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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-08-14 - Orange Coast PilotI .Netv Eridenee • • ID Slager~s Cabin - \ r . . • Newport Coun~il Hours Threatens Suit • Iv " On A ,ndrea Doria On Coast Control • .. . DAILY PILOT * * * 10 < * * * TUESDAY AFTERNoON, AUGUST 14, • 1.973 VOL. ... NO .. IN; 2 s•CTIC*I, •• ~M•s The Circ'lis· is Btt.e Elephant fro;,, Ripguftg_ Bros. B~rnum _ml"' Bailey. Circus greets one , o! his fans ·after stepping ·Off Cll'CUs train In Anahmm. The 103rd ed1· tjon of the lamed circus arrived In Orange Cou~ty Monday and J>3· raded to the Anaheim Convention Center where ti will ·he appeanng .J ~or the next week. ' More Texas Grave Sites Possi~le, Sh~~iff ~ays .. HOUSTON (Ul'I) -An East Tetas sheriff said today n hand-scrawled map of qossible new gravesltes and ''many other items of eviderice" had been found in a cabin used by a homosexual bechelor accused ol killing at leqst 17 young boys in th<! worst mass murder tn,m<Klern U.S. his«>r.y. SM Augustine County Sherif! John lloyt said the map pinpcinted several locations in the San Jacinto National Forest In southeast Texar; • "111e sherllf would not say Lr o!Ucers would 6egln digging ror more bodies In the map area. · "l'm_not-trying to be evasive," he SJld. "But we just don't know yet whetlier we have iood evidence or bad evidence." HoYt, in !Joos«>n to oonrer with Texas Rangm on the case, said the map, shovels, a sheath or plastic body bags, three pairs or gloves -one tinted with lime -and a partially used sack or !SO. BODIES, Pap I) I • • 1es Ill ' , ' •vieti•••~ Colleets Bandit Loses $1 • Muffed Heist .. , .. A HUNTINGTON BEACH sandwich shop owner matched wits with an armed robber Monday and came out ahead by $1, police reported today. The supposed victim of the 7 p.m. heist was Donald New· berry, 42, owner of the shop at 17091 Newland Street. Police said a man gave Newberry one dollar and asked for change. But when the shop owner opened the cash register to oblige, be found himself looking down the barrel . of a revolver. "DUCK," YELLED Newberry as he hit the deck behind the counter and scrambled into the nearby storeroom. The alarm was shouted tQ shop employes and patrons \vho either called police or ran outside in time to see the would be ban· dit jump Into an 'old yellow pickup truck and speed of!. THE POLICE REPORT concludes, "The victim has no furlh· er information at this time other than he got the suspect' s dollar but the suspect got no money from him.'' Newport .Beach Council Threatens Zoning Lawsuit By JOHN ZALLER • ca. ... 'OIUy .. ,Ult tt.., ~ A ~aiority. of'N.;.p.rt Beach co cilmen said Monday they're thinking r suing the Oalifornla coastal Zone Conservation Commission for alleged "usurpation ol. local' authority." But ' councilmen said they probably won't press a lawsuit unlesS the coastal commission continues in what they see as threats to Jocal authority. , Mayor DonaJd Mcinnis brought up the subject at an arternoon study sessiort councilmen were attempting to come to terms · with stiff new parking re- quirements imposed ·by the· South r.oast Reglooal 1.ooe Conservation Commission. "We're the ones who should decide how many parking spaces a development needs," Mcinnis ·said. "We're gtven that power by the State of Califorrua1" he said, "yet it ls the coutal commlsslon tha( Is exercising that power ·and nobody bas yet challeng· eel the coastal commission." Newport Beach ls angry because it re- qujr.. only two parking spaces for a duplex while the coastal commission has rerused to approve duplexes in the city unlesa they have four o£f·street spaces. The mnyor's strong remarks brought an Immediate response from Councilman Richard Croul. "Let's challenge it ourselves," Crout said. Mcinnis, Vice Mayor Howard Jlogers and Crout all oppcsed propo$ltion 2o last November, when it went before the v.oters. . Support [or a lawsuit also came from Councilman Paul Ryckoff, who did sup- port Proposition 20 last bl'ovember. "We're faced with a situation where we have to bastardize our structures in order .. to meet the coastal commission's requirement that we have two parking spaces for each living unit," Ryckolf complained. '~Th.is . concerns me very much." Mayor ~fclnnis then made· anot her reference to a possible lawsuit. ''I don't know bow far the coastal commission should be allowed to go without a ch&Uenge. Somewhere there's a line, and when It 's crossed, you have to consider legal remedies to protect yourself." NICKEL CRIME, NICKEL FINE ' .. ROCKLAND, Maine (AP) -"It was a five--cent crime and deserved a five-cent fine," District Court Judge Paul A. ~tacDonaJd sald. He slapped the nickel penalty on James V. Peters, 20, niter the youth pl•aded guilty Monday to littering a street with a soda bottle cap. The judge said the pclice went «>o far in bringing such a case to court. ,, -·ew ' . • _.., NIGHT TO REMEMBER Laguna's Ruth Roman Actress Recalls Last Momen.ts On A1idrea Doria By JACK CHAPPELL Of ~ Daltr f'li.t S'9tf It was the last nfght of' a gala Europe- to-.America cruise as the graceful Ital· ian ocean liner Andrea Doria lmi£ed through leaden waters on her way to' disas ter. In the main ballroom, the orchestra played "Arrivederci Roman " and the lights of the glit teri ng ship fell dead into a shroud of fog. Actress Ruth Roman, a Laguna Beach resident, was returning to the states aboard the Andrea Doria that July 25, 1956. Ne\vs today of the daring attempts to salvage the $2.5 million or jewels and valuables in the ship's sa[e brings back memories for Miss Rol1)3D. ''I think I got the most valuable thing. That is n1y son. Well, you know, the · material things you ca1.1 regain," Miss Roman said today. J\1iss Roman has performed i n numerous motion pictures and television productions. lier more than 80 motion pictures include "The Champion," "The \Vindow," and two horror pictures about to be released now. Television produc· tlons include "Ironside," "Gunsmoke," and "Mod Squ9d" guest star appet1r· anccs. As for mat~ial vahoables. Miss (See RECALLS, Page ll Child Fell futo Pool At Home The 3-year-old 90ll of fom>er Orange County Coogressmsn John G. Schmitz died this morning in Hoag Memorial Hospital, Newpcrt Beach. The child of the one-time presidential hope.ful fell into the family poor MondaY afternOOh. · Phillip James Schmitz was treated in the hospital intensive care unit from shortly after 4 p.m. Monday. He had been rushed there by Newport Beach Police helicopter. Schmitz and his wife kept a sleepless vigil through the night at the hospital. Newport Beach police and firemen, called to tfie Schmitz home at 10 Mission Bay in Spyglass Hill shortly before .{ p.m. Monday, said the caller believed the child had drowned. "He was not breathing, He had no heartbeat," police said. Newport Beach firemen began ad· ministering heart massage and oxygen. Police Officer Hurd Annstrong arrived moments later and called for the police helicopter, which landed in the street in front of the Schmitz home and rushed the (See SCIJMlTZ, Page I) Orange Coast Weli.iller Little temperature change is ex· pected for the Orange Coast \Vednesday, with the usual low clouds and fog holding-down beach temperatures to 68. Highs inland expected in the upper 80s. INSWE TODAY Joseph P. Kennedy 111, son of the late Sen. RobeTt F. Ktn·ntdy, mi&sed a curoe on Nantucket l s· land f,\tul •fltpp<<I his jeep, seri- ously injuring one of five girla i11 the vehicle and his broihtr, David. See story, Page 4. L.M. tey• tt In ltnlc• rt a .. tlnt tt An• LMflrs tf CtHkrnlt S. 11 MtriM 19 Cl•ull!M H·• Mututl ,..,..._ 1t Ctlftlc1 11 NtH-1 M-f C~twt,.. 1t Or•11t• c.-y 1 DNlll frMtk.. I ,.,,. ''°'' Edltorl11 J1•1• ' 119<11 Mfttlttl •tt lnttt11lnmtn.I If TtlnlNM • JllMMI t•ll T"'i.tw It •JlfW , .... llttt..... ,.. • .. ....., • MWfl(fH II WMIM'1 ...... 1loll ...... ...... 4 • ' I ' I, . :l D~!LY PILOT s TucMl,y, Au gust 14, 1973 Doria Work Stymied Broken Cable Halts Search for Treasure FAIRHAVEN, Mass. (UPI) -More problems have beset an underwater e-i· podlUon which hoped to salvage riches lnim the sunken liner Aadrea Doria - and its success appears in jeopardy. Two former Navy aquanauts \\'Cre forced Monday to dela)' their attempt to penetrate the purser's olfice of !he ship, which rests 250 feel below the surface of the Atlantic Ocean, because a cable became entangled and broke. Repairing the I II-inch s1etl cord wrn interrupt salvage operations for an undetennined amount of time, according to crewmen on the support. ship Nar· ragansett. One support diver, David Lejeun of Philadelphia. said the salvage expedition prQbBbly will be discontinued by Thurs- day whether or not valuables can be recove red by then. Many participants are Shot in Shoulder on leave from the Navy and have to return this week, he said. In an effort to speed the expedition, a third diver, Robert Hollis of Hayward, Ca.Hf., joined the team of Donald Rodock· er and Christopher DeLucebl. both ol San Diego, at the ocean bottom Monday, \~r'herc they are living In an underwater habitat. The trio are trying to recover some $1 .l million in cash and almost as much in jewelry, art objects and other valuables -most of. which are believed still in the purser's office. The Andrea Dorta sank July 26, 1956, after it collided with the Swedish vessel Stockholm . AU previous attempts to salvage valuables from the wreck failed . Lejeun noted that th&-weather is ex- pected to turn seas choppy in future weeks, and make salvage work increas· ingly difficult. Bob c.olfey, aoother diver aboard the Narragansett, said Rodocker and DeLuc- cht were in I he pl"OCtss o( cutting Into lhe purser's office Monday when a cord at- tached to an acetylene torch they were using to cut away t\.YO steel doors was moved by ocean currents. It \vrapped around an artificial forward runnel on the vessel, which he called a "smokestack." "It will only take about a half hour to repair once \\'e get it up," Coffey said, ''but the job is clearing it and bringing It up. It's still tangled." Coffey said mor(lle was "still super," despite the fact that "we've had so many problems. we're getting used to it." The enture already ls almost two \\'eeks behind schedu1e, with much of the difficulty resuJting from mechanical pro!> lems and weather. Some $250,000 reportedly has been spent so far on the expedition. From Pagel 'Love Triangw' Victim RECALLS ... Roman doesn't expect to get any of her jewelry back from the hulk of the Andrea Doria. Since it was the last night, her valuables had been removed from the purser's safe and were packed in a suit- case stowed away in her state room. Scheduled for Surgery She had been returning from Europe where she had intended to live permanently but changed her mind. Most of her valuables were on board, she said. By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 !tit o-1 ly PU.t St•ff ·A. Huntington Beach man , who police believe is the victim of a love triangle shooting, is expected to undergo surgery today at Orange County Medical Center. Donald Joseph Beaulieu, 39, of 6200 Edinger Ave. was allegedJy shot in the shoulder with a .38-caliber revolver as he struggled with Ramey Ray Stroud, 26, of 15672 Swan Lane. Police booked Stroud on attempted murder charges but said today they are still trying to piece together the incidents More Outhouse Blazes Reported In Irvine Area The Orange Qiunty Fire De2artment is investigating three outhouse fires that took place Monday night in two Irvine construction areas. · The latest instances of suspected arson brought the tota1 of such fires to eight since Friday night. Bill Brookshanks, fire department arson investigator, is handling the cases, which Costa Mesa police first theorized were a "bunch of kids out on a Friday night." Two portable wooden toilets owned by Retail Chemical Toilet Distributors in an open area at Walnut and Myford Avenues were burned Monday night. Crookshanks said he found traces of gasoline at the site. A similar wooden toilet valued at $200 was set on fire nearby in the 17400 block of Daimler Street. It is owned by the United sanitation Company. From Pagel SCHMITZ .•. youth to the hospital. Mrs. Schmitz said she does not know for sure how long Phillip had been in the water. "I took his lifejacket off so he could go to the bathroom," Mrs. Schmitz said. "No one saw hlm go back outside or get into the pooL" She said he cou1d have climbed or fallen into the pool during a IO-minute period while she was in the house, but she said her older children, Jerry, 14, and Mary Kay , 11, were in the. pool all the time and didn 't notice Phillip. "We were all there," she said. "J don 't 1cnml how it cou1d have happened." Mrs. Schmitz sald the pool in the family's new home had been completed only Thursday. 01.ANGI COAST ST DAILY PILOT TM Or•,,_.. CO-•f OAILY PILOT, with w!tldl It eom91Md th• N•-Prtu. IJ Pl>bllVl.i bV .,,. Or•l!O• Co.II Pv11n.ii1n9 (Ompl"'· s.,. rai. WU!oflt •r• PVllHlflfd, Mtlt!d9V lh"°"""' Fr!Hy, !Or Cot!f Mtu, Nirwporl lll•dl. Mlll'lflf!lllon llttth/F-tt ln V•lltf, LtOVM ... ch, 11'1nt /S!Kldl9'1tdl; .,.., s.tn Cllomt"lt/ Stn Jll'n C1pl1tr1f'IO, A tl"'fl9 ...Olonll1 ldltlOn 11 pU(llbMd ktvrdt" •l'ld SllM•~•· Tflt prlnclpol pV111l.t!l111t pWont It. ti »O Wt1! 9ty Slrl'ft, Cotti MtM, C..lltol'P1111, ._,.. Rolt•rf N. w •• d PrMkll'lll •rid Pulllltll• J•tk R. Cvrl•v Vkt "'"~ "''4 c;e,...r•I ~ lko~•t K•••il Editor llloll'!lal A. Murpliil'" MaMflllf Edl!OI'' Ck•~•• H. Looi IUcll•ul ·P. N,lj AHl1t1n1 M•fM.flnt EdllOrl COit• M-: no w-:!.:,'J '''"' H...,.,., 1.-cll: U»'" 9-ltWIN Lafllftll IHdl: m For•I AYtl'lllt MllNflPlllOll'~, 1"7t 9Mdl ltOlll••trt "" Clemtllflll "" Hof"fh fl ,.,..ltio .... Ttl ...... l714) '4J ... JJ1 a..lfiW ......... MJ.1671 ,._ C:-1•1 ,.,... '""' .. ~ ·~ 4tJ-4420 ,,..,.. _. Or._ ~ C.m""iMf!M _, .. , C...,,.-itf'!I, 1m,. Onno-Co.ta! l'!Aolltftlllie (_ft,,, Ho .....,... 11tr1M. ll!wtr•'""'· ldlfttllil INttfr W ... -11o-...,.In ..... .,. .. ·~-"'""*'' .... 1 -f'll$tloPI "' ffl'Y!'ltfll ·-. ~ ti••• ~ Nllll •I Cotti Mn>t. C.llfOnll•. ~""' .., , •• ,.., u ... -ltlt\'1 ..,. INll U.11 """ltllY/ !'fll!l'9Tf #HllftlllioN "·" !Mlll'll'(. that Jed to the shooting in Stroud's home at 12:30 a.m. today. Both Stroud and his wife, Sallie Margaret Stroud, also 26, have refused to talk to investigators:. According to Beaulieu, he had been dating Mrs. Stroud for the past few months. He told officers he believed she · had been divorced for two years. He told police that he was visiting Mrs. Stroud late Monday night when Stroud walked in the house. According to Beau1ieu's police state· ment, he thought at first the man was his girl friend's brother but she told him, "That's my husband, Ray." Stroud allegedly had the gun in his hand and Beau1ieu. who is a Loo Angeles fireman, lunged toward Stroud to get the gun away. Even though he was shot, Beaulieu said he managed to ge t the gun from the hus- band while Mrs. Stroud called officers. The first policemen on the scene reported they found Mrs. Stroud tending Beaulieu's wound and Stroud lying face down on the Door with his hands crossed behind him as if he were handcuffed. From Page l BODIES ... quicklime were found at the cabin near Lake Sam Rayburn owned by the father of Dean Allen Corll, 33. Most of the bodies found a;t three loca· lioos in Texas were wrapped in plastic bags and sprinkled with lime. "The map centers on the New Waverly-Huntsville area and we're going to be checking it out," Hoyt said. Houstoo Police Chief Herman Short disclosed Monday that a "torture board" -the Item alJegedly used by CorlJ to sh·ap his victims to torture and kill them -was found in the cabin. All the victims were teenage boys allegedly procured by Elmer Wayne Henley, 17, and David Owen Brooks, 18, for Corll. Henley has admitted taking part in the torture, sexual abuse, murder and burial of some of the victims. Brooks said he helped Corll and Henley bury some victims but said be was not involved in the actual killings. Sherill's deputies recovered four bodies 1\fonday on the beach east of Galveston, raising the number of victims to 'll. Officers indicated after the digging ~fonday that the four bodies recovered on the beach lvould be the last found there . ';We \Yill not do any more work today in Chambers County unless there is new information arising," Chambers County Sheri[f Louis Otter said . The four bodies were unearthed in the Chambers County resort of High Island as spectators including bikini-clad girls watched. The first grave found Monday actually \Vas discovered by a truck driver poking the beach with a stick Sunday night. "When I brought the stick up, it had a bad odor," George Leger said. Jewelry included a diamond -ring, a diamond bracelet, earrings, and a pearl necklace. Valuable furs are lost forever, she said. "I just thank God for that Italian sailor who took Richard over the side, strapped to his back," she said. While her son and hi!! nurse were rescued by the "Stockholm," Miss Roman remained aboard the stricken luxury liner to be picked up by a French passenger liner. "I just sat there. I was on the grand stairway. You cou1d hear the ship moan. It was a pretty sad sound," she said. Miss Roman was one of the Jast to leave the Italian ship. Fifty~e persons died in the collision between Andrea Doria and the Stockholm. ~fost or those victims died in the initial ramming of the Andrea Doria. The ship was struck on the starboard side just back from the bow. "She went over almost immediately after she was hit. Now, they claim that if the Stockholm had stuck in her and not pulled out they cou1d have towed them tx>th back. I guess it's like a knife wound, when you pull out that's the end of it," Miss Roman said. The collision occurred al about 11 p.m. and the boat sank the following morning at about 7 a.m., Miss Roman recalled. "I watched it go down. "The thing that I always think about the Andrea Doria, you know, when I th ink of it lying do\Yn there, was that. they had a great, oh. a large statue of Andrea Doria. It must have weighed tons and tons, I don't know whether it was marble or grani te or what it was. "But, it must be a pretty eerie sight down there. I have the feeling that it would be intact. · "There'd be a few barnacles and everything on it. I think those divers, if they get any shots of that you know, it should be pretty eerie silently standing there." Senate Approves Scl1ool Auditing SACRAMENTO (AP) -State auditors could look over the books of local school districts to make sure state money under special grants is being spent properly un- der two bills approved by the st ate Senate. '111e measures by state Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R-Newport Bea.ch), went to the Assembly Monday on identical 29 lo 9 votes. One names the state Department of Finance to conduct the audits and the other specifies the state C<Jntroller. He introduced the double-barrelled ap- proach in an effort to get his bills through the Assembly Ways and Means Committee, w~e similar legislation died last year. rpenter said. The bills are S 17 and SB 18. Re~ord Stands Cliicago Man Killed 200 Girls NEW YORK (UPI) -Herman Webster Mudgett, a one·time medical student, may have been the most lnfa1nous mass murderer of all. Eighty years ago, he was accused of killing more than 200 women and burying their bodies in his Chicago basement. According to the recently published book "Bloodletters and Badmen," by Jay Robert Nash, Mudgett was born in Germantown, N.H., and studied medicine at Ann Arbor, Mich. Mudgett, according to the book . lured to his house scores of women, mostly you ng girls he hired as "secretary-typists," got them to sign over assets and insurance policies to him and then killed them with lethal gas. In 1894, after the house had been burned and boarded up, Chicago police entered th e building and found the remains of over 200 corpses in the basement, Nash said. Mudgett confessed lo 27 murders in interviews with news- men but later recanted and said he was responsible for only two deaths. He was executed May 7, 18116 for the murder of a petty thief. • '· UPI T-1tPl'!Ott, Che11tical Plant it• Flatttes Smoke billows from the Mallinckrodt Chemical Company plant in Lodi, N.J., after an explosion ripped through the plant this morning, At least sev· en workers were injured. five of them critically. Irvine Company Directors Meet, Delay Naming Chief Laguna 'T empl.e' Gets T e1itative Safety Approval \ Irvine C.Ompany directors met briefly today but did not elect a sue<:essor to late company president William R. Mason. Board Chairman , John V. Ne\vman, told company spokesmen, "The board did not formally address the question of a new president at the August meeting." The board met in Newport Beach cor- porate headquarters at 9:45 a.m. today. 'The agenda was limited to several rootine administrative matters requiring board action a this time ," the spokesm an said. Directors adjourned in memory of 11r. Mason who died suddenly last month at the age or 54. He \Vas president of the ranching and land development firm since 1965 and bad served the finn since 1959. Since Mason's death, Executi\'e Vice President Raymond L. Watson has serv· ed as chief executive officer of the firm . Newman, who appointed Watson to the acting leadership post, today praised Watson and the company management "for the continuing effectiveness of the company operations despite the serious corporate and personal sense of loss at the death of Mr. Mason." There was no word from the company explaining the delay in selecting a suc- cessor or a replacement for Mason on the seven-member board of directors. Newman was elected chairman of the board at the June company stockholders meeting when perstlnat tax adviser to the Tricia Backs Father WASHINGTON (AP ) -Tricia Nixon Cox was quoted today as saying "l know my father will never give up the tapes because that would be something that is completely alien to our system of govern· ment." late James Irvine, N. Loyall McLaren retired· from the company board at the age of 81. A Clarement man, Howard Allen , was elected to fill that vacancy on the board. Others serving .on the company board are Mrs. Alhelle (Joan) Irvine Smith of ~1iddleburg, Va. and Emerald Bay,' Watson, Easl bluf!, Charles S. Wheeler, secretarY, of Newport Beach and M. Keith Gaede of Laguna Beach. The company spokesman declined to discuss the precise nature of the ad- ministrative matters being oonsidered to- day other than to indicate they involved board ratification of rn an age men t ~ecisions possibly related to sales of land. First Money, Tlien Clotlies DETROIT (AP) -Wearing only a shirt around his waist to keep him wann, a semi·nude. off-duty Wayne County sheriff's deputy was rescued from a phone booth by Detroit police. Deputy Lewis W. Thompson, 38, told police he had picked up three unidentified persons -two women and a man -while cruising around the city in his private car at 3 a.m. He said the trio stole his three ,pistols and wallet at gunpoint , forc- ed him to remove his pants and underwear and then expelled him from his car. The deputy did not explain where he got the dime to call for help. Laguna Beach's freestyle tempi~ kno'l\•n as Love Animals, Don't Eat Thero may be of{ the hook today on fire code violations which earlier caused city of. . ficials to threatefl to board up the place. That was the latest report from City Manager A1 Thea!. He met Mooday with Jim Roberts, proprietor or the one.time health food restaurant. They discussed fire code violations. "They're proceeding \vith those things and hope to have them completed by Fri· day," The al said. Another inspection ot Love Animals, 782 S. Coast Highway, then would be conducted by Jim Winter, senior building official, Theal ooted. ' "They're willing to go ahead and com. plete the work. It looks ptttty good," thO city manager added. • Followers of Love Animals, according to Curtis Reed, plan to remain at the mf.. orful outpost until Sep!. 22 when the group is leaving I.aguna Beach, caravar\ style. They are departing the Art Colooy iii return !or dismissal of 30 misdemeanor charges by the Orange County District Attorney's Office. City officials and Love Animal• followers have been haggling over the fire hazards since last Tuesday when the city ordered the immediate dangers cleared up within 24 hours. Huge Pay Hike Bogs ' I SACRAMENTO (AP ) -A plan to hik~ the California governor's pay $10,900 f year bogged down in its first committ~ test Monday when a move was sugge!ltc to lag on a salary increase for the t state legislators. "It's the wrong time•! the author, Assemblyman W i 11 i a;,;:: Bagley (R-5an Rafael), said ol the'. legislative pay hike proposal. ' A LICENSE NOT TO STEAL- Unfortunately for the general public , there are a lot of people installing carpeting who shouldn't be. Unbelievably, many carpet 11contractor'11 are working unlawfully without insurance end stale licenses. FOR YOUR PROTECTION you sh ould insist that the people who install your carpeting work for a contractor who is I NSUREO and STATE LICENSED. (He is require~ by state law to be both.) State ficensed contractors have to post a bond for your protection, end the very accomplishment of licensing indicates • degree of competency. The biggest problem in dealing with an unlicensed contractor is that he might be' out of business tomorrow. Don't take a chance -call Ald en's for reliability, and the best installation around! ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. Tllru Thom., 9 11 5:30 -FRI., 9 to t -SAT., 9:30 II 5 " , , I ' I I I I I I I I Tuesd.-y, August 14, 1973 s DAIL V PILOT 3 . Wife Slain; Hushalld Nabs Suspect °JVixon Log: §ignings ~. --Of Times ,, ORBA LINDA (UPI) -The leather 1*md guest regts\er outside the small, wlllte frame house oo a back street here i.lla a story. ' JI ts the -house where Richord Nixon was born. 'l11e guest register Is put ou t tw those vbltors to the site who want to tave their names behind. It is now the Jitiime <i a maintenance man for a nearby Mlhool. The Nixon Birthplace Foundation put.a out the guest book in a converted telephone booth on weekends. It cootalrt! about 1,200 signatures now. Remarks late last Year and early this year ran to such as: .~. 29 -••You're.great, Nizon." .;Man:b 4 -"Thank God for Mr. Nix· dli." • • • I UP.IT.._...,, ;,1n May, wtth the opening ol the televis- ed Senate Watergate bearings, a dU· ferent type of comment appeared in the margtm . DEATH VALLEY HIKERS DISPLAY BLISTERS DURING TREK Anita hrrtl (lafll and Jo Ann Cl1udlo-Wllll1ms May 26 -"Watergate-Waterloo." May 20 -"Sad statement on Watergate" But there were supporters still. May 19 -"Just dO your best" Bike Co111pleted June arrived, and the tenor took another downward tum. June 2 -"Get it together Dick" June 3 -"Let's wait till proven" June 23 -··impeach him" First Women, Walk Death Valley June 23 -''Hang in there" Hurle8' Barton , a retired auto dealer who i! the president of the Nixon Birthplace Foundation, said he took the book in dlU'ing July and early August because of "thia: Watergate business" and because be wu afraid vandals would deface it. Klan Members Freed SHREVEPORT. La. (UPI) -Charges u'ere dropped Monday against 24 Ku Klux Klan members arrested during the weekend for violating a seldom-enforced state law which prohibits wearing masks or disguises. Albert Lutz, as.sistant Caddo Parish district attorney, said the charges were dropped because the Klansmen were "'clearly visible" while wearing their hoods. ' By JOHN ZALLER }' Of "" Dally '"'' 11111 "I could never have done it without my husband. At least, I don't think l could have done it without him." That's how Jo Ann Claudio-Williams, 2t !eels alter completing ber !lklay walk acN.s Death Valley in the 120-degree heat of summer. While she and girlfriend Anita Perrot, 20, were getting international attention as the first women ever to hike across Death Valley in the heat of summer, her husband, Chris, was laboring quietly in the background. "You need a backup team if you want to take on that desert," says Mrs. Claudio-Will iams, who will enroll· this fall at Orange COast C.Ollege. "He made truck runs every day to bring us ice water, he sat out under the tarp with us during the heat of day. He even slept out with us . War is Really Hell In Twentynine Palms By FREDERICK SCBOEMEHL Of lflt Oal" Pllet Slaff MOST OF YOU readers were still off in never-never land early Friday while this writer was heading out Laguna canyon for El Toro Marine Corps Air StaUoo. It was one of those offbeat assignments that come along ever so often: an invitation from the Marines to join them on an all-expense paid half-day trip to the fun and sun capital of the desert : Twentynine Palms. The occasion was the beginning of the BIGGEST mock war beld on the world's LARGEST Marine Corps Base, featuring the NEW- EST this and most GIGANTIC that. YOU KNOW THE show's going to be big when the Marines provide you with your own escort. I wasn't com- plaining. At 6 in the morning I can usually use some hel~ Ing around. After receiving welcomes from practically everyone short of the Commander-in-Chief, we journalists gathered our cameras, press kits, pads ru;td pencils and biked across the nmway to board CH~ helicopters. SCMOIMIHt. The CH-53 we agreed later, is sort of a flying catUe truck. I GOT TIRED of the aircraft real fast. You can't talk because the dam thing makes too much noise. You can't read because there's too much vibra- tion. And unless you've got a neck like a giraffe, yoo can't see out the window. So I spent most of my time trying to keep my pant leg out of the path of dripping hydraulic oil. Around 7;30 a.m. we landed on the lawn or HQ at camp Wilson and were swiftly corralled in the commander general's conference room for a lecture on how this mock war was supposed to work. But first, this bulldog with silver oak leafs on his lapels ordered EVERY· BODY onto the stage for one of those group pictures. ''IF EVERYTHING goes right, you'll have a print by the Ume you leave," be said. . "Yeah but this is the Marine Corps," reminded one Orange C.Ounty cyruc. That done we settled back in our chairs for a 30 minute talk on MABs, MAVs RLTs ~nd BLTs. Only the last one sounded familiar . Then we were ushered o!f to a bus, allegedly air conditioned, for the trip ltO Alkali Canyon. Unreal, I thought, as the bus pulled up to a grandstand _sltUng on the south side of the canyon. Here are a bunch of journalists readying to cover a war like It was a Dodgers vs. Reds game. THERE WAS EVEN a play-by-play announcer. Sort of the Howard Cosen 'of the Marine Corps circuit making sure each of us knew where that elght- 'lnch Howltter shell landed. 1 " ••• they can reach a distance up to 20 miles away .. .'' the announcer ,was saying. "You suppose that's what started the fire at Bob Hope's place in Palm Springs," suggested a fellow newsman. AND SO-lT went for an hour. Tanks and amphlbioU5 craft on the gro\D'ld; bombers and helicopters In the air. But soon the dust settled and the war was over. POCKETS LOADED wlth .. posed !llm and notebooks bunting with ln- lonnatlon, the press corps packed back Into the warm, humid bus, for the trip to Camp Wiison and the Cll-53 ride to El Toro. I was making my way Into beadquartera at El Toro when I beard one of the generals making a verbal aU.f!mpt at my last name. I pushed , lorward just In tlD!e to receive a yellow pltce of parchment wrapped with a ribbon. It made me an honorary aviator. All !or two hours In a Dying cattle truck. "It was a na tural thing for him to do, because he was concerned t ha t everything go well. "I would have done the same for him," she says. 'lbe two young women made the 135- mile walking trip in 10 days, finishing Aug. 7. They traveled from the southern bolllldary of Death Valley at Saratoga Springs to the northern boundary near Ebebebe Crater. A ranger at Death Valley National Park said it was the flrst time he could recall any woman or women covering the distance in the heat of summer. Another woman once did it in the spring when temperatures in the valley were considerably lower, he said. C'hris had wanted to hike with his bride of eight montM. But the idea for the trip had been Jo Ann's and Anita 's. They had a reason for not wanting a man along. "We knew that if he went with us, noOOdy would pay much attention to the fact that it was the first time a woman had made the trip in the middle of sum- mer," she says. "They woU!d have felt that Chris had carried me or dragged me or something. At the very least, they would have thought that he carried the heavy backpack while I just walked along. "So we agreed that I should do it with another woman." Among the people who disagreed with this decision was Reba Williams, the Newport Beach mother-in-Jaw of Jo Ann. ';I told Chris he should forbid ber to do it," says Mrs. Williams. "But he said he shouldn't do that, because sbe had her own life to lead. "Now I'm glad that he went ahead and helped her out," saYs Mrs. Williams. The 21-year-old Mrs. Claud.Jo-Williams said her husband was in on the planning every step of the way. He did extensive reading, helped prepare the equipment, and generally tried to be as helpful as he coo Id. "He did everything we did except the walking," she says. The walking, however, was the difficult part. "Every day was a challenge," she says. ..It seemed like the desert was trying to make each step we took as bard as it could possibly be." The two women faced heat, a windstorm that became a sandstorm, an electrical stonn, and finally a heavy rainstorm. "When we stopped walking at night. we always kne'v we had accomplished something ." Mrs. Claudio-Williams says she thinks her walk proved something about lhe ability of women. But she says the main reason for the walk was not motivated by this. "I did it because I wanted to get a really goo! look at the desert," she says. "And I had a desire to prove to myself that I could do it." El Toro Driver l(il}ed in Crash; Woman Injured An El Toro resident was killed and three otben injured Monday night when tilt: victim's car went out of control and slammed Into the center divider of the San Diego Freeway north d Jeffrey Road. Robert W, Brad!ord, 22, of 2450 Overtake Drive, was dead on arrival at Tustin Community Hospital. Calllorn!a Highway Patrol olricers said his car, southbound on the freeway roll- ed into the path of oncoming cars. It wu struck by one driven by Mrs. Joanne Bauer, 32, of 26452 Pepita Drive, Mission Viejo. Mrs. Bauer "was reported in sertous condition today at Mission Communlty Hospital. Her two children, Robert, 7. and Becky Jo, 61 received minor injuries. The accident occurred at 10:25 p.m. Man Held By Police In Chicago CHICAGO (AP) - A SeatUe woman was stabbed to death in a downtown Grant Park rest room as her husband and infant son waited outside. 'l11e husband then helped run down Lester Harrison, 49, of Chicago after Harrison bolted from the rest room. Har· rison later was. charged with murder. Monday's slaying was the fourth in the Grant Park area during the past year. Police said Harri son was caught with a bloody knife and a newspaper picture of an earlier victim. Authorities said Judith Elaine Ott, 28, died of stab wounds in toe neck and chest. Police said Mrs. Ott and her husband, David, and 20-month-old son, Aaron, were waiting !or a train to MassachusettS, where they planned to visit relatives. During a stroll through Grant Park, Mrs. ott went into the rest room. Her husband heard a scream, and a man emerged. VICTIM'S HUSBAND, DAVID OTT, CAPTURED SLAYING SUSPECT With Son, Aaron, After Tragedy in Chicago's Grant Park Ott and four city employes pursued the man across park grounds while motorists along crowded Lake Shore Drive stopped to watch the chase. Police said Ott brought the man down with a tackle. The walls. !Joor and ceiling of the washroom were found splattered with blood following the slaying. Police said the photo Harrison caITied was of Lee Alexis Wilson, 23, a San Fran- cisco Slate coed found beaten in dense bushes near the Art Institute of Chicago Aug. 3. Nooe of the killings has been aolved, and police declined to speculate on whether Harrison might be coonected with the other slayings. Laguria Schools' Tax Rate Boost I riches U pivard Remember that 3.f<ent tax rate in· crease the Laguna Beach Board of Education approved as part of its $4.8 million budget? \I/ell, that increase is going to be more like 36 or 37 cents, acrording to Dr. Robert Reeves, acting business manager. The 3kent figure was !nade on the assumption the school district would col- lect 98 percent or the tax money due fr.om property owners. CHARGED WITH MURDER Lester Harri~rt, 49 Stanton Heist The county schools office, however, "" • l now says Laguna will collect only 97 pe_r-Ends m Gunp ay cent. The one percent difference will . mean about a two to three cent increase in the already whopping tax rate hike. ~ As Trio Escape The switch 1n the delinquency rate - from two to three percent apparently reflects a change in past taxpaying A Stanton man was robbed ror the trends. third time in four years Monday night Laguna's total school tax rate earlier and in the struggle which followed he was estimated to rise to $3.69 per $100 shot one of the three robbers. a~sessed va luation . ~ow it ~ppears it will Frank Mondike, 53, a Westminster hit $3.71, Reeves said. boo! d. · odi Id r he This year's rate was $3.34. sc 1stnct cust an, to po ice answered a knock on his door and two French Fleet Sailing PAPEETE, Tahiti (UPI) -Uniis ol the French fleet have left Papeete for the open seas, observers reported today, a possible indication that France may soon renew its nuclear testing program in the South Pacific. Four vessels left harbor · here over the weekend, the observers said, but there was no word from the French command as to their destination. men and a woman forced their way into his borne at gunpoint. They ransacked the house and took about $400 in cash. The suspect who was shot appeared later at the Westminster Community Hospital and police have him W1der arm- ed guard. He was shot in the stomach and leg: Officers have been unable to question him and have not determined his identity. Laguna Attorney Lanphear Named Planning Head ! Attorney Roger Lanphear was elected chainnan of the Laguna Beach Planning O:>mmission during the annual organ- ization meeting Monday night. Lanphear, '.fl, previously was vice chairman of the commission. He was ap- pointed to the planning body in Sep- tember 1971. Former chairman John McDowell was elected vice chairman in a second round or balloting. After the elections, Lanphear made assignments for the various governmen* "environments" established by the City ounciI. McDowell will coordinate the natural resources environment; Michael May, cultural envirooment; l.. au re n c e Campbell, economic eoviromrienf; Sally Bellerue, social envfroilmeut. As · chairman of the commissiOO, Lanphear will c!oordlnate the ci>m- prebensive government envirorunent. Tennis Class Starts Monday Three additional te nnis classes for young people 6 to 18 years of age will be held by the Laguna Beach Recreation Department beginning Monday. C.Ourses ror beginners will be held at 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. daily at the Laguna Beach High School north campus courts. Intermediate courses will be held at noon daily on the courts of Thurston Intennediate School. Rocco Demateis and Bob Isbell will serve as instructors. Regist ration fee for the 10 one-hour lessons is $6, payable at the Recreation Department, 175 N. Coast Highway. For further information, call 494-1124, Ezt. 45. He said the Watergate comments mark the point where even loyal Nixon sup- porters, who presumably drove miles out of the ir way to visit the site, "had to eit• press their concern and support." UP.IT ....... Playing i•• the Street Members of the Boston Youth Symphony play a sidewalk concert on Boston's Boylston Street, en- U.rtaining Bostonians on a hot summer day. The 1 group is known as the "Street Qu artet." I • 4 O~LV PILOT Tuad11, ..... t 14, 1973 B52s Make La·st Bombing Runs U.S. Planes T ake A d vantage of C'lear Ski.es in Cambodia Coast Victim s From Texas? UPCOAST, DOWNCOAST, Some Jlun. tington Beach detectives and other policemen in the upcoast area are look- ing hard for any possiblt? link between the sex sJaying horrors of Texas and five young men whose bodies have been found in our region in recent times: The local cases remain W1S0lved. The bodies have been di5COvered in Hwi- lington Beach, Seal Beach, Sunset Beach and Long Beach. One of the llouston witnesSes was quoted as saying in the mass murders there that some of the bodies "were sup- posed to have been sent off somewhere in California. 11 Well, aa far as our Orange c.oast peace officers are concerned, it would be a boon If our coastaJ sJayings oould indeed be traced to Houston and left on the Tex- as doormat Best bet is that they won't be. Which leaves us with a maniac killer still m the loose in our region. Which is grim. * THE WEATHER predictors were busy predicting thunderstonns and rain last night and you have to figure it was on the basis of Monday hysteria. Clearly on Monday, we dkl get a Jot of thunder and a h!w dribbles in the area between La- guna Beach and 5an·Clem&te. Not much else. But the predictors predicted anyway. That's okay. The way our swnmer weather has been· going through August, they could predict alinost anything now and few eyebrows would elevate. Maybe it's about time for a tidal wave. Who knows? * SOME FOLKS DOWN at Newport Beach City Hall are working these days on a S<><:alled policy statement to head off any new imbroglios with the state's South Coast Regional 1.one Conservation Commission. That's the Prop. ~ outfit that bas been giving Newport a rough way ·to·go qn.lta olf...street parking Jaws. Well, you know what the politico wags call 8· policy ·statement. That's when you aay '"'8,1: you're loin& to do IM;f°"' you know W~'Y.C."J'~ going. Anyway,· ~eWport Qty M-Bob Wynn tl;iinb~t -be belter ~ llle<el: ly to have•· P!llJcy of Ila 0\"11 rather ~ always reading to the latest outrages of the coastal commission. That may well be 90. Still, when it comes down to loggerbeads between the city and the coastal types, the main question likely remaim •. Aod that is, Who is Going to Tell Whom What to Do? Others at Newport City Hall fjgUre it different. Don't make peace. File a lawsuit. ·· * MEANWHILE UP at the good County Seat in santa Ana, the county planning commission is· worried about a similar question on who does what to who else. The county planners have urged rejection of any design review board for scenic highways in our region. Couched in planning-type lingo , the commission suigested to the Board of SuperviSors that if a design review outfit is set up for scenic highways, then you'd have to set up similar boards for everything else, like residential and com· merclal developments and on into the night. This is ditflcult logic to knock. Govemmeqtal boards do have a way of multiplying faster than rabbits. That aside, when you get talking about scenic highwaya, it seems like a fairly simple issue for all us plain citizen types. It boils 00wn to this : Are we going to look at the scenery - or al. billboards? PHNOM PENH, Combodla (AP) - American 11514 and fighter-bombers hammered al Cambodian ln•Ulll'nls all around P!mom Penh today oo the final day d U.S. air attacb In Indochina. Taking advantage d a b<eak In the monsoon overcaa, American Fllls, F4 Pbant.osm and A7 Corsairs new round· the<loclc mlssioos to wtload a mulmum bomb tonnage. U.S. AIR COMBAT operations are scheduled to end at II a.m. Wednesday. or 9 p.m. (PDT). It wilt be l'1e flr.1t time since 1964 that the U.S. Air Force. Isn't bombing somewhere in Indochina. American pilots concentrated lhelr at· tack today south and west o( Phnom Penh, the directions from wllich the Cambodian command believes the Com- mwllst-led Insurgents of the Khmer Rouge will attack the city when U.S. air support of the government is ended. 'lbe Khmer Rouge have pulled back on UP'I Tetwholt RESCUERS PULL DAVID KENNEDY, 18, FROM OVERTURNED JEEP Joseph P. Kennedy Ill (left! Shaken After Crash Teen 'Serious' Kennedy Brothers, Girl s Miss Curve, Flip Jeep '.·:j!YANNIS, Mass. (UPI) -David Ken- 'il'flly, 18, the son of the late Sen. ll<>bert Kennedy, suffered a sprained back In a car accident Monday. Five young women were in the jee~like vehicle, driven by l>llvld'a brother Joseph P. Kennedy ID, 21, when it failed to make a curve and overturned. Joseph Kennedy escaped injury, but one ol the five girls was hospitalized in serioUs condition. Three of the other girls were treated and released at Cape Cod Hospital in Hyannis, and one remained hospitalized, but she was listed in good condition. NANTUCKET POLICE charged Joseph DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtll'l'fry of thr Dally Pilot Is guarantred _..., ... f ldl't"' H l'IMI .. Ml llaft ,,_ INIPlf" •Y l :ll 11·"'·• c•U •nd 't'IMlf U.., Wiii k .....,.,., It p u. C•H• •t• tt~-Mtll 1:Jt II•"'• S.tvrefy •llf Sulltl•y: II '/'M N NI rKtl"tt ~· C9ll'Y ,, ' ...... s ....... , ......... . SV<Ml•Y. c•U MMI I npy wlM ... WWIM .. ylMI, C.fll •rt ltll ... Vlllll 11 I.II\. TtlephoMS ~.-0r...,.. c-1, """ ••••••• IMWlll Nlfllll-11 Nvt1llflll ... ltldl Mlf wwm1n1t1r . . •• •• • ••• "*'1:» S.11 c"-''• C•j111tr•11t lt•ch, Sq JIJlll Col!lblrlM, 0-l"'llftt. Mllltl Ut-· I-lot-Nlffel ...• '"2-MM Kennedy with 1'driving negligently so that the lives and safety of the public might have been endangered." He was ordered to appear at a court hearing next week. AU except Joseph Kennedy were thrown from the vehicle before it landed upside dOwn in brush on Nantu~ket Island. David was admitted to Cape Cod Hospital where he was reported in satisfactory condition. Pamela Kelley, 18, of Centerville, Mass., the most seriousl)'. inj~, Wl· derwent surgery Monday rught for an a~ parent spinal injury and was listed in serious condition. A hospital spokesman said today that Mis.s Kelley was responding well to post· operative treatment in the intensive care unit. "OUR HOPES are high and we are op-. timistic," the spokesman said. Torbin Yates. the hospital's director of community affairs. said "nobody cou1d say yet whether she'll walk again or not. We need a few days to determine what her condition is." ~IARY SCHLAFF, 22, of Grosse Pointe, Mich., also was admitted to the hospital , where she was listed in good condition with a possible pelvic fracture. Passerby Luke Gruber said he saw the open-air vehicle fail to make the curve and flip over. Fair Skies Forecaft Today Thunderstorms and Hi gh Winds Diminishing <ltnrtt. Laws will be from "..U 11 ll'lt beac:hn to tS.o rn ll'lt moun11!n1. ll.S. Sttm-ry Tt11.1110tr1tornu tl'llol dUmDl'd r.tVY r11n on IHll'h 111 m. Mktwflt 1nd _, tkll0"1 of !hi Wetl with hlOll Wlndl dlmlnls.lltd lodjr tNvlno mott Of tllt n•tlon unotf" ft r lklt1. Slonnl ervctltd In Thtl •nd ll'<t'llr It.. ll:otkln Into ettt.,.n lffV•d• lhtDUll.hllul Morld•Y. 01 ...... -II.Ml POff~ Of ll'lt Mldwesl from Ml1IOlll1 fo Vlftfnl• ond '°"''"' to Al1llllm•, Two to lhr11t Inc"" of rtln tw•!TICIHI Olfts Ill' Int SI, LOI.Ill mttrOPOllttn ltl• Ind r"tlMt' fll"h ,.,,.....IMI lllt Mono'lllV, A n..n-tlood wetdl tlto w11 llWld tor ettl-<lfllr•I 1111111111 eerly lod...,, Ovt1no Mol'lcJlly'J lkll'IM In Nlllt!"ll Htv-1•, .in111 "''"' rtllClllNI •7 l'!lltt ()ti' l'IOlll' 11 Ml~•• MOn.I llfld •2 m ...... ~• i.o.-, MOnt. Tl"f"lr"'r1t+1t~ ~ dlWfl r11,...i from JO It Dvtufft. Mlnfl., N '5 •t ....... c,.,.,..,..,, ".,..,,,,,...,,. "•rt!Y cloudy todt'f, Llt!lt •11'11blt wlndt "'"'' tnd rnomlfll ~ bttorn-'"' w.si.rty I lo 1• k"°" 111 t~ lod•i llfld Wld!Wtd•Y. High fodly 10, eo.1111 ttmpor•tvrff ''""' rrom " Ill 71, lrlletld i.m"'r1turu reno• frOl'll '5 lo t2. Wottr ltmptrt!Urt 70. St1W. /ff"'"'. Tide• TU•SOAY *ond 111011 IO:OI p,m. 1.1 lfcol'ld ~ ~'2p.m. 1.1 WIOlfllDAV ,.r,.., llloh ll:ot •.m. 4.1 First low ••••..••• t:.cto.m. I.I 5tc'Ofld 1'11011 ., IO:JI p.m. lt 5tcONI 1tW .. 4:n P·'"· l.S $111'! •1tn •11J t.m, lftl 7:41 II·"'· MOofl •11t1 7!$4 11.rn. Seh •:4' 1.m. the soutllem lront, presumably lo ,,,. equip and regroup for a new stage ol their campaign to lmoclt oo\ President Loo Nol's government. Government forces have cleared Route 38, whidJ runs aroW>d Phnom Penh's southern defense perimeter six to U miles from the city. ' But a new threat was shaping up in the ~·est, with insurgent troops encireling the village of 'I'UoJ Leap 11 miles lrom Spaceship Rolled Out For Rescue SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - The rocket and spaceship being readied as possible resC\le vehicles for the Skylab 2 astronauts rolled to the launch pad to- day at Cape Kennedy, Fla. However, space agency officials here emphasized the move is just a precau- tion. They feel confident Alan L. Bean, Dr. Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. ( IN SHORT ... ) Lousma will be able to return safely to earth Sept. 25 in their Apollo ship. A Saturn 18 rocket with a new Apollo perched on top began tbe 31h·mile trip from an assembly building to the launch pad at 4 a.m. PDT. A giant tracked transporter, traveling at maximum speed of one mile an hour, was to take several hours to reach the pad. As the move began, William Schick, Skylab test supervisor, said: "Preparations are going very efficiently. We anticipate no problems having these vehicles ready for a rescue mission if called upon or for a nonnal Skylab 3 mission ." e Plag11e Victim SANTA FE, N.M. (UPI) -The Environmental lmprovement Agency disclosed Monday a 65--year-Old El Paso, Tex ., man contracted the bubonic plague in June while visiting friends at a ranch near Lincoln. N .M. EIA officials said the man, whom they could not identify, had completely recovered. However, the man was in critical condition at one point during his treatment at two Texas hospitals, the agency said. e Grain Gripe WASHINGTON (AP) -The Com· modity Exchange Authority (CEA) has flied Its second fonnal complaint against a grain exporter involved m last year's massive wheat saJe to Russia. The authority announced Monday it has charged the Louis Dreyfus Corp. of New York with willfully understating its wheat holdings during July-October 1972. e McGovern Panel WASHING TON (AP) - A report thal the Wisconsin McGovern for President Committee apparently violated the Federal Election Campaign Act has been forwarded to the Justice Departmenl The report by the General Accounting Office, which supervises compliance with the law, charged the state committee with failing to keep adequate recorm. e Am e rkan Deaths MADRID (UPI) -Four and possibly five Americans died in the crash o( a ~panish Aviaco Caravelle jet Monday which took a total of 86 lives, the U.S. Embassy reported today. The 85 passengers and crew aboard the · plane were killed when the Caravelle ex· ploded in fiight when one of the two rear jet engines apparently hit some trees as the pilot was making a fourth landing at· tempt in rain and clouds. Thumbing Pair Beaten; Girl Nearly Killed PLAINFIELD, Ind. (AP) -"It looks like they tried to beat her to death," says Police Chief Lee E. Miller, describing a teen-age hitchhiker who was beaten and raped. "All her teeth are gone, most of her gums have been beaten out and part of her jawbone is missing." The lPryear-old East Providence, R.I., girl , Patricia McDevitt, remained In serious condition today at Marion County General i-lospital. THE GIRL WAS kidnaped late Sunday night by two men and a woman as she and a companion hitchhiked on the west side ol Indianapolis, pollce said. She bad been beaten and raped and w .. found nude Monday afternoon at the edae or a cornfield 20 miles west of here, poflce said. "Evidently sbe put up one hell of a fight or el>e they took special delight tn torture-beatlng her,'' Miller said .. 0 1.fer race Is so badly beaten 1be won't be able lo talk for quite a lew clays." Her companion, Stephen Baker, 17, of Grand Ledge, Mich., told police he and the glrl were driven to the squtb side of Platnllctd, about 10 miles west or ln- dianapolls, where one of the men pulled a gun and asked for Baker's money. HE SAID ms hand! were lied and he was besten with a long-barreled platol bef(>re the assailants drove away with the girl. Phnom Pclll and seven miles flUll tbe capital's airport. AN ES'l1MATED 4,000 Khmer Rouge troops were reported tn the area, and · U.S. planes were reported attacking them constantly. A Mekong river arivoy made up of a tanker, a freighter and five barges &r· rived In P!lnom Penh lrom South Viet· nam without any losses, a communique reported. A truck convoy brought rice and other products from Battambai\g, in the nor1fn1..oest. Jo oll1er develapments, Iron has been .accepl:ed as a member of the fOUNtation International Commission oo Coolrol and Supervision d. the Vietnam cease-fire. Iranian Ambassador Ardesbir zai..<11 made the announcement in a pbqne call to a newsman after' administration sources gave the same information on en unattributable basis. • The last roadblock to Iran's ntem· bership, replaclng Canada on the truce observer bodt, was removed when it was accepted by the Viet Cong, the sources said. THE OFFICIAL announcement is being held up, It was learned, in order to work out details on issuing a public state- ment. Canada was ooe of the original four ICCS members along with Indonesia, Hungary and Poland. However, the Canadians pulled out last month because ol dissatisfaction wt.th the operation of the cootrol commission. When Iran was proposed by the United States, South Vietnam immediately in- dicated agreement. Ho111to11 Vic tlt111 Jerry Lyiln Waldrop (lop) and brother Donald Wayne, are two victims of the Houston mass slayings. Their father says po- lice treated him like 'some kind of idiot' after his sons disap-- peared in 1971. Nixon to Cite Innocence In Bugging, Aides Claim From Wire Servi.,.. WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon will proclaim his innocence of any wrongdoing in the Watergate affair in a report to the nation Wednesday or Thursday, White House aides said today. The only concession Nixon will make, they said, is that in "hindsight" he should have paid more heed to the warn- ing signals he received about the cover· up months ago and kept a closer eye on While House officials acting in his name. AFTER FOUR MONTHS under lhe shadow of the political scandal Nixon's strategy will include the issuing of a lengthy legal "white paper" attempllng to refute point-by·pciint charges tbBt be was aware at an early date of the'°ver-· up, Nixon also was preparlng a nal.MJnwide POTOMAC CRUISE RELAXES NI XON WASIIlNGTON (AP) -Alie!' a day or work on the Watergate speech he plans to make later this week, President Nixon got away from it all with a cruise on the Potomac River. Nixon was accompanied Monday eve- ning by White House chief d 51afl Alex· ander M. Haig Jr. on the dinner cruise aboard the pr.Sldenbal yacht Seqjloia. televised address to answer accusations against him by former White House Counsel John W. Dean Ill, but mostly to appeal for public support to help get the country moving again after the paralysis of Watergate, aides said. Dean claims Nixon knew of the In- volvement of White House aides in at· tempts to silence Watergate defendants as far bade as Sept. 15. The President's public statements later this week will be his fll'St since Dean made the charges under oath before the Senate Watergate investigating committee. NIXON HAS MOVED slowly to respond to lrie accusatloQS, although Senate W•rgate lnvesUg&tors are taking a twllk after 37 da)'ll d televised hearings. :n;.+;Presldenl has sought a wide range of advfice for what some observers be1ieve may be the most crucial speech of his political career. ln other developments the government has named former White House counsel John W. Dean Ill a coconspirator in the federal influence-peddling case against former U.S. Atty. Gen. John N. Mitcbell and former Commerct S e c r e t a r y Maurice H. Stans. A bill of particulars filed Mondl,Y by U.S. Atty. Paul Qimm said Dean was a participant in an alleged attempt to obstruct a Securities and Exchange Com- mission investigation of financier Robert L. Vesco. Agnew May ,Turn Over Records 'Voluntarily' WASHINGTON (UPI) -Vice Prest· dent Spiro T. Agnew's attorneys ar· ranged a meeting with federal pros-- ecuton today and a spokesman for Agnew suggested that the vice president may turn over his personal records and fmandal data voluntarily. Agnew's press secretary, Mir s b Thompson, declined to commit himself flatly on the question o( the private papers but he said It would "be in keei> ing" with the vice president'• assertion that he had oothing to hlde in the federal h'\vestigation of alleged con t r 'a c t o r kickbacks to Maryland politicians. U.S. ATl'ORNEY George Beall and one of Agnew's lawyers , Jay H. Topti41 set up a meetlng In Boall's Baltimore office for the afternoon. Jn punning the investigation, Beall re- quested Agnew to submit bank records, . check books and other llnanctsl data. Thompoon aald .he could not say deflnllely whether Agnew would comply tn the present caJe but he and other aides appeared to think be would. Thompson said the vice president had received a heavy amount of mail since the investigation wa:i disclosed last week. He said approt.lmately 1,3S2 letters and telegrams were favorable to Agnew and 86 were critical. TIIEllE WERE these o th e r developments in the case: -Maryland engineering contractor Jerome Wolff and an attorney met with members of Beall'• stall this ll)Omlng In Baltimore. Woll! and another ~ !Inn dllcial, Leiter Matz, have betll Identified as being possiblo witnessts against AgMw. Matz w .. granted portild Immunity lrom prosecutiqn by Beall oo Mondoy In exihanae !or C»operatloo In · testifying before the special sr•od jury, his lawyer reported. -AiJlew'• campaign fl!IOl1ce records rrom lllil when be ~won the Maryland govemortlhtp through last year when he was re-elected vice president were being delivered today to Beall's office In response to a subpoena. They have been in custody or Maryland's state ad-- min.istrator of election laws. AGNEW REl'URNEO to work today in his office in tile Executive Office Building next to the While llollse during the day, malntaining a regular schedule which calls for a speech in Denver Wednesday. CHIL~ C..~Afl!GENTINA ..... ,. .. "' .... ~ •' Clalle iit Dark ". " A Callen poW1lr line blacked out hall of Chile for 35 minutes Mo nday night and the govern. menl blamed rightist terrorists for dynamlllng the lines. Tb• blackou~came ln the nilddJe·o1 a speech by President Salvadoll' Allende. • . Psychiatrist Ciahns Mullin '1~d 'Hatred' for His Family # ,..,~J.,", .i:t ~ t .. , \'J OAft.V PILOT $ . ~.--'-"-''----'--'~~~~~~....:CC:::.C..C.:.:.::.-1 330 Pickets ·out of Jail Vow to I 11,crease Forces at Delano Grape Harvest DELANO (AP) -So~ 330 unless they pledged to obey ficials reported picket lines move alone d~n 't provide SANTA CRUZ -A .. long-charged with and three ad· retired military man in his United 1-"'ann Workers Union the court order. were cahn Monday, and there the good faith UFW head standing hatred " of hls family dltlonal ones. But Jackson said late 60s, has attended every pickets have been rete!sed was no word whether peace Cesar Chavez demanded to get and an "emphasis on killing Mullin was legally insane and court session since the trial from jail and union officials ANOTHER 100 pickets re-talks between the UFW and him back to negotiations. not responsible for hi.s actions. began. say they will concentrate mained in jail until they could Chavez walked out on peace and violence" in his up-He said Mullin committed Fort said Mullin told him picketing more heavily here as be interviewed by the county Teamsters Union will resume. talks Friday alter learning the bringing triggered Herbert W. the murders as sacrifices to thaf when his father took him the table grape harvest begins probation department. The Delano Teamsters office Teamsters had signed con4 Mullin's murder binge, a save California from a to see the motion picture, 1noving north. The UFW, striking growers reportedly was closed and its tracts with 25 Delano growers psychiatrist says. , disastrous earthquake. H e "The Alamo," hjs: father On Hu1ager Strike who refused to renew con4 records moved to Arvin, but a the night before. llowever, Dr. Joel Fort, of San Fran4 presented psycbiatriats who 'ireveled in the blood and TIIE PICKETS, released on tracts, has divided its table UFW k .d h t Teamsters: President Frank clsco, took the stand Monday testified Mullin was obsessed gore." Convict Ruchell Magee, their own recognizance from grape activity in recent weeks spo csman sai t 8 F 1tzsimm 0 n s q u lckly th · ound by voices goading him to kill. He also said he found it still awaiting a retrial the Fresno C.Ounty jail 1'.1oo-between Delano area ----------repudiated those contracts. • :"ts be tptrose<l ln ~.1t'u1°"i1n~ rdup Fort, who inter v I ewe d "strange" that in the on kidnap charges in day, included 40 priests and vineyards and those in the 1 re u 8 " s mu er ulli r ho s d t l t f ersalion 1970 M · C t nuns. All had been arrested Arvin-Lamont area 50 miles BATHTUB mE UFW announced 1·1 , ~al in Santa Cruz County M n or two urs un ay ranscr p o a conv the arm oun y , $uperior Court. MuUln is night, said the voices "were Mullin's fath er had with his Courthouse shootout, July 31 and Aug. 2 for south where the early harvest 'vould hold a vigil this af. not the controlling factor" son the day of his arrest , the has gone on a hunger violating a court ord e r began and is nearly over. COLLISION temoon outside the l\1erced • -giarged with killing lO persons governing bis actions. He said father "shows: no concept of strike. Magee's first limiting picketing and the use UFW spokesman John County courthouse during a 8 three-week binge last the "forees" that led Mullin to affection for his son." trial ended last April of bullhorns at raiiches which Banks said about 500 pickets hearing on eviction notices l Winter. kill were "longstanding AT Tms POINT Mullln's refused to renew UFW con-would shift from Arvin to ST. CATHARINES, 0 n t · served by Gallo Bros. on 71 .... FORT TES11F1ED th 8 l hatred, particularly of his father, visibly shaken, got up with the jury voting 11 tracts. Delano today but another 500 (AP) -Otto Zinder, a Swiss striking UFW families ~·ho ' uWn, a 2.&-year-old former father , and also his mother, and walked from th e to l to acquit him of Superior Court Jud ge would contin ue picketing at tourist, pulled out to pass live in company housing. f;!ollege honor student, "did sl!ter and other re)atives, as courtroom. Later he told a murder and 11 to 1 to Denver Peckinpah signed the two Arvin ranches -Giumar· another car and collided with Gallo is one of more than 50 iJ\:now the nature and quali ty of well as an emphasl! on killing deputy in the corridor, "That convict him of kidnap-release order, acting on an a~ ra Vineyards and Ho 11 i s a bathtub. firms that signed farm labor is actions and did apeclfically and violence." transcript doesn't show that I ing. The state decided peal of a municipal court Roberts. Police said the bathtub pro~ contracts with the Tcamster5 ltknow they were wrong." MULUN'S FATHER , was standing there with my to press only the kid· decis ion refusing to release ably fell off a truck. Zinder after UFW contracts expired ~ Mullln's attorney, James w·11· Mull' arms around him." nap charges. the picketers without bail LAW ENFORCE~1ENT of· was unhurt. this spring and ea rly summer. : Jacklon, said In hi! opening 1 _'.Ma~rl_::l~n___::.'::"''.'.'.m'.._.'.::'.'.'.:'"::.·_::•~::..::::._:::.:.=_:::::::.. _____ _:. __ .::.._ ________ c_ ______________________________ _:._::_ __ .:__ __ _ .,Jtatement hla client com- ~ltted all the 1laylngs he Is ' ' ''Dri . Se ., ve t ·To Lower Drink Age SACRAMENTO (APl -An initiative petition drive is under way to lov.·cr the legal alcoholic beverage drinking age from 21 to IS in California. A group of college and university students banded together in an organization called the Full RI g h t s Initiative Co mm i t tee an- nounced the petition drive Monday. THEY NEED signatures from 570,000 reglstercd voters to put the in itiative on the November 1974 ballot. "Persons between the ages or 18 and 21 now have the full rights of adulthood save one. the right to drink," said spokesman Robert Closson , a prelaw sen1or at the Unlveni· ty of San Francisco. Gonorrhea · Test Urged LOS ANGELES (AP) -An estimated 100,IXXJ women in ca.Jlfornla have gonorrhe~ and " aren't aware of It, says the state Bureau of Venereal Disease, which ts conducllng an education campaign to en- courage women to ask for gononbea cultures d u r i n g their regular physical ex- amlnallons. D.L. Gunter, head of the bureau. said Monday hls department provided f r e e cervical cultures to 350,000 women, of w1tom·7,700 had the disease and didn't know it. 1be free screening program, which will nm for two more years. is funded wtth lt.2 million from local, state and fed eral sources. Sex Bias Bill Wins Approval ; SACRAMENTO (AP) -A bill Intended to erase alleged aexual biases in grade school 1,,textbooks has won approval from the Senate Finance Com4 mittee. ,. The measure by state Sen. James Mills, (D-San Diego), ,. would require texts to include ,, .material describing the "role ··and contribution 9f women" to society. * ; Boy and Girl j Role Studied I LOS ANGELES (AP) -The t city school board l!I studying a 1 proposal to call upon textbook 1 publisher to avoid sexual lstereotypt ng of "boy" and l"glrl" roles. I I I I I I Attorney Sues Ralph Williams I LOS ANGELES (AP) -Car : dealer Ralph Wllllams Is being t •ued !or l20 million by his romier attorney, who says '-Wnnams slnndmd him at a private porty last monlh. of California announces ... FREE merchandise certificate ... good for $10 toward the purchase of any merchandise in the:.,..t::::;C:£c£cv~~~· recreational catalog! Just for opening an account (or adding to an existing savings account). T ake yot1r pick fro1n over 1,200 recreational and camping items. There's son1c t hi ng fo r everyone ,,•ho Jo,,cs the ot1tdoors ... f ron1 fi shing and camp-- ing cqui1l1ncnt to hiking" ancl hackpa ckin~ st1pplies. Clothin~ and accessorie5 100! Anytl1ing you neccl to take on the challenge of the outcloors. J ust co1ne into any office of 1-11e Bank of Culifornia and open a cl1 ecking or savings account for onlv S200 or n1orc. Or add that much to yot1r JJrcsent savings account. We'll g'ive _you 1l1e colorful Edclic Bauer recreational ca tulog. And a rne rchandise cert ificate wo rth SIO towarcl the purchase of any mercl1andise in the catalog (or at the Edclie Bauer stores i11 Seattle or San Francisco). C<>rtificates lin1itcd to one per individual account. So take advantage of our Great Outcloors Give-away. But hurry. The offer is ~ood onl y until August 31, 1973. Free for the asking! A colorful copy of the Eddie Bauer recreational catalog (while supply lasts). 144 pages packed with a huge selection of exciting o utdoor recreational equipment. --The Bank of California ®We make banking eaS)'· 1401 Dove Street, Newport Place, Newport Beach , California 92660 (714) 833-3511 Warren P. Thompson, Vice Pr eside nt and Manager • • William• provloualy had fU. ed a m111lpractice suit against the lawyer, Paul C&ruso of Hollywood who !lied suit In Sllporlor Court Monday, allea· lwi WlllialTIB made remarlts at a 1earty In Orange County last J\l'Y, H v.1\lch Injured his pro- lcS81onal reputation and •bill· ():'.Jo attract clients. 1----------------------------------------------------7""'::::::::::..._ __ • . .. • • • • D AD.Y. PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Environmental Woes Perhaps not surprisingly, the environmental move- ment has encountered some divis ion in its ranks, with more moderate factions expressing the (ear that extrem· lsts may damage the entire movement. The Federal Environmental ProtectJon Agency has caused some of the djsseot by Rroclaimi.ng sweeping an·d often ill-considered programs. notably to the area of automobile smog control. On the otner side of the coin, we find such recog· nized environmentalists as California sen. Alan Cran· ston and the California Wildlife Federation co ming up l with plans to control, but not eliminate, oil drilling ac· tivities in the controversia l Santa Barbara channel. The Wildlife Federation has backed a resolution that would request the Secretary of the Interior to re- sume oil and gas leasing and development in the channel "under the most stringent regulations." Sen. Cranston doesn't go quite that far. He has in- troduced a bill to protect California offshore oil and gas by creating a federal energy reserve in the area. It would permit exploratory drilling to locate oil, but would ban production except in a national emergency, Critical of environmentalists who hew to "an ortho- doxy which does not' brook challenge," Wildlife Feder- ation President Harold Hochmuth notes there is no one best solution to each environmental problem facing us . The need,. he wisely points out, is for continuing dialogue, research, testing and compromise. Outdated Sex Laws If our present sex Jaws were rigidly enforced, 90 percenl of the public would be in jail, says Assembly· man Alan Sieroty (D-Beverly Hills), co-author of a bill to repeal a r~ft of lQO..year-old-edicts from state law. The rarely used, 19th century laws make it a crime for citizens, including husbands and wives, to perform so-called "unnatural" sex acts. The proposed law, presented by Sieroty and As- semblyman Willie Brown. (D-San Francisco), would re- move these prohibitions insofar as consenting adults, acting in private, are concerned. Jt would not, as some opponents maintain, inter-- fere with laws dealing with public behavior, solicitaUon, or the protection of minor.s. 'l'he Leag~e of Women Voters, the National Organ· lzation for Women and the National Association of Social Workers back the measure. It is opposed by some law en- forcement agencies who feel it would hamper arrests. The fa ct is ·that these archaic sex laws are never used today except as weapons of harassment. They should be repealed. Nuclear Safety The nuclear doomsayers, seeking to halt the con- struction of atomic electric power plants -and even to close down existing ones -paint frighteriing pic- tures of threatening nuclear disasters from the plants. The companies that insure the nuclear power plants apparently disagree -and back up their confidence with cold cash. Two major insurance pools handling nuclear ac- counts for more than 300 organizations recently gave their clients premium refunds amounting to $1,393,156, citing the exceptional safety record of the entire nuclear field , a 'record "unparalleled" in other fields, they said. The Nuclear Energy Llability Insurance Association and the Mutual Atomic Energy Liability Underwriters reported that neither had received a single claim re- sulting from the operation of a nuclear reactor since the insurance program went into operation in 1957. One premium refund of $48,958 represented 96 per- cent of Pacific Gas and Electric Company's 1963 P.re- mium for its Humboldt Bay Power Plant nuclear genera- ating plant. The refund was in recognitio{l of a 10-year· record of "extraordinary saJety." . '\fonder what the doomsayers think about that ... .... • T axpayer? What taxpayer ?' ·. How Do Yoii Explain It To a Child? Dear Gloomy Gus Lessons in Eco1a0111y R e peated ~YDNEY J.HAR.BI~ Trying to explain government and politics and world afiairs to a 10-year'1'.lld is a frustrating business .. Not, as we think. because the lO-year-0ld isn't smart enough -but because the subjects don't make sense. A ebild asks direct, logical and sensible questions -and there are no direct, logical and .sen-- si ble answers. We someUmes pretend there are, because ,ve are embarrassed to admit befwe the child that the adult \vorld is as irrational as ti really is. AristoUe defin<d man as a "rational animaJ." By that he meant that we alone have the capacity for abstrect thinking, He dld not mean that we use it all the time, ot most of the time. More often· we misuse it in the service of our passions. HOW CAN YOU explain Watergate to a 10-yea.N>ld without at tlie same time con- fessing that the adult human • is a creature who defies all the laws of nature? A creature who is his own worst enemy, engineers his own downfall, frustrates his own goals, and holds bis practices and his preachments in separate, air-tight compartments. You can't blame it on "politics." Politics just gives man a chance to show how absurd and idiotic he is; it strips naked all the moral pretensions we \vrap ourselves in , and disclose s the raw power-drive in us. How can you explain \\"hat the Catholics and Protestants are doing to each other in Ireland? Or how the The programming of human behav· ioi" to total de-personalization seems nearly complete when one suspect in the worst' mass murder in Amer- ican history issues a staten1ent say· ing : "I regret this happening ... " A. R. V. Gloomy Gin (OmP111nt1 ~'' 111bmlrtet1 tty r"cttr1 •114 do not rtKHHrllf nflftl lfl1 vitwl ti 1111 IMWMI•-· S.nd YOllt "' PIH!VI " Gloomy Gu1, O~llY l"llot, Israelis and Arabs got that way? Or even t.\'hY American citizens can't travel to Cuba? Are there really any sensible answers .to these tangled questions? IN FACT, it is .only when one tries pa- tiently and fairly to explain such qiatters to a child that their essential lunacy comes clear. The child is not fooled by our verbal sophistication; he penetrates to the human reality beneath the ver- biage : "U Communists are bad, why are \\re friends with Russia and China now, but we still can't go to Cuba?" Children know instinctively t h a t Russian children and Chinese children and Cuban children are just like them. They know it is adults \Vho put up tbe barriers, who decide when we are "enemi'es" and when we arc "[riends." And they know, too, that adults make these decisions for reasons that have lit- tle to do with human qualities of Russians and Chinese and Cubans. WHEN JESUS said, ;,A little child shall lead them," he was not being sen~ timental or fatuous, but perfectly realistic. He was sayin g that a child is still relatively uncorrupted by the hypac.risies and self.<feceptions of adulthood; that a child is closer to the hand of God than he will be at any later time in his life. \Ve can't explain all these "serious" and "complicated" matters ·10 a child because he alone sees that the Emperor is wear ing no clothes. Only after he is "educated" \Viii he begin to admire the cnnine robe. 'Red Meat' Presidential Waterloo WASHINGTON - The "I told you so" faction in Washington is having a field day. Their prophets said wage-price con- trols wouldn't work much beyond the in- itial shock of President Nixon 's turn- about deeision tO impose them three years ago, and they \rere right. The unholy mess is becoming just as bad as Nixon always feared it would be before he reversed himself and adopted the theories of econ· omists he had long scorned. The strange thing is that the President doesn't seem to realize yet ·that he will have to get out of the mess by going back to the .t0nventional economics he aban- doned. fie is showing flickers of realiza- tion in beginning to push for a balanced budget and restricting the money supply which creates the indirect pressures cooling off inflation. BUT nIAT approach is too com- plicated and indirect for politicians to un- derstand and too remote to satisfy the Wicks '· ! . 'No, no, csp"taln, we "re home now/' Keynesian economists who dream of repealing the laws of supply and demand . The quick fix in ea>nomics appeals to both. . The public, however, is now finding out that the quick fix doesn't last long. Every generation and every President see ms to have to learn this lesson anew. NLxon thought he learned it as a minor price- fixing bureaucrat in \Vorld War II but the advanced economics drove it out of his head 8. year after be got in the \Vh.ite House and be went the way of John Ken- neth Galbraith and other economic con- trollers influenced by John Maynard Keynes. RED MEAT seems to be the com· modity which brings Presidcnti back to their 9ellSeS. Hany S Truman went through the red meat experience to his sorrow and called o£f the whole com· plicated system of trying to manage the supply and price of the food Americans want most. Truman daimed that meat , at least, was one thing he really knew about but It didn't turn out that way. Now, again, the American lust for red meat -and the smartness of the people who Produce it -is frustrating the new economic policy, and furnishing a prime exatnple of the unworkability or direct economic controls. Not that anyone is really about to be seriously deprived of meat. They will (RICHARD WILSO~ simply have to pay what it costs to pro- duce ii plus a good profit for all con· cerned, which is -Jet's face il -the American way. Price fix ing can't change that law of supply and demand. BY ALL accounts we are to have a brief meat shortage because the price fix is still on and until it is lifted the cattle feeders will hold back their critters. Ac- cording to the president of t.00 American Meat Institute, beef will "practically disappear" from the food count«rs for several weeks beyond August 11 20. Thereafter beef eaten will heV'e to pay an even higher price and maybe by the lint of the year lhe cost will slide back tO the present level. Meantime, the collateral effect will force to new highs the price of all other meats. Nobody knows tor sure how It would have been without controls. But it ls known that in the last couple of years un- der controls relaiJ food prices have gone up 16.S percent. 'Ibe renewed experience of what happens under these conditions may convince the public and poliUcians alike that price-!ixing isn't a cureall no matter how many succeeding generations c.f housewives and economists thlnk so. The Sen ate doesn't think so any- more. It voted 54 to 5 la end the freeze on beef prices. One of the ad- vanced thinkers, Senator Olarles Percy of Illinois. confessed that the relearning process "has been the greatest adu1t education course in economlcs the na- tion's ever had." That conclusion may be just because Senator Percy hasn't been around very long. . The businessmen who enthusiastically hailed the Nixon new economic policy three years ago are disillusioned. A poll or the heads of 1,453 big businesses voted two to one against Nixon's economic policies in the last year. AFJ...Cto, Jong hot for price controls, demaods that Nixon phase out both price and wage controls as soon as po.sslble. Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz has con- tradir4.ed his chief. and Treasury Secret iry George Shultz hides with dif· rusing rhetoric his own distaste for wage and p1 lee controls. Nixon has learned he can electrify the COWllry once by dram•tlc action but not by continual pha...-.naking . The road back Is the old bard way of cutting back spending, balancing the budget, tightening up n1oney so th8t the whole economy will cool off, Nobody haa found out yet bow to make direct econom~c controls "-'Ork well . Good Politicians Don't Come Cheap A battle looms in the House over the inalienable right of every American to buy the politician of his or her choice. The Senate, · panicking over the Watergate disclosures, shocked the na- tion by actually passing a campaign reform bill last week. But it is hoped cooler heads will prevail when the drastic legislation reaches the House. Leading the figh~inst the measure (f rom behind the seen~ of course) is that prominent philanthropist, Phineas P. Pballtat. ·Phatkatt, who contributed between $1.3 (...._A_R_T_H_OP_P_E___.J milion and $7.6 million to national can· didates last year in checks, securiUes and laundry bags, bas: raised the battle cry of Pbatkatts everywhere : "Good government doesn 't come cheap!" last ·year cost $52 million?" demands Phatkatt. pounding his desk. "Do you think this great land or ours can afford to be rtUl by a measly , old nickel-and-dim<', $34.7 million President? "No, sir-ree! What all of us patriotic Phatkatts say is that I.his great nation deserves the very best politician! money can buy." Where Has All the Idealism Gone? PHATKATI' noted that the total cost of election cam·palgns last year was an estimated $500 million and that he, his fellow Phatkatts and their friends con- tributed more than $400 million of the amount. "U the money doesn't come from us. who will It come from?" demands Phatkatt. "You expect some poor slob making $200 a week to·:go out and buy a polltician7 Why, these days he can1t even afford to buy a lamp chop." JN TllE unlikely event the House passes the Senate's drastic bill, Phatkatt has two contingency plans in the works. "We're considering returning to our cherished American political heritage of buying voters instead of politicians," he says. "Voters are cheaper, but un· fortunatel y there's so damn many o( them . "Personally, if that bill passes, I favor the best or all reforms -clean money . Clean money Is the answer to cheap poll tics. 'Service Above Sel f' Yieldirig to Dollar iii Sacramento Has the Reagan administration grown old and soft and self-serving in office ? .Has it gone the way of other regimes before it? \Vb.at ever happened to the vision, the thrust, of t h e Creative Society? That dream of 1966? That co mmitment from Jean and hungry citi· zcn-politicians who would put scrvic:? above self in an ef- fort to rid Babylon of it$ money-chewing dragons? In the beginning the spirit was strong and I/le n .. h "'as 1>r1g~t· eyod oud bushy· tailed. Tough·mlnded executives put their Jaw practices and business vcnr.ures in madlN.Hs and came to Sacramento. They wad the caJJ at persoor•I sacrifice · ...,.. Incomes and Jooiter hour~ ii a Cl'8lldl fort better government, Things wen ...... up, and looking dUferent. IT 181'1-r quite the same. th.,.,. days. Thert la _,, self and lea ol socrlflce and a >loo. Look what has hoppened to ' ( RUS WA LTON J 1he salaries of some of tbe top.level Reagan appointees. Back in 1967, the. govenlor's executiVe secretary was paid $24,000 a year. The lcp salary for others on the governor's stair was $20.000. The administra tors of the £our super- agencles -agricultur e & services, business & transportation, human rela- •ions •nd resources -were paid $27,500. The djrectors of s o m e 25 departments CDMV. public works, etc.) received anywbem from 122.000 lo 125.000. Most of those guys had earned much more Jn prtVate Jife. To serve was to sacrifice. But, it wasn't the money that impelJed them : it was the oppol'tunlty to serve, to "help light a prairie fire." to ;,ave A part In governmental reform . '"hey served their time, and many have left. ... TODA V, lt aeems, the desire for salary Md ttn tus is at least equal to the. splrit of publlc service, Tite governor's executive assistant now gets f36,750 a year. Three to~level aides get about $31,000. Others oo the governor's senior staff draw from $26-to- $28,000 a. year. The four agency secretaries make $36,750 a year; deputy agency secretaries and most department head3 now get close to $30,000. To the lolks scraping pennies together to make ends meet, that Js a lot of loot. But, there's more to come : bigger sal ari es, smaller sacrifices. 1r the federal Cost ol Llvlng Council approves requested $1llary lncreases (averaging 12.9 percent) those executive paychecks will go up again -retroactive to July I. APPO INTED members of t h e governor's cabinet (executive a86istant, ogency secretaries and the director of finance) would then gel ¥41 ,640 .a year. The thrtt top-level governor's assistants '1oufd get about ~.000 and other senior .,t,fl m•mbers would get about !30.000 each. Salaries for deputy agency secretaries an J deportment heads would be in- creased 10 : 35,436 ; department chief depu~"'-would be upped to *32,1192. No doubt the federal pay board will put a crimp in those plarni. It may hold those salary increases to S to 1 percent. That, In itseU, \l10Uld be a twist. In the early days of the CreaUve Society it was the other way around: the Reagan ad· ministration fought the excesses of the federal bureaus. AH. WELL. Longevity changes things. The publlc trough gets deeper and wider -and more appealing. lt's not Just the money; it's the money and the philosophy. The tragedy ls tbat too many of thooe appointed to change the "system" haYe bunkered down and become part of the system. 'Mley are no longer as likelr, or a'J able, to demand cuts, and aqueezes and trims : they are hardly In the position to challenge big-spending leglsl\tors or to inspire well-intentioned clvtl servants. It would seem that whal the people ol Callfomla still need In ·govemment ' Is something money wilt not bl1y a I politics cannot recruit : More Individuals who have.an entlurlng passion to put service above sclf · n1u1·e men and women who wlll r.o,,te lo Babylon -not to sup at UM! trough, but -to rid It of extravagance. ( The section of the Senate blll that most angers Pbatkatt is the •provision llmltlng any single donor from cOotrlbuting more than f3000 to any single candidate in a primary or general elcct.lon. "Now I ask you," aays Pba.tkatt, hls face , flushing, "what kind ol pollUclan can you buy !or only !3000? Why , a ~ood dog catcher goes for more than that. ' Phatkatt painted a grim picture of a typical $3000 politician -seedy, furtive. shoddfly·attired and u n d o u b t • d I y dishonest. "ANY MAN who would sell _out for $3000 has got a low opinion of his own wo'rth,0 says Phatkatt grimly. "He's got 110 character, no con.fidencc1 no pride. A rockbottom price like that In these In· OaUoriary times Is an open invitation to the classical definition of pollllcal dlsh-Oncsty: once bought h• Isn't going to ttay bough!." · \ ,other te11ture of the bill t'iat 1es Phatkatt I~ tt-ie limllR!i 11 rn 1 1JI am!iunts a candidate could a.1.:: 1 •t v: p.11 SOUl'CC!I. 1''0" C'K..i f.ol'Csidcnlial aspirant wou'd have to tJ ... n down all donations ovel' $!M.71uillion. "Do you reall"' that Pn?Jldenl Niion "And that's why we Phalkatts are drawing up plans for a nationwide chain of Mexican laundries." OlAM•I COAIT DAILY PILOT Robert N. \Veed, Publi.shtr Th&mol KeevU, Editor Barbare Kreibich .Editorial Page Editor The edttorlal 1pnae or 1hc D11Uy Pilol '.setks to Inform a.t>d stlmulate ' readers . by pruentina on thl1 page divtn;e:lc:orp.mtntary' on topics of tn- tet'W!St by t)'ndlcated eolumnltts and cartoonltta, by provldlna a forum ror ttad~fit viewt and by prescnt1111 this nempaper'A opinions t.nd \cli.'U on CUM'f'nt topics. n., cdltcrla) opittJonli of the Dall)' Pllol •wear only ttl the edltortal C91;umn at the top of the pqe. Oplrrlont expretMd by the cot- 11mnl1b •"'1 cll'loonlat• a.nil Jetttt" ' ·.vrttm ate thtlr own and no tnOOne- rntnt 1or ~Ir vlewi JJy me Dally Piiot -Id bl - Tuesday, .A~gusl 14, 1973 l • DAILY PILOT 7 (;oast Area Vital Statisti~s ARE YOU SERIOUS ABOUT LOSING WEIGHT? D1lssolution Of Marriage PINAL D•ClllS r11e11 JlllV U Jl\lrl'Qul, Elli111tltl llld MJ,rco ~rto l rlOll., R!Mleft Glbeon Ind M1r;1r.t ·~-ArmtlfOflll, CollrN Olvnn Mid JMnne M. V111111, .i~IV1' 0, Ind CharteJ M. CllUO.M, Dtvld Mkllael 1rwl P1trlel1 .,, Vlr119<1i TturlM L. 1nd WVl'IO!lt L. Htrdw c~ 1MrU1n At1c1 1rwl Phllllo ,,_ ICl"'P, Lu Ann, I mirier, 1tc. vs \'>'II• ll1m J_,.n VlrQtn, JUYtnllno l . Ind ,..,.,,, !lOlno.t, Dl•nM $u. tr.I sr.nll'Y Wll· ltrd ltltr1n. Anl1111lo 1nd hnnle . . ENROLL NOW -FALL SEMESTER HAW'J'HORNE CHRISTIAN ·SCHOOLS All-Doy Cla11H kindergarten thru 8th Grade , Schoo11s1~fts.Tues'ii!y;SeP:i:~, .. R{gislrnlmn r ee Only $10 • FREEi School desk$ loaned for home use. . ' ·' On 1"1qu111 wt wlll provfd111cll 1!11d1nt I dllk hi m1y Ill It home whll1 11tt1t1-ln1 HCS~· • Mo4ern curriculum • High11l 1c1d1mlc 1tand1rd1 • All faiths wtlcom1 Vlffr&. .. rbtr• J1.111t Ind Al•n Wtlltr M«ombtl'. filld'llt<I I.. Ind M1riur11 •m ' ·a''"· "k'°''! L. •114 w1111 .... o. Clyde Al en tnd ~rot Alltl !• Olane SU. Ind t1lo J-pt, S,_,.11tfl, Dofl11d Ctrrlll Md Vl(~I Lylll'I Mllft. Mtll~ ~ 1nc1 Jerrv Ma'flleld •lltetW Jlly 21 NldleM. Lindt J. end S~ll E . Glullat\I, TOlll AM tnd Glov•nl 1111111111 KllGl:lloefl, lleul1h M. itr.c1 Frtclerlc:k E. WU..,.,., H11tn L, llld Jtek O. J.clllOA. OOMkt 'e:. Ind C,.ndac. M. HeHn. Pll'Mll /Mrll 1nd Wtvn-L1roy "'· J-1. MYfl L. 11!d OtYld Ill. Erb, Arlt.ur Del!Nr Ind CllflltJ,... lr-lr~, N1ncf L. 1tld Writ kl'ltlcl!I, Otrvl Willet' ~ Sh1rtn Lee CUMlngh1m, [)oMld A. Ind MltY L M1thll. Nadine Ind RlcMrd Off P_, O.r1k L. ~ CoMle M. Wrlgl'lt, Mar11 S. 111d Jlmmv w. °"'' Marie J11n11e c. end 01vld ·-Hoffm1n, Loh L. 1nd Arnold w. Crul, Sllarron R. and Arm.ndo L. Aey, K1ren 0. and Rk l>ard G. AOlelle. Aov S1111Mr1 Ind P11rl Arlene Gr1llarn. P1Trh::l1 J. Ind Mtlvln G. LlrnlUn, Rodller J. end sneron IC.. l'llM Jl,lly" Whlt1, 1111'1' M, Incl ChlrlH W. LI S1t11, Franc:" C. end P1lrlcl1 Ltl Antolln, Conwelo ind Jull1n Arnold l'rffd, Hllblr1 H. Ind Norm• H. FIOfn, Aoneld Ind El1lflt P11rlcl1 Wood, Nervlnn end Kl<'lneth H~btrl G.ll'!nltl, &.onnll J. Incl Robert C. Mil-. P1trlcl1 SUI Ind Ctworlu DonoY11n. BertM ~ ll'ld Elm.,. D1r1 Sovs.t, ROOll"I Jlnws. ll'ld •••IMrl LH Tllon\ptOr:\, $fnclr• M. end llOlll' W. Jem11, John M•rlln •ncl Cl'ltr'VI l,,.,d, El11l1111 Emily Ind R1fld1JI W11yn1 Winter, Ktnn"~ G. 11nd Glorlt Smith, Mirr I.OUiu, •nd H1"'f Ken· FlllO Alftvll l Miii Powell, De•ltn• Rene •nll JOM Mlthltl HtAkl-, R l~rd C. 1NI C1rolyn Rnoo.1, A-I L. '"Cl Wlnlrtu F. $1me>ton. V1lerl1 AM Ind OU~ Allfl olrrillt, 5hltbv L. Ind Rontld 6 . Clilrk, O•vld R. end P1rr11la Jl'lt1 H•U1U, Jll'Otnl Grtt.iirio Ind Vlllerrff{, Rk1rdo Munor end ~'ft• Hilrwood Henry, Andr11 A.nnt Ind Gordon LM M1r11nil Nev1t111 Aot>e•t tnd Helen Herd WI ., Rich. 1n W. 11nd Belly L.. MlcdOnlkl, lm1 .. 11Mrlr11 ind S!twlck/, Gera!Olnt M•rle 11nd R-rl DOl'leld Wll!l"m L••o, t 1•t1r, Aon•ld Lee end KrlU!ll. K•llllHn Ann Ind L11rry J1ne 1 Mtrli , R1111111 Glbb1, lmml• L 1Jld cner141s A. Ev,n1, Etllll M. Ind D•vld L. lurns, J11nlc1 A. ll'ld E•rl l.tl W1md1hl, John Loul• 1nd o-M11rlt MacDonald Love• H, •nd Lewl1 S. J11c~. AO>emlrv Ind Wlll1rd Ho!Ueln. '"''"'" J. Ind ("lyM o. Oct THll!lln. R09r• L. 11nc1 Janet M. Rte11.'":1rv H11.., •nd Geor .. A. Glj~~enrlttt• ~r(ICllS 1nd JOlln Tonti.1nson. Rot11 Miry end Wlnd•ll M. ' J1c~1011. Jhn'!'le er.d veronlc• F, Lln.Hm.in, M1•l• IM 01vtd R, Ourocl\er, K1tnl11n Sue 1rid Ken:'Wllh "•mU1on. A-I L••O'I' Ind Donna Louli Je•n Gr1h1m. John Wellece 1!'1d Je1n H. Z•lren, Gloor9l1 L, l!'ld Dlflnl1 M. COlllnl Hlrl)lr! Gregory '"" Brenda Erl,luon, Lltf T1rr1nl e nd Lind• Ctrol M1rll"6 A1w"°"', Judi Marie 1nd 01nl1I 01vld K••nl1 ICrrne 5u 11\d K1~th Lte Mkhell. K11tt1<lne J. l!'ld WIUl1m A. Ouba!il ,au! O 'nd N•ncv Jo Pevton, Tonv• K•'I' and John Ch1r111 C'I••~. 0or1, Lllllan •...:I Aevrnond John c11ru, Robert w. end Riqurl Gl~':'~:io Chtryl Lynne end Allrtdo Graves, E1rl Fr1nc1, Ind Sui11n l(''I' Al .. v•,.,, .. •, Emmi J'ne BM WllJl1m Hvcklefdl, L1rry WIUl11m Ind Lrlhlole H111>ert Kuulpo Sir > ..,.•rardl!S L. Ill inti P1!rk11 A. Akock, Slllrlev J . 1nd Charin L. Aoe, L.a• 1nd 1<enn1!ll o. IClnfil, LIWl'H!CI 0. 'nd C11rele A ~l•l'lt, 1(;1Jlhrvn A. 11'11:1 J11tn1s L. Krasltr, Imogene end Robert Tobin. B1r11ar1 Ann t,nd Roner LIOl'I Miies. P11rlcl1 E. Ind Robl<'I B. ·····•~" ..... I.I ~rt<! o""~ld "· St ..... 1r1, E1rHfll 1M Ch1d1s A. Wr\Oht, Sher'"'l Ann •!'Id Oonl\d.Ll'• Roorlover. A1mon o end Aide L ~ o· ··~•~ G~o•ne J. ind Vl'12•t1•1 D • · Al.lllelf, James e . 1nd Ccrl"t1nc1 A. Hlrln, M1rlorle Miii IM J1mn Don Glomb, Wl lll~m ~. •n1 Jane A. DOI'"~ '•~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. O•IChllkY. Ch1rllne M. Ind AOber1 w. II • . DJ!!IJm COLLEGE PHARMACY medical ' w~ight l1ndoro's un ique program is o safe ond practical method for the entire family to lose weight and learn how to maintain proper weight ... under the strict supervision of Medical Doctors. reduction LINDORA+ MEDICAL CLINICl c.11 for information Monday thru frid•y 8 A.m. to b P.M. COSTA MESA Adams at Mesa Verde 557-1893 NEWPORT BEACH 404 Westminster 645-3740 NEWPORT BEACH GARDEN GROVE LONG BEACH PASADENA 796-2614 ORANGE 538-239' 645-3740 534-2051 426-6549 '"'' l oelouoenol llld9. ""'" ,,11f1u.1nal l ldg. .:• '"'''""""! l ldg. 1u ...... c"·r-" ,,,, .......... llclg. WOODLAND HILLS SIHRMAN OAKS WEST COVINA FULLERTON LA HABRA 694-1029 347-5647 789-7103 962-3438 870-9501 w,,,..,.11.,,.,Y M1d1<Gl llldg c;,,b,,..Vo" Dyl '•1f1•t11n1I a1a, Mooo" llld1. COSTA MESA 557-1893 SANTA MONICA 818-4513 POMONA 623-1655 ,,,.._\lo•d• ,..i ........ 1 •••• , .. ~~,.~ M•<l><.t 11<11 SAN BERNARDINO 186-4788 Arrowhead Med!Cal Bldg. '•"'""" >/ell•y .... ~~·''·~· .. E. LONG BEACH 597-0378 lo' Alro1 M1d1,o! Cenrtr Siar~ C1ll•9• M1d,..,l llld1. CERRITOS 924-5748 H•ll<1111 M1dK1I tlcl1. RIVERSIDE 787-8250 c.,.,,.. ~tdiccl ••of•u•"'•"'"•· $Ciuar1 MISSION HILL~ 365-1131 • M i1,ion Medica l 8!~. , Sllft, M1rv1 1rvln1 end Mlltlhew G. AoWlr(, Klnd'll E. and Oorolhy BOrroueh, Anlll K. end Edmund J . Tll!lnglla1!. Ar•-A. Ind Herold F. Hunter, Allen 0 . and Lo!Mlr11 Gcent Epem1. 5hlrley ind G1rrll Jay lentornci, John J . 'nd EUlll"ll M. Wrlqhl, Ol•nnt M. Ind Ronald G. H1Ltlcll. Frieda JO'l'CI end John Edw,rd ~l!i;:.bftl, Dorll J11n el'ld NC!f'blrl ~~. lllwt11 L. and Petrick ft ANTHONY 5CHOOLS T s d ' N Q ~ En~··Hl'l9n Mtrle 1nd How1rd Bruce (1crosl !ram Felrvlew s1111 Hospttel) • HARBOR CENTER t ' ~~,.!~; :;~,:·J~ndA~.~J;:;:l '1"1 Mue 54W21t 1300 Hartlor ..:enter • ry a ur ay s ews UIZ AU'fllcebl, B1v1rly A. e!'ld Andrn • PREKRll'TIONS Co111 M1i1, California Mtgutl • SICKROOM RENTALS Ph. (714) 979·2353 4'41 F1lr Dr. .... F~en, L_...,; John 1M $hehfl Grey • HUOSON VITAMINS 1711 S. llrwknuri! SI. ,• ~ • Door·to·door ~11 smlc1 • Befort and after school c1re Pelldlnl, Nini Allin end A.rlel G. • "OLLISTER OSTOMY w D y 01 LI G~rdl1. Lori Lynn Ind Georgl. • JOBST STOCKINGS Ahlheim, C~I. 921!04 e are, OU Rochltort. JOMpl! Aol•nd ~ .• ~""' • CAMP SUPPORTS .... 17141 776-5800 - LllM(I MIMll l'~"';;:;;"~";";;';"~";';'~·~M;•~»~~~C~"'~"~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'!_I_ _____________________________ ·---------~ Stnllh, Lor9n E. end Glll'lldlM L. MU'lilr•W, P1mtl1 J1mes end O•vld L. L1 Fon. Mlo<ll'fn L. IM 0111 M1l,,.llel, Donne Je•n end O«inls • R11dln1 (with phonics}, writing, 1r1Uun1tlc, r11din111, 11ll·di1clpli111 emph11lz1d • Schtol 1ftlfws to redact clothing costs • fl111on1Mt tuition In Fountain Valley: 16835 Brookhurst Sire&! I 714-982·3312 Be llecessary A lot of people ne<d ;;oo: And. they need you right now! Theres a vtta1 need for qualified people of all ages In the dynamic medical and dental fields! Learn it right! Southern California College of Medical .& Dental Careers offers ex~elll")~ <qu™'• fpr ¥EDICA1. A'SSISTANTS -DENTAL.,TECHNICIANS -MEDICAL RECEPTIONISTS . ..., and - DENTAL ASSISTANTS. Vou get 5uperb pro- fessional Instruction for an excitin$" future in health care! Learn it fast! ' These are 'no-nonsense' courses. Crammed with critical Information. ·You're tau9ht quickly. Efflcienlly. And. you go to work -fast! CALL 635-3450 Po It righl now! Y01.11l ~mote lnlofmatkln -and -you'I discover Just how many people really do nttd yoU! PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE FOR GRADUATES AT NO EXTRA COST! ACCREDITED MEMBER. NATIONAL ASSOClATION OF TRADE & TEO-INICAL SCHOOLS. AU. PROGJW1S APPROVED FOR VETERANS. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COil.EOE OF MEDICAL & DENTAL CAREERS 1717 sourn BROOKHURST. ANAHEIM 635-3450 Fr1ncl1 Morrtwn. Glarl1 Ml'I' 1nd J1mes Hollis Cllrl1tenffn, Carl F. Jr. 1nd A1'9el1 C. Kr1lr1r, Vlvl1n M1rl1 •nd N•ll Ron1ld Mlll'lndlno, JOMPll C1rl end K1thryt1 Ell!'I Mo<.ldy, H1l1t1• M. end Clyde L. MUSHl#hlll, SMfry L. Ind Aobtr1 C. Bonar. llruct L1wr1nc:1 and &1rbtr' Ellen O.mund!IMI, Krl1 L. trw! Lydll c. Burnett, Ju1nll1 F1y tnd J1m11 Eclq1r Glllll1M, Arll5S C1m1ron Incl Roy --~ Schultet, C1rol A. end Wesley LOIPllt, LI""' H, tl'ld 01"l1l K. L.1res. Louh Ellli end Merlorle Mtrlt SIOlt, Alchtrd L. ll'Ml P1frlcl1 L. Puellot. Blanc:hl C. and Sh•ne T. Rowe, S.ndrl J , 1M IUdl1rd S. Ribbing, Oorl1 11'1d Ar!'IOld Noriega, Kertn J11n 1M Edw1rd G.8111, Crill Wood 11'11:1 OOnt" Jee" Vlgll, Rew M1rl1 1nd John s. Cl<'blklll', J1MI M. 11'1!1 Akherd E. Mel.Mn, Wer,,..,. H. Ind M.0.111'11 T. l rltton, C"-rles C: Incl June A. Klmlllll, Jeck Alonro Jr. tl'ld W11'1d1 fltlne • l'l\ecl ,l.11911'1 1 Clltiom.n, Shll'fn All end Kennell! R. Line. Lyntlll R, •M Pel.Ii A. Lerti.11'1, TharMI E. and CIW"l1tlne Carlis.It, JOMphlM el'ld Mervin K. ll1k1<, Rlchflrd l.Ol'l'l•lne Ind JoYCI Elelne Adl<m1n. Adflenne J-pfllne Ind Watler ()lrrell Jor6'1n, C1rol J. 1/ld RelMrl M. O'Nesti.y, J11n Elltn end Jtr1ry Deen M~ele, M1r11ret R. end WUll•m F. V1r1111. RIClllll Glllfrl Ind Abdon P. Prke, Mflriorlt end lilly G- Bf11W11. LI W1yne Olvld 1M M1rlorit 0111'11 O'Connor, Joan Oudtev Ind P1lrldl Nordell. Mery SuMn Ind W•YM '••t11Ctlt1 L1V1n, Timothy llrl1n end llltv S"" Gos11t1. Rkll1rd Edw11rd 1'111 o-a Sll'ld•ll • • Andrews. 0.111 Tl<HI Ind Slrvfll Frank Hn .. Riii Ind Oon1ld e . ~ C•rpen1w, Chlrl11 Jimtt and &erblr• AM Leu1, 1<1rtn Ind Vlrgll RlcJ11rd W11111rns. l>11n 1nd Carolyn J. Johnllon, Lllll1n H119hlnn •nd EuttM Clifford Sacl'ltfl. Dl1nr11 M. 11nd Joseph Smith, Nlnl:'f LOUIM 11\d Altllird c .... ie. C11rey, Merilyn G. 1nd SllYM C. Stirn, St-L. Ind Mery Mlr91rel °""' Jilt'ltl KM •nd JerTlld wunem 01vl1. Judllfl Anni 1ftll Homtf' Jay Orllleb. Oanne Y. end Rlcherd J•Ynll, H. WlllKI -.111 SllWl'I C. ThomQSon. AvtlflY A. •nd J otl'I T. Brown, Llncle 5. Ind KIMlllfl V. Wli11!19, Cl..., Mell1M ilM Rog.ti" LH H1nty, le!ly Jean Ind J•!"" Fr11ncl1 Htckrnl1lbl1, GllM L. Ind J11nltl L •• L•rn, Louis EU 1 ll'ld Milrloriil Merle COPe. OtnlM Ind Jeck Allen Br•nntn. lilttv Mllflll Ind Teel Roe O'••UOI\. C•rl WllU1m Jr. Ind C11rotv" Anlonowt+Jdl, FrlllC" Helin Ind Frln. cl1 O.H. Btllh11rr, Send•• Olene end R1lpll Dr1~rn sum1111..,, JoYcl June end Herbert $1tVln B1<ry, LHlll M, ilnd Rlthlrd J , MtGulni, Kiltllleen end Jonn Earl Jof\n1h>n, DouQl11 A. •!'Id S1111n A. THE ULTIMATE IN CARPET CLEANING STEAM MASTER .Mamk.il CARPllT CLSANIND 8Y8T;mM From StHm Muter Tho People Who Brought You "STEAM CLEAN" We've taken t~e revolutionary principles of st1a(l'I clean and refined and improved them to bring you a totally better pro- cess for cleaning wall to wall corpet- HYDRA CLEAN-it's batter than steam! 5 \VAYS BETTER THAN ORDINARY STEAM CLEAN CU:AMI Dtlrlll H1 ... ·lh«• WJMllM ,,_.,,. ,..,, ... IOI! Ibo, .... ,.. • .,., l•U. Dlr1 i..•1u1e4 »--•r Ill• hlsll l',...lll'f. oll• •ltd ""'"'· flt ii .. • flu lhll urpu ftkn ""' ,.allr -ie• ••• n.,..,, · 0111&1 FASTEll l l!utootll• pn.~ru 1ro 1 ffRHlll IQ Jho. per "ltlra t1<li with lSO 11•1< ffft •' 1lr ~·· .. 11•••· Dir•. -1.ot"" ••~ .i. • .,,.. ... i•~· 111 .... u, •"'·ti~ ••• ,.. Tt•• ,.,,.... Tho ,11~ 1.o loft drier odd 11 ...... HO lllAVY lQl!IPJoll:ICT t l'f• li•o.y "'l•lp• ..... " """'•hl 1•11 J••• ..., ..... °"' ... 11. «11lolN 1111 olor-111otdr. 1111 .,f ,,,,,. .,,,, 1al1 ..,. dH•l .. wood ••h•n r-•• 11oe-. MO .ltlCTllC1TT 01 llOT T,.lTEI! flt" Hrtlro·V" .,..1,-11 Jo .....,."''"' NII-•· ,.~, •Ml ,. ....... n., .......... " ... ,..,., •11 wotH • •lfftrkltr .. wllll ••• 1 .. ., 11••• c1 .... 1 2 3 4 .s FllEE ESTIMATES 540-(.@11 9 645·1313 0l'll1' SOf'T WATEIU All w11•r h "'"''' olltlt..,.•M •fl-4 to ~u111M11 1111'11 w11•r ...... _ ..... ,.,...... tlueJ"'fo SAVE 20% ONI DAY SERVICE 1740 SUPERIOR AVE. -COSTA MESA (Now,.rt 111"1. & 17th St.I ,flt•llllthed 1t2.S ""' ···"' 31 tf BONUS HYDlA GUAID PlOTICTIVI CAR.PIT SPRAY .. uo 2()0/o OFF! • ens1on your personali No matter how you picture yourself, as a busi ness tycoon or a Grecian princess, as inscrutably exotic or just plain folks , General Telephone probably has an extension phone to match your person- ality. Or the personality of your home. And our extension phones are not only decorative, they're also convenient. They save you from having to run through th e house every tim e the phone rings. After all, a business tycoon or a Grecian princess shou ldn 't have to run to answer the phone. (iji§I GEnERALTELEPHDnE An oc:ual oppori unity e mployer I ·' ' . ' ' ' LIAILY PILOT For the Record ,. ~~_ ... ::::. ....... "'"" ........ .;. Dissolution ~;; Of Marriage ~·, I'll" Aut~I I •,;... 'Gn1v, Norm• Dl•nn •nd 'lltlch••d • Morman ,. l Smith, Wlltl•m Edward •nd lklnnl• LM • ~• M•rQult, Grt'lcMn A. •"4 Alley F' •• Jr. ,< IC.-11ar. Judith J. •l'ld Tt1om11 J. •. :• 5kldmor1, Wllll•m J., Ill Ind Vlctorl• • .; L. Hoh l"'1tlf', Sllelil Ruth I nd G•t.n ' ' Wrl'!lhl : ;.. 811~. Marnie VHnlc• 1"4 Llnnlio Gr•V .,, , Ruano. 51ant.v M.llrlfn i nd Mlr'll ...... A•mslrong, MadellM M. •nd Loring -1;. Gll1, Tik'sphor1 '" •nd ti1i.n "'' W91~. R-1• IC9!11 1tld Ly .. llfl"I "' Ootio.on. Lindi K •• ,,,, Ou1ne M. .:·· Gdlla''· Jo An" •rod sam111t r . •• l(oepr;., K•ron Elluboelh and M«rll "~. M1rtln ·, ! Smllh, P•ul1 Anni ind Frtderlck ,.• 1 EdwM'd ~ • 'lloncll, IM!rld V!ola •nd L•WAM:I ,,ti , Rv•n. M•lll• LM •nd Mvron Df11no .. ~: ,Wlllouthb'I. VIYlll'I Louh .. Ind J11ne1 "~ Wlllr.fr "<. •W1ll1e1, S1ndr• Joa" ~ Donlld ".:· Fredfrkk ., • StitWart, lrrn1 J01n ind Tommv Alltn ::: R•~lfl. Fr•nlr. Mid Ad-41 • ·.1 • St..Uon, Mlrl1m •M RObl'rl H1l1 "'. Now, 811111 J , •\'Id Frtdl1'1c:tl : •G1ddlt, J11n C. ll'ld Ectw•rG E. "; 'EIHott, ht'll A. •nd Fr"*'kk C.., Jr. ~ ·' . N••I, Randolptl 0 . Ind KllhY 0. ... ~ •. Dlltbllrl'OW, John w. Ind CMIYI• Ann .1 • Wllll1ms. MllGrtd Ann 1nd D•vld .,• JOH911 "; • Goubtf"I, Jll'"" P•l11' •nd Llnd1 Mlrlt •. · Wt1lrlck, Ctlhft'lnt Ann Ind Mark •,' , P11rlclr. • • IC111MrG, LOiii st M. •nd Michael J, • ll•011nll, Donna J, Incl JOW911 ,t,, <'' Jord1n, W•Ynt T. and SuNIM l . .1:. MtlCollfl, F11mllr.o and TllerMS Rlchlrd ~ \, Blaclr.&llw, Roy Ind JO..rint K•ran ;~l , :1 l ~; t ,. t -:~ Other Deatlis • ,.. HONOLULU ( AP ) .... Douglas Richards Kennedy, ,. ,.. 55, veteran television and mo- -· tion picture character actor, ::.; died here Friday following a long illness. He had been a ~ • familiar face for television .. · and picture fans for 30 years. ... " •'· , .. HONOLULU (AP) -The :"" first Hollywood publicity man ~: for NBC, Harold John Bock, !,_ 64 , died here Saturday night. •( Bock ran his own public rela- 1: tiom firm . '· i:-' ' • ENNIS. Mont. (AP) -Mn. Blanche Halleck, the wife of former U.S. House Republican leader Charles A. Halleck .._.: drowned i1onday in the ~:'. Madison River. She was 69. , .. , .. _.. •' • • • ' . -~ '" .~ ''. M U EHLHEIM, Germany (UPI) -Karl Ziegler, 74, a 1963 Nobel Prize winner in dternistry, died Sunday after a short illness. t~ BEVERLY Hiu.8 (AP) -t1 Memorial services were t.o be i';! held today for ·eart GmllW' :-·: Andenoa, 61, founde1" of "" Anderson Steel Structural Co. and designer of a partially b ~ prefabricated airplane hangar. He died Sunday. Death Notices ARBUCKLE & SON WE5TCLIFF MORTUARY ~ U7 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa ! -;, . ~ BALTZ-BERGERON "· . FUNERAL HOME e. Corona del Mar 67»450 c ~Co1ta Mesa 6*!.Uf & 9 " • • ~ • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 111 Broadway, Costa Mesa u s.3433 • ; l>D.DAY BllOTRERS : MORTUARIES , , 17111 Beach Blvd. • .Jtaallnsto• Be1dl SU. 7771 . U4 Redoado Ave. i · 1:.oag Beaeb Zls-al-1145 ~· 1 • ' ' 1'1cCORl\llCK LAGUNA ~ BEA CR MORTUARY i!: 1706 Laguna Canyon Rd. "' 4M-NlS ~ . PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Cll•pel f'! J5lt PaclOc View Drive ~ ' Newport Beach, CelUornla : IU-Z7H • PEEK FAMU.Y COLONIAL FUNERAL ROME itf!llohaAve. We11mw1er ..,_ • S)IJTllS' MOl\TUABY a'I Mall SL 8 ........ 11-' &11•• Tutsday, August 14, l~J.> Co1npnter By JOllN SCHADE 01 It.. Deily l'HIM 5Ulf Time was ""'hen scouUng meant a campout or a wig· v.·ag flag ~sion of J\forse Code. But times have changed. at least for one area Explorer post. A computer has replaced the flags for send ing messages . A computer system which can interpret J\.1orse Code is just one ol many electronic projects currently being done ... by the nation's oldest special interest unit, Post 340 of Newport Beach. The unJt is sponsored by the Collins Radio Company. Its speciality is communications. The 17 members of Post 340 are concentrating on com- puters. ~, Four computers have been built by individual post members, but all t h e members use the ''electronic brains" for mechanical study and programming training . Pete Vogt built hi s homemade oomputer f o r educational purposes. He uses it to monitor Morse Code routines, but not in the normal scouting way, He types out a message on a keyboard and the computer sends back the message in code form on a monitor. The machine may also decode a coded me~age from another source into Arabic let- ters on the screen. Three other computers built by Wes Vanderpool. Jim .!lan- nalli and post advisor Bill Caldwell are genera purpose mini-computers. All t h r e e members have the technical or "hardware" sk..ill, oo they use the computer for pro- gramming training. "The: members get a Jot of parts because they find out just what they need, look up \Vhat area company handles the part. and then go in and ask for them," Caldwell noted , Caldwell said most or the companies are quite cooperati ve Y.'hen the explorer explains the parts are for a scout project. "Most people arc glad to donate as long as the equip- ment is used," he added. The explorer post has been going for 11 years. A remote control "moon- 1nobi le" was built in 1964 and v.'aS displayed at a nu1nber of shows. s~onting? exhibitions, until post interest shifted to the digital elec- tronics in 1971. The post. however, still has the sub and advisor Caldwell said work on the sub may begin again soon. Two members, Hunt Dabney and Jim Murphy , started designing audi-amplifiers in the post , then branched out commercially. Several others have built complete hi-fi systems. 1\\'0 amateur television sta· lion cameras y.•ith remote Lransmitting and monito ring capabilities have been com- pleted. and another is under construction. The setup allOY.'S the sender to see the person he is talking to. bolster the post's membership. Members come from all over Orange County. Seven of the 17 are still in high school, all in their junior year or above. All have a keen interest in electronic communication in one form or another. 'The post is the o n 1 y specially post that is co-educa· tional. Shelley Davidson, 16. of Anaheim, became interested in the post last October when she sa\V the post exhibit at the Scout-0..Rama. She joined in November. A high school senior. Miss Davidson wants to be an elec- t ronics engineer. and says belonging to the post has helped her towards that goal.· So, wha t you have here is an Explorer post with computers a nd a female member. 'That's a £ar -cfy from a weekend CONEY ISLAND DAYS Free Prizes Fun & Games South Coast ?tua ·HAMS "So Good ... I t Wilt /Jaunt You 'Til Jls Gone." Our Honey Baked Ham1 Are Your Best Meat Buys Today I With m•at pdc11 1oaring, our d•lido111 t1ble;r•1dy ham1 1r1 c ompl•i•lv b•kad !JO houri l ; Tr•mmtd of ••<•••iv• fi t •ltd 1kin; SPIRAL SLICID: Hon•v 9J111d; no 1hrink•g•; 011r wo"derful nut lik t ft1.-or ham1 ••• 1lic1d r11dy to 1e•v•. To S.M lo11r Mfft Doller and l11loy a Wo1tHrfwl Dl11.., 5ene HONEY IA.KID HA.MS, To11101Towl DOES THE GOVERNMENT PAY THE FUNERAL EX- PENSES OF A DECEASED SERVLCEMAN, OR, ARE THESE COSTS PAID BY THE FAMILY? by EUGENE 0 . BERGERON A•y Mnk•MO• who .... of Olly COllM wMle fflbtff or COfllfnlulOMd 111 •"Y .......... tit. Arlfled Sonkft k e11tittod to M NhlrNCI to hk mlde11ce of rKord Oftd llltenff .t tlte • .,._.of tt.e Fedef'OI Gonr•fllfft. Anotttlfteflb for tfM Nter• of tt.. ~-ore auolly moO. by tM 111llltDrY ••tltorltlel at the ,kK• of deotti . TM family, howeMf, _,, anOIMJ• with a MOrtlclo111 of rtielr ... c.hoosllHJ a.d ff rohnbitl'MCll by tN 90.,.,. ..... 1, 111 ohhr cote ttte ftiMlly h1dkstes "°'' clriolco of "• recehl1t1 .ortfc!Oll, 5625.00 1, ollowff for ,..1-rv ••!NM" $625.00 h ollewff hr fvAOfaJ Olld burlal 111 a prlvote cwtlrf er- SJ1'S,OQ 15 ollowod for hMrol •nd b11rl•l l11 a N.rlo11ol Cemetery. C•rt•l11 othor •• ,.,._ may also be ollowod, We wlll dlJCILSI thoN with ••Y•N , ... ,..ttod. w......,., po•lble, "..-tJo .. '1"111 be aawered la this col1111nt • Balt%•Bergero.-.Funeral Botne C~~~~z~:SA . 2 LOCATIONS COR~~:.,~;~ MAR 'I Since the computers are in- dividual projects, the members themselves have to do a little scouting around to find their parts. The interest shifted from the ground to the sea in 1967 \vhen. the Navy gave the post the submarine "Starfish." The un- rnanned, remote sub was also the center of attention at scout IYtost of the items usually become a part of the Scout.(). Rama di~lays which post ad- visor Caldwell says help to back pack with \he boys. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,~~~"'~·~·~~~~~~~~~ 13 Resolutions Adopted Citws Pushing State Legislation 5 County Men Face Drug Trial SANTA ANA -Five Santa Ana men arrested in a dru~ sweep that allegedly put $16,oo:> worth of cocaine into the hands of undercover Los Angeles policemen have been ordered to face trial Oct. I in Orange County Superior Court. Judge James Turner set lhe trial dale and a pretrial session for Sept. 7 im- mediately after Jesus Mesa Limon, 25, Robin Wayne Hill, 22, Kenton Louis Albin, 21. Roger J. Nielsen, 21 and Joseph M. Prime. 26, were indicted by the Grand Jury on charges of possessing and selling cocaine. All five were arrested last June 4 shortly after Los Angeles officers a 11 e g e d 1 y bought one pound of cocaine in a deal consummated in a Bristol Street garage. All rive men are held in Orange County Jail in lieu of bail. LET'S 8£ FRIENDLY U you have new ncl~hbonl or know of anyone moving to our area, plea8C 1<'11 us 110 that "'C mey extend a friendly wt>lcome And ht'lp thC'm to bceomc acquainted In their new surroundlnJ,'1i. So. Coast Visitor 494-0579 494-9341 Harbor Visitor '46-0174 LET'S PLAY POST OFFICE di capped. -A Newport Beach resolu· lion urging the s t a t e legislature to enact legj.slation that will alleviate the tax 'burden on coastla cities h11v- lng regional pubtic beacb · areas ran into .some op- position. Resoli.Jtions C90Ceming the Chino Hills Airport and the county Mosquito Abatement District were found not to be of statewide concern and will be stud ied by the local league. Men's self·winding, pressur&proofed wrist chronometers by Rolex. A. Thirty jewel movement, Dav-Date in 18 karat gold case with "President" bracelet, $1,850. B. Stainless steel Oysler-Dste, with ma1ching bracelet,$331.so.C. Stainless steel Datejust, 14 karat gold fluted bezel, steel and 14 karat gold band, blue dial, $51 o. Do Something Beautiful.~ Clt1r9e: A((Olmh lnvlltd -Amerlcl" .. ~llf•H lenk.t.morlc~rcl 1nd M11ttr Cll•rtt, tat, SLAVIC:K'S Jc,velers Since 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644-1380 Wllll lo<•llrlna 01: Torr111te. Ora~. Lt t.trr.101, LI H~br•· ..._, ltn OleilO end L•1 I/tot• Try Jack's 'Phase #5' RECIPE for REDUCING! 1. Stir In one Mini-Max prqgr~ITI of exercise and riutritiOnal guidance. 2. Add our Figure Fitness Spas fbr Men and Luxurious Figure Control Salons for Women. 3. Mix one frosty, cool and delightful Swimming Pool. 4. A splash of our Hydro Whirlpool. 5. Spice ii up In our Slesm and Sauna. It all . adds up to a pretty sweet deal. Our Special Pre-Opening Offer takes the cake! DON'T DELAY CALL OR COME IN TODAY 979·4800 NOW SERVING COSTA MESA SANTA ANA COMMUNITY. JACK lA lANNf 'S Enroll now"ll our con11ruet1on •It• triller and 11ve duri~ Phi~ IS. Open llll 10 P.M. for.vour convtnl•nce, l u~ri/11·aJ1 HEAi.TH SPAS 3611 SOUTH BRISTOL Conslructlon slli' at corner Bristol and MacArthur WORLD'S LARGllT AND flNllT CHAIN Of' HUI. TH 9PAS ,OR MIN AND WOMIN. Over 126 loclllon~ coatt to eo11t Owntd and oper1ted by Hee1tl'I lndu1tril1, Inc. .. PllBUC NO'l1CE THIS ltEl"'lfr TO •I llETVRNEO 10 . I O~PA;HMlHl 0' nl!Tll~S\Jlll' C~flO:O 0!0 lllV£"Ul SllAl'ING :!Ki'J l'f,.;o;l¥LVAHL4 .i.ve.N.W. Vl'-!l~l"OGiOlt. O.C. 20'?2' O"MTIHGIMAANTINAMCI WINOITUllU ,. ........... •• , ..... • . ... ..... ..... . -...... . ·- PUBUC N<n'ICE PUBLIC N<n'ICE TM• Gcr.-l"l'IMINT 0, · FOUNiAlH Vfllt.E'r' CI·!" P'\A1'$ TO !XP'CftO 11'$ llNE/'lli1 IMAlllHQ .).lLQCAl),QM KlllTMI l:'IT!fllMlHT rlMQO,llGfliNll .. Q IN 1)11 fOll.O'lnNG MA*ilA &AtlQ.\l~.,tJ<I !$llfMfS;i.f0~1L~Of '" $2.;:t.. n4 ~~Nt0'fe ~01 FOUNTRlN vtiLLE'r' CITY ' DIPECTOR ·OF FINFINCE 1.8200 SLRTER AVE FOUNTAIN 'Vf!U.~ CALIF 1"'2M ., "' ..~ .. . " " " . -" ...... lifl'lllilliiii • I "1bll.... Ortntt CMS! OtOf """1, Al/llltt 11, Im " Corvrurs Prized Vehicles? Suhsidia1·y Purchased By Calcomp The Seeley Company Southern California real estate firm since 1908, has expanded operations with the opening of an Orange County office in Irvine. Managing the Orange CoWl- ty staff is Peter W. Meyn, an eight year veteran of The Seeley Company, and a specialist in industrial sales and leasing. Backing Meyn will be Barry Hoeven, a recept U S C graduate. Hoeven brings with him training from Coldwell Banker lndustriaJ Real Estate Data Bank and the Long Beach Industrial Development Department , w h e r e he developed economic feasibility studies fur that city. This will be the first branch expansion for the firm. The of· fice is located at 2031 Business Center Drive. Butch Cassidy Home for Sale CIRCLEVILLE, Utah (AP) ..... The home in which famed outlaw Butch Cassidy grew up is now for sale. . The house is on the Sevie~ River on U.S 89 just south of Circleville. Six acres of the 180-aore homestead have been tak!!n for highway expansion. i.;.,Li PILOT 9 OVER THE COUNTER NASO Lllllngt for Mond1y, Augwt 13, 1973 • ''tt" Geothermal MUTUAL FUNDS_ Venture Set. 1, ........... -...... -... ,11 ............. , •• ,,,."'""'"'""'""' ____ ""' N1w Yotk -Fol· Dry! l¥ l•..S.. U.'13 I h Inv t73'10.6.l lowing 11 1 lbt ol' ""' 111<;1n /;,J.~ J.tl Grwl'tl 3.9' •.3' Vi&t• F 10'..nll.2'5 1>k1 1nd 1P.ld prl· "'d.1..et11 9,•~ IQ,// lllam 3.U 4.21 VoYllQ lO*ll.:ltl c" Oii Mut\Hll .... Mii J..U .~.u Trst Ut 3.29 .• A.wr• F • . 1.•S ·By· F' Fundt. u juotMI t:tv llfl .. Gr 1.111 1 ... Tm Sh 12.2113.31 Rlnfrt 1 InD.S ""N'j~.~ ~"""a 111" Fna 20.1121.n •t.c Eci *':lf_:.:to \olWAIU): IV!' FUl'ld 6.80 6.IO lltlr 2. 2.1) Au;~t 131..lm ll.l1n too t .olOI0.27 P'~ 1':~1J~ ~ ~ 'li}i·lt •I• ~ 1¥#Tn F I• ~ h.:SI :::"' r.: 'f,'j l.C UOOll: l'i:ts• · SAN DIEGO -Efforts to •DMUtALTY: ""'...,. ?·.., .... , Hoo" 1 • ,!:lh 1ntr In• 16M'lt" Grwttl A.3.Jt 4.7S l>P9CU F I.I• /.~ I • • -develop geothennaJ resources lnam 3.65 4.00 ,.,c .. Fd l'l . .» \;s..1.1 JotinNn 2;J.IO 8•1.ne 11·"1 .'1 liuurn 7 W. 112 -wr'10 111.11/ 11 Wt •YITON•. ~Ot\'I 1 A3 D.Q in the Imperial Valley of. Cal~ ,t,dvlMtr 4'15 4~ ':u1c ~P uw:o'w II.Ill 81 ll.l61f.41 5soec•I :lf.~.2'l ifomfa for power generation °"'"" Fd t'.U f,G) ~ .... ~T .Wilt'·: :::: "~ 1:·1~ 2:·~ rcu~fh ~:S:'°93 .Uln1 In 13.3314.51 "'*'Y \H' 1.16 •.31 11st Kl 6.90 1:s.i EC1Vltv 3.33'j'5 will be st_...-..-1 up' in a three-At11111r• 9.49 t.ott 1<111Y Pr 3.\M 3.:..2 111! Kt .5 9t 6.s In_. 6 47 ·09 ~ AGE Fd •.63 4.12 ~na Am J:a 1.~ ll !!:" "1 lfT• F '" 1:.0 company. venture announced AH1t111 12M 13.., 11rwl Gt 12.13 ll:I• :, .2f 11 L•CT•D iios·, ·M-~ay . AIPh• Fd ll.00 16.21 ..;nvn Trt 16.07 ... 1111 SJ 1.16 L Am Sht •.• l ;l.Ol UllU . Amc1p F '·"" 5.09 ,,_,.. 3.71 ' 12 Cu.t $1 ~ ... ,, 009 Fd '!1fd' ~ Involved in the effort are ~m ,ovrs 9.1• 9.9' ."KO~ 11.:a 11.u Allollo s." Sfll Slln t :!J .. m qty '·" 4.19 1!rlld 1,9\1 1.63 •aN..., ·3 ffi tt111I · f · New Albion Resources Co., a AM•u•'•x1111:ess m t1vr• ,,.,, '·" lllckr s. ntrv F '3jji"' . . _, Si -~ AR$ 9.27 .. . kr Gfh 1.34 •• ,tlAR•MLD r : wholly owned subsidiary ~ C•Plll 7.41 •.10 'IUILITY ndmr'::.t .... 1 ~-' , • 3.tt San Diego Gas & Eleclric Co.: :~o:.. J·~ :·~: .':"~k t.62 t..a !rl oaou,i12 s. 2 ~r-V°"Fd fi5 .. 1q~ Magma Energy Inc and s,P'I(, 7'.s1 1:21 l.,IOfll 11 . .w 12.66 ~L~ 15.!! w.n , ..... L r: 'J,97 '! , tock 7.33 1.01 C.:onrr1 1.94 1.t4 " ,,... '·" '9•1 •· '.'.J . .53 Standard OU Co. of Califonua. ~m G1 "", x5.6' '11 cv ss.c '·" 1.» ~-•, "•'•'' 1 .. 5 • .a tf'••'-' '• 1-" . ha agreed .. m ns n 4.'2 5.31 Oest t.07 • , ·~ F · M rn 'n1e companies Ve 'm tnvst 4"6 4"6 Eu.x 10.31 . lnlv I.~ I.,, Aocwc 17,92 .91!1 · · · test I 4.m M111 ,·,. 1'12 e,,...,, l0.6111:40 nc cu '· 1.5'1 ncom 1'-n 1.u to JOID m a program O A.mNt Gr 2:21 2:e Fvnd 1s 2t 11.,, ' nd i. ... :ii:!. -1·' t·oo evaluate the geothennal re-~~'mo~ P11r:;; F 1&: iZ J~ 't-.... ~d" 11 ,:!: soorces in the Heber area ~='~' · 4,,, •.45 1,~c•Al1""·" ch'll. l~l~J fiUSrir 1A ;.~ ~:u~1 ~r~~~ ~ i::" i;~ i~ eirfnr::l: ti: :S~t:1 i1~J:U i~,. 1!:1~w Veiopment. ,';':C:•tt l~·fi I~~ C~t Inc ~·: S.'3 ufMm I :Ji 11.21 I l&Gt to:1fto'.ft San Diego Gas & Electrlc A ...... )I' F 7.ts .:J tlFI Va 10:n1t= t.11Jn.. .. 1",u~~~ wsl~J; 'Ja 1t.sl Co ha , ... ._ to pu-'---Ill: T .P1';(' l.60 ,.9S w 111'1 G f·°' '·f . s ian "t' ..... n IU~ HOUOHTON: NV•STOIU: lllCOm 1.60 ... • 1n 1 .1212 .• any geothermal --'."~~Oil de-"•'"' .. •• •.SS •.fS DIK Fd S.36 S.t7 PHGf'm t.ll .... p • "" s.o • piuu1.n.:w ' ti , ... 1 .... Grtn Fd 7.06 1 7.J tn ,.,. 4.33 lnD ''" •.SJ veloped lll the P""°"'1Tt for Stock 6.63 6.l5 Srock F 7A L20 COi ATW 8ND GIH": , • ....,, •• ~ Alct Sci 4,04 .(.lt lit Mllltl I.JI 1.31 l'...-m 1.56 L21 Clfl'I I'd 4.n 5.1.S electnc power prodUCUlg pur-BLC Git! 11.)112.1• VM UOU1'1 lndP F t.91 ••• 1 lllftlf 5.:01 5 ... poses 81bSOn 11.IU 11.IU I Fnd 10,t) 10.7.J Mas$ F II~ 12.27 I'S 4.tl 5.'4 . 81yroc 7.1• 7.f/J IOI Fnd 7.M t.M ilflNCL1 f Fr Gt 4.67 lt.'7 Initial efforts will consist B•rrtt ar S.7' ',, C0111m 1.1' t)s 1 n .0412. ', Fr tnc t .PI '·" f!st~rod~cti~ andge:: t~ IC l!~ ~~ nc~~·1456 "." ~o lf~ lM ""°,· Afi'Ni:°l : j ·- 8NCr1 Fii 9.00 9 00 2:S Flllld f.00 6 oo ~ \l·'f 1~!.i It $tr .U.~S Us Wh'ch ...... _ . drilled BOfldltk '" s 11 U2 S.11 -·Iv f·°' l~ n-1 J' i) we . .1 • l"lll;l partieS lklst Fdn 9'." 10:34 ll'ICGf'l'I 11 • .a u.10 ~ 1 ·Of 1 ii ~~N 10 20.J1 ~ preVIOUS)y 1R separate opera• lffi!'ocec 3.2' 3.51 ~ r=. 1l,~ l~ ;J 01W ~ tii 1(4 ~w llij .2l tions and which showed ·evi· l"UNDS: F:I:kF ,,,, 9'.ss 8tt ln'o 1t.V.lt.H tt«'lltOU~· W.'11 dence of having geothennal '~~ ~: ~~:U~·:? =~~.~·N ..-\~ tr'! tlJ ~'* F= tn 1•:n -resources with characteri&-~a~r 3•~ 1~.:l S:ltic Sr ~:~~ l·tt fn i"ft m J:.!J 1:tt :~ tics that may be suitable for 8NY .. Vtn 10.n n.as Fr tncm 1.11 1:05 viut Shrl 1.&.t41t "ncro F (a l'-30 . I . """m 9.<' • .. ~~ US Gv S 9.'310j Utt T'n 1.17 MR 1 I 71 •Ji producing e ectT1c power. SG Fund 9.ts 10.1~ u11111t1 •.• 5. '411 1nc1u '"" "" MIO! !: .. t.tt •an T•ln 11.1~ 17,"tl R" C1p ~ S.. T s•C •ot1 OWWt' .91 . Ca"t Shs 1l.O. U,U lt1 Ecitv •.ll •.7S 1t•ric IM 9M ran Cap I.JS -~ ---------------------------.l"p"u••01111NO =1t1 LfEQ 11,6)12 711 (l'1(f Sr 4.71 S.15 r1vl E.11 10.ll ~1:C. N S: d Ml Op ,.22 t.22 DIYIOn 1.4 3.10 Tudor H 11.111 Ml.a !\airier! HI.,. 11."' UNDS INCP Pm Silt S.fl • .. ~ 20tlt CG ·l' ,~ 8fld Fd .1,tO t .t.'I ll:OUll>; ~ncorn •.6# Sm'°"" Cl I t'i!Wn S!k 1,'9 1.11 COmm 1.75 t.5' lol:k Ir •• 4 1.0J Unllltd 1·• . Grwth S.U 5 M li;G' 7,6' 1.35 ....,th t.53 1.1<1 Ulllfl•!ld .6' .. lr'IC'Om ol.~l 1,,.. l llf Ir 10.93 11 t5 ~•w •NO L,, NION Slll:VIC Sl!lllCI 1,1~ 1 "' ,_ htt 7.U 1'02 EQt.1ltv 15.6617.02 :lll:OUP: v ... ,... l.ll 9:10 31tewv 7.32 i.t1 G""th 10.1S 11.61 8rd S Iv 13.32 l.56 ~" .. '" ~E s..s p 3.5.19 s1c1e 1•.st 1t.02 "'u"'c"' t" .n T I T. kl. c IOSTON· """ Sic • 36 4.36 EA Ml ••• 9~7 " •r' .n .. -6 Fuzzy Fruit? eet 1 lC i1·1,g rop ~~a;: :~ ~·~ A~~PFS~~jS6 :.~:it J:l; tl;u~i!'io l ~N -~ '"'T• es ~.a• ,; ... 8•1 Fl!d 1'.51 t:r, .-ion II·~ I'·" A8u'm,, 7,IO .ni C 111 I Co l-.J. St'!KI \ 1~ • '.\'I Com Stti; 10n1112 w Plr$ • ,,,, nd ).~ ·" ·8 o r n a mpu e..-b h teeth '""•-.,~ 10·,, 11 ·•· Gtl! FAm • ,1 ,·'° "' W1d 12.1s 13.,. r,on1 11w t .11 n P..,...ucts Inc. of Ana'--lm, '--~ REDLANDS (AP) -A fruit you can rus your "ilLr>MiAL · · rtri lf'!d l!}.' :io:n 1cr,1n 16.361•.36 °"' 111C 9.st .so '\IU •Iii: llflll 'lb? ,..,.,,.~. ~rd · nu 1st lvtr 15.1115.lt ~Ot\'I 11.n ,., !:chased the assets and WI • t'Of!V ...... ,,,n,?HAMILTON . "··· rwi 6.oft ,,.., .,,,tn(' t.ll .~ lobilu...., -' Signal Galaxle1 A now fruit -sort of hairy and oval shaped and named .,_,,.,, ~ '' ' .. F~"" >.ts 4.tt N 1 fd ,{11,{·ij .~,. 11'~ "" . l\•~ w F"~ • '~ 1" •• Orwth t.tl 7.~, Wiii 1t'2• 1•:i~ rl\ ""IS . ' Inc -·~idJ of the $'"' I after B bird -has be(!Jl lntrodUCed to California. fl.-' ~· ' •~ l11Com S.'6 !·~ INHM D= .\LUii LIN ., I •IAll:t ary 'tl''I 1.......... • ·~ t•~· H1rfwtl l •. 5:11 . All!\ .'910~ v1T lfN S.: .~ 6t Com • I .. I v........ •-••• rt L• r di ~. • Flld .u I Vtl Inc 4.1 ., P n nc. 1 N -.. ,.-" ",, ,, ~· t.CM ,,,.. Trne '¥. L"' n1t1 6.11 , .-Operations wiU contlnue 11 THE LEMON.SIZED fruit Is an import rom e" ................ , ,... .,.,, .s.1D c s.c 1!. 1011 va1 ~ICt 3.13 i ·---· --· Is -~ Kiwi ·---It I ··-l'ke • N•w , .... ,., rl'" 170 I~ •rtm.I ,.Os 11"''"11 catcomp Galaxies Inc. Tehns .t.Cllll illJU Dl1in;:u ~use oo~ I .. ,. .. " '... • .. !WW(op ,. ,, 1•... aul Rty .11 .11 '"01!11:S1 di I • 7.ealand flightle.~ bird of the same name. ,. ' .. · ·• l'llPr1 ,.,. ·~ 1?·'"' IVS F .,,,. JAs '"""'' ..,. .. were not SC OSed. b wit bed ;~;:: ;.: ~:: : :: \~"J~m 1':~ 1 .. ·,: t! t.Hj'I 1-M ::r i1t ~ The new wholly ()Wned Robert M. Knight, an orange grower, as s c .. _ .. ,... • .. • .. 11'1( ft""' , ., ~ ., ia Fd :Of flllr... ...... " Caloomn subsldl&MI Is ·-·· port of his acrelgo to Kiwis and ho""S to have a large .. _ c~ ? ... ~··IM fl!Am 2.0 ll-Ill~ l'' r·11, 1.M ... t" UC: "'" "~ ........... • -.. -•ntron -·1' .,. II ti!: IJ I llnt 10'0 "·"' auartered at 695S Havenhurst =h00 ~es~~n1,e:! :re~ll commercially. The fruit ;~~.7~ '::: ·: ~ 11~~~ ~;;~ ~1:;~ f:'I~" ~"j\ ~.1 .J~ f: ~~ _: Ave., ln Van Nuys and has an ......... ,, ........ "11 ov111 , ·~ 10 I:.. 11 . "'*"' Mu I"' •• 'l.mreglonalsalesorfl-ln Whatdoe.s lttaste llke? r-...,,,, .. ,. r.1 ,,1 '""1r.c11c !" · i'flnd . , ·•"""-'" .... .., .. ~ r-•11 I"',.,,,..., a~ 1 '•211 ''" ~colio'~ •otl.'1>1•T011 Pen11sytvania. ~~ • ..!'1" ~;; ; ;~ l~Y1't\~L "' ] 11 "W..:' 'l The co.mpany produces and OPJNlONS OlFFER: ,.., ,...,,11:• · c-m '·!t tii ,., g~ 1 1...,, ml'rkela • tine of M!mi~n-"It's llke watermoton with lime on it.'' "';;;.'r' 1.,., II\•• ~if.I; l; l:~ t;; icf ' : ~= 11:·1 ~ 'll"D ductor me1T10ries for mini· "It's Uke a green apple." ,,., ... " '' '""' iw •s'f o•o""i ot . l ~ • "It's like watermelon with a dash or strawberry." .e'~11 " _.:~,::; '~R· ii tf: ._.., ~!\! .' '· computera. lt offers plug~ "It's the only fru '1t ~· -'Id brush your teeth with nr.c1 cit r~ rr1 Sll'r .... , A.a. ~ir. patible memorlts for di9ltal "w.. ..vu ~ '~b ~ utvtl ''-"' 10.•1 ~r equipment u.rporttlon com-and then eat." ~~,ft,':"'" f~ i.~ ~l.J.!" :..,,.. L_,,... ________________ _Ji om ....... ""' v.:"•., .... ' I ..... puters. t'otv ll'lf l.14 lOIJ '"" R" "" «i me - I ) I ((I UAILf f'll.UI I llffa•J, AU9USl .1.4, J-J/ > Bulb Extinct? Prin1e Rate Puts Hurts on Mai~ket By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Bmlness Anal)"lt NEW YORK -1bos• ruing interest rates are like a sear- ing wind blowing over an already parched stock markot, where a few weary bulls st.HI trudge toward an ~sis that 1he ilear:s have a I r e ad y declared is a mlragc. WITH THE prime ~ing rate already up to 91l percent, and expected to go higher, the : market is burt in at least two . "11ys: I. Jnvestors will be drawn av.·ay from stocks by a high, almost risk1es.s return from lending rather than investing their money. 2. Corporalions v.•ill find their expenses rising, thus reducing tlle profits which at- tract investors. The aridity of the market is probably best illustrated by . the failure or the Big Three ··automotive companies , General Motors, Ford and :Ou'ysler, to attract great numbers of bulls despite record blgt earniogs. EVEN BEFORE the major banks announced a lending rate of 91/4 percent to big co r- porate customers. General Motors w~s selling al only 8 times earnings, Ford at S and Chrysler at 4. These incredibly low price- earnings ratios follow reporli; by GM ol one ooe of the best years in its hist.ory, by Ford of tbe best quarter in its history, and by Oirysler of the w l April-May.June period ever. Match those ratios - or multipl~ of current tarnlngs at which these stock! are sell- ing -with the 50s and !Os oo common seven years ago among some stocks that of- fered little but promise. Those were the days of the s<><alled performance game. If a stock performed. if it of- fered .._ lot of action, then it was con&dered a stock to watch. The fundamentals? Not nearly so lm.portant. ltOW IRONIC. The fact was th."lt many of. I.hose companies really didn't porform; they were, to some degree, a product of the imagination - of hopes, publicity, promotion and , it Is suspel!ted, even of manipulaUon. In contrast, some cor- porations today are perform- ing as ne~er berore, but thei r stocks aren't. There Is no vast public in the market as there was 10 years ago. It Is an in- stitutionalized market, a shrunken market. On some days. in !act. the major portion of trading is by insurers and banks and funds. But the.Se institutions aren't invesling in the market as a wOOle. 'Ibey have selected some 50 to 80 stocks in which to participate . A GLANCE AT the prlc.- earnlngs ratios of these select stocks shows the impact of th.i.S C'OnCeJllration. All have P- Es in the double figure!, most of them well over 20. An a rti c le in the "Institutional I n ves t or' ' magazint: describes the perplexity of an investment adviser who still believes in some of the one-powerful blue chips such as General Motors, and some of the smaller emerging giants of tomorrow. The adviser showed a visitor two specially prepared charts. "One showed Kodak passing General Motors last year In total market value although GM's earnings e x cee ded Kodak's net worth." The other chart, "similarly constructeC to d e p i c t ir~ rationality in the way market values have been assigned, matched IBM aga inst the total value of all stoc ks listed on the Amex," or American Stock Exchange. Cotton to be Costly With China Exports? BAKERSFIELD AP) -A massive new market for American co tton in mainland China almost assures higher prices for dom estic growers, a California cotton executive says. Tom Akers, vice president of sales for Ca lcot LTD., returned from a trip to Peking recently with a contract for an undisclosed amount of cotton ·from the 1974 crop. Akers says the Chinese could buy as much is a million bales or more a year from the United States. Akers s a i d that the Chinese are tbe world's third largest cotton producers, but climate restricts their ex· pansion. "The Chinese know we're the only country that can substantially increase its production to meet" the in· creased world needs," Akers said. "Because of the new de- mand, we can expect that the far west grower will have a better next four or five years than they had the past four or five years," he said. But what of American needs? Will the drarnaUc sales to China create problems for American mills and con- sumers? "There 's a I wa ys the possibility that sup ply and de· mand could get out of balance for the short run, but in the long run we can supply them and all American demands easily," Akers said. P.';l:?.i.~?s.~~~~ PAYS • % on deposits of $100,000 for six month s to one year The number of these accounts that we can accept is limited WE PAY COMPETITIVE INTEREST RATES OH ALL OTHER ACCOUNTS FOURTEEN OFFICES TO SERVE YOU IN Arclllat •c1rri tos l • Crnctn11 •011n11 1111 GanltM •con• M1sa Los Anget11 (2) •sin Btrl\.lrdina •c111ot1 ,,,. OawntY (21 MontttlV P1rtr. Whitti1r f"IYI Additi11t1I Officn in Hort~er1 Calif11rni1 Ple1s111t Hill San BrllDI (Dpffti•r Soon) fester City M1u 1tain View San Jose *OPEN NIGHT & DAY and Saturdays -· Cell (213) 923 -9601 • or -me white pages · for your -•est office ASSETS OVER $375 MILLION ' When a Family Needs a Friend ... Sylvia Porter Do high food costs cause you to cut down on the quantity and quality of company dinners? Do you find yourself slighting your family's nutritional needs in order to meet financial needs? You can find help with these and many other problems of family finances in Sylvia Porter's column several times weekly in the financial pages of the DAILY PILOT. Yes, Sylvia Porter can be 11 friend of YOUR family. Her nationally syndicated column, "Money's Worth ," features im- portant ideas which can relieve your concern over monetary matter<. For ex- ample, she will tell you how to save a cons iderable percentage of your gro· cery dollar despite spiraling food costs. Let a friend drop in on you tonight. Sylvia pages Porter can visit you of the DAILY PILOT from the delivered right to your hom e. You will get your money's worth from Sylvia Porter's col- umn and all the other special features in the financia l pages of the THE ONE THAT MEANS BUSINESS I -_. • • Auousl Monday's Closing Pric~mplete New York Stock Exchange List .. lnte1~est Moves .Pull Down Stocks NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market prices moved sharply down Moncay as lnve.stora continued to worry about 1nflaUon and its accompanyuig soar· ·Ing rates. . The Dow Jones average or 20 Industrials closed down over 9 points Friday and more than 17 points lor the week. Declining Issues on the New York Stock Ex· change had a more than 4 to l lead over advancers In relatlve\y light trading. More co mmercial banks announced increases in prime rates lo 91A percent, o/4 ol a percent higher than the previous 81> percent record ol the 1969- 1970 credit crunch. ..... .... P·I tlld1I Hlllli .... Litt Ch. Nf1 Sh 1 l•b NL ll'odUtl 1 f NLT C~ 36 ll ~:irrineo 1 J l Norri• l I ,,• NA Co.\ " N.\ Mt \17D 11 NA'"Plll I 7 NCMlr OSb ' NoCnAtl'f wt ~~~~.'fl : QNO ).!;,._ ltV No>~~· I.ti: I NII 190 NolnSl~l NoNIGI j 00 t "''i" .. NoN pf, •• NoN 11t t • No!ll'llf IU t Nos'"' '' •• NOS'pf • 16 NoSPDI •ao NorthOtlt_ E 10 NotlhrOPC 1 1 Nw11Alr1 •s 11 NWllll\ I• a I• Nwil ll'ld OS ' Nw1t ll'od ~ •• Nwll If! pf S Nwltlpl • ?O NwtllnPtC S NWMV 1 ~2D Now~!Sll 11 NorinCo 11'1 Norln51 19D Nrl'I pf l Ml N i.ocor OSO N\IP: Co 20k I 197) DAILY PILOT Finance Briefs e Dollar lip LONDON (UPI) -The U.S. dollar inched up m value Mon- day ID Tokyo and Oil -European money markeis a! though it failed to matcq gains scored Friday al ti.: close ol tradmg. The price qt gold fell agarn. <! 1be dollar opened strong~ on the Frankfurt currency ex! change. but fell back quickly from it.s operung price of 2 4i marks to 2 3985 fn earl)i-! tradmg -down from Fnday's.~ close of 24065. , • e Arcata MENLO PARK Arcala National Corp. reported fiscal yearend loss of $2 3 million, but the company also said that ~ 1n the past year It has faced: up to and resolved a number : problems which have penal·: lzed earnings for several : years · Fi'i'st, said President J.: Frank Leach, the sale ot : Communications and Arcata : Leaslng -which resulted in• an extraordinary loss of $5 3: mdbon alter tax -eliminated : a severe profit drain. The op.~ erations had a combined oper·: a ting loss of $3 2 mUUon after ~ tax m 1973. 2 e Prh11e Rnte \Veils f"argo Bank announced Mondtiy that they are raising thelJ' prLme rates from rune percent lo 9\'41 percent er- fect1ve 1mmed1ately. e Retirement ' ' ·. ' WASHINGTON CAP\ -Tb6; av~rage ootl o{ living ror a:' retired couple lncrea.'ied from; l 3 to 4 percent 1n the lower ~~ Intermediate leve.ls ln U'12.. the: Oepertment of Labai~ reported. ~ ThoS-0 in the hllher lev I: with expenditures total i n '" $7,689 per year received t(~ pnrti•I reduction because of d dechne ln Income lax pa,W ments, the dep11rtment aakl. ~ II/ OA.llV PILOT * Tutsday, 4uqust 14, 1973 · WUI S..e 6.vernment Apaches to Renew Combat •. WASHINGTON (AP ) BUT THE Chiricabuas ~re ·Descendants of lhe Apache demanding millio'ru; m ~ r e . 1fln'ior Ceronlmo plan to cl,iming they w e r e im· ~e·w their legal battle with prisoned by the government • the. government · to collect under inhumane conditions ror • ~mages for an alleged atroci-Zl years. damages -$14.3 million in today's dollan. LAWYERS FOR the govern· ment did not contest the facts, but in 1971 the Indian Claims Commission dismissed the suit on grounds it did not have isting of ,Deadly Drug WASHINGTON (UP!) -disrupta nonna~ heart heat undu ncall Ar< Pertussln Decon&ettant Spray, SW.Ray Th< natloo'• drug manul1c-more "'adlly than chloroform, Medicated Vaporizer Spray, Decongestant Spray, She,.. turera h!ve been asked by the the FDA said. .. Morton Phannaceutical's Decongestant Spray, an d Food and Drug Admlnlrtratlon 1 __ Tbe __ •_lx_:p_rod __ uc_ts_tha_t _a_re __ DeCon _ _,g'-.. _tan_:.t _Sp'-r-'•Y:.:'_No_ko_f _Re_;spee_z_. ------'-> to submit a list of all products that contain Trichloroethane -a chemical it blamed for 21 deaths. I ly which decimated their tribe Govenunent doc 1.J.m en ts around the turn or the century. show the Chlricaht.\85, mostly The Indian Claims Com-old men, women· and children, mission already has awarded were transported to in- memben ol the Chirlcahua ternment camps ·in Florida, Apache tribe more than $16 Alabama and Oklahoma after {billion in return for the being evicted from homelands. jri!,ltnre of their ancestral The Apaches originally flied :fencts in Arizona. New ~1cxico suit against the gove rnment in :~ ~1exico. 1949. Hsking for $7.S million in jurisdiction over wrongs suf· ----.------ fered by individuals -only It was the first time the FDA has used a provision ln the new Drug Listing Act authorizing the government to require drug makers to submit a list of products that contain any ingredient b e I i e v e d hazardous to public health. those suffered by an entire tribe. The commission held it was "irrelevant that each and every member" of the tribe was imprisoned. -.~.~~~~~~~~-·~~~­.. The ruling was upheld on appeal by the U.S. Court of Claims. but lawyers for the Apaches arc preparing a sec· ond appeal and say they will take their case to the· U:S. Supreme Court if necessary. ~i f REE TRAVEL MOVIES ·:··If ....... .... .,,,.' -~·" ,, SOUTH PACIFIC MEXICO ANO THE CARIBBEAN The case goes back to 1876 when the Chiricahuas were evicted from tribal lands and moved to an Indian reserva· lion in Arizona. Bands of Apache warriors led by Geronimo refused to leave and began attacking the white set· tiers, miners and ranchers who moved into the area. ~;;;:, JN AN A TJ'EMPT to restore peace, the Army moved the entire tribe to an internment camp near St. Augustine, Fla. MUllt Rln e Btlfy J1rdint • Jllcly Dl"ly..- Later that year, Geronimo and his warriors surrendered to federal authorities. They also \\'ere sent to Florida. HARBOR TRAVEL During the first 3'h years of captivity. approximately 119 members of the 498-member tribe died. Most deaths were due to consumption caused by the change in climate. l>M2 VIA LIDO P.O. BOX ~38 NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA 92te3 675-tJtl There's an energy ~horta.'lc being felt throughout the nation. And it's going 10 lake more than just talk to cure it. Tu keep you supplied with natural gas well into 1he future, \vc'rc going to be doing thlngs you never even dreamed of. woe already embarked on a world· . "'ide sea.rah.Places like AJaska, Indonesia, "Australi.11 South and Central America. . ~never thought we'd be bringWg gas • from 7,00J miles away. But it looks like we'llbavo to. That means buiJding some very com~lex ships,, Each costing more than 'JJOO lnillioo.Thcn shrinking natural gas irito • lJ.Ru id so each ship will be able to c.ttl')' more gas than all chc homes In Loo ~Jes ustd during Ml CntJrc weCk las& yur. Right now, Southern California rCceivcs its natural gas by way of a pipeline from Texas. We used to think this pipeline was really something. But now we're talking about building one clear to the Arctic. A S,CXX>·mile pipeline through some of the most savage terrain in North America . Closer to home, we're looking toward another natural resource for help: coaJ. We're getting ready to produce gas from coal; cleanly .tnd without undue harm to the environment. Keeping you supplied with gas will be a mam· moth and costly job. In a kw )'Cllrs, t.beae ships will be · ;: bring Ina pa to Southern California. But we'll do whatever it takes to keep your home fires burning. Southern;Califomla Gas Company \Wre lnvatln& In"""'°"""' • •.· - I 8 Placed Ori List Of Honors Eight Orange Coast area students have been listed on the undergraduate President's Honors List at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. Students must take at least 12 Wlits of credit and be in the upper 15 percent of their class to be eligible for the honor. Area scholars were: COSTA MIES>\ -Tyler Arlll!Jr Lriwerv. '2063 Golcltntrto Pl1c•, 9ftd Ol1nt E. ~li.r .. 350 Vlll1nov1 Roed. U.OUNA B!ACH -M1rk LfrOY• Slzeiovt, 1415' Bounly W1y, LAGUNA NIGUEL -~tnny Ltw P1r01"11, 30411 Mlr1dor Courl. Nl!Wf'Oll:T ~Bl.UJI -Ooll!ll11 F. Schnledfl", 309 EW!llna s11r L.1n1. SAN CL.IEMIElllTIE -Forrnl J. HIM!, 909 Avtnldl StlYldor. WESTMINSTER -MlchHI John 0SPl"iflil, 10'°2 Sin Aniielo A...e.. Ind Cyndi• Sul1nn• Win, llll? U11lvtr1l1y Slreet. TIIE FDA ALSO proposed Monday to declare t h e chemical "not g e n e r a 11 y recognized as safe and ef· fective for use in drugs in- tended to be inhaled." The action was the second phase in the FDA's campaign to track dov.n products that contain the Trichloroethane. The agency announced July 3, that it was recalling an estimated 300,000 cans or aerosol spray cough remedy which contained the chemical. TWC!ll.OROETHANE has been used In oough remedy sprays as a solvent for the ac· live ingredients and to r¢uce vapor pressure of the pr~ pellants. The solvent is an anesthetic when inhaled and Free into and oul ol. Plenty ol parking. And the crowds h aven't found it yet. Your 1ravel agent knows the way. ·Personal Chee For e . . to celebra~ the ~pening ~four ~:ort Beach office Save up to $24 a year!• When you open a Checking Account for $100 or more at our New- port Beach office on or before August 31, 1973, and maintain a $100 minimum balan·ce, · .. If your min im um balance falls below $100, your account will ·.be transferre d from Free Checking to one of our other fl• convenient c hecking account · · plans. you'll get free personal checking. You'll be able · to write as many checks as you want each month ~ never have to pay a m0nthly service charge. *"Free .Personal Checking" could save some of our customers up to $24 a year and some customeri of other banks even more. .. The · ® Our two drive-up teller windows mean fast•se rvice without even leaving your car. Of when you come into the bank, there's a large parking area for our customers. Drive-up window banking hours 9 a. m. to S P-m. Monday-Thursday. 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. Fridays. Regular banki,ng hoyrs . 10 a. m. to 3 '.P· m. ~onday-Thursday. to a.m.to 6 ,p.m. Frida.ys. of caJifornia easy. 1401 Dove Street, Newport Place, Newport Beach, California 92660 (714)833-3511 Warren P. Thompson, Vice President and Manager ---·-· .......... ,_, "'' ............... .f.O.&.C. • · . • •• • [ per "' th• IUI In! ne· 1 a mu po! ate t "le prt the Eu ,, spl phl "S WO 1 "" Th fro "sl 1 brc Ha COi its on. 1 or~ lw • No be< fas 1 no· Ja1 1 •h< art . II •• Eye ,~ 11ans qisguise for Every Size I BrJO Ol#)N 01 tllt Dall1 l"Oot Stiff M~uinuila now have ~ trSJ)lllaled In- to comfortable caft~ns, dre1!seo with one phoulder bart<!, long shirtwaists with matching shorts underneath, c~ (long Chinese dresses), ,minis with matching shorts, the currently popular ballet dresses and new versiobs oC the traditional flowing dress. Everyone knows the story of what ha~ pened when missionaries arrived in Ha'l"aii In the early 1800s -they covered the ' bare brown skin of the native 111aidens with long, ao,viilg dresses, giv- ing birth to lhe muumuu and creating a new fashion staple. The once-shapeless garment has come a long way since the first Victorian muumuus were introduced. The long, pointed sleeves were modified immedi- ately because of the .Island heat. llolpink and a bot plqk and lime green combination are the most popular colon', 1 • l\VS. Clarke ·said. Today, the muumuu (which translates to "long shirtwaist") can be seen in ap- pro'limately 150 different forms all over the United States, in Japan and in Europe. "With the jet, the muumuu ls spreading," commented Wallah Clarke, a pioneer in the Hawaiian fashion business. "Soon it \Vill be known around the world." The first muumuus, Clarke said, were made of liberty prints woven in England. These soon gave way to brown prints from Tahiti, still sewn together in "shapeless and uninteresting" styles. . Then. lower (ares and raster jets ·brought more and more mainlanders to Hawaii and more and more \\·omen in contact with the shapeless muumuu and its ease and comfort, and the boom was on. The flowing gannent took on new col· ors and new lines Wlder the artistic hands of red·haired Gretchen Clarke, a graduate home economist from Northwestern University who ha s become a pacesetter in Polynesian fashion s. She selects colors Iha~ "reflect the no .... ·ers in liawail" then bas them dyed in Japan. "~tost print! come from Japan," she said. "They are dye experts and the:Y are accurate." .. For fabrics , muumuu designers ar.e turning of ne~ssity to manmade fibers such as acrylics because of the rising cost of Japanese cotton. "Our own cottons don't dye as well," Mrs. Clarke explained.· .Polyester knlta, acrylics and blends are her current choices. Brocades aJso are used for more ex- pensive muumuus, some costing up to $120 per gannent. Why do 'women like to wear the muumuu·fn its many ronns? It, is a comfortable cover-up for swimsuits, an easy to wear hostess go\vn and cheerful additlon to any wardrobe. "You can 'be dressed up with little ef- fort," Clarke commented. "It doesn't re- quire any special s h o e s or undergarments. If a \~'Oman looks glamorous !or diMer you will sit at the dinner table and light the candles." Flexibility of size is another prime COl)>o sideration in a woman's purchase of the muumuu. the !ormer newsman added. Theirs begin at size 3 and go up to the largest any wOman would desire", so the heaviest woman can buy W,ithout em- barrassment. As Gretchen Clarke says, "There is a muwnuu to accent -or disguise - a woman's £igure, whatever her leisure ac- tivities might include." And the Newport Beach and Palm Spring> residents believe thal · .... long as there is a Hawaii there will be a muumuu ... On e of th e newed prints used in this styl ized ve rsion of the be sic muumuu . with doubl e sli ts on th e front penel. Model on th e ri ght reveel s met.chin g sho th underneeth. Me ny of the febric s e re design_e'd in He weii, wo ven in Hong Kong a nd print.d 1n Jepen. • . ' • • • BEA ANDERSON, Editor T11tW1y, Allt.,fl 1•, 1tl1 l"aff 1J • I The caftan (above I 1s a contemporary ve rsion of the basic muumuu, while another modern edaptation (right I 1s the loose fitting flowing frock, attached to a U-shaped yoke that forms the shoulder straps . . ~ ' • -. Trad itional concept of the muumuu (above, left'), introduced by miss ionari es I 50 y,ears ago, .. sti ll 1s popular. P·ua Lii (above} is 11 Jitted ' • •' ' ., ·...,_ ;version. ~1 '" ' ' . . 14 DAILY PI LOT ' Facts Trans lated to Fight Birth Defects. ' . By ALLISON DEERR ~ II• o .. +y ""'' Steff Straight talk about pregnan· cy? Where do you get it? And what if English is your second language! How do you get the information you need? Because of the vital im· portance of good, regular ,prenatal care in preventing birth defects, exp I a in e d Dorothy Sutherland, executive director, the Orange County chapter of the National Foun- dation, March of Dimes, a current project is to get MOD information and audio-visual aids translated into Spanish. On a national level, March of Dimes has developed a three-part slide presentation available In Spanish. The slide progran1, which can 00 used with an accom p anying recording, tape cascue or script, cover! prenatal care. nutrition for pregnancy and labor and delivery. STRAIGHT TALK Called, aptly, "Straight Talk About Pregnancy and Prenatal Care," the program is described as medically authenti c and answers ques~ tlons women ask most often. "What lo Eat" and "Labor and Delivery" are sup- plementary portions that go Hawaiian Mood Prevails into a little more de1aU than "Straight Talk." ----\ "Be Good to Your Baby Berore It ls Born" is available in both Spanish and English. Elva Friederking, w ho presents MOD programs for a variety of community groups, explained that the slide pro- grams for a variety of com- munity groups, explained that the slide shows, filmstrips and films have an impact on almost every audience. The objective of "Straight Talk" is "to bring out the facts or pregnancy and help the viewer realize the need for proper medical care of the fnolber during the journey of her baby from conception to birth. GOOD CARE "The importance of the total health of the mother and chlld is emphasized. Jt can nelp women who fail to use health care facilities know th e services availabl e and en- courage them to attend a prenatal cUnlc." The Blide show discusses how to know when you're pregnant, going to a doctor or clinic, dangers or the pregnan- cy' childbirth, the period art er childbirth, spacing children and sexual intercourse after .!)lo c:hUdblrth. Danger or alcohol and smoking to the fetus are noted. Mrs. SUtherland &aid tbat Spanish • speaking volunteers from . the community have begun to translate the moun· tains of material MOO has available in English., but more help will be needed. A Chicano group at Golden \Vest College and a translator at the West Orange County ~lunicipaJ C.Ourt, Westminster. have volunteered t h e i r services. INFORMATION The reason March of Dbnes urgently wants t h e in- fomiatioh available to all women of child-bearing age Is evident in another program, Jt ii a aeries of slides, In col- or, or serious congenital birth defects, showing p r o g r e s s aft~r troatment. But It does end, she emphasized, with slides ol happy, h e a 11 h y chlldren. "We don 't went to make people frightened about having child ren. We're talking about I in 14 children when we talk about these birth defects. But people must be aware of the dangers." Films available range from "Who Wiii Love My alild?" which disci.wes March 1 of Oilnes Medical Se r v l c e Programs; to "OiagnoelJ Befort Birth" which exp)aJ1111 amniocentesis; to "Rubella" which describes the plight of the Rubolla child, bom with multiple handicaps. A filmstrip "Tomorro\v Hap- pens Today" talks about how the acllons of young people can affect lhelr r u t u r e children -environmental causes of birth defects such as venereal disease, misuse of drugs, pollution and others. Interested community grouJ).' can contact the Orange County branch for further in· formation on programs and the speaker's bureau. \ Hitter Striking Out at Home DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was in- terested in the letters from the wives of snorers. I should be so lucky. My hus- band is a hitter. Kevin and I have been married 16 years and be insists on one bed. He has always been a restless sleeper but in the last few years he has gotten worse. From time to time I have suggested twin beds. His answer is always the same. "Over my dead body." Once I answered, "Ocn't tempt me ." He gave me a dirty look and 1 haven't mentioned twin beds since. In the last few n\onth.s Kevin has given me two black eyes and a nosebleed .. When I \Vake him up it's news to him. I-le doesn't know a thing. This is his explanation: When he \i:as a kid in South Boston he used to sleep '~'ith his brother Mike. They fought au the time. (They still do.) When Kevin punches me he says he is dreaming about his childho<id and be thinks he Is hitting Mike. Does this make any sense to you? - BLA CK AND BLUE DEAR 8. AND B.: After 16 years I wollld hope that your husband doesn't think he Is still sleeping with bis brother. Dreams often go batk lo early childhood and It may well be that Kevin is reliving hl s youth. You are generous to give blm the benefit of the doub t. He should be equally ge nerous and buy you t~in beds for your birtbduy or anniversary, "·blcbc\'er com(>S first DEAR ANN : \Vbat precautions are taken in your office to make sure no Jet- ter is accidentally printed in the newspaper? I \\TOte to you about a very intimate probl em recently and I would be humiliated if that.letter should appear in print. I asked that my letter not be published but now t am \\-'Orried sick that perhaps it might slip through. Please put my mind at ease. -IRENE OF TI!E SLEEPLESS NIGHTS DEAR S.N.: Eve ry word that appears in this 1p8ce goes through my typewriter three times. I keep Use original letters beside me to make ctrC.a1n l get the facts right. Before I start to put together a week's column I read all the letters one more time t.o make sure the writer has not asked that hJs letter not be used ln the paper. No letter isl printed .iby actJdent." Su good night, Itt:ue. Gtt some sleep. Drugs. How much is too much? Is pot OK? Js UD too much? If you're on dope or considering it, get Ann Landers' new booklet "Straight Dope on Drugs." For each booklet ordered send a dollar bill plus a Jong. self-addressed, stamped envelope (16 cents postage) to Ann Landers, Box 3346, Chicago, Ill . 60654. Keeps Watch ,on Grandchild Grandma Revives Good Times the other one. The Jong one is the hour antenna and the short one is ... " your life isn't the , ... orst lhing that can happen to a kid," he sighed,. Rites Set In Carmel .. Linda Jean Muir Or Bever1i Hills and formerly of Costa ~1esa is planning to marry Peter Louis Bazovsky of ~ Angeles Sept. 29 in th~ Highlands Inn Chapel, Cannet: ~tiss -Muir is the daughter 0( Mr. and Mrs . Harry P. Muii or Chino. She is a graduate of Pomona Hlgh School and at· tended Washburn University, Topeka. Kan. ; Her riance attended schools in Hungary and graduated from A I bri ght Uni versity, Reading, Pa. A country store. filled with baked goods, homemade jams, jellies and boutique items, plus a sandwich and snack bar are planned by the Harbor Senior Ctt.izens from noon un til 5 p.m. 'l'hursday, Aug. 16, in the clubhouse at 15th Streel and Irvine Avenue, Newport Beach. Hawaiia n entertainment will begin at 7 p.m., arid a charge of 50 cents per person will be made. Ready to be given an Is land wel· come are (le(t to right ) Mrs. Eva Livesay, Waller Miller and Mrs. Irene Sawyer. AT WIT'S END • By ERMA BOMBECK '·Grandma is giving Brucie a \\-'atch for his birthday." I announced IQ my hu sband. "Why'? He still reads books upside down." "I know. J\.la ybe we should teach him how to tell time.'' \Ve sat Brucie down 8t the kitchen table and said. "Brucie. this is a clock." 3 Full Service L-11on1 In Huntington Be•ch PRESCRIPTIONS I' Golden Nee dl e's s~ o1 tk 1fled Try something ne\V ... Woven Polyesters reg. 2.98-4.98 yd. Noiv 2.47-3.97 yd. Golden 'needle FA e R1cs IOUTH COAST PLAZA • CAllOUSfl llYfl OH.It fVEltrttOS I $UNO..YS famous annua l summer Clea rance Sale All Summer Dresses Reduced To Clear Socials Mapped Activity Ahead Quota Club A luncheon fashion show to benefi t the Providence Speech and Hearing Center, Orange \vill be presented by the Quota Club of Orange County at noon Thursday, Aug. 16, in the Mercury Savings and Loan, Tustin. El Camino A day in the park for area yo.uths has been planned by the El Camino Real Junior \Voman's Club in 'Thunderbird Park, Dana Point from 11 a.m to 2 p.m. Friday, Aug. 17. Activities will include races, contests and hunts , and hot dogs. punch and cupcakes will be sold . Proceeds will be used to purchase equipment for the park. their local branch by reading a specified number of books are eligible for an admission ticket. Although the mm will be shown Saturday, Aug. 18 through Friday, Aug. 31 , patrons are advised to call their local branch for time and location information. BSP Beta Alpha Xi Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi will have a rush party at 7:30 p.rn. Wednes· day, Aug. 15, in the Garden Grove home of Mrs. Alan ~1arbut. A poolside party is planned for members and guests at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 18. at the Yorba Linda home of ?\ir. and Mrs. Barton Sharp. Sole Storti • Au9ust 16 HB Women A luncheon and card party are being pl anned by the Hun· tington Beach Women's Club for Friday, Aug . 17. <44S So. Coott f-lwv .• I 0"11"0 lleoch -494-2394 Locettd •I Hotel L•!l•M Powers Girls Have WIC The Look & The Style! Members are to meet at l 1:30 a.m. in the Mercury Sav- ings and Loan, Huntington Beach for lunch, and cards will be played in the clubhouse afterward. Proceeds w i 11 benefit the club's philan- thropies. A dinner and court whist card party is planned by the Orange County Women in C:Onstructlon to take place at 7 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 18, in the Friedemann Banquet Hall, Orange. VOUCAN S•tlnn•n1&.t.ctv1nctdCO<ir1-t• LOOK BEITER. • Mti.t ~' H•" 5!1"•n1 FEEL EXCl l lt<-G. • 1ti:u•eCon1rcM GAJN CONFIDENCE • W1•d•obe& '•~Mon & SUCCESS 'W•'~"'C' ""°1"'' IN YOUR LIFE • l-'t•Ml"•l•!v0o>~11;>pmen! • Vol<e' Oothon Call Of come !n tod~y tor a free pe1son;1I analysis. • 1'1'011uion•IModehn1 John Robert Powers Notion'• Olde1t & lo1ge11 School FOf Finith in51 & Mode Ung ORANGE 3 Town & Country• 547·8228 RIVERSIDE Riverside Ploza Center• 684·3012 f1 I f4 8t1t -Vlpettl P1rtnlt [ ''"' SOc r;1111 '•e OME ,..-t.111ily. O..t "'' 111'1j.-t. ~ SI.Del , -ft<I . Movie Special showings of "The Phantom Tollbooth" will be presented at local branches of the Orange County Public Library to conclude the sum- n1er reading program . sssc South Shore Sailing Club's iannual luau will be staged at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 18, at the clubhouse. Ch 11 d r e n "·ho ha ve-·--·-------- participated in the progra1n at .. HOT'OOlltA,.HUI WILL •c IN THI• IT°"C CXCLUSl'ln.Y OH altLOW OATll. ' l DAY ONLY! n .. ,.. .. 1.. .. ,~ ''"' 12 Hoe• 'tll 6 P·"'· Mn• Yefdo P••tlflOCf Jt71 H•rb•r 11,4, c .. ,. Mtto c." ... t FotJilo111 .. Dlsc••llt Prkn IOffl Mle!M et 1..-~ l!tlfllllti ff'On'I '°'" M•• erd Hrwport l tee.11 Delly 10,• Frl.s.y tu t P.M. ,, •. ,,.1 nrrs 1ive 1)!'CJock.," _be. said brightly. · "How did you know that?" smil~. my husband, obviously surprised. ~ • "The cartoons are coming on'. Then at 5:30, there's 'Gilligan's Island.' at 6 'I've Got A Secret.' at 8:30 'What's My Line' and at 7 ... " "Hold it.'' said my husband. "The clock has .an hour hand and a minute band." "You're te lling .him wrong," I said. grabbing the cl~k out of my husband's h a n d s , "Brucie, thi s i.S a little face with a bu tton nose and l\vo antenna coming oat 'of its head." "What's an anterm.ae?" he asked. "Look, Brucie," said my husband. "can you. count by fives like five, ten, fifteen .. .'' "You're canfusing t h el-;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;=~~;;;~1 child," I said. "Remember the [; UffELl' little bumblebee in your col- oring book with two little leelers C<Jrning out? Those are UPHOLSTERY called antennae. See? one of W.. Yo• WClllt these antennae is lo,nger than 1t221:'9.l:' ltwl. Art you sttiout about losirt1 wtlghll Celt• MeM -141.0Jlf Ho•n1 ' ••. 1, ... medical weight__.. reduction 'OMftA'S rtoclAM t$ THE SAfE METHOD \JNOU STtfcT MfDICAl SUHIVISION Of MEDICAL DOC· TOIS. lOSE lJNWANTIO POUNDS AND M-'INTAIN nort:t. WllGHT • Omega Clinic COSTA MESA 646·1633 1869 NEWPORT ILVD. ANAHllM ,,.. ... , lu.t W, hwy. ·' ,, ' e Cl'lll,.e~ e Oell'ltrlM I.Al "' "'"II W-"9Mllt ,,_,1,.-. -·~~··· A tasteful assortmen_l of Florence Elseman'a knits and custom-made clothes !or bick to school. ---·--- Boys' & Girls' Toddlers and 4 to 6X size!, Girls' 7 to 14 sizes. ···~·· .. Fashlee Island, Ntwporl Be1cl>-1711 ) - Town 6 C.UlrJI, Orang~lll) 11M611 IJuatlqton Horboar-(lH) ·Mt-Jiii ' .. " ., ' " I ( H '11t i ... and !San '·'11l Bea• au,, ta1n lhe Oro• , ... Ml the . husb with Post Do man Nept MaJ' na C1>ri .... Th Hunl and Meu band die~ Gil c Chai and Chai lhe Gil rt perf• Chill Andi ~·r Th Yun Chai GUtr Th Univ Bart ~ Raia &mt REI! Hu Ann Earl ried Chur Th perfc r1 ... and of ff -Rei& Ye t .. • ' ' MRS. HIRREMA Coast Couples Repeat Vows +IERREMA·KETILER )dalrllll! their home In Whit· tkr while they colitinue their ~lion at Whittier College ate Donald James Herrema and bis bride, the fonner fSaren Marie Ketiler. Ue daughter of lhe William Kettlers of Huntington and the aon of the Russell J. Herremaa Qf ·Foon- ~ Valley were married ln the Greenbrier Inn, Garden Orove with the Rev. Don Janama offtdating. Mrs. Howard F. Kettler was the matron of honor and her husband served as an usher with Kurt Kettler, Dave Postmus and Bill Butler. Doug Herrema wu best man: bridesmaids were Carol Neptune, Debbie B e n n e t t • Marda Poelmus and MaryAn- na Duffy; flower girl was Chris Smith, and ring bearer was Billy Kettler. The bride is a graduate or Huntington Beach High Sdlool and is a member of the Metapbonlan Society. Her hua- band graduated from Sad- clleback High School. GILMORE.CHAMPLIN Catherine Kristene Champlin, daughter of Maj. llld Mrs. James Lu n d Champlin of Irvine, became the !ride of Michael Lee Gilmore during ceremonies performed by lhe Rev. Dr. Charles Dierentield in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Qlapel, Newport Beach. Their attendants were Susan Yurash, Bruce Horvath, Joel Olamplin and Timothy Gilmore. 'lbe bride is a teaior at the University of cattfornia, Santa Barbara where her lwsbond gramated. He is the soo of lhe F.dward Gilmores of san Rafael. They will reside In Salta -~ REISENWEBER-GIBSON Huntington Beach residents, Ann Elizabeth Gibson and Lee Earle Rel.senweber were mar· ried in Sl Anselm's Eplsoopa! Church, Garden Grove. The Rev. Sarnir Habiby performed the double ring rites for the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Warren Giboon of Huntington Beach and the son of Mrs. H. Leroy lteisenweber of Baltimore and Your Horoscope • the late Mr. Reisenweber. Bridal attendants were Mrs. Stuart Gibson, Mrs. Charles Gaskin and the Misses Phyllis Gibson, Donna Betts and Debra Avery. Attending the bridegroom were William Markel. Rush Williams, Robert and ·Stuart Gibson. . The bride ls a graduate of Marina High School, Hun tingtoo Beach and Orange Coait College where she was a member of AJpba Gamma Sigma and Theta Sigma. Her husband attended Harvard College. WHITEHEAD- MELANCON Cheri Melancon and Steven H. Whitehead were-married in the Marine Corps Chapel, El Toro. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Melancon of Costa Mesa. Mrs. Charles Hardon of Westminster, Colo. and Harold Whitdlead of Hun- tington Beach. Honor attendants were Mr. and Mrs. Ken Campbell, and l ushers were oaie Whitehead and Joseph C. Melancon Jr. The bride is a graduate of ' Costa Mesa High School and . Orange Coast College and now I attends California s t a t e University. Long Beach. Her husband is ·a graduate of Santa Ana High School and now is a student at OCC. 'Ibey will reside In Costa Mesa. t Taurus: Be Patient WEDNESDAY AUGUST IS ~ By Sydney Omarr ':ARIES (Maroh 21-Aprij 19): You have more on your side than might be apparent by 8'tface lndlcaUons. What bap-1¥5 at special, behind·,.,.,,.. ni!letlng bolds answer. ~AURUS (April 20-May 20): What seemed like a "sure ttng" needs reviskm. Be pa· ~t. Leave no toooe endS. Friend who offers adviet!: Jacks neCessary information. ~EMINI (May 21.June 20): oiie at top may be tied up _ln I.Pl mess. Know It and plan aooordingly. Depending too •h on promises would be error. See situation as tt ex· istNCER (June 21.July 22): sildY Anet message. Take ~-to pe~ve Jong-range J11111pec!J· Don't give up eqpethlng of value for mere · lion. You can teach arid (July ZS.Aug. 22): g!ll versaUllty_. There ts . than one way lo achleVe . Know It and act 10- COlll!ingly. Slgttmm, Gemini pelfons figure prominently. lJRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22):. ~thorough. Wal! for In· torfsatlon -discard hearsay. ... I procedures t e q ti I i' e ~~fous care -don't Mh. A~, Leo, Scorpio ~ could be in picture. LIBRA (Sept. 2$-0cl 2t): ll•w, more .,..,.uve approacl! to he.alth, work questions may be overdue. Open dialogue with vibrant, s 11 g h t I y unorthodox person who has been vying for your attention. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Love, understanding can be achieved if you give yourself half a chance. Family member could play key role. Taans, Libra -are likely lo be lnvolwd. SAGmARIUS (Nov. ii. Dec. 2t): You may be drawn in two directions. One path sees you taking necessary and practical steps. The other course finds you a victim of wishful thinking. Obviously, it now Is more necessary than usual to face £acts about prop. erty, costs, joint efforts. CA!'RICORN (Dec. 22.Jan . 19): You may be surprtled as reaull of speclaf, closed-door mfftii1g. Key now is , to niain-. f.afn dignity, aplomb. You are belng tested. Applies lo both professional and penonal Ule. Older indMcluaf wanls to :r:;.\' ~°"Po:t:~ on a~ AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb Ill: FriOnd could make moV< which Is c:osUy -io you. Avoid be<omlng lnextricabl.Y involved. Refuse to be ''leanea on" by one who Is tryin~ to get 011! of leglllmale obligation. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 201: lndjvidual who bas pnsilioo o' authOri!y may be confused. Bo MQepeoden~ State views anil requimnenls. Malte meanin~' oeystaJ clear. Newport Beach/•-. - Laguna Beach/ ~ Whittier Quad/~ • ., TUtsd~, Au911sl 14, 1973 PLAZA FABRICS PREE PARKING OPEN 7 DAYS MONt & FRI. 'EVES. liiiii Ba Great Diseount Fahries for ·great Baek•to·S~hool looks 91entl 111annel "'oel lit \ack•ll, for .-".'"' • ... _. •• Gr••' ,..i .,it.er i.., f ll IOO· dr••~..! colors for L~ DF TM r,..._. $5 ¥••-• I ~ ........ ·""'"'"· llad<·'°"'°"°° n ••9'. OF Rat·.- ,paclal •t ~9 Knlt Faneles """" and ,.., , ••• , 1S ,,.., ,. ThoH 100°~ lor combinatlolll;_.,. for -~:ry\ks are \ust \:b. So, sew camP"• ~rtd,..., shrink, 1"' tt a ..... , Va ue your.. ,..i Hi• •-""' g. 'T .s Her'• ~f Rat· $1.49. our $4.00. ly ,,..1.1 on · •t'!8 \l' alsthantl Elasttes -hold-UP' try for lash~"!~ Solid elastics. th• .. strl In p<1rrh•I pink we h•v• em navy 1trl~•, ,,,,,.,, naut~J, other•. Thia it aabla gr-· POI''• 1paclal 1$l.M¥99~ 100% Campas Cotton Canvas For that ftatural look we llb. Ju1t the fabric for pants, sports. wear and other casuals. Colors are wheat white, wheat white with reel r•cer stripe. V11lue $2.50 DF Reg. $1.49, now only Deeoradve Trims That makH Iha difference be- twHn the great and the ordinary. OF has them In cottons, rayons, 'rlons, met•lics. DF Reg. 29-79c yd. Now just Specla• Savings Start Wed.· Sun., Aug. 15 • 18 Colorful Quilted Prints Plaids, paisley and puppy prints that were mMnt for lounging in comfort. That'• why we reco""" mend this great fabric for robes ond loung•wHr. It's SO.SO poly cotton and washes the HIY way. Value $3.00 D.F.'1 reg. $1.98. DF's back-to.school spacial SJ48 yd .. J 6 DAIL V PILOT UPI Tele11holt /\'at Quite Bill Melton of the Chicago \Vhitc Sox leaps but can't stop Ollie Brown's si ngle. Chi cago defeated Milwaukee, 5-2, Mon- day night. !\1elton lives in Mi s- sion Viejo. Australians Recruit Laver For Davis C11p MELBOURNE, Australia -Corona del Mar's Rod Laver has announced he'll return to active Davis Cup tennis com- petition for the rirst lime in 11 years, and he'll be doing it under the Australian banner. Laver, a four-time \Vimbledon cham- pion and tennis' first millionaire, con- firmed his decision with Australia's cap- tain-manager, Neale Fraser. '·Laver wants to represent Australia 111 the Davis Cup again," F'raS<'r lold newsmen following a telephone con- versation Ydth Laver from Corona del Mar. "He ~·ants to come to Meibollrn(' for the semifinals against Czechoslovakia in November, but he 'II let us know for sure after the U.S. championships in Se]>- tember at Forest Hills," says Fraser. Fraser continues: "If Rod can't make Melbourne then he is available for the finals in Cleveland in late November. "Rod \\/anted lo know •Nhether he 'A'Ould be good enough to make the team. I told him as a selector and captain that . was our decision. "Laver is too good to leave out.·· e Be 11c#1 T #1re 11 te11e d CINCI NNA 1'1 -Extra protection \\':lS provided for Cincinnati Rl'dS ca!chcr Johnny Bench during l\1onday night's baseball game at Pittsburgh after his Jilc '\'as threatened. The Cincinnati Enquirer reported today. The Enquirer siiid a trio of uniformed guards and a plainclothes officer met Bench at the learn bus y,•hen it reached 'lbree Ri\'ers Stadium in Pitt.5burgh. and escorted hiin through the crO\\d to the locker room. The Enquirer S:lid it \\'as the second time this year Bench 1\·as gh'en extra. security guards <ll l'illsburgh, the first time was June. The Enquirer said a "squeaky-voiced caller" phoned the threat lo the Pitlsburgh Pirates' office. The thrC'at was relayed lo Reds rnanagcr Sparky Anderson, the Enqulte r said. e Four Winne rs DEL rvfAR-Jockey Steve \l:ildcz, a 17- year-old apprentice, ron1ped home aboard four \vinncrs al J:>cJ !\tar l\1onday. . . . .. ~ Tutsda~. August 14, 1~7) Alo us: Basehall'-s Three-brother Act . NEW YORK (AP I -Family act! att cornmon In circuses and music halls, but they're r<irc In profes.5lonal baseball. "\\le knew we could play," said Felipe Alou or I.he New York Yankees, "bul back in those days mid-1950s. not too many people were being offered con- traC'ts in the Dominican Republic." "I liked to play," sai d Felipe's brother, Matty. who also plays for the Yankees, "but I never thought about it." "I tiuess most kids have it In the back of their minds," said Jesus, a third Alou, now playing with Uie Oakland Athlelics, "but I never knew baseball would become real rot me." ~ The three brothers originally w~ signed by the San FranciJco Giants organization. Their biggest thJ1ll of lhclr major league careers came in September 1963 when all three played in the same outfield for the Giants in a game agalnsl the New York Mets. ''We didn't play organized ball together in the Republic," said Felipe. "If we got together at all it was at home playing A Specicil B r e1v(er) Some Screwball Shuts Off Expos LOS ANGELES -Baseball has devis-. ed the Cy Young Award for the best pitcher in the g11rr1C'. Someone should 1101\' come up with an award for the bcsl scre\\'ball in the game ... that doesn t mean the No. 1 clo,vn, but the No. I screwball pitcher. l\1onday night at Dodger Stadium two of the best v•ere on hand. l\1ontreal's ace reliever l\1 ikc l\·tarsha l\ and Jim Brewer, Dodge r 11 Slate All G,i-N K,: ('4t) 7:55 p.m. 7:51 p.m. II :25 •. m. 11:10 •.m. ~larshall 's counterpart in the Los Angeles bullpen . "Marshall has THE scre\\•ball,'' l\1on- treal manager Gene Mauch says of his pitcher \11ho has 10 wins and 24 saves. But he'd likely get an argument out of \Valter Alston, the Dodgers' skipper. who calls Brewer "one of the best relief pitchers I've ever had." That's saying something, especially for man who's had. among others. Hon Per- raooski and Ph.ii Regan in his 20 years with the Dodgers. It was Brewer's tum Monday as he earned his 16th save -one short of what he managed all of last year -in preserving an 8-5 victory over the Expos. The win enabled the Dodgers to im· prove their lead over Cincinnati in the National League \Vest to 2\2 games. They'll atter;npt to stretch their wins to three straight tonight when Tommy John, 11 -7, opposes Montreal 's Balor l\1oore; 6-1 . \V illie Cra\\ford knocked in four runs \Vith his 10th homer. a double and infield out. his third foor-rbi game of lhe year. It was his homer which snapped a 3-3 tic in the fifth. ·•\Vhen I see men on base," Crav.•ford said afterward, "l just lelJ myself thars the time to produce." The Dodgers \11ere down 3·0 after Ken Singlrton's first-inning three-run homer and then tied the game with si ngle run s in the first, second and fourth innings. Los Angeles jumped its advantage to 8- 3 after Crav.'ford's homer, but still had to \Vard off the Expos in the eighth. Hal Breeden opened \Vith his 10th homer and then start er Claude Osteen gave up a single and hit a battef. Brewer then took over and im- mediately walked John Boccabella lo load the bases with no one out. But he got his screwball \•:orking quick· ly. striking out Tim Foli and Pepe Frias, and got pinch-hitter Boots Day to ground out, leaving three Expos stranded and J\1auch completely fru strated. "The big thing is to win." Brewer said when asked about the walk. ··1 can work on my control tomorrow." Then, when asked about how important his screwball pitch is to him. he replied: "Without it, I wouldn 't even be here." Davey Lopes was taken out of the line- up after being beaned. Dodgers ·officials say he will be able to play tonight. Montrul UI Los A119llH (I) •b rllrlll .. r II rbl Woods, cl ' ' ' ' L~.'lb ' ' ' ' 81Ue'f, ., ' ' ' ' L•C'f, 1b ' , , ' H8rMden, lb ' , ' ' 8r.1ekner, " , ' ' ' Singleton, rf ' ' ' • WDa~ls, Cl ' ' ' ' Felrl'f. " • ' ' ' G1rvwy, lb , ' ' ' Bocc•llll1, c ' ' ' ' WCrwlrd. " • ' , • Foll, IJ ' ' ' ' FW11-· c ' ' ' ' Frl•1, 1b ' ' ' ' Cety, lb ' ' ' • Torrez, p ' ' ' ' R11neU, SI , ' , • ReMo. .. ' • ' ' 01.leen, p ' ' ' ' PJ1rv!s, p ' ' ' ' Brewer, p ' ' • ' Mangual, pi, ' ' ' ' Sl-1'1,p ' ' ' ' Da'f, pi, ' ' ' ' """· • ' ' ' ' Totals " "' ' Tot•ls ~ • ' • MonlrNI ,. .. 011 -5 Lea Ang,ltt "' ·~ 21~ -I E-Frl•s. DP-Mon!re"'I 1, l05 Angeles 1. LOB- MMlrNI f, Los A111>eles 1, 28-Fries. W. Cr•wford, SlnoMto<!. HR -s1no11ton 21 , w. Crawford 10, H. Bre..i&ri JO. SB--Brxkn«. S--Torre1, Wood1, BIK~· ner, 8reWft'. 'Torre: P. Jervis (L, 2·1) SIPnem.in Sco11 O•l~en (W, l•Sl Brewer .. H ' . , , , ' , ' ' , ' , ' 1 10 j , 1 ' Ell. 89 50 ' ' ' , ' ' • • , ' ' , ' ' ~~v.,...·8rewet I~. HBP-hy lorr~l lopes, by o._ teen F•lrly. WP-Brewer. T-1.?8. A-21,.01. UPI Tele~llolo THE DODG ERS' DA VEY LOPES GOES DOWN FROM BEA NING. catch In the 00.ck yard.'' "Al one time we had to make our baseball glovci; out of canvas," added Jeswi. Known for their conslslency and 811· round play, Felipe currently is the startlrlg right fielder for the Yankees. He is hitting only .234, but his good glove keeps him in the line-ups. Malty starts al first base for the Yanks. Hts batting average of .303 Is third on the team and eighth in the American League. ~le has been red·hot l.tttly and is in a seven game hitting streak.. Jesus, an outfielder who was acquired by Oakland from liouston last week., has seen only lhnlted action but is still bat· ting over .300. i ·he main thing they have in common ls lhe way they h~ndle the bat. Matty, the only Jett-handed hitter of the thret. 11aid, "We're all free swingers. We don't take too many balls." The Alous said they keep up with how well their brothers are doing on the Pro Football's lJpsets baseball field and they communicate oa a regular basis. ·•we don't worry about each olher,11 1 saJd Jesus, ••because we know what we can do." 'Mle three brothers were reunited ~ past weekend when the Athletic• ~* Into New York for a series with Yankees. Asked to comr,sn lhls re.'M with their playing days n San Fraol~CM Felipe said: "It's a very big difference. jusl boys then." UPIT ....... 1 Detroit's ?!'lei Farr is knocked off his heels by Kan- sas City's Jim Lynch {51), who is taking his )umps, too. Farr picked up six yards on the play and De- troit'went on to post a 17-16 upset exhibition victory at Kansas Cit y. Lem Barney blocked Jan Stenerud's extra point try with 1:18 left for the winning mar· gin. 2 Rams Rookies to Start; Charge rs Face Dilemma Coach Chuck Knox ~;'lys he \v;:s "pretty satisfied " with the \\'ay three rookies pt'rror1ncd on dcrense agai nst the Clevcl;ind Bro1l'ns -satisfied enough 1hat at teasl l\\'O of the m will likely stnrt for the Los Angeles Rams again Satur- day. The Rams. rebuilding their def£'nsive secondary. opened \1·ith Cullen Bryant at safety ancl Eddie l\lcf\lillan at cornerback and Jim Youngblood played 1hc game at middle linebacker. Knox indicated he \\·as still satisfied \\lilh !he newcomers' overall performance in spite oi one crucial mistake. Mcri.1illian v.·as called for holding near 'th e goal line and with the extra help Cleveland scored a toucbdo\~11 in the 21- 21 tie. "I-le played y,·ell for the most part. even though th ere '''as that one call," said Knox. lfe s;1id Bryant and McMillan will prob- ably open against the Oakland Raiders at Berkeley 1his weekend. a n d )'oungbloocl \1•ill also see action again . Anoth er rookie. offensive lineman Tim Stokes, \\•as listed as a possible pe rform er a1 Berkeley after improving from a mild concussion and sprained ankle suffered in the Cleveland game. The onl y player considered ques- tionable for Oa kland is All-Pro guard Tom l\1ack. v1ho sat out of Monday's tv..·<r how' practice v.·ith a bruised should€r. • SAN DIEGO -San Diego Coach Harland Svare says he will eqieriment v.·ith large numbers of players in at least one more National Football League ex- hibilion game because he doesn't think it \\'ill prevent development of a winning at- titude on the Chargers. ··\\'e face something of a dilemma. \Ve can't play our front line people a com· p\ete game because we have an age fac· tor,'' Svare said ~1onday .. "Also there are others we need to find out about ... We're testing and we can't do ii Wlless we use the people we're testing in crucial situations.'' That being the case. Svare said. he would experiment at least through Sun- day's exhibition at San Francisco before making more effort to use rcguJars full time. Coacl1 Tries to Low l(ey U.S. Cage Lo ss to Russia l\tOSCO\V (A Pl -The ignominy ol the controversial 51-50 Joss to the Russians in the Munich Olyrnpi cs last yE':U still burns deep in Ameri ca n basketball hearts, bul coach Ed Badger is trying to keep the rirc lo\1· with his young team here for the \Yorld University Games. "Sure. we think about it -how can we help it?'' said the coach Crom Chicago's \\lilbur Wright Junior College during a break in the Yanks' first workout here. ··But rm trying to keep the boys from thinking too much about the Russia ns nO\\'. "You can climb only one mountain at a time. If we get too fired up pointing to the Russians, v:e might get our wings clipped by the Cubans. We don't want that. "Emotionally we are attempting to stay on a level keel ." When the Russians heal the Americans in the Olympic final -having been awarded a second chance after time had run out -it marked the first defeat for an American team in Olympic basketball competition. The Yanks had won 64 straight games over a 36-year period. In the 1971 Pan-Am games at Cali, Colombia, the Americans were upset by lhe Cubans, who will have virtually the same lineup here. White's Glove, • Bat Too Much; Angels Bombed NEW YORK !AP) -Roy While drove in three runs with a pair of homers, one from each side of the plate, and George f\.1edich pitched a five-hitter, leading the New York Yankees to a 6-0 victory over !he California Angels Monday night. Tonight the Angels match Clyde Wright v..•ilh Oluck Dobson. Batting right-handed v..ith two out In the first. White pumped a Rudy lttay 011 Tl' Tonight C#1autu!I 5 at 4:30 pitch into the left field seats to give the Yankees a quick lead before Graig Net· ties increased it to 2--0 with a ~scoring single later in the iMing. After Horace Clarke knocked in a rm with a sacrifice fly and Matty Alou doubled home another in !he second In- ning, White slammed a two-run homer\ from the left side of the plate into the' right field seats off reliever Dick Lang"-..-"! It was his 14th of the baseball season.·• White then made the outat&nd.\ defensive play of the game with a ~ tacular catch in lett field In the sixth ~ ning. White leaped into the left field ~ to take a potential two-run homer awaj' from California's Bob Oliver. 1. C1111...,,11 fOI NIW Yri 16) -·~rlll Alomar, 11 J o o o Cl•r-1, ?ti McCr•w, pti 0 o 0 0 MAIOll, lb Meoll, 11 0 D 0 0 Wllllf, II Berry, ct 4 0 0 O Muref<', cf FR:alblnson, dll • 0 l 0 Mllfl-.. c •• r II l1t>? 2 0 I I 5 I 1 ' ' ' ' ROll¥1r, 3b 4 0 0 0 GNtlllts, 3b ' ' ' fl . ' ' ' ' ' Epslel11, lb 4 O O O Hirt, <!ti Pl1110f1. If 4 O 1 O FAlou, tf SdmOlm, ,, • 0 1 0 MICll•fl, II BP1rk1r, 1b I D 0 0 Ml'dlcll. 0 Ll-i,Oll 0000 TO!'bor!I, c l 0 I 0 Slepllt11t1, pf! 1 D 0 0 RM•'f•P DODO ~no1.p 0000 Berblf', p O 0 O O Tolll l2030 C"'lltor>ll11 Ntw York Tol1b .... , ... I" H A It, M1y ~l, 7·12) 1 Ill 6 S l~1199 5 2/l 6 I B•rDtr I o o Mldlcn 1w, '"' ' 5 o WP--Ml'dk~. T-2;31. A-11,1)2. ' O I J ' ' ' ' I 1 ~ 00t-t ~ ,..,,,, ,,, _, "' -. l!lt I I IOI ' ' ' ' , . ' ' . 0 • .t; HE BEA TS ODDS; NOW FACES JA IL I I Russians Snafu World Games The Americans will be bidding for revenge in these student games, opening 'T'hursday, with one ol the yotmgest fastest nnd most promising squads ever Cielded for international competition. NEW YORK (AP) -KeMelh M°"".\'!t figured out a way to beat the horses ~ may have won seven years In jail ~ stead, says the Manhattan district I/. torney's office. !'iTOSCO\Y <AP ) -The World L'ni\·crsi- 1~ Games, a sort of minl-Olymp1cs for sludenfs, opens \\'cdnesday, and rnost prople, including the host Russians, arc keeping their fingers crossed. Jo~or the Sovii:ts. this is a trial ruh in tht•1r bid for the 1580 Olympics, and up to rttH\'1 snarled in red tape a n d bureaucratic delays, they haven't done much to 11npres.s the crlUcs. "Thert' is no ~'ay the Russians can hold thl' 1980 Olyn1pic Games," SA.id Ge<1rge E K1 1l1an, Chic.I de ~fission ol lhe U.S. l1•un1 "1 dou bt ttu11 lhc Unfled St11tes \\·ould send a team here under these circumstances.'' The big American Yjuad or 325 men nnd \\'O/Tlt.11 ran Into an early snag \\'hen one packet 0£ their applica tions for crcdentJals \\'as tcntporarlly lost or mislaid Virtually the whole tcanl "'as quaran- tined for t\•/o days in the hu ge golhic struclure -"'ith ii'! sky-stabbing l!lpires -at LA!nin lJnlversi ly which serves as the n1ain living qunrtrrs for athletes. At first some or the athletes were refused meals. "\\·c ;:ire jusl 1101\' gelling through the routine and it's been very trying," Killian sa id. "The sports people arc nice and trying to be as helpful as possible. But they run into political and security areas, \\·here officials couldn't care less. "For 1:xamplc. I have been going to the orgnnizing C{lmmittee every day early in the morn ing and staying until late (It night. They keep me wailing (or hours. "There "'ill be so:nc ladies culling out pictures and others pasting them on -a slow. primitive process. \Ve voluntecrc.'{) a stapling d1•v1ce. They were awed by it. Th<!y used au our staple~ " A formal prt·~.c; t'Onfrrl•nce was called at noon Tuesday at the palace of. sports Yiherc Soviet sports authorities welcomed the hundreds of press, rad io and television reporters from throughout the world. The session was conducted In two languages -Russian and French - leaving a big number in the audience understanding nothing. There were chairs only !or a fraction or the people \\'ho wanted to sit down. Schedule!, dra~ for the various tournamenLI and other pertinent details '~-ere left unprovided. "Our tcum averages only 19 years," said Badger, who was an a.satstant coach when the team won the silver medal at Turin, Italy, three years ago. "We are a fa$1-break, aggressive team, predicated on quickness." · Whcelho,.,. ol lhe U.S. squad has been David Thompson, an 1 8 .. y e a r .. o I d sophon1ore All-American Crom North Carolina Stale with springs lor legs. lie Ms been averaging around 20 points a ga me In the European swing -below his 24.7 average Jn hi• flral vanity year •l collcgo -and awlng fans with his Jump- ing ability and flashy play. A l!POkesman !or the office Mkl M I Jy. a part • time cashier at an Off·Trael BetUnt1 orllce, on May 21 punched au! $100 or $50 win Uckels on every hoi"le bl the Drill. sixth, sevenlh, eighth and nintil .races at Belmont. J.fe went to lunch mil didn't come back, the spokesman said , The llckell cost OTB 18,850, and an li>- dictmcnl handed up Monday ..,i Moseley collected $12,000 on them ~ another OTB office lhal M•y aflc"'°"" ! lie was arrested when ho rctm:n~.~t,: tho first office more than a month 1~ lo colic¢ his pay !or Ille Ume he ~ authortftcs said. ' • ' ' • ' l M • Mar lesgut fWlisht seaso1 night Serv il pl aye< Est an Mar Doug I while and S dcd 01 Tro• defcai Mi!sic Ranct each lo5S. In t Costa ty lea Anaht ed ( ~Jim <..:rove · ·forfeil' Cos by Sit ;~ppct i+hlle lo Uy I M Mal Jeagu1 turcd pionst \a~ S• ?acifi ThC' ~·itho! don ~tart~ · bovnd 6-2 ~ shoo ti tus. The secon1 , Dally 'llOI Slllf l"IMt• • ' SONNY NUTTE R !L EFT), STEVE BAST RETURN TO COSTA MESA FAIRGROUNDS. These Two Southland Motorcycle Racing Stars Wi ll Vie Friday Night at 8:1 5. . '· Mari na Poloists Unb eaten ?i1arina High 's s u m m e r league water palo contingent finished the Costa ~fesa High season undefeated Monday night with a f"4 decision over Scrvite in the only game played in the Mesa circuit at Estancia High. ~farina scoring was led by Doug Fabi:in with three goals \Vhile Jim Rock, Jeff Edwards and Shaun Buckn<'r each ad- ded one goal apiece. Troy and Los Alamitos defeated BoJsa Grande and Mission Viejo by forfei t and Rancho Alamitos and Edison each receipted for a forfeit loss . Jn the next to last sa lvo in Costa ~1esa High's No. I varsi· ty league. Costa Mesa dunked Anaheim, ~1 : Downey knock· 1•d off \Vcstminster. 6-4 ; ~·fira Costa defcatea Garden <.;.irove. 8-6: and Estancia ··forfeited to Lakewood. Costa Mesa scoring \\'as Jed by Steve Marksbury and John i·:p pcrson with t·wo goals each. \''hile Bob Hice added a single loUy. 1 Sa ys F athe r Pr essu re's On For New Evert INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Jeanne Evert, at 15, looks !('I be traveling very much In the footsteps of older sister Chris. Playing in only her second tournament as a pro, Jeanne is seeded fourth in the $90.000 U.S. Clay Co u rt cham- pionships at Woodstock Coun- try Club . Chris, the defending women's singles champion. is ranked first. Both girls \\'On their first round matches Monday. Chris breezed to a straight set 6--0, 6- 0 victory over Pat Bostrom of Seattle, who was playing on clay for the first time. Jeanne had a harder time, surviving a tie-breaker in the first set for a 7-6, 6-3 triumph over ~farilyn Tesch o f Australia. "She's tight." S'aid the girl's fath er and coach, Jim Evert. of Jeanne's troubles on the court. "I think she saw th:it she was seeded fourth and it really got to her. First round play L"l alv1ays tough ... she y,•ants to win ." Evert said too much might be expected of Jeanne . "She's playing f o r ex- perience now. She may feel more pressure because she's expected to be a winner," he said. "She's a good player, but she's only 15 and she's playing with world class players." Like sister Chris, Jearme plays mainly a baseline game, using strong, consistent sbots and a t"'o-fisted backhand. Her height -S-foot·l -puts her at a disadvantage because she doesn't have a long reach, but she is O"ptimistic that prob- lem \\'ill fade. just a!l it did for Chris. ··~fy sister grew two or three inches in her 16th year, so 1 hope I will . too." she said. Jeanne said her serve is the weakest part of her game, notin g, "I need to develop a harder, more consistent serve -it doesn't have any power." MY'S HICKS TOPS EL IMS Mission Viejo's Dwayne Hicks has taken over the West Coast match game elimina- tions lead at Costa ~1esa 's Kona Lanes with only lour games remaining before the final cut to the top five bowlers. Hicks, averaging 210 for 48 games, upped his total to 10,518, to take a 29-stick ad- vantage over Anaheim's Bob Ramirez. L o n1 i t a ' s Art Jackson is third, 45 pins off the pace. Hottest bowler Monday was La Habra's Ron Dietl, who jumped from loth to fourth with a 223-233-223·223--907. Bikes Race Two Nights This Week Motorcycle attractions are on tap Wednesday and Thurs- day nights at Orange County International Raceway with class A speedway racing and motorcross featured . lVID Wins on Fluke Play The serve was the downfall of fifth-seeded Patti Hogan of La Jolla, who became the tournament's first u p s e t casualty Monday. i'i.ss Hogan double-faulted eight times -three in one game late in the second set - en route lo a 6-2, 6-Z defeat to England's Veronica Burton. Ralph Castor returns to the El To.ro plant Wednesday with hopes of duplicating last week's double in which he won the handicap and scratch main events of speedway racing. Lakewood's Bill Manley, who two weeks ago was the fint rider to ever poll off dual main event victories, wiU also. return in an attempt to sweep both main events. Mater Dei High's summer league basketball team cap- 1ured the Journey cham- pionship Monday night in the last second of play, 38-37. over r>a('ifi('a at Santa Ana College. The ~1onarchs of i\.1ater Oei. '!\·ithout regular starters Bren· don "'fcCaughey and Steve ~•lartindale. relied on the re· · ho~ndlng of 6·1 Jack Dean and 6-2 Mike ~lonnig and the shooting hand of !'¥lark Breif- tus. The clincher came \\'ilh one second left "'·hen a Pacifica DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO VACATION SPECIALS '66 OODGa;: CAMPER l4 TON .. q!Ol'lllllc tr11tt., VI, TllaHI $1677 -'70 ARISTocttAT TRAI LER player and Mater De.i's Jim Schultz were fighting for a re- bound under the Pacifica basket. Most of the men's singles favorites were scheduled 1.0 get into action today after drawing first-round byes. The Pacifca player in- advertently knocked the ball up and in for the winning goal and Schultz was awarded the IVt'O points. Top seeded Manuel Orantes or Spain was paired against Australia's Bob Carmichael and No. 2 seed Jimmy (;on. nors of Los Angeles, last year's ronnerup, faced Ismael El Shafei of Egypt. Two-time champion Cliff Richey of Sarasota. Fla., drew Tom Edlefsen of Los Angeles. Racing begins at 7:30 and admission is $3 for adu1ts, ;1 for juniors and children under 8 free . llre!th11 Dude~ Dt-lant'y Fl•ltMr Scllu11Z """ Prlltel Monni~ Tou 1 Hallllnlt: Miter 0..-llfl ~ ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' 0 • 0 " • P1dllc1, 16·11. ,, ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' " :1 • ' ' • 0 ' 0 • Thursday's agenda features the 125cc, 250cc. and 500cc cycles in motocross. Lakewood's Randy Myers is the current point leader after winning the 250cc Expert ra ce last week. Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division w L Detroit 66 53 Baltimore 63 52 New York 65 56 Boston 62 55 Milwaukee 57 59 Cleveland 47 71 We11t Division Kansas City 68 51 Oakland 67 51 Chicago 58 61 Minnesota 56 60 Angels ~1 Iii Texas 42 74 Monell"'• 01mu Nl'W York ,, AM•1• 0 O.kllnd 3. 8oaton l Clllc•oo !. MllWl!i~ff 1 l11tlrnore 1, T111n • Dtlroll ., MlllnftOf• 3 on1v 11mn Khtdultd, T ... ,. •• lft'I .. Pct. .559 .548 .537 .530 .491 .398 .S71 .568 .487 .483 .481 .362 GB Hi 21,2 3;3 8 19 ',I 10 lO'h 13 24 1> Allfflt {Wrltlllt a.16) 11 Ntw York Cl>oblon .. , O~kll!ld CPF111 ~>) at llOSIOll {l11 t1.n c1 ..... 1w CPtrrr 12.1s1 at IC111111 Cll\' (lu111Y 10.11) NATIONAL LEAGUE Eall DM1loll w L St. Louis 81 58 Pittsburgh 57 58 Montreal 57 60 Chicago 56 61 Philadelphia 54 63 New York 5% 64 West Division Dodgen 74 45 Cincinnati 7'l 48 San Francisco 64 52 Houston 63 58 Atlanta 56 65 San Diego 42 76 MMll'l''JG.iMI ,.rtttlM'lf\ J. Clncln111!1 1 Hovti.. 4. St. 1.0u11 0 S.1'! OlttO t Ntw Yorlt 2 ~ .. ~ .. 0nrv '""*' td'ledvltd. -- Pct. .513 .498 .487 .479 • 41\i .441 .622 .600 .553 .531 .463 .358 GB i 3 4 8 7\i 2\i 81> ti 19 311> All111t1 fMol'fotl ,.., et Cl'llceeo IJ.,,klM 11).111 Clnclnnttl CGrlmslw 12·61 11 Pltlllbu'Tll (ltoOll:· tr J.-111 11 It. low.u11er, ll~ir 11••• t •ll'• ••"l"q, •1;11 "'"' & ll•trlctl fltoll· ~P•. ""°"' Cl\1(190 ISton. •·11) al Mllw11;kee (L.ockWoOd ,., 8t!llmor• CAltl!tndtr 6-61 t i T~i11 (Slftti.rl . ., Houlton (ltlChlrd 4·11 11 $1. \.0Ut1 f"o.ter N l Ntw York (l(Ohm111 •·lll et Sen OIHO {J-• >II Moftft'Nf (Moort 6'-11) •I Dtelttrt (Jotln 11·1) Pllllldelp!lll (LO!'lbott t.f) t i t an Fr111er.co $1 877 '69 EL CAMINO CUSTOM. -,,IOf'l'lltlC frllll.., llOWff lllOth Mp, f1-Pltlitr t. IW.etl I• 1ttl1r. ttJ•lll. $2177 '72 JEEP $3677 O~lro!I itoltma!'I 1••1 el Ml1111t.ota !WOOdlOl'I ,10.7) WMlllfffl'l''t Ottntl 91!1lrnore 11 Tt11M Cff!Ytl•"d •T l(•n•t• (:lh Ot1r0it al MlnflttO'I Chic-. It MllW•IA" -,"•tit It Ntw Yorlt OMl•llCI 11 BotlOA (81rr '·11l Wtdlllldfl'r'I O•m•1 Cll'l(l!lnlll U Pllhb1111111 A!lltllll al Chlctto Houtto" 11 St. lOlllS MOnl .... lel~ Naw YOtto; at San Ditto Phlltdet1>l!I• ti Sit! l"'r•ntlMO Alamitos Racing Entries .......... tll!j ....... ,......, .... " (1Mr ...... 1111atT 1-.CI -3151 Ylrft. S .,...r ek:ll &. up. et.I~ ,..,..... ti.-. Cl1lonlnf orlc. .a.-. · s11nr1 e-11 (J. 'Ml'-> •obbV Dll'1•• (0. Mlfflt} 111v W.r Chic (JI. aM11t11 $1llor'1 C,,_ge (JI. U11r1 Allle McC..,_ (L. Mylirs) J1rlco (I(, Hirt! Allm!lo• Step (E. G1,11J oral ll,•nd"f ($. Tr .. ,vrel Mr. lmPOrtll\I IH. Cr.,..yl N11IW l unny (J. lllch•rdsl m "' •n 1n "' "' "' "' m 122 91!COfllD JIACI -3SO Ylfdl. 1 Yllr old._ Cllhlllttf, PurH llAOO. Clelmlllf prlc• M.000. • Prirttv c-tt• 1e. Ga•r•I 111 Tvrnlton fk. Hartl 117 Prll'lllbt111 (L. Mvlirs) Ill H.c1or1 "-' (C. sm11111 no light Lim• 01:. Ad1lrl ll7 011\dy'1 Eiprti' IS. Tr•1ur11 120 Mr. TllrH Sir•-(R, l111k•l 120 E l A:ale•CI CJ. Rlch1•dtl uo C111d~'1 Trinktl ~. O•eY•') 111 Miff Alura 91r (0. C1rdOZ1) 117 THlllD RAC.I -S# y1rds. ! Yfff Olcfl &. up. Allow1nce. PurH S1 ,IJOO. The Seant -Lono Be1ch . C1lc111t1 (S. Trea1ur1) Oobbruck'• &tit (0. C1rd011) Queen'• Hlgl'I (It, B1Flk1l F•Y'• J 90Y IJ, Oteyerl Cll•rolng CNirU• IM. llct.iJ Hot TCI Trot (0. Holbr6olll "' •n "' "' "' '" .. OUllTH ll.._CI! -o600 Yl~S. 2 Yt•r oldl, 'AllOWlll(I. Pvr11 tltm. Tf\t LI Palme Jr. Women'• O "*- M!". OM$! Mud (Pt~) MICkl'f• Sun FIOWet' (Hert) M111y Rocktt IOtffet'I Pell-P.....iOPe (Tr••surtl Flying Marior (Merri-) A:ebe1 C111'$tid Hirn (A.cl1lrl I Am I S.!d (MYlfll Ltlltt tltid Hlwk IC•rdoi1J Cousin M•ek /links) OrOIJ o Hanwmoon (Cr1111Wl "' "' "' "' "' ·~ ·~ ·~ "' "' Fl"H JIACI -0 Yl"I. S ye1r old• a. up. Clalrnlng. Pur11 13DOO. Clt11'111f'lg Plk• S750t. Thlo XI !tt ltho Cl\1pl1r ol .... SI0"'9 Phi. Loterlon {WtlsOl'I) lltck 011 Min (Myles) A:ock•I To Ml (Morris} l!hxldY WtYn• IW1rd) Tiny W1tch 9ound (frNKltfl Ltt ll•r W1lcll (Ad1lrl Nifty Note (1111'111) Sir Mur lC1rd011J m ... "' "' "' ... m "' SU(TH llit.CI! -JSO v1rcrs. S ye1r oldt. Allow111ce. Pur51 l2000. Sharp Luli; (C1rd011) MJgs Limits (Matsuda) Everet!'• Wlll1 {Htrtl 1..11111 War Chic CAd1lrl Air Cooled (Myln l m m "' m "' "' m TutJdlJ', Autusl 14, l<J73 DAIL V PlLOT J f S hriners Aren't Panicking; ' Archaic Ru"le Flnunwd 'Ille meager lumoul ol 29,498 at tile Im Anceles Collll<Wll Sunday alt.moon fur tbe 22nd annual Shriae football game -Id ap- pear to be ., lndlcallon lhat lhlngs aren't going ao well foe tile Sbriners' charily evenl. In the past the match has atlracted as many as 85,931 for ·a single game and averag- ed 50,000 over the ytars. But despite the lo'w'est attendance figure in 21 years, prospects for the continuation of the event are bright. The 29,496 total is deceiving because tradi· --------- ROGER CARLSON blacks last year. And at another night game, at the C.OUsewn a prominent black woman was stabbed to death in the rest room . 'Ibtre was brief talk of moving the game to Anaheim Stadium tx.tt It's doubtful It will ever be switched. The fact remains. daytime football on the high school or junior college level will never replace night games. * South coach Dave lfolland showed a lot of cluss in Thursday's 1.ftb annual Oran1e Couo· ty football game. Alternates Herb Marshall of Santa Ana, Mark Garratt of Corona del Mar and Mike Meyers of Paclllca were suited up and on tbe sidelines as their mates fell to the North, 20. 10. Game rules do not allow allernates to even suit up, despile two weeks of tough workouts. It's a short-sig hted ,·le \v by the sponsoring Brea Lions Club and llolland didn 't agree with it. So he suited them up anyway. although be naturally couldn't use them in the game. tionally many members ol the Shrine buy up The alternate rule ls arcbalr. What you 're blocks a! tickets to give away to friends, doing Is asking an athlete to sacrifice lime for family and various youth organizations. a charity game with the knowledge that he'll Game tepresentative Mannie P i n e d a play only if misfortune comes to a teammate reporis that upwards of 50,000 tickets \\'ere prior to the kickoff. actually purchased, thus game profits ap-* parently are near the average figure. San Clemente High swim and cross country Pineda says the fll'st reaction to the low at-coach Ben Cummins passes along some lmidt tendanee at Sunday's game is to move the tilt comments on Australia's Stephen Holland, the back to its nighttime slot. youngster who smashed the world's swim· "Maybe the beat and some daytime recrea· ming record in the 800 and 1,500-meter tion were responsible for some of the prob-freestyleswith cloekings of 8:17.6and 1$:37.8. lem," says Pined~. "And the Jong domina· The marks broke the existing standards by tion of the South could be a factor, too." The 6.2 and 14.7 seconds. "Coach Jan Roberts," north had woo ooly once in the past 11 years. say Cummins, '·wrote me and predicted that Two reasons prompted thjs year's switch. his swimmer would break the 400-meter First, game officials wanted to ·try the freestyle . mark. daytime game as a family affair type of "He said he'd already done it twice in prac- sltuation. tice and I wrote him then and told him I But the major reason appears to be for didn't believe it. security reasons evolving from racial prob-"After what bas transpired it looks like I'm lems. going to have to write again and agree. And I A Laguna Beach bus was stoned by juvenile understand Holland justJurned 15." lr-;,...D""'o-N-,-, ....... D ... IS_C ... A_R ... D ...... T,..;H_O __ S_E_ OLD TENNIS SHOES!! Fish Report El Toro P•tlw' ITretl!i•t) Truly Het P1nt1 tl1nluil M1voress tl'egtl Mias Po!<le Chip !W•tton) John't No" (Or1y1rl m 117 OCe ANSIO I -31 "1'11ers: 4 b•r· Uf rlt l/01, ~ ttonllo. 330 11nd bast, 4 We r1 ptlf arid r•ltolMm tll t'n1" el Adld1t 1111111 TAi.rn Shon. ANTHONY'S SHOE SERVICE l'ltHtllll SI (CIC~ COCI 46 ve1towt1H. HUNf lNOTON l iEACH -11 angle<'= U> Wnd blu, 11 t>Onllo, S n11ib11 t 511 bllrrKudf' 100 rock cOCI. SAN D I GO fMVl'lldPll Pier) -155 11t l lltlkt' W ~ellowl1ll. 12 bluetln tuna, 122 1 Wiiii. "' basil. f03 rock cOCI, l"46 Sf:Vl'NTH JIACI! -~ y1rd1. 3 YMr old1 &. up. Allow•11ce. P11r•• USCG. TM Hunll!'QIOl'I a11ch Mr._ Jtycairs. As1ur td Copy (W1h0t1) llt c1ll«1 b1u, 196 mackerel, '8-4 btr· 111 r1cud1 IOO tion!to. Mr. Roan Man (W•rd) Counly F1ttiom lB•nksl Chi Cha Bi r IC..nlOll) JOYOUS Fey (Hert) Oyn1110 G .. IM1lrl LONG I EACH 1aet"*lt Pier) -71 11• 1na11,.: 37 b1rr1cud1, " 11no bass, 100 lit bonllo. 1.5 meckerwl. l 1r91 -60 llt 1n;ler1: 1 blrrtcuda, 1 s.end bll», 7S fll!f!I COY (fl"ffllll'll bOfllto, n callco b•s1. 2 y1llowt1!1, 103 rock cod, 83 m•ck•r•I. l!IOHTII Jlit.CI! -00 y1rd$. ) ~t•r Ol<b & up. c11Lm1,., ,UrH SI.CO. c1a1mt1111 Pr1ct snao. flll'#POJIT CDt"'Y'°' Lockarl -160 11111ler1: 14 blrr•cud•, '1o bOnlto, tl2 lit Slnd bl11, 17 y1Uowl1H. 961 roc:k cod. Midway Tom (lllckfi) 1,, (Art's LllMll"") -6' 1nglers: 7 fl.Br· Phoebe'I Brue• (Smlll'll ••cud•, 61 bOnlto, 2 m1ck1rel, 71 calkO 11t bass, u rock co:o:I, 1 1"111tbu1 . lit SEAL aEACH -l.GI 1nglers: 3l bar- Midway Dl!ldy fMorrlsl Ru• FerH t81nk1l GtOOYY Gn,impy IWtrdl 111 racud•, 145 t>Onllo, 1,7dtl 11nd blu. '' 11s rock cod, f ll•llbut, S5 m•c~er•I. ••rgt B1rrlna H1rl) Ota Mysttry M111 IAdl lrl Plugged In (A:lth•rds) llt -146 1na ers: 3 blrr1t11d1, 431 bOtlllO, 11t II Mild b111r J hallbul. OANA WKAllJ' -21$ 111gler1: n k1to bl11, 1 fl.8rr1cud1, 21A bonito. 2 HINTH JIACI -G Y•Nn. 3 year f11llbut. I y11lowt111, ll rock cod, 1 olds. C1tlml111. Puna l:!OOD. Cl1lmlng m1ek1,...1. 3 wlllle 1.11 !tau. price i.saio. < ~iii;i;iiiii;;i;;ii;i;i.;;i;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Dupe'• Niner (-,d11rl 122lj Ri;l'I lllobbV Jlun !Or..,.M') 122 NEWPORT LEASES G8' Re~y !Smith) 122 Rlv.,.1ldt Gold !Morris! 117 24H Welt C.-t Hltltwey sn"k Att1ck (Cardol•I 112 h e1tf1r11 e1m1 t1t1c11trds) lit L111ing 111 V1 icle1 evnny'1 Gold (Ht rll lit PORlt•N & DOMllTI~ C1rol'1 OrNm (Myt.,) \lr ... F1rnlly AU1lr (TtHIU•e) 1"2 645-2202 H01UY 1/111 ltr (ltllkl) llt Racing Results Miiftd1y, A .. utt ''· ,,,, CIH r t. Pffl l'ltl" JIAC8 --4IOO y1rd1. 2 v .. r olds, Ct9lrnl"1. PurM SU(IO . Mary Doti air (P1g1) 1s.40 s.«1 s.eo •. .o J.tlO ... S1rn Moon (Adair) Sum""r Sun•hlM (Monl1) Tlm1 -2'1.02. . Scr1khed -"°''II TM• a1r9, k lno'1 Cr11lsa, Mli Cl..,,•nllne, .11v1n1h MOOl'I. J2 tx•d • -?>Mirr OM •er t. l· S1"' ~. P• .. sn.a :i.etOfllD l!IAC• -111:1 y1r,,.._ s veer old1 & VP. Cl1lml119, Pur11 S\IOO. Scooe>tr Sport (M~lftl MlnO SlltY (l lCklll 3.IO 2.20 2 .~ 2.40 2-~ ,.., Cttt ltnd'1 S•t (G1r1.1 ) T1rnt -44.60. THlaD RAC• -a yard .. ! y11r old1. Clalrnl"lt. Purw 11.cw>. Wlltowt:r.ek a1rl1'1' (Mlrrll) l .IO 4.to '·'° Qlllrter atl'ldtr I01r11) U111 .J.'4 AIMIW JlfbMTIOI\ (Mvi"I MO Tlmt -21.01. $cr1tdltd -St.Ck., Dick I, Mid Art, S.,...ps lier. O.rltnt l!tt1. POUtlnt JIAC• -0 Yttdt. J y11r oldl &. up. CltlrnlrlQI. P\lrM lltol. -,rl Plppl11 (MYltt) W11dl 111 (l lcktl) S1nl9!lfllh (W1rCI) Tlmt -ffl.O . NO Krl1Cllt1. 21 ....... "" .... .... •• "''™ tAt• -«IO yards. 3 yMt ofdl.. Al10Wl11Ct· Jt'1;r11 $1100. Clllc Pit Go (Tr111vr1) Al'I Allbl (MYtt1) Tl"llrd lnMgt IW•rdJ Timi -20.IJ. 1.20 4.tlO 3.0ll ··'° J.10 .... Scr•lcl'led -Color Me Pink. SIJITN UC• -Ut Ylrdt. 3 y11r olds lo up. 11111..,. 111--Pvr11 Sll"OO. My Rom•n 1n•l1n (Ad11rl David COC:k11 (llcktO DoO'l•et aov (W•1111 fl"le -21,1'. 12.00 '·'° ... SCtttel'ltd -,,._r. Important. '"'° J.40 .... uo .... ... , ... '·" '·" "The best ~to borrow $2,000 •. e WESTCLll<, l'lAZA . LIDO. f'A~H ION ISLAND e (OJIOfllA Dl!L MAii BOB PALEY AND ASSOCIATES INSURANCE e AUTO e HOME e YACHT e INOUSTRIAL e COMMERCIAL e BONDS ~ BAFECD INBURANC& BOB PALEY 474 E. 17th STREET COSTA MESA 642-6500 -546-3205 is where I borrowed $2,000,000." I Where's the besl personal loan? wt.. U l"lledl -l•W9fti. l"t ''°"" t. I• .... J., .......... Marina Exams Physical examinations for all Marina Hi&h lootbtll can· dldatta will be conducted Wedn<sday alttmoon at $: 1$ la ~ boys 1ocUr room. ..... • businessman goes tor a big loan lor his company, Wt make roans to some of Amllt'lca's largest companies. Millions of dollars et a time. For things like cargo ships. New factories. Power stalfona. But for ill !he millions we lend to business, we lend Just as tructl 10 people nke you. Because we feel the reasons you need money 119 • lrnpo!lant •the reasons a big company needs money. Need C81lh to pay off bills? To take a vacation? To meet some enw- flllt'IC'(I Come see us. The peopla who understand all kinds ol money poblott., Commerclal Credtt. ~Co1mnercial Credtt ni..o..w way b botrowathOUW!ld l.s lfom Iha people who tend m/lnotrs. DAIL V PILOT TUMBLEWEEDS 'IOM ~ '""' IN tQ.lvw:>OO. SICOR£O ~'°-L ,.~ ""'81.Ut1 FlM~ vu. L.ATeLY, Mf:N1 J'Yf: M'.:11):!7 IN ~ A J11:Cll7el7 LACK OF esl'l!l'f ~ ~ J Of PRIPe, OF Saf-RESl'!CTJ •••• 1 wew., rve !7ec117z:17 rrs Hl6H 11 ME' SOMEllilNEl WAS POHE A!'OlJT IT! ·MUTT & JEFF RGMENTS . ~'T Jl.l5T sroo mEl<f, KENIN ! STOP HIM I NANCY ' ·..------..----.--------~ YES, OUR D OG .JUST PICKED IT OFF THE PoRCH THE NE WS M UST 13E VERY DISTURl31NG' . . . by Tom K. Ryan we Ri:6ReiFUU.Y ACCl:PT YOUR RE:SIC7NAilON !! by Al Smith by Dale Hale Ernie Bushmiller __ ,,,_ OM, NANCY, DID OUR NEWSPAPER COME YET~ i Tg~~l~i E'S ?.==========! THE. PAPER -............ __ _ .,,,,,.__ .. PEANUTS -TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE Yeat9fda{1 Puu le Solved: ACROSS .-3 01!lgn1le .. Old French 1 Dry good& coin ptec11 .. Soanleh VIP • 011lr1 .. Mtk1 f I T A ' ' T E A1 ~P '1RI ' 0 ' A N S T A TI( R E S P ' ' ' N [ ' [ ,, A N 11 E 0 T A R R E T gr1elly believe 10 Me~• 1 loud " Sl11tr1 no111 " Sent 10 1 " C ognl1•nt new 11111on 15 E••I ln(ll•n " Opoose nu rt• ac tively 18 f•rtler or 58 Jconogr1phy: LEER I '"' A P .f l.....S E R A S Ill 11 [ R E t S II 0 T P ( J~ SEl.SOHS R U T ~R C~S I 0 E S ~ vi: T E L c; E N T R I F F S A T A JUDGE PAtU<ER DOOLEY'S WOILD . by l09er Bradfield -------, •Ml<YTJ5 YOUR """""" ..,.,._,, llli i\.tm. .. rno I OOOl'r WINK so ... -5111<!; """'10 OF J.lfR YIR1NKlSS , ,. ~ SIYS 'IH~\''111' UklO 1JA1'1-S ~880N$ 'IAAT' f?rOOf'O HEit SISEPL.ESS N1C!'m-S SALLY BANANAS I t.JaNT To li:!lL 'rbU. Na ive K1D, THar T/.fe FIRST T~IN'.; ot\11! l eijf/NS ,.,,_ < .e- IN THe SPY BIZ,. To "'.f:•f~..,...,~ TRUST /llD OHe,i n ~ c • -vWivv< tP.at. .... - by Charles Barsotti t't7S,N ............ .i.-.c-•.,.-• •-••••"•--------'•:;:·''-'' '---------------" GORDO WINT7fE .5fiiU !NCHEJ)-1.)P .i!.VE5! MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS "I'VE 10..D QQO A t-\IU.IOl.J T/ltlES ... THilr1S . UHFAI R ! ! Sl.!llKl:S DON'T HAVE ML/PS J ; . by Harold Le Doux ' ' l . • It '. ?~ ... by Gus Arriola •.. cur 7JIAI f OIJT'. by Ferd Johnson OUR MOST l>!lAMATIC HIGH -LEVEL COVt:R·UP ... by Roger Bollen PICIC.<I ! PICKQ ! P10::Q ! THE GIRLS WI"'''" \! .-.~~ ~\ h~ '1\\\1 Mlll1y AD tlr. " H1r111 59 Rel••s• 18 USA cily " f ruit drink TOM o u o Mf M l~IP ll E IAGRIAR!ANS PER!-IAPS YOU CAN . HA'Vc YOU 6EEN ON DUTY t CAME ON AT ELEVEN .' MR, ROBERTS WAS t1ERE Tl-115 .-.F'TERNOON COULD YOU MAVE MR. RO&ERTS CALI.. ME IM THE MORNING? " M1rb!11: " M1nul1c1ured Sl1n9 !J ---Ridge, .. Condition or 1972 0 1rDy 1111 w inner " Toii•r•' .. Anoint: •Ymtloll: 2 Arc h11C w ord1 es Zoo 1111m111 !-' llm!t•d """' ee ____ 1n: period ln1erven1 " W11hlnglon " Airtight 111oort clo1ure1 " Som• 0•111101\lfl OOWN 31 Mi lch 32 H11llng ' tnlsnt Chl mb1r1 2 11 m debt 3J Fln1 lin1 +n J F1n1I "t" • G1v•no 3 5 ___ Ven m1dlc1I Wl11kl1 l id 38 Llgl'lt bell S Hunting 1ound dogs 39 P1n1m1 e Urin1tur111y Piii 40 0 1p1rt1d 7 Cupid " Eld1rty 8 Monlck1r1 " ---ii S atan 2 le11t" w ord• ,, • , • ' ' -' " 11 .. -" '" 22 ri . r -ll ., 91:.. ~ JO -JJ .. " ~ ' . R .. - " 50 -.H ·- N E A V E S N E ' 0 ~ T ' -0 [ ' 5 ' 10 Ol1t1nt in 39 s 101e time ~Ix lures 11 Shelley, !or 10 P1 ck1gl11g .,. m11!iri1I 12 Gu1rdi1n 12 Foot d1gl11 1olrll 13 N. Amer. 1J Chm111 l11dl1111 i;;1~•I <11 Rocks 21 B1tor1 .is Rur1I! Abbr. 23 Art1111: V1r. 47 ---F1ci1 25 F111·1opped 18 R1condllio11 1d 1'11111 Ure 27 Turning: 19 Lyr i<: P11!11( comooslt1on 28 M11evol1nt SO Rellnqui1h 29 T1kec1r• 1n otli1;1 °' 53 Low r11ort 30 French upper 55 Conc•Ptlon hOUll S6 Exch1ng1 31 C•llulOS• 1100<11 lor liber JS Thorough-money lire 57 Very: 38 Pr1oosiUon French J7""tlrobl1m1n 60 Spigol I • fl! .. " '" 1J ' " t< ,, 2J • ~ ~· " l5 " ,, ,-.. . .., - " ~ -" -" " I J f ! • MISS PEACH G0\.1..V, 'LOVEll"S Tire&'· S!Jltlt iriFl.EGTS A "OT OF "OMANCE, 0\1£11: THI< Yt:Alr!> ... DICK TRACY NOTHIN6 /JUT LOV&1 LO\IE , LOVE.. IT'S 801t1N@ ... ALL EVENING? UNTIL I RELIEVED "'"'.;!.;:;!II by Mell by Chester Gould MV BRanlER -5 A VICIO\ls CROOK f IM 01.AD HB's GONB! ,, ' "Wiiy Is it~ same frieadl you can talk to for houn, on a postcard Yta can't lblnk of a single thlng to say to lhem?" DENNIS THE MENACE ' EVER.Y SIN61£, &.liSSW fY..Y.' .~ , .. ' I~ al ' . ~ II< .... ti> . ad "" tlu du 1 Ml L. ~ ·~ . ' ' t' I I ' • ' , . ·~ 'J D L' R ct B, i ~ .. I ' ' t ' • - I ·.·SCR Scores Bullseye With 'Catch 22' r ; . I ' "' ' I I With its superb production of. "Gatch 22," South Coast Repertory dispels a n o t h e r theatrical myth -·that plays adapted from novels generally make for a rambling, less than setillfying stase pro;- duction. On the contrary, director Martin Benson's brisk, stac· underscores the c e r e b r a I humor of this now-<:lassic salirlzation oJ the military mind. "Cstch 22" represen~ a breakthrough of sorts for SCR, which has m:>Wlted military satire on prior occasions with mixed results. More so than "CATCH 21" 1 cato staging of Joseph Heller's -popular story makes It appear A Ol•v br. JoMl>h H111 ... , •O.r>t.a trom hi• ~, dlrttltd try Martin OenK>n, • ' ' ' ' . . . . ' ~·· 11- as if it were born tor the ""1"' tiv Jam.x M1r11n, 1101111,... bv JIM Mt;IC.la. CO-.IUme• by MllQ1ll, soul1d lheater. Benson'& production bv Mich••' 0we111, P''"'"'" bv sou•h I ' h Coelt lt1119dorv Weanfldavt tllrOUQh moves at a w !plash pace -• sund•v• untu "9f. n ,, ,,,. Third sr&p even though the sho w is two Tri.•1••· 1n1 NtwPOM 111vd. co~t• Mf'll, and a half hours long -and 'Blppy' Pajr Dick Martin and Carol Lynley star with Dan Rowan in the movie comedy "The Maltese Bippy," tonight at 9:30 on CBS, Charnel 2. THE CAST Jim McKI•, G•ry Sfll, M!cllefl Ow•n•I Gr911orv Hovi, P•I 8rumbflUC1h, Mlrn Sml!I\, Rori Mlcl\etlson, Gery Cotter. H.J. Perio.1, J•lfrev Me~Nelll...,119, J11tin Oud1worll\, M1rv Flemlna, Sieve Pit· ltrJon, Oon H.,mlhon, Su11nne Flint J~ne WJn)lt>W. Pem Krumo, Joe Anllltr. "The Basic Training of Pavlo. Hummel," more so than "The White House Murder Case" or even than lfellcr's own "\Ve Bo1nbed in New Haven," the Jack Paar Giving Up NEW YORK (A P) -Come- dian Jack Paar came out of scmiretirement Jan. 8 to host ' a new, one-week·a-month talk show fo r ABC-TV. Plagued by consistently lO\V ratings, he's closing the show after No.v. 16 . The closing was confinned by ABC ard reported by Bob Carman. producer of ABC's "Jack Paar Tonite" show, which appears as part of the network's "Wide World oJ Entertainment" late · ho u r fare. Paar, 55, wasn't available for comment. H o wev e r , Carman said the comedian had told him he'd probably give the reasons on the show before it clo.ses. S• F====="-=================-======.-J + ' MESA c~~~: A11ett..r 011ttst•itdl11t C•MJ.t.otlot1 I T8r1.;. ~•IWPOQT 8 lVD 'j ,ll 1ss2 EXCLUSIVE! GENE Hlla<MAN fflt-~ SC/W£CROW "WHAT'S UP, DOC" .... "'.'lf\Y IT AGAIN, SAM" IR) "SO NP Of-l.1USIC" NO lllS•llVl!D SI.ATS W:tfl .'ulle Aid,.WI "S S S -: S S S" .,, "THI IOY WHO CRIED w~~WC>'.F" fPGJ -.. -.... "LE~ND OF HELL HOUSE" .,, SIAD/UM '2 ;•: ' _.,lt " 'I ':!"."' '80~it:::N !1TRA NGLER" IPGI "LIVE AND· LET DIE" tP•) .... 'THI MICHANIC .. • • • "TliE MACKINTOSH MAN" IP<il ... "IULLn" IPGJ <l\I \lr\Cf\a.R 11 .\~ tOI< A I t.Oh~~ ~O~TA IAt~A • 41 ~ . . GEORGE C.SCOTT FAYE DUNAWAY JOHN MILLS JACK PALANCE OKL HOM!\ CRUDE MAIS OlllY doing hlgh·specd utility duty in f!\e dlfferent role3. Intermission Tom Titus current production zeroes in with skillful marksmanship on the regimentaUon w h i ch becomes an unquestioned aspect or life , something you put on with th~ uniform. THE KEY TO "Catch 22's'' success lies primarily in its use of humor. The play as an entity is hilarious enough: as satire it is brutally effective. The total production is the finest at SCR since last sum· me r's "Pueblo" and one of the high points or the company 's nine years on the Orange Coast. rational system and being grou.nd slowly into Its gears. HE SHARES top acting honors with H. J. Parks - playi'ng a porppous, self·serv- ing senior offlCer for the um!' teenth time in an SCR show. Parks' depiction of the inept, obsequious Colonel Cathcart is the comi c jewel of lhe play. Gary Bell earns high marks as a pink-ehecked, ineffective chaplaiTI. as does Jeffrey MacNeilled ge as the colonel's programn1ed yes man. T-.1<try Fleming is a delight as a beet- tle-b•·ained nurse w h ose bedside' n1anner can he altered with the right !ouch. 'vhi le William Bradv l<icks only a hand lebar mustache in hi~ Sin1on Le~ree characterization of_a wini;i: commander. Other notable perfcr~an""<; R!'e turned in bv !\1irhi1"'l 2nd FANTASTIC FANTASIA WEEK! 0\vens as a hvoorhondri<>c PLUS "BEAVER VALLEY" doctor, Pat Brumbauq:h as the 7 & 9:1S Weekdoys elusivP. tl"aior, Rnn r-.-nf"hael son SAT. & SUN. as a black marketeering mes<1 Co11tlnuous fTo m 2 p.m. Heller's crisp dialogue and Benson's well-oiled production complement each other splen- didly in this farcial study of an Air Force bombat'dier in \\torld War II who'd like nothing better than to chicken out and go home. He's flown his C'uota of missions, but the sta>:'·hungrv colonel In charge of his unit keeps raising the ante, a sort of carrot-and-stick apDroach to warfare. Jim J\fcKie portrays the hapless hero Yossarian with an excellent sense o.f total frustration and men ta I desperation. J\fc Kie presents an accurate picture of a single rational man battling an ir· mail room orderlv with tllO"P. ~!!,~~·J;,~ct 11n11~d Ar11~t• officer, Garv Cotter as the • oower than the general. Stu,,rt Phone: s1a-ssr.o 9:00 p.m, Duckworth as an arroq:ant c .,11 theatre for Sun. Schedule chaolain's assistant. Suzf'nne[~lllll!iilli!iilli!iilli!iilli!ll"'ll"'ll"'ll"'ll"'llol~~~~~~~~~~~~~I Flint in a h yp er lens iv e performance as a vengeful \~rhore and Steve Patterson ·-~~~~~~~~-1 1 Bruce Brown's "ON ANY SUNDAY" (G) , Plus M..-e ._.e from thl ,,...,.. Qf \ "Frft& ' The ,.,\ car ~ ......,._. ... .....,,.. .. ·- "SCARECROW" "BILLY JACK" • "SAVE THE TIGER" lll (PG) U.A, CITY ANO SOUTH COAST CINEMAS -TUESDAY 50c CLAOIES ANO GOL0'6NAGIE!llS) -OPEN 'TIL 2:ot P.M. G"'f' Sftlll ...... J1<1twn "A TOUCH • OF CU.SS" _,.,,~ P'Mhltelt•I "LOCUSTS" ao111 Jn co1or1 (PGJ SH II a.tor. Sehoof1 "91LLY JACK" • --9111- "•LESS 9EASTS a CHILD-EH" '°"' In C•leorl {PGI ___ ... _.,.® ._ . " .. ··-··· Starts TOMORROW TllE ~·'" '*'51 Of~ '. ' ""' ' . ~ SllEll.\ ~ . S1arril! (ki ~l>'lal<l<O IXde<) RICHA~O BENJAMIN· DYAN CANNON ·JAMES COBURN JOAN HACJ\ITT • JAMES MASON ·IAN McSl!ANE ·RAQUEL WELCH ll'!!lo l«:trixtr• · Celetnt'1 W¥re Bros.SO!tl ~OA~ Cmm.ricatmsC:OOW, 2ND TOP ATTRACTION AT BOTH CINEMAS IYAN O'NIA1 I JACQUIUN'l llSSIT ''THE THIEF WHO CAME TO DINNER" A .... ~ r1111m1• ~w 111111111" 8 i\P,....,.,,.l.'~r..,. plus JACK LEMMON "SAVE THE llGER" Ill plus Clint East'NOOd "A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS" I Tom Lu119ldl111 Do~rc1 Teylor "BILLY JACK" pl111 Jack Lemm4'11 "THE WAR BETWEEN MEN AND WOMEN" l oth I., Cole~ f PG l 'f1Jn17Jo · • itL . fn.>tjs ,, ..... --r·-:,":hf. ~NOE • Tl ~!)l.011Tl0) MOM. lHRU !HURi. B P.M. fRIOll 1 I HS Sl!UROll 1-1 I 94i IU MDI! 1-S I 8 ALL SEATS 54.00 CINEMALANO OAllY 1 ·1:11 • MO PAUL NEWMAN JAMES MASON I "MACKINJOSH MAN" IPC I Ollll IT HHJQ .J MS STEVE McQUEEN "BULLITT .. ,,., ~ ";'!'· <~(.,.) ltLIE ~· llCK INDREWI • VIN DYKI I TECHNICOLO~ {Gj•:.:- PLUS "SILVER FOX" South Coast Plaza II DAILY PILOT JIJ S•n Citgo f.y II 8<oo~llur1! 1So J •12-2411 GIOIGt '-scon FAY! OVHlW.lY OKLAHOMA CRUD( IN1 CHlllNHI SOCIAL Cl Ul!,.l H1<bOf Blvd I tJc7::'r1en 531-1271 Be1cll Hl•d . 1 So, or G1<den Grov1 Fre1.,17 5)'·1212 lmpe1l1I bllt .. ·n Beith Blvd. l H1roo1 Blvd 111.1112 Lincoln Ave . w11t ol l(noU 117-2223 Utt IOCk MUllUI. JlSUS CHllST SUPEISTAI lit SILENT RUNNI~ !~ lnll ""• l'nttwly n11r C111pm1n "'-••· 5511·7022_ 51n1a Anl F"ew1y l'ltlr Ch111m1n AV9. ..... N1wporl F•HWIY 1t81Ur SI, Nl-1111 All Coltf' SP4111flh P .... rem "Trn M-.rilflu•" + "B•lo Iii lm,.n. Del Hamp.11" C•rlH9 811rQaln Pi-~" NIWtsl loM I07 HI! 11:"9tr Mto~ LIVE ANO LET OIE (PG) & "THE MECHANICH (POI Mon.-Frl. OINn ' Sit, a Sun, 11 Noon Nearly Everyone Liste1is to Landers _..,_,,_07<1' C:trt llOM* • llU ...... lnllJTIJfi .. tlkl~('t .. ~ Sll\_1)1![11.111! ~llJlllll lus ·Charlton He!t "SKYJACK D" -111111..., •tllUCllliii LJJJ:e .lndlan l!Je>- JAllSGAllNER ·-.... "-IHll·O.,OMIN· .W..OCUl11f 2nd ,\LL WALT DISNEY HIT "LADY AND THE TRAMP" {G) ' TV IDGHJ,IGHTS KltJ D 7:1-0 -"Not u a Sttanger." Robert Mllcllum u a struggling young doctor In this 19~5 drama with Olivia de Havllind, Frank Sinatra, Broderick Crawford and Lee Marvin. NBC D 8:00 -"l'he Alamo." Pre.empted three Ull)es for Watergate, this John Wayne epic is re- scheduJed again -Part l tonight, Part 2 next week. Also starring Richard Wiam.,k, Laurence Harvey and Rich~ Boone. CBS B 9:30 -"The Maltese Bippy." Dan Rowan and Dick Martin made this mrewolf satire at the height of their popularity in 1969. Carol Lynley ~ and Julie Newmar a~o are featured. TV DAILY LOG Tuesday Solons Nix ,..o ... u.;;.;;rEN-.1e .... ____ a~ ... ' ... hl-' '" ... ie..,l'kiMI_. ·-" Veto Over Aid Bill SACRAMENTO (AP) -The ,._.bly has voted to override Gov. Ronald Reagan's veto of a measure lo repeal a law re- quiring Calilomians to con- tribute lo the support o! elder· 1y parents an welfare. The 59-15 vote h-fonday represented the first time since at least 1958 that an override attempt originated in the lower house. The last time a veto override passed both houses was in 1948. THE B I L L by Assem· blyman Joe A. Gonsalves (D-La Mirada) had been 01aos F-~..:'-1t1,,......,.~.,..,.. vetoed by Reagan for the._ _______________ ..,..,._.,, second time in two yearS. It ··1 would11'.l knock n1ysclf out. \Ve sent everyui'nc L.-rlt!" repeals a section of Reagan's w< weUare reform p r o g r a m which received wide criticism r---------------------i Evening AUGUST 14 WATtlUTE NORINQ All Pf'Vl••• ii ullied: " .... wltho4lt 1otlce for covtnif' et tht Wateriatt Helrl11p. the tutsts 11 McGa111tt IOll 1fteJ the untouchtble klnpin of n11tel· ics llaf1ic. in tht lsl1t1ds. D Cll aJAICT--(C) (91) 1kl• .. " .. "" ........ (R) (dt1) '72 -Shirl'Y JoMt., Meittdes McCambr14p, Wllll11111 Wliidom, Sissy S,~k. A t11d1tr in a school fof lll!Wtd methers whose 1tt1mpt to coollJ delich htrself from the probltllll of htr st»dtntl te1ds to 1 dMP ernotlot111 erbis. (I) Mt• tf tM S..e "Ste11no, th• Red Coral Dl'l'tt" Cup Race Grueling as creating ill feelings in families and costing the state more than it saves. Assemblyman Robert G. Beverly (R-Manhatten Beach) told the Assembly the override should be defeated because the main problems with the pro- gram were being solved by ad- ministrative changes . L. Jtt. Boyd 200 Marriages, m Merr Crttfhl Slllw U!JDn .. t:OO (I) 11111 t1r y.., Life Ill"-' . fJl Spa11isll lallp111 PftCJIM fD l11tert1ltklltl Ptrfor•nce ''Trfti· ute to Beethowri" m 11te:11e ,.,.lilt t:lO U l1J cas r-"""' tcl l:lO(l)Ktp11'1 ""°" (90), "1111 M1""9 llpPJ" (R) D MMI: (C) (tO) *Dlstrt Slit(' (com) '69, -01n 'Rowan, Dick Cond. (mus) '53 -Kathryn 61111· Martin, C.rol Lrnle~. Julie N1wm1r, A gruelini 192-mile race course over so.me of the roughest ocean \vaters in the Pacific has been approved by the race committee for the 1973 Hennessy California CUp offshore po\\·erboat race which will be run in waters adjacent to Marina del Rey Saturday: The race course will allow a close-up view of the powerful ocean racing boats by spec- tators on the· beaches and IOll, Oot4on MtcRu. Mildred Ntlwlck, Frilz Wemr, Rob· ---------- ()) CIS Nnrt '1¥alttr Cronkltt ert Rted, Two film-m•k•rs find th., - CJ HM llHI Wiii Tthtl •r• lnvolv.d with •ti IVtl}it.y f•l'I\· Qg) Mm Crttftl a.. ily of werewolves livlna nut door. mAiMJ•-o-. m"''"''""'" m.., .... a;') lMllc (.aq el Mlldlldla ttalllu ail -ail FntlAI """"" :il:'.'.:".:!::' IO:<IOQ!.j!l)NIC -"How W•· 11r11te Changed Gowrnrnent" Tht 7:00. (}) D m..... pro1r1m e•1mlnes I 40·re•r in· D ltwtll1 hr Detl111 cre1se in the powtr of th! Pmi· (i) Mwle: {2hr) .,.,., OldW" , dency ind how tll1t trend w11 (dra) '40 -£dw1rd G. Robinson, ~atted ind perti1ps revtrsed llst Ann SotlMrn. spring when W1ltr11t1 1ttr1cted (f)s.t11ftt Mwntttrt nation.al 1ttention. John Ch•neel!or D WMfs My 'lhltl ' is 111cllorm1n for th• PR11t•m. m• ....,...., omm""" ID I Dru• ti ••ii 00 TwHlpt Z.N EB Sflllple111111l1 M1rlll D rn m .... Wtl~ . M.D. t'EI The fruc:h Clltt ''Echo of I Babj's Lauth" ~ Or. CE MUMCI W1tb1 tells a pr1p1nt youn1 wift ,.,,. G'i) YI DnH Yfvir th1t btcluSI of her Rlf·n111tlvl Ef) s,...i llCtf f1ctor her husband wilt htvl to bl 7 told tboL/t 1 pmious prep1ncy :JOlllolribf.....,. Show (R) 8111 and 1bortlon. Btlil'llt1 ·Mofitiomerr Wltllen1uuts. ind Rk:h1rd ThoTMs 111m. JOINS RAN.GER , YACHTS (}) """'' -~ 0 ptffct ...... , .-. MMI: (211f) "Ma!t lllUI 1M g M1tp 'fllJ Ntipbor Cun" (..,,1.;'.55-Roblrt Mltdlum. (I) Tllil)l Y.Jr Ult @) &e11ln1 at,.,. CJ il11e11·$ ti1tw1r. (lltr) "'fftl n lO:JO 0 Ttlk IKt ' 1 Slr11,.,.. (drt) 'SS -Robert @ 0.. step lel'M1 Mitclu1m, OlM1 de H1Vitl1nd, Frank ' • •' GI TIM~• Sin1tr1. fB Vld~~ u·~idl a Helt,.....i '41111ru m lts Dlu f1llctt ID Tll:lt 1111 CB News/Sports lllDn"" . ll:DOIDODll>lllGll-Em titywaltltm "Hollywood Park" Ill Cil ®l'fB film; m st.nd Up .... CltHI a OM Sttp ..,.,.. ail .. ..., @ '"" ·-m Thi Addun FtMilJ m TrlUI or c.u.qMllttl 1:00 II!]) Miud1 (R) M1udt r1lurns Cl) MM: (C) "DhN II th DMf from 1 niutln• medical checkup S.Uli .. (adv) '51-J1me1 Crala. with the unexpected t1ews th•! sht ll:JO II (jJ CIS Litt MIVie: (C) .... is pre1nant. Part I of a two·p:1rt llJ IJ'Km" (•dv) '71-8ett1 Dawit, Mory, Ernest Bor1n ine, Jack C1s.sidy. o ®Jm•"'"'"".,...,«> o om,...., ..,.., (Zhr) "'Thi Ali•" Part I (dr1) '70 0 Mn: "Did; Tl"IC)' n. Cllltllr -John Wayne, Richard Wklm1rt, (mys) '4F-Mor1an Conw1y, L1urene1 H1rv•1, Rlch1rd Boone, O (})Wide World et Eillllrtala· F11nkit Avalon. This one'• bten pre-nttll "On Loca!ion-Wllh How•rd empttd three times recenttr for Costll Trainint with the Super Bowl cover11:e of W1ter11te-we HOP£ Cllimps" Pirt II How1rd Cosetl vis· it will nrn this week. its th• 1r1ininf camp of tb1 Ml1mi a Mftlr. (C) (?fir) "Wlltre lM Dolphins. Has litM" (dr1) '64-Susan Hay-m Tt Till tt.1 Trvtll ward, 81ttt 01vis, Mikt Connors. 12:00 @ lllarslltl DlllOll ~ (]) U) Te~perttara 111I1 I 0 Movie: "Or, lt11ll:H't Slcnr Creepy-Peep~ (R). Dr. Nol•nd in· (mys) '42-lynn Roberta. troduces 1 child patietlt to • horror ID Nlr'4 Kltdlac:t PrtMlb film stir with dls.astrous results. U·!D m ..... --· T ~ ('~ ID Affrtfl Hftthcod: Prtltlfl ' · ' -·-ef lflVI '""I ID Tiil Untoudlillln '6J-Geor1e Revere. fi) ... St•• ...... 1:00 (]) 0 0 ()) ""' m r11t11 lin• a "II""" rwof IE D ldlflclt tit Cltmlll• l:U fJ Movll: (C) .. Ut:MIJ Wlft" (d11) G'i) YarlrtJ I llltel\'ltn '57-0itn• Dors, Rod Slll1tt. m .... Clauics: (nr) "'TllrM .. 2:00 m AIJ.flllPt Sllow: "DPI O'Ci.t: 1 Mltdl" (cir•) '33-Humplurt 0. · Wilt," "Tmrt's ~ Cne" pJt. Bette O.vis, Jotn Blllndtll. J:lO II Mtvlt: "Wtlbptrhis ~ n. f:JO II KIWlll fhtt-0 (R) P1tty Ouke, ScotlM Y1rl" (mys) '-$2....fftro.rt Carol lfwttnc:t incl L1rry Ktrt 1r1 lotn, Rlehtrd Carbon. Greta G)'llt. Wednesday DAYTIME MOVIES 1:00 m "'Ctwr lirf"' (miq) .,, -Ritl H1yworttt, Gent ti:ellr. l:lO D ~ ti a W' (susp) '6t -Patrick M•ree. Antllo111 Qu11l1. J:llO CJ) '"l}lr11 Sillt,.-Conti. (dft) '65 t:lOO''Mr M11t ... t" (drt) '51--Kiii! St1nlty, Ctttldl~ Pip, Riclrdo Montalban, Slltllty Wlnltl'J. S1n4)' Dennis. Wendell Cort)'. lli (C) "'liH 1 "'"" Mil"' lD:Oll CJ) •Strpai81: lllt!Hlt"' Pitt I (Wes) 'SI -Audit Murpll)', Git (dr1) '60 -Jellrq Hufll1t, Con· Sctlt, • sltrtee Towers. 3:30" "'l'trpl r..1111• (aci·fl) '55 -8 "A U. it UM llltnu" (drt) Rlchtrcl Dtnrlll'IL Vlrflt1lt Grt)', '5~Lt• MarYlt1, At1ne Blncrofl. lZ:OO 0 "11le Me...U.;.rs" (wn) •53 4:00 IJ "TN ,_,. It WW' (mllS) '67 _ Wild BUI £lllott. (C) "'SunllltA -Frink Sin1tr1, [ddlt . Alb•rt. tf 1111 Ith ,,..,. .. (Wit) '6S-G1t1 Jttnnt Crain, Mitzi Gt)'llOf. Madia. 4:lO(I)SI• • lDMI ...._ KOCE, CHANNEL II) Orange County's UHF te1evision station, KOCE-TV, has schduled Che folloMng special programs today. Detailed ' listings of Channel SO's programs are carried jn the Dally · Piiot's TV Week each SUnday. 1:~ 01'11•'""" Je fCl A -•orm•l'K" bV IM "All ·$1•r Mtoll School J•U fl•rtO. ,,. 7:00 Or•llff CtlHllY ttwltw ( C J Cu1turil, JOC!.tl~,i191lllCtt, tNI (Ml· mur>11y fVlliiit '9!t WHtr. 1:~ M.t1t I• . O.lr.y1 Cl ·= Cir " t1M IV'' -~ !111\"ll s • ' AllQ\lf.I I ., I: o.m. 1:00 1w11Y, '"" ... ~ .. , I I ""'"I' W•v OI Ff(ll'lti 0.1111 ' t-11M ICD C ''"""' "" ..... "' "'/'·' t :OO Nl•sk'I •JKW!lf" CJ Tiit tpO!tlthf !tilt WMk 11 on ''Ofltt•" f :» '°"""' N1llt (C ltlllflO ~wall. ono.w .......... , fl. 11 l:lro.m. Anderson Gets Post For Ranger Karl Anderson has been ap- pointed to the position of na- tional marketing and sales manager for Ranger Yachts of· Costa Mesa. His duties will include dealer training and relations as well as the es- tablishment of dealer ~ live programs. Prior to joining Ranger Yachts, Anderson was western sales manager for Cal Boats, another division of Jensen !\1arine. He had been with Cal for a year. "Anderson's experience in the marine industry is going to be of great help to us here at Ranger," said Buster Ham- mond, general manager. Andersori has been an owner of a regional yachting publica· lion and a salesman for Stan Miller Sailboats. He has also been associated with a marine maintenance company in Long Beach. Sail Around Cape Hom For $3,000 LONDON (AP) -An old British seadog. R.M. Wiiioughby, 61, is recruiting 20 people to sail themselves through some of the stormiest seas in the world off Cape Horn. He's charging '3.000 per per~n for. the voyage around the Horn· from Mexico to England M his 5>-year .. ld tbree master. · "Women are welcome, said Willoughb)l. \oho declared : ''I'm a great believer In the liberation ,of women, and they'll be trtated e•actly the same as men." Which mean.< that with the men they'll be required to swab decks, climb masts and iotn Che ship's nlne>man crew m other tough chor<s. Bui Wiiioughby promised: "They'll be soarpf!r, healthier and ceekler !or having ailed around the Hom." palisades of Santa Monica Bay and the South Bay. The custom-designed boats will hurtle at speeds of up to 80 miles an hour thro:ugh ocean waves from Marina del Rey to Point Dume and Palos Verdes before heading out to the open sea for Jong race legs to C-atalina and 8anta Barbara islands, then homeward with a finish outside the breakwater at Marina del Rey. The race is sanctioned by the American Power Boat Association (APBA and the Union of International Motor· boating (UIM). It will start at IO a.m. This will be the first year the California Hennessy Cup has been held at Marina del Rey. Previously it was held out of Long Beach in con- juncti0:n with the California International Sea Festival. · Funds Raise Yachts' Olympic Standards The U.S. Olympic Yachting Committee has announced it wed funds raised by the United States International Salling Association to raise standards of U.S. performance in the 1975 Pan American Games and the 1976 Olympic Games. The objectives fall into three broad categories. As in past years, some funds will go t o w a rd the defraying of costs of U.S. crews traveling to major internatiooal events. Exampl'es are the Finn Gold Olp. the Soling world cham· pionship, or other world or c o n t l nental championship regattas of major importance. ONLY THE best of U.S. sailors will be sent abroad between now and 1976. The fact !bat the 1976 sailing Olympics will be held in Kingston, Ontario, and the availability of an aMual pre- Olympic regatta there means the U.S. sailors can get ex- posure to foreign yachtsmen without going abroad. The convenient location of CORK (the pre-Olympic regat· ta) suggests a second category of finan cial support -partial payment of travel costs for five to 10 entries in each of the Olympic classes each year. This support will probably be available only to those coming from beyond a minimum distance, and is designed. to reduce the burden of long-distance travel to Kingston from many points in the U.S. Sending many good U.S. saHOrs to CORK will help build strength in greater depth within the U.S., according to the North American Yacht Racing Union. A THIRD, as yet un- developed, fWlding goal will be to encourage younger sailors to think about Olympic com- petition, and to give them an opportunity to try out one of the Olympic classes. Regional Olympic classes regattas can be used to identify such sailors who then can be assisted with racing clinics, loaned boats and other aid!.' Paralleling the USOYC's ei· forts, the NAYRU Advisory C.Ommitee will undertake to provide modest USISA support for those international classes having characteristics which make them likely feeder classes for the Olympic and Pan Am classes. Also, a new NAYRU com- mittee on Intercollegiate sail- ing hopes to attract and help support coUege sailors in in- ternational competition. UNDER TIIE LAW which would be repealed, the state bills the offspring of elderly persons on welfare for part of the welfare costs of their parents. Gonsalves told the Assembly of a case in which a family was sent a bill for $1,200 and told it was retroactive for one year. He called the rule unfair, noting it app]ies only to old age as.sistance recipients - not disabled persons or other welfare recipients. IN AN emotional speech, Assemblyman John L. Burton, (D-San Francisco) exclaimed, "We've got a $1 billion surplus, for Christ's sake. How much money do you want?" BUiton said the program originally was justified by saying the state needed the money. Gonsalves said, however. that it costs the state more to administer the program than it collects. The bill originally passed the Assembly 49-10 April 12 and passed the Senate 21-10 June 29. To oven'ide the veto in the Senate, at least 1:1 votes are needed. Reagan vetoed the me3sure July 13. Illegitimate Child Link Probe Sloivs FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) -The Indiana attorney general has denied, at least temporarily, the co u r t • a p- proved examination of a birth certificate said to list a George S. McGovern o f l\1itchell, S. D. as the father of an illegitimate child. Attorneys for tbe state in- 1,358 Affairs Question arises as to how many love affairs wind up Jn marriage? A psychiatrist named · G. V. Hamilton ran ·~ study on that. Queried 200 married clUzens, male and 1,_ male. They admitted 1,358 love affairs in their easts. So : the doctor concluded that only one out of every sb: or·aev- en such amorous attachments reJ&llY Jeads to matrimOny, How many romantic alflliatlbm did you experience before you went to the altar? Just whisper. Won't go any fUr. ther. •· ... · ... -:. . . I , . ., ~-· ¢1; • . I \~ ~ -, " . ' Am asked if counterfeiters ever sell phony tickets to sporU evenl.S. Happens. Most famous instance, prot>- ably, was the Dempsey.;(;arpenter fight. An enterprising team of confi- dence men bought one ticket for a seat in the first row, reproduced J0,000 more, and peddled them through scalpers. Some nlght! .Just about 10,000 fight fans showed up to claim that chair. Debate ensued. WHY JUNE? -Q. "Why is it June allnys has been considered tbe big marriage month?" A. In recent generations it's because that's the first month after graduation. But the tradlUon got started some centuries ago because then the preceding morith Of May \Vas customarily the time to mourn the winter's dead. Go barefoot in the rain, yeung lady. That's the advlct or a British foot specialist named Harold Wlldbore. Walk· ing around without J!hees Isn't bad f0< you, says he. On t!>e the contrarx-. ~Tb.is· counsel barks back to ~ ~I advice, I fhiJlk. A health expert then told tl\Otllm to da!ii)> en down daily the s~ o! their children. To toughen the soles of their feet, said that authority. . " Another little known fact Is-the lncu o! South America freeZ<Hlried their potatoes. Set them in' high windy places first. Then jumped up and down on them· to squeeze CIUl the water. Finally bleached tbtm in the sun. ORGAN -"Concerning left·handed and righ~band«I persons, it has been my experience in .ovtt 30 yeen ol. teaching the 0<gan that rlghHlanded organists are left· footed and Ielt,banded organists are rtitit·footed . How do you explain that?" So inquires a Tennessean, Can't ex- plain it. Most mysterious. Tadpoles is one more nickname for the people ol Mississippi. But how they came to be so called Is nCit at all funny this year. They're tadpole$, 'it used to be sald, because they live hall their lives underwater. It's writ that Job cried out , "Let the day perish w~ on I was born.'' And numerous elderly citizens, parUcWar- ly around Maryland, will tell you that's why no Felruary 30 on our calendar. Job's birthday, they say. Address IJUll! to L. M. Boyd, P.O. 80% 1875 N~w- port Beach, Calif. 92~80. ' Lapworth Designs New Family Cruising Sloop ed they may figbl an '--------------------J County Circuit Cour.t Cal Boats bas announced production of a new Cal-35, a family cruising sloop from the design board of C. William Lapwor!h. The boat is designed to rm the need for a fast, com· fortable family cruiser at a reasonable price, \he company said. Interior drawings show a dinette and stand.up chart table on the port side of the saloon. This area is also available with an [,.shaped settee and dining table. The cockpit ladder is secure- ly mounted to a removable crossbeam for stability. A batch forward of the ladder affords easy access to the bat- lerles for checking and refill· Ing. On the . .starboard aide, the Cal·3.5 will reature a largo lee cheat, gaUey. sink and stove ' plus amole stowage space. An oilskin locker separates the aJt quarter-berth from lhe main saJoon. Windows SUITO\Jnd l h c saloon. The passageway leads to the rorward cabin which Is separated from the saloon by a privacy door. The other privacy doors allow access to the head from each cabin area without imposing on the other cabin. Burmese ltak, formica r givi9g "the Fort Wayne ··Sentinel access to the Vati·c .an Ref uses record. The newspaper countered by starting coh· tempt of court proceedings and vinyl are highlights of the interior. The cat-35 will have ac- comodations for five, whether crui~ing for a weekend or for an extended period of time. Like all Cal Boals, the 35 Is constructed of hand laid-up molded fiberglass. It is built by Cal Boats, a division of Jensen Marine, Costa Mesa. Race Eyed By Radio against the state. NO HEARING date was set, but News-Sentinel E d I t o r Ernest E. Williams said he was advised It probably would be sometime late this week. The newspaper obtained' the court order to view reCords at the state Board of Health In Indianapolis. 1be matter arose during testlmony at the S en a t e Watergate hearings when a memo from former White House aide H.R. Haldeman referred to a "Fort. Wayne story." Haldeman did not elaborate. Avalon radio station KBIG BUT THE Washington Post \\'ill provide its: aircraft · "Eye later said the story · was that In the Sky'' to follow the 1973 Sen. George McGovern of HeMessy California cup South Dakota, ·Ule 19 7 2 offshore powerboat race out of Democratic presidential can· dldate, fathered a n ii· Marina del Rey Saturday. -legitimate cblld in Fort Wayne The race gets under way at In the early 1940s, 10 a.m. and the progm15 will be broadCMt by KBIG boating McGovem. who Is from editor RudY Ralll()S, assisted Mitchell, has said the ttor)l by Carl Bailey. linking him with the child ts In addlti<Jll to broadcasling false. the progress or the race, the A reporter for the News· KBIG team will also act as a Sentinel presented the courl safety escort. order at the Boi,rd of Health, Th<l California lfennessy but Registrar Kingston G. Ely Cup race ls the only one on the 15afd he wa!I Instructed not to West Coast that Is Included In release the record without the bk! for world cham· the approval of Atty. Gen. plonshlp points. Theodore L. Stndak'• orrtce. To Change Rules VATICAN CITY (AP) - The Vatican will 800D relax rules barring Roman Catholic burial for divorced people who are remarried. But will In· sist on bishops and priests making clear that this does not soften church opposition lo dlvorte. VATICAN OFFitlALS said the regulation would 1,_n restrictfons and allow church burial for dlV<l!'«d persons "who have maintained at· tachment to the church and have given some sign . of repentance ... provided 'that the public scandal of otbeY falthM Is avoided." Officials In Ille Vatican ConeregaUon for the Dectrlnc ol lhe Faith said the document Is 'sUll under preporation and wo"uld be lsSt>ed after com- pletion or COtllultatlono with bishops around the world: lJNDER THE t918 Cede of canon Lew, divorced people who remarried I"•'" often dented catholi c 'burial as "public and manlCest sinners." They were put In the .18me"" category as coneu bin es. gangsters, dope peddlers and murderors. Tho rule, however, was strictly enforced only 1)1 predomlnar,tly Calltolle COml muniUes. Priesb in man)' areas grant chttrch burials tO divorced persons biit try to avoid puilliclly for the burial. R~.inecke: lndependen ,SACRAMENTO (AP) - OOv. Ed Reinecke ha declared he is I'll " de~dent" condldite Io governor and not .. i• na stemp'I or the , Reqin i mtnlltraUoq. • It. lo!4 a news cottll"!\DC · MoOOay be Is aware · Of ')w· l!nportapt Reagan lit!' >plwf"1 who &!Clded not 1o back him But he snld he never eou/tt M their support anywar.· > Reinecke, a d e c a~. Reptlbllcan candidate t. o governor, said he Is not polrited • or surpiii.d a Reogap declar,ed his neutrlm In the GOP Jlt!mary. ~ I "' ~ 'Jb t ' I ~ I llli t \: '" de M .,. ' Ab pe l j of I I Gt Br lur di! o! !c ' M< spc I lta of Ian Jiu tO als clM ol ' • ( ral dal qlll res N~ :IO,t . } De! lnil oll1 Jltll te• me I: } cor ha< an ~ ' ... s °"' I I .... list mo •Pl s.: mil ~ Oal • • s ! Ail! raj "" ' tea wel • C8I [ ' ... !av ll)'tl Ji.• Mt 1_ Bai -~ -!ta• tea· uni De1 • L 'llu 118' sob ·:! twc ~one ,, ' 'I '~ "too. ·~ ' I • ..... 11 1111 ... ~ [/f. !lo .!!Bomber ' . -. ·~rook ·· e· I •I · ... ag D.Scovered " ' . ' ... , l\Iq .SUR (UPI) -.The fwrecUge oi a )\'oild War II ' l ·~ llomber, tile ll'Jl'I of !llano iffiaL ' llrlt bombed 'Tokyo In I 1Jlllialy DOotltU•'• la'""" :·so· I ~1 ;. !: :·1- 1 \8'1!:oti<I• raJd, .. Wat I~ lti ~br)lsll In' a i•vlno. -~ 'Tbe pi.no. l1r9t spl!tted by. I ~~.oj' !>!ktra two w .. ks HO, I wu reached Mondoy by clepUtlel on foot after an Anny I ~,;. ferried them to a Pioll ~·the crash alte. A 1pokesman at Hamilton Alr Foroe Base aaid II ap- pear..i' tbe wr<ekage bad not l been Identified before. _parts of the airc.raft were ptt.tred over a one mile area of the wilderness. O•llY 1'1601 Iliff l'Mlt T....tay, All90$t 14, 1973 DAtLV PILOT 11 PUBLIC)i011CE llOTf(I TO c••orrOlt IUf'lll°" ,.,,." Off , ... IUPlttott COUIT 0.-Tifl ITATa N C.tJ,.llJOIUUA t'o« ITATI 01' u,&Jt'Otlll!A llOlt NOTQ OP 1Mllll"'1 SM.I TMI COUllTT ._ OIU.Mll NOT~~ t.U.• Tiii COUWTY Of' M.Uftl OA'ltO DI' 1 1aNA«01 11M PIM~ ..._ A·11M• o PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUILJC NOTIC8 "'-' A•Jf.1'1 Ml:NOOV..' .... ~ NOTICI OP' Mldllll Off PCTITKUt I' llA&. PIOP'llTY E•l•t. of CHAIL.U ... STJtOH. tiff ,,. HI~ t'Oll nO.ilTI Of' Wit.I. .... .-oa AT NIVATI ....... A u••T °""'""'· N*t Ha. 9Qlll iuM .,. Jiiiy llnlll ftlT.t.MIWfU't IM. A-M114 P+OllCI 15 HEllEIY OIViN 19 ,._ •I~~:~ CWN 5outf1 i11" M fOWAIO W. llAW&.lt<IS • .the to.-sc::r '°"'C:. ol°'tti. 11111 llf Cliltwfll1 u.illl0t1 11 ..... ·-ne!Mld ~I .. Jl,ldld.i Dlllrlc'I 'C-'Y llMwft II e E AAWLINI. o.c.Mld -.... .,... Ill tlw M.rt ..... rllAI IN--. hl'llrw delm1 .,.....w ,,.. °'T c.ui:r .. of c.&1..,ni•.' "°"' • NOTICl 1S He•llY GIVEN""'' C1TY ~ ~ .. °'· l"VM ANN MAH&lt. ~i: 1:C::..:~ ~ .. 'rn I:. = ~..: ... \11 frlOf' of OAVIO O• ~?.'::-.::~i;. t..::~ ... :::1 .: N;l(t ·,, htt.tly fl'ltll !ht! tilt ~ of tht Cltl'IC ot "",._. Mlltltd ~. or ,8f.ltN.AIUH. KA,HLl!.N fl.Alt1N..CCI ••• ~" .. lfl'lll MICI"' ...._.of l..ttW• ~ win WI\ ., ,ltlVATE wtt. Oii .. ~ ''*"· ......... lhe nKtlMry luclo"*" ~ton Mid ..-IMI NINA Tnl•menl•l'Y i. , .. 111-r~tftfla: to or •1'-" ""-""' ~'1 ol AUOUST. 1m I I ~1. to tr1t "'""'tlo* 11 fhl oftk1 MENDOZA & 11:.0IERT H IUdtfNnf ft= wlrlldl 11 ~ flW' Nnflt' p1rt\clltara. Ind fhl «fk1 ot ll:HDY & $CMl!ll:, INC .. of ll!Omey GENE £, DOll:NEY, 102 $OUtfl ~ ~ I fltf MIMl(t tlltl the time •fl'! ,ittt of P1t1rlnt IM ATTOll:NEYS AT I.AW. •IO NEWl"Oll:T Ull• Av-. s.ultto "'· P1MdfM, UJ'.t2'6 Kh.1911'( ......... 11 Id 1uet-Mini 119• M.n "' for All(lllll ... 1m II CEN'TEll Olt .. $U~T! *· Nl!WPOlt'T C•llfomll tllOl, wfllc h 11 the pllOt of IMfll Oii tt11 Qto of ""9 lnulllCI ol t :ot '·"'" Ill thl COl.lf'lr-ot o.perl· lEACM. CALlil'ORM IA '16'0. COUfltv el bullnM• of ,,.,. unffrsl9flld 111 •II Mtllffl .. Id t 11:itcllllof\. I MW 1t11I ... uPOll • ., tht _, N•. ) of ••lcl ~. ,, 100 CIVk Or•ne•· Slllt of Ctlliort111. to lht 1'1'9hnt ptrl•lllllllJ lo !hi tilt!• ol .. lcl flc;ldllt!, r'fOhl, tlttl .rid 111..,_t 9f Mid l\,lfftllfllt Ct!lltr Dr'IVt Wttl, 111 fM City of $11111 and bftt blddlr, Incl ...,111\K! to COO'!• within IOU!' ll'IOfllllt ttltr the llr1t public. Ofblort 111 tM Pflill'trt'I' 111 tM COtlf'lly of AM, Cllltornl•. flrrnatlon b~ Mid S111Mrlor (:-!. Ill fl'lt ilon Of lhll llOl/c•. Qrlntf• $1111 ol' CtltforM, dncrlbld I t Olltd AUOyt;I "' lt1J, rtg11t. lttlt &NI l11t1tnl of ••Id 0.CN .... Ottld July 20, 1t1J, lollowl: WILLIAM I', ST J()HH, It 1111 .,_of dt•tll •net 111 ttM tlOltl, tlt1t VEll:ONA E, $Tll:OM Tllal portlOll of tht $0Ufhvrlftl OU<lrter COUilllv Cltfll:; •lld l11ltrnt !hit tfl• 11tllt of ltld IE•tcutrb ol "'' will of of IM '°"'""''' cw1r11r Incl tllt Harry L SclWt!lta. ...... CllCHMd 1111 •cqu!rfll bv llCMl••llCll of ltw The •bo ........ ""° cttndenl SoulhHlt Q\jlrt.r ., "" SO\.ll"'hw11I 4M ....,. ... ....,. OriM or OJ11trw1••· O!,.,. 111111 or Ill 1dd!ll011 I• Gl!N• I!. DORN•Y q~rter of · StctlOfl U In 'TOWlll P 1 lillllt Nllllllotf -11111 "'d ctttelnd, ti the l1m11 of dHtll. •1 SHiit Llkl A111 ...... ,,, SOVth, •tntt ' w111. ''" lll'ntrdlllO ltvtm' Hlllt, Cll!Ninrll• "2'11 111 Ind to •H lhe Ctrfl!ll ll:EAL pl'llCltrtv Plstcltna, C1UI, Jiit! B•" and Mtttdl1n. I,. "'' div of T•h (tlJ) :tn"'5J • 114-f~ .i1u1ttd 111 Ille C1fY Oil' COSTA Meu.. T ... ftlJ) 1'1·1Uf L..,,... -..Ch. 6"(rlliltd II foltow.. Att.r'NY' lorl Jittltlwtf' Cou111v ol OltANGE. Sl•I• ol Ct llklfl'lt•, All1r11•v• for l!•.cvtnx B1tlM!flf tt ti. moll SWIM••'""' ,lllllllMll OrlllOt coesl DlllY Jillol parllcul•rly OIK•lbtd 11 iou--. lo-wit; Publls!w(I Or111g1 COflSI 01lly Piiot July (Ol'Mf' ol Loi J of TrKI --1011 II Alli!llSI •••• \4, 1tn 2ASS.13 PAACEL 1: ,,, JI •nd A11111111 7, h , ltll :n11--13 ~ Oii • mao ftltortof rl(erded Ill T111 WIS! 10 Ifft ol ,,.,. Swill flllf •' Book n p-J:I , MIKtlllfltOlll M,ept;, Lot 1006 or M-1 MtM Ttl(I, 111 "'• PUBUC NOTICE r1<ord1 of Mid Or•l'lfl c-rv. M ing • PUBLIC NOTICE City of COS.II Mt ll , C011nrv ,, Ortn0t. O ------oolnl 111 1 clll'V6 C~IV'll St>ut11H1lerlv. Stalt of C1IUor11t1, 11 11\own Ol'I 1 Mi,. 1· lwYlflll 1 nod1ut of lt0.00 tMt1 ltltllC• rtcorded 111 !lllOt: s. P••• 1 of SLP.... Nairtl!tl•tlfly tlonlr wH1 cur11t lhr""llh 11' .. T•M•NT o,-WITHD•AWAL Mlt.elllt nlOIJ• .V..1>1. In lh1 otfttt ol lfll IUJilRIOlt COU•T o• TH• I centrtl '"°'' ol' II ftt,...1 3"1' 1!" .., ••OM , .... TN••SHl, ~Elt.ATIH• c-rv ltl(Dtdtf' of 11ld COl.llltv. ITAT• O• CALlil'DlNIA il'OR fMll tflen(t Nlffll O Olllr-;it' 11" UND•I IJICTl'TIOUI PAll:CEL !: THI! COUHTY 01' CHlANGE Eld lo.t.O '"'' thtl\CO Horttl Ill IUSINISS NAMI Tiit Rloht ol' WIY lor rotd p..irpottl HO'TICI OP ::.:j~ OIJ l'!fTlTION dlO"'" 1•' ,.... WHI 71.N feel, lhlnct TIM rotlC1Wi'19 perlQll lla1 wlfhdr1wn 11 IOI' lngrt11 •NI 111rts1 to DI wed lfl fCHt ,lOIAT& Ofl WILL AHO l'Dlll SOUtfl II dtllfffS 50' lr"W•t 11 .• 7 lttt I fONr•I P*irtner" from ltW p1rlt11r111lp common wit!! ofher1, over and tert11 L•TTllt.S TIESTAMliNTAllY to 1111 NorltllirlY bolllldllY llM ol' 1111 OPtt•llng vndtr !ht lktlllou1 llusincu 1111 SOUlherly 10 IH I of t11e Mortll Ml! • I lend con¥6Yld to Julllf #NnllllllJ bY • ll.llM of ol Mid LOI 1006 I nd Ille Norfllerly 20 I Ill •I ll:UllY p, !lll:UMlEY, dffd rKordld ..-,nW 4. 1'31 In BOIJll THE HOUSE OF WAX ANO COLOR, IHI of 11'11 SOutll llall of Loi 100. al ~~'i1E IS HEREIY GIVEN lhtl e. H. Sil. ,... 3't otfld•I 11:-11111 thtnel 11\f "'°"'°"'· CO!lll Miu. Ct. '2627 Ntwport Mnl Tr•"· •1 lliown 00'! • .. UM'•Y '' .. _ SOUth 1' dtOt' ... 11' O" £111 •IOl'lo Mid The tlctl!IOlll MlfMSI 111m• 1llltmenl l.\1p re<:Ol'Gld In llO(ll( s, P111e I If '-llis ltd l'ltrtlll • oetlhon for Nortl'ltl'IY tlCIUrldll'Y IN of !111 ltnd of for the ptrlntrlhlp w•1 flied on F~. 21, Mll(tll1neou1 Mep1, In tr11 ollk l tt rh1 prob.II• ol' wlll •nd lot LtJl•rs Ttsllmtn-''''" .. ~._ 50 toot to 111 '""''point \f7l 111 tlM Cour>tv of 0.-111111. Coun.., A-ord-of w ld ,._,,,,, lary r1ltrtne• to which 11 m.ot IOI' ''"'""' lit' 1 p '' ... •• ,__ lurthfr partku1tr1, inct 1111! !111 llmt Ind tMr1ln1 tl'ltr>CI SOUth 0 dlor9" ll" Full N•mt Ind Addrc11 of ht 6fl0n EXCEPT THEREil'll:OM !~11 porllllll e BrHley Better LOS ANGELES· (AP) - General of the Army Omar N. Bradley, 80, a blood clot In one Jupg, was lo satisfactory oon- dlt\on today at the University of C.Ufomia at Los Angeles Wall of Glass plt(I of l'lelrlng Ille w.mt l'lll Min Ml E1U tlono 1111 E11llW'I' boUftdtlY Hne Wlthdr•wlrt11: Inducted !11 P'trc .. I. O A O ... of Mid land of JVlllt M11W1llllJ .U.01 1 .. 1 Edwlrd frtdtrlck O!Jth•ler, 17•lJ Ttrmt of Mii Clll'I 111 11wlul rn-y or Dr 1111· :n. ,,..,· •I t :llD 1.m .• In 1111 10 lht pOfnt of boi!lnnlllO. Thlt prOPtrtv s111t1 Lucie, Fou11t1ln V1U1v, C•. '270& ttot United s111n Oii (onflrrnlllOll o1 ''''· courtroom o1' ~rtll'ltrll No: 3 of Mid 1, commonly k-11 M ,Wk Aw11ue, Slonld, £dw1rd F. Dulh1M-r or pert c1$11 •nd bll•nc• 1vldtn(MI b'I' court, •I 100 c111lc C1111tr Drive Wtst, In LIOll'lt a .. cft, canr. F.nsu note ucurtd by Morfll•ge or Tr!Jlt c,,~ I J (..__B_RI_EF_s__,) Medical C.nter, • a hospital spot<eswoman aald. BradJey, the only living rive- atar general, was commander of ilie American forees that landed In Franoe on Jl.Day. Junie, 1914, and then battled to victory over Germany. He also served as the first cbalrman of the Joint Chiefs o1 .stalf. ' e Se41rfl Eatletl CHICO (AP) -A day-long rabi!s scare ended hue Mon- day after triggering a 4&-bloclc quarantine of animals In a resldential section or this Northern California city of 20,000. A Butte County ,Health Oeputment spoteaman said lnitlal test• by county health ol!lclalr had Indicated thtl a puppy wu rabkl but later tesll In a state Heoltb Depart· meni laboratory In Berkeley proved the rint teal result was ~l'ft<t.' Aa a result of tbe !nlllal in· """"'1 report, three children had begun a !May series of anlirlbles senim in- oculalloM. '4ffeto '-••· SACRAMENTO (AP) ~ COUoiY supervisors could VelO a ttate Alr Res4urces Board ph)pm requiring oew an- tl!mo& devices for 1886-IV· modd can, under legillaUon ll)ll'OVcd Monday by the S.OOte 1'ranlponatlon Com· mltloe: '1"'6 7~ wte sent the baJ by Sen. John W. Holmdahl (Jl. Oakland), IA> the Senate floor . ePl01tl\'lsetl • SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Aisembly bu overwhelmingly raJ<c;)ed a·$250,llOO plan 10< In· 1tn>Cllnl teachm on how to teach the metric sy1tem of weights and measures in 1 caJlfomla schools. During debate M on d a 1 , • aeftl'81 legblalorl said they favored adoptM>n c.r the metric l)'lltem but ·-the blll by ,(satmbl·yman W. Don MacGlllivray (R.santa Barbara). The vote was 23-33. · MacGUlivray'a bill would .fiave set up a three-year tead>er lnstrudlon progr8J11 under the state Educattoo Department. e Vletl ... Told LOS ANGELES (AP) 1'bree persons ldlled when two Uglit pJanes coD!ded over the suburban Torrance Municipal Airport &today night bave 'been Identified but-the other two vlCilms have not, the cor- . oner'I office tald today. " 'J1'e three knoWn victims, all 'nsldonts ol LOmlta, were Iden- . Med u Harold Alden, 42, Lyn 'Louse Harris, 18, ilnd Karla j.Anna..Harrb, 8. Tourist On Trip ·~ LONQON (AP) -A o1 South Alric•n tQurlat ad· 0 lllllled In court he took "61.sD aDd ~VO I double• ,.wer bu• !hroulb Lon- ilon. .,. l'ha lriP.eefled When the • .Wen vtblcl• cnlhed Into ~.a......-kad 11u1. " "I felt .J ooul4 do ""=· I " II 1, ng, a po ceman uOtAid l)le tourist aa I ,.,tayJng, • .. The Juda• fined him 1137' 1, [or ste•lllli the bu1, drl•· "/nl without Insurance and ,1 ~leplly .,......1lli dntp. A wet.suited surfer studies the falling section in front of him on this well-shaped tilt City ol Sin!• ""'· C•lltornll. TOQtlher wltll Ill Ind •lftfltltr 111• Plltlltm.d 0••1111• Co•5t OtllY PUD!, on Ille pro1t1rtv IO IOld. Ttll perc1t11I or th Dated .t.t'LiLlt~~· SI JOHN, flnllf'M!llt, l'ltl'lldlllmtnlt •rid 10-..July 24, :n lnll AllOU5t 1,. 14. lfn l2S6·13 1rnou11t bid to bt dtp01ltt'll w1111 bid. wave near e Huptington Beach pier. The surf wa s great -despite overcast County Cl1rk ovrt1t111nc•• ttotrwnl• lltklnll'l"I or In lld1 or Ott.fa lo bt 111 wrlllno •l'ld win skies and chilly 64-degree water temperatures. Think summer passed us up this 10No•L a AN0111soH 111YW1 .. 1pper111111n11. PUBLIC NOTICE 1>1 received ., ,,.,. 11or•••ld oftfc1 ,, 1nv Int N •• ,...,..,.,, 4t~ 1'1-NO'flCll! ls HEll:l!BY GIVEN tt11t Oii t!mt titer lhl flttt publlc•lton h•rlol 1nd year? 1•11•• ""'· C1tll. '2711 We41'1Md•Y·,Slpl.12. 1'73. 1t 10;000't1oc• ftOTIC• TO CRIOITOllS O.for• d"• of Nit. im •l!!:ZIO:•ll[jUl"'""""LJ ---------------------------ITllM1 (7141 1u..7717 A.M. 1t Malll lobbY• C-tf*IM, 70CI IUPli!RIOll: COUllT 01' TNI 01ltd AUG. •• i.n All-rtt f«~,.lfllt-Cllllc C1111t1r Drlw Wnt (lty of Stnll JTATI Ofl CALll'OlllMIA POR JOHN A. MAHl!lt. Publhhtd Or•lli!• COii! Dilly Piiot "111, Cou111'1 ol' OrlflOI, Stitt of THI COUNTY 01' ORAHGI AC1rnl~l•lr1tor of tll• E"•lf fu the Service Airman Wllllam T. Hoff· mu, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robort W. Hollman of 10> Barcel"18, San Clemente, has graduated at Lack.land AFB, Tex., from the U.S. Air Foree security policeman co u r s e conducted tiy the Air Training Command. The airman is be~g assisgn- A1111u1t 1•. IS. 10, 1973 2.s:n .73 C1Hfonll•, I wrn tell It pul'bllC •uc!lon lo Ho. ,,, 1"31 of .. Id 01e111td. 1 c==-"'-:::.-"'-"'"-----"""~ 1111 highest b!d61r. for Cllft Ill l1wiul Etlllt of MA.ltJORI£ ...... GOOOIMN, Rl'.EOY & U.NS. ATTY. ~ ol lfll U11lltd ,Sl1tn, •II !111 right, Dtcttitd. "' N-fM!rt Ct1111r or. SVllt nt lltle Ind lnlensl of stk:I ll.ld!lm•11t d1bl01"1 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to tlll New,.-t hlcll. C1tll. 11Uf l'ICTITIOUS •USIM!'.SS ln !hi lb<Wt cftS(1'!Dld property. or IO crtdl!or1 ol tl\t tbovt named decedtn! Publi1hed Oranot Co.It 01lly Jiilot NAME STAT•MllllT muc:ll !lltreof II r•Y bo ntell~ Ito ttlll 111 persons 1M111lng cl1lm1 1111fn1t 1111 AU@Ual f, t, 14, lt7' 2.,7.,.j Thi foOawlng I dol I llllllv Mid IJll(\lt on, wtth IC(r Ito Mid dKldtlll art req1,1lred to flit 1t1tm. -'--'--'--'--'-----"'CC She Could Lose PUBLIC NOTICE 11: person s ng blll 11H1 !tf'ISI and CO$ls. wltfl "" nte:Hllf'I' ll'O\IChers. 111 the olflct GU.SLIME Au T 0 .ACCESSOA IES O•tld '' Stnl• ,,_,,., C.llfor11!1. Juty 25, of !hi (IM1r. of ltM above.1111ltllld court, OI' PUBLIC NOTICE 11350 11 • 19n. 10 or'911'11 them, with l1'lt Met'l11rv1------------- Bl11tD1 A11t., Founl1l11 V1U1y, JAMES A. MUSICK. vouclltfl, to the undtrsl9ned ti the oflk e l'ICTITIOUS •UllHISS Cal. '270I Shlriff..(.oronor of In Trv1t Otplrlmtlll, Sl•th Ind Spring HAM9 l'TATP•HT Eric KlllHn.. 11350 Blllt'bell Ave., County of Ottl!Of, C1tlfDt11l1 Slr•.,1, Los Angel ... Cal!IOl'nlt, P.O. Box T~t followlng Ptfsonl ere d•lllll Founltlll V•ll1r. Cit. f'11Ct 8y c. A. 1t1nd1H, Dtput'I 20'1. 'Tltfml111I AlllltJr. LOI Anttlt1. blnlfMll •1: dl!c~.lbllllntll lf~cendl.lclOCI try •n In-Dniof Dt ..,,...... C1lllor11l1. tOOS4. Milch I• 1111 olKe of s .. T CATTLE COM,ANY. tut Lt frlc Klllffll t" l~nll ~·~-=f D~1 bwl1'1S& Of lllt lllldtr$1911Gd In •II m1t11r1 81rc1 Clrclt, FOUflllin V1ll1y. c1Mf, Joh to Marriage A 2:2-year-old woman police dispatcher In El Segundo may lose her job because she mar· rled one of lhe orncers. Karen Gruber and Davkl Barkdull, 2~. were married July 28. She was scheduled to be fired from the El Segundo Police Department when they returned from their honey- moon because or a city resolu- Tiiis 1111 ....... 111 w11 11194 with 1111 COll1'I-~ : Liii-· a11c11 oally p11o1. pertilntng '° ttlt '"'''' of tit"111d d«:;:Tn''. 9V011 says he'll devote himself to i., ci.rt of Or•no• county °"' July 't:z!;.~ AuoUJt $ 14. 21. 21, im "°'""n ;ri,:1~ ~ ='!':' ,,._,. t rst P c• ci~.°'F"~i.r:W::~~: ~~1!1.1.~:r_:rc• Clr· good works to try to change Publllhod Or1no1 Cotti D1lty ,ilol, ~ D••tdsirl'uf.·T~mPACIFIC A Al~rnl ,~· 4S5 WMtrk:lgt ClrcJe. the image or the American .Auguil 1'· 21, 21 I nd St.P.!tfnbi< 4, 1t7J. PUBLIC NOTICE N4'TIONAL. 8A1Ut T~t bu~...:. j, concluclld bY fllltrll bond 2:20f.13 By: !1.,nk l I. SWll p&rllllrt!HO f Vaga . VICI Prnldenl Ind Truft Officer JOl'I~ D. Tow~ "I'm not going to be one of PUBLIC NOTICE ex~°' ""wiu 01111e thtt 1111tmtrT1 w•• n11d with "" cou"tof those kings who takes the title SLl'.fJ NOTICIN!OA·~W'TOltS WAL.Tl::~.d~·ll~ ..Jt<:ed•nl Cltrk ol Clt'tngti County on AutUll ~.:::; all over the coun"1Y bumming ~¥:~:1g~ c'i.'t~:J11;~~-~~= .!.~~';': :..:,•" o1 <•11'°""' ~sr;!,~ s"~:~~:!!."0 A~':.1~4• tt1,h°'" o.n., 2~~31 drinks and meals off people " TMI CDUNTY Oil' ORAN Oil Esh It of MARILYN w E B 0 It G Uf ......... Ctllf. M12 . • • ' Nt. A·11211 WINDSOll:, tkl MAlllLYN W. WIHOSOll:. ,....,...,,.., C2U) &IS· .... said Graham. elected tn Britt. NOTICE OF HEAll:ING OF PETITION Pecentd. Attonlrt't tor IEllCIMr I b the I f 000 l'OR Pll:OBATE OF WILL AND FOR Nollet Is hlr'lbY gl111111 10 ct!dllort of P11bUshed Or1ng1 CDISI DtUy Pllol,1------------- 0Wa y app ause 0 15, LETTERS TESTAMENTARV' Ille ltlOVI 11•rntd d1Clde11t 11111 •11 July 31 •nd AVRUll 7, 14, 2I, ltn 2l51·13 PICTtTIOUS IUllNISS persons who poured into the Ellllt ol, Etlnor P . .stow., 0ec .... Olf'IOl'll lltvln§ cl1lm1 tgllnsl lhl Hkl HAM• STATIM•NT ". ·-"'"' •r• RQ!Jlrtd to 1111 1t1trn. with PUBLIC NOTICE ,., .. ,, •.• ., ,.,,-· ''' '''"' PUBLIC NOTICE town of 2,000 for the 73rd an-NOTICE 15 HEll:EBY GIVEN 11111 ;;;-llKetSlf'Y vovc:hln, In 1111 oftlte of bll;l11est n;..~· ....... nual national h 0 b 0 con-JOSEPHINE 8. PEREUE 1'111 111od herein Ille 01111 of ""' •bow 1t11tlltld court. or l'IC'TITIOUI IUllNISS BUENA PARK MAZOA, 1!115 Knott • ptttllon FOii: ,ROBATE OF WILL ANO to Ofl'Slnt lhltll'I wltfl !tit necn11ry NAMI! STATIMINT Avenuo, BUll'll Perk. Clllfornl1 90630 vention. FOR L £TT EA s TESTAMENTAAY VOl.ldltr• lo Ille UNlltftll\llld ,, ""office Th• folloWng pen.on 11 doll!D blllineu JIM MAll:INO. IN C., 701! Knoll "S . ., . . rtltrltllCI to wh!(ll 11 nlldt tor fvrllltr of RICHARD T. SYKES. 15770 V1nl1Jrl Awnut. a-Perk, C1Htor11l1 to'2t teamtra1n IS a part.tune P*itllcullrl Ind lhll '"' tlmt 1NI l'llCI of a1w .. Slt.'520, Encino. CA 91316 Wllkll 1' '"VICTORIA TAADING COMPANY, Thi• bu1llllU •• conaucted by • COi-cement mason from Toledo IM•rll'lll 1t1t Mmt 1111 DMn 111 tor Allf.. 21. "" pf1e1 of t1u$lnes.t °' "" vnct~•lg~ l~ JOtO Capri L•M. cos11 M111, c1nf. por1!I011. ed to Castle AFB, calil., for ( ) duty with a unit of the PEOPLE strategic Air C.ommand . .._ _______ __.. Airman Holiman, a 1972 graduate ot San Clemente High School. attended Sad· dleback Junior C o 11 e g e , Mmion Viejo, Calil. Robert w. Devoston, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. DesrQ.Yers, 9562 Warburton Drive, HWltington Beach, has been promoted to airman in the"U.S: Air Force. Atrinan Desrosiers. a law 'enforcement specialist a t Bergstnim AFB, Tex., is a!slllJ>Od to a Wlit of the Tac· ti~l Air Command. A 1971 graduate oJ Fountaih Valley Hlgb School, the airman attended GOiden West College. Ak'D'lan Raad Ramos , Jr., son ol Mr. and Mrs. Raul Ramos, 145ft Oialet Lane, Huntington B e a c h , has graduated at Chanute AFB. Ill., from the U.S. Air Force jet engine mechanic co;urse cooducted by the Air Training Command. Airman Ramos is being assigned to Oavis-~lonthan AFB. Ariz., for duty wlth a unit of the Strategic Air Com· mand. A 1970 graduate of Marina High School. he received his A.A. degree in law en· forctment last year at Golden \Vest Junior College. U.S. Air Force Fir st Lietenant Mark C. Witman, "'"of Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Witman, Job6 Sa ndc a st 1 e Drive. Corona Del Mar, has arrived for duty at Osan AB, Republic of Korea. Lleutenant Wlbnan, an F-4 pilot, b assigned to a unit of ~ Pactnc Air Forces. He previouslv served at George AFB, Calli. The lieutenant, received his B.S. degree and commission in 1971 uoon graduation from the U.S. Air Force Acedemy. Oout111 c. Ernst, son oJ Mr. and Mrs. Carlyle F. Ernst, !SIS Ba~er St.. Costa Mesa, hu been promoted to airman In the U.S. Air Force. Airman Ernst, a law <"n· forcement specialist at Bergstrom AFB, Te;t., Is assigned to a unit of the Tac- tical Air CoJnmand. His wife. Uoda, dauahter ol Mrs. Conaway, Fountain Calif. Is the Ruth Valley, Alrman First Class G11.n D. Grac:o. oon oi Mr. and Mrs. l.owell D. Grace, I D 1 5 2 Forestal. Hu"Unaton Beach, hH A~ved for duty at Bil· bul'l! AB. O..rmany. AJnnan Grace. sn aircraft. svsterna 11oeti11HM.. ls as~igned to a unit or the 1.J.S. Air Fottes In Euro)l<!. H e prtvlwslv served at March AFB, Calif. The ainnan wa s j'!raduated In 1970 from Huntington High Sc boo!. tion which prohibits employes in any one city department more closely related than "the thin! degree ol relationship." . ' ltTl. ti f :OD 1.m .. 111 t11t COlll'lroom of 1H mtlltrt S>efl11111ni1 lo tht nll I M nt.26 JIM MAlll'NO. INC. Ohio. Dtptrtmtnl No. J or Mid COl,lrl, 1t 700 ctecedtl'll, Wfltll11 '-monltll 11111' lhf Vlctori• Metqtr, 3040 Capri Lint· ly:.s. Jlrtle'll Merino, Jlrnkftint Civic Ctnll'f Ortll't Wt'll, 111 "" Cl,., of ttm pWllctllon of this notice. Coll• Mnt C.111 mu Thi• "''''""'"' Wll flied wllh 1111 Cour>- * S..nl• Ml, Callfor11l1. Dltld AU0\/$1 1. lt73. ~""" Tiii• '111,,,,_~ Is w inu con11uc111<1 by 111 1y c~rk of or111111 County Ol'I Jiiiy 2l. Oiied Auo. '· l,J7'l WILLIAM w. WINO........ lndlvldUll lt1J. Wllll•m e. SI Johll. Executor of tht Wiii viClOAIA METtG.Alt. Room lS at the Western COlllllY Cltrll ol' wk:I detlCllnt. Thi• 1t1telntftt HMd with lllt COl.lfl'Y CL..ARKI AND ll.l.•Y ponnnr)vania Hospi'•i ·, n KINDt:L • AMDElllON lllCHAAv..!.!:. s .. Y!_.•',,.. .m Clerk ol' Df'lllG6 c-ty on July 23, 1m 111)6 w6'Ml""'8 sw..t ........ J l.O Int H •• ,...IV, 4111 il'lolr um ........ _.._. B a.11 J 1argit111. OIOUTY County N•. Hlltrwllt. (1, t1'•1 The city council gave Karen a JO.day leave of absence whlle the matter is re solved. ,Pittsburgh had some famou s S111t1 AMI, C1Nf. llldM. CA t~ .. i( ! crltfll 'I' • Ttl: (Ill) 16 ..... 1 lff·mf . Tel. (7141 Slf-m7 ""°""' fW . ...lfft1 1-.0C occupants -Nixon a n d ,t,flWM'l'S fW Plf111-614¥1 IJhed °"' COIO Dilly ,llol July Publlthld Orlllll6 C-1 Dlltv Piiot Jllfy .......... ew. PublllMd Or•not Cotll Dilly Pllol. Publlshtd !'?:"'!!* ,,,,c1111 Dtlly iJ:~ 24'': •NI Auvust~. , .. ltn tll'-13 2•. 31 •1111 A\IVllll 7, 14, 1m 221).f) * High food costs have claim- ed another victim-U.S. Rep. Danie Fucell's 24th annual LabOr Dey picnic. "E-'' • Augull 14, IS. 21, lt7l 2S»73AU9Ull 7, 14, .,, .. , • F. Reid Agoew, a self-imployed inventor, was ad-PUBLIC N011CE PUBIJC NO'nCE mi.tted to the room on the NOTIC• TO COfllTllACTO•S CALLING POil.BiDS . hospital's fifth floor July 30. SCNOOL DISTRICT: f'OUMTAIN VALt..IY ' u---N'-· BID oeADLINE: !:00 o'ctock p.rn. Of tht 11th d;ay of .Stp,tembl•· lt7 • "."""'"' u.on, --itho l s PLACli OF e101tECEtPT:' District Admlnillr•IM'Offlclli , retired._ drew the same room NumWr Dn• L11111rnovse Uint , by coincidence the next day. PRtii'e"t~1~ovE~~ff1~~io~AME: AOCH COURA.E~ES SCHOOL (SITE FOUNTAIN VALLEY, CALIFOANIA PUBLIC NOTICE '" • ;,r • The Florida Democrat has thrown a free outdoor feed for hlD1dred.i of friends and con· stituents on Labor Day for 23 years. PLACE Pl.ANS ARE ON FILE: DO!rlct Adrnl~l1tr11lvo Ofllcn Tender• •lld ""'offices of""' Ar(hltect, CARMICHAEL·KEMP. AACHITECTS Hfftlh .. w .. f•r• l·•'I • ' • 2'10 Los Ftll' Plact, Loa AnQllltl, Callfomll 9CID3J4 • PtnsiOll ., * But this year, he said: "Because or the shortage of food and current economic. circumstances, 1 cannot in good conscience aUow my friends to hold a picnic in my name where thousands of dollars are spent a n d thousands of people are !ed." * 115'eamtraia Maary", newly crowned king of the hobo!, Sun,set Vista Camp Area Openirig Set Attire .was informal for the NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN 11111 ""1oo....nomod Sdiool Ol11rkt of Or•f'lll• V•c•llOll . :,· ' wedding in La Mesa of Holly ,_ly, c1ntornl1. ICllllll by ll'ld ll'lfOullh ... ~ Goll,~netlltBOt~ het!":~1~m:i~ CAltJllT, LINOLISUllft< .. ...,.,. pa.• u.11• to •t "DISfAICf", Wiii ttclllvo ""' to ,_, not ........ II • • • Groat and Bryn Davis. 'l1le ..,lid bids for"" 1w1n1oi•con11ec1tor1111 .1tioye,PI"~~'· °'*"" nd public C•rPlf, Uno. a.·son tlh-Uvor ' brl.de wore a white gown a1ct1 $11111 bt rectlved 111 1111 lllac• IOentllled 1tio111.!M DI • • • Hoeltri,,, w.111r1 '11• • '. ' ly rHd ''°"° 11 lt... •boW-&111td tffl'IO Ind pllcO, PWllkin ~· • , white veil and bandages ThH• wtll bt , ue.-OtpOt.lt r1q111m for Mdl "' of bid Oocumenh to 11.11r•11"' Vteitloll . · th• rttum In good (on(litloll wltlllll f111<1 ct1yt tllw 1111 bid OPlllll'lll d1to. AppAll!k.lthlP T11lnln0 The wedding went off as E•ch bid mua1 conform 1nd 111 F'OIOOl'ltlvo to 111e C011trKI doCvl'l'ICll'lh. •LICTalCl.UI cheduled though M. Elth bid shell bl aco:imotnlecl by !ht securlf'f r1tw..O to In IN> C011trtcl ctocu""'"tt ,. s .even JSS •nd ltV 111e lltt o1 pl'OP)lld wttclllTlt'•ctors. G«wr•I ,.., ... n • , Groat had suffered 'multiple The OISTA1CT rtlltf'Wt ""rlghl fo r•llCI 1ny_ or •II !:*It or lfl WllllO IHIY lrr111~ FOl'-11 lrac. •·-· Ir ff' 'd I l•rllln •r lntorrntll!!• In any bids or In the triddlf'lll. Jourlll'(mlll W'lrorT\111'.' ~UI= m a a JC aCCJ en Tiit oiSTll:ICT hit dtttrrnlnld"" 9'1Mf"•I prwvtiUl'lll r•tt o1Pl"diemWitt'111 thf OLAlll!ll · two nights earlier She and loclllly In whkh thlJ wort; Is lo bt ptrlormtd tor 11th cr1ff or IYPf of -11m1n D 'd ded · netdtd lo ellKlllt ltM contr1cl, to bt •• tol'-1: Gl11ltf' aVJ crow 19 guests and a SIX IAllC fRAOIS tLn .......... Orlflll (""""") Le.adman -:-:... · to h I c.t.Rf't:Nflll:S H111t11 • Wtlltr• uwu.:ner In ~ room a HNl!h ... WtH1r1: 7~ ptr llour -Sfl/72. P911ion PJ.ifl Grossmoot Hospi.tal for the , ... 1on: tsc per flour -s111n v1e1111on •1111 ~ldtY VKtllon S1vlng11 Hollclly: ~ Pltf l'IOllr -511/12 Aoprenllc-"I' Tl'Vll ceremony. FOftm111'· AK ....... "°' ... '""" tOc Pllr "°"' mor• llMlll tM llDllrlY r1!0 of tht LATHlll The bride's injuries forced · hlfl'*' c1rpen1er c11ui11u11on over ...mlef?, IM 1lh fW9Clll$lblffty, 111· he t •-•·· the · ck.dint "l'l'ltlllmlllc Heller or Power ll1pltr. slim 1/1/J'l L•lhtr r o l.<IAC: ceremonies 1 05 ~~ , l)'l'ng down and \viii delay c1rpen11r "·'5 1711 Health &. w.,11ro . ' Slllngl•r '·" · P-lon Pllll thelf honeymoon at least eight Mlllwrlllf'lt :: :·g PAIHTEll:I· weeks, six of which she'II f::eF~~ s.w ()ffrator 6.IS 1:u Foremt11 spend in a wheechair. Pneumatic N11t1r or Pow1r s11p1e1 1.00 1.:11 CIMIEHT MAIOHS llru)ll • .r.11oc:etton•1 uc P1r hour -511/13 Papen11nttr tt111lh a. W•ll•r•: toe Plf hour -5/1/12 Sl'ltll. Rock TIP'f' Pen1lon: 9.k oer nour -!f\/12 Sritet Roc:ll (UtlPIG 8tlflOlr.trl \Vhen He•~ Beckman a·nd V1c1llon• 10c ptr hour -5/1/11 sn.1 Roell tUllng Skim llOltl -J Foriman'· Wl'lerl """ or mor• Ctmtnl MHOnt 1r1 emplo'(ld on • lob. -1h1ll Journty""8n Spray tberyl Ann Farber \\'ere mar· · bl 1m111ovld 11 • Foreman •nd s11111 r~lv• not '"'' then 60c Pfl" hour HMl!h a. w1111r1 * 'ed the und rnort lhln 1111 llourly r111 IJf lllt hl9hl:SI C.IMnl MllOl'I Cl1ulfkltlon P-lorl rt on merry-ge>-ro owr whk:h 11e he• re1Plll'llflblllly. Lii• 1n1ur1nee Sunset Vista, the ocean front ope.rated by Beckman at the w1m vau11oo1 camping facility operated by Fayette C.OUOty (Ind.) Free ~=: = Jour"iyrr.n S::: ~:r,m1;:;:::!= FtJnd the city of Huntington Beach, Fair fello'v workers and c..._, MelOM F111111"" a. .,1 Pl 1 TIU.DEi ' Troweling Ml(hlnt 0ptor1tor ... will open Sept. 15 for its sec-customers showered the COU· Grtnc11n11 Mtcn1111 0ptr1t01" 1111 ,.,pe1l •.1' Ptumblr • s111rn1111tt" Gt11'I. il'or1rn1n d I 'th · I ad l ••OM '#ORKl•t Plul'llDlr &. Sllllnlltm Fortl'Nln oo sooson. P. e WI popcorn ms e o Ht11t11 a. weuer•: ac: -111•111 Ptum0er Last year, ·with two months rice. =:::;. •~Ytc-11~~m12 ~::.S1t18~":111,r• or camping allowed , the city PUBLIC NOTICE FOl'lfn6~: RtlCelV'tl not t111 "'"" 75<: per ~ men ,...., !ht lloul'IV ,,,, ol' "" P'onslon Plen collected $3,267 for cantpers highest d1111f1ct•klil ov11 wr.ld't 111 IMs tuPervl5'on.1111/n ~~~I<:: .. ~~m1111 Tr111111to parked on the city's beach SL,.... Relntorc11111 tren Worllltf w.11 lrr1ea11o11 •lld L•-Sprlnl<.ltrs king I I SU,ll:lOll COURT 0' CALlflOllNIA. Slrl/C!\11'11 Iron wartier e.7• Sewtr 11111 Storrn Or1ln Plpe&ayor par 0 . COUNTY M Oll:AHOI Omlmtnlll Iron WOrktr 1.71 HHl!h .. w .. 1.r1 °""· section of the Jot is 10I Cl'ric: c ..... 0!1M Wttf, ~!M .. ·,·.~ •• lor' IM PensiOll Plall SINlll ,._ Clllfor'llla ~ VKtlloll I. Holldl'l'I designed to accommodate up c-H...., 0111" He•llh a. wtt••r•: SSc -5111ni a.sc -s111n AW1"ent1c1 • Journeyin111 Tr11n1ng to 90 scU~tained campers SUMMOMI fMAllll:IAO!'.I Pentloll: 11.10 -s11m1 11.JJ-J/ln ) '"'''•••It ._ , 111 fl !ht _,11111' ol' Ptlltl-r: L. V1(1l!ot1 : 30cl lSc -S{l /1l at one time. Sunset Vista JEAN TISDAL£ •rid ltnpondtnl: BOBBY F•1m111: Not I•• "''" * pet' hour "'°"' 111111 '"' l'lourlY W•OI rill of Ille Foremen Operates from Sep' 1• throogh EUGE'NE TISDALE hlghtll cl1ulllc1tlon ovtr wltkll llt IMI 1Hder1~lp. ••om PJ.11ltr1r • ., To ltlt ll:H&IOlldtnt: BOBBY EUGENE st1m M HIO/tfl & Wlllftrl May 1 when normal beach use TISDALE ANN11 ltllllf, Lvt-11 • lf'Ol'ltr $S.IOJ s.s.tsS ,_Ion . • ' · Tiii pelltl-r htt fllld 1 pettllOl'I ~ As.Pl'llll si-et1r UtS S.1ti V1clllon . IS lowest. cwn11111 vour rn.ltrllfl', You "''Y 1111 1 Bunymobll• M•n s.105 S.W Tr•dt l'romotlon The cost of campsites Is f3 wrllltn resoon" wt111111 thirty d•Y• of 1111 CtmMt DumPtr (Oii 1 yd. or 111ger mlll•r • s.ass .•ror.,m,,'","",'•'•••• , ·-• d1to !hit lhh fl.UrnlTIOl'li 11 ltlYtd on you. hand ring '111111 clnllfltl S.70J .. _., • per night. Reservations can be 11 Y011 t11t to 1111 • wrltt«1 r~ concrtt• c ort cuner s.IOJ S.tsS m'ade by wrllln• to the City of within 1vch tlmt. vour ct111u11 m1v bt COllCr•t• s1w Men s.tos t~ &. ltllltrld llld lht COUtl m1y trlltr • ludO-0r111tr •. 16 • Huntington Beach zip code mint c011t11111t!ll 1111unc11111 or other ordlr1 L•llllrtr, Gtner•I or consltucllon !.m J.~ I . ' conctrnlno dlllf•I.-. of proptrty, lllOllMI Plpelly« •.ODS '·1 9'l648, or p 10n1ng ~5281 . A •llPPOf'· c1111c1 cuttoOY. chlld Wfl!IOl'I, ,,. Pipe L•rw'• B1e11up M•n s.1u s.rn P1&1t1r ,tnd.,. Holllll &. w11t1rt ·~"" V1c1lllNI aoo,•• 1P1tc11 '"' ;:: toc. utn) written request must be ac-tornrr'• IH1. costt, •nd 111<11 ottltr rt11e1 Trll'ldll"9 Mldllne. Hend PrGfllll!d s,.,,•,,s s.W •• ll'llY bf or111tod by 111t court. Unct11'9round LAbortr, lnc:ludlllll Ctl.-011 Blllow•r 5. J il'eremt11 companied by $3 to reserve a 11 v111 w1111 " ...-1111 H'llt• " 111 ••· w1nc1ow Cklntr s.ns s.w su11-For1t111•11 spot. =,.~" :~i,.';"'~· :.; .. ~ ~ :::.~Az1::":.:~1~:·i:~ Miu•_ 111112 -:':1':T.;.111r• 111r, m•Y .. lllH • """· Jie'lalon: 11..20 per hour -1111n -ltttlrtm11111 Olltct Junt "-lf1J. Vktlltrl Motld6Y Fund: '°' Pltf l'IOllr Vac:tllon WILL!,AM I!. It JOHN, Fortmefi: JOc per hOur ovtr n.. r•lt of !ht hll\hfll Plld E"91neor unOtr hit DIM Cl\Kk-01' Cl•IC IUPl'f'lftlon. Appr111llc11hi9 .. Trtlnh111 11'111'111 !ly M. B. Obin! Jr., 1/1/J'l AGmlnlstrtllon ~1'1 Onwp 1 S7.Gl SNllT MITAL JOHN A. HUGNIS, Gnlup S 7.Jt MS Witt lM'll St,..r Group • 1.ll l'or-11 CMll MUI. C•llfonl&I t2i1D G,,,.. S J.11 0-•I il'Orl'IN!t 'T•h 1n•l .......... GrOu9 • 1.t1 Slltot M•lff w.rk1r A~y M 1 f"IMI._, T•AMn•1tt HHllll &. Wllllrt ,!Jbfl.nH Dr•ll09 CO.If OtllT JlllCll Al*-lllont: UC -11111'2; tot -J/lltt1 UC -11/1/11 P'-\ofl A\191111 1C. 21, 21. 11111 Sip!.,,..,., .. HMlnl • wett111: 1.k ,_ tllvr ln!tr111llOMI PtrlllOn lf73 tJ».n ...,.IM; lie Pt' 11011r VtelllOn PUBLIC NOTICE V!l/71 110.tl '·'' . .. "'m .. .. ... .10 ... "' ... 1111n ..... ... 1.10 "' 111171 ..... "' ... ·" ... I/Sm 2ff/JJ "' •• ... ·" St.a. II/Id. Vac•llOlll ~ (fncl. Vte•lltlll .... ·" 7/1/h Not Mu tr1111 ll.ot,., 41•'1' MGl!lonll. 111111 '"" I.IS .... '"' .... '"' ... :11 ... ·" ·" 2019 gron Joumeymtn r•lt 1~ 1tio111 11r011 JourntYFMll r1!1 '"" "" 10"-of orou payroll 11'6. of fltOll peyroll IN ol gr• PlY"'ll I~ ti eroi&1 PIYr•H ''"' .,, 10 ... of ,,,... ptytoll l•'No of ... "'l'f'oll IJ'tio of gross oayroH I.,. ol grost peyroll 7/1/1J l/AIJJ ...... 1.0d ... "'' . .. "' .11 "''" •1.11S ... .... ... 11/IS/11 '"" .... .... ... •• ... ·" .... ... 11, 1bovt1 JOVl'llfYmlll'I rllt' ,,.._ •tlollo JOllf!liVINll rllt lt.U (lftc:ludtfi VKlllon) M "'' ... I~ Ol ll'(U pt'(rOH VtctllOn • HoliHY Fund: 1.00 Pll' tQW TILi LAY•ll •1e lfloretl'lll\: toe (Mt' lloltr """' ~ ""' hlglllll TMmlltr tl•Ulf!ullon IYlf wlll(h 611 /11 f'll 11 fOf'lmlt\, J'Off!'lllll Ill ("""' of ~10 !Tlln U• (Mt' clt'I' l"Ofl ll'IOn tflH'M'tf'l'lln PUBLIC NOTICE Ul/'2 Jllor-In d'l6rtt ot 11 Of ,_.. J.00 Pt!' Ny .,...,. flllll ~Mymtn ,ICTTTIOUI IUSU••ss Drllllf' ol' VtMcto Of' combllllllon II Vlllllcln Of: Tll• L8'(V 1.U \Jnc:hlelt Vtc•llonl NAA\I STATIMINT 2 Ulft 111'11:1\ldtt •II llthlclla tits t!Mln' tonil 56.)0 H11lth .. Wlfftr.1 .24S E"'""" ,..,.. MJ TM followlnO ,,.,_. 1ro 6of1111 ) tltltt 6.U '"-"" .>s 1>111tnot1 11: 4 or rnort 11tln '·'° v1e111on .Jt TI NNIS (:Lu• VILlAS ' 110 E111 Drtvor ol' Alld 011 Spretd6r TMll .... Tiit PrMIOTloll ,\J + ·~ PIY* SlJ.otf""' 1"" l tl'tll, Coil• Mffl, t2W Drl"'r of Tr1111lloMlll TrUClr. Under 3 yd1. •.t• APPt'Mlk:nh"' .U IOH, 110 l11t 11111 Strtlt, C:01l1 ~l11tr 01 'Tr1111n-Mlll Trutll -l yd1. 01 more •·• TM flllr191111'111 tclltd\tll of por dloM WIQlt '' ~ llOOn 1 --.1111 Hy If t1fM M111, ml! • CXlll'lllcrtlt Tr1i1Cll, 1111 11111n 6.~'r ydl. w111r le""I '·'' (f ) IWHlrt. Th• r1to for Milff'I' Mel overllfM worll. tl'llU M 11 11111 llmt Mil.,. This blllln111 It bflng conctuc:tld by 1 Dl.fmllcf•I• Truell, •·YI >'(11. w•ttr 1-11111 & ewer '·" 11111. Umllld P•rtn11'1111p ~orll; Liit Orlvtr 1.70 II 111an bl fnlllHtory upon 1llt: CO!'ITAACTOll to ~ ''" t'Olltrtd ~ •wt~ IOH bV Georgt M. HOhltlfl, Ill, W1lr Tr1ttll : Ind llflOll lll'i' tubCol!lrlC:klt Ul'IOW fllin. to PtV flltl 1ttt 1t1111 111t ttld tPKJtio. rain II• IUll!orllld 11141111 a•lt1 6.&S '° 111 ""'°"''"'" l'f'l'lflkl'(lld .., ""m In '"' llttltHon of "" (OllltKf. Thlt i1a1o1ntnt nlld with tllt Cwt1tv , or mor• 111ln •.1s No Meld« mer wltfldr•w ltlf Old for • 11trlod IM 1t•ty (t01 ••n afltr' tlll dll• Ml c•11 01 Or•"9• Cotll'lty on July 23, 1m Wt~ 1.d let tlll OMl'lll'lfll of N$. WILLIAM E. Sf JOHN, COUNTY CLl ltK, SUl•T•"DIS (Orll ... Cwtll't'l A Oll'fl'IWll bOnf ...... I lltffWl'NtlC't l*tct Wiii bl ,.qulrld IN!of 1-lllltulloll o1 ibe> by lllTY J. lertttoi'I, DeJH,rty. llllCKU.YI• -C*\lttc:I. Tflll "ftntnl l*'ld IMll W In 1111 fOtlft Ml frottll 111 f'!O tOnlrKI ~ ... P.2'tn il'or•-·mjlloy .. mtll.. Ml 14N lllln 50c "' hr. •llOll• JOllrllf'l'IM" GOVllllllllNG •OARD l'utlllflfled Ortnto Cotll Dally P'llOf, P:or-l!rnJNY ''" '"'"· 1111 ... , thMI 1Sc per ht, '4!011• JltllFMYllll" •r •• , ...... July 24, 11 ll'ld Alilfl,ISI 7, 14, ,,,, tt7J.1l floromtn-l"'lllOr -12 mtn, llOI lt11 111111 Sl.00 '"' llr. •bov• JOltl'ntVll'llll l'W!l111td ~ COit! DtllT ,lfot, .. ll!Ml .. i1. Im ,..,.., ' I iJ~l.'t' PILOT ~ ••• ..-, .500 ·S24 Mobilt Hon.s few Sais , • • 12S • M9 • The Bluest Marketplace on the· Oran1e Coast Autorr.obiiln • • • • • • • • 9SO • 990 -·--900 -9M t"..,...llMllll • • • • • • • • i'OO . i'99 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ""°"""· . , , ...... S2S ·S49 PttJ ond Supci• . • • ' • . l50 • 199 bol b tol• c;.wol. • • . • lSO • 199 ~ ... ~ •.• ' ••.• 300~499 .. ' Ftnandal , , • . • , • , • 200 • 299 ~for Salo,, •••• 100 ·124 Lou & Found ., •.•••• ~·S74 Med a ldl$.c. , , . • , . , , 800 • 849 You Can Sell It, Find It , Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678] One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval Schooli onc1 1t1~ttl,IC1ion • • • m · 599 S.vic.n ond tt.poin • • •• bOO • 699 Tmn'PQl'trotioo. • • • • • . , 915 • 9411 ERRORS. Advortistrs •hould chock their ads dilly & report errors lmmedl1tely. The DAILY PILOl o"umo1 llobillty for tho flrot Incorrect 1nMrtlon only. General G•n•r•• General 1~_,._,._,._,.~_,._,._,._,.~J~~~~~~~~~~- General Genera a General General ****** * TAYLOR CO. * SPYGLASS HILL -$125,000 Brand NEW 2 story beauty! Large rooms. 4 Bdrms, famJJy rm, formal dining rm & huge finished bonus rm for family fun . Beautiful corner location. Includes the land. Will be cptd & landscaped. Ready for occupancy. ''Our 28th Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road ''Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club'' NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 · General General OCEAN VIEW CONDOMINIUMS BY THE SEA NEWPORT CREST RESALES 2, 3 & 4 Bedrooms -2 or 21» Baths. Formal Dining Rooms. Pool, Sauna & Tennis Courts. OUTSTANDING VALUES NOW BROKER PARTICIPATION Real Estate Consultants 1 1525 Superior -Suite 3 Newport Beach (7141 645-3230 General MESA VERDE -$35,500 Beautifully landscaped fami- ly home with colorful planter areas and fru it trees. Close to schools. Library and shopping. Big bedrooms , 2 baths, garage door opener and large covered patio. 111•1. 11r•r• General ROOM FOR CAMPER (j)UIET CORNER LOT Lovely spacious 4 bedroom on quiet col'ner lot inside the tract. Perfect for boat and can1pcr, Swimming pool and privacy. Delightful land- scaping front and t'\'flr wtlh spdnklers. House is in1mac- ulate. Upgraded shag car· peting throughout. Priced at only $37,500. Bett!tihurry on this one. Call 842-2535. *Huge Rumpus OPENnL11 •fT'S FUNTOBENICEf Room* ! ... \villl frplc. & BBQ. 4 [ BR., 1 ~ ha. $27 ,500. Fortin Co .. Ritts. 642-5000 . Sell idle item!> , . . 042-5678 General General A LITTLE CHARMER Baycrest. $72,000 . Light & airy 3 bdrm., at- tractively decorated home. Excellent Joca~ t ion. 2¥.. Bath. Room for pool & boat. Mary Lou Marion PRICE REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE Can you believe ? Two pretty 3 BR . Lusk homes w/large fam. rm. Proximity to schools, shoppin g & beach. On ly $77,500. Call Ha rriett Davies HIGH ON A HILLTOP P anoran1ic vie\v -Turtle Rock Hills ••Presid ent" home. 4 BR., family room, swim/tennis, too'. $94 ,500. P aul Quick BAYFRONT INCOME Irreplaceabl e tripl ex: spec, view, pier & flo at -beach. Two 3 BR .. 2 ba., one 2-B R., 2 ba. units. First O\vner · deprec. $270,000. Bents HORSE PROPERTY-LAGUNA BEACH 3.3 Acres'. Canyon vie,,·, Charn1ing 2 bed· room 2 bath home \v /beautiful stone fire-- pl ace & enclosed \V /stone \Vall. $79,500 MOVE BEFORE SCHOOL Pa lermo Model. Harbor Vie'v J-Iomes. 4 Bd- rms., Ige. family roon1 : 2lfi baths, 2 fire- places. bar, plus 111any extras. $79,900. Howard Wells THE BLUF FS BEST BUY! "X" is this super floor plan . One yr. old cond o is being offered for $69.500 INCL. LAND' 3 BR's .. 2'r' ba .. ram. rm. 1800 Sq. Ft. Call Toni Escobar EASTBLUF F H~~a ~~~ Half gone in half a year and the rest will not last long. Hurry to see this distinctive Newport Beach development of condomtnium homes, built-in clusters a round handsome courtyards. Eight superb models, each a masterpiece of luxur~ comfort, convenience and quality construction. Sundecks, firepl ace, wet·bar, elegant Master Suite, Sun·Liteci kit chen, private enclosed double garage. Recreational facilities include heated swimming pool, lighted tennis courts, sauna, therapy pool. All exterior building and grounds maintenance provided. Satisfy your curiosity-see Newport Crest today! From Paciftc Coast Highway l!nd Superior Avenue (Balboa Blvd.). drive up Superior to Tte0nderoga, and directly tq Newport Crest Information c.eNer. Telephone: 1714) 64&6141 Sales Office open dally 10 a.m. to sunset CSLI No. 1666:J9 * BAYCREST * On a Budget Large 4 BR., 3 ba. family home on a Ige ., well located lot. Owner is leaving town & bas priced the home for quick sale. $69,750. CORBIN -MARTIN REALTORS Call Anytime 644-7662 Walker &Lee ll l AL l llATl Lovely & sharp 3 fldrm. Lu sk home neur the park. Only $69,000 & you can /Jave immedi· ate occupancy. Call no,v ! Jim l\Iuller 2043 \Vt'slcliff Drive 646-ml Open cve!l. CAPISTRANO COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE One Acre sites; 3 & 5 bd rms. -pools - family living. Horses O.K. Near ma rina. 1-Yr. old. 3 BR.. pool, air-cond. Best value $67,500. Call George Grupe _._ Coldwell, Banker ......... UJ.0700 644-2430 550 Newport Ctnltr Dr .. N.B. YOU SHOULD SEE THIS ONE QUICK A !J11(1ki• roof lx:nury, 3 Jx.-d. room 2 bath, blfins, fire· placr, nt>\\' carpcts k. palnl. Room for bo$1 L, <'ampcr or n1aytic n ship. Xtrn large lot, All f()r $32,600. CALL 540-1151 0=.= EASTSIDE • CUTIE • BtG, BIG lot, mom to _!),uild, cu\e!ll home we've hud In agrs. Full pric.e ju$( SZS,950. ' CORONA DEL MAR .'ll.'fl f-A~ T CUA ST HIG HWAY 644·7270 ROOM TO ROAM Exclusive location in a QUIET AREA. Lo1s of T\VO--STORY. 4 B<.>droon1, 2¥,, baths, !irc p lacC'. SU NDECK off large rnas tc-r parents hide·a\vay suite. Large brick pa1jo. Sho'v to- day and bring offr.r. S52,500. 644-7270 . When you list with us, YOUR HOME is advertised in Home for Living maga· :r.ine in more than 900 areas -and cus· tamers are sent to you as referrals from our over 500 affiliates of NMLS. 2828 E. Coast Hiway Corona dtl Mar WHERE CAN YOU BUY A THREE BEDROOM HOME FOR $25,900?? General OUR 24TH YEAR Offering Service Only Experience Can Provide SIMPLIFY YOUR PROBLEMS General General ~nJa Jafe PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES Linda i:tsle Waterfront 31) Linda Isle Dr.-Opon Sunday Lovely 4 bdrm., 4¥.i ba. home with swim· ming pool, pier & slip, pa noramic view or main channel. Lge. family rm. w/sfa<:e for billiards & family din ing. Waterfron formal dining & living rm. $275,000. For Complete lnform1tton On All Homos & Lots, Plooso Coll: Housin g accommodations can be painful to the busy family ... a lovely 3 bdrm. & den condominiwn may be the answer. This, cheerful uni t ha s been adult occupied & is in "move-in" condition. Owner has bought smaller home-hence reduced price of $57 ,· 900 . This home, at 2()10 Baja, "The Bluffs", will be open daily 1-5. cau our office for di· BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR rections. 341 Bayside Dr.., Suite 1, N.8 . •75-6161 HARBOR VIEW ••• BROADMOOR General General Exciting 4 bdrm. home wilh for mal dining VERMONT ...;;;..;.;..;;;..B_A_R_& ___ I rm. & family rm. with frplc. Plush carpets. Nice patio & profess. landscaping, wi th RESTAURANT auto. sprinklers. Handy to shopping, school s FARM HOUSE & community pool. Realistically priced at $94,500. Sellers have a logical motivation to sell . UNlfJUI' MESA VERDE Set on the golf cow·S(>, 5 bed· roon1s, including maid's quar1 ers. Classic architec- ture, Sycan\ore trees, 3-i:ar garage and exciting decor '''i\11 practical design. Ex· elusive at $125,000. UNIQUE HOMES -REALTORS- 546-5990 FOREVER OCEAN VIEW in U1is rnllSt unusual family hon1e. 4 bedrooms, den, family ro om . J\1 ost thoughUul ly planned with a dream kitchen for Mother, plus workshop, dark room, boat or trailer storage, play yard and access to Corona <lei Mar's fi nest beaches. $98,500 -fee. 673-8550. OP£.N TIL 9 • ff'S FUN TO BE. NICE.I NEWPORT BEACH BEST BUY ~,_~,.. HERITAGE REALTORS Walker&Lee lllAL llfAfl ---~ [Irvine 1-b·--•treom, • ., - IOI Dowo<Dmo 142•1211 1144-144•1200 N1"'10'1 leactt,c:e11tomte ma % ACRE • REDUCED 11)1{1.\ I [ 01.\0\ lo.'f:'<t.T O R !; "WANTED" SIX CHILDREN lfll SOUTH COAST PLAZA Walker6lee lllAL l l f Afl NEW TRIPLEXES and DUPLEXES In COSTA MESA OPEN DAILY Plac•nti• at Wilson OranKC County A~artmflnt Excfu•lve A(tnt !>47-6791 2·2 BR houses, nu carpets. dtt\pell, plumblnlf, paint & gall appll, $85.500. ~ ' NPwpo11 Beach re~taurant. Approx. ~I m illion dollar yr- ly. gross. Asking $279.500. MOTIVATION PWS New Duplex reduced to $100,950. Rapid depreciation schedule available. SPECIAL BUY Jlarbor VieY:, 4 bedroom, fee land. O\vlK'r h I a; h l y motivated. $77.500. SPYGLASS Luxurious 6 bedroom overloo king Harbor. Ju.st listed. $1.34,995 Call 6?;-7225 STEAL...IHIS ONE DECORATOR'S DELIGHT Cozy 3 BR & dr.n home, round brick Swedish fireplace. nice carpeting, septl'ate work shop &: washroon1. 2 patios, double garage. All this for only $~.500. Try l 0'7n <ki\\'TI, CALL 642-lm ~21 OWNERS MOVING Sharp Mesa Verde horn('. 3 l...aq,'t' bednns, 2 baths, mod· ern bltin kitchen, family rm with huge use-d brick fireplace and SCPfll'8.le din- ing rm. Former modi'! home on large <.'\II-de-Sile lot "'Ith room for boat or trailer. Priced only $41 ,500. 546-5880 Open Evo. , • .. HERITAGE . . HEAL TORS THE REAL ESTATERS associated BPOl<ERS -AEAlTOll:S 10 1 ~ W fln lh11r-6 7l J ~l l * 4-PLEX * -3 BR. 2~i ba. O\\'llt!r'1 A1t. ! wJrpl, 1650 "'· ft., blr yd. A pnfTo + th ree 2-bdnn unill . $85,000. ' --GEMM1-- 1»F Tuatin Ave.fo N.B. I REALTORs 64NJ23 Sell Jdle ilt'!ma •••••• 64H67S ~ ' -· BIG DADDY 4 Bit + den + ra.mlly roon1 With nearly 2!XX> 8q. ft. of 1»JnUy living. N~ly deco. lated tnsldc. Vacant A: ready for oct .. pancy. Adjacent to acho:li. & park, $38,950 Newport at F1lrview 646-8811 (anytime) VIEW· $79,5110 Cuatom built 2 1>tory family honle in excellent Ne"'port Beach location. Quiet ,area \\'Ith ·country ntnwsphere. Less than a mile f1-on1 the beach. Walker &Lee AIAl lltAtl ReaJtors »13 Westc!Uf Drlve &46-7711 Open eves STARTER Bright coey, thrt:oe bcclroon1, one bath hon1e in a well kept neighborhood. Adjacent to 400 acre park and proposed marina. Formal di 11 in g area, fireplace, tan1\ly room and much, n1uch mo1-e. Ex· cellent invcstn1cnt potential, and just $31,500. Call Soon· -1. OPEN"' 0 • "' FVN TO BE N>CEI ~ OLDIE BUT A GOODIEi Cute 2 bdr, 1 ba lrame with loads of paneling and red brick fireplace. Large R-2 lot in choice East Costa Mesa plus alley access. Close to ail shopping you \\'On't net'(\ 11 Ctu' here. Perfectly pri1.'t'd at $30,CKXI. this one will Jl:O fast. Call Red Carpet, Realtors -no down terms Close to schools Huge famlly nn, fireplace. Dr ea n1 kitchen with built ins. 3 bdrms,. 2 baths Dining rm. $28,500. brk ~1720 TARBELL TIME FOR Cj)UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 Gener e l INVESTORS! Orange C.ounly Alrpm1 &1'<'8 . Hl,300 aq, rt. of land with $250 a 1nonth looome. Po- tential Golf Courte. Ca 11 64&-0566. INVESTORS! Orange County Airport Ill-ea, 18,300 .i,;q, Ct. of lund w\tb $250 a tnonth income. Po· lential Golf Cour~. Ca I J 6-10·W"J55. ASSUME FHA LOAN Almost new p1"Qfesslonnlly landscaped 3 b e d r o o m l)ome. All electric built-in kitchen family room and co mplet e l y enclosed backyard. Shows lots of ·r.L.C. If you're looking for i;on1e1hi11g real special in a high demand area of Hun- tington Beach, you've round it in thitt beauty. $46,500. Call 646--0555. • General VIEW-CORONA DEL MAR- FEE LAND Lovely four bedroom home on pool aized }Ol with f.amtl.y room, breakfa1t nook, laun- dry room, lafit! sunny patio with Iota of m:ivacy ~ 180 de1r1-ee panoramic view. And fee land truly priced THE REllL ESTllTERS -Beautiful Back Bay 2 Story 5 Btdrm/3 BA Prlced for QUICK sale a1 $44.500 By Ch\•ner! Big Family Rooni Fo.-n1al Dining Roon1 Buillln Appliances Drapes, Neo.vly Carp1rl l'ireplat'e, Bricked Yd Full J,.andscape '\lith Screened Patio 9 Iron to Golf Course 20142 Kline Dr. Call 557-Z767 TODAY? MESA VERDE $32,500 One of those nice homes on a -~L"l""V=E~l~N7"CTH=~E~-1 qW.t Me"' Verde cul·de-sac. Just a ~011 ~·alk to t.he GRAND MANNER golf c~urse. 3 large bed· ' Corona del Mtr We'd Uke To Buy A Duplex- ••• But SUMMER FUN CAN BE YOURS 1oduy in this tantwi:rlc \'acant pool honle. 3 Bdrnis, 2 baths, room for a boa1 and n1ueh more, a.nd would yuu believe only $29.900. Call qu ick! Owner anxious. C .A L L 842-9371 . TRADE YOUR EQUITY FOR Tl-IIS gorgt'Ous !ipirfll Beach duplex! Best area -staircase Franciscan r·oun- walk to shops and surf~ lain Honie. Loads or up. Fabulous 3 BR owners unit! grodlng. CALL 842-93TI. Appraised at $82,95G-submit 3 BEDROOM I BATH your terms! We can take a HUGE LOT. USt' your GI, T':.IRAl!.E/lD;j;E/i.!ll! iBC!lla>!:llll64!!5-llLQ8400!!!1~~ I sellers will help finance. ,1 I Tit 9 CALL 842-93TI. v. E. &.vd & Co. ... .._ ......... Co1ta Mesa LOOKING FOR A HOME? LOOKING for room, room, room? tlow's about 5 bedrooms 1% +% bulhl:, for1nal dl'nlna. huge tamUy room, built on three levels. Large cu.J.-de-sac lot, pnr fessionally 1n a n i c u r e d lawns. Thi$ home is realJy rtice at $42,700. To ¥ee CALL OOJ..5621. PRESTIGE AREA Fantastic Spanish beauty· I T"·o story, hltie family room with wet bar, 3 large bedrooms. 2 baths, formal dlnlw:-, with Jots of paper and upgraded carpels. This home I s professionally landscaped for the executive and is in the prestige area of Hw1tington Beach. CALL 847·3584. FOUR+APOOL Owner anxious • This is a fabulous 4 bedroom, 1 ~I bath pool home ~·ith low maintenance lawns, on beauliful cul-de·sac st~! close to Golclenwesl College, H:untington Center and a.II major fJ"W)'s. $34,900. CALL 846-33'17. TUffdlJ', August 1<1, 1973 OAILV PILOT 23 L~•:;:9<.:""="-Be""'f'!'=----!N•wPorl BH<h Commercial BA y BEAUTY Property 151 Private community w 11 h NO BODY ---·~---------- ""'"""' palrOI, 1><11d1 ctub ELSE KNOWS! NEWPORT &. prestige atm(>gl?flere. This Just liste.'<i. Bnt•k buy arc11, BEACH AREA iriaant>r."~ ~·modern Newport Beach c ustom !'8nch home !8. the ut,limnle home 3100 isq, ft .. l~'O sloiu• f'"rec-standing hu1ldlrJK, pres- tn luxury hvina:. f r~'Shly tirepla~s and bu-ge pool l'll!ly tK·cupicd by O\\'ner/ decorated, wttti very pnvate roont. $72,500. Hurry , Doc:tor. N••ar main busule.'$."! swimming pool & 4 separate 646-7171 d1.Stnc1 n1'X1 ro r('N1den11a1 bdrm. suites, mQk~s lhis a OPENTIL 9 • fT'S FUN 10 ee NICE! nl.:'ighbOrhovd ·~ ,\1nple oft. bonl(' for l.b.e dhcrlllllnar!ng S!l'f>PI !klrk int.::. 2100 :;(J Jt SW7,000. ~®~ "'ith S e.\f1111 r1n~. 2 pl'lvate '4 I , ','. ofcs anrl olht·r Qll"ll. 0111kf'll "Jl"I ~ It l(leul for nu111Y use:.. REAL ESTATE l~~~~~~~I SIPET E"BA1RRETI W10 G!enneyre st. TH E BLUFFS -REAL TOR-494-9'173 549+0.116 4 Bdrrns, 3 Ba1h Condo. Gor· T p f th W Id geous grcenhclt. 0 pen O O e or btan1s in every roon1 Lo\V """""" ---..-. ...--...... I~:~c~~~~~~er,~~fu~~~: leGasehoR.U1dB. BS61.&500. EL.LIS --oFRCE gourmet kitchen. Parque! UI floors In family rn1. r~irC'-Realtors B LDJNG place. Lots or privar·y. 2863 E. Csl. Hivy .. Cdi\I Costa ~1esa excC'llcnt op- Move-in condition. $5:1,950. 675•7 080 portunity for u!>f'r or in- b1·k. 4948003. \'P~tor. Attrac!ivc 7200 sq ft TARBELL bldg. Good condltion. Ample DOVER SHORES p"'·king. Ne>u-llm-001· & Laguna Hills Ne11·port B!vds. $ 2 5 , o o o 4 BR fa 1 5 Bedrocnn, ·I Bath, Jivin~ do"•n, ~1r, Dt>11vt•r: No. 293 • m nn, ease/opuon roon1 dining roont & drn. phone 639-1501 $3001,m<>. $36.~. Avail for Supc1'. pool Autonla1h: .,.ar. operung of school year. 2 yrs · kl & 1. ' old, fenced yard. 673-0216. age, spr1n ~r~ 1g_h11ng.1.--::::0o1 Owner/Agent 5139,000. 13Ja ~nt la~o Dr., • N.B. By Owner, 645-8273. 642-5200 Lido isle Prineipals only. $25,750. MONTICELLO CON· DO -3 Bedroom, 1* bath, best shag. $192 per mo. pays all. 159 Yorktown, right on the square. $38,950. MESA DEL MAR -3 Bedroom, 2 bath, comp refurbished in & o u t . Assumable FHA loan. $262 per mo. 2878 Monterey. You can't lose on lloi• super-* $79,500 * * UNITS * sharp VACANT 3 bdrm Spanish style home on large Ne-.v & old. A'll siz"-> end home. Large formal mlr-I lot. 3 BR. & den, open shafl{'"s. \Vaterli'Onl or no1.1 -~=====:::::::~-! rored & wood paneled living beams, interesting fpl. Near F'ron1 $52.500 10 $1.!:'i.IJQ<l 1- rm w/new crptg & drps, "'l::=:i:=::!: Udo tennis ct. BALBOA BAY PROP. Duplexes/Units formal dining has mim>red ii LIDO REALTY * 673-7420 * sale 162 iooms, 2 baths, large fam-Where tJ1e lipectacular vit'\v lly room, covered pal.lo. Call 11resents itself at evC'ry 1110--546-2313 for an aprx:i1ntment. $49,250. MESA VERDE -3 ntent. This 5 bedroozn, 3 OPENnL O • Jt'S FUN JO BE NfCEI Yr old 2-story. 2260 sq. ft., 4 mural. The picture-pretty GI NO DOWN 3377 Via Lido N"pt Beach --· --$4 1-------- kitchen has natural wood * 673-7300 * REDUCED 500 DUPLEX -Horse Counlry! bath hon1e is an outs1anding bedroom, 3 bath. Family Ivan Wells ck>sign. R.ichly ~· l ~ rm., fabulous e x e c u t i v e cabinets plus PARQUE1' ·$24 SQQ \\'cstclirf -Q,vner. 3 BR, 2 Sa.nta Ana Heights S.17,:JCY.l. floor. 1-lugc family rn1 has 1 • * BAYFRONT * Ba. Din RnL Fi-ont patio Principals only. App t . detailed, "''Ith an elegant showplace. Every rxissible massive floor·to-ceiling brick 4 BR, 2 BA, 2 car art gar. Big 21,li years old. Beautiful 5 "' iron gates. Xln1 cond. 540-2971 or 64:1-1280 fireplace w/10' long raised ~~ie,.:~~~~~:~~df~~s! BR, 5 BA, U·shapect dock. Beaut. lndscpcl. S61.50CL 'l BR house + duplex, by rormal dining room & invit-buillin co n v en I enc e. hearU1 + hand carved ..... .,,.hools & ,hopping. NO By owner, 675·4242. ~.1~~2.19.only. Aft 6 pn1. oivnrr. xlnt area in Costa ing family room with w('t Assumable VA loan. $357 beamed ceillng. \\laJls of "' ""' '1"tO-t ~"" bar. Fronl cou11yarrl patio per mo. By appt or open "'ith heated pool. Priced at house Sun. 1-5. 3 3 4 4 closets in bch'm. Large Jow money 00\vn, only $750 clos· Mesa Verde PE"N"°'IN"'S°'U"L'A'--1--''"'"'°"''°"-· -'""'"''OOOOO'.!·_:':'.O"'.'.C1-:c7:o.~"'---I $137.500. JUST LISTED California SI. c. F. Colesworthy OPEN HOUSE WED. n1ainlenance ·yard w/big Ing costs and paymts of Income Property 166 gas brick B·B-Q. Pres-$225/mo. Why rent? Call us 4 BR, 2 BA. custom kitchen, TRIPLEX Realtors 64()..0020 12 to 4 p.m. SEE THIS 4 bedroom home ROOM TO RAMBLE Over 1800 sq ft in Mesa \.·erde for only $.'l6,:JOO. 3 - Big l)edroon1s, 2 hti!hs. hul(e bonus room \vith room rOr pooltable. Lots of p1·ivncy 1\·lth !011· maintenance. at 10.191 Monitor, Huntington Beach, priced at $34,000, ~W::~::E ~REALTORS --.i141- (0pen Evenings) 546-5880 Open Eve. """"""""""""'"""'""""'""" ~-~HERITAGE ' • REALTORS SHARP GI 4 BR & Family roont with large yard. (l<"itirview & Warner) -newly painted & carpets -15 ntinutes to Newport &ach. 0 n I y $26,500 -early occupttncyl Walker, & Lee ltllA~ llTllll LIVE IN IRVINE On Irvine'5 Ranch, 4 hr. l year old. An ottering no one c<1n RD'USE! $39JO do"·n. call 00\1'. Walker &Lee ll lAl l lfAfl 714 : 54&-0J:tl -*-CORN-ER LOTT Busy i11terscc1ion, 19lh & FUiierton. downtov.·n Costa !\1esa. Ownt'r v.1ill finance RIVIERA REALTY 149 81-oarlway, C.M. 642·7007 645-5609 Eves ON ALL ABOVE ADS, tige nbrhood. Absentee own-today! \\''e also have houses Spanish tile & wrought iron. 1, 2 & 3 B: Xlnt cond. Covington Built AFTER 6 PM, CALL 557--4617 er says it must be sold th i.s at $27.500 & $29,500. that Assumable 6% loan. Very Owner· will f lnan c e, 4-PLEX M R (ty week. Full price $36,900. are exceptional buys! clean. Many featur es, w/$30,000 down. Prin. only. . Costa esa ea Will take your hoine in .If 549-0076, 646-4242. 675-8321. Xl~t Joc',lllon. Deluxe Own· * SO.nll * trade. MESA Verde pool home, 3 WALK TO BEACH er s Unit. Only 5 yrs old. SE&YMINVOURESTRMEEANTLTY 53)·5800 ( w,,',,'.) 53)· 5800 BR, 2 BA, !am rm & Of!iC<'. Larg 2 so 2'' B th F I. A,kJng $66.000. Tw.o CUTIES ON A LOT. Encld atriun1 plus, $49 950 .e · y. '~. a s. rp c .. Roaring firepiacc, country * 847-1221 * By Owner, Mr .. Ke 'n t : atrium off hv .. nn. Pool, kitchen, 2 big bednns each, j ,iiiiiiiiiiii.O.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I ~ 556-84.ll c!ub & tennis nearby. big garage. No qualifying. ADULTS * POOL TIME * $48,950. A'5ume 7'/, VA loan 1Misslon V itio · CAYWOOO REALTY balance with a small do1vn. WANTED 4 BR, 1% BA, [rplc, 15' x 33' * 548-1290 * Only $290. pt>r mo. pays pool, with loadS of decking. NEW J\.fadrid Plan 640, pool -- e\'erythlng. Rents $160. & Just what you have been $40,000. & vu lot, 4 BR, frplc's in Harbor View Palermo $175. per. mo. Live in one, looking for! Lovely 3 Call 842-9321 Fam Rnt 0 & !\1aster BR, $77,500 rent th<-other. Only $40,900. bedroom condo in adult Ontu parquet oor en t ire 2 Sty 4 BR 212 BA ,\·et bar Bkr. 962-5;,Jl community. Ide a I Hull-Ill down stairs. compl lndscpd, coUJ~lyard,' 1718 Pol:t Abbey'. Spar ling Investment Corp. 933.3544 ---- NEW 4-PLEX 523,250 $~~o00. Beach Io cation. ~.,,21 Sn,500, 831-0324 By appt; 64+5.569. e 962 2456 • Newport &ech Duplexes near the ocean Cozy hon1e on R·2 corner lot. • Miles Larson, Realtor Brand ne,\". Spanish motif, j Nice trees & large, clear GRAND OPENING •673-8563• BR, 2 ba. deluxe uni bide;. site for another unit. I' 17301 Beach Blvd., HB. N 1 B T ,v/frplc., & 3 2-BR units eal CALL '=" '"' • 1414 ewpor ay owers Newport Heights wt patio or su n deck . 9 '1;;,I ~ 8843 Adams, HB Irvine l & 2 BEDROOM Eastsiclc Costa Mesa nr .. ,,... fa t Magnolia) CONOOMJNIUM H0l\1ES_.,, ASSUME 7 'J~ VA 3 BR, 2 Ne\vport Hts. Buy('r gets lsl REALTY Bay!ront 1-lomes BA, Fam Rn1, fp, on cul-de-user tax depreciation. Ask Nr•r J'(e•porl Pott Office PEOPLE • • • Boat Slips sac, $45,000 646-1514 or ing SU0,000 4 BIG IN GLASS HOUSES Full Security H1ghrise . 521-7560, no agts. CALL '-". 64,_J 4 l CLUTTERED .. musn't furo\\' stones. Steel & concrete construction 9;~, , BEAUTY BEDROOMS ! ! Dramatic 2-story glass walls Private Balconi('S _ 1~• I I ~· k r· I Ir highlight ttie gaUery en-2 garage spaces per unit. r I~ .... ....... 4 Bedrm, 2 Bath,~· w car-Used u11c rrepace, ex a trance of this impressive l Rooftopsundeck MobileHC>mff fi1111P REALTY j pctins; thruout, 400 sq. fam-large kitchen, 1~ Baths. Yale townhouse. Formal din· Unusual Opportunity to PlJ!· Nr•r Nrwporl Pott Offlt•1 ily rn1, dsh\,'Sill", sprinklers $31,500CALL 842_9321 ing room, 2 firepla1..-es, giant chase Ba)•front Property 1n 1 O UNITS front & rear. Asking price master suite family room Newport Beach. Mob'I H j 7:% ASSUME-NO FE ES I,..=========, I Besl buy in the beach-Ultra dclUXl' 3 BR + 2BR. steps Cj)UICK SALE! O"'l\er's requ~I • Bring offers! Beautifully kept 3 bedroom 2 bath home with all the modern conveniences. Covered patio and mani- CUl'('d 'yard. 01v11<'r ~·ill help finance. $36.950. CALL ~842.ol SoutJ1Co Reallors. $36,500. 01>.·ners anxious! a L.argest house in the Village: 310 Fernando Rd., N.B. F o tS ol mes 125 $130,000 larwin r .. lty in<. ,.--1.U"' $67.500. 675-8551 or 8 e NICE COSTA MESA • 968-4405 124 hrs) ~&1111 '''21 V1's1'on-DUPLEX sx:i.i· Bll.TMORE. Air rond. AREA ' -GET A 'CHARGE' out of your DAILY PILOT WANT AD NOW HONORING Master Charge and BankAmerica rd • ,,, . ., .... ,.:.~(11~ •. i DIAL 642-5678 lb ocean anrl shopping. CAU.. 645-7221 ~21 Baycrest 1733 \\lestcliff Dr., N.B. 4 BDR..'l. 2~ Ba. 5t.l 7< loan. Boat yu1'd $75,000. \\'rite S. * $285,000 * 1 Lonpre. Gen. Del. CM Pn-stigious Via Lido Norc'I Balboa Island \VatC'r front home. 5 br. 5 1 ~---------­ ba, custoni. unique fea tu res SALE or lease o p t I o n : thn1-out, Jg. U-shp 1v/land-Charming 4BR 2BA older ing. Principals only. hon1e -Beaut brick patio, EXECUTIVE I builtins. $TI,500. 6T:>-z.ltl Real Estate Jnvestn1ents 0c0'-'wc;n:o•oc'·~-~~---832~7353 . Balboa Pon1na.ul1 * • BEDROOM. ' balh•, I ISLAND CHARM double garage. $3Q rn1. Besl 5 Br. 2 BA, sm. play roo1n + of l('rms. renhll unit. Li;:. suudeck, too! * COMMERCIAL ZONE • 2 Old \Vorld chann. Lots of BR two story older home, \\'OOd, vaulted open beam corner lot. $24,500. Jiv. rm. \\'/baJcony. XJnt Roy Mccardle R~altor 1..'0nd. · 213 Topaz. Sll6,000. lSIO Newport Blvd ., C.1\t (h\1ner. 675-7004. 548-7729 BY Owner, Ocean front, :i For the right home for f(lu. Complete selection of homes in th@ beach area. HARBOR VIEW HOMES REA LTV ·~780 e e ONE CALL e e CAN DO IT ALL Br house, ideal location, ca1l (213) 698-3627 or 1213) m-ru4. COLLEGE Park home by 01vnl'r, 3 Br. din rnt & fam rm co1nbo lrg living rm, w/rplc, 1'4 ba. nu dlsh,vasher, lrg pat Io w/BBQ, finished gar. \\'/bar. 1'"n!Ml paint in & out, fen cert yar.d w Is prink1cr front/roar, xlnt move--lu COn(I, $37.900 I $llo\vn by appl o n I y . --[>40-<857 II ·~~'!"!'~~'!!'!~:'!"' ~c~.,-..,"'"'.-d~.~1 ~M~.-.~~- 61/20/o LOAN!!( Like new 3 BR. 2 BA, on manltwed tree chtttled lot! trptg, drps, patJ6, 2 car garage, 11polle!ltl! $29.!'iOO. Low down and take <WCr government loan!! Broker 645-213.1 *-TR"'E"°'E=-s-cHC.-A""D"'E'"D,....*-.- 1.ovcly 3 bd1·n1. Good Ea11t· l'lldc 10<'. El"tra large lot. Spnc. llvlnJl r1n. w1rrp1. All fQr $.12.!i()O BALBOA BAY PROP. * 642·7491 * PACIFIC PROPERTIES • Otean·vl<lW dctplcl<s & un1'1 • VleW lots & cond03 • Barylront homes 105 Main St. No. 4, Balboa Pt'nin 6T>-6TI2 or S48·1rn16 BHullful 4 Bdrm. $31,950, LtitJ or !!hade trf:('s, Brick fb-cplaee. Dlntna rm, gns built ins. Re1tr living nn. Nea_r achools. brk. 54().tm. TARBELL Fa' Pront I.ii attai~ when you sell 11-.a~ re1ull-1'll- Un1 Dally Pilot Clusltied Ads. 64H678 WHITE SAILS beRutltul 3 BR. & family rm. Terrill<: vtcw or ~ant Poolslze lot; p r o I e s s . decorated. Newly painted. Elec. blt~ins, formal din . rm,: 2 trplcs. One of the "'st loc-alions in to\vn, Move in b~ school time. MORGAN REAL TY 673-6642 675-6459 SPYGLASS !·Jiil's Bcs1 Vu. New 4BR, 21.;ba, Sep. dlnliiS Rnt. 25 C11rmel &y Or. By owner. DUPLEX~rner Lot Xlnt cond. 3Bn, 2BA, + 1lt1.w 2BR, !BA. !'lOO Poinsettia, open 1..a. LRG. 2 SlOry, 3' Br. home, sundeck, p11tlo, butlt·lns, nt shop, ach & bch. By owner, $72,500. Prl. only 6464319. 2~2 BR ho1111e11, nu crpt11, drps, ph.1mbi~ paint & gn11 appll. $85.!ltN. 64~. TIME FOR CLASSIFIED ADS 642-5678 \ clean. In Npt. Beach park. Income $16,056. CUSTOM BUILT HOME 6 DOORS TO 1560 Placentia Ave. Sp F5. Bkr. 1:)75-5800 or On corner lol , CM Back Bay 17301 Beach Blvd .. lf.B. red h·111 BEACH ~~~~· 213: 439--0281 eves 646-2554 area, 4 Br. & 2 ea upstairs, I :::::::::z=:::::::::!::::==:C: Do 't h. h _____ * B 2-BR HOUSES * , llv. 1,n, din. rm., kitchen, I 1 n pay 1g sumn1er rent NEWPORT BAY On 105. "300. M-l l.Dt. Fam .. den & Ba rlo\vnslairs. SURROUNDED BY "'·~1~n you can collect it, 8;'1d New 2 BR, 1 BA Jiving rm. Rear 00. vacant l.Dts of closet space. Lrg WHITE .PICKET REALTY still r~serve the best penOdl Adult park w/private beach dbl,e car gar., 2 patio Univ. Park Center, Irvine for you and yours. 3 Bed-$16.500 540-3672 Yearly income $14,136 ooVt>rs. Citrus trees . FENCE roon1s cknvn 2 Bedrooms up. Askin.e Sll0.000 '"'....:."land o-hl di 8 t r ;" l . Beautiful home in exee nbr-Call Anytime, 552·7500 $84,SIX.I ree. ioc,, down. 2 BR, 2 BA. By Owner. 20x50 RIVI ERA REAL TY "uvu """ " _., bl · h' b" Offtce hours 8 Al\1 to 8 PM $87,500 Owner 548-4732 or hvuu, t1n c 1na ca 1net:s, 'CALL 644-7211 \\'/pot.'Ch, pat:io & sheds. In 149 llroarlway, C.l\·J. 53l-0060 b,"()0(1 crpts, drps & ldscpg. Bayside Village, N. B . 642·7007 645-5609 Eves .. -* ME~S~A~V~E~R~D~E~*-Owncc "·pay point•. Only L B " fJ :1!~11~•-113,SOO. Ph' 6l'J.2126. ----·--$22,000. aguna e1cn S -~ 'TI BROADMOOR 12X64, 2 * 38 UNITS * 3 BR. Family nn. 2 Ba1hs I · I $395 000 $35,500 · 107(, dov.11 I' 1.<10NARCH BAY. walk to A ~~~.8"~'. s~1s. t°0~.!; \\'ell localed i~ Costa l\fesa 1 E 11 t . f private beach & tennis court 586-2143 6~~ X Gross 1 x~~n~=~~ or 962°4471 ( ::::.) 546-8103 from this 3 BR, 2 bath fami· BEACH DUPLEX SACRIFI~E 2 Br Expando Ll_DO_ REA. LTV ' ly rm home. Split level, 2 3 Bdrm 33n v L do N t Be h ~ BALBOA BAY PROP. -~ comfortable & convenient & units, one block Bay l'iew, beach, pool, new 1a , . P · ac * 556-8800 * STORYBOOK for entertaining indoors & from beach. Needs paint & shag. Only $4500. 67:>-8220. * 673-.7300 * e CHARM e 1 M h . SS• 000 fix up., Best buy on the ,. * * DUPLEX * * -r •~SIDE bl 6c' OU • UC privacy, , be h •= " " ~· Rs.sunia e itJ. Large Jiving rn1 w/rustic ac · -N .. ,500. ~ °'S6"'oooer v.·ill caITy 2nd T.D. fireplace, shag carpets, y.:ooos COVE, 3 BR + Oen · 1797 Orange, C.M. 642.tm Real Ettata, 2 BR & 1 BR, income ~ fam .. frp\c, h~oe yd. on cul-,,.~. home, """" pane e 1v1ng m . t> o , 111C'C pa 1os1 • down. 3 .Br., 2 Ba.. \vood n<>neled entertainment ~-' I d 1· · Omtu G.n.al o Lg I t · 1· de-sat' / $35.950. 646-1514; or center w/wet bat.', natural rm w-frplc, ~uded brick ~ beam ceiling & fpl<' in eac~ 645-6646, agent. wood cabinets in gourmet patio, 1>.urkshop & dble gar. ~21 Acreage for sale lSO $37,600. by owner 64&-9011 kitchen, 3 large bdrms, park-only $79,500. I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,jl2·2 BR. r~uRN. UNITSt CUSTOM 5 BDRMS like grounds w1tropical fruit !• w/pool $190,fXXJ. Inc. $25.~ Eastside by owner. 3 Ba, ll't!eS. Fresh-as-a·daio;y de-FAMILY HOME, 3 BR. 2 ba 100 LOTS by 01vner. Prlnc. only. lam rm. hrrlwd flrs, 2 beaut cor! Don't delay, CALL The + fam rm. in Laguna * BAYCREST * &l2-9520 af1 5 P.M. oranm> trees $59 900 """"' Real Estate Fair, 536-2551. onach. -1-., lo ·-hool· . . ..,¥ · • · """i oc .. "" "" " BY OWNER. Elegant custon1 4 Plex, Hnt. Bch. , Aliso Ave., 6~2634. HUNTINGTON l\.1ay be sold furn. One built 4 BR + lrg, Fam Rm, NEAR LAKE PERRIS (4~ 2 Br Units. Income · EA.SrSIDE: 3 Br. l~i ba, TOWNSHIP owner home, s47,9j(l 2 Master BR + 2 frplcs, $600 P<'r nio. $4X,9"J(J. fam . rm, newly pntd In & 3 BEDRM 2 stO"" lownhouse, Huge LR, Fo1mal Dr. Com. No Ecology Problems Call g39.0034 o t Cr t "'--· I . ., PRIVACY, secluded hon1e in I I u · P s, ""~· s'vun poo walk to schools. shopping \Voods cove. 1 BR borne :· Pete Y private 28. covered No Impact Reports 6 ATTRAC units on Balbo.\ $34,950. 642·181l. & City Park. Overlooks outdoor living al"('a \Vith lush p . 1 , • 1 OWNER r Cl R I $28 900 . 1 d guest apL Hrc'lwood firs, landscapi ~ ill . . . cn1nsu a. ._..,ng er m trans . ean 3 B , poo, , tnc u es SU· frplc, lge decks & niany . ng. v_,\'ner iv Subchv1dcd, ununproved. re-tenants. $lj(l,OOO, By Owner. l~~ ba. Xlnt carpet. Nice perior grade shag carpet $59 500 ~~ responsible buyer. c.'On1ed, 101s. Only $2500. 54g...969- garden. larae yard. l:hroughout, cUSlom drapes, trees, ' · Principals only 645-T:JOO each. SubordinaLlon. l n1ile ~c..c=,'·,...,--=-----000: Fortin Co. Rltn. 642-5000 many other extras. \\li!h UN 1 QUE CU ST 0 M OlITSTANDING Harb 0 r to main eni.rance road to ,ndustrial Property 168 BY Owner-$31.000. 3 hr, ~Z~ ~~cra~~~~a95'.<,1i GI DUPLEX, Ideal for owner View Monaco 2 Br. Convert lake. Realtor Ed Babson 5000 SQ ft 1 n c 1 u d i n t comp refurbished, cov patio, ~ ........................... ,! occupancy. 2 BR, 2 bas + Oen, 2 Ba. Encl~sed front (714} 645-3333 modem. deluxe office alt frnl"' "·'n '"66 or ... •227 ·'"n ea•h uno·1 w 1· th patio, Pro I es s 1 on a 11 " 1 1 ·d $6.00 .,, '" ......v-v:i. Q'f\1""\I • u ... ... landsca....A hog· hly J. cone' rg ya1 ~pact". . ~ 2 J\.fl TO BCH • 3 BR, 2 BA California Classic: panoramic ocean & coo,stal V"""• . upgra mo 2:1.02 s Su)'.an Sant• All new CMJ>f!I. Dbl gar. WOW Ste It To Believe views. Units have frplc, lge ed. Adult Occupied. Fee Commerctal An~ &16-7512 o1· 547~2·1 12 "Fruit tnios, $27,000 646-2768 p1·iv. decks, n1itred glass $67.500 1947 Port Cardiff PL Property 158 ~c-c' ~:--c-ccc--="'"'.c: ltl I ~'indows, EZ walk to beach OWNER 644-2244. i\ol-1 lot Costa Mesa. Corner.I EASTSIDE 3 Bdrm. den, l~ ON TifE MODEL srREET. & ho . $tS7 OOO H bo V H Ready to build. Ph l Ba, trlr drtve, huge yard. s pping, ' · ar r U omel LEVERAGE Sullivan, Realtor, ::ris.6761. Vacant. $32,500. 833-8690 By owner, l years old, 3 New unit . November n1ove • Br. 2 &. plus fan1ily rm. EMERALD BAY LOT, one \n. Montego, 4 br, 1 level, Lots for Sale 17~ Dina Po,nf lncludt>s an all glass kltcheit, of only a few Jots l'en1aining 1-lillslde vu lot. By owner. carpets & drapes, full)' land· in heaut. private ton1-644-4887 Fully rented comn1 center NEWPORT Beach • Custol'(l FOR Sale by O\vner. Xlnt !'1C8ped, Including b1ick niunity. Specljl.rular 11\0 -~~=~=~~--• $174,500 . onlv to•J; down. 1~1 lot. 15.1' frontage on 81.h condition 2 Bl't, 2 BA, tam patio with cover. By apt. deg. vi('w of coast. Plnns for SUPER CONDO High-potentla( Fa~t-i;:rov.'-Fairway of Big Ct111yo~ rm \V/W cpt11, drp!I, blln11. 2 only, 846+:>494 art. 6:00 pm. lal'f{e horrie inc-I. $7lOfXl. l story, 3 Br, 2 Ba. pools, ing bu!'!. area on niain road Coun1ry Club. View r.f mins from marina. $39,000, LINGO REAL ESTATE l)\Ltling greens. Exquisite 10 Lake Prrris, F"nshiOn lslnnd & Corona dql 714-49.)-5029, • PLUSH • 31706 S. Coast thvy. garden ~l"ttfr1g. $45.000. Call !\lnr. Privt1te planned Cont Fount1ln Valley 50 ~ 499 13!l" OC'nison AASOC. 673-7311. REALl'OR ED BABSON n1uni1y "'llh guard gal.<f. • , , carpeting, NO 00'\IN to · ·ir:unf!, · • · · 1 Bl ff N X Mod I !714! 645-33.13 Pri<'f;'d to sell! TcrlWI I b II 111.0 Glenncy1·e SI .. u s ew e .,., •• ,·1abl". 64•1'·''1. CONTEMPORARY ve. erllns, or S'll m your " ~ ...-""' · tenus. Xlut. 4 bedrnl, 2 bath Lagunu. Bt•urh, 494-80$11 C"arpctin,I{ rhoii:c. 3 br, din -· --' -------~~·1 • CLASSIC e fnrn rni. 2~, oo. o""'n t-5 Nine Units + Office "'HOICE lor.ntion on Balboti home In quil't lrt'c-shfld('{I ---.~ p nln z,. 1·" R t b CIMln & t..,•lsp 3'bdnn home location. Cozy flrcplare, *OCEAN VIEW* d11ily. 2749 Vista Un1brosa. $59 500 e • "'1 "" -• >' close to Mlle Square Puk, family/dlnlni;:, flnd only Hui!C, OCt'fln vft'\1• Hv. rn1 .• ~B. Phone 64!).1075. Chvner. • • ~Ol'W~ S93--509l OI' E\"85, dbl doors to tiled entry, $32.500, Best hurry! c 8 11 w/frpl; il!n o.rea. 2 Bit, dt'n BLUFFS Prel!ent IOl..'Onle $525. !\to. l-'"'--='==~=---1 m-aclous living nn. forma.I 0:..1:: o .. ., .. "'"U'c~. Rtnllocs. + gucso rm. \v/w c11.rp, Lot size 50' x 240' VrE\V LOT •· ........ _.. ..,.., ul\,U BY ov..·ner 3 Br, 2\.i Ba, over-81~ ·~ r s 1a J d dining rm, ~pace-aged kit· thniout. Central k It . 1 k. l:>a.Y SGT 500 426 ·~· ~ i;q. t. pee cu ar paooranm ay or chen w/builtint, fit't'olsce $26,950 v.·/ranw oven, dishwshr. oo 111S:: ' ~ ... , ' 80· e CAl.t. TO S£E e nlte. NB. $4 3.500. 979-Sl.94, filmlly nn o~ns to la"°e BRING Y011R POOLTABLE ....... -~h:v-, '"'SOO Vista Ptu"ada. -·11 · F.d ttlddle Realty 646-11811 Mo t • n-rt -o fo thl be"( 2 BR do ~ t 18 one. <N->o • EASTBLUFF beaot. 4 BR, 3 ~· un lln, ..,.H oovett.'d pa ' Mim:it'ed ~nu118 nn 11~~ x 20', c;nc~ Mission Realty 494·07ll BA. C-Plan, $73,500. Broker 3 UNIT co•~•ERfCIAL _Re50rt 174 \vantrobes ln masttt suit~. BEAUTIFUL location . 1 d '"'"' --------·I Don't wait, CALL The Real end. gar., bltins, xtra cal>-SOUTH LAGUNA. 1 block cooperar1on we come • BUILDING wl'll Jocatl'd w/ 2.79 AC, tncd, sm. barn 4 E81:ate F4ir, 53&-2551. lncts, shtlJI'. Cl'flts. Adlt occ. to beach. Newly remodeled 1\gt>nt 5'16-5022. ofl·SIJ'eoet parking. Owner corral. ~·otcr & e1ec. M1tey Fronts IU"CCnbeH & SICPS to 2 Bdrm, f(Uni.ly rm, large BAY vtE\V DUPLEX \\'Ill carry T.O. ~ti.000. oaks. $19,700. t\gl. 545-31t6 REPO $750 DOWN 2 or 3 BR Townholuie, hae rumpu!l: room dble gar, swim pool, few left. Hurry! 8124421 !J63. n11 Flrat P ioneer RHl!y You'll find It 111 CIAUU\ed pool. RED CARPET deck w/ocean view. Cues! 2 BH .. 2 Btt -double Rataf!"<', ~oy McCardle Rea ltor nfL 7 pm, Principals only. Realtors 536-8836. &Pt. $62.500 flnn. Ry o1\•l'l('r. ~t'AS than I year olll. 1810 Nc1\'Tl0r' Rlvd ., C.~l. 6.47 AC 11CCluded pvl. water Ri.:i>OSSESSiONS Coll 49!1-ml. Would ron-,1~121 548-7729 & clc"C. All animal• oi;. 01• lnforfn:•tl'll' and location titler 11ummcr rentt1ls nl~. RAYFRONT ~ large bea<'h, ~ Asking $32,!'iOO. Atct. ~ ni thrsc 1'1li\ & 'IA homes, BEAUTI.FUL ocean view lot $32,500. l.cl\se space $206. C-'2 LOT w /INCOME aft 7 pn1. PrinclpnlJI only. t:o: · lCt • Only $.13,000 ~ tl7S-7102. 19.81.Xl aq, ft. on Newport U~ to Trade? Our 'l'radt!.r'I KA SABIAN Occanview Rt':alty 073--.WIO BLUFF$ Condo $00,00). l Ur, Blvd,, nr FAir Or., C.M. Pam.di~ rolumn IA fM" )'OU! C" The "YellOW Pqes" of 21., Ba. Owncc. \Valk to te.n-$3.25/8Q tt. Ownt.>rJBkr. 5 ll~s. 5 d~ for p, Call 9'2"'644 cluaifted., ••. ~2-661l. nl!I clb. 640-1090 Oiht'r Pttr~l.'lis 11.vo\i, 642-ll'i90 todtl)' •.• 642-6618 Rtal Estalt I I .... , .......... __ .. ... NEED J.~JNA ,Ncr:;R · P11tadu1e Mobil~ 11 o rn ~ Purk, Joshua Trtt. !IO'{f, 305 HoUHS Unfurn. 305 If-Unfurn. -------- Huntlnston Booch Newport - 305 1.D_u"'"p-lo_x_ .. _F_u_,,._. ___ w_,,Apn. Fum. N_o_w_,po_rt_llff< __ h ___ 1Nowport a.o<h 3'0 ~· Unf\lm. Cosio Mou Newport a.och DELUXE THE NEW nimal• O.K.1 11 4% ml. or fini&OOd, call 4M-7l62 CORNER lot. Lrg. 2 Bt, trpl,, pa.tio, crp1s, app\., gardener. ~ yrly lease. (,j;.o<:IO ALONE on lot 1 Br hli~. gnr, All'O w11.lk to water 2 Br, $165. View of <kcan 3 Br, $.235. Agt. Fee. 5.'16-2575. EASTBLUFF 4 BR.. 2 ba., tam. rm. \Veil land&caped; sprinklers, 2 car garage. Avail, 9/1. $475 3 BR., tam. rm .• den, 2 h-pl. Juxt rode<.'01'. Avail 9/2. $475 OCEANFRONT. Winter rcn· --'---'----- 1al, Lower 2 Br. Nicely SEACLU"F Manor A. .1• t i, fum. AY<lil Sept. l 5 . Bachelor apt. $150 uht pd. 646-2830. Poot, A5k about 01.11 dl.'4- APARTMENTS Afr Cond • l''rplc'11 - 3 Swim· mlnri Pools • HealtJ1 Spa • 1'ennls Courts • Gym and Billiard lt.oorn. B:\ Y\\'000 APAR1'MF.NTS in Newport U(•ach arc J'('Udy. 'f'h(> s..'i!es office is Of)t'll dally h'OO\ JO AM to 6:30 PM. MacAJ·thul" Blvd. &: San Jonqu1n Hills Jtoad. road d~n't Mortgagn, her You. call 833-ln3. Trust DMds 0CEAN''RONT . t <:ount plan. 1$25 PlaC'entia ,950 And up. full price. 260 Corona del Mar • w1n er ren-Ave NB ~26.'2 tal, IO\VCt 3 an. $325. Upptlr . . . HI Estate W•nt.t 184 PUT YOUR MONEY TO WORK FOR YOU! ......... ~ VERY CLEAN 4 BR home 2 miles to ocean. Very sMrp! $300/month. Jo'amily only. Agent. 54&-41<11 . 2 BR, $%>0. Avail 9-15. S3S & Up. l BR .. 2 B.R .& 61;,.-~ Bachelors. Color TV, maid G-1'1·!"i.'i15 l BR. 1'"rom $150 TRANS:f'ERJ'lf)L> Earn 10110 lntf'.rest on well· • NEW YORK -wcured 2nd Trust Deeds on • • • Nt:AJt BE..\f:ll. delux<' 3 BR, 2 BR w/ga.r. $145. Also 2 BR, walk to water, singles fam!He11. Agl. F<"f'. 536-2575. Irvine red hill Dupltxes Vnfurn. 350 serv, ))O(ll. The.• Mestl. 415 N. Newport 81., N.8. 646-9681. I BR & D<:n rroni SJ!){) 2 Bft frorn $210 2 Bfl. 'l'wnhil•g Fron1 $250 Sl-;,\Cl.!f"f" f.1anor Apts. I Br. lJnft1111 , $14i Pool. ·Ask nh1l1ll Olll' 1J!.~1,-ou111 plun. 1:-i23 Pluc;entla Av(:, NB. ~~l4--26f<2. ARKETJNG E..X1'::CUTIVE Orange <:ounty real estate. , ntly need?I 3.5 bedrm, SIGNAL MORTGAGE <XI. 21~ BA. llui;<' 01vnt~1"s unil In 1'11:"' 1·uston1 fh1ptcx. bean1 elng. vil'1\', p;1!ioi;, fplc, nr shopp!ni;;, no pets, S·l2:i 1110. Balboa lstind ANNUAL l bdrm steps 10 1 tmy & beoch, responsible OCEAN 1'ron1 upper, 3 Br. 3 cPl only. SHlll Avnil 9115 .. MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE , an1 rm wl poo!. Cotita Mesa. t 7141 556-0106 ,~unlington Beach area, To 4500 c o NB 67'69"" 1s1on-$550 mo. yearly. 673-5729 l BR, den, 2 Ba, spacious 2400 1-Iarbor Blvd., C.M. NJ>'.°\V 2 lilt (~1n(11;, walk' to V• • Bn. + Den & dishwasher. 673-0072 I 000 ampus r ., , .. ; , . N;ent, 846-6107. ~ "" 3 BR., JI,~ ba .•.•••.•••• S3."i0 d be d (7141 557-8020 J-lu11ting1on Ct•nli:t, pool 8 3 BR., 2 ba. , .... -...... $375 REALTY C -;o;r~o:n~1-:;::d~o:I ~Mo-:;-:':-=:::~J,;S200~up~l~ex~~~N~ea~•~· .,...'-'_._,_A_"_"'_· OJ>El'{ EVER'iDAY 1)1\V, piny area. laundry. JST TD 40'1~ disc ~&WOO ANTED Residential Lot baJancC' pays $&-10 a n'IO. to 6000 sq. ft. HB. area. 10'/0; Bx 3 Apple Valley, 1111 pay cash, call al1 6 J>l\1 Ca. (71·1! 2·12-314,1 4l. 1-------1 ••••••• •..J 3 BR. 2~~ ba ......... $390 Univ. Park Center. Irvine OCE . l!OUl'S: Jol:i·TUC!I IU·6 $225 tllO. !!68-7975. BRAND new 2 BR. 2 bath 4 BR, 02~i baths •••. $3751400 Call · Anytime 552-7500 t AN V~~lrgPri .. 2 B"~h· rebig,,S~a~n.;...C~l~o~m;,;,;co~n~to'-----\Vecl. tr. 1'hul's. 1U·7 TOP -0( 1'ow('rs on bayfront spilt-Ivel condominium with 2 BR 2 00 d AJC s21· ou· H. s ove, pauu. v . .,.. · Ad:ult1· 2 Sn v· r every1hing! I Blk to China ' ' en, . . :i 'Cl? ours 8 AM to 8 PM Lsc. $275. 6'1!Hl145. OCEAN1''1lONT bachelor 1·2 TIRED OF NOISE? Deluxe 2 f!l'.' · iew o ' S\\·eeping Sc1vice $2K mo Sporting Goods $101(' 1110 Beauty Shop . $ Statio:1s [)e(oorative .llardware 400K yr. Holland Bu• Sales 4170 or 540.()6()8 1\NT to sell good Plun1bing epair Busin('SS in Newport ach area. Take over hun· reels of regular customers. 2-3128. ney to Loan 240 Houses Furnished 300 Balboa lsl.l"ld LfITLE Balboa Is I and, \\•inter rental, lx'aut 2 BR hon1c. nicely tum. & very deluxe, walk by 151 I Abalone Pl and see before calling 673--0207 daily or 673·2195 1vc·ekend. $300 per mo. ·- COZY Cottage on Little Island. -Park Ave. 2 BR, Sep 1-J u ne. $210/mo. 675-2005 eves. LG. Bay frnt "·/pier. Avail from Aug. 5th $500. \\'k. 4j4...2433 or 75.5-9569. 4 BR, 21~ ba ........... $425 "' 1 , C 1 \Vilson Gnrden Ap1s 2 Br ocean. lll'"'lY redec. $000. Cove. }125; S5CX> rurn . V1"51"on-$110 . Util Pd. Bachelor apt. Cost1 Me.. .,.: .. apts.,ooo, '~1,owpd, olml35~ I~ Ba, c1·p1.s, cl ... ~. Pool: .n~m~,=64;'~5-09~:;;·~;~4~,..,,,--;~-,;-n= University Really Stove, re-friv. Crp.,, ""ps. r ...... ,a'Ora e-c , u , · ·• ::::: B 3001 r:. C.St. I-h1y. 673·6510 .. w 2 BR I t d O\V $195 No childr('n or pets ~1alure adults, nu ()Cts. F.:AST13.LU•·r· Condo, .1 r. Blilboa Peninsula. ' w \V cp 8• rps, ' A92. ;" · ONLY S162.50ii\10. 11.:i Bfl. N<.!I\' f'rpls. drp1-1. HARBOR V'" '' fl•' 11 s d h II 1290 . 3 BR, 2 Ba, l•pl•, .carb. disp., gar, no pe", -"-"_'~-'~"-------·I N ._\ . ' e • ~ SlT:i · 22i3 r·ounlllin \\'ay East Pool. $37:'1, 644-2788. o spacious, 5 Br/den/fanl re I garage, deck. Lido Isle. ln1. :i. mo., avail Aug. 19th, I (\\' I If ' \VII t <= •=7 A t U I 365 . o · 11.1· )()<' on sou 1 , ~"'='~· ~~.·~--~--;-., rn1. pool, sJl('clacular vu. t niac! ·~ P · n urn. ic Ava. nfrer Aug. 15t h, for S-tJO ~ :i BR. Bayshores. Nl!:\V 3 br., 1~2 ba., !rplc., Call 64&-2846 B\YF'JtON'I' 11' 1)1·1\' bc<1eh & n10n. to n1on. rcntaJ. $850. RE,\LTY I •·1·p lc. Dbl gar. yard, pa1io. pvt. patio, gru'.. quiet SL, ~a lboe Penin sul• El Puerto Mesa p!t·i-. N{'11 :: BR, '!Ill\, S5.'l0/ per n1on. 644-2339. I\ Company \Vith Vision NU~VIEW RENTALS :1.Rl 16th Pl., CJ\I. $3Z>. Ph . in<i Yrly . !17!1.(M;::1 f'"l·l·4510. 51.J NARCISSUS. 2 BR, 1 BA. Univ. Park Cmte-r, J1·vine 673·4030 or 49-1-3248 6·11·6613 60' FROM BAY l & 2 BR Apts., Unfurn. ~1Al~NU·~IC£N1' vi~11· larg~ Frplc, new crpt & drps. Call Any1in1e, 552·7500 NEWPORT LIVING AT ITS 2 BR, h'Ont. neal' new. 1 bdrm. 2 Sa, util pd, yrly All USli3011· .& Upp. 'd r«"uus 2 rl'plcs, 2 baths. S265/Jno. Call week day•, Office holll'S 8 At.-1 to 8 PM \V /'II 1 1 , ·o ti t1e1 a1 ~11ru1n's. $450, ~enr stores.~ 5= 0790. BEST. Cenlt1il air, nu 3 Br. cstc l area. Clean, encl sr. A( ults. no pets . .,11 . 1,001 & H.e~·tcailon sehools. 612-S8$9. o1<rO 2 Sa single honte, steps 10 gar . .$195. 6T:i-1SJ9. n10. {213f 790-f><t:.!S. l' 1 3 BR. 2 BA, cOmpletely YES, WE HAVE RENTALS ocean. View, 2 car ~lect. gl', Dene Point C11ARMING duplex. 2 BR, 9 M.u.ragel or rent :z-Brt, '! bu. frplc. l·Blk. lo remodeled, beaut. location. May 1,,e be of service IdeaJ for Fam w/k1ds. R<.'nl I newly dee.. adulls only,· 1 59 ap •Ave, C.M. Ocl·an. Y1·ly. s:·1zs. Adults only $·150. mo. in solving year round $475. or lease for PANORAMIC OCEAN VJE\V clos<> to ocean/bay/shops. ALL ELECTRI C--Ask for h1ikr 673-1658 Your housing needs'!' $425: 673-3601 or 646-91.))8, Xtra lrg 3 B1', less than l yr 675-8720 or 98.:'r5822. GOLD MEDALLION JONF.S l'\EALTY 673-6210 LARGE 3 BR .. 2 ba., dbl. Avail Sept lst. okt,at 'h 27'S livting I rn1 •. bllnl EXTRA lge 2 Br. duplex, 2 BH. Apt iv/patio, encl i;nr, * . O~F.:ANFRq_NT 2 Br, 2 gar. \Valk to stores & beach HARBOR VlEW HOMES .1 c en. pe~ acu ar v1e1v o walk to ii•uter &· shops. 1,·1i..1oruge &: Jaund. facil. bu. '.'early. $•1.'iO ~1onlh $.~75 ~lo. Avail. now. $575/J>C'r nto \vlth gardener, ~~~al night $300. me'I. Adults. No pets. 675-41 72 Adlts only, no pet s. , A~~ for ~ike BOYD, Reallors 67!'r5930 5BR, 3BA. plush, near pool BACl-fELOR to 2 Br. $165/nio. Melody Ln. in JONES P..E.AL1'\ 673-6210 DARLING house 2 br, frplc, & clubhouse. 1860 Court Beach nlonthly. !st & la~t. C.M. 646-0977 or 6461!S09. N.E\V 3 BR. 2 00, yr ~ Se ~ Rd Al 644-1295 or 642-2222 · s1= "'" 'Ji\ ""tct patio, garage, adults only. Carlew;. Ready Sept. 15. Newport <2131 697-1496 I • TROPJCAL 1-'00L • crpt/drps. 40' fron1 ocean. s .. ,;i. mo. awruu · ter "SfNCE 1946" --""=-o""==---· IDELUXE duplex, near beach 2 Br Studio, 1 ~~ Ba. Frpl, ~ · .~ ,-,,, · · ~ t TD L Balboa Peninsula 6 pn1 557-5179 Jst \Vestcrn Bank Blrlg. THE BLUl"FS & Lido shops. ·s Br, 2 Ba. Coron1 del Mer spiral strcse. $200. E/side DELtJxr: 2 BH, 2 BA,~) blk S oans !RVTNE TERRACE University Park, Irvin!'.' NE\V 3' Br, pool & yai'd . frplc, bltns, dsh\vhr, shagl"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiml on 18th. 548-1158 lo br>uch Y1•r1rly. $3j.5. \\llNTER & yearly: S200 & ln1n1ac. 4 BR. 4 BA ho1ne. Days 552-7000 Nights nlaintenancc custont crpls, crptg. Yrly/1110. $ 3 5 o .I I NE\V . Large 1 HR. l:'rplc, 675-3126 Eve~. I dUPTTDO 90L%oo ans up. 2 & ::: Bedrooms Lrg f(.>ncPd yard. $600 incl. ,!',,, drps. $57:J. per mo. 1st & 545-340j or 638·7095 after 5 \Valk in closets, lrplc, bllns, Corona del Mar '2 UR, N1·. !~Heh . cpt, rtrps, bltns, air t.-ond. ChildN'n & " · '-= · ,. 0 _.,.... rec. $160/mo. No pets. 393 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Marsha.JI lleal1y 675-4600 garden<:r. Ph: 673-3262. 4 BR, 2 BA, crpts, drps, ~~s;ot'n&g·s ,d•,,~knsdils. 644-1~6 p.nt. re~~~-Jrg patio, encl gru'. Pool & Apls l jjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil slovr, 1'(>frig, $250 + Utils. sn1all pets ok. 5285. nro. NE\VPORT Beach. Se 11 •• llamilton St., CM. 645-4•Ul .west r11tes O range Co. II Adulls 49-l-7&'i1. 837-91].j or 543-1429 $72,500 or lease $5W/n10. or 642-8520. Balboa Peninsula ~ S ttl Mt C. VIEW+ POOL Spac. Condo 3 Br. pool & 2°'s"nc--=--=--.,.,,---/'...;_-'--'------I ' 21.71 er g. 5450'••11 3 Bedroon1 - 3 Bath I.RC: 2 BR. 1 BA I B3EB-~UT2o ,Univer,sl!y .fa.rk, drps. lst & last. $200 dep. i ';;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~/ TOWNHOUSE Call ·~~Fri o{~.rp6~ l!!tinos~ NR. BA, Y 2. BR. U~per. Year-• ......, hous(' iv/gar. 2 yards, $295 . °"" JIOO, avru 11n· 714/833-86.'ti. \I 2 Br. fireplace, pool, private i;ee 224&-A Canyon [);'Rent ly. S-~5 incl. uul. 507 E . · g Harbor area 21 yrs. $475 WINTER LEASE _,_,,_n._fi_7_3_·9_l0_3~,_G_1:J-_7_2'_3_. __ =14~~Q n10. Yea.l's Lse. Apts. Furn. 360 parios, eontincntaJ bt'eak-Sl j() mo. Isl & last + SIOO. R •. 1Jbou. 6J3..6880, I DON'T BORROW Rltr. 644-7270 C M Newport Shores ~--------fast. Spacious grounds, near 'I'll YOU CALL US! ~ esa UB":,1v,.,, .. P•Brak, ITamo""?.hmo.""1d'e-; 3 BR 2 ha I I 2 B1lbo1 Peninsula shopping & fine bt'nch. Fur. clcN~~~LrYeq.DNECo ""oRtsA.TED Costa Men • , ~ , lJ.J • • rp c, patios, ----------·! nishcd or unfurnished, fron1 "''-.. 'OW on youl' hon1e equity 2BP.. Cottage, plush. 3210 Yearly.Pool Home loc. Pools & tennis. Ref's. \\'alk to heh. Tennis ci·t, $35 WEEK & UP $240. Corona de! lifa.r, 2 Br \v/gar, \vtr. pd. THE EXCITING any good purpose. Serv. Scaview, Cdi\f. Ready ~pt. Lease. $435/mo. 544-1972. pool, clbhse. Lease $.350. e Sleeping Rooms 644·26lt. Cal!. ~!:"11 1 & 5 .. GJ&-4120 _ PALM MESA APTS. litg Los Angeles County for 15. KINGAARD R LE . 3 BR, FR 11•/bar-lovely _54=·= .. ~2825="-"a=lt~5='=30=·~---I· Housekeeping Rooms !!!11!!!11!!!11!!!11!!!11!!!11!!!11!!!11!!!11!" 2176 ,,E,, Placenha Sl4:i. •f"IUTES TO N~. BCH. cNer 20 years and NOW in 642-2222 en t er ta in n1 c n t honte. TURTLEROCI<. 4 BR, A/C, :;: onn2 A Pl " " n S".1,"1•10. Call l.o•'s M•'ll·-v•'e •' , .. De-k 2 lrpl's Santa Ana Heights • Ocean Vie\v Apts I .. I.:> accntia $1'1-0. Ba-h ] & 2 BR ~m fl~ I ange County! CHINA Cove, "'inter lsc, 3 -" "'' iv, ~ ..... ,_ ' · BALBOA INN • CdM -2 BR CRPTS '-· · 1.1u "~ GNAL MORTGAGE CO. B 2 B ,..,,_ 642-8235 (045) Unusual. $550. 833--0647 DRPS STOVE ADULTS, BAClJELOR Apt. $140. Pool Aduhs, No Pets. r, a. V\.:ean vu. S'iDO. L B h 1·~ ACRE, horse rorrals. 2 105 ?.lain Stnet · ·• · · & Spa, V,t/w crpts, frplc, 1561 i\fesa Dr. <TI4) 556-0106 n10 a44-ii130 or 673-78.18 aguna eac BR, 1 BA. $250 mo. .;rs.8740 N6~ ....... ~_ETS. $2.)() n10nth. blt·ins, walk in closets, No (5 blks !ronl Newport Blvd.} CampUs Drive, N.B. Costa Mesa Rt:'fcrences rt:' q u ired· •.:r-«.,...f. pets. ·39J Hamilton St., C.J\t. 5'1&-9860 iND Trust Deeds iivATE FUNDS AVAIL. f Any Amount * C1ll 675-4494 BKR. =Y Wanted 250 ~,(VE several 1st, t.d. of $tJ.OO at 91i.t% interest. Bkr. . 842--0691 Eve. 536-4558 • CLASSIFIED HOURS Advertisers may place their ads by telephone 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. ~ ?<Ionday thru Friday 8 to noon Saturday STA MESA ~OFFICE 330 w. Bay 642-5678 NEWPORT BEACH 3333 Netvport Blvd. ~ 642-5678 UNTINGTON BEACH 17875 Beach Blvd. 540-1220 LAGU NA BEACH 222 Forest Ave. 494-9466 i,...,SAN CLENIENTE ~" N. El camino Real ' 492-4420 t NORTH COUNTI' "-dial free 540-1220 • ~ CLASSIFIED l DEADLINES 'lk-adlinc for copy & kills ~5 :30 p.m. the day be· ·e publication. except r Sunday & Monday ilions when deadline Saturday, 12 noon. ,• CLASSIFIED ' REGULATIONS )JfHORS: Advertisers 1)1ould check thl'lr ads 'M.ily & report etrors ~mediately. T 11 E AILY PILOT assumes bility for the first in- rrect insertion only. eANCELl..ATIONS: t\Tben killing an. ad be l!Jrc t.o make a record bf the KILL NUMBER ~ven you by your ad ~ker as r<'ct'.!lpt of your !f.ncellation. This kill • mber ·must be pre· 1 nted by the adv<.'rtiscr ' casC' ot a dispute. 'l:ANCELLAnON 0 R ~RRECTION OF NEW ' BEFORE RUNNING: : ry t'ffort is made to :kln or corre<:t a nl'\V ad lhat has ~n ordered, ·~it Wf' cannot i;uaran. ~ to do so u ntil th(' ad s n1>pcarcd in t he ' f)C'r. ' : i\1£·,\·U"E ADS: 1 esC' ads arc &trlctly ifc.'ilh in ad\·ancc by mail 1 nt any one ot our ot- i ccs. NO phone orders. E~""'" 3 p.m. Friday, a Meta office 12 n -a ll branch ot· ' DAU.Y rrLOT re- Erw!i the right to C:lt•• y, edit. censor or re-- ,. an'' advertisement. td to ·,..h,.~ J1a rates regulflt'°ns \tli>$fhnu1 lOr MUCC. Realty Conipany Sfl6'1l ·,~r11I Pd. Ll'g ~achC'lor. 557-0338 YEARLY, :l BR, adlts, no 2 BR Townho se Jl ' bn G45-44ll 642--S520 2 BR. Nice putio. Lge. s!onc 642.8235 644-6200 u 'Ill' ien, gar, v1c\v, near Westminst1r pets, i~. b~k to beach or frplc, nr be~, , pool', mi or . GRAND OPENING f 1 bl . $"2;; i\I beach. bay, $235. 6•~2079 children, pets. Yr lease NE\V 2 Br, 2 Ba, bltns, drps, A1i·ard l\'innin~ 1 t & 3 br Y1~~iy le~~~1s. ... i · o.,. ~~""'""""""~~""'~"'I $275 -2 Br. 2 Ba. Bltns, deck, 3 BR 1 BA, ne"·J.v painled $23.i S.13-304J', 557-8717 crpqu·•e"'t' pool.I gdord. Spac. rm, s, apts \\'I rurnlly , rrns. No * 67' 7019 CLOSE lo ne1v Bullocks, So. pct uk Spectacula1• Vie"·' . 'd d G d Costa Mew sec u e comp ex. lt>ase. Sorry, no pets. r~1'0m ,,.... · • Coast l"laza. NP1\' :l BR, 2 $350 . Charming oklcr 2 ~ uisi c an ou t. ar e11er BRAND nc1v & beautiful + Adlts, no pets. 376 \\'. Bay just $l7S. OUR TO\VN Laguna Beach I Bn . Greenhrook ho n1 f'. dt'll, 2 Ba. Frplr. gar. decks. in(:ld. S2j() 1110· $100 dcp. LOW WE EKL y RATES vie1\·. 2 Br, 1 Ba, beam eril· St., cr.1. f<'ainily Apts, 1250 Adams -~-------s;;s51mo. 992 Carnation. NU-VIEW RENTALS 894-8840. Executive Suites ings. Adult$ on1y. $3JO. nlo. 2 BR, 2 Ba. Stt!Clio + patio. ,\vi:. tAdums at 1'~alrviewl. $150 . Util Pd. Lrg Bachelor, I C~t. 675--0771 1173·4030 or 494·324S Houses Furn.. or 2080 N Bl d 673·Hi58. New drps, paint & shag ('rosia !\Jcsa. Phone 556-0166. fun kit,. nr bench. . 3~B=R~.-p~l-us~h-~-17,-,,-, -,.-,,,-,-,,-,-,,. Unfurn. 310 ewport v ' fo"OR lease-Nu Vie1v Apt. 4 ts. Adull I I __ .. $200 UIJ Pd 0 l "' OCEANVJE\\, large 3 -----------'I Costa Mesa ,_ lba I El crp us ony. mu..::u. •CASA VICTORIA '* · 1 · r:can Vle\v , crp1s, drps, freshly painted "'-d 2 bath 1 ur,. , fam rm. Al e<:t. OC'CUJ>A.ncy. $195. J\1anager, 1 & 2 Bl'. F•••·n , u~·-. Br:. Deck. 1 blk bea.<'h, inside and out, h•g fncd , ...... roonl, neit• Y General 642-2611 bltins, crp!s, drps, $750. per 557 1'166 ~ « uiu ... S~. 2 Bl{, frplc, c!~~. gar, yard. Farnily, no pets. $2'T5. decorated, ne\v draperies, STUDIOS & J BR'S nw. 67H 992 -Cnrpcts, dr111JC-s D/\V 'IV v1t'1~·. Occanh"Ont. \V1nrcr. 547_6791. fireplace, family room, built Easttide Lrg 2 Br~s ant. Pool, ('tC. 525 Victoria NU VIEW RENTALS ""=c=---.-=o---;-c-ins, a1tailablc Aug. 15t h, Cdi\13 BR, 2 ba., vie\\'. Furn. e f'REE Linens OCEAi'J Blvd. lrg 3 Br. 2 ba. 11 11·, bltns, frig, pool $160. St. ut l1tu·bo1', Ci\1. 642-8970. 673 «J3o or 494 32.JS QUIET, sml IBR. bath, $42;';.00 per monlh 644-2013 $500 !\'lo/yearly. • .FllEE Ulilitics [rplc, view, $36.i Eve. Adlts /no pets. EXTRA Large 1 or 2 Br. . ·. SCC'!udcd $150 per ino. 2559 2 BR 2 bas. near new hon1e Penin. Pt. 3 BR, 2 ba. Un!. •. i'Ull !(ifch('n 675--H)..18 or 673-l903. 6-42·9520/6~1816 Hf'1Hl'd pool. f'ron1 $1 45. SMALL furn hse for salari('(f ::;an ta Ana, un it C. Call b' 1 . ~ "75 >'o/yearly. Hrated Pool 2 BR. DUPLEX. "-f••'g, M d I I r k "-h 1 5 •0 1 1t o ocean v1r1v. w-"""nm ~ ·• • La d F ·i· · ,.,... .• El Toro -a1ure o u lS. n ant o . No 11<1C "°or, l 1 -A so semi J.J:H:l062 for appt. to shO\V, d bl . \U1 ry act 1ue11 stove. , .. .,,, $21'. ',latu•"' 1887 , ccil, cpts, rps. t-1ns, •TV& ·a .1 ........... .. " ~ prts. "fo n ro v ia. furn hse .. j!J.J--8170 rvcs a\'a\J Sept. lst. U .,00 ,0 ,5291 niai set;t ava1 , •dults. 64CHJ747 61• 2114 Ava· . now . .,.. · ...,...... e Phone Service LEASE, 3 Br. 2 Ba. crpts, _. ~~==· ,,-c-o===~-I Lido Isle ATTRAC. 4 Br, 2 Ba + 3 ARCH Bay, 2BR, 2BA, big $JO WEEK & UP 2 BR, new cptg, sundcck drps. built·ins., close lo 2 BDR~l. 2 BATII $200. bonus: rrn. Nu crpts, fn<'d lot iv/trees. Pri bea~h. $450 ·well eoqulpped kitchen. One school & !hopplni:; $265 n10 JjJ E. 21st, C.M. CONTE~ll~ 4 Br, 3 Ba, frpl, blrn::;. Close to \va~. $485 n1on!h. \\1inter. GT.1-4923. I BR .. JI-fr Ba., den. Sept. Un·u June $450. 675-7667 Newport Beach \\'INTER RENTAL -Ex· elusive Newport Island. 2 BR. Furn. I n1 n1 a c ! $250/l\IO. 500 381h SL, N.B. Do not disturb tenant. Call ('Oi!e1·t. J.213·3Ti·4640. WA.LK to beach 1 Br. hse. Also CdM $95. Hntg Bch, 2 lit'. Bach. units, Balboa, $105. A~1. Fee. 979-84.\0. LOVELY 4BR, ba1 ~, outside shov.-·f•1·, Bnyfro11t. \Vinter rrnlal. ·100 ts!h St. \\'II\'TER Rental -Ocean· front .. 1 br. 2 ba. fully turn. $3:JO 1110. GTI-46J7. Houses Unfurn. General RENTALS Apartments Duplexes Houses 305 yrd, patio, S275/mo. 336 PC't mo. 831-0354. • Studio & 1 BR Apts. year lease. $275. 6i~7013 incl gardner. 83i~21:i * 646-S666 * Cabrlllo. 213: 2.\3-8949. "'!!!"""'""""'"""""""""""'!•TV & l\laid Servire Avail.lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii H B Laguna Hills ::; •Phone Service -Htd. Pooll ' untington uch Huntington Belch LEASE \~·ith option. $300. 3 San Clement• e a iJ I & p t Se · ~r, co~ ~~le, no pets. •I BR, fam mt, lease/option. ~~-· --· 237~ ~r:;~1>0rt ~h·d.~11~1~I rSb-..:; NOW RENTING Pf:LUXE: Adult PoolF;lde l{}..()l I s:roo mo. $36,900. Avail for. 2 BR, lop cond, 2 Ba. Only 548-9755 or 64j.-3967 Tl,. Sp.cious New Apts. Garden BungaJ0,v. N r . 2 BR, $140. Also 2 Br, $150 opening of school ye::ir. 2 Mature Adults. Barcelona, {Ad good for $5 on renl) . t:Jrcs 1 Br. $155, 2 Bl'. $WO oc·can. Frplc, h~ patio, 6 singles or families. Agl. fee. Yrs old, fenced yard . $250. 492-4944. , Sl7;J _ AITRACT lively furn Counlry atmosphcn", dish· pools. sauna, t c 11 n t 1 , 979-8430. 673.--0216. O\\·ncr/i\gent. fro t 2 BR Q . t l ON TEN ACRES 11'shr, Bltno;, crpt/drps. NCUI' 846--0Zll. 3 BR. $l9j. f'~cnced. i\laturc L Ni 1 Condominiums· 1~ . · uic · c ean. Apt ~. furn., unfur :1. Lease . ..chools. ;,.t0-0781. 2~20 Jith 1 Bdrm. from Sl3.i fami ly, refs. re<j'd. 49-J..6427 aguna gue Unfurn. 320 Pauo. G_ruage. Adults, no l·"h·eplaC'f" ' priv. pa l io~ 1 St., l-1.B. (I~ Blk N, off l ~-'-==ccc-"='-'='-- or (21.1) 449-3628 eve 3 BR, 2 hns, h-plc. bit.ins, pe!. OPEN 2234-A Rutgers Pools Ter,n1s Contnt'I Bkfst I Yorklo"•nl. Newport Beach I d !32• ' 1 & General Di., c11. 900 Sea Lane CdM 644·2611 . NE\v 3 8 I N ge y , , J. 1ne ,vater · · VILLA YORBA * 2 3 4 BR upt> * • r to1vn 1om<-', r. gard'nr. Lease 494-3704 _ 1------------FURN 2 br apt, pool, close to (MacArthur nr Coast ll"'Yl I 1 , lllk 1 ~ bench ye-a.rly pool. Ready for occup Sept. L•'do Isle 4 BDR11 condo. 2 ba. fully shops, adults. No pets. l. 2 & ~BR. Unfum. • 1'73-6606 0 67·:kia-o 1st. $283. Jack 979-163.l .. ,0, tl•·ps A,,,.,, 8/17, 1''ro1n $165. mo. 1 9 4 1 · Starting at $123. ' r • BIG 2 BR unfurn, stove & refrig, fenced yard. No kids. 5210. 249 20th SL 841-6.197 . . Pon1ona, Costa Mesa. Costa Mew Refrlg.-UTIL. INCL'O 1700 WESTCLIFF DR. BEST location, lge l bdrm, lliOOO ·11 2 liH 1 & 2 BA B lrplc. pvt patio, dbl gar W1ission V1e10 LARGE. l br, twin beds, $140 UP 2 Br· 3 Br ? Ba : Vi a Yo!'ba -" · · 1111• ap. w/ope.ner. S300. y rl y, ideal for bachelors. S/poo!. ~I b·lt·ins'playYru.ct · (nr S.D. Ft'\vyoffrainpJ phance!I'. Pool. 642.fi274. 642--0300 ALISO Villa plan A. 2 BR. 1 Adult<; $150-$160. ~9633, Unde~ New Managemt"n.t. _ 714/842--9622 't.EARL'i'. 1 To 4 BR. 0C"ean. ----------' BA. cptd, drps, bltns, cov 1993 Church SL 2212 College No. 1 646-0)32 HARBOUR VIU-AGE. l·lun: front and o!hcrs. Cull: FOR lease, nr Lake Forest, 2 Newport Beach patio, l car gar .. use of pool AITRACT. FURN. 2 BR. ~roooLAND AVE. 2 BR tingLOn I/arbour area, only Pro)>l'11y tlou~r 642-38.'XJ Sr,v Colonial Style.House. 3 521 5 'v/leasc, 830-5891. SJSO. Blt·ins w/1v, pool, DUPLEX. Bil, closed gar. 'll 2 & 3 Br. on 2 acres. San Clemente BR, 2 lull ba, lg liv rn1. * 4 BR. 2BA, 1 yr old POSH Townhouse Unfurn. 335 aduHs, no pets. 642·9520. lnc!t'Y hook up. $195 Agt Adult & ram !'!@Ctions. Y.'/frple <'rpts, drps, garden 1-larhor \.if'1v ho1nc I BR, furn. heated pool, Util 646-325,'). ' B~n~ nu .. From SISO. 4.i61 EXCITING NE\V APTS kit \v/cov patio, all bltns, Wlo111ego n1odcl. For lease. Costa MeS6 pd except lights. $l55. + $50 ROOM'' 1 8 C Hr1! .'iL 962-8838 or IHG-5076 Ready hy &hooltime-fnc.>(J lndscprl yard p I a y 64-J...7348. Sec De 548-95'18 r apl. on· 1 BF: d b .1 I 2 3 BR i\pl<i Srr <it ar ra, cloSC' to schools & 2 BR. Toi\'nhousc, \V/\V f>hag • P· · venicnt to sch ls & slwpping . •· i:arp('lS, rapes, UI l· &s6 · Caniino D ' 1 M shops, call 837·90.14. i or.,ANZA?.BRBa2BysiAde Vbaillag('l, crpts, drps, slv, full BA ,!( 2 BR, 2 BA furn apt. No Sl.25 nio. incld \l!il. &U·2240 ins g1', \\·a.lkSt\oSOpark -c"",·, (Qo11n Uic ~ 1~1n a&:'n I un um , ca na, . M children or pe•-820 Center 2 n1s courts, mo. a Cl G . I Fountain Valley yr lease. Clubhouse, pool, 11.:. Fenced patio. 1 alure ""· $140. UP. 2 Br; 3 Br, Ba. eve. (213) :)96-4557 or C213) cn1rntc cn'l Hospital). Jllcuzzi, l>ri bch 67."').600\. adults only, No child, pets. St. • 642-5848. Pool. Blt·ins •. play yard. 592-5753. 492-1021 • 4~700 4 BR Exec. beauty. Tri·levcl. Pa 1· k -like surroWldlngs. • SHADY ELMS-POOL 1996 Maple Ave .... 642-..1813 WALK TO BEACH Lg tam rm., Choice area. 3 BR. 2 BA. I&J deg. bay & 548-6920 e Adults Poolside SI4S up. OCEAN VIEW 1 BR Sharply el'ptd & drpd. $550. OC<'an Vie\v, $400. Call Bill * BRAND nev.i <I BR, pool 177 l:. 22nd St. CM 642-364.S. $150, No !'b'•ldren/pets. 1161• .1 & 2 Btt.r.~~rp!/drrs, _b!t-846-2881 or 821-8042. r-.1errcll, art 6; 61..i-3774 -ins, gru· .. 'ii.RI 16th. 536.j(J86 ' BDllM fam•'ly rm 2 Bo side, {'hildN'I n 09'1K..;, $633300 mo. Hunto'ngton •-ach _Clencaglc Trrr. a111-0259. 205 15th . 960.1749 3 BR, 2 R1\, 2 ca1· g;i.r, all .) I ., ' ' Ask for Bi lie-, • ;,-J UC hltns. fpl c s1vin1 pool. kids ~;·1·d house h'On1 park ,r;, VERY nit-e 2 BDMf apl, * $149/MONTH * Rooms El Toro Ren1al1 I~ OJ\, Liki' nciv. Only 5255. playgi'Ound. $425. ~·1·1-7121. Duplexes Furn. 345 $145. Sl65 frpl<-, pvt patio. $170. nto. 2 BR Apt. Nr. Bcat'h & Sitt.Irr ________ ....;:"400:::; 4:.1:! \\I. Hl!h SL. Cosla i\11"sa lllD. No fc1· ,\gf'nl 842-4421 LUXURY HOMI::. 5 Bl", 3 BA, B1AC1HELOR & l BR ., pallos, _64='>-0-"-73=9~-=-~~-in 11.H. Closed .gar. Pool. UCI Soiih. "irl ... ,..,,., room In lXZ..I S Coastlh1·y.,Lagu1111 4 BR 'B ,. f'rp' 2frpl-s,lrgla•''·rm•.s,·1,, Newport Beach rP.•.·s priv, garuges -Lar7 g• 2 BR, b l tns, 842"~ """ ·' ' '''' ''" ,,. ,_ " ., D d·" ha l'C't'. room, ·~16. pri IY.>lll<' h1·gin S, C/>I. 1v·,11,· · • "· · · ..:, Avail. iniin. 642-6889 1v1 ~"' th & lo!s of rlisl11v11shcr, adults, no pets, ng Cfl~T.\ ~tESi\ Ol'-FICJ;: nu_ carpets. lrg fenced yrd, \\ INTF.:lt rental. nicely furn closets. Rec. htttl, pool & .$l60. 707 Sh.alimn.r. 642-5!6S. C1.JTE l·Bdrni.. carp . , 10 h\l!iyi;it, hl"lp enrertaitl, s~· 11 1 f SI 1 f ch1ld.i'et1 "'rleome S.125 12131 \,',\CANT :1 Br. S225. Al~i 3 & 4 br, 2 ba, steps to b<;h. pool 1able5, Muna balhs, "'="-"'"-"="""""'""""'~· dropcs: No pct!'!. Avnilahle ere. 21:~4-D?Q.1, Borinic ~:.> • r eri or : ur f"nt. . urn. 596-45.)7 or (213) 592-5743. Balboa 3 Br. kids/pets ok. Lo1\·£'1· 5300. upper $350. ~AA for you•'••/! l730l l ·BR unfurn. Heated pool. tlO\V! $135 Monlh. 33&-8900 Kay .. J 160 Encino Dr., San B:1,.h1•lor "·1k11 All uul pd. o.""' ·1 <.: h · is-ti918 ·""-"" "" · u ·1 pd I/ h SlSO i\f C rr 9 SIOO • Co1.y Col lage. Nr.1 4 BR, 21 2 bt~ l\\'nh.~e .. 2 story, ,\~\. re.c. 979-0"tJV. Aviu .. ept 81 · ... l\cclson Ln. (1 blk \V. ol 11 except g ts · + LRG. 2 Br. 1'4 Ba lltudi.o. anno, a 1 · l lml i•V('i·y1hing. Lovely y;irrl. fam I'll': _rl1n r111,_,'.t1r cond, D<iily ~1lot \Ya.111 1\0S have I t :11-1 1'Csul1:; are Just a pt>one Bea.ch, 1 hlk N. of Slater). Sec. Dep. 548-9548. Encl g$l', mature couple, ROOMS S20 wk up IY/kit .$:10 t'til pd . pools, SJ50. 968·8.i;il. 1 bArp,a1n~ galore. call 111vay &12·5678. 842-7848 LRG. 3 BR, 2 BA. shag no pea., $1!i7.50/mo. 842-0350 y,•k up apts. Childrn & pet $11~. Cuti· 2 Br. honie. GBr. crpts, drps, eocl patio. Nr. H ti H bou 1t~;tlon. 2376 Ne1vport Blvd \'11l'(i fo1· kllls 'PE'I. Huntington &each ,,occ~'o· :!$1'.!85."'-"'55"7-o350~""-· __ 0 1,__"-"-~ .... '-°"--"-'--'--CM. ~>43-975.'i, 645-3967. ., SlSO . Singlc~l/X'l fin<'. 3 Br. ~~------·-· $fl'il 'OJ)',( _ f) "{1 ~. Q.. 9 VERY nee 1 BR in !lmall FOR rent or Jeaae, brand LUX. J>riv. enll'. Ba, & Maid 2 B<1. Bltns, nr. OCC. CLEAN _ NEAT _ 3 \!::;t J..'-~).. (.,!:> ).j <J• V complex. No c ~ i I d r e n new 2BR Townhouse. swlm· scrv. Non sn1okers. CM C/\LL 645--0IJI. or pets. SloJO/mo. 837·9517. ming pool 6 rec., else to 548-7197 ' 6edrm -Condo. Ph That Intriguing Word Game with a Chuckle EFFICIENCY !or rent. ocean. Pallo & very pr/vat<, ROOMS $25 • up, Overlook. LAGUNA BF.ACl·I OFFICE bath, f irepla ce, 2 pools. 1 ------£dit•4 11, ClAY 1. ,OLLAN $125/month. New carpet. Must see to appreciatt', call Ing horbor & ()('(!an. 112 blk $1 IO · I llr, Fu111. 0<'ca11 $265 per month. 531.5300 Call 556-8790 coU7 e<:t, 213: 3'.n-4427 n(t oct•ttn. r.100 [.;envlc\v, CdM. v1e1\, ,"\1·. 1011'11. or 557•2189. ORearrang• lettltf• of lh• pm G H bl., d ._ LARGE 2 BR. $1"1'MO. No. L B h uest ome 415 S:l::.i • 2 Br. S101·r. 1·ch•1g, 1 four xrom ..., wor I <;19" wP 11;11 10. l'ht ld Pl'1 <•k. I low to form four sirnpfo words. Pl'.'ls. OrivC' by 787 \V • ....;;1~9~"~"°..;....;;...•~•-•;_ ___ _ S'.ll~J Oh1i•r 'J. Hr. hornf'. $200 L'P .•. 3 .~ I B.r. J'\o ,lease \\'il.'1{>11, to 8t'C eall 67:\..819.1 '*PRIVATE room for eld~r· Pr>tn IJ(·/1 1\1~. \Voocl pun('li'<l 1 ruii ' ~ii> nviu 111 K UR 8 EE EASTSIDE 2 Br, l B.1., crpt acre-e of nlnln111lned J~nnl<'. •'amlly ntmosplll'"". -c< 1 d 011 J I I LAGUNA L'Mlo.lt' livin.: on Jy p('rson in small Gut'Jtt f:*iJ:; L1~A(~.',N2LD11~L~'ori4-R94D9s' * 1 ~tJs;:~-10~ ~~~:,':o~~~Pi' '9 ~~:: I 1 J I 12 I il. ~~~~. $~ro~:54~95~r priv ~fe~,:~·c~;1 ·~,o'1~~,: a~2~01a~ \~~~,~~~ ~~;1~~~erty lady krl • NE\\1LY d<1cor. Lgc. 3 BR., 2 Nbopp ing. 1.41e. ., ~.. )ll. in Uf". Cu1·id home, r-.I FHF:E Hl·:NT'J, S'ICJl VIC". l~·vs.-c---o-~~-I Ad It N ~· $225 M apt w/an1cnltics Also ....,...,,, ~· ~ •• ''BR 2 -I I ' ){l, u $. 0 ,,..... o. . .• . • . food SCl'vt,.'fl, 64( .... 3391 -LA-ND OROS• " , RA, \\'/fan1 ./din rn1 i T 0 G A L A[Ct'Jlt, 646-2414. 111udkl npt., Sls;;-$3."JO 1110., ~ --,-.'"""'~~ . L . con1bo, frplc, covr d pa.tio,, ~· -~..;..,,.:..,..;.....:,.--1 ! ~rtlally lum., Incl. util. Summer Rentals •20 \\ I h!1ns, nr. Edinger&:. Spring. I Ii j I ,\LL r:1ee. 2 BR. I BA, 1 ntura ndults. 494-4653 Or r' ~p1•r:1a lie ln N~11 1xll't. j h'ld O'" $175 •·· '~ TEMPO"'RY Brach e Coi'Ollll dl!l r.fur e cb1Jc-. $265. Ask for Dale. 1 ,. c 1 "• ;, mo . .;:let: UJ1J yoor broker. ""' rcnt8.l. 3 962-41111 Albert No. 7, CM 6-1&--5996. Bdrn1 house w/pool thru ~1c~1~u~~nr?£r1of{Y~~: ~;:Y· 4 BR POOL-HOME iv/bonu11 I i. 2 BR, I ~l BA. cpts, rll'Pl'I. L•guna Niguel Septl. (C.M.J Rcspon~lble ~u·Vil"w' rm, lots of decldni. 1 Yr I R 0 S Y R . TV onnounc:er: "Tune in fC)o bltns. encl gar., ma tu~ Corld~Ncw 3 Sr, 2 Ba. i~l only. $ 2 5 o Im 0 • NU-VIEW RENTALS lease. $375/mo. RED"' I I I I morrow-some station, some adults only, .$l6S. S4!rl806. on io:lf cne. l3SO mo. Ii-';,' ;;"'ii'o::-:=-.7."...,.. 673·4030 or 494-3248 CARPIT R E A L T 0 R S , • _ • . . time same # EASTSIDE -Altrac 2 Br, Call Sff..9()46 3 BR, 2 Ba1, hs11 e. 2 bloek:ll H OR SE r:in l'h on 8. C r <:' 11 ~ C -S \\'IOgt?N <ir f&n tllil'S. Pri h.o m C' [Jnlitnltf'(I ho~!!. S 14 0 , Deep in rllnyan. A.Rt Jo"•'t 9'19-8430 k93-1351. ' -. 1-4t bllns, d1hMhr, encl gar, no Mtt• Vi rd• ~~:n'tr~ • pa.~:n~y,g~ CLEAN 3 hr, 2 ba, upper In I B E J C 0 T I pctit. 6-l&-0474. 1'"e to l 673 2110 5'\M•r." 4-plex. 6ltnl(, ('f'J>l/dl'J>S, no ~-.;.....:,.,.:...;.....:,.-r--i 2 BR, 1~ Ba. Studio. UUI pd. DLX 2 & 3 Br., 2 Ba. Encl 0 1 -or .......,,. l'JCls. $190. 847-5.18-1 . I I' I I I 0 Complete rhe chvckte qucit.d Sl75. Shag, pool, blt-lns. KJ1r. $165 up. Rental Ofc., • BJ\LBOA Bnnch Apt - 3 BR' 2 "-, chlld-n ok, '--.1.-'--'--'--'--' dby '!~:nv In Th• mNiu1no L~ 1978 M•ple. 645'-5647. 3095 M11;ce Ave. 54&-1034. Sips 6. $100/wkly & up or- •.N> ... -you 1111..,p from 11ep o. 3 l;NflQ'lll', N 1 Boich yearly St75c/mo. 67:>-5810; !f'nl'd, $200 nlo. rent or 3BR 1% BA, spaciowi. 2286 ewpor 5:>'6--082.'i lease-. 842-4827. A PR NT NUM8fREO tEfT EiS IN 4 J CIH\}'On Or, Re!tdy $cpl. I. l~'===...,-.,..,=-.,.~-ICJ 1 . rt42-2222 or tenant 548-4634 NEAR flOAG llOSP. NE\VPOR1' bt8chfront, alps • CLASSIFIED fAILING ADDRESS Bilbo• l>land 3 13li. 2 RA, nC\\'lY <lecoraftd, THESE SQUARES 3 IJC<lml, 2 l~tli, flrt>pl , 9, \VllRli/dryer, 40' window, LF..N)E t)PTJON Nr. rht' bc>al"h, $~. 119<'. "While EJe.phant.'I" owr, ADtJLTS! $25<1 mo. st2-43S7 July 28-i\uic. 11 833-8350=.::·=I <I BEDR.\1. 2 BATll 9G8--62J;1 or 962-RS:;J . UNSCiAM!!lE ABOVE LffTflfS running your houll«?? Tun1 --~ ~ --P. 0 . Bo.x 13"60. <"..M ii\ Aft'Sl 9262G + 61..,2411 • Don't give up lhe ship! TO Gf:l ;.NSWER U\Cnt into "Caab" , , . ~ll 2 BR nr oct'An, turn/unf\lrn 1 BR Du1~~ sip~ <I, I bl~ 1 I 818 Uu•m tl'lni a 041\y Pilot s200 yt•ly, mq; no pefS. ocron. per w I!,." A aood want •ti"'""°" In. "l,/"" It In <1•"111"'· Ship SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION ol ... <illed ad! U!ll\I 16th St. 64~3331 AUj!\lst· 642-1272 1 l~C:=======~ J \'tllment. tu Shorr Resull.8! &11-5678. ------------------------------· I ... ~ I~ Summer Rent•l• 42:0 BALBOA Penln. ~ blk to b&y, 3 BR. 1% DA, besut. lg. kit. encl pa.lio, wthr & dryr. M8--0671, eMI. 394. AVAIL. 911·9/8. 3 Br, 2 Ba,' ....=.--------:n-ill,\."-"-.. $175. 2 Br, l Ba, $150. Nr. , Wl••~'-"-v::j:~tol1 425 •fllla BALBOA LITILE ISL I 1•• Near bch. 1-2 br. 111'5 wk. •• II • Aug 18 & ~pt l. I I •Jli.00.12. c2u1 698.30zi ' .I Rontol1 lo Shoro 430 '-. , .. MALE -35. will share furn. 2BR hou8C In CdM $,150 with mature nlalc or remaJe. 61.s'-7400 aft 5 STRAIGllT & square male. 43, has nice 2 BR hou~ on E. 19th to share. Lady OK. 645-1457. DIVORCED man wa n t 1'i roomn1ate lo share his Con· do In C.M. 545-0045 or 546-2054. MALE to shnre fun1, vie1\I beach home. No drugs, $ll0. So. Laguna 499-4329 SHARE Apt or House Save$$ Call HOME PARTNER ~1194 or 548-1419 G.1r1ges for Rent 435 GARAGE for rent, alley ac· cess, nr. l!::llh & NeWpo11 , CM. $32 mo. 897--0196 bhvn 4 &: 6 pn1. STORAGE Garllges for Rent. 1959 ~Taple Ave. No. 5. Costa Mesa. G•r1ge for Storage \\'anted 675-7009 Office Rent11 440 Are you BORED with a dead-end job? Call PACIFIC TRAVEL SCHOOL today to see if you qualify for an exciting career in the AIR TRAVEL INDUSTRY. Day or eve- ning classes can prepare you for a position as: • Reservations Agent • .Ramp Agent • Air-Freight Agent • Ticket Agent •· Travel Agent Tuition financing also available, Pacific Travel School 610 Ea st 17th Street, Santa Ana 543-6655 Approved for Veterans' Training OFFICE SPACE . c~~:~r.1:~u~~°a7~~~~:0~-~ @~~1'~ ~ single office or suites. 'l~ ~ ~ t:!J J~L , • ~\2) tljl An1ple parking. Vicinity of ' Harbor St Nell\'J)Ort Blvds. A I .35 pr "I· ft . Mr. Denver No. n n a 5 293. 639-1501 PRESTIGE OFFICES Fountain Valley, Beau ti· ful new buUding, ground floor, 3,000 square feet, \vilt divide into smaller offices, 50c per square root, includes carpets, drapes, all utilities, jani. tor !let'Vice. Cali Marilyn Stovall (714) 8J.l.S440. Deluxe Office Space 550 l'Q. ft . available in primt> Costa ~tesa location, $175 p/m 545-7131 Walker&lee lllAL llTATI BAYFRONT OFFICES Prt-stigc offices ovrrlooking Balboa Bay in Nev.'JJOM Bt'ach. Various sizr suites as low as $120 per mo. In· C'ludes drps, crpt, utiliti~. janitorial gerviCPS. Monthly or ~ase. 3700 Nl."Y.'port Blvd., NB. 67S-1220. NEW OFFICES AIRPORT No lease req'd, full service, drps, cpts, music, air cond., all util. Single offices from 1 $125. mo. I PALISADES CENTER am s. E. Bristol Newport Beech 5.57-7010 (Campus-Irvine lntenection) OCEAN VIEW Spacious, ell:ec. office in Union Bank Bldg. New-pon Center w/recpl. area , phone service, Xl'rox & pe.M time secy. Mr. McFarland, 644-9440 C.D.M. 900, 800. 500 Sq. Ft. From 37 ctnts. Air cond, prlv. p a rking, v.111 redecorate. 2700 E. Coast Hwy, C.\V. Masters ()wn('r . Realtor, 673-4120 ORANGE County Airport. 3 man law firin has interior office avail. in new attr. 1uite, for economy minded yoong attorney. $22:> mo. Furn/unfurn. All iservices avail. 833-362% PRESTIGE 2 ROOM Exec. office, adj. Airporter Hotel. Full glass view. paneled wall5, all uUl., un· crowded parking. 2 1 7 2 DuPont, Rm. 8, Irvine. 83.'h3223. FULL SERVICE Wostcllff Building ())mer Wellfcllff Drive &: Irvine Blvd .• Newport Beach. l\fr. 1-fo,vard 64HI01. DESK apace available Sric> mo. Will provide furniture at $5 mo. Answering service available. 17875 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach. 6"2--t321 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB lll80, 912, "" • 540 Sq. Ft. Ample parlcln1r. Utll. Baum· prdner, 541·5032. Pre-School Kindergarten, 1st & 2nd Grade REGISTER NOW FDR FALL Ages 2 thru 2nd Grade e Full Learning Program e Phonics Stressed • Arts & Crafts • Music • Reading Specialty e Sports Activities 2110 Thurin Ave., Costa Mes• Ph: ... 1444 sponsored by A11lstance Le-oue of Newport Be•ch HELP FOR WORKING MOTHERS! NON-PROFIT DAY CARE CENTER for preschool children, 2'1.l lo 5. LOCATION: Corne r of Bay Street and Orange Avenue, Costa Mesa (St. John the Divine Church) FEES: based entirely on your income HOURS: 6:30 a.m. to 6 p.m., Monday thru Friday, year around. PROFESSIONAL STAFF CALL 645-6570 or 546-1375 WeStond For Acodemic Excellence ond Americo ond he r Heritoge lllllEITf -ClllSJlll PRE· SClllLS SCllOGL • Schools and Instructions Interested In A Real Estate Career? IN FOUR WEEKS PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM LICENSING PREPARATION FOR • Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers • Employment Assistance For-' Graduates With Leadillg Brokers. • • Day And Evening Classes • Broker Referral Program • $1 lO·FUll Course I For lnform1tion-Brochure FrH Guest Lecture Nowport, 325 .No. (Oldl Newport Bl~d. 548-1192 EDMOND F. JACKSON , TUHday, AuQusl 14, 197' DAILY PILOT This variety of fine schools could introduce you to a new tomorrow. ... ...................................................... . EBRO NIX TUTORING CLINIC READING -MATH SPELLING • For further information re9ardin9 place1nent of advertisln9 in the Daily Pilot S<~ool• •nd Instruction Directory CALL 642-5678, EX7, 325 Newport Air Associates Flight School & Flying Club LEARN TO FLY S500. * FAA APPROVED * Courn Includes: 35 Hours flight time i 1 Cesina I SO's with 20 houri du•I instruction. Club membership. 3 Month's free dues. Individual instruction. tailored to YOUR ability. 15 AIRCRAFT 'AVAILABLE AT DIAGNOSTIC TESTING (No Charge) LOWEST R.&TES IN ORANGE COUNTY Your Child Will Receive Learn to fly now --and heve fun I Gu1ranteed 1-to-1 ln1tructfon * Fly Mexico & Canada At EBRONIX-Where Re•dlng * Special Rates for Commercial or Real Estate Education Since 1964 Is Enjoyable Instrument Students. ACADEMY REAL ESTATE 9l9 1626 For Comploto Dot1i11 Coll NOW CONTRACTING & INSURANCE SCHOOLS 2750 Harbor Sulto 7B C.M. • 979· 1155 ~""'""'~G~l-M~terCharge&BofiAi:i:i:~:il:i:i:i:i:i:i:i:iiiiii=::::::""'""'""'~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ONE WEEK FREE SULLIVAN PRErSCHOOL (Kindergarten and elementary pro1&rams also) In case you aren't already tamlller with the Sulllvin Pr•Scho9I and El• mentary School Programs, we would like to Introduce you to our Khool with 1 Special FREE Get-Acquainted Wee~. Without obllgatlon, we Invite you to COMPARE:. OALL STAFF FULLY QUALIFIED e SPECIALIZED CREATIVE PROGRAMS TEACHERS IN ART, MUSIC AND MOVEMliNT o NATIONALLY-RESPECTED SULLIVAN EXPLORATION ACADEMIC READINESS PROGRAMS e FINEST PRE-SCHOOL FACILITIES .' .. HELPING OVER 5,000,000 AND &QUIPMENT, WITH NUTRITIOUS CHILDREN HOT MEALS . o INDIVIDUALLY-PLANNED LEARNING •GUARANTEED NO INCREASE IN EXPERIENCE FOR EACH CHILD TUITION FOR YOUR CHILD ENROLLMENT IS LIMITED. ........ CALL TODAY! ~ Director of Parent Rel1Uons: Donna Finnegan or St1))iWfi SG9S~44sh1 SJ0-7SSQ PRE·SCHOOL CENTERS Foun1 ain Valley Mission Viejo >o I OU<•"-""'~'"' GO •<* .. •O•••"''""<" UffO .. _IJ Ocean Safety Classes For Children $25 for course SCUBA DIVING LESSONS $35 for course TEENS & ADULTS Ofhred Mornings, Afternoons & Evenings. Group & Priv•t• Lessons. Certified Instructors Underwater Educators 557.0035 Costa Mesa ENROLL NOW! COLLEGE PREP HIGH SCHOOL Pro._ Ac.....,k llceUeM• • 15 to I Pupil• T 11ch1r r1tlo I e Coun11l1n9·Ac1d1mic, Mor•I, Soci1I, Splrih11I e Emph11h 01\ the untftt· 1t1ncU119 of tho nae••· 1itv for ordtr and dlt. cipli111 in all lttll of lif1 e Mulfc., Athlotic1, Oc.11110,r•phv e Now Cl111room D11i9fl tnd Cl111 Sch1d11lin9 e lnd ivlch11I Atf1f1tlon e Rel1¥1nt l lbl1 Cour111 COLLEGIATE JR. HI SCHOOL fCllrh.tfe•, Cellet• P,.,.1 e Emph •1 ilin9 R••ding •nd M•th Pr•p1rat1 ion for Coll•ge Prep High Scliool Progrann e Uniqu• Cl11•room D11i9n 111d Cl111 Sr:h1d11l l119 e lltol Pupill11chor R1t1o e Mu1lc:, Speech, Typl119, Oc1a1109r1phy, Athl1tlc1, ate. e Co11r11tli119-Pr111nlin9 l11ic: Prh1cipl11 of Lili. Ac:1d1mic Pr1p1r.d111t1 111cl Voc1tion1I Planning . COUEGIATE JR. HIGH SCHOOL ST. ANDREW'S KINDERGARTEN • Individual attention • Small Class Room • Enriched Curriculum • Christian Nuture • Accredited Fall R09l1trotlon1 Avallablo St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church 600 St. Andrews Rd., Nowporl BOich * * 646-4646 * * * * 646-7147 * * --K*IUOl...,.mn9- GIAOfS f TO f2 m~tlJ~ n J.' ..,~. ..:.&lJllll ' •'!· .....,_ 1,•U1.·IMP.I. "" __ nr,._ . ..,.,. ~°'""' P~.1tilf ...... , ....... ·-·ftll9·-....... -.. -...... -·-------1111 a llAO-IC llOUll Y IASIS S.1 P .M. nil SPllCll A IWlllf cuttK lllYtCU ·CCC·_. MIA SCHOOt mc:HO&OGCM. lllMC'IS ·AMI llUCAhOH IMllOH • Hf8H KHOCX llfl'lOltot • VOCA1JOfiW ~ £Ml IYI,_.. MU&I llUCA.nGN NOMAM PIHCllOOl All ,.uu.n PtoCIAI ICllUft.A rtl tmlll W.LW''ST PU. .... ·KIMIUA.-11 IS.U.•• 897-2855 •1•1•- * TD PARENTS OF HIGH SCHOOL * AGE STUDENTS: Will they drift, or develop their full potential? The Desert Sun School, established in 1930, is still somewhal old fashioned. We still believe In, and offer, a co-educational, non-sectarian high school experience, strongly based on sound moral, spiritual and ethical education as well as all of the basic aca- demic-study programs necessary to develop the leadership and self reliance to continue through colfege, and lead meaningful successful lives. lo- cated 90 miles from Los Angeles in the san Jacinto mountains, ·Desert Sun has a most beautiful, peace- ful environment; conducive to study and the devel- opment of the whole person. Fully college accred- ited -an oulslanding, dedicated slaff, with the prorram that is needed by today's youth to face the challenges of the future. Energetic, involved stu- dent government backed by the administration and trustees has led to the enthusiastic student sup- port of popular, fair discipline, allowing current teen styles in hair and dress, while, at tfle same time, a policy of, "we don't tolerate involvement In drugs, liquor or lobacco", The students al Desert Sun WANT to be there! Shouldn't your ~n or daugh-ter be there also? Foti FURTHn INFORMATION PWSE CONTACT .US TODAY! THE DESHT SUN SCllOll. ldyllwld, CL 82341 !714) 659-2111 Posttions Available VETERANS Earn up to $2,200 going to ORANGE COAST COLLEGE for the 1chool year Got questions? Call the new OCC , Veteran's Affairs Office in Student Services 834-5646 Monday-Friday 8 a .m. oo 5 p.m You can get help with tutorial assistance, financial aid, counseling, and many more services. REGISTRA TIDN Aug. 16 through Sept. 14 NEWPORT CHRISTIAN CENTER· PRE-SCHOOL 883 w. 15th Srreer Newpart Beach ENROLL NOW FOR FALL Near Hoag Hospital For Further lnform•tion Please Call 646-7117 ' ' I !I ' Ii ' 28 OAll Y PllOT Tutsday, August 14, 1~73 l;il; ---..::1~~_,,.1 I \oil ... -J[g) I --... -1~ I -·--lf51 l IIll ~I ;;;;;' •1 ;;;' ·~:;l[Il]~I ;;· ·;;;',. ;;;;' ;.;IDJ;;•I~ !~ .. ~.,,.,~· ~llIIJ~IJ l~I ~· ,,~, '~I IJ , fluslnou it.ntol 445 Lost 5$5 C1rpentor Houlll!I Help W•-· M&F 710 Hilp Winl<Ml,M & F 710HolpWontld,M & F 711 Hile Wo-,M & F 710HtlpWM!ld.M & fl 7l --F-0---,.,----APT. Mu. IUJ"' ••P<"I'. '°" iiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiii GIRLS-TRA VIL R LEASE e GENEROUS• ALTERATIONS • llEPAIBS HAULING, Ute mo v In., ~ req, 1.e<. adult -· Dr' A ht nt lito'rH or omen will be Pllllo coven. decks,. all b'Pt's gara.s::e &. yard cleanupa. '~°"::.· .:sal:::..c-:!:::::•..:m@7=:::::::.:...-BULLOCKS S SS a Over 11 t\.'8Uable in about 3 nlon1bl.. of ca.rpe nuy. D raw J n gs 548-3129 or 548-0405. ~ .. Youna lady <U.-.28) to u sist Free to traY'-l Ha.wall, Mrx· Jdeiil tfunUnaton e 1:1 a c h e REWARD e uvaUable. ~S...1806. 'LOC\~=L::.tnOVl..:::.;: . .,."'-'&"'b"aullitg'--.-b-y "!!:~~ .. M:{3r'ti': ln ht-alth apa. WW train, l\O ico City & major cities. SocaUon in sho)>plna center. Carpel Servlc:. atuder:lt. Largt'! truck. Re-at. Newport Beach. 645-Q..tl exp. nee. Apply tn puson MU.'il be neat & aingle. No ~ ln~onna~ cill J t!rry I &rl")·. 534-UWG or 673-0647. laiil .... i.iiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiii;• a.n,y alt or eve, 29.10 w. ex~r. necessary. A 11 ~illelp1e For rebni.i or any lnforrru-JbHN 'S c a.rpct & Upholstery South Coast Plaza Coast Hwy .. N.B. transportation turnlshed. , Vfltaae fkal Estate lion leading to return of a Ori Shampoo 1rte s totch· _H_o_•_•_oc_l•_•_n_i_n"g----ASSEMBLERS l'!!!~!!'!!,.;!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!'!"'~"'"I W/'J week ' expense ~id 962--2456 or Eve•. 968-2974 gold !our Jear clover pin, gard. Soil Retardants). VARIAN II Now lntet"viewlng f or DUE to our expansion P~ trainin.fl pl'OKl'ft-m. .t 01 SUCCESSFUL appro.":. 2 inchea tn dianicti'.J'. Degreasers & all color HOUSE OF CLEAN gTan1 Luxury Dinner house appnt. for penona1 ill> EAST with Jeweled horselihoo 1n brighteners & lO n1inute Steam Carpet cleaning, .... 11,. Fuft & p Tl ne e ds experienced Lun· tcrvlew Call MW Sandi, 17TH STREET center; AlAO, aold locke t bleach for white carpet$. dOW5 & floors, lree esL ASSEMBLERS art· .... cheon, dinner. & banquet (n4) 774-8097 108.m to Spm, , Location, Costa Mesa (waaon ch&ln), approx. the Save your mollt"y by saving.,;,-;:;,;::=:::.·~~----waitress. Xlnt work i ng Monday thru Friday. J30 Sq. ft. with additional siie ol 11 nickel, Inscribed me extra ttipe:. Wlll clean DEPENDABLE, Exp'd Lady Sales SupportinC) Positions cood . & fringe benefits. Ap-Parents welcome at in· ~ *1· ft. of stor:\ge. in acr!pt, J.~LA. These are living rrn. dining rm., & will clean by day. WANTED pllcations now being ac-lerview. REALONOMlCS CORP. deeply tre....,.d lami.ly hall $15. '"" rm. $7.SO, ~~-..:6'13-81.:.::..::::1::.7___ Ho·-·kHpl' H1ovy Stock cepted Apply In ...,on on· .:.:.:~=:-::===-I •ROKERS 675-4700 mementos & the loss Is 1r-couch $10. O:tl" $5. 15 yni. ~ ..--W It ly, JiMal Pacific Coast GIRL FRIDAY "'!"' l'TPlaceable. PLEA S E, exp. is wit.al oounlg, not WOMAN wishes days work. Kitchen St• " resHS HWY. Laguna Niguel Growtng sales oUice In qFFICE on Newport Blvd. PLEASE help if .YOU have nlethod . I do work myself. Good and reliable. Ref 's. e Immediate Di1pl1y Trimmer EARLY mom newspaper lrvtne Complex. Good ftlUre ~vaU on lease, partlally any information • 642-35.S!J Good ref. 531.()101. * 541.SlOB * 0 I E 11 . . delive""'. Mus·l have car. ~ptitude. Lite accurate typ. furn, carpeted, air cond., Eve8. & weekends. STEv~s Rug Doctor . lroninn pen ngs xperiencedpreferredfora pos1ttons °"" ·~ 1, .. ~ mo mg. Salary to $600. call ng. Approx. 100'.) sq. "' • ~""3 approx . ..-.-4MJ · Gloria Gray 540-6055 . $250 mo v.-·arebouse also REWARD, Jost Sat. nite, 1 yr Carpet Steam Cleaning. I -· --------• Outstanding Apply Personnel Office Hunt. Bch area. 847-2300 Coastal Personnel Agency, ...;,.., Ideal for Contractor old Bas.set hound w/shrt l'loor.s, \Vlndows. Free est. Professional Ironing • At the side of the new store bet. loam 2700 Harbor Blvd, CM UJJ ears. Blk/\Vht, w / $ m I 646-7811 • • 645-88fj • * Opportunities 1 I INDUST ••• Anbrow, n "~ko~r Laeascth e~ Carpet Clean ii Painting & • 'st & 2nd 3333 Bristol, Costa Mesa Electronic Development GIRL Friday ._ Seely for I sq. t, • ,..,.,p, """"' ~·u Fl C & WI P h • -Technician small nursing home in La· . Al so 600 sq. ft. office Fathers day present <riven oor are I aper ang1ng Sh'tfts E t N rth S'd f B ildi gu•a ottlce exp & h~ng tv/liv'g qtrs, $155. CM. t b d •· 0 1 h M 1· t o. 531 1508 n er o t e o u ng " "'rcall• ~2130 o us y our aughter. Plse u c a n · .x:rv. -Design, layout, test & build req'd. 40 hr v.·k, return, family heartbroken. DiBERNARDO and SONS PAINTING in C.M. in· VARIAN DATA Apply Monday thru Friday solid state test equipment 494-8075 for appt. CUTE AOOBE HOUSE, 1000 Lost vie:· Colgate Dr & carpet sales, installation & ter I exter. Small i ob s Between 10 am & 12 noon & 2 pm·3 pm for voice warning systems. GIRL wanted factory wcrk. sq. ft .. adjoining busy cor-\Vilson , bet Harbor & repairs. Free Est. 963-2639 v.·elcomc. Free est. Jim. MAC.HINES Req's mln. 4 yrs ex~. small shop, call bet 8 & ~~~or C~s~e:S % :~ti:: ;:%~~C:·a~~ until Cement, Concrete p~7:~·wallcoverlng state Equal Opportunity Employer Some college electronics z:oo 645--6920 Costa Mesa. 645-Xl20/&12--6560 Ile Zl951d Has Several desirable. . ' GUA,RDS L 0 ST : Ta n fem a I e CUSTOM Concrete Work. · no. "' insur .. all o · F chihuahua. Vic. Newport Remove asphalt dn'veway•. types of paper. TI4: 842-4386 penings or Mi11ter S.,-cii1ltle1 Full & P/time Positions, H1lp W1ntld, M & F 710Help Wantld, M & !'_!!O ,.. Mon I ~ L Harbor HI School & Replace w/concrete 60c rt. No Wasting Elecfro Mechanical -1-rov • open in Orange .......... 0 n K Industrial Rental 450 NOW LEASING Huntington Beach NEW M-1 Margaret Or. Req. medica· No delays. Free est. \Valks, * WALLPAPER * Assemblers Costa Mesa Bet\ch, Laguna Niguel in La. lion. Ans. to "Cha Cha" slabs, patios. No job too When you call "Mac" guna & Compton areas tor Call: 64&-3681 or 542-7874 small. ~3325. 548-1444 eves. On their 1st & 2nd shifts. 6 · B·.ULLOCKS Equal Oppor. Employer qualified applicaflU who de- alt 5 pm. p TIOS alks dr. Sa -====---='·""'=~-mo's expe.r. required in one sire steady employment. 18 REWARD A ' w • ives. w, TNT/EXT PAINTING of the following areas: Yrs. of age 01· older. Apply 940 Sq. Ft. & UP Hamilton & Nr1vland 646-0697 or 833-0519 break, remove & replace Quality Worlc. Reasonable Cableing, wirewrap, solder-ELECTRONICS in person, 326 So. Lemon Lost Old English Sheepdog, concrete. 548-8668 for est. Ref's. 675-0160, 673-8186 ing or PC board asseinbly. South Coast plaza St., Anaheim, betwn 9 am. k white he~d. blue eyes .• Aug. C:>ntractor \VlLL paint your house. Exp. WE NEED 1 pm. 1?~'..... vzc. Magnolia & _ & reliable. $2.50 hr. 554-0862 • 2nd Shift differential paid. Is Now Interviewing For 4.DT Sterling Security Servic~ LAGUNA NIGUEL nu<UuS, HB. M. Grogan, JACK Taulane. rep a fr, for estima!es. • Excellent bene(its An Equal Oppor. Employer M·l 536-2549. remod, add. Lie B-1 269072. •Modem facilties Full & Part-Time YOU 2400 Sq. ft. & Up. BLACK leather check book. My Way Co. 547--0036 & p~~~ilANNGGING Pie••• Apply On San DI.ego F-. Vic. Daily Pilot on IV. Bay F · ~ • ""J urn1ture CALL AL 552-8374 In Person Call 831-1600 or Mr. Do-Nut shop on 17th o "-ull St., CM or in between on FURNITURE Stripping ENGLISH PAINTER r .....,ntact: J, F er COSTA MESA I t · & E Sunday AM, Aug. 1 2 . refinishing, repairs, an-} n enor xterior lSOO "" fl 2 offices, 3 phased iod .. ....,...,, • • Ch "' w st Ev s ""7887 ..,. ......,_..,,,,,, t1qu1ng. em ......... ean e · .....v- p:»wer, 1 yr old. Good loca· REWARD -Yorksh1·-le"· 892-6389 PAINTING • ~ ..,.....,, ex""r. tion $225mo. 717 C Ohms '"' ' I ,., "' Sales PositiollS VARl~N DATA Television Furnit ure MACHINES Carpet/Draperies Wom..,'1 Shoes Due to Id . ha rap expansw.>n s GUARDS Full & P/time General Protection S.rvice1 Corp. Way, 646-7£r63/64&-l201. rler, blk/golden paws, clip. Gardening nt. & E.'lt., beautiful work. ped s ho rt . Vic. Not'm 842-8.237. ~ .. !.,.DELUX1E OFFICES Adams/Main St., HB. MOW & EDGE Pla:.ter, Patel'l, R ap &ir VDM Experienced Preferred For All Positions immediate .openings in several areas. Work near home in C.1'.1, Apply Personnel Office At the side of the new store 3333 Bristol, Costa Mesa _.t"'ted, I luminated Ceil· """ ""A9 ~ EXPERT& -ings. Plus 400' Warehouse PATCH Space. 1370 D Logan, CM 2 SIAMESE cats, l male DEPENDABLE * PLASTERING * w/flea collar, 1 fem All types. Free estimates ~2228 w/sca1· on right forearm, Call For Prompt, Call 540-S825. l 4oo1 BIRCH, NB Vic: Monarch Bay Terrace. Free Estimate. Plumbing , 2000, 3600 sq. ft. or com· 493-0294. "968-0812 thereof. Avail, l0/1/73. IRISH Setter. 7 n10. fe1nale. * Creative Gardening L.R. OTIS PLUMBING . Baumgardner, 541-5032. b 1 h Remodels & R• · w t 1: rown eat er & flea collar. "Put li fe in your garden & a ._pairs, a er ~torage 455 Lost 8/8/73. Reward: song in your heart" heaters, disposals, furnaces, 642-9873. Expei·. Irishman. Cleanup, dshwashrs. 642-ti263 MIC & ~-RAGE lot. locked yard. ON 8/7 • Dalmation, vi e Maint, L a n d s c a P i n g ' ~~ice~mplete Plumbing Neijts, trlrs, etc. $7.50 mo. Harbor & Wilson, CM . Just Sprinklers installed/repair. 2n2 Michelson Dr. Irvine, California 833-2400, ext. 336 F.qual Oppor. Employer ANCIENT MARINER En ter North Side of Building Apply Monday thru Friday Between 10 am & 12 noon & 2 pm·3 pm Equal Opportunity E mployer ------------~ -- Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M&F 710 . ill Neon, Inc., 531-3374. spayed/stitches in. Ui·gent! 646-lOn. PLUMBING REPAIR 'ent.tls Wanted 460 962-£248. EXPERT :o*jo~~~sr:al~ Boat Carpenter Commercial Teller T* TWO ADULTS * HUNTINGTON , ll arbour JAPANESE HELP \Vilh Fiberglass experience NO¥.' Aceepting Applications For • Sr.Tech Writer Req's digital writing exper. related to mini computers & a knowledge of related software. • Data Control Clerk Must be h i g h school gradua,e, pre fe ra b I y w/some dala control or production control exper. • Software Clerk • area, dark brown male kit-GARDENING Remodel & Repair 10 work on 37• Trawler type Experienced Want small apt, or house. ten, clear flea co 11 a r, hts 2nd hlf _...., • -"-Will clean, paint & repair in 846-9662 Complete Gardening Service HOME Repair & Remodeling yac • -UNITED-s t , ....... ton req • U11.t.a Newport area. Must have ear. telephone, eood record & health. · Uniform1, Equip. Lit. Ins & Voe fum S.. Mr. Bomhill Security Manager At Whitt Front Stor1 In Cotti M110 12-1 pm Mondoy thru Friday. HELP Wanted 21 yn: & over. Apply at Straw Hat Pi:aa Parlor, San Juan Capo, HICKORY FARMS change tor low rent. Have · Free Estimat.es 546-0724 Valley \Vest Build 1\-laint. Broiler-Kitchen Pacific Tra...,•ler Corp. CALIFORNIA BANK processing exper. or other cat. Prefer Daily Pilot LOST Dog, Mixed Terriu, JAPANESE Gardener, ex-* 552-8374 * 547-6008 related clerical exper. Needs mature v."Oman fur . Call: 645-8186. TuFeftym. ReTan rd& ~t;.n!ame per. Cleanups. yard serv. Sewing/Alterafi">ns Hours 9 am-4 pm BOOKKEEPER 6 1\-lonarch Bay Plaza • Inspectors w"':!"k.· w~~u. ~-d~ M .... r . <t:: wa · ;JQV-.>'1\ii;i. Relia. & neat. Free est. r.. .... amie Orange County South 1 ,,~,~~ ""' .. u-iUn-~ .l!.XECUTIVE desires to Apply In Person ..,,.., ~..._.,.. Tho So Coast Pl lease or rent 3 to 4 Br house 2 Boy's gold Ross bikes. On 645-0694. AlteratlOns--642-5845 3 pm-5 pm, Mon-Fri firm needs a bookkeeper 496·1273 Several 2nd shlft positions mpson, · aza Jn NB or CM. Grown CdM Hi School field thltt"S 1 -'GO'AR~D'°EN'=fN=G~-~CL~E~AN=U~P~ Neat, accurate. 20 years exp. 2607 W. Coast H\\'Y. \Vith full charge manufac· open for !~process &,_Lower~-M~al~l,~CM~~·~-- children. Call 8 10 5 pm nighL Reward. 644-5215. Reasonable Price _ Free Est. I N£'\vport Beach 64&-02Ql turing experience. Please 1 ,..Eq,,;,,"'.,1.,0,0p;,;po ... r.'!!E!!'!!m,;,pl.,oY;;,'.,'..,.I receiving inspectors. Req's Hospit.tllty Ho1tffa kveekdays, 556--0330 ask for LOST: Normal Cockatiel • S4l-21'M3 • Te evision Repair c<Jll 1\--trs. Hanson at (714) recent exper. Servi~ " k' b'rd · T 1 H'll 828--5151 or send a letter or COOK needt'd for con-,,ac 1e. I • Vic. emp e 1 s, C I t La & G ..... · COLOR TV Re.,;., e~. rt, AUDITOR-Nile. Ex ...... r. a~ • Se t Is looking for womm to Laguna. 494-2742. omp e e "''" ruuen1ng ,,..... . ..... ~ ,.... .. resume of experience to 1\-tr. v~lesc.~nl hospital, apply 340 ere ary SERIOUS '~'Orking cpl, no Service Hauling & reasonable, most in home. ply in person. Sheraton G-n·. P.O. Box 201. Stan· Victoi ,, Costa 'I e,, 'velcome It inteiview naw UlST W II bl F "-h In "-· h p ·r· •= "' ' " 'Garden Grove office .......,•s 'd Sal dv Jcids/pets, looldng for area : a et ue suede Cleanups. 548-0405 rec estimate, H.B .. N.B. & =:ac n, ...,.,.,,c & ac1 ic ton, California, 90680. An 642--0387. ,..,ping GO. sh SO. 3-5 vr:,~;x. res.i ents. es or a er- lo build 32' boat + Ji ving \v/fringe, vie S.A. River EXPER. J Gard C.i\.1. Bert Gallemore Coast 1-lwy., H.B. Sec Mr. Equal opp 0 r t u ni y t y "' J·~ tising expet". hl'lpful. Must , art 5 . trail RE\VARD!-ioA~ '""". apanese ener. ""'" ""83. • Dy per. h •· .._wrt•-qu ers. yr. proJecl V'I~ Yard S('tV. aeanups. Relia. '''''"-""' CT'. Employer Employer DAY ave car "' ..,.,.... ""'' P-16-8285 & neat Free est. 642-4389. Tile AUTOMOTIVE -Brake & Bookkeeper p/t $3 hr. Company benefils Include 547•3095• Ewa & wknds.. ~22AN,TED:K3c<d b&r hse. UCMp to I[!] MOW & Edge. Expert & CE-RAMl--C--T-IL-E----1 ~~"'!j~~&n ;2klng) .needco~: 4 Hrs. a day. DISHWASHER ~~th .l life ins~.!-.l2t~IH;-;""'=OTE9004"':-:L·~=:-:k~=-,.~-,_--,,-~.,.I " mo. 1 s pets. • IMtruc:tlor'I rm" dependable. Call for prompt NE\V & .... J \Vestcliff UG..Y" a year vacsuun, P•VJ.l ......,., ...,..,_...., ~. NB area 645-8035 64&-9785 .......... ~-1 J h 0 •0 3446 remodel. Free est. Sm . jobs ditions, 532.-4426. Aft. 6, Pe-··~i Agency sharing &. stock options. Reliable, honest, neat. Good , · ' 1 ;;mmmmmm~-~ ·="~"~=e'C'·'-'-'0="'"~===-· -7w_cl_co,m~e,_._>J&. __ 24=26=·c..8589=-"'---'-64=2--'11=40=·------,_,,,.~ at figul"t11. Call Mr. Gardening & clean·ups Top Soil AVON SAYS 1~!,·k ~~te~·~· Experienc.d MODERN Johnson, 4*"574 betwn S .\ ( Pwsona.. ll•l scr:!·uc~ion• 575 Genera~~~i~:. * QUAL.ITY * :!-J::m~yoe:.·::~n. BOOKKEE~o work In Apply ln Penon FACILITIES H~~~NER., Ex p 'd ''mmmmmm;;~;;;1 ----------* MULOI & TOP SOIL* right in your own neighbor· Travel Centre, 20 hrs a wk. :Ji IMMED. w-refs.. 4-5 hrs. !i du. per II PIANO Instr, BA r .. 1usic, ALL types home repairs. ;---,,.~~7-=30'----hood. Be an AVON Repre· \Vo1·k into full time. XJnt op-r/ OPENINGS wk. $2.50 per hr + trans. Personals 530 spec in piano pedagogy. Info Actual time & material. Tree Service sentative. Call no\v: 540-7041. portun. 6-15-5333 he · CaH AM aft 10, 49}--7432. 494-7388, 556-76S7. Fast Sent, No job 100 sm. H OU S EKEEPER/Babysit· FULLY LICENSED F&B Jlome R e p a ir, T dSt R al BABYSITTER in my home, BOOKKEEPER, PartTime, le Plea!ll'ApplyinPerson ter needed 7:30 to 4:30, * SPIRITUALIST * 642-1403. rec an ump emov near Brookhurst & Victoria, experienced. l\1ature lady • Or Con tact ~ron t•-· Fr!, , •• ~;'!:!· Aug, ~ Trimming -Spr8ying 7 45-4 M lhr F . taaer " ..... ...... ~piritual readings 10 am-10 [ .~ ... -1 YARD & lot cleanup. Pain-Call Dave 675-5435 ~?8sm, on u ri. w/i'eferences. 646-5033 d .:I B. KRAFKA 27. 1'.Iust enjoy ldrt>n., !fm. Advice on all matters -""--ting, inte.I' & e:-..te.r. Plumb-I ~~~~~~~~~~ ""=-'0::::'==----~ BOX 13oy must be neat in ap-have car, mature, exp'd, '312 N. El Cam.inc Real, San ing & general handyman. I.[ BABYSITI'ER my borne 2 pearance & have gd \VOrk 16 Feshfon l1l.1ftd 2n2 Mlchel1on Dr re rs ttq'd. ~7 Clemente. 492-9136 492-9034 Call Larry, 645-1752. /Ii!) boys ages 5 & 7 yrs, 7-3:30, record. Avail Between 8 AM HOUSEKEEPER • Babyg>t-PROF. man 50, non-drinker Ba• 'tt' Elrcitoynlll'lt & some wkends. Clse to & 9 PM Call o .. 2060 El Newport Beach Irvine 8 .. y11 ing SAN CLEMENTE AREA '------beach, call aft •, ·~ '834. . -B •· 9 & 11 3 & 5 ter needed, to 5 daUy, \V/quiet habits, pleasant p · • Pl b' Re · " '1.)1)-'t Rancho Markets. et .. 'll • am or pm tart A 20th M t lo ,_,.,naJjty desires quarters HAVE o~n1'ng lo• two aint g -um g -pairs. I•••••••••• BABYSITTER needed 1·n my •iiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiiiii I Equal Oppor. Employer 833-2400, ext 336 5 ug, · us ve ....-·-r • • Mob. llms & Apts. 4~TI7, children. Have car. Mature. :ror boa~~f: id e~~'fen~~ ~~~:::~c!. ~tto ~u~~::: 64&-0977. Job Wanted, Male 700 ~~e ~i~ysp:y w!~i1. "r!'fu; BUS DRIVERS DELIVERY man for early Equal Oppor. Employer e'CP'd, refs req'd. 96J.3T18 ,962-7216. Fenced back yard. 646-0160 H.tuling EXPERIENCED 11·cen~...... have exp. Art 6, 979-3198. morning paper route. C.OSta EXECUTIVES HSEKPR. companion live tn. -=u Help Wanted Mesa/Newport Beach area. cook for elderly lady, Pl) f:ROBL01 Pregnancy. Con-BABYSITTING in My Home RUBBISH Hauling: Yard, Class I driver need full time BABYSIT 1 infant, part Part.Time Approx $200 per mo. Mugt $12,000 to $75,000 per mo., 675-1932 ·fident. s y mp a t he 1 i c Rec1os,~~esa5 64~-e!.;.,, g arag e , war e house, \\'Ork -will drive local or ti1ne. Some housework, $3.Sl Per Hour have dependable ear. Send resume or call TODAY HOUSEKEEPER.. live. in pregnancy rounseling, Abor-'"''"""' v-u.>o'f clean-up. Remove treer;, short line, non-union but begin Sept. 4. NB area. MS-4752 1 nffd lal NO COST "' & d ti. n I ====~-,"==c.....-·11 .. ""/611 o'S-5166 or '°· .ent Babysitter for 3~ .,.. ...i..r, ll •...,n a op 0 s re · BABYSITTING 1n· ho •hrubx, uns1·gh"y -.. h and \VI JOln. O'ID-..,., Startt'-Wane ut I ,. ~· ~APCARE G42-44:l6 my me u u..... ··• .. DEL Taco Costa Mesa exee 1ve 1nterv ew. day. Irvine. 552-7347 .....,.,. prefer age 2 to 4 yrs. $25 debris of all types. 7 days a HIGH School Grad, 6'4", 200 * * BABYSITTER. my Apply T AM, PM D•nrg, full ~r ........ time. Mr: EXECUTIVEfNCSERVlCES, H OU SEK EEP~ 'comp . .nv:.GNANT? Th i nkin g wk. Cul-de-sac, 548-2147. week. r~ast, reliable, reas. lbs., '\'ants 40 hr week job, home, 5 day \Veek, Alter 5, ... "" """'' i:.•w :abortion? Know all the facts South Coast Hau I i n g. not a fraid of hard '"'Ork call call: O"enshaw, llS5 Baker St, 888 N M · Sa. t An Must drlv~. No smokt. \VILL babysit for Teachet"'s 915 Baker St.. Costa Mesa CM · ain, n a a r · t H B 962--5224 •first! Call LIFE LINE-24 children. !\Iy home. Vic. 76"130---'.9006~~~~~~--53&-3302 David Du Mond * 83.1-5416 * 557-59lO · · (714) 547-9625. 1ve-1n or ou • · · . :hrs, S4l-S522. Baker & Fairview 54(}..004(). M 0 VIN G, H a u 1 i n g, RETI RED Navy man, handy I BABYSITIER -11 v e ·in D~IVERY Men, Perm · FACTORY Packagers, fem . lniurance S.IH LADIES July 5pecial l yr BABYSITTrNG • in rny clean-ups. Jt ea so nab I e \v /tools \vill do odd jobs in housekeeper + salary. c A !\l p ER l\1anuJactul'er p/time. Ea;Jy mo r.n $2 per hr to start. Merit We now have 2 openings for • 'membership $5. C a 1 l house, day or night, loving rates, f)'ee es t i n1 at es. yow· home or apt. Reliable. 546·5286 needs exp'd help. Apply 858 ne...,•s paper dehv to homes 1n raises 548-5125 agents to sell life & di~blll· ''Partner' 8 3 6 -1271 or care, lrg. fncd v. d. 64, •299 College Students. ( 7 I 4 t Please calJ 551·3505. Bake~-Salesgt'rl • West I8th St, Costa Mesa N.B. $200 per mo + bonus. · ty for a !\1idwestern co. ,548-1479 ~ 832--7581 • 1 Call L.A. Times, 642-4800. FRY COOK Xln't products & tools to Carpenter DRAFTI NG. part I i me, Apply J\.1ornings Only CAR mechanic w a nt e d, • DELlVER" Man ov•· 23 Pal't tln1e, 2698 Newport work w.ith. Also 100% AtfYlHOLICS Anonymt1us. MOVI NG & ha ul in g architectural, mechanical. THE SEXTANT ti do esu· 1· ' -Bl d CM :Pt;;,~ 542--7217 or write mos Y m c, smog 1c. need~ . H B F V 1 v ., . . an nu ahzed commission. NE\\', remodel, lrame & &nf"''here. Furnihu-e, misc, and layouts 714/847-720-1 Restaurant req'd. Contact Fl-ed San· on.• tn · ., .. , ~f $4 p HR Come in & see our products. ,P.O.Box 12"..3. Costa Mesa. finish, stores, offi ces & ~2si61etc. Bill & Skeeter , Job Wanted, Female 702 6.10 Newport Center Dr. ders. 831-1375 or 493-3375 LA Times, aut? route. 2,.. • ER • Brokers welcome. For e.ppt hon1es etc. Cus tom work. Newport Beach [fashion Jsl) CHALLENGING po s i t Ion Hni. per monnng. $200 + SALARY . call Ray Rico A850Ciates l[g] Lie. Bl-191801. 962-1961 CLEANUP, Hauling, trees. NEED help at home? \Ve 64().0322 available for full time chair· per mo. 847-8979 842-9389. ' \oil ... r....I K '~IWI~I~<om_c_Repair~-. -Serv--. -All-1 Will help you move with my have aides, n u r s e s , -llAN--K-I NG side dental Wdstant in pro-D E N T A L Receptionist. 2 HOU RS PER DAY iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~r:.; minor repairs, alter. For truck. Cheap. R e fs. ho us e.kprs, companions, gressive, preventhl&oriented Orthodontic p r a e t ice , Work from 10:30 am to 12 :30 INSURANCE SALES prompt attention, ca 11 64&-5534. ~~~akers UP john, Installment otrice. Good starting salary outstanding opportunU,y for pm delivering IWlChct to found (free ads) 550 673-3013. SKIPLOADER & dump truck Loan Clerk increases w/individual qualified penon. To $100. businesses i-------·---·---------work. Olncrete, aaphall FULL charge Bookkeeper, SECUlUTY PACIF1C growth. Some exper. desir-Send resume to Oas&ltied IRVINE -COSTA MESA FOUND large set of keys \.\~e~~~~ ~~~~ ~~~ sawing, breaking. 846-IDO. part-time. Thru financial NATIONAL BANK able, but not imperative. Ad No. 901, Daily Pilot, NEWPORT AREA ·with name "Wini" on lock Da Durka, G4G-T.J98, $46-949.5 CLEANUPS, remove dirt, stalements. 548--0487. Laguna Beach, 494-0771 Send resume immediately. P.O. Box 1560, O.ta Mesa, call 979-4577. 1-Spm daily ~vicinity River Ave. close to trees. ivy, driveways. grad-Jobs Wa nted, M & F 704 BAR.i~AID \Vanted. Exper. Write CJa.ssiJled ad #925, Ca. 9262$, Repliel· 11rlctly * GARDENER * ;JJa.Jboa Blvd. Call & iden-* CARPENTRY * ing .. M7·26fi6. Lie. 240182. nee. 6 pm-2 am Sun. thru Dallv Pilot. PO Box 1560, oonfidentlal. Be your own Boll No exp nee., earn whlle you learn, part tlm~. eves & wknds, hill time when quail-ned. Fannen Insurance Group Ed Lani * 54().1834 Jt}fy. 675-1355 :~~~7L1;_ 32 fl. FURNITURE Van for GOING awa.y for a \\'hile? Thurs. Call John, &16-9928, Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626. DENTAL Asst st ant, Full or p/tilne in yOUr fOUND : !\1Ble gray tiger local furn hauls & gen'I 1-lonest, reliable, couple will .l=()..6...::.·-~~-~-~~ CHEMICAL OPRS chalnlde, N.B. Ex per. own area. High Income. l"'~IR~O!!!NW~O~~~~~~~I • t n 11 1\ny Clay is the BEST UAY to houseRit or boalslt for you. :-: F di I pref'd. F/llme. Mon-Fri. Guoront--, Customorl RKER-EXPER . • ea • gray eye!!, ea co ar. d Do , hauling. 548-1862. 557·2736. "'8-1ll0l 1 6 8 1\R Maid, Queen Bee. 1562 or expan ng mot a C'.Ao u 11z ..., ORNAMENTAL 'VI Ogl & Sa 1 A ru n an a l n t delay. "" a t pn1. • .,...,...,...... c: e · n a na .call torlay 6~2_5678, CLASSIFIED wUI S(!l! it! Ne \vport Bl vd, Costa ~lesa, refinery 1n Santa l" e • No Ceth Down LAGUNA 4!»-GJM pircle. CaU 646-0818 after -;;;;;;;;;;:;::::;;;;:::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;_;;;;;;;::;:::;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;: Help Wanted, M & F 710 646-99:G S prin g ". Ch e n1 1st r y 0 ENT AL A 1 a1 11 tan 1 Earn Now, pay Later ;u,--;;-::-..,--,,.~,.= 6 p.m. , BEAUTICIAN. sm). lovely. background In school or Cha.ir1ide. at lea.st 6 mo's t68-08li It 11 An Exec Secret.try f'NO. BLK1BR\VN F . te1T1<'r ~ busy l'!hop :idjarrnt llciag past expe;. nee. Good <.'O. exper H B area S4s..3540 It•• Prof A11fstantl 1. red colllll'. no fags, vry Trader's Pall"ad1'se Aft SPM By Appointn1ent llospital, N.B. Call 8-16-36 78 C .. LE~·R'1'c"A· L2ll/92 t-7464 . betwn·. s-i2 ·am or'H pm. cw~k~~~~ ~tt~~~ ~~~~cit'• SUPhoER WOMAN I polite hse. dog. ta.ken to 1 1 Proposal \Vriter/BSEE SlZK & 642-2371. Stru1 tmrncd. I , part lime help, D ENT AL E x ecutive Sat/Sun off Snlary + ome to t reacue or our Calit. Animal Control, 8521 Control Engr!BSEE "f('I $12K BEAUTY OPR ASST. Huntfngton Bch areri. Call secretary, exp In ofticc comm. PleaU contact Bud "xecutlve deal maker. l-fo Edi.son Way, 536-2511. Sec'y/Stat Typist to $800 4 Days. Licensed, Costa IO to 5 wkdays 847-5806 management, insurance, SC· at Harbor Fair Shell, 2502 needs an e" Per 1 en e e d D A C H S H U N 0 • mi~ I 1' nes F IC Bkkpr/ AIA to $750 1 iiMii'ii"ii· ;i645-0'lii;;iiiil2ii. ........... COMBINATION Oraer Desk, counttna-. Salary· o p en . Harbor CM secretary to Of1Q.niz-c hit of. 15themal&e.OrchiWeU.dcraCdMin«I •. F~~I PC Brd Inspect.Or to $750 1 • Inventory control, ship & 646-2481. -*-Gen'I Offl-co_$450s$500_ -e:kk:p~!:,~~!11~~~ -.i1 Exec. Secreljlries to $750 Better Temporary PosHiona Rec. Exper. helpful. Will DENTAL Sec wanted xJnt 1 ,,_ keep. 61:>--0114 aft 5: SO. t •' mes p b Rel Secretary $700 train energetic p c r s o n • ' TV ADVERTISING an ntelug.:.•t. retl'JUl'cefUJ I ~I ~··.·/GeneraJ ... ~ Volt Instant 642-3472 NB. salary 4 benefits exper. ~ Fee Paid By Employer. $Milta.nt. Who has worldn& ~IIXED male No""'igan i;;!Jc ~•™ -· pmlerred. Call !Hi 548-5588 Typo acoutotely. flg>•re RO. knowledge of nwtt.ttn,, rlloond, Cftm. Shep. ViC. ~1· ~: to J: C , I DENTAL a.sst. chAir aide. Leam the exciting field of adverllrtn1, finance, real .Fairview It WllR011, Coolad dollars Jr."~alts Person to $60<) Personnel ommerCJa Must bo exper. Full Umo TV adverilsl.,.. Orllnll• Co. estate, and "°'l)Orate mw. Pam LaCt"y 5S7-S005 Diclnph(me Typ1st to $600 inc. 1iS day Sat. NB fWO.U22 Airport arta. Afro Fet Jobi <No telephone booth cha.no. AF'GHAN, black-It• -ins. Claim• Awstanr 1575 Teller DISHWASHER J .R. Pierce exactly, but Dexlblllcy 1• • on che11t, male. bnnri'U collar Ortler Deiik Aiuf111tant to WIG M st be t .l cl Ov r Asloc:lates Agency, Inc. must!), Great benefits, -black nea collar -chain o• ~ ~v n--· I IB 5 Bi's • Secretaries u. nee. ~an. e 1885 Newport CM 6421m · ~spcel&lly If you are looklnlt vr~ "" ... !..GE. Cl l)l'OJ)erty, heart or Receptnyplst to $575 21. Dependable. APPlY. Surf ' tor A re rs on a I -, leash. s47.$l42. to Sch. Eech 2' 13\1 i Car ar. i:tty, su1t. tor nursing home, A/P Oerk i<l $525 • Typists ElC!)C!rl<'nccd P/Ume & Sirloin, 5930 W. Coest G•neral La~er P"'fessk>na crowth. Call _ FOUND male G erman $15000 £q, $55000 Vn1. !<'or s. in('(I, rntr or 40 un. $115,000 CAU.. TRISH llOPKJNS llwy., N.B. Plutt· Fonm 1'11.ctory 979--7620 SheplW"rd vldnJ1y Cll,f of Orange Co. proPl.'rty or ~ 1\ill subordinate 50%. For J EftRJ Wlll'T"T'E!\10RE:" • Keypunch UNITED DISHWASHER 8V1' shift'. $2.54 f'V'1" hOUr. JANITOR for full nme ottl.ce Ora.,.e ~ ~>tll Do;·• 494·631>1 <''••· wha1 have )'OU? 675-8220. ~ PERSONNEL • PBX 0 CALIFORNIA BANK Wed lhn1 Sun. Bah I a APEX clenn-up. Mu•t work horcl 6 rND -Whlppet..gray male -M-2 Bt.c Bear Lnke. 4(XX) ft Llkc to trade? Our Trader' a SCD\JICES prs Corinthian Yacht Club, 1601 EmplO)'ment Agency beret I ab I e . E1q1er1ence nr • ~lAln & Warner -Santa waref:tae, offlcefl L3 ac. Paradise <.'Olumn is tor )OU! ~ •AGENCY Tempol'll"" Service 309 Main S11"t'e'I Bayside Dr., Ct'lM, Stt Chef 1810..C Newport Blvd. prtlerred. Please contact: Ana 8/11. 897-2864 paved, fn<:d , Next 10 ho!;p.. 5 lines 4B8 E. 17th SI. (at lrv1nt1 0 1 3848 Campus ·or .. Suite 106 Iiunti;;f.8511Beaeh Debus. Co8ta Mm ~ ICN Phanna.ctutlca.la, 11'c. fND cnt bfatk ScotU~. vtc wtr ·c:o. A-new .'d1op'it <-,,tr. 5 da,yw Sutt1 224 642·1470 NewJX>rl Beach MS-4741 DOMESTIC Jfelp Oeorte GIRL FRIDAY • Weekend 2727 Campus Dr, I Npt Blvd It. 16th St. FOR: R..E. Oil 1 &10-8222. for 5 bucks. lf.;i,. 'If-" 1fen ,., Equal Oppor. Employer Equal Oppor. Employ-er AUl!n Byland Ag1!ncy, 1~8 Real Estate help wanted. ~ A'!_"' equal GP-813-1331 ·w E. ISlh St .. !!.A. M7..Q395 C.U Toni, 49+-0473. Po 4' tmy::yw • Tuuct1y, AV9'1Sl 14, lliJ) ][j]] I L .. , •• ][Ill [~_-_.,, ... __,l tfiJ [.___~_-·__,![IE ~I ,_,, .... _,, .. m;l(j])~·I l._·_d __ •. ;;;'~~·,I --1(§] I .. ::... l~ :l lo W•nlN. MI ,. 710Help W •nNd, M & F 710 Holp W•ntod, M & F 7~ Holp W•ntod, M&F 710 Holp W•nted, M&F 710 Holp W•nlod, MI F 710 A ppll•ncu 102 Mlsatl•noous lltM ~jjjlscjjjojjjljjjlojjjnoousjj;;jj;;;;;;l;l;lb 11 m __ .. _ ... ··-_ffil 1 DAILY PILOT 27 J MACHINISTS ........._. MECILANIC l<l-:AL LS"I·.01't, .sAL£S STIJOE'NTS, i pply now tor A-10 V1NC -MUii Sell ! \Yhile OFJo~ICE fum. 3 typn'!'iten SCRAM -LETS lmpor1 auto Me C' ti an I c SUCCESS CAR£ER Sll.IH p/tlmf' concMSion JOb&. S2 CE Amt:rtcana De I u x t w/~nl.. form a;ttaC"h. ll le•: •tlOclAli.in!f. In s A A H . New or ex~,~--·. Joln ••• NATIONAL COMPANY I". O.·" 17. •ts. Tall, waah., & • ..,,.... ExC<UOnl ~~tng mach'"""'.~ •10 'lbp pay & liberal waie program. Paid health I & 4ental insurance. 11 paid boUdays a year. j Long term seeurlly. Rilyal Induslries, a major manufacturer of nu· 1 clear components, Jg now hiring experienced 1 machinists in the following categories. All 1 •hifts. i Jig Bore Machinist i-Proflle Machinist NC Machinist Engine Lathe Machinist Grinder Machinist ID-OD Mining Madllnist Personnel Department will be open for in· I terviews 8 AM-6 PM Mon-Fri & 8-noon Sat. Other interviewing times ca n be arranged, ROY AL INDUSTRIES 2040 E. Dy" Rd., (Rodhlll I Dy") S1'1t• Ana, C1. 540-3210 An Eq ual Opportunity Employer H•lp W•ntod, MI F 710 Help W•ntod, MI F 710 J·ANITOR, Full Time, Handy Man for Costa M e 11 a building. Perm. employ, Refs req. ph. 847-9696, 9-5. J. c. PENNEY CO. 24 FHhion hlond Newport Buch HAS Openings For Full I P•rt-T imo BEAUTY OPERATOR I SALES PERSONNEL ExC"C'Uent \\'Orking conds OuUltanding benc.fil~ Apply In Pl'~n W AM-4 PM Equl'll oppor. rn1p}Oy<'r JUNIOR SALESMAN: Earn W.$40 per .,...eek wonc. tna l'lller lt'hool and Satur- KEYPUNCH SWING SHIFT 6 l\1o's actual "'Ork expt>r. on keypunch, keytape or key disc device. Apply In The Personnel Dt'partmenl f\londav-Fri, 9am -.12 Noon PACIFIC MUTUAL 700 Ne .... ·po11 Center Or. Newport Beach LADY ba.rtendc1 -(.'OCklail~. exper. ncal, attractive. Call before 3 PM. 846-9T.i0 LARGE corp. formin~ new oommercial -industrial in- terior dl'!ign division. Nl'ed <'.'<p. designer & ace· exec. Resume & salary re- quirements h(>Jd in strictest conlidence. Write, Classilil:'d Ad No 5().1, Dally Pilot, P.O. Bo:t Jj6(}, Costa ~fesa, Culi f. 92626 • l\lnc:hini~t JIG BORER Top nia n needed 10 do prcrls!On aircraft \\'Ork on I n r g e , nunieriCA lly con· trolled SIP. Steady da.v r;hift \\'ork In a fine shop. Plt'ttM." apply at: YARD NEWPORT J324 W . WARNER SANTA ANA SU.7154 Equal Opportunity Employer 1 •. Madtln• op.r•tor1 Plutk'S,. opening< ou 2nd ~ ·3rd •hifts for 6]>et. oprs & lrnh~J. Clean Hie \\'Ork in n\OClrrl) f'lt!w bids, ShJrt 1 ~nus prem. for . nitc "'Ork. • ,day& Riling new 11Ub5<'rlp. 1.k>ns for the DAILY Pn.O'T. Thia is not a pa.per route 'Md dOes not include dc- 1Jvn-lcs or collectini. Open. ll"lg'I in ea.ta Mesa, Fountain Valley and South 1-lunt~ton 1B<'ach. Apply now by calling ~13. ·F..quel Oppot. Employc>r 1 Oppor. for adva~n1cnt. Immro. opening on 2nd or Jrd ah\.N1 & "'knda In our ,Orgo CO. da ta eetUl"r. Compototl .. ••l•ry rates Convenfent loc.ation & Ee1y Commute Nknd Shift prem. r •t•s •"\Ill or p/thne 129 &: Key Disc Call ITI4) 546--6080 Xln'I lri.na:e beOl!fils in- cluding profit sharing. Ap- ply In ponon, • Callfomla lnjttf1on A1oldlng ~ Brtggs Avenue Cosla l\Je-im Irvine Indus. Complex MACHINIST Xlnt opPortunlty for man ,~·tlh &.JI.around maChine shop background to handle \Vide vllricty of \\'Ork ln small shop. Lathe, mill, surface grinder I: some progressive: die f'Xpt'riel"l('e required. Call !714) 642-8060. MACHINIST·Exper. in pro- J•·n•utl f' t ' Al l"meo r~ ''""" LI"' 8:\S-1186 bel noon. -nd 9 n10s old "A"""'°"' ll-..ilers, nr .new 'NON b. ANSWERS ..,.. • •"' ..., ·• World'• lurges:t and taat•st '-U • • ~· forlcllfL Freight aalvage. Santa Anll 'i OOY.'t'll Intf)Ort i:J'Owina resale Ofll'nAlifttlon 01)t'n1ng nt_"\V ofJlcc In Orangf• KELVINATOR Refrigerator Ladifa wear, IAwnmowrs, CfU' Speclllltllt. with a network of ovtr 300 County. Sl50 Pt:r Y.t•ck &: The Balboa $40 bi.kts, lamps. 540-2446 or . Rebuke -Gloot -Sorry -i Ohjl't'I -JOKF..S ( Dick Miiier Motors offlct11 and btx:ome a oomm. Car ti.llowanre, lllah Cl 646-8484 546-4903 1Zl W. Warner; Santa Ana n1embtr of our ~flllionaire school grads only need •t>-Bay ub KEN'!ORE •· I t * AUCTION * J\1 EDI~ office In lfunt. Club. MultiwmUllon dollar ply. WE TRAI N. No ex· h1 N01\' Accepting cond~ $75/or wa~';~' of~e~. &.'h. back offlt."i! girl. \Vrl!e, auverllslng progranl. I-Tac perlence l'll'i:e1su.cy. Call for Applications For 8-12-0'.M9 nit 6:00 Flne Furniture Clags lfJed ttd No, 9'l3. I)ally ~nrant1..>ed licensing !IChool. appointment, r.1r. Paul, • le Appliances Pilot P.O. Box 1.360 Co:sta v ccill~nt sales train.Inv. mooa;, MAIDS & EIL1'.CTRodIC ~frlge~aUNl•'s· Auctions Friday, 7:30 P:·m· J\fcsa , C11J. ~2626 \ hat I~ yo ur license wort11 argc-nl e . w· d • A t' 8 II) you? Check our n1onlhly SALESf.l AN po w c r PORTERS GREAT. $35. Call ~7386. '" Y S UC ton arn MEllCllANDISE lfandler & bonui1 progran1 which n1cu ns transmission, bl:'arlngs, 111-G E WASHER, $50. O'K~fc 2075~~ Newport, O ·t 646-8686 Drl\'er, full IJrnr. co11tac1 $$$ to you! Please call du!!trlal 1111pplic11. Ornng1• & ·l\lcrrltt RIUJ ra/l&'C. $40. Behind Tony'g Bldg Marl. l\lr. Cook, Bcal'5 Furniture, Virginia Jones ~11. Counl y. \Vri!l' Oa11~ilicd Ad J··or The Opening Of Xhll cond . ~IO MOVING! 4~7x9 Brunswick 642--0262 no. 902, Dally Pilot, 1 ... 0. 1 Our Nt:v.• Cuest U11l1.:s REAL ESTATE SALES Bo 1560 c c Build ing Mater••I• I06 pool !able & equip. extra MOTOlt Route Driver for ?'-' ostu l\tcsa, 0 • I Apply Monday thru i'~riday nice, $650 fOt' all. llidc·a· 92ti2ti 9 "M·l·." P'I ·~ & tra I" l•al prov DaUy Pilot in South Laguna. ~ .,.,, l• e Surplus. BulldJng ......... " n ... e · ~fu11t ltve in area and l~ve New office in Laguna Beach. SALESLADY -Cnshicl'. A1·1 l\f,\TERIAL . lfl'.A)'s Cl! NJ!:\V BR sl.lite. J\tany Ot1ler thing~ vaHd driven l l cc n Jc . Must be H~.:enscd, but v.'i ll & Craft background helpful. P ersonnel Office JTEJ\iS! Oooni, lwnber, ply. 4 p.m. to 6 p.n1. Sun, aJl day TV annot11l(~·r: "Tltnf' In t tomorTO"' -Mme station. 511111.~ llmc>, imn1(' JOKES." POOL ta.bl~ wiltt Ping Pong ~ top, paddles, ncl, pool curs, t ,1·l!h rill r1cc<-;1!j0rie5 onl y .. $-10, Trwiler hitch for '7:l • Ply1110111 h S:u ~litf' \Vagon. ·1 u&('(I once . Cu.r carri<'r top, cnclo~d. fit~ almost any \'rhlcJ('. Rims for 6 hole .• Chev, t\vo 10" \\'lrlf' ~ tv.v \\•Hh Urei.;, J\1uch more. 1.\1 Florencia, Apt A. San Clcn1cntc, '192-'.!661' l)epencl.able auto and calih consider eager, llC\V salf.'8· Over 30. Aliro n Brother!!. 1221 W. Coast Hwy. ln Mon, Tues, \Vf.'d . ~ DeSola bond required. Call Han-y people. Many advantages. 1714 Newport Blvd. Cosla Newport Beach l\""OOd, alum shttt &'.. mold· Tr1T, CdM . 673-046.5 STEREO. Q uad a r e•· t -4 Sctley. 642-4321 Conta ct: Dorie Smith J\1esa. 645-6880, J\1r. Cooley. a1"u•·1LwDlndowER's· 's'u0'RPLUS D ISH\VASHEP l''rinidaire mntching high ('flicien E .. . ... s p e aker s. 150 \\'att Equal Oppor. mpll)yer American Home SEC•GIRL FRI. TACO BELL 2406 So. Main St., S.A. po~. like ne\v: aohd \l.'alnut A M/~l/1'1PX Receivrr. NEED an c-xll'a lncon1l'? Realtor P1'Cfet· student w /n igh I 1'fon thn.i Silt 10-;) Spi!lnet df'sk, perfect ~nd. Gn.r rnrd professional sii1· Pf'rmanent part llnie help 1!75 N. est. H.wy., Laguna TRAINEE classe!I. Part llml'. Good 714 : 546-1032 s.,111°,1: handsc:>tn e Span. h~oor turntablc, s track tnpc dc<'k. 1\,Ccded. Eves, only, ln<'I • 494-1001 • startintt" salary. I\"o ex· .IO cs: tY.'ln s P re u" ~: !'rill brand 11<·1v ln box anrl \\'knds. Ovc.l' 18. l\ltt.le & I Snu1tll J,.rtowing agi;:l'c,ssh·e JX'rience necessary. 8 l 8 Cameras & bol sters: valance: t w i n gu1:1rantt'ed. \\'ill Sflcrific·<' fcnlolc. Apply Pa ul 0 R:EO CARPET Sii rs <'nmpany nl't'! s a Ckean Ave, H unt in g Ion Equipment 808 beds: glas~ top d~tor II shari> attractive, yo ung & Reach. 530-7800. tbl: 54g_2771 nil fC\r $127.36. nr for snw !)rive-In Thealre 11.ftcl' 8, Re•ltora uggressive girl 10 take ovl'r C!\.~NON FTb cal ca "d TIVI N 1 t . 'd' 1 1 d n1on1hl y payn1cnh1, ca 11 • Pill. REAL ESTATE all office duties. Phones, 3 (.,\DIES needed to work · 11 r , "'1 c c ec r1c." JUS -a-:ic · creclH managrr K93--0JOL , Nurses Aides-SALES MANAGER ty ping, books, etc. Irvine Plll"I 1i111e for TIIE DRUG· angle Jens, lclephoto IM1s, 1 club chair, \V c b brr ~ I Orderlie s Rl'iiale Office needs tnanager J ndu.~trilll l"On1plE'x. GIST -to introduce a new Cannon speed light s!robe, bnr-1.>-que, frplc screen, 100/o OFF ; , , CALll'. COPYING PROD. line of cosn1etics. Applv in delu.xc case $450. Dave's clothes wash~1· & c.lect , • d Openings all shifts. Good v.:Hh 2 yeJll'S of Real Est.ate C 11 1 ""'t·son at THF. DRUGG.IST, Camera Exchange, 474 E. clothes dryer, 646-9781. cnll I With This A . starling \\'ages. xln't benc· experience. Ne\vporl Beach ct Lou B ~bal !179·:.!JTJ 21421 Brookhurst llB on 171h St., C.i\f. bet 4 & 7 pn1 All fl1r11h11 re. a11p ha nc-c11, fits. Tr11.i11Pes accepted, iu·ea. E."'(panding company. SECRETARY Aug. 15th ot 1:30.' ' Furniture 810 DIAi\IOND ladies \\'Al ch, c-;;-. ·rv ·s .. lan11>S, toy!\, cl~ttws, olclr r \1'01ne11 prcf'd. LVN · Excellent opportunity fo1· RECEPTIONIST gagement ring, \Vooclard & •• n11sc:. Ends. Xt l-l . U~F.:~ Oiargc 11·7 shi.f!. rtelief professional growth. Apply Execulive ofllce!l congenial I TOOL & DIE MAKE~S l\fOVING SALE _ Beautiful wrought iron, chalse Joung.,, US1\BLES, 2;,oo Nf''>'fJOll E:V. -1-1~!1,1 :~lftMo.~ew :~ c~;:~1f~~cead8:~ ~s.·u~~ Ulmosphcrc. TYl>ing 70, TOOL R~OM MACH_ s livingroom furn i t u r c. chrs, tbl, n)d blk niarl.ilt• Bl\'d., Cll-1. Tues. lhru &ii. Shoit ffand 90. Mature ex· Days & s11•1ng. Xlnt working Almost brand nc\\'. only 3 top. GE radio. 673-3772 ~ NURSES, RN & LVN, full or ~!!'. ~~~.PC~!.~~~· IX'lienccd, .,..·ell poised ' sec· conditions & over °:n1e. Pro-mo old. Couch, love seat. AUTO~fATIC Garage Door Musical Instrume nts 822 ··: rra~ti~~~ 0 ~" :)r~ 5 ~n e ~t; ___ __ _ rctary required. Starting grE_"ssl ve die expenenei! re· s1vlvel rocker, glass end Opener. Finest Brand. Reg. REAL ESTATE SALES salary S7'50. Excellent fringe qui red. . tables & coffee table. swag $200. Special S12!;l. Installed QUILTER AMPLIFIER ~nspelftl•l-.1 .. CGoodall "''~~~P:10cs •··&k· FREE LICENSE beneht s. Loc:ated near o .C. Ban-y L. Miller E~. Inc. lamp, single bed. 14 l "'/S yr Guar ~3577 6 12 , ~•-t'>~ 919-41~ """" -~ U"t go '"'" TRAINING Airport 833·;n86 ITlOO Redhill AVf'., Irvine Florencia, Apt A, San · · 1ipe....,.crs _..,.,. ;'" for Mr. Snycler or apply ar , * SEC. RETA.RI ES * An Equal Oppty Employer Clemente. 492-2667 SLIDING glass door, 8'0 x GIBSON Guilar &. amplifier. 1~·1;) Superior A\'c .• NB. I F'amous Real Estate Liccns. ~ REDECORATING 0 k 6'8, Penn c r cs t pon Collector's Heni S55 NURSES AidClli _ 7-3 3-11 , ing Course now avail~blc lireat variety: Sh/no sh Trainee-legal Sec'y -ar dis h\vasher Kenm o r e • 64G-5503 • thru Ta1·bell Realtors Free Gen'!. Sales, Land Dev. Mkt , Accuracy in typing. Con. bro1wn, hisoh-laballk?,O.haOra11""00'e \\·asher & dryer. 536-00n no cxpcr. necess. Good > • • ~ L I 1 u=suoo . 1 11. k / ve ve g c c 1r .!-~~~~~----BOGEN p A 60 "·ai;:es & benefits. Apply at I lace.ment Service. t rt'e rg sm o c _,.,. mo ge~m person. or·~\' ea~y Hexagon conimodc tbl $3a. SONI-Trlnitron Color TV, 12" · · ainp. \\'all, 1445SuprdorAvc.N.B. T~ning Program. E3t11 FREE FREE FREE gouig a!tomey. St~t $425. Gold tbl Janl p$3.5. Goidlcaf nu Fischer Supergl~~ u:oc \\'/horns or spakers. --F CE RLS \\"lule you learn. Call Al Liz ltclnders Agency fee Rci_mb. 6 _ nl~ ~-Call & olive tbl lainp $30. Green w/Nevada Binding, K·2 Ally ohms $l00. 847-4772 • 2 OF I GI Sloan (714) 8:>2-5440. 1121 \\'es1crly P\acl' Ann Chnstle, 556-8505, Con· velvet hanging lamp, gold Poles $225 645--3559 Offlte Furniture/ 1 . NEEDED R.E. SALESMAN Suite llS, NB 8J3.8 t90 trol Cat"<'er E~ptoyment !rim $35. Kingslzc orange 2 SINGLE box springs, mat· Equip . 824 Radio le\ephone dispatch Investigate the new approaeh SEC'Y -BKKPR Agency, 3400 Irvine Blvd., quilted bedspread $ 30 . tresses. Great condition. 1\tusl be 25, nbl e to drive N.B. 642-2977 ~AS. 138 E 18 CM 540 "'" Appl_r In Person &. lnnova\lve marketing G1uY.•ing Costa Mesa Co. ~ <T"M<W ADLER EI e ctr I c 21 , YELLOW CAB CO. techniques of TllE GAL-needs sharp Gal Friday for TYPIST-Lite Secre tarial REDUCED 1'0 $300. MOVING & SI'ORAGE Typewriter, New platen. , 186 E . 16th, Cos!a Mesa LERY OF' HOMES. You 1 girl office. Bookkeeping, duties, Type 60-75 Y.•pm, Ne\v Simmons 60" lovcseat Lowest rates in area X1nt cond. $200. 675-1011. \~·ill be gl.ad you did; Call payroll, typing, shorthand. S/1-1 01· speed \\'riling hide-a·bed, Beautyrest mat· 968-4765 EXEC sW\•\ chrs $15/25 Sec ·· OFFICE Girl wanted 963-5611 for appointment. 642-8080. helpful. \Viii do typing, tress. Yellow & brown AIR •. 100 hra SS/24 D k $20/90 Young. sharp looking. Part LiC'ellSed or unlicensed '"e transcribing, swbrd relief, Herculon fabric. 644-5013 a.ft . comprell50r$lOOo: gun, Plcerce 867 w 19e™ 642-.,.,..., I time, typing. Call for np· .... -ut 1nln. * * SECRETARY -S:JO · ans1ver phone, vnr off 6 psi, near new · .nv11 pointment, Newport Bench 12;30 (Mon. thru Fri.J $Z.50 duties. GJ'O\\•ing financial FOR 1 . 673.l65S Pi•no1/0rgans 82 j flnn. 548-2272 RECEPTIONIST per hr. General clerical du· orgunization, loc. in Fashion ~= c"'bc.$40unCoUn1shed bar, GENUINE cowhide rug, Im· les, some shurthand, ac· ._., n rncr group d tro I $S5 -I o u TB o ARD l\1 o tor curate typing. CALL MR. Island art'a. Good oppor, & ~Ira Latw.e $lOO, dlnelte pnrte m Argent na, . \VURLITZER Sterro Spinet ~·lcchanlc, Exp. 5 dl'ly "·eek. Day or night, no exp. nee., r.1cNAMEE. 963-4567 :<Int conip. ~.": Appllca.~t $75. plu.~ dishes & misc. 546-5904 or 646-4250 Organ. Ex. cond. 1 ~ yr. • 1\lust "'ork wknd!. Newport easy, fwi job, \Vill train, no n1ust be am1b1t10us. Expd Hunt 1 ngton Continental BOGEN P.A. Amp. Ei(I watt, old. \Valnut. Multi-math: j &·h. 6T;;t-2811 typing or shorthand, ci c. SECRETAHY I Bookkeeper, pref. 644-4360 l9m Claremont Ln, HB use w/horns or speakers. percuuion. cassette deck. 'I 1\pply in person any a ft or r·or smaU Marine orlenlcd UNDERWRITER (B-kh .. -l & Adan>•) Any ·•m• $100. 847-4772 548--0184 PART or full 1 i me eve, at 2930 \Vest Cit H11)'., business. 64..')..<1520 '"" ....... VI• =.iiii,lllililil-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ' J\11111in..11i sl &: Haird~W?r N.B. * SECHETARY Fct' Pa.id. Heavy personals DUNCAN Phyfe Table 4 I ,1 ror Bfllboa Island Shop. Dave Carroll Sailntakcrs &/or commercial expcr. in chrs, $99.50. Twln beds '$58. ·I 673-7C8 RECEPr10Nl31' & telephone agency in_surance <..'(). Must Obie bed $55. BuUet $99. 1 operator. Receive &: direct C.M. 645-4730 know ratmg. Top benelits ANTIQUE Victorian marble PAYROLL CLERK l\ll1st have experience in con· Rh'Uction Industry. Must havl' knov.·leda:c or reporting 1-crHfied payroll. Sal1try S600-S650 lloun 8 A?it·5 PM ./ l\fedlcal Plan, 100'7c paid by the company. ,/ Paid Vacation ,/ Very Attractive Ux-11.tion ,/ Excellent Working Conds Located In Newport Beach Ao'OAS 1''roqi Orana:e Co. Airport. Send Resume To Clas1i:l!ied Ad no. 931 c, o Dally Pilot P. 0. Box 1560 Costa Afesa, Calif. 9~ PAYROLL & Personn e l Clerk. Handlin& of coni· putertzed data. Duties in- clude bank records &: recon- clllaUons. Full time erni>I~~· men!. $450 to s1art. 646-0S28, Roger. PBX Operator Part t lmc am/pm shifts avail, 640--8073 customers, ansv.'el' & direct SERVICE Station he 1 p inclu.ding dental & profit top dresser, 125 yrs old $275. incoming phone calls. Some "'anted, full & part time. sharing. Salary to $725. Also 344 Ocean, Laguna 494-3315 typing & filing. Call Mr. Must be 18 & have dri\•ers Fee Jobs. call He I en BLONDE 01 . Sul 6 J .vnn, 646--8981 lie. SonlC exp nee. Neat ap Mason, 5-10--605.5, Coastal n~ te • A 00NVEHt£NT SHOPPING ANO SEWING GUIDE FO!t THE GAL ON THE 00, v••• Pd Pcnonnel Agoncy, 27 9 0 ch&!rs, gill.s:I front china pea.ranee,. com m · c b et dro 1-... tab! ( Bonuses, training & ad· Harbor Blvd, CM a in . P ""tu e ex· RECEPTIONIST I Typist. Accurate "'/figures tor general office. No book· keeping. Salary o p e n . 645-ll&t RECEPI'JONISI' -TYPJ~. Wanted for beauti1ut ne-.v Real Estate. oWce in O:ista Atesa. Bxce llent Co. Benefits call 833-1931 . RETIRED or sen1i-relired man to weed planters abt 4 hrs per day In comple..x. 546-4338 RN -male or fem. Nlte shift. Raleigh HUis Hospital, Call 64.1)...5707' ROUTE SALESMEN La~ National Co. is looking for permanent stable nlen. . Excellent starting salary. If interested Call: 714 : n4-0330 RUBBISH TRUCK DRIVERS 1vanlcd e N xp. nee. Earn Class II Lie. other benefits. Apply In rson vancemenL Apply In person, \V A l T R E" S S E S • Exp'd tends ~ 654~b ~· 18020 Magnolia, F.V. Breakfast & Cocktail. Good 7"'==,,.-"""-,,,=----1 for •n •d In Woman's World SERVICE C&Jhier & PBX hours, good pay. Call Jackie ANTIQUE white din, rm ~et, relief. Good typist. Accurate Westbrook, bchvn 8 am & "3 buffet tbl , . 4 gold velvet C•ll Miry Beth 642·5678, ext. 330 ~1 &. pairultaking in figuring pm, anyday except Sunday. cushion chairs. Kg. sz. A-fed. M I ><pail' ord•N. 5 Day wk ·~74. -~\n'd. $200 va I u.. Slim, .Sensation! For Outdoor en ' JIU .. Call J\frs. Brant at WAITRESS exper. Fantutlc .-7=~o=--~----1 ~ · ~ ', .1' Johnion & Son Lincoln chance for a profestiional MOVING S I m n\ o n 111 Jtr"'M> -., Mercury, 2626 !-!arbor Blvd, wailress. Graveyd shift. hid e-a-bed mahogany ii' C.l\t 540·5630. Xl n't tips. Reis req'd. postered bed, tables, end SERVICE Sta. 2 Mt'n Ulime 646-5304. tables, coffee tables. pie. d & · M .. _ • lures, odds & ends. 495--1027 ays n1tes. U.!t ....., ex· W•1tre11 NHded COFF. ~1 2 End bl xl per. Time + time & '"'· App{y In Person •..,. t s, nt Att0 19th & Newport Blvd, ALLEY WEST cond, 1150. Game tbl 4. chrs CM. $100. Lrg Modern dt>sk & 7106 W. Oceanfront, N.B. chr, $100. 2 Danish Chn, ._.L-. SERVICE Sta. Salesman, p I time, eves/weekends. Neat al>pearan<..-e. Apply morns, 2590 NcY.•port Blvd, CM. SERVICE Sta. Salesman, f/linie, eves. 1 Yr lite mech. cxper. Neat ap- pearance. Apply moni~. 2590 Newport Blvd., Co6ta J\tesa. SERVICE Sta. Attendant, full or p/llme. Apply In person. 3195 flarbor Blvd, WANTED: Odld Care for 120. &: lamp $5. 675-4595 one healthy 7 mo. old girl, TEAK Bedrm set Flncsl your home. 5 day wk.,_ S. Danish Construction. Like ~PJ\1 . No smokers. r.10VJng ne"'• Triple dress, beehl into your lll"E!a SepL 1. Call chest, bed.side tbl & Jan1p. collecl, 1~. $300. GT:>-5206 \VOMAN . to do 11 .gh I o°'F"F""1CE=''-"Fu~rn~i-tu-ro-.-=n~·.,.- housekeeping & l\abrs1t 3 clocks & ml.sc Items. 200 , )T. old + . schl. children, Newport Center Dr., Suite J\1usl be re:hable, have own 312, N.B. 644-9(6() transportation. 5 days only :--,~==~""~--­$250. mo. 962-9960 aft 6:30 * VELVET sofa & loveseat, pm Queen Hide-a-bed, only 4 · · mo old. Also area rug 2 SERVICE Station Attend. WHO ;~sA ~~ORK? ·"6=75-®i=-==-·=-~---­ P/tlme. Llte mech eXper. OtOOSE your hours, work HERCULON sofa & Jove CM ' . ' ' -I J I Far Appolntm<'nt A S.loguud Bu1ln111 System~ Company duction & 1001 making. 301 PBX operator for anl!lwerlng AW. Oyer Rd,, Santa Ana. service. Evening work . J\fAIO, llve-ln who would Steady job. 5.'l6-a881 love twin girls, age 2 .)'1'a 2 PERMANENT Babyi;ltter mo's. ?.fust be lmmac. needed. Your hOme on Malnt11.in 4 br hm. Age late Saturdays: only. For child 5 30's early «rs. 673--0832 or monUll old. 968-4971 Sam-Sam, Dewey's Rubbish Service, 2113 Canyon Dr, C.M. An Equal Opportunity Employer. *SALESMEN* Apply Laguna Chevron 604 for yourself, be your own scat, Glove-soft v In y I So. Coast Hwy, Lag. Sch. bo$s. Men or women. Can hide-a-bed like new , SEltVICE Sta. Graveyard he slightly handicapped. "6°'7>--0869~""~~-~~~­Shift 10,..7 am. Must he neat Neat-Clean Appearance. J\10VING, J\tust sell! 5 Pc. ,'/;. exper. Apply 3190 Harbor Vis, retired. Age 25 to 70. bdrm set $90. Cou c h keypunch to $565 $ecrfltarle• lo $650 Penonal Sec'y $700 Clerk Typ/stat $575 Exec Sec ConMr bckgmd $600 A/Pay Ocrk $500 Scc'y/Recept S750 A.IP Constr bckgmd $656 Elt'C Tech $4.5().$5.50 hr As.'Jl Book.keeper S6M So<'y """'"' $650 t:xec. Secrelar)' $875 tile Clerk $37' $toe'y, Ind Rel S600 f.eol Seeretttty 10 $750 NEWPORT P•rsonn•IAgoncy ' 133 Dover Dr~ N.8 . 642.:1170 KEY TAPE OPERATOR Wt need an experienced Keyt.ape Optrt1.lor to work nm shift on our r.tohawk computer. Ex c o 11 en I '1bontfll1 J>Ack&ae. c.n.tl for 1appolntment. 1, Pulonnt'I Dcpt1rtmcnt I !1141 "40-4020 '" AVERY PRODUCTS r-Omlwner Dtvll..lon 1 ~s. SuUn 1 ' Santt1. ~A. California , ·rNear Harbor It Warner) ~uaI opportunity employer ~ 1n/f KEYPUNCH Top SU All ah\ha avalloblo l<IVlno MH!ilO •-17802 Sky Park Im ~13·l322 730 \\1• LA Palma R A FEE AT TEMPO po Ttn1porary Hl!lp ~2-S650. :..::==~~:'=i~7=~o=-PRESS DPERAT R MALO Seachff ?.totcl 1661 S. Coast H\\')'. LAGUNA, 494-4892 l\tAIDS NEEDED Apply JA.\fAJCA INN • 673-81XI • ""M"'A"'I N"'T"'E"'N'°'A7N"'C""E,-.,.,MA'"'""N' For metal refinery In Santa 1'~e Springs, ex per. In plun1· bing, carpentry, muonry, lite eltc. & v.•eldlng. 11and tools req'd. Good oppor. SteAdy empl. 213 : 921~7464. MAINTENANCE MAN to ~'Ork ot Orerce Cnly 1''alrgrounds. Thurs/Mon. $500 per n'IO. Older man, non-smoker pref erred, &IZ.9006 after T pin. Mkta Mgr TrAtnees NATIONAL COMPANY 0Jl':nill&'. offices in Orange County. WE TRAJN, No Ex· pertf1"1Ct net~. Start at $100 per "'eek. Call today for al)PO\ntn1ent, Mr, Ada.ms, 97'9-tQ26. MANAGER TRAINEE Outatnnct1na oppOrtunlty 10 advance to managerial poa:I· t1on In ~ """'· OUr cur-l't'nt manager• cam $1000-11500 mo. Mu.st have door to door canvaU1na tX· perlence.· CaU Mr. Newman 979·S2'22 MARKET -LtQtJor Store Ml !Nlvtrsl openings for :dn't C I e r k t w I fuanag@rlal potl!nll~I. Xln't v.•01•klna: 1.."0nds. Oator nllc!l. Salary open. App in penon, 3G4l S. Bristol, nta Antt. F'u1 rt':lults llnt juat a phone c-11 away • 642-5678. H&\•!l IOmelhln" you want to tell'!' CIU1Uled atla do It weU • coll NOW ~7S. \\'omert lo work lor plnstic molding plant. 546·3370. PRINTING OFFSET PRESSMAN Thrc(' dny, 12 hr shift . MUl'll be ab\~ to opera1e 2850 & 1250 Afultillth Prc!ll'I, Apollo -W e b b Press. Some 11tripplng & pl.ate maklna: required. \Ve need sorneone who is a self sta.i1er. 2-4 yni. exper. in Q[lset Pres!! '"""· Apply In f'eritOT'lncl Dcpat11nent J\1on-fl'l1 9 an1-U noon PACIFIC MUTUAL 'iOO Nc-.vport CcnU'f' DI'. Newport Boflch equal oppor. employer PRO Shop, retired toelal lK't". m3n lo worlc 2-3 days wk. Sec Clay Ellis, Del \Vebbs Newport.er Inn, 6-3 dAlly, 1107 Jamboree Rd ., N.B. REAL ESTATE YOU'RE TO BLAME for not aucettdlng with Ruuell le Auoclates R\.'t\I E.11tate. Education by the ex· clt!t'lve Ruuell Ml!thod. See our n.lei. executive library v.·lth !he manager L. Devid at 2'l3"ll 8rookhurst, llunt· lnaton Beach 714·962·7787. R.E. SALESMEN Why not work 111 th~ holt(!s! Bench/Fountain Valley. Lei us train )IOU ~ Call Phil l\tc:NAmff, V I L L A G F. REAL F.sTATE. ll63-4M1 CLASSU1EO ...... 64>-5671 Do you take "Salesmen 81\"d., C.M. Su pplement your Income. ,v/matctring chair $75. wanted" ads with a grain of SERVICE station attendant , Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a 64G-2069 salt? Can't say I blame you. 1 day. Apply In person, "~IO""D;;E;;RN';;-:;,.hroo==m::e-&::-: .. ::.,:o1::0u-::tll I followed UP a few myse-lf part 1 me. no expei·. nee. y n cab Co 186 E 16th " ~ .. In the pest. The job seldom ~1396. 569 \V. 19th SL C~1 e :JI\' •• • · dinette tbl & c h r s, rvro to th cl · · ti SHOE Sales, "P· nee. Self St., Costa Mesa. Cabinet/room d I v Ider 1 up e aun m ie \'OUNG !\fan for yard ~-ork . 847-8906 ad starter , full 01· pRrt time. =~°"'c---,-,-,.-~-Do .yourself o favor ,to: ex· Salary + incentives + Vic. Brookhurst & POI. KING Site bed lneludcs plore this one. If you'd like bencfits, pleasant I-' a. n1. ~1~1.~50~H~o~u'~·~968~-0~738~.~~~I bedspread. i\ted1tc1Taneant1' __ 'ft to make $250 a v.·eek im· stort. !\tr. ~1 a r o 1\· it t headboard, $100. 6T:.l'"'6840 ! 9349 SIZES mediately, \\'Ith an eye to 1 ;i54S4i6840iiiiiiiiNiiBiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio j II ~ l EXECUTIVE desk, glas..~ top 1nuch more In the future, I ' MerdlmdiM ·. & irv.•ivel chair . $7~. I'd like to talk to you. II Sn•ckb•r Manager STa-WO your qualifications match .. , 1 d h n ·bl ~mmmmmmm;;;; . 10Y:i-20Y.t Hc"ll ,,·ear and wear l'l ncf ~ enjoy this handsome jacket. : our requirements, thl.a could "alurc a y, rs cxi e * DINEIJ'E set, i''onnica be the career you've been Salesman-E xper • BOO top table & 6 ehalrs. ,,,, 1ff,.,;.., 1ff r...-r'-For outdoor men -th.is ~ bulky, belted jacket wit I deep shn"·l collar. bi , F ti ~. 1 .... Antiques 1 0 looking for. or our wpor ng 8 .,.,._, 1a1 \1• ----------'1 548-1732 lntervic\v appointment 1()-4 .,..·a1-e & housewares depart· P!<.t, weekdays, 586--3182. ments. Sal" DREAM JOB Dayliml' Sales Ne"' l\Iarket F!ln!Rstk· Acceptance Advancr1nent Potential Office H•lp Experienc:ed & n1ature Good pey &: x!n 'I fringe benet':its. Call :>ID-3635 for an appolntment. WHITE FRONT COSTA MESA If nil tl1i:; and $150 per d;\Y SNACK Bar girl, n1u.st be appcali1 to your itelllng ln· neat In appearance & have stinct !hen cA.\l for appoint· 1tcl \VOrk re<:orrl. Av11\I ~en t , 1\lr. Strong, 979-2526. bct\\"eell 8 A~1 & 7 P~1 Call St\LES order & purchasing 6~1l-Xl60 r::I R n n c h o clerk. Small firm. Proct-8~ r.1arlcet1. 1111\e~ ordcrt, type purcha!IC' j ..i;iiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ordt•rs, transcribe dictation. Stock~ C lerk $702 l\1edlc.-nl plan. Call ~fl". $upttvbory exprr. High· Lynn. 646-89S'1 school arndua.te. 2 yrs espcr. &tics Rt.111·1 RV AN ACENCY 'f'O'i & GtF'T PARTIES 1793 Newport, 0.·1 &t6·4&l4 l!OUM'\\'l\'CS demon.'lfral01'1', 17931 &ach, JIB 847-9617 eArn to $2,(Q) by Dec. l . No delivc:ry -no collecl Ion. ~K room man for fa.st !''rec llo!lten gift~. need growing boat co. Apply, Clip- cnr , ri23-$484 Gifts 'n per. Time + time & ~. Gurlgcls Oet'ldenlnl, S.A. SAI.J.::S rtpra~ntaUve ~l/F STllEET 1''0REl\fAN • CITY lo .sell offl('(! 1uppllcs 111 OF SAN JUAN CAPIS'l'RA- Nc1~1.10rt Beach ar en . NO. S704·$..!t63. Pf'l' n1011th. Permanent pMllJon, sales Exprrir.ncc rrquh·1>d in Pub. 1!XPt'1ic11l·e pre r e r r c d , lie Work1' con1.1t1i.1<·tion an<I tWnch S!ttionera, 1 SOT n1alntrnun<.'t operRtion~. Ob- Nc"•port Blvd., Coata 11.1cMa. ta.In up1>lit•11!1011 fron1 P1>r· f'al Profit ts ti.tlnlned wOOn 80nnel Ofth:e, 32400 PMt..'O you M':ll lhNudt result-get• Adel"nlo, San Ju11n C111 pls· ting Oall.)I Pllot Clue:itlcd lr8no. CA. 92675, 7141493-1171 Ads. 643--5678 Oualned Ads • . . 642-5678 VICTROLA, cxlnt. cond . + * COUCJ-1 & LOVESEAT • pockets. bulloned c u fl !I . 200 old record1' (incl. Car· brand nC\v, both for $150. . Crochet of t~·o strands kn! · ; uso, Giu<'k. etc.) 1'.take offe r Usually home. 968-7910 1Sto1rt wh•lh alhsl~kddand ting \\'Orsted. Pattern 7184: : T I I •-' Ph DO s mp e s ape , en . a R I 36-4" I I ded • rar e or gramap .. unc. . l'.BLE bed with box wide collar and you have s Z(l!l · " nc u · ' R92·1832 sprmgs, $15. Good coi'll:lltlun. fMh~n·s favorite shirt look! SEVF.NTl'·t'lVt~ CEm : * 842-5776 y, "' for each pattern -add 2i\ • T\VO 19th Century or iginnl Have \t in one or two colors. cents for each pattern for : oll paintings on canvas of Gar•ge S•le 812 Prlntt'CI Pattern 9349: llalf Air ,_.18n And Special fl , Jlilaria Montez.. $220 for pair. Sizes 1011~. 12\4., 14~~. 16~'· Ing: othen,·lse thtrd-cl'" ,' 673--0802 \""ARD $Ale r BarKalru: Rt lOc 181,ii, 20~). Size 14~ <bust 37) delivery will take t , PINE k>t>box $l:l5. Child's Books, punles, dishes, toya, takes 3~ yard! ~Inch. \\•eeks or 11101'(", Send ro : roll top de~k $4i"1 €!IC. Better women• s 'NTS Alil'."C 81'0tlkl'i, the DAJLj'j ' 6·7 •• 1,,~~ dreAAes, size 12, Uc ea. 2 8EVE1"1'\•ft Vll\: (:I', .. PILOT 10-Nl'edlecraf ' " ~ m<'n's bmwn 11ullt1, site 4.0, for each pattl!m ... add 25 • ·1• • CLOSING Otrr SALf:!: 2Sc ea. Shoe rollerskates, cents for each pattl!m far Dept., Bo~ 163• yOldkCbeNl1<y• 1' f:\'eryth ing to be sold 111 1550 siz<' t. Terrarium. \\led· Air r.tAll and Special l·landl· Sta!ion, 1 e"' ar • · · s. Cst H\.\·y, Laguna lkh ncscl"''· Au•. 15• nit lOA'I. "~· otherwise thlrd-class lOOU. P1·1n1 s ... me. A~ : " d \11 tak threr Zip. i'11.t1ern Number. ' 1 Appliances 802 2132 \\.'allace CM. e very w e N E • D L ECRA--', ::!e'.'.:.:.:.:::=~---::.:.:1:;;;;.;;;;;-~·---1iiCI week• or mor"e'. Send 10 c. r. '": J_o_w_1_1_ry,_ ____ ..;l:.:1~5 I Marian ~tartln, the DAILY C'ro<'het. knit, etc. tRl::IGHT Dan1age. S:1 1t>, PILOT, 442, Pattern Dept.. dlrtcOona:. Me. • 'vasbeMI, dryers. rcfrig!I, e GENEROUS e 232 \Vest 18th St., Nl!IV ln.<1lanl M•ll!ll'lb'ne JIMJll i ne"' \\'8.ITanty. R e b I t York. N.Y. IOOU. Prtnt &ale. fancy knot&, pa", \VasheN, & dryers Jrom NAME, ADOR r.88 \.\'Ith tcn111.. $1 ,00. ' $39.!l;, 545-0780. • REWARD • ZIP, 8TZl') and !T\'LE , ..... , Ctwh6l --·1 8 CU. f'T. lVES'TINl~HOUSE NU~IBER. Ltarn b~ picturn! ~ Rt>!rigerator. ISl)..lb. t•ross r or return or any tn· ~~onr M~E ~IJ ';.! teCc,':!p~fe in~tant Gtn : top h~er. l'"'t'OSI rrec. Tur -formation lctl\dlng to n!tum Pl'lttern free tron1 our -more than 100 &11ll r quolsc ~~9.~s r'· $'i0. of a gold four leaf clovf'r Sprtng.Summtr Catalog. All $1.00. : pin, approx. 2 1nche1 In sizes! Only 50c::, C.-"lrnpletf'i Af1ha11 ltooll: I It F: FR I G E RA T OR dla111t"tPr, with j ewe I e d INSTANt SEWING l]()()K s·t.oo. r RE"EZE R. hQr5t>shoo In center: 11lso, aew today, wear 1on"t0mw.'. HI Jltty RllJ 8ook." ·~·"''"' Coldspot. $115. gokl locket (\\'O.a on chain), .11. Book of JI Prt• M.·.-., 1 c.oocl. 0011dlllon &l6-f100I approx. the l'llzc of a ni ckel, IN!n'ANT FA S 1-1 I 0 N SOc. Rent W ashers/Dryers lni«-rlbed In M!1ipt, FLA. BO<lf{ H·indrctls of Qt1IU ftoolr I -18 pattemo.l l Tltt.•l!le nt~ deeply tteasut't'd f~"'lhlon f1o1<'ts. Sl. 5Ck'. • 6.'l9-t202 • Is lrrepl11.cenblc. PLEASE, trs a brooie .•.. sett yo11r 50c. $2. \Vk . ~~ull maint. fll.mlly memMlioa t.r the l01;!l l-"==..:=.:.:::c~:_---~Ju01Cum Quut 8clok t 1 1\Dl\tlRAI. 19 c1:blP f l, :O:ldt• Pl ,U\~E help If you ha\.-. \trms with f'A!tf'. use Duil)'. Q11Hhi for Tod•y'8 U:!tti1. By ~Ide Gold r f' Ir lg . any lnformatk>n -642·3589 Pilot Claultlal. 6--12-j67$. l~ beautif\11 pett°"" 50c. 1 F'tttz:fr, $'l2S. ST.>--01;;8 f.:\'ts.. !: \'W kend1. -------------------·' I I • DAllV PILOT T~day, August 14, 1CJ7l •• ..... -·- Pl11101/0r111ns 826 Dog• --""-'-----~ 854 ---''------Motor Homu V1n1 963 AutOI, RANGER :.'Ii, like ll('W, 3 S•le/Rfl't 940 ---------I?'~ ... '70 Autos, l"'flOrltd Free Organ Lessons As Long Aa You Llkel Non.players & players "'el· corne to ~ttend Tul.'!dtl.Y night at 7:30 P!i·I. \Ve 11·ant everyone to leum to 11lay the Or'1;tlfll All m~1e1·!al:s • furnished. Tom Dieterich • in ch&rge. Phone 642-2851 COAST MUSIC Nc\\'port Blvd. at llal'bor C.ostu ~1esa • PUPPY WORLD e b&g!i! No11h sullli, R.O.F. ---------1 VAN O>rvy '11 propane t:: N r. J. t s 11 Hull nlill", 1.'0mpasa-, Chry5lt>r 12.9 O.B. e SALl:S e powered, man) extru. Be11t Chihuuhuu~. J\ in ~ r 1 can Fully equipped $ 8 5 O O . e SERVICE e oUer. Cnll after 5 pn1 E'llk ln\o 1Spltz1, Pl\ Bullr; 642-6079 Jn1j>cl--eable. . "642-~"2990"='~~-~--~ Greyhound, Bull T('rrit'I'. Rl-JOOES 33-Classlc racing • RENTALS • ·n 1'"0RD Van. Short \\•heel T-cup Poodlcll, I ta I Ian chan1plon "HANAJ-IULI." bast. Paneled, carpelcd, Gtt:>•ilOund, Bull T"1'rler, Top rondition. $&50(), Ph: · stero, Io ml. Xlnt condition. Cockupoo. 100 tot I XE D 673-1232. Eves 7l,4: 846-1~ PUPS!~ Stud 54.'rvlct' !\lost I "·n"-'--Oco;IJ'=p=p=E=R~~.7!a-n~·n-e-.,,"I' '61 FORD V"" New til'es & Bret'ds. OPEN E V lo: S : 1• ~ ...... \V/lrailcl' & motor. Can be m&gS. Xlnt cone!, Must &ell, 531-50"2'7· seen at 227 20th St., NB. $650. or oUer. 557....{)757. AKC Gt'rman Shep. F. pup-""~ ".....,. 64" '"". _.._ ~~ ~ '69 FOJtD, windows. stan· PY, i=onu!S, Y>ormed, blk/lan HOBIE CAT 14 'I t dard shih, xlnl mileage. 10 \\.'kS, gd . tem· . ·~·any exras GMC p er a n1 e n t /background. Great !!tape. Pricffi to sell. $1500/be•t oUer. 53G-402'7 -IMW ORANG& COUNTY'S OLPE~ SALEs.sER,L.EASING OVERSEAS·L>ELIVERY ROY CARVER, Inc:. 234 E, 17th St. Coola Meu. 54$-4444 847_5181 1 493-5195. Motorhomts Auto leasint ,.._ PIANOS -ORGANS 8 1\10 . old n1a I e ter-ISLANDER 24. Jo~iberglass, %\' & 26' LEASE A •73 BAVARIA ·a-•-·...,, OB $3000 li\tl\lEDIATE DELIVERY New & Used. GJ't'at sel~Hon. rier/beagle has all shots, • "'"' "' cruL;,o;, • • 0,.,....,.e Co.'s Demo • Strtal .#3132993 Competetlve prices. Open very loveable, pl a y I u I . _.,c,ca~ll=~""'~209c.-. -.,..-~,,.--~ ·-·a LEASE lor $166.41 per month Eves. & Sundays. 1'hc bc.~t 96.S-0342 23' Sl.OOP, \\'ood hull, 2 B 'EllxcBlusive Dealer '74's at '73 prleet1. All makes OEL or buy fOr $8.299. d I U /b h d I k •U50 1 arry Pontiac & models. Cars 11\•ailable B b McL BMW easare ahva,ysal: OLD E11gtl.'>h Shee pd og. sa S. o . ea . sn · • · GM, C REC. CENTER o eren, , W 11 h o b t ffr (714) 526-2419 until new '74 delivecy. a ic S Music City 1nale, 21z yrs 0 Id• r s 0 · · 2000 E. l st St., Santa Ana Order now&: save. Inc. MERCEDES IENZ 50 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY Sharp Now Car Trad•lns Comlnt In Ev<N')' D1y Ask ,AbOut Ol>r Unique Used Mor-1 LHse Plant House-of Imports VOL.VO ECONOMY ~ SAFETY P~US S1vlnt1 & Comfort In Our Remaining 35 NEW VOLVOS .Immediate Delivery DODGE 1970 CHARGER SE, 3&'I M~ num, 1 11pd~ l\flcbell.n$, hi· perfom1~ncc I Utah ear. $2200./otfer. · 493-9367. ·69·ooDGE Van, cwit:o1n In: J tcrlor, stefi'O CaltoSCtt, V-8: 1 !\lust sell. 497-1667 1956 Dodge. 4 door V8. Ex· 1 ccllcul. <11,000 origi.nt1l ntl.. 548-2898 '68 DODGE Polara, xlnt 1 coud. low ml, $1095. * ~1(00 1i FIREBIRD 6862 Mlncheal ... au ... Puk _1\ .... , L··.:• 1Jl1 the Santa Ana frn'1 lUWf'> C4Mt0 ~1250 . Y ~YO -----JIM S 0 1972 Jo'IREBIRD Esprlt, Ille, LEMONS aulO lr>ns. cloun, owocr IMPO.RTS 1966 11arbor, c.M. 646·9303 must sell, aft 6:00. 673-7403 South Coast Plaza 54().283(} ~4·2~[.!;. $75. 645-094.1 I VS' UNICORN Catamaran 558-lOOO CALL 963-2457 (714) 179-5624 ., vo.... Trophy class. fast, trailer, "'!!!!!!!!!!!!'!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~I -..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Cherry cond. 610-1102. 1973 Disco\'erer and Sundial ".; ~ PfANO. Furlong upright. xlnt cond. Refurbished, an· lique. $500. 960 -11:!7 Mon-F'ri 3-7 OBEDl£NC"ii! Class to starl \\'ed., Aug 29, 7:30 p.m. in U1e hvinc/NB a1"Ca. f\1otor Ht_Jmes for rent, 1nake Autos W•nted 968 CORTINA MERCEDES BENZ Autos, UHCI 990 FORD Aln'llORIZE!> SALES & SERVICE BUICK Good Transportation l·IARDEMAN Gl·and, ful l size, bcaur. cond. 543-93'11, nsk for Dianu Sewing M achines 828 Free· :Free-Lessons! On S<"\Ving knits, bound button holes. zippers \Vilh no seams, also 11eck lines. Lessons from 10 to 12 Friday .Aug. 17th. Call for appointment Sincere Sewing Mach & Vac 1878 Hal'bor CM * 646-9742 SINGER Model 7";;>6 Touch & Sew. In a French Provi. Cabinet. $150. 968--07.s'S Sporting Goods 830 POOL table, g<>nuine BrunS1\·ick, 4 ~1 x 9. slate, leat her pockets, accessories $r.'10. 541}..29TI or 642-1280 US DIVER % " wet suit, good rond .. $20. or make of- fer, 67f>..4.106 SCUBA US Divers, tnk, reg., wt belt, vest. etc. $150. Betwn 4 & 8 pm, 842-8743 TV, Radio, Hifi, Stereo 836 * 546-4928 * HOBIE Cat 14. I yr old, rrservatlons for Su1nn1er $1000. including tr a i 1 er . 00\V, Phone Miss Bennet at 833--0481. Bob Longpre J> o n : i a " . Boats, Slips/~ks 910 c8"'9"'2·,c685-0·1,...,_o•'-"636::;;·2500". oc·'-- NE\V Deluxe 25' Executive SLIP. at 107 • Ells t for rent . &!lf·contalned. Edge\vatcr. Ba.Iha~. Up to Many extras. Refs. re- AFGHAN n1ale, 15 mos. S75. 38' long, 12' \\'ide. $100 per quested. 97S-9056. •r.JI N 1ATURE SCHNAUZE RS .1\KC. lJ ~~'l Ch Sire & Dam. papers & all shots. Call mo. ITI4) 525-1153 days,22' ~~-W-l_N_N_EB_A~G~0~.--1 u-11-y 642-9180 or 979-9-111. Ask for _7_1_ ... ~7'T_•~7~62~ev_esc.-. ~--equip. Afr, xln't nH~ch cond. Liz. Boats, SpHd & Ski 911 Slps 8. $5950. 833-813'5.- fRISH SETTERS T ·1 T 945 AKC, 6 WEEKS. $75. ~ ra1 ers, rave• * S<S-!2811 * 14' SKIBOAT '67 NIMROD TENT l\.1INIATURE Doxies TRAILER Good cond. Many $35. 8 \\"eeks, males MERC 75 extras. Asking $800. 548-1822 * 830-8284 * MUST SELL THIS WEEK Auto Service. Parts 949 * Jifiniature Schnauzer * GREAT BARGAIN Stud Service 531-2164 or 548-8995 3. Jaguar \Vire \Vhee.ls 644-4390 1 -!l_.~-i~-~-i~-~-i~~~-i~-~-~·~-~-~ $100. ror all AKC Germ. Shep. puppies. I jiiiiiiiii64iii2-<Siii;7i8iiiiiiiiii Blk/silvcr, $40 for ft!m., $50 1~ JI for males. 548-7406. Transportation ~ [. IR!Sll Setter $65, AKC 12 Autos for Sai. I §J \\·ks. alter G. ~;;;;;;;;;;;;~·:;;..; 962.7129 Campers, Sale/Rent 920 1 Horses '856 Antiques/Cl1sslcs 953 FIBERGLASS camper shell ----------1 for '68 thru '72 El Camino. APPALOOS1\ Gelding, 8 yrs Like n<>\v $8j. 673-l65S 1931 FORD 4 dr sedan, black old . Equitation tr a i n e d , w/yellow· pin stri pe, Must sell $700. 49?...-4244 Cycles, Bikes recently . rcblt motor, REG. 6 yr POA show mare. Scooters 925 hydrolic brks, vinyl int. English & v.·estern prof. Xlnt cond, must sell. $279a. trained, $250. 962-6m * BICYCLE SALE * co:,:"...:m:cak::,::ce,:o,:ffe='...:64:.:~::.5"':::·:::-20.. -- REG. 6 yr POA show mart'. NEW 10 SPEED ITALIAN ·22 MODEL T. Touring, RCA, Zenith & Sylvania color English & we.stem. pro. BICYCLES $59.9j, Beach Completely restored. For , TV & stereos. Largest trnd $250. 962-672'2. BBllcydcles6.~ 8'l67282 EA. thoBal.~ info, 540-J591 aft 7 pm. ' selection in So. Calif. Priced v " .a-· u r 17 ... ·u Recrutional less rhan the discounters 9 YR. Reg. Apply Geld, 1611 NISHlKl dealer. H., for pleasure riding, $300 Vehicles w/3 yr picture tube. 2 yr or of.fer. Debbie 644-1547 1970 Kawasaki 956 parts & service. Antennas installed at cost 350 \\'/purchase if required. I _ ..... _.., I~ Excellent condition • Cash 90 Plan or terms to 36 mo. ABC Color TV. 9021 $350, call Jim 536-7867 L- AUanta or 10046 Brookhurst, 1970 SL 350 Honda n1otorb'- Huntington Beach, 968-3329. cle. Needs slight gear box SACRIFICE Bo•ts, General 900 work & tune up, lo milerige.. Far out bike. $300 but will I\ Pan~nic stereo tape re· WANTED' talk. Call 645-2659 corder with automatic re-• l966 HONDA 305 Dirt Bike. verse. Uses An1pcx 71,~ reels and tapes, incl ud<'s 3 Ch l B Good cond. See to appt•eciate speeds, 2 stereo speak"s. arac er oats . real move.! $295. Call headphon<'s. 15 pre·recorded Pat • 549-2625. tapes and blank reels • all Character boats needed for '71 HONDA CL 350. Looks equipment is brand ne1v. lhe Annual Character Boat like new. Needs clutch, Asking $275. or n1ake offer. Parade on Saturday, AUgust plate. l\.1ust sell $425 or {714) 846-5494. 25th. Unusual or ex-trade for truck. 536-0276 DUNE BUGGY Tul>e frame Fresh Corvair New sand tires l\1ust sell $500. 675-6910 After 4:30 pm , Bob 1971 JEEPSTER Commando A-I cond, \Varn Huhs, l\.f.iche.lin radials. a I u m . mags. rear tire racks, 500 lb capacity luggage rack, driv· ing lites. $3200. 675-3204 '12, 4 \\'hi Drive. GMC Jim- my 10,000 mi., 4 spd, 6 cyl, Gales tires, pert cond. $3700. 675-7718 Trucks 962 * S lraordinary boats or boats 73 HUSQVARNA 12 • ummer Special * decorated to th.is year's a 'TI FORD. truck & camper. Rebuilt-Picture TuL-CRMX, 125 '73 Yamaha 390 V 8 .,. Iheme. ''The Swinging MX, Leaving area. !\lust · , auto, air, camper $87.50--21'' or 25'' Color Years." Contact Newport sell. ~lake offer, 675-2653. special 1200 16.5 Ii r es * 2 YEAR WARRANTY l-1.art>or Chamber of Com· (rear), loaded! 11' Harvest Installation Available merce at 614·8211 or '71 HONDA CL 350. Looks Camper, boot, Bounce RiC't''s Television Servicf' drop by the office at 270 like ne\v. Needs clutch, bumper. gas/elec refiig., formerly Mesa North Center Newport Center Drive in the plate. Must sell. $475 or must see to apprec! $500 TOP DOLLAR PAID IMMEDIATELY FOR A~L FOREIGN CARS WE ARE IN D&SPERATE NEED OF GOOD, CLEAN FOREIGN CARS TOP DOLLAR-PAID FOR OR NOTI Call or COlll(' in to see us. NEWPORT IMPORTS 31((1 \V. Coast Jlwy., N.B. 642·9405 Honolulu Auto Dealer Desperately Needs Used Cars All Mokes All Models Receive Higher Than A1ainland Prices * 64S.0281 * TOP CASH for clean late model can and trucks! Howard Chevrolet i\facArthur and Jamboree Newport Beach 833-0065 \\'E PAY TOP DOLLA.'l. FOR TOP USED CARS ll your car Is extra clean, see us first. BAUER BUICK 2925 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 979.2500 \VE HU.Y IMPORTED AtrrOS BEST PRICES PAIDI Dean Lewis Imports 1966 Harbor, C.1\1. 646-9303 I ·~ CORTINA G.T. Needs clutch & body \\'Ork. Tires "'Orth $200. Sell as is $175. 646-8'111 CAPRI ~ NOW OWN THE FABULOUS 1973 CAPRI Sport coupe decor, body side mouldings, reclining front seats, contour rear seats, 4 speed transmission. po\ver front disc brakes, style steel \vhecls, bucket seats, radial pl)' tires. (GAECN899742). OVERS'l'OcKEDI IMMEDIATE DEUVERY GUSTAFSON Linc:oln·Merc:ury 16800 Beach at Warner Ht,!ntingtor) Beach 842-8844 * (213159W544 ''Home of the Viking'' DATSUN 1973 DATSUNS ALL MODELS JN STOCK BARWICK IMPORTS 33375 Camino Capistrano San Juan Capistrano 493-3375 .. 831.]3'1f A Datsun 2000 Rdstr 5-spd, tuned hdr, hrdtp, & ne\V white vinyl soft top. Xlnt cond. Orig ownr. $1200 T.»-4900 or 645-6854 eves. ·n 24-0.Z 1 owner, nu radials, mags, am/fm stereo tape, auto, aii' Jo mi. $3650. 642-3392/~. '71 DATSUN, al.O \Va.gen R/H. 4 spd. immaculate! $1800. 58fr2:i61. FIAT tiIPORTS W M.'TED Orange County's '73 FIAT, Spyder, Model 124, TOP $ BUYER 9,000 mt, ~owner $3910 . BILL MAXEY TOYOTA * * 18881 Beach Blv.:. "iO FIAT 124 SP.Ort Spyder H. Beach Pb. 8'7..a55!:1 ool'IVe11:ible ~at owner, Autos, Imported t70;;o1 ,.,,A:::T:..:;;1=eou:;.· = .. =1967"--.-l"-...,_.- Jim Slemons --'60 FORD 4 d... VB, aUlo. I great 2nd cnr, $250. or \\'ill mports 113 REGAL BUICK trade tor rurioturt' 01· ? 1301 Quall for lnase by Lease Conipnny * ~3-~91 * Ne\vport Beach Executive. 19Th' CRAN Torino \Vagon, \ 8J3.9300 $120 PER 1\10 . <1200 n1iles, fact. \\•mty, air, I E?>.'TER FROi\1 MacARTllUR 0 . E. to approved credit. ,:ack, P/S, P/B, tinted, ?i1ERCEDES '71 SEL ~.3, Call 963·2457 bronze, in1mac. Custom in· less than 1500 miles. Beige terlor. Sac. $.~995. Pvt ply. Gray $11,750, Call 541-2235. '72 EXT. -..go, 9 pass. Cust Eves, 548-3667, day 642-7474 From 9-5 pn1. aft 5 & int, wood grain, air, P./$1 1970 FORD Cortina 1600, .j wkendl, 532--2000 Orange P/B. lug rack hvy duty speed, R&tl niags, \vide , Ca. shocks & ~·Jr hitch. AM, tires, headers, et('. New 1959 l\fERCEDES Benz 180 tape deck, tilt wheel. $4600. clutch, brakes, etc, i1ust ' 0 . I •o"" Orig, $7500. 644-4466. sell. 546-9187 after 6. 1ese . .,.,.,.,, 557-30'23 '68 Bl,;ICK Skyla.i.i<. One FORD 1970 GalllXie 500 2 dr PORSCHE owne;. 24,000 mi. Like fie\\'! V-8, auto tranS. fl/s: ·r1n'. !1,595. 324 E. 20th No. 1, CM Radials, \\'ell maintained. , 548-1618 Only $1250. 552-701.2 '39 PORSCHE C 0 lt1' (' · f\fUSf sell '69 B u i c k '71 LTD B ha C 11 iv/rebuilt eng.. radials LeSab v' _A.. . roug m, u P"T, k · · . ' re. cry g..,.,... con· au· AM/Fl\1 stereo niust rac , 1n1mae. car 1ns1de & clition. Runs \\'ell, Besl of· seli! Below v.·hsle' book 1 I out. $17tX). 673-8423. fer. 842--0528 646-5165 'i.q PORSCHE .~upe \V/re-'68 BUICK Skylnl'k. One '61 FALCON !bit eng.,. f3.dd1als & rack. owner. 24,000 n1i. Like ne\v! Transporlation car $150. mmac inSJ c & out. $1700. $1595. 324 E 20th No 1 CM *"'09792• 673-8424 548-1618. . ' . . ;,,_. RED roRSCHE 'TI ELECTRA, 4 door, \\'hite 1~F?~~A~~s f0~~~ Can be ~&~Superior, ~ ~· most xtras, ly $100. ~fIKE 839-1427 CM .646-2885 eves. CA '70 FORD Torino GT. air, '62 PORSCHE S. Reblt eng & DILLAC p/s, p/b, sml V-8, clean, tram. Super clean car. SI8CKJ. ~ ah 6 Many exn-as. -EL DORADOS '69 FORD Ranch Wagon. al" TOYOTA . 14 TO CHOOSE ~~\1~~kc """'· 114-00. TOYOTAS FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY MX Ill LUX CELlCA CORONA L\."0 CRUISER COUPES-CONVERTIBLES 1.~60~~ro=R~D-S~ta-uo~· -n-,~.-.oo-n I DE V·1 Good shape. $150, 100'J LLES Mix,., C.M. 646-5910 31 TO CHOOSE JEEP COUPES SJo:DANS CONVERTIBLES r.fany excellent colors Choice of interiors (Cloth & leather> ?-'actory air cond!Uonin,.. Full powt!r. Oloice of: .. JEEP \Vaaoneer, '68. V-8, aulo, J>S, PB, R/l·f, air, Low mi. extras, $2700 499-2367 a.fl 5 wkdus. lUUA Trunk opener & more ' TOYOTA AU in immaculale 1.'0nclitkln '64 RE(.'ONDITIONED n1il. Jeep, Vinyl SClll~ & IOI), crptd, recent o v c r h a u l 551-Ml'I MAVERICK - ft.· ..... tf.OJiA ~1;: ~:~radio . Largest selection in 1966 l{arboT, C.M. 646-930l Orange County "i2 ~fAVERlCK coupe, Auto WE B·gy Nab-Cadillac: rnm•.. Powe" s tec .. IJ>g. •• • radio. hooter 250 Cu ln Al.J11l0RIZED DEALER ECONOl\fY 6 cyl engine, 2600 '11ARBOR BL. low miles. A REAL GAS USED COSTA i\:IESA ' SAVER AT 18 l--OLES PE:R ft40.9 100 Open· Sunday GALLON . prl. pty. ~7-3095. TOYOTAS '72 CADILLAC Se dan de MERCURY . Ville. M.Uat be soJd •t a --------·I aa.:b~ ~· been lovtngl)' 1964 ~1crc. Rtms good. Xlnt -~~ it"rthby 1~ owner trans. PrS, PIS . Best offer ALL 1973 MODELS milei. Can 646-.'nzr16,0(ll over $75. :x>7-9394. IN STOCK <lei.tis:· ror MUSTANG 1 Bick s. of Baker ~ Design Plaza. A fun ex· trade !or truck, 556-0Zl6 and take overpymnts. Priv open 9-5 (6 days) pe.rience and a community WANTED, Mint or 'i 1 oi"iii"iityiii;. ;ii511&cii;i2S6ii;ili;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii STEREO, Fisher speakers, service for all \\'ho mini motorcycle. Also · i 11 . ALFA ROMEO clut~ &: brakts. MAKE CAMARO OFFERI IHHH7 aft 1 pm. . '67 MUSTANG. Xlot cond. lo Kenwocxi 120 watt receiver. _pa~rt_;"~·pe~te_._____ speed way cycle, 55J 71 SPORTS CUSTOM ·72 ALFA GTV 2lOO 5 spd, GatTard tum table. Head * BOAT \\iA.XING * aft 6 pm F·IOO Super sharp. 4 spd. AM/FM, perfeet condition phones. 1 yr old, mint cond. Exp: qua!. materials used. '70 fIONDA CL 175. Qfod rad &: heat. New .12 x 16.5 $i500 firm 644-1545 from ! Best offer. 962-9941 Polish & \Vax. Eves, phone Condition $300 or Best of· tires plus orig tires & rims _t::o:.cl,_,lc:M"'°'l:.· ------ BEAUT. RCA 21'' color con-~9~"-·-145~-~'-------fer. Byron 557-7266 * 892-1832 * so le, needs \vork, Revel'(' 13' BOSTON \\1haJer, 40 hp '72 YAMAl-IA Encluro 250 port tape recorder 18 good Johnson. Arnedcan Trlr. like new -$625 1965 r·oRD 1,J. Ton Pickup. .72 AUDI, \l'hite, Orig. own, music tapes, pert cond. >..1nt com!. $995. or best of-* 548-3533 * 351 V·8, stick shift, good air, radio, b<'aut. cond, !\.lust 548-8155. fer, 675-5475. '67 TRIUi\iPH ch 0 Pp er, cond. Camper shetl w/re-11 $2950 494-3278 _7''-"-=-~~-=--1 BOAT t il 4 t · · h-~ tail movable. king size bed. $895. _s,,e::::_· ==·===--ILL -must sell ne.w JOO amp ra er, on capacuy, spnngcr, 111u ' many AUSTIN HEALEY stereo & almost n e \V tandem \\'heels/brakes. extras. $1000. * 545-4708 ~=~*~54;,:9:..;·2625=:_*::_ __ freezer. Terms as lo\v as $600./0ffer. 962--0789 DIRT bike 1971 Yamaha 125 DODGE 1963, 4 spd, no spin $15/dn & Slli/mo. 3595 or Boats/Marine just ovrhauled, perfect. $375 differential, R/H, 6 cyl, '64 A-Healy, xlnt cond., nt. best olr. Call now 968-6767 Equip. 90, _646-="''"1·°',2'°4=~~=--~ runs wttr.' $475. 495-j259 wires, MicheUns O'drive, "' :; \veekdays. 496-2865 eves & Jug rack, new top, 552-7366 MORRIS stereo cons o I e ----------·n HONDA 450. Xlnt cond. wknds. mornings. wfturntable. AM/FM radio, 6-71 \.\'ITH 64 HN 4 gear box. $650. or best offer. Helmets, --=~-------BMW S50. 96(}-1127 Mon-Fri J...7 Good cond. $1800. Best offer. 642-2661 eves '68 CHEVY 6 * i,~ ton BUDA DA !""" custom cab, 3 sp d , ----------. -.....,. YAi\1AHA 1972 17j Dirt set $1350/best offer. 556-0567 l\·ISJ'ine Surplus Company up, custom paint job. Ex-aft 5pm ,vkdays LEASE A 1973 3307 So. !\fain, Santa Ana cellent co ndition. -"'-'-"=-""=<.::...----BAVARIA 545-8551 540-8308 * 1967 FORD ~ ton pick-up, B I P 906 Camper Special, auto. $1300. W B U -• oa s, ower '69 BULTACO MX Ready. * 644-4179 * • uy ssv Reblt engine, never used. 1---.::..=....:o:.:....:-.__ BMW's '71 SIDE\VINDER, 85 HP Xtras. 536-8487 '72 BLAZER, 4 wheel drive, Out Board Ch~sl ~Id & -~-~~~----xlnt cond. All hvy duty. TRop Dollar P•id -. ., er, "y * 1971 Honda fJOO. Chop~. $3395. 552·-9551 1-f. IRfSH Setter. recently bronze. Xlnt cond. $2400. Really clean. $l0Cl0. ....,... C EVIER BMW moved to city, \\'ishes to &IB-6032. 2212 College No. 1, * .:Ar: A708 * * 1967 F-100 Ford pickup, return to country Jiving. C.fl-1. ~ white, good condition. $900. Sales • Service -Leasing o'~"~-4=8~7~0 ~~--~-. ol8~.~s=P=E=E=D~boa-t-, 0e-,-.-v-.~140 ,~~~~txi 350.1 CB I street. _C:::a"ll:..;64:.::,< ..=4'::1.:,4 ~--~~ 208 \V.1;3j.t3.,~ta Ana AIREDALE, MaJe, Re g, !\le.re Cruiser, I/0, $3Z'JO. $39S 67J-8760 mJ es. mmac. '73 CHEV, % P.U. 8' bed, 292 Owner .must sac rif ice, .-117-7746. nights 642-3355 ~·=·=~=-----cu., 4 spd. bvy duty. '68 Bi\1\V 1600, ne\V paint & Be a ut gua rd dog, '70 NORTON 750cc bike in $3,000 497-1884 radials. AM/FM. engine 496-4608/496-5771 16' BOAT 35 hp. Johnson. good shnpe. J\.1ust sell quick· .... ,,., l'Uns beautifully. Soon Bit-in bait tank -tilt Vans 963 .. ~ F'REE. 2 yt!ar old Beautiful trailer. $450. 548-8174 ly $650. <714l 962·2739. to be a classic $1800. German Shepherd. Moving!21 ~~.-C~H~A~R~A~CT=E~R-B_O_A_T_B_a_y· I '70 CL 350 Honda., good cond. ·73 OIEVY Van. %. ton, take 673-1005 673-7749 favorHc. l\fany xtras. Call ~~s;"seSllTimmed. $350. firn1, over lease. Lo mi, gOOd '68 BM\V 2002. Red .. LOVE for free. Adorabl(' S33-1445 "~1 om cond. 968-6669 AM/FM, mags, tape deck, Shep. mix pups. 673-4~10 GRAND BANKS 36 '72 HONDA 750. K2. like '69 FORD Club Cbn.tteau $2000,.66-2850 days 642-9194 ~-'"_"_o ._ •• _][S 3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.00 AUDI KARMANN GHIA .,'. :'.""':"."'."."'~-----1 milea~. big eng, a/c., aulo __ .;..· --'·-'----I---------~ri CM.jARO Rally• Sport . stick, tpe deck. Mu•I """ to UC\\' MAZDA * Muda '7J Rot1ry * $U MONTH 36 MONTHS OPEN ~ \\'ill accept trade-ins CALL MR. FRY 842-66611 Hunt. Beach MAZDA 17331 Beach Bl. 842~ BOB LONGPRE MAZDA -SERVICE FIRST- lst Stnet at the Santa Ana ~vy. 2001 E. 1st Street Santa Ana 558-7871 TRADE RX-2, 1972 Mazda, f\1int cond. for Toyota Land CruiSt'r, similar shape Eves. 497-2670 Laguna_. _ MERCEDES BENZ '69 MB 280 SL; Rrlstr, 4 gpd, P /.,:, air, must sett! $5250. 673-5620, eves 6'f3..0728. WE'RE MOVING K owner. Jmmac! Pis, a.ppreclate. $1200 by owner. P/b, alt. bucket seal1, con. 6/;>-49.j(j '70 Toyota 4 Dr: r.ole.. auto, l'&dio, vl!lYI top, --,,,6.,5~M=u"S"T.-A"N=Gc---I Real ShaJ'P, Auto Trans., tinted glass. Pr1 . pty radio, Air Cond. 831-1300 · V8. radio, $?,00. Cali 6'73-!1209 $1599 '68 CAMARO Z-28 '65 JilUSTANG. Needs body GOOD CONDITION $1350. 1vork. but runs good. $450 or NE\UPQRf 1 __ o::..:~~~::.~:..::·1!799:..:o:.:~=.:-i -be-·-~..,.'~-e~-;-_M...:~...:B:..:.elL:::E:.... DATSUN '69 CllEVY Malibu, HT, Sale1 & Service 1000 W. ~ H11.'Y.. recently tuned, 2 dr, R/li OLDSMOBILE • Newport Beach alr, good cond., $1050'. GMC TRUCKS 645-6400 Open Sunday 548-8733. alt 4 wk d y s: HONDA CARS WANTED -Clean Toyota anytime •wkends. UNIVERSITY Corona "'/blown eng, have ·oo CHEVY Impala 4 dr OLDS wre~ed Toyota w/good hrdtp. ReaJ nice _ hurry!' 2.!50 Harbor Blvd. engme. Object matrimony, s:;oo. Good deal. 7 1 4 : Costa Atesa 540-9640 , + Spare parts. 847-64n 968-Q93-'64 OLDS 98, 4 door, gd. coOO: 69 TOYOTA Corona, Z dr, '58 CllEVY, 283 eng, Rons. $3Th. Front & rear speakers. radio, 4 spd, good,oond. Lo $75, or oiler 1009 Arborl~64"6-'-"223=1====----I mileage. f>4G..-0685 C.M., 64&-5910 PINTO VOLKSWAGEN * '72 MONTE CARLO* Very clean, many xtras, '73 PINTO Squire, Executive * '69 VW Bug $950 T 493-3720 lease? car. small deposit &;, * '65 VW ·Baja * '61 Chevy. take O\'er to qualifiOO party.' CaJI 646-2)2'2. 543-7482 Very good condition. Call 963-2457 ' '61 VW • $JOO. Engine, trans, . Call &48-848Z '73 PIN'T'O Runabout, air 4 tires new.-N~JX>Cly work, 66 ~IALIBU very Jo n1i, gd speed, lrg. eng. 10,<m mh 6'f3..&29. · cond, Pis, aufo trans, Loaded! $2695. :>45-3215 J 1971 VW. Xlnt cond. Now 67""157 0' 64U993 PLYMOUTH [. tlres &. brakes. $1300.. · "10 RED Malibu. Sharp, I-------'--'-- • ~l power. This \\'eek. Sacrifice. '70 PLYMOUTll Ouster '63 VW, mags. good engine. Offer or deal, 64z..s.!Jb'9. . xln't (.'(Incl. Oreftl ecooo I $400. , '65 IMPALA, lo mi's, air, car. Auto. ll.lld, P/s, ~ 6f4-.S263 new sml dev., tires, a/c, 548-2492 or &1>5305. 1 Days. 646-0173 Eves. Lo ('""' hoW'S. Fully equp'd. new lo mi, $1400. or best of· \\Tag. V-8 auto best offer. "•::.v:.:e"'·:__~~--=~~ SMALL spayed dog, 1 ~~ yrs $3!!.50'0. Oivner 67>0743. ·''="o;·~642--05~~7'06=--==~~ Call 830-5664. Oassitied Ads···· .642-5678. Need a "Pad"'?·PJ&ce an ad! old. Good temperament. '73 tJONDA SL 350 K2. Mov· VW '61 VAN ............ S45J) shooks, $4 557-1335. PONTIAC ' Bed* •6~1""· CHRYSLER LEASE Ollt BUY Used to childron. 548-0808. 25' TROJAN '67 only 170 ing, must seU. 4,400 miles, hours, galley, head, xlnl 725 "" .... ADORABLE · 7 mo. male cond, 673-18,19 ~1 ~·~~~~==~~~- Sheltie Spaniel, \\'/shots. .72 ~· Sea Ray. Xt1·as. cost 1gro ENDURO, 500 miles. also chinchilla. 963-2420 $600. Excellent condidon. $12,9.lO sell 57.!195 firm. 552-9169 7374560 552 8013 AUSTRALIAN Sheep Dog, 9 &1:r:1J9j or 9i9--085,c"oco·~= ' ' • \\-eeks. shots. Boats, Rent/Chlrt'r 908 1972 TRIUMPH Bonneville 5 *8'16-4918 aft 6* spd, 4300 miles. Best oiler, COCKAPOO puppies, free CHARTER 57' KETCH _9G_Z-_9'4_l_. -·-,----- to good homes. 1'TIOGA'' 1972 YAMAllA 100 MX Best 548-5747 offer, mus t sell. Call after Coastal & Q f(shQ1~ Island 5 '" 615 ~1 ' ~vABLE l yr old, o"nge : .w. ) a-~ · uv Cruising. Xlnt ratC!'I. Daily male cat, al tered, ,11hots, bo.x \V J Ch * '69 YAMAHA 180cc Twin, trained. 64~39 aft 6 PM. 01' l:'('k y. et Salisbury 3700 mi, exlras. $ 2 5 0 tr. 675·8344 or Tioga, Box 552.-8274 art S: 30. 316, Balhoa Island. Boats, Sail 909 Motor Homes Sale/Rent [ -.., Sopplles )~ C1b 152 Pf_:RSIAN Jdttcns, CFA tq., shots, bt'aulltul long hair, Xlnt. lillt>S, Also stud scr- VJcc. StaJ11ng at $75. • 892-2970 * -VENTURE 24. '73 w/poptop. 3 sails, 11lps 5. Loaded \v/extras. $1000. 645-76:>1 * 10' LE11tl.fAN * good oondillon with tmiler s.100. 646-9070 16' 1'"'1BERGLASS Contcndef da,Y8al1Cr -l\k(' new . $800./0(ff'r. 962-0i89 ~Ul\IALA\'AN Slamt'&I! kl\, STAN Millr r Hrtcing &hot '~· Sell.lpoinl, ~1~ &. No, 5960. good •·ond. Nt11'\ ) f'n,~le. Cal. 8!!-2-3117 cht1mp. S3.l0. •19-l..;1116 Dogs 854 12' SAll.HOA~T-- OOBfES. Af\C. Crop~I. \\1ilh lrallcr 'il'Otm<"d. &hots. 646--18701 -~--,;S,,.IJ!;,.·.,.· -4.,.95-~·"~"- C\U. 541H370 Days. Whlt.o .Elephant Dime-A.UM I *RENTALS* Lifetime, Soperlor, ()pen Road, Landau, Overland & \Vl.nncba~o r.1otorhomes RECltEATION RENT AL AND SERVICE 216 N. Clara, SA 714-83&86!5 DELUXE \\'IN NEBAOO ~l.H . RENT 610.-0182, N.B. Winnebago -For Sale ·21 Chil!'!1on prl ptr 640-0482 Llkc to Trade! Our Tr·•der'J PIU'l:ldltc column ls for you1 '68 V\V BUG, Blue, AM/FM radio, heater, good con· .. _ dltlon. $823. ~1547 Chane. of • life Time '71 thru '73 Pontiacs Must Sell DAVE ROSS 70 CUSTOM O,rysler 300 PONTIAC '7~7 PASSENGER V\V Bus. "Hurst" 2 yra:/12,000 ml. Reblt eng. Ex .. concl. R/H. r&main on warranty. Only 2480 Harbor Blvd .. At Fair Very clean! $1995'. 646--U46, 2 In this area. Superior Drive, COlta Atesa 546-8017 'M v.w. BuiJ,.Re-blt ~nalne:, cond. Best oUcr. Li. No Good IY'aos. '68 Pontiac Tt>Tnr ioocJ trru1!t. Excel cond. 195BEQ. Owner 536-4680 pe!lt Sia ""'$.in. Clean, nu tl'I, Make offer 19,7-1971) CONTINENTAL fine •unolttj< o~ei-. $6001 '67 VW Van. P<":rfoct engine best. 673-1005 & tnlns. Nu 1Jre1, lm,8 trk, '73 CONT. 4 Dr. "Town 1964 Pontiac. Rebtr. tra1"'° $880. 5.16-43U. ca.r." Every eoncolvable Gd. tires. See & make olte.r '63 VW Bug. New brake11, extra. Only 6,600 ant. 549-3924 aft. 6 p.m. newly rebuilt ·tnafne, $595. AB s·o. LU T ~LY 1 M· 1969 BONNEVIU,.E 4 dr h.t. 22.0 30th St:N.B. MACULA.TE! Bloc Book Power. ·aJr, tow mila 'G&·VW Carl\f\•>',•lo·mli..p, !!.~., Will sacrillce lo• $1600. 545-3510 New dres $18'l!i. Good Otllld· ,.,295. C.. ftnence $5,TlS. l!lll PONTIAC Grruod Prix !t6&1J M ~~ty. or S28-i34Z $200 cash, 888Umf! balanoo'. '6.1 VW camper, rtblt, eng, •72 MARK lV am/fm l-'-G'r.>-0646."--'"'::a;-.,==:---I must see, l800 11rm. ll"" .ru1.. con1ro1, '1m wbcol'. RAMBLER paint It xtt'U &I0-1818 .(loot" locka. Pvt. party. Must ---------1 '71 vw. IOW mll11119 ;.ill. $6595. Otut:< -1360, '60 RAMBLER st a 11 0" $1600. * 67S--8&00 hom~ ~149'1. W~on. BortY xlnt cond, S.crlfl..,_'" vwlv. . COUGAR ~001~11o::'.'~ n1!"f~· S9111J. trn;.'IO'lli . VEGA '61 VW 1=omrerflble '67 COUGAR, radio, AC pwr --------- .. ...i6 """"' 1~/brakes. auto lrJlnS, ___ ..:..,...=:::'-=-~--vinyl root. 'XJnt cond. Needs '71 VEGA CT, xlrit Clmd, dlx '64 VW, New Tire• body ~k. SSO(). ~m. tnt., new tl ret. Muat 1cn, $400. * 543-9792. Don't irl.e Up lhe 1hlpt 6'1"""4839; 673-5!50T Like to tra.det our TradtY1 "Ll1t1' ·11 Jn clD.1!11flcd, Ship F'ast resultl Al'.'l' Just a phonl! ParadlMl column iJ tor yodf to SMre Re11ultal 642-!l678. call a.way • 642-5618. 1), \ "" • I • . -' - San Clemente- Capistrano Va!.. 66, NO. 226, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES EDITION l ORAN6E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' Today's Final N.Y. Stocks' TUESDAY, AUGUST 1<4, 1973 TEN CENTS San Juan Puts Freeze on New Developments By JOHN VALTEllZA °' rtle o.lly ... ltf ''-" san Juan capistrano city councilmen ~fooday ordered an Immediate freeze on any new plaMed community developments. ?He moratorium is expected to last un- Ul a special committee eu.mlnes better ways of assurlng resident compliance with strict ru1es at the colonies. If staff report from City Manager r>opald Weidner, generally alluding to • aome vexing · proble1111 at lllieUng townhjJuoe colonies, ·oparked lbe roove,by Councilman Jam" Thorpe. Weidner said that In oeveral Instances the city bas become concerned becau.se the -..... auoclaUom In aome towuhouae lractl bave failed to eulorce the ru1eo cOV«DIDl·malnt<oance ol prop. erty. Wek!Mr said that ,.... ol the ae..,..! problens liav, been In the leoffxpemive unlta•imere ljruclures have been-pieced IXOD P~dleton Incident Marine • ID Auto Shot; Wife Held A ~1arine sergeant from camp Pendleton vtas shot in the head Monday a!temooh and nmatns in aiUcal con- dition today while his wife is charged Civic Center Site Offered .. .,.,, ~y Deve"IX>l?!Jr: Two San Julll\ C.plsttaao d ty: COWi· cilmen, serving .•• 'a commlUet quietly searching for a civic ceoter site, dlwlged Monday that a !If.acre percel eumiunded by new residences bas been offered u a ~veloper's ~lion. · . :But tbe city stall and tbe remainder of Ifie council appeared stroaglJ cool to tbe Poeelble use ol tbe a....,e alool Alipu Slreet as civic center. And at least one COUllClltnan "I> poored miffed at the Sll')Jl'i5e an- -by the commlltee comprised ol James Thorpe and Edward Qiennal<. Tbe property, which reportedly .. being offered by the Landmark Dev~-1 «;gmpony which is bulldlng retldeoeee, mlgbl not be compatible, said. Planning D!r«tor Dave Smith. Councilmen agreed that no specific decision .or strong study would come of the offer until the firm of Haworth and Ariderson comes closer to cocilpleUoo on the city's general plan. And Smith suggest«! that 1troarer thought be given once the <OMU!taeb come back with a general pl8n framework this fall. The ltnal documen~ hoftver, ""1!1d not be complete unlli next spring. ~Iman Thorpe justified tbe •P. paronl _.,,, ov.r the oiler fOI' tbe land and said that In his mind he condoned the quiet negotiation for poerlble sites by the special committee, endllig with I public diBclosure -·the neeotlatiom have (SH CENTER, p_,. I) <:east • Little temperature change .is ex- pected Ice the Orange Coast Wednesdly, with the USUll low clouds and fog holding clown -lempenturet to le. fftcha lnlancl • expected In the upper IOs, INsmE TODA 'l' Joseph P. Kenntdu Ill, ion o/ ~h< lot< S<K. Robert F. Ke1m<dv, missed a cunie cm Natitvcktt 11· 'land and /lipped hie jttp, 1eri- oullu injuring one o/ /IV< glrla 4n-' the vehlci. and Jil1 brotl&tr, .David. See atoru, Page 4. lft IWVIW t1 .... l; .... ,. 14 Ml\'191 ., ,._. ..... ,... ,. ......... """ ~ --. .... 1"'' .._.,.... •n T-• -" ·-. .................. --. with assault with a deadJ:y weapon. The vicUm, Sgt. Sandy Woodbury Jr .. '11, was listed in critical but stable con- dition at Camp Pendleton Naval Hospital. His wife, ~tart.ha, 21, ol Santa Ana, was arraigned this morning before a federal court In San Diego on the ;w.u11 charges. !.... . Ae<ording to Rex I. 5Cllr0e0tr, opecial agent In clwle of the inveeUptioo, Sgt. Wooilb\l!'Y was • ebol In the heod with a ~Qllll>or-Mlol.JI~ .... At In. di} lllclbff-t.'ile" ... tM llli! Mateo ... ~e oo the Marine baae . .,_ i..i lift"thii liut ~ Mn. If~ and Ille lfU ........,, ovtr ..... Mlirll·..u..rtliel. .,..,_... ~)aid W'wea unallle to com- ment oo acy rootiva In tbe ·-ln1 but in ti>vestlg1tioci le etill'under way. Shortly after the shooting.-hue ol· ficiall contaded the San ami.nte police In an eflcrt. to locate thi couple'• child, reportedly left In the core ol a babysitter in the city. However, the chUd ,appattntly WH found later In the day and was plac-ed'ln protective custody. ' W.pibury b attlcbed to the Heacl- ljilarlera and Senico Clo., Ind Batt.lion, lib Marine Regimen~ let Marine Di-. -spol<tamen said. The uchange - a -.. facility -is. located In the upcooet portiGD ol the beae near Sall Clemente. Ex-Congressman Schmitz' Child Dr owns in Pool The 3-year-old son of former Orange County Congressman John G. Sd!miu died tllb mornlnc tn Hoag Memorial Hospital, Ne'WpO<I Beach. Tbe child ol tbe ..,._time IftS)denUal hopeful fell Into tbe family pool Mooday afternoon. Pbllllp J-,SChmitz was treated In tbe .boopital lnt..,.lve care unit ·from Sboi;u1 llfter 4 p.m. ;Mooday. He ~ beeh ni,sbed there by Newport Beach police bellcopter. SdunJtz and his wife kept a sleepless vigil·through the nJcht at the hospital. Newport ,Beach police and firemen, called to the Schmitz l\ome at to Mission Bay In Spygl.., Hill ahortly before 4 p.m. Moodoy, said the·cailer believed the mild bad d10wned. •111e wu not breathing. He had no heartbeat," police said. ~e'WPOl'I Beach firemen began ad· mlnblednc hem massage and ozygen. ~ OOlcer Hurd Armstrini' arrived momenll lal« ai>d ealied for the poljce belli)eplU, wlilC!i•landed In the street' tn front of the Schmitz home and ruelled the ynuth to the hoopltal. . ;' . Mn. Schmitz aald she -not know for ....... ,., .... Phillip had -In tbe wa_ter. "l toek hie urejacltet o(I so be could 10 lo lbe batbn>om," Mn. Schmill eald. "No ooo aaw him go back oulllde or get Into lht ~-" · She said be could have climbed or fallen Into tbe PQOI during 1 11>-millute pellod wblle abe was In Ilic bouae, but abe eald her old« chlldron, ,Jerry, 14, and M•ry KllJ, 11, wore ·tn tlte PQOI all' lbe time a!ld.dldn'I notlee l'llllllp. "We were.all there/' she tlld. 111 don't know how It could ha .. happelled." Mtt:'Sehinlu said the pool In the 1am01•1 ·new 1lome bod -cempleled ooty~. 'I singly in a ''mlnj.R-1" arrangement giv- ing t&e feeling ol a private single-family residence. Where common walls exist and where the selling price is l"'fler, be added, fewer problems have arisen. •1No one should comtrue by this phlloeophy that we're trying to establish dlfferen! qualities of life by that oo..erva- UOO: but what we have just said is the tnith. Our p~erns are with the less ex- pensive.developments, v Weidner said. • ' Councilmen, who concurred entirely with Thorpe's freeze , suggested that volunteers from the community could serve on the special committee which will evaluate new approaches to the prob-. lem. What has developed in 'recent years in some of the toWhhouses colonies is that community associations empowered to enforce restrictions regarding property tnaintenance and other aspects - specified in deeds as cove.a'n'ts , con· di tions "and res trictions -have become lax. "They \Vere created with the idea that they would be the purest form of democratic control ," \Veidner said. But that philosophy has run into some snags, he said . "Ruman nature being wha t it is, these wiits are not that cohesive and the rules not that well understood to guarantee consistent adherence to all the city's well-conceived controls," he added. One preliminary suggestion from Coun- cilman Edward Chennak f o 11 owed \Veidncr 's report -that salesmen in such tracts specify e1actly the conditions which wi ll be in effec t on the buyer's deed. Chermak said that in lhe past many persons bought townhouses without being told clearly the long list of restrictions which came along with the property. "Maybe the rule should be made to (See FREEZE, Page Z) l · owe Actress llecalls Last Moments On Andrea Doria lly JACK CHAPPELL Of .. Qtlllr ... l'9ff It -..as tbe last niglll or a gala Europe- ~America cruise as the graceful Ital· lmt ·oe.an liner -Andrea Doria knifed thro\lgh leaden waten on her way to ' suter. ln)1\J.e1 miln ballroom, the orcliestr.t •p1ayeit ·. ''~vedercl R<>man" and the Ilibl' ol tlie glittering sl)ip fell dead Into a ehro!J<Lb1 fog. ANDREA DORIA SALVAGER DISPLAYS FIRST PIECE OF LINER Hunt Goes on for $2.S Mill ion in Tre1lure Aboa'rd Ship Actrw R~th Roman. a Laguna Beach res.ideQt, was returning to the states aboard the Andrea Dorla that July 25, 1956. News today or-the daring attemptJJ to saJvage the $2.5 mllllon of jewels and valuables In the *1p's safe brings back IJW)mortes for Miss Roman. "I tl1lnk I go1 tbe most valuable thing. 'lbat b my son. Well. you koow, the material •tlllngS you can regain ," Miss Roman said. Broken Cable Da1npens Andrea Dorin Salvaging Miss Roman bas performed i n J1llillOrduo. BIOliOn · plcturu and televi.ilon p~uctkint. .Her more than 80 motion plctiil'l!if.liji:lilde l"Tho .ChalDpioo," ·;nie Window '' "'1cl.·two.:h1lmlr Ricturu about to be ~e'ued now: 'TelevislOn produc- tkms 1nelude "lrOnside," "Gunsmoke," and "Mod Squad" ~est · star appear· ances. 'As f0r 1 m·ater1al vah;.ables, Miss Rornftn doesn't· exPect. to get any of her jeweriy bliek from the hulk'of the Andrea Dorla. Since It 'W8S the last night , her valuabtes had been removed from the purser's safe and -were paciked in a suit· case stowed away in her state room. She had been returning from Europe where she 'bad Intended to live permaneotly but changed her mind. Most of her valuables _,, on board, ehe said. Jewelry lrlcluded a diatnond ring, a diamo/ld bracelet,-earrlrigs, and a pearl ..p.)ace. V~~. flllt are lost forever, she J!!lld. "I )Ust thank God for that Itallmt sailor (See SINKING, hp I) Border Officers Se ize Pot Worth $23,000 FAIRHAVEN, Mass. (UPI) -More problems have beset an underwater ex- pedition which hoped to salvage riches from the sunken liMr Andrea Doria - and its success appears in jeopardy. Two former Navy aquanauts were forced Monday to delay their attempt to penetrate the purser's office of the ship. which rests 250 feet belO\V the surface of the Atlantic Ocean, because a cable became entangled and broke. Repairing the 1 ¥,.inch steel cord will Interrupt salvage operations for an undetermined amount of time, according to crewmen on the support ship Nar- ragansett. One support diver, DaVid Lejeun or Philadelphia, said the salvage expedition probebly will be discontinued by Thurs- day whether or not valuables can be recovered by then. Many participants are on leave from the Navy 'and have to return this week, be said. In an effort to speed the expedition. a third diver, R<>bert Holll• ol Hayward, c.ur .. joined tlte team of Donald Rodock- er and Christopher DeLuccbi, both or san Diego, at the ocean bottom Monday, where they are living In an underwater habitat. "Mle trio' are trying to 111COver some A San Diego woman was arrested Mon-•t.l million in cash and almost as much d•y 11 the S6p Onofre clteckpolnt by U.S. In j•welry, art obj<Cls and other Border· Patrolmen who aid they found valuables -most of which are believed 230 pounds of merijuana In h<r car. still In the pur~r'a olllce. Bolder pallOlmen aald they tlll'nl!d'" '"Th~·wr .. ·Dorla ·un1r-July Zf. t~. Lym Poepst, 27, over to U.S. QJstoms after lt collided with tho Swedish vessel agents and conlbcaled the marijuana, Stockholm. All previous atlempts to -ill fW8biy SIS,llOO on the Illegal drU& salvoge valuables !rom the wreck Jailed. market. LejeWI noted that the weatber Is tx· t pected to tum sees choppy In future weeks, 8nd make salvage work increas· ingly difficult. Bob Coffey, another diver abOard the Narragansett, said ·Rodocker and Del.Jue. chi were in the process of cutting into the purser's office Monday when a cord at- tached to an acetylene torch they were using to cut away t\vo steel doors was moved by ocean currents. It wrapped arowid an artificial forward funnel on the vessel, which be called ·" "smokestack.'' "It will only take about a half hour to repair once we get it uo," Ollfey said, ''but the job is cleanng it and bringing it up. It's still tangled." Coffey said morale was 11sttll super," despite the fact that "we've bad 3C> many problem.s. we're getting used to it.'' The enture already ts almost two weeks behind schedule, wltb much o( the dli!icully m ultlng lrom mechanical prob- lems and weather. Some $250,000 reportedly has been spent so far on the expedition. Door Prizes Backed SACRAMENTO (AP) -Charitable organ.ir:ations could give away door prizes without running afoul of the law under a bill approved 4-2 by the Assembly's COmmitlce on Conslltutlonal Arn<rnlmen le. The door prize bill by As9emblyman Ray Seeley (f\.Blythe), went to the Assembly floor on Monday's vote. ' Top Aides Promise Accounting w ASmNGTON (UPI) -The Wbite House said today it would disclose within a month a full accounting of the purchase of President Nixon's San Clemente estate and would explain the role of New York industrialist Robert H. Abplanalp In the transaction. Abplanalp, in an interview with the Washington Star·Nf:WJ Sunday, sakt be was the only outside .Investor currmtly involved in' the purchase of 20 acns of the 26-acre estate. · The White House said Nixon recelved1a 1625,000 loan from Abplanalp to ..,.- the 26-acre ttaet. 'ftle Title 1- and 'J'ruat Company' 'WU named M tbe ttustae to buy the property ...i to bold lclmial UUe to I\' "1 order· to ..,. dispooal el the property the Nixons did not plan on keeping for their own use. On Qec. 15, 1970, the White House said the property was plD'chased by Abplanalp for $1.2 million in which the $625,000 loan was canceled. It said Abplanalp had set up an ln· vestment company and declined to name any other members. involved. Abplanalp told the Star-News one other outsider was involved in helping fmance the San Clemente purchase but that he has bougbt that penon oot. Both Abplanalp and the White House declined to identify the other investor. There was speculation that he was Nix- on's best friend . C.G. "Bebe'' Rebozo of Key Biscayhe, Fla. Discuss.ing the Abplanalp interview with reporters Monday, deputy press secretary Gerald L. Warren said : "There really is no difference in what l\.1r. Abplanalp is saying and what we have said, and to allow this situation, or to encourage it, as J must say that the White House had a hand in the other situatM>n (meaning reports on govern· ment improvements on the Florida and (See ESTATE, Page I) *·* * 'Sem antics' Get Blame for Nixon Home Confl ic t WASHINGTON (AP) -An apparent disagreement in statements from the White House and the man who helped President Nixon buy his C8lifornia home was merely "a semantical problem," ac::- cording to Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren. Warren said Monday lhat no cor· poration was involved in the purchase o{ part of the Nixon estate at San CJemente. He refused to grve further details, ho\1.'ever, saying that a complete stat~ ment is being prepared and wlll be released wlthln a month. A part of the Nixon estate was purchased by tndldtrlalisl R o be r I Abplanalp, and last May the Wblh! li>uoe said 23 acres had been bougbl by an hr vestment company fonned by Abplana]o. Howeve r, In a newspaper · article Abplanalp eald there was no corporation Involved. · Warren explained that the difference was semantic, noting that Abplanalp used the terms "holdina company" and "joint venture." re~n :!lt'1!: :'In~~:~· w"'j stories whklh, be said, cou~ "mlstmpreaslons and dlst«tkml."' He complained that llorles - governmtnt 1 e c u r l t y and com- munlcaUons spending at Nlxon'a bamoa and ortlcee In Callfomla Ind 1lorlda have been mlaleading. ' I DAILY PILOT SC Councilmen M~y Sue , For Zoning By JORN ZAIJ..ER Of "'-Olllty 1'119t ll•ff A majority or Newport Beach coun· dlmen said ~1onday they're thinking of suing the California Coastal Zone CoNervatlon Commission for alleged "usurpation of local authority." But councilmen said they probably won't press a lawsuit unless the coastal commission continues in what they see as threats to local authority. Mayor Donald Mcl.nnis brought up the subject at an afternoon study session. Councilmen were attempting to come to terms with stiff new parking re- ~ents imposed by the South Coast Regional Zone C.Onservation Commission. "We're the ones who should decide how many _ parking spaces a development needs," McIMis said. "We're given that power by the State of California," he said, "yet it is the coastal commission that is exercising that power and nobody has yet challeng- ed the coastal commission." Newport Beach is angry because it re- quires only two parking spaces for a duplez: while the coastal commission has refused to approve duplexes in lhe city unless they have four off-street spaces. The mayor's strong remarks brought an immediate response from CoWlcilman Richard Crool. ''Let's challenge it ourselves," Crout said. Mcinnis, Vice Mayor Howard Rogers and Crout all opposed proposition 20 last November, when it went before the voters. Support for a lawsuit also came from Councilman Paul Ryckoff, who did sup- port Proposition 20 last November. "We're faced with a situation where we have to bastardize our structures in order to meet the coastal commission's requirement that we have two parking spaces for each living unit,'' Ryckoff complained. "This concerns me very much." Mayor Mcinnis then made another reference to a pcmible lawsuit. "l don't know how far the coastal commission sbou1d be allowed to go without a challenge. Somewhere there's a line, and when ll's crossed, you have to consider legal remedies to protect yourself." Aller !be meeting, Mcinnis eipallded on his remarb. Reiterating hls belief Illa! !be city ha• !be right to regulate developments "and not any appointive body ol people who do not have to stand for election." "I don't mean to threaten anyone but we all have a point where we draw the line. "We may accept this requirement for two parking spaces. But if the coastal ainmission keeps doing more and more, we could reach the point where we have to do !QDletbing. ''Before we would pursue a lawsuit," be added, "We of course would exhaust all administrative possibilities. And I sin- cerely hope we could stop short of a suit." Councilman Milan Dostal, speaking after the meeting, said he agreed with the general position taken by the mayor, "Our disagreements with the coastal commission are not simply philosophical," he said. "They are legal. I personally feel that Proposition 20 is W1constitutional in some of the things it is trying to do." He said be was willing to consider a Jawsuit to test the legal questions if it became necessary. <>nly Councilman Carl Kym]a said he woold oppose a lawsuit. "The coastal commission has a clear mandate from the people to regulate development in the coastal zone," Kymla. "A vole ol the people super>edes any powers of zoning the city may have gotten from the state legislature." Qiuncilman John Store was not available for comment City Attorney Denis O'Neil said the councll had not ronsulted him about the possibility of a lawsuit, although he said there were probably grounds for one if the city chose to pursue one. "My ears reaUy perked up when I heard tbem talking about a lawsuit," O'Neil said. "But I'm pretty sure It's still in the talking stage." OIA ... I COAST IC DAILY PILOT '"'-OI' .... CNll ~11..V ,.JI.OT, win. wfllm t. ~ Ito. .,.__,.,-., II flll«tll"* W ..... 0r ...... , .. ,, ~ .... "" ~-._ ,.."' .. ,,..,.,. •'• ,..,,..'°"'", Moftod.&V ~ "'109r. lfiw COit. M .... , frf.wJlitff lNCA. H\llltlno,_ lNcfllfl-1.i" Yllll~, ........... ..... INIM/$Mdleblclr, M'4 $.111 CIMfttrolW s.ii J..,.,. ~lllrlllO. A t'"81ot "'°ION/ •ifllori ,. P¥1l'llJM!f S<lf¥rd•.,.. ""' ""'"'"' T"t iiWlnclNI Pilltllfl'l"'9 ~ It 11 lit W"t .. ,. $1'rt91, CM.II M-. C.nfllrNt, nllL Jlob.11 N. Wtotd l"rt11ffftt ..... ""'°'""" Jtck It. Cvrlty va ,..,..w.i, .,... GM.111 Me111911" T\0111tt Ktt 'f'll '"* Th-•• A. Mw,phi11t ~ll'lt '"!Or Q.1tlH H. lo•• ltldtt"4 '· Nill AnllMftl MM\loglllf Elllton ,_ c ...... Office 101 Nd Ef C1111l110 lt11I, 92672 __ c-t. .... I J:iO ... I ••V l lfMf ~ loMcfl: UD Nftll0f1 lou1W11t ........... ...,.t 11'11 tlffdl ltull'Vlrdi ........ 9-c:tl: m flor.-t A""'°IN TtlifO I I f714) 641..fJJI C' I tll!W ....... 642-5671 s.. M ,, All hf•• ffl l I It 10 4fJ..44JO ~'• 1m ~ co.u ~ltl'olr!t ~. .._ -'""'*· Hl110r4'1iol'll. ........ .... ... """"1-ft" ........ _. ........... ....,. -.111 ,,,,,. ........ Clll'W'l'tltrll-· ......, cl-. ............ c..11 MIM. ~ .... ..... .. CWTttr-IUJ ........ , .. fNI U.11 ..-~, MlltflwT 7 a,,... GM wM". lut\dil/, August 14, 1973 Ato1ni~ Danger Told 'Other Evidence' ' "' - Grave Site Map AEC Report Cites Nuclear Plant 'Horror' . Texas P 11 l LA D EL P fl I A !UPI) Pennsylvania Insurance Comml$5loner J!erbert Denenberg h.13 made public an ~~e Energy CommissiO!' report which NUCLEAR INSURANCE RATES EXAMINED-Edltoriol, Pogo 6 indicated a nuclear power plant accident could claim a maximum of 45,000 lives and cause 100,000 injuries. Denenberg said Monday tho 1965 study was burled in "thousands and thousands of pages of documents" at AEC's bead~ quarters and was dlscovered by hls in-surance department investigators. In remarks prepared for deliver," to- day, he said the reporl's ob.Seurlty il - h.1slrated that the AEC waJ: part of an "alomlc establishment" which uses secrecy and confusion to stifle protest $750,000 Lawstiit County Suit Awaiting Laguna Niguel Decision By JAN WORTH Of ~ o.lt., "llol Sltlf An attorney for Kaufman and Broad developers said Monday the company's $750,000 suit against Orange County "is just sitting" until the intent of the Board of supervisors regarding land planning in Laguna Niguel Is clarified . Attorney Rodger Howell said the com· pany is willing to wait until the 1983 Land Use Element requ ired by state la\Y is passed in late August to pursue the legal action. The company began the sult because of delays on a 32-acre tract on both sides of Niguel Road west of Crown Valley Parkway scheduled for condominiums. Following deletion of the Pacific Coast Freeway route through the area last fall, the county planning department initiated a series or downzooing proposals on parcels along the route. Last week the Board or Supervisors singled out for an emergency ordinance," Jim Thompson, homeowners president, said Monday. "We Celt that all tracts in lhe area should be re-studied." Both Howell and Thompson Indicated they would be willing to compromise on a density somewhere between the 11 unlts now allowed and the five units proposed in the emergency ordinance. A density of 6.7 dwelling units per acre is set on the area surrounding the Kauf· man and Broad tract in the 1983 Land Use Element recommended by the county planning commission in July. At Monday's regular meeting the com· mission postponed decisions on 'two other Laguna Niguel zoning proposals to Oct. I following Board of Supervisors action on the land use element. denJed 4 too one of those proposals which Frot11 P .. e l would have changed density on the Kauf· man and Broad tract from 11 units per REEZE acre to four. __.,...,_ • 11tat decision conflic\s with an em gency ordinance placed on Kaufman an Broad last January by the supervisors which limits density on the tract to five units until Sept. 11. • • The ordinance was passed under pressure Crom the Laguna Niguel Homeowners and the county planning departmmt, who said development should not be permitted until the traffic corridor situation was studied. But no restrictions were placed on most ol the other developers in the area. "We never wanted Kaufman and Broad Fro•PageJ CENTER • • • begun to solidify. But Councilman Josh Gammell took issue, saying, "This is tbe first time l 've heard of this offer o( donatioo." The property in question -which is now vacant land -lies along Alipaz where it makes a distinct angle. Smith said that because the Pacific c.oast Freeway plans have been scrap- ped, the possibility that Atipaz would bco:#ne a major thoroughfare is more remote. He added that because of residential usage or the land in the area the site might not be what the cty wants for a civic center. Prevalent city philosophy, he added, calls for tbe selecting of a site within walking distance of the town's focal point -Mission San Juan Capistrano. Tbe Alipaz site, Smith added, would be too far away to confonn to that guideline. The next phase In the negotiations over the donation of the site is to continue to explore merits and demits of Lbc Alipoz idea and then see how the decisions blend with the framework of the general plan . Frott1 Page J ESTATE • • • California \Vhitc lfouses) to encourage this one to become distorted would be a disservice. "It will be cleared up once and for all, and within the month," said Warren. He described as a "semantical game" Abplanalp's contention that there was no corporation , in contrast to the White House aMouncement that it was a holding company or an investment com· pany. •·our desire here is ta clear thi$ matter up, once and for all. so that mjsim· pressions don't grow and exist and con- tinue." '"Vi~tim!' force these salesmen to post the rules in t~ office so buyers can see what they · have to live with if they spend their m'« • be said. Weidner said that he polled other Orange County cities to see how they have taclded the problem and his query drew five separate approaches to con· trol : -Hiring of independent maintenance finns at residents' expense to maintain all the architectural features and open space. -Whenever the city determines that associations are de relict in their en- forcement and maintenance, the city assumes the functions and is repaid through property lines. -Creation of a special district with taxing power at the time of initial ap- proval of !be development and if Jl\e prob- lems arise the city could bring the tax· ing district to life and work could be financed from the revenue. -Creation of a townhouse ordinance setting prohibitions and penalties for in· fraction and pursuing problems through the courts. -Requirement of a performance bond to insure conformance with the elaborate list of rules. Mayor Roy Byrnes said that townhouse dwellers, developers or any other citizen willing to explore the suggestions or add new ones would be welcome on the com· mittee. "All they ha ve to do is call city hall and volunteer," he said. Se11ate Approves School Auditing SACRAMENTO (AP) -State auditors could look over the books of local school districts to make sure state money under special grants is being spent properly un- der two bills approved by the state Senate. The measures by state Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R·Newport Beach), 1Ycnt to the Assembly Monday on identical 29 to 9 votes~ One names the state Department cf Finance to conduct the audits and the other specifies the state controller. He introduced the double-barrelled ap- proach in an efrort to get his bills through the Assembly Ways and Means Committee. where similar legislatioo died last year , Carpenter said_ The bills are SB 17 and SB 18. Colle~ts Bandit Loses $1 in Muffed Heist A HUNTINGTON BEACH sandwich shop owner matched wits with an armed robber Monday and came out ahead by $1, police reported tod ay. The supposed victim ol the 7 p.m. heist was Donald New- berry, 42, owner ol the shop at 17091 Newland Street. Police said a man gave Newberry one dollar and asked for change. But when the shop owner opened the cash rel!lster to oblige, he !ound himsclr Joolcing down the barrel of a revolve·r. "DUCK," YELLED New berry •• he hit the deck behind the counter and scrambled into the nearby storeroom. The alarm was shouted to shop employes and pntrons who either called police or ran outside in time to see the would be ban- dit jump into an old yellow pickup !ruck and speed of!. THE POLICE REPORT concludes, "The victim has no furth- er informallon at this time other than he got the suspect'• dollar but the suspe ct got no money from him." ' and subvert tbe public's right to know •. Denenberg said the • ' a to m 1 c Htabli$bmes1t" maintains a stranglehold on nuclear ent"CY policy de<Woos by saying the 1.5.!ues art too technical for public onsumptlon. Denenberg's remarks were to open three days of hearings sponsored by tbe state Insurance Department Into the in· surance risk posed by nuclear power plants. Consumer advocate Ralph Nader charged today that the AEC hns prac- ticed "a massive coverup of most urgent reactor safety problems" ror years. Nader, leadoff witness at the hearing, said a major accident in a nuclear power plant could create a disaster area "equal to that of the state of Pennsylvania." Nader said his charge stemmed from a secret AEC study done in 1965. Nader and the Union of Concerned Scientists of Cambridge, Mass. said they had hundreds of AEC Jnternal documents relating to nuclear pc>wer plant safety . "These voluminous internal f i I e s demonstrate that a massive coverup of most urgent reactor safety problems has been practiced by the AEC for years," Nader said. Nader said the AEC "is licensing reac. tors in the (ace or overwhelming scien- tific evidence that the safely of these complex machines has not been proven." !·le said that "if nuclear power plants "'ere sa re , they would be insurable." Utilities and iMurance ccmpanies will not take the financial risk of nuclear power plant accidents. "But the public is exposed, for the most part ~Jhuut thcir knowledge or con.sent, to the enonnous safety hazards of nuclear power plants," Nader said. • Found Ill U'I Ttl.,..,_. DEFENDING -Charles Med- ler. lawyer fQl' accused mass killer Wayne Henley, says he thinks Henley's rights have been violated. HOUSTON ( UPll -An East T•~· sheriff said today a hnnd-scrawled rriap or possible new gravesite~ and "many other items of (!vidcnce" hud been found in a cabin used by a homosexual bachelor O.L'CUSCd of killing at least 27 young boys In the worst mass rnurder in modem U .&. hlstory. San Augustine County Sheriff John Hoyt said lbc map pinpointed severaJ locations in the San Jacinto National J."'orest in soutbClast Te.xas. The sheriff would not say if offi cen would begin digging for more bodies in tht map area. ",I'm not trying to be evasive," he said . "But we just don't know yet whether we have good evidence or bad evidence." lioyt. in Houston to confer with Teias Rangers on the case. said the map. shovels, a sheath of plastic body bags, three pairs of gloves -one tinted with lime -and a parllally used sack of quicklime were found at the cabin near Lake Sam Rayburn owned by the father ot Dean Allen Corll, 33. Most of the bodies Coond at three loca- tions in Texas Were wrapped in plastic bags and sprinkled with lime. ''The nlap centers on the New Waverly·Huntsville area and we're going to be ehec:k.ing it out ," lloyt said . lioustoo Police Chlef ~lerman Short disclosed Monday that a htorture board" -the item allegedly used by Corll to slrap his victims to torture and kill them -was found in the cabin. E'roal PG§e J All the victims were teenage boys. allegedly procured by Elmer Wayne! Henley, 17, and David Owen Brooks, 18, for CorU. / SINKING RECALLED • • • Henley has admitted taking part In I~ torture, sexual abuse, murder and burial ot some of the victims. wOO took Richard over the side, strapped to his back," she said. Wbile her son and his nurse were rescued by the "Stockholm,'' Miss Roman remained aboard the stricken luxury liner to be picked up by a French passenger liner. "I just sat there. l was on !be grand stairway. You could hear the ship moan. It was a pretty sad sound.·~ she said. Miss Roman was one of the last to leave the Italian ship. Fifty~ persons died in the collision between Andrea Doria and the Stockholm. Most of those victlms died in the initial ramming of the Andrea Doria. 1be ship was struck on the starboard side just back from the bow. 1'She went over alroost immediately after she was hit. Now, they clalm that if the Stockholm bad stuc'k in bet' and not pulled·oo~ they could have towed them both back. I guess Jt's like a knlte wound, when yoo pull out tbal's the end ol it," Afiss Roman said. The collision occurred at about 11 p.m. and the boat sank the following morning at about 7 a.m., Miss Roman recalled. "I watched it go down. "The thing that I always think aOOut the Andrea Doria, you know, when I think of it lying down there, was that. they had a great, oh, a large statue of Andrea Doria. It must have weighed tons and tons, I don't know whether it was marble or granite or what it was. "But, it must be a pretty eerie sight Blood Attack Told GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) -A government witness said Monday one or the eight antiwar activists on trial here laid him of plans to toss bags or blood at then Defense Secretary f.1elvin R. Laird in 1972 duMng a television talk show. Otarles Becker of New Orleans, a former member of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War. testified he met with defendant Peter Mahoney in New York in May 1972. down there. I have the feeli ng that it would be intact. ''There'd be a few barnacles and everything on it. I think those divers, if they get any shots of that you know, it should be pretty eerie silent!Y standing there." Workers Seize Clirys'ler Pla1it l1i Labor Fight DETROIT (UPI) -The Chrysler Corp. 's big Mack Avenue stamping plant was shut down today alter a ftred worker allegedly attacked tfVo security men with a pipe and about 300 workers seized co~ lrol ol the plant. It was the third Chrysler facility hit by labor problems 1n three wee.ks and the second seized by workers' groups. A six· day wildcat slrike at Chrysler's key Detroit Forge plant ended Mooday. "We're prepattd to stay untll all Ota' demands are met," one worker shouted through a closed gate. Among the demands were that alt workers fired 1n any dJsturbance be rehired and there be no disciplinary ac· tion against any worker taking port In the disturbance. Several radk:al groups not afflllated with the Chrysler worken were paulng out socialist literature outside the plant early today. Chrysler said the Incident st.1.rted when two men, former ernploye William Gilbreth and another u n ld en ti fie d em ploye, shut down a rraming depart- ment on the second noor of the plant when Gilbreth sat on the rra.mlng con- veyor line. Gilbrelh was discharged several days ago. Brooks said he helped Corll and Henleyi bury some victims but said he was nor. involved in the actual killings. · Sheriff's deputies recovered four bodle5· h1ooday on the beach east of Galveston, raising the number of victims torr. Officers indicated after the djggi.ng Monday that the four bodle3 recovered on the beach would be the last found there. "We will not do any more wtirt today in Chambers County unless there is new Jnformation arising," Ownbers Cowlty Sherif! Louis Otter said. The four bodies were unearthed in the Chamber• Counly resort of l!i"1 J.sland as spectaton Including bikinl·<lad girl> watched. The first grave found Mooday actuaTiy was discovered by a truck drl~tr potJ.na the beach with 1 stick Sunday night . "Wben I bcougbt !be stick up, It had a bad odor," c.orre Lqer !lid. J ~er took police to the spol and the 24th body was recovered before the morning fog had a chance to bum away. Later In the morning and lwo miles awg from tho spot when! !be 14th body was found, a rood grader dlgging in a patcll ol sand tumed black by decmlpoolng bodies unearthed !be 25th victim. · A couple of hours later, early Mond>y afternoon, deputie! digging with ahoveli found the 26th and %7tb victims In on' shallow grave. Theit nude bodies wtre tied together bead to foot. , In 1971 , the bodies ol 2.1 !arm ha~ were found burled along the Featbtj River in Non.htrn CalifonUa in wha\ was, until Mooday. !be wont imo,.. mass murder 1n the United States tht' centw-y. Juan V. Corona, a migrant labor contractor. is serving a Ure prison tenn !or Lho!e !laying!. • lt was learned also today that a IS. year-old girl linked to the CIS6 was Jienley's lianee and that she had also dated some boys believed to be victlmt. She and Henley had planned to loavd Houston together within the ntxt feW months. 1 A LICENSE NOT TO STEAL-' I Unfortunately for tho 9eneral public, there ore a lot of people installing carpeting who shouldn't be. Unbelievably, many ctrpet "contractors" are working unlewfully without insuronco and dale licenses. FOR YOUR PROTECTION you should insist thot tho people who instoll your corpeting work for • contractor who is INSURED and STATE LICENSED. (Ho is required by dole low to be both.) Stole licensed controctors hove to po.+ • bond for your protection, end tlio very accomplishment of licensing indicot .. • d99'" of competency . The big9est problem fn deonng witli an unlicensed contractor is tliet ho might be out of business tomorrow. Don't toke a chance -call Aldon's for reliability, and the best installation around! ALDEN'S CARPETS ft DRAPC:S 1663 Placentla Ave. COST A MESA 646-4838 HOUlSt MOii. Tin '!111n., t fO l:JO -FRI., t to t -SAT., t:JO fO I • , • • ' I I \ " • I I • I , • I I I l I I I I I I • I \ • I I I l J () DAILY PILOT • U.S. Steel Requests Price Hike Ualttd Pras ln&ernatknal U.S. si .. 1 Corp .. the coun- try's I a r g est steelmaker, Tuesday Joined the list or major corporations ruing for price increases following the lnlroductlon of Phase IV. Auto and steel companies have bteo the first of the big corporations to file so.day notices of price increases but many in other lines of business are expected to follow. U.S. STEEL said It expected to raise prices on sheet, strip and pipe products an average of about S percent. SC TYffday, Augus l 14, 11J7l The increases are slmiliar to those announced In the spring but which were withdrawn because or the government's price freeze. Real Power Machine They are "cost justified, 0 the company said. Jones & Laughlin, another major steel producer, also filed Tuesday for price in· creases. CHRYSLER CORP. as ked the Cost of Living Council for permission lo increase prices on 1974 models by an average of $71. American Motors also applied to increase car prices an average of $55. 1 Ford and General 1-fotors were expected to apply far similar increases for models coming out in the fall. Chrysler Showing Off New '74 Line Under Phase IV, pri~s can be increased only as much as higher dollar costs to the · seller. Big companies, those with annual sales of $100 million er more, are required to give the council 30 days notice before raising prices. but the in- creases are automatic if the government docs not challenge them. ARJllCO STEEL Corp. said It was asking to reinstate price hikes averaging 5 per- ce nt on sheet s1eel products. These had been scheduled for June, but were disallowed by the freeze. The Cost of Living Council said Tuesday "about 20 to 25" major companies proposed f)rice increases l\-1onday on the first d~y of the new Phase 4 anti-inflation program. "The action has been pretty tight." said Charles Emely, a55istant council cUrector for operations. HE SA.ID HE did not know what finns requested price In· · -;reases. although Olrysler and Armco announ<:l?d thty were among them. . 'The Administration would : not give in on the freeze oo beef that is scheduled to last until Sept. 12. The meat in- ~ dustry, and disgruntled shop- pe-rs, have complained that this has done nothing but keep down the supply or beef. Other food prices, which were unfrozen a month ago, appeared to have leveled orr Monday. Poultry prices were down. • KANSAS CITY (AP) Chrysler Corp. started show· ing its 1974 models to newsmen Tuesday, and com· pany officials said the full·pr.; duction levels of the past year would be increased even further. The new Dodges and trucks were to be previewed Tuesday afternoon; the new Plymouths and Chryslers, Wednesday morning. Major mode I changes are li mited to the big· bodied cars. TllE CARS ARE likely to ht more expensive than this year's models. Chrysler ap- plied to the Cost or Living Council Monday for authority to raise prices on new cars and trucks by an average of $71. or 1.7 perCi!lll. Once Ag ain In Europe LONDON (UPI) -Tue price of gold dropped below $100 an ounce for the second consecutive day on the London bullion market and the U.S. dollar gained in Europe and in Tokyo Tuesday. Gold first reached $100 an ounce last May and eventually reached $126. But it dropped •below $100 on l\-1onday and in early trading Tuesday sold for between $97 and '100 on the big London market and on the Zurich market. The trend or gold appeared still further down. The U.S. dollar galned in Tokyo, Frankfurt, London and Zurich by fractional amounts. In London the opening cur· rency quotation was 2.4737 for one pound sterling, a frac- tional improvement on Mon· day's closing price. on deposits of $100,000 for six months to one year The number of these 1c counts thlt we can 1ccept is limited WE PAY COMPETITIVE INTEREST RATES ON ALL OTHER ACCOUNTS FOURTEEN OF FI CES TO SER VE YOU IN 'Afcadi1 •Cerritos l• Crncent• •Or•n" Btll G1rd1M •tosta MtSI l os Anlfln (21 •sin B1rn1rdino "C1no11 P1rtt Oawntv (2) Monnrey P1rk Whittler Fi11 l ddltio nal Officu In NerOer• C111forala Pl usan t Hill Sao l11H 101 .. 1111 s'"! Futor City Mu1t1l1 y .. SH Jut TOKYO (UPI) -Keen in- terest by Americans in cars with low fuel con5Umption resulted In a sharp increase In sales of Japanese cars in the United States during the first seven months of this year, the Japan Automobile Manufac- turers Association said Tues-- day. It said exports of cars to the United States in the January- July period amounted to 4n ,000 vehicles, up 38.2 per- cent (rom the same period in Im. THE BIGGEST gainer was the Hiroshima-based Toyo Kogyo Cor., which exports rotary engine M&.1.da cars. Toyo Kogyo shipped 73,000 vehicles to the United States In January.July, up 158 per- cent from 1972. Toyota, Japan's leadlng ex- porter of cars to America. ex- ported 192,000 vehicles for a gain of 1 t .6 percent. NLssan Datsun had exports to America of 48,000 cars, up 41.2 percent. Milsublshi, Ch ry s 1 er' s Japanese associate, and Hon- da. both rep()rted sales gains but volume was much smaller than tht leaders. No /11,creases See n-Yet LOS ANGELES (AP) -The first di)' of the new Phase 4 price guJdelines produced no lignif- icant price hikes in Southern Califomla, a spot clieck ot a variety of stores showed. "We only adjust our prices when the suppliers increase theirs and they haven't done'° y~t,' said the owner or a sporting goods store In Santa Moni-ca. "I expect that some time next month we'll be passing along increases to the customers," said the owner or a hardware store In Van Nuys. Beef sho rtages continued. however. A spokes· man !or S..Ceway Stores said supplies or fresh cuts or beef were down to 30 per cent of normal, but he added that fish, lamb, r,ork, canned meat and pork "are ail in good supply. • • Complete New York Stock List ... 1:1-........ <1:.' I \ - PllBUC NCY11C'R PUBIJC NOTICE MOTIC• TO COWft~ IUl'U ... COU"T Of' TM• CAU.Ule flOI a lDS ITATll Of' C•Ll~lflA ... kflool 01 .. rlct! NE~T ~CSA IUNll.0. COl.llt'f M TM• Tl41 COUNTY 0, 01.A.... U~H,110 ffATll ~ (A,l-JH!lMIA '°" M CMc a.Mr,Dft119 WtM. tkll Dhdllfleoi n ~oo O"clcd .a.ft'!.°" tile TH• COUNTY Of! l.Ol AMNt..n ,_.. AM mri ... Of A1111U1t, 1tn, Ne. P ut.W i CAii "llM••• IMt»4 ~ l/11 aw ailOlfpt• IW f'laul!f\I NOTtCI Of' Uft'INTtoN TO SILL TICI 0, HEAll!HG TO MOOll'Y A,,_ C05l.a MeM ' aSAL ll!llOl"l•TV AT MtlVATI $14.l OGMINT f'rottct 111t11 t If It 1 t 1 e l'I NMntt £1llte ef ALtEltT M,AM,.QH, Oc ...... '•Ol.n •"'!cmfo$,_l•••~Slll'1'll._; MAINTENANCE CAltPENTltY SERVICE NOTICE 15 Hl!! .. ltY GIV(N, t!Wlt ..-. .. ~ • n Rt&pOl>Otnl; TO OISTR ICT OWNED PltOPl!.RTll$ IKt to nte contlr171111im l;ly Ille _...._ -",!,',','"','•""°•·:· ........... ,, Pl.Ct Pltl'I• .,. J1fl f:llt: 1J$7 Plt1;tnll• lllled "'""°'" c-1. Ol'I At,oOl;ll ''· 1m . "'°1 .,. · .... .....,..,., COlolt MfM •1 t iOO AJA., or tnerttfltr wlt11ln the time tlolitr. CA•Ot. PAGE SIMMONS, I'll• fll· NOTICI!! 1$ HEltEIY QlViN Intl f11t .ilow.d bV l•w• ,,_ uncltrtl0'*9, .. IEI• ft l'ltnln • ptlltlotl for HNtlno To """"' ,..,._ kMol Dl•trkt of Or•IWlf .cutor of tM Wiii of Alt:Mrt M.ttlofl, ="' ~~ r~~· to whlCll b County, C.lllOl'nl•· •Cllllf i,r •lllj tlltfllltll ~.-. wlll Mii '' prlv•I• "" to tM ...,. ,..,.,,_ p.,.....,,,,,, and tl'llt the tu G-mno aof.td, 11,iir•rnifltr rtttrrtd lll9l'lftf 1nd Wtt ~' b\ddl• on JM ttt1nt time 'f'ICI Pllltlt of llHtlllO the MIM Ml to 11 "DISTRICT" 111'111 t9nh•t \!Cl IO. lout tnd condll!ont heftlMU« -llontd •If .blitn Ml tor S.,t""blf' 14, lt13, 1f 2:00 not 11...-ttlln the ~bav9 iltltd """'' _,. rl91t1, 1111•, .no lnltr"t ot AIMrt ""''lon,i :·;:·· 1~ .. 1~~':,r'OO'ft,,. c°tv1°"'"mtn' Ho. 911 bkh tor the ,,..,,d of • ciontr•ct 1or <l'C"*'· •f "" ll!'M °' llh "'"'"' •net 111 'f" M.., ,...,... " c C"'Mr Orlve the 1oov. pt{ljKt rlgllt, tlll• Ind Jnltf'ttt tMI the fflllt M• ; W•t. 111 the tltv ol ktit1 A~, C•Hfotnl1. ISlDS .tllll IM ' ttnlYfd 111 !I'll oi.<:t l<Qul•MI In 6ddltlot1 10 tt11t of~ 11 Da•~ugwt 10, 1m kNonl!fl4d •llOY9 •nd tll•~ .,.. OPelleoci •1'111 the !Im. 61 tits dNfl'I.. tn thJ r111 IH"OPe,,.,. I ~:-c'l'eJ1 """"' Pllbllcty rffd •'IOUd '' the •bov• tl•t.I lout.cl In lhe County Ol Or•not. $1•1• ol •os•Y MD LUISl•1t11f1C tlm. "'Id pl'C•. C1lltornl1. "*<•Ibid ., ~·-: ,. '""" MIM "'-' IE.Ch bid '"VII <onlorm •lld bl All undivided lwtllt\l'·tlve Ptf'Clfll i -"""',.. ""'*'tlv• to !ht contr•" Oocu"'9nh. ftt'lil lm-t In ind to f SHtl AN. (INfotllll £AQ'I bid tlllll boJ 'CC-nlfd l>r ft\11 AM Thlt CWl•ll'I r .. I ~ lllU1'9d I T .. l fJ14) IU-fflf H CUrltr ,.,.,," lo !11 llM COl'lft-.CI 11'1 "" city . of A111tw1..... Gouritv ot Al"""" fW l"t"ll-OQc"""'"" •M tlV the 1111 of prOPOlofid 0r•l'l&'9• dtterlbtd •• loiJOwt: I l"utillshed Oninot CN•I o.n.,. ,.,IOI, 1ube«ltr•clot•. A N•«I °' IMld In .... Nortll-t ' AUOUllll 14, 21, 21, •NI s.ptemW 4 Tll• 01$Tll:ICT ,_....,ts IM rf<Olll ht t• ~~~ :' 1 tillT-~~ .. rt.1-1 •• ~:tl,w o tf73 2S3t-n Itel •nr OI' •ll bid$ or to w1lvtt •n'I' Ir· '""""" • " ...... _, P • ,,..... • .,.. t •'9ul1rltln Of' ln!Ol'm1lltln In 1nr &h:S. or 1" W.", In the R•ndlo S111 Jut11 cl9 rn 1111 &ldcllf19 Sanf• Al'll. •• tM N0t1hweat qu•rl« of • • PUBLIC NOnCE lnt 01sTA.1cr ,.,. dtiermlnfd 111e '"' Northwt11 qu""'' of "Id see11on '· t o-••I prn1U1no r.i1 of 111r diem wt11t1 11 lndlC•ltd on • m•p of wru•v l'Keltd· 1 l<lc:TITtOUS aUSINnl ln 1111 l«1lllV Jn wl'llCl'I t\11 -~ I• 10 bf ed In DOCiie 1, PIO* 56, Record of ' NAM• SlATEMENT ptrlormld lor llCl'I cr1tl or lyPI of ~. In "" office ()f !fie County , /lllf followlno ptri.on Is doing buslMu worll:rn•l'I ne-td~ 10 1u1(ul1 1111 conlr•cl. A:ec~er.,1• •0•1d Or111Qt County, Mid l u · TIMM t•lu 1r1 Oil nle •I 1t$7 PJICt l'llll N rC"' l'IO HCFlbed II follows : ';:··EXOTICA 212 M9rlll• Av• fl•IDlil' Auenut, Co1t1 Mna. Ccolea rn1r bf Ob· B19ln11lng •' the l11t1r,e-cllon ol IN: ' lil•ncl c,11'1 '2661 " 11l11td on req~11. A COPY of these r1t11 ctnltr hlll 01 Weit L• P1trna Au1nu1, AJ..;. w~ 12• Hllvinttr N OOf1 l/'11111 &e posttd 11 11\e JOii 1111. 60 fMt wide. •11(1 Ille cenrer lfne ol i a. h c uf '2'60 ' '1W Th• foregoing schedule of ~r . diem Euclid A~nve, 60 feel wlC11, 1he11ce I Th'a.cbu r1 ' 1 Ofld 1 1 WIOll Is b.lstd upan • worklnq d1r 61 E1111r1r 4'0,00 feet elono !Ill cen1er div~~., • l'IMI 1 c uc eCI tiy In ,.. •!Ohl I•) hours. The ,.,, Jor llollct•v •rid line of W111 l• P•lm1 Av•n.,.; !llence t A1rn1 wu oV'frtf,,,. work 111111 bl •I 1e.1111 time ,...., Sou1111r1v •' right •n11le1. lo ••Id ctnt1r • l hls '1•ttrnen1 w•s !lltd with 1111 COUl'I· -·Mii. lll'le of Wt-r Lt Palme Av1nllfl 513.12 ty Cl1rll of Ot•llO• Countv on August 1), 11 lhall bt m1nc1a1orv upon 11\e CON· ffft, more OI' less, lo • lint p1r1llel ~ 1tn Tll:ACTOll to wMm Ille contr1ct b wlftl •rid dlsla11t Norther•~ l0.00 Itel 1<·174'1 •w1rcttc1. 1nc1 upon anv 1ut>cont•1etor me,1surld 11 rlont ll'IOltt to 1111 Publlsl'ltd Or111111 COIU 0•11y Pilot UfMH!' him, to p1r not 1111 011n the "Id N11rtlllrly llne of lh' SOUll'I '22.00 1cr11 • A 1 I' 21 2t Ind Saplt &er .'. llQIC1111d r1tn to 111 -krnen emptoyeo of Hld Nortnw10 qu•rler of th• 19'#fu' ' ' ' m 2M9·7l bV lh•rn In Ille tx.cutlOl'I of ''" c011tr1e1, NOl'lhwtsl Cl'lllrltr ol Sec1lon 9. d11crlb- No tilOdtr """' wltl'ldrtw 1111 bid IOI' a Id •bOV•I th~• Westtrlr •lont;I Hid P.UBIJC NOTICE per1oc1 o1 torty.tlve c.s> d•r• '"" the .,.r,11e1 tint to till cen1'r une of eucud •-------------Ill•!• M'I for tht OPfl\1"9 ot Didi. Avenye1 ftltnce Norll'llrlr 11Qng Hid A peymttil bOnd 1nd 1 perform~ cenll!" 11111 to tllf pelnl of btghmlngr PICTITIOUS •USltollfSS &orld wlll bf required grlor '° •J1C.cut1on 01 EXCEP'TING THEREFAC>r.\ tt'llrl POI'· , NA.Me ITATeMINT the (onlr•(t. TIM p.arrnent bond 11'1111 boJ tlon ""rtof ffs<rilled II totkrws: TIM toltowrng Plf'llOl'll •r• dOll'IQ In tllf form m torlh In The contr1d 819lnnl119 '' the ln""$8cllon of tllf 11u.illl51 11; dOcUfl\ttlls, ttnltr lint of Wed L• P1ll'IWI Aven111 INDUSTRIAL SAFEl Y ASSOCIATES, GlilW"llnf BOl•d 60.0D !Mt wllft, •nd tlle ceni.t"" 11111 of 666 E. 1111'1 Sf., Suite 214, 5.nll Afll, Br Oorothr H1rv1y f l1her Euclld A-, MJ.00 fffl Wide. II C•llf. tmll Purth•~lno Agent ~ °" Hid mll)i ltltnc• E•sterlr ~Id JOMPti BrOWll. 265«1 Llr• Cir• Publlsllld 0r111111• C011I D•llv Piiot, 4'0.00 '"' •1«111 till c:"'i.r llnt of West Cit, Mr1slon VleJo. c1111. 92675 Al,IQVSf 1•, 21, 1973 2SU.73 L• P•ll'IWI A'lll\Utl then<• SoufMl'ly Charles lil1nd1H Shll)flerd, nos. Lron lit.ti fftl at rlolll 111111111 w1111 Hid SI., S.nl1 Al'll, C•lll, 92105 (Apt, 300 <"'ttr Hnt of Wes! L• P1lml A-. lo T"' " PUBIJC NOTICE "" true P01n1 of 11tolnhlng1 tlltnce can-"'1 bu 11111 ~ COl\ducled br • 9"11r111 flnul"' Soulherlr 223.11 lett •long Hid JH1rtner1hlp ' -------------Oon•ld J. Brow11 1-11111 11 rlgllt •noln to lhfl cenfer tint ol Thls st11ement w1s !lied w1th the coun. 8 nsM Wnl L• P1lm1 Auenue, lo • nne ty Cle!'IC of Orll\Of CounTy Ofl Aut:lull 6, Jl'ICTITIOUS •USJMl!SS perall•I wltll tncl dl1l1nt Norlht!'lr 30.00 1973 NAMll ITATl!MIHT '"°' m1111,1red 11 rlglll •noles to !I'll f·t72tt Tiit lollowlng 111ri.ons ••e doing Norti-lv line of lhfl South 22.00 Ktts p 11 "' 0 c busl11ess ••: of Hid Hortt>wtsl °"' qu•rter of IM ub 111 rlMI Oii! Dilly Pllotl GOLDEN KEY ASSOCATES 194![ Nortllwftf one qvert•r of Section 9; ~~I 14, 21, 28 Incl Sepl6mller 4, SMtllflQ Pl., Nlwport Betcll, C1. '"2:660 lhtr'let Wttltrly •lono 11111 p.r1llel lf11t ------------"-'_1·_73 1 C. A. Sllfpp1rd, 1965 Sherling Pl1c1, to st1ld center lln• of Euclid Avenue; NtwpOtf 1!111cll, Cl. 92660 11\enct NortMrly 214.ll lee! 1lano llkl PUBIJC NOTICE Hele1111 C. Gr1harn, 196$ Shet\1119 Pl.. cenl1t Unt to e point wtllcl'I Is dis''"' Newport BN<h, C•. 92660 Soullll!"ly 1lq Hkl c:"'rer II~ 3'9.10 • 7UM Thia bu1lnn1 11 belno conducted bY • feet from It'll point ot beglnnlno: tflenc• NOTICE TO CllEDITOllS JH1rlnt<'$hlp. E•s!et'1V a.-feet 11'1 • dlrKI 11111 to SU .. l!lllOfl C:Oll!itT OJI' THI! C. A. Shtpp11rd lllf tn.11 point of bt;lnnlng, STAT• o .. (ALll'OftMIA .. 0.. Thi• llllM1'1"'' fllsd Witt. the C-ty The l)tt)ptl'ty 11 c:omrnon1r reten'ld to THI. C:OUNTV o• OllANO• c,,•,,..-k of Or•1111t County on AUOUJf If, •• 102!> £1/Clld Avtl'IUI. An1ht1m, Ne. ,._,,,,, • C•lltorhl•, Esf•le °'JOHN c. O'BRIEN, o.c..ted. JOKN c ,.,,.. "·""' TIM Hit •• Mlbft<I to wrnim tlXI'$, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the ATTo•N•Y' ·T • ·w CO'le'n•nl•. canc1111on .. r I 1 I (I c 11 D n.' c<'edl"""' cf the ,...,_ ""med dlcfldent .. '""" ,.._..,,tloM, rl(lhl, rl01'111 Df w•r. t111t '" ptrsont llMng clahnl •O•lnst ft'lll ** Westdlft Df'hw, hffil Jl7 "~.,,n of rtt0rd end 1<>Cumbrence1 of ••ld diced""' ,,, raqul<'ed' to "I• ,,,.m tor....., •Mdl. Clfl,.,. '2611 record. Tlle ~ lt to •••lll'M •nr wltl1 till nec-rv YOUCMr$. 111 '"' olllc:f Pvbllllltd Or'tl'IQI Cont Dirty "11ot Ind 111 9ne:umbr•nca of re(Ord. of the ct"'11: Of 11'19 1bDYI entl!IH ie-t. or ~~IJll 1'-21 , » '"" $epllmb9r '· T'-proptr!'r 11toti.addon1n "n 11" to ~I tlwlm, wlt11 the nKelllty 25)5.7' bl1l1. I "ouchefll, to ll'lt Ul'td•flll"ned 111 tt-e mt1ce a1c11 lfld otfffl 1re ll'!Vlh1d for It'll• proo- of Mr •ttomev, THOMAS A. REYNOLDS, fflY ll'ld ll'lllll bl In writing end will tNo 609 S...<tll G~"nc1 AUf'nllt, Los A,.,.,.!u, PUBUC NOTICE rectlv.d 11 Ille olflcw of 8trl Z. C1l1toml• t0017 wtlicll 11 tllt pllC& 11! TIDffmMI, &ltDl'"-'f IOI' u,ld E•eo;utO.', " bl,!llnt11 ot ltll lllldlrllol'ltd In •II rnittefll SL,.·1• 190D Ave!l\lt of lfll St1r11. Svlle 2....a. U. f)fl'ltlnl119 to tlle fft11-t of l11d dtcedflll, NOTICe TO CltlOJTO•S Angeln, C1llf!ll'nl•, OI' mav bf filed .ttl'I wllhl11 four monllll •llw rt.1 Hrst public•· SU,.•lllOR COUltT OP THI ltit Clerk of wld S11111r1or Court !Ion of 11111 notice. SlATl O" C:ALl .. OllNIA "Oil dellvtred to Birt Z. Tlgerrn&n, JHl...oMny, 01ttd Auavst '· l9n THE' COUNTY °" O•ANOll •f '"~ time 11ter flr1t publlc1tloft of .,.. ELIZABETH J, O'BRIEN ff .. A·11MI' ncllc:t •nd before m1kfno ••Id 11le. Adml11t1tralrb EJ!fllt of WHIE CHWAT AKA The property wlll bf sold on '"' ... .... of Ille est1l• of SOPHIE REILLY, AKA $ o' pH IE lflO term1: lortr Pet'<ent («!%) Cl ... Ind Ille lbove l'l•rned de«de11t MACKIEWICZ, DK11nd. the blllnct of the pUrcll111 pr~ to be THOMAS A, ltEYHOLDS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the repr-ttd D'.f • prornl1aory flOft "'1th 111-"9 So.tti Grind A-llt credllot$ of till ebove hl!Tltd dtcedtnl lwfff •t Ille r•I• ol !en Pltaftt (1") L• Alillel ... C .. lf. M17 ""' 111 111nion1 h•vlng cJ1lms 111111111 ll>e fll'I' 11wn,1m, Wl'llCl'I note ""U &e •II du. Tth (212) .......,.. Hid dK'ldlnt ire r'<IU!red to fllt them Ind P'Y•bl• on Of' btfot• SIJIC!'r UO) d.n AltOl'HY fer Mfllhtlstnl!i• wllh Ille ntet1Hrr uoucl'lers, In !ht o111cf !tom The contlrm1tlon of Hie bY till Publ(IMd Dtlnot Coa$t 01Uv Piiot DI the cl"'11: of 1111 1boY• en"lltd court, flt Sll$Mri0r Court, flue lltfl:eflt (S'!ll.) of thl Al/'fUllt 1.C. 21, 29 111d Stpftnlbtr ;1, to prnent tllfm, witti "" MCllMrY tmol#lt bid to Kcompanv till olfeor, tnd im 2534-73 vouc ...... to !ht und•f'tl9r'lld •I THE LAW 1111 Mlll'lee to be !)lid on c:on"rm•llon oi' -----,,-,.,-,----,-----IDFPIC£ OF OUA:YEA, A:AHOOl.PH, Ml• bV tllt Svperlor Covrl. T1xes. """· PUBUC NcrrJCE MALCOt.M .. OAlY. 4301 MICARTHUlt Oflll'lllfllll •11111 ineltlttl'ltrlC9 ...,_. .. .rod -------------ll!ILVO Ho 212 NEWPORT BEACH premiums on lnsunncie ta:tflf•blt to !he "ICllTIOU$ auSINl!SS CALtF .. Wllith IJ 1 the pl•c• (JI bullnlQ ef ~rtnl~! ':t~e:!m°I' :r ·: 'NAM• STATIMltfT the undlnlol'ltd In •II INllt-"'1•1nlno tltlt tl«N'dfng oi' :,.~.nu "tr:..., Thi! fottoow/119 ~ IJ "°'"' DuJ/llffS lo Ille .... i. °' Mid dletclfht, wlll!l11 four 11xe'.. •nd .tf'IY lltl• lnJlll'lllCI riOi1a .... 11 ,,. rnonltls llf'I« fl'll first pullllca1ftli flt tntt 11i1 ., llM tJICPlf'I • "" "' • SECUltlTY & 1NOUSTJUAL ll'llV-llofJc., ' pvrchl-a. .. pure _. or 1CE$, 142.l 5outfl G...nd.',~llfl JIM, O•ttd ~ug. 1, lt7:l lht U!tder91Qntd rMtf"ns tri. rlgM IG Calif 921'115 '1'-Fr•nk Rellly, Eirecutor ••ittt 111'1 a!ld .i1 blcli _,_ to tnt"' of '1 S T S1n1k: I ef l1'lf Wiii ol llltl "'"" · • c!i1tor=111•c<M:i:" "' nc.. llll6¥• n1med flKI~ '"o'.:'.::D~O:.:='T.'::n~1•• Thi• Minni Is C'Ondllc:ltd b'I • cor• DU•YEA. ltAMOOLPH, FllEOERIC B. TANKEL por .. lon MAU::OLM & DALY Extc\llOI' of the Win o1 S.ts. Tlf!TIPCll'lr'V 001 MKA.rttlw atvd., Ne. 21! the •bOVH!amed d9cedtnl 5ervltft. Inc. N.....-1 hlClt. (1111. llRT L nG•llMAN Ben/•mln o. arown Tel: 1714) UH7ll 1"' ,._ et "" st.,... Svlte 2441 Prtlklent, .,.,,_,. ,_. ll•tClllOI' Lo. Aft191 ... Cllllwllil ""1 Thi• Siii..,,.,,, ....... flied wltfl thl c~ P~llhtd Dt.nge COid 01lly Plt>ot. T...,...., (1141 .m.1M ty Citric of ~ CllU'll'V 1111 A\111. 1, 1973, AUOUSt 14 21, 21 1nll Stptern&er 4, AttwMy ,_. "tlltioMr P4nlt1 1,73 l 2S33·7l 1U.OC NAGEL ••GAN & DAVIDSON, IN(. l"lfbilshed Or1no1 C0111! 01!1Y Plkot ATTOllfflYS AT LAW PUBUC. NOTICE Augont 7, a. u . 1,73 2'21·1:i 1111 N. Mllh St. S..t• AU, CA t21'l1 l'ICTITIOU'5 auSIN•SS PUBIJC NOTICE PVbll$1'1ed Or•not Co-If Ollly Pilot HAMii $lATEMEMT Auovat 1.c. 21, 2• •nd S.ptembtr .., Th• 1ot1ow1111 C>e"f50n1' ••• dolno' 1-------------- 1tn ~ DllMMM •1: STATl!M•NT 0" WITNOllAWAL PUBIJC NOTICE 8ROOKHUflllT INTERIORS. 11"3 PltOM ,.AATNEllSNI,. ISucl'I ISCM.Jllv•r>t. St•11lm, C1lltornl1 OP'dATIM8 UMDI• t06eO PICTITIOUS aU$1H•SS NAM! PIC'TITIOUS IUllMSSS S.1.ll, Oevt+apet1. Inc. IC1Utoml1J, Tiii followlno Pff'SOn 1111 wlllldr1wn •I NAME STATEMl!NT 11933 8111<h 8oultvlrd, 5 I Into n • ' Qfntf'll p.srtner from '"' JHltlnerslllp The tol1CM'lno Pitt-I ... dolftt C•Utomll 90illl ooer•llno Ulldtr llMI llc1111Dlll bullM111 buslne• '" Thb tlllth\tQ 11 conducltd bY • neme of lHE SHOE HUT, 2300 H•rbor Blud •• Corpor•tion. INF•ARED SURVEY, 1'9t SO...lh Cot.ti """"· C•lll. 92'26 SJ.A. OEVELDPERS. INC. Cont Hlgtrw1r. L•ovn• BtlCh, C•lll. Slv.Qf'I ~ Inc .. • Cllllorlll• cor• A.W. SOmmertl-'d, '2651 por1tlon, %300 HlrtlOr BIVd., Cptll Mf!ll. V.P. I. Stctv. TIM flctltl<M.ll tMnlneu "'"" lfllll!mlf'lf Cetll. t2"'. Tl'll1'1tatel'l'ltnt WIS tllld Wllll .... Coun-tor !ht P'rm.rn>lp ....... fllfd on Mtreh v. Thll lloullntll Is conducted bY 1 Oii" tr Cltrk of Drlllllt Coul'llY on Al,llll.ISI 3. 1'73 111 Ille CllU'llly (JI Ora~. por•Hor1. 191l. Full N•l'IWI ll'ICI Addrns ot the P•ri.on S•V.Qf\ Sl'loff Inc. -14SS.OC: Wllhdr•'lll'lno: Wlt111m 5P\lf'llfOl'I, V.P. ZIP' .. lltEH AND ZIPJlll•H, Attra. cri.rtn F. Sl\Mm1ktr, 19» Sin Tl'lll 1t11'1ment w11 tlltd with 1119 Coun· 1 .... Wlflihll"I IMtft'lf'lll ll:emo. LeglJ!ll BMch, C•llf. t26Sl fy Clerk of Or1no1 County on July 23, lt73 Loi Anttl'"' C:•lllonll• tOO:U Jon H. K1wtdl. P1rt1ier l'•utM P•'l1H4 P·23"4 ~llhed 0.1nge Co-st D•llY Pll(r!, Pllbllsllldl Drll'IQI Co-!I Diiiy Pllol, P11bllsllldl Or•ngo COlit DtllV Piiot. Julr 24, 31 •nd AUQVil 7. ,,, 1973 :ms.13 August 7, 14. 21. 28. 1913 ~29·73 Auou•I 1, 14. ''· II, 1'13 142f.73 PUBIJC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE I r ;.;1:; ~fP?ll~ TO aE ili1r.JfUIED 10 o;:>~.;;\IONT OF HH T ~~5UR1 C ~F'i:i CF l'!~ENUi Sli.l.!ll NG ::;co >E~:-OSVL'J"'t.IA .l.'JE.><:11. '.'IA;irtl,'lQiON. O.C. 20!l'S l;J ;;. ;_,;,,.; .. ~:owl -! lU OiilT II~"' ,..,. '""' .. -;y OI ,..,.,..,. '"'"'°9 t•M> ~HKI !~• I :.o.'°'"''"""'"'_,."'-"'"'°'"°"' 1rlAllO:DOUtl1oic:JliloSI • (:1 NOlfffCT ID lUSflt DtlT1:WCIU.ASl TOOSOO!:I n>. • 1'11EOIC1' cfi'ECT t!MI TAXIS t• w,,;u, <lf 111t ...._,.,,,_.lo it. •poctM Wt"" ' 0'1.oll>Oolftr ol 1'1-SllMilro n..... w;1t ........ ._ 1 ... 1. cl,._ iw~' 0-• .....,. .. """" 10-·~-"~"4. o~""°""'-"'M"n ' M.QIOIA~ll U•X. »1Clt'°'"0'11-•t~ 0 ""u. r11a1urrt..ai...stw ~ "° lHtcT Of! r..x uvnt I Mn01.1.w..io11u.11 . o-.i.r"t'.tPll eu.cnit4 0 lOO IOOll TO ,,.lllOCI' Vl''CT lo .. lolAIOllT.U: Ol"fAA 11NG.'MAINTfHANCI EX"fNOITUl'IES "- T111' Cl0\1111.-.MlffT 01' · FDJ.!hlF!!N V:'l'..L~T c; 'f'; !'1."Ni TO !:<rENol rt:; "N~f'U£ 5\l.l.~ING .J.U.OC.l.f\011 10~1:~E tN;ITLU.1~T r£~•00 f!Gl.~.~lt~G -·--. . '" , 1N ilt! JOU.OV,i'IG MANNUt ~S!'O IJP!)N Ali mt MATEO l \llA'. Of .f24L 774 - AC«xJ~T NO. . 8 5 ;: .,. 591 FUUNTAfN ~AL.LEV err~ 0 I ii£CTO~ · OF' Fi NHNCE ~0200 SLATER MVE . FOIMiTAIN YAU.EY CALIF "'""" . . CA'°'TAL 0::'11<1DITUl'ltS 1'tRCIN1 "-"NN£0 • "'""" '1.ANNfO =-~--l'\llll'OSI" '1.ANMtO • EPSNorNfll E1.-ENOtfUllES -·-••• IXl'UIOl1UAIS ~ ~· ""'llGOlltfS!AI . '" ·-w-,. '" -.~ ~-· ~~ • "~!1111 • ,l'O "Ultl• • • None ~& %111~~~~~~. • .... % % % % l'UIUClll"" ' ....... --Al. ·-5 Non• % % 1.:~~l/C.OfiOM ' -.... % % !~ % • ~"" TAA"l'Ofll'IT10 • .... % " I" • "(,t,lfH • ·-3 • " % % • 1tlMJM • Noll& " % l~N1_.,,.,-. • .... " % " " • .... " " "· lloM • -~ • .% " " " --m'""""' ~rtMill---" " , • ..OU-D .. • COM"l/IOITY Or<ll.CI-' • -" " " %· • s ...... " " " • ~ ~~~ ~ ..... " " .% t.......cw. . ' ·~· " % " " " -ilflifT.\lS .... " " ~ COMIJNAnt)fO • ..... " • .... " " " " " " """'"~ " (Jill AUU~W'flltlW~ ........ Cof ..CllU.T!Olt. • 241,174 " 100% % " 111.!Ufltl o ·-~1-""--...... -lllotfl.--·-·-s ..... " " " " ., .. _ .... _........,."' .... _ .. _" J1011'1f1W~J ~)~ ..... _. ............... _ .. _ s ·~· " % " " ,,..._ ... ""' ... .,... ............ -... ---· JJOn.flll-.... ' • " " " . " ~= .. '::':"..'!:"..!.."::: =~~=·= 1!&.-\ l'Vo"fltlll 2'1.174 __ .. ,__..,. .. ., .............. "'" ... ~ .... lll,..,... s ' ,_ .............. ilrlM ............ I .· llMl. ct &liiilli&dl . ,........ or.,... (INf Otllr ,.llPI, AUOlllf , .. "1J Corvait-s Prized Vehicles? -LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tile Corvalr lives -as a collector's Item. 1be resurgence or interest In the cars has produced a mlnl- lnduatry of sorts ln restoraUon and modlficaUon ot C«valn1. A club here, the COrvair Socie- ty of America, has 1,800 mem- bers. Missing from the mem- bership roles , of coarse, is Ralph Nader, the C'QOS\Uner advocate who almost single- handedly made an orphan of model by contending it is un- safe . DAILY PILOT 9 OVER THE COUNTER NASO L~I"'° for Mond1y, AU9utl 13, 1973 !,~.:Z:!:~ wr;i-t ~ Ulla-. ~~ p ~~:: r ~~ •rlllH Off~ •i. 25 .,.. m It Si., in" ~· • ;:,:'\,.,.1~~ II~ r~ JVs ~ IOVt LG f'~ ="' -:!:'": !t C0:"\.11> t ~ 42 1 '1·~ it= !!f! ~ 1 "' .~ eloM lll••Mrn \ ,.,Ml !Nii I 2! 'Wrld ~ 1 ' :=•., T.::. 1;::',°J:; .... ~~ ~ ,ll! ::.1l":~c§ 11~ t :-~: ~; Ntlll markuo, fMl'k EL"'~ y u~ ,, ~ lffi ~~ ?11 2 ri =' :. ~~ .c~ 1" m ~ Mn : , .... ~ 1~ ;,: ~t Ktu.11 fl!'! RC t\li :m; 1 111p Toh ....... m. •• " ::1...1 11· 1;u •• • ~r: ... ... • .. i W,i AMD ... "!!!.':ltlll '~t ' 1~ l•~ o•tll o At ,Vs = I U1 lrv. ~ji'Vltn ~-lotll'I 17~ llVs UC~ H1, l~ J)Yll Id ll::.11 15Vs 11• lkl AM ''I TJ1CF~11 'm ~~ p ~ tt1 N }."II 21 ~;""l1. ~fV. ~l" I i\'t:C ·~ +\\ r J).~ ~ ~tl ! ~, lF. 1~ ·1~ ~ IRt lrc:11."'...,. ,1,f~ tm ~~. 11 ,m "'°"', ... n. ' .·~ 1'1~ T¥'' '=t 5 ,.,.1 ~I r: "' 1 "'l~ 1~ 1?H ''"" ~d S\4 l·· '•"'·~~ i"•'" ~PB.•, 2T~g~ mont 1~ 7 .. 1llv (rp W \~ t.rn'ill. Vs m rliC'ii i ff IS vrm~r \: S:: tmM• '°' 105 • .. m Er,or '°'*' NJr FdE t'4 • ._ tll• tr: J• ... r•rlor W 51 Sll'll ""' f ; Mi 21Jo 12111o ,Vll!f' • ..,H 11\/o 11 tbll Dr lffi !''°'m ~ .. t.m "Fwn Al ii.. 1111.. ~ 1 Ill ~·!.-3 ~ f!:.n"oc •!~? ""' <;,... ""'" .u ..... xY c '"" 1" .... _,, im • .. 'Min: sv 1,"" 1~ 'tlbrttl ~ %2fe •c Lu,., 14 r1t111 .. ""' T"''" "~ :M~" R•rllnll: 1''4 1''4 •SOf,$' !VI OWlt Mt 10\lo it.Jn Wild l!Mli ll\4 2!'' LrJ I IV. 111 1~1 l 'Ai rtn Cit l' j•l "'""" •l •II.\ lco Cp 12\111 131/o 1u1 IV 14" \ill rn 011,. PAI 3\~ " Aulm 37 31 011 IV P m • ~rn Octn 2V. ltt;. Anktn In ·~ ~ p II'" II'" "''' Coo 1 14 11 't Fl'I lft t\'o "'""«O Po ICl=llo Gt1 Auto •• n c ~ • AP5 1nco 141/i 1~ .... Gn CrUIH 2'\'lo lO\/o IY N Sv 1 ~ l•'A " \'?,~ t.. ~ At'Yfd1 9\lo ~ ••lltl Sc n .,., p N SI \1 JV. Tri! L 121'11 1 Ardn Mvf ' ~... Mtd 2'4 m •Gt& w I ll "on i'll lt 11 Vt Arrow Hr 1-~11V, rhm Mt lO.~ I! ••. , F.'lroHt~ 'l* ff~ 1""'"k N11t t:: j1~ u,.1 T.......,. 'sto Cote 20 21 rl~ Adv ~ = nkr111 v 29 tt!Ji nlu Fd• 1.V-il lj~ WHEN PRODUCTION sto~ S '" G1 Lt J1C1~'4 1~1o1. •c Ch 1':111 1n,o 1-• W tv. 9:¥1 nu Mobi 6 lt t e..... -Wheels ~~~ .. I~ z."" r' :tr ~::: ,,,,., ,A'o -•1111 12" l2l• •tM H•" llt , ~ ped four years ago, the little ~· V•• Blllrd y/'; 17 1·,.,. 11rnll Br 33 34 p ind ~ 19'/J 20\io V•M• n l ' ··•·· hard to ' "'"~ ... Fit 3' "\ii ''*~" I'" 94 '"" =· ~f il'li fl: 1&\:~ &1 1~ 1lv. car was an ~"""st. If tile b eed Id rod · •· th · 1 ""!d1¥11 L .. L ,,. •roe• ii: ~,,,. ~ ~'" ,, '!VI torr st ~ If "• N ho with ca r ers cou p uce a s~er e size o , ·" '""' " • ,. sell. ow, wever , ,.,,.., """ !111• .11.'t'~ chno c '"" lltt\ s cir lf\11 1 :ii. Sri • '""~ status as a collectors' item, its this IS.foot plastic monster, the nation's beef crisis =~~ IS~t: ~ :!!! lllo Mt ·~ '"' r c~: :~ i1ttt ri~ ffil 1~~ would soon be over. This stee'r was positioned off "'""" .. " ~ ~... •xc.1 c 1~ 1'"" kr 11 il m HG 131\ values increaSlng. II•••-~ ""' 7-wd 2f..., n'•A UMl'I • \lo •tie Ml I 11".i The_., even talk of -nlng the road in Ortonville, Mich. to publicize a church's """'"" "4 1n11· -'M ... n·h 1 1111r co rv. •'Ii N•unn 1 w. • • '°' VI"-•-II ... ,. ,t.. ,.... ll!'lf "° JN; lU\ l'fCtn ebll ltt ~ J\la a Corvair museum. So far $100 annual roast beef dinner for which the sponsor =:::~".. ~~ ,~ .,!.~ H;:~c c ~ "'' •vmd ,,,.,..'if.,.. #"wt 1~.,.. 1,., .. and a Car have been con-thoughtfully ordered beef in April. • ... , ,;... ... ~· .. 1nd• w11 i1'1 1.,,. nM "" 1~ fi1,1, 111"' M , 15\Ci u~ -__ _::_ _ _::._ __ _:_::_::_:_:_:_:_:_:::.'.:_:__:_ _________ I""'' L•" "#'11,o. lnctt: Nucl 2"lo HV. teott Eo Slit~ at Pt ' ~ tn.buted. "1..., ,.,. ,..,.. ~ thtmt· 01 1•11r. i'"' "" Eltc: tE" ''"ub ,. 1~ ''(~ "'" D ,,., ' n1of't1 I IV. ell Univ 1 ' 11tr Fd t:111 Ii" Sales of the Corvair, which 111~ ~ .,. "';...,,. ntt1 cr11 56\lio 511 n Pl•• \lo ' \'''"' 1 22IAI ,,. ll'lb EWI• "'"' 11 1lv1r C 31to 3~ trn •R ~ '3l't .lfl H J T•. had peaked at 317,389 cars in "'-Nn '"'" ,.. nte•c Ell P'o •'h lv•I Ml 2'\lo lit t PkT I'"' ,,:u, D • R u ll-nco 1 ""' """ tn lltw A '~ 1 a.II er, 3314 PLt Pio tti.. 196.l and still exce<ded 200,000 ISCOunt ate p ...... '" "" " ~ .. rn n •• "' """ D. ,.. ' ... '" i~· 1·· -211 · "....,,...,. Ar "4 .,, • .,1111........:r 1~"" 1<>r. O!Un1 B 16'.4 17'/0 Norid Sv j ill' int 965, plunged to ou, m ...... ~.... ,,~ ,,,, :;~ £~,." 9v. 10·~ CM11o1 co 1• 14\'li t1oht w f bl, "•• .,., A •Ill (:111<1 Fnt t'lll li\11 omM Cp fo'-1 1 ~~ 1966, 3 year a ter the 'Pl.I !Ca-llolf~8r ~vt 7 Kews Fb I'\? 13 AUckr Ph It ~\II 1lln Fr! 4'\li '1 "U f ., ... ,.., ~I ,..,,. 1' Ktv Cult 1"" ti\ u1I SIDV 1~ N Zltolr Co ' 114 tion ol Nader's book, nsa e ""'18• M '"~ '"'"· oe .. .,~, rn1 '''• 1111;, s1111 Ad1 R 7"' 1-u11t fl~ n peed ' Sal R ........... ,. ,...., MS llltt )*" ~ .. 1="-='-.:.:_:_:::::::::_:::::__::.::.c~ At Any S . ' es con~ T R d "•n.I ~-'"' '"" Kn•"' v1 f s1 3 G l i _ • _ t·1nued to decline unt1'l GM 7 5 % ... ,. VI"'' , ... ~ , ... "-Pr 2• ~ a tter• ..... &Al'Set"• 0 ecor ,.,,..,,, Pt l"~ !It" IC~r I V. 9 halted production on May 14, • 0 ~~~~' .. ! 1::z 1:~ "rci:.'"',.:i1 !~ i Htw vor11. 1u,.1J -Tiii 1011ow11111 1111 1969 ~--t 10 years after .... _ ,..., ,.. ,, •nc•u 11v. 1w, N10Wt "" •llXU llMlt .,..,.. gtilntd '"' , auvu ,..,r 11r I• 13'h 1.;v. IWICt U'lll ""' moll 111d Iott tn. most MHd Dll PltC'ltlt Co · had been m· troduced "hfls Ste • ....,... c :. ~"" DI' c11t• on M o.,.,.fllf<t1Ut111r rvair . ,.. ,,,. ~ .... BOY 11v. l?'.'t rn•tk" ,, qllOlfd by It'll NASD. About 1.7 million Corvairs WASHINGTON (UPI) . ,.,.,~ " "' .. ..., .. _, p1 s 1<1.'I N•' •nd :'P'lll'«nf'ff cM,... ,,.. ,,,. higher than the prime rate. rt-ff 1"'4 '""" lbtrtv H 7V. 3 dltlttentl "'-T"' ~ ll&t Did were built in the 10 years. The Fed 1 Res d R"'"' e~,. 11111. ""· \' c11mo N •l~ price 1nc1 "" cur,.....1 l••I bid price About 550,000 are still in use. increased er~ts ~t ~e The previous high level for :"!:r: ,~! ~:v. ;:-"' i~ ~s'.: ~:;t" ,~a llul'lkSlld . .J .... ••~s 1i: u• i1.9 Monday to an alltime high 7,5 the discount rate was 1 per.. :::::;T,~ ; ~ ~:!.': ~ r.o ... 'l:I~ ,~1.~ J ~1~c'; 21'1 11o ~: 1;~~ NADER'S ClllEF' alle• .. lon t which had toto f .. .,. .. In• ,. .,..... "d ~· ,.. • 0.... Hltti s.rv 1:111 ._ uo •·• · eP· ........,_,t in the wake or record cen gone e -"·-· · ,.,, ,..., ... 1 Rrtv 5 Arner '"'-tin. 11,,. ¥>V , • Was that Corvairs had a ,..... ........ ........... tt: -,,,,,. nckt ~~'"' •I.lo " PIM!flb "'" -. \t up 6.'.1 high prime rate hikes by conr feet at the end Of June and ... _. .... , ·~~ .... •r11 F-t 1'"• ..... , COfl'I Shll"l1nc •111+ "" u: t' tendency to roll over on a . 1 banks .... R, '"" "' ,,,.~ 'l..-!t" n14 '-"14 • ttto ll,_m wo+ "" up .• mercta . also occurred in 19-u> and 1921. ..... ., .. • ..... ·-· '"".. •ll41n '" 1 KttVl'I co Mai "' uo ,,. sharp tum. even at speeds ...... ...... ..,. ""· _ ,, 1u1, 11 Amtc1c:o inc:: ""' ~• UP s.• d 30 m,·1-oer hour Last ..... """' --~ -· r~ ., "'"'1 11 S.llC«l'I °"'~ •11i "' UP "·' un er "'" · THE BOARD anno""""""d it TBE DISCOUNT rate was ...... _ 'R .. ~ ••• ~·Id '" 51,1, ~ t1 Tr111tcont1 ou mf \.It uii s.• I h Trans rtation ........... "··~· ,... •·• • 1111"" 51'1:. ~ 11 F.-11 C1r1 s \Ir. Up J,3 vear e 00 i·umped its discount rate from he ~·d .... _ ... ~ ... ~ ··•· n11 G1' ''~ 211.t. 1• BOii Air• 1nd ,~ v. up 5.o Deo3rtment l!ISUed the resul.ts 5.5 percent w n .-1 =I ent "'-~ ~ " ~-~... 1.,., F•b ~ ~~ 1s rr11on on G•• ~ v. up s.o (If a two-vear study that show· ·7 to 7·5 percent effective Tues--Nixon took office in 1969. but it l; rni;i1 rr.::,.:. 1~"' \t ~= ::~ I cited b N d day for ten of its 12 banks, 11 s1orv Cl'ltmic1 N lio UP •.! ed Corva rs Y a er with the other two expected to fell to 45 percent by the end '' s11kon11 tncp '"'+ Mo.UP • • -1--as safe as A'd A ii bl 20 Nor111K111 .1tti "''""+ 1 up •.J wef'e en txl3lo fOllOW Suit quickly . Of 1971 before starting Upward l Va 0 8 e ll L11'1d ftt$OllrC 3141+ Ila Up •.f similar .n\Odels 90)d at that The di·s-•"t rate 1-5 the m· . n °"''"' A11 .10 "~ 2 up 3.9 ,..,.,...., again n Wnktlltlr Cp ,. Ito up '·' ttme. terest commercial banks are Capitol NeWI Service ~ !!!"",-~ i'rl'!! ~ ~ ~P, l! CORSA ts headed by John The board said the discount SACRAMENTO A ""' '"" qu1r. charged when they borrow G 1 -ttomey 1 c1bln1 CDICllLDS••!L ,. Jackson, a 25-year..old resident from federal reserve banks. rate increase was a result of, enera Evelle J. Younger 2 Al•nlllll• con1 -~ of Anaheim. who has two The prime rate is what .com· rather than a contributor to, said that current legislation ! ~·~':!:,': rf: 1:~ 1~ O:Jrvalrs, as do most CORSA mercial banks charge their the t>Jgher commercial lending enables licensed ad 0 pt ion f ~:~.';."~ G.'1~ !~ 1~ membenl. best ctmomers. usually the rates. Some prime rates /agencies tQ provide financial : ~~f::.~~:_· 1 ~ ~ I n·i 16.0 15.1 g:; '" 11.S 1$.1 Some dewt~ own even corporate ai~nts, while the recently rose to an a1ltime asststaree for three to five t E1ec1rn1c Trn• 1--. "" A M d•·-w· man ·, ·-· hi h f 9 25 t . . lo M~1"...w"' wt •~ "' more. a ...,.,..., is.. 1 consumer rates are usually g 0 • percen · years to fanulteJ adopting 11 F1 ,,. Dl""41 '*"--v. ~ I':! ,1.. 1•.t nrmored to have 90 stored on ''This action is taken In children with special needs. ll T11 ~.J.t~ ':.t= 1~ his farm as an investment. recognition of increases that Under the Aid for Adoption of~: e?::';J~, 12'\:l,. '611 \\! on ,,,, Woody Schwartz. a young R Z E have already occurred in other Childr ~ hel · ,, AUOCouc v 10 -3l4 tate en .-1ugram, p IS 17 CltiUlll A,:,. ,. -·~ social worker in Washington, ea s sOOrt-term interest rates and il bl I "'A II s f'll .. I• )\1-~ d ,.__ ava a e . or parents W1~ 19 cf#:solitv :.,.1 ,..._ "' D.C., has 14 Corvairs an is intended to bring u~ dis-adopt children over 5. ethnic to N HA llCOl'P iii.-~ 8!l ,,,3 14.1) 1s.1 §!1 13 •• ,,,, says, "You generally see them F, O coWlt rate into better align-minority chi Id re u , and ll ~~':fnir:t"T:: ,\"'=: ,~ on the toad in one Of two COD· tr m pens ment with sllort·term rates dicapped children. n C~!:'tto1 T~~ ~ 1~ ditions. They're either rolling -generally," the board said. physically and mentally ban-~Aftdl"ln ... t:t' • -~ 1U Oft 1t..s Off lt.O 8li "·' 11.S 11 .1 trash or nicely kept." ,_ Book values 1oro1d eorvau-. In Irvine still are low, but some are selling fo'r hi~her than their list value. Jackson says he soJd one Corvair. supposedly worth only $150, for $500. He knows of a man who sold a 1967 model -in mint con· dition -for $2,000. ART HERSCHBERGF.R, president of Solar Automotive, Inc., of Princeton, WJS., bas made a business out of modi· fying CorvaiTs. He adds a h i gher·perfonnance engine new suspension comoonent.s, a sun·roof and a plush new 'n- terior to 1967-1969 Corvairs and resells them for $.1.500 to $7,000. He calls them Cavaliers. A Nelvport Beach. firm - Crown Manufacturing Co., Inc. modifies Corvairs into racers. From a late model Corvair. a Chevrolet V·8 engine and about $600 worth of Crown parts, a customer gets a mid-engine sports car that Trevor says outperfonns a Corvette. It's called a Corv-8. Trevor says he's sold about 1,000 since 1967. OTHER CORSA memben also enjoy racing their Corvalrs. Regional affiliates of the national club hold slalo.m event! for their members-tim- ed runs over a serpentine course. The Seeley Company Southern Califoi-nia real estate firm since 1908, has expanded operations with the opening of an Orange County office in Irvine. Managing the Orange. Coun- ty staff is Peter W. Meyn, an eight year veteran of The Seeley Company, and a specialist in industrial sales and leasing. Backing Meyn will be Barry Hoeven, a recent U S C graduate. Hoeven brings with him training from COidwell Banker Industrial Real Estate Data Bank and the Long Beach Industrial Development Department , w h e re he developed economic feasibility studies for that city. Thi! will be the first branch expansion for the finn. The of· lice is located at 2081 Business Center Drive. Butch Cassidy Home for Sale CIRCLEVILLE, Utah (AP) -The home in which famed outlaw Butch cassldy grew up ls now for sale. Geothermal MUTUAL FUNDS Venttire Set N•• Ylrt -Fol· 0rr1 Lv 1•.M 15.n 1 1: '"v •.n 10..., lowlno !& 1 1111 ot :...., 1ncm 1 • .a 1.fl Grwtll j ·" 4.3' Vl1t1 JI' ~l'·~ Did •nd 111(fd Pl'I· ¥d '-"" t.n 10.11 lrocom .ts ..,21 VorM j:.O B 3 F. CH on Mutu11 ........ u .J • .J ~ .• ~ Tri! ~I tit . ri--.. J .45 Y 1rms ~nc1,:A~; 1:'.fd by ~Nu'& 7.u1 , ... ,it:.''""~ ~ .• ~~~.l<lii .rt: •11 1j• t.to ,,,,.,.,..., WWAMD; vr FUlld m I· •lft•r 2.1'1 Auoon1 lli. 1m 1111n .-v t .•10.21 1 ,. Gwth !· . 1 H ;. !·" .. ~ ...... UWll'I F 14 -J)..J/ 'E'"'' Fd I 17~ .. • ... SAN DIEGO -Efforts: to ADMIRALTY: u....... s.w ••• , l ~ '" ~ I 1 DO•• 1 ~ 4.lk • n :.a.Kn F 1.1• i.w 111 s.to • n Inv '-"' ''-"" develop geothennal resources \llCO<n J.'5 iat •. c.. Fd l:L)J l.1.14 ~ 23.JO I u ·t71S 97 . the I ~""I Valley ·' ~-I nturl'I '·"' 1.n ~0.010 1.,.,u1 11.w1 KIYIST T10lll' '!:ff l! '' om.. ..a 11 • .tS m m.,.....-"'"'°. i,d\tlHf' •.IS 4.s.i •• ,,. .. :OP u.wu.w us .... .. f"·" " . I generation Alll'll Fd 1.M '0> •"" MVMT ..... , "" 2 . • Lev i 1.n 11~1a or power . ...tn. Ill U.331.U7 ..,q,r ... 1 ...•• li ""' t 1.u: ,. (~··TY [ I will be stepped up ma three-it.futur• ,.., '·"' t:.QIV Pt :a.CM Ul ""I ~ 's• ' ou 'T ti! ~~N-~--~~~u~~ .,··1• _..• company venture anDOUn\.-ni AU1t111 12..U IJ 49 grel Gt 11.1) 13,l• m it-': • Monday. ~=-r:F: 1!t 11'~ :::1rt1Tn 'tff i12 :: ·' ~~-U:"~•• Involved 1n the effort are "'•"' ~ ,;,. •'." fllf"Vr 11 .;a 11.ZJ "'re 1 S:: 1 "'ffj ' "' lltr 4.-66 .... llrtld '·'° .u ,,, l· ... New AlblOll Resources Co., a ~Mg~1t1ss ·m Bvre 9.4' t.-66 r . fl • wholly owned subsidiary of C1111•t, '·" 1, If l.D•0t,~/, Y f.V . " ~~__illl4 t1:, ! 2 =.'/"'° t!!' San Diego Gas & Electric Co.; I~~ J:J: l:tl B~1 o.D •.'2 ,,42 ~~~,.112 .. Fd Magma_,,. Energy Inc., and ft:: ~·!! 11.0211 c1ot•1 11 .... 1u. ' lir" 'j·! ,,,,n ~:lr j .n Standaro Oil Co. of California. ',m 1 Grtti xJ.'6/ 1'1 7 Contti ·'' t.t4 l'W :iJ 1•91 1 ~ I "'-!1 -· . ha greed m 11s1n •.92 s.31 g;.,sS« tr, 1:~ l:::C?:d 1~11 1i:fi fl.~,. 1;.DI~ 111';:' COmpanteS Ve a '"' lnv1t •.'6 4,4,& E11ex 10.3' ... le ll'llv 1-!f ,r, ~ 1'·~11 to join in a test program to :~H'r~r ~·U i·2 ~~·1 /~·~ 1tfi i ?J i:n .. ~ ~ t: yii evaluate the geotbermaJ ~a:~~~ . ' Purltn l ,t, t.'7 AYt'Jt. I~ ~l'I 11 ~ sources in the Heber area c •p111 • '·'' •.65 i= F u~ ~·t ~~ ~Y 13.00 13,00 t ~0 .. tlii , ·• south or El c.entro as to the S~1~"" ::~ ::~ ·~ .... ~!· • 1to1111: IUI 14''° ~ tlr .-?~ 1,.1° potential for commercial de-~':",,:', '·'° 7 56 :In Dvn '·13 t.1) A" 1"l,,,. tt 11' v"t r ' I w. • 31 9 11 fin 111C1 •.)Cl •·• ~ ,,." , ,1 1,~· tit • •·:J , velopment. ' A1~r:•ll 1~·'11!n e~t Inc ~·:} 1-'° ulllefn 10~ 1: ¢!Gr 1':11 : san Diego Gas & Electric •ue1•J1C F ,:,, .:6t '''{I v1 10:•111:~ .ui~n .. ~"•ur'iSs\0 WI' 1'iiv 11 Co. has an option to purd'lase WoHTON: 1~v1lro1ts: , ·~ ·"' l·:i "'~"T o f any g~aJ production d& ~ : ::fi 1:: ~Wi ~= /:l/ /·~ .flt~ tll i)! P trf 1 .: 1i:lf v~ m the progz:am for r:"Sci f.~ t~ ,!:VC~ui: {A 1.20 Ml'ii' co1 • AT1."'l"dj•'f electric power produang pur-:LC Gttt n .111i.1, ":i:uM .. :,tt,.~ .. f:"i: '1:H '1:1! ...... ~• }01 ~·1 poses. e= 1!J31~:U l.1 ~~ 'j:~ lj:" M"'sfHc[:.201 :ff t rrt" •.•1 t. Initial efforts will oonstst :=: 1:i :c • ~ CtfY."' '·" •. rs M 1!." j'·M t ,.,, ~ ttf :. or production and Injection 1tHcen I ;;, J:,, HJvnc1 tf t# 8 \ ·j t r,.P1,,"sir .1"1'~"-• ·~Ing of ~--g~·-·I ""'°" JC .1111.,, N 11t1 ~ 12. 4,1 A'" ,_01 · l "'°;:,~ 1.1u~ ~UMI ~allr 4.ot 4.4' OU I 0 14. l!-U ...... d 1.11 wells Which the partiet drilled t:'~~n ;:: 1&~ ~.. 1tj 1f:JJ r Iv 11: 1f::a 1~1 aoJ'~ i~ previously in separate opera· :~LOCK :a.a , F =i 1\ 9s 1~ #1 A,i; 1l:3l l1f· J:~i;c fl~ ·1t tions and which showed evi• "~1Di~ 12.62 13.rt fif:lc.{1,_ ,:,, t:U Bii lndG 't.~ 1· l~Clf11ou~:·" 14:~ --·rces Wl-th .J.aracteri•-D.lv Shr l .S7 ',, ONTC: 7.61 t.34 'l .,, •. 1~!", . : tics that may be suitable for 8NY V11t 10.1~ 11.es F• rncm 1.11 .os ~u1 1v: 1 · 41t· ,.:",.; F '•·Ji j· rod In I . •i'lttm e.~s •• ,~ us Gv s t.41 .33 \\ull Trt 7 M• A • dence or having geothermal ('fin Fd ,,,lll\n•• .ou .. 1 ~t,c1 1.u · a,..,,, l·U Iii ,.......,.. \.'11 .,.. . ttlwd • . .w lti.-1 Gwtt. Sr J.•7 !'" 'ol , i T "' l I. . p uc g e ectr1c power. ~o '"•""'• '·" 10.1~ u1111ue 4.ti J.35 ~~t 1111111 "' ""pt 8 :·~ '•' 2' • ., • n 11.16 12.l'O "" C~p •.u s.ar:r .T s•c: , ' • owt• c •91 · ----------------------~lcr,1 $11• 1).04 U.t4 .... l!:orr •.» 4,JS •l•rH:. • 1·n t•ft CID 1"~' '! ,.. ,. AlllNIMG -~I l..fEq 11 .62121'& Ond $1' 4 1 ,,YI "E I .I I . F F •t~ "i£~d 1~·.: it;~ ~~"'38{/Nc~22 ~.n ~O:Slli ~3~~~' !/ff.• ~~~ 1 '. 1: 2 Ozzy rul rom $tk 1.:19 1 . .;1 oinm I~' !'" tock,, ; "nfll 1 i ~ ~rwlll S.1• SM ~ • .1' \ , , ;t ~~fl•nd 1·1! ' ,"::ti' HI;::; ~11:.'" 'j; ',:!J 'l:1w••1•·.ll'j"o~fl.!'"'Wc•' Tile house is on lhe Sevier River on U.S 89 just south of Circleville. Six acres of the 180-acre homestead have been taken for highway expansion. v.,.11,, 1.)2 t,10 G•~,. 1.tl 11'1 0.1! 1. !I'd'\ .. v 1 .tt h r~ E~ S.~ as.It ltf 1,. o•tl ll'IU :ff f Teetli Tickling Crop ·~~·~ il:!~G:r:t·~·~~~B-~~"''1 1j:J.ilJ. ·it .. ·fiC ·~~·· C. I I I 0 r n ' .a Computer SDKI s.J: •·• com sttt 10 11: ~ ~ rrd .» , D DS AP A frul b b •··lh ,........, "" 1rt.1it 11.,. "' 'A"' J.·2 • re; .• , 1 . . ~. .. .11 I . PrQduct.t Inc. or Anaheim, bas RE LAN ( ) -t you can nas your ~ ~~t'::AL "',..,Ind S':ft f.I: ffl'.1vtr is. • ,~o.n•nc i~' . J)W'Chaaed the 819Cfs and With? Conver t·~ '!·" ~ILTOM Glt,.1 I'll t ec-= • liabiliti<s ot Signal Galaxhll A new fruit -sort of hairy and oval $1laped and named ~w •. I'. 10;:1 ~ ~-11 l:ll ~fl! 1 1 1 .. I,:,. '!A-1..9 4· l Subsidiary Purchased By Calcomp Ine.,'asubsidlaryoftheSignal afttrablrd-basbeeointroducedtoCalifomla. r-ni .il.11t "''"' f'ICDln •• •.11 1 it'M ·, l~U'li'\uli ". Companies lnc. i: ~~1~,"; !Mv :B'f:C :Q : ll, il "'tt: 1.1/ i OperaU will r THE LEMON.SIZED fruit Is an Import from Ne~ '.~!."::Wf. ""' $£ p: '·" c I: 1 ' b:r i~ !·f. I ~-1 ODSG 1a~ conI mTue u 1.caland and is named . Kiwi .... _A,,_ It looks like a New r"11'"'1 1 ,1-~ 11 ti •r•mt · • .~,. 11e • ' • \Al comp a .,es nc. enna ~-A a. 1 , "" 1.1• !f•, :4 t.H ~ ,.9Y • ) ]•o ••i ~ wtrtt not disclosed. Zealand flightless bird or the same name. ..~..," "" l·:: !·: ~Oreo 1:tl ':ff ="r-J~ j;U · :'l'J'-j·n '!. ho ned Robert M. kntgh' an orarine -er, has switched ,.an"., "rt •.U '""inc fdAm 'lfi'~lo "sl j· ::.er ·15 J· \ The . new w Uy ow .. "'"& ....... ~-"" • 1· ••• f'IC • .,., • ,.~1 •• 11. : 1 Vfl(I~ rn· i calcomp subsidisry 11 heR<f.. part of his acreage to Kiwi! and hopes lo have a large ~'::':'~~ t:: !!! ~m · :~ ~"" '1n iJ1 7i 1 :::!' 1"1 I -. Quartered at 6955 Havenhurst enough crop next year to seU commercially. The fruit :;:\".. :_~ 1: :.t '!::: '~~~ ':: I~:!.{ ·~on iJa ~ ,_~ n;~ 0, : ~-1 Ave., In Van Nnin and .. __ an grows on vines stnmg on wires. r...,M1 111 r ,4, ., •• \" !Q 'lJ'I r1 ~<Ml ~ 1 11· 1111i1 "1" j''~ ~· •-·~·t •... It •··te Uk 1 .... ~···11 .,,.. .... 11v • .1t ·ottr~ 1 • • .. ·~ Mu ~ .a 11 eastemreirfonaJsales:officein "™" U\1\:1 LiU e ,..""' ... ,,. {t1 ''' lttY llld c I 1 ' ~~~,~ ... 1'lo, " """' !">•II , ~ -'' "°'f:f; 1 .I 11.tJ 1 It N I Pennsylvania .. ..,. nJ"" ~ ~· ',, INV i 111 • • lilt The CQmpany. ........~. and OPINIONS QU'FER: ~=;·:: ... ;:,, ,,,.. • •ULJl' '·'l I. -' .t:1~ 'lm"· •• -~· "II'• n•e -·-·ion wilh lime on I' " ....... ,. I ' '. . . ~ '!' markets a line of seml«m-~ ... 1e1t1~ .. r-.1t1' .,..,,,.,,, . S:n . • c " I duetor memories for mlnl· 0ft:SUteagreenapple.•• ~~; 1·~~1:=: l,lh .. i;1 : ,f "1• i :1tj ' computers. Jt offers p1ug-com-''lt'I like •atenntlon with I dash o£ strawberry.'' --.... a..9JI'" Nb 6.10 M1 , 1· paubl. -mor'-lor digital "·It's the anly ftult Y'"' could bnlab your teeth 'trllb ~"' ~· Ii! •• ~.1:11 I'. :,. · .. ~ ~ and then...... Uf" "'" "~~B . equlrxnent ...,,....11on com-• _, :· !·R · puten. = 'lb 11:; ,.,:r,J." i lA J '--~~~~~~~~~~---" . . I I ! ' ' I I TuudQ, Altigytl 14, 1'73 Tuesday's Closing Prices Complete New York Stock Exchange List Interest Rates Cited in Drop NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market prices con• tlnued lower Tuesday as Investors remained fright· ened off by soaring Interest rates and fears that Phase 4 would not stem inOatioo. • Analysts said soaring intereat rates were drain· Ing funds from the market as investors took advan- tage of high interest rates on bank certificates or deposits and treasury bills. They also said that the interest rates along with jnfiation were tending to undermine investor con· fidence. SC D.lllV PllOf 11 Finance Briefs 8 SAL Pure,...e «: .;. LOS ANGELES (AP) - Coast Federal Savings & ~ Assoclatloo, Los Angeles, s~ it will purchase Liberty say, ings Ii LQan Association,~· West Los Angeles subsidiaey of bankrupt Equity Fund.ink, for $12.8 mlllion cash. ...., Liberty's stock is owned bY Equity and it had been up for sale since Equity's troubles emerged last April. Liberty's financial status had been un• untoud!ed by the F.quity prol>- lem, however. 8 Natlonal LOS ANGELES (AP) -Sec> ond quart ... operatlng lncomo o! $5.7 million OI' 71 ceoU a share, has been reported ~ National General Corp., th4: Los Angeles-based i.nsuranct; book publishing and liilq distribution firm. The company repo.rted M~ day thal the figure comparel with $6.6 million, or 63 cent.s a shart, tor tbe some period last year. "' e Computer Firm( EL SEGUNDO (AP) Computer Sciences Corp : Prtsldeot William R. Hoov.t said he expects the firm wiq hold OD the pro/Jt side for 1"9 -o! the year alt.,. lu _ri\- bollnd In the quarter endoll June 29. ,\ Hoover. who co mp a n:t =<nUy loll a big coritnct ~ computortze an olf·tnck ~ UnR system ln New Yen Cltit, declined to forecast ~ figures In a stock bold• meeting Monday. ' i • • ( H DAlLY .,,LOI * 1ursaay, Auvusl 14, Jq/) J 1 :·Will. Sae Govenatnent • • • Apaches to Renew Combat FDA Orders L~ting of Deadly Drug r . ' WASIIlNGTON (UPl) -di8rapll nonnal heart beat under recall are Pert11111in Deoooctstant Spray, Son-Ray The naUon'r dnlg manufa~ mort readily than chloroform, Ptfcdlcated Vaporizer t•Y. Oecona:estant Spray, Share WASHINGTON (AP) llescendantJ of the Apache warrior Geronimo plan to renew their legal battle With the government to collect damages for an alleged atroci- 4y which decimated their tribe around the turn of the century. The Indian Claims Com· mission already has award~ members or the Chiricahua Apache tribe more than $16 million in return for the :otizure or their ancestral lands in Arizona , New J\.1exico and 1'1es:ico. BUT THE Chiricahuu are demanding millions m ·o r e , claiming they w e r e im· prisoned by the government under inhumane conditions for 27 years. Governmentd oc um en ts show the Cttiricahuas, mostly old men, women and children, were transported t o in- ternment camps in Florida, Alabama and Oklahoma after being evicted from homelands. The Apaches originally filed suit against the government in 1949, asking for $7.5 n1illion in FREE TRAVEL MOVIES il.;·,Sl.l f.4~ .• ~,~.'i.--- "-"'> r::-:-~ ' '' :_ ~")' ~ -');( . ri;;~-~\ _, \~;\_\ ~-..~ . ) ''~ \;_,; SO UTH PACIFIC MEXICO AND THE CARIBBEAN "Join 11s for a sl1ow in g of Select Travel Films " ... WEDNESDAY AUG. 15th e 8 PM J. MIUle •IH e Betty Jirdine e Jlldy Dreyer damag~ -'14.3 million lo today's dollan:. ... LA "'YERS FOR the govern- ment did not contest the facts, but in 1971 the Indian Claims Co1nmission dlsmissed the &ult on grounds it did not have turen have been asked by the the ~~::OOucis that are ~n~:S~antp~~ N~~ ~::.stant Spray, • n d Food and Drug Administration1_..::::....:=-":..::=:...:=.:...::::....:=:::=:=:::.....::::===...:.....===------r 1 to submll a._Jist of all prodi,Jcts t jurisdiction over wrongs sul----------- fcred by individuals -only those suffered by an entire tribe. The commission held it was "irrelevant that each and every member" of the tribe "'as imprisoned . The ruling was upheld on appeal by the U.S. Court or Claims, but lawyers for the Apaches are preparing a sec- ond appeal and say they will take their case to the U.S. Supreme Court if necessary. The case goes back to 1876 when the Chiricahuas were evicted from tribal ]ands and moved to an Indian reserva- tion in Arizona. Bands of Apache warriors led by Geronimo refused to leave and • 8 Placed On List Of Honors Eight Orange Coast area students have been listed on the \Dldergraduate President's Honors List at Cal Poly San. Luis Obispo. Students must take at least 12 wtits of credit and be in the upper 15 percent of their class to be eligible for the honor. Area scholars were: began attacking the white set-CDSTA Ml!SA -Tv1er Arthur low..-y, 2063 Go101n•1• P11c1. 1nd tiers, miners and ranchers 01.,.. E. P•IJ•••· "° v111nov1 ROid. who moved into the area. LAGUNA ••ACM -M•rk L1ror that contain Trichloroe~ -a chemlcal It blamed !or 21 deaths. ft was the first time the FDA has used a provision in the new Drug Listing Act authorizing the· government to require drug malren to submit a list of products that contain any Ingredient b e I i e v e d hazardous to public health. THE FDA ALSO proposed tfonday to declare t h e chemical "not genera 11 y recognized as safe and ef- fective for use in drugs in- tended to be inhaled." The action was the second phase in the FDA's campaign to track down products that contain the Trichloroethane. The agency announced July 3, that it was recallin~ an estimated 300,000 cans of aerosol spray cough remedy which contained the chemical. Slielov1. 141$6 Bounty W1y. TRICHLOROETHANE ha:s· IN AN ATl'El\.IPT to restore LAGUNA NIOUIL -Ptnnr LIW peace, the Army moved the P1ron1. JO.jll Mtr1dor C011r1. been used in cough remedy Cntl·re tri·be to an 1·nternment •U!WHUtT •1AcM -ooua111 F. sprays as a solvent for the ac-Schn1e0er, 30t Ev.nlng Sl1r LIM. camp near SL Augustine, Fla. SAN CLl!Ml!NTI _ FOi'•••' J. Hunr, live ingredients and to reduce Later that year, Geronimo 909 Avtnld• Sllv~r. vapor pressure of the pro-- and his warriors surrenderf!<t WESTMINSTER -Mkh••1 Jo11" pellants. The solvent 1's an Osp,.Jng, 10402 S1n Angllll Avt., Ind ~·11dtwS..ft&-.$IU711)dudlngCllX. ll*M• waltDS-••-lm\$21.J7 ~ax. Heading nonh? Then head into and O\lt of, Plenty of for PSA and Long Beach parking. And the crowds Airpon. ll's not all th_'.'t ... haven't round It yet. Your far. It's easy to get ...,,,, travel agent knows the way. __......_ ... ,.. ••• 11• PSA.tt-,..•lft. HARBOR TRAVEL to federal authorities. They Cvndl• Sur•,,... w1tt, 131.ll Unlver111v anesthetic when inhaled and also \\'ere sent to Florida. ,-''-"---·-------------------------------------------------- 3442 VIA LIDO P.O. BOX 2238 NEWPORT BEACH. CALIFORNIA 921183 675-1311 During the first 31k years of caplivity, approximately 119 members of the 498-member tribe died. ~1ost deaths were due to consumption caused by the change in climate. • • Y' ~-·-· • THE BOLDEST VENTURE . IN THE HISIORY . E· GAS <OMPANY. There's an energy shortage being felt throughout the nation. And it 's going to take more than just talk to cure it . Tu1keep you supplied with natural gas well into the future, we're gbing to be doing things you never even dreamed of. W~c already embarked on a world- wide search.Pl.ace! like Alaska , Indonesia, Awtralia, South and Cen1ral America. We never thoUght we'd be bringi ng gas from 7,(XX) mile.5 away. But it looks like we'll have 10. Thar means buildi ng son1c very complex thJps. Each costing more 1ht.1n $JOO million. Thcn shrinking n.atural gas into a liqWd so c.ach srup 'viii be able to carry more.gas th an all the homes in Loa Angeles used during an entire week. last year. [n a /cw rears, these ships will be bringing gas to Southern Galllmma. Right now, Southern California receives its n.atural gas by way of a pipeline from Texas. We used to think 1 this pipeline wa s really something. But now we're talking about building one clear tt> the Arctic. A S,CXX>-mile pipeline through Some of the most savage 1errain in North America . Closer to home, we're looking toward another natural resowcc for help: coal. We're getting ready to produce gas from coal; cleanly and without undue harm to the environment. Keeping you supplied with gas will be a mam- moth and ~tly job. But we'll do whatever it tAkes to keep your home fires burning. Southern. California Gas Company w.·re lnve1tln& rn IOmorrow: • ' i ·f ! Free Personal Chee For to c~~»mte the O}lening df o~ Newport Beach office ' • Save up to $24 a year!• When you open a Checking Account for $100 or more al our New· port Beach office on or before August 31, 1973, and maintain If ybur minimum balance falls below $100, your account will a $100 minimum balance, it:ii!il),;:::~ you'll get free personal checking. You 'll . be able to write as many checks as you want each monlh and never have lo pay a monthly servke charge. "'Free Personal Checking" could save some of our cu sto~ers up to $24 a year and some custome!'l of other banks even more. Our two drive-up teller windows mean fast service without even leaving your car. Or when you come inlo the bank, there's a large parking area for our customers. Drive-up window banking hours 9 a.m. to 5 p. m. Monday-Thursday. 9 a .. m. to 6 p.m. Fridays. Regular banking hours ' . 1 o a. m. to 3 p. m. Monday-Thursday. 1 o a. m. to 6 p. m. Fridays. The Bank of'California @) We make b easy. 1401 Dove Street, Newport Place, Newport Beach, California 92660 (714) 633-351 • Warre11 P. Thompson, Vice President and Manager ••••• , •aw ''"""' •-><10,1,c. •• • - , • .. ,, ) " "' '01 1 •• I' I' ' I I I' I I ' • 1Mg1111a Beaeh EDITION Today's · Final N.Y. Stocks • • VOL 66, NO. 226, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 1<4, 1973 TEN CENTS Laguna :Planners Okay Macho Picchu 2 to I '.J'he Laguna Beach PllMinf Com- mission voted Monday night to lnitJale a apedllc plan to allow up to 130 cjuoterod homes on the chapparal-<0v-<Olopes between Mystic HlllS' an4;r Top of the World. .;.J The plan, poPJJlarly known u Machu Picchu, squeaked by ~n.ln a Z to I ballot, Commissioners Sally" Bellerue and Larry Coµipbell were ableot from the meeUng on vacaUon. 11te action gave tacit •PPtOVaJ to ·a baae density of 112 units on the 71 .. cre parcel. • The 112 unit figure may be varied 15 percent-up or clown depending on a nUmber of lac;jora Including the size of the, ueits, amount of traffic goaerated, number of acbool age children and amount of land devoted to ret:reaUon. Final density figures will be bammered out between the planning oommiallon and Creative Communities, Inc., project backers, lJ1 lutµre meetinga. · A 15 percent"demlty bonus could allow up to 130 bnit4 for the project. 'Q!e density !Jaure considered thts week iJ",cfraat~y reduced from the 2111).unlt proposal originally made by Creative Communltles 10 months ago. 1bat plan, after months of stormy debate, was sent to defeat by the plan- ning commission. "Oor density bas been cut con- siderably," noted Larry Redmann, a Creative O>mmuniUes executive. "We are asking tbe commis1ion to consider as much density as it can. Even orie or two units n;Wtes a cUfference." Redmann also urged the commission to move the project along as fa.st as possi- ble. ''.The llme factor," Redmann said, "is a major consideration at tbis time." Under the specific plan process, the commission will ~eceive input from citizens and developers to work out the ftnal details of the develoj)ment plan. The plan will be subject to final ap- proval from the planning commission and later adopted by the city council before construction can begin. Under the revised plans for Machu Pie· chu, about nine acres of land in the northeast corner of the parcel would hold between 80 and 90 clustered dwellings. A smaller four.acre area in the southwest comer would hold between 30 and 40 unlts. The remWning s.1 acres would be dedicated to the city as permanent open space. 1bese open space areas would in· elude canyons, creek beds, cliffs, rock outcroppings and natural vegetation areas. While the revised layout o( Machu Pie· chu received praise, certain aspects of the planning process for the project were criticized. William Leak said the _commission may face "headache after headache" by allowing lhe clustered development to precede city adoption of p I a n n e d residential development (PRO) stand- ards. Leak also objected to the use of city planning staff time for preparation of the specific plan while other matters, .in- cluding implementation of the general ·plan, have priority. Roger Lanphear, co mmission chairman, offe red similar comments to Leak's when he cast the dissenting vote on the specific plan initiation. "But I sti ll think we're going to have a r~l good plan here,'' Lanphear added. a ·1n " ·• an ·\ ' Officials To Disclose Villa Facts WASHINGTON lUPll -The White House said today It would disclose within a month a fu11 accotmting of the purchase of PresiC:ent Ni1oo's San Clemente estate and l\'OUld explain the role of New York 1ndu•triall!I Robert H. Abplanalp In the transaction. . A~IP., In an. tD\eM with the , l'/ubln(ton Star-N..., $1oday, aaW he ! WU the ool,y ouUide UMolGr <Uml!Qy ~ i~volved In the purcbuo ol-20 acres of the :is.me estate. The White House aald Nixon reet!Ved a "25,900 loin from Abplanalp to ocquire the 26-acre tract. The · 11Ue Insurance and Trust Company was named u the trustee to buy the property and to hOld formal title to it ln order to ease disposal or the property the Nixont did not plan on keeping for their own use. On Dec. 15, 1970, the Whit~ Houle aalcl the property was purdiued by Abplanalp for fl.Z mlllloo In which the '82$,llllD loan 7 waa canceled. It aalcl Abplanalp had set up an in- veslment company and declloed to name IJlY other memben involved. Abplanalp told lhe S\&!'Nen ooe other outsider waa Involved ID helplnc finance the San Clemente purdiue but that h< bu bought that peraon out. Both Abplanalp and the While House declined to ldentily tbe other In•-· There was speculation that he wu Nix· on•s be$t friend. C.G. "Bebe'• Rebozo of Key BiJcayh<, Fla. ptscussing tbe Abplanalp Interview wlt)t reporters Monday, deputy press sec,retary Geridd L Warren aald: "There really J1 no diffettnee in what Mr. Abplanalp ii saying and what we ~e aald, and to allow tbiJ altuatloo, or to encourage it, as I mUBt u.y that the White House had a band In the other 11t11ation (nM!llling reporll oo l"Vem- ment Improvements on the F.1orida and CalUornia White Houses) to encourage W. one to become dlsttITTed would be a diu<lrvlce. 4.olt will be cleared up ooce aqd for aJI, adJ within the'mqnth ," said Warren. He dt!"lcribed as a ••semanUcal game" A~lanalp's eontentlon that there was no oorDoraUoo, ln contrast to the White Hcfue announcement . that Jt wu a hOtdlng compiny or an investment com-pliiiy. . . "Our desire here la to clear Ulls matter up; once and for alf', ao that misim· preiolona don't (l"Ow and.eitst and ...,. ti~,ll ... Bicy'?le Race ' (Off Agenda ' A propooal by the Laguna Beach Jaycee1 to bold a bicycle race on Top of the World baa been wltbclrawn lrom the' Laguna Belch City Cotmcll'• W-y agenda. The race waa to be held on,LabOr !Jfty and -Id have required the closing •I Alts Lquna, Chlllon Way, Mountain View and portions ol Tyrol Drive to aul<>nlobile tral- nc. A Jaycees .1pokesm.1n said today that 1lgnlficant nqaUve com· munlty reaction to lhe propooed. race mJde the men'• group chanp. 113 mind. ' ., ·- " ~., · ·.WI T.,_... D.EFE~DING -Charlei Med- leJ'.',, lawyer for .accu~ mass tiller Wayne Henley, aays he thinks Henley's rlgHts. have lieen Violated. · Ex~Congressman Sel1mitz' Ch ild Drowns in Pool Map Shows Sex Murder Gravesit.es? ... HOUSTON (UPI) -An East Texas sheriff said today a baJld..scrawled map of possible new gravesites and "many other items oi evide.Dce" had been found in a cab;in q;sed by a homose1ual bachelor acc:l!Sed or, killjpg at leaat 27 young boys In d,ie ~mass l!)urder in modern U.S . htllpJy;;, ... ~~~':... ., Sin Aoguat!ne QiQrlty Sherill Jolln Ho:vt ._...... plnpOiillod -Iocilloii In the San Jacinto National Farelt' bl aobt-. Tlxu .. . '1'lie lberill . would not say ii officer• WOUid · liegin digging for more bodl., In tbe map area. "l'm oot trying to be-evasive," he sai d. "BUt we just don't t.oow yet whether y,·e have good evidence or'bad evidence." Hoyt. in Houstoo to confer with Texas Raogera .on the case, said the map, shovels, a sheath ol plastic body bags, three pain of gloves -one tinted with lime -and a partially used sack of quJcklime ·were found at the cabin near La)<e.Sam .Rayburn owned by the lather of Dean Allen Corll, 33. -Of•the bOdles loond at three loca- tiOiul 1in Texu were wrapped in plastic bop and aprinkled With llme. "'Th!! map centers on the New \Va\!:erly·Huntsvtlle area and we're going Tbe•.S-yeer-eld son of lof!D'r Oi:!\Oge to be checking it out," Hoyt said. • .,..,,, '"'"' '"" ""°" ~-·-"" •r....-.o-... Jofrl G .Jo.l.:.ii. . Houston Police Chief Herman Short ~,.,._,......·-·-· 1 • l'f"''" disclooed Monday that a ••torture board" died \hlB morning In Hoag ' J.lemo(lal -the iiem· Bnegedly used by Corll to Hospital, NeWJ>Ori Beach:· The' clilld ol . sh·ap his vlctlms to torture and kill them LAGU NAN KEYSE R AND ONE OF HIS PE T PARROTS For Fideaux and Pancho, Happiness is a Place to Perch Parrots Paeiiied the one-time presidential· bo!ll'lul 1ell Into -...U· found In · the cabin. tbe iamny pool Monday affem6on. All the vlctims were teenage boys l'h!lllp .James Schmitz waa· treated in allegedly procund by Elmer Wayne Henley, 17, and David Owen Brooks, 18, the ~tal intensive care lDLit from for Corll. · Lagu1ta to Provide Alter1iate Perch sbortly,alter.4 p.m. Monday. He had Henley 1\85 admitted t••; ... part in the been "ntshed there ·by· Newport Beach torture, aexuaJ alxlse. m";i:, and burial polloe 'bellcopter. of oome of·tbe Victims. Sclnnlt< and his wile kept a sleepless Brooks aald he helped Corll and Henley vigil tbrougb the night at the hospital. bury some vlctlma but aald he was not The saga of Lagunan Bud Keyser, his Newport Beach police and Uremen, involved in the actual killings. tlvo parrots, Fideaux (Fido) and Pancho, called to tbe.Scbmlti:J::f, at 10 ~llsslqn Sheriffs deputies reoov.•N<l four bodies Ba Ill. Spttd'AA• ••h1 "he! 4 -lhe city of Laguna Beach's parking Y ,.-.nu Y ore P·'"· Monday on the beach east or Galveston, Mbaondd ... &J:.~ .. tbe caller.believed the· d,lil~ ril.sing tbt number' of·victims to 27. meters and cranky motorists has been "'Ulvww:u nlflcers indicated after. the diggina-resolved happily for all. "lie ·WU> not broatbing. He bad lio Y' ! . . ' -~ beari6ff•.•r po1k:e aaJd. ?.fooday tha the four bodies recovered The two birds still won 't be allo""·ed to .i.+' ~ on the beach would be the last found sit on the city meters, but, the city will ""l'i"'"' Beach firemen began ad-there. miniBtflina.belU';t .massage and. ol)'g~. 'J\Ve· wlll ·not do any more work today install a perch on a litter can outside .P08Ce ,01l:ker Hurd Annatrong.arrlved in Cbaqt~ Coun'\y unless there Is new Trotter's Bakery for Fideaux and monttnll "laler· and called for,tbe police lnlormati · I •··" Chambe Pancho. hell_,,,.ter' , ~blcb t••"e~ m·. ,t•-•\rAAt 1"n 00 ar s,,.., rs CoWlty Tl · ed I h ~y. 'I' .... boni,u •w ., 1. Sheriff. U>uis .Otter said. le nego11at sett emcnt to t c Art h-orit-of the Schntltz o and rushed the The four bodies were·lmC&rthed in the Colony conflict was approved by all Y!"lM~.1° the ,hostz P88.H1•dl. -•-docs ·not •·-·w Cbaml>Or1 County resort of High Island parties including Bud, CoWlcilwoman r-. S8nbl MJC MIU as ~tors, incl.,,tln bikini-cl d lrl Phyllis Sweeney, City Manager Al Thea!, lor,aurebpw long-Phllllp bad been In the · .4 a g ' Pancho and Fideaux. water. wa • 111 took blsttiftjacket off so ht! could 1rn The first gave found Monday actually "We will allow lhe parrot to sit on a to ,the be\llrOom," .Mn. Q...h ... iti .. ht~ .. was dllcovei;ct by a truck driver poking trash receptacle out there. The birds are "No Jibe saw lllln'-lifct'~lllde i1r a"•t . • (lot JIOQIBll. Page I) sort of Interesting, you know," Thea! said •• today. into the ' J>.09I II I I 1 She aaid he ~d have1 !limbed .or .--------'-----. · He explained that the complaints about ... the parrots came from older lady fallen Into the pool during a Ill-minute . N'ewpo' . r't A:ms motorisl!J rtluctant to put money In the period white abe was in the house; but • meters with the birds sitting on them. 1he said her older children, Jeny, 14, "You can see the r<!luctance of some and Mary .Koy, 11, were In the pool all For Downcoast people, yet I think the whole town kind of the Ume on(( didn't notice Phllllp. id "-b"rd "We""Wf:~ all there," abe said. "I don't cons era Lin; 1 s part of Laguna/' Th•al added. !mow bow lt"COUid hive happened.•• WltllOl!t a won! ol dlicuaslon K•yser said today he had received a Mri. Sclinllti: nld tho pool In the NOW]IOrl lfeodi cotmellmen voted telephone call lrom Co u n c 11 w o m a n family's new llome had been COplpleted l1DIUllmoualy Monday to 1aeelt an ex-Sweeney Monday night advising him that Ol\IY '111tndaY· I tension o! the city's ophere of in-tho1clty )l'?uld lnitall a :~rch ~ver the • -)I quence to IDchiile Oraiice Coun!y waate container for Pancho and Fideaux. W H IJ~I~ Alrpor!. ' · • The illsue came up last week when"Bud e are ...;..,e ~oljng . Ancl,'ahhoull\~ hedged a bit, w4s -approachecl by .a clt~·offldal who · couacllmtJt .ao "'1*olnlously real-told him the p8rrots co~\cf n0 longer sit SACRAMENTO' '(AP) -AllOd and Ormed t¥,r lnll!iitioo to eventually on the parking meters. · d~bl<d welfare·redpients would get f3t> IMel at least P1i"t ol the Irvine Bud, a"ctlred furniture manufacturer, a month more under a $277 mlllloo+year Company coastline _properly toulh dally takea one of his two pamits and ducks into Trotter's for coffee and con· versalion. The parrots, however, have to remain outside. Bud would part them on a nearby meter. When news of the parrot parking pro- hibition reached Councilwoman Sweeney, she vowed to do something. Mrs. Sweeney termed Bud's .pets and _ his appearance on the streets of the art colony "one of the brighter, pleasanter parts or lire in Laguna Beach. "It can't be hurting anybody," she said. 1 Mrs. Sweeney said she had always though t Laguna was noted for "tolerance ot all kinds of interests." "The complaints are a pettiness of life that I think we like to consider Laguna Beach as being above/' she said. ·Antialcoholism Plan Approved SACRAMENTO (AP) -A move to siphon off millk>ns of dollars in liquor tax revenues lo step up Callfomla's battle against alcoholism has cleared the Senate on a 2M vote. State Sen. Arlen Gregorio ..ilmatod Manday his measure· woold· pour' "$12 1nillion Into anttaleohollsm . programs next year by appropriating 10 percent or the total $120 million liquor wx take. Liq- uor tn1 revenues otherwlse go into ttie .state's· general fund. Jl!'OllOlil whlcb advancod ·~to tho o! Conina del Mar. together they patrol the town stopping Seftale 'llaor. and talking with lolb. Bud occaalonall y The percentage would incrtase to 20 percent In 1975 under the San Mateo Democrat's plan. I ., ') • State Panel To Decide Question By JACK CHAPPELL Of Ifie Dally Pllef Si.ff Laguna Beacb'i planned ?.fain Beach Park approval has been appealed to the State O:>nservation Commission b y Lagunan John Gabriels. The park was approved by the South Coast Regional Zone Conoe<vatim Com- mission in late. July. Gabriela' appeal. based on environmental concerns, will appear on the Ute~·, ~g agenda ·the 111'JI part ol Seplember. ' Laguna Beach ·Mayur: RoyJlolm·oaid · todq ht was "tenibly surpriled'• tiyrthe -a~ ol the permit fer tho pan_ · Thi ooastal ~ were IOI bp " by the eiectorale In November with the passage of Propoaltion ID. Un<ler Proposillon 2D pennits must be requestea for projects within 1,000 yards of the ocean. Regional commissions rule first on permits with cbanneLs ol appeal open to the state board to all citizens. Gabriels was pot available for oom· ment today. State commission officials said the ap- peal was baaed on reasoning that since .an environmental impact report tor the part was not ccrnplete, the regiOo.al com. miJsioo could DOI c:onsidet what pooslble adverse enviroom.ental impacts may result from development. The ci•y initiated an environmtnta1 im· pact report shortly before the regional commisslon heard plans for the part, a $671,000 redevelopment or the city's downtown beach area . Critics knocked city procedures, saying a completed EIR should have been presented to the local commission before the permits were granted. Gabriels' appeal did not allege that any adverse impacts would occur. The part would result in the demolition of tw9 service statk>ns, and razing of the lifeguard and recreation department of. fices In the old Boys' Club building. Bare· dirt and asphalt areas would be planted in· grass and an undulating boardwalk con*1>Cted at sands' edge. A new lUeguard facility at the south end and a conceuion gazebo at the north eod of the bead! are planned. "I don't understand why th.ls was a~ penled," aald Mayer Holm, an active !See BEACH, Pap I) Or aa1e C.ast Weadaer ' Little tempe.rature change is ex~ peeled for the Orange Coast Wednesday, with the usual low clouds and log boldllllJ clown beach temperatures to 68. Highs Inland eapeded In the upper llOs. U'llSWE TODAY Josepl' P. Ktnnedu 1111 son of tlie late Sen. Robert F. Kenned.JI, missed a curve on Nantucket 1,. 1<111d and /lipped hiJ jeep, 1.n. •U1IU i•i•rlnu """ of /111< gtrll i1• the vehicle and his brother, David. Ste ttory, Page 4. • 1!~U=Al:.:lY:_:r_::IL::U:_:' ___ _'L:"•'.__ ____ ,'._'U~~ay, AUIJU)l I~. J 'tl~ Newport May Sue For. Zoning By JORN ZALLER Of l'lle Dally "'"' '''" A maJortty or Newport Beach coun- cilmen said Monday they're thinking of suigg the California Coastal Zone Conservation Commission for alleged "usurpation of local authority." But councilmen said they probably won't press a lawsuit unless the coas tal commission continues in what they see as threats to local authority. Mayor Donald ~fclnnls brought up the subject at an afternoon study session. Cowlcilmen were attempting to come to terms with stiff new parking re- quirements imposed by the South Coast Regional Zone Cionservation Commission . "We're the ones who should decide how many parking spaces a development needs," Mcinnis said. "We'rt given that power by the State of California," he said, ''yet it is the coastal commission that is exercising that power and nobody has yet challeng- ed the coastal commission." Newport Beach is angry because it re- quires only two parking spaces for a duplex while the coastal commission has refused to approve duplexes in the city unless they have four off-street spaces. The max_or's strong remarks brought an immediate response from Councilman Richard Croul. "Lf!t's challenge it ourselves," Ctoul sald. Mcinnls, Vice Mayor Howard Rogers and Croul an opposed proposition 20 last November, when it went before the voters. Support for a lawsuit also came from Countj)man Paul Ryckoff, who did sup- }Xlrt Proposition 20 last November. "We're faced with a situation where we have to bastardize our structures in order to meet the coastal commission's requirement that we have two parking spaces for each living unit," Ryckoff complained. "This concerns me very much." Mayor Mclnnis then made another reference to a ~ible lawsuit. ''I don't know how far the coastal commission should be allowed to go without a challenge. Somewhere there's a line, and when it's crossed, you have to consider legal remedies to protect yourseU." After the meeting, Mc!nnis expanded on bis remarks. Reiterating bis belief that the city has the right lo regulate developments "and not any appointive body of people who do not have to stand for election." "I don't mean to threaten anyone but we all have a point where we draw the line. ' <IWe may accept this requirement for two parking spaces. But if the coastal commission keeps doing more and more, we could reach the point where we have to do something. "Before we woo1d pursue a lawsuit." he added, "We of course would exhaust all administrative possibilities. And I sin· cerely hope we could stop short of a suit." Councllman Milan Dostal, speaking after the meeting, said be agreed with the general position taken by the mayor. Charles Littler Last Rites Held Funeral services were held ltfOnday for Charles R. Littler, 538 C Via Estrada, l.Jaguna Hills, who died Friday at the age of 84. 1be Rev. Robert Jepsen of St. George's Episcopal Cburch offi ciated at the sen'lces, conducted at M c Co r m l c k Laguna Beach Chapel. Mr. Littler is survived by his widow, Hazel, of the family home ; a son, Charles Jr., of Va.; two daughters, Mrs. Eloise McKig of San Diego and Mrs. Patricia Brake of Newport Beach. A native of Illinois, Mr. Littler had W'Orited as a purchasing agent for the EJ & E Railroad for 40 yeen. He had resided in Laguna Hills for the past five years. OU.N•I COAST LI DAILY PILOT Tiie Or ..... eo.tt DAILY "ILOT, wlfll Wfl~ II ~ flMt H-.Pr'lls. ll PllD!lthed by lie Or.,.._ COis! PllllJIN'llng eoi..,.ny. ~ Nfe 1111111..,. ••• Pllblll'*I, Mol'lday 111n1u911 frll1y, ..... C0.!1 ~. NNport IH<ll, Hvntlr!Pln ' lffch!'-t•lft V111r,r, L119VM a.di. lrvWM/SMd~ .,,,, kn """""''' Sen Jua11 C'efllstr-. A 11111111 ...,,loMI adltlon " pllblllfltd s.ivrw..,. .,.. koiid1 y .. rtit prlnl;ip.1 JIUDIW\11111 ......... 11 )JO Whl lay Slrftl, (Ool1 MINI, C.tw.n.11, f2'H, lob.rt N. W1M Ptftlffnl ltflll hMl!ohtf Jack R. Curley Vici ,.,tlldtnt alld a.-.al M-..,. Tho,.at ICetvlf ·-n-•• A, M11r,hl"• "'•Mtil'll , ....... Ch .. ,r •• H. Lo.. lltlch.tr.I ,, N.tll "*-'"-~ ... h i"" .._ __ 222 F.rt•t A"'""' M1ill111 "'41~''": r.o. 1111 '''· tz6s2 .._ __ CKlf M-i JJI w .. 1 ltYStreet H.,.,..., hfoi: ~ NtwpWt 1Wit¥trf lflllilllolt• 1..a-1 ,,.,, fl.Md! lclvlt\<arf IM ci.-te; * Norlfil 11 t.mll'IO 1t111 .,.,,,. ... (714) '4J~Jlf ct In.I .w •• ,. I I '41·1671 &.ee-e .... Al •• , •• ......,,, T:h1l111 4f4.ffN ~··· 1911, Or... C.-1 ~ltllll'lt ~. ... -........ lflwltlllent, ~I mtlttr .. "'Wtt"-tt "-lot _., "' •• 1 ;1• ... """" ~ ..... ......... ., .,.,.,.. ..... . ~ doltt ~ ,.... et Catt ....... C.R......... ......,..... 111t urrirr U ... ....-i,, ., -· ttll ..,....,,, flllllrttY ....... , ..... ., .... ,,..."'"'· The Circus is llere • Elephant from Rin gling Bros. Barnum and Bailey Circus greets one of his fans after stepping off circus train in Anaheim . The 103rd edi· tion of the famed circus arrived in Orange County Monday and pa· raded to th e Anahci in Conve ntion Center where it will be appearing for the next week. $750,000 Lawsuit County Suit Awaiting Laguna Niguel Decision By JAN WORTH Of the Dlllt' ,.not s11t1 An attorney for Kaufman and Broad developers said Monday the company's $750,000 sWt against Orange County "is just sitting" until the intent of the Board of Supervisors regarding land planning in Laguna r{iguel is cl arified. Attorney Rodger Howell said the com· Elton E. Amos Services Monday Funeral services will be held Monday in Shenandoah, Iowa, for Elton S .• l\mos , a Laguna Hills resident who died last week. He was 79. Rosary for Mr. Amos was recited 1'1on- daynight at McCormick Laguna Beach Chapel. Mr. Amos is survi ved by his widow, f\tary, of the family home, 2211 Q Via ?.fariposa East; a daughter, Rosemary Amos of Kent, Ohio, and two sisters, Mrs. June Dally and Mrs. John Baxter of Shenaqdoah, Iowa. Mr. Amos has lived in Laguna Hills fo r the past seven years. He had been employed for 35 years as an aud itor for General ~fotors. l\'.larines to Conduct Landing Practice pany is willing to wait until the 1983 Land Use Element required by state law is passed in late August to pursue the legal action. The company began the suit because ol delays on a 32-acre tract on both sides of Nigilel Road west of Crown Valley Parkway scheduled. for condemlnlwns. Following deletion of the Pacific Coast Freeway route through the area last fan, the county planning department initiated a series of downzoning proposals on parcels along the route. Last week the Board of Supervisors denied 4 to O one of tho se proposals which \vou\d have changed density on the Kauf· man and Broad tract from 11 units per acre to four. That decision conflicts with an emer· gency ordinance placed on Kaufman and Broad last January by the supervisors which limits density on the tract to five units until Sept. 11. The ordinance was passed under pressUre from the Laguna Niguel Homeowners and the county planning de partment. who said development should not be permitted until the traffic corridor situation was studied . But no restrictions were placed on most or the other deve lopers in the area. "We never wanted Kaufman and Broad singled out for an emergency ordinance," J im Thompson. homeowners president, said J\londay. "We felt that all tracts in the area should be re-studied." Both Howell and Thompson indicated they "·ould be willing to compromise on a density somewhere between the 11 units now allowed and the five units proposed Jn the emergency ordinance. A density of 6.7 dwelling unit s per acre The noise level may be a bit higher in is set on the area surrou nding the Kauf- the areas surrounding the Marine Corps ma n and Broad tract in the 1983 Land Air Station El Toro during the next fe\v Use Element recommended by the days, a spokesman sa id. county planning commi ssion in July. El Toro-based jct aircraft will e<1nduct Al !\londay·s regular meeting, the com- carrier landing practice through Friday. mission postponed decisions on two other After that, the noise leve l should return Laguna Niguel zoning proposals to Oct. I to normal for the area, the spakesman . following Board of Supervison1 action on said. · the land use element. Broken Cable Dampens Andrea Doria Salvaging FAIRHAVEN, Mass. (UPI) -More problems have beset an underwater ex· pedition which hoped to salvage riches from lhe sunken lin.:>r Andrea Dorla - and its success appears in jeopardy. T"•o former Navy aquanauts were forced fl1onday to delay their attempt to penet rate the purser's office of the ship, ~·hich rests 250 feet below the surla(.'c or the Atlantic Ocean. because a cable became entangled and broke. Repairing the I 'ii·inch steel cord will interrupt SAivage operations for an undetermined amount of lime, acco rding to crewmen on the support shlp Nar- raganse tt. One support diver, David Lejcun or Philade lphia, said the salvog."! expedition probably will be discontinued by Thurs- day whether or not va lu obles ca n be recovered by the n, J\1any Pflrticipants are on lea ve from t~ Navy and have 10 return th.is ~·eek, he ~id . Jn an effort to speed 1he expedition, 11 third diver, Robert llol lls of 1-layward, Oalif., joined the team of Donald Rodock· er and Ch ristopher DeLucchi. both of San Diego, at the ocean bottom Monday, \Vhere they are living In an underwater habitat. The trio are trying to recover some $1.1 million in cash and almost as much in jewelry, art objects and other valuables -most M wh.ich are believed stlU In the purser1s office. The Andrea Dorla sanlt July 26, 1956. after It collided wi th the Swedish v..,.1 Stockholm . All previous attempts to salvage valuables rrom the wreck failed. Lejeun noted that the weather Is ex- pected to tum seas choppy in future weeks, and make salva ge work ~ lngly difll cull. Bob Coffey, another diver aboard the Narragansett. said Rodocker and De.Luc- chi were In the process of cutting into the purser's office Monday when a cord at· tached to an acetylme torch they were using to cut away two steel doors was moved by ocean currents. I Temple Gets Temporary Safety Okay Laguna Beach's freestyle temple known as Love Animals, Dm't Eat Them may be off the hook today on fire code violations which earlier caused city of· licialS to threaten to board up the place. That was the latest report from City·- Manager Al Tbeal He met ~1onday with Jim Roberts, proprietor of the one-time health food restaurant. They discussed fjre code violations. "They're proceeding with those things and hope to have them completed by Fri- day," Theal said. Another . inspection or Love Animals, 782 S. Coast Highway, then 'NOUld be conducted by J im Winter, senior building official, Thea1 noted. "They're willing to go ahead and e<1m· plete the v.'Ork. It looks pretty good," the city 'manager added . Followers of Love Animals, according to Curtis Reed, plan to remain at the col- orful outpost until Sept. 22 when the group is leaving Laguna Beach, caravan style. · They are departing the Art Colony in return for ctismi ssal of 30 misdemeanor charges by the Orange County District Attorney's Office. City officials and Love Animals follower s have been haggling over the fire hazards since last Tuesday v.·hen the city ordered the immediate dangers cleared up within 24 hours. Fro1n Page J. BODIES ... the beach with a stick Sunday night. "When I brought the stick up, it had a bad odor," George Leger said. Leger took palice to the spot and the 24th body was recovered before the morning fog had a chance to bum away. Later in the mornin g and two miles a\Yay from the spat where the 24th body was found, a road grader digging in a patch of sand turned black by decomposing bodies unearthed the 25th victim. A couple or hours later, early Monday afternoon, deputies digging \vilh shovels found the 26th and 27th victims in one shallow grave. Their nude bodies were tied together bead to foot. In 1971, the bodies of 25 farm hands v.·ere found buried alon g the Feather River in Northern California in \\•hat was, until Monday, the worst known mass murder in the United States this century. Juan V. Corona, a migrant labor contractor, is serving a life prison term for those slayings. It was learned also today that a l5'- year-0ld girl linked to the case was Henley's fiance and that she bad also dated some boys believed to be victims. She and Henley bad planned to leave Houston together within the next few months. Betty Cobble. the mothe!' of one of_ the known victims, Charles C. Olbble, 15, 1 said the girl is ''quite beautiful and sexy. She looks 18 but is on1y 15. She is a sweet, cooperative child. "I believe my boys knew Henley through the girl," Mrs. Cobble said. "They always used to sit on Henley's p<l'ch talking with the girl and the other neighborhood children.'' The mother of Frank Aquirre, 19, who also lived in the same area of Houston, known as The Heights, said her son had been dating the girl before he disap- peared. The father of ·another known victim, Fred HUligiest, said his son attended the same junior high school with the girl and •·most probably knew her." Seventeen of the bodies were found in a Houston boat shed Corll rented in 1969. Four bodies were found in the East Tex- as pine forests near Broaddus and the rest have been found on High Island. Police also dug Monday in the grounds in back of Corll 's candy factory, also loca ted in The Heights. D1lty "11111 Slllf Piltlt Sawd11st at Night Laguna Beac h's Sawdust Festival throbs \Vilh life at ni ght as artists and craftsmen and their potential cuslomers rub elbows in the nar· row confines between sthlls on the festiva l grounds. The Sawdust. which began about four years ago as a protest against the established Festival of Arts, now has a pennanent air about it. ---------~ lrviI1e Compa11y Directo1·s Meet, Delay N amii1g Cl1ief Irvine C'-Ompany directors met briefl y today but did not elect a successor to late company president William R. Mason. Boarrl Chairman, Jobn V. Newman . lold company spoJtesmen, "The board did not formally address the quest.ion of a new president at the August meeting." The board met in Newport Beach cor- porate headquarters at 9:45 a.m. today. "Ibe agenda was limited to several routine administrative matters requiring board action a this time," the SJ?Okesman said. Directors adjourned in memory or ?\ir. 11ason who died suddenly last month at the age of 54. He was president of th e ranching and land development firm since 1965 and bad served the firm since 1959. Si nce i tason 's death. Executive Vice President Raymond L. Watson ha s serv· ed as chief executive officer of the firm . Newman, who appointed Watsort to the acting leadership post, today praised \Vatson and the company management •·for the continuing effectiveness of the company operations despi te the serious corporate and pe rsonal sense of loss at the death of Mr. Mason." There wa s no word from the company explaining the delay in selecting a suc- cessor or a replace ment for Mason on the seven-member board or directors. Newman was elected chairman or the board at the June company stockholders meeting when personal tax adviser to the late James Ir vine, N. LoyaU McLaren retired from the company board at the age or 81. A Clarement man, Howard Allen, ~·as elected to fill that vacancy on the board. Others serving on the company board are hirs. Athelie (Joan) Irvine Smith of Middleburg, Va. and Emerald Bay. \Vatson. Eastblutf, Charles S. Wheeler, secretary, of Newport Beach and M. Keith Gaede of Laguna Beach. The company spokesman declined to discuss the precise nature of the ad- ministrative matters being considered to-- day other than to indicate they involved board ratification of m a n a g e m e n t decisions Possibly related to sales or land. From Page J. BEACH ... campaigner for the Coastal Conservation initiative. Previou sly, Holm has stated that the main beach park was ''the epitome 0( 1vhat Proposition 20 was all about." The ma tter has been scheduled on a two-day agenda of !he State Conservation Commission. That agenda wi ll be considered either on Sept. 4 and 5, or Sept . 5 and 6 state offlcia ls said today. The meeting ~ill be held al the state building in San Fran-- cisco. A LICENSE NOT TO STEAL- Unfortunately for:. the ~enerel public, there are a lot of people in•talling carpeting who shouldn't be. Unbelievably, many carpet "contractors" are working unlawfully without insurenco and state licenses. FOR YOUR PROTECTION you should insist that the people who install your carpeting work for a contractor who is INSURED and STATE LICENSED. !He is required by state law to be both.) State licensed contractors have to post a bond for your protection, and the very accomplishment of licensing indicates a de<Jree of competency. Tito biggest problem In dearing witli an unlicensed contractor is that he might be out of business tomorrow. Don't toke a chance -call Alden'• for reliability, and the best installation around! ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4038 • \ • I HOURS: Moo. Thtu Thun., 9 to 5:10 -FRI., 9 to 9 -SAT., 9:30 to 5 I '-~~~....:.:.:;.;;;;;;.;.;;;;;;..;;;;.:;~:.::..~.:.:.:.;~..;.;;.;;;..;..;.;..~~~~~~~~--.· I I • -• Saddlehaek EDl·TION Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks ' . VOL. 66, NO. 226, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES . oRAliliife .c;ouNTY.,CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS ~ewport Pushes to Annex Irvine Coastline ••• lj'jlhout a word of dl.scusllon, Newport llfach city councilmen voted unanlmoilsly Mo~ay to seek an extension or the city's sphere of influence to include Orange County Airport. Councilmen also unanimously reaf· firmed their intention to eventually an· nex; at least part of the Irvine Company coastline property south of C.Orona del h-1.ar. 'lbe move to the aiport marks out the cou.nty~wned airfield for possible future amezaUon, although the movf: may be a * * * Irvine: Not Surprised By Newport Irvine City Manager William Woollett Jr. said today it is "really no surprise to us" that Newport Beach would move to include in its sphere of influence the oceanfront coastal sector of the Irvine Ranch between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. "The only surprise is the timing," Woollett sald today. He explained that Jrvine is planning the J0,000 acre area along with 53,000 other Irvine Ranch acres included in the ne\V city's sphere of influence. However, since the Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFC J has ask- ed cit-tes to file spheres £or all the unin- corporated areas remaining in the coun- ty, Woollett said he'd expected the Newport action and a similar one by Laguna Beach for lhe southerly se<tion of lhe coastal sector. Additionally. Irvine is considering an- ne>ing lhe ~al triangle commercial development ol the .1rv111e Company in central Irvine, he Wd: ..... Newport Beach's aMOUDCed filinl ol I s(ihere of influence map coverliig the cqastal sector moy speed Irvine studies of that potential annexation. "This of course will give the city of Irvine opportunity to comment (before LAFC) ·on the proposal," Woo Hett said. "The area has been under study for several months as a part of our general plan process. All lhat data wlll be available for wie in trying to decide what our position should be." he said. Irvine Company officials once offered the area ror annexation by Laguna Beach and Newport Beach. Less than a year ago Newport Beach Mayor Donald Mctn- 'nll told Irvine officials the downc<fa9l an· nexation would be put "on the back burner" for awhile. That statement. cooled immediate in- terest in the parcel by Irvine city ltJdership. NIC KEL CRIME, • NICKEL FINE _ fl,OC:KLAND, Maine (AP) -"It was a ftve-ce.nt crime and deserved a flv~t fl1,1e ," District Court Judge Paul A. MllcDonald said. He slapped the nickel penalty on James l/., Peters, 20, after the youth pleaded guilty l\fonday to littering a street wjth a soda bottle cap. 1"1e judge said the police went too far in bringing such a case to court. Or ange Coast Welidter Little temperature change Is ex· pccted for the Orange Coast Wednesday, with the usual tow clouds 8l1d fog· ho!~ down beach temperatures to 68. Highs Inland expected In lhe upper 808. INsm E TODA y Joseph P. Ke·n1a.edv Ill, son of Utt hltt Sen. Robert F. Kett·nedy, missed a curv~ cm Nantuck.et Is· laHd and flipped hil J1ep, ieri- 0 .. IU injuring one of five girls i11 the v•hic1" and hil brolher, David. Ste storv1 Page 4. n n •• 11 .... II " • • " .,, "' " tll tenokt " AMI l.Mffn 14 Mtvl• l t M11MI l'tllth le Nl"tNt..... 4 or-• CWlll'Y ,1 • ..,,. , .. l, ltMfl MM«ttl t•n Tflrtltftft 21 Tttteftn It • Wttlfltr t WtlNll'I """ 1•11 w.,.w ... 4 mear)S of cowiterlng a similar claim filed by Co!ta Mesa two months ago. The council balked at quick action on City Manager Robert L. Wynn's .recom- mendation that the city cleclare the ' undeveloped coastline below Corona del Mar as part of the city's sphere of in· fluence. The council Jater did accept Wynn's recommendation, but only after con· siderable discussion' of the issue' at the afternoon study sessioit. The city made its' declaration of spheres of inOuence in preparation for a hearing befor:e the Local Agency Forrna~ tion Commission (LAFC) later this month. The LAFC can accept or reject Newport Beach's proposed spheres, of in- fluence. Although the council did not discuss the reason,s for wantiilg the airport within the city's sphere of influence, city Manager. WyM explained the city posi- tion last week in an interview. Wynn said Newport Beach's prime con-, The Circus is Here Elephant from Ringling Bros. Barnum and Bailey Circus greets one of his fans after stepping off circus train In Anaheim. Tl\• 103rd edi· ti on of the famed circµs arrived ·in Orange County Monday and , pa· raded to the Anaheim Convention Center .whei"e,iL will be appearing for the next week. Summer Scho~A .. Kid~ Stay For Duration n1 &vine trvine Unified Sehool District's sum-. mer school program ended with .only a 4.8 ·percent loss of students from ·begin- ning to end of the _program . The decrease is far tMVer than antlcip8.ted. SchoOI board members learri>d Monday night that or the 1,676 students signed up at the opening of summer school, 1,595 continued to attend classes at the close of the special sessions nm in all district schools. "That is an ~ard 'of ~Dt ·of decrease," Superintendent ' A •. Stanley Corey said. "Most districts usually ex· pect. to Jose 20 percent or 'more and decreases work down,vards from there." TM: sTatlsfic w&S part o[ ·a rtpOrt. on the district's first summer ~hoot effort. Among other data conliine<! in lhe evaluation by school adni.in1Strat0rs: -El .Toro jMarine School enrc;>lled 193 sum.met school pupils this Year COtn· pared to tbe 15 who participaled in the predeces$0r San Joa,quin Elementary District program which required them to be bused to University Park. --C>verall elementary' e n r o I t' me n t ma~ked a ~49.5 pcrc~nt iqcrease>0.ver last year. , · -Attendance at all schools elementary State Proclaims Day for Women SACRAMENTO (Af) -By a 3H) vote, the all-male Cali!ornla Senate has adopted a resolution setting Aug •. 26 as Women's Recognition and Equality Day In Calllornla. Aug. 26 Is lhe day in"l920-w~'won lhe vote in all of lhe Untted'States.' The resolution ha s &1ready won Alscmbly approval. Its author is Asstmblyman Julian Dixon (D-Los Angeles): . . to high school was ·11p 105.5 percent·over last year. -State ald income of $100,808 exceeded. expe.ns~ for thls .,Year's offerings by $43,171. COrey said the excess income could be set aside to "enrjch" next year's sum· mer. school offerings. A summary of evaluations by parents, tea~rs and stud~nts, Corey said, sug- gest,, the followWg improvements for next year : , , --Offering bl more courses. -Reduction of ·class sizes. -Earlier student placement in classes. ~sideration of adding m o re (See LOSS, Page %) Caspers Plans Visit to Viejo Firth Djs)rtct Supe<Visor Ronald ca..pe,. plans to attend a public meeting . tonigh~ concerning road closures·1n Mission Viejo, his office said today. The meeting is set for 7:30 at La Paz Intermediate School. 'The con· clusiona of a committee appoioted by Caspers to study the con- troversial closure ol three-roads at their intersections with Jeronimo Roads, will be aired. B!1rt Spendlove, Fifth Diftrict Orange Councy Planning Com· mlsaloner from Mlsijonl Viejo, Ii lhe chainnan of lite oommlttee, The six~week-old c I o s u re 1 , ordered by lhe county · ~d)>I Supervbors •fter orelidenls· om\· ·plained ol unsafe tralllc on their Jn. iertor streets, sporked hOatid response ll'om those op~ lhe achoo. ~ ' cern was that the airport not be placed in Costa Mesa's sphere. Annexation Of the airport by Costa Mesa he said, could mean that Newport Beach would not have influence over operation of the airport. The airport is currently owned by the County of Orange and administered by the county Board of Supervisors. In discussing the downcoast area, between Corona del Mar ·and Laguna Beach, councilmen Carl Kym.la and Paul Rfckoff argued ,thlit the city ought to hedgeJta sphere of influence request with a disclaimer. "We have no present intention to annex that area," said Ryckoff, "and I am con- cerned that by declaring it part or our sphere or influence we might start up a seq·uence of events where we have no choice but to annex." Kym.la expressed a similar coocern. He suggested .~hat a co'uncil policy stating reservations about aMexations in the downcoast area be attached to the city's formal declaration of sphere of influence over the area. . Ma yor Donald A. ~fclnnis opposed the t\\'O councihnen, arguing that attachment of disclaimers would weaken the city's position \\'hen it appeared before LAFC. In the formal city council meeting later that night councilmen voted ''ith little additional di scussion to adopt Mcinnis' position that no disclaimer should be at- tached. The decision was unanimous. Irvine Delay s Decision Chief Not Picked Irvine Company directors met briefly today but did not elect a successor to late company president William R. Mason. Board Chairman, John V. Newman, told company spokesmen, "The board did not formally address the question of a new president at the August.meeting." The board met in Newport Beach cor- porate headquarters at 9:45 a.m. today. 'The agenda was limited to several routine administrative matters requiring board action at this time," the spokes- man said. . Directors adjourned in memory ol Mr. Mason who died suddenly last month al the age of 54. He was president of the ranching and land development firm since 1965 and had served the firm since Schmitz' Son Dies; Family ·~;@l Victim '!be 3-year.old son or former Orang(! County Congressman John G. Schmitz died this 'morning in Hoag Memorial Hospital, Newport Beach. 'lbe child of the one-time presidential hopeful fell into the family pool Monday.afternoon. Phillip James SChmitz was treated in the bcispiial intensive care unit from shortly after 4 p.m. Monday. He had been rushed there by Newport Beach police belicepter. Schmitz and bis wife kept a sleepless vigil through. the night at the hospital. Newport Beach police and fireaien, called to the Schmitz home at 10 Mission Bay in Spyglass Hill shortly before 4 p.m. Monday, said the caller believed the child had drowned. "He was not breathing. He had no heartbeat," )Xllice said. Newport Beach firemen began ad- ministering heart massage and oxygen. Police Officer Hurd Ann.strong arrived moments later and called for the police nelicopter, which landed in the street in front of the Schmitz home and rushed the youth to the hospital. Mrs. Schmitz said she does not know for sure bow Jong Phillip had been in the water. "I took his lifejacket off so he could go to the bathroom," Mrs. Schmitz said. "No one saw him go back outside or get into the pool." She said he could have climbed or fallen into the pool during a 10-minute period while she ·was in the house, but she said her older children, Jerry, 14, and Mary Kay, 11, were in the pool all the time and didn't notice Phillip. "We were all there," she said. "J don't know bow-it could have happened." Mrs. Schmitz said the pool in the family's new home h8d been completed only Thursday. Sena te Approves School Auditing SACRAMENTO (AP) -State auditors coUld look over th!! books of local school districts to make sure state money under special grants is being spent properly un· dcr two bills approved by the state Sen"te. 1'bc meastD'es by state Seri. Dennis Carpenter (R-Newport Beach), went to lhe Assembly Monday on Identical 29 lo 9 votes.~ -r , , · 0ne:namc.s ·lhe stale De)>artmcnt of ! Finance to conduct lhe audits and lhe 'other specifies tho state controller. He introduced the doubl .. bartelled ap- proach In an eUort to get his bills through tbe Assem~ly Ways and Mean• eon\.mJttee:. where similar legislation .... died last year, carpenter said. 'lbe bills are SB 17 and SB 1!. ) 1959. Since Mason's death, Executive Vice President Raymond L. Watson has serv· ed as chief executive offici!r Of the fiim. Newman, who appolnted Watson to the acting leadership post, today praised Watson and the company management· "for the continuing effectiveness of tbe company operations despite the serious corporate and persona) sense of Joss at the death of Mr. Mason." There was no word from the company explaining the delay in selecting a suc- cessor or a replacement for Mason on the seven-member board of directorS". Newman was elected chairman of the board at the June company stockholders meeting when personal tax adviser to the New Evidence? late James Irvine, N. Loyall McLaren retired from the company board at the age of 81. A Claremont man, Howard Allen, was elected to fill that vacancy on the board. Others serving on the company board are Mrs. Athelie (Joan) Irvine Smith of ·Middleburg, Va. and Emerald Bay. Watson, Eastbluff, Charles S. Wheeler, secretary, of Newport Beach and M. . KeilhJl'lede of Laguna Beach. The COrripany spokesman declined to discuss the precise nature of the ad- ministrative matters being considered to- day other than to indicate they involved board ratification of m a n a g em e n t decisions possibly related to sales of land. More Texas Grave Sites .Passible, S:/reriff Says Ul'I Ttltllht lt DE FENDING -Charles Med- ler, lawyer for accused mass killer Wayne Henley, says he thinks Henley's rights have been violated. More Outhouse Blazes Reported In Irvine Ar ea The Orange County Fire Department is investigating three outhouse fires that took place Monday night in two Irvine construction areas. The latest instances of suspected arson brought the total of such fires to eight since Friday night. Bill Brooksbanks. fire department arson investigator, ls handling the cases, which Costa Mesa police first theorized were a 0 bunch of kids out on a Friday night." Two pOrtable wooden toilets owned by Retail Chemical Toilet Distributors in· an open area at Walnut and Myford Avenues were burned Monday night. Crook$hanks sa id he found tracv of gasoline at tha site. A similar woOOen toilet valued at $200 • was set on fire nearby in the 17400 block of Daimler Sire!:!.. It I! owned by lhe United Sanitation Company . HOUSTON (UPI) -An East Texas sheriff· said today a hand-scrawled map of J>C)Ml.ble new gravesites and .. many other items of.evidence" had been found in a cabin used by a homosexual bachelor accused ol killing at least 27 young boys ii) the worst mass murder in modern U.S history. . . San AugusUne County Sherill John Hoyt said the map pinpointed several locations in tl.e San Jacinto National.. Forest in southeast Texas. The sheriff would not say it officers would begin digging for more bodies in the map area. 0 .t'm not trying to be evasive," be said "But we just don't know yet whether w! have good evidence or bad evidence." Hoyt, in Houst.on to confer with Texas Rangers on tbe case, said the map, shovel!, .a sheath of plastic body bags, three pairs of gloves -one tinted with lime :-and a partially used sack of quJcldime were found at the cabin near Lake Sam Rayburn owned by lhe father of Dean Allen Corll. 33. Most of the bod.Jes found at three Joca~ tions in Texas were wrapped in plastic bags and sprinkled with lime. "The map centers on the New Waverly-Huntsville area and we're going to be checking it out," Hoyt said. Houston Police Chief Hennan Short disclosed Monday that a "torture board" -the item allegedly used by Corll to strap his victims to torture and kiU tbem -was found in the cabin. All the victims were teenage boys allegedly procured by Elmer Wayne Henley, 17, and David Owen Brooks, 18, for Corll. Henley has admitted taking part in the torture, sexual abuse , murder and burial or 30tJle of the victims. Brooks said be helped Corl! and Henley bury some victims but said he was not involved in the actual killings. Sheriffs deputies recovered four bodies Monday on the beach east of Galveston raising the number of victims to 27. ' Officers indicated alter lhe digging Monday that the four bodies recovered on the beach would be the last found there. . "\Ve will not do any more work today 1n Chan1bers County unles.s there is new (See BODIES, Page !) l\larines to Conduc t Landing Practice ' . 'lbe noise lev•I may be a bit hJaher in the areM surrounding the Marine Corps Air Station El Toro during lhe next few days, a spokesman ta.Id . Ei Toro-based jct aircraft will COlldud carrier landing practice through Friday After lhat, lhe noise level should muni lo no'rmal for the area. the spokesman sakl. I " ~ DAILY PILOT IS -Tllfsday, August 14, 1973 Abplanalp Row ExplaiMd Nixon's Home Disclosure Due WAs!nNGTOl'I (UPI) -The White House said today It would disclose within a·rnonth a full accounting of the purchase of Presidenl Nixoo's San Clemente estate and would explain the role of New York industrlallst Robert H. Abplanalp in the transaction. Abplanalp, in an interview with the 'Yashington Star·News Sunday, said he was the only outside investor· currently jnfOlved ll) the purchase of 3:> acres of lhe 26-acre estate. Broken Cable May Dampen Salvage Try F~VEN, Mass. (UPI) -More problems have beset an underwater ex- pedition which hoped ' lo salvage riches from the sunken liner Andrea Doria - and its success appears in jeopardy. Two former Navy aquanauts were forced Monday to delay their attempt to penetrate the purser's office of the ship, which rests 250 feet below the surface of the Atlantic Ocean, because a cable became entangled and broke. Repairing the l lh:-incb steel cord will interrupt salvage ciperations for an undetermined amount of time, according to crewmen on the support ship Nar- ragansett. One suppol't diver, David Lejeun of Philadelphia, said the salvagi expedition probably will be discontinued by Thurs- day whether or not valuables can be recovered by then. Many participants are on leave from the Navy and have to return this week, he said. In an effort to speed the expedition, a third diver, Robert Hollis of Hayward, Oalil., joined the team of Donald Rodock- er and Christopher DeLucchi, both of San Diego, at the ocean bottom Monday, where they are living in an underwater habitat. The trio are trying to recover some $1.1 million in cash and almost as much in jewelry, art objects and other valuables -most of 'vhich are believed still in the purser's office. The Andrea DoMa sank July 26, 1956, after it collided with the Swedish vessel Stockholm . All previous attempts to salvage valuables from the wreck failed. Lejeun noted that the weather is ex- pected to turn seas choppy in future weeks, and make sa lvage work increas· ingly difficult. Bob C.Offey, another diver aboard the Narragansett, said Rodocker and DeLuc· chi were in the process of. cutting into the purser's office Monday when a cord at· tached to an acetylene torch they were using to cut away two steel doors was moved by ocean currents. It wrapped around an artificial forward. fuMel on the vessel, which he called " "smokestack." "It will only take about a half hour to repair ooce we get it UP," Coffey said, "but the job is cleanng it and bringing it up. It's still tangled." C.Offey said morale was "still super," despite tbe fact that "we've had so many problems, we're getting used to it." From Pflfle 1 LOSS ... academic classes. -Provision of food d u r i n g in· termission breaks. Trustees echoed CorC'y's public rom- mendation of summer school director Jeny Rayl. Mrs. Elzabeth "Lee" Sicoli of Universi· ty Park said, "Parents and students have told me there was a very good feeling generated, particuJarly at the elementary level and it was a feeling children car- ried into the homes \'lilh them after school. "Some have questioned 'Why can't school be like this all year 'round ?' " OU.Hal COAST IS ' DAILY PILOT 'The or.,.. CM•I DAILY PILOT, wllfl wlllch It cembhMd "-Nt-Preu. t1 1111bll111ed br l'l'lt Ortn0t Coe1f Pllt>llMlllO ComP1ny. s_. r•M .Oii~ •r• PllblllillW. Mond•r l~ro11Qh Frldt)'. for CC>Slt Mttl, Ntwpofl 8•1dl, Hulltll!flCW! BHcl'>fFOU11t1I" V111*t. l'9U'11 t.ldl. lr¥1Mfltdclltri.dl •nd J.ft ci. ..... nttf S.n J\llln C:.pl1!r1no. A 1lngl1 lt'lllof!•I tdtll!Wt 11 llUOUfll9cl l1lut1Myi •nd Sll"OCl&\'l. TIW Pl'lllCIHI lllllOllllll"'I pf1nt It 11 JXI w._I ••r 11'"1, C.M Mflof. Ctll,.,ftlt, tUM. ltobetf N. Wttd .............. h!llllfl« . J••k a. c .. ,1 • ., VI(• p,...io..,1 •rlll hiiw•I M1rwo1er Tho""'' Ke•¥il ldllO• Thom•• A, Murphin• M6Ntlrl9 £dll\ll' Ch1rft1 H. lot• Ri<-h•'' r. Ni ll A11!tltnl Mlftllll'IO fdl!GQ -Cotti MtN: »O -::.:.~ ''"" N ... DOrl IMdt: ~ ihll,..,tr• L~11111 Dtect>; m "°'"' A...nut till!'>tiflOIOll AUCh: l117f ltlldl ltul..,•rd '-11 Cltmt<'lll: JOJ Horfll l!l "1Ttifl0 lt•tl T ......... ln 4) '4J.o4JJ1 C..WfW U...,..f 64%-:1171 '" CJ ..... Alf .... , 11: ,,..,....4,2-44H ~ii~•. 1"1. °"""" """' hM!tl'>lllt C~r. Nt Mwt •tor• IJMlrtlltrio. Mltorlel INll~r .,,. Mw.-f ... i*fl• Mf'IW! IOll'f M rffl"ldll«d WI"*" ...... ..... 1111$•ltll ., C911'1'tlehl -· s.conc. CJ••• '°''"' Plilrll M (llllt Mat. ''"'°'"'" "''*"'•'"" ., tlf'f'litf' 11.U "*'lflt,1 tn mtll U .lt "*"911rl flllll*Y ••tlftlit10111• UM """"'II'- I The Wblte House said Nixon recelved a 1625,000 loan from Abplanalp I<> acquire the 28-acre tract. The Title Insurance and Trust Company was named as the trustee to buy the property and to hold formal title lo It In order to ease disposal <lf the property the Nl xons did not plan on keeping for their (l~'n use. On Dec. JS, 1970, the White House said the property was purchased by Abplanalp for $J.2 mill ion in which the $625,000 loan was canceled. Bandit Loses $1 • It said Abplanalp bod 1tt up ao ln- vestmenl comPllQ' and de<llned lo name any othel'.mem,bers Involved. AbplMalp told the Slar<Newa one other outsider was involved in helping finance the San Clemente purchase but that he has bought that person out. Both Abplanalp and the White House declined to identify the other investor. There was speculation that be was Nlx· on's best friend. C.G. 11Bebe11 Rebozo of Key Biscayhe, Fla. Colle~ts Muffed Heist • lit A HUNTINGTON BEACH sandwich shop owner matched wits with an armed robber Monday and came out ahead by $1, police reported today. The supposed victim of the 7 p.m. heist was Donald New· berry, 42, owner of the shop at 17091 Newland Street. Police said a man gave Newberry one dollar and asked for change. But when the shop owner opened the cash register to oblige, he found himself looking down the barrel of a revolver. "DUCK," YELLED Newberry as he hit !he deck behind the counter and scrambled into the nearby storeroom. The alarm \vas shouted to shop employes and patrons who either called police or ran outside in time to see the \Vould be ban· dit jump into an old yellow pickup truck and speed off. THE POLICE REPORT concludes, "The victim has no furth- er information at this time other than he got the suspect's dollar but the suspect got no money from him." Newport Beach Council Threatens Zoning Lawsuit By JOHN ZALLER 01 ltlt IMOy l'lklt Stlll A majority of Newport Beach coun· cilmen said Monday they're thinking o! suing the California C.Oastal Zone Conservation Commission for alleged "usurpation of local authority.'' But CQuncilrnen said they probably "''on 't press a lawsuit unless the coastal commission continues in what Lhey see as threats to local authority. Mayor Donald Mcinnis brought up the subject at an afternoon study session. Councilmen were attempting to come to terms with stiff new parking re· quirements imposed by the South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commission. "We're the ones who should decide how many parking spaces a development needs /' Mcinnis said. "We're given that power by the State of California," he said. "yet it is the coastal commission that is exercising that power and nobody has yet cballeng- . ed the coastal commission." Newport Beach is angry because it re· quires only two parking spaces for a duplex while the coastal commission has refused to approve duplexes in the city unless they have four off-street spaces. The mayor's strong remarks brought an immediate response from Councilman Richard Croul. "Let's challenge it ourselves," Crout said. Mcinnis, Vice Mayor Howard Rogers and CrouJ all opposed proposition 20 last November, when it went before the voters. Support for a lawsuit also came from Councilman Paul Ryckoff , who did sup- port Proposition 20 last November. "We're faced with a situation where we have to bastardize our structures in order to meet the coastal commission's requirement lhat we have two parking spaces for each living unit," Ryckoff complained. •'This concerns me very much." Mayor Mclnnis then made another reference to a possible lawsuit. "I don't know how far the coastal commission should be allowed to go without a challenge. Somewhere there's a line, and when it's cros.sed, you have to consider lega l remedies to protect yourself." After the meeting, Mcinnis expanded on his remarks. Reiterating his belief that the city has the right to regulate developments "and not any appointive body of people who do not have to stand for .electioo." "I don't mean to threaten anyone but we all have a point where we draw the line. "We may aet;CPt this requirement for tv.·o parking spaces. But if the coastal co.mrnission keeps doing more and more, we could reach the point where we have to do something. "Before we would pursue a lawsuit," he added, "We of course would exhaust all administrative possibilities. And J sin- cerely hope we could stop short of a suit." Maude Program Rankles Bishop HARTFORD, C-Onn. (UPI) -The Most Rev. John F. Whealon, Roman Catholic archbishop of Hartford, plans to resign from a television program cormnittee because of a decision to carry two con- troversial programs of the "Maude" television situation con1edy beginning to- night. Whealon told the wnc program ad- visory committee he is resigning because the station has insisted on carrying the programs which deal with abortion and vasectomy. "I see this action by CBS and WTIC as a use of TV to advance the doctrine that abortion is an acceptable solution to an inconvenient pregnancy," \Vhealon said. $750,000 Lawsaiit Comity Suit Awaiting Laguna Niguel Decision By JAN WORTH Of rlle DallW' l'lr.t Sllff An attorney for Kaufman and Broad de velopers said Monday the company's $750,000 suit against Orange County "is just sitting" until the intent or the Board of Supervisors regarding land planning in Laguna Niguel is clarified. Attorney Rodger Howell said the com· pany is willlng to wait until the 1983 Land Use Element required by state law is passed in late August to pursue the legal action. The company began the suit becau~ or delays on a 32-acre tract on both sides or Niguel Road west or Crown Valley Parkway scheduled for condominiums. Following deletion of the Pacific Coast 1''retway route through the area last fall, the county planning depattment Initiated a series of downzoning proposals on parcels along the route . Last week the Board of Supervisors den!~ 4 to O one of those proposals which would have changed density on the Kauf- man and Broad tract from 11 units per acre t.o four. That dccbion connict.• with an emer· gency ordinance plAced on Kaufman and Broad last January by the supervisors which limits density on the tract to five units until Sept. I J. The ordinance was passed under pressure from the Laguna Niguel Homeowners and the county planning department, who said development should not be permitted until the traffic corridor situation was studied. But no restrictions were placed on most ot the other developers in the area. "We never wanted Kaufman and Broad singled out for an emergency ordinance," Jim Thompron, homeowners president, sald Monday. "We felt that all tracts In the area should be re-studied." Both Howell and Thompson Indicated t.hey would be willing to compromise on a density somewhere between the tJ units now allowed and the five units proposed in the emergency ordinance. A den~lty of 6. 7 dwelling units per acre is set on the area surrounding the Kaul· man and Broad tract tn the 1983 Land Use Element recommended by the county planning commis~don in July. At Monda y's regular meeting, the com· mission postponed decisions on two other 1-aguna Nigue l zoning proposals 10 Oct. l following Board of Supervisors action on the land use element. ( Dl.ICUSllng the Abplanalp inlerview with reporten Monday, deputy press aecrttary Gerald L. Warren said: "There really ls no difference in what Mr. Abplanalp is saying and what we have said, and to allow thb 11ltualion, or to encourage it, as 1 must say that the White House had a hand in the other situation (meaning reports on govern · ment improvements on the Florida and catifomia White Houses) to encourage thls one to become distorted would be a disservice. "It will be cleared up once and for all, and within the month," said Warren. He described u a "semantical game" Abplanalp'! contention that there was no corporation, in contrast to the White House announcement that it was a holding company or an investment com· pany. "Our desire here is to clear this matter up, once and for all, so that misim- pressions don't grow and exist and con- tinue." * * * 'Semantics' Get Blame for Nixo1i Home Conflict WASIIlNGTON (AP) -An appareni disagreement in statements from the While House aod the man who helped President Nixon buy b1s California home was merely "a semantical problem," ac· cording to Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren. Warren said Monday that no cor· poration was involved in the purchase of part of the Nixon estat~ at San Clemente. He refused to give further details, however, saying that a complete state. ment is being prepared and will be released within a month. A part or the Nixon estate was purchased by industrialist R o b e r t Abplanalp, and 18.!lt May the Whlte House said 23 acres had been bought ,by an in· vestment company formed by Abplanalp. However, in a newspaper article Abplanalp said there was no corporation involved. Warren explained that the difference was semantic, noting that Abplanalp used the terms "holding company" and "joint venture.'.' Jn refusing any further comment, War~ ren said he wants to avoid pieeemeal stories whlch, he said, could lead to "mlsimpressions and distortions." He complained that stories about governmeot s e c u r i t y and com- munications spending at Nlxon's homes and offices in California and F1orida have been misleading. Porno Mailer Draws 4 Years LOS ANGELES (API -William Pinkus, 50, has been sentenced to four years in prison and fined $500 on his con- viction of nationwide mailings of obscene materials as a business enterprise. Pinkus remains free on $1,500 pending appeal after Monday's sentence by U.S. Dist. Judge Lawrence T. Lydick. He was convicted of 11 counts last month. T11e Los Angeles man, doing business as Rosslyn News C.otnpany and Kamera, distributed advertisements, magazines and films. In 1967 he was convicted for selling a stag film but the decision was reversed by an appeals court and a 4-4 U .S. Supreme Court decision upheld the reversal. O.ltr l'llot S!tlf l'hOlt Sawdust at Night Laguna Beach's Sawdust Festival throbs with life at night as artists and craftsmen and their potential customers rub elbows in the nar- row confines between stalls on the fe stival grounds. The Sawdust, which began about four years ago as a protest against the established Festival of Arts, now has a permanent air about ii. From Pagel BODIES SOUGHT ... information arising," Chambers County Sheriff Louis Otter said. The four bodies were unearthed in the Oiambers County resort of High Island as spectators including bikini-clad girls watched. The first grave found Monday actually was discovered by a truck driver poking the beach with a stick Sunday night. ".When I brought the stick up, it had a bad odor," George Leger said. Leger took Police to the spot and the 24th body was recovcred before the morning fog had a chance to bum away. Later in the morning and two.miles away from . the spot where the 24th body was found, a road grader digging in a patch of sand turned black by decomposing bodies unearthed the 25th Victim. A couple of hours latei, early Monday afternoon, deputies digging \\'ith shovels found the 26th and 27th victims in one shallow grave. Their nude bodies were tied together head to foot. In 1971, the bodies of 25 farm hands were found buried along the feather River in Northern Calilornia in what was, until Monday, the worst knov.·n mass murder in the United States this century. Juan V. Corona, a migrant labor contractor, is serving a life prison ter1n for those slayings. It "'as learned also today that o 15· year-0Jd girl linked to the case wa s Henley 's fiance and that she had also dated some boys believed to be victims. She and Henley had planned to leave Houston together within the next few months. Betty Cobble, the mother of one of the known victims, Charles C. Cobble. lS. said the girl is "quite beautiful and sexy. She looks 18 but is only IS. She is a sv:cet. cooperative child. .., bclil'Ve 1ny ~ys kn<'\V Henley through the girl." ~trs. Cobble said. "They al\\·ays used to sit on Henley's porch talking \vith tht! girl and the other neighborhood children.'' The mother of 1-~rank Aquirre, 19, ~·ho also lived in the same area of Houston, k:no'vn as The 11cights, said her son had been da tlng the girl before he disap- peared. The father of nnoth<'r known victim , Fred Hilligiest, said his son attended the sa me junior high school with ·the girl and "most probably knew her." Seventeen of the bodies were found in a- Houston . boat shed C.Orll rented in 1969. Four bodies \Vere found in the East Tex .. as pine forests near Broaddus and the rest ha\'e been found on High Island . Police also dug J\1onday in the grounds in back of Corll's candy factory, also located in The Heights. A woman told poliCi! she remembered seeing Corll several times late at night digging in back of his small fa ctory: the "roman said Corll told her was burying rot ten candy. The woman said she never t ght anything more about it until C.Or ~·as killed and the first bodies discovered last week. Nothing "'·as found in an hour's digging Jn back of the factory. T1·icia Backs Father · \\I ASHI NGTON (AP ) -Tri cia Nixon· Cox was quoted today ns saying "I know 1ny lather \Viii never give up the tapes• because that would be some thing that is compl etely allen to our system of govern-ment. •1 A LICENSE NOT TO STEAL- Unfortunately for the general public, there are a lot of people installing carpeting who shouldn 't be. Unbelievably, many carpet "contractors'' are working unlowfully without insurance ond stole licenses. FOR YOUR PROTECTION you should insist that the people who install your carpeting work for a contractor who is INSURED and STATE LICENSED. (He is required by state law to be both.) Stole licensed contractors hove to post a bond for your protection, and 'llie'very accompli1hme"t of licensing indicates a def lie-of competency. The biggest problem In dealing with an unlicensed contractor is tho! he might be out of businelS tomorrow. Don't take a chance -call Alden's for reliability, and the best installotion around! ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPt:S 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: M"'. 'lllrw Thurs., t 10 1:30 -FU, 9 lo t -SAT., 9:30 lo 5 ' • - Huntington Beaeh Fountain ·Valley ED ITION ' Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 66, NO. 226, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES • TEN CENTS ORANGE CO UNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESOA Y, AUGUST 14, 1973 • ,s hooting Vic ti m To Surgery •• By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of t1M D .. l'f l'IMt ltlff A Huntington Beach man, who police believe is the victim of a love trian.gle shooting, is expected. to undergo sw?gery lod¥Y at Orange CoW1ty Medical Center. Dooald1 Joseph Beaulieu, 39, of 6200 Edinger Ave. \Vas allegedly shot in the s}\oulder with a .38-caliber revolver 11 he 1.1ruggled with Ramey Ray Stroud, 26, or 16671 Swan Lane. _PolLce booked Stroud on attempted murder charges but said today they are still tryiil& to pl...; together the inciden'-' that led to the shooting in Stroud's home at 12:30 a.m. today. Both Stroud and his wile. Sallie Margaret Stroud, •!so 26, have refused to talk to invUUgators. • Aecording to Beal1lieu. he bad been dating Mrs. Stroud £or the past few months. He told officers he believed she had been divorced for two years. He told police that he was visiting Mrs. Stroud late Monday night when Stroud "-'3lked In the house. Acoording to Beaulieu's police state- ment. he thought at first the man was his girl rriend's brother but she told him, "Thal's my husband, Ray ." Stroud allegedly had the gun in hi s hand and Beaulieu, who is a Los Angeles fireman. lunged toward Stroud to gel the gun &IA'_ay. Even though he \11as shot, Beaulieu said he managed to get the gun from the hus- band while Mrs. Stroud called 'officers. 'Tht firat policemen on the scene ~ they found Mrs. Stroud tending Bea1 ~ieu'1 wound and Stroud lY1nl face down oo the Door wltb hls bands crossed behind him "' II tie were handculled. Wonieit's Gro~p • Forms Tree Unit A new rommillee has been formed by the women 'a division of the Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce to organize the Huntington B."e a ch Envirorunental ColUICll's lq!COMing tree.· planting campaign. Their first meeUng Is set for Wednesday. Elaine Craft, chairman ol the com- mittee, said the first goal is lo develop orilinances that would oontrol the plant- ing and removal of trees in the city, as well as lo designate landmark trees. The committee aJso wants to begin a campaign to plant tree! on private, school. residential, business and In- dustrial, as well as pubUc properties. Boy on Bicycle .Struck by Auto A 5-ycar-old Huntington Beach boy is in satisfactory cooditlon today after being ltijured Mien his bicycle was struck by a car. Jolrl David Elliott. of 8!0"l Anthony Drive, was riding his bicycle on the .l\'!"Cllli side ot the atreet and puJJed into the poth ol a car driven by Susan L. Grey, 17 of 1651 Hastings Clr<le. police Saki. The accident ocairred at J: 15 p.m. Monday on Has ting! near Ross Lane. 1be child is being treated at HW1tlngton lntercommunJty llospltal. Coast Weather Little temperature change Is er· pected for the Orange Coast • -Wednesday, with the UJUa!. low clouds and log holding down beacb temperatures to II. Hicbs Inland expected In the upper !Os. INSIDE TODAY· Joseph P. Kenntdy 111, son of the late Sen. Robu& F. Kenned11, mf.ssed a curve O'll Nantucket Is- land and flipped his Jeep, serf. oual11 injurina one of five gtrls 1 in the vehtclt and his brother, Dovfd, See .story, Page 4. L.M, aoy411 '°'""' ' C1llftl'lll1 Cltnltltlll • Ct111lc:t c,.. • .,,.. OHttl Nolktt •.. ..,.., , ... •~ttrt•l11111tnl ~llllMO """ tfl1 ""'"' ~ "-"" - 0.llY Pu.t St•ll PMl1 LIFEGUARD SWEET DISPLAYS NOTE AND OLD BOT TL E Seaman Victor Dubrowski, Wh•re Are You Now? Note Fro111 Past Yictar t..ee Dubrowski was a seaman aboar<I 111" •USS OklahOma Clly fn 196t alld wooclued what would happen If he put a note in a bottle and dropped It overboard. So he scribbled his name and home ad- dress on a small piece of papCr. stuck it in an old brown beer bottle, plugged it ~·ith a cork and gave it a heave. He got his answel'I Monday. It washed ashore near the Ne\vport Pier. Newport Beach lifeguard Chris Sweet said lhis morning the botUc was found by a µ.year-old Garden Grove youngster named James Weir. But Victor Lee Dobrowski may never know whit bapp<nea: He lived In S<lntt!dale. Al1~. lJ• yean ago, but a check ol. the telephone oompany'S in- formation assistance in Arizona says there is no Dubrowski in Scottsdale . . Lilegu~rd SWeet says he is going to send a leUer with the note in it to the Soottsdale address, anywa,Y. in hopes the Postal Service will be able to forward ii. The note scrawled on a tattered four- inch square piece of paper says only : "To whom it may concern, upon find- ing ~ with name, date found and any comment to Seaman Victor Le e Dubrowski. Dropped June 28, 1961, off USS Oklahoma City. Send to 8220 El Monte, Scottsdale, Arizona. Thank you.'' Newport Beach Council Tln·eatens Zoning Law suit By JOHN ZALLER Of me O.llr P'lkll Stiff A majority of Newport Beach coun- cilmen said Monday they're thinking of suing lhe Cttlifomia Coastal Zone Comervation Commission for alleged "usurpation of local aµthqrity." But councilmen said they probably . won't press" a lawsuit ·unJess the coastal commission continues in what they see as threats to local autborily. Mayor Donald Mcinnis brought up the subject at an ·afle,moon study ~k>p.· Comicilrnen were attempti i.g to come to terms with surf n.ew pnrking 're- quiremeflla lmpOsod by the South ·Coast Region~l .zone COnsetvauon Commission. "We're «ie ones who should decide how many ~r~ing spaces a dcvelopn1enl needs," Mcinnis said. , "\Ve're given that power by the State or Callfornfa," he said. "yet It is the coastal commission that is exercising t~t power afKt nobody has yet challeng- ed •the coastal commission." · Newport Beach ls angry because it re- quires only two parking spaces for a duplex wblle the coastal commission has · retused to approve duplexes ln the city un1 ... , Uley,hah lqui; orr .. tr<et spal:es. The mayor•1 stiOag reinarka . broueht an lmmedl* ,....,..... lroin Coundlman Richard Cn:luJ. ..Let's challenge it ourselves,'' Croul said. Mctnnls, Vice Mayor Howard Rogers and Crout all opposed proposition 20 last November, when it went before the voters. Support for a lawsuit also came from C.Ouncilma'n Paul Ryckoff, who did sup- port ProposlUon 20 last November. "Wa're faced with a Situation where we have to bastardize our structures in order to n1eet the coastal commiSsion's requlr'emcrit that we have two pat"klng spaces for en ch living unit," Ryckorr complained. "This concerns me very much." Mayor MclMis then made another reference to a possible lawsuit. "I don't know how far the coastal commisaJon should be allowed to go without a challeoge. Somewhere there's a line., and when it's crossed , you have to Consider legal remedies to protect yourself." After the meeting, Mcinnis expanded on his remarks. Reiterating his belief that the . city, bas the right to regulate developments 0 and not any appointive body ol .people who .do not have to stand for election." "I don't mean to threaten anyone but we aU have a point where we draw the line. . . . • • . · "We may accept this requirement for t"'"O ' parking, spaces, ·But if the coastal commiss~on keePs doing more and more, we could.reach the point where we have to do something. "Before we would plll'sue a lawsuit ," he added, "We or course would exhaust all administrative P.Ossibilities. And I sin· ccrely hope we couJd stop short of a suit." Councilman Milan Dostal, speaking after the meeting, said he agreed with !See USURP, Page !) Volun~er E yed For 'Careline' - A volunteer coordinator for Carellnc is needed, reports Ken White of the Hun- tington Beach Public Library. Carellne is a commllnity directory se rvice orrerlng referral lnformallon to other agencies and services in the com· munlty. It I> operated by the Huntlnflon Beach Community SCrVices Councl ln eooporatlon with the Huntington Beach Public Lbirary, which is Its base of operations. The volunteer, coordinator 1s a non- payln[ poslUon, and 1requires someono who can provide. backup st.ipport and supervise volunteers who operate the line. Interested peraoos should contact -Kon White at 53&-M79. West County Police Hit Death Suit Filed A IS00.000 wrongful death suit bas !>Oen filed against the cities of Fountain Valley and Westminster and one police officer from each town in the April 13 shooting of Miguel Ronquillo, 20. Amelia E. and Guadalupe Ronquillo, 11789 Amethyst St., FOWltain Valley, fil- ed the suit in Orange County Superior Court claimblg that negligence on the part or the police officers caused the death of their son. Miguel Ronquillo was killed April 13 by Westminster Patrolman Timothy Miller after Ronquillo and four other youths had escaped from Fountain Valley officers. Officials End Texas Digging For Bodies HOUSTON (UPI) -An East Texas sheriff said today a hand-written map, first believed to show possible new gravesites, was not connected to a homosexual murder ring responsible for the deaths of 27 boys. He said there \vould be no more digging for victims. San Augustine County Sheriff John Hoyt said the map, found in a cabin used by a homosexual bachelor accused in the case, pinpointed several locations in the San Jacinto National Forest in southeast Texas. . But he said the isolated plot circled on the map were not more burial sites. "It bas nothing to do with this case,'" Hoyt ea.id. "We have checked it out en- tirely and there is no oomection at all. It may be a map of .some cabins of some other ~· ... ~ "'""" 1"_ ~ W' K ' nut:11 ·map was ~vverec, l1&er County ·Sllerilf,W;-D •• Wbite said be sent hlS deputies to oeor<ll> tbe bocfnooods dirt roads near New Waverly, Tex. They found no trace of more burial grounds. Hoyt questioned one of the teen-aged suspects in the case in a Houston jail cell during the day lo detennine if the map ·was "good evidence or bad evidence." The sheriff said the ma}J, shovels, plastic body bags, three pairs or gloves, one tinted with lime, and a partially used sack of quicklime were found at the cabin near Lake Sam Rayburn owned by the father of Dean Allen C..U, 33. · Most of the bodies found at three loca- tioos in Texas were wrapped in plastic bags and sprinkled with lime. Houston Police Chief Hennan Short disclosed Monday tbat a "torbae board" -the item allegedly used by Corl! to sti ap his victims to torture and kill them -was found in the cabin. All the victims were teenage boys !See BODIES, Page !) Ex-Con gressman Sc hmitz' Child Drowns in Pool The 3-year-old son of former Orange County Congressman John G. Schmiti died this morning in Hoag · Memoria1 Hospital. Newport Beach. The ebild of the one-time presidential hopeful fell into the family pool Monday afternoon. Phillip James Schmitz was tn;ated in the hospital intensive care unit from shortly after 4 p.m. Monday. He had been rushed there by Newport Beach police helicopter. Schmitz and his \Vife kept a sleepless vigil through the night at the hospital. Ne"'port Beach police and liremen , called to the Schmitz home at 10 Mission Bay in Spyglass Hill shortly before 4 p.m. ~1onday1 said the caller believed the child had drowned. "He was n9t breathing. He had no heartbeat,'' police said. Newport Beach firemen began ad· ministering heart massage and oxygen. Police Officer Hurd Armstroog arrived moments later and called for the police helk:opter, whieh landed In the str<et in front or the ScJunltz home and rushed the youth to the hospital. . Mrs. Sdunill said she does not know for sure bow long Pbllllp bad been In the water. "'I took his lifejacket off so he could go to the biithroom," l\.1rs. Schmitz said. "No one saw him go back outside or get Into the pool." She said he could have cli1nbed or h~llen into the pool during a !~minute period while she was ln t~e house, but she said her older children, Jerry. 141 and Mary K~, 11, were ln the pool all the Ume and didn't notice Phillip. 11We were all lhere.u she said. .. I don't !<now how It collllfhave,happencd.'" Mrs. SChmitz said the pool In the family~s new borne had been complctCct only Thursday. I The youths had been stopped an hour earlier on suspicion of drunken driving but broke away from the fll'St two patrolmen and scattered on foot through a neighborhood in northeast Fountain Valley. Fountain Valley police thought Ron - quillo had a pistol , so when Miller and Fountain Valley Patrolman Robert ~Iosley approached him, they had their pistols unholstered. Miller told investigators that Ronquillo \\•as facing a block wall and \llhen he was approached, he lurched back\vard into f\U\ler 's pistol, causing it to go off. The Orange County Grand Jury originally heard the case and ruled the officers innocent ol any wrongdoing. The Orange County Human Relations Commission, holvever, is still looking into the case. according to commission direc- tor l\1orry Lindros, and may ask the Grand Jury to hear one final report on it. Lindros, hvwever, indicated the human relations commission has slo\.\·ed down its investigation after offering some ad- ditional information, He sa id the commission's study of it is entirely separate from the civil suit filed by Ronquillo's parents. Colleets Bandit Loses $1 in Muffed Heist A HUNTINGTON BEACH sandwich shop owner matched \vits with an armed robber Monday and came out ahead by $1, police reported today. The supposed victim of the 7 p.m. heist was Donald New- berry, 42, owner of the shop at 17091 Newland Street. Police said a man gave Newberry one dollar and asked for change. But when the shop owner opened the cash register to oblige, he found himself looking down the barrel of a revolver. "DUCK," YELLED Newberry as he hit the deck behind the counter and scrambled into the nearby storeroom. The alarm was shouted to shop employes and patrons who either called police or ran outside in time to see the would be ban- dit jump into an old yellow pickup truck and speed off. THE POLICE REPORT concludes. "The victim has no furth· er information at this time other than he·got the suspect's dollar but the suspect got no money from him ." Juarez Colony's Leader Recovers Fro1n Wounds By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of t1M DallY P'li.t Stiff It's been three months since Adelaide Luna, bleeding from several bullet wounds1 was found in a car stopped for. rnaking an illegal tum. When she was first taken to Fountain Valley Community liospital, doctors didn't have much hope for her survival. But today she is baek at her home in the Colonia Juarez trying to thank all the people that lent their support to her and her family during her stay in the hospital. "lt'11 impossible to thank everyone personally," she said. "But I do want to let them knolv that l 'm gratefuJ and I've not forgotten them." Mrs. Luna, 44, was shot several times in the head, arm and ba ck by a .22- caliber revolver allegedly \vielded by Richard Morones of Santa Ana. Morones was arrested and is awaiting trial. Prior to the shooting, Mrs. Luna was an active leader in the Colony and served as director of. the Community Center there for four years. She will not be able to reswne that job for some time yet. During the summer, her 18-year-old daugtiter, Becky, ran the center. A tem- porary replacement is being sought for the duration of Mrs. l.Ama's recuperation. She says sbe is not sure bow long that reeuperation will take because thiee bullet.s are still lodged in her body' and additional surgery is required to get them out. In an interview In her home at 10371 Ca lle lndependencia, Mrs. Luna noted that she has not been saddled with a huge medical bill for her month-long hospitalization. fl.lost of her bills have been taken care of by Medi.cat and through a trust fund set up for her and her children at the Fountain Valley branch of Bank of America. '"I would like to take this opportunity to thank everyone for their prayers and Diiiy l"llOt Stitt """• STILL RECU PERATING Colonia Juarez' Luna acts Of kindness both du.ring my stay al the hospital and now 'Vflile I'm recuperating," she sa id. Those acts of kindness have incl uded bringing meals to her three children while she was hospitalized and a nearly end.less stream of flo\\'crs and get well cards. ·"I can't drive ye t and people arc still helping out, taking me to the doctors and running errands. I don't know what we would have done without all this," she said. Nixon Home Gu est Book Re fl ects Mood Ch anges YORBA I.I NDA (UPI) -The leather bound guest register oulsi4e the small, white frame house on a back street here tells a story. tl is the house where Richard Nixon was born. The guest register is put out for those visitors to the: site who want to leave their names behind. It is now · the home of a maintenance man for a nearby s¢hool. The Nixon Birthplrce Foundalton pu'-' out the guest book In a converted telephone booth on weekends. It contatns obout 1,200 signatures now. Remarks late last year and early lhls year ran to such as: Oct. 29 -"You're great, Nixon." M•n:h 4 -'"Thank God for Mr. Nb· on." In May. with the lljlClllng of the televl1- ed Stnate Watergate hearings, a dif- ferent type of comment appeared in the !Stt COMMENTS, Pace %1 • DAILY Pl OT H NICKEL CRI!t1E, NICKEL FINE llOCXLAND, Main• (AP ) -"It was a five-cent ttime and dtSt.rved a flve-«nl fine," DI.strict Court Judge Paul A. M!l('llocald &aid. He llApped tile nlckel penally on James V. Peters, 20, after the youth pleaded guilty Monday to Uttering a street with 3 soda bottle cap. The judge saJd the police went.too far in bringing such a case to court. Newport OKs Land Spread At Airport Without a word of discussion, Newport Beach city councilmen voted unanimously Afonday to seek an extension of the city's sphere of influence to Include Orange Co1D1ly Airport. Councilmen also unanimously reaf- rirmed their Intention to eventually an- nex at least part of the Irvine Company coastline property souUt of Corona de! Mar. The move to the aiport marks out the county-owr.ed airfield for p<>ssible future annexation, although the movt: may be a means of countering a similar claim filed by Ciosta Mesa two months ago. The council balked at quick action on City Manager Robert L. Wynn's recom· mendation that the dty declare the undeveloped coastline below Corona del Mar as part of the city's sphere of in- fluence. The council later did accept Wynn 's recommendation, but only after con· siderable discussion of the issue at the afternoon study session. The city made its declaration or spheres of influence in preparation for a heaMng before the Local Agency Forma· tion Commission (LAFC) later this month. The LAFC can accept or reject Newport Beach's proposed spheres of in· fluence. Although the council did not discuss the reasons for wanting the airport wiUtin tbe city's sphere of influence, city Manager Wynn explained the city posi· lion last week in an Interview. Wynn said Newport Beach's prime con- cern was that the airport not be placed in CQsta Mesa's sphere. Annexation of the airport by Costa Mesa be said, cou1d ·mean that Newport Beach would not have influence over operation of the airport. The airport is currently owned by the County of Orange and administered by the county Board of Supervisors. In discussing the downcoast area, between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach, councilmen Carl Kym la and Paul Ryckoff argued that the city ought to hedge its sphere of influence request with a disclaimer. "We have no present intention to annex that area ," sald RyckoU, "and I am con~ cerned. that by declaring it part of our sphere of influence we might start up a sequence of events where we have no choice but to annex." Kymla ezpressed a similar concern. He suggested that a council policy stating reservations about annexations in the downcoast area be attached to the city's formal declaration of sphere of influence over the area. Mayor Donald A. ?\1Clnnis opposed the two councilmen, arguing that attachment of disclaimers would weaken the city's position when it appeared before LAFC. Int.he fo rmal city council meeting later . that nJght COWlcilmen voted with little additional discussion to adopt Mcinnis' posiUon that no disclaimer should be at~ tacbed. The decision was unanimous. Tricia Backs Father WASHINGTON (AP) -Tricia Nixoo Qxr: was quoted today as saying "I know my father will never give up the tapes became that would be something that is completely alien to our system of govern· JnC:nt ... OlANGI COAST HI DAILY PILOT TM~ CHll DAILY ,.rLOt wilt! .... !(ft 11 CIM'lblllld·fM H-1.Prn1, It. 11Ulllllh9G b'f M ~ CM1t ,.llbllllll!!O COIT!INll'f, S- ,_.. lll"ltrot •r• pub!llMll, Morw::llV l~ro1191! ,.,_,, ,..,. Coll• Mn1, N....,,ort fl••'~' .... ton 11acll/1'-11111 v11i..,, L•IVM ~ IN"'9/hddl1Hck 11'111 k~ Cim.t"l•I 1M J~ OIPlllrlM. 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C..,._.., as """' fl C.rnlno 11..t T1l1r•••• f714J '4MIJ1 ca ...,. ,u,.,, . .._ .. 1.t111 ..... -Ch' ..... c-11' '--'tlet _,Ut ~' ltti. ~ C-1 •.-ii.fit ... ~\"· Ne MWI ._..,.._ 1Hw1r1111M, .....,.... • _,,.. tr ~ 1*1111 _,. .. ......,.. wilMllt ..... , ... -----~---· ........ i.. ........ i!I .. ~ .-.... __ .... _ .... ~: W -11 U,lf _..,,., fl'lf""'1 F 1 •*"' 11.M _.,.,., Tutsday, Aug11'l 14 lq/J Expert Says Rizzo Lied Over Deal PHILADELPHIA (UPI! A po!y11raph expert said today tests show that ~1ayor Frank L. Rizzo lied aboul an alleged pollllcal patronage deal , but the mayor insisted he "unequivocally told !he truth." \\'arren Holmes, an expert from l\tiami , Fla., said lie detector tests given A-1onday to Rizzo, Deputy fl.1ayor Phillip Carroll and Democratic city chainnan Peier Camie! showed Rizzo and Carroll lied about the alleged deal tendered in a hotel men's room last February. Camie! charged that Rizzo offered to give him the choice of architects for city projects if the mayor could select lht: party's endorsed candidale for district attorney. Holmes said he questioned the three only about the alleged deal in the men 's room. He said U1e tests showed that Rizzo lied on his response to she of 10 questions, Carroll to five of nine questions and that Camie! •·told the truth" on all JI ques· lions he was asked. Holmes' report on his finding was car. ried in today's issue of the Philadelphia Daily News, which arranged for the voluntary lie detector tests. Rizzo told a news conference shortly after the newspaper came out that "I want to tell you publicly, Rizzo and Car- roll told the truth -unequivocally told the truth. We will go before any court in the land and put our hand on the Bible." Rizzo said he was "sick to n1y stomach" when he learned of Holmes' findings and said ''my credibility might be affected by the headline 'Rizzo Lied .' " But he termed this a "temporary set· b~ck" and said ''the issue here is who has been corrupt. As a result of this test. T will not back off. We will pursue all facets of corruption in government." Carroll claimed that a list they showed Camie! in the men's room of the Bellevu~tratford Hotel last February was a list of eight city projects in which City Council President George Schwartz had "excessive involvement." Rizzo said "I have great confidence in the polygraph. I believe it is an excellent machine. But when I know in my heart I told the truth, then there must be something wrong." Workers Seize Clirysler Pla1it Jn, Labor Fight DETROIT (UPI) -The Chrysler Corp.'s big Mack Avenue stamping plant was shut down today after a fired worker allegedly attacked two security men with a pipe and about 300 workers seized con-- trol of the plant. It was the third Chrysler facility hit by labor problems ln three weeks and the second seized by workers' groups. A six· day wildcat strike at Chrysler's key Detroit Forge plant ended Monday. "We're prepared to stay until all our demands are met," one worker shouted through a closed gate. Among the demands were that all workers fired in any disturbance be rehired and there be no disciplinary ac· lion against any worker taking part in lhe disturbance. Several radical groups not affiliated with the Chrysler workers were passing out socialist literature outside the plant early t<Xiay. Chrysler said the incident started \\'hen tv:o men. former employe WiUiam Gil breth and another uni dent if I ed employe, shut down a framing depart~ ment on UJe second floor of the plant when Gilbreth sat on the framing con· veyor line. Gilbreth was discharged several days ago. Huge Pay llike Bogs SACRAMENTO (AP) -A plan to hike the California governor's pay $10,900 a year bogge<I down in its first committee !('st A-fonday when a move was suggested lo tag on a salary increase for the 120 state legislators. "It's the wrong time." the author, Assemblyman WI I I i a 111 Bagley (R..san Rafael ), said or the legislative pay hike proposal. U"IT .... lt DEFENDING -Charles Med· ler, lawyer for accused mass killer Wayne Henley, says he thinks Henley's rights have been violated. From Page 1 BODIES ... allegedly procured by Elmer Wayne Henley, 17, and David Owen Brooks, 18, for Corll. Henley has admitted taking part in the torture, sexual abuse, murder and burial or some of the victims. Brooks said he helped Corll and Henley bury some victims but said he was not involved in the actual killings. Sheriff's deputies recovered four bodies 1\fonday on the beach east of Galveston, raising the number of victims to 27. Offi cers indicated after the digging J\1onday that the four bodies recovered on the beach would be the last found there. "We will not do any more work today in Chambers County unless there is new information arising," Chambers County Sheriff Louis Otter said. The four bodies were unearthed in the Chambers County resort of High Island as spectators including bikini.clad girls watched. The first grave foWld Monday actually \\•as discovered by a truck driver poking lhe beach with a stick Sunday night. "When I brought the stick up, it had a bad 00.or." George Leger said. Leger took police to the spot and the 24th body was recovered before the morning fog had a chance to burn away. Later in the morning and two miles a\\•ay from the spot where the 24th body was found , a road grader digging in a patch of sand turned black by decomposing bodies wiearthed the 25th victim. A couple of hoors later, early Monday afternoon, deputies digging with shovels found the 26th and 27th victims In one shallow grave. Their nude bodies w're tied together head to foot. ln 1971, the bodies of 25 farm hands were found buried along the Feather River in Northern California in what v.·as, until Monday, the worst known mass murder in the United States this century. Juan V. Corona, a migrant labor contractor, is serving a life prison term for those slayings. It was learned also today that a lS. year"'°ld girl linked to the case was Henley's fiance and that she had also dated some boys believe<! to be victims. She and Henley had planned to leave Hou ston together within the next few months. Betty Cobble, the mother of one of the kno\l'n victims. Charles C. Cobble, 15, said the girl is "quite beautiful and sexy. She looks 18 but is only 15. She is a s\1•eet, cooperative child. "I believe my boys knew Henley through the girl," Mrs. Cobble said. '"They always used to sit on Henley's JX>rch talking with the girl and the other neighborhood children." The mother of Frank Aquirre, 19, who also lived in the same area of Houston, known as The Heights, said her son had been dating the girl before be disap- peared. The father of another known victim, Fred Hilligiest, sald bis son attended the same junior high school with the girl and "most probably .knew her." Sevenleen of the bodies were found in a l·louston boat shed Corll rented in 1969. r-our bodies were f0W1d in the East Tex· as pine forests near Broaddus and the rrst have been found on High Island. Police also dug Monday in the grounds in back of Corll's candy factory, also located in The Heights. Re~ord Stands Cliicago Mari Killed 200 Girls NEW YORK (UPO -Herman Webster Mudgett, a one-time medical student, may have been the most infamous mass murderer o! all. tighty years ago, he \vas accused of killing more than 200 women and burying their bodies in his Chica go basement. Acco rdin g lo the recen tly published book "Bloodletlers and Badmen." by .Jay Robert Nai::h , Mudgett was born in Germantown, N .l·f.. and studied medicine at Attn Arbor, Mich. Mudgell, according to the book, lured to his house scores of women, mostly young girls he hired as "secretary.typists," got them lo sign over assets and insurance policies to him and then killed them with lethal gas. . In 1894, after the hou se had been burned and boarded up, Chica go pohce entered the building and found the remains of over 200 corpses in the basement, Nas h said. Mudgett confessed to 27 murders in interviews with news .. men but later recanted and said he was responsible for only two deaths. Ho was executed May 7, t896 for the murder or a petty thleL ZappiHeld As Fugitive In New York EAST MEADOW, N.Y. (AP ) -Etlorc Zappi, a reputed counselor to the Carlo Gambino organized crime family, re.· mained in custody "i thout bail today al the Nassau County Medical Center on Long Island. Zappl, 69, was a?Tested at his Massape· qua, N. Y. home Monday morning and charged wtth being a fugitive from j~lce in California. Los Angeles authorities want Zappi to answer charges ci. canspiracy involving the alleged sale of promotion of obscene materials. Zappl has claimed to have a heart con· dition. After the arrest, detectives of· fered him the choice of riding to court in a police car or being taken by ambulance to the medical center. He chose the lat· ter. He was arraigned at the bospital by Nassau County Judge L. S ~an l e y Rosenthal, who declined to set any ba il and put off extradiUon proceedings for 30 days. The judge advised Zappi's lawyer, J\1ichael DiLorenzo, that he could apply for bail in county court today. Zappi, who lives next door to Gambino, has been described by Nassau CoWlty Dist. Atty. William Cahn as the nwnber two man fn the Gambino crime "family.'' Zappl already is free on 12,000 bail oo a Santa Ana charge involving the sale and advertising ol obs<eoe material. He has refused to talk to a Nassau County gnmd jury that is probing tile in- filtration ol. organized crime into legitimate businesoes, -..ding be is too ill to witl13land the onteal Fro111PqeJ 'USURP' .. • the general position taken by the mayor. "Our disagreements with the coastal co mmission are not simply philosophical," be said. "They are legal I personally !eel that Proposition :l.O is unoonstltutiooal in some of the things it is trying to do." He said be was willing to eoosider a lawsuit to test the legal questicm if it became necessary. Only Councilman Carl Kymla said be would oppose a lawsuit. "The coastal commission has a clear mandate from the people to regulate development in the coastal zone," Kymla. "A vote o! the people super>edes any powers of zoning the city may have gotten from the state legislature." C.Ouncllman Joint Store was not available for comrnent. City Attorney Denis O'Neil said the council had not consulted him about the possibili ty of a lawsuit, although he said there were probably grounds for ooe if the city chose to pursue ooe. "My ears really perked up when I heard them talking about a ~wsuit," O'Neil said. "But I'm pretty sure it's still in the talking stage." BtISiness Flight Proves Costly A Newport Beach businessman who parked his car at Orange County Airport while he new out of the county on business wished he hadn't when he got home fl.fonday night, Orange County Sheriff's officers said. Salesman Robert Louis Bissonette, 50, of 3121 W. Pacific Coast Highway, told deputies calculators, golf equipment and an attache case and its contents valued at nearly $600 were taken by thieves who may have had a duplicate key to his late model car. Officers said they could !ind no llign of forced entry on the vehicle. -• Tlae Circus is Here Dtlrr ,..._. ,.... ..., u. ,.,.,IM' ., J l Elephant from Ringllng Bros. Barnum and Bailey Circus greets one of his fans after stepping off circus train in Anaheim. The 103rd edi - tion of the famed circus arrived in Orange County Monday and pa· raded to the Anaheim Convention Center where it will be appearing for the next week. • i Irvine Company Directors Meet, Delay Naming Chief Irvine Company directors met briefly today but did not elect a successor to late company president William R. Ml.900. Board <llairman, Jolm V. Newman, told company spokesmen, "The board did not fonnally address the question of a new president at the August meeting." The board met in Newport Beach cor· porate headquarters at 9:4S a.m. today. 'The agenda was limited to several routine administrative matters requiring board action at this time," the spokes- man said. Directors adjourned in memory ol. Mr. Ma.on who died sudd<nly laat month at the age of 54. He was president of tbt ranching and land dev<lopment !lrm Sino• 1965 and had served the firm sinco 1959. Since Mason'• death, Executive Vice President Raymond L. Watson baa oerv- ed as chief executive officer of the finn. Newman, who appointed Wabcll to the acting leadership post, today pntlsed Watson and the company management "for the continuing effectiveness of the company operatiorui despite the serious corporate and personal sense of loss at the death of Mr. Mason.'' There was no word from the company explaining the delay in selecting a suc- cessor or a replacement ror 1\-1ason on the seven-member board of directors. Newman was elected chainnan of the board at the June company stockholders meeting when personal tax adviser to the late James Irvine, N. [.()ya!L McLaren retired from the company board at the age of 81. A C!aremmt man, Howard Allen, wu elected to nn tl>ot VllCllllCY on the board. Others serving on the company board are Mrs. Atbelie (Joan) Irvin< Smith ol ~fiddleburg, Va. and Emerald Bly, Watson, Eastblu!f, Cbarlea S. Wbeder, ...,,,tary, o! Newport Beach and M. Keith Gaede of Lagwia Bea'ch. The company spokwnan declined 10 discuss the preclae nature ol the ad· ) ministrative matters beinr ocmsldered to- day other than to Indicate they involved ~ board .raUficallon of mana ge men t : decisions posslbjy r'lattd to sales of ; land. < F,....P .. eJ COMMENTS. •• margins. May 26 -11Watergate-Waterloo." May 20 -"Sad atatement on Watergate" l ' • • But there were supporters still. I May 19 -"Just do your best" 1 June arrived, and the ten:>r took another downv.·ard tum. June 2 -"Get It together Dick" June 3 -"Let's wait till proven" June 23 -"Impeach him" June 23 -"Hang in there" Hurless Barton, a retired auto dealer ,• v.'ho is the president of .the Nixon " Birthplace Foundation, said he took the ; book in during July and early Augutt • because of ''th is Watergale buslnes.s" ~ and because he was afraid v1ndal1 would ~ deface it. ( ' I • A LICENSE NOT TO STEAL- Unfortunotoly for tho goneral pubrtc:, tharo aro • lot of people in1tollln9 carpeting who shouldn't be. Unboliovably, m1ny carpet "contractors" are worltlng unlawfully without insurance and stale licon111. FOR YOUR PROTECTION you should insist that tho poople who install your carpeting work for o contractor who is INSURED ond STATE UCENSED. (Ho !1 required by stole law to be both.) Stole ricen11d conlroctors have lo post • bond for your protection, end the very occompli1hm1nt of licensing indicole1 • dogroe of competency. Tho biggest problem in deoting with on unr.censecl controctor is tho! ho might be out of busino11 !omortow. Don't toko • chonco -coll Aldon's for roli1blhty, end tho bost in1tollotion oroundl ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MISA 646-4838 HOUIS: N-. 1'n n.n., t to 1:30 -Fii, t to f -SAT, t:JO to I ' • • ' I ' ' ' ' ' '• , • I \ ' ' \ , ' • ' ' \ • '· " ' \ I ' I • • ' • ' ·- -·· I • I Tt1tJday, August 14, lWl H DAil Y PILOT 3 Disclosures Due Soon on Nixon Villa . ' Doria Stymied Broken Cable Halts Search for Treasure FAIRHAVEN, Mass, (UPI) -More problems have beset an underwater ex· peqttlon wJ-Jch hoped to salvage riches frofh the sunken lin~r Andrea Doria - and its success appears in jeopardy. iwo form er Navy aquanauts were for~ed Mond ay to delay their attempt to penetrate the purser's office of the ~hip, \\'hlch rC!ts 250 feet below the surface of the Atlantic Ocean, because a cable becan1e entangled and broke. Repairing the 1 ;t-inch steel cord will interrupt salvage operations for an undetermined amount of time , according to crewmen on the support ship Nar- ragansett. One support diver, Da vid Lejeun of Phlladelphia, said the salvage expedition Accident 'Horrors' AEC Report Indicates Nuclear Plant Danger PH I LA 0 E L PH I A (UPl ~ Pennsy lvania Insurance Commissioner Herbert Denenberg has made public an Atomic Energy Co mmission report which ,NUCLEAR INSURANCE RATES EXAMINED-Editorial, Page 6 iftdicated a nuclea r power plant accident ci5uld claim a maximum of 45,000 lives and cause 100,000 injuries. Denenberg said Monday the 1965 study was buried in "thousands and thousands of pages of documents" at AEC's head- quarters and was di scovered by his in· surance department investigators. In remarks prepared for delivery to- day, he said the report's obscurity iJ. lustrated that the AEC \Vas part of an "atomic establishment'' which uses secrecy and confusion to stifle protest an d sub vert the public's right to know. Denenberg said the · ·a to m i c establishment" maintains a stianglehold on : nuclear energy policy decisions by saying the issues are too technical for public onsumption. Denenberg's remarks "·ere to open three days of hearings sponsored by the state Insurance Department into the in· surance risk posed by nuclear power plants. Consumer advocate Ra lph Nader charged today that the AEC has prac- ticed "a massive coverup of most urgent reactor safety problems " for years. Nader, lea doff witness at the hearing. said a major accident in a nuclear power plant coo Id create ·a disaster area "equal to that of the state of Pennsylvania." Nader said hi s charge stemmed from a secret' AEC study done in 1965. Nader and the Union of Con~rned Scientists of Cambridge, Mass. said they had hundreds of AEC internal documents relating to nuclear power plant safety. "These voluminous internal f i I e s demonstrate that a ma ssive coverup of most urgent reactor safety problems has been practiced by the AEC for yea rs," Nader said . Nader said the AEC •'is licensing reac- tors in the face or overwhelming scien- ti fic evidence that the safety of these complex machines has not been proven." He said that "if nucl ear power plants \1•ere safe, they would be insurable ." Utiliti es and insurance companies will not take the tinancial ri sk of nuclear power plant accidents. "But the public is expooed, for the most part without their knowledge or consent, to the eoonnous .safety hazards of nuclear power plants," Nader said. War is Really Hell In Twentyi1n1e Pahns By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL ot 11'11 Deity Piiot $1111 MOST OF YO U readers \Vere still off in never-never land early Friday while th is writer was heading out Laguna Canyon for El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. It was one of those offbeat assign ments tl1at come along ever so often: an Invitation from the ?\-Iarines lo join them on an all-expense paid half-day trip to the fun and sun capital of the desert: Twentynine Palms. The occasion was the beginning of the BIGGEST mock war held on the wor ld's LARGEST f\.1a rine Corps Base. featuring the NEW· EST this and most GIGANTIC that. YOU KNOW THE show's going lo be big v.'hen the Marines provide you with your own escort. I \Vas n't com· plaining. At 6 in the morning l can usually use some help- ing around. probably will be discontinued by Thurs- day whether or not valuables can be recovered by then. Many participants are on leave from the Navy and have to return this week, he said. In an effort to speed the expeilition, a third diver, Robert Hollis of Hayward, Calif., joined the tea1n of Donald Rodock- er and Christopher DeLucchi , both of San Diego, at the ocean bottom Monday, \Vhere they are Jiving: in an underwater habitat. The trio are trying to recover some $1.1 million in cash and almost as much i,n jewelry, art objects an d other valuables -most of \vhich are believed still in the purser's office. The Andrea Doria sank July 26, 1956. after it collided \Vith the Swedish vessel Stockholm . All previous attempts to saJvage valuables from the wreck failed. Lejeun noted lhat the weather is ex- pected to turn seas choppy in future weeks, and make salvage work increas- ingly difficult. Bob Coffey, another diver aboa rd the Narragansett, said Rodocker and DeLuc- chi were in the process of cutting into the purser's office Monday when a cord at· tached to an acetylene torch they were using to cut away two steel doors was moved by ocean currents. It wrapped around an artificial forward funnel on the vessel, which he called a "smokestack." "It will only take about a half hour to Te pair ooce we get it up," Coffey said, "but the job is cleanng it and bringing it up. It's still tangled." Coffey said morale was "still super," despite the fact that "we've had so many problems, we're getting used to it." The enture already is almost two \veeks behind schedule, with much of the difficulty resulting from mechanical prob- lems and weather. Some $250.000 reportedly has been :spent so far on the expedition. Senate Approves School Auditing SACRAMENTO (AP) -State auditors could Jook over the books of local school districts to make sure state money under special grants is being ~pent properly un- der two bills approved by the state Senate. The measures by state Sen. Dennis Carpenter IR-Newport Beach), went to the Assembly Monday on identical 29 to 9 votes. One names the state Department of Finance to conduct the audits and the other specifies the state controlJe r. He introduced the double-barrelled ap- proach in an effort to get his bills through the Assembly. Ways and Means Committee, where similar legislati on died last year, Carpenter said. The bills are SB 17 and SB 18. Border Officers Seize Pot Worth $23,000 A San Diego woman was arrested !\·!on· day at the San Onofre checkpoint by U.S. Border Patrolm en who said thev found 230 poun ds of ma ri juana in her ca'r. Border patrolmen said they turned Lynn Poapst, 27, over to U.S. Customs agen ts and confiscated the marijuana. v.•orth roughly $23,000 on the illegal drug market. Sawdust at Nigltt D•llr Pltot Stiff l"f!tlo La guna Beach 's Sawdust Festival throbs with life at night as artists and craftsmen and their potential customers rub elbows in the nar- ro\v confines between stalls on the festival grounds. The Sawdust. \vhi ch began about four years ago as a protest against the establ ished J<'estival of Arts, now ha s a pern1anent air about it. Pe11dleton Marine Shot 111 Head; Wife Charged " A fllarine sergeant from Camp Pendleton was shot ln the head Monday <iftemoon and remains in critical con- dition loday while his wife is charged with assault with a deadly weaPon . The victim, Sgt. Sandy \Voodbury Jr., 27, was !isled in critical but stable oon- dition at Camp Pendleton Naval Hospital. His wife, ri.fartha , 21 , of Santa Ana , was So11 of Sheriff Fatally Beaten LOS ANGELES !AP ) -The 13-year· old son of a Los Angeles County sheriff's deputy 1va s fatally beaten during an ap- parently unprovoked a1tack by a g,ang of five youths. JX>lice say. The victiin. Patrick Shaughnessy. suf. fered massive head 1\·ounds in the atta ck Monday night. officers said. He \Vas dead on arrival at a local hospital. Police said lhree youths \1·ere being held for questioning. arraigned this morning before a federal court in San Diego on the assault charges. According to Rex I. Schroeder. special agent in charge· of the investigation, Sgt. Woodbury was shot in the head with a small caliber pistol as the couple sat in a car about 3 p.m. near the San Mateo ex· change on the Marine base. Servicemen on the base apprehended Mrs. Woodbury and she was handed over to the federal authorities. Schroeder said he was unable to com· ment on any motive in the shooting but an investigatioo is still under.way. Shortly after the shooting, base of· ficials contacted the San Clemente police in an effort to locate the couple's child, reportedl y left in the care of a babysitter in the city. However, the child apparently v.•as found later in the day and was plac- ed in protective custody. \Voodbury is attached to the Head· quarters and Service Co., 2nd Battalion . 7th Marine Regiment, Ist Marine Division, base spok esmen said. The exchange - a shooting fac ility - is located in the UJX!Oast portion of the base near San Clemente. After receiving welcomes from practically everyone short of lhe Commander-in-Chief, we journalists gathered our cameras, press kits, pads and pencils and hiked across 1Ctt01EM•HL the runway to board CH-53 helicopters. The CH-53 we agreed later, is so rt of a flying cattle truck. I GOT TIRED of lhe aircraft real fast. You can't talk because the darn thing makes too much noise. You can't read because there's too much vibra· tioo. And unless you 've got a neck like a l©'al!e, you can't see out the window. Death Snspe~t Ta~kled So I spent most of my time trying to keep my pant leg out o( the path ol dripping hydraulic oil. Around 7:30 a.m. we landed on the lawn of 1-IQ at Camp Wil son and were swiftly corralled in the commander general's conference room for a lecture . on how this mock war \va s supr>osed to work . .But first, this bulldog with silver oak leafs on his lapels ordered EVERY· BODY onto th e stage for one of those group pictures. "IF EVE RYTHING goes right . you·ll have a print by the time you leave," he said. "\'cah but this is the ~1ririne Corps," reminded one Orange County cyni c. That done. we settled back in our chairs for a 30 minute talk on ri-tA Bs, MAVs. RLTs and BLTs. Only the last one so unded familiar. Then we were ushcr(!d off to a bus, allegedly air conditioned, fo r the trip to Alkali canyon. I Unreal. I thought, as the bus pulled up to a grand.stand sitting on the sou th side of the canyon. Here arc a bunch of journalists readying to cover a war like it was a Dodgers vs. Reds game. THERE WAS EVEN a pl•Y·"r·Play announcer. Sort of the Howard Cosell of the Marine Corps circuit making sure each of us knew where that eigh t- Inch Howitzer shell landed. " ... they can reach a distance up to 20 miles away .•• " the aMouncer was saying. "You suppose that's what started the fi re al Bob llope's place in Palm Springs,'' suggested a fellow newsman. AND SO IT went for an hour. Ttinks and amphibious craft on the ground i bombers and helJcoptcrs Jn the air. • But soon the du st settled and the war was over. POCKETS LOADED ~·Ith exposed film and notebooks bursting with in· formation , the press corps packed back into the warm. humid bus, for the trip to C11mp Wiison and the Cl4·53 ride to El Toro. I was n1aking my \vay into headquarters at El Toro when I heard one of the generals making a verbal attempt nt 1ny last name. J pushed forward just in time to receive a yellow piece of parchmtlnt wrapped with a ribbon. lt mnde me an honorary aviator. All for two hours in a flylnfl calllc truck. • ClflCAGO (AP) -A Sea ltle v.·oman was stabbed to death in a downtown Grant Park res t room as her husband and infant son v>'aited outside. The husband then helped run do1vn Lester Harrison, 49. or Chicago ::titer ~farrison bolted fron1 the rest room. Har- rison later was charged Y.'ith murder. Monday's slay ing was the fourth in the c:rnnt Park aren during the past year . Police said Marrison was caught with a bloody knife and a newspaper picture or an earlier victin1. Authoritie~ said Judith Elaine Ott , 28. died or slilb wounds in lne neck and chest. Police said Mrs. Ott and her husband , Dav1d, and 20-month-old son, Aaron, were waiting for a train to MaS&lchusetts, where they planned to visit relaUves. Dining a stroll throogh Grant Park, f\.Irs. Ott went Into the rest room. Her liusband heard a screa1n, and a man emerged. Ott and four City employes pursued the man across park grounds while motori sts along crowded Lake Shore Drive slo pped to watch the chase. Poli ce said Ott brought the man down with a tackle. The wall s, floor tind ceiling of the washroom were found splattered wilh blood following !he slaying. Police said the photo l~arrison carried \Vas of Lee Alexis Wilson . Zl. a S11n Frnn· cisco State coed round beaten in dense bushes near the Art Institut e of Chicago Allll. 3. ,,,., ,.:,...,..., VICTIM'S HUSBAND, DAVID OTT, CAPTURED SLAYING SUSPECT With Son, ~iron, After Tra~dy in Chic1go'1 Gr1nt P•rk Top Aides Promise Accounting WASHINGTON IUPn -The While House said today it would disclose within a 1nonth a full accounting of the purchase of President Nixon's San Clemente estate and would explain the role of New York industrialist Robert H. Abplanalp in the transaction. Abplanalp, in an interview with the Washington Star-News Sunday, said he was the only outside investor currently invol ved in the purchase of 20 acres of the 26-acre estate. The White House said Nixon received a $625,000 loan from Abplanalp to acquire the 26-acre tract. The Title Insurance and Trust Company was named as the trustee lo buy the property and to hold formal title to it in order to ease dis~al of the property the Nixons did not plan on keeping for their own use. On Dec. 15, 1970, the White House said the property was purchased by Abplanalp for $1.2 million in which the $625,000 loan \Vas canceled. It said Abplanalp had set up an in- vestment company and .declined to name any other members involve<i. Abplanalp told the Star-News one other outsider was involved in helping finanoe the San Clemente purchase but that he has bought that person out. Both Abplanalp and the While House declined to identify the other investor. There was speculaUon that be wu Nix- on's best friend. C.G. "Bebe" Rebozo of Key Biscayhe, Fla. Discussing the Abplanalp interview with reporters Monday, deputy pres:i secretary Gerald L. Warren aaid: "There really is no dillerence in what ~1r. Abplanalp is saying and what we have said, and to allow this situation, or to encourage it, as I must say that the White House had a hand in the other situation (meaning reports Oil govern~ ment improvements on the Florida and California White Houses) to ~courage this one to become distorted Would be a disservice. "It wilt be cleared up once and for all, and within the month.'' said Warren. He described as a usemantical game" Abplanalp's mntention that there was no corporation, in contrast to the White House annotmcement that It was a holding company or an investment com- pany. . "Our desire here is to clear this matter up, once and !or aJ.I. .o that miaim- pressions don't grow and exist and con- tinue." * * * 'Semantics' Get Blame for Nixon Home Conflict WAS!IlNGTON (AP) -An _..m disagreement in statements from the While House and the man who helped President Nixon buy his California home ""'as merely "a semantical problem," ac- cording to Deputy Pre" Secnotary Gerald L. Warren. Warren said Monday that no cor- poration was involved in the purcha.1e of part of the Nixon estate at San Clemente. He refused to give further details, however, saying that a complete state- ment is being prepared and will be released within a month . A part of the Nixon estate wu purchased by industrialist R ob e r t Abplanalp, and last May the White House said 23 acres had been bought by an in- vestment company formed by Abplanalp. However, in a newspaper article Abplanalp said there was no oorporation involved. Warren explained that the difference was semantic, noting that Abplanalp used the terms "holding company" and "joint venture." In refusing any further comment, War· ren said he wants to avoid piecemeal ~tories which, he said, could lead to "misimpressions and distortions." He oomplained that stories about government s e c u r i t y and com- munications spending at Nixon's homtll and offi~s in California and F1orida have been misleading. Porno Mailer Dra,vs 4 Years LOS ANGELES (AP) -Willlom Plnkus. 50, has been sentenced to foor years in prison and fined $SOO on hil con- viction of nationwide malUngs of obscene materials as a bu.i;lness enterprbe. Pinkus remains free on $1,500 pendlnc appeal aher Monday's sentence by U.S. Dl'tl. Judge Lawrence T. Lydick . He was convicted of 11 counts la st month. The Los Angelts man, doing busin<ss as ROMlyn News Company and Xa.mera. distributed advertisements, magazines and films. ln 1967 he was convicted for selling a stag film bul the declllon w .. reversed by an appeaJs court and a 4-4 u .s" Supreme Court dtc!slon upheld tho reversal. • 4 U•lLY PILOf Coast Victims From Texas? UPCOAST, DOWNCOAST' Some Hun- tingtoo Beach detectives and other policemen in the upcoast area are look· ing hard for any possible link between the sex slaying horrors of Texas and five young men whose bodies have been found in our region in recent times. The local cases remain unsolved. 'Ibe bodies have been discovered in Hun, tington Beach, Seal Beach, SuMet Beach and Long Beach. One of the Hooston witnesses was quoted as saying in the mass murders there that some or the bodies "were sup- posed to have been sent off somewhere in California." Well, as far as our Orange c.oast peace officers are concerned, it would be a boon if our coastal slayings could indeed be traced to Houston and left on the Tex- as doormat. Best bet is that they won't be. Which Jeaves us with a maniac killer still on the loose in our region. Which is grim. * THE WEATHER predictors were busy predicting thunderstorms and rain last night and you have to figure it was on the basis or Monday hysteria. Clearly on Monday, we did get a Jot of thund<r and 'a few dribbles in the area between La- guna Beach and San Clemente. Not mucb else. But the predictors predicted anyway. That's okay. The way our summer weather has been going through August, they could predict almost anything now and few eyebrows would elevate. Maybe it's about time for a tidal wave. Who knows? * SOME FOLKS DOWN at Newport Beach City Hall are working these days on a S<><>alled policy statement lo heed off any new imbroglios with the state's South Coast Regional 1.ooe COnservation Commission. That's the Prop. 20 outfit that has been giving Newport a rough way to go on its off.·street parking laws. Well, You know what the politico wap call a po6cy statement. 'lbat's when you say what you're ~ lo do be!on you know wbent ;rou.'re s<HDJ. . •• Anyway, Newport City Mamger Bob Wynn thinks it would be better for the ci- ty to have a policy of its own rather thati always reacting to the latest outrages of the coastal co~ion. That may well be so. Still, when it comes down to loggerheads between the city and the co83tal types, the main question likely remains. And that is, Who ;,, Going lo Tell Whom What to Do? ~ at Newport City Hall figure it different. Don't make peace. File a lawsuit. i * MEANWHILE UP at the good County Seat , in Santa ,\na, the county planning commission is: worried about a similar question on who does what to who else. The COWlty planners have urged rejection of any· design review board for scenic highways in our region . Couched in planning-type lingo, lhe comnUssion suggested to the Board or SupeiviSors that if a design review outfit is aet up for scenic highways, then you'd ha"'. -,to set up similar boards for evefything else. like residential and com- merdal 'developments and on into the nJsfil,; I 'l1lis is ditficult logic to knock. Govetnmental boards do have a way of multiplying faster than rabbits. 'Jbat uide, when you get talking about aoeDic highways, it seems like a fairly simPle issue for all us plain citizen types . It lioik dc>wn to this : Are-we ,going to look at the scenery - or at. billbOards? ' • ' T I • B52s Make L~·st Bombing Runs U.S . Planes Take Advantage of Clear Skies in Cambodia PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) - American BS2s and figbter.IJombers hammered at cambodJan insurgents all around '!>lino.n Penh today on the final day of U.S. air attacks in Jndodllna. Taking advantage d a break in the monsoon overcast, American Fills, F4 Phantoms and A7 Corsairs Oew round- ttie-dock missions to unload a maximum bomb tonnage. U.S. AIR COMBAT operations are scheduled to end at 11 a.m:Wedn<sday, or 9 p.m. (PDT), It will be t!le first Ume since 1964 that the U.S. Air' Force lm't bombing somewilere in Indocblna. American pilots ococentrai.d their ·~ tack today >OUll1 and west of Plmnm Penh, the directions from which the Cambodian command believes the Com- munist-led insurgents or the-\ Khmer Rouge will attack the city when U.S. air support of the government is ended, The Khmer Rooge have pulltd back oo UPI Ttlflltlot9 RESCUERS PULL DAVID KENNEDY, 18, FROM OVERTURNED JEEP J0$0ph P. Kennedy Ill (left) Sha ken After Crash Teet• 'Serious' Kennedy Brothers, Girls Miss Curve, Flip Jeep HYANNIS, Mass. (UPI) -David Ken- nedy, 18, the son of the late Sen. Robert Kennedy, suffered a sprained back in a car accident Monday. Five yoWlg women were in the jeep-like vehicle, driven by David's brother Joseph P. Kennedy ITI, 21, when it failed to make a curve and overturned. Jooeph Kennedy escaped injury, but one of the five girls was hospitalized in serious condition . Three of lhe other girls were treated and released at Cape Cod Hospital in Hyannis, and one remained hospitalized, but she was listed in good rondition. NANTUCKET POLICE charged Jooeph DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE ~ittry or tht Daily Pilot is quarantffd M9•'1'·~..U,v : II "" de Ml llllv• Jffr .. ,... •'I' ,,,. '""'"' e•ll • .,.. 'l'l'l;lr ''"' WWI M llf'Mtilll M )100. Cll" 11'41 llkM VIiii! 7,,. IJ.lft. Sl,.,,.'I' lflll Sllftd1y1 If "'"' di Ml nalW: ,._ upy '1 ' ...... s .. -., ....... ..... Svnd..,, ''" lftCI I tlllY win " •fWllll " ,, ... Clll• .,. , ..... Vlllll ,. '·"" Ttltphonfi ,.,,.., ~ c~, ..,,.... ....... '4241 H~ N_lfll ... a11dl lflll Wnl..,IMtw . • . • •• • ........ 1231 Sit! 0.-N. C111htr-allldl. SN J>Mlll Cl,ittr-, 04IM ,....._ ~"'~·~" ......... ~ Kennedy with "driving negligently so that the lives and safety of the public might have been endangered." He was ordered to appear at a court hearing next week. All except Joseph Kennedy were thrown from the vehicle before it landed upside down in brush Ol\ Nantucket Island. David was admitted to Cape Cod Hospital where he was reported in satisfactory conditioo. Pamela Kelley, 18, of Centerville, Mass., the roost seriously injured, un- derwent surgery Monday night for an ap- parent spinal injury and was lisled in serious condition . A hospital spokesman said today that Miss Kelley was responding well lo post. operative treatment in the intensive care unil. "OUR HOPES are high and we are op- timistic," the spokesman said. Torbin Yates, the hospital's director oC conunun.ity allairs, said "nobody could say yet whether she'll walk again or not. We need a few days to detennine what her condition is." !\IARY SCHLAFF, 22, of Grosse Pointe, Mich., also was admitted to the hospital, where she was listed in good condition with a possible pelvic fracture . Passerby Luke Gruber .said he !18.W the opetH.ir vehicle fail to make the curve and flip over. the soutbom lnmt, presumably lo ,... equip llld -for a new stage of their dmpaJgn lo knock out President Lon Nol'• gl)vtrmnenl. Govemment1forces have cleared Route 38, which runs around Phnom Penh's southern defense perimeter six to II miles from the city. But a new threat was tilaplng up in the west, with insurgent troops encircling the village of Tuol Leap II miles from Spaceship Rolled Out For Rescue SPACE CENTER, Houston !AP) The f9Cket and spaceship being i;:eadied as possible rescue vehicles for the Skylab 2 astronauts rolled to the launch pad to- day at cape Kennedy, Fla. However, space agency officials here emphasized the move is just a precau- tion . They feel confident Alan L. Bean, Dr. Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. ( IN SHORT ..• ) Lousma will be able to return safely to earth Sept. 25 in their Apollo ship. A Saturn lB rocket with a new Apollo perched on top began the 3Yrmile trip from an assembly building to the launch pad at 4 a.m. PDT. A giant tracked transporter, traveling at maximum speed of one mile an hour, was to take several hours to reach the pad. A3 the move began, William Schick, Skylab test supervi s or , said: "Preparations are going very efficiently. We anticipate no problems having these vehicles ready for a rescue mission if called upon or for a normal Skylab 3 nlission." e Plague Victitn SANTA FE, N.M. (UPI) -Tbe Environmental Improvement Agency disclosed Monday a 65-year-old El Paso, Tex., man contracted the bubonic plague in June while visiting friends at a ranch near Lincoln, N.M. EIA officials said the man, whom they could not identify, had completely recovered. However, the man was in critical condition at one point during bis treatment at two Teias hospitals, the agency said. e Grain Gripe WASHINGTON (AP) The Com· modity Exchange Authority (CEA) has filed its second formal complaint against a grain exporter involved m last year's massive wheat sale to Russia. The authority aMounced Monday it has charged the Louis Dreyfus COrp. of New York with willfully understating its wheat holdings during Ju1y-October 1972. e McGo"ena Panel WASIDNGTON (AP ) -A report that the Wisconsin McGovern for President Committee apparently violated the Federal Election Campaign Act has been forwarded to the Justice Departmenl The report by the General Accounting Office, which supervises compliance with the law, charged the state committee with failing to keep adequate records. e American Deaths MADRID (UPI ) -Four and possibly five Americans died in the crash of a Spanish Aviaco Caravelle jet Monday which took a tota l of 86 lives, the U.S. Embassy reported today. The 85 passengers and crew aboard lhe plane were killed when the CaraveUe ex- ploded in night when one of the two rear jet engines apparently hit some trees u: the pilot was makin.< a fourth landing at· tempt in rain and clouds. Pllncm !'elm and ..... miles from the capital's airport. AN ESTIMATED 4,000 Khmer Rouge troops .,,.... ~ In the area, and U.S. planes were reported attacking them constantly. A Mekong river coovoy made up of a tanker, a freighter and five barges ar- rived. in Phnom Penh from South Viet- nam without any losses, a communique reported. A truck convoy ~ rice and other products from Battambang, in the northwest. In other developments, Iran bas been accepted as a member of the four.nation lntematlooal Commission on Control and Supervisioo of the Vlelnam cease'llre. Iranian Ambassador ArdeshJr Zabedi made the announcement in a phone call to a oewsman after administration sources gave the same information oo an unattributable basis. The last roadblock to Iran's mem· bershlp, replacing Canada on the truce observer body, was removed when it was accepted by the Viet Cong, the sources said. TllE OFFICIAL announcement is being held up, it was learned, in order to work out details on issuing a public state- ment. Canada was ooe of the original lour ICCS members aloog with Indonesia, Hungary and Poland. However, the Canadians p'.llled out last month because of dissatisfactim with the operation of the control comm.ission. Wben Iran was l>r<JPOSed by the Unii.d States, South Vietnam immediately ln- dicai.d agree!llOlll. Houston . \liclhns Jerry Lynn Waldrop (top) and brother Donald Wayne, are.two victims of the Houston mass slayings. Their father says po· lice treated him like 'some kind of idiot' alter bis sons disap- peared in 1971. Nixon to Cite Innocence In Bugging, Aides Claim From Wire Services WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon "¥.ill proclaim his innocence of any wrongdoing in the Watergate affair in a report to the nation Wednesday or Thursday, White House aides said today. 'Ibe only concession Ni1on will make, they said, is that in "hindsight'' he should have paid more heed to the warn- ing signals be ,..,.ived about the cover· up months ago and kept a closer eye on White House officials acting In his name. AFTER FOVR MONl'HS under the shadow of the political ocandaJ Nboa's stratqy will include the luuin& of 'a lengthy lesal "white paper'" attemptlos to refute point-by-point chargeo that be was aware at an early date ot the cover· up. Nixon also was preparing a naUonwide POTOMAC CRUISE RELAXES NI XON W ASHING'l'ON (AP) -Alter a day of work on the Wa,terga_\e speed> be plans to make later this week, President Nixon got away from it all with a crulse m the Potomac Rlver. Nixon was acccmpanied Monday eve- ning by White -chief of staff AJex. ander M. Haig Jr. on the diMet cruise aboard the presidential yacht SequniA. televised address to answer accu.satlons against him by former White House Counsel John W. Dean III, but mostly to appeal for public support to help get the country moving again alter the paralysis of Watergate, aides .said. Dean claims Nixon knew of the fn.. volvement of White House ai des in al- tempta to silence Watergate defendants as far back aa S<i>t. 15. 'Ille Pr-·· public statements 1ater this week will be his lint since Dean made the cbarges under oath before the Senate Watergate Investigating committee. NIXON HAS MOVED alowty lo mpond lo the a.,.,...tions, although Senale Watergate investigators are taking a break alter 37 days of televised hearing>. The President has 90\lght a wide range of advice for what some observers believe may be the most crucial speech of his political career. ln other developments the government has named former White House counsel John W. Dean llJ a coconspitator tn the federal innuence-ped.dling case against lonner U.S. Atty. Gen. John N. Mltcbell and former Commerce S e c re t a r y MaW'ice H. Stans. A bill of particulars filed Monday by U.S. Att;y. Paul Qlrran said Dean waa a participant in an alleged attempt to obstruct a Securities and Exchange Com· mmtoo investigation of financier Robert L. Vesco. Agnew May .Turn Over Records 'Voluntarily' . WASHINGTON (UPI) -Vice Prest· dent Spiro T. Agnew's attorneys ar- ranged a meeting with federal pros- ecutors today and • spokeoman !or Agnew suggested that the vice presid"1t may turn over bis penonal records and financial data voluntarily. was ~lected vice president were being delivered today lo Beall's ol!Jce In reSpollse IO a subpoena. They haft - in custody of Mll'l'lml's state ad- ministrator of election laws. Fair Skies Forecast Today Thumbing Pair Beaten; Girl Nearly Killed PLAINFIELD, Ind. (AP) -"It looks like they tried to beat her to death," says Police Chief Lee E. Miller, describing a teerr.age hitchhiker wM was beaten and raped. Agnew's press secretary, M a rs b Tbompson, ~ .to commit himself flatly on the question of the private papen but he said It would "be in keep- ing" with the vice president's assertton that he had nothing lo hide in the federal investigation of alleged cont r a c t o r kickbacks lo Maryland politicians. AGNEW RETURNED lo wort today In his office in the Executive omce Building next lo the Wbll<I House during the day, maintaining a reglllar schedule which calls for a speech in Denver Wednesday. Thunderstorm s and Hi gh Winds Diminishing ~_,eriHares Nltll L.eW .. r. := U S1 i:.~· 1fi ~ .Iii lf !!.~ " .. .. .. .... ... " .. " ~ .. :: .~. fV 101 11 .M .. " .. u n "°' 17 7S " .. .... n n .02 I> M " , n tfi ~ .OI ,r, 3 ti 1tt I •1 " .. .. " •1 70 .n .... t" .a M 1.11 Oty 100 "' ._... !1'1 il .IM ' ... ,, ·'' (;' .. .,."' .. .-..i Gtllforl\f•M ftMd fllll llMI A fJf "l•lft~~,. Aflllf': to -.. ---"'""' """"" I:':.';:, ... ..,=r,.;; """"" w.""' len9ol ""'" .... N/111 "" ,,. ., .. , "19'1' ~ .... dOUdl •llf "" ttld " \ ' ,. ~IAlfll t~;jlNOW ~ .. ml~H~llOW c .. ,.~t .. r """'""" 1'1rtlr tlovd'( t11111y. Lt1ht v11rl11bt1 wlO'ICft llftf'tt ltld mor"ll'lt "'°"" ._ 1111 Wftr.rly I a 16 k"°'9 '" ·~ tod1y •1"111 w.clnttd1y. High tod.., 70. to.attl i.mp..-1tv"" r•l'lft h'Olft U to 7L lrllfnd '*""~' r•l'!ltl ffMI " fl:! It. w., ... ~·tilrl 1'. S un, M1Htn. Tide• TU•IDAY Stc:ond n11111 . , •. , , ... , . , 11>:n p,m. s.t kconcl Jow . •••• •. •1Gtp.rn. 1.7 WIDN•IDAY Finl lllllf't •............ n :n a.rn. u ll"lrtt '°" ......... , .... •:"2 1,,,,. t .1 Stcond lllof't ..•.....•• 1•:• p.m. $.• llCOllCf '°"" , ... . •:U p,rn. l,J S1i111 •I• 6:15 1.m, .,,.. 7:41 p.m • MOOtl •lMI 1:54 p.m. 1111 6:1t •·"'· "All her teeth are gone, most of her gums: have been beaten out and part or her jawbone is missing." The IS.year-old East Providence, R.I., girl, Patricia McDevitt, rsnained In serious condition today at Marion County General Hospital THE GIRL WAS kldnaped late Sunday night by two men and a woman as she and a companJon hltchhlk~ on the west side of lndlaMpolls, police said. She had be<n beaten and raped and was found nude Monday afternoon at the edge of a oomfield 20 miles west of here, pollce said. "Evidently she put up one hell of a right or else they took special delight In torture-beating her/' Miller said. "Her face is so badly beaten she won't be able to talk for quite a rew day s." lier com panion, Stephen Baker, 17, of Grand Ledge, Mich., told police he and the gi rl were driven lo the oouth side of. Plainfield, about JO milet weiJI or lt>- dlanaPolis, where one of lhe men pulled a gun and asked ror Baker's money. IIE SAID lllS hands were lied and he was beaten with a long-barreled pistol be(ore the aS.W.lants drove away with the girl. U.S. A1TORNEY George Beall and one of Agnew's lawyers, Jay H. Topkis, set up a meeting ln Beall's Baltimore ofiice for the afternoon. In pursuing lhe investigaUon, Beall re- quested Agnew to submit bank records , check books and other flnancW data. Thompson said he could not say definitely whothet A(p<w would comply In the pment caee but be and other aides appeared to think be would. Tbompeon said the vice president had ,..,.ivecl a heavy amount of mall since the Investigation was dloclooed last week. He said a~tely 1,3&2 letters and telegrams wore favorable lo Agnew and 86 were critical. THERE WERE those 0 th e r developments in the ease : -Maryland englneering contractor Jerome Wollf and an attorney met with members of Beall'• ataff this morning In Baltimore. Wolff and another engineeri"8 firm official, Lester Mali, have been Identified as being pooslble witnesses against Agnew. Matz was granted pertlal Immunity from prosecution by Beall on Monday in exchange for cooperation In 1estll)'ing before the apecial grand jury, bis lawyer reported. -Agnew'• campaign finance reconl• Crom 1966 wllcn be won the Maryland governorship through last year when he • CHll .. I Chile l n Dark A fallen power line blacked out half of Chile for 35 mlnules Monday nlght and lhe go•ern· menl blamed rightist terrorists for dynamiting the lines. The blackout came In tho middle of a speecli by President Salvador Allende. vi CR B M m he r y lo W1 10 " in la pe sh tel nl Vi th p va ' • • In • -· ... . . ..... ., -· . . . , ---· .. -•w Today's Final N.Y. Stocks OL. 66, NO. 226, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA N TEN CENTS .Newport May Sue Coastal Protection Panel By JOHN ZALLER 6t fllt Ollty f'llet lleH A majority of Newport Beach coun- cilmen said Monday they're thinking of suing the Cali£omia Coa!tal Zone Conservation Commission for alleged "usurpation or local authority." But councilmen said they probably v.•on't press a lawsuit unless the coastal commission continues in wbat they see as Jhreals to local authority. Mayor Donald Mcinnis brought up the Schmitz Boy Dies . In Newport The 3-year-old soo of former Orange County Congressman John G. Schmitz died this morning In Hoag l\1emorial Hospital, Newport Beach. The child of the one-time presidentlai ho~ful fell into the family pool Mondar. afternoon. Phillip James Schmitz was treated in the hospital intensive care unit from shortly after 4 p.m. Monday. He had been rushed there by Newport Beach police helicopter. Schmitz and his wire kept a sleepless vigil through the night at the hospital. Newport Beach police and firemen , called to the Schmitz home at 10 ~1ission Bay in SpygJass Hill shortly bef~ 4 p.m. Afonday, said the caller believed the child had drowned. "He was not breathing. He had no heartbeat," police said. Newport Beach firemen began ad· ministering heart massage and Ol}'gen . Police Officer Hurd .Amutrong arrived moments later and called for the police helicopter, which landed in the street in !root of the Schmitz home and rushed the youth to the hoipltal. Mrs. Schmll! said she does not know for sure bow Iooc Phit!Jp had been iD °"'-' water. '"'t took his li!eJacket off so he could go to the bathroom,'' Mrs. SChmltt said. "No one saw him go back outside or get into the pool." She said he could have climbed or fallen into the pool during a IO.minute . period while she was in the house. but sbe said her older children, Jerry, 14. and i\lary Kay, 11. were in the pool all the time and didn't notice Phillip. 11We "'ere all there," she sald. "1 don't know how it could have happened." ~frs. Schmitz said the pool in the family 's new home had been completed only Thursday. Maude Program Rankles Bishop HARTFORD, Conn. (UPI) -The Most Rey. John F. Whealon, Roman Catholic archbishop or Hartrord, plans to resign trOm a television program conunlttee because of a decisl(){) to carry two con- troversial programs of the "Maude" television situaUon comedy beginning to- nig~t. ·Whealon told the \VTIC program ad- visory committee he is resigning because the station has In sisted on carrying the programs which deal with abortion and vasectomy. "J see this action by CBS and WTIC as a use of TV to advance the doctrine that abortion is an acceptable solution to an inconvenient pregnancy," Wheaton said. Orange Coast Weather. Little temperature change ls ex- pected for the Orange Coast Wednesday, with the usual low clouds and fog holding down beach temperatures to 68. Highs inJand expected In the upper 80s. l.NSWE TODAY Joseph P. Kennedy III, 301i of tli.e Late Sen. Robert F'. Ke1rned11, nil!&ed a curve c.n Nantucket ls· land and flipped hll jeep, seri- ousiu injuring one of Jive girlt in the'vehicle and hti brother, David. See atory, Page 4. . L.M, l•'t'f " '" Jem.c:• " IOtlllltl " A'"' L..-.rt .. (lllftl'Jlll •• ti ...... " Cl1tt!llM .... M¥tMI hMI " CMl<t " Hllt"91 HIWI • Crllttwtrtl 11 Orlllft CWlllV ' DNlll Hiiien ' •r:·· 1-.11 l•U1t11I l'ttt • I tell Mlrtttt1 '"'" •111trl•l11m.nl " Ttlhl.ill'I " f':OMMI •·11 TllMltn .. ~ ... the lrlCll'• ••• WMllltr • ""'""' " We!Mft'I Nflft l,_IJ WwW NIWI ' subject at an afternoon study session. Councilmen were attempting to come to terms with stiff new parking re- quirements imposed by the Soulh Coast Regional 1.one Conservation CommWion. "We're the ones who should decide how many pa,rking spaces a development needs," A1c1Mis said. "We're given that power by the State or California," he said, "yet it. is the coastal commissit;in that Is exercising that power and nobody has yet challeng- ~ . ed the coastal commission." Newport Beach is angry because it re- quires only two parking spaces for a duplel' while the coastal commission has refused to approve duplexes in the city Wlless tbey have four off-street space!. The mayor's strong remarks brought an immediate response from Councilman Richard Croul. "Let's challenge it ourselves," Croul said. Mcinnis, Vice Mayor Howard Rogers and Crout all opposed proposition 20 last 01ltr Pllet lllff Photo {ireat Mystery Pipe :;Brothers Craig and Mike Yester study 200-foot concrete pipe reposing .on sidewalk on west side of Newport Boulevard just south of the j\rches overpass. Pipe isn't connected to anything. City officials don't know what it's for. Neither do county spokesmen. City Public Works Director Joe Devlin sai d it must be cosUy, so he·urged passersby not to kick it. Irvine Company Di1~ectors Meet, Delay Naming Chief Irvine Company directors met briefly today but did not elect a successor to late company president William R. Mason . Board Chairman, John V. Newman. told company spokesmen, "The board did not formally address the question of a new president at the August meeting .'' The, board, met in Newport Beach cor· porate headquarters a~ 9:45 a.m. today. 'The agenda was limited to several routine administrative matters requiring board , action at this time," the spokes- man said. Directors adjourned in memory or Mr . Mason who died suddenly !•st month at the age of $4. He was president . 0£ the ranching and land developmfat rinn since 1965 and had served the firm since 1959. Since Mason's death, Executive Vice President Raimood L. Watson has setv·· ed as chief executive officer or tl;le firm. Newman, who appointed Watson to the acting leadership post. today praised Wat90n and the company management "for the continWng effectiveness of the company operations despite the serious corporate and personal sense of Joss at the death of Mr. Mason. '1 'Miele was .., word from the company explaining the delay In selecting a suc- cessor or a replacement for Mason on the sevcn·mcmber board of directors. NeW111ao was elected chairman ol the board at the June company stockholdc!n meeting when personal tax adviser to the late James Irvine. N. Loya.II A1cLBren retired from the company board al the age ol 81. A Claremont man, Howard Allen, was elected to nu that vacancy on the board . l \ Others serving on the company board are Mrs. Athelie (Joan) Irvine. iirnith of Middleburg, Va. and Emerald Bay, \Vatson, Eastbloff, Charles S. \Vheeler, secretary, of Newport Beach and M. Keith Gaede of Laguna Beach. The company spokem1an declined to discuss the 1 prec~ ·nature of the ad- mlnistrati9e matters being OOnstdered to- day otller than to indicate they involved board ratification of m a n a g e m e n t decisions possibly related to sales of land. Window Caulkers 'Hang 111 Tliere' On, .12tli Floor BUI Kimmell and Joe Bucks may be thlnking about a new line of work today. Up Until AfoOday aft.emoon, they were window caulkers. '\1teY were ~ the weather· stripping around the Windows up about the 12th floor at !he Unioo Bank Building In Newport Center when their scaffold- ing started to give way. Newport Beach firemen, ":ho respond· ed to the rescue call, wd a btak"e holding ooe ol the eablca had •llPl>«I, Up- ping tlie seallold at a steep . .aoigt.\.' Both men were wearlng safety belts, boWever. and d"!'&led st£ely for about hall an 'hclur until !he scalfold .eould be raised. Bucks, from \Vest Covina, and Kim· mcll , from &II Gardens, were given the rest ol the day off. They were not In· jured. November, when it went before the voters. Support for a lawsuit also came from Councilman Paul Rycko£f, "'ho did su~ port Proposit ion 20 last November. "We're faced with a situation where we have to bastardize our structur~ in order to meet the coastal commission's reqUirement that we have two parking spaces for each living unit," Rycko[f complained. "This concerns me very much." ?.1ayor Mcinnis then made another reference to a possible lawsuit. "I don't know how far the coastal commission should be allowed to go without a challenge. Somewhere there's a line, and when it's crossed, you have to consider legal remedies to protect yourself." After the meeting, ~1clnnis expanded on his remarks. Reiterating his belief that the city has the right tq regulate developments "and not any c_1.ppointive body of people who do not' have to stand for e~tion." ··1 don't n1ean to threaten anyone but we all have a Point where we draw the line. "\Ve may accept this requirement for t\\'O parking spaces. But if the coastal commission keeps doi ng more and more. we could reach the poin t where we ha ve to do som eth ing. "Before \Ve would pursue a lawsuit." he added, "\Ve of course \vould exhaust !See USURP, Page!) Downcoast Push Launched Newport to Spread \Vithout a word of discussion, Newport Beach city councilmen voted unanimously 1'1onday to seek an extension of the city's sphere of influence to include Orange County Airport. Councilmen al.sO''\.unanimously reaf- firmed their intention to eventually an· nex al least part of the Irvine Company coastline property south of C.Orona del Mar. The move to the aiport marks Ol,lt the county-owJJed airfield ror possible future Bike Trail Master Plan Approved The Newport Beach Bi le Trails annexation. although the mov(; may be a means or countering a similar claim filed by ·eosta Mesa twO months ago. The council balked at quick action on City !\tanager Robert L. Wynn 's recom- mendation that the city declare the undeveloped coastline below Corona del Mar as part of the city's sphere of in- fluence . The council la~er did accept Wynn's recommendation , .but only after con- siderabl e discussion of the issUe at the afternoon study session. The city made its declaration or spheres of influence in preparation for a hearing before the Local Agency Forma- tion Commission (LAFC) later this month. The LAFC can accept or reject Newport Beach's proposed spheres of in· Ouence. Although the council did not discuss the reasons for wanting the airport within the city's sp here o( influence, City (See ANNEX, Page 21 emu ..... ":~~ (annal tmarl!IMu!t;•'<n a~t Monday on a proposed master plan oC'bike trails in the city. The plan outlines about 50 miles of trails, including paths along Pacific Coast Highway, Jamboree Road, Irvine A venue, San Joaquin Hills Road and Newport Boulevard. The committee reaehed its unanimous vote only after agreeing to leave all con- troversial trails off the proposed master plan. Among trails not included on the master plan are the Balboa Island trail, the Balboa Peninsula Oceanfront trail and the Upper Bay crossing. Some members of the committee bad \Vanted to keep the so-called con- troversial areas on the master plan, thus keeping them eligible for state and federal funding. "We gave up that position because we round out that the council did not want to be asked to adopt the controversial trails at all," explained committee member Allan Be<k. The plan goes to the city council Aug. 27. Committee member Herring Franklin argued at length that the committee should not sponsor construction of trails that are simply painted lanes on existing roadways. He argued that they present a false sense of security and do not really pr~ tcct bicyclists. · Franklin said the committee should u·ork only wit.h bike trails that are . physically se t apart or separated from the main auto roadway . His motion to write this position into the city master plan \vas defeated on a ~l vote however. Another area of controversy invol\'CS the B.alboa Island bike trails system. Frank11n wanted the Balboa Island trail listed on the committee's list of con· troversial trails. However Alan Beek made a counter motlon that the Balboa Island trail be taken off all maps, including the con· troverial trails m:ap. "There Isn't anyone I know of \\'ho wont.. it," Beck saJd, "so it isn't cont- troversial." Franklin. who opposes the Balboa fslond trail, wanted it included on the controversial trans list because he said there was still support for it. "There is an effort lo get people to forget about il by leaving It o!f tbe con- troversial tr alls list." be sakt. "When the controversy dies down, they think it' will be easier to bring It back IC It Isn't labeJ.. cd at ~troveralal." Franklin >ater said that Beek was one ol tl)ooe who favored the Balboa Island trallt but wanted it rorgouen about for the ...... !. Beek denied thft he wants trails on the Island. allhough he said he still feels there ought to be signs on the island to d.lrcct bicyclists to the best routes. The committee then Voted ~ to omit the Balboa bland trail from the con· troverslal trails list. and, thus, out of ex- istence. ) LIFEGUARD SWEET DISPLAYS NOTE AND OLD BOTTLE Seeman Victor Oubrowakl. Where Are You Now? Note Froio Past Bottled Words F ou,.id in Newport Victor Lee Dttbrowski was a seaman aboard the USS Oklahoma City in 1961 and wondered what would happen il he put a note In a bottle and dropped it overboard . So he scribbled his name and home ad- dress on a small piece of paper, stuck It in an old brown beer bottle, plugged It \Vith a cork and gave it a heaye , He got his answer Monday. It wasned aslxire near the.. Newport Pier. Newport Beach lifegua rd Chris Sweet said this morning the bottle was found by a 13-year-old Garden Grove )'OUtlgster named James Weir. . But Victor Lee Dubrowskl may never know what happenJ'd. He liXed in Scottsdale, Ariz., 12 years ago, but a check of the telephone company's in- rormatk>n assistance In Arizona says there Is no Dubrowskl in Scottsdale~ Ufeguard Sweet says he Is going to send a letter with the note in it to the Scottsdale addre$s, anyway, in hopes the Postal Service \VIII be flble 10 forword it. The note 5erawled on a tattered follr• Inch square piece of paper says only: "To whom it may concern, upon find- ing send with name, date found and any comment to Seaman Victor Le e Dubrowski. Dropped June 28, 1961, of( USS Oklahoma City. Send to 6220 El Monte, Scottsdale, Arizona. Thank you.'' No Contest Plea To Manslaughter SAN DIEGO (AP) -A bassoonist ~ith the Dallas Symphony Orchestra has pleaded no contest to a nwoslaughter charge after being refusN pennlsslon to introduce a lie-detector teM and an in- terview under hYD009is as evidence. John E. Ga udette had pleaded tnnocenl in the death of Sherry !loag, 16, or Fort Worth, Tex., who died In nn nu to accident near Alpine enst of here Dt.-c. 20. He changed hi~ plea Monday. A C•llfomla Highway Patrol officer Slid Gaudette •dmltted being at the wtte.t o! he car that ran off the road nnd crashed. ., ' I U .. I Ttl""'OI• DEFENDING -Charles Med- ler, lawyer for accused mass killer Wayne Henley, says he thinks Henley's ri ghts have been violated. Sex Slaying Grave Hunt Comes to End HOUSTON (UPI) -An East Texas sheriff said today a hand-written map, first believed to sOOw possible new gravesites, was not connected to a homosexual murder ring responsible for the deaths of 27 boys. He said there \\-'OUld be no more digging for victims. San Augustine County Sheriff John Hoyt said the map, found in a cabin used by a homosexual bachelor accused in the case, pinpointed several locations in the San Jacinto National Forest in southeast Texas. But he said the isolated plot circled on the map were not more burial sites. "It has nothing to do with this case," Hoyt ea.id. "We have checked it out en- tirely and there is no COflllection at all. It may be a map of some cabins of some other people." When the map was discovered, Walker County Sheriff W. D. White said he sent his deputies to search the backwoods dirt roads near New Waverly, Tex. They found no trace of more burial grounds. Hoyt questioned one of the teen-aged suspects in the case in a Houston jail cell during the day to determine If the map was "good evidenco or bad evidence.'' The sheriff said the ma.,, shovels, plastic body baas, three pairs of gloves. one tinted with flrne, and a partially used sack of quicklime were found at the cabin near Late sam Rayburn owned by the father of Dean Allen Corll, 33. Most of the bodies fowtd at three loca- tions in Texas were wrapped in plastic bags and sprinkled with lime. Houston Police Chief Rennan Short disclosed Monday that a "torture board" -the item allegedly u,.d by Corll to strap his victims to torture and kiU them -was found tn the cabin. All the victims were teenage boys allegedly procured by Elmer Wayne Henley, 17, and David OWt!n J,Jrooks, 18, for Corll. Henley has admitted taking part in the torture, sexual abuse, murdu and burial of some of the victims. Brooks said he helped Corll and Henley bury some victims but said he was not involved In the actual killings. Sheriff's deputies recovered four bodies Monday on the beach east of Galveston, raising the number of victims to 27. Officers indicated after the digging Monday thlt the fo'ur bodies recovered m the beach would be the las! !owld there. 11we will not do any more work today in Qbambers County unle1s there ls new lnformatlm arising," Chambers County Sbertll Louil Otter said. The four bodies w~ unearthed In the Ownben COUnty resort of High Island as spectators including bikini-clad girls watched. OIAN•I COAST " DAILY PILOT Mass Death Suspect 'Explains' SANTA CRUZ (AP) -''J'n1 trying to explajn why I killed. 1'hey died qulckly. but no one likes to die like that." \V llh those words. accused rnass killer •terbert J\.1ullln besan his personal ac- count today of the 13 murders he has ad - mitted. He is charged with 10 murders in Santa Cruz County lasl winter. (Rela!cd story, Page 5) Asked by defense attoi·ney Ja1nes Jackson why he killed 13 people, Mullin said, "I feel as I! I'm a scapegoat, sort of an outcast, made to feel like a scapegoat." lifullin testified today that his relatives and friends subjected him to "a kill joy sadism" to "retard" his physical and spiritual growth. lie also made a Jong discourse on homosexuality and heterosexuality. Psychiatrists ha ve testified that 1i1ullin is a "paranoid-schizophrenic" who had a "long-standing hatred" of his family :ind an "emphasis on killing and violence" in his upbringing . In his rambling testimony on homosex· uality. 1i1ul1ID. said, ''We've experienced this since about age 7. But we're not to talk about it with other people in the neighborhood. "My sister is 5 years older," he said. "When I'm 3, she is 8 and bas already experienced homosexual activity with her friends, "They koow I haven't and I'm feeling the pain, but l'm being offered up to God," Mullin said. Mullen said his father feigned shell- shock 'A-'hile serving in the Pacific during \Vorld War 11 and put a "yellow jacket" on him. A yellow jacket Is "a person designated to experience the cowardice of all others," 1i1ullln said. Psychiatrist Dr. Joel Fort testified Monday that Mullin has a "loog standing hatred, pru1icul&r1y o~ his father, and also his mother, sister and other relatives." From Pqe ·1 'USURP'. • • all admlnlstrative possibilities. And I sin- cerely hope we could st.op short of a suit." Councilman Milan Dostal, speaking after the meetina:, said he. agreed with lhe general pc>eiUon taken by the mayor. "Our disagreements with the coastal com m ission are not simply philosophical," he said. "They are legal. I pcnooally feel that Proposition 20 ls uncon.stltuUonal ln some ol the things it is trying to do." He sald he was willing to cmsider a lawsuit to test lhe legal quesUoos if it became necessary. only Councilman Carl Kym.la said he would oppose a lawsuit. "The coastal commission has a clear mandate from the people to regulate development in the coastal zone," Kymla . "A vote ol the people supersedes any powers of zoning the city may have gotten from the state legislature." Councilman John store was not available f.9,;.,comment. City Attartfey DenJs O'Neil said the council had not consulted him about the possibility of a lawsult, although he said there were probably grounds for one if the city chose to pursue one. "My ears really perked up when r heard them talking about a lawsuit.11 O'Neil said. "But I'm pretty sure it's still In the talking stage." Business Flight Proves Costlv ,/ A Newport Beach businessman who parked his car at Orange County Airport while he flew out of the county on business wished he badn 't when he got home Monday night, Orange County Sheriff's officers said . Newport Council Action !"ollowln& ii • •ummary of 1clions Mooday by tbe l'lowport Beach Cily Council : COASTAL COMMJBSION: Talked opeoly ahouL a posslble lawsuit 11alnst the 111t1 ~ JGnt C.W.VaUou C.Ommlaioo for lls alleged usurpation or local 1uthorily. SPHERE OF INFLUENCE: Aqeod that Orange county Airport and the open coastline between Cor~ del Mar and Laguna Beach should be in the city's sphere of influence ror posslble future aMexatlon. 1'llllE£.STORV llOMES: Tabled a motion to re1nove the l1~·0-storv limlta- liou on home building rrom the city code. The planning con1mission -had fav- ored loosening city ordinances to pennit three story build ings. PINK BUS: Voted unanimously to oppose be.fore the State Public Utilities Commission a request from the Pink Bus Line to operate a route from Po- mona to the Wedge at Peninsula Point. zoNmG: Denied 4-3 a request from homeowners in the West Newport area to reconsider an earlier decision to change zoning of their land from comrner· c1al to residential. 1'RAILER PARKS: Commended the city staff for its progress in carrying out a year-Jong crackdown on hazardous conditions in the city's trailer courts. CONSTRUCTION: Ordered a study of ways to beer up building code re-- quirements for house insulation to conserve heat and to deaden outdoor noises. Fro111 Page 1 ANN EX ... f\1anager \Vynn explained the city posi- tion last week in an interview. Wynn said Newport Beach's prime con- cern was that the airport not be placed in Costa l\.1esa 's sphere. Annexation of lhe airport by Costa Mesa be said, could mean that Newport Beach would not have influence over operation of the airport. The airport is currently owned by the Co unty of Orange and administered by the county Board of Supervisors. In discussing the downcoast area, between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. councilmen Carl Kymla and Paul Ryckoff argued that the city ought to hedge its sphere of influence request with a disclaimer. "\Ve have no presen t intention to annex that area," said Ryckoff, "and I am con· cerned that by declaring it part of our sphere of influence we might start up a sequence of events where we have no choice but to annex." Kymla expressed a similar concern. He suggested that a council policy stating reservations about annexations in the downcoast area be attached to the city's forma l dec laration of sphere or influence over the area. f\;la yor Donald A. Mcinnis opposed the two councilmen, arguing that attachment of disclaimers would weaken the city's position when il appeared before LAFC. In the formal city council meeting later that night cowacilmen voted with little additional discussion to adopt Mcinnis' positi on that no disclaimer should be at- tached. The decision was unanimous. Neivpo rt Panel Rejects Closing Tinie for Parks Newport Beach Parks, Beaches and Recreation Commission members have rejected a proposal by Parks Director Calvin Stewart that would have set clos- ing times for all city parks. Stewart made his recommendation to the commission following an early-morn- ing disturbance at the 38th Street playground in \Vest Newport. At the time, the commission asked Stewart to discuss the idea of closing public parks in the evenings with the police department and report back on the matter. Police Chief B. James Glavas to Id Stewart that the police officers in his co nunand need no new laws to enforce Jaw and order in the park system. Irvine Officials 'Not Surprised' At Newport Move irv1ne City Manager William Woollett Jr. said today It is "really no surprise to us" that Newport Beach would move to include in its sphere Of lnfluence the oceanfront coastal sector of the Irvine Ranch between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. "The only surprise ls the tim ing," Woollett said today. He explained that Irvine is planning the 10,000 acre area along with 53,000 other Irvine Ranch acres included in the new city's sphere of influence. However, since the Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFC} has ask- ed cities to file spheres for all the unin- co rporated areas remaining ln the coun- ty. Woollett said he'd expected the Newport action and a similar one by Laguna Beach for the southerly section of the coastal sector. Additionally, Irvine is considering an- nexing the regional triangle commercial development of the Irvine Company ln central Irvine, he said. Newport Beach's announced filing of a sphere of influence map covering the coastal sector may speed Irvine 'studies of that potenUal annexation. ';This of course will give the city of Irvine opportunity to comment (before LAFC) on the proposal," Woollett said. "The area has been under study for several months as a part of our general plan process. All that data will be available for use in trying to decide what our poslUon should be," be said. Irvine Company offlcla1s once offered the area for annexation by Laguna Beach and Newport Beach. Less than a year ago Newport Beach 1i-1:ayor Donald Mcin- nis told Irvine officials the downcoast an- ne xation would be put "on the back burner" for awhile. Woman Found Slain on Beach A 29-year-old Fountain Valley woman apparently committed su icide on a Lido Isle beach In Newport Beach J\.londay afternoon. police said today . The dead \.\o'oman \Vas identified as Patricia Jean WiJliams. Police said she died from a single gunshot wound in the head. Her body was found In the sand in front of 800 Via Lido Nord. The Orange County Coroner's office is ,.,,ithholding an official determination on th e cause of death pending an autopsy. ~- • D1Ur .. 11111 ,lltlt I»' LH ,1,111 The Circus is Here Elephant from Ringling Bros. Barnum 3nd Bailey Circus greets one of bis fans after stepping off clrcu~ train in Anaheim . The 103rd edi- tion of the famed circus arrived in Orange County h1onday and pa· raded to the Anaheim Convention Center where it will be appearing for the next week. Newport Council Tables Bid for Taller Buildings Newport Beach councilmen shunted aside a proposed new ordinance 1i-londay that would have cleared the way for con· structlon o{ three-story buildings in older parts of the dty. 1be proposed ordinance, recommended on a 8 to o vote from the Planning Com- mis.\1on, would have eased the dty codes to pennit developers to build as many Newport Chief Escapes Injury I rt Auto Crasli Newport Beach Police Chief B. Jam es Glavas and his wUe, Melba, ~escaped serious injury in a freeway acci dent in the city of Commerce saturday but the same can't be said for his car. The car was being towed back lo Newport Beach by a city tru ck when it "''as rear-ended on the Newport Freeway, splitting it in half. Glavas said his accident was , ''The first I've had in 15 years." It took place while he was northbound on the Santa Ana Freewa·y Saturday at 10 :30 a.m. en route to Los Angeles . "I v.•as driving up the free\vay in the speed lane and there was a produce truck to the right and slightly ahead of me," Glavas said. Jte said he noticed traffic backed up ahead of him and motorists were ''gawk· Ing" at another accident. levels as they could tit within the dty's 30-foot height limlt and floor arta fonnulae. The council voted 4 to 2 to table the proposal after expressing fears that more stories would mean higher popula- tion density In older sections of the dty. An argument in favor oC allowing three stories was presented by Richard H<>1an, • director of community development. ' lie said that the propoecd new ordinance would allow more an:t»tcc- tural diversity, including split level ' homes oo hJ..llsjdel that are not rurrcnUy pennllted . : He said there would be oo lno-ease In ~ densJty because lhe city already bad • strict limits .on bow much floor area can be built for each square foot of Jot. Vice Mayor Howard Rogen. arguing against the three-story propoeal, said ll "wu giving up the city's cootrol over the number of stories and I'm not sure whit 'A-'e 're going to get in nturn." In support of the ordinance, Qxm. cilman Milan Dostal replied that "all the F tw~story units lead to a stereotyped or • box-like effect. 'I'M!e-otory and split • level homes could get away from some of ~ that sameness." • Council Paul Rycko{f comtered that "you'll get more stories and nothing more. I don't sec a benefit ." !·le argued that more storles would pcnnit more Wlits. and therefore higher population densit y. Councilman Richard Croul , who favored the ordinance. said it was especially necessary becau~ of the tightening development standards being _ imposed by the California Coastal Com-mi ssions. Glavas also said the closing hour would be inconvenient to law-abiding residents who like to walk la te at night in the parks for "relaxation and soli tude." A LICENSE NOT TO STEAL- In addition, Glavas said the open nature or many cil.y parks would 1nake enforcement of closing times a nearly- impossible task. Based on the comments by Chief Glavas. commissioners voted at their last meeting to Wlanimously reject the idea of closing the parks. Unfortunately for the general public, there ara a lot of paople installing carpeting who shouldn't be. Unbel ievably, m1ny carpet "contractors" are working unl1wfully without insurance and state licenses. Salesman Robert Louis Bissonette, 50, of 3121 W. Pacific Coast HJghway, told deputies caJcuJators, golf equipment and an attache case and its contents valued at nearly $800 were taken by thieves who may have had P. duplicate key to his late model car. orucers said they could find no sign or fon:'ed entry on the vehicle. Commission Chairman Claudia Owens, in a report to the city council, said any closure is unnecessa ry because : "The Police Department has the power to han- dle any disturbances Of the peace \Vithout any additional la\vs." FOR YOUR PROTECTION you should insist th1t the people who install your carpeting work for a contractor who i1 INSURED and STATE LlCENSED. (Ho is required by state low to be both.) st .. te ficensed contractors hove to post • bond for your prote ction, end the very accomplishment of licensing indicatu a degreo of C<>mpetency. . . Colle~ts Bandit L~ses $1 iii Muffed Heist A HUNTINGTON BEACH sandwi ch shop owner matched \vi ts with en armed robber Monday and came out ahead by $1, police reported today. The supposed victim of the 7 p.m. heisl was Donald New- berry, 42, owner of the shop at 17091 Newland Street. Police said a man gave Newberry one dollar and asked !or change. But when the shop owner opened the cash reiilster to oblige, he found himself looking down the barrel of a revolver. "DUCK/' YELLED Newberry as he hit the dock behind the counter and scrambled Into the nearby storeroom. The alarm was shou ted to shop emplo yes and patrons who either called police or ran outside in time to see the would be ban- dit jump into an old yellow.pickup truck and speed or!. THE POLICE RI; PORT concl udes. "The victim has no !urth· er information at this time other th an he got the suspect'• dollar bul the suspect got no money from him." , The biggest problem in dealing wit!. on unlicen..d contractor is that he might be out of busine ss tomorrow. Don't toke o chance -call Alden's for reliability, end the best installation aroundl ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOUIS: Moo. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -,RI., 9 to 9 -SAT., 9:JO to S , ' • ' . • • • • • • • Li d M J k cl if • In w • f t " • , T oday's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 226, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE ·COUNTY, .CALIFORNIA l'UESOAY, AUGU ST 14, 1973 c TEN CENTS Chief Vows Inspection to Curb Blast Danger By CANDACE PEARSON Of Ill• 0.lly l"llot Jillllf Any of the 38 Costa Mesa lrxiuslries listed in a city survey as potentially dangerous could explode I J k e the El ~fbnte Ch~mical Company d1d, Fire Chief John Marshall said Monday. ln that blast April 2, two persons were kllfed and several families were left homeless. build up,'' Marshall added at a city coun- cil study s~on. He pledged to continue what he said is his department's ''vigorous l.nspectlon program" of potentially bazar4ou, In· dustrial plants. · Fire inspectors visit each such industry at least four time!: a year, he said. The El Monte.plant at~ w. ·17th SJ. "met and exceeded city I (building '·"'1'1 $afety) standards," MarsHall remlodeif But any buildin g ,in the c!it}' -in· eluding the civic center -could blow up if "you allow certain characte'riS\iCs to · the ,council. . ' '.'JM' ,you~ .c.an.'~ -~l!minate ~~.~t yo.u • • ~ LI FEGUARD SWEET DISPLAYS NOTE AND. OLD BOTTLE S.1m1n Victor Dubrowskl. Where Are y.., Now? ! Note F .. o m Past I . Bottled· W ords Foulf~ in Ne ,wpott Victor Lee Dubrowskl was a seaman aboa rd the USS Oklahoma City in 1961 ahd wondered what v.·o.uld happen if he put a note in a bottle and dropped it overboard. So he scribbled his name and home ad- dress on a small piece of paper, stuck it in '-an old brown beer boUle, plugged it With a rork and gave It a heave . Jle got his answer Monday. Jt washed ashore near the Newport · P.Ser. . .NewPort Beach lifeguard Chris Sweet qJd this morning the bottle was found by ~rll-year-old Garden Grove youngster ntmed James Weir. .But Victor Lee Dubrowski may never. t:DOw what happened. He lived in Sfottsdale, AMz., 12 years a'go, but a ctieck or the telephone company's in- COhnation assistance In Arizona says tlarc is no Oubrowski in Scotlsdalc. Lifeguard S\veet says he is going to sencl a Jetter-with the note in it :to the Scottsdale .address, anyway, in }M)pes the Postal Service wiU be able to forward it. The note scrawled on a tattered four- inch square piece of paper says only: "To whom it may concern, upon rmd- ing send with name, date found and any comment to Seaman Victor. L e e Dubrowski. Dropped June 28. 1961, off USS Oklahoma City. Send to 6220 El Monte, Scottsdale, Arizona. Thank you." Door Prizes Backed SACRAMENTO (AP) -Charitable organizations could give away door · priZes y;ithout running afool of the Jaw under a bill ippioved 4-2 by the A.Ssembly's Committee on COnstltutional Amendments. The door prize bill by Assemblyman Ray Seeley (R-Blythe), \vent to the Assembly floor on Monday's vote. Is I t Cottai tag or Going? When these lwo Iowa Air National Guard planes met in the middle of a runway al Mountain Home Air Force Base In Idaho. lt gave the lmprcs· , , • could call the moral attitude," he added, referring to employe errors. "It 's difficult to police operational pro- cedures oo a daily basis," be said. The survey by fire and planning of- ficials ideritifies most of the possibly dangerous plants as in the southwest industrial district, south or 19th Street and west of Anaheim Avenue. In almoSt every case the hazard is caused by Storage of resin , acetone, methyl ethyl ketone, paints or other ch.emic$.l . S<Wepts. Methan,ol was the chemical involved at El l\1onte. Councilman Dom Raciti, v.•ho demand- ed the survey shortly after the El ~1onte explosion, asked Marshall if the accident ... · could've been prevented if the city had had a fire prevention analyst at the time. "That's not a fair question," Marshall -responded . Hiring of an analyst is scheduled in next year's budget, he said. Fire Marshal Ed Lewis said inspectors cite plants i! violations are found. A two-week notice to wmply is most common, Le\Vis said, but inspectors have the Power fo immediately shut down a hazardous plant. He added that in addition to city checks, the plants are inspected f9r safe- ty almost monthly by state and insurance officials. Identified as potentially m o s t dangerous in the survey is the NARMCO Materials Division of Whittaker Corp. at 600 Victoria St. It is surrounded by residential develo pments . The plant ''could be in a better loca· tion ," ~!arshall said. "But I can't say they should move." It conforms to city safety requirements, be added. Raciti accepted Marshall 's offer to take him on a tour of some ol the in- dustrial plants to show him the inspec- tion proc.edure. "Everything is about as salis.factory as it can be ," Vice l\fayor Will Jord~n con· eluded. "Every wmmunity hu this potential." S t. Clair Document Ur1d er Fire Bond A "ract sheet" distributed by a former city councilman about Costa Mesa's $4 milUon park bond election Sept. 11 drew strong criticism from city officials Mon- day night. "I( these are facts I'll eat it," Vice Mayor Willard Jordan declared as he shuffled the pages of a rePort written by William St Clair. "If he thinks people are going to read all that garbage, he's out of his mind," Jordan added at a city council study session. A memo by Bob Duggan, Costa Mesa assistant city manager, Characterized St. Clair 's (act sheet as "misleading, slanted and biased. II ln his response to city literature about Newport Eyes "' · -·tetWSM ,_., ... Annexing Of Airport Without a word of discussion, NewPorl Beach city councilmen voted unanimously Monday to seek an extension of the city's sphere of influence to include Orange County Airport. Councilmen also unanimously reaf- firmed their intention to eventually an- nex at least part of the Irvine Company coastUne property south of Corona del 1'iar, The move to the aiport marks out the county11Wfied airfield for possible future annexation, although the move may be a means of countering a similar claim filed by Costa r.1esa. two months ago. The council balked at quick action on City Manager Robert L. Wynn's recom- mendation that the city declare the undeveloped coastline below Corona dcl Mar 8.!J part of the city's sphere of in· fluence. The council later did accept Wynn's recommendation, but only after con- siderable discussion of the issue at the afternoon study session. The city niade its declaration of spheres or influence in preparation for a hearing before the Local Agency Form.a· lion Commission (LAFC ) later this month. The LAFC can accept or reject Newport Beach's proposed spheres of in· Ouence. Although the council did not discuss the reasons .for wal\ti.Qg the airpart within the city's sph'ere of influence , City Manager Wynn explained the city posi· lion last week in an interview. . 'Fact Sheet' Hit the bond package, St. Clair says the city has 1,627 acres of open space. City officials objected that St. Clair in· eluded in his figures Orange Coast College, Southern California College, Fairview State Hospital, and the Mesa Verde and Santa Ana Country Clubs - none of which is city owned. City Manager Fred Sorsabal said St. Clair is also inaccurate when he says the ci ty has 21 parks and three high schools totaling 40 acres. Costa ·Mesa has 16 developed parks, two high schools and the McNally continuation high school on a small site, Sorsabal said. "I'm concerned that misinformation is getting out," Duggan said. St. Clair has attacked proposed city purchase or (our vacant school sites in Costa Mesa (or parks from th~ Newport- Mesa Unified School District. He contends the purchase of the sites, about 45 acres. represents double pay- ment by Costa ~lesa taxpayers, who are already paying off school bonds used to buy the property. "The school district can't give the prop- erty away," Duggan said Monday. "lt's against the law." Duggan referred to the purchase as an "internal transfer" of funds and said the school district would use the money to remodel Costa Mesa High School. "We would receive the benefit both ways," Jordan said, by acquisition of open space and high school refurbishing. He called that the "vital key" to answer· ing opponents. The school "'Properties propoe:ed for purchase are 10 acres adjacent lo the Fairview regional park sile, 20 acres across from Estancia High School, 10 acres between Bear Street and Fairview Road north of the San Diego Freeway and five acres adjacent lo Tanager Park. In addition, the bond package calls for purchase of about 25 acres of privately owned properties. City officials have estimated the $4 million package would cost tbe owner of a $30,000 home about $8.89 more in taxes per year. Councilmen took: no action in respdod- ing to owonents of the package Mon· day. Further discussion of the open space fact sheet was scheduled ror the city council_ meeting at 15:30 p.m. Monday. Copter Res.cue i1a Vain Costa Mesa ···scnmiti·Son Dies inlf~~ !f~celif.tirrg· After Family Pool Mishap ~= ~~~!:1:wn The 3-year-old son of former '0range County Coogressman John G. Schmitz _died this morning Jn Hoag Memorial Hospital, Newport Beach. 1be child of , the one-time presidential hopeful fell into the family pool l\1onday afternoon. Phillip James Schmitz Was treated in the hospital intensive care wtlt from shortly after 4 p.m. Monday. He had been rushed there by Newport Beach pal ice helicopter. Schmitz and his wife kept a sleepless vigi l through the night at the hospital. Newport Beach police and firemen, called to the Schmitz home at 10 Mission Bay in Spygl'ass Hill shortly before 4 p.m. Monday, said the caller believed the child had drowned . "He wa s not breathing. He had no heartbeat," police said. Newport Beach firemen began ad- ministering heart massage and oxygen. Police Officer Hurd Armstrong arrived moments later and caned for the police helicopter, which landed in the street in !root of the Schmit! bom,e and rushed the yOuth 'to the hospital. Mrs. Schmitz said she does not know for sure bow long Pbilllp bad been in the water. "l took his lifejacket off~ he could go to the bathroom," Mrs. Schlnitz said. "No one saw him go back outside or get into the pool" She said be could have climbed or fallen into the pool during a IO-minute period whU~ she wu in the house, but she said her older children, Jerry, 14. aflil Mary Kay, 11, were in the pool all tti tim.e and didn't notice Phillip. "We wer:e all there," she said. "I don't know bow it could have happened." Mrs. Schmltz said the pool in the family's new home had been completed only 'Thursday. Mini-art Fest Fledgli11g Society Sets Con test The day-old Cultural Arts SOciety of Costa Mesa is sponsoring a city-wide art contest, its 11-year-old president an- nounced Monday. Although the fledgling society is open U,.1 T•ltllflt lt to all residents of .the city regardless of age, the contest is limited to persons tt- years-old and under, Mindy Jacobs said. Mindy regrets the · restriction, but :ex- plained that the club "can't afford an adult admission to Knott's Berry Farm." First and second prlZes in the art con- test will be admissions to the Buena Park amusement park. Entry fee (or the contest is JO-cents. Deadline for submission is Saturday, with judging scheduled ,for 3 p.m. Monday at Mindy's house, 948 Carnation Ave. flowever, anyone who joins the club can enter the contest free, That somewhat negates the club's hope to make mooey. Mindy admitted. She added that other purposes of the new society are to "do something worthwhile and fun ," promote~ and make !Mends. Nixon SI.ates Biigging Talk redtvelopment project designed to cor· rect "age, obeoleaccnce and deteriora- tion" were approved Monday by Costa Mesa Planning QxnmissiOners. The commission's recommendation was referred to the city council for ac- tim. 'Ibe commission also recommended a~ prova! of the project boundaries as sug· gested by consultants Wilsey and Ham. The area is bounded by 19th S-t on the north; 17th Street m the aouth ; Orange Avenue on the east; and the Newport Freeway extension right.of-way on the west. Land uses listed in the preliminary plan include commercial, industMal, residential and open space and parking. The project is supposed to "remedy ... bllgblng conditions," the Wilsey and Ham report states, including misuse of facilities, "depreciated values." "inade- quate streets" and rurHiown buildings. Density in the area is proposed at 20 dwelling units per acre. "Project activities," the rePort points out, ''may involve the relocation of some area residents due to private and public acquisition of sites for new develo~ ment." Favorable impacts of redevelopment are listed as improved traffic circulation and retail facilities and correction or blight harmful to the environment. Orange Cout Weather Little ternperatw-e change is ex· peeled for the Orange Coast Wednesday, with the usual low clouds and log holding down beach temperatures to 61. Highs Inland expected in the upper 80s. INSIDE TODAY Jos~ph. P. Kvtnedy Ill, son of tht latt Stn. Robert r. Kennedy, mi.ssed a cu~ on Nantuckti ls· land and Jllpptd ltis jeep, itrf.. ousLy injuring one of fivt girls in the vehtcl.t and his brother, David. Ste 1tortt. Pcige 4. L,M, ••'fill " 111 1'"1ct " INtJM " A!WI L~ .. Ct»flnllt ·~ Mnl .. .. Cla1MfMMI .... M11tMI ll•llft .. CtftllU .. N1t1-1 t1_. • ·~-.. 0,lllM (Wflty • DHtfl trMtk1t • -h , .. ,, •Clttrlll ..... • '*' MarUb .. .. •11t1rl1l-I " T--.. l'INMt ... T"'"" " Iler IM llt1KtN ,. .. _ • --" sion that a new type of jet lighter had been built -one that ·could go In either dlrectio~ at lhe same tlme. WASlllNG'OON (UPI) -Pr<S~ . dent Nlsoa will •ppear 01 national televl•i<>a at I p.m. (POT) Wedoes· day to further uplaln .W rete In the Water,pte affair aad auempt. 10 mtore.erodtd publlc conlklence In bit lt-adenb1p. (tarUer story, p ... 4.1 W...,.,i'I Ntw1 1J.1.I W..-N Ntwt • ' DAILY PILOT c Tutsday, AU9USt 14, 1m .. ---- Expert Say s Rizzo Lied Ove1· Deal l'llILADELPHIA (UPI) A polygraph erpert said today tests show that Mayor Frank L. Rizzo lied about an alleged political patronage deal, but the may0r lna:ilted he "Wlequivocall y told the truth." Warren Holmts, an expert from ltfia mi, Fla., said lie detector tests given Monday to Rizw, Deputy Mayor Phillip Carroll and Democ ratic city chainnan Peter Camiel showed Rizzo and Car rol] lied about the alleged deal tendered ln a b>tel men's room last February. Camie! charged lhat RiIZO offered to give him the choice of architects for city projects j f the mayor could select the party's endorsed candidate for district altomey. Holmes said he questioned the three only about the alleged deal in the men 's room. He said the tests showed that Rizzo lied on his response to six of 10 questions, Carroll to fi ve of nine questions and that Camie! "told the truth" on all JI ques- tions he was asked. Holmes' report on his finding \\'as car- ried in today's issue of the Phi ladelphia Daily News, which arranged for the volWltary lie detector tests. Rizzo told a news conference shortly after the newspaper came out that •·1 want to tell you publicly, Rizzo and Car- roll told t.he truth -unequivocally told the truth. We will go before any court in the land and put our hand on the Bi ble." Rizzo said he was "sick to my stomach" when he learned of Holmes' fmdings and said "my credibility might be affected by the headline 'RIZ7.o Lied.' " But be termed this a "temporary set- back" and said "the issue here is who has been corrupt. M a result of this test, I will not back off. We will pursue all fa cets of corruption in government." Carroll claimed that a list they showed Camie! in the men's room of the Bellevue-Stratford Hotel last February was a list of eight city projects in which City Council President George Schwartz bad "excessive involvement." Rizzo said "I have great confidence in the polygraph. I believe it is an excellent machine. But when I know in my heart I told the truth, then there must be something wrong ." Emergency Care Training Slated In Costa Mesa Four emergency care train ing sesl'iion s are belng offered to the public Thursday andand Friday in the auditorium of Fair- view State Hospital in Costa Mesa. The series, "Beyond First Aid" is sponsored by the Costa ~1esa Council on Emergency Medical Services and Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital's emergency department. Sessions will be at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Thursday and Friday. Techniques for handli ng s h o c k , bleeding, head and chest injuries, diabetie and epileptic seizures, drug overdose and heart resuscitation will be demonstrated. Reservations for the free classes can be made by calling the Costa Mesa Hospltal emergency department, 642-- 2734. 2 County Men Jailed On LSD Sale Charge Costa Mesa police arrested two 22- year-old men Monday aft er the duo allegedly sold 37 squares of LSD to Wldercover agents for $56. Booked into Costa Mesa City Jail were Steven Bennette Chemers. 2 1 6 6 1 Brookhurst St., Hun tinglOn Beach, and Eric Stephen Northrup, 1027 N. Parton St., Santa Ana. OIAN•I COAIT DAILY PILOT ,.... Or .... c-r DML y l"ILOT, ...... '""'""' i. ~ """ JMn.l"tHI, II P\lbl/IMof W .,.. °" .... a.st hllflshlrtl ~""· $fpe. "'"' ""llloo'lt .,. ..... .,,.... "'~" "'""""' l"rlll•'I• Mr cetl• M-, N•WPOtl Buell, Hvfttfng!On 1.-<:fl/l"_.•111 V•11rt, L.,;JllM •..ch, lrvlnt/SNd'"9dl llnllll S.11 C..,._tl./ .... Jlltll C:.1"litfll'°' A 1lllfll r99IOMI •Hit!! 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Ul"I Ttlt'PhOlo Wlaite Hoaise B e sie ged Antiwar demonstrators stage a pray-in on U1 e East Portico of the White House in protest against the Ca mbodian bombing. Sixty per· sons were arrested today, including Daniel Berrigan and his brotJ1er Jerry, b'ringin g the total to 158 si nce July 6. Irvine Co1npa11y Directors Meet, Delay Nami11g Cl1ief Trvine Comp311y directors met briefly today but did not elect a successor to late company president William R. Mason. Board Chairman, John V. Newman. told company spokesmen, "The board did not formall y address the question of a new president at the August meeting." The board met in Newport Beach cor- porate headquarters at 9:45 a.m. today. 'The agenda \Vas limited to severa l routine adminis trative ma tters requiring board action at this time:' the spokes· man said. Directors adjourned in memory of 1fr. fo.fason who died suddenly last mo nth at the age of 54. He was president of the ranching and ... la11d development firm since 1965 and had served the firm si nce 1959. Since Mason·s death, Executive Vice President Raymond L. Watson has serv· ed as chief executive office r of the firm . Ne w1nan, who appointed \Va tson to the acting leadership post. today praised Watson and the company management "for the con tinuing effectiveness of the company operations desp ite the serious Bandit Los es $1 corporate and persona! sense of Joss at the death of l\1r. Mason.'' There was no \.\'ord fr om the company expl aining the delay in selecting a sue· cessor or a replacement for Mason on the seven-mem ber board of directors. 1'.'ev.'man \1'a s elected chainnan of the board at the June compan y stockholders n1eeting when personal tax adviser to the late James Irvine, N. Loyall r-.1cLaren retired from the company board at the age of 81. A Claremont man, Howard Allen, \\'as elected to fill th.at vacancy on the board. Others serving on the company board are r-.1rs. Athelie (Joan) Irvine Smith of Middle bw:g, Va. and Emerald Bay, \Va!son, Eastbluff, Charles S. \\1heeler, secretary. of Ne,~1>0rl Beach and ~t. Keith Gaede of Laguna Beach. The company spokesn1an declined to discuss the precise nature of the ad- ntinistrativc mat ters being co nside red to- day other than to indicate they involved board ratification of man a ge men t decisio ns possibly related to sales or land. Colle~1s • ll'l uf fed Heist U t A HUNTINGTON BEACH sand,vich shop owner ma tched wits with an a r med robber I\londay and can1e out ahead by $1, police reported tod ay. The supposed victin1 of the 7 p.m. heist was Donald New- berry, 42, o\vner of the shop a t 17091 Nc,vland Street. PoHce sa id a man gave Ne\vberry one dollar and asked for change. But when the shop O\Vner opened the cash register to oblige, he found himself looking down th e barrel of a revolver. ''DUCK," YELLED Ne"1berrv as he hit the deck behind the counter a nd scram bled into the near.bv storeroon1. The alarn1 'vas shouteri to shOp employes and patrons \vho either call ed police or ran outside in tin1c to !iee the \vould be ban. dit jump into an old yellow pickup truck and speed off. THE POLICE REPORT concludes, "The victim has no furth- er inforn1 ation at this tim e other than he got the suspect's dollar bu t the suspect got no money from him.'' J(iller Mullin 011 S tand: 'They All Died Quickly' SANTA CRUZ (APJ -"I'm trying 10 explain why I killed. They died quickly, bu t no one likes to die like that." With those words. accused mass killer J1erbert ~1ulHn began his personal ac· coun t today or lhe 13 murders he has ad- mitted. He ls charged with 10 murders In Santa Cruz COUnty last winte r. ~Related story. Page 5) Asked by dercnsc nllorney Ja1nes Jackson why he killed l~ people. J\.full ln said, "I fee l as If I'm a scapegoat. &orl of iin outcast, ma de to feel like n scapegoat." ~1 ullin te!ltl fied toda y that his rclativts and friends subjected him to ''a killjoy sadism" to ·•retard'', his physlcal and spiritual growth. He also made a Jong discourse on ho mosexuality and heteroscxu.:ility. PsychlalrisJs have testified lhnt t-.1ullin 1.~ a "par3no ld·schlzophrenic" who ht1d 1l "lona:·st11ndlng hnl-red" of his ft1mil y and 11n "emphasis on kllllng and \'fo lencc" i11 his upbringing. In his rambl ing 1£ostimony on homoscx· uality, ~iullin said. "\\'e'\'e e~pcricnrrd this since about ;ige 7. But n·c·re not to talk aboul it "'ith other people in the neighborhood. "i\1y sister is 5 years older," he said. "\\'hen I'm 3, she Is 8 and has already c'\:perienced homosex ual activity with her friends. "They know I haven't and I'm reeling the pain, but I'm being offered up to God," Mullin said. Traf fie Warrant Le ads to 'Pot' T\\'0 Cost!i Mesa police orficcrs said they were trying to serve a traffi c war· rant Mondny when they found 45 mari- juana plants parked in Stephen Crock- et'!! ya rd at 788 Wiison St. Officc1'5 Bob Croga n ;ind Ed Oryimala said they were lookin,!! for Crockett when rhey saw the plants and various garden- ing tools. They 11 rrested the 22-yca r-old on suspicion of cultiva ting marijuana. Bail has been s1·1 al $S,OOO. Newport SUit · Looms - --? Co~~a}!oar~u~U:~~rn~n~~L~k~ ~~h~~0~~~~t~~: °' "" ~tr '""' •1•H quirement.s imposed by the South Coast The mayor's strong remarks brooght A majority or Newport Beach coun-Regional Zone Conservation commission. an immediate response from Councllma~ · , . "We're the ones who should decide bow Richard Croul. "Let's challenge 11 cilmen said Monday they re thinking of many parking spaces a development ou rselves," Croul said. suing the California Coastal Zone needs" Mcinnis said. Mcinnis, Vice ~fayor Howard noger!I Conservation Commission fo r alleged "W~'re given that power by the State and Croul all opposed proposition 2G last "usu rpation of local authority," of Callfornia," he said , "yet it is the November, when il went before the But councilmen said lhey probably coastal commission that is exercising voters. won't press a lawsuit unless the coastal that power and nobody has yet challeng· Support for a lawsuit also came from commission contlnues in what they see cd the coastal commission." Coun cilman Paul RyckoCr. who did sup- as threats to local authority. Newport Beach is angry because it re-port Proposition 20 last November. l\1ayor Donald Mclnnis brought up the quires only two parking spaces for a "We're faced with a si lualion where ~e subject at an afternoon study session. duplex while th e coastal commission has have to bastardize our structures in Cowicilmen were attempting to come to refused to approve duplexes in the city order to meet the coastal commission's requirement that we have two parking Scrawled Map May Lead To More Texas Graves HOUSTON (UP[) -An East Te'8s sheriff said today a hand-written map, first believed to sho\Y possible Tl(!W gravesites, was not connected to a homosexual murder ring responsible for the deaths of 27 boys. He said. there would be no more digging for victims. San Augustine County Sheriff John Hoyt said the map, found in a ca bin used by a homosexual bachelor accu.sed in the case, pinpainted several locations in the_ San Jacint.o National Forest in southeast Texas. (Related Pictures Page 4.) But he said Ule isolated plot circled on the map were not more burial sites. ''It has nothing to do with this case ," Hoyt said. "\Ve have cliecked it out en- tirely and there is no connection at all. It may be a map of some cabins of some ot her people." When the map was discovered, Walker County Sheriff W. D. White said he sent his deputies to search the backwoods dirt roads near New Waverly, Tex. They found no trace of more burial grounds . Hoyt questioned one of the teen-aged suspects in the case in a Houston jail cell during the day lo detennine if the map was "good evidence or bad evidence." The sheri ff said the m&!J, shovels, plastic body ba gs, three pain; of gloves, one tinted with lime, and a partially used sack of quicklim e were found at the cabin near Lake Sam Rayburn owned by the father of Dean Allen Corll, 33. torture, sexual abuse, murder and burial of some or the vic tims. Brooks said he helped Corll and J~enley bury some victims but said he was not involved in the actual killings. Sheriff's deputies recovered four bcxlies l\1onday on the beach east of Galveston, raising the number of vict ims to 27. Officers indicated after the digging ~tonday that the four bodies recovered on the beach would be the last found there. •.1we will not do any more wort today in <llambers County unless there is new informatioo arising, .. Ownbers County Sherl!f Louis Otter sa!d. The four bodies were un earthed in the Chamben Counly resort of ll'8JI Island as spectators including blklnJ-clad girls watched. A woman told police she remembered seeing Corll several times late at night digging in back of hi s small factory, but the woman said Corll told her be was burying rotten candy. The woman said she never thought anythin g more about it unUJ COrll was killed and the fU'st bodies discovered last "''eek. Nothing was round in an hour's digging in back of the factory. spaces for each living unit," Ryckoff complained. "This concerns me very much.'' 1'-1ayor t-.1clnnis then made anoth~r reference to a possible lawsuit. ''I don't know how far the coastal commission should be allowed to go wit hout a challenge. Somewhere there's a line, and when it's crossed, you have to consider legal remedies to protect yourself." After the meeting, Mcinnis expanded on his remarks. Reiterating his belief that the city has the right to regulatt developments "and not any appointivf' body of people who do not have lO stand fo r election." ''I don't mean to threaten anyone but we all have a point where we draw lhe line. "We ma y accept this requirement for two parking spaces. But if the coastaJ commJsslon keeps doing more and more, we could reach the point where we bave to do something. "Before we would pursue a lawsuit," he added, "We of course wo1;1ld exhaust all admin.Lstrative possibilities. And 1 sin- cerely hope we could stop short of a suit." Councilman Milan Dostal, speaking after the meeting, said he agreed with the general posltlon taken by the mayOl". "Our disagreements \\'ith the coastal . c omm iss ion are not simply phllosophlcal, '' he said. "They are legal.. I personally feel that Proposition 20 ts. unconstitutional in some of the things It is trying to do." He said he was willing to conslder a lawwit to test the legal questions if It became necessary. Only Councilman Carl Kymla said be "wld oppose a lawsuit. "The coastal commission has a clear mandate from the people to regulate development in the coastal zone," · Kymla. "A vote of. the people supersedes any powers of zoning the city may have golten from the st.a te legislature." Councllman John Store was not available for comment. l\1ost of the bodies found at three loca- tions in Texas were wrapped in plastic bags and sprinkled with lime. Houston PoUce Chief Herman Short disclosed Monday that a "torture board" -the item allegedly used by Corll to st1 ap his victims to torture and kill them -v.•as found in the cabin. The first grave found Monday actually was discovered by a truck drlve'r poking lhe beach wilh a sUck Sunday nlghL "When I brouiibt Ille sUck up, ii had a bad odor." George Leger said. Legu look pollce to Ille spot and lbe 241h body was recovered before Ille morning fog had a chance to burn away. Later in the morning and two miles away from the spot where the 24th body was found, a road grader digging In a patch of sand lumed black by decomposing bodies wiearthed lbe 25lh victim. City Attorney Denis O'Neil said the council had not consulted bim about Ill<. pbsaiblllty of a lawsuit, although be saJd · there ",.ere probably ground! for one If ,: the city chose to pursue one. .,. AH the victims were teenage boys allegedly procured by Elmer Wayne Henley, 17, and. David Q\\·en Brooks, 18. for Corl!. Henley ha s admitted taking pa rt in tbe Mesa Tot lnjm·ed When Hit by Car A 21,ll-year-old girl suffered seMoull head injuries today when she ran out in front of a car driving down Maple Street, Costa ~tesa police reported. DoclOrs at Costa ~resa Hospital said they were sending for a specialist to help Richelle Nicoll Guillaume, who was playing near her home at 2000 Maple St. before she was hit by a car driven by Randy Cole, 21 , of Costa 1\-iesa, police said. Cole had no way of seeing the little girl in time to avoid the accident, police in· dicated . A couple of boor9'1ater, early Monday afiernooO, deputies digging wi~ shovels found Ille llllh and 27~ victims In one shallow grave. Their nude bodies were tied together bead to fool Jn 1971 , the bodies of 25 farm hands were found burled . along the Feather Ri ver in Northern California in what was, until Monday, the worst known mass murder in the United States this century. Juan V. Corona, a migrant tabor contractor, is serving a life prison term for those slaytngs. It was learned also today that a 15- year-old girl linked to the case was Henley 's fiance and that she had also dated some boys believed to be \'ictims. She and Henley bad planned to leave Houston together within the next few mootM. Betty Cobble, the mother of one of the known victims, Charles C. Cobble, 15, said the girl is "quite beautiful and sexy. She looks 18 but is only 15. She Ls a sweet, coopersUve child." "My ean really perked up when I : heard lllem talking aboul a lawsuit." O'Neil said. "But I'm pretty sure il's still in the talking stage." 1.. Agnew Records: Open to Probers . • ' ' , \YASHJNGTON (AP) - Vice President Spiro T. Agnew sald this afternoon he . would make available to federal pro- secutors perwnal records requested in a probe o( alleged poli tical corruption In Maryland. In a letter to U.S. attorney George . Beall in Baltimore. the vtce president said the records may be inspected at Agnew's office at any time by Beall or any of his assistants. tRelated story. Page 4) ' flowcver, Agne"· made clear that he , \\'RS granti ng access only to his personal • fi nancial and income tax records sought by the prosecutor's office and not the or-- fi clal r'ecords or the vice president. .~ A LICENSE NOT TO STEAL- Unfortunately for the general public, there ere e lot of people installing carpeting who shouldn 't bo. Unbelievabfof, meny carpet "contractors" ere working unlawfully without insurance and stete licenses. FOR YOUR PROTECTION you should insist that the people who install your carpeting work for a contractor who is INSURED end STATE LICENSED. (Ho is required by state law to be both.) State licensed contractors have to post a bond for your protection, end the very accomplishment of licensing indicates a degree of competency. The biggest problem in dNling wit+. en unlicensed contractor is thot ho might be out of business tomorrow. Don't teko e chance -coll Aldon" for roliobility, end the best installation around! ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOUIS: Moo. n.,. Tlton., t to S!JO -Fii, f lo t -SAT., t :JO lo 5 • • • •: • ' • . , • ;i ' •