCaughey and Neisle.n in the fourth inning. Loom•r. P a o o o ~(,":l.:."'ill'D l g 8 g ~'.T:' l g i J Registration for the next F-t•I• v.u • ., c•o Steve Martindale were the And a single by Ken Donohoe Tg1111 sc-11'1' in1111111 vr l" s. l G,.:::i~v~ u g g g g ~~:Ir,.,.: A& c, J1·2'. " 3 10 •1 two-week ten n Is class M•''"' ~ '~ P! ~~ le~~ng scodrers for Afater Del after a double by Fowler FuH ............ r, .. '" -• , , s.T~:t·· c J g 1 g .,...,. A 01> Hiii • 1 1 ,,' wit 13 an 12 coun ters. · .......... _, c M in 1 "'" 11 11 .i ho sponso~ red b th Cost M Jttf Jotlty s o l Coach Jerry T a r d · e ' scored the final run in the W111"'11111tr 200 000 Ol-J s • '"' "' .,; r 11 rlll A•llOO••I ~ o o • • Y e a esit Lo0t11tln J 1 l 1 1 S.. eighth. 5.,, c .. -. .. 1 121' v11¥1Hnt. rf 1 o o o Ct\llntrt • o 2 • Tennis Club is set Saiurday at ~:i'~. ~ ~ l : Monarchs are back in action Rtc:h ROmrrieJ struck out l3 Z•notll, it f'; ~ ": E=Y.~ : ~ : i f: i:O'~kl ~ f J li Te Winkle Park. To11t~ "*" 11'1' f.,,,.~ i• u tonight at Estancia in the batters in a losing eau.se for :.~·c" : '1 ,1 'g s.,=..,.· ,,':,, •,' 1' 1' '•o ~~=' ~ o 2 10 There are three divisions, ~~n.Jc:J:1'i:v 1; l~ ~ ~ = il Mesa circuit, facing Garden Mi5'10f1. Vieio· . Mlk• s 11vro, 10 l "" , l g g '1 ,,.,.rtu fttl Grove at 8. Meanwhile. at Fountain Jtll.'911. p 4 I ••rtc1•11• IS 2 0 I 0 '°'11 ·~ ""'&..... ., ~ -' .. M•i.r o.i 101 J . N•r-. 211 ! , I ~· "'"""rdt. JD l a o o ~"' , , , , ... .....,,.. ... ,er, intermediate and van-., Foothill n!Ued to ~~.:111 l g 1 ol 4:'!':/,";.iP· l g g g •• c·~ ••••IJ UJ!" ",. advance, with classes set on ~m"r • o g t "'"'' ,. Ntl rt 0 I 0 s. l.mhtnlt. 211 'g ! 'g j \'"''-r 1 o ! 10 the hour from 7-10 a.m., 1·2 L..WO••' , 1 l , McC•U11n•., &'fel'COme two-ruD deficits on ~ .. "':{:·.. • 0 Holme ... II ""'"''' • ' 2 10 • and •7 The I k~ltr ' I J lf Mtrtlrtd•I• • "--.. M•rk stt"f'ro. , I , 0 ',-,,, ... ,,.•,, •f or s 1 s 11 p.m. ~ p.m. esJOnS, H••kt • ' , • 10 ~1 .... ..,.r t~~~~s1 and Ull.IJU Foun-Tot1J1 . :u ..J......l_Mt~-1 0 0 :___..;· i & 11: starting ?Ylonday cost JlUQL..~'fi~~~~ g ; g ~ ~~~' tCl.w. .. ...,._,y a OSS. Score llV l~iffiii• To1t(1 22 2 l I 101••1 2f J 11 51 th I k Toll b '1 --7-10-tt-o.lazit¥ Rick Case's single foJtowed s ... c"""'nti ooO, 010 410-rj ' ~ '-11., '""'• r 11 , H•1t11,.,.: "!bV'1. ~1·:M. e WO wee s. H11111,...: ~'-Ant11ony. n .11. To1111 by f(Q' Walles accounted for ~c.:!'""1:.:: ... m or,=:.u 'JU Cor""t dtl Mi r 000 000 1)-ll l I F · ll K"'--CNll Miit Oot OI» •-2 l l two owitam Va ey runs1 in .. .,. ,,.....,.. H•rMr <ti the first inning, and Wild e .... vi. .. II> ou11,~; cl •," { : rbJ Horsman ·drove in two runs Rlc1M1rd110n, ,, ;11 ; 110 'llJ it:.oit. ~'11.o ~ f l f with a triple and came home r.'1.1:1dr c ~ 8 , 3 lfJ:;.,h~. c ~ l ~·I on a single by Jeff Hatfield In "°"""''· P . ,• ,• I I Hook. " s o 2 I Mof!llt, lb l"!er, 11 J 1 0 the ourth. McGtrr.,, cf J 0 f 0 P•u"~ :to s 1 i Los AJamitOS scored twice in V;:i:i.°',i· JI ..3>' s' f 0 IO R°t:f111 ' rl :J ; 1 l both the second and third in• MfJ:.'r 'I'· 311 32 0 ' a .. l1l1Mlt !~) r II nings lo n•t a~'3V. San Los•"'· J11 ' o •' "l ... ~ , .. , C'-19 A UI Lllt06elt . .... 0 0 I Clemente B despite a good hit-.. r II"' ill:CW!®ltto lD • g 0 tiDg perfonnance from Atark ~~~i;:n. J11 : A j A ~7.:;. ~ : I ~ jg Stavro. g:p,";._"1b lj i '1 '1 =·~I ; Ii Stavro. who gathered three ~II/:,;,·~, ~~,;...cf"'° ; i hits ln rour trips to the plate, Mlktot. c l a 1 , Tom11"' D 1 o I ICOred .San Clemente's final =r:· c1 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~,?~'::1"' M l : 1 ? .single by Corky Fisher. Tot•ll l e-llY 111111.._ 32 J • J "1":1'2:""· a. ~ l f • San Clemente's only other r II • IClf"f lly ''111 r ... run came in the fifth inning, 't~~·~l: A = = ~ : · ~ :::~nc7:"*" m : : : : l~ : Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Ne w York Boston Bal ti more Detroit Mlhvaukre Cleveland Oakland Kansas City Angels ~linnesota Chicago Tex.as Ea•t Division W L 49 41 45 39 43 38 45 42 43 43 3<l 57 West Dtvlalon 49 39 49 42 45 40 44 .. 45 4l 3<l SS w .. --..,., o,_ ll•ltlm°" '· ""' ... 1 o .. ~!1nd '· CltY"tl•nd l Minn<!t0!1 J, f11>1!on I Ot!roll 14, Tt x11 ' Mltw11Jkl~ I, l(fllJft Cll'I' 1 New Y.ort< J, Cl!lctoa 1 Tttllr't 0""'' Pct. .544 .5J6 .531 .517 .500 .345 .S57 .538 .529 .524 .523 .353 GB 1 I II 21> 4 1711 I'\ 21.it 3 3 17 1!: NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L Chicago 5() 38 . St. Louis 44 41 ~lontreal ' 41 43 Pittsburgh 39 44 Philadelphia 39 47 New York 36 47 West Division Dodgers Cinc!Mati San Francisco Houston Atlanla San Diego 55 34 49 39 5() .. 48 44 4l 5() 31 58 WldM1f1r'f Gtl'MI °"''" J, St. Loult 1 ttous!Otl 1, New Y""-1 S1t1 fr111CIKO-1, Clllcff(I l PM11611!11111 ,, A!!1t1!1 j M011tr .. 1 '· c1nern ... u t Pltt1llur111 10. S•n O'"o 2 TM1'('1 Ot!MI Pct. .568 .518 .488 .470 .453 .434 .618 .557 .556 .522 .451 .356 GB 412 7 9 1,~ 10 11 1 ~ 51.~ 5';2 8\1 15 23 Anttlt tSlt1tllr 14·4) 11 0.troll ISl•tMtr 3·21 Otli:llnd 1111141 7.S) t i Mltwtul!H !Sl1l1>11 H J C\4v1l1<>d IWllCOll s..i •'Id l(eki<ft l·l l t i Mlll-n,,01• IWoo!l'°n t...i 11ild line O·I) SI. L1111i !Fal•trt l -Ol •I DofttrJ CMttNr· 1mt111 1-4\ 11i1nt~l Cl!y (0rltf0 , .. ) 11 New Yor~ (Dobson 4·Jl Tt~~· !Clvde l•ll 11 8111!on (P11tln 1·11! lllllllrnor• IJOlllfSOl'I 2·11 11 CMC.tl!O (Johnson 2·1f ,,, ....... 01111'111 o\fltltll 11 Otlroll CllWl•llll 11 M111~1 81ltlmot1 t i Cl'llclto Ollkl1"" 11 Mll·,.1<J1o.~ llitnNt d i¥ 1t Ntw Ygr-f"°'' " &oi•on .· H1111!111 (forKfl M l •I Pllll•dtlOfll• (Lonl>Drl J.I) Pl!!11>11rtll /Wt lktr •·11 1t Sin Olt70 Cl<frllY ... , Onlv 11•tnt1 Kl'llldvled. ....... , .• °''"'' Clllc-•I ~ Ho!.it!Otl It Pl!ll .... IPi1!1 Monl ... 1t •I Alllnll New York •I Clneh111t11 St. L...,!1 t t Sen Di9tto ltl!Tllbl/rlll 1t Sin lrt!!ChCO DEAN LEWIS ~ lir~~~a ~. · -· 1966 HARBOR BLVD, COSTA MESA 646-9303 o:,., •• 19 .>p·! p,.., I A'I '";' ·~,: (• t f'.'':.Jfl'"' B, .,. ', 1; 1c., /.' (.• 1 I ' • '' W£ ""'AKf ()IJl~l"'>f.f..'> Dfll'lfHif", SPORTS SINCE 1924 ~"~~~ ... · JISHlllMU RLT SOU "HIP BOOTS . · 13'' ClllSt HI IYLOll 19'' WADERS ... AMMO SJ{LE A LL SHOTGUN SHELLS 150/o Off 2~ Off 11 WI LOTS I WlllC ONIY TABLE TENNIS TABLES 'fl f11ch ""''-' fro,._IO<;ko_., bllo,...y Toll!• 110. 12.SO Chlr Spteltl P'rice 39'5 • W1 (1rry A fwU ll•1 1l lllll'lll"'"'' ,,,,. .. ... DIKOllTI_. SPllDO ~ SWIM SUIT 1 SALE (SANTA ANA STOil) fC011'I Mt 11t1"ot1 Mlt. Nom1t BACK PACKS hit h1 1111 w.,hl·h1t .. , ... ,, fr111111 lfG. 51 .tS Speeial ]250 Sl'OITS INn lNATIONAL STRIPED ' SPORT SHOES 110. 12.95 ·6'' llMn'ro srocrc LEATHER JACKn SALE 500/o °" • '"'"' .... ,, lh• "''" hot11t1lic ., ... 1111 1 ..... ·~· ..... hH-li1f1 .. 11 11..a:i. l'f-0.~'I ,.II lhll t;p. • 24 HR. SPORT PHONE 675-2545 GOLF CLUB SALE ODD'S 'N ENDS WOODS V•ln s ft 15.00 !RONI Y1lvt1 t. 10.00 625 4•1 . ntEADS NEW XRI n11111s UCllT CUI TOM 3600 NYLON I TIUNG 3995 CU8TOM GIJT lflUNO • l rtw11 S.ft Ht1 vy Yl11yt l tcktt end Clothlftf a•s ....... 13.95 ...... . GIVI YOUR SIU A lllAI JOIN US AND GO FISHING ENSENADA TRIP • Oi;r 11••• l 11111K1H Tri, '""'' ,,oo '.H.. J11l'1' 21 11 (Sot.) · o.odllt11 !0t l •1•mitioft1 Jul'I' ll!ll, 'oc.ko11 "''' for Tri, i1 5'S.OO. lnc!11d•1 oll '''"'. ,.,-1o1i°" l'llthl •ft4 h1J '"' lunk -/11\••icoft fi1h lt11 •••"'II -,ti,11 th• "'•• you con Drlt1t ~,. oft4 lotk- T1I• ••t11rn1 lo!e S11114oy l<•11lnf, J11ly 12. FISHERMEN 200/o OFF ON LURES I • See the Hew Cuttom OC.an Rodi in Stock NQw-'8•111 .. ~ Suo11•b Ouolity ' !wit"''' ! l 1 ll ' o ' n . 1 0 ' 1 J 0 • • ~ 0 l I I f 0 2 11 , 1• d I I l \ . -i .. .I I ·l r • Orange Coast • .•EDITION Today's Final • N. Y. Stocks -I V~L 66, NO. 193, 4 SECTIONS, 62 PAGES ORANGE CO.UNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1973 N TEN CENTS ·~·--••· · r ... _. ____ ... ____ .,,. -4 --..:-..-_ ... 011111' PllDI ltilff f'tl!lt. Irr •kMr<ll KMllllll' SOMBER·FACEO GIRL SCOl;ITS ANO MOTHERS WALK TO LINDA O'KEEFils FUNERAL Coron11 del Mar School Girl Buri9CI 1s Police Continue Search for Her Killer , ' Mourners Say Farewell Furietal Held for Slain ·corona del Mar Girl . By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 In. DllUr Pllet Stiff Quoting from the Old and New Testaments., sometimes with quivering !ones; a -gray.frocked· r..utheran minister ~ecit~ lhe, ~turies-old Christian ~­ frines of gOod, • evil and Innocence \Yednesday, in ,a funeraJ farewell to Lin· da Ann O'Koele. The murdered girl lay in a casket cover¢<! ·and surrnlinded wilb ecores Of floral tributes, flowers one mortuary man said were as movingly bea1.1tilul as any he has ever' seen. A crowd of about 100 attended noon· time rites in Pacific View ~1emorlal Park, O¥ei1ooking the lfarbQr Area com· munity where she \Vas born, christened, raised, schooled and slain by a strangler 43 days after her 11th birthday. The major landmarks of her brief lifetime were almost all visible from the crowded chapel. ''Lind8 Ann was born May 24, Hlft2." intoned the Rev. Lawrence Fruhling, of the Lutheran Church or the ~faster, He moved on into the rhythmic philosophical passages or the Book of Ee: clesiastes, Chapter 3, Verses I through 9, \Vhich poelically list the duties. joys. changes and sorrows of human life on earth' . 1 A tirpe to ._bom and a time lo die .. ·' 'A time to mourn and a time to dance ... " Her parents had requcs1cd them specifically. ·•niere is a time to love," continued the stifny. standing clergyman in his o""n fashion . "And 1 am sure -in certain · circumstances -there is a time to hate. "I don't belleve God wills 'these things' to happen. But He permits them to hap. pen." explained the Rev. Fruhling. He reminded mourners that Christ H;mself said while G()d created .heaven and earth, He chose not to interfere with nature's laws, but to give man freed&m Lap·ivorth Sloops where her parents, Mr. and ~1rs. Richard T k O L d o·.~eefe once ttught Sunday School. a e ver ea .. ~baptized,•un.m!imL9Pl.1t. _____ .. ~. . ly ,6, she pas~ from this life ... " -· He opened t~·~rmon in the now~r-Of Traiispac perfumed room with the 23rd Psalm, a - traditional comfort to mourners. Magazine Deal Plans Go A 'rrv . .. LOS ANGELES {AP) -The publishers say announced plans for Ne'v York Magazine to. buy ·Los Angeles Magazine • are oU. "The negotiations \\'ere just aragging on and on and 'we ~ecided to break them off," David Brown, Los Ange I es Magazine publisher, said Wednesday. But Clay Felker, presidenl of New York Magazine Co., had an opposite Yersion in a telephone interview. He said he called it off. Coast . It'll be a carbon copy or today, Friday, according to 1he weather · tervice, wllh low clouds through much or the day clearing in the aftemooos to 61 de~ readings at olhc beache> rising lo the low 80s , "~and. INSWE T!JDAY Ttoo aqunau" plan to ape11d ,JO day1 aboard tM 11inken luv uru liller A.ndrta Doria. roll.ect~ ino , ucl@ble art 100Tkl, 1hlp bonkl, o sUver plaque and two propeller•. StorJI Pao< 2~. , By ALl\tON LOCKABEY Df ..... Dlllly '"•-ll•ft The Cal-40s are back . The · famed Lapworth-designed sloops, winners-of three previous Transpae races, took over first and second place on corrected time Wedncsd~y as the northeast tradewinds freshened and began kicking up a surfing sea. Handicap leader was F. T. Opperman's Kolohe from Waikiki Yacht Club. fn sec- ond place was George Thorson 's Ariana. Los Angeles Yacht Club. Kolohe Is a , Class C entry and Ariana is in Class D. Kolohe was about 14 miles ahead of Ariana OJ) the .rhumbline. ~leanwbile, the race for line honors In Class A lightened up as the big boats were pushed up to hull speed by the freshening trades which were blowing 18 to 20 knots and 30 In the gusts. Windward Passage logged a 237-mile day to place her 891 miles from Diamond Mead, but Ragtime and Blackfin had . even better 24-hour runs to narrow the gap. Ragtime put 2-17 miles under her keel to move within 11 miles or Windward Passage. Blackfi n bad a 243-mile day and was 11 miles behind Ragtime. The light ai rs or the previous two days plus the drifter 11 the start apparently wiped any chance or a new elapsed time reron:I by ·any'of the Class A speedsters. n:ie first boat to fin ish would have to mHe ii by 10 p.m,(PDT) ;•r1c1ay to erue the emtlng reconi of I day•, I houn and 6 mlnulel sel by \flnchrm1 P-in 1rn. 'Ille freshening winds and mounting se.s took q,etr ffrst cUualty of the race Wednesday as Larry Pouhon1a Columbia- 38 Defiant from~ lost her rudder. The escort ve,sael Trtnquility was ftand. Ing [>)'. wlllJe.Qefwitll crew 11...,,p~ to ifl()'·rlira l'dddet:ml ~ 11 tM '""'· Hai\d!cap stan(llngs, wrth 1111 miles lo llonolulu : OVERALi. -(I) Kolohe, 1,1111; 121 Ariana, 1,152; (3) Improbable, 1,072; (4) Neferti, 1,108; {Sl Tenacity, 1,1~. Cl.ASS A -Worrlor. 1,020; m Mln Sette, 994; (3) Lightning. f.060; t4l l$<e TRANSPAC, Po1e ll ' of choice. Freedom to be good. Freedom to be evil. By whichever he chooses, the minister said , each man determines his elernal destiny. "We live in t 'NN•hcre evil doe! ex- ist. And evil is · our occasion tor being here today. "There is a higher force than man, however," the Rev. Fruhling declared, adding that no matter hO\Y horrified , sor- ry. guilt-ridden or filled with self-hatred the sla yer now may be, he must reckon yet 'vith God. And he cited Jesus' comforting words in the Gospel of St. Matthe\v : '"The liule ones shall not perish but h:ive everlasting life." The emotional impact was clear on the f?ces of mourners of all ages. There was a meek little handful of uniformed Girl Scouts. Classmates from Harbor View elementary and Lincoln Intermediate schools wept. There were tight-lipped men in black suits. \Vhile-haired women sobbed. An open grave "·ailed in a grassy S\\'aie high up the hill from the chapel. amid green pines bobbing in a rising ocean breeze •. as the July overcast began to bum a\\'3y. Folding chairs lined up alongside for a small, strictly private family farew ell , however. remained empty \Vednesday . The family chose to wait a while. Fire Toll Six; 19 More lnju1·e'-l \VORCESTER, Mass. (AP ) -Six persons were killed, 19 injured and six unaccounted for Wednesday after a fire swept throu gh a five-story brick tene· ment building, offic\als said. A search through the debris for the missing persons was temporarily baited when a wall collapsed , Injuring four firefighters in addition lo those hurt in the blaze. Six perso~ remained hospitalized, t\\'O in critical condition. Most of the others were treated for minor injuries and released. Tile cause of the fire was not im- mediaiely determined. One resident of the building, Sam J enkins, 18, said1 ''I just got out a win- dow on a rope ladder. I don't see why evei:ybody cOuldn't have gotten out. They should have been able to use the ropes." QUICK ROUNDUP FOR MUSTANG Helping you save is a Dally Pilot cl.aaslfied goal. l;pok at a typical bargain )'OU could find : '10 MUSTANG Grande. Air. p/1, p/ttilc bratea, ~Int. <i>nd" '22!0· (Phone No.) The l1rsl classijied :,d -reader who c:ame to look at It bought the car. He's happy: the 1dvertiser's J\appy; and the Daily Pllot w,as happy lo help into the bargain. If you tu.ve a bargain to list, call a Dally Pilol Ad-vbor. Sh•'ll he hap- py to help. 'l1le direct line -64Utl78. Murder Case at De<tcl End Police Seeli Public Aid A fresh plea for help was issued to- day by aulhorities engaged in a man- hunt for the strangler of Corona de! ?.1ar's Linda Ann O'Keefe. Newport Beach Police Detective Capt. Donald Oyaas says a five-man team continuing on special detail to the tragic case has run into a blank waJL . Where did lhc dark-haired, blue.eyed girl go between the (ime she left Lincoln Intermediate School about 1 p.m. Friday and midnight? "We've drawn a blank there ... Capt. Oyaas revealed . ·'Someone must have seen her ." 'Nixon Lo\vers Boom,' Insists Jghn Mitchell WASHINGTON (AP) -John N. Mltcheu insisted to a skeptical Democral today !hat President Nixon had been "lawering the boom" this year by ousting aides and o£ficials implicated in the Watergate and other wrongdoing. The former attorney general.\. in hi s third day of televised testimony before !he Senate "raterga!e C<>mmittee, said l"'O ill lhat category are H.R. Haldeman and John 0. Ehrlichman. The President accepted their resigna- lions from the \Vhile House staff April 30, calling them "two of the finest public servants il has been my privilege lo knO\\'." He also said lheir resignations were not evidence of wrongdoing on their part. Sen. Daniel K. lnouye, (l).·Hawaii J. asked Mitchell what evidence he saw that ' the President . had taken action after Inst Atarch 21 , when Nixon says he first heard serious accusations that ad· ministration higher-ups \Vere involved in the scandal. "I am trying to find out "·here the President has, since learning of these activities, lowered the boom, .. Inouye asked. . llundreds Of persons ha\'C been qUC.'i· 11oned nr \'Olunteered information -per- sons vt'ith some rela1ion 10 Linda -such as neighbors. leathers and classmates but with no concre1e results. "Nothing the.re has checked out,'' Cap!. Oyaas said of the critical 12·hour tin1e lapse. Anyone \\'ho m~ provide such informa- tion nlay call sn.:2211 and \\•ill be put in touch "'ith men \\·orking the O'KeefC casc. . . Linda. 11 . was li\'e feet tall. weighed 85 pounds, and had blue eyes and brO\\'n hair. She.! "·ore a shorl "'hite dress "'ith a TAKES ART MUSEUM POST New Director Byrnes ' N ewpo1~t Beach Art Museum Gets Mitchell mentioned the firing of While llouse counsel John \V. Dean lll and the resignations of Haldeman, Ehrlichman, Egil Krogh and Jeb Stuart Magruder l\J . D • from government posts.---·--... 1.'.'l.eW I.rector Inou ye said he didn't see much · evidence that the boom had been lowered on anyone but Dean. Mitchell implied that the resignations of l:laldeman and Ehrlichman were not fully voluntary. In response to a quesUon by convnlttec Chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr., (0.N.C.), ~·l itchell admitted that by not telling Nix- on "''hat he knew of wroogdoing in the \\'hite Hou se he Rad placed NiKon's political fonunes above !he President's constitutional duty lo uphold the laws. He also said under questioning by chief counsel Samuel Dash that he would ha\'c lold Nixon everything he knew about the \\'ateri;i;ate matter if Nixon had asked him after the election. "I \\'ould have laid out chapter and verse, everything I knew about it." But he stuck to his assertion !hat lhe President never inqui red aboul the matter of Milchell, who had been hi.s <ittorney general and his campaign direc· tor. Dash asked a long series of questions ISee l\tITCllEU.. Page %) James B. Byrnes is the new director or the Ne\l'fXITt Harbor Art ~iuscun1. llis appoin1mcnt \\'as announced today by Robert Guggenheim._ nc"'ly elected president of the museum's Board of Truslecs . Byrnes comes to Nei~'JXlrt Beach lrom ~e"' Orleans 1vhcrc he has se rved as director or thrit cily's museum of art since 1962. The New Orleans-muscurn formerly \vas kno"'n as the Isaac Delgado i\1uscum . Guggenheim said i\lrs. Betty Turnbull . acting director of the Newport ·Harbor n1uscu1n for the past eight mon ths. 1~·111 bcromc curator of special exhi bi lions. Byrnes. a spccinlist in 20th Century arl. studied painting ;:1t the Na tional Academy of Design and later st udied art history and archeology in Italy. lie. h<is taught al the LJni\'ersity of Flor ida. the lnivcrsil y or Southern California ;:ind (See BYRNES, Page 2! blue flowerfi'i pauem. plus a blue ski· type COOi \\'ilh knil slee\'eS. No mot ive has ye1 lx"'tn dclermined , because the youngster \\'as not sexuaJJy molest ed according to a p11thologlst'1 report. The youth originally arrl.'stcd and held for quellt ioning. Peter Richa rd \Vooten . 18 •. of Coron11 del ~·lar, "'as picked up et his• St•corid A venue horne ~'looday and re!f!ased frorn cuslody \Vedncsday. Dctcclivcs 1\•ill 1nake no fur1her t.'OITI· nten t on 1~hy they sought to question the 1973 Corona de! i\1ar lligh School graduate . • Yachtsman Cheats Death ................ · .. A ~osta tifcsa yachlsman miraculously escaped death today \\'hen his 41·foot cabin cruiser exploded in its Balboa ~farina berth, blowing his blazing body into Ne"·port Harbor \1•aters like a human firebomb . The $20.000 vessel "'as a total loss follo\\·ing the 4:55 a.m. blast. but tts skip- per \\'as luckier. Ed\1·ard C. Dcorr. 31 , or 463 fair Drive. 11·as-l1s~ed in stabilized condition at Hoag ~1emor1a ! Hospital shortly after he was adn1i1ted. Daze~ and in shock fron1 burns and lr1t~rat1pns. Deorr instinctively begin S\\'1mm1ng and started acro511 the lOO- (ool·\\'ide harbor chaMel toward Linda Isle. s~carn)ng for help. .. I ht a cigarette and now I'm over here on this boat dock and I don't know Mw I go! here.'' !he stunned victim told Linda Isle residents ""ho raced outs:ldc to rescue him . ' Newport . Beach Fire Department personnel said people living at 98 and 99 Linda Isle hurled out a bouyant boat sca t attached to a rope and the injured struggling man caught it. ' They tOl\'cd him in, \\'hilc Newport Beach police ;ind !he Orange County Harbo r Patrol responded to help. Harbor Patrol Sgt. Harry \Yright said lhC' fireboat \Vas on routine patrol when a s.uddCn red glo"· lit the sky in the direc- llon of l!'c Reuben E. Lee paddleboat restaurant. ..\\'e \\·ere the first uni1s on the scene an.d started pumping water oo it," he said. Thr blast. Sgt. \\1right added. disin- lcgratcd a 12-foot dinghy atop the shat· rercd cabin structure in 1vhich Dcorr lit 1 c1ga relle. apparently i g nit i n g 1c- curnulated bilge fumes. acco rding to riren1cn. ~1n~u lance crewmen on !he scene by !his t1n1e splashed the blast victim wilh PL!rih~d "·atcr.10 \\'ash away the salt by this lime agonizi ngly caked in his cuts and burn.~. Deorr \\•as also gh•cn o:.ygcn for shock ;ind. smoke inhalation. agcravated by hh~ panicky S\\'hnming. He suffered first and second degree (See EXPLOS IO N, Page 2) Q.tfl' Plltl Sffff ,,..... ATTENOANTS CARltY N!WPORT HARBOR BOAT BLAST VICTIM TO WAITING AMBULANCE Co1t1 MIN Y1cht1m1n Light1-Ci91~tt• and Instantly &e·~omtl Hum1n Torch '" . I • . - r ..... 1 ...... -• Only I Firm Seeks Cable TV Project • • By TOM GORM~N Of Nie DlllY '"'"' Slafl !IACE TIGHTENS -Windward Passage (IVPI led - Transpac fleet 89 1 mil es from J-lonolulu \Vednesday night, but Hagtime (R1\), with 902 miles to g~. an.d Blackfin (Bfo~). just 913 miles out. were 1na k1ng 1t • tight race for line honors. Warrior (WA) was lead- lng Class A on corrected time with 1,020 miles lo go. Overall handica p leader was Kolohe (KO), l ,138 miles Irom the finish . Five Ornnge CAast dtlet have ap- paren tly designed a cable television system that is so costly and com lex on.I,-.!/", one company In the country T con- sidering tackling the project. Directors or the Public C a b I e TelevisloO System, which serves Newport Beach. Costa Mesa, Fountain Vall.ey, Huntington Beach and Wesbninster, said Fire W reeks Record Center For' Military -~----~~-~- C II G l !his morning they were concerned about 0 eges e the lack ol bidders on their proposed IIS million project . FromP .. e 1 TRANSPAt. • • W • df' all John Bateman, genera1 manager of the Ragtime. 902; (5) Robon , 992. ID PCTA , said only one firm UI considering CLASS B -(1) Improbable, 1,072; (2) a bid on the project and that he is Nalu JV, l,079; (3) Sanderling IV; 1,1!>8; Of $1 Milli.on "pessimistic" that other bids will come (.f) Neferti. J,l08 ; {S) Slarwagon, 1,172, forth before the Sept. 6 deadline. Bateman told directors there are no CLASS C -(I ) Kolohe, 1,138; (2) other bidders because an estimated $5 OVERLAND. f\·Jo. (APl -Fire sy,•ept Tenacity, 1,152; (3) Blue Streak, 1,148; Governor Reaean's signing of the new million to $71.million in "front money" is h •1-1.t 14) Mitresss 11. 1,173; (5) Ahsante, 1,178. 1 II ri ti bll'I needed to ·oegin construction of the through the sixth lloor of l e ;• 1 t ary CLASS 0 _ (I ) Ariana, 1,152; (2) commun ty co ege approp a Ont Personnel Record Center in this St. Louis Illusion, 1,156; (3) Moon Day, 1,176; (4) has provided trustees of the Coast Com~ system. suburb today, destroying thousands of \Vitchcraft , l ,178; (5) Woodwynd, 1,202. munlty College District with an e1tr1 $1 "Money is very tight now, and very records on pre-1960 service personnel. million with which to balance the budget. few companies have that kind of money," Fire fight ers froCQ eight suburban coi.n· The measure, known as Senate Bill S, he said. panies ~·ere still 'battling the blaze more Coast Colleges' actually shifts an additional $2 million to Many companies are deciding to ex· than nine hours after it broke out in the Golden \Vest and Orange· Coast O:>llege, pand their already-existing systems but it also curtails the dJstrict's taxing rather than start new ones, be added. two-block-long structure . They reported E } G power by about $1 million, meaning a net "And many companies I have talked to the blaze was limited lo the top floor, but mp Qyes .to et \ revenue Jain of $1 million, district of· say, off the record, that they are afraid ~·ater and smoke damaJi;e w e r: e licials said. of our enforcement clauses," be said. spreading below. SaJ Hik For property owners in the district, ap-Under the system's specifications, if a Its cause was not immediately known. ary .. eS proval of SB 6 will mean a reduction in cable firm does not fulfill its contractual but arson was sus.....ted. the tax rate from 8S cents lO ·a1 centa per obligations, it will lose ownership of the _,.. About 1,000 emp1oyes at Golden West $100 uaessed valuation . ill rf o.lly ...... ttatt "-It FIREFIGHTERS DOUSE EMBERS ON CHARRED YACHT Accumulated Biige Fumes Bl1med for E1rly Morning Bla1t From Pqe.__!_ A spokes_man said the building's sixth and otan e Coast College, from physics .,_.., Trustees appeared gratified by the in· system and a $2.5 m· Ion ..P!_~f!!._ance_ Ooor contained ~rds of Army pe~n· teachers fo janitor will face the higher creased revenue from state sources aod. bond. nel who served prtor to 1960. On the filth . . •. an addlti~J •t90,~.J?l'OVil:ted lt>'-.~ .,~"We ha~e.~ee"? .iE.£.Pr Qmtr~~L !~the .. -n·oor . tM'5pOWinT8tl said: ure:records of·· ~..eop:l ~ livmg wilb · acroas-tbt-bolrd f~eri1' IOveinmeiit fof the''tduc'aUori of cab1e company docs not penortti, We EXPLQSJON. : ... ---- • Navy personne l prlOr 10 the same date. salary mcr~ases of 6.2 percent. . veterans...-Both.-will-help balance the-have steps to take care of that," be said. "Whatever isn't burned is as wet as Trustees ~I the eou. t Commuinty district's proPo&Cd 137.6 million budget. "They don't like that." Keene -Elected- Chief-of-<;6ast'--· -bum s over his _back, cbest~ _ __ne_c_k__and___ --·..--... -·--~--• shoulders, in addition to lacerations sus· C }} T Coll DI t t tho zed th 1973-74 In Trustees ori&inally feared a '800,000 On~Y. TelePromp~er, the largest. cable can be " said Army Col. Wesley C. ege 5 ric au ~ e • deficit because the former system of t~lev~1on o~rator rn the country, 1s con- Sc bo • h creaaes Wednesday night and justified community college apportionment would s1dcrrng a bid on the franchise. It cur-;~yro:~fi'cials in \Vashington said rhem on the basis of Bureau of Labor not have satisfied district needs. renlly seryes parts of New~rt Buch. many of the records stored · a~ the Statilllcs predictions of a 8.2 percent cost However, Dr. Correllan Thompson, the . "l get very un~thuslast1c about h~v- sprawling center are not dupltcated of living increase in the Los Anaeles district's vice chancellor of business af-tng only one bid, said Costa Mesa City elseWhere_. area. fairs, reminded lbe board that a five per. ~uncilm~~ .AIV:in Pin~Jey, a cable TV cent enrollment increase still will be director. Its hke havmg to buy a car "Some of them are full file copies of The cost-of-living pac~age e1cludes needed to obtain all ·the state-aid funds because it's th e only car on the market." Army personnel. These are not raises for merit or longevity earned bf required to putt~ budget in the black. Bate~an ·~aid the J>C'.l'A. has ~veral dupliated," said Col. Leonard Reed. the empklyes. Theoretically, the boost Enrollment forecast.a indicate a district alternatives 1f only one bid 1s received. Two firemen werenhabospl italbuizedthefor only allows the workers to keep up with wide decline of two percent. District• "Individual .cities can decide to offer treatment of smote i ation t re mirultr8ton earlier this year vowed to thei r own franch ises. This way a company Wert no other Tef)Ofls ol injuries. increased consumer prices. "beat the bushes" fer additional students may decide to bid on a city franchise, 1n- Thc center, about 20 years old. con-Original budget calculations for the to boost ald payments. stead of one that covers five cities, at a Cains about 56 million records of current district indicated that no money would be The budget, autlx>rized for publication Jot less cost." and former milllary personnel, a availa ble during the 1973-74 fiscal year Wednesday night, is up about $9.2 million "We can a~ consider a cit~-owned military spokes~ said. for cost-of-living increases. over last year's eipendilures of .$31.4 system, or we can shelve the project and Of .bout •.ooo employes , only """'urity H G R · · · million. hope fo do better at 3 later time~"· · .. ....." owever, ovemor eagan s s1grung I I •-·--t r &Uards and · malntenanct personnel oc· Reflected in the increase are '950,000 "If I'm going to be abso ute y 11UJma , cupied the building at the fire's onset of the new community college ap-f1>r cost-Qf·llvlng increues for empJoyes must say I'm pessimistic that we will get l--ie--&hortly-after midnight_ ..They es_caped propriatioos bill (~'B 8> Wcdnesday_g!Ye and-1110n1-than--$$ -~iltion--in--ntW-con-rnqre-°"q·the one bkl,!!-be-told directors. without injury. thTdi!tfictDCfdfi!"'orfRJ revenue with which struclion, mainly at Orange Coast No action was taken by the board, The center was sealed off by federal to make the payments. College ln Costa Mesa. which will wait untlf Its Aug. 9 meeting agents and military personnel after the College district Chancellor Nonnan E. The budget b scheduled for adoption before mapping any further plans. outbreak of the fire. Watson said the 6.2 percent wage Aug. l foUowing a public hearing. Jn Washington, the Armed Services package includes four-tenths or one per- were trying to piece together Information cent in fringe benefits and 5.8 percent in about the impa~t of the fire, but early actual salary increaaes. reports were only fragmentary because The cost of the overall package to the lhe fire was still reported out of contrbl district is $950,000. in late morn ing. -N<!gotiations for the ~·age hike were It was clear. however, that there were conducted quletly and without dispute, ac- no duplicates for most of the record! in cording to spokesmen for employe groups the building. which is operated by the and the admini.stratlon. General Services Administration. , Estimates of the number of records there were vague. but the Na vy alone said It was approximately 56 million personnel and medical records. Sweet Toothed Burglar Souglit Ne'A'port Beach police officers are hun- ting a burglar who by now may have a cold tongue. a terrible tummy ache and quite a few cavities in his teeth . Brother of Sacco, 90 Requests New Trial MILAN, ltaly_(AJ!) -The 91>-yell'-<lld brother of anarchist Nicola Sacco, ex- ecuted in Massachusetts in 1927 with Bartolomeo Vanzetti , has a.! k e d i\fa ssachusetts to retr)' the pair. OCC, Contractor Calls it QuitB;- Pact Canceled College trustees and a contractor who walked away from unfinished Orange Coast College projects amounting to nearly $1 million formally called it quits Wedneaday nl&ht. · c:oast Community College District trustee.s authorized cancellation of the cootract with the Harman B. J. Gladd Construction Company and the payment of $91,071 for work already done. Af!ected by the cancellation are the OCC food services laboratory, tutorial center and faculty offices, horticulture building, and student center. Martha Keeps Saine Story . WASHINGTON (UPI) -Martha J\fitchell said today she still beUeves everything she has said about President Nixon and the Ylatergatc scandal even though her husband has sworn Nixon was kept in the dark about lbe scope of the scandal. Mrs. l\-tilcbell told UPI in a telephone conversation -as her husband John "'as starting1 his third day of testimony before the Senate \\'atergate committee -that "I stand on everything I've said previously.'' lained by being blasted through tho 0 ege rustees debris. ... Names ot Jie destroyed boat moored at 201 E. Coast Jiighway and the Linda Isle residents who rescued the victim v·ei:c not immediately available. Frona Pagel BYRNES ... Tulane University. He began his professional career at the original Los Angeles County fi.fuseum where he ser\'ed as curator of modern and contemporary art. \Vhile there he purchased for the rrluseum collection one of the first paintings-by Jac'ksoi\ Eollo.ck to be placed in an American museum. Symes also has been director of the North Carolina Museum of Art and direc- tor of the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Cente r. His wife . Barbara, has served as direc· tor of the Jazz Museum in New Orleans. • Fay Hike. Ruling Due in August SACMMENTO ( A P ) Ai>- proximatcly JS0,000 state employes ma y have to wait until late August lo learn if the President's Cost of Living Counctl ap.. proves their salary hikes in the new state budget, the California State Employes Association says. This word came from CSEA President LeRoy A. Pemberton and general manage r \Va lier W. Taylor Wednesday in a statement they issued 'Of!er a meeting 1vith a council representative i n Washington. \Vorth Keene, retired postmaster of Seal Beach, Wedne9day night was elected president of the Coast Community College DiStrict Board of Trustees. The 54--year-old Keene took over leadership of the two campus district from William Kettler of Huntington Beach. who had served as board presi- dent for the past year. , Keene, or 2.38 16th St, has served op the board for the past~12 years. He serv- ed as president or the fi ve-man panel in 1968-69 and in 1963-64. Earlier Ibis year he was re-elected to his fourth four-year term on the board of trustees. Chosen vice president, Wednesday night, v.'aS trustee Donald*G. Hoff, of \Vestminster. Coast Community College trustees govern the affairs of Orange Coas t and Golden 'West· Colleges. From Pagel MITCHELL ... about the extent of f\.1itchell's active in· volvemen t in the Watergate coverup, receiving mostly denials as answers. i\1ilchell said he never heard any discussions about the possi bility of tap- ping the Central Intelligence Agency fQt money to support the Waterga te dcfen- danls or pay their bail. He said he ne\'er heard about any im· proper approaches to U.S. District Judie Charles Richey, who Is presiding in tfle Deinocralic Party 's $6.4-million lawsuit for damages stemming from Watergate. He conceded that Haldeman and Ebrlichman had shared his "acti ve con· cern" that Nixon not be told about ··\Vhi!e House horrors·· that Mitchell said he \Vantcd kept secret. Ne'A'port liarbor High School Principal Les Van Dyke reports the campus snack bar at 600 Irvine Ave., has been burgled. Sabino Sacco said today that he had \\'ritlen Gov. Francis W. Sargent re-. questing the retrial. He said he had at· ' tached documents -supporting contention s that his brother and Vanzetti were in- nocent !)f lhe 1920 kJlling of a shoe com- pany paymaster and his guard. Trustees authorized the advertising or bids for completion of the unfinished "'ork by other construction Onns. " Nobody Sells GE Refrigeralon For Less Than The loss was $33.55 and includes 191 ice cream and fruit juice bars, 67 candy bars and nine indi\'idua\ pies -of assorted flavors. I Ol4Nel COAST ' DAILY PILOT fM Otl .... CN11 CAIL Y 'ILOl . ,.,111 ""'.Cft '-"'""!Ml tllt Nt,.t·'rttf. h OUDll"'td l Y "" o ..... eo.11 """'""'"" c..,..~, s.,.. rllt .Olliofot lr9 Pl/tllll .... , MOr>doy ll'lrot"'°ft Frl!Uly. Hir Cot!t Mu.o, Ntw-1 lite,,, Hlll\1!"9100. lttel'l/F-11!>1 Vtlltr , U 111111 lt1c,., ttwiftt!S-ltbeclt -Sin ClllTlfnlt/ S." Jvtn c1,11rr1no • 1111911 ""Ollon11 tdlflort It Pl*lltlMd Sl!11tDIYI Ind S~n111y1. flle ,,lncle><ll IMID!lllllnf Dllnl II 11 lJQ Wtt! llY "'"'· c.... Mtst, Ctllforft~, m1•. Rob••• N. w •• d ,,,,111...,1 t<ICI 'llll!llhlr J1tk A. c~rley Vitt '•Hlfffll tf\11 G•"t•tl Mtnt tt• Tho""'' Kttwll ElllW Tho111t1 A. M ~•phlftt M-.1"9 Etllor L ''*'' Krlt l N ...... t ltlCfl CJry f ll., H_,... .._Ii Offlc1 JJ)J Nt,.ptrf l owltftrd MtUlftf Ad•r•11 1 ,,0 . ltt 117S, •266) -.o- C&tt• Mot: JJO Wtlf 111 J ttffl ~t lt1tl'li m F•ttl A- 1+111101<111911 l flfCll; 1"1J IHdl '°""~­Jtfl ("'"'"!ti •t Nlt1'11 II C."""' ltNI T••F••• 17141 MJo4JJ1 c1i11lfla4 ~ M2·••7• ~rlf'll, 1'71. Or C..11 ll'lllHll"""' ~,. ,.. ....... lll111tr1•lons, "'""'lei 1Ntlt!1 "' 1114wrllt-lllttl!I ....... ... ~"' """"""' 1111ti.1 -"" ...... "' ...,..,., ._ .. ...... c,lt" _ .... -""' fll (Mlt MtH. Ct1twnlf, ~•IMIM tio cMt1tt n .u _,,,... w -ff tJ..11 ""ftlhrr1 111m11rv llalfMll9M '2 ... t'llOllll'll'J, 'World's a Stage' Says ' Jury; Nude Dancer Freed By CANDACE PEARSON 01 l1le 0.Uy "llel Stilt Playwright \Villlam Shakespeare onct 1vrotc. '·All the world's a stage." Attorney Kenneth Schollz drew upon lhnt philosophy Wednesday to convince a seven-man. five-1\·oman jury In Orange County Harbor Judicial District Court that the Fire Houseri h~ spot in Costa titesa is indeed , one lhose stages. The jury Jn Judg Archie Walters' courtroom found Schollz' client, nude clancer lilarsha Sue Crump, innocent of 16 alleged violations or Costa Pi1esa's anti-nudity ordina nce . . Tho law passed by the City Council In early fl.fay prohibits nude employes In places that serve food and btvera1es but allows nudity in theaters. There was never a question in the trial that ~tiss Crump, 25, had been nude on stage when Costa Atesa police office.rs raided the Fire liouse ~fay 11. 14, 2e and June 5. Prosecuting attorney Jim Stoller con- tended she was In a bar Md said It w1s "Immaterial" whether or not 1lcohol was served. By May 11, the Fire •rousa at 1n E. 17th St .. was serving only soft drinks but 11il1 bad n sign reading "blr0 oulltde on the red-and-white striped bulldlna. "They themselves called it a bar and never the t'll·ain shall meet." Stotler argued, adding that club offidals chang- ed the sign to read "theater" in late Ma.y "so they'd have the defense.'' Stotler drew the v.-ord theater on a piece ol paper, walked to a wall In the courtroom and asked the jury to "assume on the other slde of the wall is a bunch of nuns." Tile sign doean't change I.he nunnery Into • theater, he said, 1n hit cloalng statements. "Do !hey shoot pool In the lobby al GraUlt\lft'I Chlneee 'nlNter?" he 1flted at -poin~ nlen1na to a ooin-operated pool table In the Fire --A !heai.r, Sdlolti told the Jury In h11 summartloa, "Isn't llmlted to a particular concept." It 1doesn't have to have a boJ office, a curtl.ln oa the ltlge or •Vtn a •tate. SchoJt1 arlUed,, polnttng out nnall com- munity theaters, !heater-In-the-round, cabaret• and Lis Vtfu entertainment u e11mple1 of variety, Scholto then look the same PB!"'' StoUer hid used and drew "bar" on 1he oilier llde. "U I J>llt my lip on the wolJ or a nunnery," he aald~ walklng over to the courtroom wall, "it won't tum It Into a bar either." 1u tu. "· "'"°""°'' ll'lll•llATO•.fltallll ' Authorlaed G! SERVICE •319'' elAHT tM '" '" MD 'ltO•"'T dJ9H 1101...,...IOI ltll'lttGlltATOlt , CALL DUNLAP ' 0 WE TAl<E 543·7788 TRADE-INS 1815 NEWPDRfBLYD . to DATS CASH With ... ,,,.,.._, Crtdlt Downtown Costa Mesa -Ph. 548· 7788 ' l I \ Today's F l•al N.Y. Stocks ~ ,_ -, VOL. 46, NO. 193, 4 SECTIONS, 62 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA c TEN CENTS a-.ury-Frees Fire -Hou~s-e Dancer on Nud-it-y Rap ~: By CAN DACE PEARSON Of .. 0.ltJ ,Met lt•ff ·:Playwright William Shakespeare once '·rote, "All the world's a stage." Attorney Kenneth Sc!>oltz drew upon \hat philosophy \\1ednesday to convince a seven-man, five-v•oinan JutY In Orange ·c.ounty Harbor Judicial Districl Court that the Fire House night spot in Costa Mesa is inClced, one of those stages. The jury ii\ Judge Archie Walters' CQurtroom found Scholtz' client, nude dancer M_arsha Sue Crump, innocent of 16 alleged violations of Costa l\1esa's anti~udity ordinance. The law pa'ssed by the City Council in early May probiblts nu'1e employes In places that serve rood and beverages but allows nudity in theaters. There was never a question in the trial· that Miss Crump, 8', had, been nude on es an Mitt!laell Off Stand -~~Eals.e T~~-~i~~ny .. . -· ___:_,._ .. -Cha~ges Denied - \VASHINGTON tAP) -John N. ~1itch­ ell today disputed a suggestion that he may have testified falsely during the Watergate coverup, and said investigat- ing senators can judge for themselves his denials that he ever approved the wire- tap raid on the Democrats. So saying, Mitchell left the Senate y,•itness stand after televised testimony that took two full days · and most of a third. I Mitchell had insisted eirlier in the day : tM!fore skeptical Demo!tfits that Presi- dent Nixon had been "lowering the boom" by ouiting officials implicated In .. ~e Watergal.e and other: wrongdoing. -::.police Seekin,g '>' --~Clues in Death, ~of Ne ·wport Girl A fresh plea for help \Vas issued to-AaY by authorities engaged in a man- Munt for"' the strangler of Corona del .. Mar's Linda Aon O'Keefe. -Newport Beach Police Detective. capt. Donald Oyaas says a five-man team continuing on special detail to the tragic ease has run into a blank wall. ·; Where did the dark-haired; blue-eyed girl go between the time she left Llricoln Intennediate School about I p.m. Friday and midnight? 1 "We've drawn a blank there;· Capt. Oyaas revealed. ;'Someone must have -$een her." · · Kwidreds of persons have been queS-'UOO.ed or vofunteercd information -per- !'IODS with some relation to Linda -such ~!I neighbors, teachers and classmates °)ut with no concrete results. ' "Nothing there has checked 'lUt," Capt. ~yaas said of the critical 12-hour time :'fone whO may provide such informa~ _ )Ion may call 673-2211 and will be put in touch with men working the O'Keefe case. . . Linda, 11, Was five feet tall, weighed ,IS pounds and had blue eyes' and bro\\-11 hair. She Wore a short whlte dress tfitH a J>lue flowered pattern, plus· a blue ski- type coot with knit sleeves. l No motive has yet been determined, '~ the youngster was not sexually ~.'molested according to a pathologist's 'report. . • 1be youth originally arrested and held ifor questioning, Peter Richard Wooten, 18, or Corona del Mar. was picked up at his Second Avenue home Monday and released from cuslOdy Wednesday. Detectives will make no further com- ment on why they sough~ to question the 1973 Corona del Mar High School graduate. ~uieK RO lJN DUP_._: FOR MUSTJNG ' llelpq ,.. .... ii • Dally Pilot. claallled pl. Look at a typical bargain you could fiod : '70 MUSTANG Grande. Air. p/1. pldilc brakes, xlnt. cond., lll50, (Pbcne No.) The former attorney general. in his third · day of televised testimony before the Senate. \Vater(t:ate committee. said two in that category arc H.R. Haldeman and John D. Ehrlich.man. The President accepted thei r rcsigna- 1ions from the White House ·staff April 30, calling them "two of the finest public ser\'ants it, ha~ been my privilege to kDO\\'." He also said their resignations v;ere not evidence of \\'rongdoing on their part. Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, CD-Hawaii I. asked i\:litt:betl what evidence. he saw lhat the President had taken action after last March 21 . when Nixon says he first heard serious accusalions that ad- ministration higher-ups were involved in the scJ1ndal. "I am trying to find out \vhere: the President has, since learning of tl'lese activities, \oy,•crcd the boom," Inou ye asked. Mitchell mentioned the firing of \Vhile House counsel John \V. Dean Ill and the resignations of Haldeman, Ehrlich.man. Egil Krogh and Jeb Stuart ~1agruder from government posts. Inouye said he didn't see much evidence that the boom had been lowered on .anyone but Dean. Mitchell implied that the resignations of Haldeman and Ehrlichman were not fully voluntary. In response to a question by committee Chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr., (D-N.C.1. ~IHcheU admitted that by not telling Nix: on what he knew of wrongdoing in the White House he hlld placed Nixon's politic~l fortunes above the President's constitutional duty to uphold the laws. He also said under questioning by chief c'Ounsel Samuel Dash lhal he wOuld have told Nixon everything he knew about the Waterg'ate matte11 i! Nixon had esked him after the election. "I would have laid out chapter and verse. everything I kne w ~See MITCHELL, Page %) S·weet Tooth ed Burg lar Sou g li t • Newport Beach police officers arc hun- ting a burglar who by llO\f may have a cold tongue, a terrible tummy ache and quite a few cavities in his lcelh. Newport Harbor High School Principal Le 'Van Dyke repocts the campus snack bar ·at 600 Irvine Ave., has been burgled. The loss was $33.55 and includes 191 ice cream and fruit juice bars. 67 candy bars and nine in(!ividual pies -of assorted flavors. stage v.then Costa l\1esa police officers raided the Fire House l\lay II, I~. 26 and June 5. . Prosecuting attorney Jim Stoller con· tended she was in a bar and said it was "immaterial" whether or oot alctihol was served. By May 11, the Fire llouse at 177 E. 17th St., was serving only soft drinks but slill had .a sign reading "bar" outside on the relt-and-white striped bw1ding. '°They lhemselves called it a bar and never the twain shall meet," Stotler argued, adding that club officials chang- ed the sign to read "theater" ~,late May ··so they·d have the defense." Stotler drew the word theater on a plecc of p.iper, "'alked to a wall in the courtroom and asked the jury to ··assume on the other side of 1he v;all is a bunch of nuns." 1 The sign doesn't change the nunnery -' into a theater. ht said, in his closing stntements. "Do they shoot pool in the lobby of Grauman's Chinese Thealer?" he asked at one point, rererring to a oiin-operated pool table in the Fire House. A theater, Scho\lz told the jury in his summation , ''isn 't limited to a particular concept." II doesn't have to ha\'c a box office; a curtain on the .Stage or C\'en a stage, es as ) ' • --•. J" ATTENDANTS CARRY NEWPORT HARBOR BOAT BLAST VICTIM TO WAITING AMBULANCE Costa Meu Yachtsman Lights Clgarette and Instantly Becomes Hum1n Torch Lapworth-designed Boats Takll1g Lead i11 Transpac By ALi\ION LOCKABEY or IM Dlll'f Pilat Slltl The Cal-40s are back. The lamed LapY.'orlh-designed sloops. winners of three previous Transpac races , took over first and second place on corrected time Wednesday as the northeast tradewinds fr es hened and began kicking up a surfing sea . Handicap leader was F. T. Opperman's Kolohe from Waikiki Yacht Club. In sec- ond place was George Thorson's Ar iana , Los Angeles Yacht Club. Kolohe Is a Cliw C entry and Ariana is in Class O. Kolohe was about 14 miles ahead of Ariana on the rhumbline. f\feanwhile , the race for line honors in Class A tightened up as the big boats were pushed up to bull speed by the freshening trades which were blowing 18 to 20 knols and 30 in -the gusls. \Viodward Passage logged a 237·mile day to place her 891 miles [rom Diamond 11ead, but Ragtime and Blackfin had even better 24-hour runs to narrow the gap. Ragtime put 247 miles under her keel to 1nove "'ilhin 11 miles of \Vindward Passage. Blackfin had a 243-mile day and \\'BS 11 miles behind Ragtin1e. The light airs of the previous tY.'O days plus the drifter at the start apparently Y.'ii>ed any chance of a new elapsed time record by any of the Class A speedsters. The first boat to finish would have to make it by 10 p.m. (PDT) Friday to erase the existing record of 9 days, 9 hours and 6 minutes set by Windward Passage in 1971. The freshening winds and mounling seas took their first casualty of the race WedQesday as Larry Poulton's Columbia- 36 Defiant from Oakland lost her rudder. The escort vessel Tranquility was stand- ing by while Deflant's crew attempted to jury-rig a rudder and remain in lhe race. Handicap standings, with 990 miles to llonolulu: OVERALL -(I) Kolohe. J,138 ; (2) Ariana, 1,152; (3) Improbable, J.072; 1-1) Ncferti, 1,108; (S) Tenacity, 1,152. CLASS A -Warrior, 1,020; f2) !\1in Sette, 994 ; (3) Lightning, 1,000 : 141 ltagtime, 902; (S) ·Robon , 002. CLASS B -(I) Improbable. 1.072: (2) !Set TRANSPAC. Page ti • GAlAT C:tACLl ROUTl tWWTillUl {""'*90Ml) ' Coastal Cities Des ig n Costl)' Ca ble T V S·vste1n .,, By T0~1 GOR.\IAN ot l~I DI M1 l'lltt Sti ll Five Vrangc Coast cities have ap- par('ntl~· designN:I a cable tclc\'ision system that is so cosil y nnd cornplcx only one company in th e country is con· sidcrini;: tackling the project. Directors or the Public • Ca b I c Tclc\.·ision System. y,·hich serves Newport Beach, Costa !\1esa. Fountain Valley. Hunlingtoo Beach and \Vcstrninster. said this morning they were concerned about the lack of bidders on their proposed Sl5 million project. John Bateman, general manager of the PCTA, said only one firm is considering a bid on lhe project and that he is "pessimi!lic" that other bids will come . forth before the Sept. 8 deadline. · Bateman told directors there are no other bidders because an estimated SS million to $7 million in •·front money" is needed to begin construction of the system. "~•loney is very light no'"'· and \.'cry few co1npanies have that kind of money ." he said. !\1any companies are deciding to ex- pand their already~xlsting s y s l e m s rathl'r than start new ones, he added. "And many companies 1 have talked 10 say. orf the record . that they arc afraid or our enforcement clauses." he said. Under the system 's specifications. ir a cable finn docs not tulfill its contracrual obligations. it will lose ownership of the system and a S2.S milUon pc.rformance bond. "We have teeth in our contract. lf ihe cable company dots not perform , we have steps to take care of that," he said. "They don't like that." Only TelePrompTer, the largest cable televisioh operator in the country, Is con- sklering a bid on the franchise. It cur- rently serves parts of Newport ·Beach . .. The first •ci.Ded , ad reader who came to look 1t It boQght the car. He's happy ; tbe ldvertia's hippy; and the Dolly Pilot •U hl1l!IY to belp into the barg1ln. If you have 1 barpin lo \Isl, call a Dolly Pllol Ad-vl10r. She'll be hap. ··py to help. The direct line -6U-5171. RAC ~ TIGHTENS -Windward Passage (WP) led Tran.spac fleet 891 miles from Honolulu Wednesday night, bul Ragtime (RA), with go2 miles lo go, and Black/in (BF), just 913 miles out, were inaklng it a tight race for line honors. Wanior (WA) was lead· Ing Class A on corrected time with 1,020 miles lo go, Overall handicap leader was Kolohe tKO). l , 138 miles from the finis!• "I get very unenthusiastic about hav- ing only ont bldi" said Costa Mesa City COuncilman Alvin Pinkley, a cable TV director. 1'Jt'sJikc hnvlng tO huy a car because It'!!: !he only car on the market." Bateman said thc -PCTA has stveral IS.e CABLE, Pagt %1 ,, ' Scholtz argued. pointing out small com- munity theaters. thcater-irt-the-roWld, cabarets and Las Vegas entertainment as examples or variety . Scholtz then took the same paper Stotler had used and drey,• ';bar'' oo the other sidl'. ··1r 1 put my sign on the y,·all of .a nunnery," he said, walking over to the courtroom y.·all. "it won't tum it lnlo a bar either." ea Blown Off Cruise1~ Ill Harbor A Costa f\fesa yachtsman miraculously escaped denlh today y,•hen hi!l 41-foot cabin cruiser exploded in il s Balboa r.-tarina berth, blov.·ing his blazing body in to Ney.·port Harbor waters like a human firebomb. The $20,000 vessel v.·as a total loss following the 4:SS ~.m. blast. but its ski~ per \Vas luckier. £dy.·ard C. Deorr, 31, of 16.1 Fair Drive, Y.•a'! listed in stabilized condition at tloag ~femorial Hospital shortly after he W83 -admitted. Dazed and in shock from bums and lacerations, Deorr instinctively bet•n SK1mmlng and started across the 100- f oot-widc harbor channel toward Linda Isle. screaming for help. "I lit a cigarette and now I'm over here on this boat dock and I don't know hOY.' I got here." the stunned victim told Linda Isle residents who raced outside to rescue him. , Newport Beach Fire Department personnel said people llvlng at 91 and 9t Linda Isle hurled oot a bouyant boat scat atlached to a rope and the injured, struggling man caughl ii. They towed him in, while Ney,•port Beach polict and the Orange County Harbor Patrol responded to help . Harbor Patrol Sgt. }farry \\'right said lhe fireboat y,·as on routine patrol when a sudden red glow lit the sky in the direc· lion of the Reuben E . Lee paddleboat restaurant. "\\'e \rerc lhe first units on lhe scene and st\rtrd pumping y,•ater oh it," he said. The blast. Sgt. \\1right added, disin· tl'.'grated a 12-fool dinghy atop the shat· tcrcd cabin structure in which Dcorr lit a cigarette. apparently i g n it in g IC· cumulated bilge fumes. according to firemen . Ambulance crcy,•mcn on the scene by !his time splashed the blast victim y,•ith purified \\'aler to \\'ash ay.•ay the salt by this time agonizingly caked in his cuts and bums. Deorr 11·as also given o:.ygen foi shock and smoke inhalation, aggravated by his panicky SY.'imming . He suffered first and SCCQnd degree burns o\'cr his back, chest. neck and ISee EXPLOS ION, P1ge Z) Or ange Cout Weathe r It'll be a cnrbon copy or today, Friday. according 10 lhe \\·eather service, wilh low ctoud3 through much or the day clea ring in the afternoons to 67 degree read ings at Ille beaches rising to lhe low 80.s inland. INSIDE TODAY T-wo aq11anaMU pltu1 lo spen<i 10 day1 aboard tile 1u11ke11 Lu.r· ury liner A1utrea Doria . ro{lect· htg voluable art work.a, ship bo111u. a sUutr plaqUt and. two prOJ)fUer•. Stor11 Page 2tl. l .M. .. ~. H CIN..,_. I c ... .+•ltf -... C-IQ M c .. 11_. M DMIJI N .. ICtt 11 II ........ ''" ' 11 ...... ltlll!Mftt .. ,. 'l•lflC• ""*' , ... tllt ll.c.... ,. Mtt'ttCl'IMI ti Ill ll~kt IJ • Alt! t.Hffn Jt Mt¥1M .. ,. M<r\111 ,_, )6 N1lltflll New• 4, If o ..... c-"' lt S-11 INS llM-Mlttlttt ,.,,, ,_ . Tllt•f9'• ..... w..-.r • ,._., Ntwt ll•Jt Wtr~ NIWI 4, l• ! ' \ Military Files Burn .Committee I , Ex-PO-W Wife 1 Asks Divorce • , B fuze Sweeps St. Louis P ersonnel Center Sends Nixon PALO ALTO (AP) -Mrs. Joan- Prolllel. •lie ol !he f~,\ prltooer ol war to mp olf Ibo llnl plaM from Hanoi. has filed for divorce. She cJ1ed Irreconcilable dlffetf!nctt. ~ -Alrt. Protilet seperaled !rofu ,l Navy Capt. Leo ProCJlet May I ·1rter 19 yelf'n of marriage. She reportedly is Uvlng In a Palo Alto apartment while Profllet remains OVERLAND, Mo. !AP) -Fire sw•pl through lhc sixth floor of the l\:fililary Ptrsonne:l Record ~nter in this St. Louis 1ubwb tochcy, destroying thousnnds of ttcords on pre-1960 service personnel. Fi re fighters from eight suburban coin· panies u·ere still bal!Jin~ the blnze 111orc than nine hours uher It broke out in the tv•o-block-long !t1uclure. 'l'tiey revorted Ille blaze \\'tlS llmlted to the top floor, but water and smoke damaa:e w e r e spreadlna below. lll cause was not lmmedl1tely known, but arson "·as suspected. 1\ i.:pokes rnan said the bulldtns's sixth floor contained rtCOTd5 of Army p.!rSOn· J1(·1 11 ho l\Cr\'ed prior to 1000. On the fifth noor. 1J1e :;pokcsn1.1u'I said, 11ri: records or N°ll\'Y personnel prlo{ to the M&mc dp.tc. '"\Vh11tcvcr Isn't burned is :i.s w~t as Scorecard on OC Fair can be," "Id Armr Col. Wttley C. Scarboroqb. Last Chance Army otnclalt In WaabJnctao uld many or the records slored al lhe spraw?rni center are not duplicated \VASIJlNCTON (AP) -The Senate elsewhere. \Vatergate oommlttee sent President "Some o{ them arc full rile copies of Nixon a lelter today tttat represents the Army personn~J. 11wsc are n o I last opJ)Ortunlty lor lhe White House to dupliated," said Col. Leonard Reed . provide voluntarlly papen the -panel Two firemen were hospltalind for wanu, committee sources 1&id. treatment of 11moke inhalation but ther' The com'mittee will vole to subpoena We re no other reports of injuries. the presidential paper!: if the Whitt The center, about 20 years old . con-ffouse turns down Chis last rcqul!St, the talns about 56 mlllion records of current sources said. Nixon last week rtfUHd to and former military persoonel, a tum over lhe papers. In the family Dome. She seeks" Joint cualody ol the _ eouple's so111. ages 14 .and 17. They abo have tWo adult daughters. , 1.; , ' ' County Health . military spokesman said. (The White House later said that Niron -sh H • h A nd Of about 2,000 employe5, onJy security o.11, P'11t1 •••tt ,.,... has agreed to meet ll IOIDe future tlme Ows lg tte ance guards and maintenance 'jj<r11C>nriel OC· with Sen. sam J . Ervln Jr., but dl!clared, cupied the bulldi.ng 1t the ._pre•1 onse t TAKES ART MUSEUM POST "lhe~ will be no change" in NJ1on 's re. Services Plan -Given :Go Ahead ~ Attendance at the Orange County fair C011tinues to exceed all expccle!lons. ac· cording to Fair ?.1nnager Jim Porl cr- fi eld . He said today the fair is 1no rc lhan 26,000 ahead of the same attendance per- iod last y~er. Total attendance for the fi rst six days of the fair Is 84,$24 up slgn lficantly from the tm turnstile count of 58.130. On a daily basis, !air attendan ce has been up JS-50 percent over last year. _Fair officials expected a boost in th e attendan ce again today ... Armed Force s: Day"~t the fair. All servicemen \\'ith identifldllion ere being admitted free. Freddy Martin, the man who made popular hits o u t of classical music. promises to be the big attraction tonight FromPqel shortly after mJdnlght. They escaped New Director Byrnes fu.sal to tum over the papers.) \ "'-'ilhout injury. The .sources aaid the comm(11ee'1 The Orange COunt,y llcalth PlaMing \\"hen he brings his band to the amphi-The center was sealid orr by federal seven aenators agree that pn attempt to Councll thil week wlll forward a heal~ thetitrr for an 8 p.m. pertormllnce. agents and military pe.rlOOllel after the N B l obtain the. presidential paper& must be · facilities and services master plan ~ Adm isi:;ion prices to the fair are $1.75 oulbreak of the fire. ewpo1·t eac I made, but lhat they hope to avoid lbe Sacramento, I.he first such docume ror adults. SI for children aged 6·12, and In Washington , 'the Anned Services constitutional confrontation that could ever' prepared for the county. ), frf."C ror child~n under six. 11·ere trying to piece together information A M G result if the White House were to attempt I . about the imp.act of the fire, but ea rly 1·t llSetlm -~tP 10 quash the subpoena in the court. The plan 'A'as adopted unanlmousl)I, Friday 11/gh ights of tltc fai r are: reports were only fragmentary because "-<..! •:" Rufus Edmiaten, a prinCipal aide to Tuesday night.-by the health council -Noon 10 3 p.m .. Beef showmanship, the fire was still reported out or control chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr . (0-N.C.), following pre~tatlon or amendment~ livestock area. in late mornlng. . Ne w D1·i·ector sald there was hope of a quick White outlined by Dr. Stanley van den Noor1 1 -All day, arts and crafts dcmonstra-It was clear, however. that there were House responae to the letter, nMsibJv. to-· ~ r ft ,..... " acting· dean of tfte UC Irvine College · ions. era s ;i rca. no duplicates for most or the records In day. i.1·~·-•--~ be h r · I -All day, qu ilting bee and homemak-lhe buJldlng. lrhich is operated by the James B. Byrnes ls the new direclor or The committee met for an hour ln "e\l.llal.le a.Ii' ~m r of t e ac11it ing fl'C:hniques. California Living Build-General ·Services Administration. the Newpo rt Harbo r Art f\.-luseuni. private this morning and scheduled a planning comwiittee of · the "county ing. Estin1ates of the number of records His appointment \\'as announced today second closed-doi:>r meellhg for the lunch--organization. -7 p.m .. Preservation of big bands. d' lh t r amphithea ter stage. !here were vague. but the Navy alone by Roberl Guggen heim. nc\vly elected eon rece13 to 1scuss e mat er o 11lose amendment! include : o 0 "-·· S i.~~. said it v.·as approximately 56 million .d C h . Bo d 1 pres idenli hl papers. The m e e t i n g s -A rive-year moratorium on increases -o p.m., range '-"'Ynty ympuvuic personnel and medical records. pres1 ent o t e mu sewn s er o bracketed the appearance before the Band, mall stage. Trustees.. committee ol former Alty. Gen. John N. in the count y inventory of ac ute general -8:15 p.m., speedway motorcycle rac-Byrnes comes to Newport Beach from t-.fitchell. · hospital beds or'nllning home beds. Thi( ing, grandstand. r'il> P~ P .. e J New Orleans where he has served as Both. t~ and special pros-language replaces an outright ID-yem ' dJredor ol that city's museum or art ecutor -Archibald "Ql1 have been ban on new hospital or nursing home C09; LAFC A ~ \l 'BLE ' . --0 pressuring the President lo modify his struct'·n Y;hich had been pro""·-in arr Pproves \..J'i. • • • r"nce ',962· u~ knoNew rle~ ... _mulseum tough stand against releasing preaid~n-IU .,,.._. .. • · . ' . onner y wa5 wn as ~M;': saac · iial papen.. «:_•:lier ma~t~ plan dr~t. _ __ ;---· . , lll<riiillves ·u OlllfQ!it:hi<i-tni~lved:---DelgadoJduseum_ ----r;--i:r-i:r---Ellffilhallon or an -references nine ---,t,-RA NSEAC-. . . New-Annexatio11----':~ua1 £!\!~can,!eciae to offer ..• ~~··1~;~~.:tt:·N~~~~;_ ~----. _ . _. ~-~lon..l2-!1'~lWc.~en11y ~OS«L_1.r:-11 Na lu lV, 1,079; (3) Sanderling IV, 1,158; \4 ) Neferti, 1,108; (5) Starwagon. 1,172. · --ihelr OWIT~ WI)' 1 company museum (or the past eight mon·ths, will F Htrr-Pjj.ffe-1 hospital beds would be dchce_9sed . No j T C -M may declde tou!kl 00 * cirr frcltfe;lle:, tin-become curator of special exhibitions. JTCHELL la\v provides ror such an action, van den CLASS C -(ll Koloh<. 1,138; (21 ·Tenacity, t,152; (3) Blue Streak, l,146; (4) Mltresas II , 1,173; (5) Ahsante, I,176. CLASS D - (I) Ariana, 1,152; (2) Illusion, 1,156: (3) Moon Day, 1,176: (4) Witchcraft . 11178; (5) Woodwynd, 1.202. 0 osta esa stead of one" t covers ve e el, a a Byrnes. a specialist lit 20th Century M . . . Noort noted. 10~.~;~ ::t.allo consider a city-owned art, studied painting at the National -ProvlsiOO ror updating or populaticin The 3.7-acre Ma!Chmeyer annexa tion to Costa Mesa was approved by the Local Agency Formation Commiss"lon Wed- nesday on its second lime arOWJd. 1be annex was disapproved last May 23. l can h lve lhe n""Ject ind Academy of Detlgn and later studied art about it." But he stuck to his asse rtion data to reflect changing needs of rapidly sys em, or we I e ,.. .. ,, history and archeology In Italy. He has .. hope to do better at• later time. taught at the University or Florida the thal the President never inquired about growing commun1t1cs. • Medical Library Computerized At Hoag Hospital A n~w medical library feature is now functioning al Hoag Memorial Hospital In Newport Beaeh· and 1 the way it works \\'Ould make the man who Invented the old Dewey Decimal System for hunting boob sit up and take notice. Medline is a computerized unit tied in with the giant Na"Uonal Library of Medicine in Washlnglon, D.C. through a terminal In each local hospital served by it. The facility allows hospital personnel lo get instant bibliographical l!Jlinp on any medical subject from about 1,200 current medical journals, just with !he push of a button. Basically, it makes it faster and easier for medical personnel to do their homework which may save or improve livts of patients. The $3.100 l\:tedline unit is the fil"1t in any Orange County hospital and both it and the required $300 library technician training program were gifts of Charles Hester. of 2711 E. Coast Highway , Corona del Mar. There arc 20 now in use throughout Callfomia . l{entis Rolled Back BERKEL EY \AP ) -t he Berkeley ci· ty council ha~ rolled back rents: to their Aueust. 1972 levels and frozen them there for 4S days. OU.N•I COAST (M DAILY PILOT -""Tl>t Ot.,._ C...-1 OAl\.T P'l\.OT, wllll """'"°' II ~ Ill• lll1W1°l"r"1, la lllllOlltlMod .,. MW Or ..... cet11 l"llDl!t111r'9 CotroiMn'J'. ~ •• ,. lllltlMt .... PllO!iJ"'9d. "'-., "'' ...... l""rlll1y, 19<" Ct"I M&11. Htwpef! I N(fl, H""ll"I.... l1KlllP'-.11lto Ylllty, Llo{llffll INCll. lrvlfttlS-.-tt -S.11 C...._ttt SM Jllln Ctlllt"-· A 11ntlt •-oloo\41 . tdl!IM It ""*'ltl'lloll $thl•H~t 11111 1-.~1. fhe "lf!ci991 M ll1Mnt Pll "I II ti JJO Wtl! lty !t'"'· (hi• """"· c.111 .... i., ·,,.,., •ob1rt N, Wttd "'"""'"' •l'tlll P'll001,.,., J1t• It. Cudey Vic.I "'IJlfl "I t n<I 1)-t.,.,tl M1111t ... 1'01'11 11 ICtt•il a11 ... lh•1r111 A. Mw,ph i"• "''"""" ••1i.. Ch11l11 H. l••t ltit:h••4 ,, Ntll Ai.a!llMI M-glnt l!lll!O" ----)JO W•it t1y Stt••f 'M1IU119 A44r•u r·,,.O. I•• 1160, .. 2626 --,.,.,..., hteill: »W ,,.~, • ..,....... ' LffllM •Md!! m """' ,,_ ._ Hvfol;r,f*" a114111 11"J IHCll ......... ,. lift C*°"""'Ptr Jh lffrl!'I I I C.n\lftt llMI TMtllli•• (71 41 Ml -4Jl l Cl ......... _,. .. •41·t•7t ,...,,.,.,. '"" Orenot C..11 "'*41t!illlt °"'""""· llf• ,,... ,,.,,.,. mwtr•"*M, ttltwi.I IMltW W ......... _,. ll9tllli _, N-~ Wlfllwl -ltl •• ll'llMltfl ti ~I ,..,,.,, htW tl•·~l"tl9 .. C.I• MtM, "9ttt.rftr.., . .. tt,,lt, Q,61 ~1¥1 1W ""' a ,11 ~"'' ll'lltll9r• ..,1 ... , ......... IMft!llfy, .. Principal objeetion at that lime was Crom lhc county Airport CommJssloo. It complained that the property waa under the Oranae County Ait.port noise zone and condominium development planned there was not compatible -with jet flighta. That objectlon was ~ypa!lled Wed- nesday through !he promJse lo grant an eatemtnt to the county by the property owner, A. ff. f\faschmeyer. Attorney Don Atkimon. represtntlng 1be landowner, said the property Is in poor condition now wilh debris and old cart on ll and that annezaUon of thl.! a~e would allow other nearby prop- erties to annex to the city, BOmethlng he said the owners dealred. Gosta Me!a PlaMlng Director Wllllam Dunn backed the annexati on on behalf of the-City. l\1aschmeycr said he planned to build condominiums, but i( the merger with Cos ta .. ~1esa was denied he would builrl apaflmenls as allowed under a va riance he got from the county Planning Com- mision last October. The annex ~·as approved subject to the easemcnl which protects lhc couoty from future lawsuits over jet noise by residents of the property. Colleg e . District Gets $1 Million Budge t 'Boost' Governor Reagan ·s slg ning of lh:e ne\v community college appropriations bill has prOvided trustees of the Coast Com- munity College District with an exlra SI 1nilllon with which to balance the budget. The measu re. known as Senate Biii 6. actually shirts an additional $2 million lo Golden West and Orange Coa!t Collegc. but it also curtails the district's taxing Power by about SI million, meaning • net revenu e gain of $1 n1llllon, dlatrlct of- ficials saJd. For property owners Jn the district, ap. proval of SB 6 wlU mean a reduction In the lax rate from 83 cents to II cents pe r $100 assessed valu:ilion . 'T'rustees appc?are<t gratified by the ln- ('rc11sed revenue rronl state sources and nn additional $190.000 provided by lhc federal government for lhe cduc&tlon or \•cter:ins. Both will help balanct the dil•tricl's proposed $37.G mlltlou budge!. Trustees ori11inally feared l'I $600,000 dcf1cit bec111use the fonner 11yste111 or oomn1unily co llege apportionn1c1u would no~ h1:tve satistlcd dlslrlct needs. However. Dr. Correllan Thon1pson, lhe dlstricl"s vice chancellor of business af- f&irs1 rJllnlndcd lhc bonrd that a five per- cent enrollment lncrrase 11111 wlll be ncedt'd 10 obtain 1111 the slate-aid runds requlrt<l to put tht budget In the black. F.nrollmcnt forecasts lndicnte a district wide dcclln_, of two percent. Olstrict ad- minist rators earlier thla year vowed lo ''beat the bushes" for odd!Uortnl 1tudents to boost nid paymtnta. 1'he budgel, authoritcd for publication ~·ednesday nl1ht, Is up about 19.2 million over Jas1 ye~r·s expenditures of *28.4 milltvn, "If I'm going to be absolutely honest, 1 University or Southern California ·and the matter of Mitchell, who had been his -Allowance for cities bisected by must say I'm pessimistic thl'.l_t we will get 1\Jlane University attomey general and his campalgn direc-hoapllal service or health planning are~ more than the one bJd," he told director•. . · • to share population! or bed lnventorie& No action was taken by the board, ~e began his prores.slonal career at the tor. when planning or reassessing needs ror which will wait until Its Aug. SI meeting or1glnal Los An geles County Museum Dash ask ed a long series ol questions improved ho3pltal or health c"are servi~. before mapping any further plans. where he served as curator ol modem about the extent of Mitchell 's active in· The last two points specifically aUow Coast Colleges' Employes to. Get Salary Hikes and contemporary art. \Vhile !here he voJ,·ement in the Watergate coverup. the new clfy of Jrvlne nexlbility to wo~k purchiaed for the museum colleclion one reeeiving mostly denlals as answers. with the county health planning council Uf · . planning the ran1e of health racllltlcs of the first ~lnhngs by. Jackson Pollock ?o.fitchell said he never heard any and services the resldents of the 4J- to be placed in en Amer1c8!1 museum. discussions about the poulbillty of ta~ square mile city feel they need. , Byrnes also has been director or the ping the Central Intelligtnce Agency for \\'hile 30,t*I people presently live in the, North Carolina ?o.1useum o_f Art a~ dlrec-· city, a cttiuns oroanizatlon from Jrvlne lor of the Colorado Springs Fin~ Arts money to support lbc Watergate defen--Help Irvine Gei Hospitals {HIGH) - CCn.ter. . dan ts or pay their bail. .told health council member!, they Ills "·Uc. Barbare. has. ser1ved as d1rec-He said he never hea rd about any im-foresee 8 clty population in 19113 whlcll tot of the Jazz Museum in New Orleans. proper approoche3 to U.S. District. Judie woul d justtry licensing of t"'"-o medium , Charles Richey, who Is presldlnr in the size hospitals. About 1,000 empklyes at Golden West Democratic Party's '8.4·mllllon lawsuit " and Orange Coast Colleae, rrom physics ~~ for damages stemming from Wateraate. leachers to janitor, will face the higher He conceded that Haldeman and boa d '\It'! Ehrllchman had shared his "active con-eost o( living with across-tl1e-r • a \ cern" that Nixon not be told about EXPLOSION ·salary increases of 6.2 percent. .... ·'WhUc Hause horrors" that MJtchell said • • • ,,. Trustees of the Coast Community II" .... daf he wanted kep t secret. • From Page l College District authorized the 1973·74 in-ca'e•. But he denied detailed knowledge of I.A Id In dd'u'on"lo I rations SUS. ii \rhat Haldeman and Ehrlichman had Suvu ers, a 1 ace · · creases Wednesday night and justified ' 1 · -• b bel I blasted lhrough !he been doing about it, saying he rtrst learn-11neu Y n ' them on the basis of Bureau of Labor cd of their alleged actions when be heard debris. Statistics predictions of a 6.2 percent cost TONIGHT testimony before the Senate committee. Name$ of .be dutroyed boat moored at or Jiving increase in the Los Angeles COUNTY FA IR JflGH.LIGHiS -Fred-"I've heard more from teJtimorly up ~ 201 E. Coa1t Highway and the Linda Isle .. area. dy l\fartin & Orchestra. 8 p.m. U.S. here than I knew at the particular tlme," residents who teecued the victim v-ere:: r I. · kage eludes f\1arin e Flag Pageant. 6 and 8 p.n1. he said. • The cost-0 -iving pac ex '"ADRIENNE"S SUMMER" _ South On the Ri chey matter, Mitchell aald he not immediately available. raises fot merit or longevity earned by Coast Repertory Theater, through Sun. 8 had parUclpated In a number of lhe employes. Theoretically, the boost p.m. discu!slons \\•ith Roemer McPhee, a only allows the workers to keep up ~·ith FRIDAY, JULY 13 Washington lawyer who Dean says made Beer Heir Sentenced increased consumer prices. COUNTY FAIR lflGHLIGHTS out-of~ contacts with the judge. But Original budget calculations for the Junior Horse Show -All Day, Orange i\.lllchell said ltfcPhee merely offered his SAN JOSE (AP) -Carl A. MIUer, 29, Id be Coun ty Symphonic Band, 8 p.m. oplnloo! about how Ri chey would act, heir to !he Aliller Bre'A'ing Co. fortune, district indicated that no money wou MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY RACING based on a long friendship with the j~e bl d · he 197°7< fl I has been sentenced to a l&IHlay jail term svalla e urtng I ~ sea year -Fairgrounds, 8: 15 p.m. and not on any Improper conlacts h for cost-of.Jiving increases. CONCERT IN THE PARK -1'ree him. He said I! McPhet made Improper after pl eading guilty to misdemeanor However, Governor Reagan's signing , ;:;F:"'==:';' "=Co=s=la=M~•;:;'":=::C=il~y~P=a=rk=·~8~p.=m=.===c=on"t=ac=t=s =h"e=d=ld=n='l=l=el=l=M;l=tc::h"=el::;l.====='="=lo=th"e=fl=.==========i of !he new communlty college ap-11 propriations bill (SB 6) Wednesday gave the di strict additional revenue with which to make the payments . College district Chancel/or Nonnan E'. Watson said the 6.2 pcroonl \vage package Include! four-tenths of one per- cent in frtn1e benefits and 5.6 percent In actual sa lary incraa.sea. The cost or the overall package to LIM dlslrict Is $950,000. Negollallons ror the wage hike ~·ere conducted quietly and without dlapute, ac- cording to spokesmen for employe groupt and lhe administration. Keene El ected Cl1ief of Coast College Trustees \Vorth l<eenc, retired Posttn11~1er of Seal Bench, Wednesday night was elected pr!!l:\dcnt or the Coost Community College District Board of Trustcts. The 54-ycar-old Keene took over leadership or the two campu• district from \Yilllam Kettler of 1lunllnaton Beach. who had terved as board presi- dtnt for the paat year. Kt!fnt, or 233 lflth St .. has &etyed <1n the board for the past 12 years. lfi"len.r- cd as prnldent or the fi ve-man pant! in t96M9 ond Jn . J!JGS-54. E1rlier this yc11r he was re--clected to his fourth rour-yea r Nobody Sells GE Refrigeraton For Less Than ADD A GE AUTOMATIC "LOW PRICES ICEMAKER ARE •ORN HERE·· NOW OR LATER RAISED ELSEWHERE" 14.1 (U. ''· .. ,.0-l'llOSl a l:l'lt IOl!:llA TOll_,lt l!l.tl!I SAVE 8JG 11.a C\I, l'T. "MWllon" ll l fllttOl lUof'Ott_,lla1U1t ~ ~ CALL DUNLAP Rcnected In the inc.rea&e are l9JO.OOO for cost-of-living lncrtaJe,11 for rmploye1 And more thnn ~ mllllon In new con- strue.lion, mainly at Orange CoaJt CoU<gc Jn ll<>sta Mcu . The budgtt ls · 1alleduled for adoption A~g. 1 following a public hearing. te rm on the board of trustees. . Chosen vtce president, Wednesday night, 'll'RI trustee Donald G. Jloff, c:I \Vestmlnster. · ' · Coast C.Ommunity C:Ollcgo ll\11tee11 govern tho aflalrs of Oran(e C..11 •nd Golden WeSl Colleges. Author Ind G! SERVIC! e WE TAKE 543·7788 TRADE-INS 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. . Downtown Costa Mesa -Pit 548-7788 \ ' 7 •