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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-08-20 - Orange Coast Pilot• lXOll ro DAILY PILOT Joseph Kennedy Guilty: * * * 10' * * * Fined $100~ Warned MONDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 20, 1973 VOL. ... HO, Pl. I SECTIONS, 21 •AGIS • • • • • • • • • • • • Balmy Weather's Not Here to Stay 111 New Orlea11s Nixon Death Try Plot Gets Probe NEW ORLEANS. La. (AP) -Presi· dent Nixon, warned of a "possible con· spiracy to assassinate "him,'' cancelled a motorcade through the New Oeleans business district today. But upon arrival at his destination, he walked directly into a friendly sidewalk crowd for a moment of handshaking. Officials said bolh the President's and Joe Kennedy Found Guilty, Fined $100 NANTUCKET, Mass. !AP) -A judge found Jooeph P. Kennedy Ill guilty today .of driving to endanger, fined him $100 · and urged him to use his "illustrous name" for better purposes. Afterwards, the young man's tmcle. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) said he thought his nephew received a fair trial and added, "Joe will have to Jive with the verdict." · Seven persons were hurt Aug. 13 when · an open car driven by the son of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (D-N.Y.), flipped as it entered a highway from a side road. Judge C. George Anastos o{ Nantucket Diotrlct Court urged Kennedy to "use your illustrous name to do a kit of good, as J. l@ow you are able, rather than hav· ing to ~e Jnto court like this." Kennedy-.pleaded Innocent I<> the charge. Ia addition' to his-uncle the senator, spectators in the small, crowded courtroom included his mother, Ethel. .A patrolman, William Carltoo, testilled lhal be talked to Kennedy after the ao- ciden~ adding: "During t be In- terrogation, he (Kennedy) said the ac· cident was entirely hi• fault." According to witnesses., Kennedy was driving along a seldom-Jsed side road when he pulled onto a main road, barely missing an oocqming car. · Sapra PetcrSQO, a bus driver, said she saw Kennedy's vehicle moments before tho accident. "It looked Uke there were people hang- ing all over the top of the Jeep. Some were standing," sh:i said. Mn. Pele1'110n 11ld the vehicle was travellnr 36 or 40 miles an hour on tho narrow, bumpy road. The vehicle Is a four,wheel drive, open car. She said that when she wne upon the accident she spoke to Kennedy. "lie said that he was totally lo blame ror the accident and that nobody else was (S.. KENNEDY, Pl&• Z) the public's safety were !actors in cancelling the scheduled motorcade and changing the route by which the Presi· dent was driven to Rivergatc Convention Center for an address to the Veterans of Foreign \Vars. New Orleans police, acting on a pickup order from the Secret Service, arrested a former policeman, but would not say whether he was wanted in connection with the President's visit. He was identifed as Edwin M. Gaudet, alias ''Punchy," who had been arrested in 1970, the last time Nixon was in New Orleans, for throwing a burning flag on the President's car. The President and Mrs. Nixon were driven from New Orleans International Airport by a back route and did not go through the five blocks where his car \\'as to have slowed and a crowd had gathered to greet the motorcade. Increased security was obvious. Eight motorcycle policemen preceded the presidential limousine and a Coast Guard helicopter criss-crossed overhead. Secret Service men abcnmded. When the President arrived at the Rivergate, a crowd stood near a VF\V band blaring out "Old ~1an River." Nixon and his wife walked directly to the crowd and shook a few hands as Secret Service agents held back VFW flags slapping in their faces . Signs nearby said, "Law and Order," "Right On," and "Impeach Nixon." The President flew to New Or~ans from Florida to address the 74tb aMual convention of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. his first public appearance jp. six weeks. Deputy Press Secretary Gerald \\'arren said the Florida White House learned of the possible threat to the President's life "over the weekend." He said Nixon personally dec}ded to accept the Secret Service's recommendaUon that the motorcade be canceled. The President's blue, silver and white jetliner, after landing at New Orleans International Airport, taxied to a remote corner o! the fie.Id where tight security (See CONSPIRACY, Page %) BOAT SELLS FAST ON flRST CALL Busy people just love Dally Pilot clas- sified want ads. Look at this: SA)IOT No. 2042. Completely rellnlsbed of, Oll'I. $200. (Pbooe No.) 'Ibis ad reallY womd fast! The boat sold on the !irst call. U you're busy, 11ve Umc and money with Dally Pllol claast- llcd advertising. The direct lino - 64U678. Seagoing Pot Seized .. DllllY P'll•t lllff "'-" OFFICER TOM STEWART TAKES INVENTORY OF SUSPECTEO WEED TAKEN IN NEWPORT Police Soy About 1 Ton of All09od Muijuon1 Smuggled into Harbor by BOii Coast Scout Base Used In Pot Smuggling Case By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ttte DMty Pht Stiff A report by a bay!ronl resident that t\\'O suspicious males were unloading c~ awfully late and last at the nearby Sea SCout Base to be working on merit badges today led Newport Beach police lo intercept nearly a ton ol allegedly smuggled marijuana. They also arrested a pair or leather artisans who gave addresses locally and in Seattle, Wash., alter stopping their rented U·Haul van ror inspection. Merle D. Mh, 11, who llsled his home "' 11155 Sberington Place, Newport Beach, and Kenneth D. "-1orrow, 29, SeatUe, """' booked Into city Jail oo suspicion of -Ion of marijuana !or .. 1 •. Naroollc:a lletectlve Sgt. Leo Kookel 3lld tlie van bad already rumbled out ol the Sea Stout oompo~ in the 1200 block of w .. t •Coast lllgl>Way before police could respond. Patrolman Tom Stewart atopped the truck at University DrlYe and Irvine Avenue. Neither Morrow, a leather shop owoer, nor Aah1 who Hated. himself as an unemployed leather worker, had any con· neetlon with the Scout facility. Officer Stewart encolUltered n o resistance in stopping the suspects and the truckload of green, leafy material in- dividually packed in boxes. "We're just counting the bricks ol it now," Sgt. Konkel said about 10 a.m., ad- ding it appears the load is much larger than initially expected. "It looks like it might be a ton.'' he ' remarked. He said at the current market rate of $200 per kllo or 2.2 per package, the con- traband would be worth about $400.~ in street sales. JnvesUgaton theomed the alleged smualen, "1lo abandoned their rented, 211' cabin cruiser, selected the Sea Seoul .Base beca~e it was convenient, deserted at that boor and hardly a suspected smugglers' landing. Police did not specify whether they had Information on where the shipment was destined !or delivery. A representative of the U.S. Burtiau ()r Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs (BNDDI was dispatched I<> assist in the Impound and Inventory operation today. Bird Sanctuary Hinders Search For Mo1·e Bodies HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) -Concern for a state bird sanctuary sJowed the opera- tions today as digging was resumed on a lonely sandy beach at the eastern tip of Galveston Island in the search for possi- ble .additional victims of a homosexual torture-murder ring. Previous diggings uncovered the bodies ol %7 yoong men. Iron rods and spades replaced a road grader that Galveston P.olice Chief O.K. Lack planned to use. Lack said the area is a new sanctuazy that holds rare birds GAY GROUPS FEAR HOUSTON PUBLICITY-Story, P1go S and nem and that be would not use heavy equlpmenl unless early probing in· dicated it was necessary. One hole wu, dpg alter the iron rod probe localed a .. 11 spot near the si te where Lack said a Houston couple reported that they saw two men carrying what looked like a body. Nothing was round. The Jloostoo couple told olllccrs they saw mrut resembling Dean A. Corll and Elmer Wayne Henley burying something. The case broke Aug. 8 when Henley (See BODIES, P1ge Ii Cloudiness To Return ByFri~r The arrival of summer along the Orange Coast was termed "kind of a reverse trend," the National Weather Service expects will last onJy until Fri· day. Then , the "night and morning low clouds and fog along the coast" routine v.·ill return. l\1eanwhile, an "easterly w a v e ' • brought scattered thundershowers t o coastal and inland Orange and Los Angeles Counties today. The package o( heat , humidity, dense clouds and heavy raindrops in some places is caused by a flow of moist air from south of the border. \Vinds from the southeast at from five to 15 knots brought the unu sual summer storminess. \Vinds from the southwest to west at from eight to 15 knots this a[. ternoon ~·ere expected to cle3r the skies. Variable cloudiness is the word for Tuesday \vith the emphasis expected to be "mostly stmny." A clear mild night with low tem· peratures along the Orange Coast in the rhid to high 60s is to be foUowed by highs in the mid-70s tomorrow, the NaUooal \Veather Service predicts. The "reverse trend " of land-wanned air whether from inland or from Mexico is commonly called summer along the Orange Coast. There hasn't been much of it this yea r, the weatherman admits, with sea-rooted air pushing onshore much of the time. "By the end of the week.'' the forecaster sa id," the marine air in- Uuences will return." Orange Weatller • I ' It'll be slightly cooler Tuesday- but still SUIUly !or a change ajaaa' the Orange Coast. llighs at tile,. beaches in the mid-70s rising to the: tow 90s inland. Overnight Iowa in the OOs. INSIDE TODAY I Onty two million oj the 100. million species oj animals that have roamed the earth thTOMQ"- history stilt aunnve and mmtJ of those are /acing e:rtincllon. See end read about them °" Page 19. L.M. ••H ' ~--.; INflftt " (allftr'lll• •• ....... ,.... CluMlltf ..... --. c-1c1 • =-~ Crotlwwf " 0.1111 Nltlcft , ·--EdittNI ,. ... • T-.WI .... E"19rtlllllM!lt 21•tt -,llllMI ... ,, ==--.; ""' Itri• llt!:n " ' """'("' .. WWN .... .. ...__11.l:::;.:ll Y P __ IL_O_T --s Monday, Auyusl 20, 1973 ---' . Nixon Admits He Ordered Bomb Raids From Wire Servlcts NE\V ORLE:ANS, La. -President Nix- on acknowledged !or Lhe firsl time today that he ordered secret bombing raids In Cambodia one month .:after he fook office in 1969. LBshing at critics of his lndochina poHcics, the President said in a state- ment released as he addressed the Veterans of Foreign \Vars convention here that the raids were necessary to protect Amcricnn lives. He said if he faced the same decision today, he would take the same action. When he took office in January 1969, Nixon said, 40,000 North Vietnamese Fro111Page1 ... CONSPIRACY • • had been imposed. The public was not allowed to witness the arrival. Gov. and Mrs. Edwln Edwards and members of the Louisiana congressional delegation greeded the President and his wife as they stepped from the plane, with Mrs. Nixon being handed a bouquet of red roses. Nixon· aides said the Secret Service did not recommend cancel:ition of the visit, but the action was unprecedented. "We have never faced a situation in which the Secret Service recommended a diversion or route because they were unable to resolve the situation before a presidenUal arrival," one aide said. Spokesman Jack Warner said the Secret Service made the unusual an- nouncement because "we anticipated in· quiries." Asked why he thought there would he inquiries, Warner said the Secret Service had reason to believe the change in plans and the events surrounding it would be known publicly within a short while. FBI Direttor Clarence M. Kelley has relayed information about the case to At- ty. Gen. Elliot L. Richardson, a Justice Department spokesman said. •le declined to say what action Richardson might take. Stocking-masked Ba11dit Holds Up Valley Eater y A robber whose race was distorted by a woman's stocking pulled over his head, took more than $1.300 from a Fountain Valley eating establishment Saturday night. Police said the robbery occurred at the troops had t3ken over a 10.mile-wide stretch in cambodia alongside the South Vietnamese border. "'l'he Co1nmwiisls had n1Adc a mockery of the nl!utralily or those border regions." Nixon said. "The United Slates was under no moral obllgallon to respect the sham." Nix:on said he ordered U.S. airpowcr "en1ploycd directl y and continually" against Communist base areas in Cam· bodia and said the Cambodian govern- ment "did not object to the strikes. ''Jn fact ,'' Nixon added, ''while strike!: \\'ere in progress Prince Sihanouk invited me to make. a state visit to the Cam- bodian capital." The raids were never anoounced - a ract that has stirred recent controversf -because secrecy ~·as necessary to sove American lives, Nixon said. "Jlad we announced lhe air strikes,'' Nixon said, "the Cnmbodian government would have been compelled to protest: the bombing would have had to stop, and American soldiers would have paid for the disclosure ¥:ith their lives." Nixon said the bombing was disclosed to unspecified government a n d congressional leaders. ''There air strikes were not directed at Kentucky Fried Chicken, Brookhurst SI. at about 9:20 p. ., just as employes were closing for t night. WET SENDOFF FOR FIRST FAMILY ON TRIP SOUTH Stiffer Holds Umbrella for Mrs. Nixon; President Follows Sgt. Bill DeN' said the andit went to the store's b r was let in when e pO!lnd on it. e was armed with a blue steel automatic pistol. The robber held the three employes at bay while cleaning out the cash register or the weekend 's receipts. OeNisi said the employes were forced to lie on the noor while the gufl!llan fled out the back door. The victims told police the robber was a Caucasian, in his early twenties with long brown hair. Co1ita1niriatio11 Tlireate11s Water NEW ORLEANS. La. (AP) 1'.iunicipal water systems on t h e Mississippi Rlver south or Baton Rouge were ordered to close their intake valves today to avoid contamination by 64,000 gallons of potentially lethal chloroform. The Coast Guard ordered the precau- tionary shutdown after a barge broke up and sank Sunday about 75 miles upstream Crom New Orleans, leaking the chloroform into the river. A Coast Guard spokesman said the order would remain In effect until the state Health Department devises a test for chlorofonn in water treatment facilities. OUNGI COAST " DAILY PILOT 1'11• Or•• Coa1! DAILY PILOT, wll!I wllldl lt·c-nlltl\lld trio Nt""•PftU, ft pUbllllled by tllO Or•nv• C011t Pvbllthlrt9 Co~ny. ,,,.. NHI tdlllon1 ''' M!l1lled, MoncWy tllroU1111 ,rllf1y, fOr Cotlt Mflf, NtWPOfl 8110!. l'luriflt11ton ltKllf,•imlfl" v11i.y, LIO""• 11 .. dl, 1Nlfl9/1Ndl.O.tk Mid 5'111 Cle""""' 5111 J~ll C1pl•lrt110. A t l11t1le rt1J IOllll •..ittlln It llY&lltMd S•"'""'l't -1111161~. • flW prlnclptl PVOllllllllO Pit"! It It U0 Wttl ·ll'f lffWt. CO.II M•lf, (&Ufto!lt, ntl4, R•b11t N. W1oi ,,_Iden! Ind Pvllll!Mr J11c:lr R. C11rl•v Ylt:8 Pra!Nnt I nd Gel'lllfll M&n-.et Tho11111 K1 1¥i1 E0110r llt•111.,. A. Mvr,liin e Mtlll•'"' l!dltw Ch1rlo1 H. Loot lflchonl P. Nell .t4Ahll111t M111HIM Edt ..... Offk• c;a.,. M ... l U1 w.11 ll'f Str .. 1 Mtwpwt ltitc:lll ISl3 ·NtwPOri lovlfflr' UtlllNI atotd\1 m "'°""' Awn.,. ·HU!Tfltif!Orl'h«ll: 11117' l•ldl tollltvtrt $111 CltfMnfll .J fffr"I •t (&ll'llllo •NI Tlla,•1111 17141 '42AJ11 Cl lflM Alwwwt .. lr I '41·1671 p,_c-Mf.V. ..................... I 4tJM11 Newport W ome1i Capture First In Flight Race Two Newport Beach women pilots flew from Santa Monica to Independence, Ore., Saturday in four hours and 51 minutes to win the fourth annual Palms to Pines Air Race. Shirley Cote and Madine Carpenter, wife of state Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter lR·Newport Beach) led the field of 104 entries in the race sponsored by the 99s, international women's pilot orf_anlzation. The Newport Beach niers will share a $500 prize with £our other top finishers, including last year's winner Bernie Stevenson of North Hollywood. Among the entrants were n i n c grandmothers, a mother-daughter team and an aunt-niece team. Each plane \\'SS handicapped according lo engine size and body design to give en- tries an equal chance. Farmers Battle Beacli Nud ity ERDEVEN, France <UPI) -Farmers backing the mayor ol this Atlantic coast t0\.\1l parked their tractors across the en· 't rance road to a beach Sunday to keep Bl\'ay nudists. It was the latest episode in a running feud between ~1ayor Jean Lorgeoux and nudists \\-00 have visited Cliff Beach since 1969. Last month, the district attorney tn ntarby Lorienl ruled that the nudists could use the beach If they wore what the' French called ''the minimum'' -skimpy briefs with which women were allowed lo go topless. But last week Lorgeoux dccid· ed to outlaw such attire. Clioosy Burglar Nabs Nude Shots HARTFORD, Corot (UPI) -A burglar broke tnto a movie theater here and stole all the nude scnes from an X-rated film, "l,001 Danish Delights." I , tNll ,..,. Of .... ~ c:.tri-ltltt ........ ~..,..,.,, ,,,2. Of•11911 Cottt """""""" CtiwllMll'f. M1 MWt tlDl"lft. Ulllttrttloolt, ... 1 ... 111 ~tttr " .......,, .. ""'",, ""'"" ,,...,. ot ,..,...."'9d wl!llwt '"'lotl • """lltlrl "' c....-ltfll ...,,,.,.. ~ ditu "'*'" ,..w· '' '"'' #Mitt 'Ctm.not&. ~.... .... (ffrlilf a.u James Wgnrr, manager of the Rivoli Theutcr. said the burglar W<?nt through the reela or film, tearing out sections. "•le was apparently Interested in the -nude ~s." Wagner said. fT*lfM•t' w !Nill u.11 -111w1 mlllhrt _.,,.....,. ll.61 l'Mll""Y· The lnlruder linally tripped • burglar alarm and ldt somc of his boo1J In e parking lot as he flee!. ' From Page 1 BODIES ... told police he killed Corll in sell- derense. CorU allegedly was the leader of the ring, whicll has been linked to 1he largest confirmed mass slaying in U.S. history. A grand jury indicted Henley in three of the slayings. He has told police he took part in nine killings. Another youth, David O. Brooks, 18, was indicted in one slaying but has said he .did not kill anyone. On Saturday officers ,using rods and sticks probed a 200-yard area of the East Beach without success. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Abernathy ol Houston told Houston Detective K.D. Portor t!iey drove to the beach last February or March and saw two men carrying a long, \\Tapped bund1e over a sand dune. Porter said the second couple, \vbo asked not to be identified, were looking for a camp site in June. They told Porter they drove to \\·here a white van and t\VO cars were parked. Corll owned a white van. The couple said a hole had been dug nearby and a long, plastic·wrapped bundle was lying on the sand. They said they left when one of three persons at the site gave them a menacing look. The area officers planned to search is the eittreme eastern tip of Galveston Island , called the East End Flats, about two miles south of the Galveston Seawall . The flats are abollt JO miles south or High Island, where six of the 27 bodies were found earlier. '""'' ..... (~ n :.:".:· : : ...... ·. (/): .. CAHAO A ,· •• ' . . .. ' Fir e Areas Newsmap spots eight western states where an army of al· most 10,000 firefighters are battling some. 35. major blaae• Jn the worst outbreak In west· em states in decades . (See Pages 4, 5.) the Cambodian Anny or the cambodian people," he said. ''They were directed at the North Vietnamese raiders inside Cambodi:.i. 1·There is today great anguish and loud protest from the usual critics that this was an attack against tiny Cambodia," Nixon said. llis reference apparently was to Sen. Stuart Symington l D·Mo. ), and others \l'ho have charged th at they and the public were misled about the Cambodian 001nbing campaign four years ago. lt was Nixon's f1tst personal response to rec<!nt disclosures that the Pentagon •Quiet instituted a du ul reporting system to keep the bonlbing campaign secret. The air strikes in camt>odia were reported publicly and, his congressional critics claim, also to Congress as being inside South Vlctna1n, "The suggestion that these staging areas for enemy troops , supplies iind urtillery -a few thousand yards from American troops -were 'neutral fer'· ritory' exempt from bombing and counter- attacks ls ludicrous," he said. Nixon has also sharply criliclzed the Democratic-controlled Congress for com- pelUng the end of U.S. bombing in Cam· bodia completely. Please~ Does Work Noise Hurt Love Life? GUILTY, FINED $100 ReCkless Driver Kennedy LONDON (UPI) -A member of Parliament said he will ask the government to study a report by a group of West German doctors that noise at work can ruin a man's love life. " 'fom Torney, Labor member for South Bradford, said Sunday that if the West German doctors are right "then some wives could go to other men fo r sexual satisfaction. Factory noise could lead to promiscuity and the breakdown of the family." Torney has tabled a question asking Social Service Secretary Sir Keith Jose ph to act on the doctors' findings. "I can't see, myself, how noi se can put a man off in bed. but if the doctors are right Sir Keith sl}ould launch his own 1nedical in- vestigation,11 Tomey said. · But his question will have to wait until the House of Commons returns from summer adjournment. 72 Arrested Borde1· Patrol Nabs Aliens in Oceanside One of the largest "drophouse" raids in the history of the U.S. Border Patrol took place in Oceanside early Sunday as im- migration agents arrested 72 persons all packed into a single house to await their smugg lers. But although the raid netted the large number of illegal aliens, it did not yield the ringleaders or a large smuggling operation, said Patrol Capt. Eugene Har· ris. The arrest capped a busy weekend al the patrol's San Onofre immigration roadblock, where the weekend's tot.al ex· ceeded 300 persons. Oceanside and Carlsbad, ·Harris said, are the most common areas for the drophouse system. Alien smugglers, he explained set up the houses as holding areas for car loads of human cargo from Mexico. At the houses the aliens are kept until the lime appears right to smuggle them Mafia Releases TV Reporter R0~1E (AP ) -American tele vision correspondent J a c k Begon walked into a Rome clinic today four weeks after mysterious· ly disappearing. Police said he told them he had been kidnaped by the Mafia . The Mafia transported him to the United States, but then released him, police quoted Begon as saying. "I talked them into letting me free after I promised I would no longer investigate Mafia aUairs," a police officer 15aid Begon reported. in small groups past the . immigration checkpoints at San Onofre and at Temecula , along Highway 395. Of the 72 persons awaiting shipment at the Oceanside house Sunday all but one \.\'ere fron1 ~1cxico. The remaining alien Y.'as from El Salvador. Harris said. In recent •Yeeks, vl'i th alien activity in· creasing because of harvest time in California's Cann fields, the patrol has logged ever-increasing numbers or ar· rests. Recent raids have included forays to large [arms where aliens are employed, as well as railway yards where aliens not fortunate enough to have auto passage have tried to hop freights for the trip north. Woman Learns Why Her Plant Worth So Much BOSTON (AP) -A South Boston mothe r has told police sbe was puzzled by two young men who knocked on her door, said they admired the four-foot plant in the window and offered $5 for ii.· She told police that she refused because her 8-year-<1ld son had given it to her for Mother's Day, after finding it in the neighborhood. The young men upped their offer tG $20. She again refused. They asked her [or a few "LiJttings," and she refused. When they left, she took the plant to the district police station, where Capt. John Bradley told her she had been growing a marijuana plant. From Pagel KENNEDY ... to bla1ne ... she sai d. Robert J\1oone y, the to"'n prosecutor. s<.id the max:in1um penalty was l\VO years in jail and a $200 fln e. ·•1 .,.,;sh this had happened somewhere else," Mooney said Swlday. "\Ve don't need this kind or pubLicity. "We're trying to treat it as a routine case. But unfortunately. nothing is routine with that name in it." The accident le Ct Pamela Kelly, 19: Centerville, ?<.lass .. partially paralyzed \Vilh a fra ctured spine and broken leg. ~Uss Kelly \.\'OS described in fair con· dition Sunday at Cape Cod liospilal in Hyannis, ~1ass. But doctors said it was slill too SOQn 10 dctern1ine \\'hcthcr the girl \\'OU!d be able to v.•alk again. Less seriously injured were Kennedy: his brother, David, 18; ~fay Schlaff, 22, Grosse Point, Mich.: Patricia Powen, 18, Spring Lake, N.J.; Franceoca cit Onis, 19, of Centerville, Mass.: nnd Mis! Kelly's sister, Kim, 17. Racing Pioneer Offenhause r Bmied Today Fred Offenhauser, the man who gave the Irvine-built "Offy" racing .engine ll! name, \\'as buried today after services in Inglewood. ortcnhauser, whose engines won the Indianapolis 500 a total of 28 times , died in his slfep at his Inglewood home Fri- day. He was 85. The four-cylinder Offy engine was crealed in 1934 and it soon became a standard at Indy. Offenhauser v.•as a plant supcrln-- lendent when ltarry ~1iller went out of business in 1933. Offenhauser obtained all 1he plans and drawings or Miller's engines , reorganized the finn, and gave the company and the engine his name. Offenhauser sold hls interests to Dale Drake and Louie Meyer who moved the firm from Los Angeles to the Orange Coast in 1969. Today the Offenhauser brand belongs to Drake Engineering, 1750'2 Daimler St., in the Irvine Industrial Complex. Born in Los Angeles, Offenhauser Is survived by his \.\'ido\\'. Ethel. and two brothers and 1hrec sisters. Killed in Tijuana TIJUANA, Mex. (AP) -An Imperial Beach. Calif. man was shot to death Saturday by a Tijuana traffic officer after the victim struck the officer with his car. authorities said. Luis Salazar Miranda, 42, was shot in !he chest five times. police said. NOW AT . • , I . --- '' I ' • • 95 ..... EJldonhl! 5 fur Pltll Guannl« T"I MOIO', ""11111' lll!'Mlf, M!lrti Wtlft dlttflllvllOll trtl-l>Ntef •rid P'Utn- bvUOlll •t• gu1r.n1• IOr 5 )'llllfl on ll'IOCMlt SS'1tt, ISl!tll 1fld SS/87'. Wt lll'f lor •tplKOIMf'tl kll!Of durlflg ,,.. /lfll ,...,. 90 DAY CASH WITH AJIPIOYIO CllDJT =@) TRADE-IN SAU $35. Phone 548· 7788 f _ 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Casta MW ............................................................ • . M Sa 'C TWE floor scrawn sand, j weeks Parti from E Sgt. I other I count~ past t1 train in, corps. Now active reserve lion's 1 But 1 Ing it reserv1 percen month! figures 114.6 p< Marine To a! 1ried 1 lrpops, tough,1 reservl The "Alkal five-da into t\ defend• emplo) and a venlol"' To 8 one da ol aw hellcop in the The mock I but m matter one to I for: uqlt at sand • others, cots in base c; "My cot dol Lance serv1e< Washir The their ; becaus Robert a Marl develOj and tt togetht A ~. observ 1bere'; real cl Duri years, gettin@ men t nserv1 ritan: becau~ easier Moll and ai they c "Yo• re-enli served enlistn 2 J Ti At NAS amll en out spree that • hurt I AIU! specll pollce badly N...,.. A P tried I eral r mobu Bell •• the way i l'Oli were cl ting fleer • Sn Bl: Smc d .. th St., II Fir! noor 1 Ant horn< SUndo by "' enter Del or sm treas, ~ Marines • Still Seek 'Go od Me n' TWENTY·NTNE PALMS (AP) -The noor of . the Mojave Desert, amid scrawny sagebrush and baked white sand, is a heck of a pla~ to spend two ' weeks in August. / Particularly if you are n ta ver n owner rrom Pittsburgh, Pa. Sgt. Richard Gooding, 25, and 4,000 other Marine reservists from across the country joined 5,000 Marine regulars the past two weeks for the lergest desert training e~ercise In the history of the corps. Now that the draft has ended and the active duty force has been trimmed the reserves play a bigger role in the na- tion's defense.·. But with no draft the reserves are rind- ing it harder to recruit new men. The reserves have recruited only about 83 percent or their quota for the flrst seven months of the year. The recruitment figures fell to 70.7 percent in June and M.8 percent in July, according to the Aofarine Corps. To attract recruits, other services have tried to make things easier for their troops, but life in the Marines is still tough, even for weekend warrio?'3, as reservists are known. The training exercise was named "Alkali Canyon--73" and was capped by a rive-day mock war ln which Marines split into two armies, an aggressor and a defender. During the war, the htarines employed nearly every weapon, aircraft and combat vehicle in the corps' in- ventory. To a newsman who visited the camp one day, there didn't appear to be much ot a war going on. The chief action was helicopters evacuating men who toppled in the !Uklegree heat. The war games themselves consist of mock battles judged by scorekeepers - but mostly, the reservists said, it's a matter of sitting and wailing for some- one to tell you to do something. For some, it means sitting with a small unit amid a few trucks and tanks in the sa"nd and sun away from it all. For olhe?'3, it's sitting, or maybe lying, on cots in green crowded tents back at the base camp -drinking beer and waiting. "My wife could be sitting here on this cot doing as much good as I am," sakf Laoce Cpl. Jolm Holt, 26, with 3\0 years' service. He ls a store manager from Washington, D.C. The lttarines have refw:ed to relax their training standards for reservists because. as Marine Qmunandant Gell. Robert E. Cushman put it, "A Marine is a Marine is a Marine. I do not desire to develop two dif£erent kinds of Marines. and then try to put them in harness together when the crunch comes." A Marine sergeant at the exercise observed, "I've been around 19 years. There's a Utlle more tolerance but no real change." During the high-draft Vietnam war years, potential draftees beat down doors getting to their local reserve units. Some men toured the country searching for reserve openings. Many ended up in the reserves because, as one man put it, "It was easier to get into." Moot of the reservllt.s here don't like tt and are planning to get out as soon as they can. "You'd better believe it -no chance of re-enlistment,'' said Gooding, who has served 4\1! years of the standard six-year enlistment. 2 Drug Arrests Trigger Battle At Rock Fest NAS!MLLE, TeM. (UPI) -Two drug arre1ts in a crowd or rock music fans at an ootdoor coocert Sunday night set oil a spree ol bottle, rock and can throwing that ended with at leaat lour policemen hurt and 10 peno111 armteO. Althouih a number ol o!llcm and spectators were hit by the Oylng objects, police said only lour policemen wore hurt badly enough to ..ek medical attention. None<Was believed seriously Injured. A police. 1pokesman said as officers tried to lead the two youth> away, sev· eral members ol the audlence 40tried to mob us." Between 5,000 and 6,000 persons were at the concert, held at Rivenide Raet;:· way In Davld!on County. Police said the 20 persons arrested ....,., booked on charges Including in- citing a riot and lnlerferlng with an ol· ncer during a riot. Smoking in Bed Blamed in Death Smoking In bed was blamed for the death o1 Charles Harvey, 22, o! ll'l8 Birch St., Santa Ana, Sunday. Firemen found h!J body lying on the Ooor of his smoke Oiled bedroom. Anthony Valentine, 24, who shared the home w\th Harvey, was awakened early Swiday by smoke and was driven back by smoke and names when be tried to enter Harvey's room. Death was appnrenUy due to inhalation o( smoke and gases from a burning mat· treas, the Oranat County eor....•1 olfice n!ported. New Trucl' i11 T o1v11 Laguna Beach's fire chief, Charley Kuhn , show s off city's newest piece of fire fi ghtJng equipn1ent. It is a mini-pumper mounted on a four.wheel drive truck. It has 2QQ.gallon capacity. Kuhn said it will be used on small fires and in off-road situations such as grass fires too small to bother rolling a big pu1riper. _ Adult School Dip Studied CUS D Trlistees to Wrestle Witli Emergi1ig Problem Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District tonight will wres tle with the problem of a mysterious dip in adult school enrollment -a decline which some have blamed on higher fees charg· ed last schoo l year. The drop in the enrollment at the eve- ning school classes has caused the district lo lose state income, and that loss ex- ceeds profits reaped from the increase in enrollment fees set last fall . The district staff ~aid that although the l(almbach Still Playing Role i.t1 Affairs of Nixo11 LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -Herbert \V . Kalmbach of Newport Beach. has con- tinued to act as President Nixon's at· tomey and ~'iJI play a key role in draft · ing a White House statement on Nixon's San Clemente estate to be released in the next rew days, the Los Angeles Times said Sunday. Mi1i isters Hel.d For Violati ng S1iake Rite Ban NEWPORT, Tenn. (UPI) -The Revs. Liston Pack and Alfred Ball, who've been arrested for violating a judge's ban on snake handling, were reported ''happy as can be" today in the Cocke County jail. They could stay behind bars until their hearing 8aturday. Pack and Ball gave themselves up Saturday night afte r Sheriff Bobby Sinson told them that day Circuit Court Judge George Shepherd ordered th eir arrests. The arrest order charged that Pack and Ball handled snakes during religious services in violation of his order against it and bad not paid fines for contempt of court. Several weeks ago, Pack was sen· tenced to 30 days in jail and lined $130 on three counts of contempt. Ball was given 20 days and $100 on two counts. Shepherd suspended the sentences under the condition the preachers stop handling snakes at services. Some or the snakes they have handled have been poisonous. The ministers say they believe their faith will save them from harm. A Tennessee Bureau of Criminal Iden· tification agent testified Saturday he had seen Pack and Ball handling snakes since the judge's order. Noltl Ranch Lake Area Scorched A 2S acre brush fire Sunday scorched the area near Nohl Ranch Lake. No structures were threatened and the blaze was controlled after one hour through the use of 17 fire trucks, two bulldozers and two aerial tank ers , the county fire department reported. Investigators said the blaze '~·ns started by exhaust sparks from a four wheel drive vehicle. The fire was difficult to control because of lbe steep terrain and erratic winds. The Tim es, quoting informed sources, said the Los Angeles and Newport Beach law finn of Kalmbach, DeMarco, Knapp and Chillingworth still performs a wide variety of \Vest Coast tasks for th e Presi· dent and his famil y. This comes in contrast lo a "widespread impression fostered by con· fusing White House press statements " that Kalmbach had been dismissed as Nixon's attorney, the Times said. One of the key roles being played by Kalmbach is drafting a promised White ~louse statement designed to explain the manner in which Nixon's San Clemente estate was acquired in 1969, the newspaper said. Kalmba ch, whose firm did all the legal work in negotiating for and acquiring the property, reportedly will be involved in releasing to the public for the first lime copies of papers relating to the trust that controls the property. The statement will be released within days, the Tim es, said. Kalmbach 's name hs been previously linked to collections of money paid to the Watergate burglary defendants and to payments made to alleged campaign saboteur Donald H. Segretti. In testimony before the Senate \Vatergate committee, however, Kalmbach denied having knowingly engaged in improprieties but said he believed he had been "used" by some top \Vhite House staff members. The Times said in addition to the legal work involving the San Clemente esta te, the Kalmba ch firm also is handling the President 's personal tax work as well as general legal work involving other finances. U l4 W to Select 'Strike Target' DETROIT (UPI) -The United Auto \Vorkers announced today that more than 90 percent of the workers at General Motors' plants have voted to authorize a strike if needed to back up national con· lract demands. However, it is expected the UAW will select either Ford ~iotor Co. or Chrysler Corp . as a "strike target" at a meeting In f\1ilwaukee. Wis. Tuesday. Union bargainers will return to Detroit \Vednesday and tell the target company to either agree to union demands by mid· night, sept. 14 or race a strike. The other t y,·o companies would be allowed to con· tlnue building new cars. Monkey Suits? • Troops Dressed as Serva1its WASHUiGTON (UPI) -Rep. Les Aspln (0.Wls.), believes high-ranking military officers are putting o n "ludicrous, aristocratic airs" by budgeUng $34,000 to dress officers' servants in fancy "monkey sulls." personal servants in the first place," Aspln said. "But as long as they do, they should a\ least let them dress Uke soldiers, instead of like characters in a musical comedy • • • our generals and admirals seem to have lost their heads." first·night attendance figures last fall were encouraging and showed a boost in enrollment, the students did not sustain the good attendance. The figures showed that under the old fee system· existing the year before last -where the charge v.'as $5 per student, no matter how many classes he took - there were 2,283 students. But this past school year, when students paid extra for each class, the en roll ment evenlually dropped to 1,899. The new tuition fee of $6 per class yielded a boost in income lo district cof- fers of $1 ,254, but because of the decline the clistriet's state income dropped by $2.385. District Director of Curriculum and Projects Harold Hester has recom- mended that trustees institute a ne\v fee schedule this year calling for a $6 initial fee per semester with no char_ge ~r ex- 1 ra classes. Retired students could enroll at half·price under his plan. The agenda for the board's 7:30. p.m. session at Serra School appears filled with routine matters. Among the other issues !el for di scussion are : · -TI1e approval of a modified-day schedul e for tile district's students in grades four. five and six so that teachers can schedule a once·a-week session for planning. 1'he proposal would slice 13 minutes of instruction time a day from the students, reducing it from a total of 32.l minutes. The district staff "highly rel'Ommends 0 adoption of the program. -The authorizalion for Board Presi· dent George White to sign escrow papers closing lhe sale of the 1'1anzana School site ove rlooking Capistrano Beach. The 18-acre parcel wa s sold to California Sierra Properties £or development as a planned community project. The land was deemed surplus lo district needs. -Consideration of the employment of an additional staff psyhcologist to cope with the booming district enrollment. . -Tile hiring of soils engineers to assist in construction at the Castillo School site in !\1ission Viejo and at Moulton School in Laguna Niguel. Ghost Ship'! Mondil1, A~ust 20, 197) s DAil Y PILOT J Cmacer t Etaded Trou~le Erupts At Watts Fest LOS ANGE 0 LES (AP) -"Thi! is my last Wattsta:ic ," one black Los Angeles policeman promised after bottle throwing by a small number ol the eo,ooo spec- tators prompted police to bait the Watts Summer Festival concert. The concert. which concluded the eighth annual five-day festival, was cut short Sunday night as tensions mounted inside the Coliseum. The crowd departed peacefully but tbert were some report,, of juveniles attacking spectators as they vl'ent away. \Vattstax was the shorthand name for the festival. A police spokesman said more than 60 persons were arrested on a variety of charge<, Including d!Jturl>lng the peace, fighting and public drunkenness. He said at least six persons, including one po Ii Ci! officer, were treated for in· juries. But there was no immediate in- formation on the nature of the injuries or identities of the victims. Trouble began when a group of about 400 youths formed a circle on the Coliseum grass field and refused to move, police said. The conei!rl was then stopped and did not restart unlll police were able to clear the grass, about an hour later. But the police, almost entirely black, continued to be pelted with bottles and Un· cans. U. Biiiy Wedgeworth, eommancler of the 57-man police force, was asked if be were worried. "Yeah, ·1 am," he said. "Fitty-1even guys against 70,000 -man, thole odds are bad. The only way 57 can control ID 000 i! il they want to be controlled." , Phil Pierangelo, 21, Encinitu, Mei:lco, plays in a rock band and came to .JU.ten. "Me and my bass player came here to hear music," he said. "I got three bottles broken on my head. I'm atW picking gl8.S! out of my.hair." He said he and hlll friend were walking in when a man came up from behind and hit him with a bottle and said, "How'd that feel, Whitey?" "I dove over the wall and just started running," Pierangelo said. 1be police had retreated to the en- trance at that time and didn't come to the aid of Pierangelo and his friend. At about that time, one of the police.men said, "Guys are getting beat up down there. We can't stand and watch that." Police al!Qided contact with the crowd whenever possible. "I think it'• a miracle we got out ol. .this withoUt oomeone getting killed or ~ major riot on our hands," one policeman said. "Tbe show wu just too loog -It started at 3 o'clock," said Jerry Nielsen, 8.ssistant manager or the Coliseum. Tbe ccncert ·was preceded by 1 t- hour parade attended by Mayor Tom Bradley~ Oty Atty. Burt Pines, Qmpton ~fayor Doris Davis and Georgia state legislator Julian Bond. The sununer festival has become a community tradition and conunemorates the arutlversary of what crganlzers WI lhe: "Augmt 1965 Revolt." The "revolt" proved to be one of. the bloodiest in the nation's history. During five days of rioting, 34 persons -most ol them bla<:k -wen> killed, 1,000 bulldlnp In the 46-aquare mile Watts oeC\ion o! Los Angeles were gutted, 3,300 persons v.>ere arrested and nearly $50 million in damage was conunitted. \ Mission Viejo Lake Beckons County Interest A 13Z.acre lake in the norlhwost aection of Mission Viejo !J planned and the Orange County Flood Cootrol D!Jtrict and Harbo<s, Beaches and Parks District may be lnteresltd in partlclpe.Um In the project. Tbe lake would be localtd on the !lead- waterw ol Ooo cneit: but woold be lllled entirely with Metropolitan Water D!Jtricl water. The lake would be backed up to 1 130- foot high dam and would hold 3,llOO acre fee t of water. Lake Mllsioo Viejo, as It will be called, will be supplemenltd with an amlliary dam above it to channel the waters of. °"" Creek around . the perimeter o( the main lake. It is the usefulness of this amiliary dam to control Dooding ol Ooo Creek which interests the Flood Control District, according to C11itJ1 Eng!IWI' George Osborne. He also notes that the Mis!i<xl Viejo Company plans to donate IO acres neor the 3&.cre au:iillary lake for pork .... This may lntenst the Qarbon, 11q- and Parka District, Olborne llllles. . Tiie company plans realdmtlal cte.elop. ment of all types ......i the_....,. lake. 'Western Days' Theme Rides Into Art Colony Laguna Beach Mayor Roy Holm has proclaimed the month of September as "Western Days" in conjunction with special activities of Lyric Opera and the Museum of Art. The "Annie Get Your Gun" production o! the Lyric Opera will run Fridays and Saturdays from Sept. 7 through Sepl 22 at the Irvine Bowl, while at the museum, western paintings of Burt Proctor will be displayed through September In I retrospective show. Tbe mayor's proclamation, 11a1g""4 at the Wednesday city council nwtlng, notes that both producticq will draw thousands of. visitors to the Art Coloay,1 and that the star of "Annie" is Laguoan Teri Ralston, currentiy appearing In 1 bit Broadway musicaJ. A free "western-style" lunch from t p.m. to I p.m. Sept. I, will -the Western Days show at the museum. Jn addition to the Proctor ~Unp. in gallery one, the museum will dlspiay a coUection of Indian baskets from Eugenia Froster of Monrovia, bromes in we.tern motU by Sid Burns of Llguna, western and Indian artifacts and con- temporary crafts. A stage<oach provided by the El Toro branch of WeUs Fargo, a western corral and perhaps even an Indian wigwam will also be on exhibit. A collectloo of western historical articles is provided by South Lagunan Norm Holdenhauer. The museum is open from 11:30 a.m. to 4,30 p.m. daily through September. Dates of "Annie" are Sept. 7, a, 14, 15. 21 and 22. Curtain is at 8 p.m. at the Irvine Bowl amphitheater, 650 Llgtma Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. Starring with Miss Ralston, dausbter or Dr. and Mrs. Robert Ralstoo, i! Darid Holliday as Frank Buller; Erneot SU. radno IS Oilef SltUng Bull; IDd Join Elhworth u Buffalo Bill. The com!'I* cast includes 100 actors, singer1 and dancers. \ Tbe Laguna Beach Chamber of <Joo>. • merce In cooperaUoo with I.,yrlc Opera will hold 1 f-drawing fw merthantl for lour seats to any Friday ••mll1c performance. Ticket Information II avalloble bJ <.ii. Ing Lyric Opera at 197-2011. Obs cenity Law Too Obscene? STERLING HEIGHTS, l&b. (UPI) -Tbe proix-f ~ ordinance In this Detroit may never reach lepl ..._ because some COllllCllmeO claim It'• obscene. "Tbe o..s1nance ,_ Into too much detail," said o.m..t>.ue Stanley Ralnlto. The Wisconsin congrel.'man said SUn- day he learned the Pentagon signed a contract to buy tuxedo pan ts, swallowtail coats, cummerbunds. mes.\ j11eket~. bow ties and white tuxedo shirts for the enlisted men who serve as pt?rsonal aides to generals and admirals. "Military office rs shou~ h a v c Aspin said the special servant uniforms were for enlisted aides assigned to ft. Myer just outside \\'ashington , 1>.C .• where many high·rnnking Penlagon of· flee.rs live. He said he asked Defense ~etary James R. Schlesinger to "get rid or those monkey suits lmmediluely " This Hobie Cat sailing along a Newport Harbor tltannel seems to be making the most o! its nine lives, even without a skipper or c~w. Aclually, they are underneath the cra!l, having rtghted It alter a spill. Ralnko cornpla!ned tbe ~ legi!latlon bu "vivid" -- describinl llOXUal ae11 It ca-.... -In films, boob .. ma1ulnes. .,_ u~1L.Y PILOT MOINil,, Avgw.t 20, 1'11] Coup in Laos Thwarted; Top Leader Executed VIENTIANE, Laos (UPI) -The Lao- tian government announced tonight It had crushed a rlgh~wlng plot f<> overthrow Prince Souvanna Pbouma and events aet off IUCh pollllcal tunnoll It loot lbe 11161 Geneva cool.....,. f<> .....,.. order -temporar1Jy. that the leader or lhe plot, former Brig. MA WAS LONG a member ol lhe Cen. Thao Ma , was captured and ex· neutralist faction in Laos, bitterl1 anti· ecuted by loyal troops who shot_down..b.ia. -Communist and tomeUme antl-rlghtwtng plane. · aa well. He atrudt. today appareolly In A commwilque lsaued tonight im· belief ~anna was gjvlng too much pllcaled Gen. Phourni Nooavan, lhe away lo the Oommunlst Palhet Loo Jn a onetime army leader who sei:r.ed control recently completed peace agreemenL He ol Laos In 1960 but was In tum ousted by led an attempted ooup In !JM that waa paratroop Capt. Kong Le, who ..-.d almost a duplicate ol lhe cme that falled Souvanna to the premiuship. Those today. Skylab Eyeballs Mexico's HOUSTON (UPI) -The Skylab 2 astrooauts took another televised look at tropical stonn Brenda today aa they soared over the Gull ol M<idco. '"1ey reported the storm, gaining streogtb olf the Yucatan Peninsula, looted more cen- tralized than ii bad been. Alan L. Bean and Jack R. Uusma cut into televised pictures of the sun being transmitl<d by Owen K. Ganlott from lbe solar observatory mounted on Skylab to view the storm for the third time. THE ASTRONAUTS televl!ed the blrtb of the storm Sstur<lay and watched its development Sunda~ "It's a good picture," Lousma said of Brenda. "It's somewhat at a dillaDoe, but it's quite well defined, more ao than yesterday. I think you can see the circular structW'e of it better today than Brenda you could al a closeup yestaday." Ground conlrollera 18id earller the pilcts woold not be able f<> see Brmla to- day becauoe Skylab's ground track mov- ed too far away, but tt was a c:l"8r view from 400 miles 8S lllo stalicla flew OV<f eastern Mexico. "Brenda blew Oftr lbe Y U ca I a D l'Miosula and Into lbe Gull ol 14exico to- day, beading !<>ward tbe c 0 •• t. Forecaslers said It probably ~ become. -by lflemooo. .. "ALTllOUGB TllB ultimate landfall la -. lbe greatest -appean f<> be the ooostll aecti<Jm ol Mexico betw<m Tampico and Voracroz oo Tues- day," Aid lbe Nalklaa.I Hurricane Center. 110,000 Acres llncontroUed 80% .of U.S. Firefighters Battle I 0 Fires in West By the Assocfated Press Ten fires remained wt of <mtro1 on more than 110,000 acres of. range and forest lands In tbe West f<>dsy as fire fighting efforts focused m Northern Calirorrua near Yosemite NationaJ Park. Inrormalion officer Dick Klade of the Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idah;), said lhe most critical fire today w~ the 12,000.acre Granite fire In Stanislaus Na· tional Forest about three miles west d. Yosemite National Park. A LARGE GRANITE ridge kept the blaze from entering the park, however, and with 2,600 men M the flre lines, COO· FIRE BURNING OUT OF CONTROL-Story Page 5 tainment was expected by 6 p.m. PDT today. The U.S. Fo-Service said the fire apparently was cauaed by humans. Klade said the blatts Jn lour slates were being fought by &,500 trained forest fire fighters and 2,000 support penoonel, rr.ainly National Guardsmen a n d volunteers. He said that was 80 percent of the nation's firefighting capacity. He said 156,735 acres have been black· ened by lhe fires. Affected land included majc>r big game reserves in Montana and northern Idaho, timber in Oregon and Northern California and range lands in Oregon and Montana. TIIE FIRE center gave trns breakdown by states or major fires out of control, the acreage they aflect and total acreage burned : -California : four fires out ol oontrol on 26,lm acres with 42,950 acres burned. · -Nevada : one oo 3,00> acres; 3,150 burred. -Montana : eight on 57,000 acres; 59,350 burned. -Jdaho : t~'O 00 5,IXX) acres; 32,285 burned. -Oregon: one on 2,200 acres; 17,650 burned. -WasblngloD : ome; !,JOO burned. -Wyoming: .-; 150 burned. John !Wsllell, a lint """"" spotesman, said no deaths bave been r<pOrted among firefighters. Howev,.., a U.S. FcAstry Service spokesman said ooe man was killed In an auto accident wlien be fell nleep at the wheel after -king loog hours ferrying lirelighte ... Ol.flclaJs Aid forests In ~ Washington, oortheastem Oregon and parts ol northem Idaho were •xtmnely vulnerable beaiuae ol deod trees due t<> a lussock ·molh lolestatlon. And the center said lil()rtnlng sknns Jn soolbem Idah>, ooribem Utah and western Montana are slartlng new fires. ALTHOUGH THE Oret(oo fire situation eased Sunday, control or a 1,000...,,. fire near LaGrande was not expected tmtil Tuesday. The fire destroyed nine butl~ 'lbunda• near the eastern Oregon town or 10,000. "A!J I told the children. a.....,. is Just a house. We all 11'>1 out. That's what count.." said Mrs. Wesl•Y Allen, wlf• ol a LaGrande physician. 'Ibeir 1 ¥.t-year old. 170.000 home was one ol the nine buildinrs. · "I loc>ked out the door !Dd there was a wan of flames burstine over the tun with the most terrible explosive roar," 'She said. "We all jurm>e<f in the car and bounc<d down the drivewsy; and by the Ume we hit the main road, the flames were roaring over w:. By the time we rescbed the edge or town, .... than • mile away, we could aee the house going up in flames. FIREFIGIITERS In Orel!on areas havo been hampered by yellowiaclt•b and wasps angered at being driven from their nests by the fires. A Forest Service spotesman said one man bad f<> be evacuated from the firelines to a hospital Jn Enterprise. Ore., le< treatment ol yellowjacket Sling!. SouYanna went on the air less than ... ea boura after the rebell llnlct acnJOa the M•lloag Jlivet !rUn Thailand and told the nation the bid f<> overthrow him bad failed. The government Issued a communique later toniabl ouUlning lhe plot and how It was lolled. The communlqu• Mid: -"That lhe leader of lhe altempled coup by Gen 'lbao Ma was killed by governm<Dl lorces after be tried to es<aJl" from the wre<Uge of lbe T28 plane be piloted. -THAT MA TRIED to make an emergency landing when bis plane was shot. He was helped away from the wreckage of the plane by his aide but was captured and later jailed by the govemment foroes. -Tbat 80 perSOO! look part In lhe ·~ abortive coup led byr Ma, locludlng Col. Bounleut Sy cosy and Col. P an y Pbounlhllsavan. The lrio wsa said lo be living Jn exile lo Bangkok for number of years. -'nlat 14 rebels were captured alive S l ...... : .. u.s.A • .11.·· • .-•• , TEXA ••· •• " ·1· ••• ••• •••• '1 .. : ·.'..· .. :, .• : • .-::. . ·1."" COIPUs° ;,: . ,.,,.· ( •.. CHllSTI .~ \ :·; ~' ;,~~.~6 .': : . .-') \· .. ;·,:. . KIY '".{' MIAMI '\ WU T ·; (!• \ .. , . ... ... : TAMPICO 'f ·: ~.... \ HAVANA '\' CARl llEAH SE A ~ JAM/\ I CA TROPICAL STORM BRENDA HEADS WEST AT 10 MPH G1 lnin9 Strength Al It Nurs Mexie1n C01st Areas Banks Hike Rate to 9 112% NEW YORK (AP) -Finl N• llonal Danit ol Chicago announced today that effective Tuesday It was raising lb pime rate f<> 911 per- cent, lhe bigbest Jn history. The move was not \Dleipected since lending money remains in short supply. Franklin National Ban1r: and Wells Fargo Bani< in- creased their rates t<> 91\ % alao. Some analysts bave predicted the rate may hit 10 percent or higher befon begiDnlDg f<> level off. Extreme Storm Leaves Yuma Without Power YUMA Ariz: (AP) -A violent ralnsto,.,;, sparred by high winds, lashed the southwest comer of A r i z o n a , uprooting trees and electric poles and leaving 80 percent ol the Yuma area without power. County authorities said Sunday night that lhe storm caused "extremely heavy to severe damage." They said law en- forcement and recoe agency officials were only beginning f<> check on the widespttad damage and It would be a while bef°"' precise estimates would be made. AN ARIZONA Public Ser v Ice spokesman said It would take at least two or three days to restore full power. This would leave residents wituout elec- lriclty during a period when weather forecasters say the temperatures will rt.e t<> a scm:hiDg 1115 degrees. Authorities saJd at least one person was known f<> be Injured. '"1ey said David Gerig, based at the U.S. Marine AJr Station in Yuma, suffered un- determined Injuries when slroog winds buffeted hJs camper and avmumed It on Interstate 8. The gusting winds also took • heavy toll at Yuma International Airport, where olftclals reported major damage f<> at least six single-engine aitcraft and one UHl4 helicopter. Numeroos mobile homes in the Yuma area also suffered extensive damage. Spiro Agnew Indictment 'Next Month' WASlllNGTON (UPI) -T ime magazine reports that a Ced.era! grand jury, acting on reinforced allegations he received kickbacks on govenvnent con- tracts, is expOCted to indict Vice Presi· dent Spiro T. Agnew next month. The magazine said Sunday it bad learned from aources a third Maryland contractor has told the Justice Depart· ment be gave kickbacks to Agnew. The cootractor was identified as Allen I. Green, 49, president cl a Aiaryland engineering firm.. He was reported to have told Investigators that he gave kickbacks to Agnew about five times a year while Agnew was governor of Maryland in 1967-68 and on a reduced scale aCter Agnew became vice president in 1969. e Thi rd Teat PAPEETE, Tahiti (AP) -Informed sources coolirmed today that the French have set off the third nuclear test or their current 5eries, and there are unofficial reports that at least two more are plan· ned. French officials would not comment on reports that the third bomb for 1973 was exploded Sunday at Mururoa At<>U, 800 miles southeast ol Tahi ti. Tbe first lwo bombs were exploded July 22 and July 29 at the atoll e Doc!tora S trik e SANI'IAGO (UPI) -Thousands of physicians today began a 48-bour strike in snowballing labor unrest against President Salvador Allende's govern· menl A trucking strike already ii in its 26th day. As the physician walkout begain in Santiago. the Chamber of Conunerce said it would decide later in the day whether to join the strike. And the San-- tiago Central Laber Federation, con· trolled by the Socialist president's op- position, has called for a 48-bour strike beginning Tuesday. e Mine R esrue Heat Hampers Firefighters CASA GRANDE, Ariz. (UPI) -Rescue workers asembled portable bulkheads Sunday night and advanced 150 feet into a smoke-filled tunnel where two copper miners had been trapped deep un· derground since Friday. Richard Glover, industrial relatioos manager for the Hecla Mining (/<>. mine, said the five-man rescue teams had 450 feet to go be.fore corning to the fire and debris that was blocking them from reaching the pair. T1iunderstorms Stretch From R ockies to Gulf Coast MATIONAI Wf.t.U•l• M h't<:I fOld(ASI I• 1rM f ll •• •Jet. 1 0.00 ~ ...... ,.,...fOfOc.U,. r,.11t """'""' ..n1 ...,.,. ....._ .., •l'ld i l'Wlll11Y. =.i,"'=;,:.. ~ ::'*= :: ... "" l:'fr,,."':.i~-..,=. n't w.... ......... 0. 0... .to ~ .. tl9' ....... """' ...... e Serge ant H eld NEW YORK (UPI) -An Air Force technical sergeant was caught tr)'tng to pass secret govenunent documents to a Soviet agent last month, Time Magazine reporl<d Sunday The sergean~ who was not identified. was amsted In New York with the agent and b being beld pending court martial. DAIL 1' 1'1LOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dfilvtry of tht oa.111 Piiot Is fUViltlffd Milt Oflllfe C-IY A~ ....... ~I N9tlfl<Q1t ,..,,.,....., ltldl .... .,..,.,.._.... ". " .... ,..lnl hi! C~I .. (ltlhlrl.Jlt INC~ .. J•ll (1,ittt"•, DIM HIM, '"Ill llfffll, Llf9M NlfWI , ... tf).4QI IDcludinJ! the deputy ooup leader, O>I. Pany wbc> ls now being detained at the mllltary csmp /or Interrogation. -Thal Col. Bounleut and three other leading members or the coup fled to Thailand by commandeering an air force helicopter after they learned the ~P leader was captured and ooe hour before the goverrunent forces re-captured the radio staUon and the airport. -That the government forces are completely U1 control in VienUane at about midday today, and the search for the remaining rebels ls still going on. -That aceording to a document cap- tured from Col. Pany, Gen. Phoumi Nosavan was to make a speech over the natlonal radio by 3 p.m. If they could hold the town untll midday, and that they were supposed to have additional troops from the Thai side . _ Gen. Ma was to fly over Vientiane in order to make th reats to the gove rnment, and Col. Pany was to be In charge of the coup information over the radJo. Co l. Bounleut was to organize the ground forces . * * * * * * Cambodia Rocks In New Attacks PHNOM PENH (UPI) -The five-day battlefield lull that followed the American bombing halt ended toda~ w~lh renewed attacks against two provtnetal capitals and small but bitter fights near Phnom Penh. There were indications the ConunWlists might be starting their long· feared post-bombing offensive. Terrorist bomb attacks killed .foor persons and wounded 64 Jn PJmom Penh on Sunday, but the report of a new terror attack this afternoon turned out to be false. POLICE TOLD newsmen who hurried to the scene that a government soldier got into an argument with the driver ol a motorbike and threw a hand grenade at the man. Five persons were wounded in the blast. Communist troops, who have been avoiding fights recently, fought with government forces at Kompong Cham, Kompong Speu, Svay Rolum, Qc>J Leap and Sala Krours. On lhe battlefield, Communists stepped Films to Prove Andrea Doria Booty Untouched FAIRHAVEN. Mass. (UPI) Underwater movies will prove that treasure hunters who reached the sunken luxury liner Andrea Doria last week did not get to the millions of dollars in cash and jewels believed stashed in the purser's office, the divers said Sunday. Donald L. Rodocker, Z7, a n d Christopher OeLucchi, 22, both of San Diego, insisted they recovered only a bot· tie ol perfume. some silverware and four chafing dish tops. "After the Cilms are shown, It'll be fairly obvious that we didn 't get anything substantial," Rodocker said. "It11 show that interior and that will be sel!-n- planatory .'' The owners of the 29,IXJt>.ton Andrea Doria, which sank 45 miles off the Ma.s.5acbusetts coast In 1956 after col· liding with the Swecfish ship Stockholm. have said they still own the sllip and all its contents, regardless who is able to dive and recover any valuables. Rodocker and DeLuccbi, both former Navy frogmen, called off a week·long search of · the 700-foot vessel 240 reet below the surface of the Atlantic four days ago. 'Ibey said they had failed to reach the four safes containing the ca.sh and jewels beeause tangled wreckage made the shi p's purser's office "a death trap." "I was standing probably within 20 Cee t of where the safe should have been and there was just no way," Rodocker told reporters. Numerous attempts to salvage the estimated $1.1 million in cash and another million dollars worth of jewels, sculpture and paintings have failed. up their attack against the surrounded provincial capital of Kompong Cham, SO miles northeast of Phnom Penh. · Kompong Cham is 25 miles east of Skoun. which was captured by lhe Com- mW'liSts on Aug. 12. Many or the govern-- ment troops who abandoned Skoun fled to Kompong Cham. MIUTARY SOURCES said the city ls surrounded by about 4,500 Communist troops. ~• On the opposite side of Phnom r"Cun, about 100 government troops were . at· tacked by an estimated. 300 Communists near Kompong Speu, 30 miles southwest of the capital. Military sources said neither city was in danger of falling immediately. Field reports said Communist t.roopll \Vere repulsed in an attack agalnM a government position at Muk Kampoul, 10 miles north of Phnom Penh, late Sunday and early today. Military soun:es said three rebel regiments lolaling roughly 4,500 men ha ve approached to witllin six miles of Kompong Cham on the Mekong river 50 miles northeast of Phnom Penh. KOMPONG CHM! Is Cambodia's third major city after Phnom Penh and Bat· tambang. Its prewar population of 30,000 has swelled to double or triple that number with the Influx of refugees. · Near Kompong Speu, :m m 11 e ! southwest of the capital, a company of about JOO government troops three miJeo north ol t<>wn was reported under attadt by about 300 rebels led by a Haooi-lraJn. ed Cambodian rebel named Chau Sary, military ......,., said. Mille fo r Diets Ads Forbidden In FfC Action WASHINGTON (AP) -Tbe Federal Trade Commission says It has tentatively accepted a conseol order that prohibits the American Dairy As.wciatlm frcm clsiming that whole milk ts low lo fat and calories and is beneficial ror dieten, unless the amount of calori~ and fat is disclosed. The commission accused the dairy association, headquartered In Qticago. ol false and misleading advertising. The ~said that "in many cases It is not desirable" for dieters to drink substantial amounts of milk. The consent order does not constitute an admission by the association and its advertising agency of false advertising but amounts, nonetheless, to a cease and desist order with the force of law. Under i4 the group ts forbidden lo claim that whole milk ls "96 percent rat Cree" or misrepresent Its nutritional value. Violation of the order carries a max- imum penalty of a $5,IXM> fine. Ma il Order Bride J. T. 'Rowell of Wagram , N.C., advertised for a bride betnen the ages of 20 and 45 but be knew his 7S.yeaN>ld bride was right for him the minute she slepped olf the bus. The romanttc Btorekeeper, hlmseU 73, was married to the former Lucy Bell Hulett. $ h n SA -SI stop1 foun1 hash valu1 ll<> c for i and · were 24, a from Ea $30.0 Coun ped j of SI I e i SA -T has I mad1 Ssn , ficial La Bern whil1 youn vloti! sank Dive body •• LC spok Oma sat is Br to in thee oper. in bi livln. mitt. days diUOI •• LG Stat( Youi Bea< mall stat< acts the I Ye Supe that exec JlODl did ' for ' I I E SA Hom! this bope ~~ uals. .. , tio~ sadi: bel1' Rev. J fj tor t and ed hom cool .. , dlvic perp crirr th• Am< u earl wes ~ Ht q u t not!• l• i was whi< sect! n jurlt ' $12,000 In 'Hash' Di scovered_ SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -Sheriff's deputies say they stopped a car for speeding and found inside two pounds or hashish wiHt a black market value of $12,000. Booked during the weekend ( BRIEFS J for investigation of possession and transportation of hashish were Ronald Victor Solakian, 24, and .Bucky Lucero, 23, both from San Diego.. . Each was held i.n lieu of $.10,000 bond at San Bernardino County Jail. They were stol>" ped on Interstate 10 just south of San Bernardino. e Flr('t Dro1ctai11g SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -The first known drowning has occurred in the new man~ m·ade Silverwood Lake in the , San Bernardino Mountains, of~ ficials said. Larry G. Comacho, 22, San Bernardino, drowned Sunday while swimming with his younger brother, who said the ,· :~~m ingo~crr:s ;n~~:. Divers were searching for the body. The lake opened June 9. e Bradley Rallies LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A spokesman said Sunday Gen. Omar N. Bradley is in satisfactory condition. Bradley, ·80. has "continued to improve since last Friday, the day after he underwent an operation to halt blood clotting in his 1ungs. The nation's only living five-star officer was ad· mitted to the hospital nine days ago in ''serious" con· dition. e Complai11t Filed LOS ANGELES (AP) - State AUy. Gen. Evelle J . Younger is accusing the Long Beach Construction Co. of making false and misleading statements and performing acts of Wlfair competition in_ the sale of homes. Younger filed a complaint in Superior Courl here alleging that purchasers of the homes executed in favor of the com- pany second trust deeds which did not contain any provision !or prepayment. CALIFORNIA 4 Fires Raging In North By The Associated Press Four fires, including three in the high Sierra coWltry, con- tinued to burn out of control early today in Northern Calilomia pine and fir forests. A 36-mile stretch of U.S. Highway 50 between Placerville and Myers, near South Lake Tahoe, was closed Sunday to all but lire equi!>' ment after a 3.~acre fire in the Eldorado National Forest threatened hundreds of sum· mer homes along the south fork of the American River. NO BUILDINGS w e r e damaged and a 100 to 150-acre blaze ignited by burning embers on the north side of Highway 50 was contained. said Sherry Hortman. forest information officer. Additional fire spots were reported Sun- day night along the eastern side or the fire, 30 miles ea st of Placerville. Mrs. Hoffman said 900 men would be on the fire lines to- day. One man, a pilot, was in- jured when his aerial tanker filled with fire retardant crashed on takeoff a t Placerville Saturday. Th e unidentifie.d pilot was hospitalized in Sacramento. THE BIGGEST fire has burned more than 12,000 acres of ptne in Stanislaus National Forest, 20 miles east oC Sonora. Hot southerly winds of 25 miles per hour continue to drive the fire toward the Emigrant Pass Wild~s area. · Bob Spivy, tnfonnation of· ficer, estimated the fire has caused more than $50 million in timber and watershed dall"'l!e. · Homosexuals Fearing Houston Repercussions SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Homosexual organizations in this area have expressed the hope that the Houston mass murders do not inspire a general fee: (,f all bomosex· uals. "There is certainly no rela· tionship between psychotic, sadistic behavior and gay love between healthy persons," the Rev. Bill Johnson said . JOHNSON, executive direc· tor or the Council on Religion and the Homosexual, was join· eel. by other leaders of homose:rual groups in a news conference. "To focus in on the in- dividual in Houston w h o perpetrated these h e I n o u s crimes as representative of lhe 20 million gay people in America is to do violence to _.;Quake Shakes Santa Monica LOS ANGELES (UPll -An earthquake rocked portions o{ West Los Angeles Sunday • HollYWood police said the q u ake-was 1 'hardly noticeable."'Residents or San- ta Monica, however, said it was a "pretty good shake" which lasted as long as 10 seconds. 'lllere were no reports or Ur juries or damage. those gay sisters and brothers who. despite the pressures of living in an oppressive society, live healthy, productive and meaningful livesJ" Johnson said. Several of those present said they objected to m c d i a coverage of the grisly 27 kill· ings, contending that most murder stories do not indicate if the killer is heterosexual. * * * Sex-slaying Link Feared LOS ANGELES (AP) -Los Angeles homicide detectives are Investigating the possibili· ty that the Texas sex crime slayings and a reported na- t i o n w i d e homosexual pro- curement ring may be linked to a Hollywood pornographic film producer. Police declined to identify the producer Swlday but they said he is known to have made frequent trips between Los Angeles and Dallas to recruit actors for his hard core sex films, focusing mainly on teen-age and younger boys. "We have information that several of the young boys used in these homosexual films were brought to California from Texas, especial l y Dallas/' said one Los Angeles detective. Monday, A119ult 20, 1'173 DAILY PILOT $ 'Love Murderer' Mullin Found Guilty !~~~;::::::~~~ SANTA CRUZ (UPI) -going to get out and kill a drug dealer and his wife and "most likely to succeed" by Herbert V. Mullin, 26, a high somebody -which ts not an an elderly fisherman. lie also chusmates at nearby Felton school honor student who turn· unreasonable consideration." admitted but was not charged lllgh school and won a key -· •.. ed to drugs and mysti cism and with stabbing and stomping a club scholarship to CabriUo believed murder.~as an "act l\1UWN AD 1\11 TT ED priest to death in a con· H 0 N K of love," stood up calmly to be slay ing 13 persons in a three-fessional and shooting two College. That was in 1965. manacled Sunday after a jlU'y week period during which he other persons. Later, he dropped out of col· pronounc e d r e c e i v e d ' ' t e I e pathic lege and turned on with LSD. hlm guilty messages" that the killlngs UNDER CALIFORNIA law, Two tattoos on his stomach In Conce rt Wllh Special Guests of 10 stay.. were needed as "human an appeal is automaUcally read : "Legalize Acid" and sacririces" to prevent a made On the murder COD• manna lngs. cataclysmic earthquake In victions , for which he faces a ''Legalize Marijuana." Def. n s e California. He was charged life imprisonment with no A psychiatrist at the trial An Outdoor Event on the Grass attorney with JO murders and entered chance of parole. said Mullin entered a period of Newport Harbot H.S. Stadium James Jack· an insanity plea. Both the prosecution and bizarre behavior about three ·NEWPORT BEACH son termed During his 12-day trial, defense agreed that Mullin years ago and had been com- 'the verdict, Mullin took the stand and was mentally m, but they mitted to four mental Friday, August 24, 8:00 PM which came described in detail bow he shot argued over whether he was hospitals. It was during this Tk:ket1 ''' Thr••.fttty •t the Gite after 14 1 h · Muu.1" l·jt~~~~di~~~]e~r~~~~~~t~g~1:e~a1~1y~ms;an~e~~~~~~fn;·:oc1~~M~u1~1~inra~d~van~ced:~th~e~~~~~~~~~·~-~~·-~~-~~~~~~~~~ hours of deliberations, "as · · 1 young sons, four teen-agers theory of "murder as an act of msane as Mul in is." living in a mountainside camp, MULLIN WAS once voted Jove," he said. MUWN, wearing a prison orange jumpsuit, said nothing and was led quietly to his jail cell to await a Sept. 18 sen- tencing on the findings of two counts of first degree murder and eight of second degree murder. "What was in their minds was fear/' Jack.son said of the six-man, six-woman j u r y . "They were afraid he was Ex-husband Kills 3, Wounds 2 YUCCA VALLEY (AP) Five persons were sitting at a card table playing dominoes when the ex-husband ol one walked into the room and opened fire with a shotgun and then a pistol, authorities said. Three were dead at the scene in nearby Johnson Valley late Saturday, and the other two were wounded, sherifrs deputies said Sunday. Joseph De Victoria, 48, of Yucca Valley was booked for investigation of murder and attempted murder after being arrested at a nearby bar, deputies said . The motive for the slayings was not immediately known, authorities aid . Killed were De Victoria's ex· wife, Aileen Jean De Victorio1 1 52, of Yucca Valley ; James Vernon Kirkendall . 46, of Lucerne Valley ; and Marilyn Verneue Tiggeman, 45, of Johnson Valley. Gas Chases 150,000 From Beach CARSON (AP) -Yellowish cloods of noxious gas chased more than 150,000 persons from beaches and homes in this Los Angeles suburb over the weekend . according to of· ficial estimates. The billowing gas, sulphur trioxide escaping from a tank at the Stauffer Chemical Co., blanketed 25 squa re miles i,n 1he southeastern Los Angeles area Saturday afternoon. Thirty-eight persons were reported treated at local hospitals after exposure to the fumes . Nearly all were releas- ed. The four still hospitalized Sunday were in good condition, authorities said . The plant manager and a hospital Poison information center said the gas, used in d e l e r g e n t manufacturing could be fatal in strong con- centrations. Au t horities \Vere in· vestigating the cause or the leak, which took SY.! hours to plug. Officials said about 100,000 gallons of gas escaped . Roads were clogged with traffic soon after p o l i c e helicopters used loudspeakers to warn bathers to leave nearby beaches. Authorities said about 150.000 persons were cleared off the seashore . Motorists were told to roll up their windows, shut off air conditioners and move as quickly as possible through the gas clouds. Police switchboards buzzed with calls from worried resklents. Callers were told to stay home and drink milk as an antidote. T he neighborhood garage sale is sort of an American institution. Like baseball, apple pie, and Chevrolets. So it seems only natural that Chevrolet should have a GarageSale. Ah, but unlike some garage sales you've been to, Chevrolet is not selling antiques. ·Just • shiny new cars, and some tough new trucks. Dltfdle Ma.b11• eo.tpe. for PtOP!e "ho love dri\•ing as much as we do. A tradittonal favorite. r We can't tell you, in this ad, exactly which models and styles and colors. After all, there are over 6000 Chevrolet dealers across t he country. . ·We're.simply here to suggest that;f you're even remotely in the market for a new Chevrolet, you ought t o iio down to yo\ir dealer's and browse. ~. , With a lit tle luck you'll come up with a . i~ big bargain. ' {·; Building a better way to see the U.S A. 'POPS' CO CERT TO IGHT 9:15 P. • AT FASRIO IS.LA • DAU.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE l Novel Medical · Aid Business is booming at Tel-Med, a new service that provides Orange County callers with free telephone ad· vice and analyse s of medical topics ranging from Ru· bella to ringworm. Sponsored by the Orange County Medical Associa· lion, Tel·Med is equipped with 86 tapes contammg three- to fiv e.minute messages on the various topics. The UC Irvine students man the bilingual switch· board from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. and play back tapes re- quested by callers. On a recent day they logged 260 calls. Tapes on leg cramps, birth control and ~enereal disease are most often requested. Also popular 1s a message on cockroa ches , the students note. Other tapes discuss heart disease, various forms of cancer, poisons. pregnancy and do's and don't for per· sons entering hospital. The tapes are designed lo provide infon:nation i!l easily understood language for people who might hesi- tate to seek a doctor's appointment and to point out sympton1s that may require medical attention. Most calls to date are from women, young people and Spanish-speaking people, Tel-Med reports. The tape library is expected to reach the 200 mark soon, and when it does, brochures listing the available topics. will be printed and placed in libraries and doctor.s' offices .. This a unique and commendable service that fills a real need -and could be a life saver. Call 835,2221. E11ergetic Campaigner Trekking up the California coast on foot, Congress· man Jerome "Jerry" Waldie (D·Antioch) cheerfully ad- mits his 36-day hike from San Diego to Ventura is a stunt to get his name in the papers and on TV and pro- mote his candidacy for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination. \Valdi e says it's a great way to meet people. He feels his stint in the U.S. Congress may not have made his These Are Issues for Our Schools? ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ J~ot long ago l \Vas invited to take part in a conference in Portland, Ore .. sponsored by the National Education Association , on "Critical Issues" in the schools. Let me give you a rundown of the twCKiay agenda : "Why Legalize Grass?" -Featuring an interview with a rep- resentative of the National Organiza- tion for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, and report s by m e mb e r s of the NEA 's Task Force on Drug Education. "What Should Tea- cher Political Power Be Used For?" -Should it be used just for education or should it also be used for social change? Three leading educator· politicians headlined this session. "EQUALITY of the Sexes" -A panel representing the various segments of education looked at the cultural, social, educational and psychological factors that condilion women to under· achievemenl ' "Student Rights: Will Participatory Democracy \\fork in the Schools ?" - How can teachers' associations move to protec t substant ive and due process rights for students at the same tir'ne the ir own rights are threatened? "Sex Education -The V.D. Crisis" - Two semina rs conducted by school physi· cians and nurses on the ra pidly rising V.D. rate in the school population. "Use of Tra nsactional Analysis in an OK Classroom " -A presentation of transactional analysis techniques as ap· Dear Gloomy Gus Read that 0 Europeans claim food shortage in America will help slim the fat Americaris · down." Take a look around and count all the over· weight people. Astounding! W.A. GIOOlllY Gui <omlftlllts •re subMlttM .., rHffrs •nd do lltl' nM::tuarl,., 1'1tflt<t "" Ylnll OI Ille --r. ~ "'"' "' PHYe le Gloomy GUJ, Peil\' Piiot, plied to the classroom. "VIOLENCE in the Schools" -A panel led by a professor of criminal justice, followed by group discussion on "realistic and yet humane" approaches to prevent· ing or curbing youth violence. "Pornography: Spillover into the Classroom?" -Both the social and legal aspects of soft· and hard·· core pornography, and what should be allowed in the classroom, led by an attorney familiar with pornography cases. "Alternative Schools: a Threat or a Promise?" -A workshop showing how to teach in the school of your choice and hire your own director and fello\v teachers ; also how to challenge school district policies. HAD ENOUGH? There's lots more, but I don 't have room for it. But consider that a mere dozen years ago, not a single theme listed here would be taking up the time . energy and concern of this pro- fessional group, whose main job is to teach children how to read, write, and count. Unless society itself -and quickly - begins taking back some of the responsibility it bas abdicated to the schools, the whole educational system is going to break down under the weight of these problems. Which are the school's problems only because nobody else wants the.m. name a household word. This could be right. In his home territory, Contra Costa County, the Republican Central Committee is .staging a contest •challenging cltizans to name a major bill carried by the legislator. However, Waldie has made some Interesting olr servations during his stroll along our coast. Why all the walled and guarded communities on the oceanfront, he wondered, after being denied access to the beach at El Morro Trailer Park until someone realized he was a U.S. Congressman? The first hand look at our growth may also have caused him to reflect on the need for completing the California Water Project !or the importation of North· em Callfomia water, a project he has bitterly opposed in the past. Pet Dealers Peeved State Sen. George Moscone (D·San Francisco) may be poking into a hornets' nest with a new bill that air parentiy would m;U<e it illegal to sell just about any kind of pet except cats and dogs. Aimed at wiping out inhumane treatment of animals by certain pet dealers, the bill would prohibit the im- portation or sale of all mammals, reptiles and birds not considered "domestic." Pet industry spokesmen say this would eliminate such common pets as canaries, parakeets, finches, ham· sters, white mice and rats, turtles and snakes~ They say it would eliminate most pet dealers. The senator's office, admitting the bill is contro- versial, indicates it probably will be amended. . ~ ... ~.,.,... Legislation may be in order to curb come of the shocking offenses that are revealed from time to time during investigations of cruelty among animal importers and dealers. But most cities have local ordinances con- trolling the harboring of so-called ''wild" .animals. Zero-. ing In on canary birds and the like seems a little exag· gerated. •well. so fAF. IHERl'S SEEN No Sl6N Of A PEOPLE SHORTME.'' Chinese Eye New Presidential Restra·itats Clouds Shad·o~ Peking Connection . WASHINGTON -The first potentially disastrous result abroad of President Nixon's Watergate catastrophe is now being felt with stinging impact in the collapse of his Cambodian policy and, more important, in the sudden awareness by Peking that the American connection is shot through with dangerous unpre· dictables. The reactio,n in Pekiog to Mr. Nix· on's worst time of troubles is still to a large exteot ambig· uous, shrouded in the minds of China's col~yed policyma· kers. These men re- gard the new American connection as having only one justification: as a coun· terweight to the power and hostility of the Soviet Union. But not an the signs are completely ambiguous. Thus, the delay in Sen. Mike Mansfield's much-heralded secood trip to Peking was specilically due to a polite but no-nonsense warning from Com· munist authorities there that this was not a propitious time. THE REASON for that, it now ap- pears certain, is that the s p e c i a I usefulness of Mansfield, as perceived in Peking, was his own special relationship with Prince Sihanouk, the ousted cam- bodian monarch and Mansfield's old friend. At the time the Senate majority leader was originally asked to make his second visit to Pf:king, C«nmunist China was looking to the Sihanouk option as the most promising of aJI the limited possibilities for settling the Cambodian civil war on terms not totally unaccept· able to Peking. ., The restoration of the mystic, playboy prince, the most popular figure in a country that until recently used to laugh at politics, was designed to give Peking ( EVANS·NOVAK J an enduring political influence in Phnom Penh. With Sihanouk restored, and backed by both Peking and Washington, the threatening growth of po\ver through- out the Indochina peninsula by North Vietnam. would be at least temporarily stopped. l\IOREOVER, precisely some such political deal with Sihanouk V.'85 what Mr. Nixon has been pJotting for months. Indeed, there is soliit reason to believe that if CongresS, in its unprecedented a~ lion of June 30, had not forced a bombing ban on the President, the U.S. and China could have contrived just such an end to the CamOOdian sector of the ~hina war by mid-September. It was to prepare the way for such a settlement that Mansfield was needed in Peking. Likewise, it was to bargain for just such a settlement that Mr. Nixoo bad ordered his ace foreign policy ex- pert, Dr. Henry A. Kissinger, to go to Peking early this month. That journey . along with Miwfield's, will now not take place this month. I~fAGlNE, then, how the cold'{?yed rulers of Communist China must be react- ing to the sudden discovery that Presi· dent Nixon's freedom of action ·lo n~gotiate has been undermined -in this case, by the bombing ban. Continuation of the bombing was. judged no less ,in Peking th3n in Washington as an essen- tial part of the complicated formula . to slow the pro-Hanoi·, "Khmer Rouge" Communist revolutionary movement ·in Can1bodia, paving the way for Prince Sihanouk. Suddenly. Peking's clandestine ally in this complex poUticaJ maneuver 1 Rich- ard M. Nixon, is crippled not by foreign influence blit by his own Congress re- acting to growing presidential weakness induced by Watergate. IN PEKING, the political ravages of Watergate are probably perceived with the same disbelief that guided U.S. policymakers during the ravages of the Great Proletarian Cultural RevoluUon in China in the late 1960s. "Would Washington have made its political connection with Peking at the height of the cultural revolution?" one top Nixon lieutenant asks rhetoricaJly, "when no one could even predict that the rulers oC China would remain rulers for even another month?" Or, as another White House aide put it sarcastically, Peking must wonder how the party that was repudiated in a historical landslide last November now finds its policies accepted in Congres3, While the big wirmer. President Nb:oo, becomes the big loser. NOTHING baa happened yet to destroy the short-term durability of t he WashiDgton-Peking axis. Its foundation-- Peking's fear of Moscow -has not changed an iota. But hideous dangers lie behind the am- biguities of subtle change in the way Peking -and all other nations -must now be studying the trust and dW'ability of the U.S. as an ally. These are dangers blithely. ignored by the faithless who gave the nation Watergate. Can Psychiatrists Judge Morality? A quarter of a century ago there was a wi~ad view that a' large part of, the people in this country were out oC their head, one way or another. This con- viction was in no way lessened when the hospital beds of tbe Veterans • Administration had to be given to what were called psychiatric patients. These people were called psychiatric patients, or more or less mad, by the people who committed them, the psychiatrists and psychoanalysts. Letting <Shrinks define who was crazy was not unlike letting cops make laws. Or, if you will, putting tbe hawk in charge of the chicken yard . Might sound like a good idea; but only for a minute. professor as tending "to label as deviant any behavior that differs from that cur- rently favored by the majority. And it puts psychiatry clearly in the role rt an agent of cultural control." PSYCJUATRY'S own devil's a~te, Dr. Thomas Szasz, professor at the State University of New York, claims shrinks are not practicing medicine at all but are moral legislators and social engineers "and the sooner we admit this the bet- ter." The American System Still ·works THOSE DAYS wer< probably the high v.·ater mark in the practice of stuinkery, mostly Freudian, in this country. As an instance. homosexuals were mad, and \Vere treated as such. A hundred years ago it was fumly believed by the shrinks of that day, who were called alienists, that masturbation was a prima facie in-. dication of serious mental disturbance, a view which is accepted today ooJy. by a few aged Jesuits and Soutbem Blble- thwnpers. A lot of the. ,things which· are today viewed as evidence of mental UI· ness will be cjuite aec<ptable behavior in The Southern C3Jifornia s h r i n k previously quoted, Dr. Judd Marmor of US~, recently took a look at this cop- shrin,k matter, with specific reference to homosexuality. "It is my conviction," Prof. Marmor said, "that we have t10 right to label as deviant any behavior that differs 'from !hat currently favored by the majority. Founclilig Fathers Understood tlie Ha,zards of Human Frailty \VASHli'l'GTON -Sooner or later, Sen. Sam Ervin. jo\vls \vobbling and brows popping, "'ill loose upo n the country another Biblical admonition: Woe unto the \Vorld because of offenses! For it n1ust needs be that offenses come; but \\'()(' to lhat man by \l'ho1n the offense coineth. 1'hat one seems a natural for the \1•isc old senator because it proclai ms the in· e.vitability that man \\-'i ll transgress and lhe req ulre-n1ent that he be deterred. This is rorgollen today by ma ny who. sickened by scandal plied upon scandal, fear the American system has gonl' sour and no longer \\'Orks. But before v.·e give up on it, let's reca ll just what our system is and \\•hat it Is not. IF 1lfE NOBLE experiment or 1776 had bet'n based on the hope that American oificia1s would be naturally honest and decent, that presidents and genernls \\'Ould ne\·er lie, t h a t IJureaucrats would upltold the law, lhllt judges would always !Jo jusl and that l'OflirtSSmen wouldn't cheat, we would have to concede that their scheme had lW'lle!d out a sorry flrusco. But Utt go1-.mment """ founded upon I the opposite assumption: that rulers may be conditioned and constrained to do rfght but, in their natural state, they must ever be suspect of lhe worst follies and sins. SO IT WAS that the fathers inscribed on our founding documents an indictment of homo politicus, per sc. and a litany of the iniquities of George Ill, along with a prediction that his American successors would tum out no better if left to their own resorts. Tho lathers set about restricting the mischief of ollicialdom by limiting its powers and by dividing up such powers as were permitted among different branches, so that each might act as a check on the others. A large portion was left to the pe<>ple and the press, along \\'ith the obligation to act as watchdog. BUT WE FORGET oor constlluUonal obligation to be exacting ta.skmUten toward the temporary stewards who use our money and authority. We back.sit& and begin to equate citizenship with mere obedience, and patriotism with symbols, songs and reverence toward office holders. And we get a secret war in Cambodia, an ITT case, a Watergate. Does this mean our structure of state is foundering? 1 think not. Our fathers protected us against our own negligence. The American system was constructed like a battleship. with successive rings of watertight compartments. At any given time, only one or two need hold to keep the ship afloat. When the threat comes, say from the presidency as in Watergate, the structure sinks only if all its checks collapse - only if tbe press fails to expose, the op- position party declines to oppose, the public neglect8 to care, Congress r<luses to resist, the courts demur from the law. IN mE LIGHT ol Watergate, bow has the system beld up? Transgressions came against our liberties, agltiMt decency, against the law, against th• electoral process Itself, as o u r forefathers had foreseen . But even the trespassen w ere restrained by our traditions. It may be said for the President and the men around him that they attempted.no front· al coup. Their IllegaUUe5 were at· tempt<d on tbe sly ; the l r ag· grruxUzemenl! W.re pr<ssed only as far as the trallic would bear. The response? Some reporters did their job ol investigation. Tho opposition party went to court and, thoug)t tempted to set· Ue lor money, refused to do so. /\ slow trickle of truth began inexorably to com· mand events. Public indignation built up, slowly but surely, Congress, led by a venerable gentleman from N o T L h Carolina, who for many years has car- ried a copy of the C.OOStltution around in his IX>Cket, rose to the occasion. THE COURTS were redeemed in the person of Judge John Sirico, who woold not accept a coverup, however · welt packaged. And around the country, juries, polls and legislative majorities have repudiated the un-American cla,hN to power. The antidotes of the fathers, Wee a physic of delayed but wondrous pot.ency, art working their wru. Men are prone to look first at outward appearances. To many or our people and to querulous populations around the globe, America m"'t 1ppear In lorment and turmoil: the President on the run, the FBI and CIA compromlled, the government paralyzed, the markd · Jit· tery, TV serials Interrupted, all started by a little break·in. VET TllE 01 wishers must begin to wonder at thiJ marvel of liberty, as 1bey see the !cadet of the foremool nation .C the world, who commands great -armies and ltell$url ... waiting glumly upon the V.rdicl or a free people as lo what was the truth about a burglary. For me. It is a spectacle lo set the spine tlngiing with lhal boyhood pride of country. , a few decades. You can make book on it. THE IDEAL and Miolly successful pa- Uent or analysand m· those days was the lad who would leave the Menninger Clinic or whatever and instantly sign up with the Elks, the Odd Fellows or the Knights of Columoos; be<ome·a cul1er of lop ilnd hauler ol water. He'would buy season 11ckets to the· loolbalf and ' liase- ball seasons of bis choiCe: '' The magic word was adJUstnienI. · It didn't ·occur to many shrinks in those days that their rerv.or for adjustment waS a form ol mind-washing ln behalf of the values of tbe Establishmenl. II It hadn't 1-; and seen as such, -elhlng would have happened to au thotle lat ap- proprlalions for ·mentaJ.bospitals and the National lm!llute of Mental H•alth, etc. SHRINKS •lwl become copo, almOiit un· beknownst. There an! those aberrant souls, like the cleponen~ who think thal guilt about their practict's public rela- tions, on account of Its ierrtcic emphasis on ser, led a lot of the shrinks to dO society's donl:ey ~ ol lndcictrlnaUoo. Yoo were illghUy mad, in lact, if you didn't believe in the flag and blueberry pie. _ Pu!Ung up such orbilrary norms, and also dcllnlng political radicals as guys wlto ha~en't worked 001 the old Oedipus r .. nnga, was _recenUy_ defined by. a leadlt>g Southem Qllllomla lhrink and ". . . .Surely the time has come r ... psychiatry to glve up the archaic prac- tice of classifying the rnlllions. of m~ and women homosexuals as mentally ill, be<ause ol that fact alone. The fact that their Ille-style happens to be out of favor must not be .a bas~ for such a dlll,lllOOls. It ls oor task as psychiatrists to be healers or the distressed, not watchdogs of social ~s." 01 ..... COAST DAILY PILOT Robm N. Weed, Pubwhtr Tho"-o1 K eevil, Editor Barbara Kreibich Editorio& Page Editor Tile editorial ;J"iV Of tho Dai~ PiJot .ietQ to tnronn and •Umul&te readers~ by presentina: on this pqe divtnie •ecrntn11ntary ' on loptca Of in- lt'ttlt by lfndlcated columnltt1 and cartooni1ts, by providlf!J a rorum tor re1dmi' view• and by prnentll'fl' thts newtl)lW's opinions and kSea$ oo ~l topics, The editorial Optniona of tl>t' Daily Pilot •PPtar only In ·tho _. Mitorial column at the 1op Of ~ paar. Opl~km:s txpi'tlaltd by the oot- wnnlstr and c•rtoohlsts and lekr wrttm art tbtlr owa and. ·no edork- mcnl of thtlr vtewa by ..,,. Dall1 Pilot -Id ... - Monday, Au.gusl 20, 1973 S! Fun schE Sect vest two Jolin SI Ave •. (, Jtosoo~nr bt'v!IM!fl .. ~v, ~ !"•. Th< ero.dw4 .•MHth , ~·n•• A S11rvlv1t< 0111'1{1ld, ....... s ... v1e1• "•"' P1rk. "' ·-~ L~"un~ 1173, 54 Hiii$ M Hlil" N ~urvlv" 1'11r~r• <~­Jose1111 '""° $h Ml(lllOI' B•IJ'lerd ne&e11v. Glend•l1 Ne!QN» 11<:1ef!M1 OlrKIOI' Elll•bel f\Ntll: FUMrll , __ Bo<11tcn, nc11t1M1 l.'11:1111\I - WE 117 Coro Cost 110 •Jun· Loni I j\{ f 17t c 3> N., Co SI For the Record ' \ Otlie r Deatlrs ' SANTA BARBAl\A (AP) - Funeral services were sched1,1led here todily for Secondo' Gua1lJ ID, an in· vestment counselor and one of two grandchildren or the Death Notleell O".t.Jfl! Elner F. Gl•M, AIM! I), ol 6M W. lflll $1., tbsfl M"" D•Je Ol IM•lh, .t.119u1117. 1tn. SwYIYt4 b'I' wlft,~th; ,_ loO!lll Alltn. ol Los Angt J $1f!l1 o WfflmlMNri rwo 0. hlff'1, MOrthl Bfoombel'g, to.11 Me11; Ellllbtih Men. n!na. AllM"'°''' 11• Arandc:hlldrllfl; alx 11rt•t1rlltlekhllllrllfl. S.rvk;n, to d • y , ~y, 2 ,.M, Btll BrQldwav Chlael, WllM RIY, Ed Phllllpa olflclerl1111. J11ltr-l'l'lllfll, Wfftmln111r Mtmor let Park. h!I Bro.1dw1v MortueJ. Olr1Ktor1. kl!fDL S,.AltGIElt Mar lorlo M, IClnd ~roer. AIM 61, ol 2515 Senti Ant Avt .. Cost• M111. Dale of dt1Ul, AUIUll 1,, 1t7), SUrYIYtd by hut1· b.tnd, Wlllarc1; loo.Ir ~$. Wiiiiam WllU1, ldtl>o; Earl WUU1, Sant• Rosa; Don•ld Wlllll. Of9QOll; Raymond WllH1, Hun-111\Qlerl 811ch1 two daughlff'I, 81rb1r1 rounder or the 1t a It a n Vineyard Co. Guastl clled Thuraday at 47 of Injuries sul· lertd 1n a traffic accident 20 mu~ south or Santa Maria. LOS ANGELES (AP) - Funeral services were to be held today for Roy Lauren, a vice president of Security PacHlc 'National Bani< and Ille Data Processing Managem ent AMociat.ion. He died Thursday o( a heart attack . VANCOUVER, B.C. (AP I - Wllhemlna !Uetvald, 23, Van- couver, whose picture was featured in a Playboy magazine centert'old two years ago, was round dead Sunday in her apartment. Police said they found a number or empty pill bottles believed to have contained barbiturates in her suite. I ORANGE COUNTY Hartelius Inquiry Continues Monday, August 20, 1973 DAILY PILOT 7 Moscone Schedules Working Session in Governor Race By O.c. HUSTINGS Of ltW Dllt1 P'tl .. Ir.ff lnltlal planning for a n Orange County Mosco.ne for Governor campaign has been scheduled by the Democratic gubernatorial hopeful himself at 7:30 p.m. Aug. 25 ln the Mercury Room of Mercury Savings and Loan, 1095 Irvine Blvd., Tustin. State Senator Moscone says the public meeting isn 't a "rally, but an important work- ing session for my campaign." Congress would be more el· feotlve ti they bad Instruction to acquaint them with their duties, Rep. Andrew J . Hinshaw (R·Newport Beach) contends. Freshman Hinshaw may know what he's talking about. lie has introduced a bill that wou ld call for two seminars in Washington, D.C. for new legislators and two of their staff members between the November elections and Jan. 3 when swearing~in takes place. Otherwise, Hinshaw argues, two months are lost at the * * * be~inning of each session LEGISLA noN to provide while new members get used funds through the Federal t~ their jobs. Communications Commission * * * (FCC) tQ assist states and televlslon systems from honor· ing a commitment to avoid broadcasts or sold-out games in the area in which they are played. It would apply to pro- fessional football , baseball, basketball and hockey games SQ!d ou t 48-hours in advance. * * * TOM PAU.1ER of Hun- tington Beach served on the platform committee at the re- cent Youn g Americans for Freedom (YAF) convention in Washington, D.C. Palmer, 16, is chairman of the Orange County YAF chapter. LOS ANGELES -A ~ local communities in adopting LOCAL TELEVISION black· year state Board of Medical "911" as the nation w Ide outs so disliked by sports fans Michael Millan g of Newport Hono1· List Examiners ~ry i n. t o. emergency telephone number \\'OU!d be stopped if a bill co-Beach has been placed on the charges or unpiyCessional con· is being co-sponsored by Rep. authored by Rep. Clalr W. Dean·s Honor List at duct and 'moral turpitude Craig Hosmer ( R ·Long Burgener (R·Rancho Santa Stanislaus State College in against Dr. Ebbe Hartellus of Beac~). Fe) ts enacted. Turlock. .Cos.ta Mesa an.·d .El Toro is *' * * Burgener's bill would prQ-Millang is the son of Mr. and scheduled to resume flere hibit local television stations, ~1rs. Harvey B. Mill~ng, 2312 ARBYl' OFFERS ROAST BE ~F DINNER Del icio us Ro1st Bt•f Sandwich French Fri•• SERVED FROM 4 TO 9 P.M. SEVEN DAYS A WEEK Good 011ly Gt followl119 l.occsriH 7942 EDINGER AYE. HUNTINGTON BEACH Corner leach 011tl ldlttter Tul!lt, N .... POrt BHCh; OorolMV Pomo, Co1!1 M1111 brother, W11ltY Gll1tr10, Or900n; 1l1twr11 Hal•I Gerrell Ind Wflmt Hen~rtll, bo h ol OrfQOll / thlrlffll 11rtnck:hl dr1n 1 flYe or•1t..qr1ndchlldr1n. 5•rYl«t, TuescJfry, 10 AM, Btll BrOldWl'f Cha1»I, with Fl!her H1rl1n CO\lk•11d1ll off!clatlno. lnttrm•nt, Harbor Rnt M1morl1I Plrk. Btll Broedw1y Mortuary, O!rtclor&. LAOllRQVIST Howard D. l191rquht, M.0. """' AYenldl SeylJ11, llQllf>I Hlll1. Otll ol dHlh , AUQU!lf \I, lf73. SurvlYtd bY wilt, Maroartl; tW9 son1, Or. Howard W, laovau111, S1nt1 M1rl1; Roblr1 O. Lecterou 11, CO\la M111; 111111', Marqe,.... Moulton, Chltt001 lfYt gr1ndthlld•1n. Memorial MrY!«s, TutldlY, I PM, PKlllc Vltw Chio.II tnlffrnenl, Ptc:lllc Vll'W ......,._lal ,.,, I Fa.mllY ~111 tl>oM Wlli!lllll l'O ml I ~llJ ~ lrlbutlon1, •-contrlbult te lt!I HHrt A11od1llon. P•lfk: Vl-• N'IDrtlMlrY, Olrtetor'$. ST. PAUL. Minn. CAP) - The Most Rev . Leonard l\ Cowley, 60, auxiliary bishop~( the R o m an Ca thol ic archdiocese of St. Paul, died Saturday. Tuesday. FRESHMEN members of national network or cable Newport Blvd . Hartelius' two lawyers are -..'.:..'.~".'.::'.'.'.'.'.'..:...~'.".'.'.'.'.:'.:....'.'.:_'.:'.'.:'.:::'.'.....::.'.:'.'..::.:_.::.__::::::....:::.::.!:::::.::::.:.:::... _____ .:__=-==...:...:...: _____________ _ to open their dftense of the PALMaR JamtJ v. Palmtr. llOo r>ort latbovmt W1y, N.-t BMCfl. Dttt of dtltn, Awu111t, Im 5ul'Y1wcl by wlft, ,.alrlcla R. P1llTll'!'J few '°"'' J1"'"' of 5.Mlta Monk1; Tlmotlly, Sin 011«11 Ptlr1ck llld CHICAGO (UPI) -Fiore "Fin" Buccitrl, ooce.~tenned by a Chicago neviipaper "the first ackn(lwledged duce" o! the clilcago crime syndicate since Sam ·Ballaglia, died Satunlay el his hpme, It was announced Sunday. He was 65. silver-haired physician in an inquiry that has seen the pros- ecutor and bis assistant repla~, the state hearing of· ficer leave for private practice and two physicians on the six- member board depart during seven three-day hearings. c11n11ootowi:''.,,.,. of 1t11 11omt1 two THE CO~IA11TIEE at its dauoni""' 11trt ··i',1mtr, coat• Mn11 COPENHAGEN (UPI) MarY c1m 111 Pal"*'· ot ttie 11om11 -last session refused to accept mot111r, M'1o ... tllfl ,. ........ LOI Anot1111 Brew Moore , an American rwo 1111tr1. Mt1. Frtd<trlctt "'!nl. La& a propasal that \\'OUld have An<111tt; Mr1. W1Ul1m O'Donne 1. ar..... jazz tenor saxophonist, died dal•. R0&1ry, 1on111h•. ~1y, 7:JO PM; Sunday ,.· Munici.t..I hospital placed Dr. Hartelius. 50. on ~~u1t'=c1~a~;,e!.,ut~~v."'~ti~· ~i1'i'to1i~ ya probation for rive years with A ' C , from in1"uries suffered in a fall rhu•ch. 1n11rrntn1, !IC..,1"" '""' "rv, an added clause that would El Toro. F1mlly 11JOQ1111 rhos• wtshlnci. f h )i'er He was llllllt ma~e l'nlP10flAI t11nlflbnl!(lnl to a eW ours ear • t . t h' r d g 0 1111 H11•1 Fufld. P1dtlc v1.w Mor1u1 ry, 49. res r1c IS use o an er us or~ectors. sl!DDO!f drugs. John s~c1on. Mi• 1oa. o• 1•SJ C011t1n11nt11 He must now offer his AYf •• CO!lll Mlt.1, SurY!Y9<1 bY d1uPllll!ll', ROSll"nne G1t,,1<•1, s11n c11m•nie1 "'"" I • defense to charges that he en· brothers Ind '""° •ISi~"'· S1rvlcH, Tll"!s-Di .... o ut·-.... Y, ~ PM a .. u .,.,,... .......... '"""""1. ... 1... itit •V•• joyed improper sexual rela· t=r. Thoma• J. Nl'YI" nlf•rl •!lnQ. B~I 8rotd'w•y Mortuary. O!rec1or1. tionship with two women .lnuoh M. $11 ... f~!-.~~~\ H•·-8 '"". Of M. arr-inne Mrs. Reba Vaughn, 31, then of ........ •n•. oatto"" 11 ...... ,.. • .,1 .. • 1•· 1•"3. -D "'"--ta M-and the late Mrs. Survlwd by wit• H...,..1 l'Wo -•· I.AID ~ Onnald, of Wfflmln11 .. 1 NHlor sr1.,..ir1, '111111 """" I Wanda Melendrez ~ also or G1•<it'fl G"W'll al"l\I o•....,...."11"•-. RodlkoWlltl, Ellllbltlh 11111 ftotllrl ' -":I, StrYlt••· Wtdnffdav. 10 AM. Paclltc V'-Oulne -Costa Mesa. Cl\loel lnl•......,,I. ,."(lflc VII-M•--111 Curtis. ltll• Y. •lid Gtor9I T . ,.,rk. ,.tc:llk vi.. M<wh11ry, 01reckN'1. chanc•Hor. RVUtln <:h1 r1 .. •nd Judy It has been alleged in the VAltNUM Ann t' ha th t G-Wlnthroo Vanrum. RHldllfll of Pritt, Ma1""91rtf S. tfld J1ma1 O. prose<:U !On p se a LA~un,. Hiiis; 11-11 o4 ci-"'"' Aup•"' 1~· srlllhft', vnma JI:-. and Wa ller Harteli'n• m· i·ecled Deme-1 1-n. ~""' M11on: Mtmtlff L1ovn1 E~ Jr. ...., •"' Hilts Masonic CIUbl S1tmo Club I ¥1Ufll Wtlltl. Gtoroe lewis Ind !fll'ICY m' (0 both worn-and W8S Hiits: Ntlol'lbOrl'IOad COflOrt11a!lon Church. Franca '"" ~urYFYtd "" wilt ""''""""1 dA•«1l'>•-. kff'111.1, tmfl Incl llotll po s'bl fo Mrs Vaughn Fl•rblra JHfl SmHI!. W1t .. u1 Cr""-; 50n, B•llllO•S<t Dl•ne M. •nd RlcMrd R. res n I e r • ('-Varnum Jr .• l~la; lw'o!IW•. Fl11\tr, Cynlhll Lft and Jlrnft Wllllarn becoming 0 C 0 n V j C t e d JOHDll I . V1rnum, 8kl'Nlrk, Ml1101.1rl; 11 '""° 1111e,,, Oor"llltY Sttc:Y, lan•lrwi. Hvt110Ck. Rrt1 Ka 1ric1 Ira narcotics addic\.. Mlcl!l41111 El!r•btttl V•'""""'"· s I.. MMIGll\J!I, Paul a'. Ind Jennlfe-r C-Btrnare1lno. G•,.,...•ldol wrvlcn, Wad-Alndil. El'ftld E. 1nc1 Marv J.iina It was also, alleged that r>lllllY, Auo. 22. 2 PM, Forttt Lawn .. J T G11ne1.11. wtltl R1 .... Jotin Revl"'ld• 01 •tot Tott.I 8•rlHlra "'· •111'1 •mn · Hart.elius performed abortions N~ollborltood C-r111tlrlMll Chwcl'I, of· McC lr'd, Jo A. -8trton l. flrlallna. SIWlllr Laouna 811ch Morlulrt', Tiffany, Mkhlll and SUlln l. On Mrs. Vaughn and kicked a ... 1111, Ctclllt I." J-DlrlClllfl. Wl'tT•UltG C"-"dl.,., Shir .... JNn ind Witltr and beat her on several oc-Ellr•lllfh Wfftbv"', J1:11>ldent of l-•nl MalYln Jr. fl11c11: 11111• °' ,...,t11. """""' ''· 1•r:i Wllit•, Mlrt1nt Aile• ind wnu am casions atter he moved into Funt••• ~•rY!cn. Tunday, 2 PM. Shel'" Herbert J c• , h Co l M ho L-·-.. A(., Mii•'"•!"· ""''" RIV. Jim Joj~ ..... N1ncv,tt1na Incl lmft ,.ar IS er s a esa Ole. flo"'"'"· of Fl"! ('l!rt•li"n l!ltul'e:tl'< ~'· 11:n*m1n1 !•llY Vl1"11Jnl1 (Mcl11nl and ·------------1 tlc!tlf"'I' In...,,,....,, Ci'•~-. ,1t.tt.r ''::J::' ''' AdY1rll1tmtnt ~C.O~.,,~·=·~··~';,' ~-~'='N~, 0='='~:;"";;;·=::..I E 'r:°t,!1~11Q, 5Jlll'drt. I nd Lt~ . ARBUCKLE & SON , WESTCLIFF MORTU ARj:'., ,1 1%7 E. 171b St., Colla Mffl 1111118 •• BAL'J'Z.BERGEJION FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar m-Mst Costa rtfesa 141-U!f • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY , 110 Broadway, C'-0sta Mna LI 1-1433 • DILDAY Br.OTHERS MORTUARIES 17911 Beach Blvd. Hundngton Beach g.u..7771 UC Redondo Ave. Long Beach %1~1145 • McCORMICK LAGUNA 6E,\CR MORTUARY 170I Laguna Canyon Rd. 4111-!Mli • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery rttortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Beach, California l«-!700 • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL ROME 7111 Bola Ave. WtllmbultrllWIU • SMmlS' MOllnJARY G7 Main St. RDDllnglo• Beach - ' "~';f, ~~111 e>.;1n lfld Ktlhlttn Eat! Pen•. M1rg1flf Giltler~l tnd Ralph Mlddfn, Cllrt Jaret tnd E~ l lOll ,l~~~Ml~=Jt;;.,Ann ; GollODllll rlfl(litl l . lfld Glrtld E. 1 Ollhl, Wlt1 m f'llll Ind Ptmal1 Gill IOOll\. lliilftlMl'I Ann 1nd DI~ Slulrt Lon .............. l<ydl, ~1'1.J:.x':°' :t'" ~~ and EA~111M11'9 mr:r· . j • .---1'N1~1n-n-..--.. ""' ShwOll ulhlHn Ind 8Uly rvnual. Mce:na, Adtilldit Vtrict alld Ja1n11 It tales the worry v~U::n, OoNld Jr. 1nd Lindi Lynn out d W&ariltg dentll'es. FkiU~L $111dr1 0. Ind Rooer o . Jl:outt". uaY'kl J. and $'11Yla A. LornblrOo. O.rl and l-.rd Wllmtf'f, Jo-nne 8. 1nd 8ruc1 E. Jl:1l1y, Al'ltll G. Ind Pttrlck R. Hartrtnft, Judllh M. 11'11 Wlllltm i:(~~~ J, ~ lll 0. Gon1aleL M. Ind JOM C. ,t.ncle>rwn, Lalli C. Incl Gtotfr~y F . Holm11. A.llrlabtll l. Ind HI/TY A, M1rden. Sv$an kaY Ind How1rd Sfanll'I' Abbol,. kllhlMn Palrlclt Ind Roi;tr S~r~. 01-C. Ind Slt'Ohtn 8.E Morin. RubY Anri and Ch,,rltt . HudlOll. P11111111 John arid IC111'11111l Mtt Flltd A .. Uff t Gl1Koe, Jtm~ Lorrv •nd Marlorl• ,:., Wllll#lm H. Ind OllM Dee Fromm, Patricia M. incl Mlc~lll I, M-1. ll1111nl1 l . Ind NO!'MI J . ~lnt1Ml'lllM. C.rol M. Incl Guv A. onttll, Charin T. incl Ctrolt Ann lowarcl, S•111n G1vl1 and Gary Vtrn W!lt!1m1, Bolin t . 1nd Delores V. Web&. J.N. tncl M1rl1 M.. T Ell!lrtYldo, JOHOll 5. tnd AO.ltld.I • ~lclttl. l1ur1 L" and Hl•rY A. ICl115!1n, Lora C. and Mlchael A . ,t.•hl•Y· Renl!ll AnM Ind Paul JOll9tl ,.lib, !1ttlll1 F. Ind J•rry W. Wllll1. a.ttla L. and John A.l . Lll'!Chly, Cvnthla Lou Ind R!ch•rd c>nn. Sc'11ntL Gladn Ann1Mtla Ind 01'11d '" OolHhal, EYI Mii Incl Jtlch1 rd Johll ~ltor1~I , Curlfs L. incl A"'"41 R. Doran. Wllllam J. ancl Edna L ~ HUGH MYNAn Now's The Time! in the l1Mltlijl!1ll PHARMAC.Y WE QUOTE PRICES OVER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME -CHICC THUi SUPll SALi IPICIALS-5""' .... , ow a.., l"tlft I DIGEL ANTACID Ttbl•tt, •100 ···••••••••••••••• $2.10 $1 .79 BAYER ASPIRIN , •100 ••••• ,, ••• ,,, •• ,, 1.17 99c PEPSODENT l•othp••t•, ·~ OL • •.•• • • • • • •• • • o\ • • etc 69c MUSK Oil lubbll119 Qtl, 16 01 •••••••••••• , • • • • 1.91 1.49 2100 E. Coast Hirmwav. at Femleaf. Corona del Mar .... l'rtff $1.39 73c 59c 99c 644-7575 D acc:ou1ds for At United California Bank, we figured that if we could simph!y day-to-day banking, the world would beat a path to our vault. So we came up with The United Account. The United Account takes a wealth of everyday banking services and unites them into one convenient package. Instead of paying a separate fee each time you use one of these service!>, you pay just one low monthly charge that covers them all. There are two United Account plans: The $2-a·month plan includes a UCB personal checking accounf, regular savings account, Master Charge Card and.Balance Plus/Check Guarantee Account. Plus all the other banking services you're likely to want, at no additional charge. (Of course, monthly interest charges for Master Charge® and Balance Plus"' are not covered by the $2 charge.) The $3-a-month plan includes the UCB personal checking account and the regular savings account. Plus the other banking services at no additional charge. Whichever plan you choose, there's no minimum balance required. Now that we've told you how The United Account works, the pictures will tell you what you get. mfil UNITED B!J) ~~ORNIA \ Money orders and cashier'• checks. You can get as many as you want. There's no additional service charge. Vnlimitecl check writing and overdraft protection. Write as many checks as you need, with no additional service charge. And if you ever get carried away, your Balance P!us (included in $2 plan) will cover • any overdrafts up lo your established credit limit. - ''I VnJimitecl personalised checlu. Checlc Gaarantee Card. Pick .your checks from • wide Master Charge Card. Master Charge (included in $2 plan) is accepted at over 1.000.000 places. from Cali· fornia to the New York Island. And good for cash at 5,600 banks. ., • We pay the postage, coming and going. ..... deposit box. You get a $6 size. Or a $6 credit on a larger size. selection. induding our new California Scenic checks. Reduced rates on loaJU. Your Check Guarantee Card (included in $2 plan) gets them acaopled by all UCB offices •nd many merchants. } Traveler's checks. First Nahont!ll City Bdnk Traveler's Checks are as good as money. but a lot safer. And you can get <lS many as you hke witQ no extra sernce charge. When you qualify for your personal loan of $1.000 or more-boat loan. vacation loan, whatever-you quah!y for a speci41 reduced simple·interest rate. 'I f' ...... Mond1y, Au;Ytl 20, 1973 ~ QUEENIE lly Phil lnterl a ndl •• • ''And one more thing. Don't wear those dam fool shoes ~ arouad the office-we're not covered if you fall offt" ' ' ' • .. L. Jff. Boyd Honest Abe Had Wandering Eye f\.1ister, how old are you? Wait, some medical experts who specialize in heart ailments contend you're 15 years older thM your actual chronological age, if you: t Smoke more than a pack of cigarettes a day. 2. Show an exceed· ingly great blood cholesterol level. 3. Register abnormally high blood pressure. Now, sir, bow old are you? Rare is the black man who has hair on his chest, I'm L< told. Or relatively rare, anyway. It's a matter of record that the typical coin collectioo increases pro- portionately in value even more from year '9 year than the typical portfolio of stocks. -· Gen. Joseph Hooker commanded a division during the Civil War. r..tany was the Wfiftan who followed his troops from camp to camp. Our Language man says she became identiried by the general's own name. As is the girl of similar ilk to this day. Or did you know that? BROKEN JAW Q. uy•ve heard it's almost impossible to 11reak the jaw of a profes.siooal boxer by hitting him with a 12-ounce g:love U his teeth are set in his mouthpiece. How did Ken Nortoo manage to do it to Muhammad Ali?" A. Long-time Ali observers assumed bis mouth was open. ; You aught not trust that citizen v.·ho fails to look you . straight in the eye. Such is the common belief. Am asked • Jf there's any scientific reason for the notion. No, it's bwik .. . • Take honest Abe Llncoln, for instance. A trustworthy soul, that ooe, certainly. But be suffered from a condition called hypertropbia, which caused the visual axis of one of ~s eyes to deviate upwards, thus preventing him from looking ao,ybody straight in the eye. ASTROLOGY It's the contention of that research astrologist Linda Goodman that people born under Aries, Gemini, Libra, Sagittarius, Aquarius and Pisces tend to be late arrivers in four out of rive appointments. \Vhat. you don't know the very first of Henry J. Heinz' original 57 varieties? Grated horseradish. Young college men and the coeds share living quarters at West Berlin's Free University. Share bathrooms, too. Management decided the girls should hang pink cards on the doorknobs when they showered, the boys blue cards. Excellent, excellent. But dormitory visitors now report vir- tually all the bathrooms di splay both pink and blue cards simultaneously. Medical statistics indicate the average age of the wom- an in menopause now is 50. AddTess mail to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, New· port Beoch, Coli/. 92660. FR EE CHRISTIAN SCI ENC E LE CTURE by Miss Patricia Tuttle of San Francisco Saturday • Au9ust 25 11 a.m. EDWARD'S CINEMA THEATRE FASHION ISLAND Chlld c1rt 'Will bt provid.d •t Second Church - 3 I 00 Pacific View -Cd M Spe111or1cl Dv Fir1t And S1to111I Cfu.rt h of Chri1t Sti111li1!, N•wport l11t h J Co111et to Give Show hf .,.... s~ w.,. ... We•~ Lrm RADCLIFFE HALL 7°/o We have a savings plan to fit about every need. Whether you're just getting started in life and need to be able to get your hands on your savings quickly, or whether you can Certificate accounts 63/40/o . 61/tO/o I I h I ,0 'icitid to i ldl11g tht 1dv111t1m111t of th• Aprv111coo•0 k ivirig• tluder1t clo1119 bt1ow 1v1r191 wor • SMALL Cl.ASSIS _ INDIVIDUAL ATflNTION ACCl l DITID TIACHI N5 STAP' TUNSl'OITATION TO ,t.LL AllAS IXflNDID DAY CAii _ 121 S. Citron, An1heim 6]5.7892 • .. * ore afford to put your savings away for longer times. Wecan help you choose the terms and the savings plan that are exactly right for you. Ask us today. ·aonus Passbook accounts accounts ~ 53/40/o 51/40/o annual Interest rate. annual interest rate. annual interest rate. annual interest rate. Minimum $1 ,000-90 days. annual lntera& rate. Minimum $1,000 - 4-10 years Mml •nnval yttld of 7.250/o Minimum $5,000 -Minimum a) $1,000-1-2 years Minimum $5.00-<18}'-ln,dqcul 21'.!-10 years or b) $5,000-2-10 years Additions-none Additions-any amount ••m• •nnu•I Jl•kl Of .ime •nnu•l JI.id Of __ ,......, ·-·-"""of 6.980/o 6.7!0/o . 5.92% Addlllons of $100 or more c11n be m1c1t on eny e«ti~catt 11CC<U1l prigr to l'Nll\lrily. Ari ex\l9nllon of lhll dllt to a time tt Jeuat equll to mlnlrnum P "f'IQUlrlld. *You can earn even high4tt' ratq when larger amountl qre depollted for 4-5 yeart, ... us fot Mtallt. CiLEl\D4LE FEDE·RAL MoN olli-to_,.., ti-any other ~ Scw'.np and '-Aloockltlon In 'tht nation. And.,.., $1.7 bllllon ··- Costa Mesa Branch: 2300 Harbor Boulevard (Harbor Center)• 642-4711 Fullerton Branch: ::S20 North Harbor Boulevard• 526-8331 SJ9% Newport Beach Branch: 500 Newport Cen ter Drive (Newport Financial Center) • 644-5300 Santa Ana Branch: 51 Fashion Square (In the Santa Ana Fashion Square)• 541-3314 -• -• l , • s G • • • c F c < H p c • A • 0 '1 " p • E J• • G Fl ' ' • •• ' ' ' ' I Monday, August 20, 1973 DAILY PILOT .• E'GJMllll C'lrcu1 b11 Bit Kea11e ~---..... OPEN DAILY 10 to 10 TUESDAY & .WEDNESDAY ONLY I ! • • f g,:zo ... ~1,'­ ''0annfs mother is 'speding o baby but we have to wait till November to find out if Donny's gonna be a big BROTHER or a big SISTER." SUNDAY 10-7 HAWAIIAN DAYS At K Mart Grill e Hawallon lu1'9er S6c e Chinese Po<lc lun 35c e Polyneslan Pup 39c • Hom Steak e •;, Fnsll Pineapple 57c •with Pineapple 1.03 Coconut filled with punch, only 47c I For the Record POL YE STER DOUBLE KNITS Marriage Licenses .i J-S,1tn IEX·DE LA Clll:UZ -Ec:ld\e Mac, tt. 10215 i"NllftttnNlt, '-tlht V1t1ev •rid Dl\'t,.. Ill•, 11, 500Z Mc:F~ $MCe u 5-111• Ma. SPINE J•.-OUK~ -Tllomlt. 21. G'2 w"' ........ WMtmlMler ww:I Dto!ll• Mn. I&. 4012 J.O. CJr,11. "unlln;1on ...... llEGIN U·OUNN -ThomlJ Gr"'°'"!' 19, ~:u West AYI. Q·S Aot. l ' P1lmoal1 •no El•l•Dell'I Jetfl, JY, 11:1'~ Klmbtrly Drive, HIMtlnglon BeKll. LOGAN-A\.OMB-Edw•rd WIUl•m, U, 2Yds. 5°0 ~14' Ellubetll \.OUM, Cr11rn1 •nd, •NO .... , oncf c;.U Tl'IKI•, 24. 7101 W•rn.l', Apt. Sewing fun With 58._,, IU , mony 1ln,.t.~.':rc~ ... lttcti.-D • 11 I• I patterned knits. Spring colors.Need no TllO!Mi, 2'. 203.c2 SM!• AM AYe., 12 1'--' ,_,..._ A11t. 21. S..nt• .-.,,,.. H•IQll" •rid IMry ironing. In • "7-... "ill"'• """' D, 1'0fl HU.UO. A.pl, Z.11~----IU... '°""·----.. --1111 W.tmlnt•r. ~ · ~ J ACKSON ·EVE-A:T~Cll•rl" A:k Nol"dlotl. lO 111222·1$111 SI .. O.reletl Grove •rd Jiu M.trle. It, 19'11 M.lttol'll• LW. H11nllnvlOt1 Beech ... HEMSL&Y·SALAZAA-J1mn Edw• 1• 22, t3' AMhelin. ANl'lllm af>d l!:r ti Ju""', It, 914 Hot S~t1111, H1111-tt1111l0ti tudl. ~---' --.1 FatnllyflalnlMMlllrflrdllllr ~ BLOOGETT·lllGEL.OW -M.lrc Tllom- •1 n :l1lO FullwtOll St .• AP!. I, COil• Mlti. end Michell Mlrlt, 11, \DOIO Los Coyol", FOVt1t1Jt1 Viii.-,. SPUHLElt·EAltHART -TMldlt lvlt1, n 1"9t Vtrmonl Lt11t. H11ntlnQton 11Hct1 •nd llettv. ~2, 1"99 Vermonl L-nt, H11t1tlng!Ot1 aucll, MOPHEltSON-M.4.SON -r.rtd. 6', ,11 Olcktl. ,t.Nohotlm Ind El llbllh Hiid, '°· 10227 Holburn Orlw, H11nlt1111lon 8Mcll. WIEBE-GltlMMETT -WHlltm LtA:ov. 25. J.U WHI Frr11 Sl.1 T111!1n Ind Llw Ktr.n, 20. «13 C•l1t F1mlll1, Stn C1emtnlt. PITTIM.N·ICOLlllEA:T -~ A:OO- trl, .42, 1011 England SI., ,t,¢. C·l H11ntlnglon BMdl. -0 N.cllnt Floy, 4 11111 En;l¥1d SI., Apl. C-1 Hun!· lngton 8.-c:ll. GAA:lA+CHEARY -kftrlno, 2',, ~ E1lrtlle. S..n ,.......,,, •nd c.r.., AM , , 306 Madrid, SM ICl-lt. vouNG.i'.ELSOOJIF -Aictw'd .... btrt. ,2. "2 S. G.lrtllld ........ ~Hltlldllt, 1111noh •nd Vlcv Ollll rlt. •t, 1121, Ylt49-Wood W1v, Irv llf, IANNlCAAI, JR.·HAJIAN -,,...rlo JOMOl'I 22. in12 H•l•rd SI., MldWrf <I~ 1'1'1d ,,...,. P1trlcl1, 21, llf21 Onvx I, Glor1'«1 GrO"t'f. CAMERON-SNAVELY -Dlnnl• E1rt. 2l. 1na A.al\, A!>I. • Huntlnqton BeKh •!Id Otbt1 An,.., 2o. inn Atll, Apt ~. Hll!'>!lnglvn Bffch. ,.p111tt•n~11llw .. ,....., .. Sm!Moreu Pnerline portallle frem K-MART 13333 s.11111.., Ill~· --HANli=IN.CHYA:CHEL -PI Ir IC k Wllll1m, 2S, 109 22nd Sloe... NIWPOl'f Beech 11'1d Mt rd• """'' u. t70 W. •>-•• ......... .._ 11ttl St .. ADI ..... Cosl• Mew. llt. .................. _,,__.:!l•-" • Ii''' L K Mart Costa Mesa While they last thru Wed., Aug. 22 "Dlredor Two" Dooll·Top ·sxt12" \ MODERN CALCULATOR 5500 Electronic calculator odds, subtrocts, multiplies, divides. floating decimal. llERAY-REILLY -MlcMel E~ll 1t m ltotflel!tr, Cotll Mn.I 1 • .., ............ -.. -L.;.flllf, 11, :t:nc Mln1111m•n W1v,l 'J-~.,..,............. ... .. ,.,:;;s::.,.c~Cllll'41! il•i ••• • _ _.,,_ c&r~~.~Tit ..• U(HANAN -RlcMrd l ~ Wllllim, 24. 7641 Benion St . UNFINISHED w .. 1mln1...,. 1nd LO<J Ann Mlchtllt, 11, 14612 AlMn St .. Wtslml111I~ I "'1Js~:~.~·~;~""li'~" .,;;... tn:07'. Ntw-1 B~ll Ind Sl'ltlll Rull\, J ' ,,.l~.._v(glv-v1N'te"N~~«1111'~M'· · VANITY 21, :llCMY, Goldenrod. Coron.. del 1r Ind C1rol M1r1t, M. lO<llllo Goldomrod. C01"on1 dll M.lor. 21 llEEC.:HER.COLBERT -01vld, l i ~~··i:::..:'1 .. ~~I .. ,;.; WITH BOWL S.nrt Ane Aw., Aot. D, Cost• Meta. TAYLOlt·VER.l YN -A!JbAv, ,,, l! 1·...l::":::"r.:.".'·is. •r,;,, '·,,.,,, 1t11on Rd,. lrvlflt. 21 215 FITCH.COP1:: -J1ck W11ttr, • 11 Vfl'-PllOf, rrvll'll •nd Dtborl tEitt, 20, %1t4$ltl St.. H•-1 Kl'li;:s llLAIA Jtrornt Antt.onv. 44 W~LA,f, L~Mlnci L;-M. (Mii Mn1 Ind Ei11,.. Mir-¥. ?t. 120t1 MOnl•n Line, 2 D 11~~~8-~BANA -01ft1d1~':..:d • ays ~;.!:?:' Jciv!~1bon a~~ .. E.I P1I....... Only L..IGJ~~'RAL -J~A:::'°0ti:1! l'OM H1rtior. cosi. ,.., 1 5, l'o'•rlt!" J•••· 31 , 1~9 ... •• • ~ Lll~:~~w~~-... !.'. ~:.: ~J~ II -P•rk ~ e .. ~. UWVI, 1s. 1J:n1 St>ll<:' Rrl "'"""ln•ttr. St"HOO .. t')VS:D.F 'li,s:p1oo11.DOT :... OH""'°' n 111n Pe<nt>er«> c1rc1... lm-LN, ' Ii •nd SMrr-1 L"'·I•'"· ~1 ;';;":"~Ol'IS•";."M,"o. Aot. 0-3, FOUt1t11n L;:,.r::;:'i"lt-JENSEN ~. R~~t!:;!~,; ~ .. c1:1~~co,.~;: M,.'r11, ,,, n«> llrltt&n Aw .. Stn C1rto1. Charge It Ready to finish bathroom vanity with choice of bowl colors. Strong, sturdy and very attractive to compli· ment any bathroom. Paint, varnish, stain or antique in color of your choice. 23'' wide, 19" deep, 31" hiQh. Dissolution .,., .. .,..,.,....,,. .... ,. •• ,.._~•"••"•'".""""'"'"""'"' ~: •. ~"""""""""''""""""""'""""':;;;""o••·•"""""""""'~""'""""•llllL:I'"""~ Of Marriage ~~ "'""'"'"'""""'" 2 ...... ...,"""'o;;:..,;"' _.,.2 " - FllM At.11V1! 1 , kllil1 Charin G. •nd P1trlcl1 A. -~ ' '"" .-•nd T~I E, P•VIH1rd. L I .... ·-·-'I o"-Gallon F•mtm. Jlldllll Ann 11nd ""-' Y~~nov, Jecob Gtro;t incl JHnlllt 1t!t:l': Otvl<I L. 1nd J-1 LHllt ICYltr Eteinort s. 1nd Hor1ct Glll'ls"u. 11:onMt1, Mlc!IMI LOlll1 Ind S.ndrl Brlmtr, Sharon o . .,,.; J1mt1 M. Wl\allnQ, Pwtr1cl1 E. tnd A:kmrd H. F Wilton Aon1ld w. ,and A:osem•rv · Colt L'vnn Dl•Mll and Ltltfld Gordon Hill~. Bonnie Gayle •nd Kenn1tll 0:.;::;::~ ll•rblr• "nn •nd MldlNI c~t.110. IC1r1n ,.M. ~~-AOQel' i!Y. Ind Vtnden Bos, .,.111r....... Vici Gr-rv Earl A ~~'.!rn.~1r8:~d"~11~ C:::ge1.~11" II~~~'~ Robtl1 It. tnd Vlrglnl1 Htnltv, Pllrlc• JOMPl'I Incl J•nl1 LN Minor, ... nnt M. Ind Tflll'on c . s.wrn, S111tnn1h 111111• Ind 011•n1 ~=·~. ae111 and Jolin s. ;11,m1n, LOI.ell• c11r1 •nd P1lll Gtr1ld "' ,_,,, HlrvtY. M•rcro $\;!Inn• • LATEX HOUSE PAINT .... 10.74 2 DAYS ONLY 5 .. 00 L1fi~~~·1>.0 """'w"·,',,"" M,~111nvTNiinti 2 gallon bucket or exterior latex house pa.int. \Vhlte only, 01v11. •rY I S•Dt111 e "' Robert e 11"'"'""•.,..,•LJt ·~--""''-'""" ...., .., __ Hlmmtlretcll. 00tl1 . a "" ._..:,_ L1pr1, M•rv S1ndr1 • ""111v> Steotlln "'l&MllUONGi t'S GOOP FM VQU, &ROT"4£R.·· Grtham, 1.trrv W. •nd H10"" L 0111, C•rmtn •nd P11Qlll C11~n1. P1mel• Miry Ind F0trot.I .... CaVlMU. B1f'bl;r1 J. line! Ll!TY R. ~~!!r~ Su1tn P. tnd t>t•n M.,. Robo-"lic:' Wind& G1thenl I '' VllDI~. Adolot. Sltnll'/ lltd LI,,,. b1111nt M. llUH Ollnt A. lnd Ktnnelll C. • =' 1, Cll'fll F, lfld 6-'al ... JlltlY LYM Ind j ,Oj - Un.n, tt:.::.fuo:~ ~1 Johll Harbor ~ENT AL CENTER DENTURES • CREDIT • PENTOTHAL FIWMM • mtlACTIONS • HIKI WOil x.u.n • DINTVRU • RIPA1H • JAClm nNTOTHAL • ROOT CANAL$ c•OWNI • WISDOM nmt • MINO• OITHODONTIA DR. A. FREDERICK SALTZMAN 2706 HARBOR BLVD-COSTA MESA ...... St •• Nm ,. "" 1 Phone 556-8013 i 'I ' '( '!,'\: f I ,:,i (: 1;1 ;~f; I l 'I . ~ ~ I ,! : II j /1!1·!i. ,i '! :, U • :I :Ill, • , 20-GALLON TRASH CAN 2 Days Only Lightweight rustproof 2. 11 platlk: trosh can with ll!Op-on lid,jl.jipo• cloon e Charge If wlthdompcloth.AYOCOdo. I 10 Plf Pick ,~ Rousoblo ~$ ? •1 CLEANING CLOTHS Reg. 44' 3,c 10- Pack Absorbent 14x24'' r_oyon I cotton reusable cloths . 1 Gal. Size ITALIAN CYPRESS These bca\ltlfu1-attrac1lve any landscaping. trees will add charm lo ·i SCRIPTO DISPOSABU ' BUTANE LIGHTER • • • \ I I I , . ~ 2 DAYS ONLY ,79c 1! ,. I p' Visible fuel supply • adjustable flame, no refiHi119 -no reflinting -comes in four colors. WHILE QUANTITIES LAST, #llOOXN "'"''" cuwONA AD5)~1NJG MACHINE 77 77 2 DAYS • ONLY IO column, totals l l -add.c;, subtracts -hBJ multlpHca- tion repeat key. Al so non add key and credit balance. OZITEe TILE! \ i ' ' ' l ' ' ' ' ' l ! ' I • ! l • 12'' NYLON SHAG i. CARPET SQUARESi~ Pkg. of 6 2.12 "' C ·:s Only 1• • ' ' ' • • ? Nylon face with built-in ; foam rubber cushion ~ back. No messy adhe-1 sives or tape ore needed.1 • MEN'S CARDIAGN SWEATER 2 DAYS ONLY 9.88- 100% Orlon Acrylic sweaters in a choice of beige, na brown, red, blue, tan or black colors. Sizes S.M-1.rXL. J,0 DAILY PILOT S Monday, August 20. 1973-".. . !Buffums ; ! To Utilize , ' iComputers • : Special to 'Ille Dally Pilot I LONG BEACH -Buflwns ~as signed a 41-month con- Mact with McDonnell Douglas !Automallon Co.. which will '1andle all the company's data 2>rocessing, except data entry, jVaile G. Young, chaJrman and j:lhief executive officer of the 1pecialty department store Win, announced Friday . • : THE CONTRACT, which is io commence Nov. 1, will have )i value of about $725,000. ~cDonnell Douglas Automa- J:lon will be responsible for all pultums data process l n g QUIET FURY -·Design of 1974 Plymouth Fury features lower beltline and increased glass area for low look and greater visibility than previous models. Emphasis is on a quiet ride. Eeds including a cc o u n t s yable, receivables, sales aylses , payroll inventory j:iontrol and statistics. In High Gear ~ Young noted that McDonnell Douglas Automation offered a. )lumber of advantages in- tlud.ing access to sophisticated ~quipmerd, a large technical 'taff and on-line capability ""hich Buffums might choose lo utilize at some future time . • Chrysler Accents Exterio.rs : BUFFUMS PREVIOUS data Processing relationmiip was iivith Union America C.Omputer Corp. A reorganization or that ~mpany made necessary . its giv~ng up of all non-bankmg busmess. : McDonnell Douglas Automa-tion Co. OJ>erates five major Computer centers with 86 com- j>utcrs valued at $135 million. The company hed more than 1,300 clients throughout the country last year. . :Jlankruptcy . . · ;Bids Filed :· The following persons have flied petitions for bankruptcy With SantaAna federal court: 'GARRITY, Rodger Weltm•n, ftoc~erbrvker, 6J12 Sierra Siena Ro.cl, ljv•ne. Ll•l>llllles $167.156.40, aisers 112.000, rel•r"" Peter Elllo!I. : HINSHAW, JICQUeUne s u let I e. &o.,s.ewlfe, 621? Sierra Sle111 Road, trv!oe. Llab!Utl~ Sl\9,906.~. essels t!.000, rtteret' Elliot!. ~LAWERENCE, Earl K!ng, malnl•ll· ~· rnKhllllt. 2S60S VII Vlenlo, MOS· 11on Vltlo. Llabllllles 526,93S 11wh 9600, referff Elliott. •HECKMAN, Wiiburt Eu Gen e, ~employed, 17'r.I Bell Clr,le, Hun... 1 111011 Beach. l11Ullle1. Sl?.760, 15"'' 10. r~erH Phelps. ,HECKMAN( Marlorle Joyce. wrvlca vcrettrv, 11 olller d~1!11 as 1bove. .OE MINT, 00U(llai Jam es/ cialrsman, 130\f: •71h SI.. Newper ftf!:ach. Llab!llHes 121,ns, 111'11 '°' ~. ,_ferff PMlps. \MOll:ENO, Henry F ., •oreman, 164S1 lf'.twlll'ld SI., Hunti ngton a e 11 ch, ~DlllllH U,24. 11ssels lJ,974., reltrtt "•M~·ENO. Barb1r1 V .. u1111m!llOVtd. .'.Ii ether e1et11lls as 11bove. •flAKEll:, A.lbert Lff, r.ates repr,senl- a,1ve. 16Sn Oellon Cl rcl11, No. 1, Hu,.... J{iloton 8ffth. Ll1b1lllln $6,ll,, e1sets S$00, reieree Elliott. ··SAKE~, Je1nle Alana. housewife, I ll cj_ther d11111ls 111 •bove. .• COMMERCIAL REMOD~LING . And N.w Buildings : KARL KENDALL GENERAL CONTRACTOR 548-1537 By CARL CARSTENSEN Of the Diiiy Piiot Slaff Highlighted by new exterior styling on Plymouth Fury, Chrysler and Imperial models, the 1974 passenger cars from Chrysler Plymou th Division will include m a j or im· provements in four basic areas, according to General Sales Manager Francis G. Hazelroth. Hazelroth said these im- provements are: car line iden- tity and appearance; servjceabllity and reliability: comfort and convenience; and vehicle performance. THE MAJOR styling change will be in the full-size cars with all new exterior and in- terior design fCH" Plymouth Fury, Chrysler New Yorker, Newport, and Town & Coun- try, and Imperial. "In OW' compact, specialty compact, and intermediate lines -Valiant, Barracuda, and Satellite -our position is ()De of change where signiri· cant gains can b e ac- complished in value . . . changes directed primarily at customer value im- provement,'' Hazelroth said. The full-size cars look lower and leaner than their '73 counterparts. Side windows are two inches deeper than previous models and provide increased visibility. The front and rear glass area is in· creased also. "The Fury, Chrysler and Imperial lines are our style setters for 1974. The full-5ize car market still represents the major segment of t h e automobile business -about 30 to 35 percent. "In 1971, the intermediate Sebring received the major styling change and has paced our Satellite series as the Divisions strongest s a 1 es gaill'er, running better than 45 ' Tormenting Rectal Itch : OfHemorrhoidal Tissues Promptly Relieved ln:many cases }->reparation H tzives prompt. tempor.'lry re lief fnirn such pain and itching anti actually helps shrink swellin g of hemorr hoidal tis-sues cauS(!(j by inflammation. !rests by doctors on hun- • dreds or patients showed this to be true in many cases. In fact, many doctors, them- se lvfS, use Preparation H I!> or recommend it for their fam. ilies. Preparation H ointment or suppositories. % on deposits of $100,000 for six months to one year The number of these accounts that we can accept is limited WE PAY COMPETITIVE INTEREST RATES ON ALL OTHER ACCOUNTS FOURTEEN OFFICES TO SERVE YOU IN Arced., •c1rri101 Lt Cr11ctnt1 •or1np . Btll Gtrdens •Cott• MHll Los An11les (2) ·•sin 81rnerdino •t1noi • P1rtt Dow ney (21 Mont1t11Y P1rk Whit1ier Five Addiliona l Ollices in Norlbero C11iftrni1 Plnsant Hill San Bruna Fosler City. (Open in1 Soon) M111nt1ln View San J1sr *OPEN NIGHT & DAV and Saturdays • Call (213) 923 -9601 • or see the wh ite pages · , fo r your nearest office ASSETS OVER $375 MILLION percent ahead or 1972 sales. "The Sebring Plus is renec- ting an 80 percent gain and in· terestingly, Road Runner sales were registering a 145 percent jump. For 1974, the Satellite four-door sedan will have an entirely new front end to enhance its appeal. "Valiant set its third con- secutive record breaking sales year in 1972 and is well on its way to a new record. Since the beginning of 1973, Valiant, led by Duster, has played a major role in contributing t o Chrysler's 37 percent share of the compact car market. "Duster has been running abou t 25 percent ahead of 1972 sales and the four-door sedan recording a 10 percent gain. There are improvements in air conditioning and upper level ventilation. A new air co ndi tioning system ncorporates six panel outlets, plus two lap coolers - providing an almost 100 per- cent increase in discharge area and greatly increasing air flow. A NEW, HIGH -output version of the 360 V·B will re place the 340. The optional 360, four-barrel, with dual ex- haust, will be available in Duster, Barracuda and Road Runner. Instrument panels on Fury, Imperial and Chrysler will be easier to read than in previous models because they are more functionally oriented. Controls for car operation are located on the left side of the panel and controls for comfort and convenience situated to the right side. Jn the area of safety, there is a new passenger restraint system with starter interlock, improved roof intrusion pro- tection, and a supplementary throttle return spring . IBERE WILL be St models in th e Chrysler-Plymouth lineup for 1974 including 15 Chryslers and 36 Plymouths. They are: Imperial, Chrysler, Fury, Satell ite, Barracuda, and Valiant. The lineup is unchanged fron1 1973. Mmiey's Worth Will Minimum Wage Hike Mean Inflation? By SYLVIA PORTER Jf President Nixon vetoes the minimum wage hike pass- ed by Congress early this month, it will be on the basis that the increase would thro'v even more fuel on our fiery in- flation and would lead to massive firing or marginal workers. So strong is the threat of a Nixon veto that congressional leaders have delayed sending the measure to the White House until Saturday, -so Congres.1 would have a chance n•hen it re- convenes Sept. 5 to try to override a tumdov.11. J-fad C.On· gress s e n t ~,~ the bill to the 1~ President ·. and then gone on va-'Po11:Ti11: cation, the President could have killed it merely by a pocket veto and Congress 'l\'ould have had no comeback. TliE BILL would raise the mini1num wage from $1.60 to $2.20 an hour \\'ilhin one to three years. depending on the occupational category and. among other things, also \vould expand wage-hour Ja\vS to include 7 million to 8 mil· lion additional workers. Would it, then, acceleratP our wage-}X'ice spiral? Would it swell our jobless and u•el· fare rolls? The answer is not a simple yes or no. as Nixon almost surely will argue if he does veto the bill. For instance, against a minimu m wage hike now is the fact that summer '73 is hardl y the right time to spur a new round of wage increases starting at the bottom and fanning out and up. IT JS QUITE pos<lhle lhal against today's ho r rib I e economic background, a ma· jor minimum wage boost would set off a "ripple'' effect, with the increases at the bot· tom lead ing to increases at the next level and then QR and up to the top of the line. There is the danger that b11'inessmen would try I<> off. set the extra labor cocts by firing their older, less product· kc worken -tht>reby shifting them from the working poor to Jh• welfare rolls. ' But supporting a minimum wage Increase are Labor Deparlment 1ludles of wage trend& before and afler pasl minimum wage hikes show ing only a short-term wage spurt right after the change in the minimum wage -but no wage "ripple" upward through the pay ranks. The story is similar for prices . Said fortlM!r Labor Secretary James Hodgson after the massive I 9 6 6 minimum wage boosts: "The wage increases granted to 1,600,000 workers to meet the $1.60 minimum wage stardard had no discernible adverse ef· feet on overall employment levels and on overall wage or price le vels." BUT, TO ME. these statistical arguments miss the two central points. The first and overwhelm· ingly significant of these points is simply: How dare we ask the very lowest paid workers amo.ng us to stand in the first line of defense against an inflation fueled by the buving and borrowing of the affluent? How can we Possibly justify asking those already being pinched the hardest to accept an even stif· fer pinch "for the national good"? What sort of distorted economics translates price pressures resulting from a worldwide boom and its soar· ing demands for goods and services into a ·wage curb (10 those who don't even earn enough tQ have normal, much less "soaring," demands for anything? The second point is impli cit in the first: 1973's inflation is being caused by excessive del'T'ands for goods a n d services, not by excessive costs of labor. AND IF WE now leapfrog back into a cost·push tnnatinn after this dreadful demand· pull inflation, the reason will be· today's price spiral, not any increases in the pay of the Jowest·rnng workers. It would take an immedi;:ite hike to $2.18 an hour just to cover price rises since the las t minimum wage boost. Tt would take an immediate raise to $2.21 an OOur JUSt ta: main· lain the 1968 ratio of minimum wage earnings to the earnings of manufacturing workers (55 percent). At this moment, auto workers are getting an average of $S.J2 an hour, plus extra for overtime and fringe beneflls. The ave.rage yearly wage or a migrant farm worker in 1972 was $1,83-0; of a hired farm worker. $3,170: or • lutJ.time domestic worker, about $1,200. I • • Wall Street • • • • T'u'!I. • 1 • •-i 1 • • •' • F .I •i • • .11 • • • • • • • ··;~'}!lay·s;;:t!~~IOJf.;;f~~~,.oq'l{Jf:l';:~'!]lV!fJJ!Pe.f;:; • •• • • • • •• • •• •• 0 ~ • • • • ••••• -- Fifteen out of every 100 Americans today own stock. likely the Or- but it We couldn't prove it, of course, see.Ms • that the percentage is even greater here in ange Coast area •.. and it's growing every day. That's why the DAILY PILOT was proud, years ago, to be the first newspaper in Orange County to bring its readers "today's final stocks today" via super high speed wite services. We're still doing it in every home- delivered edition and the service gets better all the time. Wall Street's computers "talk to" computers in DAILY PILOT plant every trading day at the rate more than the of 12 minutes to l,000 words per minute . It takes only move the entire New York and American the Exchange reports from Street to the typesetting Stock of Wall DAILY PILOT canyons machines of the right here on the Orange Coast. And when technology finds a way to beat that speed record, the DAILY PILOT, no doubt, will be among the first to use it to bring readers "today's action today." When it comes to financial news, the one that means business is the \,, DAILY PILOTl . . , .I f • a I I l I ' I Look around your house and 9ara9e and you'll prob· ably discover you have a mountain of merchandise you could sell -all kinds of goodies that you just don't use much any more. Wouldn't you really rather have money? Okay. To move that mountain, just call a friendly ad-visor at the DAILY PILOT. Use the direct line. --. ,. ..... , .. •" Don't just sit there on your small fortune ••• LL IT! • • • • Thousands of ready-to-buy want ad r e a d e r s are "shoppin9" the ads in the DAILY PILOT every day. And it may surprise you how many of them are ea9er to buy just what you have to sell. Want to 9ive it a try? Get with the Orange Coast area newspaper with "response ability" ••• the one that can move your mountain of merchandise. Advertise in the Orange Coast Newspaper with Response Ability Classified Ad Line 642-5678 it ' ;..·, ., :~~ -;·, ·-.•.. ·-" ·-.. .. . . .. .. .• , . . , y y . "' • " ' , • , ., , , , .. .. .. ~ .,,. . . , J --• ... ... f ' .. .. ; · . .. . ~ . ' l;-~ ~ ·~ l; • •• •• •' •• •• " , . • •• •I· ~·~ • • • • _________ -"!"' _____________________________ ..;... __ ~:; .. 1 • \ . • f% DAILY PILOT 1 'D ee p Throat' Phenomenon Sw ee ps U.S., Baffl,es Law LOS ANGELES (AP) - ''Deep Throat," the 1novie thal made pornography "chic'' and pushed permissiveness to new extremes, is b e i n g strangled by legal problems, one or the first noticeable vic- tims oJ a tough U.S. Supreme Court ruling onobscenity. return on a production that cost $25,000 to make in sil: days in Miami. But liUgation costs money and ,the price rises when fines are imposed, as the exhibito.rs found out in New York when Judge Joel J. Tyler nned them $100,000 and banned the movie. period, the University Research G r o u p 1 com- missioned by a defense at- torney in the local "Deep Throat" trial, conducted a survey of 2,600 of the movie's patrons, providing aome hint of who goes to. see "Deep Throat." • T1w Jewel Thi•! • H••• and The•c •.S-ndlpilf • U.A. l•i Theolo-e • Hu119ry Tiger hdou1ont • Wiil\0~1111 Ston•WO•• • Heidi'• little Swlti,rkt.lcl •St. he• • Colko Couiin• •Getaway • la Tortuga • The fer" fodory • Dok'• ,.11 •• ~ foot W0<k• • 'o~ti .Mo~ol WITH MORI TO COME. Distributors of the movie say they have ceased peddling it to theaters. In to\\1ns where the film is still playing, ex- hibitors are being urged by at· torneys to IOJIC down ad- ''ertising and assume a low prorile. JN NEW Y 0 R K , a spokesman for D a m i a n o Productions says the CQmPa11Y has s t o pp e d distribution of 11 Deep Throat" because ot "the law." A subdistributor, Aquarill! F11ms, also halted distribution because ol litiga· tioo. The survey found l-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=::;::;::;::;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii alm06t hall the viewe rs werel~ between 2n and 29 with another 29 percent between 30 and 39. JN AT LEAST 12 American cities, "Deep Throat" has been seized on obscenity charges. Judges in New York City. Cleveland and 1.1iami Beach have ruled that lhe movie is obscene. Court tests are pencling elsewhere. Star Lhidn Love· laee • • • beenme a I r e a k i s h c ult herol ue . At the Pussycat Theater here, where "Deep ThrQat " has been playing s i n c e November, the show goes on. The theater O\\'JlCr a n d manager are awaiting resumption of !hei r obscenity trial. It was halted while they ·appealed, unsuccessrully , 10 have the charges dropped. THERE IS NO hint that theater owner Vince Mjranda will close the sho1v voluntarily. Its recent gross receipts to~ ped $60,000 a week, although a theater spokesman notes that the take has declined con- siderablv from the $98.000 a "'eek it was reaoinit earlv in the run. Tickets to "Deep Throat" cost $5 apiece. The film 's national gro.ss receipts already have climbed past $3.5 million. an en\'iable The spokesmen d e c I i n e d further comment "on advice of counsel." Although "Deep Throat's days may be numbered, ques- tions· arising now are less :ibout its future and more about its past. How could a film like "Deep Throat" have become such a hit and why? THE FILM'S main at· tractions were its star Linda Lovelace, who, became a freakish cult heroine, and its content, which features 15 selC acts including seven or fellatio and four of cunnilingus. The 62-minute production is a tale of a young woman whose clitoris is located in her throat. The sex in the movie is ex- plicitly real, classifying it as hard core pornography, the kind of film that once was confined to stag gatherings, whispered about but not discussed openJv and certainly not shown in the company of decent women. Times have chan2ed indeed. Outside the Pussvcat Theater. women .R"~mely linP. up for the show a1on'!" \Vith their hushantls or bovf'riF:nds. No onP hirles behind rlark R"lasses anrl th'! C''"O\Vd is decidedly U!>' per middle class. IN A RECENT four..<Jay The show's $5 ticket price seemed to attract those well able to afford it -47 percent of the group earned between $10,000 and $25,000 per year. The researchers established that 51 percent of the sample were married and 31 percent 16 percent came on dates and most 0£ !he balance of vie\vers brought their spouses. Another '"Deep Throat' hus beeome a household "' o r d IJeeause the eo1111° fr8 f s f11 u lot of trouble ••• " visited the theater \V it h friends. IN NEW \'ORK, v.•here the film gr~Sed $1.3 million in a 39-week run before it was clos- ed down, mink-coated women regularly braved the winter chlll to stand in line for the show. It wa s a sight that worried some -oddly including the producer of "Deep Throat," 44-year-old Gerard Damiano a former hairdresser who has been stunned by the film's success. I THE PICK OF Punch I " 'Deep Throat' has become a household word ," he said, "only because the country is in a lo.t of trouble ... Because basically the movie's success has proven to me lhat there is such a void. such a need for sexual awareness, that the movie was accepted a s something people can grab on- lQ and discuss openly because of its humorous aspects." PUNOJ '', , , I gave at the office!" W ate1· Shortage Ends Development SACRAME NTO (AP ) -A major California land developer says it halted sale and advertisement of su~ division lots at Taho:e Donner until a water suply for the project is assured. A spokesman for the State Reat Estate Commission said the sales and advertising halt was the result of an agree- ment negotiated by Dart Industries, Inc.. of LO: s Angeles and the commission. enough water for the entire subdivision without tapping Donner Lake. Hempel said Dart vice president Russell K. Bolton signed a letter to Karpe, also promising that his firm would offer refunds to existing Jot owners if they cannot pro.ve there is enougZi water. SOME CRmCS lau d ed "Deep Throat" for its technica l slickness and at- tempt at telling a story which elevated it above the usual run of porno movies \\1th their emphasis on athletics rather than script. Damiano 's latest effort, "The Devil in ~1iss Jones,'' a pornographic morality tale about a virgin spinster \Vho commits suicide and finds an orgy in the afterlife, has won even mo.re favorable notices. Some industry w a t c h e r s have claimed that the "legitimate" movie industry lured audiences tmvard por· nography by loosening restric- tions on explicit language and nudity in respectable films. MOTION PICTURE Association of America Presi· dent Jack Valenti puts no blame on legitimate film makers. But he worried for a Jong time that the emergence of pomograpliy from the undergro:und would worry the public so much it wou1d lead to censorship. "The public's discomfort over what it thinks is the prtr liferation of pornography," Valenti noted ." is as im- portant as "'hether it is ac· tuallv proliferating." H e predicted last April that "the Nixon administration sees that discomrort and is prepared to dQ something about it." Now, the U.S. Supreme Court has done something NO DEADLINE has been about it with a dacision that imposed on Dart for proving delegates broader power to its contention, Hempel said. states to define and prosecute In its suit, filed in Nevada against obscenity. THE FIRM HAS been sued C.ounty Superior O>.urt, the by the State Lands Com-state accuses Dart plus the TlfE FIRST TARGET in mission over a 24-inch pipeline Truckee-Donner Public Utility many states in their use or into Donner Lake, inlended to District and Lake w or Id this new decision has been serve as the main water Properties with coostrocting "Deep Throat." The film has source for the 6.0!»-lot sub-the pipeline without com-been the subject of seizures division. The state says the mission approval. and prosecution in Tucson . pipeline was illegal. The complaint also. contends Ariz. San Jose, Fresno and In addition, Nevada County that the pipeline "obstructs Bev~ly Hills. Calif.; l\1iami Dist. Atty. Ronald L . naviga tion and interferes with Re~ch ; Cleveland; D a 11 as. l\1acl\11llen claimed in a letter the public's right to use the Fort Worth and Houston. to State Real Estate Conl· lake for recreati on a 1 'Pexas : New York City and missioner Robert \V. Karpe purposes." Binghamton, N.Y. that Tahoe Donner does not 1,=;::;::;;::=:::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::::::;::::;:=:::;:;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;=;/ have enough water for the lots it already has BOid unless it t•J" Dooner Lake. A spokesman for Dart contested that claim. TJIE SUBDMSION Is plan· ned for .an eventual population or 11.000. FAIRMONT Privat e School Ouuld•r Th• Ach·•nt•i•• 0, A W•ll Or9anb•d, C •••Iv Dlr1tt1d Prh•1+1 Sth•ol ll11rolll'llHt Now 0 ,..1 Sm1ll Cle•ses, lndividuel Guiclanc• Tr1dltion1I l R's Pro9r1m Sound Study Hebit1 T r1nlport1tion -. Cef•terie -Ex-t•nded 01y --1557 W.MAI LE, ANAHEI M n 4-10 52 John E. Hempel , chief assis· tnnt real estlte commissioner, Id the firm agreed to bait all ules and advertising unUJ it can satisfy Karpe that thet< ;,,,,_ _________________ _,, • Open Monday through Thursday 10'0.m., lo 5 p.m.: J'ridny 10 o.m., to B p.m. Drivn-up windo\V opens 9 <1.m. Acioss !ro1n Orange County Airport' 2121 Ca.rnpus Dri ve, Irvin1\ Cnliforniri (7H) 833·3700 A Message by Courier! ''The Bank is now Open!~~ Come be delighted! Gifts to new depositors~ and smiles for everyone! That's in store with a visit to Irvine National Bank. See our handsome offices rightin the heart of the Irvine Industrial Complex. Newest, most surprising bank in Orange County! A'piirposeful, independent bank that's friendly and fun to do business with . A bank that knows what to do to help yo~. Big or small, your financial transactions art', all important to the Irvine N'ational Bank. Let us -prove it. And remember! Ol!r customers come from all over to bank with us: Irvine, Newport Beach, Corona delMar, Costa Mesa, and Tustin. Come have your first experience with the surprising bank that cah do a lot of things.to make life a little more pleasant for you. Visit us during our gala Formal Opening. Open a personal Pioneer Account. Enjoy free service charges for life with a $50.00 minimum opening account. Be somebody special! Enjoy! . . J.11mbcr, Feder1l Daposil Jn1ur1nce Corporation.. .. Sll!WJ oomr11i'lm'un <1,.nlnr d -potJt, on1tJ"rf•m01 ptnu1, 1 DE. and i fess lo tcctio my SI cent crcas, not v~ I a bcha\ husba •Jld r ~pent shirt.9 helm< moloE La.o suit, t to hi! house " . . • ~., .. ~men BEA ANDERSON, Editor MOIKl.llJ, Avtnl fl, 1t7J ..... lS ' _ . • 'Who has walked these blu~fs before me?' ~-~"'I ...,.. ... ..-..... 1. -- t • "' , ' . ' Back Bay S elters Sh<lre tlie still and morning quiet \Vrapped in the ci·1111amo1L gold of slcrnting light, Twined in tlte flat braid of winter cat-tailt Flaring strong from tlie earth. Joan Coverdale, "! Share This Marsh" By JO OLSON Of tfle Delly PUtl Stiff 1be Back Bay -or Upper Bay, whichever you prefer - is many things to many people. To some it is an ideal spot for water skiing. Others enjoy walking aloog the bluffs in the sunset to end a weary day, and still oUlers see it in terms of dollars and cents, a perfect spot for boats, docks and houses. ~ ·~· · To Joan ,C»verdale, U>e lfpper _Bay,iJ. a place to rest, to learn, 1o waik, 1o meditate -and a place to preserve. lier feelings are expressed in a new · book entiiled "I Share This Marsh," for which she took the black and white pic- tures and wrote the verse. Art and text are alternated but the verses were not written to go wi th the photos. 'nle words catch her feelings about the algae, tide, cat.tails, Canada geese, egrets, \Vhite pelicans, islands and minus tide of the estuary. It is dedicated to "The Friends of Newport Bay and the Orange County Foundati<?n for the Preservation of Public Property." JOINED GROUP Mrs. Coverdale, a member of the Friends of Newport Bay, joined lvhen she heard about development plans for the. bay. "I couldn't believe this beautiful area was going to becollle commercial," she explained. She and her husband moved to Newport Beach's Bluffs development from Playa del Rey to escape the jets, they had only a month of silence before jet flights be- gan at Orange County airport and they had the old, familiar sound again. It was during thls early period of residency in Newport that Joan began di scovering the beauty and importance of the Upper Bay. "I couldn't believe that this area was as natural as it was," she commented. "It was a marvelous place to take pictures." And she could not believe that someday it 1night be another Marina del Rey. "' Her photos "·ere used for Friends of Newport Bay meetings and brochures, then she had a 5howing at 1he NeWPQrt Beach City Hall. Visitors suggested she publish tbem in a book and the project was born: · BEACH PUBLISHER The book tW1led into a real · bonus for the Novia Scotia native. "I had :always wanted to know about publishing," she explained. With the help of an artist fri end. Peter Ebeling of Seal B~ach, who designed the book, she learned each step of the process as it was put ·through his firm, Wllale and Eagle l'ublishers. "We found out about UlC ·joys and ter- rors or ~lishing," she .said. ·The finn was ~ for two mdaoprecl speoies, . . . libe.a<!de<L ,, • ' Joan, who has '1always done some writing," found ·her words about the Up- per Bay were "a basic emotional response to the bay." She commented that she wrote them simply. to share these responses. She and her husband 11aJ , an engi neer. keep binoculars beside their telephone and she frequentl y will pick them up and scan the shoreline as she talks or listens. CHECK SHORELINE They walk together along the bluffs each day and check the condition of the tide. and the shape of the shorelin e first thing. Often, they will take their canoe in the evening for a quiet journey across the still \l:aters. "There al\vay s is something exciting and different going on in the bay,'' Joan explained. She spots the osprey, or fish hawk (a rare bird) sitting on a post just below the bluff iwaiting to catch some fish or in winter, sees thousands of dtx!ks stopping by for a visit. "We go with a bird boo~,''1 she .s;p.d, . "arid learn about their hab((s -1fjjj1r SOWlds,·flight patterns and what they eat. The bay is rich in food for birds. There arc crabs, worms, algae." Joan, a housewire and mother, say s . she has "no suitable backgrowid for any profession." Strange Outfits 'Rubber' the Wrong DEAR ANN LA NDERS: ~Iy husboncl and r are in our late 40s. lie is a pro- fessional man, well-respected, ar. fcctionatej'and t love him. Unfortunately, my sexua desires have decreased in re· c<!nt years and his seem to have in· creased. i have tried to fake it but I am not very good ot pretending. r am becoming cone<med about h behavior, whiCh l think is abnormal. My husband has gone In for Car-out leather and rubber outfits In a big way. He has Spent a small fortune on pants, leather shirts. boot..'i, gloves and a motorcycle hclmel although he doosn't • own a 1notorcycle. t..ast week he bought a rubber stonn 1ult, complete with boots that g<> clear up to his hips. He wore tbot outfit In the house all day Saturday. ThJs afternoon he put on that same get· up. handed me two le'ngths of rope and asked me.to tie his legs together and his arms behind his back. 1 was flab- bergasted. l-le said it would relieve his sexual tensions and he hoped l would cooperate. I told him the whole thing was too freaky for words· and 1 refused to do It. What does thi s bizarre behavior mean? Was I wrong not. to cooperate? He is a fine ll\lln and all this 1 ather and rubber · sluff plus the clotllelli!Je has me com· pletcly bowtldefed. Can you cxplaln II? - CONN. CONCERNED DEAR C.C.: I wo11ldn't even try, and J urge you to see someOne who can. Ask your doctor to recommtnd a psychlatrl11t. !\take an appointment to discuss yo ur • /--• '4•.l~ \ ... husband's behavior M you can help bJm. Normal he t1n't. DEAR ANN LANDERS: sometimes people write to air their grievances. This Is why I'm writing. r address my com· plaint to welfare workers. My husband and I love children. We have a large, comfortable home and a lot of love to give. Abou t 15 years ago we spent $13,000 remoclcllnJ. so we could take in several foster children. , . Welfare has given .us retarded youngsters as well as teenage prostitutes and dope addicts. OUr home hes been set on fire, moneY stolen, our cat \vas strangled and our lives threatened. No one ever told us these children \Vcren't normal. My husband and I are Mt psychiatrists. We are not competent to deal with children who hear voices, maim themselves and set fires. \Ve rea li ze these children need care, but Is ii fair to place them with lay pco-• pie when the weUare \vorkc r kno~·s they should be ln an institution'! If this letter evokes son1e screan1s around the country, I say, fine , scream away. Sign Mc -LET'S KEEP IT HONEST DEAR LE'T'S: There mast be another side to thJs story -one that only a welfare worker can tell. When t receive It. I'll print Ii. Thank you for "'ritlag. DEAR ANN LANDERS: ·Today was our son's fourth birthday. I let him invite eight little friends In for games. ice cream and ca ke. J asked the mothCrs not 10 bring presents. I have strong feelings about over·in· dulged children who are toy crazy. They don't know \vhat to play with next. Also, Lie But she is a talented weaver, sews her own clothes, gardens , reads el(tensively on conservation-oriented subjects and develops and prints-her own photographs. TOUR GUIDE She also writes many letters in behalf or the bay and works as a guide for winter and spring bay tours offered by the Friends. "I believe everyone should do some thing within their talents to make their area better." she said . \Vhy is she working so hard for lhe U~ per Bay? "It's open space, which is hard to get. It's valuable as a living resouree which we don't know all about yet. We don't know how best ,to use this area for the benefit of mankind. "It's abused now. It's a garbage dump at· times. It aiWdi, be used as a survival area. There are fresh water springs and Jot of food . It shelters young fish-until they are old enough to go to <Sea. ;,I think it 's beautiful \Vith the bluffs arolUld it. And, it's Wlique to have it \Vithin lhe city limits. It should be valued for ,.,..hat it is." Way don't \\'ant our son to associate friendship with girts. Son1e of the mothers said I was wrong. One mother said I \\'3S being unfair to \ my son. Two mothers ignored my re. quest and brought gifts anyway. What is your opinion ? -IDAHO FALL.5 DEAR IDA: I applaud your good sense. All'""\lrchid to you for your conrage te buck the custom .• t\ skunk cabbage t• those motht.rs who brought gifts anyway. It's not always easy to rl'COgnlze love, especially the first time around. Acquaint yourself \Vith the guidelines. Read AM Landers's tooklct. "Love or Se x and How ~o T~P the l>iffcrence." For a copy, mall 35 crnts in coin and a long. stamped, scll- addrcssed envelope with your request ~ ttw DtlTiy Pilot J .J. DAILY PILOT ANOTHER FIRST Gl t nd• Mou ille Navy Boots Limit The first fem ale under 21 Moflday, August 20, 1q73 Childhood: Survival of the Fit Test ' By CAROL MOORE Of lfMI Dltl't l'lltt IMH 1£ a child's actions and al· titudes ca n be attributed to his stage or development, the parent or teacher should tolerate or make the most of it rather than fret and stew. Dr. James Hymes so ad- vised the UCl Extension course on Guidance or the Young Child adding that "if childhood Behavior was so hard to take, the human race would have died eons ago. ''Age-appropriate, d e velopmentally significant behavior should be Sj cleverly channeled that the Youngster doesn't even know it," he said. "This does not mean diversion or substitution. "Early remedies that hide or repress problems grow up into real damage. Make sure your response is appropriate to the cause. Guard· against sloppy thinking of pet cures for all problems." Having ..,..eel four years on the National Planning Com· mlttee for lloadstart, Dr. Hymes praised the day care phllosophy of ucorne and Uve it up. We have what you need at this stage of development." CONSIDER SOLUTIONS To help adults dupllcale this environment, Dr. Hymes sug- gested that ' when the major cause of a cblld'a bebavlor is maturation, consider hypothetical aoluUons a n d adopt them if they are sup- ported by behavioral cues. These include: "I've seen lots of children about this age do this or something like it." "I've read that this might happen. The situation was covered on page 97.'' "It makes (psychological) sense and fits the broad strand of development.'' "I did it when I was that age." • Lal thi• all sound too simple, Dr. Hymes cautioned parents to be reali:sllc and remember that a child pro- gresses by sensing trust, "Tarzan autonom y,'' in· itiative, good ideas and suc· ccss. "Just because 'you did it' doesn't make it right. You have to recall your sickness, angriness or loneliness that led to that action. 0 And don't rely entirely on books. "1be division of labor in our house meant that my wife held the child while t frantically consulted a nianual that was either the worst written, lousi· ly indexed or implied that ours was the strangest child." Further analysis of the in- cident may show that : --All children do this. HThls is just an allowance for human nature , not-a justlfication for morality by numbers." WHAT NEXT? -It will end. "The next situation may not be better, though." -The child canoot easily control it without cost. "It amazes me what children are forced to do these' days. Everyone will have to pay the price and :subconscious pe,na_lties can continue for a lifetime." -It i s CONTIIJBUTING behavior. "The child goes in Jots of directions. Concentrate on his central source of power. Like when the car sputters to a stop, check the gas gauge : when the vacuum quits, check to see if it's plugged in." Dr. Hymes offered three warnings for child guidance in general: Practice tight intellettual discipline between y o u r estimation of !he trouble and • operable solutlOn:!. ' "Make yourself do -what's approprlale. Don't resort to such second nature reaponses as dunce capg, paddles, think chairs or bolallon In the halls. Behavior rnodlncatlon or talk- ing sternly or reasonably have no value unless they're related to what's wrong ." Beware of 0 it works." "The problem may have disappeared before but what are the hidden aymptom.s. Ac· countability -judging by rtsults -is very obvious but iricky. Make sure your solu· tion worked because the ·~ ess was right." Consider the total setting but find the present cause. "Hypothesize and be careful what you do. Don't diagnose and feel compelled to prove yourself correct. Instead of 'I have to find the cause,' say 11 think I saw this factor.' 1• ' I, ' ~ I " Horoscope: Gemini Sticks to Style FOR DRUG PRICES ••• r TUESDAY AUGUST 21 By SYDNEY OMARR Libra prefers to avoid dirett conlrontatlon. These persons strive to be "out of the way" when unpleasant situations are indicated. Libra is more than willing to compromise -up to a point. When backed into a corner, the Libra native takes off the gloves and the fight is bare·knuckle and to the finish. Jt is really best to listen to reason when dealing with Llbra. ARIES (March 21-April 19): \Vhat is far away may seem better than it actually i'i. There wi!J be changes -you1· ideas will be tested. Keep opcu mind without being gullible. Accent is on appreciating what you have -and improving material at hand. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): MOney, JUxury, pleasure - these are highlighted. Libra person could figure prom· inently. Refuse to spend ex· cessively for ostentatious ol>- ject. Jo'amily member ,1:ould be pleased by b e i a g remembered. High Ii g ht simplicity. Applies to eating habits, too. GEl\flNI (l\1ay 21.June 20 ): One "'ho dangles proverbial carrot in front of you has ' nothink else to offer. Know it and be on your own pace. Stick to style and principles. Pisces can play important role. CANCER (June 21.July 22): One who makes threats and sings song of doomsday is fill- ed with doubts, fears. But you need not take it to heart - your own position is strong. \I/hat you require can be ol>- tained if you look behind the scenes. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You see friend in light of reality. Some promises prove to be empty. Accept truth \Vithout despairing. Don't bang on to mere illusion. If you face issues, facts, you will be free- and happier. Act accordingly. VIBGO (Aug. 2.'1-Sept. 22): New deal is in offing. Strike independent stance. Welcome chance for greater seU-expres· sion. Leo, Aqoariu1 persons could figure prominenUy. You have a chance to advance to-- \11ard goal. Creative procedure is likely to succeed . LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221: Rise above the petty. There is no real need to be discourag. ed. What seems far away is closer than might be apparent. Give full play to intuitive in- tellect. Relatives may be misguided. Know it and heed your own feelings. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Young person could have cost- ly habits, tastes. Be un· derstanding but know wh('Jl to draw line. Sagittarius, Gemini persons may be in picture. Finances should be revie"·ed. Plug hole in budget. Take in· ventory. Find where you stand -and stand tall. SAGITfARJUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Slow pace. Play with time. Make delay an ally. Dig for factual information. Lay groundwork for future moves. At present,. foundations lack solidity. Chetk legal aspects. Refuse to fall victim to wishful thinking. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Undercover activities could be featured and Gemini could figure prominently a1ong with Virgo. Don't eat while in a hurry. Slow pace. You might be trying to do too much. too soon . Know it and correct situation. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Friends, associates may be quick to make promises. However, family m e m be r seems to discern truth of mat- ters. Take conservative course. Be positiv& of what you have -don't depend on what could be or might have been. You will understand. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20 ): Obtain valid hint from Aq uarius message. Perce ive facts as they exist, not merely as you wish they might be. What seems solid may ac- tually be subject to swift change. Prepare accordingly. Virgo person Js in picture. IF TODAY JS YOUR BlRTHDAY you have delightful sense of humor. You can go to extremes ~·hen it comes to eating -and might Call have weight problem. Basic 642-4104 change that could include [ I travel is due to occur in 1'lr 111.t ·rf Oclober. Sagitlarius, Gemini MBDICll'I !BOP persons play lmPortant roles in your life. You are perce~ JtO I. 17tli 5t. et Tntf11 Awe. SPOll.TSWEAA tive, even psychic. You know eon":'.: h""9 M•~M1 14 We9tclift' Plua. 17th and ll"Yine. when something of importance l~=;:"::M;:.;:~;:N;:'::"~· ="~•;:'-'o::"::· '::"o::' ~~N;::o;:w;::po;::rt;::Bo~"=h=,a.~1il;::o;::m;::i•='=2660'=i~ is ln the offing. ·: Powers Gris H.we West Sets U.S. Trends The Look & The Style! YOU CAN 8tfinni111" Mvai"lld Cour~ · LOOK BffiER. • Mtt.11 Up•Hllr SfY!ina FEEL EXCITING. • fi1~•eeon1ro1 GAIN CONFIOE.NCE • W•rd,_,, • .,_;,,,, & SUCCESS • W•lk"'I:" Poit"'• IN YOUR LIFE •l'tr.o.'lllilt~I • Yoite " Oicllon MENLO PARK -The \Vestern United States leads the rest of the nation as a market for station wagons. air travel, credit cards. ethnic C•TI or 'ome i" tod.ly !Of a free persorial 1n11y$ls. • l'toluslonelMochll111 food s, lig ht duty trucks and Joh Robe Powers recreational vehicles. second n . rt . homes, swimming pools. king. sized furniture , buill·in ap-Notion'sOld•d& lorgest School For fini1hing &Moffling pliances. sportslvear. frozen ORANGE 3 Town & Country • 5"'7·8228 .. foods, pet foods, slereo and RIVERSIDE Riversi de Plaza Center• 684-3012 quadraphonic equipment. ':-:-:-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::'__ Citing these claims, the ---· • Western Market Almana c boasts: "If you want to know what the U.S. will be like in another decade, lake a look :it the West oow." Nearly Everyone Liste1is w Landers from Southern California or, _______________________________ 1------------------------------------------ Arizona to enlist in the U.S. Navy v.ithout written parental consent is Glenda Gail Mouille, 19, of Huntington Beach. Because the State o f California grants majority status at 18, Miss Mouille was able to enlist without the con- sent 1be new Navy recruitment policy altered p r e v i o u s guidelines which required any \\'Oman betYt'een 18 and 21 to have written parental consent no matter what state she lived in. The requirement at one time even held to married wo- men under 21. Otiel Pelly Officer Guy Fligor, Navy recruiter in HWl· Lingloo Beach, said !he new policy may be a sign or the times. "Basically, I think this policy has come as a result of the ratification of the wo- men's rights policies around the country," he noted. Fligor said the new policy has helped his recruiting someWhat, but added that the service still maintains its policy of not enlisting women under 18. Miss Mouille, daughter of Mrs. E~ie Vigie of Huntington Beach, wi ll attend seven "·eeks of basic training in Orlando and then will do OO· the-job training at a \Vest Coast dut y station. LOSE WEIGHT THIS WEEK Thi! Odtlnex Pt1n CUI l'ltlp .yw become the slim tiim peison thtf you would like lo I.It. OdilntK has been lised successfully by thou~ands a!I o~~r the COUr'llry for 14 ytais. Ger lid 01 CICtSS la! 1nd /lvt longer, Odfl neK Is t !iny tablet and e1s1ly s wal!cwed .Conl~in~ n~ dangerous druri. Ni> sta1~ln1. No lP1dal t~ercises. Odrlrwx Plan costs $125 u1d !he la1gt economy s11t $5.ZS, You must I0$1 ua!y r11 or your money will bt ttlunded. No qutstiont tsked. Accept no sub1tl fut1s. Sold with this 1u1r1ntn b)'l THRIFTY OIWC. "D 01,(0liNT \TOltf <, Done by Dunn Pat Dunn gtt1 thin~s done. Throw her your ch&lleng& 11nrl 1te hn'' JChe h"n"'l•s It in her "At Your Service" col· umn, now appearina evt:rr. Sunday, Wednesday and f'r · ct.y In The DAILY PILOT. In Laguna Niguel Regional Park: San Diego Symphony Orchestra s ncert e Sund1y, August 28, 8 P.M. La guna Nlgual Reglon1I Park J0hn Green, Guest Conductor Prog ram: Music by Dvorak & Bernstein; selection~ from Ol iver, Oklahoma , Porgy &'eess Directions: Take La Paz Rd. west off Interstate 5 to inte rsection with Aliso Road . OR : La Paz Road' off Crown Va lley Parkv1ay •n Laguna Niguel. Park Dedication at 6:30 P.M. Picnic grounds and seating opens lo Tlc kel ho lders at 6:45 P.M. ~-----------I I I I I For Ticke!s. m111 couPon to; Laguna N19uel I Aecrcaticn Oept , 31000 Ci own j v11:1ey Parkway, t.iguna Niguel [ •2•11 I Please send me the following tickets: ___ Reserved Chairs@$Z ~;ich .,., •• $ ___ _ ___ Ad ult Blanke! Sealing @$1'. ...• , $, ___ _ ___ Child's Blanke! Sealing @SOc ..•. $, ___ _ (children under 12) -Tola ! enclosed:$, ___ _ Malett check (no cash) payable 10 l1~una Niguel Cultural CommlUee NAME------------------'-----_AD_'.".'.ESS================:J Sponsored by ~he Sen Diego Symphol'ly Orchestra Assn. & Laguna N1gtJol Cultural Commiflee LIFESTRIDE'S SLINGBACK It's the Trea sure. Truly. For all th e ways it walk s into your wardrobe. Subtly slim on on und_ers tated platform. Kid-soft. Feminine, The· lightened look of a slingback, .perfect for dresses. Camel, block, navy or red coif, 22.00. Fashion Shoes, 8 ANAH&IM 444 N. Euclid (714 1 5]5·1121 NEWPORT 41 f•shton hl•11d 11141 644 -121 2 AA A 6\/2·10 HUNTINGTON IEACH 71 11 Ed i1191r Aven v• 17 141 ltJ.JJJI AA 8 61/z. I 0 5.1 0 ORANGE, MALL OF ORANGE 2100 N. T1utl11 Street 1114) ttl.f]I I c 6-9 CERRITOS 100 lo1 C•rrlto• Mall 1113 1 160·04 11 SHOP 10 A.M. to 9:10 P.M. MONDAY lH~~UGH FR IDAY. SATURDAY 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. SUND.AY 11 NOON lo 5 P.M . .. ' Mr. pag anC who Am and ( .. I Te chilC be.in: Horr lhc Kric M1 mas· welf Kan: bad H< \\'Ori di ca di stl c h i Cent Chil· A just llan Johr Ht citiz men seri4 pub I lhro SHC A< Chai dire pro1 tern basi that --. • • • DAILY PILOT }$ Couples. Feted After August Rites FUESSENICH-CLIFFORD Married in the Memorllll Chapel al California State University, San Jose were Carol L)'M" Clifford and F. Blake FUessenlch. The Rev. George Collins directed the vow exctiange for i<'ill,t .<1 the daughter ol Air Force Lt. Col. lret.) and Mrs. Robert R. Clifford of Costa Mesa and the • son of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick F. Fuessenich of Torrington, Conn. Attendants were Mrs. Jack Fancher, Miss Robin Clifford, Todd Nelson and T h o m Anden;on. 'Ibe bride earned an AA degree at Orange C o a s t College and an AB degree at --San Jose, where her husband received a masters degree. He MRS. FUESSENICH is a graduate of Goddard C-Ollege, Vermont . The newlyweds will reside in Carmel. NELLE-GEHRKE Catherine Ann Gehrke and Charles Edward Nelle were manied during double ring rites in St. Matthew's Ohurch, Long Beach. Their parents are t h e Lawrence E. Gehrkes of HtJD.. tington Beach and the Vernon E. Nelles of Seal Beach. Bridal attendants were the Misses Jolie Zettler, Gayle Opportunities for Taxpayers Gehrke, Debbie B re w c r , Kristin White, Terri Reed and Debbie Derry and Mrs. Mark De Voss. Best man was Patrick iJ ' Markley and ushers were r Whitney Plummer, M i k e George, Tom cairns, Greg Henry and Greg Mills. The newlyweds, wOO reside in San Clemente, a re graduates or Marina High School. 11e is a graduate of Golden West College. where she attends. He also attended California State University, Loog Beach. BROWN-GILMORE Arthur Brown c I aimed Luann Gilmore as his bride during ceremonies conducted by the Rev. Paul Rawley in the Lakewood Village Com- mwllty O:iurch, Long Beach. They are the son and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Brown of Newport Beach and Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Gilmore of Loog Beach. Honor attendants were Mrs. MRS. NELLE party were Susan and Allison Dunn. Chris and Ten')' Brown, Lynn Hunt, Ed Staunch, Frank Pugliano and Simpson. The newlyweds, who will MRS. BROWN reside in Huntingtm Beach are graduates ol call!oml1' State University. Leng &a.ch She is a member of Dell< Delta Della. Travis• Simpson and Steve ~jiiijjijiiiiiiijjijjjjiiiijiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijj Brown. Others in the bridal ii COASTLINE HEAL TH FOODS Trade Skills Offered SPECIALS FOR AUG. 20 TO SEPT. I Women interested in learn- ing new job skills or polishing old ones to enter the labor market can now do so at no cost through the Capistrano- Laguna and Cioastline regional occupational programs. s u p e rmarket occupations, teacher and preschool assisting and several areas in the medical field. Other courses, which are more popular with men but open to women, are con- struction, appliance repair, fo reign car service, elec- tronics and motorcycle maintenance and repair. need for entry level workers. COASTLINE SUPREME -50 SUPER B . COMPLEX ··-i. ....... , $J.4t 100 c.,.. ... Re4J11lar ss. ts SPECIAL $2.79 SPECIAL $4.79 VITA-TIME A complete Vlt9MI" • Ml...-.1 ..,, ....... ::.~:~~. SPECIAL $2.79 Mr. and ~lrs. Robert Hodges of Newport Beach entertained with a family cham- pagne buffet to celebrate the golden wedding anniversary of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Williams, Corona del lifar residents for 13 years. The honorees. who were married in Hollywood , have been active in many area organizations. .i\mong those attending were their grandson, Tim Hodges, and granddaughter and her faruil y, ~1r. and ~1rs. Karl Kloetzer and Amy. According to Hector Navar- rette, South Coost ROP direc· tor, the school district prog- ram has been open to the pub- llc since its inception in 1970. The only requirement is resi- dence in the Laguna Beach or Capistrano Unified S c h o o I District boundaries . Qualified instructors teach compact courses in · Taught with the "com- munity classroom concept," the courses utilize t h e fa cilities of the participating businesses, cutting expenses for the taxpayer. New courses will b e supermarket occupations, food services, nursery school assis- tant and finan c in g oc- cupations. Expanded courses will be retail merchandising, allied health programs, ap- plied communication, landscape-nursery occupations and the service station pro- gram. The C'.oastllne 0 f r i c e is located at 1399 Logan Ave., Costa Mesa.. Telephone is 979- 1955. ::.~1~.. SPECIAL $4.79 ::.~~;;~. SPECIAL $7.19 Coastl ine 100 Toblets Natural Alfalfa Tablets SPECIAL 49c Some arc scheduled just for --- adults. Navarette said, and .... ,., ''~ Short-term Care Fostered so1nc ha ve lx>th adults and 1-· _.,~ high school stu dents in them. -.. 11 c•'"'''''"' !laving adults in the : ,~· .,~, c .. ,, .. classroom is a stabilizing fac-,1~ C: Jf Si m· tor. Navarrette added, so most fo 0. ~}' An11u:1 directors welcome o Ider ~? l~' SALE! COASTLINE YEAST 500 1 Lb. 11' 01.I ..... ,., 52.lt SPECIAL $1.79 By ALLISON DEERR Of !tit D1il'1' P'llot Siii! Temporary foster care fer children with special needs is being organized by Children's Home Society. Coordinator for the new program is Kathy r Kriccnsky. 11rs. Kricensky, \Vho holds a 1 masters degree in social welfare from the University of Kansas, has a va ried background in social work. . Her experience i n c I u d e s \\'Ork with the physically han- dicapped a n d emotionally dist urbed children at the ~~~l?r Ch i Id re n's Rehabilitation ~ Center at KU and \11ith Children's Protective Services. A California resident for Just over a month, she lives in Oana Point with her husband John, an architect. Her position resulted from a citizens' committee recom- mendation made following a series of conferences including public and .private agencies throughout the county. SHORT·TERM CARE According to \Villard Pool, chairman of the CHS board of directors, ''The foster care program is to be on a short- term rather than a long-tenn basis. in situations or stress Iha! can be helped by tern- NEW COOROINATOR Kathy Kricensk:y porary separation of the child from the borne." Mrs. Kricensky said an ex- ample of this would be a child ready to leave the ·hospital. If his parents weren 't physically or emotionally ready for him to return home, temporary foster care could be provided until they could provide p:-oper care in the home. CHS, she explained. is now laying the groundwork for the progran1 . Her job lhus far has been contact with resources in problems or being a roster students. . . :.1, ~~. Graduate the county -public agencies, child." ROP relies heavily on _ ..... corsclicrc& foster n.'lrents, homemaking volunteers. Navarrette com· o "'"' "" c11111 r-LeisW'e lime for the former ed h' h (" services, hospitals. sch 0 0 \ mcnt , w 1c is "different J1t t:. 111111 s1. C••ll M•" <f; Coastline Health Foods Co5ta Mesa HILLOllEN SQUA RE 11t E. 17TN ST, 54W5U Tustin 10t4 llftVllrt• at.VD, NllA• SAY.ON S44>7U4 L°'uaa Hllll 2411 llL TOJtD •D. NI.Alt a.ALP'Ml --systems and colleges. Kansan and her husband, a than nlost educ at i on a I {.._., i. •11,t1·, M-1.1 ~ ,,1 1 1 h . Missouri native, is spent on systems." IM1·iut ~ { ee t ere IS a great deal the beach, biking, refinishing !---;=:::~"~"~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ or service potentia l in the An example of this is the furniture and exploring ho t d b ROP county . ., 1 use cons ructe y recreations possibilities Of· students with a $12,000 dona- COOPERATION fered in California. tion from Laguna Federal She finds it "fascinating to Savings and Loan and the see the quality of services H a~istance of Orange County available and the number or ems Drop Building Dept.. and Vllrious tradesmen. people who are willing to There are indications some New classes will begin the help." pace--setting designers on the v.•eek of Sept. 17, and furthe r iNl tRIORS by cJimmie GKirk/ep c!lc' ..6.1111c1°d/eJ. .@nc. A major goal is "to find American scene may be trying information is available at the what gaps exist in the present to make the mid-calf hemline ROP office behind th e We Are Red ucing Pri ces Up t o 20°/o. August 20 to August 31 . services offered and fill in Capistrano Unified Schoo I ' REMODELING SALE a fashion point for fall and Dist rict office. 26126 Victoria Our entire stock of imports, One-of-a-Kind, Tables, Chairs , there. winter. Blvd., Capistrano Be a ch . U h I d S f d Ch • G ··My biggest hope for the Not 3 fashion statement or Hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Lamps, Vases, Pa intings, p o stere o as an a irs, ame program is that foster parents dictate. Monday through Friday. Tables plus numerous decorative items which brighten up can become part of what I'd Paul Snyder, director or the h like to label a therapeutic Just a point -meaning Coastline ROP. anticipates a your ome. team, with the social worker women who want the longer finale enrollment of 1050 to Also, Reductions on Fabrics, Wallpaper and Draperies. a5~~ntheese • .. ,encies in delivery of hemline for whatever reason 1100 students this fall. Four Li'mi'ted Quantities-Shop Early! """"'.. will find it avai lable among new courses will be added and The direction the program others in the siores . five expanded to meet the 3701 E .. COast Hwy.-Corona de! Mar-Phone: 675-1600 goes, she emphasized, will de- 1 ______________________ _J __ ~==========================::'.. __ pend on what needs are determined. Mrs. Kricensk y feels her v.·ork as a student with the f\.1ental Health Association and on legislative matters will be useful. Another asset, she feels, is her year as a foreign ex- change student in Germany living with a £amily with eight children where "I was like a foster child. I think it v.•ill help me to better identify \l·ilh the For cloud.9 school da_ys ... ' ONE WEEK FREE SULLIVAN PREiSCHOOL Pacific Trail's femous"The 900" nylon shell with orlon pik lining -men's and boys' L<zvi cord flares witk culf polyeirt~r and cotton boys' only (Kinder1&arten and elementary prol&rams also) In c:111 you 1r1n't 1lr11dy t1mlll1r with the Sulllv1n Pre·Sc:hool 1nd Ele- m1nt1ry School Pro0r1m1, w. would Ilk• to lntroduc:e you to our IChool with 1 Special FREE Get-Al:qu1lnted Wuk. Without obllg1tlon, we Invite you to COMPARE: o ALL STAFF FULLY QUALIFIED t SPECIALIZEO CREATIVE PROGRAM S TEACHERS IN ART, MUSIC AND MOVEMENT t NATIONALLY-RESPECTED SULLIVAN EXP~ORATION ACADEMIC READI NES S PROGRAMS• FINEST PRE-SCHOOL FACILITIES .•• HELPING OVElj 5.000,000 AND EQUIPMENT. WITH NUTRITIOUS CHILDREN HOT MEALS t INDIVIDUALLY·PLANNED LEARNING •GUARANTEED NO INCREASE IN EXPERIENCE FOR EACH CHILD TUITION FOR YOUR CHILO ENROLLMENT JS LIMITED. . CALL TODAY! ' RamarFltmnal pl.aid shirt polyesW-~ ootton boye.'only Tiv<TubeScck fiom. Wigwam '1--...,,,..us' a.rd men's U!.vi5oil1anl1ed harnzss @)~:·~~~@ 44 fashion Island , newport-eenter . 644·5070 .. . . . . fP MOflday, August 20. 1973 ·Olga, the Mark Spitz -of Girl's Gymnastics MOSCOW (AP} r ~ premier track and field cornpetinw ends today at the World University Games in a burst of 15 final events with the American team still seeking its first victory in a rlood of Soviet gold medals. Soviet gymnasts, led by Olympic p~ Olga Kort>ut who bas collected a l0t4ll ot· five golds including three gold and one bronze Sunday, dominated the fourth day of the Games. • Going into today's competition, the • Soviet Union had 36 golds, 15 silver and 17 bronze, compared to a single silver and four bronze for the disappointing United States contingent. Gymnastics was all Miss Korbut and her teammates in the girls competition. Nikolai Andrianov won two more men's gymnastics golds, pushing his total to four for the Games. Vladimir Shukin got two golds, and the onl y final women's event Miss Korbut didn't win, Lubov Bog- danova stepped in and took the victory. Americans already were looking ahead to the swimming events where they won 19 of their 22 gold1 medals at the last University-Game$ in Turin, Italy. Both the U.S. men and women are considered good enough to win many of the sWim- ming events and restore a measure of pride to the U.S. delegaUon. In the track and field fmals, the U.S. men's 400 and 1,600-meler relay teams may have a shot at gold. And there are finalists such as Tony Waldrop and Reggie McAfee of the University oC North Carolina in the l,500, and Mark Lutz of Kansas University and WIT-RUSSIA'S OLGA KORBUT, WITH A PERFECT DISMOUNT, STOLE THE SHOW AGAIN IN RUSSIA. , Wadkins Aims ~: For Showdown , With Nicklaus SUTl'ON, Ma8'. (AP\ -Little Lanny Wadkins headed for Cary. S.C. today with his sights set on winning his way in- to the Match Play golf championship and a shot at Jack Nicklaus. "I'd like to get hold of big Jack." the 23-year-old tour sophomore said Sunday following his triumph in the USJ Classic, 'Vadkin s second victory of the season. Then he considered the statement, grinned ruefully and backed off a little. "But then, I guess big Jack would like to get hold of me, too," he said. Wadkins had to survive a double bogey five in the run down the stretch to annex , , the $40,000 first prize and push his win· 0 ,, nings to a whopping $188,914, fourth on , the list, th.is year. ~ 1• It was a record for a second year ;i player. He set the rookie record last . t. season with $116.000, and now has more ~, than $300,000 in Jess than •two full years f' r on ,the tour. · "\Vhat's the record for a thi rd year player?" he then quipped. \'. Wadkins, a stocky , 5-foot-8, 160- J.• pounder, came from three strokes off the .,.. pace with a final 69 before the massive .,: gallery or 44,000 and won by two st rokes 1 with a 279 1otal. Lee Elder, rookie Tom Jenkins and Rik .,,..1'1"assengale, the third-round leader, tied , ""~r second at 281 . Elder closed with a 69. ... Jenkins bas a 73 and was in titl~on­ ~.J tention until he bogeyed the 17th hole. . Massengale needed only a birdie on the ' par five final hole to force a playoff, but I' three-putted for a bogey and had a 74. " Sports in Brief Ontario Practice Star~; Contractor Now Bookie ONTARIO -f\,1echanics made final ad- justments Sunday before hitting the track at Ontario rwfotor Speedway for the opening of pract ice for the California 500 auto race Sept. 2. It v.·ill be the fir sl race at Ontario since the track \Vas closed last December \Vhen previous operators couldn't make a rent payment. Five days of practice. starting today , are on tap before Saturday 's one day of quali fying that breaks tradition by only detennining the pole posi tion and front row. Instead of using more time trials to make up the rest of the field, two 100- mile races will be held next Sunday for the remainder of the 33 starters . Previously, both here and at In- Conigliaro May Try Comebacli BOSTON (AP) -Former OOme run slugger Tony Conigliaro is "seriously thinking" about making a comeback in baseball as a designated hitter. It would be his third comeback try in six yea rs. The 28-year-old Coni gliaro. injured \\'hen hit by a pitch six years ago, said he wants to play with the Boston Red Sox. "Fenway Park is tailor·made for me," he said. "But as it stands now, it appears the Boston front office doesn't want any part of me." <Jonigliaro said in a weekend in- terview that he expects to make a fin al decision on a comeback attempt in the next two weeks after a few sessions of batting practice. "I feel I've got five or six good years left and there we a JOt of ball clubs who need a guy who can come in and get that clutch hit," he said. "The designated hit~ ter rule would enable me to concentrate on my hitting." The former outfielder's left eye was pennanenUy damaged Aug, 18, 1967 when he was accidentally hit just below the protecti ve batting helmet by a fast ball thrown by Jack Hamilton of the California Angels. dianapolis and Pocono, the only two other 500-mile races on the United States Auto Club circui t, time trials picked the whole field. e IVo Se11th11e11t RENO -Even though he reads sports news voraciously, follows all the teams closely and tries to think like an athlete, H. North Swanson doesn't coosider himself a typical sports fan . If he did, it could cost him money. Swanson is a bookie. He operates the Reno Turf Club and is one of the nation's best known oddsmakers. Sentimentality and favoritism , the marks of the average sports fanatjc , can- not be applied to the college-educated S\vanson. ';! enjoy sports, but there's so much business involved," he said in an in- terview . ''I certainly can't allow myself to become prejudiced or sentimental. I have to be objective." The fonner owner of a building supply firm in Southern California, the 37-year· old Swan.son bought the sports and race book here in 1960 for about $100,000. e Estep 1'ictor11 HAVERFORD, Pa. -Mike Estep of Dallas won the $25,000 74th annual Pennsylvania Lawn Tennis Championship by scoring a 7-6, J..6, 7-6, U , 7.5 victory over Gene Scott of New York Sunday. The capacity crowd of 2,500 was treated to three hours and seven minutes or stirring placement tennis marked by a succession of scoring recovery shots by both players. Jn the deciding fifth set, Estep, a fonner United States Junior champion, fired a service ace to lead S.S. He then won the next game and the match by breaking through Scott's service at love •. e Ps11cholog11 Wins PHILADELPHIA - A lesson in psychology proved out for 18-year-old Candy Reynolds, who completed her in- credible march to the U.S. National \llomen's amateur tennis championship, The unseeded and t<>lally unheralded Knoxvllle, Tenn ., youth came from far ofr the pace Saturday to wipe out 16-year· old C.lhy May ol Beverly Hills, 1-6, 7-6, 6-. Wardel Gilbreath of New Mexico Jlllllor College in the '1XI. • Romania. winner of l1'0 golds. SUndly, had a total of three golds. five silver and five bronze f<>< second place. CUba bad two golds. two silver and a bronze for thlrd. Ryszard Skowronek ol Poland l!<ol'ed a major upset Sunday in the decathloo, defeating Soviet Olympic gold medalist Nikolai Avilov and Rudolf Zigert of the Soviet Union. ne trailed through elgbt events but dOled otrong and won the javelin and 1•.-ier race in Lenin Stadiwn. Zigert finllbed lleCOlld and Avilov third. 1he Arnmcan men's basketball team rolled lo Its fourth straight victory, crushing France 13743 for a totol of m point. in four games. The young Aineri<::Ms are pointing toward a col· Uslon with the Soviet Union in the final I<> try and avenge the controversial loss to the Russians at the 1972 Munich 0!)'1)1· pies. • h Meanwhile, the Soviet Unloo continued to dominate. The Russians took two more track and field golds-Mikhail Barlban won the triple jump and Leonid Sav~liev took the 3,~meter steeplechase. The American wrestlers did manage to pick up three broru:e medals In Greco- Roman events, by James Sones of the University of Iowa , Mark Davids of Eastern Michigan and Ken Levals of Hiram College. Umpires Breathe Easier After Ferguson's Homer CIDCAGO (AP) -Joe Ferguson took the umpires and the Loll Angele! Dodgers off the hook twice Sanday in a 2· 1 victory over the Chicago Cubs with tbe umpires twice ruling against the Dodgers on crucial calls. · Fergusm's t\\0-nm homer with two oot in the ninth erased a protest lodged by Dodgers manager Walt Alston: 'lben, after another disputed call which left CUb runners on first and second with nOne out in the bottom of the ninth, Fergus<lt! picked off Don Kessinger at secood base to blunt a budding rally. Martin Pro~sts "It looked like we were going to get beat and then like we were going to win It and then lose it," said A1ston. "Yes, I guess you could say Ferguson took a lot Deqen.Slate ........ "': ( .... ) ol people olJ the hook." 5 p.m, ··~ 5 p.m. 4:3(1 p.lfl. Rick Reuschel ol the Cubs and Tommy John of the Dodgers were booked up in a double no-hitter when R"'1 Sant<> led off Detroit Manage1· Says Angels Throw. Spitters Billy Martin, Detroit's pepperpot man- ager, woo the ball game and then gloated taht "crime doesn't pay." The Tigers won Sunday night's ll·in· ning contest from the California Angels when reliever Aurelio Monteagudo of the Angels wild-pitched a runner home from third base on a pitch Martin charged was . illegal. "It wa's a spitter. No doubt about it," said Martin of Mooteagudo's fatal pitch "·hich went to the backstop. The night before Martin complained to the umpires that Bill Singer of the Angels AllfJeb Slate All ..... •KWCmtJ Aug. 21 Mllw•ukM et C•Hfornl• Aug. :n Mltw•ukff •t C•llfornl• Aug. %1 Mllw•ukee •f C1Ufornl• Aug. ,, 9osTon 11 C•llf11rnl1 1:5J p,m. 7:" p.m. 7:55 p.m. 7:55 11.m. \\'35 loading his pitches. Sunday Martin asked the umpires to check Monteagudo and plate umpire Lou DiMuro went .1o in- spect. Martin later said he wasn't opposed to the spitball. "If the pitcher can control it, he should throw it,'' he SI.id. But be said that the pitch is illegal and "spitball pttdlers are making a mockay ol the game. "You can't fault the umpires because there is no rule that helps them to stop it. They've Jegalit.ed the designated bitter so mayhe they'll legalize the spiller. They should, because more and more pitchers are throwing ft.'' "All the Angels need 15 Gaylord Per· ry ," he said. "Then they'd really be able to whip up a batch of wet ones." With two out in the 11th, Mickey Stanley and Tooy Taylor igniled the Tigen with singles, Stanley goes to third . Then Monteagudo uncorked his wild pitch permitting Stanley to score. John Hiller, who worked the final three and two thirds innings in relief of starter Mickey Lolich, picked up his seventh win in 11 decisions. Stanley and Taylor gave Detroit an BROHAMER'S RUN DESTROYS BANE CLEVELAND -Jack Bnlhamer of Huntington Bead! soored the winning run in the ninth inning with two outs as Eddie Bane of Westminster receipted for his fourth straight defeat as a result ol the !COfe as the Clevelalld Indians handed the Mlnneso!a Twins a doubleheader setback, 5-3 and 4-3 here &mday. Brohamer was on third bMe witb two out when Leo cardeoas reached lirst base on an il)field single off the \"\1estminster left-hander. Thia was the wiMlng run and the ooly marker giwn up by Bane. In the first game of the twlnbill, Brobamer had a pair ol singles and an rbl in three trips w the plate. early 2-0 advantage in the third when they slugged baek.t<H>ack ho m e rs against Angel starter Clyde Wright. California tied _the game in the fifth on Richie Scheinblum's double and run-scor- ing singles by Lee Stanton and Sandy Alomar. The Tigers remained 21,2 games behind Baltimore in the American League Ea st and snapped a modest three-game Angels v.·in streak. The Angels were idle today. ...... (41 (Ill,_.. 13} H '""' • rllrM MSl9nMy, cf ' 2 2 l Al«Mr, 2' 5 0 I I TI9)1or, a 4 1 2 1 lerry, cf S o 0 0 Kat!M. 19 5 o G 0 Fltobl-, O :S 0 0 o WHOrtOrl. tf • 0 l 0 8Pwtctr, ,, l 1 0 0 Fr""'"' c f 0 2 O ltOllwr, Jtl S O 2 O FHowan:I, ftl 4 l 2 1 Epaltiln, 10 5 0 1 I Shloron,rt soeo~rf •120 Altod!'981, 311 S 0 2 0 Pin-, tr I 0 0 I Ellrnkmn, u ' 0 I 0 Sl.,,taft, If S I 2 I Mlolkl'I, p 0 0 0 0 Torbor;, c :J 0 I 0 Hllltl',p 0000McC1'9w,pr OGOO Sttpl'l119n, c o 0 0 0 G•ll'91'1er, pl'I I 0 0 0 M.olln,a.s 1000 Ll-s.2b •O OO CW!'loftl, P O o o o Tat1.. 4 3 10 3 TOlltl 46 ' 12 3 Montoucto. p 0 0 0 0 Otlroll 002 «O OlG 01 -' C•llfor!'ill 000 t:20 010 00 -I E--Meoll 2, I!. BrlnlUNft, LOl-Oe-lroll 12, C11J. fornl• •• 29-Sdtrlnblm. Hll-M. s~ IS. T. T•Y· kw" F. ttow.n:I '· S--E. BrinklTWn, Torbol'Q. "" H • •R 11 SO M, Lolld1 72/:J • :J :J 1 :J Hlhr (W, 7-1) 3 1/3 4 0 0 0 5 C.W"'al'lt •t3.tlO Mont~ {L. l-1) 3 3 I l o I H8P-oy MontftgVdo ~11 .... WI>-MontffOudO. T-2:!&. A-JO.at. the fijth with his 13th homer I<> give Chicago the lead. Reuschel kept his no-hitter intact until Willie Crawford singled 1'> open tbe elghtb. One out later, Roo Cey singled Crawford to third to set the stage for the first flareup. Bill Russell bounced back to Ute mound and in a nmdown it appeared that Santo had tagged out Crawford. Third base um· pire Jerry Dale ruled Crawford safe. The CUbs argued end finally asked Dale to appeal to home umpire Tom Gonnan. Gonnan, claiming Dale was blocked out ol the play, overruled llie third base um- pire and called Crawford out. Alston then lodgod his protest. Reuschel opened the Dodgers ninth by fanning Dave Lopes. It was his 13th strikeout, a career high. and a season high for a CUbs pitcher. Bill Buckner singled, and arter Willie Davis flied out, Ferguson hammered his 18th homer to put the Dodgers ahead. Don Kessinger opened the Cubs ninth when a single and Jose Cardenal followed with a bunt. Ferguson, who was jarred by Cardet1al. managed lo field the ball and throw to Russell at second. . Russell dropped the ball for an error and an argument ensued . Meanwhile , Cardenal had stopped. thinking the ball was foul. Instead of throwing the ball to first to retire Cardenal, the Dodgers began arguing as Cardenal finally sauntered to first. "I argued that the umpire (Dick Stello) had his back to the play and didn't kno\v if Russell had dropped lhe ball while trying to dig it out of his glove," said Alston. "l asked them to extend us the same courtesy they did the Cubs in the previous inning but they refused saying 'It was a different situation.' It got to the point where 1 didn't know '1.'hat was going on." Wt ........ (!) Cl'lk ... (1) 1brhrlll 1brhrlll Lopa, 2b ' 0 D 0 KtU[nfiltl', ll ' 0 2 0 llllCll.nlr, ti ' 1 I D Carden•!, rt ' • o o WO.vis, (f • o o o BWll11ams. lb l o o D F...-;UllOl'I, ( I I I 2 C1rty, II l 0 l 0 WCrwfrd, rt • 0 I D Hfsff", If 0 0 0 0 G1rvey, lb 2 O O O S•nto, lb 3 I 2 1 P1d11rllk, II 1 O O O Mvndl~y. t l O O 0 C1y, lb 2 O I O Monday, cl 3 0 0 0 JQShW, ~ 0 0 0 0 Popovich, lb 3 0 0 0 Mc.Muln, 3b O O O O Atuel\el, 11 3 0 0 0 Aussfll. u. 3 0 o 0 Jonn.p 2000 Mol1,p 1000 ar.wer. P o o o o T~al• JI 2 ' 2 Tot1l1 tt I ~ I Los A1191'1ts 000 OOD 002 -2 O!lago 000 010 000 -l 11!!-A~lt. OP-Los Angeles 2. LO~ MQeles S. Cl'lklgO 2. HA-Sltnlo IJ, F~guson 10. IPHRt:RllSO John 7 1111 8•-{W, -.~1 2 0 0 • 1 AeuKMI CL, 12·12) t 4 1 2 0 13 H8P-41y Aevschtt Cty. T-2:17. A-2),2166. • ' ' Romanians Certain They'd Lose ALAMO, Calif, (AP) -The Romanians knew when they were_beaten against the U.S. Davis CUp doubles team of Stan Smith and Erik van Dillen SUnday. I Crtstea Coraluhri, captain of the Roma· 1 nJan squad, said before the matches j bepn a; Round Hill Country Club here that Nasto.H had the only chance to win Oii the last concrete courl and that the teain ''miihl be able to lo<e w." So far, he bu been con:t<t. The first thret mat~ were all won In straight • sets, with Smith heatlng Toma Ovicl 7-S, 6-1 . 6-S, and Nastue handling Marty Ric.sen 6-2 M, S.S In Stturday's play. Sundily, Smith and Van Di11'n teamed I to defeat Nastase and Lionel Santieu in the doubl es match &-2, 7·5, 6-2. giving the U.S. a 2~1 lead . The Americans need only win one of today'$ two singles matches to win the series. Riessen can clinch it by beating Ovid in today's Orst match. II he loses, Smith .wlll have to top Naslase in the finale, which pairs the two men who are generally rated 'one-two in the tennis world lhls year. The Round HJJI stad ium was about 90 percent sold out over the weekend, and a full-house crowd of 6,000 was expected ttr day. The big attraction Is tM first Smith-- Nastase match of the year, even though it might be anti-eUmactlc. "J don't know bow it wiJI affect me." said Smllh when asked how he would regard the match II a U.S. team victory already is certain. "I've never played in a si tuation like that before." Smith and van Dillen, together in Davis Cup competitloo since 1971, won the first set easlly SUnday mainly because of !re-, quent mi stakes by the Romanians . The NasU!S&Santieu team settled down in the second set and threatened to break Van Di.lien's serve "1th the score 5-4 In Romania's ravor. But a potential point was taken away by olllclals who ruled Nastase doubl e-hit a ball wilh his rac- quet. "At that j)Oinl. I thought we bad a chance. tt wu very depressing," said Santleu, the ftrot·year Davis CUp performer whO then IU!!ered bis thiril eervtce break ol the match to let the Unlled States tak.e a ~ lead In the eet. '!be Romanlll!S elec1'd to let Slntleu serve first in the thlrd eet,·and another break starled the bl collapee. The oaly garnet Romania won in tbt tel were on Nastase'• !fervtt. '!be U.S. team is shooting Jor a alrth straight Davis CUp UUe. With a VlctorY !Oday. the Americans would go on to Cleveland for the first indoor challenge roUnd in history, with A..,tralla "' Czechoslovalda the opponent UPI Tel ...... LARRY HISLE IS CUT DOWN BY JOE FERGUSON. , ' t f.'. !. ' ' v .. .. ,, .. I· .. • ' .. ' I ~ ' '· , ' v " '• ,, ~ .. '· " ' ,. ' r ' Outgunned, 19·7 Chargers Ripped By 49ers :Passes SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The San Francisco 49ers, who USua\ly live or dlC by the pass, wiU probably do more of the same this season as they prepare to defend their Na· tional Football League passing ti lie. This was evidenced Sunday when previously unheralded quarterback Joe Reed atW oft. injured wide receiver Terry Beasley both came through with their finest pro efforts in the 49ers' lS.7 preseason victory over the San Diego Chargers. Reed, a second-year pro Cincinnati, N.Y. Gain Easy Wins from Mississippi State, who \.YSS on the taxi sq~ last season, played all but two series and completed 17 qt 35 passes for 180 yards. Beasley, a No. 1 draft pick from Auburn who was limited to only one reception while beset with injuries last year, grabbed four passes for 57 yards. "Joe really played well for his first real start," said 49ers' coach Dick Nolan, who takes a 3·1 preseason record into S u n d a y • s Candlestick Park clash with Denver. "A couple of his long passes floated in the wind, but I thought he directed the club real well," Nolan added. "I also liked our defensive line play." Johnny Unitas connected with Gary Garrison on a 10- yard touchdown pass for a 7-0 lead. Then John Brodie made bis 1973 home debut and im- mediately produced the tying touchdown on a 3--yard pass · play to Jimmy Thomas. The Chargers, now 0-3, Off t ti N t • Is didn't think so. "Reed really ' 0 le ft ~ODO Monda~, Au911sl 29, 1973 DAILY PlLOJ 17 •. ; World Games N.et Reward's t!J' To Deaf Girl By FRED SCHOEMEHL 01 tht D•llY f'llot St•lt Lee Anne "Bobo" Johns of Laguna Beach was bubbling with excitement when she got off the plane from Malmo, Sweden a week ago. She brought with her a gold medal, a bronze medal and the honor or setting a .world swim- ming record while partif:ipating in the 12th An4 nual World Games for the Deaf. Friends in Laguna Beach raised more than $2.000 to send Miss Johns - a former homecoming princess a t Laguna Beach High School and Golden West College -to 1 the games. "It was a great trip and a \YOnderful opportunity. I'd love to go back again," said Miss Johns Friday. Her flight to ~1almo for the lwo weeks of competition was preceded by intensive training in Washington, D.C. LEE ANNE JOHNS She took part in the 100 meter butterfly, 100 meter freestyle and the 400 meter freestyle relay. Carter Campbell and Jim Files scored touchdowns on pass interceptions to lead the New York Giants to a 45-30 Victory over the New York Jets at New Haven, Conn. while the Cleveland Browns defeated Cincinnati's Bengals, 24-6 at Columbus, Ohio in Na4 tonal Football League ex# hibilion games Sunday. did a job sti.cking the ball Mission Vie3·a Nadadores' coach Mark Schubert (left) down our nuddle," offered . . coach Harlan Svare. "The ch~ks stoc~wat~h prior to. ~eav1ng fa~ the. AA_U 49ers' protection was ex· Na~on~ Sw1mm1ng a~d ~1vmg cham~t~nships 111 cellent. It's the best in the Louisville, where sw1mm1ng compet1t1on starts league and bas been · for Wednesday. The Nadadores entered from the left standing include Victoria Reithard next to coach Schubert, Rick Windes, Amy Howe and Peggy Tos- dal. Sitting are Phillip Wilder, Kathy Howe and Diane Toepfer. In the water are Taylor Howe, John- son Denison and David Baron. "They really worked us ." ~Uss Johns said of the training camp. rn their spare time, the 20 members or the swim team did quite a bit or sightseeing around Washington, including visits to \Vashington's M~u-­ ment and the Capitol. Miss Johns took the gold medal when she and three other American swimmers set a record for the 400 meter relay at 4:44.25. The former record was 4:48.00. She won the bronze medal for capturing third' Piice in the 100 meter bU:tterfly com .. petition. The Browns exploded for two touchdowns within 12 seconds of the third quarter and Frank Pitts scored on two spectacular plays in pacing the Browns to victory. Al Woodall. who came off the bench late in the second quarter to le3d the Jets into contention . released both Giant interceptions as he was being hi!. Campbell, a fourth-year defensive end from \Veber State. hauled in the first at tbe Giants' 28 al'MI barreled 8'l yards to raise the Giants' lead to 31·23. On the Jets' next series, a Woodall pass popped into the hands of 240-pound linebacker Files. who ran 20 yards to score with 13 minutes left in the game. The teams. who both en· tered the game with 2-0 records, traded 1ouchdowns in t,he waning moments. 'J'he_ Giants evened their record tn the annual exhibition game with the Jets at 2-2·1 . A capacity crowd of 70.874 Jammed the Yale Bowl. The Giants are scheduled to play five home games there this season and all of them next season, while Yankee Stadium is renovated and their future home in New Jersey is built. Woodall was sharp as he ,took over late in the first half for Joe Namath. who suffered a bruised elbow and tv.·o\ in· terceptions that led to scores. The five-year veteran guided the Jets on three sroring drives in less than six minutes to close the Giants' ha1£time lead to 21-20. VACATION SPECIALS '66 DODO~ CAMPER % TON "•191T11tlt tnins.. VL T88111 $1677 70 ARISTOCJtAT TJtAILlll years." Unitas, who completed five of 20 passes for 77 yards, ad~ ded : "Reed picked our defense apart, but we came up With some good plays on defense to hold them to one TD. I wasn't happy with the way I played, thougb." S•n DltQo 1 0 0 1)-1 San Franch.c:o o 11) o 9-19 SD -~rtillOl't 10 !:NISS from Unllas werschlnQ kick SF -Th0m11 l P•u trorn Broal1 Gouett -lcli: SF -FG Gt»Mttl l2 SF -FG Wlllum 2J SF -F{. Wttturn 23 SF -FG Wlttum ~1 Allend•nc• -.st,702 Flr1t downl Ru1hes-yards P1llln11-v1rd1 Return Ylrel~ P•~ses Punl1 FumblM·IOSI Pena111e,..v1rd1 Robertson, Cowan .. OK .Mrs. Cow·t Wins Net Tourney WALL TOWNSIUP. N.J. (APJ -Margaret Court has become the all·time leading money winner for one .year in women's sports -and she did it the bard way. Mrs. Court, the top seed. came from behind to defeat fellow Australian Lesley ~unt 4-6, 6-2, 6-3 to win the $30,000 Jersey Shore Tennis Classic Sunday ·nigbt. ·LOS 'AtJGEbE;S (AP) The first prize or $7.000 has Two defensive stars-of the Los given ?\1rs. Court $122.900 to • 1 • • break the former one-year Angeles ~ms came out, or i:ecor<! <Jf $119,201 set by Billie Saturday's l~ exhibition loss Jean King in !971. Mrs. King to Oakland with slight injuries, withdrew from the quarter· a club t;pokesriiaii said Sun-fmals here Thursday after suf- day. · · · fering a minor knee injury. ba k I iab n-~----. The victory was M r s . Line c er s nUUCI '"3Un1 Court's 12th in 15 tournaments of Huntington Beachr ·has a on the women's circuit this hyperex:tended left elbow and '. year:. tackle Charlie Cowan has a The doubles championship sprained left ankle. · It isn't was taken by Francoise Durr known if they w{IJ ;miss of Paris and Betty Stov.e of the Friday's game with Miami, Netherlands, defeating Mona the spokesman said. Schallau of lowa City, Iowa The Rams were given the and Julie Anthony of Los day off Sunday while coaches Angeles. 6--4, 6-4. The winners looked at films of Saturday's• split $2,000 and the losers game played in Berkeley. $1 ,000. '' Bobby Sox Softball Huntington Gal-S Defeat Roseville By HOWARD L. HANDY Lori Croft, playing first base Of rM oanv Piiot st•n after pitching in the opener, South Huntington Beach's drove in two runs with a pair girls· all-star softball team ad-of base hits to lead the hitting. vanced to the third round of In the third inning, Patty play in the annual Bobby Sox Morita opened with a single to national tournament being center and after two fielder's staged at Bellis Park in Buena choice plays, Julie Hutchinson Park Sunday afternoon with was safe on an error. Malia an 8-5 victory over Roseville. Mendenhall drove in the first South Huntington B e a c h _ run with a single and Miss returned to action in the Croft followed with another. S1111day RHlllll C"-mpionshlp Br1ck1I S•n Pedro 11, West Anaheim I · Haclend.I HtiQh!S 3, Thou~and Olki O N•v<iio a, Bellllawtr O El s.-Qundo 8, Lemoore J L011r'1 8rilcket (LOMrl ellml11atffl Clairemont 4, Mld·Pl'nlnsula l Branham Hiiis 10, Kearns, Utah O SWlfl Hunf1nwton team •· Sosevllle s Norwalk-L1kewood 17, NE El Paso, Tex. 11 loser's bracket of the tourna· ment this afternoon against Norwalk-Lakewood, winners over Northeast El Paso, Texas Sunday, 17-11. With Renee Rossi on the mound. S o u t h Huntington Beach came from behind a 3-0 deficit with five runs in the bottom or the third inning, then added two in the fifth and one in the sixth before Roseville scored two in the top of the final frame. Jo Ann Kalama then singl ed the tying run across with the . go-ahead marker scoring on an error and an insu rance run getting in on a double steal after Rocky Graham walked. In the fifth, singles by Miss Croft, Rhonda Winn and Miss Morit•a scored two more with the final tally scoring on singles by Misses Hutchinson and Wanda Winn and an in- field out off the bat of Miss Croft. A victery today would bring South Huntington Beach back for a fourth game Tuesday at 4 with that winner returning at 8 in a doubleheader. A loss will eliminate them from further competition in the double-loss affair. S.. H11nlt119ton eeacn ft) ilD r JI rDI MDrll•, 2b • 0 2 1 Rossl,p J 0 1 0 Mltchell. n • 1 1 o Hutchlnaon, 11 J 2 1 O Mendenhall, t·rl J 1 I 1 w.wrnn,rf 1 o 1 o Croll, lb t 1 2 ,• Kal•m1. 30 • 2 2 Skller, (! o o 0 O Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East w L Pct . GB Baltimore 68 52 .567 Detroit 67 56 .545 21\ New York 68 .58 .540 3 . Boston ~; 57 .533 4 Milwaukee 59 62 .488 91;~ Cleveland 51 74 .403 1911.: West OaklMd ·72 51 .585 Kansas City 70 55 .560 3 Minnesota 59 G:l ,484 121h Chicago 58 66 .468 12~~ Angels 56 65 .467 141\ Texas 43 78 .355 28 · Sulldtr'•' e.fOlei , Detroit 4, .&nftlt 3, H lnnl['VS Ct1vt1al)d S-4, M!nnes.ol• 313 aoston 4, K•M•• City 3 Oaltl•l)d ._ M~aullee 4 IJ1Ul!no,. L cago 1 Ntw York ... Tt111fll 2 ' T~'I Oatnts Mlnnesot• {COl"bln et 8•1tlmor9 (Al.XM!dff .. .. NATIONAL LEAGUE East IV L Pct. GB St. Louis G:l 61 .5-08 Pittsburgh 59 61 .492 2 Montreal 59 63 .484 3 Chicago 58 65 '.472 4~ Philadelphia 57 66 .463 5'h New York 55 66 .455 51,]; West Dodgers 77 47 .621 Cincinnati 75 50 .600 21/i San Francisco 67 55 .549 9 Houston 65 61 .516 13 Atlanta tiO 67 .472 18112 sa'n i:>ieg9·. j5 78 ,366 3Jlh: ..... •. Sunday's G1im1 OOdtttlf 2. Cll!tt911"I Plt!Sbul"9h s S.n Fr•ncl!KO 0 New YDrlt 2, Clnclnn11I 1 Montr'Nt 3, A_tlenta l .SI. Loufl 1, Sa11 O!tao C Pl!OedelPl'lli 5, Holl:ilon J Tliday'I «hi-Clndl'INtl IBIH1n11llllm 16-t) at New Yort; !Staver Roberh. el l o 0 O Graham, c 1 0 0 0 Bernoulli, rt 0 0 0 0 snva,rf 1 o o o Boo!h, rt 1 0 0 0 RT:ft~(~' rl ~ g 1i l St-bV lnninp . ' . Rosa~llle 003 000 7-S " 3 s. Hunl, Btecn 005 on 1<-8 n ' Deep Sea Fish Report SAN DIEGO IMUnidpal Pier) -1,139 a110lers: 931 vellowra11. 25 llallbut, 3 blve nn tun•, J wMle saa bliss, 916 oonllo, 1,190 oarracud1, 227 caUco be11, 1"Jb-~~ i°.fY (Br•N•l -4J llnQltrs: !Virge's Landl119) -U9 anglers: 38 1111<1 cod, 1.69' rgc k coa. 19 llbacora. 1s1n Slmtonl -.\1-4 anglers: Sl l!nq cod, 2..606 rock cod. HUNTIHGTDN 8EACH-'9 angle rs: 5 bllrr•cuda, 95 bOnlto, 80 bass, 3 nallb11!.i, lOS rocJ<; cod. 6 yellowtall. 1 IMP~RIAL 811!'.ACl'I -71 anglers: t yt!lowtall 12 barrac.Vda, 11 bOnl!o, 1 hallbul, Xi calico bass, 6 yellowl•ll. , DANA WHAJtF -J3S angler$: S'I c•llCll ba1s. 12 bonl!ol 6 h11llbut, 245 rock cod, ~7 mackere , 16 wh!I• :iea 11 ft, LlllHl111r, Ith """'' .... ,. 1W111119, --& .~ ..... NIW York lltottlemyra 12•ll) • Kan"' (8\Kby 11.111 B111lOl'I ICurtlt 11·1CJ'> 111 Texat (Blbtrf "'' City 1S.6l • San Fr•l'\C.l.CO (Brad!~ 10-111 •I M(X'lre•! t lorrei 1-111 P 11\burgh IEl!h 11°111 al HQUilon iR!tllllrd ~·O bali"N PEDRO -116 ano1ers: 5 yelloWlall. 38 barracuda, 169 bonito, 2ll cal!co bass, 5 sand bass, 194 rock cod. 116 mackerel. lttnd $!. Landl1>g) -1S2 anglers: 'l yellowtaU, 37 t>arrac\fda, 61 c11llco bliss. 1 t1a!lb11I. 16 ••nd b8tl. !>a bOnln:i, \23 rnac~erel, 57 blue hess. 10 SEAL IEACH -820 •nglers : 1 1and baU, 1,360 roe~ cod, 9 IT'llCkPrfl 1 '"" ~ j• \ $~877 '6t EL CAMINO CUtT~. At..,..,..Ht tr•ns., Poftr ·~ '°" I""" .... ""' • IMct: '"" 1trlw. H1-I I. $2177 72 JllP - $3677 ,, Otlroll IPtrry 11·10) ,,., Olklllnd (B1Ut IJ..11 Only 11•1r1e1 acfllduled T11ttd•y'I e.-t Mllwauke'f at A1'19'" Delrott •I Oak\alld Bo.ton •I TIXQ H~ Yort •• IC.•rit8s cnv M ""''°'' 11 Ba111mor• Chit• tit Ci..etal\d .. Only 9•mt1 "*1edvlfil T1111d•'I".> Gam~ DOCl•trt a! New Yor-Slln Fr111<!1co 111 Montreal San Oiego 11 Phl!ldtlPllll C!nc!"n•lf 1t Chicago St. Louis '' A!la111a Pllllllurgh al Houtton • v•Uowla!I, l 1>arr11cuda, 14 bOnHo. 8tt,!!t _ IM '"'l<ll~r,. ~ b11rracud11, 69l bOn•to 10 bau. I h~llbut, 30 m11c kertl. LONG l l!ACH (8r.lmont Pl•r) -1:1., •n11ters: 'IO bonito, 10 i.and bas,, 1,cet rock tod. B•ritt -12& anoler1 : ''fl bOnHO 15 barr11cuda, $ 1an<1 b•1s. 1 ll•llbui. (Plerpolnl lalllllntl -,, l~: •nole.-,: 90 bOnfto, ) y111owta . ~ callco l>l!l1 115 rock cod. NEWPORT {Art'• L•nd\nol -1st1 ,naler1: 17 1H11s, l w• nwttl!. 13 bon!IO, 112 rnc;lc ,od, li'ltllbul, 17 blllt ""· oc•ANSIOI -lSS •ni:il•nt :no l)onllOi... 1,566 tel'ld ~IS, 61 wlll!t t.1• ti~~~. ~ ll•llbu,, 3S rotk cod. D)(NARO -.Ml tl!l'llers : l,lol! cttl«i .... ~~. t'() 1""'1 I'~••, 1 •'1 "''"' ~··• 1 Ufl!I cod. ''' roele cod, S' bonito. ~ h~llbu!. t l>fllf'l"at\lda, NEWPORT LEASES 2400 Wttt Cooat Hl9kwey Le11ing all Vehicle1 FO•ltGN Ir DOMISTtC 645-2202 Alamitos Entries Tonlljlllt: Frrst 'hst 7;45 P.M. FlltST RACE -lSO va rds. 2 ve"r olds. Cl.,lmlng. Purse $1700. Claiming Price. Wl'll!e Front, (MvlHl 119 Brother's lark, CWerdl 119 Ve-oas Capte!n, {Gorial 119 MV Blt 0 Honev. (l(nlghl) 116 Sl>iltltill, fAelairl 11• Miss Go Rhocl•· IPaljlt) 116 Zan's Sun O«;k, fCaraota) 119 "We didn't try to go to the \Vatergate hearings. We got enough of that, anyway," says Miss Johns. adding a chuckle. After arriving in Malmo, members of the team stayed in a hotel along With swim· mers from Italy a n d Germany. "All we had to eat, it seemed Uke , was potatoes and bread. I'll never forget that," she said. W))il,e not in the pool, Miss Johns and other members of the team spent !heir time watching other games invol- ving· deaf athletes lrom throughout die . world. Competitions were held· in tennis, cycling, s h o o t i n g • volleyball , table tennis and a score of other sports. ''It was really beautiful. r loved it," she said. Ladttlt Sis <Drtyerl 119 Mil Clemtnllne, {Hartl 119 Ht's Taylor-~lel, !Trtasurel 1n SECOND RACE -350 yards. -3 ye11r olds & \Ip, Clalmlng, Purse $HOO. Bid Who, (Adair) 119 Mr. u~. (Morris) 119 Ottp Tonto, (P•gel \19 Dark N Oandy, (Ward) 119 Walch en, (Knlghll 119 Sanla nnah. (CrosbVl 119 Final Physical Exams Scheduled at Schools Oendv's Jet, (Matsuda! 12'l THIRD, RACE -•OO yards, 2 years oldt. A!lowal'\C.e. Pur" u600. PhysicaJ examinations are a Missy Rocket, (Dreyer) 117 Go Go Too, (Trtasurel 117 requirement for a J l pro-Orphan Johllt'f, (Mytes) no Moi,1 eoom, !Mllchelll no spective football pla y e rs . Bo Blot.Dy, (KnlghT) 110 "d Rebel orum, !Cardoza) no While most of the area gr1 Palquin !Gari.a) 120 d'd I d t Jh · 01d1e·s Gem, <AC1111n 111 can 1 a es un erwen e1r FOURTH RACE -350 Y•rels. 3 vear h · 1 d . h . o!dl. Purse $2300. Claiming. Clalmlng p ySJCa S urmg l e Sprtng, Price Sl0,000. ddi\' I J Everelt's Whiz, (Hartl 117 many a JOOS 0 area earns Third Image, 1w11r<1J 11" t'll t obta. the proper H1nk's Note, {Adair) 117 S I mus ln Melita'• Charger, <Oreverl 119 examination before the starl El Toro P&rklJ'I'", (Knight) 119 Sh•11> Lulu, (Harl~ Cr°"by) 117 of the football campaign. Watch Missy Go. ITn~asur• 117 Tht New Looi!. !Mylesl 111 Those athetes who can not FIFTH RACE -350 vards. 3 yuar old• & up. Allowance. PUTw ruoo. Tnu obtain an examination through Jr. Woman's Club ot Hunt111111on Beacn. Moraga Rocket (Garza) 172 the school must get it through Spill TH, IAdlllr) 122 S~lal Notice, (Knlghl) 119 a private doctor. FINI Copy, (Treasure) 122 rund h f Al~mltos Susie, (Mvles I 117 Here's a own on eac 0 N e w p o r t Harbor-None scheduled. San Clemente-already held. University-already held. Westminster-Aug. 30 at boys' gym, S.11 a.m. Celeh1ity Tourney Planned Busy w111ow, cwardl na the Orange Coast area's The second annual celebrity Rocky Beach Hank, (Pagel 112 I I Chiller, (Oreverl 11t schools and their avai abi ity tennis tournament spansored SIXTH RACE -110 va.-cis. J ~aro1e1s of examinations: & up. Clalm!ng. Purse Sl!'OO. Clalrning by the Assistance League of Price 11000. Corona de! ~1 a r -N o n e Motiv Kiiiian, 1w11re1J 172 New.port Beach will be held at ~. High, 1A<111lr~ J\7 scheduled. Khala Pro ITraasura) 1'9 the Balboa Bay Racquet Club Native Twist, (Holbrook 111 Co.sta Mesa-Aug. 25 in the Sl>ttd Coont (Cardoa) 1?1 school cafeteria, 8 a.m. Ol1 Sept. 8 and 9 With many of Gyp Ftt (Cr1»trfl 127 Bio SPY CHartl 119 0 H'll A 24 · th Hollywood and television's top Get"onimo Mayor, CKnlghl) 119 ana l S-ug, in e SEVENTH RACE -3SO vards. J vi:ar boys' gym 6 pm entertainers participating. cl<l$ & UP. PUl"5e $8000. ' " " Go Eftorllessly, ccardoal 11s Edison-Aug. 22 at No. 100 Proceeds from the' event wiU Ka~ah Bar. (Adair) 118 9 go '"" the League's ""''·-Tll'!Y Bart, fP•geJ 110 bldg. on school campus, -12 .., ----...--... Mr. M1e11and. !Morr is) 110 thropic pro j e Ct s, the PKCae11uo. twarnl 116 a .m. Children's dental health center -l ight She Was. (Tr•asure) 1h El Toro-Aug. 22 and 23 in EIGHTH A.ACE -350 vanh. 3 v'ar and the new day care center otds & up. c1almlng. Purse 11100. Mission Viejo High's weight for working mothers. Mid Poise, ISm!111J 17! eu~ler Cult Bar, (Page) 11? room, 6-8 p.m. Tommy Cook, well known as Rocktl Mkk. (Ward\ 1 ~7 · hed led Fair Blair. lMy!esl 119 Estancia-None sc u . a celebrity tournament direc- cando Bay Bar fTrea:iurt l 112 Fountain Valley -Aug. 29, tor. will bring a large group of Sco!1 Maclean, (KnlghJ; 1?1 Ora"' Play, tH••Tl in 2 p.m. motion picture, TV and sports Golla Bar Too, (Adlllrl 119 h,,_ Ra CJ b NIN TH RACE -350 ya rds. 3 vear Huntington Beach -None stars to t.~ cquet u • old) & up. c1a1m1ng. Pur!e s\600. scheduled. Included in the list are such Jant Me, !Kn1gn!l 113 Raider Rocket, cTreasurel 119 Laguna Beach-Aug 24 at names as Dino l\-1artin, Jr., Triptica1e COPY. (My1es1 118 · Bill Cosby. Clint Eastwood. ' Mr. As1ro ze11e-e, CP1111a1 110 boys' gym, 9 a.m. Bud Eve, CCardolal 119 Merv Griffin, David Hartman Hank's van11u11re1. !Garia> 119 Marina-Already held. from Jhe Gold Ones, Lloyd Hell 01 A Note, (,.Clair) 122 · Bobbv oeiuxe. 1Pre1tldge ) 122 Mater Dei -Already held. and Beau Bridges and QMrl-Mr. La5er cro,byl tit d h Id H sa11or•, char<;1e. 1Pa1110) --"~'--~-l_iss_io_n __ v_ie~i_<>-_a_lre_•_Y:__e_. __ io_n __ es_J_on_. ------- PSA wants to go north (or south) with your money. Other Grinningbirds to San Diego and Sacramento. Over 200 flights a day connecting all of northern and southern California. Gall your travel agent or PSA and let's migrate. PSAgfves you a lft. •ia DA!LV PILDT \ • ' • ioi ·· rro 69 ea •M:knH PMl01 WHEN THE W IND BLEW -A portion of the 59 Lasers in Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Western Regional Junior Championship get away to a brisk start in the one race in which the wind freshened off Balboa Pier. ~lark Gaudio of NHYC was the regatta winner. Brazil Yacht Wins Last Cup Contest PLYMOUTH, England (API -The. Brazilian yacht saga was confirmed by race of- ficials Friday as the winner of the 605-mile Fastnet race, last contest of the Admiral's Cup which decides supremacy in world ocean racing. Saga, captained by E • Lorentzen, was given a cor· rected time of 105 hours 11 minutes. Second w~ Recluta III, the ' Argentin boat skippered by C. A. Corna , in 105:38.24 and third Charisma of the United States in 106:49.03. Charisma was captained by J e s s e Phillips of Canton, Ohio. Race officials also an- nounced the official standings of the.16 nations competing for the Admiral's Cup. The result, which stands as final, barring last minute protest, include: 1. Germany 831 points; 2. Australia 779; Britain 749, 4. United States 738; a nd 5. Netherlands 566. Fog Hurts ' Log Racing Accuracy Dense fog along the coast at various times over t h e v:eekend contributed to some high percentages of error in two predicted Jog races for major trophies. In Long Beach Yacht Club's Hall-Scott Trophy race, the winner was Dexter Wood's Nani Kai with an error of 2.198 percent. Second was Weldon Fulton's Fultana, California Yacht Club, 3.303, and third was Roy Knowle s of Hollywood Yacht Club in Hala Louise, 8.531. Class B winner was Charles Snyder's Caravan, Hollywood YC, 1.519. In Catalina Island Yacht Club's race around the island for the Charles Ram sey Trophy the winner was Cobb's Castle, skippered by Burt Cobb of ClYC 2.9'UI: second was Miss Pam, Irv i n g Phlllips, C''C. 3.008. and third was Shipmates, Bob Wilson, CYC, 4.120. Class B "'inner was Judy Ann, Ger ald ti1artin. Shark Island YC, 3.244. REDEDICATED TROPHY -Mrs. Jos eph A. (Car- roll) Beek presents the famed Gold S Trophy to Mark Gaudio. winner of the first Laser Western Re gional Junior Championship as Newport Harbor Yacht Club commodore Ted Afunroe looks on. The trophy originally was deeded by the late Joseph A. ·seek for the Snowbird class championship. -Norris Did It Right, Wins Hennessy Cup MARINA DEL REY (AP) - On the inside rear cover of the program fo.r the 1973 Hennessy Cup, there is an advertisement · paid for by oil millionaire Roger Hanks ol Midland, Tex. A photograph shows Hanks' 36-foot powerboat r acer "Blonde IV," with !her bow im- bedded in a yacht. The caption says "Nolxxl.y's Perfect." \Vell, almost nobody, that is. While all the favorites were experiencing engine trouble, huge Art "Snapper" Norris \Vas doing ever ything right as he led a trio of longshots into a 1·2-3 finish Sunday in the $5,000 Hennessy Cup. The 22.year-old Norris, a 230-pound sensation fro m Miami, esta bl ishe d an American record of 2 how·s,33 minutes 18 seconds for the 192- mile off-shore race. He revved his boat ,;Slap Shot," powered by twin 60Q.horsepower engines, to an average speed of 75.15 miles per hour. Only two others have ever gone faster and both were from Italy. Roger Penske of Southfield, ~iich., has apparently switch· ed successfully from race cars to boats with his second- place finish, l3 'h minutes back of the winner. Third was the aggressive, colorful flanks, who didn't ram any yachts this time, as he had done in a recent r ace in Florida, leading to the advertisement. The favorite in this race, Dr. Bob Magoon of Miami, and the second choice, Dante Tognoli, both had englne problems. Tognoli. in "Dante's Inferno I." is powerboat rac'ing's oldest competitor at 65, The Oakland restauranteur and meat packing executive finish- ed fourth a nd his son Steve, in "Dante's Inferno II,'' was fifth. 1'he rugged ocean race started in Marina Del Rey, billed as the world's largest marina, The boats first head- ed out to sea, around check· points at Santa Catalina Island and Santa Barbara Island. The course then cut back to the break\vater for a clockwise circular run in the harbor off Santa Monica and .the boats finally ended back at the marina. Ullman to Win .One~ BYC Skipper Gets Leg Up 01i Snipe Title Dave Ullman of Balboa Yacht Club won lhc first two races of the Sni pe Class Na- tiona l Championshp rega tta nt Mission Bay Yacht Club Sun- day to f et a leg up on hlo:; flrst nationa title in the class. In at lea~t six previous tries fo r the Heinzerling Trophy, symbolic of the national title •. Ullman bas b«n runner-up to F.arl Elms of Mission Bay Yacltt Chlb, a six-time t'<>rmer natlooal champion and IW<>- lime world cltampion in the class. In Snnday's llrsl lwo rates for \lie Htlnzttling Trophy Ullman plal1"1 lir>l, !ollowed by Jdf Lenhort, Tom Nule and Elm.<, all or ~mvc, and !) ----Doug De Souta, Sen Diego __ _ Yacht Club. --..:: Thttt art five more races In tbe cltampionsllip S e r le 1 . Bting sailed simuUaneouS(y Is SEEKS TITLE 01vt Ullm1n the Wells Series for the con- solation prize in the nationals. Ullma n won the Crosby Series \vhich is the qualifying races for the fleinzerling. Ullman has won four na- tional title.1t in other c lasses during the past two years. He is currently the national title holder in the Lldo-14 and C<>ronarlo-JS Class. He was the national champion in the 470 Class last year bul placed sec- ond in this year's regatta. He was al$0 national champion In the Senior Sabot Clas.• In 11112 but did not dcl"1d hia UUe this year. Ullman will forego del"1so or his titles In the Lldo-148 and C.Oronado-15s tbjs year to com~ pele in the CORK Pre-Oly111pic Regatta at Kingston, OntarJo, Canada, stargtng next Thurs· day . He wiU sail in the 470 Class Qt Kingston. ' ' ' Tropla11 Given PUBIJC NOTICE PUBLIC N011CE PUBLIC NOTICE HOTICI! TO CONTIACTOtl NOTICI INVITING SIDl Teenage Skipper ••SO&.VTIOfll tlO. 7154 Noll<• 1, lletebY glVtTI tn.1 Ille Hiil\-HOTICi IS HElllE.8'f GIVl:N ltl•t llW A lllSOLU'rlC)M 0, TM• CITY COUN• tll\Qklll INC.II Ulll°" HIOl'I kltool Olstrlc1 '°''d ol TMAIM5 of lllf Jloufllt(fl V•lltY CIL O.,_ TH• CITY Oft l'OUfllf,t.IH wlll rKtlV. &Mltd bldt !OI' NtnlV\1119 ttl &dlool Olilrlct of Ortl!Ot County, VAU.IY, CALll"OaNI~ DICU.lllNO lfbor, fl'lli.rl1I, tt-1porl1Hon • 11 cl Ctllfornlt wUt rtcelvt Mtltd bldl llP to ITI INT•MTION YO VACATI ,Oil· MfVl(t) lol' th• pertOl''"•llC• ,, IN 2·00 ,,,.,.·on 11\t' •th cltY Of $flllffnbtl TIOtll 01' A •• , •• L.INI IASI'· tollowl119 wotk: 1ffl •• 1i.. oftlct of Wljl tcllool cllltrki MINT LOCATID OW LOT t• 0' Tiit con1"vc:llon ol !ht Nt'lll lie 109 lft.plrtmt11I ti wllld'I ti-Mid Wins Laser Race TllACT MO. ... AlllO SITTINO '"' CltlW'DOm 8uhc1l1111. H11nllng1on •••Ch :::;,c -~u Of OOtntd tl'lf fd lot ""' TIMI AlllD Pt..ACI POil l'U•LIC Hlon kl'IOOI. 1!11rttlON to Ille tlllttlflt lt.!rnlthlne of -rtloetl•~· b1,1lk111>9f M•AlllMG ntl ll•ON. Hom.nu1kl119 Bulklino. dtmollllon ol lllt lr•ller WHEll:IAS. nit ~ INf Hlollw•yi exl•llno Cl•11foom lulldlno. t "• To b. fVNllilltd ,,. tccordanc• w11ri Codi. $«tloN o:io tt '°"'" k"°""" 11 "" rt111blHt1tl011 ol 01• t_.r1tll'lf Sltdlum MM-Clflc•lloni now on tilt lft ll'lt puri:M" SlrMI VK•llon Act of U~I, PfOYltln fot BlffChtrl llnd Sii• lmprovemtnh ti Inv dtptrlmenl ot tht il041111t11'1 VIII•'( lllf pAICtdur. .,,..-"' tne Cltr m•r dellntd on ll'le dr1wlno•. • . k hool oi.1r1c1 Nvmbtt on. L.lori1110u1t" Mark Gaudio, 111-year,.ld Newport Jlarbo< Yacht Club sailor won the flJ'S't Western Regional Junior Championship el the Laser Class Sunday, beating out 58 rivals in the NHYC ·sponsored event. Gaudio recorded flllishes of 2-1-17-7-1 for a score of 27'11 points. Runner-up was Mark Rastello of Balboa Yacht Club with flllishes o! 1·2-111-1-16 (or 41W4 points. The five-race series was sailed Saturday and Sunday in light •to moderate breezes in the ocean off Balboa Pier, One race on Saturday was hur- riedly canceJied just before the starting signal when the Coast Guard and Harbor Department broadcast a n order to c lear the area because of a cloud of toxic gas that threatened the ocean and beach areas from a. ruptured chemical tank in the Carson area. lOOth Boat Tmned 011t By Sm·fglas A milestone was reached this week when the lOOth Prindle-16 catamaran was ordered from Surfglas, Inc. Tustin builder of the hi&h- performance multi-bull The announcement w a s made by Sterling Stanley, president o( Surfgias. "We have built 93 «~ats,'' Stanley said. "we're ·working as fast as possible to get them out to Califcrnia and out-of- state dealerships in Texas. Florida, Michigan, Minnesota and Hawaii." The PrindJe-16 was designed by Geoffrey Prindle, the firm's vice president and veteran catamaran racer. "Small catamarans are ex· tremely sensitive to weight, and I wanted a competitive boat which could be sailed by a lighter crew than that re- quired by other two-man cats," Prindle said. Surfglas recently doubled Us manufacturing space by shift· ing its metal, sub-assembly and trampoline-sewing oi>era· lions to a new Plant ill Santa Ana. Boat Firm Expanding Production Coastal Recreation, Inc. of Costa Mesa announced today further expansion or its Eastern Boat Division with the start of production of the Aquarius 23 on Oct. I. "Increased sales cf the Aquarius 23 justify expansion of production of our eastern facility as well as in Costa Mesa, according to Whitney Peden, senior vice president. "It is believed we can better service our dealers and the boating public with t h i s move," he continued. The Eastern Boat Division is headquartered in Strasburg, Va., and is beaded by Tim Gilmore, manage?'. Production began in Strasburg l a st October with the Ensenada 20, and was later expanded to in· elude the Balboa 26. Coastal Recreation, Inc. is headquartered In Costa Mesa and will continue to produce all three lines in their main facility. All boats are trallerable sailboats. Quick Draw Wins BCYC Series Race VKtle e pWik n.-ti 1nd $Qlld t>ldt wUI be rKefWCI llO lfler Lin~ FOll"l•ln' \ltlltr C11ifol"lll1 t270I WHEREAS. 111t CllY prtffflll'f' '*"'"' t ... n 5:30 p.M., s.i>ttmtitr 21, 1m In th• ,., ' Of'dtr of '"' 9otrd of Tru11iu. G udio the Gold S • Mlle ffMmtnl •ncf t19rit..i·w•r tor (Onftrenct room •l Ille Hunllrl{llon hKll Founitln V•Her khool 0111r1c1. 11t09tt 8 WOn w•tw ft11t 1IUlllOlff loclttd 11'1 Trtet No. UNon Hlllh Schoell Olitrlcl, ltO'I: kY"'" Bf!itn, Clerk of tht 8oerd . ........_y aft OWlird origlnally lt205 tnd fl inort PVllC\ll•rtv dtterlbtd In ttenlh 11r .. 1, Hunllnoton 8 t t c II ' Publlll'ltd Or1no1 Coe1t 01)IY-Piiot. ... "'r'. • ""' "9•1 dtlCl'IDtloll •tt•clltd l'M•lo •nd C1Ufon1lt ~ •• , Wtlkh time •nd plK• AUllVll 21), 21. 1rn 1"5-73 dedicated to the Snowbird l11eorwt1111 ..-.111 ,, E•ri111u A1 •nd 111t bid• w111 "-P1Jl>Llc1y openld •r>d r1•d. __ ----------- Cl b th I t J ph WHEREAS portl.on• of Nici public AU bid• tllfill 1)1! c1t1r1v mtrktd Hllll-ass Y e a e ose A. Mstmtnt •ri lllll'IKHNN fOI' prtaent or 111111* •..c11 N._ SChool 11tw11n11a111111, PUBLIC NOTICE Beek of Balboa Island Mrs prOSf*tlvt UM ....... of • MW trKt PlwlM 1 .... N•. IN. Beek -•-•• ted the tro.ph ' layout •nd tl'le •v•ll•blHly of., witabl• E•tb bid 10 lit In tccordanc• wltll •IC'TITIOUl ausiNass 1~ca y to '""'""' .... """' fct' Wllat 111'141 pl•n .. tpaclflc•tlOflt •!\Cl otlHtr Contr•cl MAMIE STATIMl!HT the ' -··-c•--s I •L-po.trpo1n wll!'lln Mild lrt<f doc:umtflll -Oft flit with Ille Hun· ~ UUj or Uftl'. NOW TH e ll E , 0 ~ E ee IT tt119tOt1 l•Kh UnlOtl Hl.(111 SchoOI Dllltlcl Thi foUOWl1!9 person 11 ool119 bllllfltl) Western Region Junior Cham-RE solvEo bY lht cuy counc'n "fhl cs. 0tt,1"'','' ,"""' 1~'?"11,'"!.~1h .,street,...,•,,,,.,,. •~:THE TYPE $ETTERS '" e 111h . hi Troph • Iv of Fou11t•ln V•lltr !NI II .ri.u hold • flOIOll ........ OfJMI "'· • • . PJOOS p. y WlMers: SHIOllc llaar fng tor PllrotHt of conildttlfl\I llffk• of tlle Archll.c:11: All91• & MHJer StrNT, Cosll M•••· CalltOf'nl•. 9U27 (1) Mark Gaudio NHYC wlltlhtr to vtcal• ttia •boYN•sc:rlbtd Ar<:ll!tK11, U06 lu1h StrHT, san1• An•. HASTY P•INT, INC. IC1Ulornl1l ' ' l)Of1IOM of• puOllc ffHl'Ml'll S.ld llffr· Ctllfornla t2101. Coplu rnay ba otit•lned 41 E. 171~' Street, Co,11 Me1f, rt¥.!; (2) Mark Rastello, BYC, Int Wit bl 11e1c1 In !ti. eounc1i Clltmbtrs. bV Gtner•t Conlr1ct0f'1 •nd 111011 bidding ~~tornle 1 1 cOMI • d , <Qll • (3 ) Jim Buckingham c11v Hill 10200 Slalw Avtt111t Foullt•ln work tJfldat WPat•t• C011tr1c11 •• Ille • l>us 11e1s 1 u e v • ' ' \111!ey ~ Tutldtr S1pt1mb« '4 1'73, 11 Archllk11 office onlr upon • deposit of CCW'POl'lllOft. NHYC, 47; (4) Dick Munroe 1:00 p'.m., Of' 1, ~ lhtt'eettw •• tht 1100.00 w ••I. E•tn con1r•c1or 11 llmlled 01rryl W1lktr, NHYC 4•· (') K t Lan ( d' tQtfld• perml! 10 thre• Mb, lloow•wr, •OdllLon.l copLe1 Prt1lde11t ' o;o, " ur g or • IE IT FURTHER RESOLVED thtt fllt mey bt purchestd tor tl'lf ConlrKtor. Tlllt ila!ement w11 flied wltri lht Coun. WYC, 51; (6) CUrt Schmidt e>.puty ·c11y Cltt-11'1111 c•UM 11 to be 0.PO&ll• W111 bt rttul\dtd on rf!urn ot tr Clerk of Or1ng1 COYnlY on A11911st 2. Llyc ( I M k Re Ids' P1Jbll1hfd In fti. Or•not C011$l D1Hy Pllo! llldl coplu In good cond1110ft wrtllln tfve 191;. 1 55; 7 ar yno , Nl'WIPIPtr durl119 Illa two IUCCnll\ff dl'l'I llltr t ... Didi fl'9 optf!td. No IUS« SDYC 58· (8) Craig Martin woelcs prlOf' 1o lM llffrlno •lld wn retul'ld1 wlll bl m•de for extra 1et1 1 "· c 1 •t7UT ' ' ' h.lrlller ClllH not!c• of tha time end pltct pu~b•ltd. Publ ll'U1d votll9• Olltf 01 ly Piiot, MBYC, 61; (9) Mark Williams,· of 11earlng to bt p0sfld In ,1 IHll ttwH Eich bid 1ri111 bt 1ccomp1nled bV the A1.111u't 6. 13. 20, '11. 1971 2411·13 CYC 69Jh • (10) Clark Pothoff p\1ce1 ·~ tri.e llnt of 1111 MMmtnt pro. NCvdty r.terrtd 10 111 ttw ConTr•ct • ' ' IHl'td TO tit \f1catlld. doc:vments Ind IW tht 1111 ol propolfd PUBLIC NOTICE NHYC, 78. PASSED AND ADOPT!O •I 1 ll""'•lar 1ub<ontr1ctor1. 1 95 Race In LIYC Regatta. v•• TNI DISTRICT 1'91.ffVfl !NI rlgllt to r•·l-------------meellno of I'-City Cflll'ICll tlllt 711'1 dty tect •ny or •II bids Of' to wilvt •nr Ir· of AUll~E)i~1'lG .. E 0 "'OTT rtQularlttn or ln!Of'melltlt1 In 1ny bids or ''z.:J~O~~A:~~1:::s · ,..., In tll• bf0dl119. I I ATTEst'ror TM! DISTRICT has del.,.mlned !lie 11~~ follow 1111 Ptf'IOl'I I doing bllslneu E\IEL YN H GRIPPO llMtr1t pr•~allln9 r•te ol per diem w111e1 . MEDICAL OFFICE SERVICE 'H6 DIWIV CllV. Cler-In Ille locetlty In wlllcll Thi• work 11 lo ~ Gtrden Grove llvd,, G•tden Grovt, STATE OF CALIFORNIA l perlormMI tor tacll crtll Of' type ol Cal!I. 9'16'4 COU NTY OF ORANGE I u . workm11n nffded lo exe.:ut1 lllt Contract. MIChHI O.nnl1 Fltldlng, S3 f CITY OF FOUNTAIN V•LL EY) ThtM r1hlt ware publl1htd In Ill• HUii· COf'Oll•do. No 4 LD!l9 8HCll Calif ll119ton 8H<:h N-1 AVG\1'$1 31 and ' ' . I, EVELYN H. GR IPPO, Otputy City S1~mbtr 7, lfn •nd 1rt on tile •I the 90$14 Clerk of the City of Founltln \1111..,,, DISTRICT office loc:attd 11 1902 a•ven dl!~~11bu1ln111 11 l:Dl'lducted br •11 In· C•Jllorn l1, do h1rlb'I' Cffflfy that the tffnll! SlrHt, H1111llngt0ft 8 ta ch , Mlctltll o Fleldlng loregolng rfl(llvllon w1s r"l!vlarlV 111-C1Ufornl• 92Ul. COl)ln m•r bt obt1!ntc1 Tll!i al•tement W,, flied wlllt tM Coun· TrOduced to the Cltv COOllCll tt Its on raq..,.11. A COPY of ltlew rlllS 1h1ll be 0 R111v111r Mffl!n11 hlld Oft !ht 7th d•Y ot poslld •I tltt lob Ille. IV Clerk of r•1111e County on July 20, Avavsf, 1973, •1'1111 w11 •t wlcl "'""1111 oattd: Al.Ill""' 10. 1913. 19n . revulerly peued and tdopttd bV the Slgntd: P•11I E. Hiii follow!ng volt. to wit: , linl"tu Aul~lant AYES: COUNCILMEN: Adltr, Just, Oper11lon1 FU,1S Publllhed Or1ng1 C0111I O•llv Piiot. Ju· ly 30 •nd A1.111111t 6, 13. 20, 191J 22J2.73 N. f $coll, HonlnMn. Svallllld Pubflshtd Or11111e Coe1t Delly PUol, 1nety· ive boats in nine NAYES: COUNCILMEN : NOftt Avav•t 13. 20, 21, 1913 2Slf·13 PUBLIC NOTICE cl ABSENT: COUNCILM EN : Non• asses turned out Sunday for Eve1y11 H. Grippo Lid 11 , [)epUty-City Cltrk PUBUC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSINl!IS O Se Yacht Club s August Put>ll1heo Or•noe C0111t Dally Pnot .. l--------------I NA.Ml! STATl!MaNT Regatta for small boats. All A1.111ust 20. 21, 1f1l 2491·73 ,.~ezlI~o~lA::~•::~s ,,;,,.,. 1o11ow11111 per.on 11 dol1111 bu11"ns "led . 'd h Th ,,,,_., I ' I AAA POOLS. 26012 e. G•ttv Dr .• races were sa1 ms1 e t e PUBLIC NOnCE ,,. • .,...119 PttlOll • 01n11 bus ness L•oun• N!o~1. ca111. '2677 bay. Trophy winners in each· I----------'-----. THE SCHOOL DOOR , 1601 Whlll O.k, cti1~·~~;Jddll, , .... l..ak•fltld. El T~o. NOT\CI! OP TlllUSTl!a'S SALE COS!• Mesi, Cell!. 92626 Tlllt, buslntis 11 conduct.cl by an In-class: TS Ho tf71 D«lt 8. Mlch1el, 1601 Whitt O.k, dlvldu•I · · • · Ci.11 Meu, cant. 92626 i= 11: Wldl LID0-14A -(1) Al Oleson, A.9:. !:"1~,m~.,',.1'e.,~~:'nc:1 ~i:'1~~0C,,~ dl!~~~.11>u11ntu Is conducTed br •n in-Thia 11!1':.nen1 w~1 flied with !hf Cou11• BYC; (2 ) Marty Lockney socvrlly-Tiiie 1nsur•nc1 com111nr, tzs Dori• a. Mlcllttl ty Cl«k of Or•nu• Countr on Au;u1t 2, ' Nortll 8rotcrwtr, In the Cltr of Sent• An1. This sttlemtnl w•i tllld w!lll tllt Cou11-1913· LlYC. ~::~~~Nt:ur~ ... A~$~U.RIJ~!~ j;J.lffk or Or•l'llll' County on A1111u11 10, Publlslltd Or•no• Coe1t D•llY '";~ LID0-14B -(I) Don Palm· '' Trustee under the Deed of Trll!t execv. "1t'1J A1.111u11 6, 1l, 20. 27. 1913 2.0S-13 . led by EUGENE w. l!IEHSON Ind Publl•llld Or1rog• Coa•I O•llY Piiot. qwst, LIYC; (2) Don Aarvold, MARJORIE E. BENSON, H11swnd 1nc1 A1.1111r11 ll, 20, 11. •nd S1pt1mt1tr 1, PUBUC NOTICE W!fe 11 Joint Tenanb. rt corded 1973 ll(l).7J LIYC; (3) Don Bradbury December 1s, 197', es C10C11mtn1 no. 13663 I-------------"'"'-I------,-,-.,------. ' Jn bOolr. 11U11 , pa~ 983 of Off!clal Re.:ord1 PUBLIC NOTICE SL~.fS BYC: (4) Ken Harrison !n the olllce of the Recorder ot Or•noe sU~ElltO• COUllT 01" THI Live. (5) R W I ' Cou11ry-, C•lllornla, by r11son of d.t1ull In -STATE OP CALIPOlltrlllA POii • OY 00 Sey, the J)olymenl Of' parf0f'm.onc1 o! obtlge. FICTITIOUS IUllHISS THE COUNTY OP Oll:ANGI! LJYC tlol'ls itturfd l'htnby lncll.ldll'lll !ht bre•ch MAME STATIMENT No. A·77tll SENI. OR SABOT (l) D .,... ~eult, rtotlce of wlllch w111 recorded The lollowln11 persons ''' doing NOTI CE OF HEARING OF PET ITION -ave M1y 3, im, II documtnt no. (In, In book l>u1lntn •• , FOR PROBATE OF WILL ANO FOR Tingler LIYC· (2) Dor is 10618, p1111 21,, of Rid 0111ci11 Records, LOU'S EQUIPMENT, :nt s. M••toor LETTERl: TESTAMENTARY . ' • wilt sell al public 1vc:tion for Clish. 81vtl .. No. 73 ; M.tU lno Addrns, P.O. E11tt• ol Elinor P. Slowe, Oec111- K1rst, BYC; (3) Mary Jane without w1rr1nfy •s to 1111t. POSM11lon, Box 5211, SaMI• Ana. C1llf. tt'°' Ml. Tyl Bye or encvmbr•ncn, ltll lnl&rHI CDllY'tYl'd to Annt Lou Llvlng1!(11'1, J2t S. Harbor NOTICE IS HERE8'f GIVEN lhll er, • Slid Trustee br said Died of Trull In Blvtl,, No. 23, San!• Anl, Calll., 92104; JOSEPH INE 8. PEREUE 1>1s lllld herein LASER -(l) D 0 n Propl1'1V 11t11at• In "" Clly of '"""'· M•lt -P.O. eox S271 • PlilliOft FOR: PROBATE OF WILL ANO Countv of Or1r191, Stal• of C1lllornl1, Monte Elmo Llvlng5ton, 329 S. H1tbor FOR LE TT ER S TESTAMENTAll'f Stoughton, BYC; (2) Drew deKrlbtd •I 81vd., No. 23. S•nta An1, C•Jlt. n7lM; r•f1r1nce to wlllch 11 m•de f.,.. lvrlher Gram, PVSA, PARCEL ~:X~!~~ ;·~~•ct No. ma, ~~I ·i:11~1~s52:~uc!ed by •n rn-:;:\~'ii! !~:i:.1':!7.f'~ ~::.•:.'. MONTGOMERY-12 -(1 ) In 1n1 City ol lrvll\I, County ol Dl'•no•. dlvldv•I. 1tn, 11 9:00 •.m., ln tht courtroom ot J Stat• of C•llfOf'nla, 11 per m.p recordtd Ann i Lou Llvlng11on Dtc>art111tnt No. 3 of Mid court. •' 700 erry Montgomery, VYC. In book :ns, PIOtt 20 10 2'l 1nclu11ve o• Thl1 st1temen1 w1s fllld wllll the Coun· Civic Center orlw Wnt, In Ille Cltr ot KITE_ {1) Denise Doering MIK1tt1ntooa Mlop1, 111 tfl• o111c1 at the IV Clerk of DI'•~ Countr on A11111111 10, Stntt An1. Ctlltornl•. • County Retordll' ol Mid County. nn. 0.llld A\111. 9, 1973 NHYC. EXCEPT •II oll, oll rlghh, mfnttala, 1"27,11 Wl11!•m E. St JOfln, SABOT A (1) J k F mlnerel ri1111u, n11ur•I 11•s rlgh!I end Publllhed Ortl'lft Coe1t O•tl'f P!lot. counrv Clll't; -ac ran· Oltler hrdroc:1rDon1 bY Wllelsoevtr n•me Auo111t ll, 20, 21, •nd Septembll' 3, KINOIL & ANOllltSON co LIYC· (2) Mike Hatch known 11111 may be within Of' under 1tld 1973 241.73 Int H. •rttdwer, 4th Floer ' ' ' land togetlltr with Iha Pll's>etu1I right of PUB S•nll A111, Clllf. HHYC; (3) Steve Rados, drlmn11, m1111ng, •~p1cw1n11 •nd Q()tr•tino UC NOTICE Ttt, IJ14l m-mr NHYC· (4) Madeline Koll trietmr •nd stOf'lng In •nd removing IH TMIE IUPllltlOllt cou•T o" All-'fl fw Pttltl-r Live ' > ' the stme lrom Uld ltnd Of' 1nr o!Mr THI STATE Off CALll'OlllNIA IN Publllhld Oranot CGISI Diiiy ,lie!, . . land, lnctudfng Ille l'lollt 10 wll[fl1lcick or AMO •0111 THI COUNTY OP OlANO'I A"'91/•I "'· I.I. 2t, ltn • ~7] $~ B _ (1) Bruce dlrec!lonellr orut •nd mf111 from lands H .. Antn Crary, NHYC; (2) Lisa Grun· ~ :.a,n !i~; t~';.'~1~:0,:1~::;1e,':!: 0~~·:,.,101EsMow CAUtl fO• CHANGl d Llyc (3) Cind Har . lhrougll or tcross ltw 11,/bwrfa<t ol th« In Iha Mll'l'W of ft1t ....... I fl ofl---===~------PUBLIC NOTICE y. ; y r1son, l•nd 1111'1lnlD011• described. Ind lo bol-JAYNE ELIZAIETM THo;..;sON on F PICTITIOUS IUSINISS LJYC tom svc:ll whlptfocked or dlrac:tlontlly ,...,11111 of Mama ' « trllAMI! STATIMl!HT · drllled weU1, tun11t11 and 11111111 wnotr TM ippllcaHofi ol JAYNE !'.LIZABETH ~ following ,.,.son II OO!nt buslntSs SABOT C -(1) Mike and ~•Ill or beyond Illa •Xl•rlOf' THOMPSON tor c:tMng. of neme h1vl 11• Penckney BCYC· (2) J ay llmll• tnareot. and to rtdr lll, retvnnet. Dffn flltd 111 Court, •fld 11 •ppprillQ tr,: STlltESS lllD co. 'IS6 Rvr•I Pl. , , 1q11lp, mtlnt1!11, rtf)lll~. deepen •nd Mld •llPlk•tlon flllt Ila! flltd Cost• Mn.t, C•, mv Shelton LIYC· (3) Carter IJPll'•t• •fl'f wch Miit or mlne!I. pllc•llon pr~f'lll ttltt hllr ,,.~ ·~ t Jtmes JOHph Leooux, 2156 Rvr•I Pl, be ' ' without, llowtwr, !ht rlllht to drHI, chlnotd to JAYNE ELllAIETH ELG osta Mtte, C•. tu11 Sa r, BCYC; (4 ) Wendy mine, stare, 1xplcwa .~ Optrtle Now, ltlarttore, II Ii llertbr or6tred ~nd Thl1 bUlln1s1 II cond11Cltd bV •n In- Taylor LIYC· (5) Sheryl l\\rlJllDh the 1Urf•c. or the l.IPJ'er 500 dlrtctlld, "''' •II par-sons Fnterei!f!d 1n Ofvldval ' ' lea! ol l'ht $Ubsll!'l'Ka of fM l•fld •1ld n.t d btl J•met J. ltDoux Rados, NHYC. t>ereln•bow dfl(rlbed ••• rt$tfWd IM o .. ~~I ,0 !nppt:~ 2,:· :; ~°"'1.~ Thi• Slllt!Mnl Wll flltd with !he Coun· Sloop Wins Dana Series Oass A !ht deMI recordtd NOYtmbtr U , lt72. timber 19n, •t 2,00 o'clock p M of Id IV Clerk ol Or11111e County on Jiiiy 2r, PARCEL 2: A ,,.,.,_.xdullw ap. I ' ' · ' 11 1'13, pur1en1nt ffllmtnl for ""' pUtpl)UI II d•r 0 lllow CIUSI WflY <lfM •PPIJClllan fO( •·S10n $11 forth In •nd over the land described clltnoa of NIN •bollld not bl. 11r111ltd. Pvtrll111td Dr11t9• Coe1t Dilly Piiot In Artlcle \/, S«llon 1 ot tlllt cert1ln or:!.~' :rt!:n=r'::i 'r:: ~;.~ ~!!; Jllfy 30 •1'1111A1.111u11"13, 20. 1913 un.1i decl•r1111on of coven1n11, cOlldltlOftt 1nd 0 ,111 Piiot , 11 ...... ~ aa ,:1----=:::::,,-:-=--occ-----,..,1rlctlons rKCl!'dtd Jn aoot. 960 Pt0e ' ~--Pff °' o-r• PUBLIC NOTICE 381, Otllclal RecOfdl of Or•noa County, clrculallOft. prl11ttd In stld c-ty, •I leesl ----::::::=::::::-:-=-'---C•1lfornl1 onct each weell tor four S\lt~lw Wfflls OTE· ~Id 1 I prior lo Ille dlY of Ykl llttr1ng. ll'ICTITIOUS IUSINESl N . llnd I descrlbad Dn tlle O•ttd 11111 9tl\ oar of Aval/St lt11. NAM£ STATIMl!ICT Co11nty Ttx AIMhl'IMlnl Roll tor !ht llsc11 CLAUDE M. OWENS ' Tiie lollowlno Plf'JOllS er• doing year 1972.n •• A.P, No. "'"'20'J·U: Judpe o1 said 5_.1or court bu1lM1s as U. U.001, HICICl!Y, CAl"l:ITZ AND •11tlCICNlllt WALICEll GRAPHICS, ... E. 17th The stretl llddre11 ol stld Pf"Opertr ,, •Y JAMIS T. CA"rr:t. • Street, COlll Ml!Jf, C1lllornl• '2621 purPQrltd ID be •361 Srldgtwt'f' S!ttet, ltsh MKArtW awlttlrd, Svl!t NI 47S HAST'f PRINT, INC., ICtllfornlaJ, 41 lrvlnt, C1., Ind 11 glll'tl'I wlfll.oul lltblllly Irv!"' C•Hlarn{I '2717 ' IE. 17tri Slrfft, COii• Milt. C1Ulornle •s to lhe c0f're<:Mt11 tnareot. .,. c'n•> _ _.,. Thi• bllllneu r1 COllducttd bY , cor· Stld ult Is befnt m1de for ti!• Pllf'POM : -par1tlon. J · h I I d 36 of p.ay1ng obll11ttlon1 1«:ured bY Mid An-y fwi AHllcaM O•rryl L W•ltll' ~ erenua 1 an s an er · Dttd o1 Trust. Publl1Md Oral'IOt Cot11 O•!!Y Pllo!, This •l•t•ment.wei 11..d 1 h sloop skippered by R i Ch Otled: August 6, ltn ~.·~ual 13, 20, 21, tnd SepTemb• .. 1. Ir Cltrk of Oringt County w: l~ifs~ . SECURITY TITLE '~ 2.S1S-7l 1913. ' Ritcheson of Channel Islands INSURANCE COMPANY -· F·27ll$ yacht Club was the Class A Br Chris Louk••· superv!!IOr PUBLIC NOTICE ~ 1451.0C: . Sunda . the f"fth TrultM Sfttlon Publl1btd Or•l'lll• Coest Oilty Piiot, winner y tn I SPS J7tO:J AUOUJ;I ,, 13. :io, 2T, ltn 1'16-73 race of Dana Point Yacht PubllUlld Orange Co••' O•Hr Pilot. ll'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS A1.111u1t lJ, 20, 11, 1"3 2~9·13 NAME STATl!Ml!HT PUBUC NOTICE Club's PHRF Series. Thi 1onow1no person Is doh1o bli•l11tt•j---;;;::;:=:::::.-:==-'--- Class B winner was Karl PUBLIC NOTICE ••: R. 8. WHOLESALE co .. lut E. fllCT1T1ou1 1u11N111 Lassey's Sola Via, DPYC, and Edlno•r, Slnt• An1, C•lll '210! MAMI ITATIMINT the Wl·nner m• Class C WaS fmt •• Raymond 8olct, ~Ii Pebb11 Ln., ~lie foll ..... 1111 person la doing bu•IM» ISCNW lUI'• HU!'lllnolon INCll, C.111. '2644 ••• Dick Dickey's Tantivy, DPYC. NOTICI OJI IHT•NDIO Thli 1>u11nus 11 conducted by '" 111. 1 ,:A~~lt. f0~0~2ftAPH.1cs, • E. Sl!.CUllllTY INTalltlST AO•IE•MEHT dlvldu•• ' OI a ,..._, C•\lfor11l1 9'U27 Summary: IS.Cs. ,,.1 ..... 111 u.c.c.) Aeymond aolca HASTY PRINT, INC. (C1 lfortll1J .... CLASS A -(I) Jeremiah· Matice 11 hereby oiven lo crldlt0f'1 of This t111tment w11 flied with Ille Coun· E. 11111 '''"'' Cosl• Mesi, C1UPornlt • tllt within namtd p.trllts llltl • MCUrlly Iv Clerk of Or•1111• Countr on A119utt ID This bushM!h II conducted by • ctr- (2) Lush Life, II, Jack Bay, SI lnter11t rs Intended to bl mid• Ofl im. POl'•tlonoirrvi L. W•lk BYC; (3) Zapatero, Bi 11 ~~~~.~ ~:i~~~H~rl~ttie Put>ll11>ed Or1~ Coalt O•IY '1i1!t Prt!iliien1 "' Fodor, DPYC; (4) De C.Ore, Intended O.blor 11: Ml• Tr1d1r1, Inc., ~mwusl 13, 20, '11, incl Stptembfir 3, ty T~i!r:'•01~~·~!!'t Wiii! !Ill COllM- Cal P .Ion NHYC 4255 Mer!lnoal• W1r. NfWPOrt le1cl'I, 2416'73 1J71 n,, Ofl .. 119u1t J, re , • C1llf0f'nl1, CLASS B -(1 } Sola Via· TM n1mtt •lld bu1lnes1 addr"1 of Illa PUBUC NOTICE 14ft« , ' Intended Security P•tlfe& ire: P•vl 1 ------·--------(2) Skirr, Art Phelps, DPYC; e1nn•I, Gern•r w. Klno. Lriy Hui.I" SLfl•M (3) Torrey' David Cooper' '~'°"'~ill West 146!" srr..i. G•rd-. SUPElltlOll COUlltT OP TNR DPYC Th1t ttit prooer!Y pertlf!lflt 11trlt0 11 STATI 011 CAU•OllHIA !IOllt Publl~llod Or1nge COii! Au;ust 6. 13. 20, 27, lt13 PUBLIC NOTICE • 1 T f deKrll>fd 111 Ot11er•I ts: Me~l•la. wp. TMI COUltTY 01" OlltAHOI CLASS C-( ) an ivy. piles. mercilandl11, 1<1ulpme111, afld ft NOTICE O• ::;.,:i~or: PlrTfTtOM PICTITIOUS •us1H1ss 10(.llfd 11: Alli M•rllno•I• Wly , Ntwport •01t Pt1tO•ATI o• WILL AMD FOii NAMI STAHMINT PUBLIC NOTICE 8uc11. ca111om11. Ll!TTllll TISTAMINTAllV The to11ow1ns Ptt1ori1 •r• doing FICTITIOUS •uslNl!SS m!~'11s''l:,:,:J!, ":11~ty(~~M"~.='!i o!:':!!:ci of RUlllV ,, lllkUMLEY, bu•!r::e ·~~881TT .. co., 22A Jilt SI ~: NAME STATEMeNT 1111 ofllca of GremtrCY Etcrow Comp•11r, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ltllt E H Huntlnoton 8Hch, Cel, t2U1 " The follo..,.1119 peooni •rt dolnQ 3'71 West SIJtltl SI., Las A/llflea, BRUMLEY 11t1 filed llerlln 1 .,.i1t1on'io; Roge,r Mtck Grtflllh, '112Dtb St, Ho. bualneJJ •$: Callfornl• 90020. Oft Ot •fltr Autu1t lOt1\, pt'Dblt. ol ...,.111 •nd for Lelt.rt Ttat.mtn· C, Hunllf'llllDll hrrt~, Ctl. n~ ICOLl;-WELLSf8AY AREA, 11M5 SkV ltn: fir)' rtt.rtnee to whkll •• maoa lor ICalllarlflt Jull• 0 K..r., 617 2llth $1,. P•tk Circle, lr~ll'MI, C•lltor11I• ""' so fir as fl known to Mid lntffldld tvf'fllar PtNlcul•rt. Incl ttltl IM fftM •nd Na. c. Hllflllngton a..ch, C•I. t2'4 i I Don1ld M ICotl "" VI• Lido $oucl Sllcl.ll'td P•rlltl Hid lnltndtd OtOIDr' PIK• of llHrlflO Illa tam• fits fMlll Ht This buslntll •• COncllleltd by • (lln• . . "'rt I t2'60 ' intd tllt folowlng eddlllontl bulflltSS fOt A 2*. 1m ·OO fftl p.trlf'llnfllp. "';~,:,e;c~ El\ro~~ ~ Lindt lih. namn,_and tcldl'llll .. wllhht ttta ll!rat c~ °' o.aJ!.!'t N::";:• ~fl :_ht\' Thi 11:coar M. Griffith Ntwp&rl 811dl, Callfornlt nUG .,...,, ... 11 PHI: None. (OIH'f, 1t 700 Civic Ctnltr Drive Wflt, fl I ttllt!Tlt!lt Wfl 111"1:1 wltri tM COllll-- 3. Lee c. s1mmfi, 94 \.Incl• Ille, Oattd. July 3. l'13, ll'lt City of hnl1 Ana, Calltotnl•. ty Cltt'll; ot Ot•fltt County °" AllOUll '· Newport B1acb, C1llfornlt 92660 PIUI 8ltlllll,1• Ot!M AUCll. 9, lf'3. ltn. '· D•vld P. Mlddltmes, 11 H•lf Moofl i:::;r .. ~~r:· WILLIAM I. lt JOHN. P-tmJ t Orlvt. Coron• dfl Mir, C•UIOf11I• '1'25 lflfotl'ldld Secured P•rtfn County Cl«k Ai:~\1~3, ~?,1,h°''' Oallr Pll(>t. s. Evtrlft O•vl1, 3'Df Stndune Lant. Publf•ll4G 0.-•no• CDlll OaUr Piiot kUIDIL • AMDlll:SON 1411·7) J cr~f~~'L.c·~::~~.~~ Port AllOlrlt 20, ,,,, ""'n :!.."A~!·&,._ PUBLIC NonCE ~ Quick Draw, sJcjppered by A•t>.J11i, Nf'lfport eeac11, C•lll«nl• nwo T•1 (714) ....,,." 't Eddl·e Arnold was the w·mne 1. Gtoroe o. GlblOl'I, Jr., 311 Old L• PUBLIC NOTICE "'""'"' rwi l'tt1t1-1TAT•M•NT Clfl WtTMDll:AWAL "•OM r Honda Rotd, Woochldl. C11l .... 11!1 Pui.Ushtd Ortf!Vt Coat! OlllY Pllot ~All:TMlll:lNlfl OPtllATING UNDI• o! the PHRF Class A division •· we1t1 Farvo Mort!}Age 1nvestot"1, 1....., Awud 1._ 1s. 20, 1tn "'31·73 PICTITIOus au11N1ss HAMI '°' North Stpwlved&, Sult. noo, El UBLIC . Tht followl1111 """' h•s Wlltldrawn ., in Bahia Corinthian Yacht Segundo. Call10fn11 91124$ NOTICE TD CRSDITORI p _NOTICE • O~ral parlfllf fram 1111 .,.r1fllftlllo CJUb'S <:urfimer SUn Series This buJl11t11 Is being randUCltd l>Y a ~¥:~:·g: C~l.~=~-:rA ~~: fliCTITIOUS IUSINlll •r•ffl!O Ul'ldll' lhll llCllllOll'I bll1l11t11 .., • Otrltrt l P•rlntrshlp, N 0 CNtAMO• NAME ITAT•M•HT n•tnt of S.C.U.l .A. LIMITED •t 1005 The Series is sailed each Fri-KOLL-WELLS/OAY AREA THI c:ou TY fl Tiit followlno ptff()nJ .... 6olno 101$ w. llln Sir.ti, Cost• Mm, c.. . d . h fir TlmDllly L. $1r•<lll' H._ A'16'11 I buslntts 11, r._!ht flcllHOlll bual11es1 l'lflln9 ll•tM\tnt I ay rug t. Thll lllltmtnl w•s !!ltd wllh 1111 Coun· Eltatt of ELOISE M. c 0 N,N I s s. KOLL BUSINESS CENTIEkS • • ... vi"" ffla Ptrtnettfllp Wll flltd on .l•fllllrr. PRRF-A-(1) Quick Draw;~ Clerk~ Orinot Coufltr, calllO!'Mla on ~~E 1s HiREBY GIVEN 10 tha AllEA, ll'ltS Sky "''* Cll'ct•. l"'IM' ~~.'~.V:: :;a.:-,-......,ot ~--"'!!· (2) S -•· Bob Th Is """' " m nnn Cttdltoh of "" atiow NIMd dtctc11111 ~1tor111• f2"4 "'""'r"'" W11'4Aer, a b' -~,,,.. -~ ••• ,, .,,~ ''"'· lhtt •II ""°"' n.vi:::.,i:•-"i'"" "" 1. OOMN "'· KGll. t0t 'IA• Lido loud. R0111l4 o.nn11 Ntwtu WYC • (3) ----a Bo ,...,.., ...,. .,._ '' d -.,. 1 n NtwllOl't ltacti. c .. 1fDrnla ~ 413 at1v111 L•ne • .lllal:I 1 AutVJI 6, I), 10, • 1173 1A10-~ Ml ~ .,. o t tMm 2. llcNnt C. •111ott, N Linda lilt, lilbOa, CA rull Searles. BYC; (4) Sea Ranger, PUBLIC NOTICE :/Trie~'*:"~ .~J:C.'::!1: H~ 1..m. c.v'°"'1•.,... ,.~11had 0r c •mn Bob Staats, BCYC·, ( •) to """"'' "*"" wltll tt1t MeelMlry 3. lM c . l•IMltt. '4 Ufldtl 1111. 1 " '""· oaat Delly P!Jot, .lu--" ........... ' N~ hedl. callforrlla ,,.. ., ' •f'ld AUQust " ''· 20. 1'13 1)44.n Lahalna, Will Fordt.anJ, BCYC ITAr•M•WT Oft AIANDONMIHT ~,::,JOHN c. sAtvi:.":: "'o.. '·Ml...,,_, 11 Htfl MoOl'I or.. PUBLIC NOTIC PHR.F·B _ (I) Terry's OP' ut• °" PICT!T1ou1 Wllf'l:llffOttw.s!lli.W.H""'1--. CtrON dill MM, ca115'*' · E IUSINllt NAM• C.tltol"l'lft "660, wtllcfl It ll'lt pla<t ff I. 1-.tl Dwla. .... Lant, Teapot, Mark Hughff, BYO. TM 1o1WW1111 Pit* 11t1 •IM!MllMd tN •-• .. • ........,.... 111 ... man.rt ff.,.,... dfl. Mar. c.11'°""' PrcTIT1ous 1u11111ss LllJO.lf (I) DAtt ""-• II .. of JM lk;tlltovs Ml'!M'&a namt D.l.A,. ~·fnl1111 to """ tttart of talcl daCMtfll 6. Tlmat1ty L. Sfrldlf, 1-,,0 "'°" Al• NAMI STATIMIH't -•""&er Ii' l,er, Alt.T CJtA'1' Ol'CORATOlt.I. at '''" .w. Wltllln tour mtfllhl afttr !tit flrJt Mlle.: btna. NIWflO'f ~ C•llftntl• '2660 T/la fOllo'wlno ~rion Is dolf!O IWl!net BCYC; (2) Bob Smith, BCYCi laldv Clrclt, Faunt1l11 V1Hf't', C.lltomll l/lll'f ot fills notice. '· a.or,. 0. Glblon. Jr.1 in Old Lt 11: • (3) Rid I I kl CYC n~. O.ttd .1utr ff. lf7J. HOflda 11:o.11, WllDllbkta, c, U•11lt Tl ltMO\IX, 1~13 Fo1191ow, lrwln• Jey Po it s , B , Tiii nctlllov. MlfltM 111me r1terr1<1 lo Mtrndtl MatOlnnTa "octwell '' ,., E ,~ .. Inc .. Isl ''""'llOIOfl C1UI, fU6.t ' LASER (I) MI k. tbo'la Wtl Hiid Ill Or•no• Co1,111ty on '""''"'of tM WI" of A.verl\I .. MtrifOird. COMICtlcilt OiillJ C•1'91 1. Ttn'llOfllen, 1Nl3 P:o1111ow. NOWlflfitr 2a, 1'11. '.T 'nils Mll'lffl It COl'ld'1Cl.cl oY . Hmllfd lrvlllt, C•lll, ~ Brinkman BCYC IOW•rd Llfll•"•lll, 1MOS T•marlfld Illa llloff n•rnld .... ,., 111rtlllf'tlllp. Tiii• butlMU Is ~!Id b'( Ill 111-- • • St .. llOVl'llllll vautr. ''"'· tl10I .IONN c. lAt..V-lll TllflOth'( L. Stttdtf dl~l""l ----KITE -Scott Foresman, Thi• blltlnt1i w•• c-olldvc:t1<1 by '" MU wntcnn or •• a.it•,.., Th~• sf•t"""'t wat flltd wltlt !tit COllll< C•rOI 1. Ttrmoh!t11 ----Bcyc. llldfYldlMI, N....,. IHCll. Ctllf. ,,.. ty Ci.rt of Or•flltl Caunty, C•llfOl'l'll• on n.11 1t1ttmoll'll WM "'" ""''" tilt COllT'I· E:d'Ward 1.1m1111kl T•h (n41...,.. Jt,lly p, 1•n. ty Cltl'k ot OI'.,,.. tounty on Julr 11, 1•11 BC SYAC.B?'f, (2)-Ga(Jry) CMaoollenr, BFCabeYCr, Publli11ec1 0ranot coa11 D4nv "~::, •=[,!' o':!::~:..t O•lly Piiot. Ju· PLllM••had Or•not eo.11 0111y p1.!i~ PVbll111tc1 or11111 CD111 0111., ..,=~ • AUQull 6. lJ, 20. ,,, 1m 2409·73 ly 30. l l'ICI AU0\111 '· IS, :io, itn %)!1·13 ,., z afld Al/GUii '· 13. 20. 1m 2w.n )llf'f 30 ..... AUOll•l t.13. '°' 1tt3 iJ».n • E . - Monday, August 20, 1973 DAILY PILOT JfJ Nature~s Minorities Struggle to Live EAGLE , LORD-OF SKIES, RULES OVER DWINDLING KINGDOM MAN DESTROYING GORILLA, NEAREST ANIMAL RELATIVE Animal Survival Dim As Humans Take Over No creature is safe. No creature is guaranteed survival. Nature has created 100 million kinds over its eons of time. Of these, 98 million are extinct. Of the remaining two milli9n, many are rare or livi ng a threatened existence. lt is hard for many people to see the significance in their lives of the desert addax or the great Indian rhino or the Cape Mountain zebra. But these creatures are part of nature's experiment with life. They are remarkable adaptations to changing and bizarre circum~ stances of life. They are a pool of genes that are the world's great~ est treasure. No one can predict when, or if, man will someday have to reach into that treasure to find genetic characteristics to breed some new and useful creature. But even were that not necessary, nature's changing designs are monuments in their own right -the resilience of life under the battering of changing climates, ice ages, shifting deserts and receding oceans. The blue whale, for instance, is endangered now. No one knows how many are left .in the sea because of wholesale slaughter for blubber and ivory. It is a sad fate for the largest creature ever to live on earth. The addax is one of a kind. It is a true creature of the desert. It is broad-hooved to cross the sands and its coloring matches the dunes. It gets moisture from the sparse desert plants it eats. It is the only member of its genus. Of the birds, 94 kinds have been wiped from existence in 300 years. The great bald eagle and California condor are about to join that list. Unfortunately, the list is large. The ani'mals pictured here are but a few of dozens faci ng extinction as man crowds them off an increasingly congested globe. · CAPE MOUNTAIN ZEBRAS MAY END EXISTENCE IN ZOOS ADDAX NEAR END SIBERIAN TIGER SEES DIM FUTURE; ONLY FEW HUNDRED LEFT AP PHOTOS B Y EDDIE ADAMS ' TRACT HOMES IN SWAM PS PUSH AME RI CAN ALLIGATOR TO BR INK OF EXTINCT ION •. ""I"'-·~· -~ LIKE DENIZENS OF MISTY PAST, INDIA N RHINOS TROODING LAST STEPS ON EARTH j • • • ' AMILEl TUMBLEWEEDS MUTT & JEFF TMERE. TMERE/ CON.,. CR.YI WE\.!. FIND>t>Ult MOMMY. WMERE DO~ LIVE? FIGMENTS NANCY HAL: ANP 1715MOUN1! J,.ISTEN TO .,.HE SWISS YODLERS ACROSS TH!! YAt;,LEY TODAY'S CRDSSWDID PUZZ LE ACROSS 1 l11li1n _ 6 Gr1l11 on !hi 1111r~e1 10 YOU!li utmon 14 Trot 15 Chou __ 16 Put __ in one'• borne! 17 Alllrm 18 M11t cut:2 · word1 20 Nonmlgratoty 22 GenuH1c1a 23 Hlgh·aplr!1td 24 lct !tndlc liroetr m11su1e 25 Aaih outbur1ts 28 Mo1e beautitul 32 Grasslltlld 33 Entrance Into ~•y 35 Per1i1n rug 36 lnefcts 38 Ollice •CCels«y "'° Sc>eck• '4 1 F.cl1I expre11lon 43 snoe parts •5 Allan kingdom: Abbr. ' •• " -~v ·-.. " -48 Gas 48 Eleetlonday VIP1 50 Always 51 People: Prefhc 52 Venus, !or 001 55 Godspeed 59 Acl1of lorglveM11 61 Fancy 62 Olli hfllrb 63 Ending w!ITI cons and gran 64 Brings in11 pro~! 65 large 11.1"1bet es Picket• 157 Blllng lnaect DOWN 1 Chlroese gelat!n 2 Wash 3 Ptslry Items " Zebfa leature . 5 Turned btckwsrd 6 Concemlng 7 \lenellanbUnd port 8 Cl'!Um 9 Grain c111Ung lmp!emlltll 10 P101ected, Jn• . ., 'll. ft~lll • - --' ~ --" ~ ., - '" H -~ r Yesterday's Puule Solved: DORI! HDHO T S £ N SEDGE CDS APSE H O LY HTRAP CENT W T CORALISLE A OG H£AT SI DATE SEW 11 Competent 12 F1U back 13 Soalls nax 19 Mi111ary '"'''" 2 I legal p11Der 24 AuS3ian guild 25 Reduce sharply :?6 Irish coin 27 A»essed 28 Don: 2 words 29 Hole __ 30 Pe~trate 31 Cal'?f!ntert' tools 34 Of leis value 37 Dignity 39 SetbacU 42 Roams 44 Being: Stillla 47 Rollsoutol bed: 2 word1 49 Pulling behind 51 Italian poet 52 Baby carri1g1 53 Miu Home 54 Last word 55 Young hor11 56 Dellghllul ..... 57 Former Mr., Chaplin 58 Most recent 50 Doek·workera onion: Abbr • 1 • •• n " .. .. ' ;jifn ~:: -' ,,· ;;;" k'1 " " H • .' 3S ,, .' ' H .. "" - -'~~ -.., ~ -~ it • ~ .. .. ·1- PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER :}(AVrt<G TOUl !>EToY THAT THE HOTEl. CL£RK CONFIRMED LAS51lER'5 STATE· MENT THAT SHE HAP PHONED HIM, 5AM DRJVER ACCUSES HER OF SENDING HIM TO HIS DEATH! 1/J,,_,,.,, 'II~ 77.0"~ r 8-20 MISS PEACH by Doug Wildey by Tom K. Ryan OH Vi:RY w~l~ ... Ai l:ASf! by Al Smith MOMMY GOT MARRIED AGAIN Tf-115 MORNING! by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller l.IOOLEY'S WORLD l .cAA'r -""" UPI SAL'.Y BANANAS GORDO MINE 1!3 ).}/ Jl/'/TOMOJ.0&1CA/.1 NOT 7ECll/JOJ.DGICAJ.~ /.A81!.J..1J..4DDll!J MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS by Harold Le Doux YOU TOl.D ME AR5T THAT LASSITER WAS l.YING, •• NOW THE ClfRK! NQ NEIT!-iER ONE WJ:.6 l.V1N6, .eETSY ! by Mell J::ArtiP ~ELLY }(LAfioN AlfTHIAI':' WE'VE JLAST LEAl':'NW THAT TH£ CAMP PIJt.ECTOlt IA'ES A TAP!· lffCOJt.DIN<d DEVICE • see IF' Yol.l CAN GET A STATEMl\NT ·MR. GJt.IMMIS, l:Ve IJfeN "TPLD THAT EVE!tY WOJt.D L.(TT&ll:ED IN THIS~-~ OFFICI' JS ll:ECOll:DED ON TAPE. IS IT TlfLll!? IT"? A~:SOLUTEL.'I FAL.~E· A"SOL.IATtL.'r' F'AL~,. A"§OLUTIL.Y FALS5- AllSOL-l.jTIL-'I' ' ---'\ F'~OM HIM. DICK TRACY FlltST -MOPI!, LAST NAME LIZZI •HOPI l.l'Z'Z t . IMAGINE CiOING TMROUGH· UFE WITM TMAT MONlkER..• FA~- ,, ,, '···-............. -. -. , . , (·~· by Chester Gould '91SIOO:S, Hl!lt SUtc:IOO: 1'T'f&Mtir v.116 ~TO FN:'lllRS MIJCM DUl"!R gr~ ... -,. ( • ll !! !' ·l I ~R"'R> 1J..llNK OF Mvsa.F AS UNO~~Ne A PEIOSONAI. a.lliR6Y CRJSIG by Charles Barsotti by Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnson WELL, '/I'S ,AND No •• by Roger Bollen t:al'T I00!1l<Q ABOJT' IT .• HE'S A "1EAL-NOMBSICOl-1-! THE GIRLS ,,--....... ,,~~ '~t>,; .. ~ ... '5 f!yl/) '/'ff# ' "Let's stand here for a few minutes, A.Uce - I Uke to look at the funny way they dress." . . 'ltJY.I ffVE OAYS WfllWf A tJAJ)l.I T~ Ul'/,,Y'.' • '!F I KNEW A 640 ilOO? 'l'DS4YIT!' , .. ** ,, • S'" ... ••• •• ... I ,s .. ... t::; ·~ ... ... 1: ... .~ ••• c (1.) 12.1 '·' • • :I i;; ... ~ ... .. I ti • flt It tlOMWAf MHfA ANA J41"47)1 "LEGE ND OF HELL HOUSE " "THE OTHER ",,.., *********** ' R]~rllcla f r••W•Y 11 1.tmon St. 52S·Sl:lt IUlT i;tNOLOS THI MAN WHO LOVID CAT DANCING IPGI HAMMER Of GOD Ill l lncotn Avt. w••t 01 ~nott 111-4 7D (10 HO°"' UNOU II ADM!mo (J;) ANIMAflO AOUO SHOW! HEAVY TRAFFIC 01 ' HAMMER Of GOD 111 :i•n 011100 Fwy C1p,.1r1no Off.,.mp ....... S1" Diego-fwy 11 B•ooli.llu,.1 !So I M2-2fll OIOtGf c. scan ••YI DUHAWI' OKLAHOMA CRUD!"°' 6t1c1> Blvd. , So. ol G1•dln Oro"" freeway Sl•·•2t2 •uu· "'"'°"os WHIT! LIGHTNING ''°' 'llJS I IUtf lANCASnt scpRPIO (Plil tmpa111! Oelw"n , , , , Bt•Cl1 lll•d, ' & 1-i110or Blvd •111-1111 UllCOlfl A.,,,, w111 or ~nou 517·2123 OMT OllVl·IN SHOWIHGI JlSUS CH•IST SUPlRSTAR ~ SILENT RUNNl!IG 1~1 "' San1• An1 rre•"•Y ne1t Cfl•fll'"" A••· 551-1022. fl.) UnlE CIGARS (llO! (l .) IAN.INAS \PGI J.) TAKI THE MONIY I RUN 1~ ~1"1NTIR THE DIAGON" JAIMION 111.AllO • • •' ••• , ... s §h•l·""""'~ llollo-\1..,. •• ~··~'IC·" ...... ,_.. ...... • • • • • • T • • 0 • < ' . ' . . . . . ~ ~ . . ~ ' ... . . . -- Mond.ay, August 20, 1973 DAILY PILqT •!I Movie Experittaerat 1'Six Fathoms' on KCET 'Quality Fil-ms'' -a G~mhle ·'Six Fathoms Deep." win· ner of the b;O~ medal and silver cup for fuCuence at the Fiera DI Roma Filn1 Festival. will ·be broadcast on "Man Builds, Man De s t r-0 y s,'' Wednesday at 9:30 p.1n. on KCET, Channel 28. Santa Barbara oil spill, and 1971 San Francisco Bay tragedy when two oil tankers collided spilling nealy one inllHon gallons of fuel oil. By 1108 THOMAS LOS ANGELES !AP) -Will American audiences b u y season tickets to .see qu~ljty GENERlll CINEMll COllPORAllOl\i ~OUNTA VA llY ''" I 00 Gfii '1,00 IVltDA'r' fll 2:30 "Live and Let Die" i: ..... u.•••te "THE MECHANIC"•• 110MAW,JI /::J fOUN1AIN VAllfY 830~~~0 ,.._, •• oO~;",';,T;O;;i;tA '1,00 IVftV OAT lll 1130 "~Ian \\'ho Lo1·ed Cat Dancing" \Vll.O ROVERS.'- m h00-'•JW;41 MANN THEATRES ALL THIATllS . COOLID IY llFllGllATION ~~ , iJYifDUO .itL ' ~~® ............ • r -::::: U~tle~ i. ld'IMITTEO MON. THAU THURS. I P.M. FRIOll T I 9,45 SITUROI! l-1 1 Ul SUNDAi 2-l I I AlL SEATS $4.00 ONEMALANO 1411 J. ILUIOt at.YO. • 635-7601 South Coast Plaza I JI" DltGO M . iT nlSTOl • S4i·!71 I D~ll 1-Hl -UD PAUL NEWMAN JAMES MASON "MACKINTOSH MIN"~' DI~! IT HHJD-JD,ll STE VE McQUEEN "BUlllIT South Coast Plaza II u." DlfGO fWl. Al lllSTOl • 54t -lJSf 4"'1 MATINllS DAILY GEORGE c.scon FAYE DUNAWAY JOHN MILLS JAtK PALANGE OKL HOMA CRUDE -1111 :tL°'~ JAMES COBURN PLUS -RYAN O'NEAL IN "THI THIEF WMO CAMI TO oiNNltH films once a month? Producer Ely L a n d a u , American Express and a Canadian investor are gam· bllng UJ>'.Vard.5 of $7 million the answer will be yes. "We're out .tc> prove H.L. A1encken was wrong when he said that nobody ever went bro.ke by underestimating the taste of the American public," says Landau. Landau is the guiding force behind the American Film Theater, a bold experiment in movie presentation. Starting Oct. 29, 519 theaters in the · United . States will begin monthly showings of a series of PJght films, all of them made since last October. AMONG THEM: Katharine Hepburn and Paul Scofield in Edward Albee's "A Delicate Balance"; Zero A1oste1 in Ionesco's "Rhinocerous"; Lee Marvin, Fredric March and ~~~~~~~~~~~- " Sunday, August 26, 1973 Showtime: 7:30 p.m, $5,()0 per person Monte Carlo Room (no one under 21 admitted) Tickets: All Ticke~ron Agencies or Del Webb's Newporter Inn ~~~ "A JOY! STUNNING! BEAUTIFUL!" -N Y fll,I£$ -SATURCIAY REVIEW _,._.,y90T Paramount Pictures presents the return of the greatest love story of all time, t'.ttL\MOC~T Ptt..Tl'IU:S ..,...... ... • ""lflUI "" FRANCO ZEmRELU ......... ROMEO 0"JUUET JAMES COBURN PLUS . RYAN O'NEAL IN "TH( THIEF WNO CNM TO DINNER" I I I Robert Ryan in O'Nelll's "The Iceman Cometh": St a c y Keach in Osborne's "Luther"; Laurence Olivier and Alan Bales in Chekhov's ''Three Sisters." No tickets are t0; be sold for i n d i v i d u a I performances. Subscribers will pay $30 per se a so n (or night performances, $24 for matineees. There will be printed programs and in- termissions, as in the legitimate theater. "We're no t aiming at the present mo.vie audience,'' Lan· dau said. "We're presenting motion pictures for people wpo have lost the motion picture habit. "Thi~ will be a chance for them-10 see motion picture fare that doesn't play do wn to the lowest denominator of the human mind. You can count on two hands the number of int e I lectually provocative films that have been made in the past five years. They're just not done." ENTERTAINMENT banned major companies from "block-booking" -s e 11 in g more than one picture at a time to theaters -and the Justice Department stalled the deal. Mean\vhile C-Olumbia suf· fered reverses and dropped out. Landau went nhead on his own. "We accomplished the im- possible: eight pictures made since last October, on budget an d without major catastrophe," said the pro- ducer. "THE AVERAGE cost of the fil~ is $800,000, but the equivalent of $1.9 million is on the screen. That was ac- complished only because of the passion of creative people to do something a cut above the norm . The film rerounts the 1969 KCET repea ts the episode Friday at l:t:au p.m: and Saturday at 4·p.m. U.A, CITY AND SOUTH COAST CINfiMAS -TUtSDAV Sil (1..AOtES AHO 001..0ENAQl!RS) -OP'EN 'Tll.. I ;• l".M, From "" M•k••• er Frlu Tllo • C<lt ••• "HEAVY TRA"ll lC" -p1Ul- "M0111..E" 80111 In Color! '" RolNrt Duv•tl "llAOGE )13" "DILLINGER" Bolh In COior IR) Geo•o• s.,11 Gl11nd• J•('™'" "A TOUCH ,i.,. Of CLASS" T( -PIUl- Ft~l11rell1 I "LOCUSTS" Botti In Color (POI Rt0er1 Mi!Chu'" "FRIENOS OF EOOI E • COYLE" -PIUl- ltO!le<I 011¥'111 Eddie E11n "BADGE l1J,. ,., LANDAU HAD prev iously produced two prestige films, "Long Day's Journey into Nig ht '' and ''Th e Pawnbroker," as well as the Play of the Week series on public television . He took his plan for the American Film Theater to American Express in January of 1971 and drew enthusiasm from b o a r d chairman Howard Clark. "The maximum salary forl---=======---------------actors was $25,000, for dire<.:- Ameri can Express wante~ the comfort of an established fi lm comoa ny, and so Colu m- bia Pictures entered the pl an. But the government long ago - tors and writers. $30,000." Subscribers will be assured that the films they see will not be shown in theaters or on television Has long as there is a second season of the American Film Theater." The chances for a seeo;nd season? "We're praying," Landau said. The ultimate in Martial Arts . adventure,,and excitement! . ~/ .,.. -::_ . -""",",r~' ~"'"' p·1•/ •:,~~ ...;,4<'""' . t a ··· (I"'''";' .. .... ,. VIBRANT EXCITING OAllUNG DELIGHTFUL JULIE ANDREWS DICK VAN DYKE DAVID TOMLINSON GLYNIS JOHNS MAGNIFICENT UPROARIOUS INCOMPARABl cumn1•c . FABU lllUl:l l.EE -.111111 SAii* ·AHIA Wiil •'Ullll TIIE llUllll' c:o S!arr1ng •Will·• W .n: 1~1roo..&ig • KEU1 STARTS FRIDAY 4G[RJ.=...~=~""C::.' .... ! AUGUST 24 AT BOTH THEATRES S.rita Arie frwy . .,.,, Chepmen Oron;. • 558-7022 2ND flATUll AT IOTH. IDWAIDS CINfMAS A CHARTOf f '.VINKLEfi CARLINO PAODUCT!ON CHARLES BRONSON •n A MIC~AEL WINNER f1lnl "THE MECHANIC" SHOWING' NOW AT IOTH IN MISSION VIE...10 EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO ~· .. ['l!vO '"'' ot cl P•t lVll"'OH 9 tn "~'lO '" IN MISSION VIE.JO ... SA"' O!!C.0 rlll• •I L• P•t fVll"'OJJ 8 10 ~<190 Walle·· Matthau "ltm H TilU(" EDWARDS HARBOR ,1.l:':.1 llAlttoll llVO. AT WU.SOii SY. Mt·°'1l M&·l2M COSTA Ml!.SA .. · ~: : < ' ·.,;_ MAGICAL . '• ..... ~ GREAT U \I \f\( f \lfll HAPtOR Ar A O AV ~ COS TA \A f\A • 979 -'1-'l ST "RTS WED. AUGUST 22 , MATINEES DAILY AT All THREE • (PG) LLY JACK IUIT RmOUS ·.SAHi MILES wicau,J.\CI •AtDE!MiUIGE llMJLi'oll -m PLU ~SIONEY POITIER_ IN "A WARM DICIMUR" l\\\WW",Mli11IXWll A l\aoottaG PLUS , JAMES GARNER ----EMPEROR .:' cw ntr. idmt • -.' .... <l:P J\''""' \' "' ' 'l• '" • 1 ............... • .. -.. , ~only ==rl1e1a (PG) NOW • • ... ... "' " •I • . . ., . . - • 2 DAIL V PILOT Monday, .AL1g t 20, 1973 I Lady Go111er~ TV IDGHLIGHTS Diinib Blonde Joi11s Mary lter cbaracterlzation or the sweet, guileless Georg ette is a • natural extension or herself. Jus t as Comer's purity "'as an out growth of Nabors' slmple southern background. KHJ CJ 7:30 -"Casablanca." The umpteenth rerunning of this Oscar movie from 1943 with Hum- phrey ("Play II again, Sam") Bogart, Ingrid Berg- man, Paul Henrled, Claude Rains and Peter Lo rre. KCET fl!l 10:00 -Sorry, No Vacany. This docu- mentary on the world population crisis is viewed lrom the standpoint o! its effects on the Unlted §!ates. A drama graduate or the Universlly of Hawail, Georgia draws a clear di stincllon between herself and t b e hapless Georgette. K'ITV m 11:30 -"Royal Wedding." Fred As-' ta ire and Jane Powell in one or the typical splashy musical movies from the early F'ifLies (1951). "I TlllNK I'm more com-:. plcx than she Is,'' Georgia ex- plained, ''although they take qualities they like from the lop of my personali ty. B u t Georgette and I both have a sense of humor." TV DAILY LOG IN A TINY, quaveri ng voice, Georgia said, "They were nice enough to send me some or the letters from viewers they got after that show was seen on the alr. They wan ted to see more of Georgette, the girl I played." Georgia stammers when she gets excited. So does Geor- gette. AeOffJ /%,,/:· . ' . •,• . NOW Burt Reynolds "WHITE LIGHTNING" 7:00 and 10:30 PM also Burt Lancaster "SCORPIO" 8:50 Coll rhHm for Sunda"t Sclled11le. MESA c~~~! 1884 N(WPORT SL YD 548-1 SS2 HURRY! FINAL WIEK! lHOTHElt OUTSTANDING CO MB INATION EXClUSIVE' W.U~£H OATES • ClO~S l!ACHMAH BEN JOHNSO# "DILLINGER" PLUS "' ,, ••ll _ .. "'Uw .. -a.... ~~ ... ·. ,. ...... -~-~ MATINEE W£D. I P.M. OHTIH. SAT. & SUH. FROM 2 P.M ITClllQC(l0R8 frOll Win'lef Blas."" A Wmltf Commulllnhons~ W' SURF THEATRE -5J6°tlt6 Coost Hlway et 5ft.Hu1U, lcll. To1111o1ttllh1 Dolores Trrlor "BILLY JACK" plu1 Woody Alifli "PLAY IT AGAIN SAM" Bath 111 Color fP'GI THE ULTIMATE EXP£RIEMCE FOR EVERYONE! ~61(AT1'0Mt-K•TINlf• T//lSlASff'J#ITlll~'-il'. - "H ..:U.T ll'fOllffrOMn flll. .. lllllllllllW tllllllllJT' ,......,,._ ""fM ,WAI •ITT TIMI., .. IU1 AllOll·'Mlli 1JPE•1t11tlll'lr ,. __ ,, .. ~•UT "'Ah!tl .. Y .. .._ ..... --- ·~ TOTAi. DP'lRll!Cl Ill t.IGMT, IOUMD AMII «JI.Oii ,., -t IAllTUIA A MUSTr' ... --·- EVES: 7 P.M. & 9:41 CONTIN,-SAT. & SUN. l P.M. "HEAVY TRAFFIC" Rat.d X -11 •-n,i.• SIADIUM ·2 ~ ' .._WUf.1:L!.UC::r131' "SOUND OF MUSIC" NO RESEllVED SEATS With J11lle AndreW5 ... "SCORPIO" "LEGEND OF HELL HOUSE" ... "BOSTON STRA NGLER" IP'Gl "LIVE AND LET DIE" (rGI '"' ''THE MECHANIC" "THE MACKINTOSH MAN" IPGI .... "IULLn•• IPGI '~ •• easily the best movie so far this Year'' -S1eph11nFe•ber 1 NEW YORK TIMES,...-; ~ .. HARBOR 0.1. STARTS AT DUSK 1110. "PLAY IT AGAIN SAM " SOllT" COAST PlAtA f l CONTINUOUS DAil Y 11•, S1JO, J:•, 7:JG, ,,. EXCLUSIVE OR.IHGE.COUNTT ENGAGEMENT Monday Evening AUGUST 20 1:0011 OU EE m ll!l m- 00 "'"' IJleuu1 @ Court:IM, .. EUii'• , .. 0 Wa.W .,._. tr AllN I ®I ••lo< u.,.. -C..fd ,lnim 5PM. m,..,,,,_, 1!J star Trak @LOI T1ms flil -.. 1.o1,. mlll,...,.... 5:30 @ Kopl's HtrteS u """' i<l (90) """"' en. •Irr" (1dv) '56 -Randolph Scott. Bartlar1 Hilt. (j) CIS flm W1lter Cronklll G KM.an Win Trml. m"'1Crifflt> fD Sut , .. , n., , .. m"" .. ..., llilT""'"' ID_"',.. m Utlll 11X1111 7:00B CD Om- O tow1111 i. Deltm ClJ "°'"' ('1H) ·1~ C., T-· h• Is allawtd to slttp undistllfbtl durlnr his 1r1nstll1ntic lli1hts. Cl) Clwlllution u CD ID AIC -.. """' (C) (2h1) "Rorue's 11111•'1" (R) (my,) '6S-Ro1e r Smith, Dennis Mo11an, Edpr 81r11n, Brien Donlny, Farley Gr1n1er, Mala Poweri, Rldllfd Al· len, Jackie Coo11n end Jchnnit Ray. Aft11 prlvatt dettctin John Roiu• is hired lo prevent 1 11rtslttiy i.cty frcm cornmittin1 111lcld1, llt Is beaten up, druafld ind framed for murder. 11) Mt11 el lht Sta :'T1pu, tllt la· hltlan" ®l """' (211~ •• T•"" "' kDI· In(' (dri) '66 -stl'lf•rt Granier, Curt Jur1ens. m .. _ EE ltolltr C111111 el LI CrllCl1 llttl triads 9:30 tJ (I) Doril Dlf S)iow (R) Andy Griffith 1uests •s the 1lib operator of • Hollywood tllent apncy arid aetln1 school, 'Who prumises Dorla • lucratlvt certer ti an 1ctrtS1. ONn1 ti) c.t Smart EJl) Seba, SIN This film rtport, cent1rin1 1round lndepender.ce Day In T1nz1ni1, Africa, deals with tht t1sk of buildin1 1 nalion. IE MIC.haclla ttallana llil'""~ row"' (dri) '55 -Susan H17Ward, 10:001J (j) Mfflul Cellltr (R) A neuro- Rieh•rd Cente. iur1et1n, troubled by his wife's ([)Wlldtlft Thletrt str1n1e b1h1vlor, n11leds 11oun1 O WIMfs My u .. 1 a:irl's sur1ical treatment m 1""""' o mm"'"' ID I Dm• tf Je-" @ Twlli't lont fiJ Si•pM-" Maril fill WMtls. Un l a,, 0 l•ris rt1i1b11 T1lb Tt ••• ttl MV!tlCll fD I l,ICIQ I Strry, Ne ftcalef A Ef} Speed Ram dotumentiry on the 'World PQllUI .. tion crisis, viewed from the stlllll· point of Its ellecb Oft ttie U.S. Ft1h1rtd In the film ere comm1nts fnim former U.N. Secrttary·Gtntral U Th1nt: Dr. Paul Ehrlich, author of "The Popul1tlon Bomb;" writer Rod Serlln1 ind Ors. Geor1 Borl· strom and Willl1m Paddock, pro'l'id· in1 lnsl1hts into uti1izin1 ocuns, dtserts and jun1les es potefltill food SOUrtlS. 7:308Wttiny .......... "' .. ChHr (R) .lo Anne WoMr aunta. (II Ha11n'1 Heroes D The NIW P'rlu Is lllM IJ Htlp Tlly N1l1hbof fj) Tiit nrillsttMrs 0 Miii .. $ Moot: ('1H) -C- b1?11t1'" (dr1) '43 -lnlfid Birt· man, Humph111 Bc&•rt. mThat Cifl tl)Drapet EJl) Los Mitlts Ctlltdivt @DTh• Mwntum EriJ Ustld y las Edrln. eJ TIM Mdain1 Fa111Hy 10:30 IJ T1H1 lad @ Ont Sltp le1"d mtrve AMntn a:ITY Malcal llil "'"''""" 1:00 tJ ([) Cunsmokt "P1lricl•" (R) Newly marries I 1lr1 ht hid courted 1J:OO II D 0 mm CD film while both 'Wire t1ndln1 Ka1151S rn (j) ®l EE Ntwt tornado vict ims. U Ont Step llfOlld 0 l'I:' M1)ot Lupi llllbal Of. ({) P'eny Mason l11ed brGIOclst T11ms lo bt an· O Mo.It: "Tiit t.fftlltml If .. nounc:ed. In Hood'" (adv) '38 -Errol Flynft, Q Mwle: (Zhr) "'TWI TNB llfM Olivia de H1vlll1nd. tt1t Mad'" (dra) '46 -Alln Lldd, m Trutll 1r CollM1111tllCft Bti1n DonltvJ. l!J MllM: "5'Dnll Fuf" (dr1) '56 0 Cl) Q) Thi IMkks "Lift Rob· -Corntl Wilde, .ltan Walla«. bery .. (R) Terry, Wnlit end Mlke suspect 1 retired cop, I dose friend ll:JO IJ (I) C8S, late MM.: "'Tll'f of LI. Ryker's, cf burilirizi lay" (dr•) 59-ffayley Mills, Horii homes Jn a nelitlborllood ht SIMS Buchholz. as security p1tnil1111n. Pat Hlnile lf;J tli.m Mh11ny CarfOll Joey Bishop 11 ruest host ~s~ I 0 M~: ''Thi Stttl H111111r m Tiit &hod ... 11111. Mlllf (dr1~ SI -G1nt Evi ns, Sltvt ID Tiii Ul&toldaWet Brocht. fE LI Sn«1 JM1 0 (])lad: P'11r Ttnitl , fID 1 ltlCIA I Tribut. 11 liMl'll m Mow4t: (C) "Ropl Wtdd1n(' CtrsfrM• A concert of C.nhwin (mus) '51 -Frid Astslfl, Jane mirsic f1atu1ln1 th• Momion Youth ;J"~ihn. lrtCllm Symphony and CltoM, plus lutSI io!cis!S. 12:00 @ Manlltt Dlllol !EB"""""' Q':) Ml1111Utt Yaldn Sltew 1:00 (J) D 0 ())Men &t-Mfril Cmkl: C2Jlr) '1111 Ctr1 0 Hl&flway Patrol I•''"_., (dr•) '45 -Bett. Divis. l:JO II 0 fllns John Dill 1:io m"'" '""" -m-• t;OO 1J Htn'• Lay (A) Guut Dtvld Frost hirts Lucy to SH lo It thll Tuesday DAYTIME MOVIES 1:30 u (t) "llihll -<-> '64 -fr1nkle Av1lon, Ann1tt1 F1111lttflo. 10:00 (}) "nt Mktde" P1rt I (dra) '59 -Carroll 81k1r, Roaer Moor .. e "Stctlld flddlt'" (com) '58 - Tltotley W11!1ri, LISI G1stonl. ll:OO 0 • .,.., ,_.,.. (Wes) '50- 0on Red 81rry, Robert Lawtty. (CJ "''"' " -(Woo) '61 -""" ...... 1:45 B "°'"' i<l ''"'' Flrf (Wtsl '65-RGIJ C.lh011n, Vlrslnl• Mayv. J:IO II -: '"Oo•dllM ot -· (drt) '46-SUsan Kartt•rd, P1ul Lukas. 1:00 m "f'IQ tf lfft'" (com) '57-Judy Hclllday, Richard Conlt. l:lO 0 "Tiit Lall TI"' I Sow ..... (com) '61 -Robtrt Mltchul'D, Jack Wtbb. J:OO())-Way Oii war 1rtd ..,..._. Dt)"' (com) -Llure1 & Hstdy f1ature1tn. ~"Min"' -. .....,.Ir C..d. ccom) '52-Uthtr w1m1ms. Naftll tf °"la•. J:lf" (C) .. _ ,, ··-... 1•~ '53-Errol flrnn. 4:0D 1J "f\lt llH If Woaa•• (dr1) '$t-Soplrlt Lo,tn. Ttb Hun!M. 4:11 (D-" IOollt ...... KOCE, CHANNEL SO 3•DO P1rr•KllMI (Cl lltnl John'°" dfKut~•s m. t11ClllM1 "" aport wttn Oien W1st0Nrd. 3:30 C11T1Ko0fl•t (Cl A ~llnoval COl'M'll.l'l'lktl!Ofll pn19r•m fot tfl/ldr111. .f:OO MlllW Rttl'l' Nlf9........... fCI Ml1t ... lottn Miii Mw 1nltMlt llM (a~ltft fOr ptolKllM. •ol!O l lKtnc C""'911r IC) Normt11 1'1Wl1--n'll1J 1M1 ltit llNtf, lrrtwv""!' ~ ""'"""'' CrtMi. $.00 lftll!W llnlf (C.l Tiit Cookie Moo'l.W i.rm Plow to wfll611t. l :IXI LIW ,... fM 1t'1 {C) ltt.ten 41 Dismayed Rock Fan Files Suit From Wire Services A dissatisfied rock fan has filed a $198,000 class action suit against singer Nell Youog and rock lmpressario BUI Graham . I~ f -·.. I~ 1.-I __ ,., .. _!~ ---iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ The complaint, filed in San Francisco Superior Court, co.n· tends that Young cut short a March 13 performance at the Oakland Coliseum and that Unda Ronstad, a su pporting performer, failed to appear. The concert was arranged by Graham. G1ner1I THOU SHALT COVET custom drapes and cai,>ets a 16'x40' covered patio, nn ad-joining park and 3 com· munity pools; au on a quiet cul-de-sac. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths and family room In this near new Fountain Valley home. Every con· venleoce, Including privacy. Thou sl}alt covet a n a.sswnable 7% no points VA Loan. At $49,950 t h o u shouldst make haste ~ phone 962-.'!851. The suit 011 behalf or Richard Kass of San ?t1ateo and all other concert goers seek!! $98,000 for return or OKNTJL" • n-s FUN ro BE Mee1 ct ;;t;;L~ ~ j ~. ~ -VERMONT cost uf ticke ts, parking and transportation by some 14,000 persons who att.ened the show. He also asked $100,000 in ex- emplary damages. * Noting that "women are clamoring ror women's lib." a judge in Kan sas City ordered a female truck driver to pay $40 a wee k child support for her four children. After hea ring testimony that Sherry Lynn Walker aban- doned her family in August, 1972, Judge 0 . Q. Clllflin m of the \Vya ndotte County District Court also awarded her ex· husband custody of the children. all household goods and furniture and a 1962 auto. "In this case," the judge said. "I decided equal treat- ment was just the right thing to do." * C.G. "Bebe" Rebozo and Robert JI. Abplanalp, two close friends of President Nix- on. are in the process of buying 10 acres of prime land on Ke.v Biscayne near ~tiami, the ~1iami Herald reports. 'I'he lferald said Rebozo has negotia ted a purchase oJ four acres along busv Crandon Rou1evard for $1.175 million for the Precision Valve Corp., wh ich is owned by Abplanalp. The laNI is zoned commercial. And Rebozo. reoortedly has an option to buy six acres just south of that parcel. the Herald sPid. None of the 10 acres is developed. * Sen. J. William Fulbright (0-Ark l savs he intends to run for re-election next year. "It 's quite obvious from my actions that ·-. it is my pur· pose to run, a<;suming my health doesn't fail or anything unexp ec- ted doesn't happen," Fulbright said during a talk show on an El Dorado television station. Political sources have in- dicated pooular Democratic Gov. Date Bumpers is thinking about running a,g a i Rs t Fulbright in 1974. * A Dearborn {Mich) Fire Department captain and his wife have been awarded $2.76 million for injuries he sus- tained while fi~hting a 1971 fire at a F'ord Motor Co. plant. Capt. Peter Gherardini, 51, sufrered brain damage and lost the use of his arms and lei::s after falling through the roof of Ford's Rouge Plant rolling mill during the fire June 13. 1971. 11is attorney, Leonard Jac- oues of Detroit. contended Ford was liable because the fireman was not warned of the weakened condition of the root. * A Reno allornev filed a ~1flfl Ot\l'I rlam oee suit ali!'.ainst t'°ll'! H,,llrtav Hotel. cnntenrtinR: h0 W'S ""PVPnt~ from usin~ hls "!ti:aal fMlnroof" svstem to f'i";it lhf\ f"'lulet.te wheel. l\felvln Schaen(old's fedr.rnT rn11rt suit ~aid the hotel's owners tind the State Gaminq: t o"frol Board won't let him 1•se frPe couoons in a svst,.rn, t)\::it ~"~'" ro11letle levnllv. Ite "'''"S<?d the hotel ol deorlvlng him ol his right to gamble. * D... ~vmond Owen of Lo.! ,4..,0,.1.-,. " nrorem.r of !iinlo(V at C.!Wb. was named bv I.,,. Whlt1t HnllQI!: as a "'ember or the President'~ cancer panel. * Plans have been announced for A Gaodnhlht dormltorv on thf! Unlversltv of Wisconsin. Tho school SAld ll would rename Elm Drive Donnltorv C In honor of Scott H'. Good· algbt. the first dean .of men. on the cam~s who retired ln 1945 and died last year. FARM HOUSE -% ACRE · REDUCED $29,950 Rolling green la\\'ns and stately tr~es sun"Ound pic- tur esque Vermont fnrmhousl". Old w or Id charm 11t1d architecture. Formal entry. Strp do'''" 1nasler suite "'·ith 5th bath . J\lan size d<'p "·ith rugged bewn.s. Jl.1aids quarters. 23' TA VERN KITCHEN '''ith cathedral bean1s. &nqucl fonnal dining. EI e g ant }"'rench doors to secluded garden paradise. \Valle<! patio with outdoor fireplace and B.B.Q. RED BARN 2nd story in-law apartment. 2 guest cottages and C'OVered dance pavilhon overlooking magni?icent tree form pool. ENTERTAINERS PARA· DlSE. CALL ~. IORl\I J OISO' REALTORS THE FISH DON'T STAY- but the bulll·in aquarium does! This darling starter hom e h as a ne\v dishwasher, 11!'\Y carpets, and an expensive water con· ditioner included in its lo"'• low rrice of just $30,500. You·t be glad you called lo see lt so don't wait -n ,·alue like this doesn't last! S.·17-6010. OPEN TIL 9 • r1'S FUN 70 BE NICE! TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD WE HONOR Master Charge and BankAmericanl TilE DIRECT LINE 642-5-618 General General DUPLEX - EASTSIDE COSTA MESA Hon\Cs and Income Plus!!! TY•o 2 bedroom homes. Ex· 1.'<'llent condition. Walk lo shopping. J.leated a n d filt~rcd pool, plenty or trees und slu·ubs. For the PLUS, SEElNG Is 11. n1ust! Offered lo $59,500. Call 646-05.55. EXCHANGE - SELL 12 Apartments. ?i.I o n y MORE THAN oltl"rnaUVi?s to financing JUST A HOME an<I ownPrship. f\1uy Trade Down for Exclusive loc:atlon in n sninlll"r units QUll:":T AREA. Lots or Jl.l:ty Trade for Land 1'\1.10-ST'ORY, 4 Bcdroon1, suitable ror 3 to 5 units. 21'1 baths, fire p I fl cc . J\1 uy ca1Ty 2nd Trust Deed. SUNDECK off large ma.slcr All Units furnished. Good part'nts hide·away suitl". Hl"nt Schedule. Heated and Lorge brick patio. Show to-filll•rc<l pool. Call anytime. day 11nd bring offe1·. $:>2,500. &16-<ffi5. 644-7270 MOVE THE FAMILY IN and enjoy tn is lovely ho1nC': new carpets and drapes, . family room or formal din-' I_~\;;::;::~~===~'._ Ing room. but what n value '"" 3 bedroom, '~ balh, 3728 OCEAN f.ireplace home Is! Lan.:e palio for your ente11ainlng BLVD., OLD ~~:.1);'.~'· All youn; ro, only CORONA DEL 644-7270 When you list with us, YOUR HOME is advertlnd in Home for living maga· :zine in more than 900 arias· and cus· tomers are sent to y o u as referrals from our over no affiliatH of NMLS. 2828 E. c..,,, Hlwoy Corona del Mar MESA VERDE VIEW $69,950 SIMON SEZ Step Into this 4 bcdroon1, l ~ bulh mini-castle. Easy-care floor plan in an ideal family neighborhood. All the extras plus l\\'O covered palios. Just $29,950. Simon Scz Call Now! 962-8851. OPENTtt.f • ff'S FUN 10 BE llllCEI ~ ~ NEW-4-PLEX $IO;ooo- NO FINANCING PROBLEM Seller will support financing! Beautiful nC\V 4'-()lt;ox vn cant and rendy ror tbat first owner tax advantage. Sub-mll land exchange!!, com· mcrclill or units in this nrea. Call Red Carpet, Realtor• M6-S&W READY TO a-u-1-LD_I_ WHILE YOU LIVE cur e 2: bedroom. l bath home with mom to buUd three ad· ditional units. Build with a view. Rldlculoul(y low prtc· eel at $30,00J, C3ll Red Carpet, Realtors 546-8640 THERE'S ONLY ONE In Mesa Verde, at least. Low, mmbl.lnr 2500 -i ft, onr. llory, a.hake root home • <I big BR. 3 BA, and nr CounUy Club. Under I00.000. CAU.. &an Mt)'tl', A,a:cnt. ~16-5880, M!j.13116, Want ad IUUll& .•. 642·5618 MAR GO BY! Beau1lful old Spanish hon1e on double lot Jnrge enough for lhc largest fanilly. Spec· tacular view only steps to !he beach. Take a look at lhis fabulous home and then KiY<' us a call. 673-8550. [@;""~ro~•a•~ ! BACK BAY -just litltd NE\VPOHT Ht-:ACll ADDRESS 1 &1lroom, fan1 il.v nn , yard spu rt• for pool + hoot &1or lra.lll"I". A \'ersatile family home, ~t of schools. CHARMING .· 3 BR, 2 BA. . _ . large famil y nn, 2 fire. pl.aces. Harbor High. L\t- J\!EDIATE OCCUPA.~CY. Five items of Income. Rood area Costa J\Iesa ( o n P lacentinl.. So. of 19th. Owner will CllM'y lJsl TO w/lO"/o down . Hurry on this $85,00'l. e CALL ANYTIME e ""-3921 or Eve. ~ Luchenmyer R:e<t ltor NEW TRIPLEXES and DUPLEXES in COSTA MESA OPEN DAILY Pl1centi1 at Wiison Oranic County Apartment Exclusive Age.nt 547..fi791 EASTSIDE SPECIAL! 8r!aht and airy new all el~­ trtc country kitchen, la.rgc family room with used brick fireplace. llll'lt patio, loAd11 of 1lu:t Md what a delight. 3 bedroom, 2 bP.th lovely home for only $39,950. C!\ll RC'd Carpet, R e 11 l I o r , ~·S&IO (OJ'M'n e~nlngwl You don't nttd a aun to .. Draw Fut" W n YoU pla.ce an ad ln the Dally Pilot Want Ads! Call rmw -~111. - (. """"' -"°""' """"' ,....,.. -'"" & ----~---ERR( 1d1 c DAIL incor ~ G Gener• . . . ' takes den c looks lo th< Conv eoou priva \V/OC $69 ,5 I ~enera VA R SUPI on qt 2'h I sha can doWlj TALK YOU 2 bat shak, locat er a II ' NEIG SPACI01 bedroo' garage. ly roorr drn. ~ $48.950. ()PfN Tit I BEAU ROOW Lovely family I pool \\' Choice and im This oi Call R 645-80& Gener• ... Cole Bea ' ious wet Gw Pas con• kite 500. A~ bdr w/1 floo sto1 ' Cha tlos ver Mai ltru Lik Jus $69, 7~ Tri Re1 con std . ' Mond1y, Auvusl 20, 1973 DAILY PILOT %3 The Bluest Marketplace-0n the· Orance Coast A,nnauncemertJJ •• j • • • soo . 52 .. AutomObilca • . • • • • • • 950 • 990 Boat• • Marine fauiomtnt 900. 9W EmP'~mtnt · . • • 100 -799 DAILY .Pl•Oi CLASSIFIED ADS Mobile Hctnn for Solt • • , 115 • W) r.r.onab. • . . • • . . • • 52S • S49 P9tt ond Svpplln • • • • • 850 • 899 a.al f,tOte G.nerol. . . . lSO • 199 fi~ . . . .. 200 . 299 • ..... ... ,\ .. ' .. 300·~ ••• 100 • 124 .• SlO • 574 .. eoo .... You Can Sell It, Find It , Trade It With a Want-·Ad (642-5678] Sthools ond ln'lfu<lion . . 575 -599 S...vke, and Rtpoir, . . 600 • tR9 Tronsportotlon. • , , . . • , 9\5 • 949 ERRORS. AdverllMrs should check their 1d1 dally & r•r)ort errors lmmedi1tely. The DAILY PILOT a11umes llablllty for the first inc orrect Insertion only. ener1I G1ner1I . OUR 24TH YEAR Offering Service Only EJ1;ptri1nc1 Can Provide TAKES A HEAP 0 'LIVIN' . . to make a house a home ... but it 1 takes a minimum effort in this 3 bdrJV. & den condominium . Adult occupied -& over· looks a lush greenbelt; als, it's an easy walk to the community pool. $57,900. CAMEO HIGHLANDS Convenient Jo priv. beaches -yet high enough in the hill s to assure· seclusion & privacy. Charming 3 BR. & family rm . home \v/ocean & canyon views. Restful patios. $69,500 'Beu; and lf.uw/i, l:'ifai'IA-1. §1n c'. ?407 l COAST HWY • CORONA DEL Mf\R 1 ·li l 'J J0'10 ener1I General VA REPOSSESSION SUPER BUY, EASTSIDE C.M. Large 2 story on quiet cul-d e-sac, 3 Bedroom & hobby roon1, 21/2 bath, oversized covered patio, shake roof, shag crpts, room for boat or camper. Anyone can buy. Full price $40.950. With $1,950. down. VACANT · HUR RY. TALK ABOUT SHARP! YOU'LL LOVE THISI fin e 3 bedroom dining, 2 bath home contplete with builtins, fireplace, shake roof, new crpts & fresh paint. Ideally located near shopping. Room for your camp- er and boat. Asking only $32,600. Hurry! ~',$;"" HERITAGE REALTORS 541151 Opein Eves. General General Gener•I General · H yot.{n? • a ~fol~ Half gone in half a year and the re$towill not last long. Hurry lo see this distinctive Newport Beach development of condominium homes, built-in clusters around handsome courtyards. ** ** ** *-TAYLOR CO. * EXCLUSIVE IRVINE TERRACE Very best VIEW of bay, ocean & Catalina! Custom quality tbruout this fine home with 3 large bedrooms, formal dining, paneled family rm & 3 baths. Terrific new sauna off master bath, 3 fireplaces. Beautiful pool in private frl courtyard. Reduced $172,500. MESA VERDE RANCH STYLE BEAUT. RAMBLING 4 BR., 2 BA., on .. story home. Heavy shake roof, picturesque atrium, lrg mod kitch, famil y rm, beaut carpeti ng and paneling. Spacious ·Jot on quiet cul-de- sac close to new regional park. Offered at only $49,500. CALL 546-5880 ROOM TO RAMBLE OVER 1800 SQ. FT. IN MESA VERDE for only '36,500. 3 -Big bedrooms, 2 baths, hu ge "bonus room with room for pool table . Lots of privacy \vith low maintenance. CALL 546-5810 ''Our 28th Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO R It GOVERNMENT REPOSSESSION 2111 S•n Joaquin Hiii• R::..i ea ors FIXER UPPER . "Overlgolcing Bit C•nyon Country Club" Bnng.your paml and mop, and check out this NEWPORT CENTER N.B. 644-4910 bargain. 3. Bedrooms, 2 baths, hardwood ' floors, family rm, oversized double garage, Gener•I Gener•I patio and lo ts of fruit trees. Good No. Costa PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPCJINTMENT Linda Isle Waterfront Mesa location close to everything. Unbelieva· ble low price $28,500. ONLY $1,000 DOWN. Bids close soon. CALL FOR COMPLETE DE· TAILS. S46-5880 .. , • " HERITAGE . . REALTORS S46-Sl80 Open Ev••· Great VA Assumption - Fantastic Home \Vow !! 6~~ VA l oan , payments $220 per month, anct just a fabulous hon1e. Large patio with gas fire ring and fountain . Cu1-<le-sac lot, supe r up-graded throughout \vilh lush carpeting and lots or mirrors. See this one fast!! $39.500. Call 847~10 THINK -ACT -NO\V Tu·o 2 bedroom units, good location close to rollege. Roo1n for additional unit. \Veil pri'ced at $38,500. "WANTED'' SIX CHILDREN IN SOUTH COAST PLAZA Eight superb models, each a masterpiece of luxur~ comfort, convenience and quality construction. Sundecks, fireplace, wet·bai; elegan t Master Suite, Sun-Liteo kitchen, Custom 4 bdrm., 5 bath home with view of main channel. Soft colors, rich wood panel, ing & 3 frplcs ., give a warm Intimate feel· General ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;; Another super two story 4 private enclosed double garage. R~creational facilities include heated swimming pool, lighted tennis courts, saWla, therapy pool. A II exterior building and grounds maintenance provided. Satisfy your curiosity-see Newport Crest today! ing. Waterfront mstr. suite has dbl. bath, Corner Privacy sitting area, view decks . _ ......... $295,000. BEAtmFULLY maintained F C I 4 bedroom home close to or omp •t• I nformatlon beach. Expertly landscaped On All Homes & Lots, PIHM Call: with sprlnkleni front and rear. Owner has added tons BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR of brickwork. Ioside """"" 341 B•y1lde Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 clean with l ike -n ew "':"!!!!!!!~:""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!""l!!!""!!!!!!!!!!!!! / carpet:Ing. Close to beach. G.ner•I Gener•f $31,500. S42-25J5. t~N TilO • rrS F~m~~Er~ NEW OCEAN CONDOMINIUMS NEWPORT CREST RESALES 2, 3 & 4 Bedrooms - 2 or 211! Baths. Formal Dining Rooms. Pool , Sauna & Tennis Courts. WIDE SELECTIONS ALL PLANS AT SPECIAL PRICES BROKER PARTICIPATION La9una Lot $1,SOO 3 BR & Rumpus $25,950 U"°'IUJI: CORONA DEL MAR A perky duplex: • mellow on the inside; )'("llow on the outside (with white siding), Beam ceilings, a fireplace, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths plus 1 bedroom, 1 bath income unit. $79,500 wilh room to grow. UNIQUE HOMES -REALTORS - BR/lonnal dining room & den model home. Two fireplaces -\\'et hnr - paneling & tile floors. Great (an1 ily home 15 1nonths old in Sandpointe. Walker &Lee 111•~ f.IT.ITI * 4 BEDROOM, 2 baths, double garage. $3Q,OOO. Bes! of terms. * COMMERCIAL WNE -2 BR two\ story older home, corner lot. S24,500. Roy Mccardle Rultor 1810 Newport Blvd., C.?.I. 54$.7729 General From Pacific Coast Highway I Gen•r•I and Superior Avenue (Balboa Blvd~. drive up Supe;rlor to PRESTIGE , ROW NG HILLS 1'1,onOOog~ ood di .. ctly lo NEIGHBORHOOD N_c, .. 11ofonnollon Rul Estate Consult•nfs 1525 Superlor -Suite 3 Newport llt•ch (7141 645-3230 Country. Duplex $39,'ISO Beach Duplex $69,SOO 675-6000 Balboa Island PIER & SLIP ISLAND CHARM Lovely 4 bedroom, 3 bath 5 Br, 2 Ba, sm. play room + waterfront home. Choice rental unit, Lg. sundeck, too! Balboa Peninsula location. Old \VOrld charm. Lots o Complete with pier & slip, "ood, vaulted open beam home completely remodeled llv. rm. w/balcony. A1nt and \\'hat a beautiful view. cond. 213 Topaz. $116,000. Prlced to sell at $298,500. Owner. 675-7604. Beautiful 4 bedroom, 2 bath Center.Telephone:(714)64S.6141 SPACIOUS 2 story, 4 home with 5 weeping Sales Office open dail!I bedroon'l hon1e with 3 car panoramic V(E\V of hills 10 a.m to sunset HORSES garage. Fireplaces in fami-n1ts, etc. \VaU to '4'ali ly room and large, secluded carpets, \\'&nn fireplaet>, CSU N•. 26663 ? WELCOME den. _2600 sq. fl~ of home for great covered patio. Full ~ .._.a.. ... ...._..,~M.C..Mc. • $48,950. 842-~. price $36,950. 1-IURRY!! l.!.lt=-....,H.O..o.,....,co-.a~ --If you're looking for an OPfNTltl . trS FUN ro BE MCE'! *' COATS ,.,_..;.._,.......i....._"""'"-,....._,.,...,.__ .. _ .. =.,,., Muneusualsa w°"e mehavi~ ~!t ~~ -........... --·-·----.--.n..--11.c.i.. . c &. _ .. ...,. .. __ .__....,....,.,_ ... _.___ . charming two dory Cape · W WALLACE Cod home iJ a stone's throw I;;;---.-------;;---,-------I from the Santa Ana Country REAL TORS General General Club. You decide ii it's to be ---:5'44 .. 6-44141-3 bedrooms, den or 4. As a (Open Evenings) l'lpecial bonus, this outstand-* BAYCREST * '"" horn• "' located on an Lovely 3 bcdroon1, 2 bath, Jamily room plus 14..'X28' JXlOI ... :ith load~ of dcc:·king. Choiet! Eastsidc location and imagine this for $35,950. This one will not last long? Call Red Carpet, Realtors 64~ (open evenings I Gener•I COND0-$21,000 Very sharp 2 bedroom. 1 ~; bath rondo located in choice •luntington Beach location. Call Red Carpel, Realtors 546-A&IO (open evenings) General R-4 lot. All this for $39,000. On a Bud9et Call Tooay! 546-2313. Large 4 BR., 3 ba. family home on a Ige., well located lot. Owner is leaving town & has priced the home for quick sale. $69,750. CORBIN· MARTIN ROOM FOR 644-7662 BOA;gR& TTH~1~1ERS l#~AA~~H~~1~;;J::::::~~~~:::::~1Lovely, panelled I: 4 br's General General huge lovely patio & yard on ---------1 a corner lot. OUered at WONDEROUS $29,000 on Veterans terms. SPACE-VIEW-COMFORT Beautiful greenbelt views from this spac- ious 5 BR. home with large LR & FR w/ wet bar. Located adj. to pool. $79,900. Gary Knox r' BLU.FFS-NEW ON MARKET Paging couples for immac. townhouse condo with 2 bdrms., den, terrazo entry & kitchen. Upgraded carpets & drapes. $63,· 500 . M. Barr FAMILY ROOM Casual luxury In a perfect setting for the family that wants: everything. Four large bedrooms, f a m i I y room, dining area and a work·frec kitchen b u i It around m ag·n i f ic e nt landscaping on an extra large lot. See It -you'll love ii, Low At $48,900. !}62.-8851, OPEN 11L II • rrs FUH ro Sf NICEJ i I •" 11~$'11'11 RACQUET CLUB lN WEEPING No down! WILLOW $45,000 In desirable Eutslde Costa l\itesa a giant weeping willO\\• nlakes a tree shaded paradise of a huge fenced rear ye.rd \Vith your own Walker &lee 1114L llT4TI mini~rchard of fruit trtts, STARCHED AND tree• aod prolific plaotlngs o( shrubs and f!O\vers also SHINY BRIGHT grace the front o! thi• jewcl General 2 Story Giant 7-Unlts & Guest $36,500 $59,soo PRES!'IGEOUS NEWPORT Century 21 642-1771 RIVIERA. Secluded private POOR MAN'S street of fine homes. 4 bedrooms incl. hide-a-way INVESTMENT Call for appointment -Red I :'7"""--"'cc:;"'-----1 Carpet, Realtors, 645-8080 SALl: or lease o p t i o n : {open evenings) Charming 4BR 2BA older home -Beaut brick patio, KEEP YOUR MONEY ~uiltios. 177,500. Gr,.2111 NO OOWN VA Bright new Owner. master suite, library & Excellent rentals! Owned by music chambers, and guest a Dutchman & clean u a facility with 3rd bath. Walk pin! Both rented by long to private c o m in u n I t y term tenants at $185 each. reereatk>n center . Sparkling This sharp duplex is a. "tax pool a n d engertainment shelter" with no wo1T1es at paint & carpets, a truly BY owner, Beaut nr new lovely home with gardens 3BR c!en, 3BA home. 2BR beautiful on tree-shaded apt rear $1 40,000. 673--0897 lane. Only $27.500 (10') Bal boa Penin1oul1 pavilllon. 1st time a d-$35,500. vert!Rd. BE'ITER HURRY. Call AGT. 64>-0Xll Walker &Lee iltl4L l•tolfl 10~1 \I L 01\0\ Walker&Lee ) .' A , ' U I>' , 54&-00Zl POOL TIMEI MESA VERDE! Triplex Fixer $35,950. Clianning 3 bedroom, 2 bath POOL TIME I Start your estate here! ~essy home With large family but sound, 2 BR units -Beautifully decorated, lovely paint. oolish and profit! room and huge bric k pool home just 2 blocks to Listed at $39,900. 10% down fireplace. 14 x 28 pool with Mesa Verde Country Club. or TRADE!!! Call 645-8400. loads of decking. Lar.;e 3 bedroom 2 bath plw; fami·i~---------. \\'Ork shop Jn rear for the ly room, large lot w~th 1 ~-" u-.--' & Co. I handy man. Thb is a hot custom pool & jacuzzi with • .. ..,.. nuwwu one! Call Red Carpet, loads or brick decking. A IW r-....., Realtors 546-8640 ( o p e n real delight to show and _ _ _ _ _ _ _ evenings) owoen are mot1va1ed to * BEACH DUPLEX* * TRE"'E_S_H_A~D~E-D_*_ sell. Priced to go fast at Block to Water" Lovely 3 lxtrm. Good East- $79,500. Call Red Carpet, Real cutlet 1 & 'JI B<lrms. side loc. Extra large lot. Copen evenings~ Ideal home· & incOme. Spac. living rm. w/frpl. ONLY $59,000 All for $32.500 FIXER UPPER CAYWOOD REAL TY BALBOA BAY PROP. GI repo in Halecrest. Full * 54$.1290 * * 642-7491 * price $28,500. Who's first? General General 1.;;.;~..;..;..~~-~~"-"-'---'--~~~~~ Newport II f•lrvlew 6464111 (1nytlme) R-2 LOT with 3 BR, l 'Ai BA house. Block to beach/bay. Appt only. 675-4494 Bkr. BAYVIEW DUPLEX 2 BR. 2 BA, one year old. 2 Obie garages Agent • 548--2121 Corona d1I Mar We'd Like To Buy A Duplex ••• But \Vhere will the kids play?? I-low about the nearby youth center or th e park 8CT058 the street frum this out- standing 3 Bedroom, 2 bath owner's unit and 1 Bedroom rental. $89,500. CALL 644-nll · mm SPYGLASS Reduced $5,000 FIRST TIME OFFERED-LIDO ISLE Artisti cally decorated & arch. designed ; 4 bdrms. incl. M/bdrm. suite & guest qtrs. w/priv. erit. & kitchenette. Ext. use of tile flooring. So. patio. $135,000. Kathryn Raul· ston IRVINE 3 BR completely upgraded, lush carpeting, drapes & prime Jandscap\ng -to ·see tt Is to LOVE IT! bo.'C n1eticulously cared for 3 CUstom Highlands home -or- bedrootn home. Ow n e r lered by original owners. 3 bound for out of state and bedreoms, family room, on will consider serious offers large P o o I s I z e d lot. and I e a v e refrigerator Separate boat trailer en- behlnd too. An Idyllic trance, extra storage and restful retreat for one or intercom. Add your own two, a tree house jungle for flair and ti.ave an individual kids io crow up or a pets home. I !!!!!!!~!!!'!!!!!!!!~~!!!!'I ..,. .. i... Com• in or PETE BARRETT RARE MESA MACNAB IRVINE Fantastic sit-down bay view on a quiet cul-de·soc for your family , Fo ur bedrooms, family room, Jlllllds and office. Move In now. $129,900. can 675--7225 BEAUTIFUL PRIVACY Charming home surrounded by custom pa- tios & gardens; spacious 2 bdrm. w I con- vert . den & large family kitchen. $69,500. Mary Harvey ' OCEAN SIDE-NIGUEL SHORES lmmaciilate 3 BR., den, in priv. comm. Like new. Great beach1 tennis. pool, sauna. J ust reduced fo r quick sale. A bes t buy al $69.500. Bob Yorke 7'12% INTEREST-INCOME PROPERTY Triplex -spectacular location , main bay. Rent the 3 BR., 2 ba. apts. or convert to condomlnl ums. Sandy beach plU! rm. for small boat fleet . $270,000. Bill Bents 133-0700 ~ Coldwall,8anlcs ~ 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. • Walker &Lee 111•~ •• ,,,,, SPACIOUS! 4 BDR . $45,000 Shnrp lnrge fan1Uy bo1ne wllh over 2600 !lq. ft. or liv- ing. Immedlnte possession avail able on this 4 btdrom. 4 bath family room and fom1a1 dlnin1 room, two story home. Don't htstttate to ell.II Red CaJ1M!t, Realtors &e-S080 (open evenings). MESA VE-RDE- IMMACULATEI 4 BDR Altl'IOl'il new, beautiful 4 bdr, 2 bath home on itttlrUlar lo! In lovely Mesa Verde Only $(5,950. llUIT)' on this one! Red Catpd, Realtor• ~ (open evf!ninp) You'll find tt 1n Qalllfied for a n appointment. Red REALTOR Carpel, Realtors, 717 E. --VERDE 17th St., C.M. 64.5-8080 (open 642-5200 """"'•••> ------.. FOUR-PLEX STORYBOOK --;oc;"LTI'MU CHARM $35,950 In Harbor V iew Homes ChA.rmlnR 3 bedroom, 2 bath One of the lowest prlcul home \\'ith large fan1\ly homes In U\IS most &Ought room and hUKe b r I c k a ( t er nciJl:hborhood. 3 firepl11.ce. 14 x 28 pool with Bedrooms With cu g Io m lot1ds of decking. Large dctaJls throout, that give a \\'nrlc Mop In reRI' for the warm, ho1ncy atmosphere. h&ndy man, TI• ls a hot There's a garden patio off one! Call Red Carpet, the btia;ht-1w1ny kitchen !open ewnlnp l '";:~~!~! that 11 a real dcllght for I iiiioiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiii• I = outdoor dlnlna. Reuonab\y priced at $64,900 I: Yo'l own tho l&nd. C. F. Colesworthy RHltoro 640-0020 $2900 Total Down Aqume 7!4 ~ VA Loan! Trim 4 BR. 2 BA Ranch Style, shake. root, bhn!I, huge fAm nn • decorator "'°'111 Mklng $.1T,9IO. Sub- mit aey ·ofter! No 10&1l ~! ! ! Broker 645-2133, e e ONE CALL e e CAN DO IT ALL ~ "*'tl7MltN""'"7 No Down G.I. l bdrmt. 2 baths. Cose to 11ehools. Huge family rm, fl~place. Ort1nl kitchen with bullt lna. Dining rm. 121,500. b<I< -mo TARBELL SPANISH ELEGANCE Low maintenance yard & close to pool & clubhouse. Charming 4BR tastefully dec- orated -Harbor View location. $69,900. Joyce Edlund 642-8235. (El2 ) "THE IN PLACE" Elegant Big Canyon 5BR family home. FR -3 fireplaces -Ref .. air conditioning. Expensive cpts. & drps. Extremely U!>" graded. $150,000. Joel Smith 642-8235. (E17} COSTA MESA -$32,500 3 BR home in popular Eastside C.M. Across street from Newport Beach. Enor- mous lot - great potential! Polly John· ston 642-8235. (ElS) I lrvlne I --.°""-I *DUPLEX* Lo\'ely 2 bdrm. home v.•ith cabana for your extra guests; all rem<><k>IE'd & In good concl. Large patio w/gas BBQ. Copper plumb- ing, plus brand new I-bdrm. t't':ntal with lots of claM. ~Jany c.'Ctras. Take a lool< ll gl\'e 11$ ynur oUer! MORGAN REAL TY 673-6642 675-6459 -WALK TO BEACH- crom unusually Jge lol w/ k>vt\y older home A apt l.ush prdent. Call Ornl!K>n & A.11.!IOC. m nu. ' •i • . , . . . •• . . ~ .. ~ . ·-"'• I~ ~[ ;;;;;;;-;;;;;;; .. ~I~.;:• if~. -~,.,~-~'~~ie· 1.c_o_ron __ a_d_o_l_Me __ r ___ c ~•;:.•;:.;t;:.•..;Me.;;;:. .. ;:;:.. ____ • Huntington hach Lido lite * $79,500 * TAKE OVER VA LOAN Spanl~1 ~yle home on large IMfl.1EDIATE POSSESSION lot. 3 BR. & den, open 3 BR ran<.il home with <..'OCOCl ~anli, in!e.\"CStln.i ~el. Nl"&l' b1'0wn thJClc shag crpl.$, mod Lido lennuf er.-- Newj>ort Heights NEW USTING Busln••• HouHs Furnl1he;d 300 Opportynlty 200 Newport Beach Income Property 166 SPYGLASS Hill's Best Vu EASTSIDE Now <BR. 2•1ba, S.p. dining LOOKING FOR A Z..Sty., rust. bll ho m e w/lha.kt: roof. 4 Bdrnu1., 2 bu. Lge. mstr. BR.: 2 frplcs. 500 Sq. ft. recniation rm. Come 11ee & buy! $68,500 NEW 4°PLEX Rm. 25 Carmel Bay D,. By COSTA MESA HOME? Brand f'l('W, Spall.iSh moljt. 3 • Cocktail bllt $15M down WALK to Beach 1 Br-. Also UR, 2 ba. deluxe Wlll e Electronlc..-s Syli -Sttles &!boa; downtown H.B. &. owner • $ 1..00KING for room, room, ouPLEX~rner Lol 25,000 room! How'H about 5 ki1 wlbilins, l'li BA, 2 car LIDO REAL TY \v/f11Jlc., & 3 2-BR units ea. e Children's Store -beach Lnguna Sch T<'11.house, $155. v.·/patio or s u 11 deck. e Sweeping Serv. 68 11cct1t Agt. Fae. 979-8430 Xlnt cond. SBR, 2BA. + new THfS 3 bedroom home has IM'!drooma, 1 % + % 'badu, 28.R. 1.BA. 500 Po\mettia, large Shade tl'tt!I: end a formal dining, huge family C)JMln 1-5. large lot. It's today's buy room, built on three leveli>. gur, •ltua.ted on l r a: 3377 vt.,, Lido. N'pt BC1lCb Khade--tree eul--Oe-sac lot. * '673..7300 * Ea$l&ide Costa It!esa nr. Holland But ~les 2 BR Cottage, fl!rn. $285 mo. Ney.•port Hts. Buye1· gels 1st 66--4110 or S40-«i08 for 9 mo's. Plush, 32'10 Se-a.- uiscr tax depreciation. Ask-""""'~""'~""""~"""'I vietv, CdM. Rcudy Sept. 15. Ing $110,000 e COFFEE Sh op, Highly KINCAARD R.E. &12-2222. Low down paymt. $31,500. --"'-.C:.::..:..:=-"-- f'.P. Newport S.ach CALL 0 '''-l'I' 91•'""" C MeH and will be tomom>w's Large cul·de·sac lot, ~ Ost• steal. Take a quick look! fCist1iona1ly ma n I cured A Wowl 646-nn lawn!'I. Thl11 home 111 real!)' • OPENTfL~. rrs FUN'fO BE MCEf nice at $42.700. To see CALL ., GRAND OPENING &IALTY N••r Ntwp•rt Pe1t Offlct CALL (i) '''·14 14 resp. Nr. Sc!U'S S.A., .seats LOVELY 4BR. ~)'~•outside A!.~MIL 53, 6rn dwn. 0wllC'r \\1.J.I fin-sl\Owet'. Bu.yfmnt, Winter COLLEGE PARK [ ! ~STIGE AREA 9U.4471 (::ti 5#-1101 Newport Bay Towero 1 A 2 BEDROOM POOL HOME Fantastic Spanish beauty. Just nuule available -3 · . ~~ !~~17~erh':!~. 3r~::1~~ Californla Classic bedroom. 2 bulh surrounded bcdroon1s, 2 baths, formal OONOOMlNIUM HOMES BayCront Homes Boat Slips ASSUME 7% VA 3 BR. 2 llA, Fam Rm, fp, on cul-de· sac, $45,000 64&-1514 or 5Zl-T:>60, no agt11. .. ,.....,.., IUlC'e. 673-5218 rental, 4()0 381.h St. RE ALTY u-t L 240 Nt•r Newporl Po11 Ofllre muney 0 Oln \\1INTER Rental -Ocean· front, 3 br, 2 ba, fully tum. Industrial Property 168 1st TD Loans $350 mo. 67:1-4631. 111:1: by roses and trtts. $43,950. di· 1 llh 1 .. f WOW S.e It To Believe • Please call 646-TITl. • .,..,750. MONTICELUl CON· 11 ng, \\' o ... <i 0 paper Ill I Full Security Highrisc Steel & concrete construction Private Balconies * LARGE, 2 BR house, nice yard, $38,500. 642-7056 after 6 PM ** M·l ** South Laguna COSTA MESA I UP TO 90% 2 BEDROOM & Oen. °"'"" _, and upgraded carpets. This Of'fNTlt.l • IT'SRMTOBENCEf 00 -3 Bech\iom, 1%. ba1h, hon1e i 11 professionally ON THE MODEL STREET. 111, ! best sl\a.g. $192 per mo. pays landscaped for the executive By 0\\'1ler, 3 :years old, 3 all. 159 Yorktown, right on and is in the prestige area Br. 2 Ba. plus fanlily rm. 2 garage spaces P<'l' unit. Roof top sundeck Sant• An&. Pta~: fo:C:e~Tb1dg. 2nd TD Loans ~~~h.~(! ~~!d!1~oc~~ ~ the square. t!( Huntington Beach. CALL includes a.ti all glass kitchen, -$36,950. ?tIBSA DEL ~!AR • 3 847-3584. carpet~ & drape11, fully land- Unusual Opportunity to Pur· chase Bayfront Property in Ne.,..'Jl011 Beach. 2200 SQ IT detttxe home w/4 Br, 3 Ba, bonus &. fam mt, den, etc. ~"xistlng 717tJ F'HA loan assumable. $48,500. or offer. 557-0139 nIVIERA.REALTY redecorated: Dt!Juxe. $350 Lowest rates Oran9e Co. per monlh Sept. 15th thru 149 Broadway, C.M. Sattler Mtg. Co. June 15th. South Laguna. 642-7007 64&-5690 Eves. 1 ~========1 Bedroom, 2: bath, comp FOUR+ A POOL scaped, including brick rerurbished in & out . O\mer anxious • Thts is a parjo "'l th cover. By apt. 310 Fernando Rd., N.B. 67s.&55l 642-217! 545-06ll 213, 4&<-4686 eve" 213, 5001 SQ. Ft. inc I u d I ng Serving Harbor area 21 yrs. c1::21c_-5:;1".15:..::d00ayc:'c:.· -----I Assumable FHA loan. $262 fabulous 4 bedroom, 1% only, 846-5494 aft. 6:00 pm. per mo. 2878 Monterey. balh pool home with IO\V ntoclem deluxe office, air DON'T BORROW U f cond, lrg yard space. $690. a 'TIL YOU CALL USI Houses n um. n10. 2302 S. Suzan, Santa Wt ltlll!,&CLHlll)<tllV . ' 305 Tustin DUPLEX 1naintenance lawns, on Irvine Beaut. 4 BR, 1800 "!ft, fami· ON ALL ABOVE ADS, beautiful cul-de-sac street 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ly rm honte, bloc~ AFT'ER 6 PM, CALL 557-4617 clatie to Goldcnwest College, 6 DOORS TO BEACH EXCLUSIVE Saint Huberts Woods Luxurious family llOme, less tltan 15 min from N.B. 5 BR. 3 BA, tam rn1, maids qtrs., pool, 7 car gar, A/C, 5800 sq f1 , 8 yrs old, close to best schools, Sl39,:'J(XI. ShoY.•n by appt only. L. J. Finley, Agent, 644-7076: L. J, Finley, Agent, 832-6800. Ana, 646-7512 or 547-2412 Bonmv on )'QUr ho1ne equity General Lots for S•l• 170 for any good purpose. Scrv-----------1 ;on10na Elem & Rae Jr. Ht. Cost• Mesa Realty Huntington Center and all 2U5 Wallace. CM. 134.300. * 548-nll * majo' ""Y'· $34,900. CALL NO BONES ABOUT IT Don't pay high sum1ner rent when you can collect it, and still reserve the best period for you and yours. 3 Bed· rooms down, 2 Bedrooms up. $84,500 fee. 10'/'V do\VD, ing Los Angeles County for over 20 years and NO\V in OJ'<inge County! 7% Assumable FHA. 84S-3377. Out cupboa rd s are BIG CANYON SIGNAL ""IORTGAGE CO. t114J 5:)6.0106 RENTALS Apartments Du~ TWO CUTIES ON A LOT. somt>tintes be.re due to prop. Roaring fireplace, country erty selling so fast but ... kitchen, 2 big bedn:ns each, we do have ne\\', l.istings Fantastic rairway lot in printe location $64.200 coming in every day. Call '-'UICK SALE! big garage: No qUalifying. us, we may have just what T Assume 7o/o VA 1 o an CALL 644-nli HARBOR •1500 Can1pus Drive. N.B. $500 to $100,000 for Business or personal net>fl:> No collatt>ral requil'l'<l Upon proof of abili!y to pay -Owner's request . Bring balance with a small do'Nn. you're looking for. offers! Beautifully kept 3 Only $290. per mo. pays V1"s1"on 433 \V. 19th St., Costa Mesa 1854 S. Coai;l }h\·y., Laguna bedroom 2 bath home ,.;th every)hing. Renl9 $160. & -COMP'ANY all the modern conveniences. $175. per. mo. Llve In one, d h 11 REALTORS COSTA ~1ESA orFICE /.Jxl NIG EL UAILEY & ASSOCIATES H illiam Fox , INC. Covered patio and mani-rent the other. Only $40,900. FOUNTAIN VALLEY· re el tiltHomla SINCE l!H4 The Action Broker $125 -in(';.,;pcnsiv(', Wt nk:e! cured yard. Owner \vill help Blcr. 962-55ll 67., .t:•-Coll~1 fl) 213/386-7433 Lg. furn Bach. Nlre are11. finance. ~16.950. CALL FAVORITE ~ All ill ~ 545-11@1 SouttlCo Real!Dn<. $23,250 Two Slory, 4 BR, Mlh irg·ll'g " "'" ho d. r REALTY "BLUFFS CONDO" MK>bile Homes BEAUTrFuL VIEW 2ND Trust Deeds 11"' · 1 Br h,;e. AH "'" ""· CUSTOM BUILT HOME Cozy home on R-2 corner lot. nus rm, 1~ area, pa 10 Most desirable Bluffs loca-For Sal• 5 SloV<', 1-elr1g crpt/drps, On corner lot, CM Back Bay Nice trees & large, clear a_nd pool sue yard. Univ. Park Center. Irvine lion. 4 Bdrm. 3 Ba. Lovely l-----'-----'l;;2c. OT PRIVATE FUNDS AVA1L. gnr & Jrg yard. li~a, 4 Brdin •. & 2 Ba ukpstairs, bldg. site for another un i!. i::,~us area for t!nly 0~::! t!::::i~l~,M s;>;8T~ private patio on greettbc.>lt. SPECIAL Located Nnrthent Dan a Any Amount $150 -Cute 2 Br hse E/side. v. rm, . rm., itchen, CALL I.:!\, 646 ·1414 ' Open beams thruout. U>\V Point, SO'xl()()' unobstructed * Call 67$..4494 BKR. St~1v0e, crpts/drps, bean1 Fam., den & Ba downstairs. 90:,, ~ I' leasehold. $67,500. vit>w of coast & ocean. Can l ~""""~"""""""""'!'"'I cet . Lots of closet space. Lrg ..... ~ "_L_•g,_u_n_a_B-'H"-C'-h____ GRUBB & ELLIS build up to 2500 sq. ft. 2.r,. $245 -Nice 2 Br pool hon1e dble car gar., 2 patio ;£ALTY 962-4471 {-J S46-IJOl;1 Realtors ONCE IN A LIFETIME custom home on !his lot. Money Wanted -w/frpl c, alone on lot. rovers. CJtrus . tr~es. Ne•rl'ftwport Post Office' ...... ·EASY • • • -... 24 x 40 S17252'.~"r..Tern1s. BRR l,TI4 ) NEED FINANCER· Appl'~ tum. Gar, encl yard Woodland Sehl dl s t r1 c I.!----~-----::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: *003 E.6c7~t.7080H"'Y·· Cd?.1 -wvv p d' .. bil H . for kids & pt'lS. ~soo Ow '"0 •132 •.• financing; the best in ~ I yr old 2 Bdrm completely , ara 1.se n10 e o me C"ii 640 'Ill ~:OSSO ner J't&-'I or * V.A. REPO * family living can be yours set \\·ilh 2 a\\1lings. porch & NE\VPORT Beach · Custom Park, Joshua Tree. 50'/.i "" J-U 3 BR., 2 ba. $28,500 4 BIG L~ this oc 1 ean view 4 bdrm. 'HA~RB""o"R"""v"u"""p"A"L"E"R"M"o' ! skhiing, Delu."(e family park Rl lot. 153' frontage on 8th ,ri'.in::i•:;ch::.ed::·..:•::•O'.ll_:<::o94-::::;11C!62'---I LAGUNA BEACH OFFICE MESA VERDE BY OWNER BEDROO S 1 1 11ume; c ose to schools & in El Toro. Fairway of Big Canyon M 3 Br. Fonnal din. Fam rm $1,825 Down paymt. M • • I tennis courts. Over 2,000 sq. TotaUy upgraded, beaut. 4 $9 995 Country Club. View of ortgages, $140 -1 Br furn. Ck<'Wl vi£'\\'. all nu Kitchen, lrg corner Incl, closing costs Used brick fireplace, e.."<tra h . of Laguna Jiving, wHti Br, fam rm. 113 acre. F('('. • • Fashtln Island & Corona rlel Trust Deeds 260 Nr. Tov:n. lot w/separate boat & $275 Mo. pays PITI ta,....e kitchen, l* Baths. many extras. $64,900 End cul-de-sac on gret>n l\tar. Private platl'K'd Com-$235 -2 B1·. Stove', rt:trig, traUer yard 1900 sq. ft. O . ., belt, nr. ·schools, prof. I ORANGE ·1 ·th rd t patio child/pet ok. S48,990 S4rr:m& BAL*B05A5~8a~ P*R P. $3l,500CALL 842_9321 ~lia~ landscaped. 1\-lany extras -~~~ i~ s~I~i 1::i:~ PUT YOUR MONEY $250 -, 2 Br House. Din Rm. M1N , ---"-="-~="-"'---bltn color Iv. wetbar, t>lec. COUNTY available. 640-1537. TO WORK FOR YOU! rrplc. huge yard l o r haded F I • V II RE . ., ma Y mon'. MOBILE HOMES CHOICE I Eam 10% intere5t on well· s pc . OIAR G duplex, tree•· ()ntu eye gru· d• n kid / I ' estate type R-2 lol oun a1n a ly ""C13mT1"~21 AL ESTATE Move into 1h;s n...,,m °""~n oo Balboa ,.,.ured 2nd Trust Deeds on CALL 4!>\-9491 IOO'xl32'. $54,500. Drive by I-;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;; House, entertain immed. 537•9455 Penin. Zoned R-1, b Y 0 C * LANDLORDS * 2172 Miner Agt 54o.-0218 I• ll90 Glenneyre St. Red ced 1 $86 000 644-1230 O\vner, 893-5091 or Eves, range ;ounty ttal estate. ' . REPO 494-9473 549-0316 u 0 • · · ---------49"-·'A"" SIGNAL MORTGAGE ro. FREE RENTAL SERVIC~-; OWNER, 4BR 2BA Mesa Open house Sat & Sun. ~ASHUA l2X40 + cabana. 1 ..--..u" (7 Venfe $1450 dwn $35 950 $750 DOWN LARGE FAMIL v?-................................. BR. full ba fully furn. 'yrs 68xll0 UlT. 1601 Cornwall 4500 c.1.!!p~~~;~ N.B. LANDLORDS! Needs work. T.0. FHA 2 or 3 BR Towru:i~~se, hgc 17301 Beach Blvd., H.B. One or Laguna's largest Pacific Properties old, xlnt coiid.' Jdt>al Joc-~RY Newport Beach. Nr. shop-'.'re Specialize in N~'port Loan. 833-1103 ruinpus room e gar, faniily hon1es. 6 BR., 41,:.i ./Oceanfront duplexes view. Rent on opt. to buy or ping. Owner. 673-6293. Beach e Corona de! ~tr.re REPOSSESSIONS $28.500 to swim poo1g,Je!"..l,efl. Hurry! KEEP HIM ba. 4,000 Sq. tt. F'am. rn1. ca~h out. No. 18 Lido Out of S p 178 !'. Laguna. Our Rental Ser· $41.000 Low i n t ere st F ' t p· -.'f"'l-R It FOR A PET! w/frpl. & S\veeping ocean ./ \tie\~' lots & t."OndOs Village, NB. 673-7S47. tate rop. I~ Nvlucc.v1·i~ .. r. REE to You! Try Goventment loans Call brk irs roneer ea Y Ladies, don't wear him out vie \.\'S. $l04,000 ./ Bayiront homes NEWPORT BAY ARIZONA. Lake btohave I ........ ,.... 11! "" .~i1'39 doing yard work. ThEn's Turner & Assoc. I Nt>w 2 BR, t BA living rm. Ranchos, 1 ~~ acres <-'ash or l ~mmiiiiimmm;;:..:1~N~U~-V~IE:W'iR~E=N~T~A~L!S~ 2 Ml TO BCH. 3 BR, 2 BA Huntington &each totaJ exterior maintenance 1100 N. Coast Hwy., Laguna lOCi ~Iain Snwt No. 4, Adult pad< "'/private beach terms. 545-7656 673-4030 or 494-3248 All new carpet. Dbl gar. BEST BET at Larv.'in's Tiburon. Choice 494-Jln Anytime Balboa Peninsula $16,500 540-3672 Fruit trees. S27.000 64&-2768 2 to 4 BR resales are now * OC-EAN VIEW-* 675-6112 or 548·8796 Real Estate Houses Furnished 300 5!~~;~~,;~ bc~~~a·"a~:: CLASSIFIED HOURS Adv£'rlisers may place their ads by telephone 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday thru Friday 8 to noon Saturday COST A MESA #OFFICE 330 W. Bay 642-5678 NEWPORT BEACH 3333 Newport Blvd. 642-5678 HUNTINGTON BEACH 17875 Beach Blvd. 540-1220 LAGUNA BEACH 222 Forest Ave. 494-9466 SAN CLEMENTE 305 N. El Camino Real 492-4420 NORTH COUNTY dial tree 540-1220 CLASSIFIED DEADLINES Deadline for copy & kills is 5:30 p.m. the day be- fore publication, except for Sunday & Monday Editions when deadline is Salurday, 12 noon. CLASSIFIED REGULATIONS on the market. All feature h 8 ' You can"t lose on this super· electric bllins, air-cond & J-fuge, (){'Can viC\v liv. nn. I~ Exe ange I 2 General BEAOI & Pri Pool, 1 Br sharp VACANT 3 bdl'm' private patios. Fr 0 m ,v/(rpl: din area. 2 BR, d('n Super Sharp Condo R~~t'e, ----------1 s1-io. Slv/refrl. Utll Adlts. borne. Large formal mir· $29,990. Ass u nl P 1 i 0 n + b'llCst rm, w/w carp, Freshly pain!ed, 3 bdrin., 2 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~:iiii: I BRAND NE\V, Oceanside. 3 $150-Util Pd. Lrg Bach, full REAL Ni~! 2 J.lr .+ den, 2 rored & "'OCKI paneled Jiving available -Call today lhruout. Central kit . ba's., hobby rn\.. laundry I BR, 2 BA! Private hillside kit, nr bch. Laguna. Ba. $X-i0. Xtras. Bnng pet rni \\'/new crptg & drps. larwin realty inc, \.\'/range oven. dlsh\.\•shr. rm.; dbl. garage w/e\ec. Acr•-• for sale ISO l~t, laBll pildine tr_~,s -139oce500an $21~2 Br, bltns. gar, patio, l OCEAi~ \1u! 2. Br, 111.t Ba formal dining has mil'rored See this one! is3,500. opener. New ca r p e 1; 11 g , -111 view. u er a~ng • hlk bc:h. Newport . ~ fncd, pa110, gar, pet.s. n1ural. The picture-pretty 968-4405 (24 hrs) Mission Really 494-0731 drapes: all new kitchen np· · submit Orange Co. prop. ~Nioei)' furn <l Br. frplc, Ulil. kitcht>n has natural \\'ood OCEAN ti:ont. OYO Adult plianccs. incl. sink. $43.300. 2i~~~R~:~hSissk.p~~. c~r~~ erty or TD:! Broker 6*8400 pool, gnr. Cdf\.1'. ALA RENTALS 642-8313 cabinets plus PARQUET STORYBOOK apts. J\1ust see gorgeous Gik Walker Realty $200 Dn, Bal $60 010 incl 7,1,, Real Estate Wanted 184 NU-VIEW RENTALS Balboi I I _ d floor. Huge family rm has •CHARM e vie.,v. good security, pool, ~ Via Lido. Npt. Bench int. O\\'ner 714-199-3005 673-4030 or 494-3248 5 In niassive floor-to-ceiling brick Large living rrn \v/rustic elevator to ~ach 1 BR * 675-5200 * 1 Balboa lsl•nd NE\V on Balboa Island. Lux· fin'place "'/10' long raised fireplace, shag carpets, $48,50'.l, 2 BR $59,000 & up Commercial TRANSFERRED hearth + hand carved wood paneled entertainment also 3 BR for lease furn $700 DOVER SHORES Property 158 · NEW YORK · LIITLE Ba · ury fam. honle, 3 br, fRm beamed ceiling. \ValJs of cente / 1 bar 1 _, S R 1 MARKETING EXECUTIVE lboa 1 s I and, rm. Many custom xtras. See r w "''e , na U•cu per mo. wartz, ea tor 5 Bedroom, 4 Bath, living \vinter r£'ntal. beaut 2 BR to appree. 118 Gamet. closets in bdrm. Large low wood cabinets in gourmet TI4-499-3005 room, dining room & den. Nine Units + Office urgently needs 3.5 bcdrni, hon1(', nittly furn, & very LEASE OPTION maintenance yard \V/big kitchen, 3 large bdrms. park· fam rm \\'/pnol. Costa Mesa. d t lk gas brick B·B-Q. Pres-l'k nd I BEAUTIFUL location -Super pool. Automatic gar. $59 500 Huntington Beach area. To e uxe, \Va by 1511 4 BEDRM. 2 BATH tige nbrhood. Absentee own-~~roo ~~~~ rr:;: SOUTH LAGUNA. 1 block age, sprinklers & lighting. p t . 1 $5~ l\f $60,000. Agent, 846-6107. ~~i~gne :~ SC:airy lo~~ * 675-2411 * er says it must be sold this , Don· d · · to beach. Newly remodeled $139,000. 1315 Santiago Dr., resen income . 1 o. LOVELY \\' .... k Full pn·ce •= 900 ooR 'ai· E t elay, CAIL The 2 Bdrm, family nn, large N.B. By Owner 645-8273. Lot size 50' x 240' * CLIENT * 673-2195 weekend. S300 per /d New 3 BR, 3 DA \Vill ·take your ho;;;';' iii' e state Fair, 536-2551. deck"i::~/ocean vie\v. Guest Principals only. ' Bldg. 4500 sq. ft. --mo. w en home. Yearly rental. tradt>. $26,950 apt. .,....,500 firm. By owner. * UNITS * e CALL TO SEE e \l'ishes to purchase distressed Balboi Peninsuli $575/mo. li73-C897 BRING YOUR POOL TABLE Call 499-1204. Would con· · Ed Riddle Realty 646-8811 pl'operties, homes or inromc B hor SEYMOUR REALTY 1 lh" be 2 B sider summer rentals also. New & old units for the purpose of 2BR. gar•g•, g•"'"•• do·"-P·'_a_y'-1--'...;;e;;.• ______ 1 & INVESTMENT or is aut. R condo. reoovating & re-selling. F'or ~ '""6~ " 1-* 847.12'!1 * Bonus rm 20' x 20', 2 car BEAUTIFUL oct>an view Io! All sizes & shapes 3 UNIT COl\fMEIUCIAL info call 5'l:>--S424 SouthCo ds~/\\'Sh, "''ash mac h. CORNER lot. Lrg. 2 Br, .('net. gar., bltins, xtra cab· Only $13,900 \Vaterfront or Not BUILDING \veil located \V/ 1 1 1 C R 1 \V1~ter : College stdnls ok. frpl ., palio. crpts, appl .. inets, shag crpfs. Adlt occ. Oceanview Realty 673-8500 From $52,500 to $145.000 off-street parking. lmner nves nt('n o., ea tors. $2'25. 67a-5470. garclell(>r. $J&) yrly lt'aM!. 5 J 0 p ! f'~ronts greenbelt & steps to Laguna HUis BALBOA BAY PROP. ""'iii carry T.D. $59.000. \\'ANTED Residential Lot Cort1na del Mar 646-5430. hoarding ywr horses! pool. RED c AR p ET * 67l-7420 * Roy Mccardle Realtor 50ClO to 6(lOO sq. 11. HB. area. l ~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiil i~~~~~~===: I Bt'ing 'e1n llOme ito stalls R~tors 536-8836. 4 BR, lam rm, Tease/option 1810 Newport Blvd., C.l\1. \Viii pay cash, call aft 6 PM Corona del M•r of " · ----"'-=---BLUFFS.OWNER •••n29 586-6141 . ,..,. own while you live REPOSSESSIONS $300/mo. $36,900. Avail for 1 YR ~ iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil VIEW .+ POOL BRAND new 2 BR. 2 bath in spl end1d comfort in your opening ot school year. 2 yrs • nu, erxl u 0 it• "!!"!'~~""~""'~~!!'I 3 Bedroom_ 3 Bath spht-lvel condominium with ultra-modetn ranch home :1·-0r informalion and location old, fenced yard. 673--0'l16. cul-Oe-sac, huge green belt. C-2 LOT w /INCOME ~ h' I with it's massive living or these FHA & VA homes, Ch\.'Oer/Agent. next to tennis, walk to Flrllneial I • $475 WINTER LEASE t>veryt ing! I Bk to China room including fioor to cell-contact -everything. 3 BR. pro(. dee .• l.SOO sq. ft. on Newport . Rltr. 644-7270 CoveU~~ J~y ing lirepL. formal din., \rg. KASABIAN Lagun• Niguel ~s, only $64.000. ~~~isqnr ~~air d!er1'fit:: '-;;ii;ii;iim;ii~;;;; I I!!'!!!~!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i. 3001 E. Cst. Hwy. 673-6510 laundry and sewing rm. A * $38,500 -BEST' BUY * Otht>r parct>ls avail. 642-0590 1 Cost• Mesa custom beauty set on a halt Real Estate 962"'644 REDUCED $4500 Business HARBOR View JI i 11 s. Moving out of area. 4 BR, WANTED dress shop Joca· 1 BR r1n, pool, spectacular vu. acre for $45,00J. * ONE BLOCK TO THE 2~ ba, lg. cul-de-sac lot. \Vestc.liff • Owner. 3 BR, 2 lion. Good traffic & reas Opportunity 200 : carpets, dra~~·. stove, Mo. to Mo. rental $850 with I' BEACJ-r -Only ns,834 per * LEASE/OPTION * Ba. Din Rni. Front patio rent. H.ighly contpetilivt>. i,;;;,;;;;;;..,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;, «'frig, car port, utilities pd. pool maint &W-2359 house. Three houses for only 3 Bdrm., 2 bath view home, v.·/iron gates. Xlnt cond. &t.5-0333 $160 mo. $50 deposit. Avnillo7.=~="''-' .::.:;==-- 531·SIOO ( .-••• ) 531·5108 14 1. 5 0 0 . E-z term• vacanl now! Sc•ut. lndscpd. $61,500. D1'str1'butorsh1'p 9·1 no pets. 6734627. N~"W 3 BR. ' BA, ' blk> to available. Probably the be•t * PLACE RE "'TY * Pn·nc only Afl 6 p Condominium• H · beach. Cpts/drps, bltns. buy on lhe Pacific Oce~. 494-9704 IU; 494-9729' 646-i~il9. · m, for sale 160 untington Beech Close to schls & shpg. SCOCallITanyRIEimALe. Lido Isle PORTOFfNO -H. Vu. Homes MUST sell-lease, Tle\V deltLX Your Very Own 1 BR. \\'"alk ti] water. fncd. ]o_o-6:-"•s-4034""=· =-----' TY e 536-75.13 .::C.::.:.-"";;;.______ 1 Year nc"'• many exlr'5, Also Bachelor C.M. S85: ;,l;;i NARCISSUS. 2 BR, 1 BA. ERRORS: Advertisers should check their ads Sun 'n Swim . $36,soO daily & ttport errors Crystal clear 15' x 40' H/F immediately. THE pool. 3 large bdrn1!\, mir· DAILY PILOT assumes rored walls in living room liability for the first in· re(iect brick fire p 1 ace . Ne"''Pt Condo, Spa, tennis, B 1~-11~ NB F,.....l,.. n 1 • ~ * \VALK TO TH.E BEACH • * $198,500 * 3 BR, 3~) B,\, bonus mom, a UU<O. v.,; priv home ·.. .... ,,cw crp <>< .... .,... Vacant! Like new in & out -4 BDRMS. P lus maid's. 4 Ba. available school opening. Frplc, by owner. Coil. Zl3: Business fee. Agt. 5$--2575 . !~!1m90o. can week days, , BR 2 BA 128 .... ..11 '-··· 965-50;)6 ll-6, Mr. Abner, L ~ " • • .~. i..Nw F. I e g a n c e personified! OWNER wt\J finance resp. pm 557-7671 agun1 Bue" l~"'c~=· =~~---·I do\vn. VA-FHA terms. Brand nelv, Call today~ buyer. Fee $89,500 644-4448 We need a Distributor to IRVINE TERRACE Scott Really e 536-7533 ---GE.•Mn---1715 Newport Hills Dr. w LAGUNA Hills, L eisure handle eslablished dealers I Br hsc for salaried Immac. 4 BR, 4 BA home. correct insertion only. gourmet kitchen. Assumable 3 BR, din rm, frpl, bllns, ...,,, . Bluffs New X Model WRe'0 1.'11 1,d· .. N2.e.,wA.,'! ~~R. "La \\•ho wiU be retailing our bachelor, $170 & 3 Br scini Lrg fenced yard. S600 incl shag, 2 Ba, patio, pool, Jen-lw-F Tustin Ave .• N.B. ~•W<.> products. TheS£' products fun1 hse. Slurlio $87.50 gardener. Ph: 673-3~2. CANCEILA'I'IONS: 6% loan. Act now and enjoy When killing an. ad be the best in pool-side living. sure to make a record CALL The Real Estate •)f the KllJ.. NUMBER llc;,Fo::air::c•c.:53&-e;:::..:2551~'--=== gi\'cn you by your ad Want ad results •..•• 642-5678 taker as receipt of your nis. 51.4 % $22,000. Ownr, REALTORS 642-4623 ~arpeting c~~c~ 3 ~-.. di~ 5 Duplexes/Units are manufactured by a 50 responsible salaried adul1s. C 96&-2218 Sell idle items ..•••. 642-5678 am nn.. -a. pen -sale 162 year old leader and one of 494-8170. eves. ost1 Men cancellation. This kill number must be pre- sented by the adv£'rtiser in case of a dispute. CANCELLATION 0 R CORRECTION OF NEW AD BEFORE RUNNING: Every effort is made to klll or correct a n£'w ad that has been Qrdered, hut we cannot guaran· tee to do so until the ad has appeared in th e paper. Dll\'IE·A·LL~E ADS: Thes<' ads are strictly cash in Advance by m&il or nl nny On<' o( our of· riccii. NO phonf' Orders. De1ujlint': 3 p.m. FT"lday, Costa 1-'fesa. office 12 11oon -all branch or. fices. THE DAILY PlLOT r~ seTVts the right to clas- sify, ·edit, censor or rf'- !~ any «idv~semenl 11nd lo change JtA ratts & regulations without priol' not.ice. CLASSIFIED MAILING ADDRESS P. O. Do• JJl60, Costa t\fCJa ~ • S©ll4U~-~~~s· That Intriguing Word Game with a Chuckle ------ElliNcl IJy CLAY L Pou.AH 0 ·-'"""" of tho four xran'lbi.d words b. k>w to form four .i....-words. ,, Iv I R i" i T 11 11=11' I YADIS j t • I I 1· I . l !. I .GIINC _ 1--1~1""'' '°'l',_,.I __, To ma--the volue of ... _.__ -'-· -'-· -'-· _. gold, have It handled by yox .--------~ ..-. •~it I REBTYA I fj PllNT NUMBERED tEOERS IN THESE SQUARES ' & ~JC:~i\ LITTERS TO I I I I I I I I SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIACATION 818 . - daily. 2749 Vista Unibrosn. the best-ltl10\Vn ntanufac· DELIGHTFUL Vacation 4 ---="----- NB, Phone 644--0296 Owner. NEW Deluxe Duplex, 3 Br. turers in Original Equip-Br. 3 Ba. pool hontl'!. $950 IDEAL garage apt $140. Lg PRESTIGE, PRIVACY 2 Ba. & 2 Br. 1 'Ba. has 3 car ment Manufacturing or St>p1 l /Nov 15 494-0451 8~ + DR, c/d, stv/ref. Pools & golf + spacious 3 gar. 618 W, Balboa Blvd. automotive parts. Thi s · ' Uhl. Br, 2 Ba hon1e ror only 871•9467 or (213) 342-9812 business can be operated Lido Isle KIDS & pets • 2 Br hse $145 •.K 000 Call 0en·-A·-· out of voW' home on a part Avail 00\V. Garage. .,..,, · 1....,n ~. MESA Verde, 2 &. 3 BR, 3 , LIDO Isle Bayfmnt, Best NICE area 3 Br hse $225 673-7311. car gar., min upkeep, by thne or full time ba.'lht beach, lovely 2BR, 28A Fncd, gar, c/d, kidt1/pets, · Harbor VJew Pelermo owner 549-0504 $59,400. Extreme"' Hi'gh house, beau~ful)y furn & NEAT tor 8 dult·ill(I ulil. $77,500 DUPLEX_~ Santa Ana IJ decorated. Mmt cond. Elect Fum. &. garage. oi:i1>: $l65 2 Sty, 4 BR, 2'12 BA. wet bar, Heights. Principals only. kltch bltlns, fi:lO monthly. ALA RENTALS M2..a3U T ~ 500 ••0 •729 R t 111· Winter rental from Sept. ""'=""'--,--=';.,,-"'-= c'OUrtyanf, 1118 Port Abbey. "ms. ~·· . ~ e urns on IS Call Dr. Saks. 213, 6~161, CLOSE to hew B"Uocks, So. By appt; 644-5569. -' tncome Property 166 or 714: 67J.J2424 Coast Plaza. New 3 BR, 2 PIER & SLIPS • co T .Ba. Grttnbrook ho 111 e;. Covington Built Exciting Growth N EMPO 4 BT. 3 ea. '"'1' $385/mo. 992 · Carnallon Newpt's bc'1 bayview. ~ B,, ~p bllns. Close IO watu. $48;; CM 615-0171 ' 3 Ba + guest for the rom· 4o LEX n1011th. \\-"inter. 61:>-4923. 'N;,;0 :;;11;-; =,,;:-;;;.:.:c,---,--- pteat yachl:l'ltnan. Call Deni· Xlnt, loc~llon. DcluXt' O\\"n· Bus"ness "• •l Br to"•nhomc nr .,n A·-613 1311 m-'11 Unit. Onlv 5 yr11 old . I ·1 n.R .. 3~ ~a .. den, Sept. pool. Ready for occup .• Sep! · ,...,....,_,, · · ,, lh1u Jw1~ $450. Isl. MO-::. J••k, M, "1633 ron. s1de by owner. Blufls E Asklng $66,000. ,..--~675g,.~1667~~---lii:~·~ijjiijv'""'"'~~~~-Plan. Wldest Grt<'nbclt. \Ve have n1ade provi!lions to =' TEMPORARY rentaL 3 Prine. only, ea.II 644-l680 for guarantee the sueccss of our N•wport 811ch Bdmi hou.w \V/pool thru d I 11 1 rlbutorshlps. Conge. Sept IC .. ) R lb! appointment · ""· cspons e BLUFFS quenlly we. require a man or WINTElt Rental. Bayshore11. fan11ly only. $2SO I mo. woman with high ethical Sharp, modern 3 Br, 2 Ba. 979--5891. BY fJWM!' 3 Br, 21,i Ba, over-~tondArds. JOOC1 credit and a ,•~·u~n(!$32S~._!646-3545~:!·~· -=-== l"'"':"'::"~---~--1 looking bay. $67,500. 426 minimum ot $1,700 cash QUICK CASH 3 Bedroom 2 B th Vista Parada. 644-1180. secured by invt.ntory and Builtin, $400 mo•. Co Sparling lnvutment ,.Nlces Ior this pre<tllJlou• 82LllUFFS8a Ownndo $60Walk,ooo. 3 Br. Corp. .. J)Mllion. rt )'QU meet the THROUGH A "···· R•eltor,· 644-72 70 • er. to ten-above requirements and nit clb. ~1($0 83~ \\'OUld like to bu.lid your own 4BR. 2BA. crpt11, dt'p8, tiled 4 BDRM. 211Ba.5!(% loan. 7% Assumable Loan busl11< .. wllh limited DAILY PIL.OT yrd, .... dening Incl. $260 Boat yard $15.000. Write S. out.side activity and no IeMe or rent, 545'-3* Lonpre. Gen. Del. CM. Own. prr90nnl aelllng wrttc lod&.y 5S7-2200 ' 3BR bou!t, ntar ocean 10 Unit1 $130,000 bnlore your llt"eA ill cl*<!. OLD 2 Br, spilt, $1«>. Al80 S,!)9,0CIO LO dwn. Miies La.non Nice Co1t1 Mesa Area. E<:orn Syirteini;. Inc .. P.O. WANT AD Walk lo \Valer, 11.B. $liq. Realtor 673456.1 Income $16,068 Boxd 3'cos. J'/829 vi alley A,a1, Fee. 979-8430 Blv ., ily or llll' ustry, TR.ADE Nl?1''))0rt Bi-ach C!llllfornia 91744. ffnclude 642 "5678 BIG., BR unr.urn, stove & Prop. F' or Onl·Of·Town Bier. 675-5800: eves. 646-25&1 phone number.) • !'!'frig, fenctd yard. No 1dd4, Prop. ·Bkr. 714/813-2058. CLASSinED will Adi It! 1,,;,...,...,"""""'""'""'"""' L_..:.=..:.:.:.;:__ r.::121c:O::... ;;;)19;;.:::!IOt:.:;~.::S:::.t. ___ 1 •• I• t ' ,, ' I'• ·[ ,,, -Ho1 Cos -\"IE! 381 Zl' A., bef Du • Cust Wa Be< 712 OC> ''" $25 Lal LEI n" baJ Fo1 3 B bill DK mo Hu -LE Pl 12il Ir• ' & ' ,. . ' . .,.. '°' to 961 .... N• Vac 2 fpt qu: ... pn 0\\' I~ , .. Or T 21 : ,.,.14 31)1' ''" bl! da !16: FE: klc "' 531 4B In o. •: hu •II· 3B N• 961 3 I n Le Irv -38 38 3 8 48 28 48 2B 3 " <B , u 0 --YE I ] I D. -NE p "' " LI ~:· -SU • ir : $2:! ,- ' le ~ d• $3l rr N ' 6TI TC 0 b d fl b & LI II b d • h 3- E ,, $ ~ L ' .J : •. 4 $ • l ,. t ' • e ( -3 I i: I) .. -Monday, .A1t9u1t 20, .1~73 O~LY PILOT 25 -"'-l ~ I _ ... _ 1~1 ~1 -----~· 1~~11! i:.....iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiltl I ......... -1~ I ---lr!J I -"'-I~ I -I~ ~I ~ ... · ..... ~~ 1 H_o_u~ ... _s_U_n_fu_r_n_. __ 30"'-5 tfou1e1 Unfu~n. 305 Duplexes Furn. 345 Apti. Furn. 360 Apt. Unfum. 3'5 Aft. Unfum. .3650ff1 c'-'-'<9"--A...t-'-._.1..;.1 ___ 4;..;;.fe 1 _P_1_rso~n-'-1fc..s ___ ....:;_S3to;:1,· c_ ... "::•;"M:;"':::;-:;::-;::--1 ~~;;!_;~~~~~~~= D-·':::"':::...:Po.;:•::;nt:._ ___ 11::-F-:u:-m._or-:U:-itlV--:-rn_ • ..;.n..;.t l -·1tvOltC"' Costa Mota \'IESTCLIFF area, lovely 3BR 2SA. lrg faro rm, 2 1rp1,., fully ct·pted & drpe<j, all ~his \1•lklng di&1.aflce.. Avail Sept. 5. Call 548-36i7 bef 4pn1, &1~14 a lt 4 ;.;N;;cew"'po=rt..;.8::.;•::•.::ch::___ Coron• dot Mar -OFFICE SPACE s; FOhoR lcRso 3 Bdrm, 2 ~ OCEANf'RONT \vinter rtn· $30 WE Ek & UP DELUXE Vl f 2 BR. deluxe paneled apt, Huntington Sffch Neair Harbor & Newport, Do yow· own with our book by Ncn1e li~-.. ~~An _,vi i9CJ07. tal. 10\\'Cr 3 Bfi $.325 Upper e Studio &; I BR Apts. Oce•n. 1 LrgApt. BR. e~.~. <bliown.sla\?, crp$128,0 d r p 9' DELUXE Adult ~-l"d• Coli1a Ale811, 7200 IQ. n. fo1• Atly, C.E. Shenn1tn. Our S . ve:r ""-" in. v.,. I . 2 BR $250 'AvaO g.;15 • TV &: Maid Service Avail. """"" tns, · &ar. 0 I mo. G rd n .. 1 .-uu N lea..'11:'. Single off\ce1> or u-al.nt.'CI staff 'A' ill fl8.Sill'I by 300. \\later pd. 837-7309 675-5366 • • • Phone Service -,Htd. Pool drpa:, re.frig & i tovo. 331l 831--0834 a en uull&il ow. r, suites. Aniplt" pi!,rklng. 35 OCE~:,.AN=:F::.R0~---1--• Children & Pet Si<:tlon ~~:sJ: 6'll-l833 or l-2ll: Huntln~n Buch :;f:,· ~1ria, ~ e~':i 8 ~ cents per sq. tt. ?.tr. Denver typi~;h\V!~~J!cF· NT w n t er • 237e Newport Blvd., CM 846-0259. No 293. ~tn Mesa. Santa Ana S300. lower 2BR. 2BA. trplc. 548-9i;;5 or ~396"1' ~--N MlssiOn Yteie Newport Beach Washer/dryer. 646-2830. !Ad good tor $5 00 nm!) Costa MtN * $149/MONTH * I Bdrm . From $135. '"'P"rt Beach & Laguna • RE.NT OR. !..EASE • Duolexe1 Untum. 350 Huntlnnton Belch DELUXE 2 BR Apt. Nr. Beach&. Slater Newport 8Hch 673-llG6 "' tn ll.B. Closed gar. Pool, F'Uj.-LY LICENSED Cmtom 2BR 2BA 'Yplit level . r.sp/rn ... 1_1 • vi·ew. Bilbo41 Penlnsuli1 APARTMENTS roe. 1'00n1. 842-3546. OCEANFRONT 2 Units -2 ~VJRITUALJ1;r * O.n1 PolnT FOR LEASE DOVER SHORES \y.lk lo Do~.. SIA°' " ~ .. ......, """ Sli0 • $165 ty 2 B / rt s~ ~· ...... ""' 'lt lt Be.ch Vac ·~1~ 1714) Avail enrl ot Aug. $150 r.1o. o~UXE 3 BACHELOR & 1 BR., patios, Air Coud • Frplc's • 3 Swim· LRG 2 Br 1 ~, Ba l dlo s r w ~nvc . rnt. v• iie•lv.i;..~ a:rn· 11 " ,,r:.M. · ~"1• Cookie Allison 6 4 2. 8 z 3 5 c..1.. • Br. 2 Ba. Yearly trple's prlv. i:'.'""'""& _ 1niog Pools • •realth Spa • En 1 • t' s1u · Also rear upsl!urs w/1 BR; pn Ac ce on all mauers ~ !E48). l;\pt •. 1 year old, adults, gar. Do'v•'ded bath &-·~10·,_ of Tennis Couns • Gym and e 81~ nia ure coup e •• no 1'"urn or Uuf. Util & gnr in-312 N. El Camino Real, San OCEAN Vil'w-St-cludcd 2 Br, parking d_tshwasher, stove, closets. Rec. haU, ~l & BiUiard Room, pets. 1 7.50/mo. 84~350· eluded. Avail Sept 16th thru Clemente. 492-9136 492-9034 frplc, 2 cal' i:: a r n Ke . carpeted, qui~ area, alt 3, pool tables, aauna baths. 1 BR. 1'"rom $150 VILLA YORBA June 15th. Days 21 3 : I ii~~~~~~~~-. IPROB.LEr.1 Pregnancy. Con. $..'>50/MO. 33872 Vi o I ct 673-2512 See tor yourseU. 17301 1 BR & Den Jo'1-on1 $190 1, 2 olk 3 BR. Unfurn. 338-8461 exl. 419 or after 5; fidrnt, s y mp at he ti c Lantern: n.eal1y Com~f _ _ Corona del 'Mir Keelson Ln. (l blk w. of 1 BR from $210 Starting at $123. collect 213: 69:'>-lOSl. PRESTIGE pregnancy eounse!Jng. Abor- t.EASE: 4 BB., 2 btt. fam rn1, 642-8235 644-6200 Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater). 2 BR. 1'wnhses F1-01n $250 Refrig.-UTIL. INCL'D 1700 WESTCLIFF OR. OFFICES lion & adoptions ref. new horn<! 111· hi ~chi, I'.'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•:' 2 B.R. 2 BA, dining nn & 842-7848 MEDITERRANEAN 1600'.l Villa Yorba 2 sn., 1 & 2 BA. Bltn. ap-Fountain Valley, Beauti-APCARE 642.4436 harbor. $350 mo. 497-2311 NEWPORT LIVING AT ITS garden patio. Garage. W/D. MEN, small beach hotel. VILLAGE (nr S.D. Frwy offranlpl pliances. Pool. 642-6274. ful new building, ground LADIEs July !)pecta.l 1 yr BEST. Central air, nu 3 Br. 5011,S Mariuerite. $.300. mo. Rooms $21.50 per wk. Apts _ 714/842·9622 _ OCEAN Fl'Ont, .,earl.,, 2 Br. floor, l,fX)O square feet, mcmbershlp SS. Ca 11 2 I 61:r2506 2.""" ~ ~ wiU d1vide into smaller •p t • 8 3 6 1 2 7 i Fountaln Vi1lley 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 ctlr gar, fill bllns, fplc fiV.•inl pool, kld!f OK. Like new. Only $255. mo. No fe£' Agent 842-4421 • 11. Huntington Be1ch ------------·------ L E A SE-2BR V I LLA PACIFIC CONDO. $28011'.fo. Lots o t f!x· tl'8S • basket ball, ~\1£>yball , , • & lighted tennis courts. 3 pools. sauna. ,',i sep parking tor boa1 or ti·ailt>r. One niile to beach. l1rwin realty inc. 968-4405 (24 hrs) -Near Newport -Beach Vacant, oow 1·nn1b!i11g 3 BR, 2 B,\, all bltru;, fam nn, fplc, v.•I " cpls, drps, on quiet cul«-s&c, 400 yds to ocean. ~ !!'f' 3 single Jadiel! pref. $11)() nto, i n c I d g ov.•ner/broker 5-17-54;;9 Ba singe home, 1tep11 to · $95 per month. 536-7056 . ..,... llarbor Blvd., C.ri.t, H.ARBOUR VILLAGE, Hun-lronl $235. al' ner • or v · 2 1 · (714 ·7..go20 offices. 50e per square $48-14~ ocean. 1ew, ear e eet. gr. OCEAN Vu lrg. 2 BR. refrig, MODERN bch apt acros.'I st ) 55 tington Harbour area, only * 645-8908 • foot, includes carpets, ,:-;=='""'~-~~~~- ldcu.1 for Jo~arn _w/klds. Rent stove, pntio. Priv, heh. Adult from ocean. $20<) including OPEN EVERYDAY 'l7 2 & 3 Br. on 2 a~res. San Clement• drapes, all utilities, jani. PREGNANT? Th in k i ng yeu1 round $47a. or lt'a.se for Lse. $275, 615-6145. util 213• 661 2645 l-lours: Fri-Tues 10-6 Adult & Fam sections. · C abo11-ion? Kno'v all the fact5 $425. 67:h1601 or 646-9068. ' ' -\Ved. & Thurs. 1()..7 Brand nu. From $180. 4561 EXCITING NE\V APTS ~~~v!.!i'V(TI4i ~~az:uyn first! Call Lfl?E LINE ¥ 24 Aval\ Sept ls!. I Costa Mea. Lido Isle ALL THE J-teil St. 962-8838 or 846-5076 Reafly by Schooltime 7hocr='·~541~-05~2'1=·-~--- $26()..2 gl', frt>lc, dbl gar. lrg NEW 3 br 11 · .. _ frplc 2 BR 2 BA bnck fprlc dbl WALK TO BEACH 1, 2. 3, BH. Apts. See at NEW OFFICES (ALCOHOLICS Anonymous . $~~N ~t4H~~h~~lc d k pvt. patio Kar.:2q~f' st., 38.i gar. \\'inter rental. J3;)0'p1us COMFORTS I & 2 BR, Ct-pt /drps, bll· G86 Camino De Los !\'Ia.res AIRPORT Phone 54Z..7217 or wrile Nc\v~ii Shore's .... • e<: • 16th PL, CM. $325. Ph. util. 673-7593 aft 5 pm. OF HOME ins, gar. JM 16th. 536-8548 or (Down the St,-from ~n No lease req'd, full S<'t'Vice, P .O,Box 1223, Costa P..tesa. $450-3 BR. frple, dbl gar, 644-6613 Newoort Bei1ch 847-3957. ID5 151h. 96()..1749. ~io2ite ;e;! 110~~!00 drps, cpts, music, air cond .. I R VIN E COAST CC d . bch Ba h t;..;. Stretch out in Yo ur 3 BR, 2 BA, ~ts, d~•. 1 all util. Single oUices ll'Onl membeCarBh1tp 73tor sat72e a t di&- yar • pnv · ys ores Dana Point easv-to-care for Vendon'te ~"" • .,.. $125 I I 6 33 Nu-VIEW RENTALS :::;_::;_;._;;;;:.: _____ WINTER rental·. Avail Sept. ~ bltns, \valk to park, tennis · mo. coun · -· 3 d 2 $3 garden apartment •.• your PALISADES CENTER 67l-4030 or 494-3248 PANORAMIC OCEAN VIEW BR, en, BA. 15/mo. 2 own garage, laundry area, cts. $350/mo. 213/59215743. 1 ~ YOU benefit more for much BR, 2 BA, $225/mo. Also . 1. 2 BORMS dshwhr, forced air .... _. I & 2082 S. E. Bristol less • Corona del Mar Ten--BLUFFS, new see ti on, Xtra lrg ,l Br, Jess than 1 '!If' avail. Yearly. See at 5000 patio, ireplace plus t\vo heat, .,00, Cleaning dep. ... ,,-Newport Beach 557-7010 . nis Club. 673-5711. pc')l)lllar z plan, wide green o~d. Z7 living rm, bltn Neptune NB. or ph: M5-526S bedrooms, tlen. two baths. Ji§iG~";J~~c:_.:'.]liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I (Campus-frvine Interseelion) helt, 5 BR, or tennl$! ~1tchen. Spectacular view of or n4: 3~3476. Just a few available $21£1. $235 mo. 960-1190. ECK AN K AR Discusi::ion t•lub/pool. !-.faint. cust drps. lights al night $300. mo. SE CLIFF ,._.___ THE VENDOME * 3 BR, 2 BA Studio. Rooms 400 p f FOR LEASE GP~!". ~·A~1•26"1'Y Tuesday 8:00 rlpts, adults, no pets. 1st & 499-2895 A IYl4UVr Apt s. $195/mo. Mature family. ro ess.io nal OUice Suite • " ,,...,- last + tlep. $575 n'IO. Avail Bachelor a pt. $150 ullt pd. 1845 Anaheim Avail 8121. 84Z-0350. ROOl\ilS $20 \\'k lip ,v/kit $30 Jl,636 Square Feet suitable Sc]ll. Call eves 01• wknds. Newnort Beach Pool, Ask about out dis· Call Mrs. Phill.ips 540-0781 k Ctt'ldre & t for Large Group Practice. I ~~~~~~~~~~\ 644-81-22 L count plan. ~ Placentia 3BR, 2BA( widen good loea-...,, ~p apts. 1 n pc Adjacent to Hoag Memorial ! , Ave NB -"'A0 ""02 El Puerto Mesa tion nr shpg. Avail Sept. section. 237?~ Ne,vport Blvd., Hospital. Av a 11 a b I c ,,,,. l!Sl THE BLUFFS DELUXE duplex, near beach --·--· ~---~-· ___ CM 54g...97:>a 645-3967 loll. _.. found 1 & 2 BR A U I 1st $275 mo. Call 968-6187 · ' • · n1ediately. Contact: Lou - SHARP NE\V 3 Br, pool & & Lido shops. ~Br, 2 Ba, ~J: BLK from beh, 3 Br, 2 Ba, $''30pt1., n urn. ROOMS $25 & up. Overlook-. Kaa or Keith \Vallev · l ~jjjjjjj iiiiiiiiii~~-~I yard, maintenance custom frplc, bltns, dshwhr. shag sw1deck, gar. Winter or ... & Up. Huntington Harbour ing harbor & ocean. ~t blk ~5-8600. J 11 crpts. & drps. $575. per n\O. ~~. Yrly/mo. l 3 5 0 · ~~~St~75-.f~ Sept. 8. All Utilities Paid ocean. 2500 Seaview, Cdl\l ~'="~==~=~=~ Foun'd (frff ads) 550 1st & last & deposit. Pool & Recreation 1 FOR rent or tease, b~nd ROOM for rent, $25. per wk 1617 WESTCLI FF-NB 644-1846 evenings & wknds. YEARLY -Seashore by 51st. OCEANFRONT - 2 BR Garage for rent ne.w 2BR Townhouse, swim· w/kitchen privgs. Costa 1.980, 912• 756 & 540 Sq. f't. $200 ~P. 3 & -4 Br. No ~ea¥ J.lARBOR VIEW HOMES Lrg 2 BR. lmmed. OC· duplex. Sept. lli-June 15, 1959 Maple Ave, C.M. ming pool & rec., else to Mesa area 645-35CEI Aniple parking. Util. Baum· required. O!lwrs avail 1n I s575rper mo wilh glU"dener eupancy. $300. 548-1007 I lov.'er -$230, upper -$300. Tl RED S ocean. Patio & very private. ' ~gtmln==•::.r,_, :.541=-503=2,_. __ _ VERY triendly male gray w/tiger stripes on face. Pretty gray eyes. Gilay v.•hiskers. Old flea collar. Grunts \vften he eats. 'V'!.e. Sanla Ana & Ogle. 646-08'1B eves. Org Cty. Call Dcp.t of SBR, lBA, plush, near poo. i 213: 333-0852.Gl ·::2:.-<277='--~~~~~-. OF NOi E? Must see to appreciate, call Guest Home 415 = T r a n sport at 1 on .:: · \V1,tso.· n. Garden Apls. 2 Br, collecl. 213·. 022 .. ~, aft _B_u_s_in_•c..•-•_R-'e_n_t_al;..__44.:...:.;5 ? , • & clubhouse. 1860 Por1 Duplexes, $35 & Up. 1 BR., 2 BR & 1 " ,..~. -1 31620-3:,10 front 9 • 3 Carlo\\'. Rrady Se"'. 15. Bachelors Color TV · 1 '~ Ba, c.Tpts, drps. Pool . 7pm FOR LEASE \\'kdays. 64._1295 or 642_2222 ,,. Furn. or Unfurn. 355 · ' maic l\fature adults no pets. • . .. se1v, pool. The Mesa, 415 N. ONLY $IS2.50i l\'IO. L UX U R.IOUS ,~aterfront • Pnvate Roonl or Cottage 3BR. 2 DA, \\'/f,m./din ryn NE\VPORT Beach. s e 11 Balboa Pentnsuli1 Ne\\'port Bl., N.B. 646-9681. 2283 Fountain \llay East condo. Pr1v. boat sbp at your for elrk'rly, an1bulato1'Y man t'Ombo, frplc .• CO\T d p~UO, $72,500 or lease $550/nio. ;;..:;c;;.;..:...;_:;.;;:.;;;..;.;;: __ BRIGHT & cheerful 2 Br. lW. Of Harboi· on \Vilson) door. Spectacular main or lady, Quiel SUl'l'OUndings. Ne\\· stores or offices \Vill be available in about 3 nwnl.M. Ideal Huntington Be a c h location in shopping center. 1',or information call Jerry Gillespie FOUND: Black s h a g 1 7 poodle-type dog. Vic. t:dison High School, Hamilton & ?.fagnolia, Hunt. B e a c h . 968-5789 bltns, nr. _Edin~er & Spn.ng. Spal'. Condo 3 BR. pool & \\'INTER or yearly. New 3 apt. Bay Front. Priv. patio. Call 646-2S46 channel view. Be au t . Good meals, Call 548-4Ta3. dale. $265. Ask for Dale. yard mai.nt . Cust. erpts & BR, 2 BA, 100' to beach or \Vinter only, no pet 5 • decorated 2 BR., 2 Ba.,1'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"" 962-44n drps. 1st & last $200 dep. harbor. 917·E. Balboa. 673-3053. NCHEE\V ADULT LIVING!! frplc .. patio, garage. $5001" FENCED 2 Br, $15 5 , Days 557-7883: eves 833-8635 ==-==~=-""',--~~-I BA LOR Units & 1 BR's Mo., lease. 544-4223. LIC. nurse \\'OUld like 2 Village Real Estate 91)2...2456 or Eves. 968-2974 DOG FINDERS SERVICE IF YOU FIND OR lllSE A k.d I I Alao p . fl TERRIFIC Bay View. 2 Br, w/Lofts. Frple·s, beam L a-ch senior citizens who need I s pc s. riv. ome 2 BR, 2 ba, adults on1y. New· 1 Ba furn apt. Lido Island. ·1 1· & I hi · aguna ..,..a 0,,~; •• --to lt've In home walk to beach $170 Agt Fee cet ·• pa IO poo. tins, & ---e ......... SUCCESSFUL EAST 17TH STREET DOG please can 5n·596!5 FND: fmI German Shephen:I about 3 yrs old, ton/Bik Vic S. Santa. Ana. 55!H>767 · · ly painted inlout, new crpt. liVI Summer rental or lease. refrig avail. $160 to $225. Good f-" & 1 .. ~. p ~2575 N 1 s285 Ph 548-"""A "'"" A""" LAGUNA eslate Uvi~ on UVl.I a ......... ,,. h o pe s. per mo. "9a11ments fOf' Rent : 1o.J'I or .,...,......,....,. Util pd. No pets. .... 642-9278 4 BDRM 2% baths. tv.'O slot')' George ~7071. ~;ij;ij;;j;ij;ij;j;;;~~l '•I BLK ocean 1 br, gas 393 Hamilton C.l\J. acres of maintained ~~~-------] I t I $350 A k I ~-iens. Pool & spa. Ocean *PRIVATE room for elder· Location, Costa Mesa n x n oc. · s or 3 BDR!\t in Back Bay. New \\'3ter pd. Couple pre!. No 645-44ll or 642-8520 t;cu.u Dale 9624411 crpls & drps, frplc & bltnis, 360 pets. $200 mo yrly 645-4333 views. Close to beach & Jy pergon in small Guest 1430 Sq. ft. \\rith additional 3 BR 2 BA !. 1 2 & hi ~ Aptl. Furn. ALL ELECTRIC shopping. Lge. 2 BR., 2 ba. Home. Family atmospbe1·e. 400 sq. rt. of storage. * , . u-ep see. car i.::arage . g )'ll1l1. * 2, 3, 4 BR apt.Ii * apt. w/amenities. Also, Xlnt food. ~1537 REALONOMICS CORP. buillin!!, close lo schools & S27:'.i. •no. S.10-4013 B1lbo1 lsl1nd !'.l blk to beach. yearly GOLD MEDALLION t d' t $185-$350 BRO S YOUNG Fem. dog. Br., blk. & v.ilt. Flea Collar -Vie. Cabel't & Bay, F.V. 962-9714 shopping. 962--0166 3 BR. 2 BA, 180 deg. hay & B73-6606 or 673-6370 2 BR Apt w/patio, encl gar, s u tial~o 1ap tu.. . 1 m~ .. Summer Rent1ls 420 KER 675-6700 d cd · "~ C I I \v/st.orage & laund. facU. par Y rn., me· util.1-----'C.CC.:..:-.....C.:.O 3 BR, 2 BA. newly ecorat . ocean v1ev.•, ......,,,. a I Bi I \VINTER Rental _ New 3 A 11 !\.1ature adults. 494-4653 Or BALBOA p · 1 , blk OFFICE on Newport Blvd. Lost SSS ~~· ,. 2 1h 1 : ben~h~0"S265. Jsc. 1r1erTell, aft 6; 675-5774 BR, 2 BA, Duplex. Frplc, Newport Heights 1165( ;slmoo.nl~~clody"" LP.'.'',·~ your broker. enin. 2 10 Avail on lease. Partially ;!Qo-u ., 96~1 II bl I $335 '" " " "'°~o'-'~~,..-.~=~I bay, .3 BR, 1% !3A. beaut. furn, carpeted, air/cond, . or · 3 JJR. 2 BA, pool, ~ blk bt.·h. !...: 13871-ns. mo · * BACHE!llR . _.. C.M. &16-0977 or 646-1809. FOR the executive, 3 BR., 2 lg. kit. encl patio, \VShr & parkincr, Approx. l!XXI "'" ft. •GENEROUS• •REWARD• 3 BR. 2 BA. Children ok. fan1ily onlv. $400/mo. 1;1•a-• • pnv. ya•~•. ba. apt. ~· wood & dryr. 548-0GTI , ext. 394. S25CJl~"O. Warehou•• ~also .Fenced. $260/nto. Rent or 493.57~ BEAUTIFU"Y -· apt., no pets. lneld's gas &_ v.1.r. NEW 2 Br, 2 Ba, bltns, drps, glass Ocean view ""-'I A -~ $'""/ Y I G-'2256 •~t pool S · -· .. ~t' · • BALBOA Beach Apt -avail. Ideal for contractor. Lease 842-4827 I 2 Br, bay vi-". Winter or L)\I mo. r y. ·-· -"" g, • gar. pac. rms, real charmer $425 · LUXURY HOME. 5 Br, l Ba, yrt 6~3310 --S Cl t quiet secluded complex. Engl .. •d Re. al E'stale Slps 6, $100/wkly & up or c54co8-=o26-'160===-c==~= lrvfne 2 '-Jes, lrg fam. rms. •r:.75_ Y-,..,.. · an emen • Adlts, no pets. 316 Bay St., -· I 11=1 ~ ·~o ~ I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I ._.., ~ 318 Thalia 494-8093 year Y •:> mo. vi<1-;xu. ; CUTE ADOBE HOUSE, 1000 For return or any inforrna· I• _A'-v-'a"H'-. coim"'m"'-. 642-088=-"''-''---1 :Ba;o;;.l;;;boac;.;;_;..P;;_•n:.:l:;n;;;su::;_l•;;._ __ OCEANFRONT bachelor 1-2 CM. ;-;--:-:~;--;-:------\.."536--0825:"':~~------gq. ft., adjoining busy cor· tion leading, to return of a hr apts. pool, view. Compl SPACIOUS, CLEAN 3 Br, Mesa Verde TERRIFIC Bay View. 2 Br, ner, for business or office gold four leaf' clover pin, 3 BR., 1 ~ ba ••••••..••• $350 3 BR., 2 ba ••••••••• $315/4'1'5 3 BR., 21A tm .•••.•.•••• S.1SS 4 BR, 2\~ baths ........ $"50 2 BR, 2 ba, d£"n, AIC ••• $275 4 BR, 2~~ bt1 .•.•....... $425 2 BR. 2 bRths .•....•.•• $300 3 BR. 2 baths •••.•.•••. $-100 -I BR. 2 bath~ .......... $47"5 Vision- red hill REALTY A Company \Vith Vi~on Univ. Par'k Co."nter, Jrvine Can Anytime, 552-7500 OUicc hours 8 ~1 to 8 P!\f YES. \VE HAVE RENTALS May wt be or loC"l'Vicc in solving Your housing needs'!' ('!111h''l1l'llil. ---''11.~ullor "'SINCE 1948" 1st \Veslern Bank Bldg. Unlver!rity Park, Jrvine Days 552-7000 Nights Sen Juan Caplotr•no NEY( 3 BR. 2 ba, fam nn home. $.125. lease. Adlts. Pool, lnke priv. dbl gar, cpt, drps, D.\V. 49-J-1003 ~"t 609 Sant• Ana Holphts ~~ ACRE, hors£' corrals. 2 BR, 1 SA, $250 mo. Rcferenct?s r e Q u I r e d . 557~ HoUMtl Furn. or Unfurn. Gener1I 310 CdM 3 BR, 2 ba., view. Fum. $500 Mo/yearly. Penin. Pt. 3 BR, 2 ba. Uni. $375 1\-10/yearly. associated BROKE RS-RE AL TOQS 101\ W Bolhc<' 1>71 11>1.l Balboa lll1nd YEARL\", lrg modem 3BR, 2BA Shag erpts wlk in closets, 130 Pearl. 675-0158 Condominiums Furn. 315 redecorated, util pd, $135-new drps, y.•/w crpt, elee. 1 Ba furn apt. Lido Island. us e· C ost a ?.1 es a. approx. 2 inches in diameter, $195. No children or pets. bltns. 2\!i Ba. Lrg encl DLX 2 & 3 BR, 2 Ba, encl Summer rental or lease. ~2020/642-6560 with jeweled horseshoe in $35 WEEK & UP • Sleeping Rooms • Housekeeping RoomJ • Ocean View Apts BALBOA INN 1()5 '°fain Street 675-8740 WJ-3615. patio. Nr. hwy. No pets. gar: $170 up. Rental Ofe., Ph: 548-7834 or 646-4750. "THE F ct ry" h J center : also, -Id locket ~ 3095 Mace Ave $46-1034 a o as a rg ..... •' f'URN 2 BR, l~!i BA. 1 blk 54 3. · · AVAIL. 911·918. 3 Br, 2 Ba, 'shop avail. $16.5/nto. In (was on chain), approx. the 10 bch, some view, lndry fac. 2 BR, w/w shag erpts, drps, Newport Beach $175. 2 Br, 1 Ba, $150. Nr. Cannery Village 425 30th St. size ot a nickel, inscribed $195. mo. 1208 Buena Vista. sty, full .BA & %. Fenced ocean. Gia-5366. NB. 673-9606 or 642-8520. in script, FLA. These are 492-0951. patio. Laundry room, encl THE NEW Rentals to Shi1re 430 SHOP STORAGE ~ sq. ft. deeply treasured family ga~. Mature adults ?nly. :No BAY\VOOD APAR'Th1ENTS in rear nr. Npt Post Office, n1en1entos & the loss is ir-OCEANFRONT. 3 BR.-$325, ~~~dee!, \\'inter rental. Apt. u __ n_fu_r_n_. ___ 365_ Corona del M.ar Gener•I .. IBR apt. Oishmaster, in· 2 BR. erpts, drps, bltns. Call side entrantt, Open from 548-8196 or 67a-6676 or see 12-6. S21~ Iris, $~mo. 2246 A Canyon Dr. Rent Cost• Mesa $150/i;to. 1st & last + $100 deposit req. No pets. Ch1ld,. pets. Park-like sur· in Ne\\""'rt Beach arc FEM. room mate wanted to $175. Agent, 646-2414. replaceable. PLEASE, rounchngs ~ ,~ h 4 B N rt 3 PLEASE help iI you have · · ready. The sates oUice is s are r. e\\'J)O ap~. 1600 sq ft INDUST. shop, ·nr · 642 3589 $140. UP. 2 Br; 3 Br., 2 Ba. open daily trom 10 AM to blks from bch. w/3 girls $225. Also 300 sq ft office ~s.1 & C1f'w':~:ds~ • Pool, bit-ins, play yard. 6:30 PM. MacArthur Blvd. $87.50 mo. + Util 675-843~ $$. C.M. 646-2130. Under New Management. & San JoaqUin Hills Road or 499-2T::i0 · Industrial Renti1I 450 LOST: Long haired Tiger 2212 College No. 1 646.@32 644-55.55 • MATURE male wanted, shr cat, Fem. Approx. 3 year 2 BDRA1 , crpts, drps, bltns, SEACLIFF Manor Apts 1 4 Br house, H.B. $90 per I old, in Vie. of 27th St. NB \\'ashing faeil. Nr. shop'g. Br. Unfurn. $145. Pool. Ask mo. + util. 962-8668 NOW LEASING \\'earing flea collar, frtendJY $l80/mo. Adults only. J69.B about our discount plan. MALE to share furn, view Huntington Beach but s h Y desperately Ogle St. CM. 644-4359. -1525 Placentia Ave. NB. beach home. No drugs, $110. NEW M-1 missed. 67349-t9 AU. UTILITIES PAID 2 NEWLY DEX:'ORATEO 548-2682. So. Laguna 499-4329 940 Sq. Ft. & UP ~: &Pam:rtk &bnb'tely colored Compare be fore you rent BRAND new roomy 2 br apt BR w/gar. Water pd. CalI $350. 4 BR, 2~2 BA, fpcl, I ~ SHARE Apt or House Save SS l-lamilton & Newland nee rea.st omg/ Costom designed, featuring: lnelds dshwshr. trash oom· btwn 1 & 5, 636-4120 hick to beach yrly lse Call HOME PARTNER 646-0697 or 833-0519 yellow, olive gm, red & blu Casa de Oro Balbo1 Island •Spacious kitchen.wilh in-pactol', elec range & oven, 2176 "E" Placentia $145, t-eq'd, call aft 6 'PM,1 ~='8~3&-~ll!_!94~oro:.."54S-~;!:14'.'.7!!_9~"1 ~ .... ~~!!!!!""'!!!!!"'"!!!!!'" \Vings. Reward 673-5889 or direct li&l>ti"8 re!rtgJ1i ~dcd. See6731<1 ap-• TROPICAL • POOL • 64>-2017. Offico Ront1I 440 MISSION VIEJO =64=2-°'5334~·~~----I • Separate din'g area prec. ~S arnet. -6918-2 ~r Stud10, 1~2 Ba. Fry!. 22EBiliRC. .. ~1t;;bQ;:.IFf.rp;;;k1c::-.11-=iBiilkk.~1oi;;I'.~.!::::...'.~~'._._--:=': REWARD -2. Fein. Whip- • Hon1e-likf! storage Balboa Peninsul• spiral strt:se. $200. E/s1del ocean. Yearly. $325 BAYFRONT OFFICES 1600 SQ. Fr. & UP. pets, Dana Point area, red e Private patios on 18th. 543-ll~ Ask for Mike ~ Ui loold AVAILABLE NOWI collars. call anytime .---.-.....,.\1ge o · ces over ng 496-0348 e Closed garage w/stora.ge 601 FROM BAY 3 BR, 2B.A. very large. Ne<J! JONES REALTY 679-6210 Balboa Bay in Newport ON SAN DIEGO FR.WY. e Marble pullman 1 bdrm, 2 Ba, util pd, yrly OCC. Kids & ~ts ok, $195.1 WALK to Beaches -dlx 2 Br. Beach. Various size suites 2'7992 Camino Capistrano REWARD. Lost Collie Vic. • King-sz Bdrms lse. Adults. no pets. $170. !033-D Valencia St. Mgr. encl gar. AduHs over 21• No M \ow as $L20 per mo. Jn. 831·1600 Victoria & Pacific. Male. • P-Ool -Barbeques -sur-mo. (ZllJ 790-5428. 557-7766 pets. Yearly. $215. 673-1990 eludes drps, crpt, utilities, 4 DELUXE OFFICES 645-67'l1 ealJ anytime rounded with plush land-~"='"='="""'-"'~~= · · ·a1 51.-aping CHARMING dup~ex, 2 BR, LRG. 3 BR, 2 BA, shag or 213: 774-3933. 1amton services. Monthly Carpeted, Illuminated Ceil-LOST: Old Fem. long haired Adults. No Pets newly dee., aoultB _cnly, crpts, drps, encl patio. Nr. NEW 3 BR 2 ba yr or lease, 3700 Newport BJvd., ings. Plus 400' Warehouse Tiger Cat, Mission Viejo. LARGE 1 BR, $100 close to ocean/bay/Sh\T;ll. OCC. $185. 557--0350. crpt/drps, 40: from ~an. NB. 67S-1220.~. ~==--Space. 1370 D Logan, CM Reward. 831-02-45 365 \V. Wilson 642-1971 675--8720 or 985-5822. $140. UP. 2 Br; 3 Br, 2 Ba. $425 mo. 548-2819. OCEAN VIEW 644-222!1 LOST Dog, Mixed Te1Tier, N.wport Boach LOW WEEKLY RATES EXIRA lge 2 Br. duplex, Pool. Blt·ins, play yard. BLUFFS, 2 BR, newly Spa~ious, exec. office in 1300 Sq ft M·l, w/front of. Fem. Tan & \\'ht. Name walk to \\'8.let & shops. 1996 Maple Ave ..•. 642-38131 decorated, pools, view, elec Union Bank Bldg, Newport flee. Lrg rear door. $180 mo. Tufty Reward. 962-3'906. NEW 3 Br. 2BA, Unlver. FORleascnulrg 3BrCondo Executive SulteJ Adults. No pets. 6i:>-tl72 2 BR, l~~ BA, epts, drps, 2cargar,Jse$350.6T:>--0175 Center w/recept. area, 646-5033 days . Eves LOST : \Vhite shaggy female Park. w/w cpls, rirps, EastbluU area. $550 mo. 2080CNewpoMrt Blvd. BACHELOR to 2 Br . bltm, encl gar., mature NEAR HOAG HOSP ~hone service. Xerox & part 64&-0681. 1791 Whittier, CM toY poodle, Please call. pools, trnnis Ni·. sc hls. 871-1141 aft 6. 01ti1 esa monthly. 1st & la.st. adults only. $165. 549-1806. 3 Bedrm, 2 bath, fifepl, time secy. Mr. McFarland, 5,000 SQ ft. including mod. 968-3204 vie, Jlunt. Beh. , , $375. 552-313R. Condominiums 642 .. 2611 (213) 697-1496 EASTSTDE • Attrac 2 Br, ADULTS! $250 mo. 6424387 644-9440 dlx. offices. Air--cood, lrg yd Laguna Buch Unfurn. 320 STUDIOS & 1 BR'S · Corona dtl Milr bltns, dshwshr, encl gar, no San Clemente BUSIEST intersection I n space. 2302 S. Suzan. S.A . ' _ _;;-"';;.;..;.;:... ___ _o;;;.; •FREE Linens pets. 646--0474, Newport Harbor. Serond 646-7512/547·2412. If 14') . I :_ $1.GlKJUl -Pd. ·Qlder.-char1n-H·'ntl-ngton' lloa-ca.. e FR:EE-Utilities· 2 BR l tllla st·u,.,io Util ... ~ NEW lat"" 2 BR. 1'•' ba, stoiy ~ in Unique Hon:ies ·M-1. CORNER. 12 7 X 9 0' hbuctlon · u ~'' • ' · u · .1'<'· "¥ Building , 800 en, ft. at w/buildi•g. 991 W. 19th St., ~---;ij;ij;ij~·::.;;~I , 1ng 1 + den. S. Laguna. e Full Kitchen ""' -$175. Shag, pool, blt-ms. plus gar & shop, 314 A. Del $350/mo • 600 :;. ft t C 225 ..... : $~mall 1 Br cottage, LG. 2 BR Studio in a 4-plex. • l'leated Pool rSb 1978 Maple. 645-5647. ?.far, quality extras. Adults, S300/mo.'' Both with vie,!. .M. S · U'U-J490. lovely garden. Gar. P£"t ok. Greenbelt!I, brand nu, nr • Laundry Facilities fl: 492-2264 Storaae 455 Schools & $250-Lrg 2 Sr, 2 Ba, bl tns, beh. Srnl pct/child ok. e TV & nlaid serv avail. ,,.._ ore's NEW 2 & 3 BR Esidt · 675-600'.>· s . instructions deck, gorgeous ocean vu! .827:::_-8525.::-=·-------·•:,,P;,h<mc;:::o:o'_cServi:::::_:::·:::ce:__=---I Cal.I 675-6488 eves. NEAR beach, 2 BR, l~ BA F1JLL SERVICE STORAGE lot, Jocked yard. ---------S_T_S $350-New & nice 4 + fam -::COOL ,...,,._...,. '"""" ,,, •. :,11-. TOWNH' OUSE uoo sq ft. cpts/drps. Sl85., W t l'ff B 'Id' l HUI """""'IS" ..,,,... ......... ~ 2 BDRM apt, stove. Older lease, 492-3799 ts C I UI 1ng Boats. trlrs, etc. $7.50 mo. FREE Yoga Dernortstratioll& rm, gar, yard, patio. Lag. 1gun1 I 2 bl.ks. to shopping center, 2 Br, fireplace, pool, private couple pref. $150. mo. Corner Westelitf Drive &-Neill Neon, Inc., 531-3374. • Wed. at 10 am & 8 pen. ~1fj~IEW RENTALS LACUNA Hills!! 233fi6 San 100 ft. 1~ bus stop, 3 min. to patios, continental break· 646-4862 or 548--0-158. Apts Irvine Blvd .. Newport Rentals Winted 460 Yoga Center, 445 E. 17th St, "-"' Miguel, townhouse 3 br, 2 bch. Xll'a lrg closet ground fast. Spacious grounds, near * STUNNING 1 Br. Garden Furn. or Unfum.. 370 Beach. Mr. HO\vard Costa Mesa. 646-8281. 673-4030 or 494-3~ ba w/vlew. Bllns, dshwi;hr, floor, nu paint. furn'. $1.S9..50. shopping & tine beach. Fur-A Pool R $145 645-6101. YOUNG ...,..,..,,...n. woman PIANO f eel pt. . ee area. . :-=""'""'-=~~~-... ~.... Instr, BA Musle. TOP OF THE WORLD forced a.Ir ht. comm pool, 536-5114 J:ed. or un W'ni::cl . from 710 w. 18th St. C.M. Cost• Mt•• C.D.M. 900, 800. 500 Sq. Ft. wants Bach. apt. or rm. S90, spec in piano pedagogy. buO OCEAi'l VIE\V, la.rge 3 rec area closeby-. Rent $245 Sl'{S . Attractive tum. front 26 . Chrona Mar, LRG 2 BR c~ts d~ bltns From 37 cents. Air cond, under. By Sept, 23rd. Pat: 494-7388, 55&-7687. bedroon1, 2 be.th newly nw. 1st & last. First Securi· 6-4+ 11. ' .,. ' .,.~. ' PREVIEW OPENING priv. parking, will 556-1837 "Make Room For Daddy" d~ratcd , new drapules. ty Mortg,.ll'e, TI4/565-4466 2c BR. Quiet, !clean. Patio,. priv. patio, no pets· redecorate 2700 E Coa t RESPON. Mafu--pl-~. ' I· fl pl f 11 b lit ..., arage. Ad u ts, no pe • $1651mo. 557-5080. · Award winni ng l , 2 St 3 br · · · s .. ,, ._.,, v,,..:u •• , clean out the garage 1ti:'. am,;.Oom Ype~ni:OO~th Sen Juan Capistrano OPEN 2234-A Rutgers Dr., 2 BR, frnt dpix, flagstone LARGE 2 BR, 2 BA, epts, apts w/fanilly rms. No Hwy. C.W. Mast.ers Owner · man seeks 1 Br. furn. Hse. • •• turn that junk Into cash ,· ,,AA_...., 13 CM. frplc den/din, fMm kil d blt 110 leal!e. Sorry, no pel,. From Realtor, 673-U:ll or duplex. May consider with a Daily Pilot Clauilled • ..,...-.u 2 BR Condo, encl gar, retrlg, LARGE. 1 br, twin beds, w/blt!UI, 2 blks beach $275. 0~s;malf~·hnJ. ~ts, just $175. OUR TOWN OFFICE SUITE-Npt. Flnn.n-sharing. !JGS.8461 art. 5. l\.d. Call 642-!i678. UGUNA Niguel, it BR, 2 00. d/w, erpt/drp,, 2()()/mo. ideal for bachelors. S/pool. 6~ 1-·amily A,pts, 1250 Adams clal Center: 4 lg. offices, TIS 1tv-rtn & -d1n:-nren, trplc:. 646-8150 eves. Avl 9/'t Adults $150-$160. ~.FOR lease_ Nu View Apt. 4 $175-l.rg l BR, 2 BA, clean, Ave. (Adams at Fairview) Ml ft; beau!. dttOT; short bit-ins, rcflig---freczer, cpl, Townhouse Unfum. 335 1993 Church SL br, 3 ba.. lam nn. All Elect. erpts & drJ>s, adults, no Costa. Mesa. Phone 5.56-0166: lease w/option; immediate drps, 2 ear gar. E.'l:cel vh?\V, 2 BR, 2 BA rum apt. No bltJns, erpts, drps, $750. per pe1s. 765 Shalimar, 547-11$. THE EXCITING occupancy. 644-5633. workshop, llnJ.niae. $3509-•~.~.1~ Cost• Mesa children or pet• 8Jl Center mo. 673-6992 1 BR, pool, adults, $130. Also PALM MESA APTS. DESK is.pace available . $50 Trader's Paradise la11t, dcpos t, lease. 4 'r""'tvrt _ ~..... S • &42-5848 "" U 2 2BR, $150 w II Id t turt 9 ARCl-1 BAY 3 Br. 2 Ba., CAPE C.00 Charm 2BR. 1~ t. . dPecPkE,R 3b8 1,J\·ns BAN,rfrplbec,h~ 325 East 17th Place. l\flNUrt:s 1'0 NP't. BCH. moat;. mo1 Apn~-nt:n.,urruscm·-ba di I * SHADY ELM~POOL · • ""' · • • Bach 1 & 2 BR.. from $150 .., . ""'" •-e ... ., Beam Ceiling living nn, ~..:. qu11ic 7 t 5 a 64<2-•, pa 6 t o, crpt•, • Adultll Poolside $l4S up. stores. $325/mo. L 1 e. LARGE l Er duplex, util Adults No Pets available. 17875 Bea.eh Blvd. me·~.~ 1~:-o°t:i/ "'.,3, · 127 1i7 E. 22nd St. C~f 642-3645. 962-2270 pnld. $185. 333 B East Zlst 1561 'Mesa or. · fiuntlngton Beach. 642-4321 Agt., 4'.!M-045l Huntington Belch 2 BR, 1 BA F"URN $22(1 2 BO~, ne\v c r pt, St, C.M. 54W945 (5 blka from N~ Blvd.) NEW oUlce bldg. Airport Laguna Hnt1 2 BR Tawnhow!e, 1~ Bath. 151 E. 21st, C.l\t = ted. Pool. $2'15. mo. 3J: J~~~·osr.~~~ f~: * CASA~ICTORlA * ~~aft.F~ ~:-~ 4~.1ir ;:.;;:..:....C..------1 Frp 1 ~c. 1C!'P190ts.w.,..~ stove, * 64(?-8666 * 2 BR. o.pts, from S2IO to $300. 1st. &12-2222. l. 2 &-3 BR. Fµrn &-Unf. l\tullan Realty, 3'100 Irvine, : ., -4 BR. tam rm, lease/option; rer1g. · >llM 3'BR,1.\\ BA. o•• ea~ ... dra-• D"", TV Newport Beach. 54~ • .,.,.., mo. $36-. Avail for Sent• Ana U"'l!>tain. AIJ10,unf\lrn. houses 2 0 n"t garden duplex, new . .,... .,... ~...; , ,... i =:'nituc Of ~I ytar, 2 m Shall~~ or., C.M. BOYD Ree.ltors 675-5930 in quiet northllidc nt"ar Bay ant. Pool, etc. :>;Q Vtctorla OC. AIRPORT 68'l sq. ft. y~1 o1d f need d · St. $195. 548-1425 St. at Harbor . CM. 642-8970 $m n10. 2 yr. lease. Full !!~,, 'o' 1,.J•,r -. BRADFORD PLACE 1 BEDROOM. CLEAN. ORM Ask about' !\love-In service, lum. avail . 61~•u. wner nA"'n . New townhtc, 3 BR, 1\t Ba. $1-40 mo. DeJ Mar, CM 1 B , crpt5, drpa stove, it') .. '>747 Logun• Nfg uol -:;::y,11drp11, blt-ins, dlll ~r. eSC&-0919 e rSb""'; refrig, balcony. 2 chUd OK. Allowance ~ • Like to trade? Our 'ftadtr'a Pt, v •at•• ~• -0 ., $140 mo 9'J6o.8936 ~. RA '•:,tc 1 or z Br. OM~ICF. (appro. x. 515 sq ft) Puadbc column 15 for you! 3 BR 2 •-Vic ~1 ... ;..,,•7 ru. .f'Vlll, .,..,., • 2 BDRM, new crpts & panel· .'"' -ortll 2 8'0 RM' 1 . ,,H."eai-• ~poo. ~., II'". for lease. T&J Mahal 23521 5 lines • • ~ w. ruu i;lUl"'llow • tng. Infant OK. no petJ_ 2267 • stove, re ng, n1 J' iv "'' p De V 1 i La 5 d tucllltlea. $!25 Month Duplexes Fum. 345 8 ea·-Dr 833 ~... d\shwhr. 70.1 Shalimar. SHiO. Mn.t\il'Cl adull$. tntilnt ok. No ~seo 8 enc 8• guna. ays Agt 49-1~ 4D4-9729 ~ ,..,v.. "IAAN ON TEN ACRES mo. 962--39:*i pets. 1881 Aton ro v ta. Htlls. 837w7ll0 for 5 bucks. Lid I I Loguna Be•ch NICE 1 A 2 BR Traller1. $S0 A.pl.I. rurn /Wlfum. Leue 64~2174. NE\V bldg .. ocean v;ew. 2.<XXI WtlJ.. tnl.dl" land nnr BAr· o 1 • & Up. Matu1" adults .1.33 E. Flreplacci ·, prtv. patiot. Dena Po1nt REOEC. UNF. 2 Br/l Ba. &{. ft. avail. 40c per sq. rt. 11ow tor equity In hon1t":, LOVELY 4 BR, 2 8.\, patlo, 2 BR lawer,Ophc, turn FA 16th St. 642-1265 Pools Tennis Contnt'l Bkfst. S215, FURN 2 Br/1 ~~ 0.'l. Brookhut'Sl St. 962-6(&. ~t, or lt1.tc modt"I car, all eleo kit., fpl' , dble gar., heat. priv patk>1 ~osed $139 1 BR film. UtJI pd, Near 900 Sea Lane, Cdf\.f 644-160 2 Br. Sweeplni;: h11rbor vu. ~. 1 Br $190. Adu\1s, no Any day Is tM BEST DAY to Equhy $3,()(X) -$30,<XXI. ' I .. lines times dollars 11AV.E: 3 BR hO~, rentfd, value $20.lOO, Eqully $6300. \V\11 add, \Vant: Sports car or k>cal pn:ipert)'. 673-6756 SilARP Duplex, 1ross $3.i'SO S.A. Equily $1,&KI. Want C.M. or N.B. HoUJt. PaUi&On Invettsnrnl Co., 612.$lll; &!2"8001. ' ~pt 15 to June 15. $400. mo. pr. Near beach. avall Sept store1, Quiet adllJ. 1983 (MacArthur nr Coaal Hwy) \\111er & ,J;:flll lncl'd. 1\dults. pt-bl. U•I E. 20th SL ru11 an ad! Don't delay. . 979-9165 673--1334 15th, 49Ml60'l Pomona; CM~ sg-p;; No dog1. $100. 493-6039. 646-4005. _call today 642-~75. •••••••••••••••••- .... Monday, August 20, 111,3 1~1-~-l l5l ! lttsito, ..... State Mutual Savings 121;;, hl"i-7~11. 1·.'I:! :.'ll·I ~;quul Oppor Enl l'lQyrr 'lrr,) ;\[atn !'\11···1·1 llun 1111L:fo •n Bt!uicn :):'.ti-~'\JI 1;:ryual Oppor, E1np!•1,\1·r * * COMPUTER OPERATORS VDM Varia n Data Machines 2722 Michelson Dr. Irvine 133-2400, oxt. 336 . ·--~-- J[Il)I [.,.,,..11 l[Il] I £11,..7nwnl IITT1 l.....__ ..... _-_,filJ I ~meut J[Il] .\p1·l~ 111 p,.l ... ••tl ANCIENT MARINER ::01 \o. T11~t1 n,. :'i .. \. !'.i 12-1.t.'\.'\ Master Specialties 164 0 Monrovia Costa Mesa HELP! Volt Instant Personnel NEEDS Secretaries Typists Keypunch PBX Oprs Help Wanted, M&F 710 Helo-Wanted. M & F 71DHelp Wonted, M & F 710 INSURANCE SALES No exp nl'('., earn whilc> you learn. p1u1 timC', eves & ,1-knds, full time "'hen quali· ried. Farmers lnsurancr Group Ed Lani * 540-1834 JHON\r ORKF:il EXPER. ORNAMENTAL LAGUNA ·19.l-63 i6 JOBS MEN-WOMEN Sk;lled-Unskllled Ship RC'c Cl<'rk, rt• lo S!50 "k MACHINISTS Top pay & liberal wage program. Paid health & dental insurance. 11 paid hollday~ a year. Long term security. Royal Industries, a maJo: manu!acturer of nu· clear components, is no\v hiring experienced machinists in the following categories. All shifts. Jig Bore Machinist (DeVlig) Profile Machinist (Hydrotel) NC Machinist Engine Lathe Machinist Grinder Machinist ID-OD Milling Machinist Personn el Depart1nent \viii be open for in· terviews 8 AM-6 PM Mon-Fri. & B·noon Sat. Other interviewing times can be arranged, ROY AL INDUSTRIES i040 E. Dyer Rd., (RedhUI & Dy.r) Santa Ana, C1. 540.J210 An Equal Opportunily Employer Help Wanted, M & F 710H elp Wanted, M & F 710 MOTOR ROUTE DRIVER Male or Female CanH·r~1 ,\:-Sf'n1i>ler rn Sl.!11.l hr [ S;1n1lt'l'.~. \\l"llf(l/1n1I O S2.'.?:1 hr 11 ;~1 Tl'pi'. nn•ch In ~~O() n10 r '1 Fa~·tur)' lrainN';; S:l.00 hr c~1 rl Frida~· FOR DAILY PILOT IN SOUTH LAGUNA I :-:Onie 1yp-dl'l1v S1.2j hr I J::fec. ,\sscn1. trne'>, l ;rcat 1\ork conds, <'arly rui~es. Sl'\\·ing or kni111n~ C'XJIC'r. Starting S 1.80 hr S1vitC'hbrd Opr $2.00 hr Orderd [){'sk. ace typ to S::i'15 mo. APEX EMPLOYMENT AGENCY !Sl()...C Nc\1·port Bh·<t. Costa .\lesa 645-1:120 JUNIOR SALESMAN : Earn S20-$40 per ""(•l'k 1\'0l"k· ing: airer school and Satur- <lays selling fl('\\' s11bscrip- 1ions for the DAIL\' PILOT. TI1is is not a paper route an<I dOC's not inC'!Ud<' ~­ l1v<'rics or collecling. Op<>n- inc:~ in Costa ~l<'!<:l. Foun111in \".:1llrr and :"ou1h Jlunlinvi'ln I :1 •;11·h. Ap1i!y no1r hy c·:dJ111b j \-.:.:~11:.:. l-:<1uaJ Oppor. E1nplo.\1•r Liberal profit plus generous car allowance. 1\1ust live in area & have valid drivers li· cense. Dependable auto & cash bond r~ quired . Call Harry Seeley 642-4321 An Equal Opportunity Employer . . He lp Wanted, M & F 710 1 Help Wanted, M & F 710 KEYPUNCH \"ar\1111 Data ~fach 1nl's ;1 lead<'r in the mini con1put <'r indu'ilry ha s immediate opening;, in our keypunch area for the following: Keypunch Opr. \-3 years recrn1 CXJX'r. on the I 0'2'9, 059. l\1akt' Q\Oo·n rlr1.1n1 cards & do n11"Tl verirying-. f Softweor MACHINE OPERATORS Soni~· l'i'\JX'I". HI miJlfna' n1aehines, lathes & drill pl'l'!ls deii;lrabl~. \Vllling to t1·ai n son1ecine u·/exper. in high school n1achlnc shop. Cnll Fur Appl. lndus1 1·1:.! Hcl«lions (714) 494-9401 Jr. Recept;on;st Preparation Clerk , A <·hN.·rful fat·~ & lo\'l' for 2nd shift. KC'ypunch exprl'. publie. 1\rt·ur:11·y in lyp1n~· [ prt>ftrrrd. Prt'\'ious da111 TELONIC INDUSTRIES Brginn ing for a cart"C'I" l'Onlro\ t'.'l:()('r. hf'!pful. j n1inrl('(! Pi'l"SOll. Xln"r bene-. Fql J o i-· ] Laguna Beach fiis. Start $400. Call Aim If _ you n1e<>t lh!_'Sf' quahricn· 1 · ia ppor. .mp oyer Oiristie ;.;J6.S5(); Control lions .~· al""f' 1nlC'1'eSted 111 '· ' . · . '. . ... ,.,,. joining a J!:f'O\l'ing: ro1npRny :'11,\NlCURIST -EX pr. r I . Ca1_"l'l.'I F:n1ployn1cn1, J"1\l\I th t 11 · Vollo,\·ing not nr(~·s~,...., Jr,·1n(' Blvd., N.B. a o l"l"S. -• I 6T,,....i100 •:r e Xln't Benefits .\IAID \''ORK_ 5-'7-h,-,-pc-r~da-y JR. CLERK e Modern Facilities in <'XChan~c for apt. 2376 Bc<;;inninl{ position for young e Competitive Pay Nl'i,·port Bh·d. cr-1 :>48-97j.j. n1an. r.rust !yrc. J\nply Jn Pf'r!<fln PIC!l!'f' Apply Jn Person r-TA RINF: E:\"GINE MARINERS Or Contact :'llECllANIC SAVINGS & LOAN B. Krafka :'ilu~r t>e e:..pi·r. & current on J.JIJ \\lestclifl Or. pleasure boat gas & dlesel Ne\1•port Be11ch 1•11g1nrs, rransn1issions, out· VDM r!rlve!', C'tr. Hii:;:hC'st wages KEYPUNCH OPERATOR Varian Data Machines Irvine in industry. Brand new fnciliLi~ al Strt1SC'I Aquatic Park. Cnll ls;t for appt. il4:8-16-4I2:) or 213: 592.-1645 ri.JECllANIC 2722 Michelson Dr ln1pQrt aull) :'>I c r ha n i c Sw ing Shift 833-2400, ext 336 I srcc111ltt1ng 111 SA A B, Hospitality Ho stess ~ P.\1-1:?:30 Ai\! P.enau11. ria1. ,f.. Al Romro., Service Equul Oppor. En1ployer Santn Ana's ncwesr IinPQrt J..; looking for 11onll"ll to \\'c . are sreking an C'X· CRr•Spec1ah,,1. 11•'lt·ome & intcrvie\v 11p11• 1 pcrte~~I tab . Pu 11 <' h KlTCllf;N 1-fl'll"· pari Hnie, I Dick Millar Motors l;11uat Oppnr. r..:n111tn~·f'I' resuJ.·111~. Salr..; or udver-\"a r 1f 1 (' r · Apphl'anls ex-Hi Sehl S1Utk>llls. Apply 5.57-2132 1 1.~1ni; C'Xpt.'!'. hC'Jpful. i\1ui;1 flr'1'.17nce<1 °11 IBM .129 & J\lgr, Taro Bell. 699 Coast 120 \\" \\'arn(>r, St•n!a Ana Elec. Enginee r to $T2K h .. v1• ea1· & lypc1\rilcr. Uni\ a~ _l 70l/l7lO eq~upnlent Ilwy, Laguna. r.JEOICAL as!lislaot. • •.. :il7-~ .• 095. Eves & ii·knds. are ehglble to be tranled. "'·' .l:.-'1><:r. C"un1n11111i1·ations LANDSCAPING J.UREMAN. bflt'k offi<'I', limited x-ray \\"1•..;tcliH Slfi-!JOOI. Plcast" Call Jn1erview between 4 & 5 liCf'n.Sf'. 1\1 a I u re , For Pl'1"l<on111•1 1\s:enr\' Housekeeper-Governess For Appointment pm. 5.57-8336 irencrnl prnctice. 968-31l:J lfi:11 E. Er!ini.:l'I" S .• \. !...1 K·.111on Nc11JXlt't lkachl Mrs. Glorla75nose MAID, Jive-i n v:no \\'ould J\IF:DTCAL Sec'y w/previous '\J,irl; 111 r c•uteri Irvin<' £U"\'li. Con1p1U1y 1n·('si-17141 547-Jove twin girls, agt· 2 yrs 2 MD"s nrric<' expcr. Good! I ~,i2-.~·;i; 1lf'nt .t 111fe \1•/l child, 11 N n'IO's. Must be imnu1c. typinl!" SPl'f'd essentia l ., Elec. Test TeCh-$3.65 hr j yr old son. r('Quirc a n1u -GREAT WESTER Mllinlain 4 hr hn1. Age late 213--121-897.1. Long Beach. B,,..,11• J-:!0•1· HuekJ,:round run:-!':·1glish speaking 1~·on1· SAVINGS 30's en rly 40's. 6'13-002 or ~IOTEL MAIO \VAN"f'ED \\1•stclirr all ru rlf'VO!e herself to this 642-96.50. I "'ill !rain, apply io ,,.-, .... · · Sul 1418 No. 1'faln '"" 1'1•rN"1ll"•·l A~l'!l{'Y r \trao1u1nary position. • · Santa Ana l\1Af0 for club .'~-ork, ar-Cos1a l\1C'sa Inn. 11,·11 F.. l·'.1linR:<.'1', S.,\. nry is OJ>f'll .'V. a full range 1c111oon shirt, $2 .. 10 hr, over MOTOR Rou!I.' Driver for J:\!:uk 11; r .•n11•1·• of btncri1s arf' provided. Equal Oppor. Emplo.vcr m/f 21 yr11. Apply TlO \V. Bny Dally Pilol in South Laguna ~1·1'.!-8~16 Outsidt' hf'lp 1~ cn1p!oyed to AVC'., Bnlboa. l\fus! Ii\·(' in area Md haW __ E_X_E-CUTIVES pc>rforn1 hC'avy hou~holcl K E try I _, I t" valid driven. : •.· • •" s e ., ll'Or!:-. POllition IS for l1Vt• in * ey n * ~i/\ D \\'anlL·u pnr 1n11'. $12,000 to $75,000 " and t'f'<Juir<"s a Calif. drlv-GT.J-3-163 ll11rbor Inn ~1otcl Dependable auto and cazh Si·nd n·~un1r nr call TOIJAV c•r'R licensc. Car \VIII be Jll'Q· 1800 \V. Balhon Blvd. Nn. bond required. Call HUTy for i'(111f1dl'ntial NO COST vided If t'-vruirl."'d or allow-ltnn1cd. O""rl!ng on 2nd or MACHINIST___ Sc<!ley, 642-"'32J . . ... ,.~ Eq11nl Oppor, En1ploycr e'1'\'U l1vr 1n1en.•1c1v. ancf' 11•\ll be mod(' for u. .. e :l1Y1 !lhifts .~ 1rknds In our Growing Joc;·al lirn1 nwds in-EX1':CUTIVI~ SEftVICES. or iX"rsonal l'&J'. For 1'\">nfi -Org Co. dala cenler. cliv, \I) run mill & lathe. NCR Proof Opr. INC. rh'nllal in!('1'VI<.'"'• plea.1W l\lust be able to do setup~. Beautiful modern bank in 888 N. l'il1un. Snnta Ana fot'l~·ard ou1Jlnt-or pnst c.'I:· Compett tivt salary S1tu1 S8G6. Call F,d \Volr. N.B. i\fanl!ger ~}'!I .YOU ca n i7l.J! 5-li-$2.'i. _ J)t>TienCl' ant1 r<'fcrt"rn.·r~· rates S·l()..00.'X), Coe11!1•l Personnel KO horne early if 1\-0rk gets Experienced \\"rile Clas!lif irr! /\d #!I05 I Convenient location & A~rnc)', 2700 ll11rbor ijlvd. ''nnr be!orr {)_!1illinR lime. D?ily P1lo1. P.O. 13ox ~:16() Eosy Commute ~ _ _ _ __ S'llllry to S42;i. C.All Kay Boat Carpenter C.•ixi:i i\lt•sH, C<ilU. 92t.i?6 . ,Nk d Shift prem r<ltes 1 MACHINISTS \\ltn". ~ .. io-oo.\i. Coos1111 ., P1rd11011 11lUl>I I.It' fll lt'tl w11h111 n • 11('1'!1fll111C'I /\ic('lll'y, 2790 111 11ork on 3i T111•1l<'r nl':>.I 2 \\N.'k . f"ull or.p1t1~1" Prorolypc mill m:ll'i'.1n1~t " HnrOor Blvd .. rl\I. )Ul'hl:.. ~ ~ .. -;-12!1 .t: f,,.,, n1:sc ;, yri1 nih1. e.,~r. '"~~'" l'al'ifit• Tr1111 l••I' Cor11 l fOtrSt;fJ.~./\NF:R:, Ex P d .. JulhC' lll8Jl, prolol)'f)f' ,tot pro-5-t7·6~KJS 11 t~!s. _ 1 . ., hrs, " da s. rcr .?H I 114) ~16-6().'I() itucrion . Shop lrnint'f's, F.-,-.~;-g_n_cca ,:-mechanic ivk, S2.j() pPr hr + lranis. ·or Appointment Bouse ~lant1f. Co., 4000 Cam- Cnlt AM 11tr 10, 494-7432. pull Dr., N.B. S.'.i7-!m0. l\'ft~ _!12-5111 HOUSEl<E.El'ER, live In, for A Saftguerd Business ~1'AN to work f/time In ren- 1 J-'l{Y c-ook -\\"111IT'f'SS • ('lllployed couple. srn. wk. Systtm_! Company tal yard. Short ha.Ir. Very / Obh"'~!i!IK'I" rnr Cf'1ffee 11h<Jr 1'<'f!l . rcq'd. Reply 10 P.O. neat handwrltl"f. Wiil ll'fl ln. I oo 26.13 IV. Coo'1 Hwy .. N.U. flox 14:18, Laguna Bench. KEYPUNCH App!y m<>r~•. 1930 Nwport ('n il,_ &12-.1<75 ••. r 71 3) HOUSEKEEPER, part tim• SWING SHIFT BIV<I, CM '122~.1046 n('('(fe<I ror <'Onv{llrlicent MA ~:;;;N~A'"GC;Eo;R.-;T;:;Rc;A'°l'N"E;;;E FRY COOK hnspi1~1. 11pply 340 Victoria. 6 /\<Io's actual 1\'ork exper. on Outd11.ndi11K opportunity to NEEDED NOW! e DISHWASHERS e BUSBOY e WAITRESSES ~Ills! be clean It neat. ~r 21. l)cpendablt. Xln'~ ¥.'OJ'k. Ina: l'Onditlons. r~1r1 rim". 269X Nl1\vporl C(l11ta i\1csa, 642--0387 kPypuneh, keytapc or ke)' ndvant.'t' 10 manuiitrt11J posl· Bl\11., r .. \1. IJOUSEKEEPER. t mm f'd · disc d<'vlCf'. lion in 30-.fiO da.v-. Our cur-Apoly In IX't"!Oll f.'t:IRNl'l'URE: Upholslc!rcn;. OJll'nlnq full or p/tin1e. Call Apply In The l'f'nt n111.n ager!11 e1u·11 SURF & SIRLOIN ('uirr~. 1\rrn n1Hk1'1 & ~1r. ~!UlPr, 61~1 1. Ptnontlt't l>cpnrtme:nt $1000-tlfiOO n10, 1\nt!il hAVt' 593()-\\'. (..'ml!lt Hwy.--~an1,11trP~srit Nl'1~ lrir f1u·-HOUSEKEEPER ,._fond8.Y·t~rl. 9nm -l2 Noon door 10 doo r canva!ll!ling cx-1 Nr1r(Xl1't Ucach IOI')", 111;11t,v IX'rwhts Appl) Chllrl i·llr<' CrtM tln'll PACIFIC MUTUAL pt·rltnce. 111 .2.1:Z:t Sriu1h F:n .. t ~ltil n SL. • ~>-Kl:s.ws 11 iOO Nrwport Center Or. CnJJ "fr. Nt'\\1llan 9~ Need a "P1td ";' PiMOlt an ldl !~~,','~; ::01~~~ n I' r· i. /'w.•t N;•('ol i1 "Part"" Pi .. -e nn ail~ Nl'Wport B<-neh CLASSif"IEO , " 612-567S l C:1 ll fi.12-:-:A17S.:-.--, ' -· ' , • ... c -He IF -~ITE lion Senc Box Cali NIGl1 Coa' in 1> t< GB '. has 1rai1 mw- cred !<><• 11\C:'d tloni perr *XI GRJ * C\ . "' PO AVA F IN' Beau c;rc1 I f' 0 • i;,oo J s.W-: A•• ' Cll.J 1 I ~ fits. oldr. Cha LVi~ Con NUR I :R l~ NUR reli> Top Par •66 Mi :;hi ~ Top ,,., I N.B 2 Ra •ti I y ]~ -OFF ( fng Sou ?.fo1 .u M~ ?.fu: ~ Vila; tab, ma vin .... P/tij Mu or &16 p ~1aj ""' "'" the per .. , Xlt fiE E• PA~ Cl< pUI clu cil~ "'I RO A.B M\ ,,., Ne -PRI I E w UI m 01 lit C( .,. pt w • If Y• of Cf •i .. ( "" •J Monday, August 20, 1973 DAILY PILOT -~ l[Il] r-t ~En ..... , .... ~l[Il]~':l~""~ .... ~ .... ~~l[Il]~'~I ~-~ .. ~.-~l[IlJ~t• , .1 iiii ..... iiii ...... ~ ]~ [,__· -----..I· ]~ Holp Wanttd, M & F 710 Holp Wanltd, M & F 710 Holp Wanttd, M & F 710 Help W onted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M &.F 710 hi Help Wonted, M&F 710 Help Wonted, M&F 710 M c 816 RECEPTIONIST 11 nery Misc1Ll1neou1 l'ITE Cher. Jrgc Cood opera· . ., \Vl\lTRESSt.:S \\'ll 11 t e d, tion Is lookl!ti for nlte chef PRINTING Fee Paid. titpldly ii,'l'OwlrlJI: SOCRETARY Secretar·1es Sna ck bar Menager r..1utt1re l.Qdl(•1, PersonabJ<i, Bl.ACK & DE~,KEH. \Voml 818 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS send resume & refs lo p o' O""S flt;n needs your good typing PERSONNEL ~tahu\• lady, tui!: fiex.ihl c reliable & dependable. Fpr drive 51!W. 7~ ·. 2 l!P uox lOOO. Newport Bea~/· rr ET skills & pleasa,nt peNIOnallt y Sales min-Exper p£<rm position. Apply t11 • 64;~7944. t.:vei1. * Callf. 92660. . " ·PRESSMAN lo handle th«r bU'Y front ' I"""°" all pm Open M" II 818 desk. Salary to $5.;(). Also SEC EJ ~Iyland Laboratories has h,n r~or our spor1ing goods, hard· Scl!llmt' 2400 ~· i C 1 . llC• 1neou1 !'-IGT-IT \Vaterman, l rvi~ Fee J obs. Call 11 e 1 c n R ARY n1Nllare openings and in· \\'Ure & housewu.res def)W't· H""'Y N' B es oo.s * AUCTI N Coast Country Cl ub. Apply 'rhrt•r day. 12 hr shill. ~tason, :J.1()-QJ55, Constal tcrvlC\\'S UJ'1l prtsenily being fl)(•1il!S. ' ' · · 0 * lr1 pt'nOn. l\h1.~1 be nble to OfK'ralc P<•11i0111111l Agt•ncy, 2 7 9 O <..-onducted to. fill Ille foliw:. Office Help \~~c!~1~1 E.'t.:.s ~~k~~il . F~ Fini• l-'u.rntturc 1 ~:·;.v~ = ~~~~1 ~. 11:ing --NO EXPERIENCE 2850 & 1254) Multilith llarbor Blvd, CM J>t'rfec Olft'l'tl pl' rm an c n t Ing positions. E'>.:p(:i·!ei11,,'<'tl & ma!uri· . hours good pay Call Jackie & Apphunces ·ro~ lh 1 NECESS PJ'C'lifl, Apollo . \V c b h l'll\l)loymcnl mtid vacation ADMINISTRATIVE G00<I . puy .~ x,·ln'I .. r,l'ir1wc· \\'i•slbmok, lx•t\~·n 8 11111 & 3 Au~tloo~. i'"rldny, .7:30 p.111. i.,>0lri. ~~~'~it~anJedv~Yu:,.M~ ARY Pl'l'SS. Sonll' strlp1llng & RECEPTIONIST after 6 in9nU1!1 plus one I h\•n1>f11i;. Call 540-36:\;i fnr pni, auyduy except Sunday. Wind y S A uction Barri DENTIST. " '"" RA N E plat\' n1ak1ng l'('(!ulrix.t. 1 0 . \;t't'.k paid Hine o[f at SECRETADY an nppolnt inent. -1.94-657 1 . coec'-~-~~--T I E POSITION \\\~ 111-cd son1conc \\'ho is ny or night, no t:xp. nee.. Christmas. company palrl ~ WHITE FRONT ' 2075~~ Nl'wpor1. C:-01 6'16-8686 STEREO. Quad a f cl' 1. ·1 NOW OPEN a S<'if ~•arl e-r. 24 yrs. cru;y, tun job. Will b•ain, nu Ure, .hospilal, 8 u r g i ca I , so wpm shorlhand, 60 wpni. COSTA MESA \\rAITJ{ESS l'Xpl.'J'. Fantastic Behind Tony's Blrli:: 1i'l11t 'I. n11t!l.'hing high efflcl~ncy GB Industries of So. Culif. CX!Jl'r, In Offset PretiS typ'1ng vr isl:IOrthand, etc. ~echcal and dental benefits. 1yping. Excellent clerical i·lit~nce fol' n fltofcssional ~ ~I' l' n kc rs, lj() \Vall has Immediate openings for 1vo1·k. Ap1)ly .. in person any all or t;xceUent working c...'Ondi-skills. 1;a1!rcss, Crni·cyd sh~ft. 10o/c OFF /\ 1\t/rl\l/J\1PX Rf'c,~iver, h'iline('S in di !I p la y ' CVl'. ut 2930 \Vest C!il 1-J\vy,, 1Jons and growth pott'ntial. STH.EE'l' l-'OREl\IAN -crrY Xln 1 ll(W. Rt~t~ req <l. w· h OTh. d Gat'l'tll'd professional siie . n1nrketlng dish'ibution .t Apply In N.B. GENERAL (J!-~ SAN JUAN CAPISTRA-646-5304. it IS A turntoblc, ~ n·uck 1ape deck. credit merchundlsing. 6 llCiv Personnel ))c'partmcnt Progressive com p u t er NO. $704·$.~. JX'r month. All furniture, applinncrs, S!ill hrand new in box and Jocations 10 open in iin-r.ton·Fi·l 9 an1-12 noon RE.'CORD keeper for \vine & Per i Ph e r a I Products SECRETARY Experience requlred in Pub· WAREHOUSE TV's, ltunps, toy.~. clothc!l, guarantecd. \Viii sacrifk:e niediatc ruturc, J\lany p0i;i-liquor consultants In Cdl\1 manufacturer has a n im-lie \Yorks construction and & ni\sc. Ends ~ 21 . US£D :ill for $127.36. or for small r!ons noiv open for full time PACIFIC MUTUAL ofc. Good h a nd'" r it in g mediate opening for a Shorlhand or dictaphone. rnaintcnance operations. Ob-WORKER USABLES, 25fi) \'p,1•port n1onlh.ly payrncntti, <·a 1 \ J>erntancnt people, 700 Nc·11•fJ01·t Cl'ntcr 01'. req'd. 673-5972. personnel secretary report-General office l'xptriene<> 1a1n apphcalKrn from Per-VI' 1 , . . , . Blvd .. Ci\!. 1·urs. 1h1·u Sat. crrdlt n1anager 893-0501. * XLNT TRAJ NINC PRO-Newport St;al·h 1ng to the PersonnC'I l\1ana. required. sonnet Office, 32400 p • r1i; l v1tan11ns assi~I tn -~~--..........,... GftAJ\f Nfual oppor. cni ployer RELTABLE Saleslady for gl·r. Adt'lan to, o~n , .. ,,,, Caap'•'°s-1 stock contrnl & 'inventory. 1 ~\'-ING-SO:-:---. . Mlscellaneous Jewelry •lore. Roi. N'-CLERK TYPISTS ~· " 646-3931 ,,., -'"'" >II" . Wanted 82.0 * C0i\.1PANY B~NEf"ITS _ __ quired. 518-3·102 If you have excellent typing__ . lrano. CA. 92675. 714/493-1171 itein~. Bch·111 S\."t, AiC'C ]-_;.:.;;;;,::::... ___ _.: • SOr..tE PART TI l\l E PRODUCTION un<l cun1n1unications skills.).) \Vpn1, typu1g STOC!' room nian fol' fast \VHO \VANTS ·ri)'\V0RI '? \\'i!Sh(•r & dryt r . 1-'11" " !l P 0 S I T I 0 NS AL S 0 Jll'shHU'lllll and at least 2 years person-g1'01vtn~ boat co. ~pply, Clip. DRIVE A CAB•. '· pool iablr, t.a1-r;c s1C'rl drl'<k * CASH-fol' old blue jean!I, l.f'vl's. 1664 Nc,,·port Blvd. Suitt' C. C.M. J\'1011-Fri. Musical Instruments 822 ;\VAILABLE TECHNICIAN A FUN PLACE ncl sccrera1·y CX""rience, BID AND pc•· T<>' + 1 & 1 & 3 c·hnirs. Hl'a."OnnhlC'. 448 FOR PERSONAL you may he the i~divid"al ·. .ie une ~· ICllOOSE; )'our houn; \\ll')rk !)(>Sola ·rerr:i('t>, Cd i\'r. " CONTRACT Occidental , S.A. for yourself, be YOl;r o1"11 67340.1115 INTERVIEW CALL : Pe1·for111 electronic checkout TO WORK ii·c seek. 'l'wo years college. STUDENTS. apply 11Qw fo1· boss. r.ten or \\'On1cn. Cun _ 536-2591 of n1ict'O\\•ave Jll'Oducti'i & Apply or contact: CLERK . p/tin1c concession jobs. S2 be slightly handicapped. i\l~~ RClJ King bt.-.(1, Din .. Mon. Only 9-5 RS ro111pol"K'nls. ·rcchn ical :Ji~ R. PERT EC Calculators. 55 wprn . typing. I hr. Ovt<r 17. M.S. Tait, N ca t-Clcan Appenrttnc<'. di\:ar~. ste~ console, Sony, -~N"O;:T;::E TELLE_R_ or se1·vicc school 1rai11!ni; in f 12!38-1186 bef noon, Vts, retired. Age 25 to 70. pa1n11ngs. minks, n1ach1oes1 cle~·U'Ooics ,I',,: l\11n l y1• e €Uben Apply in pc-rson or call: Supplement your inconlt'. ?: incch '.~\:-;, caml'r?-s, pro· Beautilul n1odcrn bank . rclatcd ex.pc dcnct'. BUSINESS SYSTEMS DONA LEVERETT 'T<'chnicisi n Drivt: a cab 6 hrs or more a ;ectors, 64--R277 or 646-8214 BOGEN P.A. amp. 60 \Vall , use iv/horns or spakers. Any ohms $100. 847-4Tl2 FENDr:R Atnp. 4 -1 0 speakers. GoOO. concl. $140. 963-2326 Crea! benefits & friendly 17112 A 1"141 ~.•n "'1VVI "~n 1 · A I · ·-1 110" I G. of.I nnstrong Ave. i <>'<..,...........,.,, est. ''"' Pr~RTEC offers ""tmanent <ny. PP Y in pcrson, 1 · ,~DA, 3,j() Dirt, Road 1·o ·workc r$;. Sa·lary 10 Call For Ap111 s c I" · ,~ ,. II C "C "86 E 16 h 0 ·k ~ 1, S500. Call Kay \Vi 11 ,,,. • • anta Ana, a 11orn1a en1ploy1nrllt, paid va,·ations ·c 01v au o., .i • t ,~1 ·e $..:;:15. Color TV 23" ~ ... Industrial ftcl atiuns • ee Irvine Indusu·ia l Complex Hyland after 6 n1onths. plus one St .. Costa Mesti. $6i Hober!s Tap(' Player Office Furniture/ 15 55, Coastal Pcrso11111..•I (7l 4 ) 4 94-940 l Equal Opportunity En1ployer \1·eck !laid !inie orf at WIG STYLIST S9:i. Grrtch Guitar. 10 speed Equip. 824 , ~fncy, 2790 !{arbor Blvd, 1 m/t Christn1as, con1pany 11air1 I Bike. 6~2-9107. TELON Now Hiring -::::::::::::::::::::1 Laborator1"es lifr, hospital, s u r g i ca I Pl And/AO,. ISa!Brs 2.1 \V,\'fER i"lyacinths 50c EA"EC SIVVI chrs Sl.5/25 Sec I Nurses Aldel-IC BUSBOYS & • f!le.dical and dei.ital. bc.nelits. ease PP Y ctwn .. h , • d . chrs $8124 DC'sks $20/90 SECRETARIAL E ti t k 11 :1111·& pn1. l\1on th1·u Sat. eac i..aven r r Blossom. Picrce 867 w 19 CJ\l 642-3408 Orderlies I INDUSTRIES .x~e en \\'Ol ing con-! WHITE FRONT Corne lake your Pick pricnings all shirts. Good Perso nal Sec'y $700 3300 Hyland Ave. dLllons and gl'o\vlh potcn· I 545-6~91 Pianos/Organs 826 I s.tarting wages _ xhl't benr-Laguna Beach HOSTESSES Exec Sec Constr bckgrnd S600 Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626 tial. I COSTA MESA l o8~0cc~-C.-c;c.:,.5 _spd~-s-.-,-"-"-, 1-.• -, f O l fits. Trainc('S acccptcd, El1ual Oppor. En1ployer ~~~~ 5fn~y Reial. ~ An Equal Opportunity TEST \V0~1EN _n cc de d fOL' S!ingray Pca-pickC1', ex ree rgan essons oldrr 1 .. un1e11 pref'd. LVN -Lcgal Secretary 10 ST;J(l'l :z::::Ei;:m:p:lo~y:::e:r :>:ll::F::: housecleaning. Call Robbie's l'ond. retails nc.1v ~123. ask· Olargc. 11·7 shirt. Rf'lief PROD-:--ARTIST--Full Tin1c In Housc Council I• Rag A l\top 5-18--075 7 ing 555., ·192-1395. As l!ong As You Likel Non.players & players 'vel· ron1e to attend Tuesday night at 7:30 PM. \Ve want everyone to learn to play the organ! All materiala furnished. LVN · All sh;fts. Bayview <· • d . 1 f""""'•"'l' mo TECHNICIAN WORKING moth< · d "E\V · Conv. lfospital 5'10-5690. ··-XJW:t'. 111 1'1''n C'rln~ pot \ 1 .. ~cl 1 .,,...,_,, """" * . ·1 nee s ,~. apr. i;1ze gas stove. _ plans, silkscl't'.!cnin~ & 1 PP Y .;-:> '11 Y Sl'Ct'C lftI'Y $650 adult. s1ttcr fo1· childrC'n i S.r Table \\'/leaf & 4 chairs, l NURSES Aides -7-3 3-11, ·ry~rnphy n1aps, Salary tf'I 151 E. Coast Hwy. ftl-:. Constr. background REQUIRES minimun1 of onE> 9, 8·6 Aug. 27-Sept. 10, then sgl bed. S'l.J each. 6~0-8795 \\ll~es & benefits. Apply al Call lh'lt"ll i\1ason .. :,10.-00~1:1, Dil'l'Ctor of operation~ Secretar·1es fun e Ii 0 n tcst:o; and 812-1796 after 6. j I "? e)(pcr. ra;cess. (;oo<l I $if'W), Plc>aS<' bring porlfolio. Newport Beach l~xee. Sce'y $700 year cxpci·ience per[oi·niing 2:30-6. Slatei· .i:; Ed1\•ards. MOVING & STORAGE 144a Supcrlor Avr, N.B. 1 Cnn.slal Pl'!'sonnel A1.:c:ucy, 1-'.qual Uppor. Ernployl'.'L' Financial Sec'ys to $700 ti·oubleshoo!ing or electronic Lo\i·cst~761n area NURSE.5, R.N"s s.. LVN 's, :li!~f H:i l'bur Blvd, C'.\I Sales Sec'y Sa50 di gital equipment. o!0-60 YRS lc111 . Hr sl;c.c== .. -='7'-='-=-- "'ro.lief ~ f"1tin1.c. All shi!ti;, REAL ESTATE SALES llN -n1alrc or ff•1n. Nitc shift. GENERAL Varian Data ~1achines h<is ENGINEERING 3:30-10:30pn1• niin. 11,ag(', BOGE~ 1 P.~. An1p. 60 \1•at'., p \\ages Xlnt benefits Raleigh Hills llospital. Call C_al Friday lO S500_ iminediate OJ>Cninns f 0 r I No cxpcr. nee. Take & "ivc USt' 1 ' ho1 ns or spl'akC'rs. Park Udo · Flagship Conv: FREE LICENSE 645-5707. Keypunch to $565 Secretaries \\i lh ~xcel\e1it ,,·ork assignnients by ph~nc. Any ohms S!OO. 847~1772 466 Flagship, N.B. G42-80-1•1 TRAINING RN-e>--pe-,-. O~B-<l-ep-1,-1-1-.1-.. -,.-,n A/P Clerk $500 skills & the ability 10 handle TECHNICIAN No sales. N.B. localioo. Call ~URSE Aid~s. 4--6 hl'l'I, day Famous Real Estate Licens· Clemente Generfll Hospital A/P Constr backgrnd $650 a variety of situations in a 646-IOn bet ..... ·n 10am-10pm. QUICK CASH :;hirt, mature CXJX'r, prefd.: 1ng Cours<' no1v available 714/·196-1122 ext 214. Elcc. Tech $4.50-$5.50 'Y mature, professional man-YOUNG lady 1vfdepcndablc Top salaries. Park Lido thru Tarbell Realtors. Free ROOi\t Clcrk, exper. pi'C'f'rl., Assl Bookkeeper $650 ner. If yo\l. are looking for a fi'.1l\1"ED1ATE opening for car, full tinie messcngcr, no f1aphlp Conv, 466 F1agship Placemcnt Setvice. Free bu! \viii train. Apply: lloli· File Cl_er~ $~75 position \Vith a growing !echnician 1l'ith digit a I t'Xp. nee. 557-5100 THROUGH · A 1 N.B. 642---S(»il Training Program. Eam duy Inn, Bristol SL at San Rccep11ontEst O $550 Orange County con1pany f'<1uipment. v•hilc you learn. Call Al Diego Fr"'Y· Cl\'I. N WP RT that offers excellent benefits Il\1MEDTATE opening for 2 OFFICE:. GIRLS Sloan <TI41 8.\2-5440. l.iiiiiiioiiii.iiii'-iiiiiiiim; Personnel Agency & \\'orking conditions. technician \\'llh digital i11- NEEDED Re.I Estate -Ro.,tal Oflicc ROUTE SALESMEN 833 Dover Dr., N,B, Ploa,;e Apply In Person lcg.-aled circuit boa c d -llr.>. J DAI LY Pl LOT Radio telephone dispatch Pcrsonable 011y ol' ~al 1vith 642 3870 ha<: kg r o u n d -Per!orn1 V ~lust be 25. able to drive liccnsc. Goocl"'hotu'S .~· monc>v • I Or Contact breadboarding and ron1· ~;;;;;;;;·:;;;~1 Apply Jn Person Al..A HENT,\L.S • li~2-S.183 ---· --. B. Krafka ponent-le"el troubleshooting , WANT AD YEL Ow CAB L..i.rgc National Co. ii; looking 1 SECRETARIES I and t•he('k out coinputer L CO. REAL EST Ar~. SALES fur P<'rn11u1ent stablt• 111en. I 833-2400, ext 336 J)('i·iphf'r;il e q u 1 P 111 <' n 1 . Antiques 800 186 E. 16th, Costa ~tesa SUCCESS CAREER . F .'<ccl!ent !'<farting salary. Outies inc.lude lab testing of Ne1v or experienced. Join the! If intert'iitcd Call: fn · · d 1 · ANTIQUES ~taio· r land developn1ent firm VDM · gi neering oc·u1nPn at1on. .OFFICE help. Clerical, typ- ( Ing I.: filing. Apply at 2.123 South East ~fain St .• I1vi11e, ?>ion-Fri. bet 8am-4:30pm U T BOARD M o tor Mechanic, Exp. 5 day \11cek. Mlllll work wknds. Ncv.'{>Ort Bch. 67fr2811 \\.'orld's larg<'st and fastest 714· n4-0330 SI I I I k . • has immediate openings for · iou r iavc w o r · 1 n g Ne1v arrival 40' container growing resale organization ,--an·'!"' '"/substa"ti'al kno,1·l{'dgc of TTL -0 TL from Boston at sale prices. ~·Ith a neh\'Ork of over 300 """'" "" ... I · ofJices and become a •SEAMSTRESSES cxper. in the fie I <l o I ogi_c 1 P r 0 I 0 11Y I? cs. ai~d Open 7 days 10 lo 5 Peach member of our Millionaire Dnve Carroll Sa.ilmakers sales/mktng, rinance, civil Varian Data Machines n1,'1 1!1.enance 0 circuits l!l & Co. Antiques, 2332 New- c 'I o•o '730 "·'2 ,,c..c-engineering, construction, a c it1on to general elec" port Blvd., CM. 642·2523. Club. 1'1ulti-million dollar .J> • vt.,.... • ..,.. -,~ .... ;, Irvine \ro"1·0 s R · 1 \ 2 d . nrcl>ilectur" of l••."l l''"'I ''... . equ1res a east Tll'O 19! ~. a vertismg program. Free s \I ES'IEN ... "" " ..... ,, [ 1· bl h \...entury original eed I '"" I ' • :• • f'state backgrounrl. Sh so y"ars o npp 1ca e ex· guarant lcens .. 'li> schoo . 1 . 70 2722 Michelson Dr. perience and 2 years educa-oil paintings on canvas of l\Iust hav• good public & .r 1 o n a e e c t r o n 1 c a G7'.HJ802 "" To111 Dieterich • in charge. Phone 642..2851 COAST MUSIC i'\e1vport Blvd. at Harbor Costa Mesa PIANO. Kimball, arliM con- sole, Fench, frultwood, $785. 494-4769 B A L D \V I N \VonderChord elec. organ w/Orga Sonic, tape deck. 644--2271 EWs. CONN MINUET w/harp section. Xlnt cond. & price. 640-045.1 PACKAGERS Vilamin tablels, o p c rn le tablet rounling & la beling machil1l!S, C I e a n en· vironlnent. Excellent sales tralniny. LAST JOB! \l'.p.111., yp1ng w.p.m. 93•2400, ext 3J6 1 · t 1 . Maria Montez. $2200 for n<>ir. \\'hat Is )'our license \\'01'1.11 .. b k d "" d 1 to yeti? Oicck our monthlv telephone personality, Ex· Equal Oppor. Employer ac groun ""'yon 1lgh bonus program \\o'hich n1en1is \ <.·('lleot "·orking conditions & '-========== / school. PlNE icebox $12!1. Child's $$$ lo you! Please l'UJI i National Corporation benefits. !• Co[!/~"t ~ight rolltop de~¥3.~:;s VirgRiniEa DJo~eA'R~P35E-4TSll . I Manufacturing light· Call Mrs. Fielder Secretaries·P /time PEI RTEC40 BUILDTNG going do \V n : For an ad in Woman's World Call Mary Both 642·5678, oxt, 330 ing products for in-644.3399 9·12 PM r-.-h1jor land development firm r..1us1 sell everying! 1;)51} S. Realtors dustrial & commer-has immediate openings for Coast H'''Y· Laguna Beach. P/tlme Nev:spaper rtclivery. REAL ESTATE cial accounts has op-THE IRVINE CO. DEPT. S.R. IAopliances 802 1'-fust ov.'tl dependable truck SALES MANAGER enings for salesmen PART• TIME BUSINESS SYSfEJ\IS r;. or van. No other need call. Resale Office needs manager in local areas. Must Equal Oppor. Employer 17112 Armstrong Avenue FREIGH T Lamage Sale, &t&--8162 ·u 2 f Real E t 1 SECRETARIES Santa Ana, Cali[. washers, d•·uers, rcfrigs, · w1 i years o s a e be non.pressure, hon. --~ llvine Industrial Complex ·er PAYROLL CLERK experiencc. NCY.•port Beach est& sincere lndlvid· SECRETARY An equal opportunity newh warranty,. Reblt ~tajor Newport Beach firn\ area. E..'lpandlng company, Sh 80 w.p.m. Typing 70 employer was ers. & ryers from ~ks candidate "'ho i~ Excellent opportunity for ual looking for his 11-.p.m. Must have good $39.95, 545-0780. lamiliar with all phases of professlonril gi'tlwth. Apply LAST JOB; Must be -TO THE-public & t e lephon e ---· -Rent Washers/Dryers \h(' pa"""ll functions. E. .... 1 in confidence. Send resume qualified to open new CITY MANAGER personality. Excellent l''Ork-TEMPO'S •2 Wk FuU · ''" Cl ·r·-• ; ing conditions. ~ · · n1c.1nt. perience '"ith computerized to asAI i ..... ad no. 638. c o accounts as well as * 63~1202 * J>A}'l'Oll sys1e1n desirah{('.' Daily Pilot, P. O. Box 1560, upgrade established $751. $912 Per Mo. Call Mrs. Fielder Xlnt benefits, Call i\lrs. Costa 1\fesa, Calif. 92626. .f.t.t3399 D• I A J b I fl~Jdcr. JtE. SALES~lEN users. Repeat busi-CITY OF -1a 0 644.3319 \rhy not i1·ork h1 the hotresl ness, secure future. IRVINE THE IRVINE CO. • • • e Surplus .Building bel\vel"n 9 & 12 Bcach/!-~ount11in \'alle,v. Let Libe ral training com· 'J\fATER!AL . i~•·s Of NE\V E I 0 E 1 • b f' Is S<'rking an energet.ic \veil NO •N qua pport. mp oyer us lr11i11 you! Call Phil pensat1on, ene its. organizf'd & innovaliv<' in-Equal Oppor. Employcr \V Orange County's rnost ITEl\IS! Doors, lumber, ply. PA \"ROLL & per s 0 n 11 r 1 l\tcNa1ner. ' V T t. LAG E ,. · 1 1 ,, · d progTcssive & innov11tivl'.' '.":xx!. _alum sheeting, mold· Clerk. Handling of com· REAL EST1\TE, 96.1-1567 CALL COLLECT ivii ua to ut'. iippointc as --Ten1porary Help Service ing, windows, etc. Pu t•rl•ed data . Duties In-MR. EBERLY lhl' secretary to . th~. city Sec'y no sh $600 'does it again.' TE~fPO of· B n1anagcr. The individual ' ,. t 1 · UILDERS SURPLUS elude bank records & rceon· R E SALES !201) 867 1111 "·ill perfonn a \\'ide variety Engr Dept. ln111c Free Cl'S a !I'll Y unique & tin1c cillnllon'-Full Ume =· • • • 01 d;Hicult re•pono;b[e & Secretary $500 sav;ng opportunHy for skill· 2~0';:'·,~;~~t.ioSsA. nient. $450'to start • • KATELLA REALTY An equltl opportunity confidential secretarial "rork Acctng Dept, NB Free ed · · · · · TYP. ISTS TI4: 546-1032 Roger. employer [or 1he city manager & File Clerk $450 I----"-'.:..;;.:.:..;=:._ __ PRESSMAN INC. 1----------111cmbcrs or the city counci l. Split Fee Costa i\1e .. 11. BOOKKEEPERS Furniture A.B. Dick pressman tltekl OHcrsc 1 * SALESMEN * General Office $450 KEYPUNCH ---------1 ., • Fastest gro..,,·in" R.E. co. J\Iust ty!X' 60 ,,. P 111 froin T "' t · , SECRETARIES ~Unimum 2 yrs expt:r. ,,... ... 1 • · · · vnc '"' 1v1nc r !'t¥ DUNCAN Phy(1• Tablc, 4 per hour pill!'! incentives, • In1nu.'(\. noor timt' a\•ail. Do you take "Salesn1en l' ('al' copy & fak(' dictation file 'cierk $325 \\'h(l \\'ant dignified .~ chrs, $99.50. Tv.•in beds $58. Ne~1>0rt Beach arca. • Enrn up to so~.;. cornnt. \\·anted'' ads with a grain oJ Rt 120 \\',p.n1. No typin~. NB Fee sti111ulating long or short Obie bed $55. Bullet $99. C II (714) ,., "232 • Full page n<lvcrtising salt? Can't say I blame you. Cl I ,. a · 1 t A a ~ 11111,1y erk Typist $375 ,. 111 ssignrnen s -l'\I' NTIQUE Vicitorian marble R nothii1g o[f lop of comzn. I. followed up n f,ew myself d0 vs -uple ' -k f d 2 Or 494-1814 ( et.) ,,_ City of Irvine r~c Nego. Nr1vport Beach '" · · "v v,"" sot· eiv top resser, .1 5 yrs old SZ75. e \Vf' u1~ not a franchis(' 11l w•C past. The JOb S<.'ldom 1nonths -you decide! No1v 344 Ocean. Luguna 4M-3.115 e National l'f'fcn·a\ p1'0•~ram I lived up lo the claim b1 the 4201 Campus Or., Irvine F • p vou an • 17 ofcs in Oro.ngt• Co~nty ad. Or Call 833-3840 L'C'C J~R~ "P1er~~itio11~ APPL y . BY PHONE BLON DE Dining Suite • 6 • M rt ·1· Do your~elf a favor & '' l ~;::i~~;::i~;:::;::i~~I chairs. "'.lass fJ'ont rh1'11a anagement oppo un1 1es · · · Associates Agencv, Inc. APPLY BY PHONE b' 1 • Both resale & nf'\I.' homes plore this one. l! you'd like ~ta-;:;-lk-t~S~;o 188:1 l\'e"'port. CJ\.1 .&12~720 APPLY BY PHONE ~~>d1~c110. '•'"r·,'.1 l.e~f12~1.ble lex· e Training for new liC<'nsces to n1ake $~ a week i1n-.,,_..._." .,, ,. .'6 '1WV" '" ... ,, ~ ., e l[ unllt..'Cnscd. \\'O assist n1cdiately, \Vlth an eye to RescarC'.h & Dev Sec'y $700 * SECR.ETA,R'·I' p/ti n1e Call TEl\1PO'S Olf\ce at • 5-19-2625 • n1uch 1nore ln the future, Financial Sec'y $650 Dave Carroll Sailinakrrs 5-10-1430 & Let us kJ1011· 'r\\'IN J.iedi; attached. to pnle Jump Into Fall! Twin Sweaters! 646-3931 ~uilding Materials 806 PRINTING OFFSET PRESSMAN 1st SHIFT Get With I'd like to talk to you. II Land Dcv-R.E. Sec'y $750 CM 645-4730 i1·hal. your skills are. No green. upholstered Kingsize if: YQUr qualilicttlions match Ofc Mgr, Legal $700 .. · · need to come in Pf'MlOLlally -JI ea dboard \\'/tnatching :S:~ Katella Now our requirements. this could Acctng Clrk-G.Ofc S.l50 SER\rJCE Sta. l\1anager. ex· un1il \Ve have 1hr. 'just right' custom spreads. $ l 0 0 . 9252 f_.· PAIR UP fall 's most C.11 n-b W~lnton be lhe career you'\·e been Le"al-R.E. Sec'y •7;o per. Smog li e. Lite n1ech. spot for you! 54" n;o. 7 fl'!' ~ I kl 1 • 0 v t t .oM y tl · I II Do ~ 8 @:. 11·anted pal'tners to go oo ng or. Chief Accountant $l'1f{ ('IJ' nea n appear. ,JOUV+ our n1e IS va ua > c. n·t SIZES 8·1 ~ · eve •·ywl>ere'. , Exjierlonce on 1250W with T .51 two color unit. Must be able to m1lnt1in uniform col· or balance and hair· llne registration on cooled lltho labels and be i1ble to 1etup and print on 40 po<md Iii•· weight stock. W• need a craftsman who Is 1 soil slartor with 2'4 years experience In offstt pres1work. E x- cellent benefit pack· age arid starting sal- ary. Apply h1 Person or Call: Dona Leve"tt (714) ~5(!00. ~xt, 2lO HYLAND LABO RA TORIES 3300 Hyland Ave. 774-43 lntervle1v appointment 10-4 Inside o-lc• ~p•·t S""" per n1o to start. Apply \raste it. tnVt.'Sl it \Vis<'ly F.:XTRA nice Italian Proven· I.., 1lf. 1lf. C 0 T C P •! kd <06 31'2 ~ "'"' •.JU ""90 ,. I d ·11 T I I einl Bed rn1 suile. • ..: rochct sporty C'ardi"""n r om aruso ", \\'CE' uys, "" · () , Secretaty/Constr "~~ morns . .f,,.} "c..,,·port B v .. \\'1 1 c>n1po at ii if•urlv '·-ic.... ~1 ....,.. d -· -CM · 11 SI NEVER \FE'·" A. 673·0465 -. un matching turtleneck top 837-9400 Sales A/P, lite typinJt $450 1r"E~i;lPO ' '"' T I in easy pattr111 stitch with - _...,_.,.. ......... ...,.1rcv ' ~,,,. PARTIES FREE FREE FREE . " COUCH 1FOOT " "' ,. ' SERVICE s d T T H I Good ' · Zip up thls rashlonnble ribbing. or \\'Qr.ltcd 01· Mune REAL -ESJAJE-SALE-S 11ousC\1rlvr!'I demonstrator~. Liz Relndel'S Agcnl'Y , , tal!on n t' t' s empo emporary e p I condition $10. jun1pct' O\'er ils o1vn shirt \1·clght synthcti(', Pattern 1'arn ro $2.000 by Dec. 1. No 4.lZl \Veste1·\y Plarc l~lnnd l\fan. & G 11 0 cl • 644-8581 • 1 11 l 7008: misS('s' sizes S-18 incl. dl•livcry -no collection. Suite u:;., NB ""l-8190 M1..>chanic. Good pay . TIIEATER DO ORMAN '* COUCJ.{ & LOVESEAT * anc 8 · your turtC'!Oj)!{ .111~d SE\IENTV·n\'"" CENTS " OJ. Prnnanent. Nl>t.'Cl No,v! nrcde<I ni t he 1 1 I) ~ bodysu1st. Quick to Se\\ m ~ NJ\~s?r~:r. 1'1~e~.nal):~:;j ~~·~:· ~~~5:S,. gigfirs n~~ ~ UNION OIL 393 E. 17th St !'over 18 tfl l l c ea'.1 .cu rand ne11" both for $150. tweedy \\'001 blend!i, l'hecks, for each P..'lltern -add 25 '"' Gadgets SECRl=.l:\RY for growing Cl\t , . South Coasf Pliaz~ .ri;;::~~ Ui;ually hon1c. 968·7910 plttld.s. ceA1"r"Ma'1'1'•nd'"'shpePc•,.~~eHrTt~'Jt1. ·• c.:onsider cager, ne1v i;a\es-inte.rnational oU (.'Ompany in No. 1. 3410 S. Bristol, Ci\1 Pr1nt,ed. l'atlr.rn 9 2 5 2 : h "' ~N , peop!c. ri.tany arlvantastt>s. * SALESLADY * pos1tlon. Job olters pleasant SERVICE Sta. 2 \\1en f/time . . G1rage Salt 812 Mls~s Sizes 8, 10, lf. 14, 10, Ing: ot en\•isc thtrd-clasl Contact: Dorie Smith 5 •lny!I, 40 hrs. No sun. or working corlditions in an days & nltes. Must be ex-TRAINEE for hie assembly 18. Siz_e 12 (bus~ 3-1) Jump 2~ dellvery will take t:hrtt' American Home rvc!I. A1>r>ly in person interesting field. Salary ap. per. Time + time & ~~ & packaging Costa \\tesa AP yds. 4;,-lnch: sh1rl 1~ ynrds. ~Wlra ~<J'l<'th.· Se0nd \'l Realtor Co!':ta 1'-1l•i;a StatlonCt'l'I. 270 prox SSOO per mo. to start. Arco l9lh & Newport Blv<i' area. Xlnt fu111re potential. PLJA~CES, furn, r.rpts. SEV'f'!VI'l.·f &Vlll. <;ENTS 1ce ~ • e AlL~. E. "17th St., C.l\1. 'Bet'vn 9. Starl Sept 4 For intcrvle\'' CM 'l $l.85-$2.00 to start, 979-.~ l't'C vehicles. Mon-Sat. Come for eacfi npattem -ndd 2S p LOTL .. trj, Needlecrah -~m N. Cst. lhvy., l.agun<1 . . ~cc Lvlng 1970 \\' II Del)f Hmt 163 Ok! Cbeltea * 494 1001 • 11::{() only. No calls plis. cri ll 644-4444 hclwr1 1 and 3 i · · · 1 a acx>, cents for curh pattern fo1· S '' · ' .. , N · -Pl\-t SERVICE Sia. Salesntun, , TRANSCRIBER <;.M. bet. Hnrbor & Placcn-Air l\la il and':°~pechil Hnnrll· tal!nn. Nc\v lork. .Y. R.E. SALESMAN SALESLADY • ~ PI time. evcs/\\'CCkt•nds, t1t1. ini;: otheN'l5e third-class 10011. Print Nan1f:, Add.rt!r!iA. Invcsti~utr the ne1\' Rpproa('h Exp<'l'. Unn1·Ct"!'l~ry • .* SECRErARY 1.· Neat appcart1ncc. A11ply T ·1 l lill • delivery ,.,.111 take lhrce z,1p,EPE•'o'•LcnENCR11mber. - & inllOvRr\ve niarkctllljl; SHOW OFF P.l\.~t1n1c. 1 ru\ltlni~. ~.:3,!}-niorns, 2590 N('wpo1·t Blvd. yp ni; spcl·t \\.11·111 · + "'' Jewelry 815 \\'Ceks nr 11,ore. Send to croc•·t. knit, AFTolc. ~:_ lothnlquei; of Tl.JE GAL· 22 Fashion Island, N.B. l2,30 (f.ton., lhru Fri.\ $2.j() Clio·!. (''<('('llrnt !':IX'lling .~ F;nglit¢.h. ~1Arian ?o.lnrtin, the OAILY '"' rnx Ll·:RY 01'' l·IOJ\·IES. \'ou SALES. Full i hn{' 1viU •~aln, per. hr. General cl('r\cl\l st-:RVICE S!ntlon Atlcnrlrnt. Ap1>IY Iii • GENEROUS PILOT. 441. J>nttern Dcot.. direction~. SOc. \\'il l be glad you dld: Call ... <lutles, M:lnic shor!hRnd, R('· full or part time exp 11ea1 PcrY111nl•l Ucpartn11•nt • 232 \Ve!!! 18th St. New 111'°~anl 11 ••cr1tmt'! Book. 963·5611 f-Ol' appt.lintn1en1. N~1~·~~:11~\~i..At~~y lit 181~ c~~·ate lyplng. C,!'LL l\'IH .. Apply in ()el'son.'300 ~~-1'/th i\'IOt14~'rl 9an1-12 noon York, N.Y. 10011 .' Prlnl f~~l~· s1~00~Y knols. pat· Llcm~d Ol' unlicensed \1·e ;iii""iiiioiiiOiiii.iiioiiiiiiiim l~N~c~N~AJ~>~IE~E", ;:!-96~3-4~56~7!:·=-= St., C.1\1. e REWARD e NA~tE, AODRY.SS ivlUi ln!lhJnt Crocbcl Beoll-- 11·1\I trvJn. SCHOOL BUS SECRETARY I Reception ist 2 SERVICE St ti Alt d PAC IFIC MUTUAL ZIP, SIZE and STYLli t.e-arn by plcnrr.fl Pat· ~RE~'"'C~E=PT"°'lO_N_l_ST __ f_o_r_p_ro-_ DRIVERS for CPA office. Skills re· P/time Lite ~~ ex~r' 700 Ncv.1port C<"nll'r Dr. NU~ffiEll. t('rn~. $1.00. a:rcsslvc animal hosp,. Nwpt quired: . A~atc typing, Apply i.agunrt Chevro~ oo.i NewJ)Ort Bcaeh F'or rct\lm Of" :iny 11'1· SEE MORE Q u l c ]( Coolpklte ln~tanl Gltt ~ Cir. Top saint)'. Send AppllcnUons be1ng acetpted some d1ctati0n, t e 1. t «" r So. Coast llwy, Lag. lkh. equal oppor. en)ployer formation leading to return Fashions Md choose one -more than 100 gtfb ttsunic to ClnssUled ad oo. ror Sept. c1nployment by wrlU~. 10 key, filing. -0! tt KOld to1lr leaf clover Pl\tlCTTJ tree rrorn our $1.00. 932 / 0 u P'I 1 p 0 rontmctor opcrntlng In Potentlel promotion to of· SERVICE station attendant, TRUCK DRIVER--pin, appro:<. 2 lnchciri in Sprlna:·Summl"l' Catalog. AU Con1plele Arctia" Book - Box cl~ Ca~a ~~ia. (:~ ll'vine Unified School Dist. flee manugl':r. $1\lnry open. part llnle. rt? exf)('r. ").('. Local co. needs !!lab!~ -clean· diameter , wiU1 j e w c I c d sties! Only 5()(, $1.00. 92626 . Pf'NiOtlS holdlng valld .llehool 64~ 646-1196. 560 \\i, 19th ~1 .. C t. cul lnd\v. \'o'/Cx!>e.r. drlvln"1 hor!il'Shoc in ~nttr: al!O, INSTANT SE\VlNG SOOK HJ ,fifty Rar Boolll -SOc. R 1-: CE 11 T 10 N 1 ST/dt'sk bu!f driver certificate pref'd. SNACK ll..'tr girl, n1ust be lll'!ml end dump truck. IJQlrl locket C1v3!1 on chain\, sew today, \vear tomorrow .... Book ot u Prill& Af&but. Trnlnh\lt program avail for TIME FOR ncet 111 oppenranc:c & have Salary to $780. C1t1I l~r\ opprox. the size ot a nickel. $1. ~sac. f'lrrk. full 111n~·. typlng thoS(' \\rlthout f'r.rtiflcalrll. gd "'"Ork 1<teord. A\iill \\'oU, 5.f0-605~. Coa!'!l nl lne:cribcd In script, r~Li\, tNSTAN'r f'AS1'1 t0N Qullt Book 1 -16pattmw. Jo.:qi111l Oppaf. E1n1Jlfiyf>1· 1 \~M('i\ . 12 !19!)() X!n'I sAIAricit & benefits. CLASSIFIED ADS bct"'·~n s A~! & 7 p~l Call Prrsonnul -A,gtncy, 2 7 9 0 Th~ are rtceDly lrt1:t8:Us'("(I BO<>K l1•1ndrt'dt of ~. JI.talc & f!!mllll' _ *~· · • Call: i\1ts. \\'alp, (TI4\ · 644-2060 t::I f{ 1111 ('It Q llorhor Ulvd., CZ..l . 1 frnnily n1emcntos ~ the iOlt!i f11itrlon-f1teb1. Sl. l\f11Ml!Uln Quill 8oot-t. • i!Jll""'~""""':i""""'""'"~' ltECEPTlONIST. Ute !ypln.it . f>l1·1170. ·• ' ~fflrkcts. ---\>1. lrrcpluccabl(', PLEASE. -50c. C~I& Mesa, Calif. 92626 AJIOOd want ad•• &:1a:ood1 ... I 80me posting. $2.SO hr 10 __ 5 642-5678 For 11181 llcni un<1~r·$:'>0, iru TJ~ISTAP,ol~:a189h .,ao1~:1t)1•.6tGhcSn·1 1~LEA1nsrr: help1 \f yo~~ ... h3~~ Dbaolly ~i\ot \1Yo11t /\tl!i havr q1~1be11" 'u"'r 1Todl.f"' lJ!1_"1 . *•tment. i<tn.rt. 537-4381 Need" "Pad"T Jllal c 311 ad! 1 er • ••. " ~. .1. uny onnnt on -V'I.-;;!\)" rga1t\'I i:aorc. "' au u pattern;. OM:. ----------l ·'-''"":::...:Pc'-"'n"ny'-'P~ln'.:!c~h~.,.c.·___ NU\Vf>OM Bi•nch . 1·:\I'• .• ~ v.'Ct"ken<I • • --~----- 28 DAILY PILOT •ct.•· Pl1no1/0rvons 826 Boots, Pow.r 1:::::;::;:;;;;;:::;;:= e 23 foot JOHN All· 906 CyclH, Biko• f\ulos Wonted HI Autos, lmp~.~ed;;:.:........:.9;_:70 - .::S<::OO.::l;:•;_:":__ __ ..;92..:::~ 1--------DATSUN PIANOS -ORGANS MAND, cloep V cobln Nc'v & Ute<I. Gn!at Sl1lcc1\ctn. cruiser, 155 hp, in & out. * BICYCLE SAL;E * competctlvc prices. 0(X!:n Like ne w condition on NEW 10 SPJ::t.;o ITALIAN Eves. & St.1ndays. ·r. he bti;t bcNt & lr•llor. Full BICYCLES S.l9.95. Beach TOP DOLLAR '71 Datsun Pickup. ll l al s 11t Bicycles, 800 E. Balboo ea s 1~1-e way •. c· price $5,000. OWNER Bl\'11., 675-7282. Authorized Wall1chs MuSIC 1ly ~SS. NISHIKI dcalcc. Soulh Coa~t Plazn 5-I0..2830 2~;-· ..c.,1-m='"", _c_u_"_om--ll->1·-g-ls Motor Horne• 8lO Lyman :m hp, F\\IC \r.s. Seit/Rent 9-40 1.S:tp::o::.';:'i;;n:!g...:G.:oo;:.:d::.•--:-sips 2. hcnd, V~Uo~. de1)1h 1n-l-..:;;"-"-"-:c...;----"..;;: '" 1 dicator, OF', \Valer 1l'ntp e SALl:.S e POOL la.hlc, g c nu n c gage, teak sv.•ln1 slcp, e SERVICE e B11.1n!l\\'1ck, 4~ x 9. s.Ja.tc, outriggers, bait bag. Int· leather pockets, acccssones n1ac. Pvt pty, 646-6344. • RENTALS • $T:i0. 612-3729 TV, Radio, Hifl, Boats, Rent/Chart'r 908 Stereo 836 5T LUXURY Yacht-enjoy harbor or other cruises. ca.JI DUE to mt'dicaJ bill 1 need for rates. 11) 714/846-7831' some ca~h fast?! SO I ha"'.e or (1) 213/43()...-0.)30. to sacrilice a pana.sonic .:::..cc..:=-""='-"=--- EXPLORER ", HUNTINBTON BEACH 18801 ~f,\( ~· I'!\( l!-1:' fU!UJ HUNlri';<,T<.),_,. l\.(,\{H sterco tape r cc o r der Bo•ts, S.il 909 v.·/automatic reverse. Uses GMC ampcx 7'~ reels and tapes, ISLANDER 32, ModifiM to includes 3 speeds. 2 ste""? :W, 5 Bgas + Spin-rollt>r Motorhamts !>peakers. headphones. l.> Re e f e I e c l "' a t c r . Zl' &. 26' PAID IMMEDIATELY FOR ALL FOREIGN CARS WE ARE IN DESPERATE NEED OF GOOO, CLEAN FOREIGN CARS TOP DOLLAR-PAID FOR OR NOT I CaU or come in lo see us. NEWPORT IMPORTS 311X' W, Coast Hwy., N.B. great cond., Radio, Jlenttr. $1695 NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \V. Coo.st H1vy., N.B. 642-940S ~~~- '71 Datsun 4 Dr . Sedan 4 Spd, Ail' Conti, Hadio, t693· DLT!. $1388 Harbour VW 18711 Sf'ach Blvd. Hunt. Ekh. S.\24435 FIAT ~~15re~rdacdll ~spi~e~~ani~ l''athorometer, 0 pt is a i I, 1~1!\1EDTATE DELIVERY 1-.."'"' ... , gea1""ed \\inches, dodger. Orange Co.'s brand nu. askin~ s:27:> or radio, RDF' Chvncr. 6Ta-1371. Exclusive Dealer m•ke off Pr. 84f!-5494 B'll B P t' I 642-940S I Top CASH '61 t'IAT Spydcr S1xw1 CoU(X'. Ne1v top & sent for c.·lcan Jatc model ears covers. Good !Ires, runs like and trueks! ne1\' and looks !he san1e. BRAND llC\\' Hobie 1 6 I arry on IOC RCA Zenith & Sylvania color Tangerine yello\V \V{yell· G!\lC REC. CENTER TV' & stereos .. ~est panelt'd sails \V/trlr, $2100. 2000 E. 1st St., Santa Ana selection in So. Calif. Priced valut> "'il l st>ll $I 5 5 O, ~-100'.J Howard Chevrolet ~soo=·-c.1:::v·'"'1'0v1:::1"':o:"'c· ="CM"=-. -- l\1ac.-\rthur and Jan1borec JAGUAR iess lhan the discobe unltcrs 646-7866 645'-4222 $6895 \v/3 yr picturt' Ill . yr Nev.'port Beach ..... ~- 833-!f..55 '72 Jaguar XJ6 nstall e d a t cost "Cat's·Paw," xlnt racing Or \VE PAY TOP OOLLAR Farts & ·service. Antennas 26' LUDERS 16 SI o op PACE ARRO\V \\'/purchase if required. record. 2 sets sails, o/b, TIOGA Cash 90 Plan or 1ern1s to 36 $1800. 675-0781 Base Price FOR TOP USED CA!lS 10,7&'.) miles. \Yhitr -A'i1l1 t:in mo ABC Color TV, 9021 RHODES J3-CI · . l!\1Pt1EDIATE DELIVERY' If your car is exlra clean. intcrio1· Air Cond Joadt>d see ~,~i~R BUICK , $7895' ass1c racing CREVIER Bl\1'\V Atlianta or 19046 B~:h33u29rst, champion "HANAllULJ." Snles _Service .... Leasing Huntington Beach, ;7IJO' • Top condition. $6500. Ph: S I I * 673-1232. 208 \V. 1st St., Santa Ana * Summor poc • 83>-3171 Rebuilt-Picture Tube MONTGOMERY 12 sailboat, $87.Sl)-11" or 15" Color 12' long, brand new, in * RENTALS * * 2 YEAR \VARRANTY v•ater once. 642-1597 or Lifetime, Superior, (}p('n lnsta.llatlon Availabl~ 645--09ll Road, Landau, Overland & Rice's Television Scrv1ct 32' COLUMBIA Sabre, fg \\'innebago l\Iotorhomcs formerly Mesa North Center racing sloop. Sleeps 4. $4600. RECREATION t Bick S. of Baker 5•16-6002 845-3445 RENTAL AND SERVICE open 9-5 (6 days} 1-:IOBIE 16 Full race, many 216 N. Clara. SA SACRIFICE extras. Near nMv cond. $167;) =~--'n.::4-c:836-=!16=15:.._ __ 2925 Harbor Blvd. Costa Jl-lcsa 979--2500 \VE HUY H\1PORTED AUTOS ,. BEST PRICES PAiDI Dean Lewis Imports 1966 Harbor, <.:.ill. 64&9303 NEWPORT IMPORTS I 3100 w. Coast Hwy. N.B. I 642-940S ' Autos, Imported 970 JAGUAR '6-1 XKE. nu ·67 ---'--''------1 tl'nns., clulch, ycllo11/hlk, I AUDI $l390. 5S&-S.-'19 E'""· LOTUS Jim. 714/675.6891. FOI? salf' \Vinnehago J\loior l\ P anasonic stereo ta~ ~COCc"L"m~t"B,:lc:A=34=Sc:.:c_a_t_"'99_. hoinc 2,1' xlnt c.-ond., $8,500. recorder \\•ith automalll.· Placentia, Costa l\fcsa $8000 Call 979-785.1. t'f.'vcrSt'. Speakers, head· or best offer. NE\V Deluxe 2·i· Ex('{:utivc phOncs-lols of tapes. Bst of· ~...::===-----for r c n t . Sclr.contalne<l. AUDI '72, 23,000 n1ilcs. Slick ----------;~. ~~~~ llllni1Jcuiaic~ '70 Lotus Elan Ir. S'"-"'94 22' CATALINA & Ne\\'(>Ort M .,,.;n M · !"" any extras. Refs. rc- ZENm·I Zl" -!or TV. tablt> ooring, "500· I I 9~90~' .. v 675-7158 * quesec. ,,,.... JI). model. Pert cond. Late e Orange County•s Finest e model. $150. 64&-6670. MERCURY Sloop, lB', nu Dale's l\fotor J-lome R.entnls S k paint, rigging, sails, \\'/ N 2 LANCER SC6 pea ers. trailer. $JOO. 673-6474 C\V Minis, 23-26' Lifetimes $250 each new. $100 each -~~~-"-==-'----"Care-free fun" 838---0900 now. Xlnt. 673-4643. MUST sell ! 18' Catamaran r~OR RENT: O\\•ners '73 Self· trailer, Taylor sail, n1any contained motor h<>nte. $165 xtras, $1200. 968-8948. 1vk. 6c n1i. 897.0796. Boats, Sllpsf l>Ocks 910 DELUXE \\IINNEBAGO i\1.11. RENT G·l0--:0-J82. N.B. BMW LEASE A 1973 BAVARIA We Buy Used BMW's Top Dollar Paid CREVIER BMW I['--_r,.. _to You~)~ 3 Lines1 2 Times, $2.DO SLIP, al 407 Ea s I Edge\\·ate1·, Balboa. Up to ~· long, 12. \\·idc. $100 per mo. {714 1 52j...115.J days, 7l<HiT:r-8762 eves. Sales . Sen·iee • Leasing Winnebago -For Sale 208 \\I. 1st St., Santa Ana '27 Chicfton pri ply 640·Q.IS2 ! 835-3171 3 IS a cro"·d. lo\1ing home need«! for fc.m. Black JlOO" die beagle. ~l * 34' Slip * 1-:luntington Harbour $68 mo. call 846-32"12 Tnilecs, Tnve1 94S i ORANGE COUNTY'S LOVABLE l yr old, 01·angc. maJe cat. aJtcred, shOls. box trained, 644-0139 aft 6P~1. OA'i'llSH modern couch. 9'. Brown, in very gd cond. You haul. 552-7495. I ,.t .. and Supplies I~ Boats, Speed & Sk i 911 15' ROD & Reel, full cabana, '. EZ hitch. good cond. $a75. 536-2005 ·:)II TRAILER, 8 x 31. Stone 20' FORMULA, used !\vice. Villa Trlr .Pk. &16-7914. not New $7500 Sacrifice $6500! ~":c11c.0:.'' .::7'c::":.O_:_P_::M'----- Pvt ply, 545--8625 · Auto Service, P•rts 949 16' SKI boal & ll'aller, 281 l ·62 CYLINDER engine for C~evy. good cond. $900. .Jl'cri. son1e ex1ra parts $150. 67J-8163. :i42-~1967 <lfler 6:30 Dog• ss4 ~~~~~~ I I~ ~ 111111 Autos forSllt r:i e PUPPY WORLD e ·~iation_ .-. E N G L I S J-f Bull niix, '"----'---'" ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~ Chihuahuas, A ni er i can •••••••••• Eskimo (Spit:i:l, Pit Bulls Campers, S.tle/ Rent 920 Antiques/Cl•sslc1 Greyhound, Bull Terri.er, T-cup Poodles, I ta l 1an Greytiound, Bull Terrier, Cockapoo. 100 l\t I X E D PUPS!! Stud Service Most Breeds. OPEN E V E S : 953 531-5027. AKC Boxer Puppy, 81indle female . Champion background. Good price. !16S-20'l0. OBEDIENCE Class to start \Ved., Aug 29. 7:30 p.n1. in the Irvine/NB area. * 546-4928 • AKC Standard Poodle Pups. ShO\\' or pct, from $75. Stud service. 8.32-5-178. 893-<1258 * Miniature Schnauzc1· * Stud Service 6·14-4390 19:>7 CHEVY 'J"1'U ck, Clean, \1•fcan1per, sips 4. must sell 1\lso 1972 Camper sips 6, ne,·cr used, niust sell, 2020 NC."'JlOrt ;\\•c, Cosra J.Iesa. CHEVY "iO 350 V-8, custon1 cab. auto. p/s. p/b, air, atl xtras. Nc1\" delu.-...: c a h o/camper, Super cond. Pr1 pty, 673-4978 36'' CAMPER Shell w/75 lb. bit-in ice box , curtains & rug. UsC'd 3 times. $.125. 842-2254 \VE Rent Campers -l'\fesa Can1per Sales 2036 Harbor Blvd, Costa i\fesa. Cy.cles, Bikes Scooters 925 MALE AKC Reg. l '"' old 1970 Kawasaki' lrish Setter. SW. 96:1-1584 350 1'11N· SCHNAUZERS . AKC Excellent condition 12 WKS. BOTif PARENTS ARE ClfA~fPIONS. 646-6385. ""'°$350"'-·:,,'ccaO'll_J'-i"m'-"536-::..:7116=7- AKC Min. Dachshund male, 1966 HONDA 305 Din Bike. Blad: & Tan, 2 mos old , $73. Good cond. Sec to appreciate .f99-.37S4 · real niovt>r! $295. Call Pat . 549-2625. ---- I~ 'il HONDA 350 Scrambler Lo n1ileegc, nc1v cond. Aiust sell. L<:>a,·e overseas. ~ or best ofr. 646-0l i6 19TI JEEPSTER Con1n1ando A-1 cond. \Varn Hubs, 1\1'ichelin radials, a I u 1n . mags. rear tire racks, 500 lb capacity luggnge rack, driv· ing lites. $3200. 675-3204 DUNE Buggy Late model, 140 hp, comp! bug & trlr, sand & dirt, tires + spare . Eng ready. lving overseas, 646--0176 '72. 4 \Vhl Drive. G~fC Jin1- my 10,000 nil., 4 spd, 6 cyl, Gates tires, per! cond. $3700. 6Tr77l8 'il. HO~DA CL 3~. Looks Bo•ts, Powe r 906 likt> nt>\1·. Ncl'Cls clutch ;T;c:;u;;ck;;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;9;;6;2 I pla!e. !\1us! sell S400 or ANNUAL l\11D SUJ!l\IER 1radc for 1.rurk. 5.l&-0276. 0 71 SPORTS CUSTOM clearance' seic. ~~anra.i;tlc '68 TRIUJ.fPH .roO. very good savings on our in\·cntory o[ t·ond. $3$5. in<"I. helmet. F-IOO Super sharp, 4 spd. new & used hoa1s. No n>as. i\1otor st'OOler 5.'; cc, xlnt rad & heat. New 12 X J6.S offr. rcfu~. ~1t'sa Boat ...... nd •17-67' .,59 tires plus otig tires & rims OLDEST Q SALES.SERVlCE-LE..\SING OVERSEAS DELIVERY ROY CARVER, Inc. ~4 E. 17Ui St. Cos!a Mesa 546-4'14·1 LEASE A '73 BAVARIA De.mo . Serial •3132993 for $166.41 P<'r nion!h OEL 01· buy for $8.299. Bob Mclaren, BMW, Inc. ( 714) 879-5624 WE'RE MOVING BIG SAVINGS ON '73 Demos 510's Picku ps 610's Center, 159;) Nc\1 port Blvd., .. v ' ~ a. o:ruJ * 892-1832 * CM. 646-62.69 or &16-m39. '66 BSA ChopPf'r. 14" t>X· ~lJfO((f '69 STARFIRE, 20'. lfO trnsion \r bars, !ear drop I!lGJ FORD ~I Ton P\ckup. Mere '69 \\'alton trlr. hdrlc lank. 1""'·bl! G:iO cng. $:>00. J51 y.g stick shirt good brks.' s.5 rad., 300 hl'l'I TT, 493-24-li. t'Ond. Camper Shell' \v/rc· j DATSUN absolutely inm1ac! \\'ill help TP.IU~1Pli 6.j() CC 1966, runs movable king si1.e bed. $895. 888 Dove finance. Ne1v car 1racte-in. i·t>ry good. Al~ Bultaco 350 * 549·262!:> * I Newport Sch Toyota of Brea 5~11 CC Pursang 1973. \\'ill lalk '7:! Cl'EV. ~ P.U. 8, bed, 292 1833·1300 Open Sunday about price~. :HS-8027 afr 6. "' ·~ '72 TAl\;'j.~ ~~1~.~. ,.,.., Triumph TR6R-70 ~~.'!ii.J4 spd, hvy duly. 497.1884 1 1973 DATSUNS Cnlltll'C, 1/0. A real lwou-$820 l!l6J DODGE ,, T Pick Up. ,1 ALL MODELS ty, like ne"'· $2.r.lJ. "-•s.n•.,.,, I , 8'17-6S2S ~ """'"' a f. .1 s1~. R/II. <!ood condl!ion. j JN STOCK R .,.,, , ·72 KA\\11\SAKI li:l, ,lirt b1kr $1.iO. '196-2S6:1. '71 SJDEWINDE · o.i hP l~d. rond. !\lust ~l'l1 $.J'.n. Vans 963 BARWICK IMPORTS Out·Board Chrysler, gold & :"131-5070. 1.:..:;;.::_ _____ ::::; 33375 Camino Caplstrano bron7.t. Xlnt. cond. $2400. CllF'V S Sa J C p•-•-~· 2212 College No. l. 1970 2.j() Enduro, Ya1naha, · . 'li7 port van 108, 6 n uan a ut .... ano M' A1nt cond . Lo mllf'agc . <°}'I auto. pfb radio. stove, 493-3375 or 831-1375 '72C. s'KloJACK :10'. Opcn-225 Cl<an. 8'6-64 15, ru<kh"' S<:i!l. sink, !rig, looks good, runs '72 DATSUN 1200 ' '69 BU'· -iz1-c11.t. $1 lj()/nr. or I e 1· 0~1C Under 100 hrs. Trt1llC'r ... TACO 360 ce. 64:>-7240. 'SEDAN. 1'.1nt Cond. Rad:lo, !:: tici ms. Xlnl cond. $7.:.JO. Rebuilt. Never ridden. --;-6-5 DODGE VAN heater. Ne1.v tires. Sl850. 714/494-7001. S·12J. 536-8-187. 5'-IS-4.~6 * 19TI K Good c."UrKlit"ion. $8"iJO or bcir l>rlv,. P8rf.Y· Call a!ter~r111 LET U!I sell your trallerable .., a\\'auki W. Sllj orf(·r. 61~ .,927 ask lo• & ,_\1."11, 64~1850 or mornings, • fi~-1 .. ·~ boat . For last I·, x ct 11 <' n t cond\lton! ! ! ..-u • <!-.1 ~ ~"•-s=•zi~ Rvn1an." ·-~-·-~~·-------! ,,.8uJts: call t.fclll Boat -;;:'"::,'~;:=:,';:·=,...,=--~ · Centcr. 646--6269 or ~. •TI Y Mi.Al-IA RT-I, 360 !\1x. '69 FORD Clt1b Chatteau ·n 2.,1oz 1 owner. nu radJals, CU ( ·"--k w ... v • auto ~,1 nl!c•. mAgs, :im/fm ~tcreo taf)4', Is• SPEED ~1. ~. v , 140 mu I MIU\'. !', Ot!lf'r Xlrtl.!i. -...,, ""' • t . I . s~~ ·-~ $600 C~.11 8'" ,,...., au o, air o m1. JQ;N, )ff!rc O'Ullt'r, 110. $325(1. CIUth v.•/trlr. 67.Ni57. .:.U-:l'llO'I 642-3392/6T.°°J-3008, l ti-n"6, nl.lhta &0-3.155 " * '69 J-:IONDA Ji:i likr Autos Wanted 961 n.w 902 Mil ' imz '71, Mag WliCOI•. R/R, GRAND •••""'KS 36 · · cs. xln' --• F ·" by • -'"" '--·-~ly equp'd. 558-3092 ~J.....j9S:; 1!\JPORTS 'V.\NTED .•. '-""UUU. or ~e ~ '"""" Or:1nJ:e County's O\vlX'r $3600 673-4285 $38.000. 0....-'JK'r m-.mc. • 1'"~ lfONOA Chi;1pp<>i7"'K-I, TOP s BUYER • • ·n 2401., 3\r, A~l/F:\1. 1'2 16' Se& Ray. Xtru, <.'Oil ~om Pt.Int. much chroma. sru~ l\tAXEY TO)'OTA mag~. xtra elean. $•1.200 $1.2.,!00 tell t7.99l rinu. Atldte Offer. 53G-l'197. 1g,q;g1 Be&eh Slv l. ~4"97'--:1065='------- :ll:::i>-':;:r>St;=l.::or:..:m-os:;;.::.::=:....--Cf!'lflf'd Ads • • • IM2-5671 ll. Bca<:b Pb. 847.83$ SPll idle ilt'ms . i>f2.567'f, ..;;..=..c.:.=....:..;..::.:="' Ext ra clean, l 01vncr. ycllO\v \\'ilh blk in terior, Lo\\• miles NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \\I. Coast llwy., N.8. 642-940S "6.3 LOTUS Elan, nel\· t11·in ca111 C'ng., perfect cond. 67:>-3968 nfl. 6 -"'' k d y s , 11•knds -all day MAZDA * Mndo '73 Rotory * $66 MONTH 36 l\IONTllS OPEN LEASE \.Viii accept trade-ins C1\LL AIR. FRY 842-6666 Hunt. Beai:h MAZDA MERCEDES BENZ JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS MERCEDES BENZ AUTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE Jim Slemons Imports 1301 QueU Ne\vport Beech 833-9300 Et-.'TER FROM l\1acARTHUR MERCEDES, 190 Scoan, 1964, 60,000 mi. * 548-9601 * -·.. 1§1 I _.... l§J I .......... J§l I .......... l§l l~~~I Autos, Imported 970 MERCEDES BENZ 50 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY Sharp New Car 'l'rade-ins Coming In Every Day Ask About Our Un ique Used t.\ercedtt Lease Plans House of Imports 6862 Alanchester, Buena Park un the Santa Ana Frv.-y 523-7250 lt1ERCEDES '71 SEL 300-0.3, less than 1500 nliles. Bf.ige Gray SIJ.r:J(t. can 541-2'235. From· 9-6-~ --aft' 5 & wkends, 532-2000 Orange Ca. OPEL '68 Opel Station Wagon 4 $pd, ~l1~· ~~0117-12) $799 Harbour VW 187ll &oath Blvd. !!unt. Sch. 842-44?.S TOYOTA $2021.95 is the Delivered Price for a '73 TOYOTA COROLLA 990 A~u~t'.!°'~•..;l::;m'.!!pc11:=_rt:_:td:..._~970:!!'.A:::.ut:.:.:o::••..;U:::-::::---="° Autos, Uood CADILLAC VOLKSWAGEN '73 VW Supor Bug Ai\-1/f'M Stel'\."O, Oro~e fin· \~h. plus ntan)' CXtrlUI (89(}. CNTJ. $2395 Harbour VW 18711 Bea.cti Blvd. I runt. Beach. 842-4135 EL DORADOS 14 TO CHOOSE COUPES-CONVERTlBLES • DE VILLES 31 TO CHOOSE COUPES SEDANS '69 vw Fastback CONVERTIBLES Aut<i Trana Radio Excellent l'\1any ex~ll~111 colors Cond. (Xri~1. ' ChoiC'il of Inter iors $1295 <Clolh & lentlu''' .!-'11ctory air l-onditlonlng H•rbour VW Full po\,·er. Choice of: 18111 Beach Blvd. Stereo Al\l /!Pl\-t radio tlunt. ~h. 8-124435 Cnnsc conll-ol . . Trunk opener & more 68 VW Bug. Radio, n!ar scat All in imm u1 l :(lrfdillon speakers. Kood tires, ne\Y ac a c ~ . battery, low n1ileage. $975. ~~~=t~ in .:;::;s; .N•w '""i"', tran•. Nabers Cadillac brakeJ, tires, cluteh. US Al!THORIZED DEALER mags. Bilstcin shock.s. Fm. 2600 HARBOR BL., $9JO. 645-3415. COSTA MESA '12 GHIA , 01·angc, 2HlX> nii, 4 54().9100 Open Sunday speed stick, radials, ryt.dio, 1971 Eldorado, full (J0\\~1·, top 1..'0ncl, $2200 F 1 r n1 sunroof. Has everything, 64'1--0609 642-9m or &15-5935. '69 V\V BUG. Xlnt. eng., trans, body. brks. AM/Fl'\1. $980. S.16-4313. CAMARO '67 VW Bug Re-bit (!n & ·70 CAMARO. :i50 eu in. 4 new pnt ·AJ.1/l'~M !dio spd, f>/S, p/b. b~t sis, $550 642-0sri · cl~an. xlnt <.'Ond. Orig 01vn, · pr1 pty 640-1996 9nm-noon * '69 V\Y Bug $9-j() • Sun. aft 6 daily. * '65 VV..' Baja * Call 646-2022, 548-7482 '61 V\V • $400. Engine, trans, tires ™""· Needs body ...,'Ol'k, 673-6329. CHEVROLET WE'RE HERE ~ Dove, Newport Beach 833-1300 '63 VW Camper, reblt, cng, n1ust see, $800 Um1. New pain! & xlras. ~n-1818 ~IL'llJl"!h~r '67 VIV, Pop lop <amll't' lo lvt;;'\ ""V~ 111i. nu engine, l\tach. xlnt, DATSUN FORD '72 Ran~ero shell cove1·. Aulo Trans, H.adio, Hc-atl•r, Blue, clean $2395 NEWPORT IMPORTS 3JOO \V. Coa!:lt !-fwy., N.B . 642-940S --WE 'RE HERE RSSO Dove, NC\\'JJOrt Bt'aeh 833.]JOO Nf:'\''mf<r DATSUN New Address Specl•I '65 Ford Station Wagon Goo'I Transpu1·1n1lon (ZX:V. 2621 • . $499 '1'1 i\fAVERfCI< cou~ Aulo Trnns., Power Steering 1·adlo. hcntcr 250 cu 1r; ECONOJ\._1Y 6 "Yl engine, lo\\' nulcs. J)ri. p t y 847~3095. . JAVELIN '72 JAV~LIN SST, tuU j)(J\\'Cr, tttr/co11d, nt>w fittg lo rnllC"a,i:-~ $3195. 645-5861 ' JEEP I '68 JEEP, 4 \\/heel Com- mti.ndo V-(;, 29,cm miles E-Z lift trailer hf t c h ' 531-49.it.·. . MAVERICK very clean. Sl.\50. 675--0.);)5 New Address Special at ·s9 V\V Bug, sunroof, uulo, '70 Camero I n1ust sell, 1nov1ng $950. 1 C 1 '72 MAVERICK coupe, Auto ii\ l • 644-0826 or 499-2689 Ar onr. Auto. Trans, PO\\'<'r T'r-dns., Power Steering - iUUJI. fWt4 I S1ct'r1ng. N1<'c. Chron1c radio, heater 150 Cu I~ TOYOTA VOLVO \\heels, 1191BT\I'. ECONOJ\1Y 6 C'yl engine l\lGG Ilarlxlr, C.i\1. &16-9303 Order Your Color Today! WE BUY USED TOYOTAS ALL 1973 MODELS IN STOCK ltlllitru11i 5 llluhn;; 1Qllln ~ ltGll.il Ji:. I l.Illll .. ... ., ·-. . . .. WE'RE HERE 8880 Dove. N£'\1'port Beach ~-1300 '67 Toyota Corona i\uto Trans, Landau Top, Radial Tires, IUOG3121. $795 Harbour VW J.~l.l Beach Blv<L lft.111!. Bch. S42-4t15 '72 TOYOTA !\lark 11 wagon \\"/air, xln"t cond. Call :)36....1671 aft 6pm. RED Toyota Station \vag. '10 Corolla. 645-4533 reas. TRIUMPH Orange County's Newest TRIUMPH DEALER FERRARRI LOTUS MG AUSTIN MARINA 2'0 years experience in foreign cars. · NEWPORT IMPORTS . .. 3100 \\'. ~ llwy., N.B. 642-9405 'GS TRIUlt!PH TR250. Stereo, new brakes,Trans, n1urfler .~ top. Excellent. S1500. Call 968-4034 after 5PM VOLKSWAGEN '68 VW Convortlblo ~'l<i-6160 $2S99 low miles. A REAL GAS '68 Volvo 144 Sedan '69 CHEVROLET 1mp•I• SAVER AT 18 MILEs PER Custon1 350. powt>1' steering, GALLON. pri. ply. ~7·3095. . factory air , linted glas!I '72 MAVERICK C.oupe, Auto Air Cond, 4 Spd. lo mllcs, Tan complete. automatic irons Trans., Power Steering \\'ith tan interior. in 1..'0nsole, strato Bucket radio heater 250 Cu i.; S1695 seats, V_inyl roof .. radial life ECONOMY 6 cyJ cn.gific saver tin>s. radKl, heater, low miles. Pri p 1 y' good condition. $1 ,T;iO, phone 847-3095. ' · NEWPORT IMPORTS 644-4687 '69 CHEVY Malibu, HT. MERCURY recently tuned, 2 dr, R/H, :::-:-:=------ air, good cond., $10.:.0. '61. l\1ERC. Commuter 5--iS-8733 afl 4 \V k <I y s : \\·ngon, t-ngine trans. rear 3100 W. Coa" Hwy.t.B. •nytim• wwk•nds. end all over hauJed/,.bull! 642-9405 '71 CHE\7Y Kingsv.·ood Sla ~:~'.""0• lircs nu. $666.66 ___ C_O_M~E~IN \\'ag, A/C. ps/pb, bro"·n ·72 0 $22((1. Call Susan bct"'ll 7 & 1 J.t ERCURY Broug:hani T DAY c•c:_: .:""":::,,:::21:::11l:::·______ New steel-belled radials ali '66 CHEVY Impala 4 dr, extras, AM-.8 track. 640--045;1 TEST DRIVE luxury with economy hnt1p. Re" "'"' . hurry! MUSTANG $J(JO. Good deal. 7 1 4 : 96S-6893 '73 Fuel injected VOLVOS ~w.LW!i& W VOLVO 1972 OiEV Monte Carlo, silver, blk landau top. A/C $2500. Can be seen at 2602 A\'On SL or call &15-5888. Z28 C•maro, Xtr•• $1100 642·8199 1970 lt.tPALA convert, air, P.S. P.B. Xlnt cond. Call 493-0078 1966 Harbor. C.i\T. 64&-9303 * '72 ~JONTE CARLO * 1971 VOLVO. 1800 E. fully Very clean. many xtras, equip wfair rond & -=~--"•93-:::.,:3:,:720:::__~- am/fm. Xlnl cond. $3900. '67 Gold El C•mino 682-<355. $1000. ""'." " .. " 642-3100 Autos, UHd 990 BODY J.fan's Special '69 '67 _i\1 US'I'ANG, Xlnt oond. lo mileagt", big cng, a/c, auto stick, tpe deck, Must see to appreciate, $99:>. by -·-6T:>-4950 ""'=. '67 !\1USTANG CTA hard top, 289, air cond.', aulo n·ans., pis, needs body \\'Ork. $500. Call 646-8746 '69 i\'IACll I. 351 au10 an1/fn1 , sterro. c u s t 0 ~ 1<1.pe, many extras. J ........... r 5'~2699. ""'"' . 'TI bfACH I, air, loaded, must sell cheap! l\fovin .. 64·l-8239 .... OLDSMOBILE BUICK Chevelle. 22,000 miles. Auto. Sales A Service 1400· "'6-3120 OLDSMOBILE ---------1• '61 Impala rorrvertible *I GMC TRUC S 'GS BUICK Skylark. One Good condition. 1\.1 UST I K o\1·ner. 24,000 n1i. Like new! SELL!! 518-8482 I HONDA CARS ~6J24 E. 20th, No. I, CM '67 IMPALA stalion w•gon, UNIVERSITY OLDS , · . A-1 cone!, Pwr. rack, l\.1ake 2850 llarbor Blvd. 71 ELEC. 225. 4 Dr. Lo m1. offer, 496-0708 Cmta ~1esa ~9640 Ft.111 pwr. Cru. co nt . Good ot:ransportation car: Am-Fn1. Xlnt c o n d . '61 Chevy $50 PINTO 644--0962. * 645-5194 * '65 BUICK Special, auto, ·1t PINTO Sedan, big eng, •1 P/S, R&H, pvt pty, $160. CHRYSLER speed, 8 Ir.ck & f"M. 5.16-2065 headers, '1 nu \\lide Track 1967 BUICK Skylark, Xlnt. Chance of a Life Time tires $1.IOO. 846-3ill. I cond. New tires & paint, Must Stll ·73 PINTO Runnbout. air. 4 $7:JO. 552-7119. iO CUSl'Oi\.I Chryslt>r 300 speed. lrg. cng. 10,000 nii . 1966 BUICK Special.. Pis & "Hurst .. 2 yrs/12.000 ml. LoodC'd. Prlv. ply :;4;,-321:;. P/b. Rings & bearings 1 yr rernain on \l'arranly. Only PLYMOUTH old. $350. 49--Hi004 2 in this area. Superior 1---------- '65 BUICK Wildcat, all cond. Best offt>r. Li. No 1969 ROADRUNNER 383. power, great transportation. 195BEQ. Owner 5.~ !\1ags, AfC, auto. SUOO. Aft $373. ;.a:~~LLAC COMET "'"' -=IAC ---------COMET GT 'Tl A1a~ 'vheels --------- '64 CAD. Cpe de: Ville. All new ti.res, green ext, blk in!, LEASE 0" BUY xtras, newly paint~. good pri prty. f96l-DLH) $198.i '71 thru 'i3 Pontiacs cond. SJOO, 645-1531 Call 4!><-5>16. DAVE RCSS C1\D. '72 CdV, loaded, air, slereo. Excellent. $5200. 494-2900 CONTINENTAL '72 CADILLAC Sedan de '71 Lincoln Mark 111 Ville. !\lust be sold al a Full Power, Leather, Crul!it>· sacrifice. Haa been lovingly o-matic, Radials, 31.1000 cared for by one owner mile~. ~~~~. ~:i'1' ;'~~2716,: details. $4688 Below Wholes•I• HorbourVW 18711 Beach Blvd. lfonr. Bch. 8424435 COUGAR ·59 COUGAR -XR -7 - orlitlnal 0'\'ncr-101v mllcni:c -,\/C -Vinyl Top. $1~. ~1'-"'87 FORD PONTIAC 2480 llarbor Blvd., at Fair Drive, Costa i\fesa 546-8017 CORP. Ex£"C, Vchicl~i;. OxJop;c frorn 121 ·n F.xe<.". Pontlae \l"llg or '69 GTO Pontiac. Both 11./c in xln't cond. $1900 ca. 979-2290. '67 PONTIAC Catallnu. Good condition. $42.1 01· offer. Call : &16-5277. 1971 PONTlAC Grand Prix. $200 cash, assunie balance, 675--0646. RAMBLER '60 RAMBLER Statio n \Vagon. Body xlnt coll(), ncedic some eng ...,,orit. $100/offer. 548-1324 en 5 VALIANT '63 VALIANT lant 6. fUl\l! xlnt , good body. $250". or best oner. 557-.9394 T·BIRD WE'RE HERE 8880 Dove, NewJ>Ort Beach 833-l.100 I - ,. i:e, Ii• P.r ad 1 lh< on no ,,, Mt I I on Iha Cal in 1 pol me v~ :~ I tod v Ni> tro str1 Vi~ mo bot ~ me ·• w~ me "°' 1 rac' .. , ,, Nii WOI the Am the ~ 10 ""' •• the pc<; ~ ,, pro w~ Nb t Stu wh put liol 11 10 , Bi 0 ' San Clemente Capistrano VOL 66, NO. 232, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES • EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA , T oday's Final N.Y. Stocks MONDAY, AUGUST 20, 1973 TEN CENTS GOP Aides Kept Tabs on McGovern Campaign . ' By L. PETER KRIEG Of .... oaii, ,llet ,,.., President Nixon's political aides received as many as three or four reports a day on the activities of Senator Ceorge McGovern during the 1972 Presidential campaign, a Nixon political advisor confirmed today. Murray M. Chotincr, who is staying at the Balboa Bay Club Jn Newport Beach on a working vacation, said he saw nothing wrong with paying a reporter $1 1000 a week to "keep tabs on MCGovem." · Chotiner said he didn 't call it "spying" • because the reporter, Mrs. Lucianne Cummings Goldberg of New York, would provide information generally available to anyone following McGovern. Chotiner said the employment of a reporter to follow McGovern would not have been necessary if the newspapers and other media would have reported every single thing that occurred during the campaign. "But we knew that is impossible and we needed to have more detailed in· fonnalion,'' Chotiner said. Chotiner also .said the Democrats similarly received daily infonnatlon on IXOll Laslaes Critics Nixon Ordered Bombing Raids From Wlre Services NE\V ORLEANS, La. -President Nix· on acknowledged for the first time today that he ordered secret bombing raids in Cambodia one month after he took office in 1969. Lashing at critics of his Indochina policies, lhe President said tn a stat&> ment released. as he addressed the V~nms ol Fortlgn Wars convention here that the raids were necessary to protect American Jives. He said if he faced the same decision today, be wou1d take the same action. \Vhen he took office in January 1969, Nixon said, 40,000 Norlh Vietnamese troops had taken over a tG-mile·\Yide stretch in Cambodia alongside the South Vietnamese border. "The Communists had made a mockery of the neutrality or those border regions ," Nixon said. ·•nie United CAMBODIA ROCKED IN ATTACK~Story Page 4 States wu under no moral obUgation to respect the sham," NIXon said he ordered U.S. airpower •·employed directly and continually" against Communist base areas in Cam- bodia and said the Cambodian govern- ment ''did not object to the strikes. "In fact ," Nixon added, "while strikes were in progress Prince Sihanouk invited me to make a state visit to the Cam· bodiao capital." The raids were never announced - a fact that has stirred recent controversy -because secrecy was necessary to save American lives, Nixon said. "Had we announced the air strikes," Nixon said, "the Cambodian government would have been compelled to protest; the bombing would have bad to stllp, and American soldiers wou1d have paid for the disck>aure with their lives." NilOh said the bombing was disclosed to unspecified government a n d Clllli!USklnal leaders. "There air strikes were not. directed at the Cambodian Anny or the Cambodian people," he said. "~y were directed at the North Vietnamese · raiders inside Cimbodia. "There Is today great anguish and loud protest from the usual critics that this was an attack against tiny Cambodia," Nlxoo said. Hls reference apparently was to Sen. ~tuart Symington (D-Mo. ), and others who have charged that they and the public were misled about the cambodian bombing campaign four years ago. It was Nixon's first personal response to recent disclosures that the Pentagon BOAT SELLS FAST ON FIRST CALL Buiy people just love Dally Pilot clas- siflcd want ads. Look at this: ' SABOT No. 2042. Complelely , _ re£lnished + oars. '200. , (Phone No.) Thi.'l ad rtally worked fast! The boat oold oo !he lint call. U you're busy, save "me and money with Dally Pilot clan~ fled advtrtlslng. Tho dlrtet line - 142-6fll. instituted a dual reporting system to keep the bombing campaign secret. The air strikes in Cambodia ..... ere reported publicly and, his congressional critics claim, also to Congress as being inside South Vietnam. Joe Kenneily Found Guilty, Fined $100 NANTUCKET, Mass. (AP) -A judge found Joseph P. Kennedy Ill guilty today of driving to endanger, fined him $100 and urged him to use his "illustrous name" for better purposes. Afterwards, the young man's uncle, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) said . he thought his nephew received a fair trial and added, "Joe will have to live with the verdict." Seven persons were hurt Aug. 13 when an open car driven by the son of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (D-N.Y.), flipped as it entered a highway from a side road. Judge C. George Anastos of Nantucket (See KENNEDY, Page %) Tlir ee l1ij ured As Car Caree ns Into Light Pole . A car allegedly being driven by a Camp Pendletlln Marine under the in- fluence of alcohol and drugs skidded out of control in a quiet San Clemente neighborhood late Sunday and slammed intll a power pole. All three occupants were gravely injured. Police said the driver of the car was cited for driving under the Influence after the crash which occurred at 6: 19 p.m. along the 100 block oC Avenida Mateo. Donald Lee Jones, 25, of Camp Pendleton, was the driver of the car. He suffered a fractured arm, a Possible shoulder dislocation and a head cut. He and his tflo passengers were trair ped in the wreckage and were rescued by city firemen. The olher two occupants were Joan ~largaret Day, 35. of 26434 Paseo Carmel, San Clemente, and Terry G. Payre, 23, also of Camp Pendleton . The Day woman, poUce saJd, was trap- ped the longest In the car. She sulfeN!d fractures of tbe upper leg. hip and wrist along with poaslbte Internal Injuries. Payre suffered a broken back and head injuries and was taken from the scene unconscious. All the victims were taken Initially to San Clemente C.neral Hospital and later the two Marines were transfemd to Q>e base hospital. Ml.ls Day was roPQrted In satisfactory condition today. Police said Jones, who despite his in- juries assertedly was a.bu.sivo 1t the sctne, bad been headed -north on Mateo and lost control of the car. Police IAkl tho auto skidded for llS (eel and then slammed Into the pole. President Ni.zoo's campaign. He said he did not know if there were any reporters on the McGovern payroll . "But he bad his 1friendly reporters' too," Chotiner said. Chotiner is as fonner Newport Beach attorney. Chotiner in an interview this morning, denied allegations by a Washington newspaper that Mrs. Goldberg was SUir posed to be compiling a sordid dossier on everyone traveling with McGovern. "We were not interested in the personal habits of the people or how they behaved on airplanes,'' Chotiner said. "They 'veren't running for President." He said ,.trs. Goldberg was a free lance reporter "'ho obtained press credential s because she was planning to Y.Tite a book. • "She would call my office as often as three to four times a day to fill us in on the size of the crowds, their reaction and \Vhat he (McGovern) was saying," Chotiner said. "She would also interview people along the way," he said. Chotiner said the.re is "no question that reports on President Nixon's activities 'floated around' to McGovern. 11 • ' Olotiner also denied reports that Presi· dent Nixon spied on Vice President Spiro T. Agnew during the compaign. Chotiner. who said he does not meet or confer with the President on a regular basis any more, said he was a volunteer during the 1m campaign and received only expenses. He said he was in charge of voters rights and ballot security for the cam· paign, a matter which he said vitally concerned the President after .. alleged voling irregularities in 1960. Chotiner also denied he had any part, or any before·the-fact knowledge of the \1latergate break·in. ' DIUf' l"i..t Slllff """' OFFICER TOM STEWART TAKES INVENTORY OF SUSPECTED WEED TAKEN IN NEWPORT Pol ic• Say About • Ton of Allogod Marijuana Smmlod Into Hnbor by Boal Coast Scout Base Used In Pot Smuggling Case By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 flle Dalt)< Piiot Sl1fl A report by a bayfront resident that two suspicious males were unloading cargo awfully late and fast at the nearby Sea Scout Base to be workiog on merit badges today led Newport Beach police to Intercept nearly a too of allegedly smuggled marijuana. They also arrested a pair of leather artisans who gave addresses locally and in Seattle. \Vash., after stopping their rented U·Haul van for inspection. fi.ferle D. Mh, rt, who· listed his borne as 1955 Sheringtoo Place, Newport Beach, and Kenneth D. Morrow, 29, Seattle, were booked into city jail on suspicioo of possession of marijuana for sale. NarcoUcs Detective Sgt. Leo Konkel said the van had already rumbled out of the Sea Scout CompoWld in the 13)() block of West Coast Highway before police could respond. Patrolman Tom Stewart stopped the truck at University Drive and Irvine Avenue. Neither Morrow, a leather shop owner, nor Ash, who listed himself as an unemployed leather worker, had any COD· nection with the Scout facility . Officer Stewart encountered n o resistance in stoppi ng the suspects and the truckload of green, leafy material in- dividually packed in boxes. •·We're just counting the bricks of it now," Sgt. Konkel said about 10 a.m., ad· ding it appears the load is mucl:i larger than initially expected. "It looks like it might be a ton,'' he remarked. He said at the current market rate of · $200 per kilo or 2.2 per package. the con- traband would be worth about $400,000 in street sales. ' •Quiet Ple~se' Does Work Noise Hurt Looe Life? LONDON (UPI) -A member ol Parliament said he will ask the government to study a report by a group ol West German doctors that noise at work can ruin a man 's love Ille. ' .Tom Tomey, Labor member !or South Bradford, said Sunday that If the West German doctors are right "then some wives could go .to other men for sexual satisfaction. F'actory noise could lead to promiscuity and the breakdown or th<l family ." Tomey has tabled a question asking Social Service Secretary Sir Kelth 1Jooeph to act on the· doctors' flndlngs. "I can't see, m}'Se!f, how noise can put a man off in bed, but U the doctors are right Sir Keith should launch his own medical In· vestigaUon," Tomey said. But bis question will have to wait until the House of Commons returns from summer adjoununenl Co11ncil Critical Of Saddleha ck's Pay Negotiating By JAN WORTH 01 tt1t Dally l"Uot 111111 , A memo criticizing the 8addleback Community College board of tru stees for conducting salary negotiations in public has been sent to the school's faculty members and the press by the Certilicated Employes Council (CEC). Jean Vlncenz.i, chalrman of the five- member elected council, said the memo i.s the first attempt by the CEC to keep the public informed on "things that may be ol interest about the local community college." • Last JW'le the faculty committee re. quested a 20 percent hike in the salary package. After a seven-hour session at the July board meeUng, a live \>ercent raise was granted. Faculty members present claimed they received no 'vord in advance of the board's counter.proposal to their request prior to the board meeting, and ques· tioned whether ·meet-and-confer stand- ards had been met. · After meeting in execuUve closed .session with the county counsel, the board determined meet.and.confer had been satisfied, but allowed the employes groups to argue their points before mak- ing the final decision at 4 a.m. "We commend the Board for listening to us and lhe arguments for the pro- posals thoroughly that evening and the next mornhlg ," the memo stated. ''However, we feel it is a shame that the major part o! negotiations had to take place In an open meeting. This is not a saUsfactory way of handling eegotlaUons and we sincerely hope a bet· ter procedure will be established for the future." The CEC memo stated the faculty "did not get a fair shake" on any of its three proposals : the 20 percent hike,. a fringe bencllt package, and a change in the board policy on laboratory lecture teaching credi t ratio. "It seems as though the minds of some board members may have been made up beforehand and that these boa rd (Stt CRITICAL, Pag• % I . "The fir st I knew of \Vatergate was \\1hen I read it in the newspapers," he said. "And T know this sounds funny but when I first read of it, I thought it was an at tempt by the Democrats to check out (Democratic National Chairm an La\vrence ) O'Brien to make sure he was being neutral," Chotiner said. "There \\'ere a Jot of Democrats who figured he was leaning toward (U.S. Senator Ed\vard) Kennedy." Chotiner sa id he couldn't understand \vhat the Republicans expeeted to learn l!bout the Democratic stategy before their convention was held. New Orleans Motorcade Canceled NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP) -l'r<si· dent Nixon, warned of a "possible con- spiracy to assassinate "him" canceled a motorcade through the New Oeleans business district today. But upon arrival at his destination, he walked directly into a friendly sidewalk crowd for a moment of handshaking. Officials said both the President's and the public's safety were factors in canceling the sdleduled motoreade-llld, changing the route by which the Preii· degt was driven to Rlvergate Convention center for an address to the Veteram of Foreign Wars. New Orleans police, acting on a pickup order from the Secret Service, arrested a fonner policeman, but would not say whether he was wanted in connection with the President's visit. He was identifed as Edwin M. Gaudet, alias "Punchy," who had been arrested in 1970, the last time Nixon was In New Orleans, for throwing a burning flag on the President's car. The President and Mrs. Nixon were driven from New Orleans lnte.ma.Uonal Airport by a back route and did not go through the five blocks where bis car was to have slowed and a crowd had gathered to greet the motorcade. Increased security was obvious. Eight motorcycle Policemen preceded the presidential limousine and a Coast Guard helicopter criss-crossed overhead. Secret Service men abounded. When the President arrived at the Rivergate, a crowd stood near a VFW band blaring out "Old Man River." Nixon and his wife walked directly to the crowd and shook a few hands as Secret Service agents held back VF\V flags slapping in their faces. Signs nearby said , "Law and Order " "Right On," and "Impeach Nixon." ' The Pll$ident flew to New Orleans from Florida to address the 74lh annual convention of the Veteran s of Foreign Wars , his first public appearance in six weeks. Deputy Press Secretary Gerald Warren said the Florida \Vhite Hou se learned of the possible threat to the President's life "over the weekend." He said Nixon personally decided to accept the Secret (See CONSPIRACY, Page il Orange Weather It'll be slightly cooler Tuesday- but still swmy for a change along the Orange Coast. Highs at the beaches in the mid·70s ri sing to the low 90s inland. Overnight lows in the 60s. INSIDE TODAY Only two millio'' of tlle JOO tn llLion species of animals that hove roomed the earth tlirough his tory still survit•e and manu of tltost nre facing extinctiO'n. See and read about then& on Poge 19. 1..M. •1vd • Allll L•nOtn 1i ... 11... 11 ~._.... 11·ft C"'llorlll• S N•lll!lll N""" 4 ClttMli..I )1·11 Of•-CtvlllY 1 Comics ll SYIYll "'""' It CrtiHWOf'd It '""' 1 .. tr Dl!ftrl Nlflc" 1 Sled! M•flltt. 1 .. 11 11 .. owi.1 "'" ' Ttl..-l•IM a £111 ... 11h1lfltllll 11·h "'"''" ll·D l'IMllKt 1 .. 11 W11t!Mr • l'I' ftlt lttft 7, t W11M11't N ... 1Jo1J 1'19"!'<°" U WlfWI ,....... 4 ' ~ U~1L Y PJLOt SC fte(1or d Capt11re Raid on . - Nets 72 One of the largest "drophouse" raids in the history of the U.S. Bol'dcr Patrol took place in Oceanside early Sunday as im· nligration agents arrested 72 persons all packed into a i:;ingle house to await their smugglers. . But ~!though the raid netted the large number of illegal aliens, it did not yield the ringleaders of a large smuggling operation, said Patrol Capt. Eugene Har- r~. The arrest cap ped a busy weekend at the patrol 's San Onof re immigration roadbloc:k. where lhe weekend's total ex· ceeded 300 persons. Oceanside and Carlsbad. Harris said, are the most comn1on areas ror the drophouse system. Alien smugglers, he explained set up the houses as holdiag areas for car loads of hu man cargo from r..texico. Diggers Careful House Aliens At the houses the aliens are kept until the time appears right to smuggle them in sn1all groups past the immigration checkpoints at San Onofre and at Temecula, along Highway 395. or the 72 persons awaiting shipment at the Oceanside house Sunday all but one were front f\.1cxico. The remaining alien was fro1n El Salvador, Harris said. In recent ~t.'eeks, with alien activity in· creasing because of harvest time in California's farm fields, the patrol has Jogged ever-increasing numbers of ar· rests. Recent raids have included forays to large farms where aliens are employed, as well as railway yards where aliens not fortunate enough to have auto passage have tried to hop freights for the trip north. ' - UPI Tel .. PtOIO GUILTY, FINED $1 00 Reckless Driver Ken,nedy From Page I KE NNEDY ... Beach Bird _Sanctuary District C.ourt urged Kennedy to "use your illustrous name to do a lot of good, as I know you are able, rather than hav- ing to come into court like this." Slows Hzint for Bodies Kennedy pleaded lnnocent to the charge. HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) -Concern for a state bird sanrtua ry slowed the opera- tions today as digging was resumed on a lonely sandy beach at the eastern tip or Galveston Island in the search for possi- ble additional victims of a homosexual torture-murder ring. Previous diggings uncovered the bodies of 27 young men. Iron 1rods and spades replaced a road grader that Galveston Police Chier D.K. Lack planned to use. Lack said the area is a new sanctuary that holds rare birds GAY GROUPS FEAR HOUSTON PUBLICITY-Story, Pago 5 and nests and that he would not use heavy equipment unless early probing in· dicated it \Vas necessary. One hole was dug after the iron rod probe located a soft spot near the site From Pagel CRITICAL • • • members didn't want to be confused with the facts ," the memo stated regarding · the 20 percent hike. The five percent decision passed 3·2 with one absention and one absentee. Major medical insurance was doubled to a maximum of $50,000 for each employe. But the CEC memo said the 1973-74 budget made no provision for ad· dilional fringe benefit requests submilted last April . "The board was apparently willing to absorb the estimted $1,800 cost per year (of the insurance increase) because it was so low," the memo stated. The proposed teaching credit ratio refers to the fact that teachers now get two-thirds of an hour credit for each lab hour taught and 0111.. hour credit for each lec ture. This means science and other Jab- oriented teachers must work up to nine hours more each week to get the same tt .. ching load credit. Full-time teachers must teach 45 credit hours per y~ar. or 15 hour s a week. The CEC proposed that lab course time be given equal time to lecture time. A request by Trustee Hans Vogel that the ratio be compromised at 1: ~ was re- jected by the rest of the board. But a study of a change in the ratio '"'as ordered. "Although the board has suggested similar studies in the past, \1•e are going to ·do our best not lo let them drop the ball this tim e," fl.1rs. \lincenzi said. OI AN!ll! COAST DAILY PILOT Tiit Orll'!DI CO&•t O.\tLY PILOT. wll!I Wllicn It cClfnbl!\ld Ille N•w1.Preu, It ""b+lllle<I bY tht Orf"'lll (Geil.I Publi1111ng (OmDeny. 5- rllt fdltlor>$ Ire Nblltfled, Mo...S•y '"'°""" Frld1v. for Co1!1 ,... ... , to .. POrl B~•cn. Huntlf1D!Otl . llt1c111F011nt1ln Valltv, l•t un1 flt6c:fl, lr~1nt1$.00ltt>Klt •1111 S•n (llrn~~!t/ 5•n J\ltll CaplJtr1no. A 11r111lt tt{lio..11 lldllion n pybll•IMCI $11un11y1 ""' 5Yrl\1dV~. 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'"""""'· where Lack said a liou ston couple repdtted that they sa\v two men carrying "·hat looked like a body. Nothing was found. The Houston couple told ofCicers they saw men resembling Dean A. Corll and Elmer Wayne Henley burying something. The case broke Aug. 8 when Henley told Police he killed Corll in sell- defense. Corll allegedly was the leader of the ring, whicn has been linked lo the largest confirmed mass slaying in U.S. history. A grand jury indicted Henley in three of the slayings. He has told police he took part in nine killi:igs. Another youth, David O. Brooks, 18, was indicted in one slaying but has said he did not kill anyone. On Saturday officers using rods and sticks probed a 200-yard area of the East Beach without success. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Abernathy of Houston told Houston Detective K.D. Porter they drove to the beach last February or March and saw two men carrying a long, wrapped btmdle over a sand dune. •'l Porter said the second couple, who asked not to be idenUfied , were looking for a camp site in June. They told Porter Jbt.Y drove to where a white van and two ~~' were parked. Corl! owned a white van. 2 Men Executed In Russia Rape l\.10SCOW (AP) -Two men were shot before a firing squad and a third was sentenced to 15 years imprisonment for the rape and murder of a young girl in Soviet Moldavia. Sovietskaya Moldavia, the Communist party newspaer of the republic, reported the case in the Aug. 18 issue reaching ~toscov.· Sunday. The controlled Soviet press .seldom reports incidents of violent crime. I t's t lae Wate1• . In addition to his uncle the senator. speclators in the small, crowded courtroom included his mother, Ethel. A patrolman , William Carlton, testified that he talked to Kennedy after the ac- cident, adding: "During the in- terrogation, he (Kennedy) said the ac- cident was entirely his fault." According to witnesses, Kennedy was driving along a seldom·Jsed side road when he pulled onto a main road, barely missing an oncoming car. Sapra Peterson, a bus driver, said she saw Kennedy's vehicle moments before the accident. "It looked like there were people hang- ing all over the top of the jeep. Some v.·ere standing," sh~ said. , Mrs. Peterson said the vehicle was traveling 35 or 40 miles an hour on the narrow, bumpy road. The vehicle is a four-wheel drive, open car. She said that when she came upon the accident she spoke to Kennedy. "He said that he was totally to blame for the accident and that nobody else was to blame,'' she aaid . Robert Mooney, the to\1.11 prosecutor, si.id the maximum penalty was two years in jail and a $200 fine. "I wish this had happened somewhere else," Mooney said Sunday. "We don't need this kind of publicity. "We're trying to treat it as a rootine case. But unfortunately, nothing is routine with that name in it." The accident left Pamela Kelly, 19, Centerville, Mass., partially paralyzed with a fractured spine and broken leg. A-1iss Kelly was described in fair con· dition Sunday at Cape C.Od Hospital in 1Hyannis, Mass. But doctors said it was still too soon to determine whether the girl would be able to walk again. Less seriously injured were Kennedy; his brother, David, 18; May Schlaff, 22, Grosse Point, Mich.; Patricia Powers, 18, Spring Lake, N.J.: Francesca de Onis, 19, of Centerville, Mass.; and Miss Kelly's sister, Kim, 17. Some guys will do anything to be diflercnl. Jud Olte, 10, of. Cocoa, Florida fo und this new, somewhat tip sy way to approach the old water fountain in lhe cily's Travls Park. FroM Page 1 CONSPIRACY • • Service's recommendation that th& motorcade be c-anceled. The President's blue, silver and white jetliner, after landing at New Orleans Jntematlonal Airport, taxied to a remote corner of the field Where tight security had been imposed. The public was not allowed to witness the arrival. Gov. and Mrs. Edwin Edwards and members of the Louisiana congressional delegation greeded t.he President and his wife as they stepped from the plane, with /.1rs. Nixon ~ing handed a bouquet of rl'd roses . Nixon aides said the Secret Service did not recommend cancelation of the visit, but the action was unprecedented. "We have never faced a situation in which the Secret Service recommended a diversion of route because they were unable to resolve the situation before a presidential arrival," one aide said. Spokesman Jack Warner said the Secret Service made the unusual an- nouncement becau se "we anticipated in· quiri es." Asked ""hy he thought there \\'OUld .be inquiries, Warner said the Secret Service had reason to believe the change in plans and the events surrounding it would be known publicly within a short V.'hile. FBI Director Clarence M. Kelley has relaved information about the case to At- ty. Gen. Elliot L. Richardson. a Justice Department spokesman said. He decli_ned to say what action Richardson might take. 600 Pounds Pot Se ized; S1nu ggler Craslies Border A marijuana smuggler sped through the San Onofre Border Patrol Checkpoint over the weekend and led immigration officers and San Clemente police on a freeway chase before ditching his car and fleelng on loot. He left 600 pounds of the illicit weed behind. Patrolmen said the incident· -in· creasingly common at the checkpoint - took place at dusk Saturday. 'I1le car, they said, was being driven by a male and it did not stop despite signals from patrolme;1 at the roadblock. Instead, the driver sped away and patrolmen gave chase. Moments later San Clemente police units joined in the pursuit. The flight ended et the Camino de Estrella offramp on the San Diego Freeway when the driver pulled to the roadside and ran into the hills. The heavily laden truck contained more than 300 kilogram bricks of mari- juana. Officers said the registration of the car was traced to a West minster man and agents for the U.S. Customs Service took over the investigation. The seizure of the weed "'as the second major haul in less than a week at the checkpoint. Early last '\\>'eek a routine check for aliens in a Car dipping in the rear netted several hundred pounds of marijuana and the driver who was booked on smuggling charges. Reds Continue Hu e Shelli1i g •• HIL ARY WRIGHT, 7, STAYS COOL IN THREE ARCH BA Y But Summer Heat to Be Short Lived, Sa ys Weatherman Bahnv W eatl1e1· Just Fluke ., As Clo11d s D11e to Return The arrival of summer along thl' Orange Coast was termed "kind of a reverse trend." the National \Veather Service expects \Viti last only until J.'l'i· day. Then , the "night and morning low clouds and fog along the coast" routine \'.'ill return. Meanwhile, an "easterly w ave ' ' Racing Pionee.r Off enhauser B1uied Today Fred Ofrenhauser, ttie man Yl'ho gave the Irvine-built "Offy" racing engine its name, \Yas buried today after services in Inglewood. Offenhauscr, whose engines won the Indianapolis 500 a total of 28 times, died in his sleep at his Inglewood home Fri· day. He was 85. The four-cylinder Offy engine was created in 1934 and lt soon became a standard at Indy. Offenhauser was a plant superin-- tendent when tlarry h1iller went out or business in 1933. Offenhauser obtained aU the plans and drawings of MiJJer's 1ngines, reorganized the fim1, and gave the company and the engine his name. Offenhauser sold his interests to Dale Drake and L-Ouie Meyer "'ho moved the firm from 1.-0s Angeles to the Orange Coast in 1969. Today the Offenhauser brand belongs to Drake Engineering, 17502 Daimler St., in the Irvine Industrial Complex. Born in Los Angeles , OffcnhauS<'r is survived by his widow. Ethel, and two brothers and three sisters. brought scattered thundershowers to coastal and in!Jnd Orange and Los Angeles Cou nlics today. The package of heJt, humidity, dense clouds and heavy raindrOf.>6 in some places is caused by a flow of moist air from south of the border. Winds from the southeast at from five to 15 knots brought I.he unusual summer storminess. Wind s from the southwest to west at from eig ht to 15 knots this af· ternoon were expected to clear the skies. Variable cloudiness is the word for Tuesday with the emphasis expected to be "mostly sunny." A clear mild night with low tern· peratures al ong the Orange Coast in the mid to high 60s is to be followed by highs in the mid-70s tomorrow, the National \Veather Service predicts. Farm ers Battle Beac li Nu di ty ERDEVEN. France (UPI) -Farmers backing the mayor of this Atlantic coast town parked their tractors across the en· trance road to a beach Sunday to keep away nudists. It was the latest episode in a running feud between Mayor Jean Lorgeoux and nudists '''ho have visited Cliff Beach since 1969. Last month, the district attorney in ne:f.rby Lorient niled that the nudists· could use the beach if they wore what the r~rcnch called ''the minimum" -skimpy briefs with which women were allowed to go topless. But last week Lorgeoux decid· ed to outlaw such attire. ----------------------------------- NOW AT 95 + ,_ Exclushe 5 Year Partl Guarantee Tne mO!O•, pymp, llmtr. tfllort w•!e• d1J1rlbull0n 1¥11..,,, l'ltlttr tl'ICI l)ulll· 1>1onona tfl gy.,anlff<I tor 6 Vt11' on mO<ltll 5$1979. SS/!111 al'ICI 551971. WI pay Mr reipl1Ctrflenl ltbor d\IWIQ tntll,ll )'111'· 90 · DAY CASH WITH Al'flOVID CHDIT HEADQUAR TE RS. l l'hone 548-1788 . !-. -. · 1815itEWPORT-Bl~D.-Downtown Costa Masa--. - .......................................................... ~ . ''i J s I '}1ai tra ·Au :ha1 ·pre 'Va Chi spe ·Che > 1 ·to 1 :a. Mc tior ·l!uJ :~ .. :pa~ •ana ' ·COn ' ' y llol 'nur clu1 equ stal whi lo ' B pro wltl Cor eorr givi bus: M ti on "'rr put~ The : 1.3<> :~ou1 B n filed y,·ith ' GA~ •'~"· V V•ftl ,JIJ,OC • H I~ ·flcH.i'' Ir.In.. . s1.ooa "' >oc• · .. ~ ..... "" ..\lfltrn "l!no!o 'J.910, . "'I "~Kre oe cr•!ls ... " r•'''' •"~; Mlfi "' 't BA~ : t1'.!::f, :~10 • BAJ , ctr.er ' K . .. ( Tnma lf~VCS J ~m S)Vf!lli· sues c Tes '1( JO DAILY PILOT SC B11ffum s To Utilize ·computers Spedl! to The Dally Pilot LONG BEACH -Buffums has signed a 42-month con- tract wJth McDonnell Douglas ·AutomaUoc Co .. Which will :handle all the company's data ·processlng, except dnta entry, 'Vaile G. Young, chairman and "chief txecuUve officer of the specialty department store ·chain, announced FrJday. MOllday, August 20, }q73 ,. • ·- Complete New York Stock List hlet Ntl P•I! (llllt.I Hl(llfl Low U ll CllO 'ti JtWi ff ~ -I • ~ldUnl l:: ·: \ ~e '= ft: l j:~~r 1 .i~iO ' I ~·r.· giv. lNt ~ Uf fs f4M f.i¥i : .... m:s~P . .0 1 Jil I \.1 lt\; 12\'t t~. J-"< P~Uol 1. ?fl N \!i \"» .1~ 1 ~~20'1> Ffl(:IJ'tc1$k' •1 1 11,,., J\~~J 11111 . iH»I I°" 5 +2 4 t!l'to l!ltti 1!\'J-... Fln111on ... 1 1j2 l . 11 .... l"h-it J Cll II . 2 '60 Ml'. ff"' ... I\ )05 19"ie It'll lt..._ f ll(,..,.tr SI I l I•~ 1)~, 13i.-V. J•'flt91 C l,'6 t SO lj'.lo Ut\ + '-" ll--30\ .. 301'1-I F11Chk 1-'1 1• lli ~ M1" ~+1-• J1mW1lt ·" • U• I ~\ r -" "' • j1llo 21¥o-lit Ft118ka .IO 11 27 4'lli .... •"-V. J m W1llllf 1 •· l60 iv, l 1J. UV. •I 1"a 4'1o 1411t-"" '''Ml I.OS& 7 10 16~ I~ I~-• JlmWpl 1 60 · 31 f~ -\o U 14V. 14 14 + '°' FtH•ot 1"2 10 1( ,,._~ 19 )t -Vt JH11ISc ·~ ·· f: 1 1 ti,, ••• 11 21" 2!\11 21"+ \Ii FalHS llnc 2 I S lMt 2'V. 211•+ V• j=:.:A"v \:20 7 st Jt V. fJ: Pt~;.'\,, , 1._ 11., '* Ft! Nat srr1 1 16 16 16 -v. 'so .t 1os 1u 'i'\ii 11 "· •i ~ 16~ 16"+. F.,.CO 1.llll 11 ~ 1.SV. " 3' -I .. Jann&Jn · .II .-.. " 'Im 1114 1tl4 .. "''"'' I.Mb • )117• II 1t:V. i7 -"'~~~Y"C .:g : 11 ~ t: ~ 1S l I ~ 1"6+ V. FtlURIE ·" IS J9 I? 11*,'!L J-1 L 1:Jl 7 1 11\1 I 11+. ~ 20 21~ fl'lol>-Joi Ft Vtlk .4' 11 IQ ji"< ll'Wo 11 14 J-1L11IA 160 !' 51 1.1.i-i.i; 16 311' :H\9 2:11\-lil F1W!18 1.12 t ' i\lt Jj'JO lS~•-1-. Jorat1n 1.JOa "6 1 4 2t t +.,,_ 20 fllo ti.lo t~ V. fl Wl1 3.01b Cl t :Ullo )S'iCI 3~ ~ JOfoltn1 .76 e 1 11-.. 11'4 tv.;. "' .. 4'\t ~ ~--_...., FIK~F .ff lt, l'. 1130~~ "o•• »,,..,. 1 \> JOYMkl 1 . ..0 20 JI l-1 '.P'• llV. ,., 21 Sl\lo 51Yt ii + V. l"lllhr I .aGll ,,. • 1 " "'' ,.. -· ,_ 2 11\'t ltW. ltV.-~· F ....,.Se .ll f IS 1'10 1 1\-\t K1lwrA I .SO 1( 11 1tl'I It It -\lo 1 Wt 1V. 1\~ . FIHtEnl ,12 • 1:13 11H1o 9~. 10~---~-KAI 57ol ''~ l ,,, I Jl1'1 SI,,, . ~ ... ~ ... ' j ''"' 1.-. ''"-... Fl.mo 0.6(1 • I 10 10 10 " +v. K1lserC I .so 6 't 1\.o ,,, 111it '· Der .u 2t .a"" 11\t n Flt!C.IV1n Sk 10 11 11~ 11"· ,,,.. K1!1CIPI ,.. :JO lO lO _,. v. AW .:UC. , ., 11"11 1\V. 11\li Fllnllo.OI i.ot • ,, .. ~ l>'• 1si-"-1C1111MU .10 ' .].( 11\lo l)l~ lS\lo-1\ Ale.In Ahl I 11 17 ,n .. •1\lt ,,.._ •• FllnlkOf )',Jo ,, 111\i 11\\ 11VI '•LPLl 1.10' J11~ 11Vt 17\'t-I'• Alr.o Sid :J6 I ' 1°"" 10\.i 10•. Fl• e Cot.i t ' 1•~ ,,..., 1•~ ~KC so Ind 1 ' J 1S~• "'' lS~ h Ale Lii 16 4J lj I'• 8 111+ I,\ Fll Gii .'5 I ll.14 1( Ill~ 1Jlil-'' KCSoll'ldpl 1 , l<I() 12'~ 11'' 11..., '°!:n .\Ob 40 ' 1i *~ ff\' t'l1Pwr 1.IO 10 lO ~·11 3~ JS\lo-Vi Kin GE l .J7 8 11 1t'"• 1t\o l~• , Al'°" 2.221> 9 J ]1)4\ \~ ,.._" Fl1PwL 1.11 11 II l)\l :nt\ 33'4.+-""K1nN1b 1.11 10 ! IJ\o IS 1, .+ '1 AUA ll 14 If t 11 ..... I 1'1!.-\'o Fl1 511 1.30 $ I 7?1'1 t2V. J1\;.-V. ~1nPLI 1.4 9 I 21 tH-. 71>.:.-'o Atl '"2 iOb t I 11\lt 11 \'o II\">-\'!» FlliOI' Cll Sit U lfJ 44',"o '6 '6~-~ 1ry hldutl 1 11 S\• J ~1"-'o All!fl~! \ 20 4 U ffi SIA J\•+ ~ FluorCPOf 3 .S 7tY, 711'1 J•V.+1 l lV pl l . .W • ' 1/:h II•~ Ir-\o A1t!L;i11i 3 2$ ' W. lh F!YTlqr ·* ·; It 1.S l t io -~Kaull.Br .U 17 42 1"l 2'.I._. 231'>-'• :-THE CONTRACT, which ls ·to commence Nov. t, wtll have :a. value of about $725,000. McOonneU Douglas Automa· Uoo will be r .. ponslble for all :IMtums data pr oce s 1 Ing '.Aeeds including a cc o u n t s :pJya blc, receivables, sales ·:inaylscs, payroll inventory :control and slatlstics. QUIET FURY -Design of 1974 Plymouth Fury features lower beltline and increased glass area for low look and greater visibility than previous models. Emphasis is on a quiet ride. All:,. 144 "1 I 12 ll 17 .. FMC Co .ts 1 115 1~ lS'h l.!Mo+ V. l(a~k .20 10 f tl'o l\i 1i-~. A.lllnG~P .Sil; ' hromt .10 4 11 12 11* 12 FMC pl 2\lli •• I 12 ]I Jl , l(a"t"WrA: .60 S 2' llllo 11 11~-~. Allld Ch l.'2 11 , l.IO .. 211 1W 231'lo n ...... "' FoodFr .»! ... ~~ ~~ ttt= U' ~=p rg \ 11 l~l~ I~'"' 1:v.-... Alk!Mln .41 21 I I'll 1 ~ i . lt'°1~~1 s ™'1si:~ "-~~.C~I~ 10 ~ :•• 7\.'I I t ~ K•ll•r 1n ·...o s 13 IOV, 10\fo 100.:.-\• :nf!i'S~ 1·: J n ~~ l,.., f 37 21\0 11\li 21~ l't FooteMln pf 69 22'h ~ 22\.'t V. IC1llo!IQ ..Sol 16 :ll 1'\\ 14 1' Alld suonikt • 50 M • ..._. lnG f,30 •• ~ 115 115 llS +ll'o FordM J.20.lr j 115 s~ 53* ~ " l(tlt•fH 1.1D ' 91 211~ 2 ... 2Mll-!~ • All!t Cll .16b 11 1114 12\-\ 11\it+ \lo lnG Of' . 2210 S2\~ Sl\li 511'1--lVI FprMct It: 1 21 13 .... 13\lo l~+ Vo K.nc:ot1t 1..0 '~ >O'll,,,_ ~ ri~ 1: AllrahlA SO f 11 It. ,.. It\ \lo ~111 i.40 21 !!6 3.IV. 33~ ~ V. FrM ot 1.80 . 4i 23\lt 2'Nll 23V.-~'t UI I l.7A I ,.,.... .,. · Altot f.9' IS 10. 61\11 I •V. "' I '"~.JO 10 39 39\• l9'.to :iom+ y., FOf"l08 ,931> .. (1 l~ 11'4 1•'4-\lo HI'" Mc ~ 27 I~ ,~v. ,w-1r---2n Ambit SO 6 4' 9\l!t m I,.._ ~ ffSv .20 11 7t '41'1 '4 4'V.+ .. FOl'!HW .»t 71 31 2• tt tt -2 lfTMOf ,.,. .. • •• -, Amcor .151> 7 • (\II ~ \Iii+"' 1''$0 2 lb II 21 l1h 321.'o :nv. FosterW .ta lJ 26 lf'h 3n\ l"-" I~ KtY•ln ..450 ' i(.I 1511> 15\lo 1.~~-:' Am.t'IC 1.20 1 ] lt l t ~ -\lo ty Inv .Ml S 61 12\lo 12 11 -V. Foll.OotO «l 11 25 3, .... ~ 35'+-~l l(lcldl W M 6 22 lt'4 lf\lo r ..-' Al'!\ H"I .lO i1 112 lOl'I 30~ ~+," ~lty Inv Wit ,, 17 I~ 1'l 1.11o+ "" Fr11nklM :20 17 2'7 11YI 1W. 15:\ot-~·o K ~W Of ~ .. 1 ''l't •91h 'i~ '--i 111 High Gear ' AH11 p 3'1• . 17 71 ""' + ... /IYlnVOf 2 .. 21 ,,.,. 2l\to 23,,._V. Fre111Mn IO 21 11 26'1o 161-11\'o-Kldd~pl 210 I 43 (] ,.·.~ ·, 1 Young noted that McOoMell :OOuglas Automation offered a ~umber of advantages in· eluding access to sophisticated equlpmer.t, a large technical staff and on--line capability which Buffums might choose to utilize at some ruture time. Chrysler Accents Exterio1~s AmAlrFI ·'1 19 4 20\loo 20 20 --.. ty $tor" 2 S 5 S Fr~I 1 ;o 1 71 15 ''~ 2tl'.i l(lm Cl 1.10 11 2• :!t'h 3'\' ~ ' Am Alrllnn .. S6& 9". "'°~Vt ltrtl.Eq 1¥1 11 7(43 4l\lo Q +YI Fuou11nd 0 4i' 17t 12\.\ Ill• 11~1 -\•1<.lt1g10S .lO I 10 I rw Ti o+,'• AmB•k .20 .. l n-. 71'1 n-.-\c. lartl.011 .«l 7 '' lt 11~. It T ~ --0 G-1<.1rs.c11 c .n • 12 1114 11 16V.-~• A9 r.nd 2.31 I SI 36 UY. :W + l'I LC of Am S 16 S>,j, }"'t S"-Vo Gi~l llldst I Jt ,1 ~ ~ ~, K L M Alt! 3S 36\o » .. 36 _,. ... AmBrcst ,'4 10 19' 2~ 2,~i i.ti.-'4 llvCHtb 2 12 2 12"1 72;,, n~T ~ GAC Ca.p 2't l "• ')';. 3V.+ \1 l(nl11M N 21 II 60 Jl''t JIV. JI'•-'1 Am 910g .2t t • 12'9 I~ im-YI Cltv El 2.a2 10 21 31'1io ~ ~ .. GAF Co .u ,6 .. 11$to 11111 ni~-\• KOlllft>g :6(1 s JS I~ 12 \lo 11 AtnC1n 2.10 I 113 21~ 1nt 2t -\II CICI..., I. Pitt lSO 111'1 11\'t 11\li GAF Pl 1.20 .. 21 11~ 11\1 17\.'t-'o Kol>P'r I.A 1 10 31~ 31\t) 31 \o+ '• A Cln pt 1ililo . 2 tl ..... 21\to 2J~ . . !hwoxCo .52 16 11 201/o 19',I 2&1o+ V. Gam Sk J :>0 6 4 27'4 ~',· 271\+ 11 Kapper pl ' '210 S0\12 jO 50 -'• BUFFUMS PREVIOUS data processing relationship was with Union America Computer Corp. A r eorganization of that company made necessary its giving up of all non-banking business. McDonnell Douglas Automa- tion Co. operates five major co1nputer centers with 86 com· puters valued at $135 million. The .company bed more than _ J .300 clients throughout Ute :Country last year.' Bankruptcy : Bids Filed The following persons have filed petitions ror bankruptcy ·"'ith SantaAna federal court : ' • G"'llRllY, Rada1t W1 llm1n. llock•rbroklf, 6112 i!oltrra Sl•n• ROid, r~;111. Llallll1ll11 J167.1S'.,O. 1uct, 112.000, rtltrtel: P•11r Ellloll. • HINSHAW, JICO\>llLM SU I I 11 e. •1\ou11wJ11. 6712 Slerr• $/1,,. ROid, 1,....1.,., Ll•llllltl" 11\t ,9°'...0. ,,...,, 11.000, ntf"" EI UOll. L.AWEltENCE. Etrl Kint, PY111nlft>-ance mec:hlnlc. 2S60S Vi• v11n10, M!1- , ..:Ion Vl•lo. L!1D1t1Ut:1 S26.tll ttM'!I $600, rtftrtt ElllPll. HECKMAN, Wlltwrt Eu QI n I, ·llnlm11lovtCI. 17'32 9ell Circle. llun. '111\QIGn leldl. Llt lllllt\ $11.760, l\Mll ' »10, rtllfM Pl'll:ICll. ~ HECKMAN, ,..,.,Jori• Jovct ... rv1c. '!e<ttlll"V, 111 ~ Olttlla 11 alll>Yt. OE MINT, Douola• J 1m11. cr1tlPNn. \]!IV, •h l'I St., N....,oort 6"dl. Lltb11\lle$ U 7.l1S, ltM!t $( 4'S, 1119~ Pt..llll. o MOflll!MO, HIMY I'., ~orem.n, 1"51 ;~...,ltnd $1., Hunting!~ a t 1 c h , : \1bUUl11 $1,14, a-II $.l;,J74, r1f1r .. . 1111111>. d MORENO, B1rl>l•e V ., unel'l\PIDYt , n otl'll:r a.1111, 1' 11>oYt1. ·~A KElt. Albert LH. •!Its rep.r~senl· .• !IYt, 16511 Ol'ilon Clr~le. Ho. 1, Hun· I lntlon 8uc:h. Ll•billtln $6,124, 11 .. 11 , rtlern Eltlo". 9AKEll , Je•nle Al1n1. llouwwlte , 111 , Ofl>er dlllfl$ II lbcl<tt. ' J COMMIRCIAL Rl!MODl,LING And New lulltllnt• KARL KENDALL [>GENERAL CONTRACTOR .. !>48-1537 By CARL CARSTENSEN Of Iha Diiiy Piiot Sllll Highlighted by new erterior styling on Plymouth Fury, Chrysler and Imperial models, the 1974 paMenger cars from Chrysler Plymouth Division will include m a j o r lm· provements in four basic artas, according to General Sales Manager Francis G. Hazelroth. Hazelroth said these im· provemcnts are: ca r line iden· tlty and a p pearance : serviceability and reliability: comfort and convenience; and veblcle performance. THE MAJOR styling change will be in the full-size cars with all new exterior and in· terlor design for Plymouth Fury, Chrysler New Yorker, Newport, and Town & Coun- try' and Imperial. "In our compact, specialty compact, and intennediate lines -Valiant, Barracuda, and Satellite -our position is one of change where signifl· cant gains can b e ac· comptished in value changes directed primarily at custon1er value im- provement," Hazelrolh said. The full·size cars look lower and leaner than their '7:1 counterparts. Side windows are two inches deeper than previous models and provide increased visibility. 'Ibe front and rear gins area is in· creased also. "The Fury, Chrysler and Imperial Jines are our style setters ror 1974. The full-siie car market still represent.s Che major segment of t h e automobUe business -abcluJ 30 to 35 percent. ••Jn tm, the intermediale Sebring received the major styling change and has paced our satellite series as the Divisions strongest s a I es gainer. running better than 45 .. ""•orru11m1111 Tormenting Rectal Itch Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues Promptly Relieved In many cases Prepar~1tion H R~VE"S prompt, U?mpornry relief ~m such pain and itching a:;nr1 actually helps shrink S)licllinR" of hemorrhoids! tis- sues cnused by inAit mmation. dreds of patimts showed this to be true in many cases. Jn fact, m any doctors, them· selves, use Pr~parotion H~ or recommend it ror their fam. ilies. Preparation H ointment or suppositories. T ests by doctors on hun- • % an depesits of $100,000 far si1 months ID one yeu The number of these accounts that we can accept Is limited WE PAY COMPETITIVE INTEREST RATES ON ALL OTHER ACCOUNTS FOURTEEN OFFICES TO SERVE YOU IN Art1dl1 •c1rrit01 La Crnc1nt.1 •onnp 1111 G1rd•M 'Cost• Mtsa Los An1•~1 (2) ·•sin ltr1t1rdino •t1no1• Park DowntY C2, Mtlllttfty Ptrk Whitti1r fiH Additional Ol!lcH i1 Ntrthro Calltar•i• Pleasant Hill Sa1 Ir••• f 1Ster City /0DCftin1 Soo•I 1M11ntai1 View San Jose 1QPEN NIG.HT & DAV .and Saturdays • Call (213) 923 -9601 •• , orsee the wh itt p11gn " • • · for your nearnt office - ASS.EIS OVER $375 MILLION ;- ! p a.('if i('~a' i 11g~ I\. ··········~··-l•I , .• ~ .. ,. percent ahead of 1972 sales. "The Sebring Plus is reOec· ting an 80 percent gain and in-- terestingly, Road Runner sales were registering a 145 percent jump. For 1974, the Satellite four-door sedan will have an entirely new front end to enhance its appeal. "Valiant set its third con- secutive record breaking sales year in 1972 and is well on its way to a new record. Since the beginning of 1973, Valiant, led by Duster, has played a major role in contributing t o <:;brysler's 37 percent share of the compact car market. "Ouster has been nmning about 25 percent ahead of im sales and the four-door sedan recording a 10 percent gain. There are improvements In air conditioning and upper level ventilation. A new air conditio n ing system ncorporate! six panel outlets, plus two lap coolers providing an almost 100 per· cent increase in discharge area and greatly increasing air now. A.CnM 1,J(b 1 11 11-l't i1V. 17'4-~ lueil P .so 1 •l ,~, a1:. I\\-Vo Gambfpf i-'.o .. 1 27\/o 2714 27V• . Kr•flco i.n 1i I" 11~·, ., '2:1t .f. ~. AChlln 1.10 7 t 23'4 22'11 22\lt-1 Ivett,. Df I ·• S 111h ll~• 11:V.-o;. GamSllf 1.60 .. 2 2ra 2Tl• 27~-\Ii 1Crm 1 .70 :k 2tl JSl< 3514 JSV>--\/, A NEW HIGH t t AtnCy1n IY. t 2.sl 21"41 21\/o 21,.._ ~ Ml Inv Cp 16 10 31',I U >n 3S'!4-1'h G111nert .25 21 10 3$-3Sl'I :15"1 KrOlhler .IO ' 1 17~, 11"• 171'1-Vo • t • 0 U p ~ ADlllTel ,(3 21 21 311'lo 31'4 31YI+ 'l9 NA Fin .SI S 1<46 11 \1, IOl1 10':-V. OirdOen .10 12 10 171'1 U\l!t )7'11+ "'° l(r1>91r ·1.30 16 '2 lS\12 IJ"'° IS'4-1• Ver5lOll Of the 360 V--8 Will AtnOutl Vil .. 21 5'11 S¥o S'fo.-V. NA"•' ,l.lO 3t IJ~lo n .... 15 ~I G11$YC 1.12 I 11(1Je 11'4 \(Yl--\iolC'(SOl"I • .0. 6 I 12'-U'h ltY>--•1 AOUI l)f Ml 6 11'1& nv. 11'1& . ocaa: .to 11 •11«1\\ 1lll ..... I~~ GCA COt"P 10 1 t'lo I I -1o -t. \.-replace the 340. 'Jbe optional AmEllC '1 ,to .. , 292 ~ U~ 2''h ... :Jw:~ 3: 21 11,1 ru! m.,,~ ... ,, ... --~ Gtmll\f C.o 1' 11 11~ ll'Ai+ loo L•<lede 1\'l J 2 1f\.J ltYJ lf"-'~ Am EQIOl"l ~ .,. •.-.. ~mlnHnc 1 14 I 1m i:.t1' I>~+ ·~ L.1m5n sn l 1 xS 11 lJ 13 ~ "o 360, four--barrel, with dual ex-n lJ.16 "' ~+1·1 oltcoin ·°' '' lf 11~ 1u1 11~+ v. Gll'IAm 1nv 11 lM 1~ 1~ \'I i..nea n 10 J 1t;i 1'""'° 1tu.-•• haus• will be available in A 1<1ns., 1.10 9 u ,, 1w. 1w. :.~11: 11 2: 41'f ::"' it: i"r~1 w. Gii "¥: ·~ ~31 ~ ~ ml 3''11-~ L•rM1rv2.0so • 21 21~ ~ 2;:.zt ~ ... A. Gna 1.m .. " U.. 2•11o1 2''111+ \Ii o111111 Food 10 s tl'o 9~-. 9,0 14 GaftA r ' l'I -L•lrotie s11 13 I 7 6v. •~~-l(o Duster, Barracuda and Road ~ ~51,,!·~ ·7 1{ l!~ ;nt \~ U ol Pr,11 1·'° 1~ ~ t~' tty, F'+ ""~l.~ 'n 1 f = ff\~ .. t::~l1:1 i: ~ J~ ~ isv. 2.S'-'t-~. Runner. AGnpf 1.90 •. , UV. 2.S\4 1S1Ao+Vt Ind-~. 4314V: I''" l~\lo 14Gl'!C1b1' .50 7 IU ..... I .... tVo L1•acoC ..a 's 119 11 10\.'l lO''t--io AmHollt .6'11 7 It 11~ 11~ 1\lll + !,;, ollln of 4 I 4~ 4',Z. ~at~ -\lo tin Cor 1.20 7 11 IS\-\ II ~ lj + L.HKPI 2:60 . . 27 70"' 10 :VO 20',o • · •--•-·ment pan •-n Fury ArnHom " u 210 "' •1\la 4 v.--.. / $ 1 10 .. u 31 3,~ ,,,..._ -G11 Devt•OP • 10 m ,,.,. m + ~ Lt111c111 2 20 1• """ 2'\lo '''"'+ •-. u~w. u e13 0 I A Hom. pf 2 I IM lM 18' -1 Gas 1:90 I n ""' 26~ 2•i1 •• t;.., Oyn1m, • .n 1• ltv. lt+ v. L.H•wy . .so.:. ll I """ 35"' 35\'t--t~ Impenat and Chrysler will be Am Hosp ... 42 76 «HI! •ll'I 43-1>11 . Pldura1 . 10 ,,,. ·~ '~ . Gn EIK i.• 20 "2 60lli ,.,,., ID._ ~ l.Mdsl.H .SO i9 20 1]~ l]W. IJ~+ '. . t d th . . AmlnVll :so , 311 9 ·~ 1'9-\loo COIS Oh 1.n • "" 1S 2•lll 26!·i·v. GnFood 1.40 10 131 2j'h n :m?+ \, L-1 .50 1 • llV. l]YI ll'h ... easier o rea an 1n previous A Mldlcl .12 1 15 1ov. ~ 9:v.-"'Combe 1.s1 21 n 19'1. 1' rtl• 'II Gft!Gro .wi 2' 1 1 * 11\lo 1N+ \\ L-" Pt c ..o 6 11 1>v. 131• 11..., . A Mt'dlc.orp ' IS ,~.. •Yt •V>-~ ComSolV .AO U 101 lt~:. 17 11\11 'Ii G11 Host C11 a 2 1~ 10\\ 1Gtto L~ Vil Ind .. 1 1"'6 I~ 1:V.--\o models because they are more A MetC• 1..., 11 n llft JS u -~ 1oms1 Etf .ta , 3 1•'1t ,, u 11o G..n Instr 211: lj " 19\• lt\!i lt.,._ v. l.lftmn 1 ;,o . . 106 1"' 1,1;, 1'"-+ 1-. r U ll · ed Co 1. AMIC pt JV. I 90 to 90 +I mwEd 1.30 ' 14' ~ 21 .... 79,,_ :t;, .,.,111"'1 Pl • ' •-•• •"""'T ~. l.lnnlr Cp 4 31 mi m At--\, unc ona Y orient . ntro1.:1 AIM!' MOtor ·5 m 11,. ~ ,,,. . omEd"' 2 .. J " 1'~• U\!o-11o .....n MeG .l~ 1s • I• •• •o -i.. L-• 111 60 11 ••1 Jl V. l2"' 32~ 1'. for car operall·on are localed AmNG• 2 .. 111 1 115 ~ JOV. :>011t--.li\ cwEdol 1.•2 .. 1 19•~ 1t•• 1•1~ .. ....n M•h• • 11 111 >-,.111 ).>'It >•)"!-~1 L.iv inc j51 , 11111 11"t 1 1 ~1 . . AmSHI .3611 11 l IVI IV. t•.r. ... c~ or 1.VO .• 1 :or. 23\'io. 2V:lo+ v. \,tMlll pr l'I:. I ;, w.., w,....... !.•vi 51r1 . All il " l•\lt ""' 2' ' -""' on the tert side of the panel Am 5hl11 . ..a • l 1•v. 19\ti 19'-'< .. ~wed w1 · • 20 t'll •l'I t\11 ' · unMPI J . ...w 1 Jl) ••~· ~,.1.~.0 1".--lo L•Y1t1 Furn lo 25' 1'11& 1;;. 71Jo-4e AS It I lO 1 l.O 19_,.. IP'lo ltV.-VI ornEd &wt . 19 Mio t'll 9'H-\,i, ~lnMOI 111 , .,. II 1U\l!t ,.,,. 7D!i4-"-LFE Corpn 19 5 J 5 j and controls for comfort and ......, 'Ttnd :so 1 111 11'!0 11lt ll'l't-"" omwon 2k 21 1t m '~ 9•-.-i'l 1.>tr1 Port ·"' 10 1•-11 '' -1-1 L.l1>11,,o 2 70 1 a n•A 314;. •1~1-.. 5'd I "· 13 5'V. JJ'h "\it-h ...011111 l.n 1 ~ ~ 2U'ril . .a l'ull!J 1 . .U I IQ.I l9W \Ito 11111 ,, · LOF -.... 3 '9\.\ UVI ~ ~ convenience situated to the ~~51,~11 ~ii is 77 11._ 11v. 11 v,+ omsat .41 '' 37 Jl\.\ s1v. '1V.-~ "'" 1tetrac1 21.t , >1• >~ ,,, · L.ll>tr N.c,..1 .w 11 ,.,_ j¥o ·~ )I, ·~ 1'~ . '* omPUh' SCI . 3S "'~ 3 ]\\-"'IJ~la1111 .ts •• lu f..llfl ~ •• -1,/; 'I ... 1 •• 1¥1 ll't ..... ·~ rightside. AmT&.T1.IQlO 31J.'L~~~"'1s;=~ onAQr..3711 1 ,,.~l,V.1•\'t--l4 1Jn ~•"llnd •. 211 JV. J \l.o J\lo-\\'L.J~IYL11 1..., ;1, 1, 14 +'M Amt& T pf • . · OMMI I.QI 1 17 17 1'\0 16U-'I• G T E 1.n 10 lei 211• ,_In 211'1-~I r ~ 2 · 0 27 3J "~ "\lo In the area of safety, there ~rtr3·~ .. ~ ~: ~ '\"" -~~nnMt 1..nn 12 2I 1tv. 1tl't. it + 14 vT1F1ot 1.JO . uo ,, ... 11· ... 11~.+,. t')H;twGM "'ot ~ 1 1150 ICJI 100 101 +i .. i.! a new IUll~•enger restraint ~~!.!!""·.~ ·7 110\'J ICJft 1ov.-.. r::tf-1..: i: iis ~f~ ~{""~~"'-.YI~~ s u! 1~"" i;: i~~t: • ~ 5\4,,:·. ,,,' _,.1,1, mt ft:='!'! ,.._.... ... , ... _, _. 6 I l:Mt im .1w.-.... -Ed l)f ' .. 2 JN ~ ~-·11. \,;lnu1nP ..... ll llt •2i'J 'I"' (]\lo h ti YNEll 1'110 J1 :W'h 34 :w -\11 system with starter interlock Alflllst .iati ~ ~ 1~~ 1tt 1~ tt onfr:,o: .. i ·· 11ca tl._ 1~YI ~Yr+·· ~:I:~ f.: ~~ ,1U: W" tt ~+2~ LJ:-Nll pf J 1., •, ',1, .. ~'II ~,,..=: :-'! improved roof intrusion pro:~'~~ 1:i: t 42 26\-2w. 26*+ \II onsFd 1..10 11 :it 31 :ao 30 -11,u1Pw11t 1.1i .. uo ,.,,.. tt\.'I """'T"t 'h L-' Coro 11 ~ 1 ,,4 t U• and I t Amite ·" 1 3J 16'11 15\12 1614+ ~ onFdllf ,v, lo! 1.5'4 u u -1 V•rW 1.u 11 ~l 11v. 1m 11~T "' tl"on 1...,1 1 2 •~ 9 19 •· ec on, a supp emen ary AM P inc .21 42 l6 "~ .cl~~ ..,, -~ on Frqt .St. ·a 3S9 1s""' 1•~ 1.w.-~ 1,;111y 1.210 2J 1111•'\jo 11•11o 11•""+ .,. 1~~v 11!,l · · ~ 1:.,. 1"' 9\lo ... .'~ throlu t rln Al'l\ll(Of' .l6 6 l t I • + .... onsHG 2.cn • lJ 29Jio 2Sllo t5lil-14 """"'pf L.20 . • I l\.'I 19\.'t ltYa ... t •• ~ .,. ... "" S\t 9_11 e re urD Sp g. Ampex Cp 47 I'/ j •'Iii •:U.-IA ontm Pw 2 9 31 2$.\41 2.S'.to 25\IJ+ lit uF &I# .:i:.t l' 5 614 ,..._ IYI -\l OCkr..-. U.. 1#-~·>4 AmrtP coro s " "'°' ,,,.. ~ .. ::I 111 /~ 'H8 if Yi tt.,.. ~.,._ ~ u11n1PC .ao / • 11 '\li 11* 11._"" t=:'Ft '~ 1f 1:" 1m ji' 1~11oo-"' mERE WILL be 51 models ~.I',' •·." ... 1 17 ~ 2'~ UV.-~ on!I r., i.n 1,~ ,, ,,.. 7'Mo 7*--... ~·or t'lnl )It s 19 1'1"!' ll~ 1' .. LomM 2 3Sll 11 "' lt "~t " _,, :r.: 23 ..,.. &\Ii l\/o-"' "C111 I 60 llj SA\loo ~ iMll+ "" Utdd Uwl• . . ll ~ ~ m ... London Miii s 2 1'9 n \\ in the Chrysler·Plymouth Amil 2..0 1 s '114 401'1 .w... +l'I on c~· r Mir JI.Ii .sv. "'11111HH1 .l6b 1 1 l.Sl'lo li'N 1s111+ \la L.-s tnd , 1 11 1r 17'h 17'111 ,_ Ami In .XI I 10 ~ S S -Vt ontlCo 'j .11'5 ~ 31 :1114-"llltlll I.JO 20 l2• J1\j,, )l'lfll S.1·e · ·· Lon SIG IA4 • 65 Ulil 23'"' 2• -1'1:1 lineup for 1974 including tS ~ .,•~ ,• u.i2w. D\ 21 nttco · x:1 .a ,1 ... 41""+ ""' noi 1ncor 12 • ''* l•ltli 1,,.. ·· L-ILt 1.,. , 1u 11'h 11 1t'h+ Vi "'''•""c -21 11"' 11 It ,. (POf 21'1 "'1 '2 •2 ,2 + UIHIOll M ll II I~ 1*"'4 16\~ ·· L.OllllDll '51 44 IJ 1JYI 7$ lS\lri-~. Olryslers and 36 Plymouths. And" c1 :60 6 9 1rvi i7 11 -~ ttllUt l.)Ob , u 1614 16 16 v10011 IMr 12 ..a l4'h 141-. 141..-1-. L.1>r•I ccirp 12 , 3~ ' ' -v. They are: Imperial, Chrysler, :n~~/1~~: 1~ 'l 1~ il::: 11•:_ v. :U7a"".1l~ t i; ;~ :¥; ~~·~aoic::'w'!~ ;:'ti ' ~ i1It! l!~ l {~ :: t:~:~~·.~ :: 1~ ~Jr' fflt:1l.? F S l 11.t B d A111che 3611 7 1 12h 1?!\ l r.-lo. onll 011 IV. 7 S'4 2ra 21 27\'t-v. GOOClrlch I • S1 1-... 21 21 ~• L.PllG•• l 10 10 I UV. 2' 2' + v. ury, ae 1e, arracu a , All(11011 '•k • 21 11 lni 13 +"'onto! 01 2 2 311v, 31v. 31'h+Yl(;Qodyrtlr 1 • 3'9 21:i. 20¥. tov.-~L.QWfnat ·90, , 16\lo 15'\ 14\li t.'" and Vall t Th t. ' AlllCOCP 16 U 1~ 3'1to lll 3\'o -\to ont Tll .11 ii :ll 20 If~ ltfa.-V. Y!ll'"OClllJ .24 I P lt'N 13\lo 121"'-"°LTV Cfirp j 75 IYa !i:W. Mto , ~ an . e 1neup IS A p L. cOr11 s 11 10 '\~ """-v. on1rt Diii • l 3''h 33'111 33':11.-YI GoulCI Inc 1 I 7 :n "" 221'1 22"1o-'" tTV l orp A . . 1 lO'h 1 \'o lOYI+ 14 unchanged from 1973 APL. pf8 jO 2 ' 1\1! I'll . onDl!lof ,v, Sl Sl 51 Gr•c• w IV. 9 19 2l'h 21 '"' 2•'1:1 .. TV ' • .... I lOV. JO.,., 30\/t . A!IPl>ld Ma 12 lJ Yh SV. S¥1 +~ onwd 1.90 "j 9 27 ~ 2'""'--0\/o Grand U .IO I 4 10'11 10 10.,_ 'h L.ul>rllol :.J if 51 4''1& 44 \tl ~f ;j: !~:~: \~21u 2222if',..\1?~ 1~ =t~=1~ ;U 1f .g J~ ~ :J~~g~:~~Yw 1i~ ~ ll ~l\'e m: ?r'-"t:r;..s11: 1: 6i :~: lf: ~;;+ .... Arc.1t1H .I( «! 1 "" ~ i~ \lo Coooet' Leb ll 10 tr. MS I'll ... •Gr1~Dr 1.20 t I) 11\lo 11 l1V.+ 'Ill L.Ultft>Sll :ao I 7 21'1to 21 21 -~ Arc1t ot C 1 . 1 22 22 22 ... C-Tr ..$411 1 10 IS~ 1$ lS . GIAMI 2.'31t 10 IO 31"" ll ll\lo ... L 'I O Coni 11 1, 4\41 ' 41'1+ l'I A.rclllf"D .50 IS 61 u~ 3:11/J ~ + ~ Co®Tpf ~\4 .. I 17\li 17\lo ltl.lo-v. Gl Al.P TH .. l-1 11'11. 11'1to H~t Vo L.Y1C• Yll•ln 11 M "' ~ N--...,, Arctic Enlp 27 10 s:r;. sn sv. ... CO!le'lnd "" 12 ' It It ,, -\lo G!UD 1.209 If s 20v. 20W. 2011'+ \• Lyk Ill J.12c . . IQ 1N lt 1• -""" Arl$1tr .n I 9 10\'o 10 10'+-'lo C°"" RM>91 59 «I 11"11 I~ ln't-l-. GIN Ir 1.IOd 11 S lafo I~ l~ .• LynchSy . ..a 12 2 '* l'lto N + Vo Mot1ey's Worth Will Minimum Wage Hike Mean Inflation? Arl1 PS 1.16 I " 11¥. ll'Ao la\lo Coowlcl 1 60 s 2 2:Wt n-. 2'J'1" . GINW!llt .J.60 12 ,., <46\fli ..sv.. ~h+iVi -MM--Ark Be1>1 .40 I 2 \O'lo 10"'-10~1' ·;• Cordure C11 ( 116 Alo (\io •'Mi+ '4 GI .aFln"'l' . .O I 11 1'""° 16\."t l~-~ MlcAF .11b 6 II 111141 1.t-~ Arlet1 lll!OY I 156 •V. (l1o •:i.-V. CornGli 1.12 29 31106 IOt'lo llUl'·+·v. G Lin -· • l~ 3t'e ~-.-. ..._ MacOonkl II 11 a\ti 14 ••• ArrMCM c11 13 1 ~ ~\IJ j'n+ :i,i. CouMn 1.Jlb 11 lf 24'Jli 2'\.'I i.*-Vo ID WllVn pt • • 6 ! >j ll>-" Mack• .30 6 14 6 ·,,:: ArmcOS 1.20 1 69 ~ 20 20'4 +Ii. Cowles Com 15 S .._ "' 6~ 14 rt WaMI In . 1 1'1 ~ h •· · MICNUt .10b ' 10 ,._, "!' Arm pl 2.10 .. 13 21'111 211'1 21lli +*Cox 8.-d .3S 11 J 23\fo 23V. tl~ .Yo Ml Gian! I t l 9 . ~ YI-\\ MKY R H l 1 lf 23'lio S7 + 1• Arml Cll .U ll 111 2.S'h 25 Siio-V. CPCltlfl 1.n t S6 2v.'o 21 » ....,.-. rnlld 1.0. " 16 1-4\111 I~ 11\t ·· Mcv otA •V< .• 1120 J1 S1 •,;:: A Ill 160 6 a 2'\li 2'\loo 26"'-~ CrtlllC .IOI 6 10 IW. 1 ~ 17't+, ,,_ rrttlnd wl •• '4 ! ~ !*-""Mid Fd JSb •• 61 9\lo t~ ,.,._ ¥• Ar:lr. JOo 7 I IM\ 1(1\ 1•,,.,_ 'It Cr..:111 A .4o I 17 l 'lio 1\'o tl't-14 ~rolltc' .to 1 '11 1 Wt io ,+ i,;, MM SQUlr. 11 S I 6 ru"' ... ~In nd. ~ 12 6l I~ IN 1N-I Crock•r 1.U 7 2A mo 23V. n~"' ""1'1m1A 11 m ~ ·~+ ... MfflcCh .n • JS 1"' N . Y• ASA L.td jO ID .W\'i '5\.'t ... +lV. CromD IC .IO 7 I 12"'1 17 .... 12"'1 +14 Ull"l"•n In is • '"' .,,,,, It\.'!+ .... M111n•v .llJ II 131 ,,,. 11~ It Ill AshlOll l'.30 ··· 5126 25\'J U'l'i Cl"llUMH .Si 1$ 1 n n 12 + v. Ml'8 i·"" •, '" ~)';< ll'llo ~'hM1U1rtCo 1 • 2 ,,.,., ~ llYI . ' AiDrvG 1 . .in io "' ~ :a:z ~·· · row"ticr;k I• 75 23'olo 23YI 2lYJ . If \-ii•· 1 1 II ~ fi\'." ll""+ "'M1lonll1 .32 It 1 ~ T.: ~ :l "'So.. l ,20g 1 I ~ mi. 23W-'lo. T Co 1·?2 : ~ Tr' .. nv. TI"+~ (,j \1°~ ... l~ I ~ P. ltt 1lir. -.:~ ~::;n.;,..nd ~ I 1 :i~ 1st: 1s~t .... By SYLVIA PORTER If President Nixon vetoes the minimum wage hike pass- ed by Congress early this month, it will be on the basis that the me...... would throw even more fuel on our fiery in· nation and would lead to massive firing of marginal workers. So strong is the threat of a Nixon veto that congressional leaders have delayed sending the measure to the While ~louse until Saturday, -so Congress would have a chance "''hen it re· ·· c onv e nes Sept. 5 to iry t o override a tunxtown . Had Con. !'lre6S sent the bill to the President and then gone on va· POttntt cation. the President could have ki.IJed It merely by a pocket veto and Congress would have had no comeback. nlE BlLL would raise the minimum wage from $1.60 to $2.20 an hour within OJle to three years. depending on the occupational category and, among other things, also \l'OUld expand wage-hour laws to include 7 million to 8 mil· lion additional workers. Would it, then. acceleratt> our wage-price spiral? Would it swell our jobless and \lo1el· rare rolls? The answer is not a simple yes or no, as Nixon almost surely wlll argue if he does veto the bill. For instance, against a minimum wage hike now Ls the fact that summer 73 Is hartlly the right time to spur a ne\V round of wa~e increases sterting nt the bottom and fa1ming out and up. IT IS QUITE possible that against today's h o r r lb I e economic background. a ma· Jor minimum \Vage boost would $et off a "ripple11 effect, with the increases at the bot· tom leading to Increases at the ntxt level and then on and up to the top of the line. There is the danl{er th11.t businessmen wou~r. try to cifl· set the eXtra la r costs bv lirtng their older, ... produd · Ice worten -lh'f."hY shinln~ them from the wo1~tng poor to Lhe \\'f.lfare rolls. But supporUng • minimum wage lncrease are Labor Dcpartme.nl studies or wage tftJ1ds belore and aller pall •soc T•1n5 · • • I 10 "'· >l't",,,."'11.,, · ~umln1 .Ma 11 11 36"9 36'M :MV>-v. orlfll?l>u' -"<1 11 .,ii' ,~ ',',..~ ll,°'.?_ ;1 Ma" Hn 1.5' 11 26 3~ lS u20 -'' ml·ru·mum wage h1'kes showing ~.·~.·~! .5·152 • .. ,_ C:Unn ~1111 • • •·" • • v. vutt5 io --.,. ··•oco ~· 11 "'' 1t'lll 21~ YJ "'" ....... .. IO 11~ , .. 11~ YI curth• ....,wrt tt tn ,.,;; 23\le ~1th ti 5U llf 4:..0 J.S SS ss -h ;ritnon M • 9 1ev. 1w. 1~·i• only a short-term wage spurt ~\~1e1·1~ ! P, ~ = ~++~ curtlsaWr A 1s 1 J1 JI 31 + ~ 8!Jitf"~1 '6: ·, # 2~~ ~ 2l~ t' Mar oo 1.60 t Its JW. JI~ JIV.+ 'IJ right after the change in the ::RR<"",."t.oo2 20 101 t:Wi ~.Ii '2¥1-V. Cult~~"f ~uio ~ ~ ~:::: 1,r. vUWI Of ~i 1 r S2:V. S~ -··::~~:pf ·~ p l~ ~ !:"' :"°'=::.; . . bu '°1• ", ... ~ .. ,..._-1\lo .o\U 1 io ~ J.411.t :M\11 -'oli~~.!.~1.J!'> .112 i .... 11\'I 7!r:::l.Marem .20b i.f J3 ~ 'S~'t 45\'I .• manunum wage -t no A111• Gorp • ... .. •·• D--..,.., "'' ..... ~ ..... ~ .-M•rNlld 1.1a 1 '° 23"' 23 23 •.• Wage "rl'pple" upward through !~~nc .. .:,',' ,.1 .J~ ~ .~ ~. "Dimon co 21 ,. n·.~ 1111o 11v.-1v. "~IPrl .IOI 1 2"l!i,i Jm i~ MarlonL. .u :>0 '° :s.1'11 Joi"' :Mio?-1~ ...,,...,,. ""' ,.... _.. ;o>"W .1614+ "'0..nRlvr M 7 12 1""1 ~ tJ4i . "'' I IW, j\\ Matlin 1.11 22 '6 4 f,l'lt. 14¥1 ·· · the pay rank' Automl lndl I •2 4'-l 'h I"' •· 0111.Cp 1.)6 1 30 17'/o 27 21 -\\ H lbln l .Jl j' ,. >'1~~ 4' M•rltv .SO 20 1' ~ '1\lo (\---. ~· . Avco c.oro ' 21 ~ ~ 9:\o\-" 01rt In .lOa 12 4S llV. nv. '31.1.+ \lo '1tmPIP ,.., J '"' I ' ' MlrQll Ctm t ,, • ,.. ,_,__ \lo The story is similar fo" Avco co w11 .. ,6 ~h..-~l~ lit:..._ Otrtlna 111 2 . 4 :uv. :uv. J61A-"' ~:;:f~ ::l ~ J ti! I ..... ~ Marl1111 21Mc x 101 2114 2~ 21.,._ \~ "" Avco Df J,20 ·· -"'" ..... ... 0.YCll 1.11 6 l IJ'lt lS'h l!i\'r-. \lo H ndV H n 9 20 l 17"' 114-+ ~ M1rll1F 1.2( 10 5 25_., lS Z5 -~ prices SaJd former Labor AYlrvPr .2s '° J :fit ;l(Z l4 +~ 01yc Ill •ot. .. z20 60 st~ 60 •.. H:lllsCP · 0 1 11 llfk 12 -h MtrllnA.I ·'° '3 • 11-1o w. w.-~ .. Secre~ James •t 0 d gs 0 n :~1·~11 1j .n nN: 11f"' 11~ .. E:~l~A ~ ~ M 1k. ,fit 1~!t-~ ~=~r:ml~ 2t ft "' mt a t: =rl~ 'J ~ ~ \tlt I~ 1ftr+ r: arter the massive t 9 6 6 t.~611 ·a 44 • 11SYI 1sv. is~·" &:!!~f, 11: 1: ff ~ 20~ 2Y~ ~ H:= i"!a 1: 11 ~ !JYI ~1"'7 ~ ,,.,.!~ni1~ . .u ~ ~ ~:; m:' ~N -:'~ " '--t "The __. a--a.ere 1...a. 11 7tCI SI !'"'° 52*-1 ~ 1hl ,J:1 IS j Jl'h I~ I~+ Vo MIUIY .30b P l.sD 1SV. 2'YI 2"" ~ m1n1mum wage UU\13 s : B111t.Wll .IO 11 16 2• 23"" 2m;+ .. OelP&L 1,16 • J3 1514 JV. lSV. ... ~1.1nt11 I 12 I ,,. 2'V. :m..+ "M ... PI l.Olll .. 33 l•YI 1•~ .. .,,_ , •• wage increases granted to :~111·1.~ ~! = uPll u~" +·~8:r1Z'A1',1:la 1~ P, ~ b'U ~++~~sM.. ~ l ~ 11~ !ft: li~\:::J~r .. ~ ii ti ~f\? ~~ ~tt_-~ 1,600,000 Workers to meet the t:ti~~I :il 1l 1t f:Vo n n -·~ 8:1::i. In~~ i ~ 1f~ int 1 ~ ~ H~=~t ·1~ I~ ~ il'll~ = rn:+ ~ =:::~ := .~ I~ 2'4"" 2:.,., 2!\'a +_t': $1 60 minimum wage stardard a.11G1s 1.'' 917' uv. 2•1 .. 7-"t-Vo o.nni... .90 1 • 21\.'t 11 21 Yr+ "'~ ....... Alb. 1 1 2 I lj"'"' 1m+ 11< MaY cs '·'° 1 u1 21~ lj:~ 11 -1 ' 8tlGJ Ill ..,,., •. 1311 Si 51 Y +I o.nt\YI .06 1' 31 12q 12"' 111'1-,,._ H~llMn 2k ~ IO \.'t 1 ~ .. , May.rQI .M ll J 23\11 Vo HYI .• had no discernible adverse ef· a111c•I 1,.. • s 23V. n n•1o + v. t>t>nhol.,. .61 12 n s 11'ol.o 11 17\lo-11oo H• llmn ~ 4 9'llo ~ "" •• Mavww .so • • ,,,.. 1 -,,.. Btndlll ll'IC '3 2M 32'/J 31'.lo 32 . -II> DeSoto In .60 • 20 n'llr. 12\lo t i.lo-~ H• Ill H 1:c. 1 IJ '441' 4<1"1 "'"" ••• MIYllD 1.30 ll 211 21\11 2114 U IA -V• rect on overall employment a1111JOr Pn s u •~ t'll "11+ 'ti! o.1ed1s 1.•s ' " 11:w. 11~ ll~ ., .. Hel..-..R ·'' 1n " ff.,. fl '31,(i-1"4 MCA inc .u lo 11 2s,,.. "" ~ ~ Bnkol NY 2 6 t ])'lo ll"' 33Yl-'1.....,,o:;pt t.Ji· .. ~ll~'Jolll~ll~llo-1?Hl'il1tlnt .IA 17 13 Voll 2JV. ··McCord .92 6 I ISV. 1.S ISV. ... levels and on overall wage or a1n11 va .11 10 J 2S 2s 2s ... o.1e 111 1 u , . 11:ao "" tsv. " +1 H~m1Pr ..60 I' I .-'llll 1~ v. NKC rcw 1.20 4 ' 11 "'11v. l-. " · J I n 81nkTrull J t 29 ~ S4 SI -~ i.oe1 t:. Ill '"" . . • 11\to 70\'t li\11 ... H11m&.t' .20 S I 21" 2 Vo 2~ "'McOtnnot I 29 17' 711"' 71'4 ~ ~ price eves. eartl«OI a. .. , 29 ~ ~'Ill U.J;lr Co .2s I• 13 "'"' 11 I -~ H«nlB C•D . 2 2 ~+·i .. Mc.Oonld co SI 161 •1~ 61'Mi 61V.-" 9trd CR .14 3' 16 2flo'J 1'~ 2i\'J ... 1.1111 Fin .SI 13 2' 21\IO 20\/t v.+ U H..-n In ..$0b • , J :J'lll 6"' ti~ •• Mc.t'ElO .40 6 ti ~ ~ 20\'tt 1,11. BUT, TO AfE:, the se~n1·~ J ft21*2J 2r-~e::~5~11: ~~~~=t:t .. ~1.-n11: x:J6l•~=1>¥1-·i..Mc!.7re~1 1l; ft2J'(:.J "1!.?~t ~ statistical arguments miss the a111n"' iva 1. 1100 21 '1 21 : . : 01ash"" 111 2 • :1111"°' ~ 2:77;.+ ~ \-11111on .2io 11 "3 ~ :mt :M -'"" MCGreor D ID l v. \\ :J\I& ••• . l•lel /11111 20 I 21 1~ IOYJ 10\li-"' ""/•:.l"IOI 1.211 11 U"°' I("' 14'1!.-\\ Hf'Ubll'in .'2 22 2' ..,_ '9 C9 -.,_ lntvr. P .. !150 U SJ .... 5)~1 "'-tWO central points. Ba~aM pf l .. l 16•4 16\li 111.1. . D c11oM -" ii J3 11.Y. ,,_.,. 11 ~,,.. Ht'wltt P .» " 60 llPH ao 90 -v. MeK" .s.sti 13 1s u 2~ i.~+ l o . flllh llld .:JO • 17 20'4 19'/t lt\'t-"" ...... !llOIO .«IQ 21 3 "''" " •""'+ ~ Hlol!Voll En u 35 6~• 614 ~ ~ 11\CLHn .60 12 71 ""'"" .. ~ .,,. The first and overwhelm· aeuKhL .42 24 21s »lll :a~ llV.-,,.. D•Gloruo .'6 1 16 f(• ''"' ~ ·" H11111nbr A 1• 4 2s~ u~ ~-"' Mc~lh sn 1 "" ~._ 1 20 -,. · I · 'f' f he 8t•lar L .IS jJ it-(f'llt '9't. '9'.Ao-111· IJ1,111tl Eoo! 41 4t ~ 111\'I U~"' H lton HT! I t It 10Y, 20\.11 lOl,1.-\fo MCN l .75 1 1 1~ I ~ 1~+ •., 1ng y s1gn1 1canl 0 t se Bearlna1 60 11 $ "' '3~ '3~+ .... 0111111(111 ·'° 12 ' ... bV. ~ ... HMW lndUI IS 22 3\.'> ll\ 3~ v. Ml . CP ·'° ' I I 15* 1 IS -'• points is simply· How dare we 88111 FOi '.6 21• 151 20 lflli ltl'o . ..iuunun pt 1 . . •, '•'•" ~ n~· 22._ :z Hct>lrlM .12 '' lS 2'14 ,,21"" ~ ~ "'IHDpf 2.llCI .. j H ~~ " ' 8tCkl!'lll .50 16 51 17 ~ 27 +~ Pillllll Co lo I] ... -Holf"1Mr .t7 10 II 30 "" .,.,_ "' .Y,ffllf8 2.IQ • . 61 1,S •.. ask the very lo\vest paid BKtono » 26 •1 »11o >.s\lo :u -Ye v•""'ww .n .w 211 ••ft ~ M'e-3~ Hoff er.ctn 1 • 1111 111o w.-v. Mlduw l •.11 / 19 "' 21 -•,o Beec:hA Joo 7 16 1Sllo 1 .... l"""-~I Oluton .09b 10 20 1~ 16 1$ -.., Hal lnn1 .30 l.S S6 7'2 21\.\ 11fl+ \i ME I Co~ t l 2"° ™ :m.+ l• workers among us to stand in Bl'lcoP1t' 21c 1 11 11\ti n1to 11 Y1--"" .,..,v .. r111d n . . lot 21. 2 2.~ '-''. HollYSu .SOb t 1 1J 1~-. 13 + "",...,.1 ~ ·" Iii 1 ll'lo ~ n -~ " 1akltn I 20 I l 11 21 21 DfWMI 2.ISb I II 2111 21 21.-~ Homnll~ I 17 tt 4"" '2~ '3l4+\11 fMMKP ~ ) I .... 1\0 m , the first line Of defense 1ldQH ..30ci 12 • alil t\4 t,.+ V. ..irPeopr .24 SS 31 15 .. 1~ =+l .. HOl'IYWI 1..40 21 61 lOS l~ ID4\li-~• M.rc Sir .IO 20 I 71 72 72 -lto against an inflation rueled by =~~""' ,r: : 1~: m: J;. L::1~ =:'/:n.,~ 20 ;I ':: •:v. ll!IT "' =~ 'c1: ~ 2? 2f" 1:'4 2:~ ~~~1th 1J~ 3: ~ tt~ T1i: fft:= ~! the buving and borrowing Of ~:n'"'~! r.,1 ·• J ; ;:I.lo g..-3 ~;~111; :~ l~ 1!t 2t~ 2t~ 1~+·\\ =:' .~71, 1! 1l \O~ :~ \~·v; ~~l~~j j3 'tl lr. ~~l; at: g tt:1r: ___ 2•111 110 30111 30111 30"" ,., 0or1cco .n s 12 12"ii 1m 12lll ... Holl 1011 .36 ' 311 1 1m 1~'111 M•i.alll .7Sb 1 10 9>A l" . the aifluent? How can \Ver"'C'Pt •:ao'·1 16 6, u u +·111 oorrollver 9 6 •~ '"" •~ ···Houc11i..10 ' 1t1\1112 12i..-i....MGM 1111:11 617 1 1 +1. ·bl · t'[ kl thos ll'fl • ;; 419 1,.., ""' ~ oor .. ve .10 • 12 ~ SV. 5\'l ... Houah M Al t 1 12\li 12\ti 12\li-t,<, Mtlro ,jOg ' SU 12\lo 1 l'I 11~ ~ J>OSS\ Y JUS I Y as ng e B8•~,'ot p'~o I l7 12\11 )a\ 1 1:V.-;~ Oovr<;p l.G" 11 I «I-Va .Cl\lt 'IWo-W. Mou11 F1br1 1$ N t~ t 9 .. MGIC In .10 '2 1J1 67'111 6"ii n ->~ I d be. I bed the • " " u I> ~ DowClltm 1 21 106 ~ ~ J'.I.._ ~ HOVSIFn M t UP 23 22111 ~ ~lcl!G• I.Gt t 2 14\'o j4'11 V. . area y 1ng pnc ~rhst 1.0 11,•m,'••""',. -"'OPF ncp 11 s\.\ .!i .s ···House llf2'1\ .. JS0!/1 50 50 -2•4.Y.lcnsT ubl' ~13h ll' 1~-'' h rd t ,, I l'f BiQ l lllCI ..l2 · Oravo t'h I l 27\lo :UV. 27111 .. HoinFllf t'r!I I "3 4 43 -h Mlcrlldol .44 o t 11V. 11 • I V. . a es l.U accep an even s I • Blltll: D I.Gt .. 10 ll:Rt.11lt; nu:;+ 'h OreSllf' 1 . ..0 14 4i 4'\lo ........ 44"+ VI Hor.nLP 1.41 ij 2fO l1ft 3714 l T'.lo--"" MlcrO'!fll'IYC II 2 21\lo 21 .... 21~-~ .. fer pinch "for UM! nationa1 :lr~:i.~ 1! 1 1~ it: r,; u•-·~ &;:::', ,l·'l :: 'l :!~ :!: :!.,+·~:::Ill~~ 1-l: " 'l ~ ll~ lltt::," ~l:' .. "ll"/.,l ll J ~~ ll,, Ii \: good"? 91Ddl;HR .J:I 11 11 ~ 1,r--~ Oreul 1 . .$61> .. JC9 lfft 1~ I~ 'l9 H-trdJ .20 11 M lnll lT-1>\. 17..._ ~t MICIMI 1.Jlb 9 !i 14~ 14Vo ..,._ ~. · 8~~1 ti S 111 11.... 4 -'""Ortvtute11 1 ' tl I 7'h ~ "-H-mtt 70 t 17 12VI 12'.lo 11\li _,,_ l'Alf.R.1151 .IO I io 12~ 12r: 2..,_ · What sort of d i s lo rte d !o;r,,: c8 .J 1# 1~ 1: ,Jn 1~ ~ ~: :, ~ :g 10 1f: 1L~ 1Mt';1~~1~ Hu~ 1-/~ i\i i~ ~r" ~:~, ~'""'-•• ~irl.Cr ':ll ~~ 31 tt" 11~ 1 ~ (.: economics translates price 81111• C1Kd 6 llM ll 12\ti \2t"""-~ OunBr&d M ,.. 10 :11:\1! 311.'J .»'II.+ ,,. ~~'tt "40 j 2' S~ J\,l .s•+ \-. NIMfM 1.10 3t :ic:li1 I~• th· I~ ... Bond lndUt •• S ' t I --· OUPlln Cp 2• S2 :m lll"it '""-r,;, uew;T iOti 26 61 •2 11'1-1 61\oi lnnPL l . .W 1 Jll 111'1 '"" 11'.li-.._ pressures resulting from a BODllMo •,·.~ 1, ~ l.t... ~''" ~"' -"' ouP11t1t t'lto 11 n 1 l")2 ' .. ~f1-'h uni c11 · .11 u • 1n• 1"'° 1,,._ '• MM11•,ro~I .96,, 1•3 1f l~ lffi'l' ~1~ · Id 'd boom . l!oorCl•n .£v '' .,..,. ,, ••• OuPn flf •l'I .. 1 '4 '4nr ..,. ··· Hutlon E ..O I I I ni Ji--\o 111 .. 0 • ',• -• wor W1 e and 1ls soar· aon1 w 1.15 1 "' 2t 2~1.1o 2J,. -¥o oucr~L" 1.12 ' " ""' 21~ 11..._ Vo HuvckCP :l., 31 44 21 211. u _ ,4 Ml11 lllY .to ' • H""' 1 1 \lo • • ing demands (or goods and t::7~2.~ ~~ !l ~ lO~ ~+ .i,I; ~ \JO t fl001;~: it~ t ""-'VJ t+"f'dromt • 6 1 { ~ lb 1~--to ~V.l~ ~.J ~ 1~ ~ ?zltli 'h ...:1;, · · t b '8os!t:lll I M 120010t'lll llW 109 -Yr • -··-ICH Phlrm 11106 ll V. 101,4 100 '4Mo PubS .M 9 17 4" 141'1 4i't+ • services 1n o a wage cur on aour111 1M. iO 1s 11v. 16'!1. 11\la+ h Ett;I~ ,.1 .97 , , ?AV. 1'~lo 24\\-~ ldlho P i... , 21 ?M-21,,~ 2,» Mobil• H .20 • 11 11"" \IHI! 1~,. tho ho d 't BronUA.lr JI f lOl ·~ 9~ Vt-,,_ EIKOC 211t I t H'M! 11'4 11~ IOHl8•s .IQ I 10 ll'h ,... ll'Mo ... MoollOI 2.IO 1 1.o2 5t\lo 56\11 5'lto-\" se w on even earn eri11111 1.20e 1s 11 ~ """ s.Vo-1.11 e111.,,. ·Air .. 2t0 ll'I 1 I\'."-'4 I°"'' T'T ,1 , 17 514 5~ 5,,.._ v. MOhKo 1.20 1 11 iii: 11ll!V1 "t':= ~," enough ,,., have normal much 9rl$ MY 1.n '° "' Mh " ,. -"" Ea11Ga•F 31 11 1s2 1•11< 15-'\ 1S"-""' os 1t1 150 12 :ao lw. l6Vt 2•Y,..... v. MONw1'. 01 ,,.. ' 1~· '~ "I • Brli My pl 2 1 39"' l'I 39 -'lo Et"Ut11 1\.\ It S 1~ 17lll 171\ lll/5tnln J,u 6 lt 1\11 11\lo 11'---"Mol'lwk fl.to I S J /Sf\ l Jess "soaring," demands for 8rl1Pf1 .. 2~ n :I ~l'I ~ ~:.:r-~ EH Ko 1.0ll lS 2'113J'll 1l1\lo 1J~I~ iC'" PfA 6 .. t II* 14 It -"'=v•DrchC0'8 J fl 1~\'J 1i~ l + ~ anvthing? :~Hr"'. 2 . . 1 l9t. ~"" j~,,.: .... ~~~l'f:i~n10 2Z 1l ~.,.. H""' '° -11'1•r,~r' 2~~ li ~ ~~ ~ fi~! 4: ~:_m 44 i' 1% i'"' ik' J = t The second point Is implicit ~n~~1 1·H 1a 1: ~°'t ~ ~·~ rt~~nr .. ~ ;: ~ fi'i? ~ r,~_t ~ 1 ~1':i ~ tg 17f 1r.: 2: 'Iv.-.~ ~::~J10 ·, f "f . "' S1 ! ~ in the first· 1973's lnfiaUon Is 1runG1 cl~ ,, l: ~-m: mt-"' Ead ... ~ .24 20 u 22v. n 22 .... + \' i'HUP 2.10. t 2' 31"" ,. -" -~ M11111 o.113' ., ' fl tr4 .. being C.u: •• by ··-·~ve ·~-l\.'t t 3 2lt• mi n>.-.+·~ ~i"'..8~ l.'ft ,: 11 ~·A ~$to ~,,._·v; l~r~ .. ~ .. If 1rn I~ 1;~ .. =:::s JJ: ~Q !t 1!1\i L J!~ ... X\.\ .......... arn Slll'P ..20 9 ' ,.... ..... ,.... . EllCt AUOc 11 ,, •VI '"' ~ ......... Y> tndHetd .IQ .6 lo llV. 17l\ 11 + ~· MonyM ·"b JG n: I fii4 ~ ... demands ror goods and l '',...,.r1•, •1 1] lf l:l ii:Z I~" M?:::1~ eos cp ..2Sb 21 13' ,.. ,,.., XI"'-* 1ndM ot 1.u i400 "'"" ,,,,.. ""'-"Moor• Me<: s 11 l~ ... !~ 1"-+ ~ . , N w • 2 l.11 ~ ~ Iii Eltc:I Mln"O 10 U 3JAo 1111 ,.,._. \.t lnd""'l l.,J ·7 IJ ~I \.\ 11~ 71 V.t I• MorgJ P l.'6 It 133 .,..., .. ......, 6.lMo+ ~ servts1cesol, I bol)Ot by excessive ·1~JhE,w 1:5 1! 1! n~ r~ ff:! : ~~~ l)f ~ : • ,: ,,~ 1J'" 1f~+ .... :::t~r. I~~ 9 1~ ~\.'! ~ t:\.'I ~ =KEI ·4rr ' ~ :~~ t!~ l!,,.:: tt cos a r. ....... 0 . 6l 13 EIT••r Ind ' j .s.... s 5Vo+ "'"\lllllto OH 11 S4 10.... "' ........ ""Mont.Sh .15 1 !I • t~ I~ It luddC• Pl J .. 111a 6lYJ .., 'h . "Ip DHG I ' d • ,, lJ~ 12"6 ~ Rnd 2,16 14 II l.S'.ti "~ •$ •. MtoTr \.S1b 1 II Ulli 1S14 IS'-+ I• AND IF WE' now leapfrog.~!!... ·~ .. 3f ,~ ::: 7~~ .... E 1r!'c1 l\/t , I• '"" 71\.l 1t\')-"-IAllR ot 1.JS 20 (\\.Ii •lYa •l\i'J Mor!Nor .••• llll 1614 1J'4 ,16~+ ,"' ::rm·,-,~'• l 2 1.11 ll 2 '-'Vt emcrEI 114 JO MJ" 87'1. NV.-1 lnlCont l.l 10 I] 391.11 ,,...., 39\/o+'-MSLln .100 .. t 11~ ,, .... 1 .. -.. back into & COStdiUSh inflatJnn :~lctt~I :z.4lb 10 36 :H\.'I J~ 2 i,,, Em1r El wl l .U\6 44\4 "'I.lo-'lo 1n11nd Sii ~ S.S 27~ 21\loo 21\' -1-. MP1on111 .10 21 S.S S3'.li .S2YI J1M-l14 & lo\/ w 10 ' 136 16 SU I~+"' EmryAlt 7• ., l.S "3 6l ., -\Ii nmonl . ' II '" w. J\4-"'Ml l'utl 1.n 21 32 1, 1• I -after thfS drea (U) deman<J· 8~nkraR iOO I '6 t\lt '"' "-~ Erntrvln ~I t 16 7'11 7'h l~ "'ln1llc11 C .1(1 6 101 t i.Ii 1.\6 IV.-\~ MISlTl'I 1 . .)6 ' I) :IOllo 'at~ ~ · ti I fl ti th will 9 ll of 'i'h 1 111'> u\.'I 1n-¥t Emhltl I :10 6 21 11.\lo It\\ 111' -W 11\lUCvol 114 7 161\ l(~ lt\li • Munla.d .21 ' ID N "~ pu n a on, e reason 8~1 111 1 .o 10 n 2n-. 2 ..., 2m;. "' eMi LI 0.1> 11 ls l\.'I ii,,, ,...,_ .,.. 1n•r COllll 2 9 i1 ::.'"" n~ ,.~, . Muntd 111 . ..o • s~-. 1•1 • ," .. '+· L be loci ' ' s 'aJ tB rt No lV. t 2t.52t 1"2ll'o-f .... Emp01\1111 2 16"•1i 1• · lnllnv .16b I 3 11\fo 11 12 -V.MllM"11.l.OI 6 S it"-"' ay s price p1r · no !u r!N 111 15 , N J\41 11_ 14 Emp Fin 'si.: 5 t 10.:. '"" tit-"' tnttr(t ·1.n 10 • ll~• :Jt\4o ni.to +•, Mllrl)t!OI ... 1.s ,. " 6$'' 65\.1,-\\ any increases in the pay of the ~ncivc :i. 12 it u~ ,~ 231 "' e:mpl•• 01i ' 3.S 11 10.., \O\lt+ \\ 1n1r1..-, 1.ao 1 • 23\'i U14 'l'"' Mllf'r o, .... ,. 10 ~·, is:" }l~ ~i~ '" Burron• '°•I lnmvt 119"'nrl 4 1• Eno1111d •1 11 11 111&1 1•""' 11 -~1BMCP • ... 31 204 >0i11o m 29t"'-4M•Om .1 ''"' ~ lo1ves t-rung workcrs. · -<<-'"l'e"'·"' "sv. l'• P&i+l't lnF1~vr _,,, .. "'°"' 11111at~\-1._M.,,...•LM11 "'11"' 11 .... n.._• . . C1bL.T l.nto 11 1l 24* 241\ ''"°+VI EnYrPllth '' l .0 •O .cJ ntH1rv 1...0 I 17t 3'V. lll.lo lll'I-'\ -H N-it would Utke an 1mmechate c111o1 c11 .92 1 14 '~ 11~-. 21~ ... Equ1mr11: .1(1 1 1 14\.\ ,,~ 11v, 1nHold 1.ltb ' l\'"' ll'h H'h .. ~·~1coh 2.~ ~ '' ~:~~ = ~\._ ~ h'k t $2 16 h j t t .0.J'KC Ind 3 '' !" 11.< 3~-'lo E11uGat 1 .cJ 1 11 :io:i. :JO 10'~ + \.'ii lnl••n•t llld I ~· I~ 1-16 '"'CO C · 1 + fo I e 0 • an our us 0 IC!lltS Wei s ~ ,.. •.• l\4-~ EQL.111: l.i3b 10 l f 12\l ,,,,.. l,,,_ \"i 1nl lndV, pl ' ·~· f~\ , ... +•• f'!8•CO Sc ·'° 10 ll 1~~ ~~-~ '• I I · th I l 1111 Flfllnt 1 3' 3•:. "' l\\ ES8ln¢ 1 '9() • 17 mt. 1S"' 51'1-~' nMlnC h _,;2 IS 710 tt'IJ 21,... 31'\-l'•"lillu•C .51 21 4 '· • cover pr ce r scs since e as 111111111 111: u 12 ii». 10111 10~ : : · hmlr11 ;71 1 11 11r. 21 v, 21_ -~ 11111 N1l11!no 12 a '" ,..,. ti.., "N1n .r.1r1 :10 • u 111to 11 IA • minimum wage boost It 1m a '·'°" ' l ts'\11 u.., jSl-l+ \41 ~MM: .:n s 11 "-11'\ ,,._ ._ ln~M.\I,'!!.. '"'• ,,• .,' .. ~,. !'~ tt~ ~·.:•,•,"1 .u_~ , l? 1~:: 1~ u\I. -~ . •mllll. JOI 34 f-1 ST~ ii M+J\-i Eucxlnl .... 1 65 lJl.o 14" 1•,..._ '-n., ,. .... 11 it ' 1Vi 31•t-~ n ,..., "--WOUid take an Immediate raise •1n11 s 1.11111 3l 29 \' Joi ll .. &1.,.11n .:icl 11 10 Pt s1to s"' 1n1 P111 l'>'tl u x110 41 14 '°"' 40vt-"' ~I·~~ -~ 11 1~ ?i:~ ~!,: =-q . lnack S. .. JIO 33 .11 IEfflY!C .... l 7 ts .... ,..._ 30 + ... Ill'! llltd"ll:r lf • 6,,_ • 41•+ \'In (,..,. ...., U~ IJ\,I, IMI to$2.21anbourjusttQmam· anl~2$ 1 ~ ·~ Allt "'EtttvlofJ,.fO 2 .u\4 0 '""° l"'T&t1 . .o • :>O.,..JO l0\\t-.~10et"';l:z:;z' 1'" ~ ... ~• tain Utt 1968 ratio or minimum ="i!l '1.~ :: 1f lfl: = tm -~ ~:~:iro 11 ~ ~t \~,, ;~ :u::. ~ tti ~E~ .. l 'lij~ Ut: ::::=~ =t;.~~ i?! ' S{ ~ u. u~ ~ wage earnings to the earninl!'S r:'W~" .. ~ ~ ;; ;,~ ~li-\v. ~~~,..let 11 o~ t~! ~ t~"°'t ~ 1 lf /f~IC ' tl :_t r :;~-\lo Ntt..'ut1 1.tl 1 4 li~ ;i,_ _E.,.+ • of manufacturlnR workers (55 !~1~0 11: J 11 nil ;~ f~~-1" -• ,_. 1 l .. f' rAON '1 11\-l .,.. 31\fi \) ~~'b'::"i:M 1 4 1!J IJ\\ '1"" ~{;;_ '""'rctnt) At lhls moment ar11u•rt :.o 1 , ''°' •~ .~~~~~ .. ca-: 1: il: J~ "'":: .,r;i_ "' ,,.,.,.Ht, f 6 lj r. .. H-. '''' tl4't \\ ~r::;-0: 1~ '; i!' ~ ~ -'"'° · • araPj, 1-ll I :J1 21fto 21:w. 21"'6-,. F lrlnd IS. IO '! s-. P\ ~ nt:ot s 60 '° -"" · • 0 1~, auto workers are getting an :~~~ l:r; 1~ Jj il:t ~\: n:::..~ ~ltmlfl •. Jn 1 1 •:-' "t •.• ::;:tf)?r,;:, s 1~ 'S: 11~ ':~ :~ =~~iQ.11: J l :i! ~\:-JO'-,. average or ss.12 a n hour, plus trr•r 111 , 1• l!"" 1 \\-.,. ,,.,:::; 1" ·7 11 ,~~ ,r .... ,?:H. w. ·~·'r;" 's~ 10 ,, 11 1•~ 1~· \\ ~~' w-..1c."'10 t 34: nJ1 1rt' ,j<J~ extra ror overtime and fringe :u:Gt "".t 1l lf lf~: 1 ~ lftt+ I• ~!.r:hufl~iSk 7 11 ~ r: ~: jnt3u'n t .OC,b .s '\ ~lo l;! l~t "''s-'''~ .N >"> I01 "v" J!~io ~q~·t'.:. be clll •111.Cll: '° 10 11 1•1.t 11.-. 1~ 'Jo ~,.. 4; lJ 11, 12, , er.• 8ff'f P / 14 t11,t, T!l\ 7''-1, HI 11rc M ,• n S. • .itr Tr i¥1 LJ Ila •l11o •n• 61~1\'t 'ectrtC11 1 / t; · '-' 12 • m.-.:0 !::!,~ j ~ 1 1; lt:': iJt.; 11: • _ , ~:if~ 1(.: • ~ 1f • ~ ' The average yearly wage of •t~tn'lcJ,•P 4 ft1 r.? !~ ~+ ··"'~dNl!~t .to "I '!" ''" 111-iow11PL I·" • li 111l 11 11 _ ~ H1tu11M ,,. s n 111, [' 11t-•, I t { ' '· I 1972 cl~ . . l .. .. Id: ml ,... 9 I ) n1• 22''-~ 'O'O""~ ·~ 10 ~·~ , ••• 1''" 11•k1Mt• .lJ » '° 'I "' ., ....... , a m gran arm •or .. er n 111 '1 1 1 1•,~ ,j.~ -"" "P•otr 1 ' J 11~ ''~' ·~ 1~ ~°'o 11 'l 6 ,.. '"" 4, ,-+ "'N•'PY"' ,.., 13 " 1 '. i 11 _ Was $1 830, o{ a hi-' !arm et'll orp .... .. 1 ~ 14 "::I Sklfr .JO • 2 '" 11, •~ 1• IT" ,,,, MJ<i ,. 11·~ ,~..., t~\ '" w .... """ 1 lS 1 1.1t ?t' • 1 2~ , • "~ ~,,.... 2 1 tt 32\\ jl-l (;':~ft OSl 1,0. 15 ltl :II-)1111 :Jl~l te-CorOr"" 1s 41 ~ »'' i'ftlo-tl f'l~P~ 1 fO I.JOO Jl1" lfl ~ '"' worker, S3 t70· ot a full-tJme .:i:irn ~ , J f":ri: .. ~ " ~ 'ni\ ,•, •,•, "':i.' 1s11 11• ," 1u 11111 ·'l 11 ·~ •1. "' ,,..._ .. H!no£1 i ... , ,, 1~ nt~ 111~., -.,: '. ~--'"'"""· )I Jt .Jt -:1u11111c:o • ,,.. S~l~N EoTT l,Jt1f 11"21•'1 ,._ .. domestic worker about Sl 200. "''1117. Mb'" ,1,3 15 1•• ,'',.."' ~+ \ Fld " • ' 11 • ~ ..i'-1• --J J-"'""'"''n :w:i n ,... v, t\\+ 1 ' " • 1122 1rn.+-lo\ AoM41 ~ I J6 f1"t 21\fl ~\to Jamtl ,. ,3' I lf ~. ft• 11' .. 1\ ............... l .IM II • ~ 1'f ft -!iJ • • f'aMll!I .<.ir c11s OJ!J BU Keane '. :onJay, August ~J. 1973 DAILY PILOT 9 • • .-----..... TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY ·ONLY i l I B·20 I ."l:l::.i=. OPEN DAILY 10 to 10 SUNDAY 10.7 "Donny's mother is 'specting a baby but we hove to wait till November to find out if Danny's gonna be a big BRO THER or o big SISTER." ...... ~' For tl1e Record POL YEST ER DOUBLE KNITS 1:;4@46;.S;:i;t;vt:'.C·"-"'"'''"""·,,Ci1llli"""""'""'4;lfilt;~ 2 5 00 Marriage Licenses Jynt s. lt71 BEX·OE LA CRUZ -Eddie Mac, tt, 10215 Mlahllnaale. Fou,.11ln Valley 1nd Dlvil'll R11, 18, S002. McFl!fden, • SD1te SJ, Santa An•. SPINE JA.·OOl(E -Tl\OmlS. 21, 1362 Wnl 81Yd., Westm!mler illnd OtnlM Ann, 1$, t.an J1e1a Circle, 9e1cn. J11111 ,, 1f7l GABSTER·AYAES -Frederick Kress, :B, ~S.tn Place, Lonci B111ch and Sharen Lynn, 21, 912!1 L1 Luna, Foun-!lin v1nev. SROWNELL·ltEBARD -D 11u111 as Gonion. 23, 703'/J Carnation, New· porl 811cl1 and Chri1trr11 El!labelh, 20, 1721 C1ndlesllck Lane, Nl!'Wporl '"""· WISELY·LINOEM.ANN -R ichar d Euaene, 33, 411 L1rksour, Coron1 del M•r and JOoln Mae, 39, •11 Larkscur. Corona dll Mir. " WJLDAUEA·MUAPHY -J t mes Harold, 10. 265'15 Grannie Dri ve, MIU•on Vll(O and M•ureen Anr), 19, 17.kl N. Templ1, A.pl, 152.. Anaheim. OE Nl$14ULLIVAN -Richard Brl•n, 36, t«IG Clover Court Clrcle, Apt, J, f111,1nt~ln Valley and SO.ron Mary, 30, 2231 E. S1nlo Cl1r1 A~ .• Apt. D, Sanll Ana. COOIC·WHITE -Jeffrey Al'fn, 15, 19'32 M1ote Ave., ADI. a, Co1.ta Mesa and Jac11ueHne Robin, 18, 10223 PlleaSllnl, Founllln Valley. ICINCAtD·PUNTINI -Ch;srt1s Mkh1al, 21. 7Sol5 Kalelf•, Stanton and C1rol Ann, 21. 15302 Notre Dame SI .• Westmlnsl•r. JllN 4. 1J7) HEINE·BOOKSPAN -David lee, J9, 9"81 cam•l10<1 Drive, Westmlnsler and Merle Chrisllnel 36. 9.:11 Cerna· flan Drive, WKtm nstar. PAYNE-MATZJCK -Joe Dwl<rht, ll, !Mo/) MacArthur BIYd .. NIWDOTI Beach 1nd Iris Emmaune, 51, :1'3651 Sidney Bay L111una Nlouel. BEGIN ll·OUNN -Thomes Gregor!, 19 ~2' w,,1 Ave , Q.s Ap1. 1 , p.j1muale ona El•lllPl!tlh ~•an, 1v, 61~~ Kimberly 0 ,lvl. Huntlnglon 81acll. Yds. LOGAN-Ai..OMB-Edwerd Wlll[lm, U, ,1611 Elll&belll loort, Cvoreil and ~N• I'd d aftw Gall Tt>ecla, 2,, no1 Warr.er, API. I(. Sewing fun with 58-ov so 1 ~n m 1 JS9 Hun11no1on Suell. k • S · < lor1 Nnd no 8AL6WIN·M ICHAEL -D. n I• I patterned nits. pung 0 • Tnom•l· u, 203.ll S•n11 Ana Ave., 12 1 "-d I thL ADI. n, Sanla An1 Hel11n11 and Ma'/. ironing. In • .,.., • eng ~~lml~ier.~l Haiard, Aot. 'liOllll .. mglllrf:~ ~'~ J ACICSON ·EVERT-Cll1.rlH1' Rlcllerd1Dn, 20, 10222·15111 SI .. Garcllln Grove Ind JILi M1rl1, If, 1'6111 Matscnlo Laoe, Hun!lncnon fl.eacll . HEMSLEY-SALAZAR-Jamn Edward, 22, 8311 An1helm.. Anallelm and Erin J11noe, 19, 911'2 Hot Springs, Hun· tlnuton Be<ich. BLODGETT-BIGELOW -Mire Tllom-ai 21, 20lO fullerloo SI .. Apt. I, CbSll Mesi 1od Michele Morie. 18, 10090 LO» CDyDI~. Founlaln Valley. SPUHLEA·EAAHAAT -Teddie lv1n, .n 19899 Vermont Lane. HunllnQ!Dn efacll ""' Betty, ~2, 19899 Vermont Lllne, Huntl119t0<1 Beach. MOPHEASDN·MASON -Fr«!, 64, 611 Olcke-1 Anaheim and Ell11betn Held, t.a, 1oh1 Holburn Drive, HunTlnoton Beacll. WIEBE-GRIMMETT -WUllam L1Aoy, 25 :US Wnl First St., TU$lln Ind L(Sll Kirin, 20, m Ca!lt F11m1111, San Clemente. ~ PITTMAN-KOLBERT Rob- ert n 1011 England St., pt, C·l Hu~ll..gloo 8each, and N1dine Floy, '3, lOll E"fland SI .. Apt. C·l Hunt· lngtoo Belch. GAAZA +CHEARY -Selerlno, 26 •• t.02 Estrella, San Cllmenre 1nd 1.:a rol Ann 14 306 Madrid, San IClamente. YOUtJG-iELSDORF -Richard.Alber!, 52 632 s. G1rlletd Ave". H1nsd11a, 11i'rnoJ5 and Vky 01110 Morris, ~9, 11216 Yellow Wood Wav, Irvine. ,_ lANNICARI , JR.·HAJIAN -Mar.., Josellh 22, 8212 Hazard St., Midway Cilv ind Marv Patrkl•, 21, 11821 Onyx St , Garden Grove. CAMEAON·SNAVEL Y -Den11rs Earl, ' 24 112'2 Asll, ADt. ~. Huntlnqton Bfacn and Oebra Anne, 20, 172•2 Ash, Aot. •· Huntington Buch. ---JL. Falln Q feabn and dollar fer dollar '"pt a lot •111 type111ter fir Jiil •HIJ ii I Smith-Corona Powtrlhle portable froll K-MART 13333 HANll"JN-CHYRCHEL -PI tr It k i Wllllem. 25, 109 22nd SI."-N-oort ~ B111ch illnd Marcia Anoe. ·u, 9711 W. ·· 17th St, Apt. A, Costa M61. 11iM. !f!h'Ldfrii·•w ~ BEAAY-ftEILL Y -Michael Ell(lene, ·' 11 m Aoc~ler, c ... 1a Masa and Lt.iinne, 18, ll3<I Minu!eman W1y, ~ COOPER, JR.·BUCHANAN -c ar · • "''·'" - MATHtS-PROCU NIAR -Dennis Clvoe, 20 2902 Gronci. Vista, Sin Clemen!• • rid Robin Idelle. 20, U.SOJ San Grabrlel, San Ju.in C1Pl1tr•no. COOK 111-0'Slll:IEN-Wlllilm Frank. 21, 62'2 W•fnlr Ave •• ADI. 11-C, Hun-tlnoton Beach •nd Naeny Kay, 21, 639'2 Durm Drl~, Huntington SeKh. ROOT ·DEEi( -H1rllld Glenn, 33. 311 J1smlne Clrda, Corona del M•r. and Clllrl-Jov, 31, ]11 Jasmina Corcla, Corooa dt1 Mir. MILLER..SCOTT -Rk...,rd Gordon. :M, .V Westmlnst1r Ave., Newport Beac11 and Judith Ann, n. 236 A11>1la, B•lbOI lsl•nd. AMDERSON-MINCHIMTON -ktnfll'fh Wavnt, :n, 6522 E~moot, Hun-tlncrton Beech alld o.br• Jelff\, lf, 525:1 CaUen te Orlva, Huntlngfon Costa Meil RI " o r Willlaiil 2.f. 7Ml Benion SI · westmlnsrer and Lou Af!n M!cllelle, . JI 1~2 Allen St .. w1n1mm5ter \ • HOLSINGER-KRAMER -G 'ol.a n "' Wrl<rhl 51 1106 O<rver r.ve, ' Newoort eeKh 11nd Shalla Ruth, 37, ,. 1706 Vlsll Del Oro, Neo...oort 8e11~h .. ~ FRAC,t..LMY·VINCE NT -I.to Josee>ll, 27, :x.tV. G°'dtnrod. C:Ofonll Gel Mar ~ and Carol Marie, 26, ~Ill Goldenrod, corona de-I Mar. 1 " 8EEi.HER-COLBERT -0 1v d, L • :ti 1s25 P11ctntl1 Ave., A11t;., 1J:; ~ Newi>art 81Nt(h Ind JoAnn, •" Santa Ana Ave .• ADI. D. Cost• Mesa. TAYLOR·VERLYN -Aubrey, 61, 239 s. Bamn111on .. k~.v•.~. Af:Sc1 8's1e~~ AllQeltt and • '~'" ...,, · Ralon Ad., Irvine. 21 215 FITCH-COPE -JK~ Walter, • UNFINISHED VANITY WITH BOWL A8mf~EvELLE-HAllAIS -Aldlard, VMl!lll Place, Irvine and OetlO<;sh d'Este, 10. 21t·lSth St., Newoort HAWAIIAN . DAYS At K Mart Grill e Hawaiian Burger 56c • Chin... Pork lu• 35c e Polynesian Pup 39c • Ham Steak e •;, Fresh Pineapple 57c •with Pineapple 1.03 Coconut filltd with punch, only 47c K Mart Costa Mesa While they lest thru Wtd., Aug. 22 MODERN CALCULATOR 5500 Electronic calculator adds, subtracts, multiplies, divides. floating decimal. .. 41 i1m Pennotll crrcle, Founrtfn vtriev and Patricia Elaloe, ]7, 11353 Penney Clrcie, Founl1ln Valley. O'LEARY·STR:IDER -Archie Vloc1nt, 7$, 10310 Lii Hec::lenda, Apt. M-1, Fount1ln Vellty end Carol Marv. 15, 1~ Braddock Drive, ADI. 12'·8, w!~cgES·BLAIR -Jer~ Anttionv. 33 91>3 L1nslno Lane, C0\1111 MKaL and eialne Marv. 29, 1'1081 Moni•n ane, e~R~~8.S't1'8A.NA -Oavld J o,.nhd !il4 YI llSl E. Balbt>" BJv<1., BlllbO!ll 11n " ·Grace Joyce, 33, 915 E. Pa mer •• 2. Days Only 44 Mar Vista. 1 PAl..MER·STAPP -Lee Brildley, I, 19«1 Arnold. Cmla MKll end Martha Ann. 22, 19AO ArnolCI. Costa Mesa. Gle-ndole A tonlo ~i. LAAA.l'ORRAL -J!'.>W n 61e1· ~~1~11''1':"8. cg1'.'111l:rB11 t~r1e s:~ ~, CMlaM~.N001A -R le11rr111 ' L~e.J:~e~-~~ 651!• Knott Ave., ADI. 2~, Charge It • OSTERHUES-VAN RENSSLELAER Gordon Don,.ld, 40, 231'6 Windward Clrete, West11ke 1nd Lorreine, 41, 29o\12 Preston, L11<1un• Nl<1uel. PETTY-PRICE -J~n Edw~•d, ?II . 8'-11 Th<ll'J)e. Westminster and Tlltr.sfl Ann, ll, IC>l Pltrce Orlve, B<.Jenl Park. s BRAOLEY·IC l:MP -Bnb Bat•ett. 5 • 22936 Via Plm!ento, Mlulon Vlelo alld J11ne, 47, 229'36 VI• Pimiento, Mlsl!Dn Vl elo. BlJf'na Park 11nd B~"':· Leyva. 2 • l:J331 Srth•« Rd .• Westlf'•n~t"'. 0 '<1 ; h h • f b I scLH00~1"J~:=1n";~~~c~0Zircie. H~~. -Ready to finish bathroom vanity wit c. 01ce o ~ ff, •• k d S .. •rrvl L"'•I••. ~· d d ttr ct t mpl rrr~°"sene·M~t:. Aol. D·l, F11untain colors. Strong, stur y on very a a 1ve 0 co ,. L~,1~~;'.;~1t.JeNsEN -;:, Ro':'~,!~ •• ~'?~~ I ment any bathroom. Point, varnish, stain or antique in I TORRES-N'cMtLLEN -An I hon V COf1el, 21. 3l6 We•I AlmO•I St., M""'"''e'I' P11rk an°' Naocv Lv,.n. 21, 131 w. MarlDllSI Ave , ADI. •· San Cle,...,,..,. '1. 1757' i•m•"~n ' ..., ~~ 9'' 3JH h' h Rf'>OCll end D~!cen" M•rle, 21• r.l«I r -lor Of your choice. 23'' Wide, 1 deep, lij 0 B•lt<~n Ave., San C'~•los. . w • ii .,,.,,. .......... .., ...... ,1,.,..,.,..~ ... '='"""'"'l ............ , .... ,.0 ... .,,:·o••~"'&l'"''"""'•a&i1!Bli ELLERBROEK·MILLER B rr II n Jos&nfl, ~-i:r-~ A•-01 ~ .. T"•tln ~-1 Lvntl~ l(•v. 27, «lf·l?tn SI., Hun-t!,....+,.,.. ....... D • I t 0.. t'J --~~IMJmlll!lil if. l'lll • ----~ --tSSO II I .,. ....,_,,_ &o:it• --""' - JONES.01CKSON -Mlchtet John, lt, :rtUl L.,. A'l'"'· r~+ 11• Ml••l•" v1.;10 anrl Llnnt~ .~ .. s•n, II, 2"12 T•"'"" U\•·l~n "'•'• R I DD0N·~Tf'PT1 -ll--n•I~ '"•11IQ, 1~. ~1' .... ~ ... ~, l"l•I"• •~·""'"' ... ~ C11rolvn ~""· ??. 11l T~ntv-sevenlh ~· .......... l'l•*th. G~I N~V.t';Dnl';A.N -W'l!l~m H!n•v, 31 ~ "'nl..,..,..-.d "'. "'~w·~·• '!!"'~ .... ·d G•'f' L"""· n . 331 Colton Sl ' Of Marriage ~~-~,,;-r·=rs ·::'~:cLEANINGUOTH S, Fnni ,1. 119 us1 1 ~ 2 ·· / ,,..·~ RtuSlble Reg. 3 6 C l 0-Lockh•rt. CharlK G. and Patric!• Af 1y Pavlllerd, Linda C. and Thomes · G II Farnam, Jlldltt'I Ann 11nd Rus~I Oliver, a on 44i Pack .. ~ ............... ~ F''""'""'"I"'-'·•h ""''"·..,.. F 618. Nlntlt-SI .. Huntlngtn11 Beach end """'"'~ ... ., •• 10. 618 Nln'h St., H""· tlnolon Beac~. ANIMAlogic1.;,;r.,..,.,. YoJ:a:nov, J11cot1 Geroge end Jean1tte A~I~: David L. ;snd Janel L"l11 Kyier Eleanore s. and HorKe Glen~~ •• Rorm~n, Michael Louis ind Sandra ,,_ Brimer Shar11n 0. and James M. w11a11nQ, p111tlcl1 E. and IUch1rd H. F Walson Ronald W. arlCI Rosemary ' Cole Lvnn Dianna and L~rnd Ggr®" Hah~, Bonnie Gavle and Kennelh D::~~r, Barbara Ann and Mlcharl c~iello, Karen M. end ADii••, L1., '"" Vanden Bos. Ctlarlena Vic or Grt!IQ"f Eflrl Gell A H"rlan, Barber•, A'•'••'" ,.l"Loielff Redwine, D•~ d en nu B;~~l~~"1tooert R and Vlr11!nl1 Hanle~: Palrlck J0sel>h and J~nls Lff Minor, Anna M. and Tlltron C. Severn, Susannah lnqlt 111d Duan1 Thoma$ Phlll1Ds, Mee Be11<,"""c••'•"'•' ,s.:... Paul Eastman, LOiii! I '"' H!'°~~·~.d Maro11 Su1anne 111d StePthn Charles R _ .. /Mrlln T Liiiard, Debol'allW "'" •·" Vl;...ln11 01vls, Garv ayne "'' · • Hl~~~elch, oor,rs _§· and,Robe'::rfi."ur La1>re, Marv anura nd G~~~~~~larrv W. and Ht len L.. 01~1. Carmen end PaS®al cummlnl. P•melll M;sry 11r>d For~ A. CtYlness, Barbara J. end Larry A. S'aier. Susan P. 'o"'•~~"• Mc, ''"" OWen!., W11'1d1 I ,,,,,.a ""' F!11vd L VtiD!rd, AdolPh Stanley al'ICI •~ berllnll M. Bull , Diane A. and Ktnnltl'I C. Flctrr1. Carrie F. and ~J 0 A. Dennl5' J(ldv Lvnn 1nd • I G1rcl11, Jesus P Ind Herm la Larsen, Gued1!upe M1rl1 and John Harbor~EN TAL CENTER · DENTURES • CREDIT ~ENTOTHAL PIUINM·· mucnONS • lllDGI WORIC l..UYS • DlNTURIJ • llPAIRS • JACICITS PINTOTHAL • IOOT CANALS c•oWNS .. Wl.SOOM TlrTH .. MINOI OITHODONTIA DR. A. FREDERICK SALTZMAN 27N HARBOR BLV~OSTA MESA ......... St •• Nert •• "" 1 Phone 556-8013 LATEX HOUSE PAINT .... 10.74 2 DAYS ONLY 5 .. 00 2 gallon bucket-or exterior latex house paint. White :l ; <aw '1 ' :: ":ays Or.ly lightweight rustproof 2 I I plastic fros~ con with &nap-on lid, t'i,ipe& cloon e Chorp If withdompc.loth.Avocado. Absorbent 14x24" r.oyon/ cotton reusable cloth s. 1 Gal. Size ITALIAN CYPRESS 8.c ffCh 'n'lete ~utlfUl·aUractive any landscaping. trees' will add chann to SCRIPTO DISPOSAIU BUTANE LIGHTER 2 DAYS ONLY 79c Visible fuel supply • adjustable flame, no refoRin9 -no reflinting • comes in four colors. WHILE QUANTITIES LAST. : 'fl ' ! • • ' ' • • ' • ' ' ' ' •llOOXN C..JoONA ~DDIHNlG MACHINE ' . ' ' 77 77 2 DAYS • ONLY 10 column, tion r<'peat tota.ls It -adds, subtracts -has multlpllca· ~, key. Also non add key and credit be.lance. • ·' OZITEe TILE! , 12" NYLON SHAGl CARPET SQUARES !~ I Pkg. ot 6 I, • 212 :. !ti . " : :' O.:ys Only i I I ' Nylon foce with built-in i foam rubber cushion! back. No messy odhe .. sives or lope ore needed. I MIN'S CARDIAGN SWEATERS 2 DAYS ONLY ~ 9.88 j I • • N N N N ~ N N ~ N N• ~· ~: N •· "' "' ~: •• •• •• N •• •• •• "' '" "' "' N• "' "' N' 0• g: g: ~ m 81 o• i o. ~ g: 0> .. .. " .. .. P< P< .. .. .. .. •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• .. •• •• •• •• p p ,, p p " " " .. " .. •• •• " .. •• " •• .. " •• Pl " Pl " p Pl ;1 " " ;1 " Pl ~. " Pl p Pl p Pl p p, p, p, " p. p, p, p p ; p : p p p p p p : p ~ p p p 2 Q = • ! Monday's Closing~ Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange Lis t Bad News Sends Stocks in Spin NEW YORK (AP) -A rash ol discouraging economic developments sent the stock market tum· bllng again Monda y. The first blow was that some major banks were again boosting the prime lending rate another ~ percentage point to 912 percent, a record. Then a number ol factors that turned lavorable last week reversed themselves and sent buyers to the sideline s. These Included a decline In the U.S. dollar on foreign exchange markets, accompanied by a rise In .the price of gold, and a surge In food commodity pnces. SC DAIL V Pilaf Jib Fi11ance e Memore:ie .. •; •• •• ~ ..• ·~ SANTA CLARA (AP) -;': Me Co .,, more:ic rp. announcedi~ ~ayoff of 300 emplofe!, bring-:;; mg to 1,000 the number ?eli' go while the firm scaJed down ongoing equipment operations. A spokesman for the com- pany said the latest layoffs "largely complete'' plans to reduce staffing. He said about 4 of those laid off have been oontract employes. .. The finn announced earns this year it was terminating' its computer systems program as part of a general reductiah in operations. " • O Fleetwood RIVERSIDE ( A P) _.s Fleetwood Enterprises. lnc., • manufacturer or mobile ho~ and recreational vehicles, ha.j . reported a decline in earning'.& for the 13 week! ended JUiy it!. Profits totaled $3.S miUionl: or 31 cents a share, comparel. with $4.3 million, or 38 cents ~ share. a year earller. SaJ rose to $99.16 million 1,,,,,1:: $87 .!9 million. ::: • :l •1 e Del JtJonte SAN FRANCISCO (AP) _:: Consumers are placing s~al ; orders and hoarding C&McJ; fruits and vegetables in an!; ti<:ipation of price incream Ill~ September, the Del Mootd• Corp. says. 'j Vice President J a me sf Schmuck Sllid Sunday the ~· on canned food hes ''se\•ere ~ dcpleltd" the lm stocb : one of the nation's largest c~· ning companies. ~! ,. ,. .. , . •• e DollC1r Weak LONDON (API -Tile U.S.: dollar weakened in fairly ~ tlve tradlng at the opening or; European foreign exchana~ mark<i.. Monday. Gold p<ict}j ro.c;e. ,. • Deal ers allrlbuled bot t shifts to a lechnlcal react!~ tu the drllnr's :;:harp reco~ last week .: ,,., pour1 rose a ctn! I~ Le n, to f? t7. In PAriJ. liji dcll::!I lost 2 centlmts, drp~ ping t 316 francs. ll dl~ to t · •rk>-In f'rankr~ down from ·700 !'rlday. · ' I JI DAILY PILOT Mondiy, Auvust 20, 1973 'Dee p Throat' Phenomenon ' Swee ps U.S., Baffles Law LOS ANGF,:LES !AP) - "Deep Throat," the movie that made pornography "chic" and pushed perm1ssiveness to new extremes. is b e i n g strangled by legal problems, pne or thet>ffrst OOticeable vic- tims oJ a 10~.S. Supre1ne Court ruling on obscenity. r eturn on a production that cost $25,000 to make in six days in Miami. But litigation costs money and the price rises when fines are imposed, as the exhibltots found out in New York when Judge Joel J. Tyler fined them $100,000 and banned the movie. period, the Unive r sity Research G r o u p , com- missioned by a defense at· to.rney in the local "Deep Throat" trial, conducted a survey of 2,600 of the movie's patrons, providing son1e hint of whO goes tQ see "Deep Throat." • TM Jewel TllMI • H.n and Thete • To1uma • krip'l rtiokigfopily ll_S. .. !>dipity • U.A. Tri Tlloolf• • Hu119ry Tlgn"" .......... •Wi~r11ll Sloll.•-• • Htidi'1 l iltlo $wilUl'tM .. • ••• IS • St. MK . • C91ko C1N1ifl1 • 5.tflflo1 .. ,, -lo Soulh Coosl ..... • Gti1o-y • l• T0ttug0 • Th• f11111 foclory • Dole'1 M·h, A..nc. fool Worlt1 •Poll! Moho! WITH MORI TO COME. Distributors of the movie say they .. have ceased peddling it to theaters. In towns where the film is st ill playing, ex- hibitors are being urged by at- tomeys to tone down ad- vertising and assun1e a low profile. JN NE\V YORK, a spokesman for D a m i a n o Productions says the company has s t o p p e d distribution of "Deep Throat" because of "'the la\v." A subdistributor. Aquarius Films, also halted distribution because of litiga- tion . The survey found that l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--,:::::::::::::::-:::::::::::::::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:.:::=:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;; almost half the viewers were ~r\ AT LEAST 12 American ril ics, "Deep Throat" has been seized on obscenity charges. Judges in New York City. Cleveland and Miami Beach have ruled that the mo\'ie is obscene. Court tests are pending elsev.•here. Star L h 1d11 Lo.,e. lal'e ••• bel'a111 e a f r e a k, l .• h c ult h e rolue . At the Pussycat Theater here, where "Deep Throat" has been playing si nce f\ovember. the show goes on. The theater owner a n d manager a re a\vaiting resumption of their obscenity trial. It was halted while they appealed. unsuccessfully, to have the charges drqpped. 'nlERE IS NO hint that theater owner Vince M.iranda \Viii close the show volunlarily. Its recent gross receipts top- ped $60,000 a week, althou~h a theater spokesman notes that the take has declined con- siderablv from the $98.000 a v.·eek it was reacing earlv in the run. Tickets to "Deep Throat" cost $.) api~e. The film 's national gross receipts already ha\'e climbed past $3.5 million. an enviable .. -~ The spokesn1en d e c I i n e d further comment "on advice ol counsel." Although •·Deep Throat's days may be numbered, ques- ti ons arising now are less about its future and more about its past. How could a film like "Deep Throat" have become such a hit and why? THE FIL~1'S main at- tractions were its star Linda Lovelace, v.·ho became a freakish cult heroine, and its content. .. .,,hich features 15 sex acts including seven of fellatio and four of cu nnilingus. The 62-nlinute production is a tale of a young 'voman whose clitoris is located in her throat. The sex in the movie is ex· plicitly real. classifying it as hard core porno.~aphy, the kind of film ,that once was confined to stag gathering~. whispered about but not discussed ooenlv and certainly not shown in the company Or d~rtt women. Tim"!S havP. ch~11e:MI inrfeed. OnL'!itle the Pussvcat Theater, "-'Omen "~rnelv JinP. up frir the show alonll' with the Ir hushantfs or bovfriends. No onf' hides behind dark ulasses and !hf' rro\\'rl is decidedly up- per middle class. J,\t A RECENT four·day PUNCH " ••• I gave at the office!'' W ate1· Sh9rtage Ends Development SACRAME NTO ( AP J - A major Califo rnia land developer says it halted sale and advertisement or sub- division Jots at Tahoe Donner until a water suply for the project is assured. A spokesman for the State Real Estate Commission said the sales and advertising halt was the result or an agree- ment negotiated by Dart Industries, Inc., of L os Angeles and the commission. enol,!gh \Valer for the en tire subdivision without tapping Do,nner Lake. Hempel said Dart vice president Russe.II K. Bolton signed a letter to Karpe, also promising that his finn would offer refunds to existing lot owners if they cannot prQve there is enough water. between 20 and 29 with another 29 percent between 30 and 39. 1be show's $5 ticket price seemed to attract those welJ able to aff~d it -47 percent or the group earned between $10,000 and $25,000 per year. The researchers established that 51 percent of the sample were married and 31 percent 16 percent came on dates and most of the balance or viewers brought their spouses. Another "'De ep Throat' has f).ecom e a household '" o r d beC<111#e the .,...,,.. lry is i n a lot of lro11b(e ••• " \'isited the theater \V it h friends. IN NE\V YORK, \\'here the filn1 gro.ssed $1.3 miWon in a 39-week run before it was clos- ed down, mink-coated women regularly braved the winter chill to stand in line for the sho\11. It was a sight that worried some -oddly including the prQducer of "Deep Throat," 44-year-old Gerard Damiano a former hairdresser who has been stunned by the film's success. •· 'Deep Throat' has become a household word," he said, ··only because the country is in a lot of !rouble ... Because basically the movie's success ha s proven to me that there is such a void, such a need for sexual 8\\'art;ness. that the movie was accepted a s something people can grab on- to and discuss openly because of its humorous aspects." SOME CRITICS I a u d e d "Deep Throa t" for its technical slickness and at- tempt at telling a story which elevated it above the usual run of porno movies \Vith their emphasis on athletics rather than script. Damiano's latest effort, "The Devil in ~1iss Jones," a pornographic morality tale about a virgin spinsier "'ho commits suicide and finds an orgy in the afterlife, has won even more favorable notices. Some industry w a t c h e r s have claimed that t h e "legiilmate" movie industry lured audiences tO\vard por- nography by loosening restric- tions on explicit language and nudity in respectable films. MOT;{ON PICTURE Association of America Presi· dent Jack Valenti puts no blame on legitimate film makers. But he worried for a Jong time that the emergence of pornography from the underground would worry the public so much it would lead to censorship. "The public's discomfort o\•er what it thinks is the pnr lireration or pornography," Valenti noted," is as im· portant as whether it is ac- tually proliferating." He predicted last April that "the Nixon adrninjstration sees that discomfort and is prepared to do. something about it.'' Now, the U.S. Supreme CQurt has done something NO DEADLINE has been about it with a decision that im posed on Dart for proving' delegates broader power to its contention. Hempel said. states to define and prosecute In its suit. filed in Nevada against obscenity. THE FIR!\f llAS been sued County Superior Co.urt, the by the State Lands Com-state accuses Dart plus the TIJ:E FmST TARGET in mission over a 24·inch pipeline Truckee-Donner Public Utility many states in their use of into Donner Lake. 1ntendffi to District and La k e w or l d this new decision has been serve as the niain \••alcr Properties with constructing "Deep Throat." The film has source ror the 6JJOO-lot sub-the pipeline without com-been the subject or seizures divtsion. The state says the mission approval. and prosecution in Tucson. pipeline was illegal. The complaint also. contends Ariz. san Jose, Fresno and In addition. N'c\'ada C-Ounly that the pipeline "obstructs Bev~ly Hills, Calif.: A-1ianli Dist. Atty. Ronald L . navigation and interferes with Beach; Cleveland: D a I I as , J.facMillen claimed in a letter the public's right to use the Fort Worth and Houston. to State Real Estate Com· la ke for recreation a I Texas; New York City and mJsskmer Robert W. Karpe purposes." Binghamton. N.Y. that Tahoe Donner docs not1;;:===========::::=:=:=:=;;;:;;;:;;;:=;j have enough water for the lots It alreadv· has sold unless it taps Donner Lake. A spokemian, (or Dart contested that claim. THE SUBDIVI ION Is plan- ned for an eventual populatio11 .or 11.000. FAIR MO NT Private Scho ol Con1ld•t Tho Advtnt•q111 Of A w,11 Ort•nhed, Clo111lv Olteettd Pri¥et1 School llflr•llMtflt N•w 0,..1 Small Cl11ses. lndividu1I Guido11nce Tr1d itio"1I l R's Pro9r•m Sound Study Htbits Tr1n1port1tion :..._ C1feferi1 -Extended D1y 1557 W.MAILE, ANAHEI M 774· 1052 John E. Hempel, chief assl >- t.ant real estate commissioner. uld the firm •ar«d to hall all ..... and lldvortising until it can ull ry Kllrpe lhal there 1•"-------------------.J • ' Open Monday 1hrough Thursday l O a.m., to 5 p.m.j Priday10 n.m., lo 6 p .m. Drive-np window opens 9 f'l.n1. -Acros.-from Orange County Airport .2121 C1LnJpus Drive, Jrvinc. Californiit (714] 8~3·3700 SM DIECO FlWf ii ....,,, .. A Message by Courier ! ''The Bank is now -11P11!·· Come be delighted! Gifts to new depositors: and smiles for everyone! That's in store with a visit to Irvine National Bank. See our handsome offices right in the heart of the Irvine Industrial Complex. Newest, most surprising bankin Orange County! A purpose ful , in~ependent bank that's friendly anll fun to do business.with. A bank th at knows what to do to help you. Big or small, yo ur financial transactions are all important to the Irvine National Bank. Let us prove ill»And remember! Our custo~ers come from all over to bank with us : Irvine; Newport Beach, Corona delMar, Costa Mesa, and Tustin. Come have your first experience with the surprising bank that can do a lot of things to make life a little more pleasant for you. Visit us du ring our gala Formal Opening. Op en a personal Pioneer Account. Enjoy free service charges for life with a $50.00 minimum openin g account. Be so mebody special! Enjoy! Irvine national Bank . The surprlaing Bank! . ------~ Member, Ftdetal Deposit Jn1ur1oco Corpor1tion. •11ao.oo Mll'lhn'mll ope'nt111 dcptull, cifle P'1' fu•llf pt .. ..,, • • • • ' ,, ' .. ... . .. •• ·-... 111 ... "" I · 1 ., -- ( ( Pi re& r~ G'j" Pre: adVi •M I th\! I orl ' noCt I 11,~ ~ ti ' Su day ll I man Sd1<l Lo :'.:!" Ira~ 17 ~ Tb dull• He I Lo N R B ~ • NI oo a that cam in ti La Poli< men Vete here prot1 H< todaJ 'l'bb, .wt Nlxo Voot Strei Vieti ..... 1 mocl bord .Stall r+s p NI "em agsJ! bOdU men "E wen me ~ Tb __. B~ 0 1 Bu I sifiei \ .. 'l'li told um< ~ ' Laguna Beaeh EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stocks -- OL. 66, NO. 232, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, AUGUST 20, 1973 TEN CENTS GOP Aides Kept Tabs on McGovern Campaign By L. PETER KRIEG Of tilt DtUy '\let Sl~ff President Nixon's political a i des 'r~ved as many as three or four r~P;Orts a day on the activities of Stna~ GljMge McGovern during the 1972 l"luldential campaign, a Nixon political advisor confirmed today. 1'furray M. Chotiner, who is slaying at the Balboa Bay Club in Newport Beach od a working vacation , said he saw nolhing wrong with paying a reporter $1 ,000 a week to "keep tabs on MeGovem." ~hotiner said he didn't call It "spying" ' • because the reporter, Mrs. Lucianne Cummings Goldberg of New York, would provide information generally available to anyone following McGovern . Chotiner said the employment of a reporter to follow McGovern would not have been necessary if the newspapers and other media would have reported every single thing that occurred during the campaign. "But we knew that is impossible and we needed to have more detailed in- formation," Chotiner said. Chotiner also said the Democrats similarly received daily information on lXOll Laguna Schools Lovelady Named Business Chief Superintendent Donald \Yoodington to· day announced the appoi ntment of Clyde fl Lovelady Jr. to the post of business manager of the Lagooa Beach Unified School District. Lovelady, 49, presently is sales ~ger of the Voeue Paint Com~ny of 1.Qs Ange1e!I and hu received extensive tralnfnC in public school financial Q\Alla&•menl .1be new business manager will begin duties with the school district Monday. He will earn $23,208 annually. Lovelady replaces Dr. Charles Hess Nixon Says He Ordered Bomb Raids .A From Wlre Services • NEW ORLEANS, La. -President Nix- on acknowledged for the first time toda y that he ordered secret bombing raids in Cambodia one month after he took office in 1969. ·Lashing at 'critics of· hi!I Indochina policies. the President said in a state- ment released as he addressed the Vtterans of Foreign Wars convention CAMBODIA ROCKED IN ATTACKS-Story P•g• 4 here that the raids were neeessary to protect American lives. He said if be faced the same decision today, be wou!d take the same action. 1bls ttlbeived applause and cheers. • When he took office in Jinuary 1969, Nixon aald, 40,000 North Vietnamese &oops ·bad taken . oVer a 10-mile-wide slretch In CaD!bodla alongside the South Vietnamese border. "'The Communla:l! had made a mockery o[ the neutrality of those border regions," Nixon said. "The United . Slates was under no moral obligation to respect the sham ... Nixon said he ordered U.S. airf>ower ''employed directly and contloually'' against Communist base areas in Cam· bocUa and said the Cambodian govern- ment "did not object to the strikes. "ln fact," Nixon added. "while strikes were in progreu Prince Sihanouk lnvlted me to make a state visit to the Cam- bodian capital." The raids were never announced -a (See.BOMBS,.Page .2) 8_0AT SELLS FAST ON F:IRST CALL Busy \)eOJ>l• jusl love Dally Pilot clu· 'Sified want Id•. Look •t thls1 SABOT No. 2042. Com]lele!Y rerinlshcd + oara. 4260. (Phooe No.) This ad ... ny worl<ed fHI! .The boat jj>ld on the rlrst can. ti you•r._b.,y, save Ume and ..-y with Dally Pilot classl· lied-ad .. rtislng. The 41recl line - ~7&. who resigned as assistant superintendent for business services in June to accept a similar position with !he Palm Springs Unified School District. Hess earned $23,508 annually. "We believe that Mr. Lovelady's ex- perience in pri~te industry coupled with his recent training in public school m$gement will be 1 definite asset to the managem"l\t of the Laguna Beach Unified School District," commented Dr. Norman Brown~ president or the board or education. Dr. Woodington said he was "especially delighted to· employ a man with ex- perience in private business." Lovelady received his undergraduate degree from Texas Tech University and served in the United States Marine Corps during World War II and the Korean con- fl ict. Lovelady attained the rank of lieutenant colonel. Recently, Lovelady received training in public school management at California State University, Fullerton. His master 's thesis dealt with the application of pro- gram budgets in public schools . Lovelady was one of two top can· didates for the business manager position interviewed by the board of education during a special meeting Thursday. Commenting today on his appointmen t to the district, Lovelady said, "though my experience has been in private business, r am certain the transition to the public school system will be smooth and problem free." Lovelady is married and resides in Fullerton . RFK Son Guilty, Fined $100 Over Highway Crash NANTUCKET, Mass. (AP) -A judge found Joseph P. Kennedy Ill guilty today of driving to endanger, fined hlm $100 and urged him to use his "illustrous name " for better purposes. Afterwards, the yoong man's uncle, Sen. Ed1vard ~1. Kennedy (D-Mass.) sald he thought his nephew received a fair trial and added, "Joe will ha ve to live ll'ith the verdict." Seven persons were hurt Aug. 13 when an open car driven by the son of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (D-N.Y.). Oipped as it entered a highway from a side road. Judge C. George Anastos of Nantucket District CcNrt urged Kennedy to "use your illustrous name to do a lot of good, as I know you are able, rather than hav- ing to come Into oourt like this." KeMedy pleaded Innocent to the charge. Jn addition to his uncle the senator, spectators In the small, crowded courtroom Included his mother, Ethel. A patrolman, William Carlton, tcstilled thal he liilkcd to Kennedy 1fler the •c- ciden~ adding: "During the ln- terroga,Uon, be (Kennedy) said the ac· cl dent was entirely bis fault." According to witnwes, Kennedy w11 driYlng along a seldom-Jsed side road when he pulled onto a main road, blrtly (See KENNEDY, P1ge I) President Nixon's campaign. He said he did not know if there were any reporters on the McGovern payroll. "But he had his 'friendly reporters' too," Cho tiner said. Chotinef is as former Newport Beach auorney. Choliner in an interview this morning, denied allegations by a Washington newspaper that Mrs. Goldberg was sup- posed to be compiling a sordid dossier on everyone traveling with McGovern. "We were not interested in the personal hab its of the people or how they behaved on ai rplanes," Chotiner said. "They v.·eren't running for President." He said Mrs. Goldberg was a free lance reporter who obtained press credentials because she was planning to write a book. ''She would call my office as often as three to four limes a day to fill us in on the size or the crowds, tbeir reaction and what he {McGovern) was saying," ctlOliner said. ''She \l'OuJd also interview people along the way," he said. Chotiner said there is "no question that reports on President Nixon's activities •noated around ' to McGpvern." Chotiner also denied reports that Presi- dent Nixon spied on Vice President Spiro T. Agnew during the compaign. ~iner, who said he does not meet or confer with the President on a regular basis any more, said he was a volunteer during the 1972 campaign and received only expenses. He said he was in charge of voters righl3 and ballot security for the cam- paign , a matter which he said vitally concerned the President after alleged vOting irregularities in 1960. Chotiner also denied he had any part, or any before-the-fact knowledge of the \llalergate !>reak-in. "The first I knew of Watergate was \l'hen I read it in the newspapers," he said. "And I know this sounds funny but when I first read of it, I thought it wu an attempt by the Democrats to chec k out (Democratic National Chairman Lawrence) O'Brien to make sure he was being neutral ," Chotiner said. "There were a lot of Democrats ll'ho figured he was leaning tow ard {U.S. Senator Edward) Kennedy." Chotiner sa id he couldn't unders tand what the Republicans expected to learn about the Democratic stategy before their convention was held. ro ~"., '°' .. _stiff l"lloht OFFICER TOM STEWART TAKES INVENTORY OF SUSPECTED WEED TAKEN IN NEWPORT Police Say About 1 Ton of Alleged M •rijuana Smuggled into Harbor by Boat ~~~-"~~~~~~~ Coast Scout Base Used In Pot Smuggling Case By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 Ille O.lly Pll1t Stiff A report by a bay(ront resident that t"·o suspicious males were un1oading cargo awfully late and fast at the nearby Sea Scout Base to be workin1; on merit badges today led Newport Beach police to intercept nearly a ton of allegedly smuggled marijuana. They also arrested a pair of leather artisans who gave addresses locally and in Seattle, Wash., after stopping their rented U-Haul van for iMPfCljon. Merle D. Ash , 27, who listed his home as 1955 Sherington Place, Newport Beach, and Kenneth D. Morrow, 29, Seattle, were booked into city jail on suspicion of possession of marijuana for sale. Narcotics Detective Sgt. Leo Konkel sa id the van had already rumbled out of the Sea Scout compoWld in the 1200 block of West Coast Highway before police could respond . Patrolman Tom Stewart stopped the truck at University Drive and Irvine Avenue. Neither Morrow, a leather shop owner, nor Ash , who listed binlself as an unemployed leather ~rker, had any con- nection with the Scout facility. Officer Stewart encoootered n o resistance in stopping the suspects and the truckload of green, leafy material in- dividually packed in boxes. "We're · just counting the bricks of it now," Sgt. Konkel said about 10 a.m .. ad- ding it appears the ldad is much larger than initially expected. "It looks like it might be a ton," he remarked. He said at the current market rate of $200 per kilo or 2.2 per package. the con- traband would be worth about $400,000 in street sales. •Q11iet Please~ Does Work Nois.e Hurt Love Life? LONDON (UPI) -A member of Parliament said he will ask the government to study a reporr by a group of West German doctors that noise at work can ruin a m'an'! love life. Tom Torney, Labor member for South Bradford , said Sunday that If the West Gennan doctors are right "then •ome wives oouid go to ·other men for sexual satisfa ctlo n. Factory noise oould lead to promiscuity and the breakdown of the family." Torney has tabled a ques!lon asking Social Service Secretary Sir Keith Joseph to act on the doctors• .findings. "I can't see, myself, how noise can put a man off in bed, but if the doctors are right Sir Keith &hould launch his own medical in· vesUgaUon," Torney said . But his quesUon will have to wait until the llOuse of Commons returns from summer adjournment Laguna Beach's Linda Stein Cops Bike Title A 17-year-old Laguna Beach lass eas ily swept the women's division of the third annual Huntington Beach Grand Prix bicycle race Sunday. Llnda Stein, third-ranked female rider in the U.S., whipped around the IO-mile women's course in 26 minutes, 13.65 seconds for an easy victory. Prior to the race, she said she \Vas in good shape and hopes to keep working towa rd a 1976 Olympic Ga m. es performance. About t ,000 spectators watched more than 300 registered racers plus another 200 unattached racers compete in eight divisions. The Grand Prix is co-sponsored by the Huntington Beach Recreat+on Depart- ment and I.he Orange County Wheelmen . Winners in other divisions were: -Senior BAR (Best All-around Rider). 100 kilometer main event. Mike Celmins of San Luis Obispo, two hours, 28 minutes , 19.5 seconds. -Junior (BAR), 25 miles. 58 minutes, 53.3 seconds, Paul Deem, unattached. -Senior C divisioo, 15 miles, Lawrence Laf£en, unallached, 34 minutes, 32.5 seconds. -Novice, IS miles, Tom Quijencio, AYH Competition Club, 34 m1nutes, 56.t seconds. -Intermcdlate, 10 miles, Al l_e n Fenyves, Phoenix, 26 minutes, 9.6 second!. -Veterans. 20 miles. w I 111 am i -tacGregor, unattached, 48 minul e!:I, 38.8 seconds. -Midget.!, five miles. Mark Whitehead, unattached. It minutes, 18 seconds. The course was n1n over city streets in norlh Huntington Beach using some or the area's hilliest termtn. Jn a special mayors and councilmen race, Councilman Larry Schmit af Garden Grove won , closely followed by Councilman Bernie Svalstad of Fountain Valley and ~layor Jerry Matney of Hun- tington llencn. Councllw0man Allee f'ranklevich or Cypress we.s declared !See BICYCLES, Page II · New Orleans Motorcade Canceled NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP) -Pr<SI· dent Nixon, warned of a "possible con- spiracy lo assassinate "him" canceled a motorcade through the New Orleana business district today. But upon arrival at his destination, he walked directly into a friendly sidewalk crowd for a moment of handshaking. Officials said both the President's and the public's safety were factors in canceling the scheduled motorcade and changing the route· by which the Presi· dent was driven to Rivergate Convention Center for an address to the Veterans of Foreign Wars. New Orleans police, acting on a pickup order from the Secret Service, were seek- ing a former policeman, but would not say whether he was wanted in connect.k>a with the President's visit. He was identUed as Edwin M. Gaudet, alias "Punchy," who had been arrested in 1970, the last time Nixon was in New Orleans, for throwing a burning flag on the President 's car. The President and Mrs. Nixon were driven from New Orleans International Airport by a back route and did not go through the five blocks where his car was to have slowed and a crowd had gathered to greet the motorcade. Increased security was obvious. Eight motorcycle policemen preceded the presidential limousine and a Coast Guard helicopter criss-crossed overhead. Secret Service men abounded. When the President arrived at the Rivergate, a crowd stood near a VFW band blaring out "Old Man River." Nixon and his wire walked directly to the crowd and shook a few hands as Secret Service agents held back VPW flags slapping in their faces. Signs nearby sa id, "Law and Order," "Right On." and "Impeach Nixon." As he left the convention center after his speech, Nixon waved lo a crowd out- side and then 'A-'llS whisked by car to the airport, where he and his party took off in presidential jet for the Western White House in San Clemoote. The President flew to New Orleans from Florida to address the 74lb annual convention of the Veterans of Foreign (See CONSPIRACY, Page %1 Orange Cout Weather IL 'II be slightly cooler Tuesday- but still sunny for a change along the Orange Coast. Highs at the beaches in the mid-70s rising lo the low 90s inland. Overnight lows in the 60s. INSIDE TODAY Only two million of the JOO n1ilLion iptclts of animals that have roamed the earth tllTough 11istory still survive and man11 of tllose art facing e;rti11cticrn. Set and read about 1he1n oii Page 19. l .M. lt1'd I A1111 Lll'Mlffl II INtlllt II Mt'lltt tl·tt Ctllltrllll • N•tlt!W'I lffw1 4 Ct.nfllttll IJ·ll Of'•llf• C.ullh' 1 ,_,,. ,. ,,!YI. ,..,,.., ,, Cro.1wonl M S-h 1 .. 11 Dfflll HtHc~ I SlM11 M•rtl•h 1 .. tl Edl""4tl '"'' · 6 Ttlftl11R a Et1i.rtol111Mr1t 21·b TIIMI.,.. n.n ,.lllMCO 1•11 WM..... 4 "'' "" llteft 7. t w-........ lJ.lt .. _.,. 14 Wlflif N.... ~ • Dally Pilol Stitt Photo HILARY WRIGHT, 7, STAYS COOL IN THREE ARCH BAY But Summer Heat to Be Short Lived, Says Weatherman Balmy Weather Just Fluke ., As Clouds Due to Return The arrival of summer along the Orange Coast was termed "kind of a reverse trend," the National \Veather Service expects will last onJy until Fri· da y. Then , the "night and morning low Noxious Fumes Put Lagu1ia1is '011 Tlieir Giiard' Laguna Beach police, fire and lifegua rd departments went on guard at news of the Long Beach area chemical plant ex· plosion and drifting gas cloud, but. of· ficial s said today, no action was taken to clear beaches or alert the town. Sgt. Victor Sagan sa id the police depa rtment received news of the noxious cloud from "Control I,'' a central Jaw en· forcement radio station. The department advised the lifeguard force or the situation and radioed in· formation to all patroling officers. Lifegua rd Jim Stauffer said. There n1ent headquarters informed all guards stationed at Laguna's coves and beaches , but he did not order any persons to leave. Fi re Captain Forest Johnson said today that when reports of th e gas cloud were broadcast by commercial stations, the department phone "rang off the hook" but no action was needed. ;'We were ready to take action, but we didn 't need to ," Stauffer said. There ""ere no reports of the acid cloud coming as far south as Laguna Beach. An estimated 100,000 persons were cleared fron\ northern Orange County beaches. and th e police departments of Newport Beach and J~untington Beach did alert residents there of possible dangers. The cloud o[ irritating sulphur triox ide came from a 43·acre Stauffer Chemical plant in Ca rson. OllAHGI COAST La DAILY PILOT TM Or1119e Coan O"llY PILOT, wllll whl<'.11 11 combined tl'I• N~·Prtu, Is Pllblli.htd b't' the Or1119c Co.<i•I P\lbllshing Cornpenv. Stpl· r1t1 editions ••t t1ubli1h«1. Morwtiv ll'lrou<;11'1 Frkl•v, !Or COl!t Mttl. NIWPOrf 8•acll H11nti119ro11 8eac1111=111m11ln v111ev, L•vun; 8elch, lrYi)lf/Silc:ldl•IHc~ Incl Sin Clernen!t/ S..n Juan C1plUr1no. A 1,119,, •evfonilr tdltlo!I 11 Pllfllisl'M!d Stturday• 1...i Svnd•v1. Tn1 pr!nc l°"I PVblllhlno tlltM !1 11 ») Wn l lltV $trttr, COt!I Mt~il, Cflllorni1, t161t Rob1rt N. W11d P•111M:l.ri1 tnO Publ11ht • J 1dt It Curl1y Vitt 1"r111klenl and Gen1r11 Mtn11Vtr Thom11 K11 .. il Edl!or Thom11 A. Murph;n1 M1ntt•n9 Ed,,or Ch1rl11 M. Looi Rit~11d P. Nall .\Jllt!tnl Ml1'*91ng EOllOrl l.ev•H 9"ch Oftk• 222 Fo1t1I AYt nu1 1"1 ili119 Addr111 1 P.O. 101 666, 92 652 0.. OHi ... CO.I• MtWI : DI Wnl 8•y $!rtt1 N~ 8tt<:h: SJ:U N•W110rt aoui.v•rc Hlill'lllnf!Ofl lladl! 11171 l t•dl IOultYffd Ian C:l-11: JI» Norfll Er C:•mll'O 1tu1 Tel ..... (7141 MZ-4321 Cfm&ffiM Allnrtl .. 641·5671 ............ "~ T...,ltMe 4t4-f466 CCllP'frlOfll, lt1J. ora,.. C..11 -111>1l1P11N Qom""'· No -• •lorltf, rn~11r111oo1s, 9111i.fft l mttlfr I'" tclY•rflttmen!, Pltrflll ft'ltV Ill l'Wl'llfuclCI wllllovl fPIClll Ott• 11'11111 .... II CIDJ'~rlfM ~. ~ tltU ... laot N ld t i COtl .. o\W11. C.fllontlil, ~l-lloll 0., cartitr ll,'5 '!'*'ltlllyi W NII U,IJ f!!ll'llPll¥1 Ml!ll•r' ettltMllOM SIM ~tlll,. clouds and fog along the coast" routine will retwn. Meanwhile, an "easterly w a v e ' • brought scattered thundershowers t o coastal and inland Orange and Los Angeles Counties today. The package of heat, humidity, dense clouds and heavy raindrops in some places is caused by a flow of moist air from south of the border. Winds from the southeast at from five lo 15 knots brought the unusual summer storminess. Winds from the southwest to west at from eight to 15 knots this af· ternoon were expected to clear the skies. Variable cloudiness is the word. for Tuesdaj with the emphasis expected to be "mostly sunny." A clear mild night with low tern· peratures along the Orange Coast in the ;nid to high 60s is to be followed by highs in the mid-70s tomorrow, the National \Veather Service predicts. The "reverse trend" of land·warmed air whether from inland or from Mexico is commonly called summer along the Orange Coast. There hasn't been mllidi of it th is year. the weatherman a!mits, \Vith sea·cooled air pushing onshore much of the time. "By the end ..,r the week." the forecaster said," the marine air in· fluences will return ." From Page 1 CONSPIRACY •• \Vars, his first public appearance in six weeks. Deputy Press Secretary Gerald Warren sa id the Florida \Vhite House learned of the possible threat to the President's life "over the weekend." He said Nixon personally decided to accept the Secret Service's recommendation that the motorcade be canceled. The President's blue, silver and white jetlin er, after landing at New Orleans International Airport, taxied to a remote comer of the field where tight security ha d been imposed. The public was not allowed to witness the arrival. Gov. and Mrs. Edwin Edwards and members of the Louisiana congressional delegation greeded the President and bis wife as they steppeij .from the plane, with Mrs. Nixon being handed a bouquet of red roses . Nixon aides said the Secret Service did not recommend cancelation of the visit, but the action y,•as unprecedented. "We have never faced a situation in ""bich the Secret Service recommended a diversio n of route because they were unable to resolve the situation before a presidential arrival," one aide said. From Pagel BOMBS • • • fact lhat has stirred recent controversy -because secrecy was necessary to save American lives, Nixon said. "l1ad "'e announced the air strikes," Nixon said. "the Cambodian government v.·ould have been compelled to protest: the bombing would hav~ had to stop, and American soldiers would have paid for the dillclosure with their lives." Nixon said the bombing was disclosed to unspecified government a n d c;ongressional leaders. "There air strikes were not directed at !he Ga mbodi3n Army or tho Cambodian pCQple." he said . "They"were directed at th<' North Vietnamese raiders Inside Ca1nbodia. / Higl1 Waves Enhance Surf Meet By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Ot Jht Dally ~1111 l!flff Wa ves breaking at an even six feet at- tracted mo re than 70 surf enthusiasts to Brooks Street Beach Saturday for the 19t h annual Laguna Beach Surfing Contest. Carl May of Laguna Beach took the top award in the se nior men's board com· petition, followed by Bill Brown, Geo rge J1anson and Mark McRae. Even though fog hid some of the su rfers fro m vie w, several hundred persons dropped by Brooks to watch the day Jong contest. Doug Allen , supervisor at the Laguna Beach Recreatio n Department, said the number of competitiors and viewers made the 1973 contest "the best in years." "Obviously the big surf was our best recruitment factor," said Allen, noting registration was double last year's figure. This year's Cy Chambers Memorial Award was presented to Phil Ostrander of South Laguna for all around surfing ability and sportsmanship. The award was established in honor of Cy Chambers, the first student body president of 'Iburston Intermediate School who died four years ago. Winners in the other eight divisions or the competition are as follows: JWlior Men's -Roy McDennon , first; Doug Mcindoe, second; Doug Bunting, third ; Richard Deal, fourth. Boys' -Pat White, first: Craig Ost rander, second: Jeb Steward, third ; Ron ll'runnell, fourth. Minnies -Dickie Carlson , first ; Stephen Sadler, second. Men's Body Surfing -Earl Wellsfry, first : Tom Sholseth, second; Gary Armstrong, third: Keith Carlson, fourth. Boys' Body Surfing -Craig Brashier, first; Steve Nolan, second; Dickie Carlson, third; Marco Paolini, fourth. Senior Men's Board Race -Bill Brown, first; Mardie Madison, second; Jim Moore, third. Junior Men's Board Race -Robert McCa rty, first ; Robert Potter, second ; Doug Mcindoe, third. Women's Body Surfing -Rennie Parsons, first; Patty Slowski, second ; Karen Carlson, third ; Eva Toth, fourthi Judges this year were Jim Gilloon and Marge McClelland of Laguna Beach and Les Williams of Dana Point. Sanitary Board Hopeful Quits; He's Moving Out Robert E. Dwyer, announced candidate in the Nov. 6 South Laguna Sanitary Board election said he is withdrawing from the race. In a letter Dwyer stated he is moving out of the sanitary district boundaries shortly after the November election date. Dwyer noted, however, that he will complete the remaining two years of Ws term on the South Coast County Water District board of directors. The Three Arch Bay resident an- nounced his intention to seek a sanitary district directorship to "'ork for a merger of the sanitary and water districts. Both districts share common office space, management personnel and cer· tain equipment. Merger of the two agen· cies was endorsed by an in-depth management-study-two years ago. In his statement, Dwyer said he will continue to work for merger of the two agencies. "You and the rest of the board are \\;ell aware of my conviction that the water and sanitary districts should be merged. in the best interests of the peo- ple they serve -tha t this \Vas my sole reason for rwuting for the san itary district board, so that people would be given an opportunity to express their thoug hts on the subject," Dwyer said in the letter to Thomas Brooks, water board president. "Hopefully, some responsible person will step forward to take up the cause which I. unfortunately, can no longer pursue personally/' Dwyer concluded. Terms of P. Norman Anderson, Harold Edwards and Charles W. Petty are open in the November sanitary district elec· tion. Girl, 18, Hurt In Laguna Beach Fall From Rocks An 18-year old Beverly Hills girl who walked % of a mile from Brooks Street to Main Beach, was rushed to the hospital Saturday after L a g u n a lifeguards determined she may have suf. fered a spinal Injury In a fall from rocks . Kimberly llurbert was released after treatment at South Coast Community HospilAI, aides said today. Weguard Jim $bluffer said the girl had be<n Injured at Brooks Street, and had turned up in a dazed and semiconscious condition at tho Main Beech flrsl aid station. Lifeguards rescued 65 persons from four to six root surf Saturday as 15,000 persons braved overcast skies in the Art Colony. Sttnday, an estimated 30,000 persons covered the· sands and only 13 rescues \vere logged from the two to three foot surf . ,, ' "IT'S VERY fNDIVIOUALfSTIC ; MOSTLY JUST A BUNCH OF WEIRD PEOPLE GO FOR IT" Lifeguards Bill Brown (loft) and Jeck Lincke Hold 11-loot, Six-Inch Paddltboard ,., •' .. .. ~ Paddlers: 'Weird People' ' Big Board Riders Hate It But Do It A1iyway " By JACK CHAPPELL 01 Ill• DlllY Pi11I Slaff The sµort of paddleboarding is like that bad tast ing mouthwash, devotees hate it. but resort to it anyhow. In the case of paddleboarding, however, it may not be twice a day, especially if the surf is up. Those are the impressions of two staunch LagWla Beach paddleboarders, J aok Lincke and Bill Brown,-both city lifeguards. Llncke and Brown tied for first place Friday in a four-mile paddleboard con· test in the Malibu Surf Fest. "It's a very individualistic type of thing. ~lastly just a bunch of weird peo- ple go for it,'' said Llncke who has been credited with promoling the sport among the Laguna force. He said it takes a touc h or masochism to kneepaddle an ll·foot board for miles and miles. Among the Laguna Beach guards, the spot is popular, and the locals do w('ll in .the area contests, Lincke said. point· ing out that at a recent contest the five Saddleback E11111loyes Ilit Board Over Public Talks By JAN WORTH Of ni. DtUy ,llol S!tff A memo criticizing the Saddleback Community College board of trustees for conducting salary negotiations in public has been sent to the school's faculty members and the press by the Certificated Employes Council (CEC). Jean Vincenzi, chairman of the five- member elected council, said the memo is the first attempt by the CEC to keep the public informed on "things that may be of interest about the local community college." Last June the faculty committee re- quested a 20 percent hike in the salary package. After a seven-hour session at the July board meeting, a five percent rais.e was granted. Faculty members present claimed they received no word in advance of the board's counter-proposal to their request prior to the board meeting. and ques- tioned whether meet·and-confer stand- ards had been met. After meeting in executive closed session with lhe county counsel, the board determined meet·and-confer had been satisfied, but allowed the employes groups to argue~their--poinls before mak· ing the final decision at 4 a.m. "We commend the Board for listening to us and the argu ments for the pro- posals thoroughly that evening and the next morning." the memo stated. "Howeve r, we feel it is a sha me that the major part ·of negotiations had to take place in an open meeting . This is not a satisfactory \va y or handling negot iation s and \VC sincerely hope a bet· ter procedure will be established for the future." The CEC memo stated the faculty "did not get a ·fair shake'' on any of its~three proposa ls: the 20 percent hlke, a fringe benefit package, and a change in the board policy on laboratory lecture teaching cr~dit ratio. "It seems as though the minds of some board members may have been made up beforehand and that these b o a r d members dido 't want to be confused wi th the facts ," the memo stated regarding the 20 percent hike. The fi ve percent decision passed 3·2 \Vith one abse ntion and one absentee. Major medical insurance \vas doubled to a maximum of $50,000 for each em ploye. But the CEC memo said the 1973-74 budget made no provision fo r ad· ditionaI fringe benefit requests submitted la st April. "The board was apparently willing to absorb the estimted $1,800 cost per year (or the insurance increase) because it was so low," the memo stated. The proposed teaching credit ratio refers to the fact that teachers now get two-thirds of an hour credit for each lab hour taught and on ... hour credit for each lecture. This means science and other lab- orienled teachers must work up to nine hours more each week to get the san1e It-Ching load credit. n1an relay team or Tom Ridwitz, Craig Parsons, Robert McCardy, Brown and himself took second place in stiff com· petition. i ,< He noted the local force competes with agencies as large as the 500-man Los Angeles County department. Both Bro\vn and Llncke noted that pad· dleboarding doesn't appear to take much m"re than endurance, but, that in fact it does require balance and a sense of "how to move through the water." That's one reason the locals do "'CU in competitioo, Lincke said. f\;1ost of the Laguna participant$ have been ocean swimmers and surfers for a good part of their Jives, while other area lifeguards may be morf;: competitive s1\·immers. The boards used in the sport are special, and costly. A fonner lifeguard named John Par· Jette turned out lhe $150 boards for the two Laguna guards. Brown said the guards turned to pad· dleboarding when the surf went flat. A good swell on a day of paddleboard crintest can kill it as would·be oontestanb decide to surf rather than paddle. "Paddling is really onJy something to do when you can't be in the water surf. ing,'' Llncke agreed. From Pagel KENNEDY ... missing an onco1ning car. Sapra Peterson. a bus driver, said she ~a\\' Kennedy's vehicle moments before the accident. "It looked like there "'ere people hang· ing all over the top of the jeep. Some "·ere standing," shJ said . ~!rs. Peterson said the ve hicle was traveling 35 or 40 miles an hour on the narrow, bumpy road. From Paae 1 BICYCLES ... women's wi nner in the same race: followed by Counci lwoman Nonna Gibbs of Huntington Beach. The city officials' race stre tched around the block , about seven·tenths of a mile. NOW AT !J1TIT1 PRICES START FROM 95 + ,_ Exdusl,,. 5 Year Plrtt Gunntee Tl!t mo1or. p;Jrflll, llmt1, 1nt1rt w1ter di11tiblllion f'l'•ttrn, hta!ff •t'ld P\IJI>. but!Ont trt 0Ylranlfld lo• & ~lta Dn -at11 sS/iti. ss..-11 1nd s11eta. Wt PIY IOI rep!l('tment ltbOI dulillg tilt l1!$I \41•. 90 DAY CASH WITH AP,..OYID CllDIT .. ~ TIWll·IN SAU $35. HEADQUARTERS. · Phone 548· 7788 £ , 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Duwntown Costa Mm ........................................................... I - ( P: .... repo Geo !'re ad• M tlie on not• lt,0 Mc< Cl N on• thal Car in '1 L poll -Vet• her· pro• H tod• Thu \\ Ni x troc strE Vie· moc bon Sta• res1 N "en aga bod mei " .... me bod T fael j';y ,,. • Nix WO\ tht 4in the ~ to con " the pee the c:a, " pro wa Nb I ~tu wh jiul boJ '1 lo B (J I I !if! , ""' tin no 64l I . . ' ' Saddlehaek Today's Finni N.Y. Stocks EDITION * * * VOL. 66, NO. 232, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES TEN CENTS GOP Aides Kept Tabs on McGovern Campaign ' By L. PETER KRIEG Of tM Ollty Pli.t St11f President Nixon's political aides received as many as three or four reports a day on the activities of Senator George McGovern during the 1972 fresidential campaign, a Nixon political advisor confirmed today. Murray M. Cbotiner, who ls staying at the Balboa Bay Club in Newport Beach on a working vacation, said he saw nothing wrong with paying a reporter $l,OOO a week to "keep tabs on McGovern." Chotiner said be didn't call it "spying" ' • because the reporter, Mrs. Lucienne Cummings Goldberg of New York, would provide information generally available to anyone following McGovern. Cb9tiner said the employment of a reporter to follow McGovern would not have been necessary if the newspapers and other media· would have reported every single thing that occurred during the campaign. · "But we knew that is impossible and we needed to have more detailed in- formation," Chotinet said. Cbotiner also said the Democrats similarly received daily information on IXOll Lashes Critics Nixon Ordered Bombing Raids From Wire Services NEW ORLEANS, La. -President l'\ix- on acknowledged for the first time today that be ordered secret bombing raids in Cambodia one month after he t.ook of{ice in 1989. Lashing at critics of his Indochina policies, the President said in a state- ment released as be addressed the Veterans of Foreign Wars convention CAMBODIA ROCKED IN ATTACKS-Story Pago 4 here that the raids were necessary to protect American lives. He said if he faced the same decision today, he wou1d take the same action. This received applause and cheers. When he took office in January 1969, NJxon said, 40,000 North Vietnamese troops had taken over a 10-mile-wide stretch in Cambodia alongside the south Vietnamese border. "'The Communists had made a mockery of lhe neutrality or those border regions," Nixon said. "The United States was under no moral obligation to respect the sham." Nixon said he ordered U.S. airpower "employed directly and continually" against Communist base areas in Cam· bodla -and-said -tlle Cambodian govern- ment 11did not object to the strikes. "In fact," Nixon added, "while strikes were in progress Prince Sihanouk invited me to make a state visit to the Cam· bodian capita l.'' The raids were never announced - a fict that bas stirred recent controversy ..... because secrecy was necessary to !ave American lives, Nixon said. "Had we announced the air strikes," Nixon aaid, "the Cambodian government would have been compelled to protest; the bombing would have bad to stop, and American soldiers wOuJd have paid for the diSclosure with their lives." . Nixon said the bombing was disclosed to unspecified government a n d congressional leaders. "'lbere air strikes were not directed at the Climbodian Anny or the cambodian people," he said. "11\ey were dire~ed. at the North Vietnamese raiders 1ns1de C8mbodia. "There ls today great an~sh and loud protest from the usual critics that this was an attack against tiny Cambodia," Nlion said. His Teference appa rently was to Sen. Stuart· Symington (0.Mo.), and others who have chArged that they and the public were misled about the cambodian bombing campaign four years ago. · It was Nixon's 6rst personal response to recent disclosures that the Pentagon BOA.T SELLS FAST ON FIRST CA.LL • Busy people just love Doily Pilot clos· ified want ads-. Look at this: SABOT No. 2042. Completely refinished + .. ,.. $200. (Phone No.) Thi• ad rully worked. lasU The boat «Old on the lint call. If you're busy, save time and money with Daily Pilot .classi· fled fdvertising; The direct line -- 64W1'18. ,, instituted a dual reporting system to keep the bombing campaign secret. The ai r strikes in Cambodia ~'ere reported publ~cly and. his congressional critics claim, also to Congress as being inside South Vietnam. Joe Kennedy Found Guilty, Fined $100 NANTUCKET, Mass. (AP) - A judge found Joseph P. Kennedy III guilt~ today of driving to endanger, fined him $100 and urged him to use his "illustrous name" for better purposes. Afterwards, the young man's uncle, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) said he thought his nephew received a fa ir trial and added, "Joe will have to live \Vith the verdict.'' Seven persons were hurt Aug. 13 when an open car driven by the son of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (0.N.Y.), flipped as it entered a highway from a side road. Judge C. George Anastos of Nantucket District C.ourt urged Kennedy to "use your illustrous name to do a lot of good, as I know you are able, rather than hav· ing to come into court like this." Kennedy pleaded innocent to the charge. Jn addition to his uncle the senator, spectators in the small, crowded courtroom included his mother, Ethel. A patrolman, William Carlton, tes tified that he talked to Kennedy after the ac- cident, adding: "During the in· terrogation, he (Kennedy) said the ac· cident was entirely his fault." According to witnesses, Kennedy was driving along a seldom-Jsed side road when he pulled onto a main road, barely missing an oncoming car. Sapra Peterson, a bu.s driver, said she (Sec KENNEDY, Page %) Trustees W eigl1 Dress, Grooming Standard Tonight Action on a dress and grooming code is expected at the regular meeting of the Saddleback Valley Unified School District board of trustees at 7:30 tonight at Los Alisos Intermediate School in El Toro. The <.'Ode, slightly revised from one written by students, states that dress and primarily grooming is the re.ponslbillty of the family. But it adds a student could be di!Clplin- ed If, rt; the principal'& judgment, the dress and grooming Is deuimental to the educ~ttonal program, h<alth, welraro and safety ot any student. Few cooiroversial matters are schedul- ed on the brief agenda, which also in-. cludes rtcms on purcbasrng clghf bu,.,~ and a report on the district's program for the mentally &ifted-, President Nixon's campaign. He said he did not know if there were any reporters on the McGovern payroll. "But he had his 'friendly reporters' too," Chotioer said. Chotiner is as former Newport Beach attorney. Chotiner in 'an .interview this morning, denied allegations by a Washington newspaper that Mrs. Goldberg was sup- posed to be compiling a sordid dossier on everyone traveling with McGovern. "We were not interested in the personal habits of the people or bow they behaved on airplanes,'' Chotiner said. ''They -weren't running for President." He said Mrs. Goldberg was a free lance reporter who obtained press credentials because she was planning to write a book. "She would cal l my office as often as three to four times a day to fill us in on the size of the crowds, their reaction and ·· what he (McGovern) was saying," Chotiner said. "She would also interview people along the way," he said. Chotiner said t~e is Hno question that reports on President Nixon's activities 'floated Mound' to McGovern." Chotjner also denied reports that Presi- dent Nixon spied on Vice President Spiro T. Agne\\' during the compaign. Chotiner, who said he does not meet or confer y,•ith the President on a regular basis any more, said he was a volunteer during the 1972 campaign and received only expenses. He said he ' was in charge of voters rights and ballot security for the cam- paign, a matter .,,..,hich he said vitally concerned the President after alleged voting irregularities in 1960. Chotiner also denied he had any part. or any before-the-fact knowledge of the \Vatergate break-in. 4 1»itr 'illt St.ff,-Pllthl OFFICER TDM STEWART TAKES INVENTORY OF SUSPECTED WEED TAKEN IN NEWPORT Police Say About 1 Ton of Alieged Mariiuana Smuggled into Harbor by Boat Coast Scout Base Used· In Pot Smuggling Case By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of Ille D•ily '1101 Sl81f A report by a bayfront resident that two suspicious males were unloading cargo awfully late and fast at the nearby Sea Scout Base to be workin& on merit badges today led Newport Beach police to intercept nearly a ton or allegedly smuggled marijuana. They also arrested a pair of leather artisans who gave addresses locally and in Seattle. Wash., after stopping their rented U-Hau1 van for inspection. Merle D. Ash, 27, who listed his home as 1955 Sherington Place, Newport Beach, and Kenneth 0 . Morrow, 29, Seattle. were booked into City jail on suspicion of possession or marijuana for sale. Narcotics Detective Sgt. Leo Konkel sa id the van had already rumbled. out of the Sea Scout compoWld in the 1200 block of West Coast Highway betore police could respond. Patrolman Tom Stewart stopped the truck at University Drive and Irvine Avenue. Neither Morrow, a leather shop owner, nor Ash, who · listed himself as an uneniployed leather worker, had anY con· nection with the Scout facility . Officer Stewart encountered o o resistance in stopping the suspects and the truckload of green, leafy material in- dividually packed in boxes. "We're just counting the bricks of it now," Sgt. Konkel said about 10 a.m., ad- ding it appears the load is much larger than initially expected. "It looks like it might be a ton," he ren1arked. He said at the current market rate of $200 per kilo or 2.2 per package, the con· traband. would be worth about $400,000 in street sales. •Q uiet Pleas·e.~ Does Work Noise Hurt Love Life? LONDON (UPI) -A member of Parliament said he will ask the government to study a report by a group of West German doctors that noise at work can ruin a man's love lile. Tom Tomey, Labor member for South !lrad!ord, said Sunday that If the West German doctors are right "then some wives could go to other men for sexual satisfaction. Factory noise could lead to promiscuity and the breakdown or-the family." '.l'prney has tabled a question asking Social Service Secretary Sir KeltlvJoseph to act on the d~tors' flndlt)gs. . "l ~n•t see, mysell1. bow JtOISe can. pqt a-man oU in bed, but if the doctors are right Sir .Keith should launch his own medical in· vestigatlon," Tomey said. · -But his question-·will·have to wait untiHhe House o!-Gommons · returns from summer adjournment. Council Critical Of Saddlehack's ' Pay Negotiating By JAN WORTH Of tM Olllly 'itot Stiff A memo criticizing the Saddleback Commun ity College board of trustees for conducting Salary negotiations in public has been sent to the school 's faculty members and the press by the Certificated Emp1oyes Council (CEC). Jean Vincenzi, chairman of the five- member elected council, said the memo is the first attempt by the CEC to keep the public informed on "things that may be of interest about the local community college." Last June the faculty committee re- quested a 20 percent hike in the salary package. After a seven-hour session at the July board meeting, a five percent raise was granted. Faculty members present claimed they re<:eived no word in advance of the board's COW}ter-proposal to their request prior 1o the board meeting, and ques- tioned whether meet.and-confer stand· ards·had been met. After meeting in executive closed session with the county counsel, the board determined meet-and-confer had been sati~ied, but allowed the employes groupS to argue their points before mak· ing the final decision at 4 a.m. "We commend the Board for listening to us and th e arguments for the pro- pO.sals thoroughly that evening and the n~xt mornihg,'' the memo stated . "However, we reel it is a shame thal the major part of negotiations had to take place in an open meeting. This is not a satisfactory \Yay of handling negotiations and we sincerely hope a bet- ter procedure will be es tablished for the future ." The CEC memo stated the faculty ''did not gCt ft· fair shake" on1 any of its three proposals: the 2() percent hike. a fringe benefit package, ati(I a change in the board policy oo laboratorr lcclurc teaching credit ratio. "tt seems as though the minds or soinc Doard members may haVe been inacfe up beforehand and thai these b o ~ r d IS.• CRITICAL, Page 21 "The first t knew of \Vatergate was '1-'hen I read it in the newspapers," hie said. "And I know this sounds funn y but when [ first read of it, I thought it was an attempt by the Democrats to check out (Democratic National Chainnan La\vrence) O'Brien to make sure he was being neutral." Cbotiner said . "There were a lot of Democrats who figured he was leaning toward (U.S. Senator Edward ) Kennedy." Chotiner said be couldn't understand what the Republicans expected to learn about the Democratic stategy before their convention was held. New Orleans Motorcade Canceled NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP) -Prtsi· dent Nixon, warned of a "possible con· spiracy to assassinate "him" canceled a motorcade through the New Orlean~ business district today. But upon arrival at his destination, he walked directly into a friendly sidewalk crowd for a moment or handshaking. · · Officials said both the President~s and the public's safety were factors in canceling the scheduled motorcade and changing the route by which the Presi· dent \\'as driven to Rivergate Coo.Vention Center !or an address to tl,le Vete.rans of Foreign Wars. New Orleans police, acti ng on a pickup order from the Secret Service, were seek- ing a former policeman, but would not say whether he was wanted in connection with the President's visit. He was identifed as Edwin M. Gaudet, alias "Punchy," who had been arrested in ·1970, the last time Nixon was in New Orleans, for throwing a burning flag on the President's car. The President and Mrs. Nixoli were driven from New Orleans International Airport by a back route and did not go through the five b~ocks where his car was to have slowed and a crowd bad gathered to greet the motorcade. Increased security was obvious. Eight motorcycle policemen · preceded the presidential limousine and a Coast Guard helicopter criss-crossed overhead. Secret Service men abotmded. When the President arrived at the Rivergate, a crowd stood near a VFW band blaring out "Old Man River.'' Nixon and his wife walked directly to the crowd and shook a few hands as Secret Service ageiits held back VF\V flags slapping in their faces. Signs nearby said, "Law and Order," "Right On," and "Impeach Nixon." As he left the convention center after his speech, Nixon waved to a crowd out- side and then was whisked by car to th e airport, where he and his party took off in presidential jet for the Western White House in San Clemente. The President flew to New Orleans from Florida to address the 74th annual convention of the Veterans of Foreign (See CONSPIRACY, Pago 21 Orange Coast Weather It'll be slightly cooler Tuesday- but still sunny for: a change along the Orange Coast. Highs at the beaches in the mid-70s rising to the low 90s inland. Overnight lows in the 60s. INSIDE TODAY Only tu)o niilLiO?l of tl1c 100 niiUion species of anintaL~ that liave roamed tht earth th rough llistory still survive nnd n1any of those are facing exti1ictiu11. See ond ·read about them' 0 11 Page 19. l..M. .. ,. • Allll L8Mfn " ... flM " Mt•ltt 21 ·tt C•llWlll• • NtlltMI Newt • C18Ulflttl ,,.,. °'"" c ... 11r;-1 Comltt " ,.,,.,. ,,,,M" " ''"._. " ..... 1"-11 DtttJ1 Nltfm 1 Stec:k M•rtth 1 .. 11 1111torltl ~ ••• • Tel"'lllM .. l11ttl't1l11mtt1t 11·» -·~ '''" .. _ 1•11 WN-•• P:or IM lllt<Ol'll '" Wt!Mfl't Nt'W!t 1)-lf M-cOM " Werlll H-• • • ' NEWPORT PILOTS TAKE FIRST IN FLIGHT TO PINES Shlrloy Coto (loft! a nd Modino Corponlor Air Raee Won 2 Newport Women Beat 53 Pla1ies 1\\.'0 NeY.'J)Ort Beach women beat 53 other entrants Saturday in the annual Palms to Pines flying race t o Independence, Ore. from Santa Monica. Shirley Cote, chairman of the Orange County 99s chapter, and M a d i n e Carpenter, wife of state Sen. Dennis E. C.arpenter (R·Newport Beach) made the trip in four hours and 51 minutes. :P.1rs. Carpenter, co-pilot of the new, four-passenger Aerocommander 112, said today "Jt was the best weather J've ever flown in." She Is a veteran ol four trans- continental Powder Puff Derby races and has logged over 2,000 hours flying time. Fog at Santa Monica Airport delayed the start, but nothing dampened tbe spirits or the citizens of Independence, "who make tWs short race the fun race it really is," Mrs. Carpenter said. 1be enthusiasm of the Independence townsfolk for the women air racers, she nid, makes Up for the paltry purse of the four-year-old event. The top five finishers, shared a total of $500. The $200 first place money earned by Mmes. Cote and Carpenter was "only enough to cOver part of the cost of the gas," Mrs. Carpenter said. The biggest reward is the welcome given the women when they land in Independence, she said. · "The race is the biggest thing that hap- pens In Independence. 'They even paved I.he nmway for us. It used to be jus:t grass. "The Elks Club was the center of ac- tivity and they brought in fresh salmon for a victory barbecue," Mrr. Carpenter said. "And, the trophy we won is huge. It's a perpetual trophy and la !be biggest thing in city hall." The wlnlling pair flew a plane lent them by Mrs. Cole's husband . 1bis la the thJrd time Mrs. O>le has entered the Palms to Pines race. It was Mrs. Carpenter's first go on the Oregon circuit. Another Orange Coast woman placed among the top 10. Thon Griffith of Costa Mesa piloted a plane Mllcb placed ninth. At her side was co-pilot Fran Bera of Loog Beach. Four Turtle Rock Groups Planning Blood Campaign Irvine'• community anociations tradi- tionally provide an array of services ranging from greenbelt maintenance to cable television but four associations in Turtle Rock this month are adding a lifesaving service. On Aug. 27 the Red Cross Bloodmobile will visit University Hlgh School from 3 to 7:30 p.m .. ~ Unlike routille conuntmity blood drives, Mrs. Ellen Brackett said, four Turtle Rock community associations have band- ed together to form a group blood plan. The Orange County Chapter ()f the American Red Cross has offered group plans to businesses and other organlza.. tions for years. One University Park C<lmmunity association has its own, Mrs. Brackett noted. "We have tried to appeal to people primarily to do a 'good deed' even though those who give a pint of blood will get dCIUble credit," Mrs. Brackett said. "We feel it is an important first step in cementlng · the associations of Turtle Rock into a community." Participating Turtle Rock homeo~ners will receive blood bank credit f()r their personal use in an emergency, or any member of the participating associations OIAN•I COAST II vl1Mlijijj(111 Tii t Or1°nve Ceftt DAILY PILOT, wllll ""'left It tombl"9CI lllt N.w.-Pre:u, It ""bl!th_, by rM OrW.O-Cot~! Puti.lishl"lt Com11111y, s.,,._ nt. .ciJtltM l rt ....... lsh9o, MOl!d1, lhroupll Frld1r, IOI' ca,11 M .. t , Wewll0!1 lt•ch, H1111!1,,.io., lt~F-11111 Vtlley, L1911111 .. CPI, lrvlnt/Stllldl~ 9nd S111 Cll""""' S... Juari C.pltl!'t.... A 111111111 r-ololltl t111tio~ ;, "'1tllls11W Stht•d•n •l'ld S\ll'ld•n. t111 prlnclpel 1t11.r11111.,. pla111 11 at no weat •• , stt .. r, Cot!t MtM, C1l1191"11i., '""' Roh•t N. W11d Pr .. lditil 11111 P110tll ..... J1clc I . C1nl1y \lite Prtllll"'I Ind '-tt MIMttf Th11r11t K11•1I !flier l1io11111 A. M11rphl111 M1 .... ,ln1 Editor Ch11f11 H. Looi Rich1rd '· Nill Al9Tlt1111 MllMIQltif ldllet1 Ce.It Mtcit: J)I) \11111 II• Str-tet H"'"'1 lttdll ~ H-pe" 9ovtn1rf Ult-1~11 : 22' Forni """"VI Hllllllrlft'M ... Cl'I: 11VJ ae1di lovi.y1,f Ifill CllrNl'li.: JOI North Et C.11>1o!i 1.tll fet~ 1n41 '41-4111 Cl....,._ A4"ftktat 641•1671 S.. Chn 1rtc All hpMIMM11 Tcl•••tt 491-4421 Ctoy•lf!'ll, 1fTI. °""'fl Colt! Pullllilllnrl °""""""'' He -tWlin, UlinTrtlllflt. lfitwlitl _,,,, , .,._,~ ...,..... _, ... ~ •""'*' ...... ... ...... ""' " .w·...-. --· _ llMJlllf cltu .._._. MW 411 Cotti Mui, C..lllWfllL ~--W urrtn ltM -'fl~j ... INlll tJ,1$ "*""'"'' "'llllat'Y ...,.,..., ..... .,, .. "*'"'"'· may draw on the Turtle Rocle acoount, ~· Bracketl explained. Each asaociatlon has appointed a chainnan to contact residents to make reservations in advance of the Monday Bloodmobile visit. For information, or to make an ap- pointment, ·Turtle Rock Broadmoor residents may call Mrs. Brackett at 833- 9143. Other association chairmen are : Sylvia Lemcm!:, 833-2248, Siena Bonita AssociaLion; Dick Murphy, IJ33.32tl6, Sier- ra 'Broadmoor Association, and Betty Hollis, 833-8719, Turtle Rock Terrace Associat ion . Racing Pioneer Off enhauser Buried Today Fred Offenhauser, the man woo gave the Irvine-built "Offy" racing engine its name, was buried today after services in Inglewood. Offenhauser, whooe engines "'on the Indianapolis 500 a total of 28 times, died in his sleep at his Inglewood home Fri~ day. He was 85. The four-cylinder Offy engine was created in 1934 and it soon became a standard at Indy. · - Offenhauser was a plant superin· tendent when Harry Miller went out of business in 1933. Offenhawer obtained all the plaM and drawings of Miller's engines, reorganized the finn, and gave the company and the engine hls name. O!fenhauser sold his interests to Dale Drake and Louie Meyer who moved the finn from Los Angeles to the Orange Coast in 1969, Today the Offenhauser brand belongs to Drake Engineering, l75'rl Daimle r St., in tbe Irvine Industrial Complex. Born in l.D$ An~eles, Ol!enbauser I• survived by his wi<klw, Ethel, and two brothers and three sisters. l\1artial Law Ended? ATHENS (UPI) -George Papadopoulos, newly sworn in •• the first president or Grwc., proml.sed to stan decrees today Connally ending martfal lllw and freeing polltlcaJ prisoners. Papadopoulos, a former army colonel, tool< o(fic. SUnday as prHident of tlie country be bu ruled with an Iron bond since coming to power in an April 21 . t!Hi7 military coup. i Ba4ny Days Numbered For Coast 'l1le arrival of summer along the Otange Coast was ternied "kind of a ,reverse trend," the Nallooal \Veather Service expects will last only until Fri- day. 'Then, the "night and morning low clouds and fog along the coast" routine will return. fl.feanwhlle, an "easterly w a v e ' ' brought scattered thundershowers t o coastal and inland Orange and Los Angeles Counties today. The package of heal, humidity, dense clouds and heavy raindrops in some places is caused by a now of moist air from south of the border. Winds from the S<IUtheast at from five to 15 knots brought the unusual summer stonniness. Winds from the southwest to west at from eight to 15 knots this af. temoon were expected to clear the skies. Variable cloudiness is the word for Tuesday with the emphasis e1pected to be "mostly sunny." A clear mild night with low tem- peratures along the Orange Coast in the mid to hlgh .60s la to be followed by highs in the mid-70s tomorrow, the NationaJ Weather Service predicts. The "reverse trend" of land-warmed air whether from inland or from Mexico is commonly called summer along the Orange C<last. There hasn't been much of jt this year, the weatherman admits, with sea-eooled air pushing onshore much of the time. "By the end ()f the week," the forecaster said," the marine air in· fluences will return ." Front PGf1e I CONSPIRACY • • Wan:, his first public appearance in six weeks. Deputy Press Secretary Gerald Warren said the Florida White House learned of the possible threat to the President's life "over the weekend." He said Nixon personally decided to accept the Secret Service's recommendatk>n that the motorcade be canceled. The President's blue, silver and white jetliner, after landing at New Orleans InternaUooal Airport, taxied to a remote corner of the field where tight security had been Imposed. 1be public was not allowed to witness the arrival. Gov. and Mrs. Edwin Edwards and members of the Louisiana congressional delegattoo greeded the President and hls wife as they stepped from the plane, with Mrs. N'wm being handed a bouquet ()f red roses. Nixon aides said the Secret Service did not reeommend cancelatlon of the visit, but the action was unprecedented. "We have never faced a situation· in which the Secret Service recommended a diversion of route because they were unable to resolve the situation before a presidential arrival," one aide said. Spokesman Jack Warner said the Secret Service made the unusual an- nouncement because "we anticipated in- quiries." Asked why he thought there would be inquiries, Warner said the Secret _Service had reason to believe the change m plans and the events surrounding it would be known publicly within a short while. FBI Director Clarence M. Kelley has relayed infonnation about the case to At· ty. Gen. Elliot L. Richardson, a Justice Department spokesman said. He declined to say what action Richardson might take. From Pqe 1 CRITICAL • • • members didn't want to be confused with the facts," the memo stated regarding the 20 percent hike. The five percent decision passed 3-2 with one absentlon and one absentee. Major medical Insurance was OOubled to a maximum of $50,000 for each employe. But the CEC memo said the 1973-74 budget made no provision for ad- ditional fringe benefit requests submitted last April. "The board was apparently willing to absorb the estimted $1 ,800 cost per year (of the insurance increase) because it was so low/' the memo stated. 1 The proposed teaching credit ratio refers to the fact that teachers oow get tw1>-thirds of an hour credit for each lab hour taught and on\,. OOur credit for each lecture. This means science and other lat> oriented teachers must work up to nine hours more each week to get the same tc. .. chlng load credit. Clioosy B urglar Nabs Nude Sliots HARTFORD, Coon. (UPI) - A burglar broke Into a movie theater here and stole all the nude scnes from an X·ratcd Olm, "1.001 Danish Delights." James Wgner, manager ol the Rivoli Theater, lald the burglar went lhroush the reels of film , tearing out sect.Ions. "He was apparently lnteresled in the nude scenes," Wagner said. Tbe Intruder finally tripped • burglar alarm and left some of his booty In a parking lot u he fled. V anisJ1i1tg B1•e ed The great bald eagle, once lord of the skies and the symbol of American freedom, is being pushed from the face of the earth by the encroachments of thoughtless men. The great bird is only one of scores of animal species facing imminent extinction as 1nan fills the globe. See some of the other mem· bers of nature's min orities on Page l~ today. F rom P"flel KENN ED Y ... saw Kennedy 's vehicle moments before the accident. "It looked like there were people hang- ing all over the top of the jeep. Some were standing,'' sh~ said. Mrs. Peterson said the vehicle was traveling 35 or 4-0 miles an hour on the narrow, bumpy road. The vehicle is a four-wheel drive, open car. She said that when :;he came upon the accident she spoke to Kennedy. "He said that he was totally to blame for the accident and that nobody else was to blame,'' she said. Robert Mooney, the 10"'11 prosecutor, Si;.id the maximum penalty was t\>o'O years in jail and a $200 fine. "I wish thiS had happened somewhere else," Mooney said Sunday. "We don't need this kind of publicity. "We're trying ·to treat it as a routine ease. But · unfortunately, nothing is rrutine with that name in it." The accident left Pamela Kell y, 19, Centerville, Mass., partially paralyzed with a fractured spine and broken leg. Miss Kelly was described in fair con· dition Sunday at Cape Cod Hospital in Hyannis, Mass. But doctors said it was still too soon to determine whether the girl would be able k> walk again. Less seriously injured were Kennedy ; his brother, Uavid, 18 ; May Schlaff, 22, Gtosse Point, Mich .; Patricia Powers, 18, Spring Lake, N.J.; Francesca de Onis, 19, of Centerville, f\.1a ss.; and Miss Kelly's siste r, Kim, 17. Consmner s A void Cattle Attcti on . . . Diggers Careful B each Bird Sanctuary Slows Hitnt for Bodies HOUSTON, Tex . (AP) -Concern for a state bird sanctuary slowed the opera- tions today as digging was resumed on a, lonely sandy beach at the eastern tip of Galveston Island in the search for possi· ble additional victin1s of a homosexual torture-murder ring. Previous diggings uncovered the bodies of 27 young men. Iron rods and spacies replaced a road grader th at Galveston Police Chief D.K. Lack planned to use. Lack said the area is a new sanctuar J that holds rare birds GAY GROUPS FEAR HOUSTON PUBLICITY-Story, P1go 5 and nests and that he would oot use heavy equipment unless early probing in- dicated it •.vas necessary. One hole was dug after the iron rod probe located a soft spcit near the site \1'here Lack said a Houston couple reported that they saw two men carrying "·hat looked like a body. Nothing was found. The Houston couple told officers. they saw men resembling Dean A. Corl! and Elmer \Vayne Henley burying something. The case broke Aug. 8 when Henley told police he killed Corll in self· defen se. C<irll allegedly was the leader ()f the ring, which has been linked to the largest C<lnfirm ed mass slaying in U.S. history. A grand jury indicted Henl~ in three of the slayings. He has told police he took part in nine kil!Ligs. Another youth. David 0 . Brooks, 18, v.·as indicted in one slaying but has said he did not kill anyone. On Saturday officers using rods and sticks probed a 200-yard area of the East Beach \\'ithout success. f\.1r. and Mrs. C. C. Abernathy of Houston told Houston Detective K.D. Porter they drove to the beach last Februa ry or March and saw two men carrying a long, wrapped bundle over a sand dune. Porter said the second couple, who asked not to be identified, were looking for a camp site in June. They told Porter they drove to where a white van and tv.·o cars were parked. Corll owned a white van . 600 Pou1i d s Pot Se ized; S muggler Crashes Border I A marijuana smuggler sped through the San Onofre Border Pa trol Checkpoint over the ~'eekend and led immigration officers and San Clemente police ()n a freeway chase before ditching his car and fleeing on foot. He left 600 pounds of the illicit weed behind. Patrolmen said the incident -in- creasingly common at the checkpoint - took place at dusk Saturday. The car, they said , was being driven by a male and it did not stop despite signals from patrolme .. at the roadblock. Instead, the driver sped away and patrolmen gave chase. Moment~ later San Clemente police wtits j()ined in the pursuit. The flight ended at the Camino de Estrella offramp on the San Diego Freeway when the driver pulled to the roadside and ran into the hills. The heavily laden truck C<lntained more than 300 Jdlogram bricks ()f marl· juana. Officers said the registration of the car was traced to a Westminster man and agents for the U.S. Customs Service took over the investigation. The seizure of the weed was the second major haul in less than a week at the checkpoint. NOW AT PRICES . START 95 F ROM ·-•-11/171 Bxlullw:1 5 l'ffr Parll Guannlee Thi f!IO!or. pumo. Urn.tr, tnlort w1t1r Oilttlbu1il)n 'Yillf'l'I. Mlllf Incl OUSll• but1011• ••• ou••tl'llM<I tor e 1'9••• o!'I !l'ICKltlt SS/979. SSfll1 I 1/IO SS/171, WI PIY lot rtf!llClll'ltflt t1tior during 1111 flrtl yt11r. 90 DAY CASH 'll'ITH .vraon• CHtlT Phone 548-7788 HEADQUARTERS. 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Oawntown Costa Mesi ........................................................... • I Pre. recei\ repc:1r1 Geore Pr.es it advi5' .A1u1 lhe B '9 a nothir 11.000 ~o ;tho r .1 NE\ on acl that b Camb n t96 Las! Jo: Fo l1i NA! found of drl and \ name' Afte Sen. E he ti> trial I with I Sevo an opo Sim. F as it E Judi Distri- your i as I k lnj: to Ken charg ;Jn I spi?cta • !19"'1' : Al' that I eldent ·n .torroe ciden1 ·Ace drivin when mlsslJ ·s.p saw I the ai • HJt 1na.: 'were Mn trave'. ilarro Tbe car. .She ,_ Bll . . ·'01' BUI 1 sllied Thi; Sold c time tied 64UI ' ~ ' ., Du~ti~gton Beaeh Fountain ·Valley -ED l.T-1 o .. N,-- . VOL. 66, NO. 232, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ... Today's Final N.Y. S(ocks TEN CENTS GOP Aides l(ept Tabs on McGovern Campaign By L. PETER KRIEG 01 tllt 0•111 PUo1 11111 !?resident Nixon's political aides received as many as three or four reports a day on the activities of Senator George McGovern during the 1972 Pr.esidential campaign, a Nixon political ~dvisor confirmed today. .l\iurray M. Chotiner, who is staying at lhe Balboa Bay Club "in Newport Beach ~9 a working vacation , said he saw nothing wrong with paying a reporter Jl,000 a week to "keep tabs on ij~vem." }::hotiner said he didn't call it "spying" • because the reporter, l\1rs. Lucianne Cummings Goldberg or New York, would provide information generally available to anyone foJlowing McGovern. Chotiner said the employment of a reporter to follow McGovern wouJd not have been necessary if the newspapers and other media would have reported every single thing that occurred during the campaign. "But we knew that ls impossible and we needed to have more detailed in· formation," Chotiner said. Chotiner also said the Democrats similarly received daily information on IXOll .. fMslaes Critics Nixon Ordered .Bo m b ing Raids From Wire Services N£W ORLEANS, La .. -President Nix- on acknowledged for the first time today that he ordered secret bombing raids in Cambodia one month after he took office n 1969. Lashing at critics of his Indochina Joseplr, Ken1iedy Found Guilty l1i Car Mishap NANTUCKET, Mass. (AP I -A judge found Joseph P. Kenned y Ill guilty tpday or driving to endanger, fined him $100 and urged him to use his "illustrous name" for better purposes. Afterwards, the young man's uncle, Sen. Edward f\t. Kennedy (D-Mass.) said be thought his nephew received a fair trial and added, "Joe will have to live with the verdict." Seven persons were hurt Aug. 13 v.·hen in open car driven by the son of the late ~en. Robert F. Kennedy (J).N.Y. ), flipped as it entered a highway from a side road . Judge C. George Anastos of Nantucket District Court urged Kennedy to "use your iUustrous name to' do a lot of good, as I know you are able, rather than hav· ln,I to come into court like this." Kennedy pleaded innocent to the charge. :in addition to his uncle the senator. spf!ctators in the small, crowded C.Urtroom included his mother, Etbel. ~1A patrolman, William Carlton, testUied that he talked to Kennedy ·after the ac- tident, adding: "During the · in· •l} ' terrogation, he (Kennedy) said the ac- cident was entirely liis fault." ·According to witnesses. Kennedy was driving along a seldOm·Jsed side road when he pulled onto a main road, barely missing an oncoming car. policies. the President said in a state- 1nent released as he addressed the Ve te ran s of Foreign Wars convention here that the raids were necessary to protect American lives. ~le said if he faced the so.ime decision today, he wouJd take the same action. This received applause and cheers. \Vhen he took office in January 1969, Nixon said, 40,000 North Vietnamese troops had taken over a 10-mile-wide stretch in Cambodia alongside the South Vietnamese border. .. The Communists had made a mockery of the neutrality ot those border regions." Nixon said . "The United States was under .no moral obligation to respect the sham." Nixon said he ordered U.S. airpotver "employed directly and continually" CAMBOOIA ROCKED IN ATTACKS-Story Pago 4 against Communist base areas in Cam· bodia and said the Cambodian govern- ment "did not object to the strikes. "ln fact ," Nixon added, "while strikes were in progress Prince Sihanouk invited me to make a state visit to the Cam- bodian capital." The raids were never announced - a fact that has stirred recent controversy -because secrecy was necessary to save American lives, Nixon said. "Had we announced the air strikes," Nixon said, "the cambodian government would have been compelll'd to protest: the bombing would have had to stop, and American soldiers would have paid for the disclosure with their lives." Nixon said the bombing was disclosed to unspecified government a n d congressional leaders. "There air strikes were not directed at the Cambodian Army or the Cambodian people," he said. "They were directed at the North Vietnamese raiders inside Cambodia. - "There is today great anguish and loud protest from the usual critics that this 'i''as an attack against tiny Cambodia," Nixon said. Searcli for Leaks President Nixon's campaign. He said he did not know if there were any reporters on the McGovern payroll. "But he had his 'frlendly reporters' too," Chotiner said. Chotiner is as former Newport Beach attorney. Chotiner in an interview this mol'ning, denied allegations by a Washington newspaper t~t Mrs. Goldberg was sup- posed to be compiling a sordid dossier on everyone traveling with McGovern. "We were not interested in the personal habits of the people or how they behaved on airplanes," Chotiner said. "They weren't running for President." He said Mrs. Goldberg was a free lance reporter who obtained press credentials because she was planning to Y.Tite a book. "She would call my ofCice as often as three to four times a day to fill us in on the size of the crowds, their r®ction and what he (McGovern) was saying," Chotiner said. "She would also interview people along the way," he said. Chotiner said there is "no question that reports on President Nixon's activities 'Ooated around' to McGovern." Chotiner also denied reports that Presi- dent Nixon spied on Vice President Spiro T. Agne\v during the compaign. Chotiner, \vho said he does not meet or confer with the President on a regular basis any more, said he was a volunteer during the 1972 campaign and received only expenses. He said he \l'as in charge of voters rights and ballot security for the cam· paign. a matter \Yhich he said vitally concerned the President after alleged \'Ot.i ng irregularities in 1960. Choliner al.so denied he had any part, or any before-the-fact kno,vledge of the \Vaterg3tc Jreak-in . Dli~ Pilot Stiff Photo OFFICER TOM STEWART TAKES INVENTORY OF SUSPECTED WEED TAKEN IN NEWPORT Police Say About• Ton of Alleged Marijuana Smuggled into Harbor by 8CM1t ' Coast Scout Base .Used In Pot Smuggling Case By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ll1t D•lly Piiot St•ft A report by a bayfront resident that l\\'O suspicious males were unloading cargo awfuJly late and fast at the nearby Sea Scout Base to be workin& on merit badges today led. Newport Beach poli~ to intercept nearly a ton of allegedly smuggled marijuana. They also arrested a pair of leather artisans who gave addresses localfy and in Seattle, Wash., after stopping their rented U-HauJ van for inspection. Merle D. Ash, 27, who listed his home as 1955 Sherington Place, Newport Beach, and Kenneth D. Morrow, 29, Seattle, were booked into city jail on suspicion of possession of marijuana for sale. Narcotics Detective Sgt. Leo Konkel said the van had already rumbled out of the Sea Scout compound in the 1200 block of West Coast Highway before police could respond. Patrolman Tom ~tewart stopped the truck at University Drive and Irvine Aventie. Neither A-1orrow. a leather shop owner, .(See POT HAUL, Page 21 Stocking-masked Ba11dit Holds Up Valley Eatery A robber whose face was distorted by a woman's stocking pulled over his head, took more than $1,300 from a Fountain Valley eating establishment Saturday night. Police said the robbery occurred at the Kentucky Fried Chicken, 1 7 2 3 9 Brookhurst St. at about 9:20 p.m., just as employes were closing for the night. Sgt. Bill DeNisi said the bandit went to the store's back door and was let in when he pounded on it. He was armed with a blue steel automatic pistol. The robber held the three employes at bay while cleani ng out the cash register of the weekend's receipts. 'Sapra Peterson, a bus driver, said she saw Kennedy's vehicle moments before tbe accident. · "Il looked like there were people hang· lni all over the top of the jeep. Some were standing," sh~ said. Astronauts Turn Plumb ers DeNisi said the employes were forced to lie on the Ooor while the gunman Oed out the back door . The victims told police the robber was a Caucasian , in his early twenties wilh long brown hair. Mrs. Peterson said the vehicle was traveling 35 or 40 miles an hour on the narrow, bumpy road. · Tbe vehicle ls a four-wheel drive, open car. , She said that when she came upon the (See KENNEDY, Pag• %1 BOA. T SELLS FA.ST . ·'ON FIRST CA.LL · Bu.By people just love Dally Pilot clas- stlied want ads. l'..ook at this: . . SABOT No. 2042. Completely . refinished + oars. '2(11. (Phone No.) This ad really worked lastl The boat .Old on the first call. II yoo're busy, save time and money with Daily Pilot classi· fied advcl1l!lng. '!lie dti;cct line - GIW678. SPACE CENTER, llousion (AP) - Two Skylab 2 astronauts turned plumbers today and searched for leaks in two systems in their orbiting space station. (Related story, l'age 4) Neither a pressure leak· in a unit that removes humidity rrom the cabin nor a nuid leak in an air.conditioning system is serious. But Alan L. Benn, Dr. Owen K. Garriott and Jack L. Lousma would like to fix them. Bean concentrated on UlC humidity system w!)ich has been a nagging prob- lem since their arrival in lhe lab 2f days ago. The astronauts have malr>- talned. pi:essure and kept lhe system lunetlonlng properly by servicing it dally, They wou1d like to eliminate the time- consuming servicing. Bean pressurized the lines and tubing w'ith, nitrogen gas and. uslng a stelhoscooe, listened for the his..ln1 IOUnd of cscaplng gas at various connecting points-He also rubbed a soapy lather over several points. A bubbling of the lather wooid Indicate a leak. Lousma removed wall panels in the laboratory to try to locate a leak in the system that coOls the cabin and some electronic equtpment. He looked for discoloration of tape wrapped around coolant lines. Mission Control detected a small, gradual loss ol coolant two. weeks ago. If It continues, the Ouid will be gone in abollt 10 days. There is a backup system sulficlent !or ~ rest of Skylab 2's 59-<lay mission and for' the. two-month 'Skylab 3 flight set to start.Nov. 9. The , astnmaul! today also conduoted solar astronomy, photographic, science and medical uperlmeats. During tbe rooming. Bean pbolbgraph- ed a plain Jdih In the Peruvian Andes mountains approprialety named the ",l;lrflold ol Andellt .,,.ltonauts.'' -lie almed his esllllll'tl at the Plains of Naica, a narrow strip 37 miles lone by one mile wide about 300 miles southeast of Lima. The plains consist 0£ many criss-cross patterns, with the most prom~ inent feature resembling an airfield. ~fission Control said lhere are several J()l).foot·Thll o bjeciS in the plain and historians long have questioned their origin. One large figure is thought to represent a spider or an octopus. lliglw!IUtudc photos from Skylab might provide clues to the over-all pattern of the fonnation and the thinking of those who built it. In stud)tiog ·the photos, ex· perts will try to relate the geomelr!c·pat- terns and general appearance ol the plain wilh lhe geographic fonnation of the surrounding mountains . Bean reported there were scaltered clouds in lhe area but he photographed several clear spots·. The astronauts for the third st(aight day sent televi~ed pictures to ?i1ission Control of TropiCaJ Storm Drcnda In the Gulf of Campeche of! the easf coast 9f Mexico. I Brothers Injured In Cycle Crash Two teen-aged b r o t h c r s were hospitalized Sunday after the notorcycle they were riding collided with a car in Huntington Beach. Police said James Arnlenta, 13. was driving the motorcycle on New Haven Lane with his brother, John, 18, on lhc back whon they collided with a car driven by Raymond Allison, Jr., 2t, ol 8121 Falmouth Drive, Huntington Beach. The two brothers. who live at 8431 Yorktown Ave .• were taken to Paci(ica llospital, where lhoy arc in satisfactory condition today. Police said they cited the under-age youngster in the accident. which oc- curred at 6:40 p.rn. at the intersection of Yorktown Avenue and New Haven l..anc. "The fir st I knew of Watergate was \\'hen I read it in the newspapers," he said . "And I kno'v this sounds funny but wl1en I first read of it, I thought it was an attempt by the Deznocrats to check out (Democratic National Chairman La1vrence) O'Brien to make sure he was being neutral." Cho tin er said. "There ,,·ere a lot of Democrats who figured he was leaning tow ard (U.S. Senator Ed\vard I Kennedy," Chotiner sa id he couldn't understand 'vhat the Republicans expected to learn about the Democratic stategy before their convention was held. New Orleans Motorcade Canceled NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP) -Presi- dent Nixon, warned of a "possible con- spiracy to assassinate him ," canceled a motorcade through the New Orleam business district today. But upon arrival at his destinatiqn, he walked directly into a friendly sidewalk crowd for a moment or handshaking. Officials said both the President's and the public's safety were factors in canceling the scheduled motorcade and changing the route by which the Presi- dent was driven to Rivergate Convention Center for an address to the Veterans of Foreign Wars. New Orleans police, acting on a pickup order from the Secret Service, were seek· ing a fonner policeman, but would not say whether he was wanted in connection with the President's visit. He \\'as iclentiled as Edwin M. Gaudet, alias "Punchy," who had been arrested in 1970, the last time Nixon was in New Orleans, for throwing a burning flag on the President's car. The President and Mrs. Nixon were driven from New Orleans International Airport by a baek route and did not go through the five blocks Where his car \11as to have slowed and a crowd had gathered to greet the motorcade. n Increased security was obvious. Eight n1otorcycle policemen preceded the presidential limousine and a Coast Guard helicopter crisso.erossed overhead. Secret Service men abounded. When the President arrived at the Rivergate, a crowd stood near a VFW band blaring out "Old Man River." Nixon and his wife walked directly to the crowd aod shook a few hands as Secret Service agents held back VFW flags slapping in their faces. ; Signs nearby said, "Law and Order,'' "Right On," and "Impeach Nixon." As he left the convention center after his speech, Nixon \Yaved to a cro\vd out- side and then was whisked by car to the airport, where he and his party took off in presidential jct for the Western White House in San Clemente. The President flew to New Orleans from Florida to address the 74th annual convention or the Veterans of Foreign (See CONSPIRACY, Page %) Orange Coast Weather it'll be slightly cooler Tuesday- but still sunny for a change along the Orange Coast. Highs at the beaches in the mid-70s rising to the lo\v 90s inland. Overnight lows in the 60s. INSIDE TODAY Oaly two nt illion bf the 100 niillion species of ani'11als that liave roarned the eortl1 tl~rougll history still survive and niany of tllose are facing exthu:ti<r11. See a 11d read about them 011 Page 19. l...M, .... • """ l..•""rJ " lkllllllt " MOYln ..... C•UIOM!i• • N•llMOI Nowt • ( .. llllltf ti•H or ..... CMlllTY ' Cot!'!k l M Stl•I• ,,,,..,. " Gl"Oll-.1 M '"'" 1•·1, Dollto N•lkll 1 STK• ~r••tt 1 .. ll tcttorl11 '•~• • T .. tvblon .. lltlltfllhlnttlll lt•lt -"" ..... l'llllMICO 10-11 w .. -• •• , 11\t lt.C:Otd ,, . WllMll'I ~ 1).U NOrOKO-' " Wtf"lt Ntwl • l U~I T1IU'ftol0 GUil TY, FINED $1 00 Reckless Driver Ke nned y From Page 1 KENNEDY ... accident she spoke to Kennedy. "He said th.at he was totally to blame for the accident and that nobody else \\•as to blame," she said. Robert Mooney, the town prosecutor, st.id the maximum penalty was two years in jail and a $200 fine. "I wish this had happened somewhere else." Mooney said Sunday. "We don't need this kind of publicity. ''We're trying to treat it as a routine case. But unfortunately, nothing is routine with that name in it." The accident left Pamela Kelly, 19, Centerville, Mass .. partially paralyzed with a fractured spine and broken leg. ~1iss Kelly \\'as described in fair con- dition Sunday at Cape Cod' Hospital in Hyannis. Mass. But doetors said it was still too soon to determine whether the girl would be able to \Valk again. Less seriously injured were Kennedy; his brother, David, 18; May Schlaff, 22. Grosse Point, Micb.; Patricia Powers 18, Spring Lake, N.J.; Francesca d~ Onis. 19, of Center\'ille, Mass.; and Mi ss Kelly's sister, Kim, 17. Frona Page 1 CONSPIRACY • • Wars, his first public appearance in six weeks. Deputy Press Secretary Gerald Warren said the Florida White House learned of the possible threat to the President's life "over the weekend." He said Nixon personally decided to accept the Secret Service's recommendation that the motorcade be canceled. The President's blue, silver and white jetliner, after landing at New Orleans Jntematlonal Airport, taxied to a remote comer oC the · field where tight security had been imposed. 'Ibe public was not allowed to witness the arrival . Gov. and Mrs. Edwin Edwards and members of the Louisiana congressional delegation greeded the President and his wife as they stepped from the plane, with i\lrs. Nixon being handed a bouquet of red roses. Nixon aides said the Secret Service did not recommend cancelation or the visit, but the action was unprecedented. "We have never faced a situation in which the Secret Service recommended a diversion of route because they were unable to resolve the situation before a presidential arrival," one aide said . Spokesman Jack Warner said the Secret Service made the unusual an· nouncement because "we anticipated in- quiries." Asked why he thought there would be inquiries, \Yamer said the Secret Service had reason lo believe the change in plans and the events surrounding it would be known publicly within a short while. FBI Director Clarence M. Kelley has relayed information about the case to At- ty. Gen. Elliot L. Richardson. a Justice Department spokesman said. ~le declined to say what action Richardson 1night take. OIANGE COAST HI DAILY PILOT Tiit Ort1191 tol1t DAILY PILOT wlttl Wll\(11 11 comllll'Otd, 11\t N•ws·Pren, 11 po;tilllhM bY tl!t ~11199 (0111 P11blltllitlg Cllm!>tllY. ~ r1t1 ldltltns •rt p11b!111!td, Mond1y througll Frid1v. tor COiii Mtl&, Ntwl>Df"I 8e1ch, H....,11,.gton Bt&ct'!IF-lt ln V1ll1y, Ltg...,.. audl, lrvln•IS-!•l:Nlt., 1rid Sin Clemtn!tl lln J111n C1pl1rr1"'1. A 1!1111!1 "11i0nl l _.il\gn II publl&Jled 51!11rd1v1 IN Su...U\"I. r"' prlnclplol Pl/bll111lriq pl1nl 11 •• JJO wru 11r Slrt1l, COtr. M111, C1llror11l1, nt1'. Rob11t N. W11d Pl'ftldlfll I rid Pltl>Hl/ltr Jeck It . 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C1lltorftlt. ~ltfl trr ctrrlll' U it "*'"'"'' "' -11 u.11 """1"'1"' l'l'llllttno -.tl!otl*'t UM -"""'· Cmice rt Etaded Trouble Erupts At Watts Fest· LOS AN GELES (AP ) -"This is my last \Va ttstax," one black Los Angeles policeman promised after botllc throwing by <i small nurnbcr of the G0.000 spec- !utors prompted police to halt the Walls Summer Festi val concert. The concert, which concluded the eighth annual five-day festival, was cut short Sunday night as tensions mounted inside the Coliseum. The crowd departed peacefully but there were some rcPorts or juveniles attacking spectators as they went away. \Vattstax was the shorthand nam e for the festival. A police spokesman said more than 60 persons were arrested on a variety of charges, including disturbing the peace, fighting and public drunkenness. He said at least six persons, including one police officer, were treated for in· juries. But there was no immediate in- formation on the nature of the injuries or identities of the victims. Trouble began when a group of about 400 youths formed a circle on the Coliseum grass fi eld and refused to move, police said. The concert \\'as then stopped and did not restart until police \\'ere able to clear the grass, about an hour later. But the police, almost entirely black, continued tO be pelted with bottles and tin cans. Lt. Billy \Ved geworth, commander of the 57-man police force, was asked if he were worried. "Yeah, J am ," he said. "Fifty-seven guys against 70,000 -man, those odds 4 County Cities Scouring Nation For 'Lobbyist' Orange County's four biggest cities narrowly missed hiring a Washington lobbyist recently, when their prime can- didate took another offer. The cities are now scouring the nation for additional prospects, according to David Rowlands, City Administrator of Huntington Beach and spokesmen for the four. cities. , Ana heim, Santa Ana, Huntington Beach and Garden Grove plan to share the cost of "our Man in Washington" who will help those cities snare federal grants. Rowlands said it will be another two "'eeks before the cities can line up can· didates and make a selection. The Washington lobbyist proposal was first made in early May, but for awhile it looked as if the plan would be dashed by Anaheim councilmen who voted against it 3 to 2. They later reversed their stand making it possible. At this JX>int, no one has revealed a specific salary for the Washington lob- byist. but Rowlands has said the cities will have to pay well to get a good one. A preliminary budget of $60,000 per year has been mentioned, but not yet adopted by any official council actions. The budget would include the lobbyist's salary, a secretary and a Washington of- fice. A selection of qualified candidates is being obtained lhrough the National League of Cities, Rowlands said. About 14 lobbyists. representilig some 30 cities across the nation are already working in \Vashington. according to the ad- ministrator. Ghost Ship"/ nre bad. The only \Vay 57 can control 70,000 is if they want to be controlled.'' Phil Pierangclo, 21, Encinitas, Mexico, plays in a rock band and came to listen. ·'rite and my bass player came here to hear mu sic," he said. ''I got three bottles broken on my head. J'm still picking glass out of my hair." He said he and his friend were walking in when a man ca1ne up from behind and hit him with a bottle and said, "How.'d that ft-el, Whitey ?" ·•I dove over the wall and just started runni ng," Pierangclo said. Meadowlcirk Purchase Up in Air There has still been no agreement reached for the city purchase of the 96.~ acre J\1eadowlark Golf Course. Huntington Beach City Administrator David Rowlands said he and Councilman Henry Duke met with spokesmen for th e Meadowlark Corp. last week, but nothing happened. "But at least \\le arc talking and that's encouraging.'' Rowlands added. City officials have until about Oct. 23 to close a deal on ~readowlark, according to an escrow arrangement the golf course owners have with S. and S. Construction Company, another possible buyer. The city's plaMing commission is con- sidering the placement of a recreation open space (ROS) on Meadowlark as well as other goU courses to prevent their use for anything else. Meadowlark land is zoned R· I for single family homes, but the area is listed on the city's master plan as a golf course. Either the master plan or tbe zoning will have to be changed to con- fonn to state law. Last week, the county harbors, beaches and parks commission recommended that the city be given $250,000 in county revenue sharing funds lo help buy Meadowlark. The city had asked for $600,000. The price of the course, speculated to be anything from $2 million to $4 million, is one reason for the delay in action, as each side tries for the best offer, city of- ficials say. Training School Adds Oassroom Construction of a !our.classroom ad- dition to the Lark View School facility for trainable mentally retarded students is expected to begin this month, according to James Jones, assistant superintendent of the Ocean View School Distfict. Pavneff C-Onstructnon Company of Ontario submitted a low bid o( $389,000 on the project. District trustees are expected to ap- prove the construction contract tonight. The addition includes a physical educa· lion room, three classrooms, ad· ministrative offices and a therapeutic pool. School officials expect completion prior to the end of the 1974 school yea r. This Hobie C.I sailing along a Newport Harbor channel seems to be making the most of its nine lives, even without • skipper or crew. Actually, they are underneath the crafl , having righlcd it alter a spill. THIS IS CRAFT ALLEGED TRAFFICKERS LEFT BEH IND From Ship to Shore at Newport's Sea Scout Base 600 Pounds Pot Seized; Smuggler Crashes Border A marijuana smuggler sped through the San Onofre Border Patrol Checkpoint over the weekend and led immigration officers and San Clemente police on a freeway chase before ditching Ws car and fleeing on foot . He left 600 pounds of lhe illicit weed behind. Patrolmen said the incident -in- creasingly common at the checkpoint - took place at dusk Saturday. The car, they said, was being driven by a male and it did not stop despite sf.gnals from patrolme .. at the roadblock. Instead, the drive r sped away and patrolmen gave _chase. Moments later San Clemente police units joined in the pursuit. The flight ended at the Camino de Estrella offramp on the San Diego Freeway when the driver pulled to the roadside and ran into the hills. The heavily laden truck contained more than 300 kilogram bricks of mari- juana. Officers said the registration of the car was trac~d to a Westminster man and agents for the U.S. customs Service took over !he investigation. The seizure of the \\'eed v.·as !he second major haul in Jess than a \li'eek at the checkpoint. Early last week a routine check for aliens in a car dipping in the rear netted several hundred pounds of marijuana and the driver "·ho was bookeC: on smugi:;ling charges. 4931·d Bridge Victin1 SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -The Golden Gate Bridge claimed its 493rd victim Sunday when an unidenillied man leaped to his death, police said. The victim was described as a white male, about 40,~ foot·7 and 130 pounds. Fron• Page 1 · POT HAUL ... nor Ash. \\'ho listed himself as an unemployed leather worker. had any con- nection "'ith the Scout facility. Officer Stewart encountered n o resistance in stopping the suspects and the truckload of green, leafy material in- dividually packed in boxes. "\Ve're just counting the bricks of it now,'' Sgt. Konkel said about 10 a.n1 .. ad· ding it appears the load is much larger than initially expected . "It looks like it might be a ton," he remarked. lie said at the current market rate of $200 per kilo or 2.2 per package. the con- traband \\'Ould be worth about $400,000 In street sa1es. F otmtain Valley Council· to Hold Tax Rate Stead y For the seventh consecutive year, Fountain Valley residents will pay a municipal tax rate of $1.15 per $100 assessed valuation. Councilmen are expecled to give their approval to that rate during their 8 p.m. meeting Tuesday in city hall. Revenues raised from the city tax rate \viii bring in an estimated $1.190,891 to fund city operations during the 1973-74 fisca l year. The tax rate consists of a $1 levy for city services and salarles and a 15-cent levy to pay for the city's retirement fund. City Manager Jim Neal explained that the $1.15 tax rate has held since 1966 when the city first adopted a 10-year budget. "The tax rate is in accordance with our statement to the taxpayers at the time our l~year budget was adopted that our property tax rate \\'Ould be maintained for ten years," he said. Lagunn(!al Wins Bike Grand Prix A 17-year-old Laguna Beach Jas!i easil swept the women's division of the lhir annual Huntington Beach Grand Pri -• bicycle race Sunday . ·; Unda Stein, third-ranked female ride~r in the U.S .. whipped around the 10-mll women's course in 26 minutes, 13. seconds for an easy victory. Prior to the race, she said she was ilfj good shape and hopes to keep workini;_ toward a 1976 Olympic G a m c ~ performance. ,. About 4,000 spectators watched mo~ than 300 registered racers plus another:, 200 unattached racers compete in eight divisions. The Grand Prix is co-sponso red by the Huntington Beach Recreation Depart· 1nent and the Orange county Wheelmen. Winners in other divisions were: -Senior BAR (Best All-around Rider). 100 kilometer main event, J\1ike Celmins of San Luis Obispo, two hours, 28 minutes, 19.5 seconds. -Junior (BAR), 25 n1iles, 58 minutes, 53.3 seconds, Paul Deem, unattached. -Senior C division, 15 miles, Lawrence Laffen, unattached. 34 minutes, 32.5 seconds. -Novice. 15 miles. Tom Quijencio. AYH Competition Club, 34 minutes, 56.4 seconds. -Intermediate, IO miles, A 11 e II Fenyves, Phoenix. 26 n1inutes, · 9.6 seconds. -Veterans. 20 miles, WI 11 i am J\1acGregor, unattached, 48 minutes, 38.8 seconds. -J\tidgets, five miles, J\fark Whitehead, unattached. 14 minutes, 18 seconds. The course \\'as run over city streets in north •luntington Beach using some ot the area's hilliest terrain. In a special mayors and councilmen race. Councilman Larry Schmit of Garden Grove \\/On, closely followed by Councilman Bernie Svalstad of Fountain Valley and Mayor Jerry Matney of Hun· tlngton Beach. Councilwoman Alice Frankievich of C)rpress was declared y,•omen 's winner in the same rnce, foUowed by Councilwoman Norma Gibbs of Huntington Beach. 'Ibe city officials' race stretched around the block, about seven-tenths of a mile. A!iimal Assisting Program Formed A group of animal lovers has form~ Animal Assistant, a volunteer organtza. lion th.at will aid animals at Huntington Beach's California Animal Con t r o I (CACJ, CAC operates tbe poWld facilities for the city, and his hoping to implement new animal welfare programs, including a low-co5t spaying and neutering clinic. Animal Asistance volWlleers, numbering only a dozen at present. plan to assist CAC l'.·ith this and other projecls. Animal assistance has already set up a lost and found service at CAC head- quarters at 8521 Edson Way. Anyone irlterested in adoptJng a pet at CAC, or volunteering to help Animal Assistance may call 536-2513. 2 Men Executed In Russia Rape MOSCOW (AP) -Two men wert shot before a firing squad and a third was sentenced to 15 years Imprisonment for the rape and murder of a young glrl in Soviet Moldavia . Sovietskaya Moldavia, the Communist party newspaer of the republic, reported the case in the Aug. 18 Issue reaching Moscow Sunday. The controlled Soviet press seldom reports lncidenU of violent crime. NOW' AT·~ 95 ·-·-11/171 Brdushe 5 Yur Ports Gdlranlff Tiit "'°'Of. pumo, llmtr, 1111tlro wattr dlt!r•bullOtl .,.. .. _ l\Httf l llCI jlulll- bul10f'!I 111 91111.ntMd for ~ rtlltl Oft modOlt SS/11'. SS/1111 111C1 551171. w. 01¥ lor 1ll)l1C.,,...,.I l1bol du••"ll tho lilt! rtll 90 DAY CASH WtfH A'PIOYID CHDtT .. ~ 1'1ADE0 IN SAii $35. HEflDQUflRTERS . Phone 548· 7788 t 1815 NEWPORT BlVD. Downtown Costa -. ... ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••. 2 Tw• oilier Pillm: lndepo Shi~ COWlt, Ca~ Carpe trip ir Mrs rour-~ today, flown coo tin has lo 'Fog the s spirit! "who ~ally The IOwnsl said, the ro The $500. I by Mr DI j HOI state lions I lonely GA~ p Ga Ive ble ac tortur Pre· of 27 Iron grade: Lack is an Sn Bli Sm< death St.,.S! Firt floor • An~ home SUDdB by Ill enter Dea of \m lress, repor 1 gc lb lb tl> pl Si lb ve ,. ' ' I " ..... ~;itt'.,,;,; NEWPORT PILOTS TAKE FIRST IN FLIGHT TO PINES Shirley Cote (left) ind Madine Carpenter Air Ra~e Won 2 Ne iv port Wome1i Beat 53 Planes Two Newport Beach women beat 53 oiber entrants Saturday in the aMual Piilms to Pines flying race t o Independence, Ore., from Santa Monica. Shirley Cote, chairman of !he Orange County 99s chapter, and M a d I n e Carpenter, wife of state Sen. Dennis E. carpenter (R·Newport Beach\ made the trip in four hours and 51 minutes. Mrs. Carpenter, co-pilot of the new. four-passenger Acrocommander J 12, said today "Jt was the best weather J've ever flown in.'' She Is a veteran of four trans. CODtinental Powder Puff Derby races and has logged over 2,000 hours fl ying time. 'Fog at Santa Monica Airport delayed tbc start, but nothing dampened the spirits of the citizens of Independence , "y.rho make this short race the fun race it ~ally is," Mrs. carpent er said. The enthusiasm of the Independence townsrolk for the women air racers, she said, makes up for the paltry purse of the four.year-old event. The top five finishers. shared a total or $500. The $200 first place money earned by Mmes. Cote and Carpenter was "only Diggers Careful enough to cover part o{ the cost of the gas," Mrs. Carpenter said. 'Ibe biggest reward is the welcome given the women when they land in Independence, she said. "The race is the biggest thing that hap- pens in Independence. They even paved the runway for us. It used to be just grass. "The Elks Club was the center of ac· livity and they brought in fresh salmon for a victory barbecue," Mrs. Carpenter said. .. And, the trophy we won is hu ge. It 's a perpetual trophy and is the biggest thing in city hall." The winning pair new a plane lent them by Mrs. Cote's husband. This is the third time Mrs. Cote has entered the Palms to Pi~ race. It was 1'1rs. Carpenter's first go oo the Oregon circuit. Another Orange Coast woman placed among the top IO. Thon Griffith of Costa Mesa piloted a plane v.'hich placed ninth. At her side was co-pilot Fran Bera of Long Beach. Beach Bird Sanctuary Slows Hunt for Bodres . HOUSTON, Tex . (AP) -Concern for a state bird sanctuary slowed the ope.ra- tions today as digging was reswned on a lonely sandy beach at the eastern tip of GAY GROUPS FEAR HOUSTON PUBLICITY-Story, P•ge S Galveston Island in the search for possi- ble additional victims of a bomoselual torture-murder ring. Previous diggings wK:Overed the bodies of 27 young men. lron rods and spaces replaced a road grader that Galveston Police Chief D.K. Lack planned to use. Lack said the area is a new sanctuar:r that bolds rare birds Smoking in Bed Blamed in Death Smoking in bed was blamed for the death of Charles Harvey, 22, of 928 Birch St., Santa Ana, Sunday. Firemen found his body lying on the floor of his smoke filled bedroom. Anthony Valenttne, 24, who shartd the home with Harvey, was awakened early Sunday by smoke and was driven back by smoke and fl ames when he tried to enter Harvey's room. - Death was apparently due to inhalation or $]11oke and gases from a burning mat- tress, the Orange County Coroner's o(fice reported. and nests and that he would not use heavy equipment unless early probing in· dicated it '.\'as necessary. One hole was dug after the Iron rod probe located a soft spot near the site \Vhere Lack said a Houston couple reported that they 5a\Y two men carrying "''hat looked like a body. Nothing was found. The Houston couple told officers they saw men resembling Dean A. Corll and Elmer Wayne Henley burying something. The case broke Aug. 8 when Henley told police he killed C.orll in self· defense. Corll allegedly wa s the leader or the ring. whiCh has been linked to the largest confirmed mass slaying in U.S. history. A grand jury indicted Henley in three ,gf the slayings. He has told police he took part in nine killi:igs. Another youth, David 0. Brooks, 18, was indicted in one slaying but has said he did not kill anyone. On Saturday officers using rods and sUcks probed a 200-yard area of the East Beach without suc<:ess. Mr. and Mrs. c. C. Abernathy or Houston told Houston Detective K.D. Porter they drove to the beach last February or March and saw two men careying a long, wrapped bundle over a sand dune. Porter said the second coople, who asked not to be idenUfled, were looking for a camp site in June. They told Porter they drove to where a white van and two cars were parked. C.orll owned a white van. •Quiet Please~ Does Work Noise Hurt Love Life? LONDON (UPI) -A member of Parliament sald he will ask the government to study a report 'by a group of West German doctors that noise at work can ruin a man's love life. Tom Torney, Labor member for South Bradlord, sald Sunday that if the West German doctors are right "then some wives could go to other men tor sexual satisfaction. Factory noise could lead to promt.culty and the breakdown of the family." Torney has tabled a question asking Social Service Secretary Sir Keith Joseph to act on the doctors' findings. 0 1 can't see, myself, how noise can put a man ore in bed, but if the doctors are right Sir Keith should launch his own medical In· vestigation," Tomey said. But his question will. ha~• to wait until the Hou~e of Commons returns from summer adjournment • • H DAILY PILOT 3 Orange Coa1st Witness To 'Summer in Reverse' Marines Still Seek 'Good Men' By ROB GARDNER TWENTY-N INE PALMS (AP) -The floor of the Mojave Desert, amid scrawny sagebrush and baked white sand, is a heck of a place to spend two weeks in August. Particularly if you are a tavern owner from Pittsburgh, Pa. Sgt. Richard Gooding. 25, and 4.000 other Marine reservists from across the country joined 5,000 Marine regulars the past two weeks for the Jargest desert training exercise in the history or the corps. Now that the draft has ended and the active duty force has been trimmed the reserves play a bigger role in the. na· lion's derense. But with no draft the reserves are find- ing it harder to reeruit new men. The reserves have reeruited only about 83 percent of their quota for the first seven months of the year. The recruitment figures fell to 70.7 percent in June and 64 .6 percent in July, according to the Marine C.orps. To attract recrujts, other services have tried to make things easier for their troops, but life in the Marines is still tough, even for weekend warriors, as reservists are known. The training exercise was named "AlkaJi Canyon-73" and was capped by a five-day mock war in which Marines split into t"'o armies., an cClggressor and a defender. During the war, the f\.1arines employed nearly every weapon. aircraft and combat vehicle in the corps' in- HILARY WRIGH T, 7, STA YS COOL IN THREE ARCH BAY But Summer Heat to Be Short Lived, Says Weatherman ventory. 72 Arrl"sted To a newsman who visited the camp one day, there didn't appear to be much of a war going on. The chief action was helicopters evacuating men who toppled in the 115-<iegree heat. The war games themselves consist of mock battles judged by scorekeepers - but mostly, the reservists said, it's a matter of sitting and waiting for some· one to tell you to do something. Bor£le1· Patrol Nabs L4lie1is in -oceanside For some, it means sitting with a small unit amid a few trucks and tanks in the sand and sun away from it all. For One of the largest ··drophouse" raids in others, it's sitting. or maybe Jying1 on the history of the U.S. Border Patrol took cots in green crowded tents bark at the place in ()('eansit!e early Sunday as im· base camp -drinking beer and waiting. migration ngents <irr ... "'tf'd 72 persons all "My wife could be sitting here on this packed into a single hcu::.~· to a"'ait their cot doing as much good as I am," said smugglers. Lance Cpl. John Holt, 26, with 3~ years· But although !hi: raid nel!C'd the large service. He is a store manager from number of illegal aliens. it did not yield Washington. O.C. fhc ringleaders of a large smuggling The Marines have refused to relax operation. said Patrol Capt. Eugene Har- their training stand ards for reservists ri s. because. as ~tarine Commandant Gen . 1·he arrest capped a busy \Yeckend at Robert E. Cushman put it, "A Marine is the palrol's San Onorrc i1n1nigration a i\1arine is a Marine. I do not desire to roadblock. where the \\'eekcnd·s total ex· develop two different kinds of Marines. ceeded 300 persons. and then try to put them in harness Oceanside and C<irlsbad. Harris said, together when the crunch comes." arc the 111ost cornmon areas for th e A Marine sergeant at the exercise drophouse system. observed . "I've been aroWlQ 19 years. Ali~n smugglers. he explained set up There's a little more tolerance but no the hou:i."'S as holding areas for car loads real change.'' of human ~·~rgo froin :\1exico. ----=------------------- Vanishitag Breed At the houses the aliens arc kept until the time appears right to smuggle them in sn1all groups past th e immigration checkpoints at San Onofre and at Temecula. alon~ 11ighway 395. Of the 72 persons awaiting shipment at the Oceanside house Sunday all but one 111ere fron1 :\lcxico. The r~aining alien \1•as fro111 El Salvador, Harris said. In recent •.\'eeks, Ylith alien activity in· creasing because of harvest time in California's fann fields, the patrol has logged ever·increasing numbers of ar· rests. Rcc£'nl raids have included forays to large farn1s "'here aliens arc employed. as well as railway yards where aliens not fortunate. enough to have auto passage have t:·ied to hop freights for the trip north. ---------------- The great bald eagle, once lord of the skies and the symbol of American freedom. Is being pu shed from the face of the earth by lhe encroachments or thoughUess men . The great bird is only one or !icorcs. of an1n1al species facing im1ninenl extinction a s n1an fills the globe. See some or the other mem· bc.n; of nature'!> n1inoritics on Page 19 toda y . Warm .Days To Give Way: To Clouds i The arrival of summ~r along th~ Orange Coast was termed "kind of a reverse trend," the National Weather Service expects will last only until Fri- day. Then, the "night and morning low clouds and fog along the coast" routine will return. ~1eanwhilc. an 1·easterly w a v e' • brought scattered thundershowers to coastal and inland Orange and Uis Angeles Counties today. The package of heat, humidity, dense clouds' and heavy raindrops in some places is caused by a flow of moist air from south of the border. \Vinds from the southeast at from five to 15 knots brought the unusual summer storminess. Winds from the southwest to west at from eight to 15 knots thls af- ternoon were expected to clear the skies. Variable cloudiness is the word for Tuesday with the emphasis expected to be "mostly sunny." A clear mild night with low tem- peratures along the Orange Coast in. the nlid to high 60s is to be followed by ~1ghs in the mid-70s tomorrow, the Nat10nal Weather Service predicts. The "reverse trend" of land-warmed air whether from inland or from Mexico is commonly called summer along the Orange COast. There hasn't been muc~ of it this year, the weatherman admits, \Vith sea--<:00led air pushing onshore much of the time. "By the end <>f the week,'' the foreeaster said," the marine air in- fluences will return." 2 Drug Arrests T1igger Battle At Rock Fest NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UP!) -Two drug arrests in a crowd of rock music fans at an outdoor Ct)llcert Sunday night set off a spree of bottle, rock and can throwing that ended with at least four policemen hurt and 20 persons arrestel. Although a number of officers and spectators were hit by the flying objects, police said only four policemen were hurt badly enough to seek medical attention. None was believed seriously injured. A police spokesman said as officers tried to lead the two youths away, sev- eral members of the audience "tried lo mob us." Between 5,000 and 6,000 per900S were at the concert, held at Riverside Race· way in Davidson County. Ra~ing Pioneer Off enhauser Buried Today Fred Offenhauser. the man who gave the lrvine-built "Offy" racing engine its name. was buried today after services in Inglewood. Offenhauser. whose engines won the Indianapolis 500 a total of 28 times, died in his sleep at his Inglewood borne Fri- day. He was 85. The four-cylinder Offy engine was created in 1934 and it soon became a standard at lndy. Offenhauser was a plant superintcn-- dent when Harry Miller went out of business in 1933. Offenhauser obtained all the plans and drawings of Miller's en- gines, reorganized the finn, ·and gave the company and the engine hls name. Offenhauser sold his interests to, Dale Drake and Louie Meyer who moved the flrm from Los Angeles to the Orange coast in 1969. Today the Offenhauser brand belongs to Drake Engineering, 17502 Daimler St., in I.he Irvine Industrial Complex . Born in Los Angeles, Offenhauser is survived by his widow. EJhel, and two brothers and three sisters. Obscenity Law Too Ob sce11e? STERLING HEIGHTS. Mich. (UPI l -The proposed obscenity ordinnnce in this Detroit suburb mRy never reach legal statu~ because some councilmen claim It's obscene. "The ordinance goes into too much detail," said Councilman Stanley Ralnko. Rainko complained t~ would-be legislation has "vivid" passages describing sexual acll It considers lbsctne in films , books and magailnes. ~ l ! ! • • • " Coup in Laos Thwarted; Top Leader Executed V!EN'I'IANE, Laos (UPI) -The Lao- Uan government announced tonight it had crushed a right.wing ploL 10 overthrow Prince Souvanna Pbowna and that the leader o4 the plot, former Brig. Gen. Thao Ma, was captured and ex- ecuted by loyal troops who shot down his plooe. A cpmmunique issued tonight im- plicated Gen. Phoumi Nosavan, the onetime army leader who seized control or Laos ln 1960 but was in tum ousted by paratroop Capt. Kong Le. who restored SOuvanna to the premiership. Those events set off such political tunnoU it took the 1961 Geneva conference to restore order -temporarily. MA WAS LONG a member of the neutralist faetioo in Laos, bltterlf anti- Communlst and sometime anti-rlgntwing as well. He struck today apparently in belief Souvanna was giving too much away to tbe Commwlist Pathet Lao in a recently completed peace agreement. He led an attempted coup tn 1966 that was almost a duplicate of the one that failed today. Skylab Ey.eballs Mexico's HOUSTON (UPI) -The Skylab 2 astronauts took another televised look at tropical storm Brenda today as they soared over the Gulf of Mexico. They reported the stonn, gaining strength off the Yucatan Peninsula, looked more cen· tralized thao it had been. Alan L. Bean and Jack R. Lousma cut into televised pictures of the SWJ being transmitted by Oweo K. Garriott from the solar observatory mounted on Skylab to view the storm for the third time. TIIE ASTRONAIITS televised the birth of the storm Saturday and watched its development Sunday. ''It's a good picture," 1.ousma said of Brenda. ''It's .somewhat at a distance, but it's quite well defmed, more so than yesterday. I think you can see the ci rcula r structure of it better today than Brenda you could at a closeup yesterday." Ground controllers said earlier tile pilots would not be able to see Brenda to- day because Skylab's ground track mov- ed 'boo far away, but it was a clear view from 400 miles as the station flew over ea.stem Mexico. ~ blew over the Yucatan Peninsula and into the Gull of Mexico to- day, beading toward the coast. Forecasters said it probably would become a burrlcaoe by aftemooo. .. 0 ALmOUGH THE ultimate landfail ls IDlcertain, tile greatest threat appears to be the coastal sectloos of Mexico between Tampico and Veracruz on Tues. day," said the National Hurricane Center. 110,000 Acres IJIN!ontrolred 80% of U.S. Firefighters Battle I 0 Fires in ·west By the Associated Press Ten fires remained out of control on more than 110,000 acres of range and forest lands in the West today as fire fighting efforts focused on Northern California near Yosemite National Park. Information officer Dick Klade of the 1nteragency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho, said the most critical fire today was the 12,000-acre Granite frre in Stanislaus Na· t.ional For~1 about three miles west of Yosemite National Park. A LARGE GRANITE ridge kept the blaze from entering the park, OOwever, and with 2,600 men on the fire lines, con~ FIRE BURNING OUT OF CONTROL-Story Page S tainment \Yas expected by 6 p.m. PDT today. The U.S. Forest Service said the fire apparently was caused by humans. Klade said the blazes in four states were being fought by 6,500 trained forest fire fighters and 2,000 support personnel, rr,ainly National Guardsmen and volunteers. He said that was 80 percent of the nation's firefighting capacity. He said 156,735 acres have been black· ened by the fires. Affected land included major big game reserVes in Montana and northern Idaho, limber in Oregm and Northern California and range lands in Oregon and Montana. THE F'lRE center gave this breakdown by states of major fires out of control, the acreage they affect and total acreage . burned: -California: four fires out of control on 26,000 acres with 42,950 acres burned. -Nevada: one on 3,000 acres: 3,150 burned. -Montana : eight on 57,000 acres; 59.350 burned. -Jdaho: l\\U on 5,000 acres; 32,285 burned. -Oregon: one on 2,200 acres; 17,650 burned. -Washington: nooe; 1,200 burned. -Wyoming: none; 150 burned. Jolm Russell, a fire center spokesman, said no deaths have been reported among firefighters. However, a U.S. Forestry Service spokesman said one man was killed In an auto accident when he fell asleep at the wheel after -king long hourli ferrying fin!ighters. Offictms said forests in southeastern Washington, northeastern Oregon and parts of northern Idaho were extremely vulnerable because of dead trees due to a tussock moth infestation. And the center said lie:htning stonns in sootbern Idaho, oorthern Ulah and west.em Montana are starting new fires. ALTHOUGH THE~ fire situation eased Sunday, control of a 6,ClOO-acre fire near La.Grande was not expected until Tuesday. The fire destroyed nine buildings Thursdav near the eastern Oregoo town of 10,000. "As I told the children, a house is just a house. We all iot out. That's what counts." said Mrs. Wesley AOen, wife or a LaGrande physician. Their 1 i..2-:vear old. S70.000 home was one of the nine builrlinn. "I looked out the door and there was a wall or flames burstinl! over the hill with the most tenible explosive roar," she said. "We all jumped in the car and bounced down the driveway; and by the time we hit the main road, the flames 'vere roaring over us. By the time we reached the edge of town, less than a mile away, we could see the house going up in flames. nREFIGHTERS in OreJt:on areas have been hampered by yellowjackets and wasps angered at being driven from their nests by the fires. A Forest Service spokesman said one man had to be evacuated from the ftrelines to a hospital in Enterprise. Ore., for treatment of yellowjacket stings, Souvanna went on the air less than seven hours after the rebels struck across the Mekong River from Thailand and 'told the nation the bid to overthrow him bad failed. The government issued a communique later tonight ooUlning the plot and bow it was foiled. The communique said : -'''That the leader of the attempted coup by Gen Thao Ma was killed by government forces after he tried to escape from the wreckage of the T28 plane be piloted. -.. ... : TAMPICO ~·: ' -THAT MA TRIED to make an emerge.ocy land1ng' when his plane was shot. He was helped away from the wreckage of the plane by his aide but was captured an~ later jailed by the government forces. -That 60 pers0ns took part in the abortive coop led by Ma, Including Col. Bounleut Sycosy and Col. P an y Phounthitsavan. 'l'l:le trio was said to be living in exile in Bangkok for number ol years. -That 14 rebels were captured alive CARl 88EAN SEA ~ JAMAICA TROPICAL STORM BRENDA HEADS WEST AT 10 MPH Gliining Strength As It Nears Mexican Coast Areas Banks Hike Rate to 9 1/2 % NEW YORK (AP) -First N&- tiooal Bank of Cblcago >umounced today that effective Tuesday it was raising Its prime rate to 9\\ per- cent, the highest In history. The move was not unexpected since lending money rernaiM in short supply. Fnmklin National Bank and Wells Fargo Bank in· creased their rates to 91h % also. Some analysts have predicted the rate may hit 10 percent or higher before beginning to level off. • Extreme Storm Leaves Yuma Witliout Poiver YUMA, Ariz. (AP) -A violent rainstorm spurred by high winds, lasl)ed the southwest corner of A r i i o n a , uprooting trees and electric poles and leaving 80 percent of the Yuma area without power. County authorities said Sonday night that the storm caused "extremely heavy to severe damage." They said law en- forcement and recue agency officials were only beginning to check on the widespread damage and it would be a while before precise estimates would be made. AN ARIZONA Public Se r v i c e SPokesman said it would take at least two or three days to restore full power. This would leave residents wituout elec· tricity during a period when weather forecasters say the temperatures will rise to a scorching 105 degfees. Authorities said at least one person was known to be injured. They said David Gerig, based at the U.S. Marine Air Station in Ywna, suffered un· determined Injuries when strong winds buffeted his camper and overturned it on Interstate 8. The gusting winds also took a heavy toll at Yuma International Airport, Where officials reported major damage to at ]east six single-engine aircraft and one UH34 helicopter. Numerous mobile homes in the Yuma area also suffered extensive damage. Spit·o Agnew Indictment 'Next Month' W ASHJNGTON (UPI) -1' i m e magazine reports that a federal grand jury. acting on reinforced allegations he received kickbacks on govenunent con· tracts. is expected to indict Vice Presi· dent Spiro T. Agnew next month. The magazine said Sunday it had learned from sources a third Maryland contractor has told the Justice Depart- ment be gave kickbacks to Agnew. The contractor was identified as Allen L Green, 49, president of a Maryland engineering fll1l1. He was rePorted to have told investigators that 'he gave kkkbacks to Agnew about five times a year while Agnew was governor o( Maryland in 1967-68 and on a reduced scale after Agnew became vice president in 1969. e Third Test PAPEETE. Tahili (AP ) -Informed sources confirmed today that the French have set off the third nuclear test of their current series, and the.re are unofficial reports that at least two more are plan- ned. French officials would not comment on rePorts that the third bomb for 1973 was exploded Sunday at Mururoa Atoll, 800 miles southeast or Tahiti. The first two bombs were exploded July 22 and July 29 at the atoll. e Doctors Strike SANTIAGO (UP!) -Thousands of physicians today began a 43-hour strike in snowballing labor unrest against President Salvador Allende's govern· ment. A trucking strike already is in its 26th day .. As the physician \Yalkout bega in in Santiago, the Chamber of Commerce said it would decide later in the day whether to join the strike. And the San- tiago Central Labor Federation, con· trolled by the Socialist president's op- position, has called for a 4S.hour strike beglnlllng Tuesday. e /lflne Resc11e Heat Hampers Firefi,ghters CASA GRANDE, Ariz. (UPI) -Rescue workers asembled portable bulkheads Sunday night and advanced 150 feet into a smoke-filled tunnel where two copper miners had been trapped deep un· derground since Friday. Richard Glover, industrial relations manager for the Hecla Mining Co. mine, said the five-man rescue teams had 450 feet to go before coming to the fire and debris that was blocking them from reaching the pair. Tliurulerstorms Stretch From Rockies to Gulf Coast • V.S. S11mmary Ftrr A~I t.kffl &eross Ttle iwtllon Wtft fN'1'9CI only by M;:atffftd thundtl"a~r •ctrvllv fodtv. Ttw 11ormt W&rl cen1ertc1 llll"OU!lh Ille IOl.lt!Mrn Pl•IN11 tlld RocilltJ, frOm Mlclll~n to the mlcldle otifo VIII.,. end tlOl'lll 1fll ttilt"' Giii! COltt tncl llW central Atl~nl!c Je~tio.rtl CO!ll'fnutd varied c;ondf!IOllS Jn "'- Norltl-t-twof'llMl'ed f!ml011t1r1-trv!no to brlnQ vnCltr control 13 !Ir" cowrll!Q ts 000 Krt1 01 r•not "'Id lofe11, 5.M'eU hlll NllOie•td 00j1Wll tnel ..... "" C'OV!l'llH In Mfdllgan •lld storrns ffml'G'td trttS In S1uo1fu(k, MIC! .. SUl'ld•v. S•ull Sle. Marie Wll w11sl'lld wllh OM Inch of r1111. Troo1e11 Storm 8""°" -1Ml'l off ti.. Gulf ~ tt Winch Ot1fll•*lt fO hurTlune ~ ot '5 mu" Pit' ticvr. Cnn•tnl ff"nth~r MOtllY WMV todly. Ll9hf v1rl1bl1 winds nlfht end momllll ~ bKom• '"" Mllll'"""' fO -· • lo 16 knotl 11' tft.moot11 IOCllY and Tutldlly. High "'" 71. eo.1111 ~.,.,,.. ,... ,,_ 65 io 11. 11181M ""'*''tura r1N1119 from '5 10 n. Wtffr t.m,..,-eturt: 1Q.. Sun, Mnon. Tide• _ .. y Second llfgh • , , , , , , , . ,, , 111:03 p)n. s.J kCond tow •• , t:OI p,M, I.I TUEso-.T l"l,._t hlfl'I .............. •iOO •.rn. 1• F1m low .... ,,,,,,., J:..011.rn. t.1 S«Ondl'lioh ........ , ... 11:32p.ll'I. S.f S«tnd ~ , ", ........ 3:21 p.rn, O.• svn ••.., •111 a.II\. kt• 7:).1 o.m. Moon lllMt 11:23 p.m. S•h l:OJ p.m . e Sergeant Held NEW YORK (UPI) -An Air Force technical sergeant was caught trying to pass secret government documents to a Soviet .agent last month, Time Magazine reported Sunday · The sergean~ who was not identified, was arrested bi New York with the agent ond is being held pending court martial. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Otllvtf'J of tht Oa111 Pilot is guaranlttd MlllU¥•llll'U1y1 If "" ff ""' ~ '"'' ,. ..... .., S;at jll,11'1 .. c•ll '"' YMr _, Wfll .. IN'Wlfll i. .,.., Clllt •A b-• lll'ltll 7,. ··'"' -.~, '"' s.May: ., ....... ~ """" c.tflt •'f I •·"'· S1hlnl1y, "' I ••"'• Sv"•l'f, Uft ..... I Cl(ll'f wl~ .. """"' .. rw. '-R• are tM'.e11 1111111 1t 1.M. Ttltphonts N11it ~-"If! C•11111r Ar-....... "'"'221 NOHllW•tl HW!lll"tltft lotcll lff Wltll'lllllO.,. , " .......... Int .... Clfm11111, c»tt1r.,.. 'IM<11, • S..11 J11111 c1,idrJ111, O•llA "91111. Jfflll L•tullol, Ll'fil/11 "'""" .... ..., ... (If iooluding the dei1uty coup leader, Col. Pany who Is now being detained at lhe military camp for lnterrogaUon. -That Col. Bowtleut and three other leading members of the coup fled to Thailand by commandeering an air force helicoptor after they learned the coup leader was captlll'ftd and one hour before the government forces re-captured the radio siaUon aod the airport. -That the government forces are completely in control In Vientiane at about midday today, and the search for -the rem¥1nlng rebell is stlll giltng on. -That according to a document cap. lured from Col Pany, Gen. Pltouml Nosavan was to make a speech over the national radio by 3 p. m. if they could hold the town until midday, and that Ibey were supposed to have add~lonal tl'OO!l'I from the Thai side. -Gen. Ma was to fly over Vientiane in order to make threats to the government, and Col. Pany was to be ln charge of the coup Information Over the radio. Col. Bounleut was to organize the ground forces. * * * * * * Cambodia Rocks In New Attacks Pf!NOM PENH (UPI) -The five-day battlefield lull that followed th e American bombing halt ended today with renewed attacks against two provincial capitals and small but bitter fights near Phnom Penh. There were indications the Communists might be starting their long· feared post-bombing offensive. Terrorist bomb .attacks killed four persons and wounded 64 In Phnom Penh on Sunday, but the report of a new terror attack this afternoon turned out to be false. POLICE TOLD newsmen who hurried to the scene that a government soldier got into an argument with the driver of a motorbike and threw a hand grenade at the man. Five persons were wounded in the blast. Communist troops. who have been avoiding fights recently, fought with government forces at Kompong Cham , Kompong Speu, Svay Hoium, Qol Leap and Sala Krours. On the battlefield, Communists stepped Films to Prove Aiidrea Doria Booty U1itouched FAIRHAVEN. Mass. (l)PI) Underwater movies will prove that treasure hunters who reached the sunken luxury liner Andrea Doria last week did not get to the millions of dollars in cash and jewels believed stashed in the purser's office, the divers said Sunday. Donald L. Rodocker, '1:1, and Chris topher DeLucchi, 22, both of San Diego, Insisted they recovered only a bot· tie of perfume. some silverware and four chafing dish tops. up their attack against the surrounded provincial capital of Kompong Cham, 50 miles northeast of Phnom Penh. · Kompong Cham is 25 miles east ot. Skoun, which was captured by the Com- munists on Aug. 12. Many of the govern- ment troops who abandoned Skoun fled to Kompong Cham. MILITARY SOURCES said the city ts surrounded by about 4,500 Communist troops. On the opposite side of Phnom Penh, about 100 government troops were at· tacked by an estimated 300 Communists near Kompoog Speu, 30 miles southwest of the capital. Military sources said neither city was in danger of railing immediately. Field reports said Communist troops were repulsed in an attack agaiMt a government position at Muk Kampou!. 10 miles north of Phnom Penh. late Sunday and early today. Military sources said three rebel regimenls totaling roughly 4,500 men have approacbed to within six miles ol. Kompoog Cham on Ibo Mekoog river 50 miles northeast of Phnom Penh. KOlllPONG CHAM: is Cambodia's thin! major city after Phnom Penh and Bat- Iambang. Its prewar population of 30,000 has swelled to double or triple that nwnber with the influx of refugees. Near Kompoog Speu, 30 mi l es southwest of the capital, a company of about 100 government troops three mlleo north of town was reported uodel' attadt by about 300 rebels led by a Hanoi·trall> ed Cambodian rebel named Qlau Sary, military sourteS aaid. Milk for Diets Ads Forbidden In FI'C Action "After the film s are shown, it'll be fairly obvious that we didn't get anything substantial," Rodocker said. "It'll show that interior and that will be self.ex- planatory." WASHINGTON (AP) -The Federal The owners of the 29,000-ton Andrea Trade Commission says It has tentatively Doria, which sank 45 miles off the accepted a con.sent order that prohibits Massachusetts coast in 1956 alter col· the American Dairy Associatioo from liding with the Swedish ship Stockholm, cl&iming tbal whole milk is low ln fat have said they still own the shi p and all and calories and is beneficial for dieters, its contents, regardless who is able to unless the amowit of calories and fat is dive and recover any valuables. disclosed. Rodocker and DeLucchi, both fonner The commission accused the dairy Navy frogmen, called off a week-long assoclaUon, headquartered in Chicago, of search of the 7()0..foot ·vessel 240 feet false and misleading advertising. below the surface of the Atlantic four The FTC said that "in many cases it is days ago. They said they had failed to not desirable" for dieters to drink reach the four safes containing the cash suJ:manUal amounts of milk. and jewels because tangled wreckage 'Ibe COMellt order does not constitute made the ship's purser's office "a death an admission by the 8890dation and its trap." . advertising agency o4 false advertising ''l was standing probably within 20 feet but amounts, nooethe~. to a cease and of where the safe should have been and desist order with the force of law. there was just oo way," Rodocker told Under it, the group is forbidden to reporters. claim that whole milk is "96 percent fat Num erous attempts to salvage the free" or misrepresent its nutritional estimated $1.1 million in cash and value . another million dollars worth of jewels, Violation of the order carries a max· sculpture and paintings have failed . imum penalty of a ~,000 fine. Mail Order Brid.e . I J. X. J\owell of Wagram, N.C .. advertised for a bride betweea the ages of 20 and ~5 bul he knew hiB 7S.year-old bride was right for him the minute she stepped oU the bus. The romantic storekeeper, himself 76, was married to Ute former Lucy Bell Hulett. I ~ • V( I ·Tl fom thlit ¢11JI tire' NC11 Tl t!ii sq., isllu • ] ] NE on a that Cam In 11 La polic Jc; F( In N~ foun1 of w and oamo All s... be II lrlal with Se• an oi Sen. as it Juo bisb: your as I ing t Ke char1 In Spece cow1 Al that cider terro cider Ae drtviJ wher miss Sa: saw tbe I "11 ing l w~re Ml ll'AVI narr1 Th car. s~ acc:ic "ti for~ Bl or Bu &i fttc Th Sold time lied -.MU Oi;ange f~!!i Today's Final N.Y. Stocks • N TEN CENTS Irvine Compariy May Not Own 3 Bay Islands By JOHN ZALLER Of 1M DtllY Pllet Slaff 'The Orange County counsel has in- formed the county Board of Supervisors that legal grounds may exist for ~allenging the Irvine Company's title to tlie three undeveloped islands in Upper Newport Bay. The opinion is based on research into tlit way Robert McFadden, a Newport l14)ach pioneer, acquired title to the istands from the state in 1897 . • Tbe county COW\Sel, in a copfidential report to Supervisors, said that McFad- den's orlglnal tlle to the island!: may have beeil faully because it failed to comply with important points of federal law. It is argued that, if McFadden's title was improper, the Irvine Company - which later bought the islands -also has questionable title. 11le crucial question rai~ by the opin· is whether the three Upper Bay islands existed in 1850. If they did, it IXOD Lashes Critics Nixon Ordered Bombing Raids From Wire Ser\•lces NEW ORLEANS. La. -President Nix· on acknowledged for the first time today that be ordered secret bombing raids in Cambodia one month after he took office In 1969. Lashing at critics of his Indochina policies, the President said in a state· Josepli, Kerinedy Fou1ul Guilty In Car Mislictp NANTUCKET, Mass. (AP) - A judge found Joseph P. Kennedy I II guilty today oC driving to endanger, fined him $100 arl(I urged him to use his "illustrous name" for better purposes. Afterwards, the yoo:ng man's uncle, Sen. Edward h1. Keotiedy (0.Mass.) said be thoughJ his nephew received a fair trial and added, "Joe will have to live with the verdict." · Seven persons were hurt Aug. 13 when an open car driven by the son of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (D-N.Y.), flipped a! it entered a highway from a side road. Judge C. George Anastos of Nantucket District Court urged Kennedy to "use your illustrous name to do a lot of good, as I know you are able. rather than hav- 1 ing to come into court like this." Kennedy pleaded innocent to the charge. In addition to his uncle the senator, spectators in the small, crowded courtroom included his mother, Elhel. 1ncnt released as he addressed the Veterans ot Foreign Wars convention here that the raids were necessary to protect Ameri can lives. He said it he faced the same decision today, he would take the same action. This r~ived applause and cheers. When he took office in January 1969, Nixon said, 40,000 North Vietnamese troops had taken over a IO.mile-wide stretch in Cambodia alongside the South Vietnamese border. "'Ibe Communists had made a mockery of the neutrality of those border regions," Nixon aald. "'11le United States wa.s under no moral obligation to respect the sham." Nixon said he ordered U.S. airpower •·employed directly and continually" CAMBODIA ROCKED IN ATTACKS-Story P1ge 4 agaWt Communist base areas in Cam- bodia and said the Cambodian govern· ment "did not object to the strikes. "Iii fact," Nixon added, "while strikes were in progreM Prince Sihanouk invited me to make a state visit to the Cam- bodian capital." The raids were never announced -a fact that has stirred recent controversy -because secrecy was necessary to save American lives, Nixon said. "Had we announced the air strikes:' Nixon said, •·the Cambodian government would have been compelled to protest: the bombing would have had to stop. and An1erican soldiers would have paid for the disclosure with their lives." Nixon said the bombing 'vas disclosed to unspecified government a n d congressional leaders. "There air strikes were not directed at the Cambodian Army or the Cambodian people." he said. "They were directed at the North Vietnamese raiders inside Cambodia. would be possible for the Irvine Company lo own them. But if the islands formed since that time, they may legally be tidelands, and hence not subject to purchase by a private individual. An Irvine Company spokesman, in· formed of the county counsel's opinion, issued the following statement: "'The county counsel's office has not provided our legal staff with a Copy of the opinion. The company, naturally, cannot comme nt on the opinion until it has been reviewed by our attorneys." The three islands have come under scrutiny by the county counsel's office because the county is currently exploring ways of bringing Upper Newport Bay, in· culding the islands, into p u b l i c ownership. The Irvine Company has said the islands are suitable for development as a \vater oriented community .. On this basis, the value of th~ islands has been set as high as $9 million. If the <.'Ounty could success£ully challenge the co1npany's ownership of the islands. their value for develop1nent would fall sharply and would affect the effort to bring the Upper Bay into public ownership. The islands are already included in a prescriptive rights suit brought by the county against th e Irvine Company for the entire upper Bay. The county counsel's new report does not n1ake the cor11pletc case for challeng- 'O•llJ" Pilft Sl•O Pltote OFFICER TOM STEWART TAKES INVENTORY OF SUSPECTED WEED TAKEN IN NEWPORT Police Say About• Ton of Alleged Marijuana Smuggled into Harbor by Boat Newport Poli~e Nab 2 Sea Scout Base Used to U1i load To1i of Marijiicu?a By ARTH UR R. VINSEL Of tltt D•itr Pilot St•lt A report by a bayfront resident that tvo"o suspicious males were unloading cargo awfully late and fast at the nearby Sea Scout Base to be, \VOrkini; on merit badges today led Newport Beach police to intercept nearly a ton or allegedly smuggled marijuana. They also arrested a pair of leather artisans who gave addresses locally and in Seattle. \Vash., after stopping their rented U-Haul van for inspecLion. Merle 0 . Ash , 27, who listed his home as 1955 Sherington Place, Newport Beach, und Kenneth D. ~1orrow, 29, Seattle. were booked into city jail on suspicion or possession of marijuana for sale. Narcotics Detective Sgt. Leo Konkel said the van had already rumbled out of the Sea Scout compoWld in the 1200 block of West Coast Highway before police could respond, Patroln1an Tom Stewart stopped the lruck at University Drive and Irvine Avenue. Neither f\.1orrow. a leather shop own£'r, .nor Ash, who listed him self as an unemployed leather worker. had any con- nection with the Scout facility . Officer Stewart encountered n o resis tance in stopping the suspects and the truckload of green, leafy material in· dividually packed in boxes. ing !he title. according to attorneys familiar with ii. But the opinion does contain the basic outline or an argument that could be ex- panded into a strong case, th e report m. dicates. "U ntil 1norc research is done. no one can be sure about how strong the case \vould be," said one source who ha s seen the confidenlial report. ''But right now the county counsel is n1orc optimistic (See BAY ISLES, Page 2) New Orleans Motorcade Rerouted NEW ORLEANS IUPI) -A pesslble plot to assassinate President Nixon dur· ing a New Orleans visit today was dis- closed by the Secret Service, forcing a presidential motorcade off the city's famed CanaJ Street. A former policeman who tried to throw a burning nag on Nixon's car Lhree years ago was sought. Four other persons re- portedly were under surveillance. Nixon \\'as infonned of the possible plot Sunday night. He would not be dig. suaded from making bis New Orlean visit but agreed to the Secret Service's "strong recommendation" to change the motor· cade route. The Secret Service ordered the a?Te9t of Edwin Michael Gaudet Jr .1 30, who was dismised from the police force near- ly six years ago. Police said Gaudet had a lengthy arrest record , shqwed "radical tendencies" and was believed "armed and extremely dangerous." At mid-day, police said "at this time ""·e have not, nor has anyone else, re- lated Gaudet to any series ol events. He may be as innocent as the driven snow." Secret Service spokesman Jack Warner announced in Washington that "we have a lookout" for Gaudet. nicknamed "Punchy." But, Warner said "J wouldn't draw an inference that the two (the re- ported assassination and the lookout) are connected at this time." \Varncr's announcement came as Nix· on flew from Key Biscayne, Fla, to New Orleans to address the national con- vention of the Veterans or Foreign. Wars at the Rivergate Auditorium. From here, he departed for San Clemente. The presidential motorcade w a s sv.•itched to a new route and security along the way and at the Rivcrgate was extremely tight. After the Secret S c r v i c c an· nouncement. the FBI in Washington com- mented : "1t's a very real threat and we do have agents on the case." A patrolman, William Carlton, testified that be talked to Kennedy alter the ac- cident, adding: "During , the in- terrogation, he (Kennedy) said the ac· cl dent was entirely his fault." According to witnesses, Kennedy was drtving along a seldom·Jsed side toad when he pulled onto a main road, barely mlsslng an oncoming car .. McGovern Watching Told "\Ve're just counting the bricks of it now ," Sgt. Konkel said about IO a.m .. ad· ding it appears the load is much larger than initially expected. "It looks like it might be a ton," he remarked. But. a New Orleans police department spokesman said he could not agree with the Secret Service or FBJ. Asked to further explain, Sgt. Frank Hayward of the police in£ormation office said: "I can 't. I don't know. I've talked to the FBJ people here and they made it very clear that they don't have evidence of conspiracy. They just wanted Gaudet picked up because of his radical ten· dencies." Sapra Peterson, a bus driver, said she saw Kennedy's vehicle moments betore the accident. "It looked llke there were people hang- ing .all over the top or the Jeep. Some ~re standJng," sh ) said. Mrs. Peterson said the vehicle was lrRveling 35 or 40 miles an hour on the narrow, bumpy road. The vehicle is a four-wheel drive, open car. She said that when she came upon the ~ accident she spoke to Kennedy. "Re said that be was lot:8llf to blame tor the accident and that flObOClY else was (See KEN!ijl!!Y. Pas• I) • BOAT SELLS FAST ON FIRST CALL Bu•y people jwt !eve Dally Pilet clas· sifted wanl ads. Leek at lhls: SABOT No. 2042. Completely rnlinlshed + oars. $200. (Phone No.) This ad rea!ly werkcd fast! The boat IQ)d on the first call. I( you're busy, save time and money with Dally Pilet classi- llcd advtrllsing. The dlrecl line - MWS'll. Newport's Clioti11er Recou1its Campaig1i Activities By L. PETER KRIEG Of lllt D•llY Piiot Si.ft President Nixon's political a i de s received as many as three or four reports a day on the Activities or Senator George h1cGovem during the 1972 Presidential campaign, a N!~on political advisor confirmed today . Murray M. Chotlner, who is staying at the Balboa Bay Club in Newport Beach oa a working vacation, said he saw nothing wrong with paying a reporter $t,OOO-a week to "keep labs on McGovern." Chotiner said he didn't call II "spying" because the reporter, Mrs. Luclaooe CUmmings Goldberg ol New York. would provide lnfonnation generally available to anyone follo"'·ing McOovern. Chotincr sald the employment of a reporter to follow McCovem wouJd not have been necessary if the newspapers and other media woul.d have reporte<i every single thing that OOClll'red durlltJ the campaign. "Bui we lcnew that Is Impossible and we needed to have more detalled ln- formation 1" Chotiner said. _ Chotlner also said the Democrats aimllarly received daJJy infonnatlon on President Nixon's campaign. He sak:I he did not know if there were any reporters on the McGovern payroll . "But he had his 'friendly reporters' too," Chotiner said. Chotiner is as former Newport Beach attorney. Chotiner in an interview this morning. denied allegations by a Washingto n newspaper that htrs. Goldberg was sup- posed to be compiling a sordid dossier on everyone traveling with McGovern. "We were not interested in the personal habits ol the people or how they behaved on airplanes," CboUner said . "They weren't nmnlng for President." He said Mrs. Goldberg was a free lance repcnm who obtained press credentials because she wes planning to wrlte a book. "She would call my office as often as three to four times a day to fill us in on the size of the crowds, their reaction and . whal he (McGovern) was saying," Cboliner .. Id, "She would also interview ·people along the way/' he said. ChoUner said there is "ne question that reports on President Nimn's activities 'floaled '"'"md' to-McGovern ." Chotlner also denied reports that Pre~i· IS.. CllOTINER, Poge II • ·~ ~l!ltt KEPT TABS ON McGOVERN Nixon Adw lHr Chotiner ' He said at the current market rate of (See POT JIAUL, Page !) 4 Hi gh Schools Begin Sig11ups For Fall Months Registration began today at the _f~ur high schools o{ the Newport·Mesa Uruhed School District. Students new to the district ma y register for the fall semesler-through Frida.y at each one of the campuses. The hours are from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. New eJementary and middle school students (kindergarten through eighth grade) will register at Lheir neighborhood schools between 9 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Aug. 'l1 through Aug. 3L Children enrolling in Newport-~tesa kindergartens must be Jive years old prior 10 Dec. 2, 1973. Parents should present written documentnUon of age at the time 0£ registration. AllllO required for kinder gar t e n r glstratlon are proor or immunization against diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough. measles and polio. Parents who fire not su re which school th,ir child should atttnd may call the district's attendance office . 64ft..l 100. .. School begins Sept 11. • I Police records showed Gaudet burned a U.S. flag and tried to throw it on Nixon's (See CONSPIRACY, Page 21 Orange Coast Weather It 'll be slightly cooler Tuesday- but still sUMy for a change along the Orange coast. Hi ghs at the beaches in the mid-7Qs rising to the low 90s inland. Overnight lows in the 60s. INSIDE TODA l' Only two n1illion. of the 100 milLioti species of ani111als that have roa med the ear!/~ tllrough his'rory still surt1ii·e 011d n1any of those C1re fac l110 exti11ctiu11. See and read about thcni ou Paue 19. l .M, 9ofll l ISOIHM 11 C1llt0tlll• S Cl.lttlllt'CI 11·11 C.,,.,lc• M Crntwo"9 H 011111 Mttlcn '' Elll1rlll '"• ' E11ttrt1lnmm1 11·11 ,llllMI 1 .. 11 If•• !flt tttc•• l , ' ... _.... u An" LlllCltr• 11 M1vln ll·tt N1!1t111I Htwt 4 ~Orlftff C"'""' I Sylvl• ~lf'tar 10 ''""'' ••·11 II~ M•rllth 1•11 tt1~1.-.. IJ tllHlll"l ll.n WMfll.tf 4 Wfnoltft't Htwt IJ.U Warllll Newt • ) • I ~AILY PILOT N UPI TllHl'IOIO GUILTY, FINED $100 Rec kless Driver Kennedy FromP~el KENN EDY ... to blame," she said. Robert ?ifooney. the town prosecutor. SLid the maximum penalty was t\\·o years in jail and a $200 fine . "I wish this had happened some"·here else." ~1ooney said Sunday. "We don't need this kind of publicity. "We're trying to treat it as a routine case. But unfortunately. nothing is routine with that name in it." The accident left Pamela Kelly. 19, Centerville, Mass., partially paralyzed v.~th a fractured spine and broken leg. ?\1iss Kelly was described in fair con- dition Sunday at Cape Cod Hospital in .Hvannis, Mass. But doctors said it was still too soon to determine whether the girl would be able to walk again. Less seriously injured were Kennedy; his brother, Uavid, 18; May Schlaff, 22, Grosse Point, Mich.: Patricia Powers, 18, Spring Lake, N.J.; Francesca de Onis, 19, of Centerville. Mass.; and Miss Kelly 's sister, Kim , 17. W oma1i Learns Wliy Her Plant W ortli So M ucli BOSTON (AP) -A South Boston mother has told police she was puzzled by two young men who knocked on her door, said they admired the four-foot plant in the window and offered $5 for it. She told police that she refused because her 8-year-old son had given it to her for Molher's Day, after finding it in the neighborhood. The young men upped their offer to $20. She again refused. They asked her for a fe\V "cuttings," and she refused. When they left, she took the plant to the district police station, \\"here Capt. John Bradley told her she had been growing a marijuana plant. ·'Impeachment' Threat to Nixon WASHINGTON (U PI ) -Sen . George S. McGovern says that ii President Nixon defies a court order to release tapes o[ h is Watergate-related conversations Congress \\'ill "ha ve no other recourse" but to consider impeachm ent. McGovern said Sunday he believed it \\'as "premature" for anyone in Congress to be advocating impeachment at thi s time. "But. . .if the President remains stead- fast in his refu sal to turn over the tapes. even if the courts hold that he has an obligation to do so. then the Congress will have no other recourse except to gi ve serious consideration to impeachment," he added. { o aANGI COAST " DAILY PILOT Tlll .Orlrllll Coll! DAILY PILOT, wllll Wl'lkll 11 comlllnld !~t N1,..1.Prtts, 11 w11tl"'ed tir 1111 Or•llOI (0&11 Put1l1111lng com~y. St~· rtle tdlHont ••• 11utlli1hed, MOndlV tllrowgtl Frld1y, tor COii• M1 .. , f1twi:-11 Be•ch. Hvnll119ton f11.ct1/Foun•1I" Vtllty, L11gun1 flHcl'I. lrvl.,.1$'6cl1Rlcil '1'td Stn Cl1mente/ $1n Ju1n Ct11lltr11111 A &Ingle r119lon1I e.Jl!lon 11 p~b!htlld S.!urlltVI 1M Sund1y1. Th• Pflntl~I pUtlll1hl119 1111nt 11 11 JlO Wn1 fllY $!rift, Cllill M111, C1lilornlt , tHM. Rob•rl N. Wetcl P1ttldtnt ll\CI PU(lhll\lf' J•ck R. c.,,r,., Vk l l'rn ld..,I •nil Gtntrll MIMOtf' Thom11 K•1~a Ealtor Thom11 /II, Murphint M•Mtlnll Ellnor l . ''*'' Krlt9 NIWWI ••tc11 Cnv lll!tor H..,.,. .._.. Offlco JJJJ N1wpo'f loul e~tul M11/l11t Acl.lr11u 1'.0 . lor lt75. •Z66J OTtt.r Offk" CHI• Mtu: Uil Wtll ••v Su tt• L.'O\IM IHCh: 122 l'orttl A\'lt'I..,. 1111"'11~ lttcfl: 11111 lttch Soult~•rd """ Cl-II; IOJ Nori~ El Cimino 11: .. 1 , .. .,.... (7141 642-4JJ' c....,.., • ...., ..... 642·5671 (lffl'ltfll. 1'11. Or-t• Cot11 P\lbllllifrlO """°'"'· N1 M9lt tlltlt., U!ul'!rtrloru • .. l,..,lol 1Ntl9f' tt .-..~'"""'"""" lltttlft -r tol ,..,..lretlll wlltlolll •lflttle1 IMf· fllb1IM ti tOOYtltftl -· ' &tcitl'llll C.ltN _, ... •Ill '' CRll Mn.I, c1r1ttntio. JllbKJi.tloll .,. wri.r n.u _._iy, w INR u.u """"""tu mn".,,. lhf!MI.... ta... """91/r • Monday, Au9v1l 20, }q73 . Skylab T1•011bles Space 'Plumbers' Search for Leaks SPACE CENTER, tlouston (AP) -electronic equipment. tie looked for 1\vo Skylab 2 astronauts turned plumbers tOOay and searched for leaks in two systems in their orbiting space station. \Related story, Page 4) Neither a pre ssure leak in a unit lhat removes humidity from the cabin nor a fluid leak Irr an air-conditioning system is serious. But Alan L. Bean, Dr. Owen K. Garriott and Jack L. Lousma would like to fix them. Bean concentrated on the humidity system which has been a nagging protr lem since their arrival in the lab 24 days ago. The astronauts have main- tained pressure and kept the system functioning properly by servicing it dally . They would like to eliminate the time- coosuming servicing. .Bean ~ressurized the lines and tubing \Vlth nitrogen gas and, using a stethoscope, listened for the hissing sound or . escaping gas at various connecling points. lie also rubbed a soapy lather over several points. A bubbling of the lather would indicate a leak. Lousma removed wall panels in the laboratory to try _.., locate a leak in the system that cools the cabin and some discoloration of tape wrapped around coolant lines. Mission Control detected a small, gradual loss of cool ant two \\'eeks ago. Jf it continues, the fluid Y"lll be gone in about 10 days. There is a backup systen1 sufficient for the rest of Skylab 2's 59-day n1ission and for the t\1:0-month Skylab 3 flight set to start Nov. 9. The astronauts today also conducted solar astronomy, photographic, science and medical experiments. During the morning, Bean photograph- ed a plain high in the Peruvian Andes mountains appropriately named the .. Airfield or Ancient Astronauts ... He aimed his camera at the Plains of Nazca, a narrow strip 37 miles long by one mile wide about 300 miles southeast of Lima . The plains consist of many criss-cross patterns, with the most prom- inent feature resembling an airfieJd. ~1ission Control said there are seve ral 100-foot-tall objects in the plain and historians long have questioned their origin. One large figure is thoughl to represent a spider or an octopus. FromP~el UPPER BAY ISLES ... than pessimistic that, it a court challenge were made, it could be suc- cessful." 'Ibe county counsel's opm1on was transmitted to the supervisors about three months ago. It has not been discussed i:ublicly. However Supervisor Robert Battin, in a July 26 letter to the Field Committee, wrote : "I will be recommending to the Board of Supervisors that we immediately file suit to establish title to the islands." Battin's office today confinned that the county counsel opinion has influenced his d~ision to urge the supervisors to file suit. There was no indication, however, "'hen the matter would come before the board in open session. 11le Irvine Company bases its title to the islands on the federal Swamp and Overflowed Lands Act. It provided that any swamp lands in existence in 1850, the year the Jaw was passed, could be sold by the state to private owners. The key point raised in the county counsel opinion is: Were the three bay islands in existence in 1850? The Irvine Company has admitted that the first map that suggests existence of the islands is an 1875 survey of the Upper Bay charting hazards to navigation. That map clearly shows the ootlines of the islands. But the 1875 navigation map does not say whether they are true islands or simply underwater sandbars. The first map defmitely showing the islands is an 1890 map prepared by the U.S. Geodetic Survey team. It desc ribes the islands as marsh islands. and hence probably eligible for sale. if they had been in existence since 1850. The Irvine Company has argued that the 1890 map Is the first.sur::vey that ever had any reason to check for the existence of the islands. There is also a body or evidence sug- gesting that the islands did not exist in 1850. One element is an 1858 survey done for Ghost Ship? the original U.S. grant of lhe Irvine Ranch. 1bat map, on file in the county · courthouse, shows the eiistence of some lower bay islands, but gives no hint or the three Upper Bay islands. The Irvine Company explains the omission by arguing that the surveyor in the 1858 study bad no interest in the offshore islands, since he was charged only with detennining the boundaries of the upland ranch area. These maps alone constitute a major part of the case. There is also a body of scientific data that suggest5 the three Upper Bay islands, as well as most islands in the Lower Bay, did not exist in 1850. A 1958 study by Robert E. Stevenson and K.O . Emory suggests that the islands did not come into existence until some time after 1861, when the Santa Ana River formed the major portion of the Balboa Peninsula. From 1861 to 1920, the river emptied into Newport Bay and flowed out to sea near the present harbor entrance. During that time, major sUting took place in the bay, and the scientists argue that is pro~ ably forced the Upper Bay Islands. "The value of that study to the coun- ty," said a coun ty ofClcial, "is that it is a truly independent study. It was done in 1958, before ownership of the islands was an issue." The county counsel's opinion does say clearly that, at present, there is no preponderance of evidence on either side of the question. "It "·ou]d be nice if someone had an aerial photo of the bay from about 18.50."' said an official. "Then \\'e would kno'v for sure whether the islands existed or not." lf the county were to sue for title, of- ficials have tentatively estimated it would cost several hundred thousand dollars to secure the expert research necessary to make the case. The Irvine Company might make similar outlays trying to prove its case. This. Hobie Cat sallin~ alo.ng a Newport HarbOr channel seems lo be making Jhe most of its nme lives, even without a skipper or crew. Actually, !hey are underneath lhe craft, having righted il alter a spill. 0•11¥' l'Jlot Sti tt l'l!tlt' f'rona Pqe 1 CONSPIRA CY • • car during 1.1 New Orlcnns visit Oct. 31 , 1970. Gaudet was charged with attempted desecration of the American flag and given a suspended scntc11ce. A report that "at least four persont will be kept under constant surveillance whJle 'The ~1an • is here" Y.'ll5 published in the New Orl~uns Tlmes-Picaywie suit day . Columnist Clti~Cncc Doucet sai<ti however. the report "cannot be COO• firmed." 1'he poss ible conspiracy '\'as believed linked to the 1heft ol a car owned by New Orleans Police Superintendent Claren Giarrusso and a unifor1n belonging -lo patrolman Bennet! Lacour. Doth Giar- russo and l.acour live in Algiers, La'. across the Miss issippi Riv er from Nr'A' Orleans. Crowds were three dee .. along New Orleans· broad Canal Street an bout"' before Nixon's arrival, with clusters up to six deep near the Rivergate. uge "·bite canvas banners were er ed along Canal Street, saying "New rleans I.Aves You'" and "The Home he Saints Says, Hi ." Nixon didn 't ge u chance to sec the signs. Arter ag s closely inspected his limousine, the presidential niotorcade sped from the airport to the convention center along U.S. 67. then Interstate Ill and directly to the Rivergate near the Mississippi River. Cars loaded \Vith Secret Service and FBI agents, plus pol.ice on motorcyc les moved quickly in advance of_ the lnotorcade. They c~ked suspicious: looking residents ranging from picnickers to a long-haired tattooed youth . THIS IS CRAFT ALLEGED TRAFFICKERS LEFT BEHIND From Ship to Shore at Newport's S.• Scout Base A young black man , dressed in an African print dashiki, was arrested in a French Quarter hotel a half d<nen block1. · from the Rivergate. Police said the youth \\'anted to shake hands with Nixon and , refused lo move oo when ordered. 600 P oun.ds Pot Seized; Smuggler Craslies Border A marijuana smuggler sped through the San Onofre Border Patrol Checkpoint over the weekend and led immigration officers and San Clemente police on a freeway chase before ditching his car and fleeing on foot He left 600 pounds of the illicit .weed behind. Patrolmen said the incident -in· creasingly conunon at the checkpoint - took place at dusk Saturday. The car, they said, was being driven by a male and it did not stop despite signals from patrolme... at the roadblock. Instead, the driver sped away and patrolmen gave chase. Moments later San Clemente {K>lice units joined in the pursuit. The flight ended al lhe Camino de Estrella offramp on the San Diego Freeway when the driver pulled to the roadside and ran into the hills. The heavily laden truck contained more than 300 kilogram bricks of mari- juana. Officers said the registration of the car "'as tracl!d to a Westminster man and agents for the U.S. Customs Service took over the investigation. The seizure or the weed v.·as the second niajor haul in less than a v.·eek at the checkpoint. Early last week a routine check for aliens in a car dipping in the rear netted several hundred pounds of marijuana and the driver who was bookCC: on smum;ling charges. 493rd Bridge Victim SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The Golden Gate Bridge claimed its 493rd victim Sunday when an unidentified man leaped to his death , police said . The victim was described as a white male , about 40,5- foot-7 and 130 pounds. FromPqel POT HAUL ... $200 per kilo or 2.2 per package, the con- lraband would be worUt about $400,000 in street sales. Investigators theorized the alleged smugglers. "1io abandoned their rented. 26' cabin cruiser. selected the Sea Scout Base because it was convenient. deserted at that hour and hardly a suspected smugglers' landing. Police did not specify whether they had information on where the shipment was destined for deli very. A representative of the U.S. Bureau or Narcotics and Dangeroos Drugs (BNDDl was dispatched to assist in the impound and inventory operation today. Authorities said they would present the case to the Orange County District Attorney's Office for criminal complaints and prosecution on a local basis. 2 Men Executed In Russia Rape ~10SCOW (AP) -Two men were shot before a firing squad and a third was sentenced to 15 years imprisonment for lhe rape and murder of a young girl in Soviet Moldavia. Sovietskaya ~1oldavia, the Communist party ne'.'·spaer of the republic, reported the case in the Aug. 18 issue reaching ~1oscow Sunday. 'nle controlled Soviet press seldom reports incidents of violent crime. Two Workmen Killed Front Pfffle 1 CHOTINER. • • dent Nixon spied on Vice President Spiro T. Agnew during the compaign. Chotiner, who said he does not meet or confer \\'ilh the President on a regular basis any more, said he was a volunteer during the I9n campaign and received only e:.:penses. He said he was in charge of voters rights and ballot security for the cam- paign. a matter which he said vitally concerned the President after alleged voting irregularities in 1960. Chotine.r also denied he had any part. or any before-the-fact kno'A·ledge of the Watergate ~reak-in. "The first I knew of Watergate was1 v.·hen I read It In the newspapers," he'" said. "And I know this sounds funny but wben. l 1firs t read of it, I thought i t was an attempt by the Democrats to check out (Democratic National Chairman La"Tence) O'Brien to make sure he was being neutral," Chotiner said. ''There were a lot of Democrats 'vho figured he was leaning toward (U.S. Senator Edward) Kennedy." Choliner said he couldn't understand \\·hat tbe Republicans expected to team about the Democratic stategy before their conventioo was held. Clioosy Burglar Nabs Nude Shots HARTFORD, Conn. (UPI! -A burglar broke into a movie theater here and stole PJERCE, Fla. (AP) _ A "tidal wave all the nude scnes from an X·rated film , "I ,001 Danish Delights." ol phosphoric acid" killed two workmen James Wgncr, manager of the Rivoli \Vhen a 32-foot-hlgh tank containing 1,800 Theater. said the burglar went through tons of the chemical ruptured SUnday the reels of film. tearing out sections. and collapsed. Police said 15 other "He was apparently interested in the workmen at the Agrico Chemical Co. nude scenes," \Vagner said. complex escaped injury by three firemen The intruder finally tripped a burglar were burned by the acid while at-alarm and left some or his booty in a - tempting to recover the bodies. parking lot as he fled . ~~~~~~~~~~~~- • NOW AT • 95 ··-MMol U /171 bdutl .. &Yarl'lrt1Guarlntee TN mo1111, pump, tlmlf, .. life wttof Oi1trtbul10n trttttn. llffll• tlid pu.,,_ bull()tl• ,,. 11u1r11'J!Md lot I yMl't Oii lllOOtl1 SS/ttt. S$1111 I tlid 5$1111. wt Pt1 for r•litCttMftl 11oor filrlnl! tho l\rtt yW. 90 DAY CASH WITH .,,IOYID CllDtT Pllane 548· 7788 HEADQUARTERS. 1815 NEWPORT Bl YD. DawntDWll Costa Miu . ' ........................................................... • . Or._ge_C~!!t Today's Final N.Y . Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 232, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES c TEN CENTS Irvine Company May Not Own 3· Ray Islands By JOHN ZALLER tu !I'll Giill.,. l"l~t S1111 · The Orange County caunsel has in- formed the cOunty Board of Supervisors that legal grounds may exist for challenging the Irvine company's title to the three undeveloped islands in Upper Newpcirt Bay. · The opinion is based on research into the way Robert McFadden. a Newport Beach piontoer, acquired title to the islands from the state in 1897 . • The county counsel, in a confidential report to Supervisors, said that McFad- den's original title to the islands may have been faulty because it failed to comply with important points of federal law. It is argued that, if McFadden's title was impro~r, the Irvine Company - which later OOught the islands -also has ques~ionable ~lie. , The crucial question raised by the opin- is whether the three Upper Bay islands existed in 1850. rr they did, it lXOll Laslaes Critics Nixon Ordered Bombing Raids From Wire Services NEW ORLEANS, La. -President Nix· on acknowledged for the first time today that be ordered secret bombing raids in Cambodia one month after he took office in 1969. Lashing at critics of his Indochina policies, lhe President said in a state· 'Fact' Packages To Be W eig lied Ori Open S pace Costa Mesa city councilmen will al· tempt to decide just who has the real facts on the upcoming open space bond election tonight. On the 6:30 p.m. agenda is a "fact" sheet being circulated about the $4 million issue by former councilman \Villiam St. Clair. .st . Clair's "facts" are used to support the contention that the bond proposal is "extravagant" and that Costa Mesa prop- erty owners cannot afford it. A second "fact" sheet circulated by the pnrbond forces argues that open space is rapidly dwindling and that Costa Mesa cannot afford not to be without open space. Aboot the only facts not being disputed are that the election will be held Sept. 11 and that the bod package will include about 70 acres of w1developed land. These are: -10 acres adjacent to the Fairview Regional Park site. -20 acres across from Estancia High School. ment released as he addressed the Veterans of Foreign Wars convention here that the raids were necessary to protect American lives. He said if he faced the same decision today, he would take the same action. This received applause and cheers. When he took office in January 1969, Nixon said. 4-0.000 North Vietnamese troops had taken over a 10.mile-widc stretch in Cambodia alongside the South Vietnamese border. "The Communists had made a mockery of the neutrality or those border regions," Nixon said. "The United States was under no moral obligation to respect the· sham.'' · ' Nixon said he ordered U.S. airpower "en1ployed •directly and continually" CAMBOOIA ROCKED IN ATTACKS-Story Page 4 against Communist base areas in Can1· bodia and said the Cambodian govern· nlent "did not object to the strikes. "In fact," Nixon added, "while strikes were in progress Prince Sihanouk invited me to make a state visit to the Cam· bodian capital." The raids were never announced -a fact that has stirred recent controversy -because secrecy was necessary to save Ame1·ican lives , Nixon said. "Had we announced the air strikes," Nixon said, "the Cambodian government would have been compelled to protest; the bombing would have had to stop. and American soldiers would have paid for the disclosure with their lives." Nixon said the bombing was disclosed to unspecified government a n d congressional leaders. "There air strikes were not directed at the Cambodian Army or the Cambodian people." he said. "They were directed at the North Vietnamese raiders inside Cambodia." would be possible for the Irvine Company to own them, But if the islands formed since that time, they may legally be tidelands, and hence not subject to purchase by a private individual . An livine Company spokesman, in- formed of the county counsel's opinion, issued the following statement; "The county counsel's office has not provided our legal staff with a copy of the opinion. The company, naturally, cannot comment on the opinion until it has been reviewed by our attorneys." The three islands have come under scrutiny by the county counsel's office because the county is currently exploring wrty~ of brinJin~ Upper N~wport Bay, ~n· culd1ng the islands, mto p· u b 11 c ownership. The Irvine Company bas said the islands are suitable for development as a water oriented community. On this basis, the value of the islands has been set as high as $9 million. t 1£ the county could successfully challenge lhe company's ownership of the islands, their value for development \Vould fall sharply and would a(fect the effort to bring the Upper Bay into public ownershi p. The islands are already included in a prescriptive rights suit brought by the county agains t the lr\'ine Co1npa ny for the entire upper Bay. The county counsers DC\V repo rt does not make the complete case for challeng- 0.llY• '"" Sltff 'llolo OFFICER TOM STEWART TAKES INVENTORY OF SUSPECTED WEED TAKEN IN NEWPORT Police Say About a Ton of Alleged Ma rijuana Smuggled into H;rirbor by Boat Newport Poli~e Nab 2 Sea Scout Base Us ed to U1iload Ton, of Marijuaria By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 ltlo Dolly Piiot $!off A report by a bayfront resident that two suspicious males were unloading cargo awfully late and fast at the nearby Sea Scout Base to be workin& on merit badges today led Newport Beach police to intercept nearly a ton of alleged ly smuggled marijuana. , They also arrested a pair of leather artisans who gave addresses locally and in Seattle, Wash., after stopping their rented U-Haul van for lrispection. Merle D. Ash, 27, who listed his home as 1955 Sherington Place, Newport Beach, and Kenneth D. Morrow , 29, Seattle, were booked into city jail on suspicion of possession of marijuana for sale. Narcotics Detective Sgt. Leo Konkel said the van had already rumbled out or the Sea Scout compound in the 1200 block of West Coast Higb\\•ay before police could respond. Patrolman Tom Stewart stopped the truck at University Drive and Irvine Avenue. Neither Morrow, a leather shop owner, nor Ash, who listed himself as an unemployed leather worker, had any coo· nection with the Scout facility. Officer Stewart encountered n o resistance in stopping the suspects and the truckload of green, leafy material in· dividually packed in boxes. -10 acres north of the San Diego Freeway between Bear Street and Fairview Road . -Five acres adjacent to Tanag~r Park. McGovern Watching Told ·'We're just counting the bricks of it now," Sgt. Konkel said about 10 a.m., ad· ding it appears the load is much larger th an initially expected. "It looks like it might" be a ton," he remarkt:l(i. -Six a-cres in park zone 3, -east of Newport Boulevard. -15.5 acres in Park 7.one 1. in southwest Costa Mesa. -Three acres in Park Zone 6, in northeast Costa Mesa. ' The proposal will be listed on t~~ ~allot in two parts. One is for the acqu1s1hon of the property in the amount or $2,~.ooo and the other for development 1n ~c amoWlt of $1,308,000. The total sought ts , $3,910,000. ·1 ·Other business facing the counc1 tonight inclu~es a J?Clition from .122 Tanager Drive residents f o r 1m· provements on their street, setting ~he official municipal tax rate. the ad~ption of a new policy concerning the closing or streets. BOAT SE LLS FAST ON FIRS T CA.LL Busy people just love Daily Piiot clas· slfled want ads. Look al this: SABCYI' No. 2042. Comple\ely refinished + oars. t2@. (Phone No.) This ad "'ally wor~ed fast! The bOat ~ld oo the first call . II you're busy, save t lmc and money with Dally PUot clas!i· !led advertising. The dirci:t line - 642oM'l8. Ne·wport's Chotirier R ecounts Campaigri Activities By L. PETER KRIEG 01 !tit Dalty Pllet Stoll Presi dent .Nixon's political a ide s received as many as three or four reports a day on the activities of Senator George McGovern during the 1972 Presidential campaign, a Nixon politicaJ advisor confinned today. Murray M. Chotine.r, who is staying at the Balboa Bay Club in Newport Beach on a working vacation. said he saw nothing wrong with paying a reporter Sl,000 a week to "keep tabs on McGovern." Chotiner said he didn 't call it "spying" because the reporter, Mrs. Luciannc Cummings Goldberg of New York, would provide information generally available to anyone following McGovern-:- Chotlncr said the employment or a reporter to f~ow McGovern would not have been necessary If the newspapers and other media woold have reported every single thing that ocairred during the campaign. "But we knew that is impo!slble and we needed to have more detailed in· formation," Choliner satd. Chotiner also said the Democrats similarly received daily inlorma1lon on Pmldant Nixon's campaign. He said he ' did not know if there were any reporters on the McGovern payroll. "But he had his 'friendly reporters' too ." Chotiner said. ' Chotlner is as former Newport Beach attorney. Chotiner in an interview this morning. denied allegations by a Washington newspaper that Mrs. Goldberg was sup.- posed to be compiling a sordid dossier on everyone traveling with McGovern. "We were not interested in the personal habits or the people or how they behaved on airplanes," Chotiner said. ·iThey weren't running for President." He said Mrs. Goldberg was a free Janee reporter who obtained press credentials because she was plaruiing to wr1 e a Ok-:-- "Sbe would call my office as oUcn as three to four times a day to fill us in on the size or the crowds, theJr reaction and what be (McGoven1) was' saying," Chotiner s&id. ushe would alao jn~rview people along u.. wai." be 981J1. · - Chotlner said there is "no questi .;, that reports on President Nixon 's activities •noated around} to McGovern." Chollner also denied reports that Prc.si- (Ste CUOTINE~. ra1• %) Alt l'llO!O KEPT TABS ON McGOVER N Nixon Adviser Chotlner He sai d at the cu rrent market rate ·or !See POT HAUL, Page%) 4 High S~hools Begin Si gnups For Fall Months Registration began today at the four high schools of the Newport·Mesa Unified School District. Students ne~ to the district may regis ter for the fall semester through Fritfay at each one of the campuses. The hours are from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. New elementary and middle school students (kindergarten through eighth grade) will register at their neighborhood school$ betwee.n 9 a,m. and 3:30 p.m. ug~27 through Aug. 31. Children enrolling in Newport.l\1csa kindergartens must be five years old prior to De<:. 2, 1973. Jlarents should present written documentation of age at the time of registration . Also required for kindergarten registration -arc proof of immunir.ttlon against diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, measles and polio. Parents who arc not sure which school their -child should attend may call the district's atteode~ce office. 645-ltOO. School· begins Sept. II. ' ing the title, according to attorneys fa1niliar v.·ith it. But the opinion docs contain the basic outl ine of an argun1enl that could be ex· panded into a strong case, the report in- dicates. "Until rnore research is done. no one can be sure about hov,i strong the case \\'OU!d be." said one source who has seen the confidential report. "But right no\v the county counsel is more opti1nistic 'See BAY ISLES, Page 21 New Orleans Motorcade Re1·outed NEW ORLEANS (UPO -A poa!ble plot to assassinate President Nixon dur~ ing a New Orleans visit today was dis- closed by the Secret Service, forcing a presidential motorcade off the city's famed Canal Street. A former policeman who tried to throw a burning flag on Nixon's car three years ago was sought. Four other persons re- portedly were under surveillance. Nixon was informed of the possible plot Sunday night. He would not be dig.. suaded from making his New Orlean visit but agreed to the Secret Service's "stz:ang recommendation" to change the. motOI'· cade route. The Secret Service ordered the arrest of Edwin Michael Gaudet Jr .. 30, wbo was dismised from the police !Orce near. ly six years ago. Police said Gaudet had a lengthy arrest record. showed "radical tendencies" and was believed "armed and extremely dangerous." At mid-day, police said "at this time we have not, nor has anyone else, re. lated Gaudet to any series of events. He may be as rhnocent as the driven snow." Secret Service spokesman Jack Warner announced in Washington that "we have a lookout" for Gaudet, nicknamed "Punchy." But, Warner said "I wouldn't draw an inference that the two (the re- porled assassination and the lookout) are connected at this time." Warner's announcement came as Nix- on flew from Key Biscayne, Fla. to New Orleans to address the national con- vention of the Veterans of _Eoreign_Wars at the Rivergate Auditorium. From here, he departed for San Clemente. The presidential motorcade w a s switched lo a new route and sec urity along the way and at the Rivergate was extremely tight. After the-Secret S e r v i c e an• nouncement, the FBI in Washington com. mented : "It's a very real threat and we do have agents on the case." But, a New Orleans police department spokesman said he co uld not agree with tbc Secret Service or FBI. Asked to further explain, Sgt. Frank Hayward or the police information office said: "I can't. I don't know. I've talked to the FBI people here and they made it very clear that they don 't have evidence of conspiracy. They just wanted Gaudet picked up because of his radical ten· dencies." Police records showed Gaudet burned a U.S. fl ag and tried lo throw it on Nixon's (See CONSPmACY, Page Z) Orange Coast Weather It'll be slightly cooler Tuesday- but sHII sunny for a change along the Orange Coast. Highs at the beaches in the mid-70s rising to the lo\v 90s inland. Overnight lows in the OOs. INSIDE TODAY Only ttvo ndltion of the JOO 1nillio1~ species of a11iniaL.s that have roan-1ed the eatth through hlstoty stID survli•e and many of those are faci11g extinctiO'n. See nu<l read about tlle·1n o" Page 19. l.,M. IOY• I '"""' ,. Ct!HOl'lll• s (l•lllflM tt·tt (ornlU N ,_ " DNtll Httfittl J l:.ltoNJ P•tt ' l!nl1r1'1/llP!'ltfll 1l•lt f'llltfKO 1•11 iro• lllt 1t11tor• 1. ' Hf!WC:OM u \ Allfl l.•lld'" IS MoYltt tl•J2 N•lloMI Mewl • 0r"9t C"Jllf J SytYlo l'orttr 11 s_,. t ... u 51odl MMtl't 1•11 T ...... bltll 2t Tll .. ltrl tl·!J WtOltltr 4 W-11•1 Newt lt-IS Wtrl4 Htwl 4 • I ~ " I z DAILY PILOI (. Monoay, i!U()ll$t tu, i 'lf ,) Sk11lafJ T1·011bfes ~pace 'Plumbers' ,. Search for Leaks SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP I - Two Skylab 2 astronauts tun1ed plumbers today and searched for leaks in tv.o syste~ in their orbiting space slation. (Related story, Page 4l Neither a pressure leak in a unit that removes humidity from the cabin nor a fluid leak in an air-conditioning systcn1 is serious. But Alan L. Bean, Dr. Q\\'en K. Garriott and Jack L. Lousm<l "·ould like to fix them. Bean concentrated on the hun1idity system which has been a nagg ing prob- lem since their arri val in the lab 24 days ago. The astronauts have main- tained pf'fss ure and kept the system functioning properly by servicing it daily. They would like to eliminate the timc- consuming servicing. Bean pressurized the lin es and tubing with nitrogen gas and, using a stethoscope, listened for the hi ssing sound of escaping gas at various connecting points. He also rubbed a soapy lather over several points. A bubbling· of the lather would indicate a leak. W 01na1i Lear1is Why Her Plant Worth So Mucli BOSTON (AP) -A South Boston mother has told police she was puzzled by two young men who knocked on her door, said they admired the four-foot plant in the window and offered $5 for it. She told police that she refused because her 8-year-old son had given it to her for Mother's Day, after finding it in the neighborhood. The yoWlg men upped their offer to $20. She again refused. They asked her for a few "cuttings," and she refused. When they left, she took the plant to the district police station, where Capt. John Bradley told her she had been growing a marijuana plant. Slide Show Set 01i Open, Space A slide presentation on the upcoming Costa Mesa open space bond election is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Tuesday by the Citizens for Open Space Committee. The $4 million bond package will be ex- plained by committee Chairman Vaughn Redding and other speakers in the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club. An earlier nolict! listing the meeting for the Mesa Verde Country Club was incorrect. Also on the program is Bill Ring, education coordinator at Lion Country Safari, who will present a slide program on the importance of land conservation throughout the world. Entertainment will be provided by the Orange Coast College Jazz Ensemble. The public is invited to attend without charge. Thief Gets 8888 Fro1n Mesa Car Wash A thier who broke into one stora ge shed but failed to jimmy a second one, s_till took a Costa Mesa drive-through C'ar wash for $888 in equipment Sunday. Lcn1.,1na rctnovcd v;a[J p:1n{']s 111 the l<lhorJ!ory to try to loct1tc a lcDk In the systl'Jt'l thaL Ct){J]s the c:rtnu and !)Ollie t.'h'ctrouic cquiprni::nt. 1'16 looked for d1scolol';1tlon of t<i~! 11r11ppcd around coolant lin es. J\1i ssion Control detected a smu\C grudual loss of coolant tv.•o v.·eeks ago . If it continues, the fluid 1vill be gone in about 10 days. 1'here is a backup syste1n sufficient for the rest of Skylab 2's 59-day mission and for the t11·0-month Skylab 3 flight set to start Nov. n. The astronauts tGday also conducted solar astronomy, photographic, science and medical experiments. During the n1orning, Bean photograph- ed a pl ain high in the Peruvian Andes n1ountains appropriately named the "Airfield of Ancient Astronauts." f-le aimed his ca1ncra at the Plains of Nazca. a narrow strip 37 miles long by one mile v.•ide aOOut 300 miles southeCJst of Lima. The plains consist of inany criss-cross patterns, \\'ith the n1ost prom- inent feature resembling an airfi eld. f\.1ission Control said there are several 1()(}.foot·tall objects in the plain and histo1ians long have questioned th eir origin. One large figur e is thought 10 represent a spider or an octopus. High-altitudl' photos frorn Skylab n1ight prov ide clues lo the over-all pattern of th e formation and the !h in king of those \\·ho built it. In studying the photos, ex- pert::; \Viii try to relate the gcomC'tric pat- terns and general appearance of the plain 1,1,•ith the geograph ic formation of the surrounding 1TIO U11lains. Bean reported there were scattered clouds in the area but he photographed several cle ar spots. The astronauts for th e third st raight day sent televised pictures to l.1ission Control of Tropical Storm Brenda in the Gulf of Campeche off the east coast of Mexico. A ;\'nro•o tv Esape Oriver <ind passenger were injured Sunday night \vhen Robert L. Jones' sport roadster skidded out of control on Ca1npus Drive at University Drive in Irvine. wiping out roadsigns and guardrail and roll- ing over. Jones. 43. of 2300 Fai rview Road, Costa :r.1esa, had a cut chin. Passenger Mary F. Pearson, 56, of 5381 Catawba Drive, Irvine, suffered head in· juries and is in satisfactory condition at Tustin Com munity Hospital. iHe~a ·All-Star.~· Tu Pl11 y Council The Costa ?\lcsa Playg round All-Sta rs \\•ill slug it out \Vith thr City Council \Vedn esday night on the Te\Vinkle Park baseball dian1ond. Game tin1c for the annual ··city Pops" game featuring ci ty councilinen and city hall administrators is 8 p.ni. There is no admi ssion charge. Dally Pllol Stilt Plloro From Pagel UPPER BAY ISLES ... than pessimistic that. if a court challenge were made, it could be suc- cessful ." The county counsel's opinion was transmitted to the supervisors about three months ago. It has not been di scussed i:ablicly. However Supervisor Robert Battin, ln a July 26 letter to the Field Committee, 1,1,·rote: "I will be recommending to the Board of Supervisors that we immediately file suit to establish title to the Islands." Batlin's office today confirmed that the county counsel opinion has influenced his decision to urge the supervisors to file suit. There was no indication, however, 11•hen the matter would come before the board in open session. The Irvine C.Ompany bases its tiUe to the islands on the federal Swamp and Ove rflowed Lands Act. It provided that any swamp lands in existenct! in 1850, the year the law was passed, could be sold by the state to private oWTiers. The key point raised in the county counsel opinion is: Were the three bay islands in existence in 1850? The Irvine Company has admitted. that the first map that suggests existence ol the islands is an 1875 survey of the Upper Bay charting hazards to navigation. That map clearly shows the outlines of the islands. But the 1875 navigation map doe! not say whether they are true islands or simply underwater sandbars, The first map definitely showing the islands is an 1890 map prepared by the U.S. Geodetic Survey team. It describes the is lands as marsh islands, and hence probably eligible for sale, if they had been in existence since 1850. The Irvine Company has argued th at the 1890 map is the firSt survey that ever had any reason to check for the existence of the islands. There is also a body of evidence sug- gesting that the islands did not exist in 1850. One element is an 1858 survey done for the original U.S. grant of the Irvine Ranch. That map, on file in the county courthou se, ..;hows the existence of some 101ver bay islands, but gives no hint of the three Upper Bay islands. The Irvine Company explains the omission by arguing that the surveyor in the 18.58 study had no interest in the offshore. islands, since he was charged only with determining the boundaries of the upland ranch area. ' These maps alone c:onstitute a major part or the case. There is also a body of scientific data that suggests the three Upper Bay islands, as well as most islands in the Lower Bay, did not exist in 1850. A 1958 study by Robert E. Stevenson and K.O. Emory suggests that the islands did not come into existence until some time after 1861, when the Santa Ana River formed the major portion of the Balboa Peninsula. _ From 1861 to 1920, the river emptied into Newport Bay and flowed out to sea near the present harbor entrance. During that time, major silting took place in the bay, and the scientists argue that is prob- ably forced the Upper Bay islands. "The value of that study to the coun· ty,'' said a county official , "is that it is a truly independent study. It was done in 1958, before ownership of the islands was an issue." The county counsel's opinion does say clearly that , at prese.Jlt, there is no preponderance of evidence on either side of the question. "It would be nice i! someone had an aerial photo of the bay from about 1850," said an official. "Then "'e "'·ould know for sure whether the islands existed or not.'' If the county were to sue for title, of· ficials have tentatively estimated it 1,1,·01.dd cost several hundred thousand dollars to secure the expert research necessary to make the case. The Irvine Company might make similar outlays trying to prove its case. Front Pflfle 1 CHOTINER. • • dent Nixon spied on Vice President Spiro T. Agnew during the compalgn. Chotiner, who said he does not meet or confer with the President on a regular basis any more, said he was a volunteer during the 1972 campaign and received only expenses. He said he was in charge of \'Oters rights and ballot security for the cam· paign, a matter which he said vitally concerned the President after alleged voting irregularities in 1960. Chotiner also denied he had any part, or any before-the-fact knowledge of the \Vatergate Jreak·in. TONIGHT COSTA MESA CITY COUNC IL Regular meeting, City Hall, 6:30 p.m. - TUESDAY, AUG. 2t • LIBRARY STORY HOUR -Movies for kids, 10:30 a.in. SENIOH CITIZENS CLUB -Com· munlty Recreation Center, 11 a.m .-3 p.m. NEWPORT·MESA SCHOOL BOARD -. Regular meeting, COsla Mesa High: Lycewn, 7:30 p.m. t Frotn Page 1 CONSPIRACY • • . ' car during a Ne\Y Orlean s visit Oct. 31. • 1970. Gaudet was charged with attempted desecration of the American flag and given a suspended sen tence. A report that "at least four persons · 'viii be kept under constant surveillance while 'The Man' is here" was published in the New Orleans Times-Picayune Sun - day. Columnist Clarence Doucet said, however, the re part "cannot be con- firmed." The possible consp,iracy was believed linked to the theft of a car owned by New Orleans Police Superintendent Clarence Giarrusso and a uniform belonging to patrolman Bennett La cour. Both Giar· n;sso and Lacour live in Algiers, La . across the Mississippi River from New Orleans. Crowds Y.'ere three deep along New Orleans' broad Canal street an hour before Nixon's arrival, \1•ith clusters up to six deep near the Rivergate. T\vo huge '"ilite canvas banners were erected along Canal Street, saying ''New Orleans Loves You'" and "The }Jome of the Saints Says, Hi." Nixon didn't get a chance lo see the ~igns. After agents closely inspected his limousine, the presidential motorcade sped from the ai rport to the convention center along U.S. 67, then Interstate 10 and directly to the Rivergate near the Mississippi River. Cars loaded with Secret Service and FBI agents, plus Police on motorcycles moved quickly in advance of lhe motorcade. They checked suspicious- looking residents ranging from picnickers to a Jong-haired tattooed youth. A young black man. dressed in an African print da shiki, 1,1,•as arrested in a French Quarter hotel a half dozen blocks from the Rivergate. Police said the yout h v.·anted to shake hands with Nixon and refused to move on when ordered. "' Extension Set For Bear Street Bear Street v.i ll be three-tenths of a mile longer at the end of next year when workmen complete a $98.000 project ex· tending it from Paularino 1\venue to Baker Street in Costa ~-tesa. Bear Street will run across the adopted route of the Corona del Mar (Route 73) Freev.·ay. Route 73 between the Newport Freey,•ay and the San Diego Jo~reev.·ay is tentative scheduled for completion by 1975. An interchange is planned at the ex- tension of Bear Street and engineers say -the current. project will offer some traf· fi e relie! prior to the rree1,1,·ay's com· pletlon . 493rd B1·idge V ictitn SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The Golde n Gate Bridge claimed its 493rd victim Sunda y Vihen an unidentified man leaped to his death, police said. The victim was described as a white male, about 40.f>. foot-7 and 130 pounds. Howard Kirkwood Slikker. owner or :OSta l\-1esa Car Wash. 2059 Harbor Blvd ., said the gear included seven paint spray guns and a pressure tank. THIS IS CRAFT ALLEGED TRAFFIC KERS LEFT BEHIND From Ship to Shore at Newport's Sea Scout Base OIANGl COAST CM DAILY PILOT T"9 °'""" Co-11 OAJLY PILOT, wltl'I wtllcfl i. comtllntd "'' H-1-Preu, 11 pUbllsl'lecl .., Ille Or•noe C.0.11 l'l.llllltfllnt Col'f!INl"V. kl'&· r•i. tid!llon1 •rt Pllllll)tled, M-•'f thrown Frld1y, for C0\11 MO•, Newpc>rl Btacll, Hunll"lllon BeMll/FO\mlt!n V~lley, L•Qllfle 1.-eh, lrvlnt/Slddllbllcl •nd S.n Cl-nit/ Sin J111t1 Ctl)lllrlM. A 1inv11 •'1!ion1I ldlllon Is M lilll«I S.tvr.llys 1nd Sunaav1. t"9 prlnc!~I P11bll1lllng PllnT !1 I! )JO Wt•I ll1y Str"I• (01!1 Mtl<I, Ctlit~rnll, i'HH. Rob1tf N. w,1c1 l"rald1nt '"" Pub111lltr J1c~ R. C11r!11 \lie• l"resklffll 1nc1 G""''" M•"•9•• Thom11 K11vil EClllO• Tho11111 A, Murphi111 M1n101,,., eo11or Clitrltt H. loot Rieh1rd P. NtU Anltltnl Mlntf lng Edi~•l c .. te a ... Offk• JJO W11I lty Str11t M•lll11t A4Jrtt1i'P.O. 101 l &60, •1616 Oftlef Offlcn HWW110rl lhtd\1 ma H.wpor! lloult><ltd Ll9UM ll10Cl11 m 'Ol'"-I Avtn11t HunllflSIOll h<lcll: Jtt7S lla(ll lo\lltvtrd m cr-11: JOI Hortl'I &! ttm"'° ltMI T .. , ...... (714) 642-4JZ1 Clc::::lfa.. A4wwt ...... '41·5671 ~llflt, lt1J. 0Bl'9e C.t! ltW!ltfllflf c......-y. ,.. MWt lfOtltf, llhttlrtt'-• MIWltl mtll« .,. Mvtrtlt-" htrtln _., 111 ~ wlll'lwl t!*ltl ""' ,..... « ~ .... -. ,,,....,. dlU ,_..,. NII .. C-.11 MtM, C.llW!'lle. . 11Mcri.t111n .. Wtltr l2M "*""""'' "' -11 13,11 "*""'"'' m111tm •....-t*" ... ,,,.,.....,_ 6lJl) Pounds Pot Seizecl; S11u1gg.Zer Craslies Borcler A 1narijuana smuggler sped lhroug!1 !he S<in Onofre Border Patrol Chctkpoint O\'rr the \\'Cekend and led immigration officers and San Clcn1entc poli ce on a fl'ee1vay chase before ditching his c;1r and fleeing on foo t. He lcfl. 600 pounds of the llllcit \Vt!Cd behind. Patrohnen said the incident -in· ereasin gly C(lmmon al the ch!:!ckpoint - took place at dusk Saturday. 'fhe car. they said. 1~·as being driven by a tnalc and it did not srop despite signa ls fro1n patrolr1c .. At the roadblock. Instead , the driver sped ~way and patrolmen gave-chase. Moments later san Cl{•1ncn!t! police units joined 1n the pursuit The. fl ight ended ti t !he Camino de Estrella of{ramp on the San Diego Freewa y Y.hcn lhc driver pulled to the roadside 1:1nrl ra n b1to the hills. The hea\ 1ly laden truck contained n1ore thnn 300 k1logra1n bricks of n1ari· Juana . Officers ~n{i the rcgistrntion of the car '''~s t.rac..:d tu ll \Vcstmin.ster nHw itlld~ 11gc11t-; for tht~ t:.S. Custonu Service took ()1•cr the In\ cs!igat1011 . P01' I-IA UL ... S:!OO pe r kilo or 2.2 pt•r package. the con- !r:.ilnind 1rould be 1vorlh 11Uoul $400,000 in street sales. lnl"cstigators theorized the alleged sn1ugglers, who abandoned their rented , :!6" cabin cruiser. selected the Sea Scout Base because it 1vas convenient. deserted ~it that hour and hardl y a suspected ~n1ugglcrs· landing. Police did not specify 11·hclhcr they had inrorn1ation on where the shipment was dt·stint.'<I for delivery. A representative of the U.S. Bureau of !\'arcolics an d Dange rous Drugs (BNDDl 1\<1S dispatched to assist in t.hc impound and inventory opc.ralion today. Authorities said they would present the case lo the Orange County District AHo rncy's <)fflcc for cri.rnina l co n1plaints and prosecution on a loc:.i l basis. 'I'wo \Vork1uen Killed PIEftCE. ~~la . (AP\ -_,.,,_ "tidal wave of phosphoric acid" killed t\\-'O workmen \\'he n a 32·foot·high tank containing 1,800 ton s or the chemical ruptured Sunday ~nd collnpscd. Police said 15 other "'ork1nen 11t Ille Agrico Chemical Co. t·~n1plcx cscn()!?(I injury by three firemen 11·rri: 1,ur11c.i by tbe llcid whlle at· tempting 10 recover the bodies NOW AT 95 + ,_ ·- Elduliw g Yur Parll Gui,._ TN ITI010r. P'Jll\f), timer. tntirt ••-- d•ll•lbu!ioll ll'lltm. 1111•1tr arid p1111h- bunon• ,,. g\jl•IN'l1Md for ~ .,.,,. "' lllO<ltll 851919. SS/1111 tnd SSll7f. W• .,.., for ffl)llC~I l•b!)r d11f ll'IQ tl'l• flnll yur. . 90 DAY CASH WITH """OYID Cl ID IT HEADQUARTERS. Phone 548-7788 t . 1815 NEWPORT llLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa . +t+••••t••················································· (