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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-08-30 - Orange Coast PilotI I ' I I • •. ' . . . r._rellers Lined llp Against . Wall ··' • r . ' illionaire Hughe,s Agrees to Appear For Court A~tion DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * ~,., .. · · HURSDAY AFTERNOON, AU$1JST ·30, 197a \'01.1, AC 90. *-. 4 SICTlotff...• r.A*i. --- Passenger Dies I Heli~ops Airlift Key Medieal Gear < But VietiJD Dies • IS • • Ill oenae • Helicops Airlift Key Medical Gear Jury Indicts 17 Steel Firms WASHINGTON (AP) -A federal grand jury indicted three major steel companies today on antitrust charges involving a $40 million business of selling reinforcing bars in Texas. The Justice Department said the lndictments, returned in U . S . District Court in Houston named United States Steel, Bethlehem Steel COrp., and Armco Steel Gorp., plus 14 smaller companies, as defendants. Greenspun Requested To Testify By JOHN ZALLER Of .... ~ '"'"' ... By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tlle O.ltJ Pllllt Staff Sophisticated medi<:at equipment was airlifted to Inglewood l!Y the C:.Osta Mesa police helicopter Wednesday night, In the battle to save a Htmtington Beach woman critically injured 24 hours before in a lreak jetliner mishap, but the vicUm died th!! morning. Marjorie Payette, 4t, of 618~ 14th St., . never regained consciousness at Ce~ tinela Valley C:.Ommunity Hospital. Assistant hospital Administrator Paul Hopper said after Mrs. Payette suc- cumbed at 8: 23 a.m. that death was ap- parently due to massive i n t e r n a I bleeding. She also suffered a fractured spine Tueoday night when a TWA Boeing 7f1I Jetliner encountered violent vibrations at 28,000 feet, inbound for !As Angeles from Honolulu. (See earlier story, Page 5.) ~""'l. ' UPIT......,_ Btist;J Getaway · Investigators today continued to ex· -amine -lhe· ~. which landed ;arery after the bizarTe incident that injured seve.n other persons in addition to Mrs. Payette. .,,. ' ;;'fkotoll!'apher Art Sales makes a quick retreat from a burning blaze, : jilrposely set In an abandoned house on the -Emory University cam- :~'us In Atlanta. The fire got out of control during a training exercise !. · rook.le firemen. · . ' Severe bleeding and shock as a result of injuries auffered when she was hurled about inside the plane ' left Mrs. Payette iJ\ critical.condition when admitted to the hospital. Assistant Administrator Hopper said ·-• :} Billionaire to Appear ·"•1 . 'iJ,T LAKE CITY (UPI) -BllliOQllre -d Hughea -bas ~to come, out ~g long eoough to give a dfposition ln:i ~k .which ·cbarges he wu bilked tn tlie; l' mnnon purchaee of worthless ~a mlajllj. clalma. • • ,., • 'Di>'a lele~e -alndavli lrom t.Onclon, llupies agreed to tesUfy in a civil •g• suit filed agal111t one of his fQl'lller tdvtsers 1nd11CYeri.l businessmen b7 Huglles Tool C:.O. ' '!Thia document la Intended to cohfinn ~ ·1 expect to be available to ......,. aiel IHll!mate qlleltiooa al auch time aNI r-under such reasonable ~tan~ as the t'OUr\ m a y ~jrfuller determine to be .._.ry to · tt>f cue," HUgbes aald. •. '.l)o allldav1t IUed Wedneoday WU ~ by Lever B. Mylar of Salt Lake C)!f, who 1'81 described U I frt«ld of H*s for more than 20 yem, after the Suckling; Charles W. Adam!; E.B. 'billiOrialre toot 111" oath ~y telephone. Walsum; Malaga Investments, Inc.; Huglles' lawyers had Mylar appointed a Jnrespro, Ud. and M a a t s c b a p p I commissioner of deeda !or the United 1 Jntermovie. Kingdom in order to admlnlsler the oath. M•••whil• lbe to·•-n""Y "~ress · H~ aald he '"Cllnno~ ·oonce1re of • · -~, · ,...,.. """ ..,. ,my maMer In which my testimony · said today Hughe! was "smuggled Into might be of use" In the suit, which ac. the London Clinic" for an operation on cuaes former Hughes employe John H. hls hlp when a surgeon refused to oper- Melcr and nine delendantl of conspiring ate In Hughes' hotel hideaway. to sell the tool company 1 mining clairna Tbe newspaper's gocslp column, writ· for prices "far in ex..., of the value of IBI under the pseudonym of Wiiiiam the property." Hickey, said Hughes bn>ke a small bone lfl!ihe• Tool C:.O., which bu changed ill In hll hip and aent two aides to penuade name to Summa Corp, since the milt wu an eminent surgeon to perform cor- filed, paid more than II million for the rectlve surgery In the ninth noor hotel claims while Meler wu the firm's Iden-suite whero Hughes, with characteristic tlllc adviser bet_, llltT and 1969. sectt<)', bu been oecloded !or months. Other defendantl Include Tol<do Mining "An operating theater would be set up" C.O. of Salt Lake k'ty and Ill pmldent, at the 'hotel, the newspaper said !he Anthony Hatil; ulobe, Inc.; .John D. (Ste llUGBES,_ Pap I) I I ' ' • her blood pressure fell so low. Wednesday that a special ultra-sonic monitoring device was needed to measure it. The only one available at Centinela Valley ComnwIDty Hospital was in use and could not be taken off ano.ther grave- ly ill pa'tient, a pattern that proved true at olher area hospitals. A call was made to the machine's sup- plier in Irvine with a request to the California lllgbway Patrol in Santa Ana to race a 'technician and the equipment to Inglewood with red lightl and siren. Ranking CHP officers said the mercy mission would be virtually futile on the commuter-clogged freeways at rush hour, so the c:.osta Mesa Police Depart- ment helicopter was enlisted. Patrol Sgt. Cliff McBride said the Eagle I chopper, already airborne, was simply diverted from patrol to its base at Tallmantz Aviation at Orallge County Airplirt to meet the factOrY represen- tative. ODserve.r Officer David B r o o k s clambered out of the two-man chopper and the company teclmiclan, identified only as Robertson, clambered aboard with . three or the blood pressure monitors. Pilot Officer Randy Nutt made the flight in 30 minutes. He oet the chopper down at Hollywood Parlt Race Track and the technician and equipment were raced to the Inglewood . hospital by emergency vehicle. Hoapital olflclals confirmed this morn- ing the blood pressure-sensing devkes - whh:h monitor life signs when there virtually are oone -cotld not ltsell have saved Mrs. Payette. The machine was critical, however, in mea111rlng her vital functions while lnedlcal personnel sought to su>taln !Ue. A doctor, plus her "'° and a. daugbtel' were with the vlotlm when she died, hospital o!ficials said. Bodies Brought Back MADRID (AP ) -The bodies of 24 Americans killed Wednesday In the crash o( a U.S. Air Force cargo jet have been bn>ught to Torrejon Air ea .. to be flown to the United States for burial. The dead Included 9everal wives and children ol. Air Film! personnel, Air Force officials said. The names of tbe viclllM were ex- pec!ed to he announoed later today. Sixteen steel company officials also were named. United States and Bethlehem Steel both said they would have no immediate comment. 2 Bandits Clea1i Savings arid Loan Office in, Mesa By RUDI N!EDZIEL!>Kl Of tllt_DallY Plttt Sii" A pair of. aunmen-ttw,t int0-separate entrances of a Costa Mesa savings and loan building Wednesday afternoon, lined the tellers up against a wall and stuffed all the available cash into a pillowcase before making their getaway. The Glendale Federal Savings and Loan office at 2300 Harbor Blvd. was hit by the two heavily armed men at 3:07 p.m., while one customer was still in the building. No one was hurt during the robbery. Police said one man wearing a bandit· style bandana over his oos,e and chin brandished a rifle and leaped over a gate into the teller's area, while his partner held the other employes and the customer at bay with a pistol. · Although police and a team of FBI specialists have pieced together most of the details surrounding the brazen daylight holdup, just how much moaey was taken remaim a mystery. A tentatlvellgUre 'of sever&l thOusand · dOUars has been mentioned. "We sUll don't know," Sgt. Keith carpenter said this morning. "And we won't know until the savlngs and loan has completed Its audit." The rifleman then ordered three tellers up against the wall and acooped up the contents or thelr cash boxes befoM in- structing a woman employe to open the vault. Investigators said a substantial amoun__ur money was taken from there. As quickly as they had anived the two bandits left in a two-tone black and green Chevrolet Malibu which was discovered (See ROBBERS, Page Z) The publisher of the Las Vegas Sun said Wednesday in Newport Beach that he has been subpoenaed to testify before the Senate Watergate Committee. Hank Greenspun, who claims an at· tempted burglary of ·his office may have been the work of Watergate conspirators, said the subpoena was served Tuesday at the Balboa Bay Cub where be is vaca· tioning. Greenspun also disclosed that in- vestigators from the Senate Commlttee spent two afternoons this week in- terrogating him about President Nixon'• re-election campaign. The questioning apparently stems from Greenspun's claim that a slx·ftgurt Howard Hughe! contribution to the President's campaign may be linked to favors Hughes received from the U.S. Justice Department. However Greenspun dec}ined to reveal _det¢Js .of the "'l!lY~.Sllkil he had with Terry Lenzner, assistant majOrity mm- sel of the Watergate commlttee, and R. (See ~ Page 2) - Orange Weadler A fairly nice day is in store for Orange Coast residents and visilcn Friday-especially after the morn- ing clouds clear oil. Highs In the 70s at the beaches rising to near 80 Inland. INSIDE TODi\V I/ 11ou've got 11 aptcial fntertst In a hiphwau }>rof•cl, ii woo/ijn~ be improptr to invite tlw: rn.tire Cali/oma Highway Coniml.t•ion ou.t to di'nnrr -1~h °' the lr- nHie Company did recentZ11. Story Page 18. L.M. ..,.. ti AM LllllMA n u.11111 ,.,, ~ M41 Clllltnll• s _._.. '""" ,. Cl1Mlli..I )M4 Ml"-! ,,.... t c-1c• » ~ c.... t+tt c,..._., n '""" .-.. OH!ti ~M lt-U Sled Mllt1ll'tt ,... alllttnll P'" ' T~ '6 l11ttf'lli-I »-17 ~ »U '''""'" ...... ....... 4 ,_ t11t •tetn1 n ,14 w--. """ tt.a HwMctN U WIWM ..... t I• Stnkt It I I " • ~2 _DAILY PILOT ___ s _____ T_h,_~_•_Y_A_"l_'_'-' _J-0_._1_•1_3 Nixon Resists Judge's Request for Secret Tapes WASllINGTON (AP) -President Nix- on has vowed to resist an historic court order commanding him to deliver secrt'l WateraaJe tape recordings for a judge 's SIRICA DECISION AFFIRMS JUDICIAL PREROGATIVE, P1ge 4 privale inspection. Otlef U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica ordered Nixon Thursday to produce the tapes demanded by special Wa tergate prosecutor Archibald Cox, but tern- Re~all porarily withheld the effect to allow tlme for an appeal. Nixon refused to obey the order. 'l'be White J~ouse, in a statement from San Clemente, i;aid without elaboration that the President's lawyers "are now con· sidering the possibility of obtaining ap- pellate review or how otherwise to sus- tain the President's position." The order and a companion 23-page opinion fueled the President's clash with the courts and the Senate Watergate committee over access to the tapes of his su~~ess Host of Decornposed Tunci Found WASHINGTON (AP) -The Food and Drug Administration said today that the recall from Hawaii and California of nearly 80,000 cans of Luna, some of it decomposed, has been essentially completed from stores and warehouses. But the remainder presumably was pur· chased by consumers. Few if any cans of the Bumble Bee brand chunk light tuna are believed to remain on the market, an FDA spokesman said. The agen cy said it told the processor, Hawaiian Tuna Packers o! Honolulu, on July 25 that federal tests showed four out o! 24 cans sampled contained decompo.sed tuna. A recall was initiated Aug. 13 by the distributor, Bumble Bee Seafoods, a division of Cas tle & Cook, Inc., Astoria, Ore. The recalled cans are coded 21 WO-L202. The decomposed tuna is not considered to be a health hazard, the FDA said, but would be esthetically distasteful. NY's Po,ver Cut 5% Again As Heat, Humidity Soar . ' By The Associated Preis Hot and humid wealher smothered the East Coast and much of the Midwest again today as utilities struggled to cope wilh increasing demand for eleetricity. ,For the third straight day, the New York State Power Pool ordered a 5 per· cent cut ID voltage. A spokesman said the state's power system was strained to capacity by huge demands, primarily to operate air conditioners. The National Weather Service said there Wu no rW!e! from the heat in sight Death Penalty Measure Changed SACRAMENTO (AP) -The major capital punishment proposal before the Legislature will be amended to delete four of 15-mandatory death sentences, its author has revea led. The move will be made to increase chances of Assembly passage of the corr tl"\)versial death penalty bill, Sen. George Deukrnejian said in an interview Wednes- day. The Long Beach Republican said he will abandon attempts to require capital punishment for skyjacking, arson-con· nected murder, torture slayings and murder of an inmate by a Hfe-tenn con· vicL From Pa{le J HUGHES ... Hughes aides told the surgeon. "A fully qualified anaesthetist would be hired. And, it goes without saying, ex· pense was no object.'' But Hughes "ran up against the im· movable force of British medical eti· quette," the newspaper said. The surgeon told Hughes' men "he had neVer operated in a hotel room and never would no matter how high the fee." DU.NH COAST fT DAILY PILOT TIMI°''"" c .. tt DAILY ~llOT, wltll .ir.ldl a.. ~llltd ""-Ntwt-Puu, 11 P\lblltMd 11r lfll 0'•1111• ,a.11 hbjlafl!119 COmP9nr.·..,._ ,... t11lOM1 t rt .,.,..lllhloll, Mon!Mr lllNVlll l'"rlHr. fol' COii• Mtw, HtwWt •udt. 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"'......-....... ...... dlMI ......... ..v .. c.t• Mae. ~ ............ ., qm.r II.al ~ ........ ,, .........,, "'"""" ...................... until next Tuesday. But a power pool spokesman said industrial closings over the holiday weekend would ease demands ror electricity. Some 200,000 New Yorkers were left without power Wednesday night after several feeder cables burned out. The blackout affected an area of Queens in· eluding LaGuardia Airport, where passenger terminals were darkened but emergency power kept n111ways lighted. The blackout lasted nearly 15 hours before power was restored to lhe area this morning. The Tennessee Valley A u th o r i t y reported it was relaying to New York power generated by private utilities in Texas and the Southeast. Temperatures reached 95 Wednesday in New York City, 94 in Chicago and 98 in Washington. The National Weather Service warned that air pollution in the capital metropolitan area was at record levels. A General Motors plant ln Unden, N.J. had to shut down when some of th e 1,750 workers there walked off their jobs because of the sweltering heat. City officials in Philadelphia said water pressure in some areas dropped to half its normal summer level. Policemen, firem en and water department employes worked to tum off opened hydrants. In New York, Consolidated F.dison was forced by repeated failure of 27,000.volt feeder cables to cut power in Jackson Heights and parts of Corona, Woodside and . Elmhurst. The blackout snarled traffic at in-- tersections and delayed subway seryice because trains had to be run with hand signals. Hospitals as well as the airport switched to emergency power supplies. Smaller power outages were also reported in two sections of .Staten Island. Television coverage of a baseball game between the Mets and the San Diego Padres at Shea Stadium was interrupted because or the Queens blackout. The audio portion ot the WOR·TV telecast continued but the picture failed. In the Washingtoo area, the air quality index reached a record 160 at Fairlai:, Va. during the sixth day of an air pollu· tion alert. Any figure about 100 ts con· sidered hazardous. Parts of O'Hare International Airport and an adjacent hotel in Chicago were blacked out because of a fU"e in an underground electrical vault. Flight operations of the aiprort were unaf· fected. A Commonwealth E d i s on spokesman said the fire probably was caused by overstrained power cables. A 35-minute power failure hit the Ohio Stctte FaJr in Columbus, delaying a grandstand perfonnance of Sonny and Cher and stranding patrons on a sky ride for about 15 minutes until auxiliary power was avallable. On the West Coasl, lbe BoMeville Power Administration said It would be able to provide 7 percent less energy than normal to power systems and major industries in Washington and Oregon and some utilities in Idaho and Montana. Blamed lor the power de!ldt WM light ' snowpack and drought which has left r .... rvotrs at all-ttme low levels. The water ls needed IO drive hydroeledrlc generators at dams on the Colwnbla River and elsewbere. Contractor Convicted LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Compton contractor. was convicted of Jross negll~ gence Wednesday in connection with an explosion and lire In a sewer plpellne that kll!ed three workers In February, 11172. Roscoe R. Walker was found guilly o! three counts ol gross negllgenco ond fivt ol violatlng th• state Induslrlal aalely code. conversations with key advisers Im· pllcated in the Watergate M!andal. The dispute hlJ been carried further than any similar confrontation over presidential power·ln U.S. history. On a key point, Sirica squarely disputed Nixon and ruled that it i.s not the president but the court which has ultimate authority to detennine whether material sought In a criminal investigation ls protected by ex· ecuUve privilege. Nixon bas claimed that a president's oonfldentlal records are privileged from disloaure. 'Ibe erlstence of the tapes became known last month when a fonner White House aide told the Senate eommittee that Nixon routinely recorded his Oval Of~e conversatlomi. Cox, acting on behalf of the Watergate grand jury, then subpoenaed tapes of eight meetings and one telephone call between Nixon and his advisers at the time, John W. Dean III, H.R. Haldeman and John D. Ehrlichman. The committee alSO filed suit to compel dilclosure after Its own subpoena was re- jected by the White House, as Cox's had been. Cox and the committee say the tapes are vital to resolve contradictions ln the testimony of Dean, H a I d e m a n , Ebrlichman and others allegedly involved in the Watergate coverup. Cox said he was "very pleased" with Slrlca'i1 ruling: Watergate committee chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr. (D-N.C.), called it "a great victory for the search for truth." Sirica reoo~zed the President's need for confidentiality in the fonnation of public policy, but disagreed with Nixon's claim "that it 1s the executive that finally determines whether its privilege is properly invoked." He stated: "For the courts to abdicate this role to presidents or anyone else, to make each officer the judge of his owrt privilege, would dJsbonor the genius of our consti- tutional system and breed unbearable abuse.'' Slrica added that he was not suggesting Ni:1on "could not be trusted as hia own judge in matters of privilege," but said he could not set a precedent j'that might pennit or encourage some luture high executive officer to become a despot." Describing his judgment as an attempt "to walk the middle ground ," Sirica said it would be "an inexcusable course of con- duct" to order Nll:on to produce the tapes !or a lull grand jury impe<Uon. The judge settled OD the comproml.se of demonding the tapes !or his inspeeUoo in chambers to determine which material, U any, should be tmned over to the gl'llld jury. "It is true," he said, "lhat if material produced is properly the subject of privilege, even an inspection in chambers may constitute a compromise o f privilege. Nevertheless, it would be an extremely limited infraction and ln this case .an unavoidable one." He elaborated: "If privileged and un· privileged evidence are inlennlngled, privileged portions may be excised so that only unprivileged matter goes before the grand jury which also meets in secret proceedings." And if the two categories are so in· terwined "that separation becomes im· possi ble, the whole must be privileged and no disclosure made to the grand jury." Frot11 r-.e J ROBBERS ... parked at the Mediterranean Village apartments by police about 1 O minutes later. "We assume they switched cart," said Sgt. Carpenter, adding that the car, also bearing a stolen license plate, 234 GRC, was detennined to have been stolen from a used car Jot in San Bernardino. Sgt. Carpenter and Identification Of. ficer Steven· Nash dusted lhe car for Iingerprinta and took It apart, searching for clues, as apartment tenants stood around and watched . Several pills , be1ieved to be barbiturates, were f o u n d on the floorboards. The car had not been hot-wired and Sgt. carpenter said the steering lock was in the locked ,POSilion, leadlng him to believe that thi bandits had a key for It. One theory is that the bandits drove the Malibu through th~ open , empty lot behind the Harbor Shopping Center and roared ln through the southerly driveway entrance to the Mediterranean Village Apartments, zigzagging pa~t the business office and recreation facility to the first carport stall on the north side, where they apparently had a second getaway car parked. Csrpenter said police were notified of a "bright" sports car leaving the ar~ around lhe Ume ol lhe robbery . Both men were described to be: In tbelr mid-30's, shabbily dresaed, white and about six feet tall. One of them was wearing a leather jacket. Illegal Hunting C1iar ged to Heir SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Procler and Gamble heir George Franklln Gam- ble, 35, has been charged by a federal grand jury wllh transporting illegally killed elk and big horn sheep. Some of the animals were spotted by plane and bu%%ed until too fatigued lo escape, A,.lstaot U.S. AllOrney Brian llenlOn llld Wednesday . Indicted !or aldlng llJld abetting was Jacll Alclie...,, Bulla, Mont , hunting consultan~ tuldermlsl and wrll<r. • UPI TtlffllefO Simulating Space rro ... r .. eJ WITNESS ... • • • Scott Arm>trong, a commltl•e In- vestigator. __ Greenspun'.s name wu..llrs:t. b<outrht- lnto the Watergate Investigation last MOy when James McCord, a convicted Waterga te conspirator, testlfied before the Senala Cooun!tteo. that G. ~ Llddy told McCord of plans to break Int~ Groonspun's olllce In-Las Vegas. • McCord said the burglars wero alt~ documents they thought could tie Sen. Edmund Muskie (0.Malne) lo organized crime. ' Greenspun has maintained there ls clear evidence that someone tried ttn.!U O-- cessfully to jimmy his newspaper's safe.· Grttnspun said Wednesday he beUeves the effort may have been the work: ol Watergate burglars but that he doubts tt was for the purpose of gathering in- fonnaUon linking Muslde to organized crime. "l did have in my possession a doru- ment tying Muskie to apparent wrong· doing," Greenspun said. "But It involved only a relatively unimportant hunting violation for which he paid a fine . I thought the matter was so trivial that 1 never even published it." However, Greenspun said that a1nce 1971 he has been asking questions of Nix· on administration officials about a "large cash contribution" from llughes to Nix· on's campaign fund. "I hadn't COMected my jimmied safe to the campaign contribution until this May when 1 heard McCord say that lloward Hughes' airplane was standing by to take the burglars to Central America after they burglarized my o[. fice." Greenspun saJ d that, since Howard Hughes was him self in Central America at the time the burglary was supposed to have taken place, he immediately suspected that there might be a con· necUoo between the campaign COfl-" tribution and Justice Department favors for Hughes. Skylab III astronaut William R. Pogue puts the Skylab Astronaut Maneuv~r1ng Urut. through its paces in Denver. fl ying in simulated space without leaving the earth. The unit weighs 255 pounds on earth and is weightless in space. Greenspun said his suspicion wai further aroused when Jeb Stuart A1agruder, deputy direetor of the Com".· miUee to RAH!lect the Pn!Oident, !al« told the Senate Commlttee that Attorney General John Mitchell had personally ap- proved surveillance ..... t on Greenspun'o olfiee. Woman Admits Hacking Father Wl10 AssaultedHe1· Greenspun b acknowledged to poaea an extensive collection of handwritten memos from Howard Hughes to hli vaiious subordlDates. However, the publisher natly refueed to YJ' whetl>er these memos proved hix mplcloos about pooslble Justia! Depan. ment favors for Hughes ....ittng frmll cam!>alin contributions. ''There are leads on this matter and they are being followed up," wu all Gl'e<llSpUll would say. ASHBEBORO, N.C. (UPI) -A murder warTant has been issued against a young woman who told police she shot her father and dismembered his body because he had sexually assaulted her since sM· was l l. The warrant, issued· ·in Philadelphia, where the slaying allegedly took place, was expected here today. I\ charges Bombs Explode Inside Stores In Birmirigham LONDON (UPI) -A lire bomb ex- ploded ln a Birmingham city center store today and, minutes later. two small In· cendiary devices went off in two nearby stores, police said. In London, Scotland Yard carried out dawn raids all over the city in the search for bombers. Binningham's assistant chief con· sta ble, Maurice Buck, said a man went into a shoe store and placed a parcel by the door. An assistant became suspicious when he saw a clock inside. The staff fled the building before the fire bomb exploded. The other two il'jcendiary devices about the size of a cigarette pack were placed in a bookshop and a greeting card shop. About 30 firemen, some wearing breathing apparatus, fought the shoe shop blaze, the worst of the three fires. Camella f..leglino Robbiru, 27, ln the shooti ng death of 5Q.-year~d Frank Aleglino. f..trs. Robbins told authorities she killed Meglino t"'O years ago as he lay sleeping in their South Philadelphia boole. Sbe said sbe and an accomplice then hacked up the b<Xly, hauled the remains to Miami, Fla., and buried lhem. Philadelphia police Sgt. Larry Grace, 'vho qu estioned the woman at length \Vednesday, flew to Miami today to work \vi!h the Dade County sheriff's office in trying to locate the remains. Mrs. Robbins walked into the Randolph County sheriff's office late Mooday and sa id she shot her father six times. With th.e help of a woman she said she knew only as Tami, and who she said was her father's girlfriend, they cut up the body \\.ith a hacksa w and butcher knife in the basement, stuffed the pieces in garbage cans and rented a trailer to transport the cans to Florida. !'hilJ!llelphia _aulhoriUes lold the sher- iff's office here they found human blood· stains on the sofa, basement steps and basement of the abandoned Meglino house, vacant since Meglino disappeared in May, 1970. At the time ol the murder, Mrs. Roi> bins said she was three months pregnant with her daughter, who is now 3. She now has another infant daughter. When she first made her confession, she told the .sheriff she had been wan-. dering across the country, hitchhiking, but aulhorilies later learned she was married to Dewey Robbins and the COU.· pie lived in an Asheboro trailer court. He remained noooommlttal about whether be will lay out his collection for the Watergate Committee when he iJ called to testify. "These are newspaper documents and I have a right lo keep them CGO· fidential ," Greenspwi said. Samuel Dash, chief ~I for tbe Watergala Commiltee, llld W-y in Washington thal he does oot expect to clash with Greempun over the memos because it is "not the commJttee'a pru. tice to subpoena newspapers' IOUrC. material." The committee Is scheduled to reconvene next month. Greenspun'a sul>- poena, signed by commltt.e Cbalnnan Sam Ervin Jr., does not specify a date for Greenspun's appearance, Witness Writes Of Beach Death SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -An unstpd Jetter has been received from a witness to the murder of a teen-age boy at Ocean Beach, pollct .. y. The letter writer said be was standing on the seawall at midnight Sunday when he AW Richard H. Ahli, 11, run past m the beach pursued by two men. Shots rang oul and Ahi! !ell, the witness wrote officers. Alter they received the I.tier Wednes- day, police, W'Ked the witness to come forward under a promise of anooymity to furnish more infonnatlon. LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE ••• R.AISED ELSEWHERE Ad111lrol NO -'DEFROSTING~ Ad1nlra1. REFRIGERATOR/FREEZER ALL THESE GREAT --1ra1,FEATURES • Full Width "Bookc11•" ;,..,., Door Sh elf -for ln•t1nt •v•llt bltlty. • Du1I T•mp1r1tur1 Contt'Ol1- 1elect the rl1ht temperltu~e for I.Ch Section, • Twin Porctl1ln Ct!spe'1-kHPI fruit. vt11tobln 11rden fresh. • Extr1 Llr&• R•frj1er1tor Door Sh11vtt-Plold1 1vtn \Ill qutrt bOttlnl Medel NT 1334 No dtfro1tin9 r1fri91rthlt 1tc+ion1 with Arctic Air {low 1y1t.m for fvll SLIMLINE REFHIGEllATllll 1yc.lt circ11l ttlo11. · ' ' ..... Cl1JZ • P\111 Wldtft ,,.... Ot•t • W~Ranp TlmPMlvrt Cotrttot • fled Vltull Oefl'Dlt-ttmw ll'ldlcstw • (Jrtni 0..p Door Shelf • 'un Width ,,.....,.,rt Otllltf brt't'l'lr 159'5 ,,,.,,, ... r of C•llfomle'1 l.ol'lftt c...,. .. ,iv. luyhif 90 D~Y · CASH ' I Group With The WITH A""°"' • Volume lluylnt CllDIT ... ,.,,,.,A_A_ P•-of .110 Slor•E!J ~ Y.WMlln ... -. 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7788 ' • • Thu,$day, August 30, 1973 s DAJLV PILOT ! Tunney Supports County Bid for U.S. Court By TOM BARLEY Of IN D•tti ~llft Sl•H Orange County's lawyers have come up wltll a pow..-!ul ally ln their long and Frustrating fight !or a federal coorthouse in Santa Ana -sen . John Twmey (0-caur.). Tumey met with the Orange County 1 Bar As.sociation's federal court com- mittee and guests at the Baltx>a Bay Cub this week to pledge bis aupport !or the project, particularly from the Senate floor. . • "But lt's'hot going t.o be easf," Tunney warned local lawyers and judges, among them county bar president James W. Obrien, past president Robert S. "Sam" Barnes and Superior Coort. Presiding Judge Bruce Sumn<r. ''There is top level opposition to the locatioo ol. such a court ln On"'• Coun- ty," 1\Jnpey said. "Tho! proposal hu been rejected at Iea&t once at high federal levels but I can· tonight sug(est what I think will be a new aod better route f9f" your future claims." Tunney, M attorney from Riverside, rteommended to the commlttee that Its next bid for · what the group loel• ill a long overdue federal courtroom In Orange County must be channelod through the Federal Judicial Center board -a group of seven judges headed by United States SUpreme C.ourt Otlef Justice Warren Burger. Support from that group would weigh \·ery heavily in any future voting on legislation designed to give Orange Coon· t.y Its courthouse. Tunney said. "But even sO," he "'atned, "It could be three to four years before you get the federal facility you ere· seeking," 'eouney judges and lawyers have been Arguing for years that a local federal <..'OUrt was long overdue in terms of populat.«>&1 and filing statistics alone . Federal authoritlea have been bom- barded in that time with complaints that litigants in federal actioos consume many hours in freeway travel and find it difficult to obtain parking space when they arrive in coo.gested downtown Los Angeles. It was conceded to Twmey that Santa Ana's nine-story federal building. now almost con1pleted, has not been designed to include the courtroom facilities needed If Orange CoW1ty should get approval of Its bid. But Corontt del Mar archHect William Blurock assured county bar members that he sa.,1,. no problem in the con - struction of an annex to the new building or a separate courts building as part or Santa Ana's civic center if an Orange County bra:lch is authorized. Orange County is part or the Central District of California. The region also comprises Los Angeles, Riverside and San Bernardino counties and is in terms of population alone the largest single jurisdiction ~'ithln the distri ct coort system. Federal authorities have been told Jnany times in recent years that Los Angeles' cramped and outdated federal bt...ilding is the only place where the legal issues created by the lives of more than 10 million persons and activities of many thousands of private and municipal en- titles can be resolved. The cow1ty bar has pointed out over the years that one has to look to such federal jurisdictions as the Virgin Islands, Guam. Delaware, Rhode Island and the District of Colun1bia lo find other situations in \vhich just one federal court building is available for an entire jurisdiction. Local la"'Yers have the support of both !he Riverside and San Bernardino oounty bar associations for the bid to put a .federal courthouse In Orange County, it \\'as stressed at the meeting. "It is vital to have all these statlstics contained in any study the Federal Judicial Center may carry out or order to be carried out," 1\mney said. "You obviously badly need a f e d e r a I courthouse here and it's hard to see ei:- actly >n•hy you've been denied one thus far. "It's probably because yOU're roinr again.st the power structure," Tumey said. "But that kind of opposition will be difficult to maintain in the light of • study that ~·ould so clearly demonstrate the strength of your argument. 11 ., Better Fill !>er Up Coast P e1•11iit Ruli•lfl Only 3 Projects Can Be Restudied Open Gas Stations Scarce Over Holiday By JOHN VAL TERZA ot tM Dll1Y P'lllt Sl1tf Are you headed for the desert, the mountains or the sea this Labor Day weekend? If so, it would be wise to keep your gas tank filled because the fuel &hortage is not quite over. It's not that service stations are 1ow on ga30line -although some shortages do exist in certain areas -but in many cases they will be closed because the employes want a holklay too. (Related story, Page 34 ). "We're closing because everyone's been hollering to get off," said the manager of Airport Texaco, 4678 Campus Drive, Newport Beach. His station will onJy be open on Saturday. Another gasoline retailer who win be closed Sunday and Monday is Dan's Chevron, 1597 Euclid Ave., Fountain Valley. He has always followed a policy of closing on hoUdays. simply because It's a holiday, the American Automobile A s so c i a t i o n reports that the gas shortage continues to affect some parts of Southern California. The San Diego Freeway through Orange County, an Association spokesman said, continues to pose dlf- ficulties for motorists because many g_as statiom are limiting their hours and late night stations are "few and far between." However, there are some all-night service stations in Encinitas and C8rlsbad, and the Association reports that "almost all" stations a Ion g Interstate 405 are planning to be open on Labor Day. If you're headed for the San Bernardino mountains the going will be considerably rougher. Although more than half of the mountain stations were said to be operating "normally." stations at Big Bear are closin~ early in the eve- ning and all are ratiorung purchases. Motorists are warned to enter all mountain areas with a full tank ot gas this weekend. Natioawide, the AAA reported im- provement in the availability of gasoline for the eighth straight week. 'This week 58 percent of stations con- tacted are operating normally -main· taining hours of operation in effect before the summer fuel pinch and allowing motorists to fill their gas tanks," the association said. The AAA said this compares with 55 percent nonnal operation last week and 43 percent ·on June 28, lhe low point of the summer. Some gasoline retailers had planned a gasoline shutdown over the weekend to protest Phase 4 price controls on gasoline but the protest plans did not filter down to retailers contacted by the Daily Pilot along the Orange Coast. The Phase '4 price controls are cur- rently being argued in lhe courts in \Vashington D.C. but it is unlikely that any developments will have any im· medlate dlect locally. UPI T1l1Ph11I• 'SEXLESS JOURNEY' Capt. Ma ria Bjorn1tam By CANDACE PEARSON 01 tl\I D•lll' P'lllll Sl11f None of Avco Community Developers' Laguna Niguel projects qualify for a sec-- ond look by the South Coast Regional Zone Conservalion Commission, its dlrec· tor said \Vednesday. Only three Orange Coast developments denied exemptions fr001 Proposition 20 rcquire'ments appear lo be eligible for reconsideration, Melvin Carpenter said. A recent state Supreme Court ruling said permiLs aren't required if "substan~ tial lawful construction" was started before Feb. J, 1973 . The previous cutoff date was Nov. 8, 1972. Nev.·port Beach and a 80-unit apartment building in San Clemente. The other projects that might be reconsidered are ln Los Angeles Couoly. But South Coast Comml.ssioners have delayed any acUon until after Sept. 22 when the court decision becmnes final. Deputy Attorney General Den n i 1 Antenore said this week he will ... t the • court to clarify its decision, which he says ls "poorly written." The court didn't define what "subsf.an. tial construction" is, Carpenter SI.Id. Other ramificaUons of the chang!: art still unclear. "The ground rules haven't been aet forth yet," oo how to proceed Carpenter said, adding he expects help from the state commission, whlch meets in San Francisco next Wednesday and Thun- day. Jn Mission Viejo, dealers on La Paz Road, one or the major thoroughfares had not yet made up their mind! mid- week whether to close or remain open over the holiday period. "We don't like to cut each others' throats," said a spokesman for Warren's Arco, 26001 La Paz Road. "We have a nice thing going here." Carnies Tear Up Rock 'No Lovemaking' Aboard Sex Raft, Skipper Claims Prop. 20, the coastal initiative passed by voters last November, gives six regional and one state commission authority within 1,000 yards of mean high tide liae. The South Coast Commission has denied 4-0 claims of exemption from the new law, according to a report released by Carpenter. Current thinking is that developers will . have to reapply for exemptkms. 1be new rullng doesn't allow construction to go ahead automatically, Carpenter l8fd. Exemptions approved by the nglonal commission and then denied by the state commissien on appeal wtll probably be reheard by the state, he !8icl. "If one stays open, we all stay open. tr one closes. we all close. And we·re debating right now whether we'll stay open or closed ," he added. Concert in Wild Brawl or those 40, Carpenter said , 14 projects later received coastal permits and don't 11-1:EXICO CITY (UPI) -The blonde have to be reconsidered. In addition to . some stations closing Contact School For Regi sb'.ation Students who haven't received their fall registration packet! from Mis.!lon Viejo fligb School yet smuld contact the acOOo! guidance department. School officials said some of the class lists mailed last week have been returned by t1le post office becall3e envelopes were incorrectly addressed by students last spring. 'l'he high school is trying a se1£- reg.istration system for r e t u r n i n g students for the first time. Anyone who doesn't have registration materials by now can call for an ap- pcintment at the school. . . . . • • •• ·: . . • . . . ' • ' .. ( ) .. .. ' _. ' ' ' ; ; ~ ' BE'nlANY, Mo. (UPI) -C&mlval workers rampaged through rock: concert !ans Wedneoday night, !iring guns Into the air and beating up young people unW a force of 40 state and area law officers moved to end the disturbance early to- day. Four workers, who were at the Har- rison County fairgrounds t.o set up a carnival coinciding with the opening ol the county fair today, were arrested on various charges ranging from carrying concealed weapcns, to assault and in- citing a riot. A local resident was al-90 ar- rested. and several handguns, shotguns and rifl~ were confiscated. Al least tv.'O persons were hoapitalized with injuries and many others suffered bruises and scrapes. Sheri[f Melvin Smith said, "We were very fortunate we got nobody killed." He said he planned to seek a court in- --1 Art tor Art's ·Sake"/ ) ' ' ' ' Doug Tyler. the "phantom painter" ol Eul Lansing, Mich., slniclt again recently, this time on the side ol a ham. Tyler'• paintlhg ls a "'production or an old Japanese lithograph. which dwarl1°Jlll O'Con- nor Oower rigbl) whose parenls own the barn. • ( junction today to halt the carni;al and get the c.arnival workers out of town. "They were running in groupS and beating up whoever they met, shooting guns and this type ol thing," Smith said. The aherilf sai~ about . 500 ~g persons were attending the concert, which kicked off the Harrison County Fair. Two bands had been scheduled to play from 8:30 p.m. to midnight. s"·edish skipper or a raft that crossed Or the 26 exemption denials still stand-Brotliel Shoot:ng the Atlantic on a 101-<lay sociological ex-ing, 14 obtained city or county building " periment swore Wednesday there was no permits pnor to Feb. 1 and might fit lh . r under the court's extension. the report E m'barrassing sex arpong e s1x·woman, 1ve-man added. crew. Nine Avco tracts in the company's The man who organized the expedilion. multi-million dollar development planned BUCARAMANGA, Cokmbia (UPl) - Dr. Santiago Genoves, was asked What near Salt Creek Beach were denied ex-Police in the town ol Barbosa did a dou-, they did for entertainment. emptions. ble take when they took the names of the "They answered my questionnaires," Although U19se projects -including a . ·pats he said, and studied water pollution that controversia l 1,218-unit oceanside con· pnnci in 8 shooting In a broc.hel. was so bad it had blackened the teeth of dominium tract -had grading perm.its Alfonso Lopez, a patron of the sharks. prior to Feb. I, they didn't ·have local establishment, shot and \\"OWlded Maria N eighhor Sues "'! did not participate in any sex and I building pemilts. Eugenia RDju, who worked at tbO did not see any lovemaking aboard the Avco attorneys have argued before the brothel. raft," said the unsmiling captain of-the commission that grading creates a 'D Thr t' raft Acali , Maria Bjoms'tam , 30. vested rights ei:emption. 'lbe State At· Alfooso Lopez is the presidential can-eep 08 Her ans~·er to an explicit question tomey General°s office, advising the didate of the Uberal party In nei:t year's from a Swedish journalist ended t~'O commission, has said that grading pi-esidential election and Maria Eugenio LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Superior hours of haggling between Genoves, 49, shouldn't be considered construction Rojas is the name of the pres.idential Court judge has taken under con-who kept talking about the sociological under Prop. 20. . candidate of the National Popular sideration arguments on both sides of an consequences and scientific data gleaned The three Orange Coast projects listed Alliance. from the 5.0CK).mile trip, and reporters by Carpenter for possible re-hearing are injunction request to st.op showing the X-who kept pressing Jess academic mat· a seven.unit apartment building in Seal Police said they were no relation to the rated !!>OVie "Deep Throat" at a ters. Beach, a single-family dwelling in -politicians. Hollywood theater. l~;;;J~l:~[{,;c;;;-;;)--:::::;~:=;;;2~===::=::=:::;::~:::;::=:~==~========~~--But Judge David Thomas said Wednes-I day he doesn't know when he will make his ruling in the suit filed by state Sen. John Harmer (R-Glendale), and resident Salvatore Maiorino. Maiorlno said his neighborhood had deteriorated since the film started show- ing at the adult Pussycat Theater, 30 feet from hll home. Hospital Model To Be Real Cool A scale model ol Ifie new Saddleback Community Hospital sculpted in ice will be dllplayed at the benefit opening or Buftum'a' department store in Laguna Hills Tuesday . The Ill-square fool chilly copy Is being created by Donald Spurgeon, director of food aervlC.. at the hoopita:. Huge blocks ol Ice will be carved to in- clude ligtiting effects. miniature autos in the parkin'g area· Md landscaping details, a ~pital represeii.taUve said . The benefit partieS will run from 2 to -4 p.m. and from 7 to 9.p.m. at Bufluma, ad- )Jcent to the hoopital. Suspect Slays Officer, Him self ALAMOGORDO. N.M. (UP I) -A man on the nm because he thought he had killed his teenage wile shot and killed a polloemin who stopped him on • routine tralllc check Wednesday. Tht min, tentatively Identified as Altredo Saline ol Wichita, Kan., was later found shot to death in his car. His gun and the .38 caliber revolver belong- ing tb the officer were in his lap. PoUce aald he was between 27 and 30 years old. Police U. Jim Vigil, a 1ix·year veteran ol the Alamogordo Police Department, wu ahot lour times. three times In the chest and once ln the bead. SEM I-ANNUAL SALE Include s Special Promotion on leather. • • now $699. 84 inch leath e r so fa Lu.:urious sota covered in leather a unique look and feel of luxury. A fu ll 84" wide, available in 3 colors in loather • lect.tlw r chair and 111atchi11g OUOllUJ,lt Select a button tufted ~air with matc~ing ottoman in •.• , your choice of 3 colors in ''•, ~·;. laatherorsuede. 1WW $49 9. . 1-1.J. GAI\l\ETT f URN lTURE PROFESSION ... L Op•• Mon. 2215 H ... RBOR BLVD. INTERIOR DESIGNERS Thun. l Fri. E,.,. COST ... MESA, CALIF. . ,: .. 4 DAil Y PILOT Thursd11 A119ust 30, 1973 2 Doctors Produce Test Tube Enabryo MElJlQIJl\NE, All~trali JUl'IL= DocfA>ra al Queeo Vie1«ia Hoopital suc- cessfully achieved human conception in a test tube, a hospital spokesman said to- day. 1be opokell1D811 said the !ertlli2ed egg, which was lat~r lmplanted in a woman's womb, aurvtved !or nine days before it aborted •. 1be achievement, the result ol lour years of lnt.enslve research. involved a ebildless married couple. 'The woman, leocribed as a houaewde, had ber right ovary ,and .lalloplao tube removed ill an opera!ioh. when she was young and her J e!Ua!loplan Jube. .wJs..Jilil<;kell. TIIE F AU.OPIAN tubes carry the egg to th'e uterus, or womb, and coase- quentl)' she was UD• able lo be<orne pregmml The team ol doc- tors was headed by Professors C a r I Wood and John Lee- toog. 1be operattoo was carried out sil Ll•TONO "'eeks ago. II W11 not believed to be the first time .~U<n..baL~_baod .andJertlli.ze<Lan_qgJrom .• the Dr. Daniele Petrucci 'woman's remaining ovary in a test tube of Rome reported In chamber. 1961 that he achieved TUE l!G<l WAS drawn from the laboratoey fertlJiza. woman's Jett ovary four hours before lo- tion o1 a human eu semination, and was kept alive in 113 own -• lban 40 times. natural ftuld In ao atmoopltere of 80 pet'· He said at the time cent nitrogeo and 10 pen:ent carboo dlox· that ooe survived 29 Ide. daya, much Joog.,. The egg, or oocyte, was transferred than the time f"&. from it.a life supporting solution into a wooo ported In Melbourne. diluted oolutton cl 3PUJ11. Acoording lo the hoopltal, the doctors Twenty hours after lmeminalion the removed sperm from the woman's b""' outer layer cell of the egg disappeared, Cambodia Opens Supply Highways PHNOM PENH (AP) -Government infantrymen reopened me cl Phnom Penh's two supply highways today and a convoy of more than 100 trucks sped into the capital. In South Vietnam, the Viet Cong in- creased attacks southwest of Saigoo in a drive. tq.1solate the Mekong Delta and its rice 1ttfm the South Vietnamese capital, military sources said. TUE CAMBODIAN troops blasted through the last rebel bunkers aloog a two-mile stretch of Highway S that leads to Battambang ProVince to t h e northwest. The province is a major rice producer. The highway has been cut since Satur· day at a point 35 miles to the northwest, causing food shortages and leaps in food prices. The Cambodian command said opera- tions were continuing to reopen the capital's other major supply route to the coast, Highway 4, blocked al Molla Salng, about 30 miles southwest of Phnom Penh. districts ol ca! Be and caJ Lay, areas of traditional Viet Cong cootrol ill Dinh Tuong province in the norihem delta. The South Vietnamese l'OIIlllland said three government soldiers were killed and 20 soldiers and civilians WOWlded Wednesday when the Viet Cong hit the ca! Lay area 45 miles southwest ol Saigoo with 120 mortar and artillery rounds. VIET CONG troops also llhelled a militia post two miles from ca! Lay and followed up with a ground attack, killing four militiamen and wounding U, the command said. 'lbere was no report of Viet Cong casualties. Bank Victims Still Dazed After Ordeal indicating..lertilizauon. The spokesman said the egg was then transferred Into a ,pedal growth solution containing 20 percent serum taken from calves. The egg and soluttoo were kept al a 99 degree temperature. . AFFER 43 HOURS, a zygote, or tl>re .. stage cell divisjon stage ol development, was reached. · Sixcy·seven' l\oun after iMemlnation the egg ·had reached the six-to-eigbkell division otage. 1be 'eigfi.CeU egg was theri transferred into -mother's womb, the spokesman said. 110n the. fourth and fifth days after lm- planjatlon there were definite lndlcaUona from tests that the embryo bad Im· planted and was developing," Ille spokesman said. "A pregnancy -and proof of s......, -was measured by reading af GMadotropbin (hormone) ewollons." 1be spokesman said surgi<al com- pllcaUons from another oporallon the woman had. days before the lmplantaUon, probably caused the embryo _to abort. UPIT ....... Be's Bon Hard fighting also was reported farther south oo Highway 4 at the Prek Thoot Dam, 29 miles beyond Moha Salng. A communique said government forces repulsed several Khmer Rouge attacks, "the enemy suffered some Josses, and oor side suffered seven killed and 10 wounded.'' STOCKHOLM, Sweden (UPI) -Doc· tors said Wednesday four freed hostages dazed by "shell-shock" from 131 hours in a bank vault at the poilll cl a submachine gun may need several weeks of psychiatric treatment to recover from their ordeal. MEXICAN PRESIDENT ECHEVERRIA (GLASSES, CENTER) TOURS WRECKAGE Calls. Q~ake Worst in Mexico's History; Declines U.S. Aid Offer The Chinese Communist Party met in Peking today and re· elected Mao Tse-tung as chair· man. The 319-man Central Committee also elected a 25- member Politburo to run day. to-day affairs o! the party. THE MILITARY sources in Saigon said the Communist command's goal is to cut SOuth Vietnam's Highway 4, the main highway through the Mekong Delta to Saigon. The drive now is centering on the Doctors compared the three V.'Omen and a man, held by a bandit and his con- vict friend in a downtown StoekOOlm bank for St,? days, to war casualties. Merger of Egypt, Libya Approved in Compromise DR. LENNART Ljungberg, a St. Goeran Hospital psychiatrist, said the hostages were "still in the first phase of som'etbing res e m b 1 in g shell-shock" Wednesday, a day alter police firing tear gas stormed the vault to free them and captW'e the two desperados. Dr. Jao Agre!~ a specialist in military psychiatry, said "the methc:xb nonnally used to break down a person's mind are identical to d:te treatment the hostages received." By United Press International Political sources in Cairo said today the annollllcement by Egypt and Llbya of "the birth or a new state" by a gradual merger into one country has forced Ll· ( IN SHORT ..• ) byan leader Col. Moammar Khadafy to drop his demand for immediate union . A joint annoUIJcement on Cairo Radio told of the last-mi nute compromise Wednesday between Khadafy and Presi- den' Anwar Sadat of Egypt. lt said the merger would be in stages and came three days before the two countries were to have voted on approval of the plans in a referendum, which has now been postponed. e Bugglltfl Trial • NEW YORK (AP) -A federal judge has rejected defense contentions that massive publicity over Watergate would preclude a fair trial for former Atty. Gert John N. Mitchell and ex-Commerce sfcrelary Maurice H. Stans. -u .s. District Court Judge Lee P. Gagliardi on Wednesday ordered that the trial begin Sept. 11 as previously schedul- ed. Gagliardi said the only way to determine whether a fair trial is possible would be to impanel prospective jurors and question them under oath about the effeets of pretrial publicity. e Gunman Dead SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) - A gunman wounded two detectives and set his downtown apartment building on fire Wednesday night, theo apparently shot himself to death after dueling with police for more than an hour, authorities said. Authorities said officers were at- tempting to serve a "mental warrant" on Jaek Magney, 57, when he opened fire on them. They said be retreated iilto the three-story building and exchanged gunahots with omcers as tile rire burned. One o! the woman hostages -slim, dltrl<·hai.red Kristin Enmark, 21 -was quick to defend the two gunmen and said at the 00.pital tbe bandits didn't harm any of the victims. "I've read some of the newspapers," she said. "But it's all wrong. 'Ibey never banned us in any way. I never felt Ibey really threatened me. We were more afraid that the police would do something which would put us in danger.'1 PSYCIDATRISTS, however, sald she had been under "severe stress" Md ex- pressed doubts her description ol the captivity was accurate. Ljwigberg said Kristin and Ille other hootages -Birgitta Lundblad, 31, Elizabeth Oldgren, 2.1, and the man, Sven Saefstrom, 25, "appeared to be doing well wider the circumstances and they are eleeping peacefully." Gulf Coast Cools a Bit East;ern, Seaboard Still Roasting in Heat, Humidity Hlfll LN ,.,, " .. " " .. " ., " 17 72 .. " ~ " f ! 76 fl 73 " " ...... " .. H U ., 11 .06 .... "" " fl 6f " " 11 ,, ·'' " n " .. " 7~ ,,5 = ~ .. " "' .. .. Tl "' " " .. 76 $1 .. .. ., ., .1t .. .. .. " 1f! f V.S. S11-r1t Ponkwlt of Hll Ovtf CO.tt tot l"ftltl from I nlllonll llMf wtltt todly It tcllttrH ''"""""""°"'.,.. tl)rf11kltd the '"''· rwr hot •nd l'!Umld 1lr to111llltltd to 1tlfl1 "" "'"'"' .,..... Att'*'Ofl tllftflll WU tNrct, tl'IOwtrf •tr•tc"-d from tN Gulf coe•t north In-to Ml'-rl Ind llllllOll •nd Kroll tl'lt northffn Incl ctntrll Pl•l"'- T~ elto dlmrieMd aait· I'"<! lt'ffS IC~· tflt COftlllltfll -ttll W111'1lngton c011t, Wl1C0111ln, upper Mfdllfl•n Ind perh of ~ fnolend. ,.., .. o1 "•clllc C:0.11 PJe1 wtr• allrovded In cloud• "rid tlllck toe f«m-ea OVt!' Ille ,\OHIKl'lllM. Ttm~eturts btfort' d~ In !tit ••lrtf'll JMrf of ftl• n1lion ....,, motttv lr1 ll'lf 7D$ In C'Otlfnlt to CIOOltr end Clrl., llvtll rn the $0$ Ind '°' OVt!' the waltrn hell, Wini the IJICC.llon of Clewrl ., .... WitdMSff)''I ICOl'dllno ne.t In ""to. c1111tt1 meny •l«tTlcel vlilllln to cut tt.c:ll Of\ ¥0fllt0' Of Ilk CUllOIMl'I ... rWute P0Wtr WWijpllon. Slwnl llOW"I' l•Uurn _. ,_...... 1cro11 ttw 1111tton. Wli.t pnaur1 w11 • prOl>llm Ill -11'9t dtl .. wMrl ct\lld!'WI -* flrt llydr1nh to cool ofl. 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I Mexico'' Worst Tembl.or Death Toll Still Climbs ( ORIZABA, Melico (UPI) -Mounting casualties from Tuesday's earthquake put the unofficial death 'toll at nearly 1,000 today and President Luis Ecbever· ria said it was "the worst earthquake in Mexican history'1 in terms of persons killed. Heavy rain and shortages of water, electricity and even wood for coffins hampered rescue operations today. The rains turned dust and debris lo mud, thwarted salvage crews and sent loose rool tiles and bricks !ailing Into the streets. WORST HIT WAS this Swiss-style city, which sat at the epicenter of the quake that ~gistered 7 .2 on the Richter scale. The rains forced Echeverria, who toured the half-ruined city ol 50,000 persons Wednesday, to stay the night In a Uncle Charged In Soap Box Derby Incident BOULDER, Colo. (UPI) -District At· torney Alex Hunter said Wednesday the admission from a prominent businessman that be convinced his 14- year-old nephew to cheat to win the 1973 soap box derby Hmakes me sick." Hwiter filed two counts of contributing lo the delinquency of a mil1or against Robert Lange Sr., the president of a company that manufactures sld boots. EAllLIER IN the week, Lange ilsued a five page· statement taking f u JI respooslbillty !or advising his nephew, Janes Gronen, to lnlltall a magnetic nose ill his racer to get a faster start. "As the lather ol two boya, this state- ment make.a me sick.'' Hllllter Mid. "I c&n't unduatand the logic of this. Jt's five pages of 'well, everyone else does It." Lange said he coovillced bis nephew to Install the device so he could compete with the upr'Ofesslonal builders." DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtllvtf'Y of lht 0.1il1 Pllol Is 11uarantttd -· -~ ... .,.........,, ,, ,... ............... IN"1' •f t:• p.11t,, c:1U llllf '"' aw w;tt M .,..,.,.. .. .,... C1Ut IN ... llllllf , .• ~ .... s.,.,.., ... kMH't• ff ,.. .. "" l'lttl .. i'91tr OW t'f' f l ,M, $11•,,ttr, W I I.~ """''· cell W 1 _, 1'111 "' .,.,..., tt '"'' c.n. .,. ,. .. '''"' , ..... ltltpllofttt Mnt Or•• c ... 1.,. .. ,... . ...... ~1 Ii ....... , .. llllllf!t,.. ''"" IJMI WalmlMt• • ... •• .. •• .,..1.m S... (""""'"" Cl~ltlrlN l11cll1 ......... ( .......... °""' ,.... ' S..lll U,~ LlfWll trt""91 ..... ~ downtown hotel instead of returning Jo Mexico City as planned. The president told reporters it was "the worst earthquake in Mexican history in tenns of loss of life." The worst previous earthquake waS iii 1941, when 150 persons died. By early today, the official death toll had risen to 527. But unofficial reports by various newspapers and government workers put the total near the 1,000 mark. The Health Ministry said 4tl people died In the state ol Puebla, 113 ill the neighboring state of Veracruz. ' TWENTY SIX of the victims died In picturesque Orizaba, 150 miles east· southeast of Mexico City. Several were killed when a three-story apartment building collapsed as they were a.sleep in- side when the early morning temblor rumbled across 200 miles of Mexico's Eastern Sierra Madre mowitains. Meanwhile, in San Clemente, Pesident' Nixon offered American sympathy and help to earthquake victims. In a letter to Mexican President Luis Echeverria, Nixon extended "deepest sympathy" from the people of the United States to the people of Mesico, and be directed the U.S. anbassy In Melico Ci· ty to report to him "any way in which the United States might assist" Mexico. Jndieial Power • ' Judge _Affirms Riglit to Privacy WASHINGTON (AP) -Presilient Nix· - on has won a federal dlstrict:cqurt•s en· dorsement of his right to.~ ol!lclal privacy. Still, II was a defeat for the' chief executive. · Chief U.S. District Cdurl Judge John J, Sirica acknowledged · that the need !or presidential privacy earrles \rith It a. ) ( ' NEWS .AN.4LYSIS ' I • privilege to withhOld evidence. Yet, bit ' decision was an afflnnatiotl .'ri judicial prerogative. ' THESE SEEMINGLY ,conlrl!dlclory results from Wednesday's decision by Sirica in the White House Watergate tapes controversy stem from a refocut- ing of allentioo from the queslloo ol privifege to one ol power -judicial versus presldeotial. Lawyen ill the caae -special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox Oil one side, the White H"'* on the other - spent much Ume on the Mtd for pro. tection of presidential Privacy 1 and the purported great or small Jou In freedom and candor In the White Houae If privacy and conlldentlalicy cannot be gull'lltteed. Sirlca touched on thQlo arsuments only briefly ill his 23-page opinloo, coocludlng, "the court is willing bore to nt<IOIPlim and give eflect to an evldenllary privilege based on the need to protect presidential privacy." BUT SJRICA Issued 1111 °""" demlnd-inll that Nixoo !Uni _. fll" private jualclal lnapectlon tapes or nine Wblte House converaaUOlll touching on Watergate. Despite the agreement over privilege, NlxOn and Slrlca tach claims for his branch of government the .,.,..... to determine when that privilege may be ln- vol<ed. Nixon and his lawyers have argued that an inClDllbent president is and must be boyond the reach ol a court order. "A holding tjiat the Pr<Sideol ls pemnally aubject •to Ute orderl of a court would effectively destroy the llalua 'JUDICIAL PREROGATIVE' Jucive John J, Slrlca • • • • : cl the uecuUve branch as an equal ml• coordinate element of government," they• ~ In an e~Jy brief ill the caae. l They argued that the Presldeot Is not; above the law, but nther beyond Its • reach aave for the method set lortb In the Constitution: impeaclJmeoL Slrica.would have none ol ll " "Tllll AV AM81UTY cl erideoce ii>-: eluding the vallditY and IOOpe af : privllegea Is a judlclal decision," Slr1ca • declired. • He said "For the courla lo abdicate ; this role lo presidents or anyooo else, to. malt• each olficer the judge ol his own • privilege, would dishonor U., genltla, 91 our cottsdtutlonal syatem Incl Jned· unbearable abuses," he wrote. Kidnap Suspect ,Pleads Innocent VAN NUYS (AP) -A 49- yeaN>ld man has pl eaded in- nocent to the kidnap-rape or II-year-old Tracy Grrnoeld and to sex offenses against his four step-daughters. The defendant al,. told the Mwtlcipal Court Wednesday that his real name is Robert Reynolds rather tban Robert Lee Ray, an alias by which he has been known !or some time. After the arraignment he was jailed In lieu of $120,000 bond pending his n e x t Mwtlclpal Court hearing Oct. 11 . His attorney said his cllent would be unable to post the bond. MEANWHILE, another court granted the man's wife, who said she was divorcing him, aote custody of all of their six children, in order to remove the youngsters legally from any claim by the man. But the woman's attorney llld be dldo'I know whether Reynolda woold sometime be allowed to visit the children. The defendant was charged with 17 counts, includlng allegallonJ be attempted to nwnler Tracy with po...._,. subatances and bad given drugs to a ml.nor. There were 12 counts of offenses involving the ste}><laughlers, ranging In age from 13 to 18. THE DEFENDANT'S at- torney said tbal ReynoldJ was 0 quite In expert in COO• siltuUonal law" and had work- ed for him slz morths aa a researcbe11. Officials say the man baa "-long crimlnal record. Although he described himseU as a screenwriter, the Wliler's Guild said he had UPIT.._.M ALLEGED KIDNAPER Robert Reynolds been dropped for llOjlpoyment of dues and that it knew of. no screen credits. Tracy, found drugged and unconscious at Marina Del Rey after the kidoap last week, was back at her Mission HUis home ofter release Tues- day from · a bospltai. Thursday, August JO, 1973 DAILY PILOT 5 UFW Pickets, Teamsters in Clash JJVJN.GS'l'QJ'l,__j;Bli/. (AJ'l -Sixty striking Unlled Farm Workers Union pickets were arrested after storming a Gallo Bros. vineyard being harvested by Teamsters Union members, the sherUf's office says. It was the most serious in· cident to date in UFW picketing against the world's largest winery, which signed a farm labor contract with the t!mlllltm In )uly al~ Its pact with Cesar Chavez' union ' expired. A dozen persons were In- jured Wednesday when piCkets rushed the field a f-t e r roportediy trading Insults with workers and law enforcement officers moved in to get them out, deputies said. 0 THE PICKF:l'S ran into the fields and attacked the workers/' 1'1erced Coun ty. SherW Earl Mcl(eown said. The sheriff's oflice reported 10 persons received hospital treatment, inch.Kling sheriff 's Deputy Donald Hong who was kicked and hit in the side "1th a rock. Field worker Joe Homan was reported bleeding from one ear and vomiting after being hit on the head with a baseball bat. The most se riously hurt picket was ranch committee Convention Crooner Sentenced chief Basilio ~havezt hit~ on 225 workers were ln the ~ the bead with a club before he vineyard . Officials estimated was arrested, th e UF\V said. there were 200 pickets. Two other pickets w e r e treated at the union's Satem clinic. Three pickets ~'ere booked on Investigation of assault with a deadly wea pon, the rest , on trespassing and failure to A GALLO spokes1nan said disperse. ~--~~-~-"-'--'~~~~~~ ********************* * MERCURY SAVJNGS * and loan association * * ~1'1111111'• SANTA BARBARA CAP) -sentenced Regan Wednesday the case himself in 120 days. * Irish tenor Phil Regan , who to an indefinite term that Regan, who denied the * * once sang "Happy Days Are could nm to 1987. charge, was convicted of of-"STATEMENT SAVINGS "-PRESTl&E Card Here Again" at Democratic However, Superior Court 1fering a $1 ,000 bribe to a coun· * * National Conventions, h a 8 Judge Arden Jensen continued ty supervisor whose vote he * BUENA PARK Mercury Savil'IQS Bldg., van8'f View at Lincoln * been sentenced to serve as Regan's freedom under $10,000 allegedly wanted in a zoning * HUNTINGTON BEACH Mercury$avings81dg.,EdingeratBeach * long as 14 years in prison on a bond pending appeal. The controversy over a big * lUSTIN Mercury Savi nos Bldg., Irvine Blvd. at Newport Ave. * bribery conviction. Superior Court jurist also left oceanfront condominium in LA HABRA·FULLERTON Mercury Savlngs Bfdg.,lmperialtMy.atHarbor Against the advice of a it up to state prison officials to this ecologyoCOnscious area. * * prison doctor, who said the 67· determine the exact length of The project later was disap-* CARSON Mercury Savings Bldg.,AvalonBlvd.atSanOlego Frw)'. * Manslaughter year--old retired singer had sentence between l and 14 proved wi th the supervisor * * medical problems, a judge years and said he may review voting no. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * c-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-~~~-'~~~~~~- Parents Held For Halting Son's Supply of Insulin SAN BERNARDINO (UPI\ -Lawren~ Parker and his wtre, whose ll·year..old son died after they decided his diabetes had been miraculous· ly cured by a fu ndamentalist faith healer, showed little emotion when they were ar· rested on c h a rges of manslaughter. fellow believers subsequently . to bis belief that his son will he clapped, chanted and sang for resurrected soon, saying "God hours in a funeral home, com· is letting things go this far so mandin.< Wesley to rise from be can receive the most glory hts casket. Although Wesley from this when Wesley comes was buried, Parker has dung back." "11ley expressed no reaction one way or another," said Edward Burke, assistant police chief at Barstow. where the Parkers were arrested at their OOme Wednesday. TWA Jet Studied ''They are very unemotional people," he 118id. After .Buffeting 1 Parker. 34, an unemployed NASA tracking station worker, and his wife, Alice, 29, were both charged with Involuntary manslaughter and en- dangering the health of a child for the death of their son, \Vesley. · After the boy was declared "cured" by a faith healer's HJ9ying On Of hands, It the Parkers said they threw oot his insulin supply, which doc- tors say is vttal to diabetics. At one point in his coma. Wesley muttered the word "we," which Parker said showed that "diabetes is caus- ed by two devils." He refused to allow insulin because it wouJd bring the devils back, he said. Wesley died three days after the faith heaJing. A coroner's report Wedn esday confirmed he died of lack of Insulin. The Parkers and about 100 LOS ANGELES (AP) - Boeing Alrcrafl Co. represen- tatives and fed eral Ur vestigators have begun a study of a J3oe1ng 7f11 airliner thal encounterecr violent buf- feting on a flight from Hooolulu to Los Angeles, resuJUng in Injuries to five passengers. One passenger died today. A team of National Tramportation Safety Board investigators began a study of the Trans World Airlines jet Wednesday at Los Angeles International Airport. They were looking for signs of a mechanical fa il ure , a i;polcesman said. 1i1eanwhile, four of the in- jured patients remained in an Inglewood oo.i>tlal, where a spokesman said their con- ditions were unchanged. ON ITS APPROACH to Los Angeles Tuesday nlgbl, the airliner went into a violent u~ and<lown motion tbal tossed several passengers a n d stewardesses about the rear cabin. Two of the most seriously taat were said to have beea standing in a lavatory area at the rear of the plane. Marjorie Payette, 14, of Huotlngton Beach, died today after being In critical cooditoo with a b-oken neck. A 16-year- old girl from Taiwan, Te-sun Hsu, was in serious condition with neck and jaw injuries. ELLEN .llARGITAY, 30, wife d. former Mr. Universe, Mickey Hargitay, was in satisfactory coodition with fa cial injuries, and stewardw Ellen Chapiro, 21, of Honolulu, was in satisfactory condition with injwies of the lower back. Why Othen Can't Compete CollHn, Kim & Dennlearetharea1on.1 A Siorekeeper That's Knowledgeable, Courteous, De pendable, Friendly & Willing to Serve.' BACK TO SCHOOL t111ng1 t11ork•P Ltvl Cold• (al~ colors & t lz••) Hind toolld leeth1r B•llt ln11rwown Sockl e~u111de Shi"• Bold Pllld r1nt1 LIYI O.nlm JHnt Htng Tin Wllldtlrll~llt SI-IHI &w.11111 Fltnnll Sfll"' P1clllc Trill Jtt~•l• H1w1ll RIVll'tl Sh1"1 Hing Tin T Sl'llrtt v Neett lwMllfl Plcl<li11y Shlrt1 JocU:, Undl,,..1r w°"n s11114t1 S.tu Cl111lc P11t1mld Sport Shlrtt c11111c N1'11 e1u1r Co1doroy J1ctr.11 H111lt Sl1c~1 Boyollopta lt\'l Co«.l1 j1lr11 I lh!Y 21) Sut1U!11 RIY91H Shlt'11 H1no T•n T Shhtt W••lfl uo J1c~•t1 Jock'Y_ u,.,....., H1no Ttt'I Wlndbf1111t11 V Necll Sw1111rs P1eif!o Tfll1 J1clllt11 L""4 Denim J11n1 lnl1rwcrttn lotkl Hing Tin lllts F11nntl Shlt1t Sport &trlrtt (!Utl P1t111n1J A 1ton1ol 1xboonl!Mty_ lor_ l bofl. • ears TREMENDOUS VALUES ON PATIO FURNITURE. SHOP EAR.LY! HURRY F_OR BEST SELECTIONS SALE PRICE MO. $64°8 CE E.~~~~~~~~~~~~~-·• ~~ 6 n. 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MULTI-COL Tl COLOR 111 FOLDING ALUMtNUM CHAIR, MOL • ntP 1T1MS IM LIMITlD QUt.NTITlf.S t.llOf'TIO UMlfl:lL.LA Tt.11.ll -MAMV 0 COSTA MESA 3333 BRISTOL STREET . /, Phone 540-3333 • • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Forget It? Never! ;.. the end of the summer Congressional recess ap- proaches. many Americans are asking, "Why go on with tho Watttgate bearings? Wh y doesn't the Senate com- mittee just call it a day and tum the whole thing over to the courts, as the President suggests? Why can't we get it off the front pages and off the air and put the affair in the past, where 1t belongs?" Those who are tired of Watergate, bored by the hearings and eager to forget it all, seem to have missed the point. Of all the events in American political history, Watergate must not be forgotten. It must be remem- bered for years and for generations to come. For it was Watergate, and especially the televised hearings, that showed those who would watch and listen just how close a country can come to disaster if the people are looking the other way. Of the committee investigation, J.lawa ii's Sen. Daniel Inouye said aptly, "It will have a tasting effect on any person who aspires to go to 1600 Pennsylva nia Avenue. {The White House ). It will also serve as a caution for any adviser or aides at the White House, and as a re sult, we are going to set up standards for political ethics." ' The need for new standards in political ethics has been apparent to some for a long lime. But it took. the widely publicized bearings to focu s the whole nation's attention on that need. The Watergate figures will have their day in court. The testimony presented at the Senate hearings may or may not affect their trials. But far more important than the punishment of some misguided individuals, is the full and open airing -as provided by the bearings -of the twisted thinking that bas led American politics to such dark depths: to the bland acceptance of illegal cam- paign contributions, of spying, lying, electronic eaves- dropping, pay-offs, bribes and burglary as everyday facets of campaigning and governing. · Having caught the public's attention, the hearings also. have served to educate the public in processes of Nixon Reasoning Can Be Baffling WASHING TON -Having taken away our bread, President Truthful now wants to do away with our Watergate circus. Llfe wasn't so bad when we could clutch our empty bellies while we watched Senator Sam clobber the Leader of the Free World on television. If it didn't take our minds off the empty shelves in the supermarkets and the high prie<!!. the Senat o r and his North Carolina Jug Band gave us a heal- thy outlet for. our anger. A fair judge would say that President Tnrthful's I ate s t speech was better th.an previous attempts, and rate it only as dreadful The improvement over the time before was sufficiently great that we may suppose that if he reworks his Watergate routine about twice more, his version ol. those events will move from the preposterous to the improbable. Take his sissing and moaning over the tapes. He thinks handing them over to the authorities would com promise the confidentiality of the Presidency, does he? If he wants to maint ain, not the in- tegrity of his office .b ut his conduct of the office, he might consider refraining from clandestine bugging of his telephone calls and his conversations. Ills I-Was-a-Dupe-of-the-FBI act is bet- ter calculated to evoke giggles than in- dignation. "Because I lrusted the age n- cies conducting the investigation," our Little Boy Blue Prexy told us. "and because I believed the report I was get· ting, I did not believe the newspaper ac- counts that suggested a cover-up.'' So. okay, then, how come L. Patrick Gray. his acting chief of his FBI, calls him up a couple of weeks after the break-in and tells hlm that "people on your staff nre trying to mortally wound you by using the CIA and FBI, by confusing the ques· lion or CIA interest in, or not in, the peo- ple the FBI wishes to interview." EVEN A FELLA ALL taken up with getting peace with honor by givin g away ( VON HOFFMAN ) our wheat to the Russians might have paused for a small minute and said. '"Patsy, old buddy, old dangler in the wind, who? Who on my staff is trying to mortally wound me?" nie Gray-Nlxon conversation took place on July 6, 1972, and if our deceived and betrayed leader had spoken that one three-letter word he might not have been caught on coast~to­ coast TV on August 16, 1973, trying to tell us that, ". . . I pressed repeatedly to know the facts, and particularly whether there was any involvemenl by anyone al the White House." On April 15 of tQis year, Henry Petersen, the h e a d of the Justice Department's Criminal Division, a guy whom Nill'.on describes as a man with "an impeccable non-partisan record ." has testified that he told President Truthful that the lwo German Shepherds were up lo their eyeballs in trouble and he'd bet- Wick s 1t seems t o follow me 'everywhere!' our government which most had not even thought about since completing that compulsory high school clvics course. The hearings should proceed so that remaining wit· nesses can tell their storie.s and the committee round out its investigation. Whether or not all or part of the con- tinued hearings should be televised should be up to the committee and the networks -which incidentally spent millions of dollars on the initial sessions, with no hope of recovering their expenses. Already the effect of Watergate is shown on the political scene . There are bills to control campai gn financing. Closed door meetings are going out of style. Legislators are concerned about the increasing invasion of every citizen's right to privacy in his home and in his personal life. Phrases like i•Iaw and order" and "national security" are getting a second look, and being used more carefully. If Watergate has awakened the American public and its leaders to the need for a return to baste decency in government, it has served a good purpose and it should never pe brushed aside or forgotten. Fringe Benefit Another potentially beneficial effect of Watergate may be · the restoration of communications between President Nixon and the American public. His press conference didn't shed any new light on the affair, but the polls indicate the mere gesture of facing up to the nation, through the press, bas boosted his standing from an all-time low. The President's formal television addresses have been singularly ineffective. By getting out in the sun· light and fielding questions from reporters in an infor· mat setting, he scored more points than in all the formal speeches combined. The experience should encourage him to repeat the effort. 'You've got a great future in. the corpora re world, kid!' Dear Gloomy Gus Now it's hanky-panky at the AlJ. American Soap BOie Deri>)'! What is there left to believe in? A.K. O'-nr O"*' ~ ,,. ........ lthf Irr ...... ..... .. "°' _.,.,.. ,..,., .. "'"' .. lftt ---· lelllll yew "' .-we .. O~r aw. DlollY ~'"'· • • ter fire 'em. He al9o said he should keep Dean, so it didn't look like a guy who was cooperating with the investigation was being pun.U;hed. So Nixon fires Dean and allows the krauts to retire voluntarily with their sidearms. YOU COUW GO thnlugb almost every paragraph ct that speech and pick it to tatters, But the excuse offered for the crime committed on his behalf and in his name is enough to melt the wax in a hip- pie's ears: " ... in the 1960's, as in- dividuals and groups l n c re a s Ing I y asserted the right to take the law into their own hands ... their attitude was praised in the press and from some of our pu]pits •.. The notion that the end justifies the means proved contagious. Thus it is not surprising, even though deplorable, that some persons in 1972 adoPted the morality that t h e y themsel""" had rightly condemned, and committed acts that have no place in our political system .'' Teehee ! There are John Mitchell, ~1aurice Stans, the two bloodwursts, Halde man and Ehrlich man, Tony Ulasewicz, the ex·NYPD Peeping Tom. all or them infected by the sight of some raggedy· pants, inner-city Method i st minister nopping down in front of a bus to protest the war or school segregation. But take that argument a step !Urther. U the criminal behavior of all those col· lege kids is going to have such a powerfully contagious effec t on the highest government officials in the coun- try that we should sympathize with the boys in the Casa Blanca, what do you th.ink is happening to Vice President Egg· plant by hanging out with Frank Sinatra and his friends? Or, wh y can't every poli ce chief in the country turn gangster and then cop a plea by saying it was the Mafia that set them such a poor ex· ample? Bill Would Restrict Bani~ Queries Financial ,Privacy ·Rights To tell you the truth, I thoulht it would be a cold day in August before I ever made pillow talk with the likes of Assemblyman Alan Sieroty, D-Los Angeles. He's 8! much of a liberal as I am a libertarian. Most or the time he lauds the State. Me, I go for the individual. But, by golly, Sieroty has come up with a bill I can support wholeheartedly. In a way it ls sort of a mmpanion piece - at least It is similar in thrust -to SB 44.'I (Wedworih, D-LA). Th a t legi.!lation would tnm.fer the burden or proof from the bock of the tai· payer to the neck of , the laxlng agent. ll<Jlh SB 44.'I and AB 1609 are bills ol rights for the citiz<n. Sieroty's AB 1609 would protect the in- dividual's right to financial privacy. It would restrict govennnent investlgatioo of private bank accounts and other finan- cial records. · AS THINGS are now, a gumshoe from the State Board or EqualizaUoo, or Franchise Tax Board, can pad into a bank, scare the wits out of the bank manager, and inspect your bank records. Without due process, without a search warrant. Several mooths ago, for enmple state agents marched into the West Lodi branch of the Bank of. Amerlca and demanded to see the checldng account records of one Bob Bennett, proprietor of a bottle shop. The Slate claimed Bennett was in arrears on the payment of his retailer's tax. The agent.1 bad no search warrant , no subpoena ; but, tbey convinced the bank manager that cooperation was the belier part of wisdom. He let the agents Inspect Bemetl's records. They promptly im· pounded the account ; forthwith and right there without a by-your-leave or even a judgment. of debt. UNDER Sieroty's bill, a bank could not pennit such access to a depositor's bank records unles.s the Investigator (state or local) had obtained a subpoena. ( RUS WALTON J Any p!f'SOll who knowingly violated, participated in a violation, or induced a violation of AB 1609 (the "California Right to Financial Privacy Act") would be guilty ol a misdemeanor. The penally for such violation would be not more than ooe year in the clink or a fme of not more than $$,000, or both. Says Sieroly: "Writing a check OI' making a deposit in a bank aocowit is a persoo's private business. However, re- cent eootroverslal Federal legislation allows Federal government scrutiny <l every banking traMSctlon, without court authorization and prior nollce to the citizen. "Thal Is a serious lovasion ol the right ot privacy." So saying he moved to ~ vent the slate, at lea.!t, from being a part of that invading force. Suboequellt to Sieroly's AB 1609, U.S. Senatcr Alan O'anston, D-Calif., in- troduced similar legislation at the federal level : to corral the federal tnvaders. I have only one query: How COZ11f Jt takes an a v o w e d libera1 to &ilh> duce such a liberta.rian bill? What'! the matter with tfie so-ealled con- servative legislators? Those who protest their concern about in4lvldual liber1y and the encroaclunent of big broth e.r government! EVER SINCE the l930lo lhi>-n&Uon bas been hamstrung aQd bar.med by --10me weJl-lntemil:lned, some pot -wlto wanted to chanBe America. Time refonns to the left have given ~ a residue ol controls, coercion and coo- fiscation . For years the ce11tral question bu been: "who will refonn the reformers1'' °"" would hevt thought such refonnaa might come from the so-called servaUves. Those who proclaim the fealty to the ideals of liberty, ~ and propriety. · But , in the area or financial privacy," least, the liberals seem to be leading the way. Unique Book of the Sea Marilime historians and ~. and anyone interested ln lhe aea will be fascinated by a collection of 60 facsimiles ct <harl3 .,._,, for thetr historical sigollicaoce u well as tbelr beauty -1be Sea t'hart by Derek Howse and Michael Sanderson (McGraw-Hill, $12.95). BASED ON the Britlsb National Maritime MUleUm exhibits, tbe chartl range from 14211 to 1!1'11 and cover the seas from the Mediterranean to New. foundland , rrom the Eut lndles to south America, from the Gull of Finland to the Pacific Norlbwell. Each chart Is ac- companied by a commentary giving the known facts ol the geosrapby and ex· ploraUon, the b!Otifapby of t he cartographer, the lecholeal detaila c( the surveying or carfotrapby, as well as references to related charts. Ao introduction by S-.Admlnl (THE BOO~) Ritchie, Hydrographer to the Raya! Navy, coven the creation of sea chart.I from Marinus of Tyre in 100 A.O., the devel..,.,,.nt of the compass and the quadrant, the discoveries of Columbus, Vespucci, Vasco da Gama , John Cabot, and others through the preseot day . DEREK HOWSE, who served u 1 navigating officer in World War 11 and the Korean War, heads the Department cl Astronomy at the Natiooal Maritime MU!etlm. Dr. Michael Sanderson has been Li.brarian at the Nationa l MartUme Museum since 1964. VICTOR DE KEYSERLING Psychiatrists Disagree on Calley's Confused Personality WASHINGTON -In his taped u1- tervicws, J..t. William C.S lley described the My l..a1 massacre as "just li ke killing antmals" with whom he could neither speak nor reason. He discussed the tragedy freely with poychialrlsls. "Do you just want to get into some blood and guts?" he asked lhem. •'Or do you waol to go through the chtonological o'· der on what hap- pmed!" He told about gun- Dlna: down helpless Vlelnamese Yillagers who had been taken P'-· Latu, he killed someone crawl- ing through a rice fleld ; it turned 011t to be a cld.kl. Ae also confessed to Jlloalini an old man. WREN ONE of his soldiers 00.ltated to loio lo the slaughter, C.llcy kicked blm and onlered him k> start <hooting. Yet in tho middle of tho mUSICn!, Calley lk>pptd another aoldler lrom sexually molutlnf • Vletnameoe sJrl. 1u carley reaxm led the horror or ldan:h ti, 196&, he thought he w•s rollow-inl ordcn.. He was told the atta was oc.· I cupfed wholly by the "enemy." His orders were to make a rapid sweep through the area and to destroy all the "enemy" so he woul dn't have them at his back. lie dldn 'I fee l, he said, as ii he were "killing hum.ans.'' AFTER THE massacre, he began to feel "cocky'' and "told a few people ol.f.0 The orders suddenly recalling him to the United States didn't denate him . "I'd gone th~b 17 months In a com· bat area and you JUSt don't build yourself up on hopes or try to out-guess what the Anny's got ror you," he explained. "I was going back to the big headquarters. l had no gulll lo my mind ••• I didn 't honestly think J was going there for anything. I was going to ge t there and be very happtly surprised." TIIE THOUGHT oocy111ed to him, nevertheless, that be mJJllll be questioned a!Jout ~h:il WCflt wrong at My Lal. "I told them 1£ General Westmoreland (then the Army chief) wants to know anything about tactical operations or if we've made a mistake anyplace, I'm there to do everything tn the world I can to sit down and he lp ... JM that wasn'l what they were after. I was never asked my opinion." The psychiatrists, however, "'·ere cager (JACK ANDERSON) to get Calley's opinion. One asked whether marijuana or naroot.lcs could have contributed to the killer craze at My Lai. CALLEY 'eplled that he was unaware or any marijuana smoking before or dur- ing the operatioa. Ho explained: "You grab a handful of cigarettes off a guy. All you could do Is tromp 'em loto the mud on him. Then, of cow-se, you've got a morale . problem. 'The lieutenant's running around stomping on all ol our cigarettes.' My troops think I'm the fall guy ... I had no supporl from higher, ao I didn't concern mysoll with the prob- lem." BIJI' ON re!Iectlm, cau.y regretted bis apathy over drug1. "Gosh, I mean It'• a terri ble tragedy because I didn't go lok> It," he saJd. "U that was the cause <l something Irregular at My Lal. then it made me a very poor commande r ror not going In to IL" Calley's most poignant remark wasn't I recorded. But when he was away from the tape recorders, the doctors quoted him as l!klng anxiously: "I would like to have the three or you doctors tell me whether or not I can have the same killer Impulses loday as I had lo Vlelnam, because I would reel very bad H I sud· denly round myself accused ct kflling my neighbors and their children." TUIS QUESTION still hanp heavily over Calley. Is he a psyc:hodc wbo would ldll I.Older stnu and who, tbmlo..,, wasn't .....Uy l'!SpODSible' for the My Lai horror? Or Is he a producl ol the U.S. mllltary llY'!em who would follow orders bllodly er>d ldll helpless civilimll lo eold blood? The Army psychialrisb, who •flllTlln<d C.lley, dettci.d persooallty problems and ...,,.r1oc1 ha "l«lds to reason and problem·oolvt lo a rather lllmpll1lic 'ellhcMr' flSbioa." But they concluded: "There Is no psychosis, no neumlis, no pattern ct behavior deviant -b to label him u havln& 1 penooollty dlson!er." AT LEAST lhree dvt!lan psyclllairllll came fo Ille opposite conclusion. The strongest oplnioo was staled by Dr. Alberl A. Laverne of New York City, who declared : "Calley at this lime II very disturbed, Iacldng Insight, Impairment ol judgment, denial "' reality and full of hootllity ..a the viciousness ct a nbld, mad dog killer." We discussed the oecrtt calley tapes with his attorney, Geora• W. Latimer, who rejecto 1AVeme'1 findings. "It wasn't a question ct Inaanlty or ol Calley's mental p,........ not working," said Latimer. "It was a question ol what mlghl haJll>"1 to anyme who ,.,.. OU.-COAST DAILY PILOT Robtrl N, Wttd, Pllblllher Th0!7141 Kttvll, Edlklr Barbanl Krtlblcll Editorial Page Bdlklr Tburscla,y, Auguat SO, 1978 through the horrifying expocleoce ol war." THE U.S. Court of Military Appeell will ...vtew the Ciiiey case probably lo 'October. Theo President Nixon has prom- bed to make his OWD finaI n!vlew. The tngtc C.lley, mt<1nwhlle, II awaiting the outcome numbly. The psychiatrists asked him about the future and the IOCfet tapes record his reply, "To be honest." he said,"! have no idea. lf the case were dropped tomorrow , I wouM walk around like a dUmb Idiot" 'n'le ~ Ne of· th~ n.Qy Pilot tctb to Worm 't.nd ltlmula.te rtaden by p~ntlha on this Ne dlvt'nle eomtnentary on toplcs of in. tettst by l)lndlcated columntata and cartoonl11£, by provk!ln1 a forum fC)I(" readtn:' vil!WI and by pre!llentinr thls ne~r'1 oplnkx!r and kfeu on CIU'ftrrt top&cs. The «litor1al cptnlonl of tM DI.Uy Pilot appcer only tn the tdltorl&l column at tht top ot the -· Oplnlonl .xpt<lled by the C.'OI· umnilts and evtoon.IJtJ and letttr wrltrn m tt'lflt OW'l'-and ru endone- mtnt ot tbdr v5ewt by U. Dl.Ut Pilot lhoczld be lnfen<d. u,,, ...... Hea1Jg Load Sharon Lyle, at General Accounting 0 f f ice , bolds reports on cam· paign donations of all presidential candidates. More than $60 million in donatio ns ·is docu- mented in I ,900 pages. Erotic Film Still Scheduled COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP ) -Controversial Danish film maker Jem Joergen Thorsen says be ls going ahead with his erotic film on Christ despite papal anger. a French ban and possible loss of Danish government flnan· cial support. "The whole thing t s ridiculous, with condemnations from a Jot of people who haven't even read my script ," Thorsen declared Wednesday, "If these reactions truly renect today's Ch r Is t i an message then my film will come closer to the truth than I originally imagined." THORSEN WAS reacting to a decision by the National French Cinema Center Tues- day to ban the shooting of the movie on location In southern France. The filming was to begin next month. Thorsen , 41, is considering possible new locations in North Africa or South America. But the Da nish government's film irultitute, which caused a storm here an4 abroad for putllng up a guarantee for a $100,000 bank loan , said It wouJd have to reconsider ln the light of the French ban. LEIF FEILBERG, the in- stitute's director, said a change of film ing location would also change the pre- conditions on which the credit guarantee was based. No Danish film project has created a stir comparable to that caused by Thorsen's latest plan. He hints it will in- clude a bank-robbing Jesus riding a motorcycle In the nude and making love to Mary Magdalene in a brothel. Pope PauJ VI denounced it Sunday as "an ignoble and blasphemous outrage." And on Tuesday gasoline bombs were t h o w n at the Danish- amba.tsador11 residence in Rome. In several other coun- tries, including the United States, Danish embassies reported protest letters. IN COPENHAGEN, the Young Christians held a pro- test rally, started a leaflet campaign and pledged to sabotage the fllrnlng wherever it took place. Denmark 1 1 Roman Catholic minority join- ed forces with Lutheran vicars in a natlonwtde protest move· ment, and conservatives mov- ed to raise the matter in Parllament.- 'Mlorsen claimed the reac- tions showed that his piaMed Hfilm hlta home among those who fear an attack on their Jesus monopoly." Thorsen said he regards Jesus u a mythical Ideal which the churoh and othe .. shaped end used to their . needs. ' ·' nursoay, Augusl :JU, J.'1/J * UAIL Y l"llU I 7 INTO FALL IN NEW WOOL SWEATER JACKETS The sweater is a jacket. And that's not all. The sweater is everything this fall. Big- stitched bulkies like these are a must. Great with pants, greater with slim skirts, a lithe body und erneath. Bottom: tweedy cable knit cardigan, natural with rust, camel or bottle green, M-L, by Cinzia 24.00. Left: Italian fisherman knit cardigan, natural ' with motiff, M-L, Cinzia 26.00. Top: loop jacket, zipped Irish handknit in natural, S-M-L, Patricia Byrne 40.00. See the sweater news in ca mpus knits 138-al I 20 stores ' - SROP MONDAY TO FRIDAY I 0:00 TO 9: 30 e SUNDAYS NOON TO 5 e saturday I 0 to 6 m '~' co, south coast pleza, san die90 f"(y. at bristol, 541>-9321 MAVCO • I ·I I • DAILY PILOT Fa..U11 Circus bfl BU Keane Can't Get Rid of Ducks RIVIERA BEACH, FI a . (AP) -Multimillionaire John D. MacArthur has turned, in desperation, to a M i a m i 'Berrigan's Wife' Held: Shoplifting GLEN BURNIE, Md. (AP) -A woman who identified herself as Sister Elizabeth McAlister, the wife of the Rev. Philip Berrigan, will be tried Sepl. 26 in Anne Arundel Oxmty District Court on shoplifting charges. She and another woman, identifying herself as Sister Judith La.Femina, were ar· rested Monday on a complaint by the security officer of the Sears, Roebuck Co. store here. ' THE TWO WER!!f alleged to have taken an eleetric saw valued at $209.99, ... a 69-cent package of sandpaper and a 19-cent package ~:of picture frame hangers. • Ashley Vick. deputy COWlty police chief, said the women gave their address as 1933 Park Ave., Baltimore. Tha t is the address of the Jonah House. a residence established by the Berrigans for peace ac· ti vists. Sister McAlister 8.nd Father Berrigan were defendants in the "Harrisburg Seven" con- spiracy trial in which they were charged with plotting to kidnap presidential adviser Henry Kissinger and t o destroy underground heating newspaper for help in getting rid of a steadily increasing flock of oversexed ducks. The 78-year-old developer and insurance magnate, con- sidered one of the world's richest men, wrote the Miami Herald's Action Line column recently that a•• friend 11 deposited 13 ducklings in the pool at hl3 luxurious Colon- nades B ea c h Hotel near Riviera Beach. "THEY WERE very cute and the guests enjoyed feeding them," he wrote. MacArthur admitted he led them, too. Later, he said, friends and neighbors added Easter duck· lings. and then a few wild geese and mallards flew in. But once they se ttl ed poolside, they mu1tiplied, and MacArthur complained he couldn't get rid of them. frS A REGULAR melting pot," he said. "And they're the most broad-minded b i r d s you've ever seen. I thought mallards were supposed to be true to their wives . Theoretically -but you see, they 're not. "We've got mixtures of mallard and muscovy, mallard and white, white and rn~ - a little bit of everything,'' he said. WHEN THE Herald found a foster home for his fowl, MacArthur said he'd accept but cauUoned he wouldn't part with all of them. "I bellyache about them ... but they're great to have around . You·d be amazed how many people come here , who have never seen a live duck." facilities in Washington, D.C. 1-----------1 THE JURY deadlocked on the conspiracy charge. Vick said one of the arrested women produced a New York state's driver's license with the name of Elizabeth McAJister and the other had a Massachusetts driver's license bearing the name of Sister Judith LaFemina. Shoplifting carries ·A maxi- mwn penalty of ~· $'100 fine and 18 months imprisonment upon conviction. • fast, Thorough, Guaranteed Real Estate Sales and or Brok er license TRAINING Ph one for Free Folder I ANTHONT SCHOOLS HAllO• CINTE• 230t H•rbor Cdftt•r CtsU MtM, Ctllfo"'I' PL 17141 f1f·l3SJ '"' S. eni.khursl SI. Anlllelm, Cal. t1I04 .... (7141 77,.5100 % on deposits el $100,000 for six months lo 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 Areldil •c1rritos Lt Crnctntt •oranp . W GlfdtM •costt Mm Los A"'"" (Z) ·•sin a.m1rdlno •C••ot• Park Downey (2) Monterey Pfl'k Whltttlr fiYe Additio"I Off ices in Northrt C.lilor•I• Pleas .. t ff ill Saa 8r111 (Opeol•c Soon) Fister City M01otain View S11 Jtst *OPEN NIGHT & DAY and S~turdays • Call (213) 923 -9601 or see the white pages for you r nearest office. ASSETS OVER $375 MILLION r Hl~SPE ·ED VALUES on the back-to-school expressway. •• girls' jeans 'n shirts 3:939 A. Print ribs. Polyester ribs. Polyester/cotton sleeves. White, red or navy. S,M,L. Reg. 5.99 5.09 8. "Baggie" jeans. Cuffed cotton denim in navy, brown, berry, red. 710 14, IUINA , .... Bt•ch If Or•noethOr'Pt 0-olotiy NO r. f1IO ,..,_ S.odoy 10 to 7 OIANOf City or: al Garden Grove ~lvd. o;... 111-f ,. ... Dolly .. ....,. 10 r. ' c . Waist cinchers. Polyester/ cotton, easy elasticized wa ist. Solids. prints. S,M,L 5.94 o. Pl1id baggies. Polyester cotton. Great cuffs, 2 front pockets. Neat plaids. 7 to 1•. 3.39 E.Skknpy,1hrink1. Bare it in navy, red, gold ,•white. brown polyester. S,M,L. 4.50 G.One·eyed ties. Vlnyl upper and sole. Brown /red/green multi· colors. Sizes 8 Vi to 3, •c. 4.74 I". Corduroy bells. Pinwale cotton corduroy. Navy, green1brown. berry • J 7 lo 1•. Sale prices through S1turday. Kox1§.:1i~. value. Wlogt'J) \'fny . r ·~ sole. Brown/tan. Slzee 8Yi. to 4Ct ,_;;.--______ ,..... . ., -------ii' /( / I / ,l SANTA ANA 3900 So. Brlstol ·No. ot So. Cot•f Ptu:e . O,.. IM,... Doliy •. ....,.10116 . . • Neweomb. Third Timnthea Larr -~ :~ins Adams Cup GREENWICH, CoM. (AP) r------- -Timothea Larr of the Seawanhaka-Corlnlhlan Yacht CJub, New York, Wednesday won the Adams CUp for the North American W om e n ' s Salling champkwhlp '!rom the host Indian Harbor Yacht Club here. In 'Che eigtlt-race series "'1ridl started Monday on l.Gl1a fsland Sound, she never llnt..lied worse 1han Mil · cxmpetitton against se~ other top regional women 981J. ors from throughout North America. She totaled 51.5 paints on a high point scoring system. The series was sailed ln 'IT- foot Sollng crass sloops which the eight top women sailors changed art.er every race. Kalle Wilford or the Tred Avon Yacht Club, Oxford, Md., won second place Wednt!day with 44.5 points. Carolyn Newcomb from the Newport Harbor Yacht Club who held a close second after six races Tuesday, finished third In the race for the cup with 39.S polnl!. "After the fint three races Monday th< skipper I really had to beat WU Carolyn Newcomb from California " Mn. Lan-aakl. ' In fourth place Wedoe!day was 1971 Adanu Cup winner Rmly EV<f'dell ol the Frostbite Society, Duxbury, Mua., with S7.25 points. GUllan Weot ol Kltsilano Yacht Club ln Vancouver, B.C., llnlsbed filth with 34 point&. Sparky Arceneaux of the Southern Yacht Club, New Ot1eam:, La., was sixth with 33.2S poinl!. Ann Boyd or the Savannah Yacht CJub in Georgia totaled 29 points for seventh place, while Heidi Backus, Vennilloo Boat Club, Vermilion, Ohio linWJed eighth and laat with 21 point&. BOATING Harbor Gal Praised By Champ "carolyn Newcomb and her crew from Area G (C&llfornla) was the toughest competition 1 had in every race." 'n)at was the comment o( Timothea Larr, wiMer of the Adams Cup for the women's North American sailing cham- pionsllip in speaklng ol tile third place team from Newport Harbor Yacht CJub. Mrs. Larr (nee '11mmy Schneider) doesn't spoil llgbi- ly when It comes to sailing and sailing competition. This wasn~ the only time she hBs won the Adams Cup. She will be remembered in Newport as blonde, green.eyed '11mmy Schneider u a Junioc who came here to win the Sears cup. Junior national championship. Mi'is Newcomb and her crew of Rolie Jones and Barbara Barnard were second going into the final tv.'O ra'Ot5 for the Adams Cup a t Green'A·ich, Conn. Rodriguez, Robertson Share Lido-14 Honors F.d Rodriguez and S I u Robertson, both from Alamitos Bay Yacht Club were tied for the lead after two races for the Lldo-14 na- tiooal championship al Klng Hal1>or Yacht Club Wedoes- day. The regatta wu thrown into Cucchiaro Takes Lead • sll&lrt donnybrook ~ the race committee was protested Over a starting 1ine procedure in the second race. U the pro- test stands the race will be thrown out and resailed today. Otherwile, the cbampionlhlp will be decided on a alngle nice. l.Mding the comolation flight is Al Perez of Balboa Yacht Club. Standings : CHAMPlONSillP FLIGHT -(I) '11e between Ed Rodriguez and Stu Roberl!on, ABYC: (3) Pete Jefferson, Mission Bay YC; (4) Dlck Lineberger, ABYC ; (5) tie LONG BEACH (AP) -between Harry Wood, ABYC, Steve Qlcchlaro ol MIT aod Bill McCord, BYC. I CONSOLATION FLIGHT -Nautlca As>octaUoo took a 2-1 (1) Al Perez, BYC ·, (Z) John lead in the beat fOlD"-of-teven aeries as the North American Palmer. ~tBYC ; (3) Dick match racing championships Rqblnette, SDYC; (4) Martin for lhe Prince of Wales Bowl Wells, MBYC; (>) J erry moves into the final day t-r1_T_ank __ ers_le'-y,_AB_Y_c. __ _ day. Cucchiaro came out on top after Dick Deaver of Loi Angeles Yacht Club wa.s di.!1- qualifled ln one race for changing fhe tension on the backstay of hi! Cal-25 sloop during. the race. • ' THE LOOKS OF LOVE So meny ways to ahow your .love. We twv. aom• of tho moat beautiful. Ir\ whl!lllW price l'llng• you wla~I When you decide It's fOt'8\IGr. let UI help you decide how to uy It. Oillmond solltaires In 14 klrat gold. From $200 . -Do Somtthlng Buutlful.,. Clltf'tt ~ tft'tlflll -AfNl'kltt I ii,,_ hillA!Mrttl,.'IW Mntw CMrtt, ,_, SLAVl<Li'K'S Jewelers Since 1917 II FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644-1380 Wlttl klulltnt •h TON•~. Or•nft', U Ctl"rltot, U H•btl Altoi ltn D1tOO Md 1M V'91J. ' ~ . . Thursd<1)', ALIQIJSl 30. i q73 DAILY PROT f • Hit the back-to-school expressway for NON-STOP VALUES 15 % OFF boys; shirts. 21s5 Reg. 2.98 each Short aleeve polyester I cotton broadcloth. Tw-rtone polk1-clol. Ito 18. 5.98 "Elephant btll" brushed cotton )eana.Anorted aotlda. 8to18 regular. 8lo16 alim. 111• prices tlleetivt 4 days only, 2/$6 Reg. 3.50 each Two-tone long sleeve polyester I cotton knit layered look. Assorted c;:olor1. 8 to 18. Long sleeve French crew. Polyester/cotton knit 8to18. Reg. 3.98 each. 2/SI 5.98 Cuffed baggle, polyester/cotton rnklw1le corduroy. Assorted aol- kit. 8to18 regular, 8 to 16 slim . husky 8 to 16. 6.49 5.99 Ever-popular ''George" boot. 84'own vlnyl. Youlh sizes 8Yz to 30. Boys' 3V. to 60. 6.99 7.99 Btu.hlld le1ther lace-to-toe lie boot Yooth sizes 81h to 30. IUINA pa•K Beach at 0r"•l'l9ffhOrPt °""" olotty NO .. -,.... ...., 10 .. 7 O•ANOI City Or. at G•r!Mn Ciro\19 Blvd. °"" 10-t """ o.lly ktNkor• 10 .. t 21s5 Reg . 2.98 each Bold plaid solid 1hlrt. Polyelttr/ collon, long 1leev11. 8to1" 4.98 Snap front "eltph1nl bell")..,.._ 0olyester/cotton, aaaorted llOIW.. J lo 18 regular. 8 to 18 allm. Hutky .\to 16. s.•• 21s5 Reg. 2.98 each Short sleeve placket front. Pot,_ ester/ cotton knit. A11orttd cotOft'. 8 lo 18. Zip-front 1hort tlff't'I...,. tone, polyeater/cotton knit B to 18. 2/11 5.98 Baggy dress tlacks, texturtd ,..,_ ester knit. Sol Ids 1nd tandll.eto 18 regular. 8to18 11Jm. ·Husky 8lo16. 1.41 SANlll' ANA J90I So. &rl1tol • No. of So. Cetllt ,._ .,,.. , ........ Dolly. _.,. " ... I • ) I jd Ol<JLY Pll9T Thursd1y Au911st 30, 1973 February Event . Acapulco Race \ . ( . v ' Entries Issued The San Dleso 'Yacht Club and th~ Club de Yates of AcapulcO have issued In· vitat'ioot and mailed entry blanks for the 12lh biennial San Diego I<>-Acapuko race, Feb. 3, 1974. still five months away. definite commitments have already been received from 15 skippen. Ten entries have b e e n received from San Diego skip- pers and five from Mexico boats. New .·Ranger 32 -Design Released Line drawings for the new been given to the greatPr Ranger-32 from the design number o( winches normally board of Gary Mull have,been mounted on a racing boat. The released by Ranger Yachts. cockpit was designed with the GOLDEN ARROW DAIRY ScrYH You Timt l Gas "We follO\\'ed the same visibUity and convenience thinking in developing the needed in racing in mind. WE DELIVER Ranger-32 that we followed in "These same factors s~uld the very successful Ranger· afford the efficleot'handlir.g,of f~r FREE Sample 37," said Muster Hammond, cruising gear," said Ham- general manager. mond. CALL 492 6956 "We told Mull that we Cabin accomodation , • wanted the fastest o/.i Ton designed for racing will give a 1~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!=~ design possible and still have family of five, or two couples.1~ a boat that offered com-comfortable c r u i s i n g ac-T · S l d ' N Q ' lortable cruising and sailing comodatlor.s. The weight is ry a ur a y s ews wz 'Ibe 1,430-mlle race ls the longest on the West Coast ex· cept for the Transpac races to Honolulu and Tahiti. It has been scheduled on e v e n - numbered years -opposite from the Transpac -since 1952. Ir. recent years the Acapulco race has fallen short on en- tries due to the length of the race in what Is normally light airs in the latter stages. Chambers said the early In- terest, in addition to the WORC inclusion, is due to the enthusiasm among One Ton skippers in long distance rac· ing. A special One Ton award, the La Siesta Trophy, will be awarded for the first time . BOAT DRIVER -AND CREW? -Don Edmond· son of Lake Elsinore gives pre-race instruction to pretty model as he prepares for the 250.mi!e endur- ance race on Lake Elsinore Sept. 15-16. accomodatlons for a family." centered for racing with four The Ranger-32 represents berths amidships, plus a dou-we Dare y OU the fourth generation o f:1j0biileiiiibeiirthiiiiii¢iit.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-.;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiii0l~Oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiii;;;;;;;iiii0iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijj development by Mull along1l- these lines, the first being the highly successful Uvely Lady. ~n appearance the new Ranger is much like the Ranger One Ton (37) with some modifica· tions of shape to enhance the light air performance and decrease rating Wlder the IOR fl.1ark Ill rule. PERSONAL CARE THE RACE got a shot in the arm recently when it was in- cluded in the World Ocean Racing Championsip Series. YACHTS IN the Three- Quarter Ton rating will also be eligible for the race. Eligibility is restricted to yachts with a minimum International Offshore Rule (IOR) Mark III rating of 24.3 and an "L" factor of 26.5 or more. The yachts must be 30 feet in length overall or more as indicated on the measure- men t certificate. Edmondson Joining Lake Elsinore Race Chairman Harvey Chambers of San Diego Yacht Club said the 1974 race promises to be one ol. the la~est in several years. Although the race is Don Edmondson, a Lake Elsinore OOat dealer, is the latest entry in the Sept. 15-16 PSAgivesyouafft. HONEYWELL PENTAX SPSOO WITH f 2.0 LENS e Super Takumar 55nm V2.0 Lens e Highly accurate through-the-lens Exposure Metering System e Classic Pentaic Styling and Precise Handling ~2690 SLIDE -PROJECTOR • l/l .5 Prtclslon Lens • 500 Wall Brllllance • Pop-up Edl!Of IOI Sllde Prt-'l'ltw • Carryln& Cast and GAF 100 S!ld~ l'r1y • lhmol• Control e fotward, Rt'l'tr•t, Focus 59.95 BOWMAR MX40 CALCULATOR Lake Elsinore-250 boat race. A veteran out boa rd er , Edmondson has always been known as "leadfoot" and was the leader at th e half-way mark in the 1970 Lake Elsinore classic. He will be competing this year in an 18-foot Kitsoncraft· ~1ilemaster hull pawered by a single C-6 h-1ercury engine. The event is held annually at the Holiday Trailer Park on the north shore of Lake Elsinore. The race will start at IO a.m. on Sunday and end when the first OOat reaches the 250-mile mark. A n estimated $12,000 will be di- vided among the winners of the four classes, inboards, out- boards, jets and rotarys. Saturday will see the en- trants participating in the STP time trials. They will race agalnst the clock for one lap over a 2th-mile course. Prize money donated by the STP Corp. will be distributed to the fastest boats in each class. Admission each day is $3 for adults, $1.50 for 12-16 year olds. Children under 12 ac- companied by parents are ad- n1itted free. Lake Elsinore is located half way between Los Angeles and San Diego on Highway 71. It is 25 miles inland from San Juan Capistrano. Racing orientation is ob- vious in the deck plan. Consideration and room have 4 Millionth Outboard P1·oduced Johnson OUtOOards has an- nounced that its four millionth outboard motor -a 1974 135 horsepower model -is off the assembly line, mar k ing another milestone in the com- pany's growth. Founded in 1922, Johnson's one millionth outboard was a 10 hp model built 30 years later in 1952. In 1959 a 75 hp motor -one which used the same basic V-4 engine block as this year's four millionth - became the company's two millionU)._ -·-~ , A three-cylinder l o o p - charged SS-hp Sea Horse was identified as Johnson's three millionth in 1968. "We are very proud of our four-millionth outboard," said Tom Kalbfus, director of marketing. "We feel it ~ftects not only a grOwth and future of the company bot of the entire recreatio~ _ marine indUstry as well ."· \~·) \j1 =-·--·-} MFG. LIST PRICE 275.50 18995 PRICES 6000 THRU MONDAY, SEPT. 3 KEYSTONE 64 ELECTRONIC STROBE e 1 Gulde No. 40 • NICAD Rtcharceablt Balttrits e Rtch1re:ts in 2~ Hrs ..... e Nton Re ady Ll&lll e 2 11. Gu1r1nt11 • Madt In U.S.A. 4'1.85 DUR REG . PRICE 48 .95 Patient morale is enhanced with regular visits lo our beauty salon for . a shampoo and hair set. Barber facilities are also provided. Laundry service for patient's personal items is available if desired. ........... ...-..-.. •-.!i'ii'!-~ n-·• Yhlton Alw_,. W•k:o1111t h¥erty Mnor Canm..cnt Hnplhll 35410 c..-. Caplstro••· C.pktrm ..... . 4, ... ,., HARDWARE STORES WE WILL BE CLOSED ON LABOR DAY MON.-FRI. 9 A.M.·9 P.M. SAT. 9 A.M.-6 P.M., SUN. 10 A.M.-4 P.M. ' ' .. YOUR CHOICE: GLOSS OR FLAT LATEX HOUSE PAINT both t•le pric,d! R.•1i1h w••· ther, 1mo9, mildew t nd 1teint, Extr• high hiding. One coet coven mo1t 1urfec.1. Drie1 ft1t. Q11ic.k, ee1y cleen·up in 1oapy weter. For primed wood , metel, mtsonry, etc. Choote flet !reg. 9.79) in white or re•dy.rn;~,d colors. Cu1-t.om Color• 1li9htly higher. 97 LATBI HOUSE PAJNf 1rs THE ClVILIZED WAY TO DELICIOUS OUT- DOOR COOKING, WITHOUT MUSS OR FUSS OF HIT OR MISS CHARCOAL Cookln9 outdoor1 the ELECTRO.GRILL wey m11111 no chercoel me11 -before or efltr. No fu11l119 with lighter fluid. le11 weitin9 for werm-up. And thenk1 to Oitl·•·metic Control, you're sure of th1 motl temptingly d1 ticiou1 btrbecue you"ve '"'' f11t1d! SALE $44.95 REG. $59.95 LARGEST STOCK OF CHARMGLOW PARTS IN THE HARBOR AREA SMOKEY ilE KETTLE 1695 299 LANTERN W/BATTERY ' COMPLETE Wl'fff DELUXE VINYL CASE AND AC CHARGER e t Dl&U Dl1pl17 e Full Floatln& et.cl1111 I • Manual Const1nt BUSHNELL 90•2)0 ZOOM LENS SPECIAL PUllCNASE New smaller' 13" 1"111 pltlS col~pslble lee constnJo. tl<>n for compact llke- elonr -Ideal for picnics or" 1 second unit Tight· fitting cover. dlmpers for heat contro11-closl to smother COllS for rMISf. Bllcll pon:ellln finish. SJIOO Ideal for boaters and campers. ' Braak...sisllnt floatini CISI wilh wulhorproof pllllH>ultDtl switch. 6V bltt Incl, l2S9S e Vlnyl Carr1ln1 Pouch e Ad1pttr/Char11r 79.95 • f'tnta• Mount e f4.S Aptrtwt • fllllOUI Outfltttll Quality '1'13.95 MFG. LIST PllCE 211.50 SO. COAST PLAZA-COSTA MESA-· lllSTOI. AT SAN DllGO PIWY. -PHONI f7tJl7J MOH •• Tun •• WID •• THUIS •• SAT. -10.' P«t. 1t•t ; SUN. 12 lN•o.1J to I QUEENIE By Phil l_nterlandl . .. o n.·,-~-.!'~,,~..__... '.'So. today is the fu.t da1 of the rest of my life -big de<i!!. Hwiibugl I just feel one day, older.'' For the Record Dissolutions Of Marriage e:11tll'H """""' lJ Altll1~. Ulll1 Rlollll 111d Cllarl" Calvin arati.m. Edw1rd Lynn •!Id Marorlt J. ~"tfl'\lol\,. Hlttft Dorl •lld 8¥Mrd ··~ C1rr. W1Ul1m EllQlbelll ind Lorin "~"' Hollv, &1-1y J011n Ctr10n 111d H1rold Wt lr.tflitld Htlll'Of"ton, Zorl M.. Ind How11'd C. (llWIH, M1rl1n Fr1ric:r. Ind LM Perry Fll1p1rrk;k, llOIK'rt W. Ind Atl cl L. S1k1I, Hlftry S, Ind Jull1nne A. Miiier, lltnl•"""' LUkl l rwl Vvonnt JIY a1ndy, C1rolvn Ju11 1nd J.ckl1 Tyr- Rlc1. Linea. M. Ind $11\fftl A, Hllchcoclr., N1nq L. 111d Jo/lfl H. Slaw.. J.ek R1ymond Ind CtrollM ,_ ll1lni.ld, LOVll SC0tt .rid LI~ MM Arcllt'I, MMllvf'I ~ GrtOOtV S. euc1r.m1Utr', Hwold Arnold Mid ShlrltY .... 0.vtt, J1y llitnlon Ind Mary PMrl Spll'ldllr, Fri!z Otto Ind &rl;llff ll1n1t1 Hirt. P1lrlcl1 .-.n111 9fld JKk Edwin f Ootrr. ll11r1Mr1 J. 1nd RllMrt L. MotflV, O.nt1lt W. Pd N1ncy J . 8111, Slllr1 .. LOii Id N11m11n £111111 H1rlfl1ld, AnrM M. •nd Thom•I S. P•rk.,., S•nclr• J. •nd Jolw1 M. 11..,._,, Rlelllrd L •nd Shlrlw M. Htrv1ah, RDllln J . 9ncl llob M. Mlnoo._ Lr.Kia II. and JtffTrr IC. e""'"'' ....., ~rtt lfld Thom11 C•rt"' ll•1s. M•rtN L lfld R9ftHI G. lll~n. Chlrlt IC. W Rcwil1 O. DunrM. a.rban """ and CMrlH H. Wtlls. ...._ CUttonl !Ind LorrtlrM <'-' ......... ~ #Ml9 ft RoMrt ,_ ••"'"' J;,.. 1nd wou-H. 1 ·~. 11mef!W f'•tridt Md IMf1 ""'-Adtml. SMren Jo _. Dllllllcl Joel OeMlrc(l9al, J•11e c. lfld Phllp L. Hvc!Mn,~' II._,. lfvce a. H1Hlpli, ~ MM .. •nd Mlc:llNI .. eoi.. ..... n, Sh1r0f'I L" Md SIU Joe Cook.,., Jama Allyn •nd IC•rtn fMrlt Wollrt'lllll'I, lll0011'1 Atlnholcl Md lftty Loblt•, Roa.rt F. 9lld Ml!llWt ... .,, Mldltfl Ar1"n and ~ Leland Fowl .... MktlNt C. Md C.rOll A. Tolll¥ff Jr., Lewl1 E. lfld lKrv L lhofn9i.on, AJYln DI" lfld Ame M•rle ........ ~,, Gen .... ltOM Ann •nd """""'" J•tk Fls.lltlvm, ytM~ F. •1111 Dt•M L. Mol!IU, ,,,..,.,E. •nd &•l'fl.llra M. WalQr, Dorl• J. •nd Jec'k Ill. Maril, Linde and Mel Sh«wln C.mpbeN, °""91•1 J, Md Florence LI~ S! ....... Lonttl IC.~ o.rT \\YIWI Adtrnt. Otlorfl S. tnd Allen Robert O.Ylt. CtlhlrlM I, and Douglas IC. OOOCIL Jolw1 (Nor'4!1 wlCI AH Anna McCl"IMI\', MIMn C. lfld Jo.n F. llurr0U9ht. J•n and PllK Hl'l'9f', N&l'ICY LoulM •nd Phllllp Alhonl' H1rrl1, C•rd Ill • ...:I Elft lrllln Or1mby, Peter G. Ind Cherin A. H1rr1n. ~-tnd H1rry Clllrlt s D•tv. Mary Ellul>lth Ind RObert G-.o Fk k, Ltllll1 A. llld Tlltodorl A. llrKMnln. LloNtd I. Jr., •nd suwn J , Whlll1k ... , LorrtlM llnd JOlq!h £, Sl!bln. N1ncy J, Ind H•rold A. Ill l roc:k, El111btlh l., 11\d Wllllm L. LOPtZ. Vktorl• ,..,. Rklrdo C1rdlnl1 Murphy, Robert LYM tlld l.Ofl"th'MI Ann Slt"9lr1, MMlt Wld Neslor JOMph BOll1AC11, JNMtll• Ind Alellllllltr ....... Big Boom For Pill ALGIERS (AP) Algerian women bought nearly two million boxes of birth cont rol pills in ' 1972, compared with only 12,000 in 1965, t h e newspaper La Republique d'Oran reported .. Each box co ntain s enough pills for a month. Daly, E11"11 A. Ind JOll Hubbell, J-1 Ind Wl'(l'll A. Roe, Blrthl M. Ind Nicholas N. v.i1111. &lilt E. •nd G...-11c1 L. J111nlngs. Marv FrtncH 1nd Gr1ctr p, Wtlt1Kt, Ell.z•blllh II. •nd Frink R. &tu, Slvndr• o. •nd Roa.rt o. K1sold, SNorm•lH Ann •nd Mtlvln !""M 1111111, Timothy G. tnd El1•nor II. Htsl•r, Brtlerlr •nd G•rv smith, l!l1rtMor• J. 1nd wuu.m c. Llndllffll, DtMls Al•n Mid ShtO'I Allll ()pferm.n. Ellen Elli.btth Ind 01>Aci ,_ Like, C1rol S. Ind Wiii"' A. LUP1rtllo, TtrtM Mtrll Ind lho!Tlli5 G11'1- Coolt, M1sot1 J1v •nd Cynthie J•n GOllr, Ktllh M111rlc1 •nd MIN AM Sltp!M,,s, Arthur F. 1nd Dorl5 LIOlllrd, AnM E. •nd Robtr1 A. Anlttl'l.On, P~ J, Ind Oltn Gltn Jr, &orsi1r, T•m•r• l!I. 1nd kott L. S•ltrno, Merilyn JMll Mid Vlclor '"'" W1rrtn, LlllOA' •nd Jahn McCoy, l(tMefh W1r111 Ind Donni lff .,.,.,.. """" 11 C•rt..,, Rl'(!l'IOllCI RlllMll •lld Vtln'll Rc:.ltn dt Diil. Merctdlt Ind Htrmlllo M. 11109&. C1roit' Elltn Ind HutMr1 Sr.tlltV &rMdlng, Sfll!'WI Elli.IN-It! 11111 Dlnnl5 '" Q!Mlvllle, lkMI• J. •nd Rlctllrd I'. Htrrlt. Cyrlftlla Jo Mid Norm1n I.Al HO'tf, COf'lnl• G•,. 11\d G•rv Ed'/lflfd Sllrltz. $1ndr1 0. Ind ltOt111d W. ~vkllOll, AJICll AMI •nd Rlchlrd Brue• Sl1nw. Lorirlll W. Ind Keith Sutir. ltaymond,L. •nd 9'flY L. Am1rw1, Heney 'El1lnt Ind TlfMftlr Rlthlrd Jalinlotl, Mlrotflt Ann Ind IC""""9 Gttd'ltll, M•vblll Ind Ronald lr>omoson, ~•lrld1 L.culM and Mlci.M """ .Smith, Toni Mtn. 1nd RllNlll scan • IC1U, 0 111'1111 W ..... ll Lllhrqi, Jolw1 '· ll'ld Dortlh't' ~. c.rol L _. DaNifd L. ~ ~ Ind Hlrvtd Dlnfll Mc:Hlll. 0ttror1h It, Ind SleWll Ran-dolph. • Fllt, DllM ~ end Rlchlrd Dtvkt Gok*I, 11H1it lt\lfh tnd o.tm•t Fr•nk $._, 0tnni. 0.11 wlCI J~lttl DertlM HKll..,, Jim ElrNr Mid S-DMIM PM, Hin-I Mid V-MltlFTJ' l(Md't', OllllM ,,... .... Dou!JI•• Dllf. """ Con.fl!ltl..._ Me('Cllll M.. Ind ltol~ •• O.bum, Pltrkl• Giii Md L. Wl'f!'MI O'Ntlll. ShlrltV Jffll -.Id ~ LlfOtl kMPt(, ROl:ftlr Ev...ty tnd L-111 .. ,,,,....., .. ,._ P•trtdl Anti I nd Sim Ir• H11forl, Dl•M LYM ll'ld Yvlllo Amison. Tlfftl R.. ll'ld Eric e. s.alllburV. R1lpll Herry Ind Can1l•l'ICI "'"" Mock. Mlrllnnt ll«nadlttl •nd J1mn Melvln Sl'Mlphtrd, Allin. R. 11'111 Sttphlnll L.. Fottw, Mtrot,..t A, Ind (fltrll'I W. Dodd" Denford JOMPft tnd M•rlt E"'M WltlOf'I, Roblrt i nd Anlolntttt RUCkK, IJbtrtl IClllllMl'I Ind ~ ·~· l rtcluMl'I. Robert L" ll'ld Bonnie 1. Slngff, IClrtn l.H Ind Robert Elton • ..,.... A911111 • Mlr'lllfl, WHll1m lt•lph •nd MtrtUll'l'tl AM Ollvef', Lor-1nd JOltph Htfll"I', Jr. 1Clrk11n, Jofln E. Md EitlMI Covtrly, Ednl Ao91n Ind Otn Oltl Cl1'1l. S1111n P•lrlcla Ind Jotll'I A•lph Wlhor1, P1ul1 C•st tnd JI.,,.. Howtrd Whillock, Robert PNlllp Ind Helll'I K1r C11tro, Twll• R. Ind Robert Ol'rlo. ll'1trkl1 e, •nd J~ J. JohnlOll. T1nv1 Merit •nd JK.k Urry V1l'llflrpool, K"'ry Ind MyNM: L Wlftwnllllr, 8'Wfly AM ....... ~ MlchMI ; Ffl'9U1Gn. Joell L. 11\d Cllnlol'I o. . Loy, Clrotrl'I El11M Ind ClwfMI ·-. w11111r. JMMtt• Fr111el1 Ind Hi9mUI "'" 011111, N•n G. Ind Robert Ouv1ll, ll'•lrkll A. Ind LMI"' Tllomll M•r1n, Vol1net1 M. •lld'Robtrt,L ForHrlh, Flottncl L. •net Robert P'. Fox, lhtlml M. 11\d Gl1nclon O. Howtn, Suz•ll• M•ri1 •nd Gf't90fY Frldtrkk Rodr~z. c.rmtn Nlldl 1nd Crlsl!no, Jr. Miiis. Edwti'd M, 11\d Olt11 M. Cl"OWil'f, O.wn Emlllt 1nd It-kt 'Wlll•rd S.ndlrJ, $hlrMy VV-ll'ld Allllrt Martin ltrlr;111, Nll'ICV Elltl'I Ind MlchMI Arttl'I Witts. R°"' Ind Junt Dtll-iti, M.9xl,. 1-1tld Tllomll ICllcf'I. Robtrt• Heltll Ind John J, Smlttt. Mtry Jun Incl ~nl•I Reymand .......... 8r9fldll o. Ind J(Mpll R. PMblll. ROlllrl' ll'IVM Ind ·C.rol't'I """ Miit~ -Co:urtntY LlllMr olnd Dokftl NMlll!I ' Llttlkln. $hlrrl L, •net lt1ymoncl L Hllnnln, Robtrt Clllr\H 1nd Mlllncl1 .... LO/If, MW1 J1m111.Md C."""1M Mty ThotnMl'l.<Socorr• Ind Jltfrly LN PRE~ KINDERGARJEN REGISTIATION "'CLINIC I Laguna Beach• Uniroed · School District Aliso, Top of the WorM and D Marro wiH be held Thurs. & Fri. -Aug. 30 • 31 8:30 . 'II a.m. & 12 • 2 p.m, Laguna llNch Hith •Set-I 62.5 Park A¥o. • ' FRONT l e ·~~"' I ffllllf-~ • I • . ----11 --~.::::; -~ •• ';.-< GL\mlrl 18 OL OVIN CLEANBI Lemon fresh oven cleaner is mi;stless for safer use. Child· proof cap. For gas or eleotric ranges. OUR REG. 88< c G.l AM/FM TABLE MOOR RADIO You'll get a world of en- tertainment and information from this compact radio. 4'' spea~er, AfC for FM. COMP. AT 19.9S 50 TIM• LIHT WITH NmN HLB ~- Get professional results when you tune _your car. WaAd type luning light. Bulb included. OUR REG. 3.77 .~ • -·1 . ' ... ..,. . ' Now you can buy !", !~". 2" or 1W' paint brushes at one low price. Nylon bristles are bonded to wood handles. REG. 61cto ,. ..... 77 FRIDAY NITE • • I! . '. '/,·'"!~~. .. ~~/ ~/). • 1 LB. BAG POLYESTER FIBERFILL Non-allergenic 1111 is great stuffing for pillows. toys, quilts, chair pads, etc. Save now and start a proJect. OUR REG. 1.39 c ' DRUXE 12" l!'~::.;COLOR PORTABLE Make your move to color with this value priced TV. Slide nil~ con trols, built-in antenna s & handle. COMP. s AT $229 • REMINGTON 30/311 or 30/06 AMMO Hunter's favorite brand ammo. Stock up at this low discount price. Each is box of 10. 30-06, REG. 5.97 , , ••• , , •••. 4.77 77 30/30 REG .4.77 •E i AISOITMENT OF TOOLS Tools and hardware gadgets galore. Hammers, wrenches, saws, screwdrivers, drills and much.,much more. NOW ONLY Fs 0 R DAILY PILOT JJ &PM to lOPM ONLY GRANO FUNK LP, HEAD CLEANER Grand Funk. "We're an Ameflcan Brand." 8 trac k head clearier cartridge for all players. LP RIG . 344 S.98 • ' . .. 26% CLEANIR RfG, 1.98 KLEAR RODI WAX BY JOHNSON Puts a dazzling shine on your floor OUR t~at stays brilliant and never yellows. REG. Big .46 oz. economy size can 1.a1· . at savings. 39 LADIES' FASHION TRIM SCUFF Smartly trimmed scu!! of easv care v1Qyl. Assorted colors. Cushionf(j NOW inneisoleand padded.heel. Sizes to· 10. ONLY Very comfortable. 86 COLORFUL I LIVR Y GOLDFISH run lo watch fish add interest and excitement to fish bowls or aquariums. Many different types and s11es in this group. OUR REG . 19c • • c ABOVE ITEMS ON SALE IN ADDITION TO REGULAR ADVERTISED SPECIALS STOii HOUR): FRIDAY lOAM to lOPM • SATURDAY lOAM to.9PM • 1UNDAY lOAM to 7PM COSTA .MESA San Di190 FrMw1y 1t l ri1tol . ....... 3088 BRISTOL ST. • I ' I I THE PICK OF Punch l G1·eek Amnesty: Lady Fleming Not Included rn111 Wilt ltrvloea Pr11ld•nl George J>aptdopeulol' •mnNty 11\i• -lh dotall'I IPOlY to ~ A11illll J'lillllq, widow ol lht British dl1oov1r~r ct penictllln. ~ ht• bHn barred !Nm .. 1cr1111 o ...... . Lady l"ltml!IJ .... 111P"lied llllm ltlt OOlll\111 Md •tripped ol her ONtk nallonality In 111'71 !or plotting to free Alex- ander Panagoulis, would·be les1 lmpoliant tlitn the House. he la)'ll but ii llO!lll to run !or THI~ Oii 1ny-;W. Goldwaltr, the 11114 GOP pmlclenllal llOftllnM, said he plw to 111111 .. 111 ll\ 1974. • llf, W111lll!t I'· ll•as, former Ro111111 O.lhollc priest and presldtn\ of Previd ence Golloa,, ~ married Miss P11ll.i.fte G. Burke, h is secretary for six years. assassin of Papadopoulos. ( He was granted a presiden-P'"'OP'T E' J· tial pardon 10 days ago, one ol L .IJL about 300 political prisoners .., ________ _.. freed the day Papadopoulos "''85 sworn in as the new Greek republic's president. " Sen. Barry Goldwater. (R- Ariz.), thinks the Senate is 2640 Harbor Blvd. 546-5527 A FAVORITE SHRUB ••• lilBISCUS lon9 • f•vorite of coe1t1I 9arden- 1rs, HIBISCUS mekes an excellent "screen" plant, l1n4'1c:1p1 shrub or small tree. Large, showy flowers are '" extra bonus. Many In Bloom Gal. R09-$2.25 ............. . COSTA MESA OPEN DAILY 9 -6 SUNDAYS 9 .5 CHYSANTHEMUMS Plant • ri ot of color for now and into fell. 'M ums ere excellent border plants ind l11t long •• cut flow1r1. · Gal. R19. $1 .7' ··········-···· SPECIAL $1.19 4" Pot 79¢ ea. or 6 for $3 .99 OLD-FASHIONED and HARDY •• . LANTANA They thrive in the sun with occ1sion1I deep watering -Effectiev as low hedges with I to 2 inch c:lu,fers of nearly year-round flowers. 1 Gal. R19. $2.25 NOW ..... :.:·············· 98C No..cAll GROUND COVIR Decorative Bark Haas, 46, was granted dispensation from his priestly duties in early A\ljUSt by Pope Paul VI and permjtted to mar- ry. * C•los Cbavea. M e x i c a n co m po s er-conduc;tor, has resigned as head of the Cabrillo Music Fe3t.ival, held every summer in the Santa Cruz County town of Aptos. Olavez, in his mid-709, talked of stepping down since ear· ly thla year but gave no rea10n. Olavez took over the 11· year-old festival in 1970 and built it into a critical and financial success. * Comedian Soupy Sales filed a $100,000 breach of contract suit against the producer of the televi· slon presen- tation of thP play "Hellza Poppin." The suit accuses Al· exaader H. Cohea of breaking a 1967 agree-. ULU ment w I t h Sales to offer the comedian first choice in starring in any of Cohen:S pro- ductions. .,_ 1 Sales said Cohen fatled to of- fer him the starring rote ih ·the TV production. * Bonnye Vobdea, 34, sued for divoree by former prisoner of war Raymond A. Vohden, \.\'iJl receive $500 a month alimony and $250 a month child support !or her two children. The 42-year-old Navy com· mander filed for a divorce shQrUy after his release from a North Vietnamese prison where he spent almoat eight years. The divorce is pending, but the property settlement was filed in a Memphis court. Vohden said he returned home Feb. 12 and found that his wife was dating another man. * Nobel Prize winning chemist Robert B. Woodward o f Harvard University a n d Professor Ronald Hoffman of Cornell University received the American Chemical Society's $40,000 Arthur C. Cope Award in Chicago. The award, presente<l for the first time, honors chemists for contributions in the field of organic chemistry. It was presented by C.Ope's widow. ·* Margarita M..-an, the 1973 Miss Universe who s a i d Richard Nixon is "the world 's greatest man," has received a letter from the President thanking her for 1 h e r 0 thoughtful comment on my efforts to bring peace in the world."' Sacrifice Pla1J1ted For Sli~ep Reagan Charges Conspiracy LONDON (AP ) - Shortly after police found a sheep wandering in north London and turned it over to the animal pnr tective society, a I~ man complained that the sheep was his. He told reporters he belonged to a group that is recreating ancient Greek rituals and planned to sacrifice the animal to the swi god Helios. ' SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Reagan administration step- ped up ha attack against Legi1lotlv. An•lyst A. Al•n Po.!it Wednesd4y, !Jut a •JIOkl!SmllJl conceded ti•~,. no data to repudiate P o B t ' s crHi~isllll of Gov. Ronald Reagan's' tax llmltaUOQ in· ltiative. Kenneth Hall, R e a g a n ' s chief deputy finance director, repeated the accusation of "dlstorUon" wb i c h the Governor made T u e s d a y against Post. BUT IN A FACE-to-face debate with Post before the Assembly Ways and Means Commltt~e. Halt admitted no one on his staff has made any budget estimates which con- tradict Post's analysis. Also under hostile ques· tioning from commit te e me1nbers, Hall revealed the administration has not asked !or legal opinions to dispute Post's Interpretation of the controversial proposal. POST IS THE state official with legal responsibility to write the nonpartisan analy!!is of initiatives and ballot prop- ositions published in official voter handbooks for each statewide election. In a Tuesday news con· ference, the Republican governor condenwed t h e analysis for what he called "deliberate distorUons." REAGAN ACCUSED, Post ol conspiring with l)emocratic: Assembly Speaker Bob Moret· ti to de!eat the lnlUatlve in a Nov. 6 election. Post's analysis estimated passage of the Reagan in- itiative would require a '620 million cut in current pro. grams in next year's state budget. He added the probable effect would .be to force in- creases in property taxes. i#!ll'H_ _SAVE$$ DURING RGI .. ~ ' OUR fALL KICK·OFF ~· WEEKEND SALE! THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY SPECIAL PRICES ,fOR THIS WEEKEND ONLY -NOT JUST COLOR. BUl Chromacolor Now a 19" Dlagonol COLOR TREVISION AT A PRICE SO LOW WE CAN NOT PRINT IT!! SHOP THE DISCOUNTERS TllEI. ·cALL ABC-CHECK OUR ABC WARRANTY I PRICE . THEN BUY FROM US! e l Yt•r Homt SerYict 'e I Yttr Parts e ] Ytar Picture Tubt e Plus ABC Pers on1liltd Strvict 197 4 ZENITH REMOTES IN STOCK-&-ON DISPLAY thl ARUBA-SE16!0R 16'" dltgOMI Porl1ble In i'con™'1porary StyUng Tht WLNOMERE • StU6CW -Spee• Command~ lltmolt C:0<1- trol li" dl&gor1.1I Tha RAPALLO ti $E25'5R -Th& TRIESTE e SE2570 Spece Commelld@ 600Z Rfmolt Command 6001 Con!rol 2S" dllgOMI :Z.S" dl•gorial PORTABLE PRICE RIOT! RCA 18" ....... t COLOR TV $259 1974 Model ES· 403 RCA 19" .. _ XL100 100•;. SOLID STATE ---,p;;v_ $ 389 -~' ER47S "' Rated · #:1 '. ' ' - RCA-ZENITH-SYLVANIA 1•04& llOOIHURST ST. HUNTIN•TON RACH HOURS: DAILY 10 ·7 SATURDAY . 10 • 5:10 SUNDAY 12·5 ; . , e R1t•in1 moht11r1. e U11 on w1lk0w1y1, HANDSOME, PRODUCTIVE ·cECD e It looks GREAT! I lAOS 1 98 • cu. '"" ... 4.98 1 COV•IS UP' TO Jt SQ, PT. Petunias Pl1nt i11 f11ll 111n. Singlt •nd do11blt t11ffltd flow• '''· ... ., 2 ,."., ptli:1, 7tc NCh. G.t •lnl Ono FAIE. s,..i.to ,.,. WN., hf'· l AVOCADO TREES St•nd•rd·tiit growth ( 11p to )0 ft.) Widt 1prt•dl119. D•rk 9r1111 lttvtt. 'H•11'-,rod11ct&, thlck·t~lnnff fl'ltd i11m t. l1r91 fr11U, 'F111rt1'--0nt of th1 !.11t known, Mtd. 9rttn q1111ity fr11lt. $9.95-. GARDEN SHOP FEATURES ... A• Aid to Cookl09 F11n i nd prtctic t1 to grow' your own htrb1. S1tcl1, poh , pltnt mix tnd h1n9. WROUCIHT IRON e Pl•nt 1!111dt e Wall lr1ck1tt e H1n9in9 hooli:t e l1tkth MACRAME' Somt pl•ln, 1omt ftncy, for h1n9in9 pot1 in1id1 or 011t1iJ1. 1r in on • 1i:a. 1 1i111. GLASSWARE Service •lul Qtlallt" Sl"ce,1948 Snlftt r• t ncl b11bbl11. ldttl for ttrrtr1irm1 and 1rr1n9tm1nh. ,.,,. 1,79 HANDCRAFTED CONTAINERS V1rl1d t11turt1 111d finl1htt In lnt1r11H119 1hap11 ind colors. Or!N LAIOR DAY a pr.ictical WIJ It ·- Clutilt desip ftr , -1to<lT10tOIOIU¥ifllU-[11J t""'M•MI PHONI TOOA't' ro• tttro•MA TION U0.1111 ..... N1·1111 FURNITURE I \ • ' • Thursd~, August 30, 1973 DAILY PILOT l:f '~:~!u~~~-~~~~~~~~~-~~ve~ .. ~~g~ ~~~~~ THE RONRICO r, Advoe1tes of reform of mari-as a "violation" with a max-posses,,lon of two ounces of "As other atates follow lhe removing penalties (or simple legislative iniUaUvet th1I year WEEKEND " juao.e. laws -in the dll:eetion imum ~nalty of a $l00 fine, marijuana. lead of Oregon," he said, hwe po.ssesston for private use. but are convinced the Ude h~s t. Of Jessenlng rather th a n the equivalent of a9 expensive The Texas. law also allows will see a dramaUc reducUoo Followina: the action 1n turned and the thrust of public 1trengtheolng penalties jaywalking ticket. for 8 resentencing of those 1n the number of young people Oregon, aim.liar measures have opinion is on lbelr side. believe they may have turned -The l!ouse of Delegates of currently imprisoned. whose lives are irreparably been introduced in nearly 8 THE ABA resolution calling • ~ ~:~. In :~~a1C::f:!~~ ~~::!~10:11~;;~caa: : ACCORDING to NORML -~man·~1 ..... r;,Y~. :im~~mo~ d:oo~er ::;~ eyed by !:nai:S s:e"!. :: be~: GUIDE ul'I' '"we to crlmlnal penalties for mart-the National Organltatlon for ........ refonn advocates l5 Colorado, out. It calls for "no criminal ' They cite these event.5 : juana smokers. the Refonn of Marijuana THE PRESIDENT'S Com-where the legislature held laws punisblng the simple 8 R Laws -200 persons are serv-mission on Marijuana and puJ>lic bearings this year on a possession of marijuana by ==--'="--=~-------------- ' -Texu, which had the EFO E THE change in ing marijuana-related sen-measure to legalize sale ol users." A semi-public service ad with important banhest aancllons in the coun-the Texas law offenders cou1d tences in Texas. Drug Abu.!e reported last year marijuana to adults through That links the ABA wi th try apJnst trnok:ing mart-be sentenced to life im-"The new Jaw will entitle that under existing state laws existing liquor outlets. such organi.zationa as the Na-information, reminders, recipes and whatnot . j.-lharply reduced its prlsonment for possession of many prisoners lo be freed, 93 percent of marijuana-The Colorado plan -which tlonal Council of <llurches, lhe to start you on a sensational weekend. , penally for possession of the marijuana. and hundreds of others to have related arresb were for would go further than any ex-National F.ducatioo As9ocia- 1ubstance. Under the new law, private their sentences significantly simple possession and only 7 ls ting Jaw -would call for a lion. the American Public • t f t • ' ' ' -Oregon es sent i a 11 y possession has been reduced to reduced," It said. percent were for trafficking. tax of $6 an ounce which Health Association and the removed llll crlmina1 pepa1ti~ a low misdemeanor classifica-Keith Stroup, director of The marijuana lobbyists, would be ~ for the state's governing board of t h e tor private possession and use lion. This provides for a max-NOR.ML, says the Oregon while eventually hoping for old age pension fund. American Medical Associa- of, marljuana, reclassifying imwn jail term of six months decision represents a signifi-legalizatlob . of pot, are con-Stroup and NORML do not lion. PETER MAX IN PERSON' FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ON '. "VILLAGE GREEN" Enjoy the mu sic and festivities all day. Free Peter Max poslers especially designed for thi s occa sion. Browse and b~y from our fantastic array of shops and boutiques. Merchandise galore from the great handcraftsmen, domestic as well as the old-world cottage workshops: Wishon-Harrell Stoneware, Leather Vi World, Here and There, Artichoke, Allen's Engraving, Brass Balloon, Montalvos, Heidi's Uttle Switzerland, Woodshed and The First Americans ... The Old World at your door with imports from : Posh Mahal, · Tosca na, Coffee Trader, Whimsey Hollow and Hiland Tobacco ... Art Galleries: L"Acadef!'ie', Jack Glenn Gallery and Eye's Art ... for fashion: Getaway, Dale's Miss American Footwork~, La Tortuga, Company Headq uarters, Lofty Lady, Sunday's Best, West End Bouti~ue ... other fun shops , ·include: Cahco Cousins, Fern Factory, St. Ives, The Jewel Thief Serendipity, Krips Photography, Sunflower Swimwear Anthony's Shoes, Jack arid Jill, Morrow's Nut House, H.U.D.D.L.E., Needle Nest, The Other Tree, Rug .Crafters, ETC., Wine, Cheese, Culinary, Etc., Ti.m~IL,ife Books, Pa1a, Woof and Wrap Fabrics, European Gem, Pri sc illa s Cakebox, The Ohve Branch ... for entertainment: UA Tri-Theat res and the Hungry Tige r, which also offers a complete menu; •. good food and pleasant dining, as well as the other more co,nventional eat-on-the-go · establishments will also be opening soon : Petite A~berge, Restaurant Horikawa, Rose ;Ind Crown, Italian Village, The Abbey, Belgian Waffle Cafe. Cisco's, Glutton #2, and Bob's Old-Fashion Lemonade. ••• LOOK FOR THE THREE FLAGS IN THE SKV::.. NEXT TO SOUTH COAST PLA A .- , Some serious weekend ralionaliz.ing and evasion tactics 'lllblp you must do this weekend and why you can't dolllem. Mow the lawn, as usual. Tire lawn mower is aclint 11p again. Fix the lawrfmower. II would take a year for that yo-yo in th e .Jlore to fix ii. Wash the car. And wait on lhot Saturday morning car wa1h linet Clean all the papen and junk and magazines off your desk. That'.J more of a vacation· at-home project. ·Tate the kids fishing. I haven•t wed my reef for yearz. /(z all clogged. Take your wife to the supermarket. I zhoufd ht playing 3 JttJ of tenniJ. You know what Dr. Good,.an Jaid about e:xtrci.Je. Get the old lV fixed so you · can put it in the playroom. Tht Uut tlmt I had it fixed it co.JI mtS.51 inpartJand labM. Paint your oldest kid's room, with his help. My oldeJt kid JhowJ up only a/ mealtimes: .Jix tlmt1aday. Tate your wife to the supermarket. John, Ray and ltu a.Jked . nu lo play softball. Can't a 1111 ret away far a few ho"n 11nd hllVe some fun'! Visit your mother-in-law. It's been a Jong time. I'll call Mr. Visit your mother. It's been almost u long. rm ltanting 10 Uvt with m1 guilt. fll coll htr, too. Take your wife on a romantic, old-fashioned'date. A romantic. o/J.fathiontd date no11o1 CO.Jt.J S7J30. Take your wife to the 1uperrnarkeL Don't I alwa,11 1(1 the klllt I can do.· ·Ourweelelld doa'l-'OIJ<I list O CrMll!.,. fer cr.ck•rs aftCI ,,,_ O CM-. !or~ '"d crldl;era. O Mhtll"I (tonla, tad&, .ic.). O V•"lll• l'Lld91 lc1 c,.'"'· O P1a"ub, poWla chlpt, com thlPt, laca chlOI. O T111u11 Uor lh• car). O Exlr1 t11mburgera tor unex• peCtld llUMb. O Fiim, b1tt11111, lllMCt ,.,.i11n1, nall1, nut1, &era-, baits, drlll bllll. O Wiiiia tlpti, 8and-Ald1, -I• lallo", 11n"l1 bal11, g.olf balla, O Llmone. 1111111. 0 Aubblr glOViil. O V191t1b11 1nd flow.r 1lldl. O Th1111rrlbt1 roe::" lecofd rour !lid Wl"lt. O Ronrlco rum, wtil• and gold. Mlle I gr<at party lot lwo Or even' one. Why do partiel have to have a lot of people? Especially strangers, Why nOI make a party just for yourself? Don't invite anyone. Let your guard down, forget your party manners and enjoy your own deli&btful co'mpany, with our guaranteed-to-.atisfy food and drinl:. Our-~ fooducldrint G-ct-oh Solt 1 clo¥1 prllc, cut (or more if YOU lib 1arlic) I larp: ripe avocado, pitted \4 to 1A teaspoon chill powder I teaspoon kmoo or lime juke 2 tcupoom mlnctd onion I. Sprinkle a bowl with a little alt and rub 1rith prlic. Mas.la t.be atocado ha the bowl and ... IOD with '4 tcupooa 111!, the elUU powder and kmou Of lime t~r in tho onkln. U dcsirtd, it.Ir In ripe 1om1to, ollvts or crumb~ becon.. J. Serve with taco dUPI or pot:a. 10 cblPL 'I""-Dalqolol l o·i. Roririco white.rum 1\ttio( hill a lime or'daiqulri mJx Scant tulpoorl IUJU t.uol"" Put lht irtmdiefttt In a &hater and tblko Tt 1iU mad fOf 1 hlH' lninuw. Orint it tUliabt or Oii ......... OllMr nte1•••• .. ......... ,., JOW""11 A comfort1ble chair, • 1oo4 . boot or • IOOd. tflll\1 boot. If you're having • party for more than one, consult our Handy Table of Weights and Measures before you shop. Our bandy tab lo of weights and measures 1 Y.i ounc.cs equal 1.Jiuet. (This is thD &W>dard amoaat for the liquor content of·a drink. Many poop~ pour 2ouncea.) <J ounces equal 1 wino llass. 8 ounces equal 1 cup. J6 ounces· equal I pint. 25-3/S ounces equa11 fifth. or 4/5 quart.. 32 ounces equal I ~ 64 OUDCCS equal K plk& How lo bUI Ille Sunday Nigbl Cruit1 -I Ronrico Moi Tai ,• ,. ;., Everything stops oo Sunday night. Your wife doesn't want .,• to cook. You don't want to ~ cook. The kids are wildly rest-· 7 less or strangely quiet, or both. .. Your mind wanders. You put-:f ter around lhe house, watch J• TV, skim through the Sunday ~ papers, note the things that , •: have to be fixed next weekend, ~ .. take short naps, followed by even shorter bursts of enerl)'. You're begjnnin1 to get the, Sunday Night Crazies. It's not< your fault. The SNC's are caused by thoughts of Monday momina. There'1 only one way to beat the S\lnday Night Cr.Wes: have a Ronrlc:o Mai Tai. A R·onric.o Mai Tai i.a. the drink that rcmlnda youof temi· tropical nights under tJie stars ... cool ocean breeuis ••• wb.ile dinner jackets ... strap)ea even- ing gowns and all that wonder-• fuJ, wacky movie mlnicaJ stuff , of the 30's and 40's when there were never any Monday mom-< ings. Only Sacurday nighta. 1bc Romico Mal 'I'll l oz. Ronrioo While cw Gold -I tsp. supr in. oz. each lime juice and -olmood""""' '• Pour inlo double Old-Fubioned sWs ball full o( crushed ioe. Mic wdL Add crushed ice to fill. Stir ll!nl.l,y. Doc:oralc with 1priaol ~. ~ pineapple 1pe1r or muuc:biAo ~ chem. "'"' RonricoRum The rum with the bright taste. ~ ~ ' ' • ' . ' ,, ' , 0-11 Wlftt l lt*\tl C., WTC. • .... , ' Thursday Augusl )(), i ·, • Supervisors OK 1983 Land Use Plan Dr. Davi d Gardner By JACK BROBACK Of ,.. DellJ Pflet ''-" dicates generally in what ,,---------.... reserve areas and urban unincorporated territory in the areas. planning reserve areas are DEVEWPMENT i s en· couraged in these a r e a Iii because it Is here that the sup- port systems such a s highwa ys, water and sewer facilities, schools, libraries, etc. have already been pro- announces the opening SANTA ANA -Orange County supervisors Wednes- day adopted a 1983 land uso element to the c ounty's general plan, a 100-page docu- ment approved by the Plan- ning Commission after eight public hearings and developed by the planning staff. The vote for approval was 3- 2 with Supervisors Ralph Clark end Robert Battin op- posing because they feared the plan would allow too much density, Favoring the plan were Superviaors D a v i d Baker, Ronald Caspers and Ralph Diedrich. AS DEFINED, the lend use element of the general plan in- Cal State's Fall Term Starts Early • FULLERTON -Classes et Cal State Fullerton begin Sept. 10 this year, earlier than in previous years, to allow for a new two.semester s y s t e m featuring a m.1d-year mini- course break in January. More than 18,000 students ere expected to enroll thiJ fall. That's an increase of 1,000 studentl!I aver last year. College officials explained that the earlier starting date means fall semester ex- aminations will have been con- cluded prior to Christmas holidays. Spring classes wllf then begin on Feb. '4, after the January mirucourse program is over. Another item new this year at the Fullerton campus is the addition of Saturday classes. maMer, where and to what extent proposed pubUc and private land uses are to be ac· comodated according to public policy. The e l e m e n t lncludes general statements of land use development p o I J c y , ob- jectives, principles and stand· ard.9 such as building in· tens ity and population density for all land use proposals. Until the plan was developed there were nine area general plans and the 1947 general plan or land use. AS OF NOW the planning proposals for the unincorporated area of the county, largely in the fifth Supervisorial D i s t r l c t 1 in- dicates the following uses : residential, 25.6 p e r c e n t; commercial, 1. 7 percent; in- dustrial , 3 percent; public and quasi-public, 22.6 percent and opeu space, 47.1 percent. There are 291,328 acres in the unincorporated area with a projected population of 1,225,860 persons. The objective of the land use plan is to establish a new baseline from which more reasonable and detailed plan- ning can take place in accord with the overall goals and land use policies of this decad e. IT SEEKS to present the decision maker with a working document for use as a guide in making daily land u s e decisi011S. While the plan provides a 10· year projection into the future, it is not meant lo be inflexible. AIJocation depicted in the element may be continually chS?ging and, the ref or e , revtew is a continuous proc· ess. Boundaries depicting land use categories on the land use element map serve as an in- dication of th e general loca- tion, extent and distribution of Try Jack's 'Phase #5' RECIPE for REDUCING! 1. Stir In one Mini-Max program of exercise and nutritional guidance. 2. Add our Figure Fitness Spas for Men and Luxurious Figure Control Salons for Women. 3. Mix one frosty, cool and delightful Swimming Pool. 4. A splash of our Hydro Whirlpool. 5. Spice it upinourSteam and Sauna. It all adds up to a pretty sweet deal. Our Special Pre-Opening Offer takes the cake! DON'T DELAY CALL OR COME IN TODAY of his medical offic• 5peciali1ing IFI family practice 493-6333 Preserve areas are esaen-Bolsa Chica , 1,600 acres sur- tiatly open space w he re rOWlded by Huntington Beach; development Is not expected Laguna Aliso, the large unset- nor encouraged during the tied area south of Laguna next 10 yean. The preserve HH!s and north of Laguna areas are found in the hilly Niguel between the San Diego regions of the county, in or ad· Freeway and Laguna Beach, vided. 24655 la Plata, Dana Point jacent to the Cleveland Na-8,974 acres. tional Forest and In areas of The deletion of the Pacific agricultural preserves. C.oast Freeway raises serious Residential densities were1~=~~~~ divided into five sections: low, 0..2 dwelling u n 1 t s per acres; medium low, 2 to 3.5; medium, 3.S to 6.5; high 6.5 to 18, and heavy, 18 and up. ORANGE COUNTY proposed land uses, and not as exact or precise lines. Preserve areas should be zoned for agricultural use and issues regarding residential variances which permit land land use densities which might uses should not be granted. have been planned for this Extension of roads, public area. according to planners. services and fa eUiUes should South Coast ls the designa-be discouraged, the plan tlon given 1,500 acres close to states. Dana Po I n t and Laguna Annexation or Incorporation Nigue1. This area Is also af- of preserve areas for the fected by the deletion of the purpose of urbanization win be proposed freeway. discouraged. THE PLAN, county officials NORTHERN EL Toro is hope, will provide a means of PLANNING R E S E R V E 7 ,023 acres oriented to the up- This was the only detail of the presented plan chan~ed . The motion to approve .states that densities for residential deve lopment will be t h e average of the above spreads and the average being the maximum for all z.on'es. Newport Girl In Who's Who controlling urban sprawl in areas are areas where a plan-per part or Aliso Creek. Strong central a n d southeastern ning program is underway' development pressure h a s Orange County and of helping territory where critical plan-been underway in this area for to establish priorities for pr<r ning decisions have to be a number of years. vision of gove rnm e ntal made within the next few It is bounded: by the Miss Allx Elizabeth Riley. services to meet the needs of years. These are areas, now in Cleveland National Forest, the daughter of Mrs. Glorya Riley the population. agricultural use, where Irvine Ranch , the City of of Newport Beach has been nae estimated growth of the development pressures will Irvine and Mission Viejo. listed in Who's Who Amon~ S rfa Pian · g id u American High School county population in the next u ce. n 1 n cons era ons 10 years is about 500,000 Although most p I an n Ing must consider the El Toro Students. persons to a total of 2,It2,190 reserve areas are large (over Marine Air Base and its flight The June graduate of by 1983. The population in-I,000 acres), a program is paths, noise problems and Corona del Mar High School crease between 1963 and 1973 being designed to deal with hazards, planners said. will attend use in the fa ll and was 700.000. smaller parcels that will have Urban areas means those expects lo m a j or The plan states !fiat the ma-to be made with dispatch, ac-regions where development journalism. J jor impact of future develop-c<lrd to the plan. lt is ahould occur in the next few ---------- ment will be felt in the recognized that the sma ll prop-years. It includes existing Kids L 'k T southeastern portion oI the erty owner's right to ex-urbaq areas as well as vacant i e 0 county, especially the Sad-pedient land use decision is areaa on the urban fringe dleback Valley area. highly important. which are ready for A k A d development in the near s n y ENROLLMENT NOW OPEN for •"'• &t11d91tts wortllnt Nlew ........ In 011e or nt0re oNOI Firm dltclpllne -Sm1ll cl1tse1 Homework 4 nights per wetk Hfgh moral 1t1ndard1 m1lnt1lned RADCLIFFE HALL Grades 1 tfirou9h 10 Tre..,ortatl .. to llff .,... 121 So. Citron, An•hoim 635-7892 ' Tux Rentals & Mens Wear SLACKS SPORT CO. SUITS ..... ~1000 ..... s2900 ..... s4900 ALT ERATIONS FOR MEN & WOMEN THE LAND USE element PRINCIPAL SUB areas of future . divides the land use proposaJsl---------------------------------'11111111111111111111111111111111111"'111!111111111111111111 -~----====== into three major groups : preserve areas, p I an n in g . ...!:- G\l'le f\n\sti\ u•"'''"" 14•\j A\.\1't f\RST Q\C 1\\..£ c£RA~ "'''1 make 'JOd~ :;\ tot' co\ol'5 el Hat • Ric.h ,d~oO~~oom in the h0~;14~4V• inctie:S· ·tne pte;tt1es . mea.su.'•-,.·--~~~ tinish tiles g\a.z.e The Charm of Real Brick!. .Q.lc·brilt WALL TILE Use indoors or out, fa< patio•. flrep11ees .. 79c accent walls! Light· weigh II ne~d• -no - re info rcement. Natural red. SQ. FT. DoZllftl of 'uclnatlng P•tttmsl MOSAIC TILE Make floor!, walls S9C and counters beauti- lull Easy to install! ApproK. 1 sq. ft. mt¥1 she els. AS LOW AS Bli!IT F,.sh, New Color In Your Ktttfttftl GOODYEAR COUNTERTOP Pure vl•yt ••• woo•t 46C chip or stAin. lasy. t• aPP"f -even if vou·re 1 baginoerl 36 In. wide. "'"' Soundproof IS You Decoratel DECORATOR CORK TILE Co<1< bollet;n bo .... and 3 9c &ccent walls give you a rich look for a. low priOe. 12xl 2 in. tileL .... BATH VANITY TUB ENCLOSURE 2ox20 ;n. 1-pc. 32ss ,,...., top and base. E•trt Safety 9lass slidin 9 doors! Harldsome embossecil 2c patterFI. 1211:12 In. Decorator colorsl WALLPAPER IN 5TOCK SO. FT, 11yge sel•otl11ns of Vlnyls , tlooka and prlntt In sleek for on.the-spot d•llveryl Wash· Ible finl•h•tl Some pre· pasted! AU •11y to apply! ROLLS ( •UVI 1 GET TttE •TH AOLL SHOWER DOOR Easy to lnstaU standard size. 22·· SELF-STICK ftfAG CARPfTTIL Thick nylOn pill ,. 9 tufts hide se•"'f/ ( Jum!lg 11•11 II\ tilH , SQ. FT. NO-WAX SOLID VINYL FLOOR TILE luxurlously .supple 12x12 in. Illes give a lllet1me ol wear! Spark- ling marble chip pat· te rn; tovely colors! MIRROR TILE Try It on doors. lab- letops, over fireplaces, bullets, In hallways. and bathrooms! Mirror tile is thrifty and glamorous! 10K10 inches. 49 ( EA. CLEAR GOLD VEIN 59~ EL MIRROR CABINET Surface mounled 13 8 8 Deluxe 18 In. size. . 979·4800 NOW SERVING COSTA MESA SANTA ANA COMMUNITY. Enroll now at our con11rucUon 111e tralle r and tave durtng Phaae 15, Open IHI 10 P.M. for your convenience. 29•• JACK lA lANNl·tS {lu~ojtl'Oll HEALTH SPAS ' 3611 SOUTH BRISTOL Cons1ructlon site at corner Bristol and MacArthur WOllLD'I LNIGUT AHD FIHUT CHAIN OF H!ALTH IPAS FDA MEN AND WOMEN. OWr 125 Jobllon• COltl lo eoa1L Owned and operated by Health Industries, I~. • ··~ ,., COLot o··-Till -...... \.•·o "-. ·- Some lttfM Limited Quantl'1 c ~r.~a [~ ., OPEN SUNDAY -11 1.m .. 5 p.m. .u~ ~ ... ' . I """ 9 645 1126 MON., TUES., WED., SAT. -8 1.m. • 5:.0 p.m. • ALWAYS PLENTY OF FREE PARK ING 1 f Thursda,y, A~ust 30, 1973 DAILY PILOT Jlf For the Record Cory Seekif!g Ti ghrer Grip Schools Up Hot Lunches a Nickel •11twni111 Miti1l !I ICHl"llft', Aoti.r1 MJi:Mel •l'ld M&r, DI I ti IC:•ltllHn On Stare Oil 9rillin g Laws SSO 11 ODS L•nctitlh, Ronald Gr•nl •l'ld N•ll('I LH Proclot, P";I J, llnd V1ronlc11 A. Of Mn•rlade ••ttt. Jacq .... 11ne A•1 •nd H•,....~ JOhn GARDEN GR o v E lunches will be five cents a.a e t:::.'· JL~;:a ~jt,.::h °';':C:' ~r1rn By 0. C. HUSTINGS for oil "absolutely liable" fo.. Wllllamson Act. That law Students In lhe Garden Grove higher in the district. v1111~n, ~tllda •nd Fr•nk LH Tho!t!IOl'I ~ 01 tttt D•llY "net stiff any dam<e tG the environment alms at preserving open s~-The rt hik ls being •-p .. r11n10. Nit• June M•rlt •M MlchMI H•wttr; SMron Ann «!'Id Aobtrt ic~t .....--Unified School District will P ce e ur Mi:M•fltn, J1nlc• ic:, arid Ja'"" Albert E119tf, "*" L.ton '"" TWfla M11rl• Assemblyman Krnne•h Cory caused by the drilling. by giving owners tax benefits ~ .. ve to brl~ an -~a nickel s tltutcd to meet increases In N•I-. K•r•n G. •nd Al~ a, llowtll, P•ul• Oline •nd Jecklt L1m11r · ua CAW he 'd GrHn. H~rv W•Yn• 1fld V1rn•"• Fvnmer, Mlctietl R•li>tl •nil Evgtnl• has prooosed legislation to 111e State Lands Commlqginri to keep it undeveloped. to scOOol for unch this fall . labor and fo¢ costs, s 581 · M•rll l!lll•bl11\ clamo ll•ht t I imnn:-:-.1 R ban "" orr·. hore 01'1 A d' t he I ta l el tk~ ~YI•, PNllY Ann end J1me1 ructi1rd, C•1tro. E1111111 Ol•M •nd Raber! "' con ro s on renew-=u ·~ Carpenter said h is measure ccor mg o an an· At t e emen ry ev 1 uu Jr. H••itrct R~ 1... 1nc1 st.•ron ic. ed oil drilling orr th e drilling after a 1969 blowout in ORANGE COUNTY nouncement from Doris hot lunch will cost students 40 "'~'111• ltOl)trt LH •nd stieron ~~· F~~!: •;~9'1111.'.:.' ~·.,1 California coast. the Santa Barbara Channel. was needed to insure the area Adrian, district food services cents, Instead or the 35 cents Yb9rr•, EdtJ•rdo Antonio •nd C•rmtn Arrnlt-oe Cory, a Garden Grove was kept as a habitat 'for "---------" '1lpervisor, pn·ces for hot they paid last year. At the L.,.I Slltlw, Lotlt Ann Ind l.•rrv Diii * * * d k th p ·r1 ovr1n•. J1me1 J . Ind svrll L.i11h J111-. C.rolt .lnnn. 1nc1 Oouol•s Democrat. s aid he formulated UC S on e ac1 C Coast junior high level. the bOt siietow. Jtrry L. •!'Id Geoor111nne w • .,.... ~=· bill rte L Go Ed fl I ches '11 t 45 cents -~ Fl.chi•. MHW L. 1twt Alie• L. FOi,..., Judith AM •nd l!llct ,,_ •= a r t. v. THE STATE Senate h:ts yway. C • Cle d • c un WI cos D.1a1 wi;1~~l~ditrkl• H•litffd Ind Charin Mc:;:;:• P•lt1cl11 Ann tnd Erner.an Reinecke announced he WOUld narrowly approved a bil1 giV· But opponents said the ouritian are in ase in high schools, lunches will s111". 11art111r1 EU1n •nd "•11• H1r-Know111, ~rllYft 1nd Al1twr Loul• consider ending the offshore oil ing a property tax brea k to flyway wouldn't be affected by cost 55 cents. J~~ G•ll El••nor •nd ll:•ymond =:!~o~~~~r~11 M. drilling ban enacted by the owners of duckhuntlng areas an y action on the land artd SANTA ANA -One of two been cleared or all charges In For students who bring their w1yne T•lt, Miry Lov Md wllbtrl Donekl State Lands Commission. in Merced County. said the bill amounted to a men indicted by the Orange &lpertor Court. lunches. the cost of a 'hall-pirlt Ho$.Pel'", P1ul EueeN Ind J1,..t Ir-GenhenllOll.. IUchtn:I M. 11ncl 81rber11 b I d , ~-----r · d k or mt'IJt wt'll be 10 -ts. 1C11m. Jo EU• tAne llld Erwin L. Jr. ...... Cory's ii wool reqw.re en-'lbe measure, SB 702 by UUlldl~ or pnvate uc bunt· c.ounty Grand Jury on multi-Judge James Turner .......... ~\~.~~~·:,Rt,:::1ER:oortpi F:'-· Low.ii RoOllrt •nct Pitrkl• vironmental impact statements Senator Dennis Caii:>ente r ing clubs. granted the prosecution's mo-f\1rs . Adrian noted that the Rldllird, ll•v All~ 1nc1 a1nv M1r1• L•mtr, L1wrt111:e •nd Peowv sve on oil driUing to be approved (R-Newoort Beach) w o u 1 d The measure went to the ple drug charges after sher· tion for dismissal of aU allega-district's policy of providing 0'::'.;,,rl.,,1111 LoulM ind Floyd ~,,?.:":: :irT:'c.Fri~ w. by the regional coastal com-allow 55,000 acres used for Assembly on a 21-13 vote, a iff's officers testified that they tions against George Dana free and reduced-price lunches Mobi•Y· Notm• J, •""' 11111v M. A1111111, s1uy cam11net 1nd c111rtn missions. rt would ma k e duck hunting to be assessed at bare ma1·ority in the 4-0-found 20 ounces of hashish at Dressing. 24, of 8041 Roosevelt W need y students is still in ef· Llll11rd, Clinton R. •rid 81tty S. Aon111d ve1.v ... 1yn Edith •net Htrbtrt CIJl"d. N•ncy •nd Albtrt E. persons or companies drilling lower _rates under the state's member Senate. his Midway City home has Ave., MidwRv Citv. fee t in sp ite t>f the price rise. &1•ll1y, Oowl• W. 11nd MllClrtd G. ----. •• ;:;w;r;;w;;,;;;;;;;~·;;~;;;,r;;,.~-;:;~iiiiiiiiiip;;;;; •• ;;~;;;;w;;;~;;,;;,;;;.;;;.;iiip;;;~····;;;;;;;;·;;~p;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiii;;;;;;~·.--;;; •• iiiiiiiiiiil-S1l11, J-tl S. tnd David Oy.r, IC«lhlMn Mnc•I H11Q1m11n Ind R•ndlll LN llCllord, WHll•m Jotin Incl ~ry Anne Murptw, P•trlc• A. •nd Mlchalll J. E1mor1, Jo.n Alln• end Edlrldge Edw•rd com1111rldo. Elll•llllh LuclU1 ind J4m11 RotMrl ,tr,Mr1w. Mllrlcl I(. Ind J1mn J. Ptrlil, Fr•nk Anll•ony 1nd 01n1 Louts• CollKoll, MOnlc• J. llnd Conntt" L. Cl1rk, Slndr• Lynn •nd GtorQI F. Morrla. NlllCY LYnn •nd L11rrv ~ .... Gtrll, P11rld • Lei •nd John A1ymond 8l1hnlk, Yol1ncl1 e<ld Gorilon Fr•nk Nor'lh, C•thef"IMI II. •nd Richard Allen Tol1111, Mlldrtd ~lie •nd Evg-Filla OtdlKIWW, Pl,,,..I E. llt'ld JOM D. Slllllna. Anni H1ullnger •nd Ectwtn ,_ 8•1er. o.My ICl'f'I Ind Vlcti.i. Lou Gr tnl, Eunlcl M. Ind M11rr1y R. Slone, Cl'Mrl Lynn •I'd Edell• H-trd Avrtsl, R-1 8•tJU Ind S.ndrl ICIY l•lntf, WUll11m ,._ «nd Anni• INY lr•Y· C•rolyn J11n •I'd w111tr Elbtrl Oamllllkl, Andr•• RH •I'd Clllrtft N, M11rry Frtnk H11rry •nd S1Uy Jltn llrvmbl\IQll. JO'I'~ lrtnt encl ~ ,_ SpMf", Ruth Mllrvtl,n •nd Chlr1t1 ·-· ,.,.,.. .. .,...n MclCtnnl. JO.II E . .nit Llwf"-. E. V•n K11mp1n, Nick Ind Ntvl K. Wlnl'br1nner. ic:.thryn Allllr9Y llnd Glenn L.wll C1rt11", PtlTMll iytifl Ind R•IPl'I ,,._ K1lunt. ft-•rd fl'l'9dl'ttck ~ Din, 1"'111 •nd Al\« II, MoMIU111, hri»r« AnM ltd Jtrry Roland B11rQ1•S. K•r•n J11ne •nd llUIY G. Klr-, Lllll•n P. •nd l-1•rold Leo Mc0111!k•n. Jonn •nd Glori• Adel• Mont•no. Steven Slh111nt11 ano::I C1rol -c111w, P•tlY L• •nd Glenn WUU1m Lind. Oevld NIU •nd N•ncY Lynn L•MCkl, lot•lt1 M. tnd Tfton"l.lla F. &oMnlant, DonM A. Ind M111rlct M . \'•lone• Dolot" Alll'I Ind lloblrt ll11utU NNI, S\IMn Fr•ncH 11nd 81111• Ei.v-Not11n. Mery Lou111 tnct Mlc,..111 Hunter PMlen, L.11111nd C. !Ind Anne SINCE 1•24 I 'i ', ~If ark C. Bloome STEEL 195/14 133ts 185/14 ERT8/14 F 78114 STEEL 195/14 FRT8/14 4995 G78/14 205/14 134ts 205/14 GRT8/14 5495 STEEL 215/14 136" ttllcncock, NlllCY L and Jonn H. 8r1lh111r, NII• JIM Incl W1lt.r ,_ ... H1ll.O., MlldAd M . Ind Gtorgot P1<lhlno 215/14 HRT8/14 59'S H78/14 ~ STEEL 205/15 135ts S«lclon. JCll\n WUll1m Ind W•ndoll Miry Death Notices CAaNAHAN \'lf"non W1yrit C•rnln.&n. 211 Vlrglnl1 Piie•. COii• ,,.,....,_ 0111 of Ot•ln, Aw11,i 21, 1t7J. Survived by wlfl, Svwn1 ~'1!nh, M r •nd 1V1t1. H•rl•y C•rnallotn, Arkan1111 bfolMrl, J-, Hwold Ind G•rltn C11n•n•n. 111 ot Arklnw•i llVH •hrtrs. Unltt Sltlly, CO!ill MIUJ Fly P11rry, Oregon1 P1111y Hawkln1, Art1n111a. 5trv• kn •nd lnltrmtnl will N flllld In Ar- k1M<1s. 1111 arotaw-v Mortu.ry, For-w1rVing Olrtctori. OAF PNaY Hfilln GlllMY. Agl u. of m Jt1nett1 Pltce, C(lf.11 M-. 011te of <IHI!\, A\lflllll :V. 1•n. Svrvlvtd by th,...-. HllQh •nd 11'10m41~ G•flney, c.-t• M1 .. ; c;;.reld G1ttney, ttvnllnglon l llChl 11 YI e14ugn1..-1, Aug11.i1 Coon. Whlttltrr 8•rblr• -Flori Gtfff!rt Coll• Mne; Mll"V Wlnt111rn. Ml•lco t \1y1 . Mlrlorl• Wffkl, R-, 1t•ly1 1' grendclllklr~r 11 G'<Ml1'rwlddllldt'M. ll-1J I 0 11 1t h!, Tf\\lrld•Y• I PM. 81111 8rwdw•Y Ch«Pll. R11q11lirm M•u.. Friday, t AM. SI. JD11clllm1 C111'101lc Cllun;tl, with Pr. Bir! s.cnm.or 0Ulcl1llng. l"l~t. C1lv•rv c-v. a.It ll"OllC!My ~ry. 0•1"9'(1ots. HAOl..IY EYtrett "· Hldlly. lleNdent of C-def Mir. 0111 of dlllh, Aug1111 2', 1tn. Survlvf(I b' wll1, Lllll11n; an. Wlllltm. ot Newpott e1<:h; tH"olhlr, eon.kl C. l-11cll1Y, Long &Men: •l•ter, M1r91r~ cr1r~. Olnwr: lhr1e gr1ndchlldr..,, 5ervtas. Fridty. 2:30 ,.M, P11c:1nc v1- c11ot11e1. E"loml)mtrlll P1elllc VI-M-It! P1rk. F•m ly 11J'9 .. h 11\ott wl!.hlng, "'"" m11k• conlrlOll!loftl; to SI. Mlry's Hoap1111, Long 8ttch, In mtmotv of Ev1rt11 P. H«dlly to "ltbllal'I I rftffrch ~r1m1nt lot c•nctr •nd c•ralo v111e11111r dllH•ft-P11elrlc Vl1w Mor111•rv. Dlrt'cior1, HOP PMAN Jftllt Hoflm1n. llf W•1!monl Or., Aot. 4, Alhambr•. 0111 of dnltl, A1111uit n. 1m. Strvlc•1 Plflodlng 111 &Ill BrOlldw1y Morlu•ry. POTTl ll Thom•• H.nry Pontr. Formtt rnldtnt of Cost1 Ml'Sl1 dt ll ol dNlh, A11911st 17, 1971, In lvrnltlY l .C .• C1nlda. S11rvt'ff'd by IOYlno wilt, Eltl11 dltJQ~r, a111y A"n Ll;hhtv, Ol1mond l1t1 two'°"'' Rotiotrt. of Hunlll'l(llon 81•ch1 A lcn~rd Pon ... Al•SK1; ........, grtndclllklNn. Senices wltl bll hlld In Ctnldrl. 1'1rn.lty lllUVlth ~ wl&hlng ,.... "'"-mernorl•I contrlbutlon1 to thl Or•llOI County A ..... 111111.non C~ltr fa.r c '. pp I I d Cl'lltdrlll Ind AcMtl or Ille ConMrwnce HovM. as A1btrt s1., NOr11'1 11u..,,.D'Y, l .C. ARBUCKLE I< SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY CZ7 E. l'ltll SI., Costa Mtl& 1114111 • BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Coron del Mar 673-915-0 Cotta Mtl& llf.U!l • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Men. U WW • DILDAY BROTl!EllS MORTUARIES 17111 ll<K h Blvd. Haatlogton B<och IC-7771 144 Redondo .Ave. Loni -!I.J-4ll.1141 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUA RY 1708 Llgun1 Clnyon Rd. 41'-9115 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery ~tortn•I')' Chapel 3500 PaclDe View Drive Newport Beach. Callfoml1 M'-!700 • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 'llfl Bolio Ave. Wmmbtlter !IS-3SU • SMITH8' MORTUARY lt7 Maht SL llalla!llOn ll<aclt l3$4Sll ' G78/1S 205/15 GRT8/1S STEEL 137ts H71/15 215/15 95 •k ....... ~_ .................................... 215/15 HRT8/1S ................................ ,.,..,.... .. llrtlll ........ 11 ..... ~ STEEL ts ~ ........ ,._. ....................... c.tllllbl l .S. .. 235/15 143ts ·=-·-.. -· .. ""=·"'""' ___ ,._ 235/15 LRT8/1S L71/1S llflill ... It .. .-Mt .... ,.. .., .. ,_._ ................ M.A. ...... "'""· 670/lS (70/14 115114 (70/14 175/14 F70/14 F70/14 F60/1S F60/15 l .00xl6.S l .7Sxl6.S I0.00xl6.5 12,00x l6.S GARDBN GROVE COS!'A ME SA 14040 ~hwnt 3005 HARBOR BLVD. I c or n~r Wot !l'l'ntl•r (corner of Baker i nd H1rbor I • -1111d 8rookhuttl) (:l1 4 ) 557-8000 ( 714) 530-3200 •i.... .... r_. ,.. ,_ ... EXTRA W-1-D·E 60 SERIES "IJl'fl CHAIGfl ,...,, , 11.11 OWS" .. u.•• .... t.. , .. 6.45114 6.50113 7.35/14 OUR CONSUMER POLICY 7.75/14 878/14· 878/13 E78/14 F78/14 G78/14 Chtr cntowttr 1141icy i1 ff .Mtttr ..,... .,.._ H Y" .. ,, • •••1ti111 cHCff'tlli., ~ .,. senlcn ""4wH t• '"' plM11 c•ll Hr DiNCtw et C.... 111"'...-Aff•ln , Mr. S. Ars•iu (JJJ) 170.17:17 IN" 3•1 ·1211. If •• 1h1•I• ,,11 ••t •f Y••r size, • "Iii• OIK ll.H will H i111t .. •sswl .. • l•t...-... li'ttf'f d the H•trti1N ,..kt. 1.25/14 1.25/15 8.55/14 8.55/15 G78/1 S H78/14 WE NEVER SELL SECONDS OR BlEMSI I OOUBL C ION SHOCKS SMOOTHIE Whee Align. "::'' 495 CHROME WHEElS 95c 2f$35!!. LOW ._ .. ... .. • "r.lffiT' c ......... •••191.-.,. .. W1lko ""'9• Of """ IMl""-t IAYI 17.00 '"" ••• 11111, i-. .... i-. "'~MU. , .... ,t ... looA•leW. 1'11 1• c.-""''"'"' R". 17.tt •Ht111Nnl .... 1'11H UTOMATICAIRPUM 1111 U,S, c•n . 'l'lit. tlll1 Ill l·T MAGS ' , ""' """"'"'·. •ll'<M-FOR Al ADJUSTABL .illtMct l tonlen Uf'I II.ti SHOCKS _,,.,. ............ bllrl. Otfw ..it! ._.n. <OMmi Miii: .. COMPlnt CAPS ,;;;;;.. ITAllUIUS --& LUO NUtl AVAIL llOll lfln9GS ~ I AllllUUllT "'JU51 ~RllYIDI W"• l•"I• 9' 111 .. koc~ \: lllM WllAIWI ... 'icbp t~ ...... 119111• •SIT•T Ml t&Otll 2:$49 90 ~= ',... --Mllllwl lttNfOI TO HKlllU MtOCI l ..... =IClirlll.L Al10llll 111 PIUIUll • 1111'lllJUll1tOW OISIAl n T $Jo••$<~ MlllJUP POI IOIM OWlll1" •<I I 11 UJIO Wlll Alff AlllllOCI • 11,H ._ f ,LY 1.77 1.73 1.13 HEAVY DUTY SUSPENSION SERVICE "JMMllUll.J.YIAI PllfOIMAICI PIG. $34~~1 1. WMIR UKIMDIT POUCT J.YUI. S0,000 •\l1 t lltAYY ovn m t OD IW111111GS 1 • w••n <Ott 1r11H STAl1lllfl1 4. llAll ADJU$TMllCT ·-1n-10 PO.IC••'°'""°'' =-1110 I 1•tl OI : ~.,KllllC C-t LA HABRA BUENA PARK FULLERTON ORANGE 2000 Whlft&.r ll•d. 2?62 UMolit ll•d, 1 JZ1 lo9'ft l tcfid 410 Notift Tntf"' lc:o r"'' of Whittitr l corner of l inco l>t (I Bloc~ North of ""'"' . end B11c::1I 1>td K110•') :' .... ,,;do ro1wr ·•I 674·3666 17141 826-SSSO '7141 870-01 00 . 11 41 639-43~1 INITALLID $36~f~ ......... -............. .. .......... 1.l thlM .. 1• ..... ,~ ,, . .,. ........... ~ .. ,_ ... _W!N ........ ....... ·~· 11 ... ........ t .,....,. ....... ... "":r: ... Mt.I ,,.,."Mill ......... ..... ,.,., ,,... """-·· t. '"' .,.,"_ ,., IHI .. '"" 1 .............. .....,. PIOUMllVRID., IOMDID JDI •• , ••• , UUI , ____ ,.,_. . • .,.-.. ... --4 ' • ' • i ' • lfi DAILY PILOT Thursday August 30, 1973 Murder 10VER THE COUNTER ·suspect ~In Love' NASO Listings for Wednesday, August 29, 1973 fl'llM cwoi.UOl'll lb(lh $Ul>Plled bv lhl NI• ilrfln« TIQn1i Auocl•rlon "' 111 LrJ Secut11'1s 011l1r$, to CP 1r1 bldl Ind ofltr• II Aulm OllOl.O b\I _,,_,,,.. AuloP "'CRAMENTO (AP\ "I counter 1111Jtr\ 11 Cr~ iJln -e1Ch o!Mr 11 of Mid k>vt you Ronald." Waldis Lea f/::.1 tne ie:~~ ~~ 't: Copleman, 41 , called out to her ~~. ~.~:'uo~~:i H~ 1,:0 husband as she was escorted = :W ~Ji ~:nn F,: ftwrt h e r arralgrunent on rei>r_, .c11111 ~1mn B• ·:..,..• • tr11>wcllon1. lrlYll P charges of plotting to have INOUITlllALS •r-II: bi · .. ~ red AND UT!LITllS HIWth Fl • A.uoull 19, 1t13 ell c m mwue . w.ane141• E111c:i Mt Municipal Court J u d g e ACIMMI 1V·~ fi.-00111r EAWard Garcia set a pretrial Ale• Al• 11'" ,,., Hunt MIG ". • • Aiko Lnd 5'4 • Hv111 c h.O,.;ng for Sept. 7 ID the case Al*' Bev 2111 ~ Hvt'er C '"r'."' . Alli.ct Tel 19~ 20lrt tndl W1! or Mrs. Copleman, wife of Allvn Bl ..... 5\'11 Ind' Nud • • Am Aonl 9 '"' nlor1 .. C.Ilfornta Highway Patrolman A ArtCrll rr. !'Jo ntel C•ll Ronald Copleman. ~::ieb,11~ sa~ 59~ :~::f ~~ • Am Flncl ll~ II"' lnl Alum Am Furn M'I 1\lo In llkW A ~· ~PLoMAN sobbed Am Gr" .s '5\lo 1n1r11 Ct> Jnn.:J. ~v c. AMJr~ Sv 11:i... If~ Ir• Ind R dui'ing her arraignment Tues· ~::i ,:~r: i~ .. tt,,. j:i"*.l1~Fr day oo charges of -conspiring A""-"'' •1•1. ''"' J01t¥n M Ankln In '~'-•V:i l<i11ser SI and solicit'"" to commit AOIXCO 9~ 10\'-1(1 VI( c .. '6 APS lncP UV:I ljll:I K••tn Tit. murder. As the charges were Ardn Mvt · J '4 1<111wod bein d h .d "( d 'I Arr.,_ Hr lSVt 11\lo KHI COhl'I a: rea , s e Sat , on Arvk)(o ' ~ Kev 011• l h lh ,. A.SMI Coll 221.0 2l'llo Kl'/ft Fb wan to ear em. A11 G• L1 13"' 14v. Kay c1111 • • A.UIO Trn l \!o t'Ao K1~r lnl Gracia dented a request to Baird Alo •V. 4V. KMS 1nd .1 81ll'il Wr l•V. 1'41 Kn YI reduce her $100,000 ba1 . 6•k•• F• u1.1o 36 icC:!'r Pr B1lown L tV. 9"' Kro>eOtlr The alleged plot to murder e111v Mtt 57\lo SI'~ 1<1111m e1 8nk BIOCI jJ UVt Copleman was uncovered de-61t1k Rel •\• ,.,,. ,L~ •• ~e1 • • , ' &1rnts H 1'"' 25 ·~ i~~es ~d, 1h~en ~~~~tiff~ l:ri.:1 : :5 i5 ~:s:'ao~ · _..., hired f 811cln CP ,.,_ ~ Legget Pl person su~ .... y or een11v L1 21 n Lloer1y H $5.000 to accomplish the killing t:: t:: ~Yi :g ti~ '~':'1 by staging a fake holdup. l\~ 0,~ 1 ~l;: 111 .. ~ t~11~151 Bird Soni 24'./; 2 "• Loews Co BOii Evnt ll'lio 19"" Mid G11 ALSO ARRAIGNED on the aoo111 NP 19V. aci Mal 11111v Br1nco I 21'!1. m:. Ma I kl same charges was James Brink• tn 1o><o Ht,oi Marl~ Frt Hadley Gerow Jr., 39, alleged gr;:~ Ar 1f" 1f~ ~rvcr:J he .ddl . bvcklM 15 15V. to have been t nu eman m e-uck•Y s~~ 6v. M .. cQu1y he I Burno st ™" 27\l ck:m t p Ot. ~ull1r M •5 .S =~rn1 Mrs. Copleman was arrested :~ l.: ~n 2~ M.•,,.,.., F~ •-Sun en \t!PS , .... 15V.. llpor at the pet Store Sue runs -~hmO Pl l•'-~ IS Miiis G1s da · G f · d Ill~ A l~ lffl Minn Fib y everung. erow, a rten 111n1 s,o ~· a M~I cp ol the Copleman family, was li1';r )~ )~~ID!~~ ~; arrested later at his home in hrls SK 1•1 1s1 Morrlsn c111r u A J.tVt l,"1 Molot c1 suburban Rancho Cordova. C 1veoa.: '"" 1014o MSI 0.11 . • Clow Cro 9-'" 10\'t Nit Cn\151 The Coplemans also hve 1n ~OCIC LI 11'!,4 19,. NII Llb!Y rd oml Shr 27 21 NI Mctier Rancho Co OVa. mwTt P 23 ... 2''°' NI Patent onlllll P U~'o 1~ Nlldhm Mullin lndicted In Stabbing ~=nl Co ~~ J1V. Ntwll Co Crutth R IV, ~ NE1111 GE Curt Noll 15\':i 16\'t NJ NII G D"I Intl :Ula lW. Nicolet ln 0Bn v M I '"" Nielsen A D1t1 Oro 7\1) -7711 Nielsen 8 Diii 0.1 :Rio 3:\1& NPfdslr §!ii Gen ..s-. '6 Nws NIG Is 01 lP'o \~ Noxell Cp or tn .,,. $\~ Nuclr R• 0.klb AR $2\1> $3\/) 01kwll H Delhi Intl 5 SVJ Oce1n O.-Delu~1 c 37'\0 JIV:i ocean E~ DJ1m Crs · l H• 12~ OC:npr Ml Dl1m Hd l~ 10~ Olfsh L111 Dick A a n•n 26 Oc:iUll'I m 0 "'"' ScJ 9\lo 101.lo Oh Ferro Ooculll 291~ 30 Opll eo.t Dollr G«I Al Alo Ormonl ~Id$ ~ 2A4I Ovr SAN JOSE (AP) -Con-Dow Joni 'll'V.. .,. o..::"''NA viCted mass murderer Herbert ~1:1n°~ 1~ 1~v. OlH• Cro ~c.on Lab •21.9 "21\ P1tnl er Wf ; Mullincrili, ~w~it1ingl s~ntenchaing el ~~ 1k, 1r,: ~=~c'cfam or 10 sa ICIH S ayings, S Enero11 C ~· 91t Pie Lum • . • E<KI S&L ll 13'i.I P1SO Brd been indicted for murder m E1ti1n A n 1• Pin 0co1 the bb. d th of · l •iecu In 3"• 3"4 P~vt R•11 S\a tDg ea 8 rnes E Paint 6 1 P11vtey P . oo~'ess·onal a SI F1lr LM 7'~ 81.I. Pvlu C1s tn 8 IU I F1r!Ofl El l'1'"1 3.1~i Pav N S11 November Firm B, 11 \') n •1o P1G1& w • FIVI Oro I 1 P~I H&H !be indictment against the Flflllrllt lJ l.P4 Pfit•o Lw Fii eosm 17\lo II P•cN $111 Uryear-old former honor stu-1st T""'" 21 """' Plnkrtn dent and admitted drug user 11111(:-:'1!.! m l11. ~::;r ,,: • Fla TellP 171/a 1111o \\'aS returned Tuesday ntghl Fllckar 11 . 11'~ PlAn<'I >.\k For•1l 01 10'• 11"-PDllll Bro by the Santa Clara County Frink El 1f. 9~~ P,•nf Gott nd • Fr1nlll H 'h 26'.:0 •Mt-s gra JllfY. Friend IC 2:lV. 2'"' PSN C•r Frltcll Iii · 11\4 12" Pt<tn C10 DEPUTY DIST. At l y . Ulysses Beasley said Mullin Fro.z FdE 7'ii !~ QoNor c,, Fuller H l2'h 13'1o Q1111~r Ch Funk Sn t:W. 9\lo QllMll Cl • IOh 211• RiJll'lr CCI I f Tamp.la 10$ 100 IS~~ i. A<1vcm 281 112 t •vlOI W .._ .... v. 7« '" R•vm<I It 10 , ••WCm ,.. • 121._ 13 AllM P.C: 1•\.\ 16"11 ftll•ll'I' ''"° ~ ls • !W'• R9(0!! E-. j S'• •• m. oc 91·1 , .... 1 11'• Reg_ Elec 17 111.'o ltliJll 11.i '"' 271, 'li '• R-41 univ l:W. l•loo .uw .. Ml 9\oo 10 j~ 1>11• Ae.o Pl•1 ..... 1 Tran C" 111 lO ,..... • Rl"t'fl '" '~ 4\oli 1rn U..1P l~ 11 • , ... 6't Rivi! Ml :Ullo 35\IJ ltn Oc_,. 10.. 11\'t 9 91. A~ E~ :Mh l5 f rnoh Fn J\IJ • t:"" r. Aotlrl 011 lf"o 161'1 Uni CiJpt 9 9~~ l•'-IS Rollins ll 15Va 11 .... Vn1on Sip lt'lt 11 ~ lL"' Rouat Co 12\lo 12"' UllAll Th 1 1.\lo · J,14 J ... R-Fnl ,,,., 1D\4il US Ilk NI lh 2+< J.I• ...._ Ruckr Ph 17 1a.,., US Trk L 12 12\.> ''"' , •• Rusi SIOY 11\li ,...., univ Feb l•l't 1$ t"' 71::. 5•11• Ad1 '"" ~ Unv MObl I ~ 1 17"" S11lem CP 71'1 111'1 VegM Ho I~ 7\IJ 71~ IV. S.m5nll 16'.'t 1~ Vine• Sn S..., Sb ft\• 22~ S.:her•r :IOV. Jll.li Vin O\lk 10'~ 1~ ljlt.. S.:!'loll In 2'\.\ 27"'1 1111' Shell 61'1 7iolo l .,., SC:ol! Inn N IV. Vietor! SI 11"'" 12'r:o 1''~ ',,1~ s.:oniL G 1 11'1 vv"'°i svs ~ 'n "' '• SC:rlpps H 1714o 1114 If.YI SC: '"' 0 21\.'t 2111.1. S.:riplo I l..., 19'o Vol Sl\09 12tl 1llot sf"" J~ s.. Wrlll 2J 2:Mlo W11h NG 12V. 1!'<• ''" 11,,. S11 Merch 1117 11 Wlslt Ml lJV. 16111 lllt.. uv. S11m1ilr W1xm1> I 7 1~ xV 21 W11)b R• •\'II •Vi ~~ ~ S......, lip lOV. JIV. WMIMll "' 1 .... ,tl~ 10'• SMllr (p 1~ l'W Wllal WI 12 ll fv': le\ Sl'lortw 6\'e ~ w11rno M I•" 1s1o1o 10111 11 SlmpiOll 11 12 W1tcst Pf 5~• 5:\1& J•:. • Snip Toll SI'~ St'J. WstPub n 16'"' 1~ 16V• 17 Sllld PIP 15:\lo 16'.lo Wlllr Fd 18 11\.'J 13"' u 1~tr1 191.!i 20V. Wlll1mt t 22 22\.'J l"' l~ Sl1n111y I 16 1~ wl1n H J II lO 5 .S,,. Sid Jl.1911 lJ 16 Wini PkT UI~ 14'WI UV. l)l.o Slk N All n v, 2'/V, WIK PL! ll\lo lt .... 11 12 SlkN Brw 7\ro t i.Ai Wood Lll'I lSV. 15'11 Isl,\ 11~ Slllk N S I I V. WPfkl Sii \3\lo 1• ' ,,_ 51rllf Ttc lll'o l:W. Wrlgllf W •VJ S ••sue11• El 9 ov.xomx c 'p ~ l~ 11Y. SY"*' Cp 11'~ 11:\lo V1llo Frt •2 •2:W. l'l'I ~· Si.Ibo Fd •:wr. Hi Zleglr Co 6YI '"" 12'11 1•.; Tally Crp ~~ 4 Zion& lllll 23 u,v, 21"'1 2llll•\:.::::.:._:::;__:::;_:;_=""'--'---"-- '"' Ai "' ,.. l 0 Most ct .,e 1v. 1'•••-------..... --,,--,.,---1~ 11\ol 26\lt 11'1' NEW YORK !UPI) -TN 10 mot! JS 3111~ 1cll111 llOCkl trldld on 1111 OTC m1rkll 71111 29'"1 WedMM:llV 1$ ~IMI by NASO. 1• l•\1 Stock Yolvmt a111 Mk_. c~. 2"' 2:\1& Penn Llf• 300,toO S 51:1 • 7:\i 1\1.o Pntn Otbl'I B 67,SOO !Wo ' "9 •"" ~. :omD ln1ur Am 61.200 12'111 13 lO 3\!o J'M 8urn11p Slm1 Sol.ao:J 21Wt 27'11o+ l o SJ\'r s.iv1 Soulhern Co 50,500 17 17\11+ :WO 5J~1 57 Am Gr .. tlng '3.IOO •S ~+ '~ 13(• 14~ V1ll1Y NIBkArl l .Q,200 2Alll 2514 .. 1.-Cl'ntronlc1 0111 31,100 ~ ,....._ ~~ '3 U Am E•pr-37,100 ~ St~ b 161'0 I NPflhrup Kiev 37.«IO -'SVt .. v.+ \lo 32\0 33\lo -40\'i •lV, NASO YOIUrnl IO<Uoy (,1151,600r ..ctll•nctt J;:? Jf4 111 ; dtcllnts J'lG; unchlfl91d 1'69; 10111 :U\~ s111o 3000-.::c· ------------1 "' "' 17\'o 17 """~ Gainers & Lose-rs 2l'I' ~ Ntw VPfk tUPIJ -Tl'lfl followlnll 1111 20\'t 21 \'r ~l'IOWI. 11'11 JIOC:U !"'! hlVI gl1Md !hi 34•.1. :15V. mo.I 1n<1 Iott t11o1 mott beMd on perc.n1 2111.i 'l9 ot cnarige on lhl Over·th1-Coun11r 19 .... 21 m1rk1t II quoted by IM NASO. '""' fl\ NII Ind perCHlllQe Chll'IOH ... llMI 9 9 dill1r1nc• bHWffll Tiii prev!0111 1111 Diet t nil price .iind ltll current 11$1 bid price. 51' 6,,.. GA INl!aS 10 11 1 Caban• Coacn l:ti+ ~ Up 37.5 lo.\ 11 2 Uld Coln S_,y 2'.•+ VJ Up 211.6 9 10 3 Procn1mco In ''lo+ ~ Up 25.9 91't 10'"• ' O.nk1rWh wt N+ 'h Up 22.2 19.' 161/o 5 GenCmplr Sys 6 + 1 UP 20.0 154\ 16~• 6 &1Uek Corp 6YJ+ I UP 11.2 6\1 7111 7 AlwOOdOC:n wt l:W.+ V. Up U.4 ll"!' 34V. t Comptr MKll 6'11o+ :: .. Up 14.9 Ea 34 9 Enervy cv v11 l•\/o+ l>oro up u.o "'-. ~ 10 EllffOY C!lf\11r ~'+ l .... llP 13.6 9"' 9"t 11 Biii Klct .06h •l<o+ V. Up ll.3 'II/\~ ~V:i 12 o.ntoMect 11\d 2"'+ ~:. ll11 1~.J 13 JlrOm M Judo •V:i+ \'r UP 12.S 57~ J~ l• T1l.crl!dJI Inc s""+ 'h Up 11.2 7 A~ 15 HenAdnF . .0. llY:i + 2 UP 12.I 3v1 3 ·. 16 F11yn1 lncll,osl 3'h+ "9 Up 12.0 ··~ I; 17 DIKkWllSfr .16 xll + 1~. Up 11.1 1911. 21 It ChlMPkl Ins! ' + b UP 11.6 7 Milo 19 0.IBkCp 2.52 11•2 .. + "'' Up 11.• 1, 17 20 Mldw1t10lsl A 5 + \IJ Up 11.1 6" 7'! 21.FISCO Inc .20 l \'i+ 'Ito Up 9.7 '°" 6\0 n Marin• Proten J'I(.+ \'1 Up 9.5 4 • n Loglcon lncrp ~+ ""' Up t .• 6\lo ffil 2• Adv•n MlcroO I•\<+ ll~ Up 9.l "2 "2Vt U PlgltComp Crt l + •1, Up 9.1 311.1.i 3914 1.C»ERS 21"-21~ I USB1nk110I .30 l"'e--Vt Ott 21.l .'.lll't 39\4 2 Cl Rttvlnv wt ~-'• 00 16.7 I'll """ l Simer• (PfP 1'~-'. Olf 16.7 \Pt 15'°' 4 SMlllr Cp Am l~ \,, Oii IS.• ui:. 1•~ s Courter COl'P 6:W..-l Off 12.t 3\IJ l.._ 6 T1111w1y Jnc \:WO-'-' Ott 12.5 15Vt 16'.i 1 6001: Allen .12 5 -~' Oii 11.1 Ult. 14:t.I. • USF ln...es WIS 1' ......... 01f '10.0 !JV.. 17\0 9 Lltco NV .30t> 27'h-l 0 I 9.8 2'l\li 2l"i 10 UA ColCblevl1 1 -"4 Ott 9.7 I I"'° 11 lnlott~ IRCOl'P 6\\.-... Oii 9.l 6 7 12 Aigorlll Oilll 1'.lo-n Off 9.1 lCI llVr 13 ComllUlln'IP 1 '~-'·'-Olf 9.1 11""' 11v..1, CunflmArt Pr 2:i...-1:. Oii 1.3 i~Vt ;k 1S D~n•llb lncorp 1•0--•1 0'1 ll. 5 5~ 16 AITS lncor11 5~ '1 Off 8.0 1v. ,..._ 17 My Toy C.o I''>-'• Ott 1.1 16':0 16\4 11 lil1dlll0fl Tech I ~..-l'o 011 ~.7 1~ ltw< It Cr<l'Wn Cr1fls 5 ->1 OU .0 ·~~ 'lG PIC (llHld 311; 31->:. Oii 6.5 • av. 21 C1rlb Leh .SO tl -'9 Ott 6.l lt~~ '°VI 12 SlllCOfl'I Oen• ,~.,__ v. Ott 6.J 11V. 12 l'3 SporlCOICft Cp ~-V. 011 6.3 would be arraigned her c -,. ______________ :om before Monday. ~Jk~ MUTUAL FUNDS A jury in Santa Cruz County convicted him of murder Au g. 20 in a slaying spree in that resort c o m m u n i t y last atw'f"'W'KZ n rare·,, = •• 'lfk:· 4 ·77 zm Fi' •=· January "M\d February. He is Ntw VPfk -Fol· et.e Mu 3.2'l 3.22 JH•n gth 7.ts 1.Sl SCh111 SP 1.56 t.36 bein" held in the state medical krwlnc:i 11 a 1111 ot E•ole Gr '·" 7.63 JHan Sig 11• 1 M scuooe• ,',.".!=,, ,, , ".' , bid ind 11ked prJ. l!ATOM & Jot1111ln 23.97 23.97 lnlr Inv ,. facthty at Vacav11Ie. co» on MutUll HOWA•Ot 0 KEVSTOME: 81l1ne 1,,'·.",, ',',·.•,•, fund• 1s <iuotld trY Bein Fii t .•7 l .lS Cm! 81 11.n lt.59 com The fll"St-degree murder in-tN N ... SD Inc. Gwlll F 1•.101s.•I Cust 82 lt.2121.11 Sptcll 29.127'.12 di •-~ · the Inc,..,. 5.19 6.U Cud B• 1.16 1.9• 5bct Lev t.31 ._n ctment was re~u1u=i tn WlidlleMIY Soecll F 7.1• 7.1/0 CUii Kl ,_,. 7.61 SECUalTY l"M: death of the Rev. Henri Tomei AU11lllt 29• 1973 e5~~11J'd ~i:~lf:f~ cu.i 1e2 6.oo 6.57 Equltv 3.«i 1.n \.-fOIE so 7.12$22.25 CUii SI 22."'2•.62 ln...est 6.'5 7,07 who was fatally stabbed as I~ L l ld Alk EFC MGMT '0111" CUii 52 11.3712.'6 Ulfrl F ,,17 7.SJ . . f . I . St ADM111A TV: Eo!V G J 10 1·.n Cu1t SJ 7.17 8.6'3 St!l.llCTl!D FDS : sat m his con ess1ona tn . Grw1h l'Y ~-= eotv P~ 3:02 33> '"'' s. Ln •-'S Am SM 1.D5 1.os •fary' ~urch m· nearby Uis l~~ 1:1 1:.w {inc1 Am 1 ci 1.12 AllOflo '·" s.09 opp Fd 9.1• t .1• 1' S \.Al Actvls.11' ill •.SI are! GI Jf2713'.2' Pol1r1 l.67 •.Ol Sol Shrl 11.J't 12.19 Gatos Nov 2 Aetn..1 Fd 1·21 t cw llun Trt 6.11 Knl(kr 6.07 6.65 Sant!nel t.7• 10.5' • · Aefni In 13" st 1.:.s ern1ro j·7D '·°' Knkr Giii 7,1' 1.0.. !11-ntrv F ll.JIO 1•.67 Afutu~ 9'92 992 Enerqy 1 .3611.36L/Mfmrk 6.S. 7.l•SHAllEHl.D Gl,. : TE STJFYING AGE Fd 4'79 •:t9 F1lrtld 1.05 t.IO ~-Fd 5.19 S.19 Comsl 3.3J )," 'f)/f H I L ~ _ • Allsl1!1 li53 13.r. ~; '"" :·:: 9.44 LIX GROU,.: Enlfll!' $.'3 6.IM Mullin also conressed to killing A111111 Fii 12.96 u. 6 FIOEL1lv . • Cp Udr 1•.131,.17 Fief Fd l .lt 4.17 Ame:~ F •.61 $.11 GllOUP'· Grwlh '.36 6.95 H1rbr 7.11 7.IS the priest, a transient and a Am ~~r· ,.21 10.07 8nd oiti I" • 52 Rttrch 13.391•.'3 LllMI L 6.07 6.t.J Woman hitchhiker. Poll·ce sa1·d •.mM •'•'•'••',,-~ .... C1Pli1I 11'.5312'60 Ub!Y Fd $.12 S.10 Pace Fd 7.36 LCM · O Canlra 9.27 . Ute lnlv •. 26 9.QJ SHEAllSON FDS: the Y f 0 Un d MU 111. n 'S 'c"", '1 ' , '' I >O Cv SSec 7'02 7.33 Lll>C (111) 7.07 7.73 AP!)fc 11.27 19.97 IP I . . !"' .:n LOOMIS ~ lncom 16.7.S 11.ll f. · ts · l h lncom '~ 1.99 sse• 10 3' SAVLEI~ lnVfll t .27 10.13 tngerpnn ID e COO-!:::~m I .SS wnt 10:11 11:11 C1p Ov ll.06 13.06 51'1 O.an 11 .9111.97 fessional srock ~-~ l·U FIJnd 1s.•116.1• M111v11 1u11•.31 s1<11 Fd 6.•1 1.s1 -::==============tlAm Grlll 5°15 i21 Purltn 9.00 t.14 l.Ofll:D All: SIGMA "UNDS: • Am lnsln 4:141 s:31 ~~ F ~JZ J·ff Aflll18t 6.•7 ,'·'",, Cap l hr 7.0n, 101.m" Am lnv11 •.to •.IO ,1f4.,"' CIAl. · · Am Ill 2.17 • Inv 10. . REFJ.EcrIONS 1'y Reyn Sheffer Ability oan be a natura1 gift or come as the result o f hard, practical study and experience. Opportunity to capitalize o n this abUlty Is largely of the individual's maJdng and can. in most caaec, be prepared for in ad- People mar, find them- .elves placed n areas "'here their abilities are ttldom utilized and often unrecog- nized. This lack or opportun- ity must be resolved by the individual "'ho, recognizing the nature of his ability, will make a determined effort to change location or cfrcum- atances so that opportunity In his field will exilt. Please call on UI for in- formation about our emcr-- gency ...acords file -a no cost servtce to the families of our-community. t16 SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY u.&UNA HACH .... ,,), SAN CUMOOE IUI NOITH EL CAMINO IEAL •tl -0100 Am Mui 8.0S 1.IO Pll~llAMS· 8nd cleb t .6610.5' Trsl 7.60 t.31 AmNI Gr 2.21 2.41 Ff Ovn i 20 , 111 Lltlhlm 10.u 11.41 Ventur 1.66 t.'6 ANCHOR Fl~ ll'ld .:,1 4·31 Lullln In 9.21110.1• Smlll'I B 10.00 10.GO GllOUP': Fin Inc 5_.7 5-.7 Man~ln 3.9' •.31 SB l&Gr 10-'9 10.'9 Cllllll •.'3 .S.07 Ven! , 10 i10 ASS CO: So (;.el'IF 11.2412.12 ~~~n11 7.50 1.22 1,tFd Vi 11 ·0I 1il1 Fr"1TI 7.51 l.ll Swst lnll 7.fl I.SS 1 !·~ ,.49 ,Ill.ST · lndP F f..Clol 1.11 Sw Inv G S.ft '·" v:r IA' 9H1NYESTOJl:S: M1ss F 11.3312.42 Sovr In 11 .2•12.JI WI N•ll 116' 12·~ ~li.c Fd S.J3 S.8' MASS .. 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UNOS IHCP' Grwtf\ 6.62 7.23 Trln C1p 1.37 t.10 ID Trin 11·09 11'12 O•OUP'i NEW INO LF: Tr1"1 £q 10.2111.27 fflf sn1 (iJ ii Comm W.19 tAl E®ltv lJ.7917.16 Tudor H 11.2011.20 t HANNING lmCllC 7.1"1 l.U Grwtll 10.IO 11.7• 20ttl CG 2.62 2.17 fl'UNOS: lndU1 Ir 111.t:l 11.•5 Sidi 16-TI 11.1• 10th Cl l.U •.21 61lntd 10.3111.'17 Pilot 7 . ., .. 71.5'1'9 NEA Mt 9.:111 t."9 Unlf!MI 1.51 9.38 Ind Fd 1.n t .76 r.1i.wv •. . N.u Cent S.09 5.09 Unlf\ll'ld •. ,2 9 . .n Com Stk 1.21 1.3' ~I: S-~ p 3:J} ,.,, N1uwth t .91 I.ti UNION SEJl:\llCI! Grwlh S.16 5.6' • .,. ·et , Nlwtnn 1.Ul lS.Of OROUP: lncom '·" 1.30 OllOUP Sl!C. 1I NW Per• ll.621(.lf 8rd $ Iv llM ll.71 ~°";I ~·:t :·'2 ::·F~ fl: f:,. N"" Wld 12.1213.25 Natt lnY 1.52 t.Jl r.ti/Ts'f · .JG rom s1k 111.11 11.n Nkt>l•s 1....s. 1,,5' U1t C1pt t.76 9.57 iosTON• Glh FAm 4.11 4.-'0 N1.t l...tr IS.o.t 15.CM Wl'ltllll 12.413.57 Fnct Boi I '9 t 19 r';tth llld 7"1.20 7'1,.,., 0011111 ,_. ,,ll UNITED ,UNDS1 Fron Cp s·2· i·,, "'"'~ 27.~1"1,Al Omeo;i• 7.59 1.11 ACClll'l'I 7.11 1.1' SllTr es io1 '73 .... MILTON (loll,.: 0 Nin fcl II.IS II.IS 6nd Fd 7.67 l ,'1 S!ltcl Sas ,,,. """"' •.01 '·""Ont w111 16.19 16.19 cont 11• t .7J 10M Clllm Fd 10:.t n: .. Gl'Wlh •.11s 7."9 Of'Pl'NHM FO: Cont Inc t .1110.6' COLONIAL Jno:-~, ,,'·"·· ·1"·~ Op Alm 10.20 11.lS lncom 1).2! 1•.n ,UNDS: -.1 ·· · Op F"d 7.20 7.17 S<lenc 6.11 7 . .t6 1 ~on...., 91: 10.11 Hirt Lii •. 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I llldk .No • Pll'I Tj• 2.tt VndtDll •.• ··1' ,., .. ,•,. ~: "~ I :n n :n ,.IONI It ,0: Y1ngrd 1.41 I •• • 00 • INYl!ST Pion En 7.00 1.65 lf\11090 6.11 OllMI Jl'I J,.,,. l 'rouNSEl. Pion Fd 11.36 11.•2 \11rlld I 3.n •.10 Or1tr1n 1:fl' il i-m \ll '·'° """' u t.:n 10.11 lknt or s.'3 s . .n ontrv i 1i7• 13'7 IPll Iv . 2 U Plll'lncl t .n t.SJ 1US! Gf 1.S1 l ,11 oo 1·12 i 11o11 Sii n 602PU11ro11 11 .JSn.ss •"' M11 10.n11.n Div "45 S INVWIT 011 UI": NW ttOI' 9.N 9.Q W.1119 ICI 10.17 10.17 !IJS 1:2. ." ~i ':,'& :·ld 'SI Prod SIP 10.2' 11.lf •Ll.INGTON 1Ykkt l.1J t t~ I $p •.JI ,61 P'UTNAM. ROU,.: U.WAJl:E vt\lrl 9J2 1f·n UNDS1 E•plot n .2-124.Jl OU'"• toe:t.1 ,1,. 2 • COftwr lGM 11.J.I 1....,1 t .1• 10.&1 I ;:fl1in Ill(! '.2t t 't EqullY 1.91 f.74 ~n 11.3111.4' Ill ~ ~'.ft':" lri:rRr;:v l:tf J:~ ~In \f:ll :;·~ t~::,v 1l.'ll 12.11 Vo<""<o i· ··i I II !IK 7.'IO l.6l ""'lllY U.65 1?.n fl 1 • G""" t:J 43' In¥ t.~ ~.61 Wtllf'll 10.U ll.U 11 1 1 1i· lncom , •J1 Vitt• F 10.5111.5' winasr 729 1,9" ".9,us i-r,. . Tr1t Ul YCIYN lO-S211.fOmHI 11\d ~.,,, J,t.s " 'i 4S llfl Trll $1'1 1 1 lJ.74 R-. " 6.lf 7.d Wlrkl Gr r) (1) .. ~-, l l•lll Fl'ld 21,n 21 .'9 IUnlrt 12.•l Wltc;Oftt 51 !·" ,, ,1· , . ,,, '""' ..,, I·"'"" ,, !·" I·!'"""' .,, , ... nc:m J ,. Gwtll .... .7• 1l"1r ,31 • I x411-cjlV'IOtftd, l.------------..J fflf t. IO.t4 J.nut Fd 17.16 U." fl'd IA f,11 l~VllllD'I. I •• A c. ' SWINGING SHOULDERS Stash pencil s, an apple for the teach- er, all kinds of school stuff in these swingy bags. They 're crafted of leather.look vinyl and plush·toucb fabric with lots of lasHion accents. 2.00-6.00. Girls' Accessories, I 02 ' ANAHEIM ••• N, Euclid 171 41 5]5-112 1 NEWPORT 41 f11hio11 h l,11cf (714 1 6'44-1212 ' ~l.I ®If§ CHILDREN'S C11.AFT WORKSHOPS FREE AT THE BROADWAY Anaheim Huntington Beach Orange Anaheim Anoheim September 5 \ ' D. 10:00 Origami 11:00 Papercraft 12:00 Yarncra~t September 7 2:00. 4:00 Clown Make-up September 8 2:00 Weaving 2:50 Macrame ' 3:40 Ya mcraft 11&1sn1 IN THI CHILDllN'S .. ' DIPAITMINTI 11T AND IND FLOOAI ., Let's go to school in jumpers. They're smashing! And each one comes with its own get.it-together top. Just look at all the zingy plaids, rich tweeds, and classic solids. Just four looks shown · here. Come see the whole terrific collection for big ond little girls. All in mochine washable ocrylic. , A. Belted iumper with sti tched down pleats, navy, Print blouse, sizes 7.1 4, 15.00. B. LJ.neck iumper, dropped waist. Ribby turtle, sizes 7·14, 14.00. C, Jocquard iumper, rust. Ribbed tur;tle, sizes 4·bX , 12.00. D. Pleoted iacquard jumper in hunter green . Ribbed turtle sweater, 4-b'X, 12.00. Girls' Dresses, 47 , 96 HUNTINGTON BEACH 7777 Ecfi119•r Ave1111• 17141 192-Jlll ORANGE, MALL OF ORANGE 2JOO N. T111tl11 Streit 17141 991·1)1 I <fil»'" CERRITOS SOD lot C•rri101 Mill (2111 160·0411 SHO, 10 A.M. to 9!l0 P.M. MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY. SATURDAY 10 A.M. to 6 ,.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON to I ,,M, I • ' ' • State Park Gets Land In Malibu SACRAMENTO (AP) - Malibu land once owned by Gov. Ronald Reagan would become part of the ltale park system under a 16.7 million appropriation approved 3G<l by the lltale Senale. The money woold finance the purchase of 2, 700 acres owned by tile 20th Cenlury- Fox film studio under the bill by lltate Sen. Robert Stevemi (II-Los Angeles). (OUTDOORS J He said Reagan once owned about 200 acres of the land before selling It to the studio. e Vote Delagell SAN DIEGO (AP) -The Sierra Club says It doesn't ob- ject to COW1ty superviaon' postponement untll Oct. 3 of a vote on the controverstal Kemp Ranch campsit e development near ~tt. Lagwia. The board cancelled a vole scheduled last week on the project aller 1111 attorney for Landtec Corp., wbich wanll to develop the land, said tbal on, ly thrte of the five supervloon panther 10-speed bicycle 79.99 Rog. 89.99. Prince includes essem- bly. Sliimeno deroilleur, stem slii~­ er, combination ch ain lock, center poll brakes. Sporting goods, 43. might vole on the qlltlllon. 1•••••••••••••••• The propolal, crilfciJed byl" environmental groujil, calla for <.'OllltrUction of ~re than 2.000 campsites, tennis courts, a Jake and other facilities at the 1,553 acre ranch. ' . , e Bou, • ._ ROHNERT PARK (AP) - A $1 million bond Issue to buy open space around thll amaD community has been endoned by the clly council. The council voted to put the measure on the Nov. 11 bellot. The council's Ad Hoc O>m· mitlee on Open Space said the measure "will a190 provide the community the opportunity to express itself u to wbetber or not it Is willing to pay the price foe acquisition of open space." Rohnert Park is a city <i 9.000. about half way betften Peteluma and Santa Hou. e State Park SACRAMENTO (AP) -'!be state could acquire property at Candlestick Point for • new stale park under 1 bill puaed 5W by the Allembly. The bill by Assemblyman Willie Brown, ( 0-San f'rln' clacc>), ii ~ by I $10 mill!on aJ>Pl'Olll'lll!o -Into the stale budiet by Bmm. who beodl th. Assembly Wl)'I ml Mum Committff. ' The pn1perty "'"' ~ I &ari>al" dump and includel about IA acres that ant' Iba last undeveloped -Ii> the bay In San Fnndlco' County, a Brown aide Aid. e fllll Sr.tell 8A!1 FRANCISCO (AP) -A federal judge bu approved modification ct a lempcnry restralnlng order '° dirt can be dumped on lour acres ct a 1Hcre tract w h I c h "°"' servatloolsts are seeking to proe.ct at a Mountain View pork Ille. Except for the lour ..,.._ comtruction wort ·ii blocked in the CUey SIOIJI)> muob secll\ll ol the 554-lcre Sbore- JliiO aepinai Park unlll U.S. llllirict Judge stanley Weisel decidel whether to IJ'llll a preHminarY injunction "' the Comm1ttee for a ·a rte D Foot111111. , ·-~ The pork s11e ts 1>emc ~ u a~ for San FnncilcO'• prbaC• under a coatracl bel....n the two c1u ... e P•rfu Bill Clpbol News Service t~~yman~ Priolo (ft.Santa Mon I ca) which would uailf loci! ....,. cles In the creation of more parks on excess land wlthtn state highway rlg)Uof-wa.u....- belore the atate Ammbly action. ... Qlrrent law provldel -• the state may t-to a looll agency, for part pur!JOltl. that portion ct ...... state right-of-way up to 2110 !Mt from the nearest bouodltY ol the hlglnray pn1jecl. Priolo'• AB 2375 would amend the law by rem>vlni Ibo JJ»loot HmltaUon, thua mllk!ni more land polentlally available lot leaoe to local agencies for park P"l'l'OH+ FlltlBAY' 1n thl lfl!illiildi new rock record releases 3.SB Value, 5.98. Feeturing "Sing It Again," Rod Steward .end Feces, '.'Neturel High," Bloodstone end "GeO Me," Al Gre.en. Recon:lt, 77. zenith 12" b/w portable 79.88 A qy11ity block/white 12" 'diagonal set ideel for summer petio use. Up- front controls, high performance chessis. Televisions, 72. ANAHEIM 44411. a..li4 t7141 111-1111 Thursdat, AU9USl 30, 1973 DAILV PILOT J'/ westinghouse 18-lb. washer 189.95 Weter level end temperature con- trol, lint filter, normal, gentle, end permanent press cycles. Mejor Appliances, 80. • • • COSIO m1n1 calculator 49.88 Reg. 59.95. Six-digit entry, lighted display, perfonms oil fou r erithme- tic functions. Includes batteries, case. Comoros, Shevers 13. springboc double puz-zle 1.99 Two lerge puzzles in • permanent storage bookshelf box. Many pet- tems: noture photos , ert master- piece•. 8.00 Veluo •. Stetionery, IS hoover deluxe upriQht vacuum 59.95 A Broadway exclusive. Cleans all types of corpets . Furniture guard, long cord, decorotive zippered bag. Major Applionces, 80. "cheetah" bike by eldon 21.99 Reg. 23.99. Fleetfoot power drive system, rubber front wheel. In- cludes chrome trim, red seat end racing stripes. Toys, 28. '· -- silhouette tote bags By S.msonite. Aveiloble in Moon Glow, Dover White or Wild Strow- berry. 28.50 5"oulder tote, 22.79, 30.00 Hendi Tote , 23.95. Luggage, 33. "the fordham" by panasonic 199 .99 Value, 289.95. Includes cossette recorder, with auto reverse, stop, AM/FM stereo rodio , outomotic reverse, sepa rate speakers. Stereos, Radios, 88. zenith 16" super chromacolor 278.88 Chromotic one-button tun ing, 16" diogonol picture tube, over 90% solid-state chossis, ottroctive styl- ing. Televisions, 72. • easy way removes stains 3 .40 qt Reg . 4.00. Concentrote d, non-pollu- ting. Removes stubborn steins with- out sc rubbing . Gal. 10.95 reg. $13 , 1/i gal. 5.95 reg . $7. Notions. 4. NEWPOkT HUNTINWTON IEACH Oll:ANGE, MALL Of ORANWE CERRITOS 47 F•1hli11 hl•114 f71 4l 644·1212 1111 E1U119er A.,;,. .. , 171'1' 19·2.JJJI 2100 N, Tu1th1 Str11t 171 41 'ttl·lll 1 500 Lot C1rr1te1 Mell 121 JI 160·0411 SHOP 10 A.M. t. t rJO P.M. MONDAY THROUGH f.RIDAY. SATURDAY 10 A.M. te • P.M. SUNDAY IJNOON to i P.M. I \' : ' • • • ': 1.·· " ' ·I· I ' - '" '·.•i ·'• ,, •! « _, " 'I~ ,;: . :.• j .~ -.. ' ' ' -' • ' ' , , __ , • l , .. ! . l I • l ., ~ ·' l ' I l ' < . -, ' '; i I . ' ~ l I I ' I ' -· . ' I ' i : • r ' ' I ' I • i • -_I ~ ' -- ' I , . J B DAJL Y PILOT Thursday August 30. 1973 S11ow-Shoe Says No _To Dmnp Irvine Company Dinner SNOW SHOE. Pa . IAPI - In a vote seen as a victory for "the little people," r·esidents or this central Pennsylvania community have rejected a. proposal that !hey reared would revamp their lO'o''n into the garbage capital or the world. Refusing to even listen to details, some 400 Snow Shoe residents Tuesday n i g h t shouted dov.'O a plan under lvhich the city or Philadelphia would dun1p 12.000 tons or llb""il .... trash a day into nearby aban· llonored Congressman F. Ed- doned strip mines. ;'WHO WANTS to be knolvn ward J-lebert. 1D·La), as the garbage ca1>ita l of the Chairman of the I-louse 11•orld ?" Cenlre County Com-Armed Services Co1n- missioncr J. Doyle Com1an 1n ittee, feted by local Naval Enlisted Reserve asked after\l'ard . Assoc iation. Originally a supporter of the -----____ _ plan . Corman drew boos '\'hen he introduced hin1sclf at the public meeting. Federal and st at e en· vironmcntal officials appeared 11nned "'ith charts and scaled reproductions of the proposed landrill sites. TII EY NEVER c:ot a chance to speak. Snow Shoe citizens demanded an imnl<.'diatt' \'Ole on the plan and pron1µtly re· jected the proposal. "\Ve'll go back and lick our \\'Ounds." an official fron1 the fed r r a I E n vironrriental Proteclion 1\gcncv said later. SIX FRENCll COEDS STRIP SOUTHSEA. En~land !A P) -Six French college coeds stripped t,o the waist at a crO\\·ded family beach but the police soon ordered them to cover up. One of the girls told a bob- by: "It's stupid \\•hat you sav. In St. Tro!JCZ nolndy "·ould 1akc any nntice." ~ACRAMENTO IAPI -If you have a special in1erest in a hlghv.·ay project . the California 11 i g h way Com· mission wouldn't think it im· proper if you invited the entire commission out to discuss it over drinks and dinner. a com· 1nisslon spokesn1an says. And all seven rne1nbcrs might very v.·e11 a t t e 11 d , because the co1nmission con· siders such functions a proper v.·ay to gain a broader view· point on highway problems, said 11al Richard, the rom· n1ission 's assistant secretary. QUESTIONED ABOUT a re- cent dinner in Orange County. where the Irvine Company hosted the commission for \vhat critics described as a sumptuous dinner, Richard said neither the invitation nor its acceptance was unusual. The Irvine Company is seek· ing to divert a state highway project through a parcel ii wishes to develop. "The policy is frequently that they (t he commission) accept s u c h invitations.'' Richard said. "f\'lany time-. they come from cities and counties and chambers of commerce. In this instance it \\'8S the Irvine Company," he sa id. RI CflARD ADDED the com· mission normally a t t e nds "fo ur or five" such events an· nua\ly hosted by developers and "many times that number" from groups such as chambers of comm<'rcc and groups of city and county of· ficials. Commissioners a r e not sala ried. but they receivr $28 a day for food and lodging e;ich day they n1ect plus SHOP 'TIL 9 TO NIGHT ncn 18'' RCA XL~ 100 SPECIAL THE MODERNmE RCAl finelt !~·i nch die9on•! XL-100 colo'-feetures all lolid 1t•t1 circuitry . Automatic fin'e tuning . .eccum•tic color moni- lo•, super bright blac~ m1trix p;e lu11 tube in a handiome w•! nut gr ain1d cabine t. ST.AND OPTIONAL EXTRA RC.A'S llG·SCREEN COLOR PORT.AILE TH.AT'S EASY TO IUY • F1mUy i.11e color view· 1111 thll'l portibl• - e On1-1tl \>HF llnt hi,._ ing • Two pl!lf·in AccllClr· cultjl moclul•• ler N• ltr Mrvldnt e Vivid color from high perfwm1n(1 color tybe s279Bs SOLID STATE CHROMACOLOR II Zetdth's Lowest Price 17" Dlog. Mod•! :iassw'------..;.-..! Zenith Solid State Porta hie 'The Mctdero'-Model E~OlOX 1 t'' Dlo9onol Chromocolor 11 LOW AA&D PRICE <( ~ .. e(',~ . _ ~ y.O O'°'ICS FO~ '" AAj·D ILICTROH ICS C•Ll.AS SfA.R TYi 275 E. 17th, COSTA MESA 642-1882 Dolir t-6 • Th1rs. t.t Sen-411t The> Hor1>ot A.No Sh1e1t 1 t!54 Why Buy From AA&O • 0111• yMr labor 91orot1tM e O llO 'fOOr ,.m WOl'nlllty • "'" .,.... pktwe tllto ..... ,., e Dbco11tt prlc" • o,,. .,.., 1pHler oJch•nt• • 60 day t111er 01ch•"t• ........ ly.-001..mc.-.. kNOW.., ,,..,_., off IMtdl .._ _... llRYICI tra\el expenses. He said the commission docs not coruiider IUCh meetings to be a violalion of California's open 1neelings law. because no formal business is conducted, and that members SC<l no ethical proble1n. "TllE DlVERSITY and fre· quency or these things is such that the comn1ission isn't \os· ing its sense ot proportion or balance by a dinner. They arc given pitches by many dif· ferent groups," Richard said. Cornpany dinner in July as a "soci~I function" which he said ~ comparable to a lob- byist Inviting a legislator to lunch A 11u1nber or members of the Legislature share that view. One Senator who is a fre· c1uent Cl'itic of the commission sa id he thought the Irvine Company dinner was "quite improper" but that b e \\'ouldn't like to be quoted by 11an1e criticizing it. legislative counsel also con· firmed that legal opinions have been issued in the past t.'Onllrnting that the ac· ceptance of such invitations by the commission ls legal so long as no formal business is cond ucted. Richard added that a local news repo rter was Invited to the Orange County dinner, but did not attend . in Sacramento, but that the 1 others are rotated aroWld the 1 state in an attempt to bring the commission closer to the public. Such luncheons and dinners are part of the same process of getting a diversified view· point, Richard said. Asked about groups which can't at· ford to host lhe commission for such an event, he said they have ample opportunity to RICJIARD SAID most of the write to the commission or a~ lu.ncbeons and dinners at· pear in person. tended 'by the commission are Kid Lik T held in connection w i t h s e 0 hair odyssey 119-4144 ''It's primarily men meeting men. It's an opportunity to get acquainted," Richards said . who described th c Irvine "IT'S TOO ~tUCH like the pot calling the kettle black," he said . A spokesn1an for I h e monthl y co'1nmlssi on meetings. He said about two- lhirds of the meetings are held Ask Andy 161 l I Brookhuril •t Edi11g•1 Houri: IG-7 lue5. · s.r. SAVE OlmlO FLEX Reg.$1 59.95 ~~~1llS Take advanlage ol lhls ?. · - low sale price on a great Ortho king. Complete wilh Mattress, 2 Boir: Spring,., Oftho-Pak & Double Bonus! S! SAVE \ ORrnOFORM Reg. $199.95 Quallty construct!On and a fabUlou1 sale price! Famous Ortho C~Freir: c;:enter tor eir:tra $Upport. M1t1ress, 2 Boll Springs, Ortho-P.UC & Dot;ble Bonus! QUEE I .. ORTHO FOAM Reg. $179.91M~'!"''!l;;o!~~~ $ LOMted with quality fealures Hke Scroll.Quilted cover oYer Urethane padding. Much morel Complete with Mattress, Bo1i: Spr~ Oftho.PAll: A Double Soni.$! S&FULLS ORTHOGENIC Reg. $339.95 Now Only 95 Ortho Products are manufactured by Ortho and sold only through Ortho Factory Showrooms FREE DELIVERY ' OATHO nEX Reg. "f69.95 : The choice lsyaur9-Twin or Full size Ortho quality. And now a greatule pclee. Comes complele with M11tress, Box Spring & Double Bonul! TMrilie buy! A top-quality rnattr ... Mt f!yourchok:eol.twlnot : ti.Ill size. Steel lnneraprtng •1th·reinlorcH borders. Complete with Mattress, Box Spring A Double Bonus! The nation 's largest chain of mattress specialists • •' ORANGE SANTA ANA ANAHEIM .LAKEWOOD Ower SO Stor•• to Sln'e You In: 244S N. Tustin Ave. & Fountain Valley 1811 W•st Lincoln Av•. '4-4]) Cendlewood Ave. ~s AHOll.11 MOot~to N P•ANCIKO FRUHO 81t..,een E11clld end lrookhurd I SAN 01!,GO OA.KLANO 161l1 H.,bo' 81,d. C•:l41f~ood Shop• I.AN JOSI! l"WOllNt)( ! •cro1t from Or•119e M•ll! Aw111111t I 1cro15 lrom l•~ewood Ctnter tACR-'MENTO TUCSON Pho111 6J7.0511 !(otllel• of Ed ln'11 rl Nell to Zody't J ~1t ••tt of F1d tA•rt Pho111: 6J4·26J I STOCICTOH AT I.AN TA Phon•: llf·4S10 Phone: 776°2590 SALT l.J,Kli! CITY • r Thursday, AU911St 30, 1q73 DAILY PILQT Jf -· • .,y'OU GO'N~ KNOW 'wt:NJft -r~eir~s.· In the ' Service Capllln JUcUrd M. lllolb, .on ol Mr. and Mn. John H. Stultz, m Lookout ~ve, Newport Beacb, U I m<mber of a 8quldnlo which bu um- ed the Attoopaoe Defenoe commaod's hlghe8t u n l t award. Captain Stultz, an F·llll Delta Dari pilot, II ualgned II K. I. Sawyer AFB, Mich., with the 871h Fighter lnten:optnr Squadron which received the award for maintaining an ex- ceptionally high degree of operational rtadiness for a lt- mooth period ending last March 31. The captabJ, a veteran of Vietnam, wa graduated ln 1960 from SOuth High School, Denyer, and recoived bla B.A. degree In geography In 1984 from the Vlllverslty o I California at Loe Ang<le.s. P1tl'lc:t F. Gadwhl W, son of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick F. Godwin Jr., 2983 Royal Palm, Costa Mesa, haa been pro- moted to airman lint clUI In the U.S. Air F ...... Airman Godwin II a diet therapy specialist at the USAF regional hoepllal, Mazth AFB, cam. The 1lrman, a 1970 graduate of Estancia High Sdlool, at- tended Goldeo West Collete and Onlllge Coast Community College. Airman Robort B. 'l'rqo; IOn of Mn. Janel p . Lawrence, 17m Redwood Tree Lane, J.rvlne, h a a graduated at Ladtland f.F'B, Tex., from the U.S. Air Force security policeman """""· The airman, who -!rain-ed In security and law en- fottS!IODI, is being assigned to Malmltl<lm AFB, MoM., ""' duty with ' • Wlil ol the J;ntefjc Air c.nimancL H> was grwlualod In tm from the University High School. His wife 11 the former Gayle M. Gordon. Marine Lance Corpor1I Dovld c. -· ""' ol Mn. Jocqullne F. Howell of 13' E. Bay SI., Costa Mesa, was pro- moted w bis present ranl: while aervlng at the Marine Corps SUpply Cent.er a t Bantow. , A 19'10 graduate of Bradford High Sthool, Bradford, Pa., ho joined the Marine Corps In August 1971. Navy Selllllln Apprentlot Jeflny c. -· "'" 0 Mr. and Mrs. c. I\. Dtwhirst ol &m \\lualldrla Drive, Hun- tington Beodi. hu ""'l:!:l from Naval Sahmarlne at Groton, Coml. His atudteo includod the standard 1operallooal & D d emerg!DC)' procedUrtS uaed aboard America'• 11.1bmarlnel, and qualllled him lo< duty abolrd one ol the su!Hurface ..... 11. He will -re,..t aboard • submarine to Uftdergo an In- tensive ils mooth practlcal training period, and will be able to Carry out vlrtually any duty aboord prior to ~ , awarded th e IOlbmartnU'l "Sliver Dolphlm." 1 He LI' a lonner atudmt Marina .High /School, tblglon Belch. Oasses--~an Reunion Leadora of the cluses of 1943 and 1919 at Long Beach Polytechnlc , High School are trying to orgllllu a 25-year clwreunlon. · Mn. Colleen M u r p h y Selanden of HunUnglOn Be1ch urges 111 of her Conner clwmatt1 to contact her ,. GATSBY CABLED SWEATERSET Pondoro put together o greot CO<Jrt-ship •.• tennis sweoters with the Gotsby style. Wh ite Orlon® ocryl ic with novy ond burgundy trim. Roll slee ve cordigon , I 5.00. Ve st, 11.00. Hi-Deb Shop, 52 FALL'S SWEATER SET A must-hove fo r Fo n. Acrylic cordigon with. co bles in gold, wine , forest · green, rust, S-M-L, 16.00. Motchi ng pullover , S-M-L, l 0.00. Sketched with ploid polyester-ocrylic pants, 8-1 4, 20.00. All by Albee. Ploze Sportswear, 65 , St reet Floo r about a ttunlon to he holdll-----------------....:~ IOl!\eUme nut •Prlni. Mn. Selandm 11y1 that the'i------------...;; ____ .,1 clustl have never had a ,...,. ANAHEIM ~ NIFTY JACKET SETS Weor them in twos. The shirt, ond the shirtjoeket by Lody Mon hattan. It's mixed medi o. Sketched, lour-pocketed jocket, polyester-rayon, wine novy or beige. Mochine woshable, I 0-16, 22.00. Under it, gingho m check weshoble polyeste r-cotton sh irt, wine only, 10-16, 14.00. Plozo Shirts, Blouses. b6, Street R00< THE CABLE VEST The vest fo r Autu mn '73. In nifty ocrylic knit. Weor it over shi rts for that classic look . W oshoble, S-M-L. Burg undy, forest green, brown, 11.00. Sketched with polyester shirt from a collection of polyester knits, I 0-16 , 14.00. Misses Sportswear, 40 nlon and that only about 100 of l,IOO graduai.. have been located. She ml)' he re•ched at M7-180ll. 444 N. Eucl id 17 14 l 5)5.1121 NEWPORT HUNTINGTON IEA°" '411:/ NGE, MALL OF ORANGE CERRl1 47 F•1irliot1 l1l1ncl 171<11 644-1212 7777 Edlnq •r Aw•1111• 11141 192.Jl)°"I 2JOJ N. T~•.in Stte•t (7141 991 ·111 I 500 lo' C•trlto1 M.11 'II SHOP 10 A.M. to 9:10 P.M. MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY. SATURDAY 10 A.M. lo 6 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON to 5 p M \ ;· . • ' " j • 1' • • I ' . .. , ,. ~ " I ·. 20 DAILY PILOT Thursday August )0, 1973 OPEN DAILY 10:00 to 9:00 SUNDAY 10 to 6 447 Pair in this group WOMEN'S SHOES · e OXFORDS e PUMPS 3?o~ e CLOGS e OR IG. 2.99 to 8.99 -· WOMENS . 800 WOM EN S NO VEL TY BI KINI PANTIES 66' ORIG.'l'I<.,, ............................. ,, .. , .... .,.,,,,, .... ., •. , .... NOW 400 PAIR WOMENS OPAQUE HOSIERY $ ORIG.8'1c., ................................................................. NOW 2 for 1 300 WOMENS LIGHTWEIGHT DUSTERS 00 ORIG.•.'l'l·l 99 ............................................ ,. ...... ,, ..... NOW 2 • 182 WOMENS PAJA MA GROUP ORIG. ~-11'1·l.99 ........... , ............................................... NOW 100 'l{OMENS STRAW HANDBAGS ORIG.4.9'i>·l.?'l ......................................... , ................. NOW 400 WOMENS HANDBAG GROUP ORIG. 7.99-~.99 ........................................................... NOW ,·, ~... , , GIRLS . * . .~ 200 ON LY GI RLS PAJAMA GROUP ORIG.J.97·• 97 ........................................................ NOW 624 ONL Y GIRLS SHORTS-PANTS ORIG.1,99 •."'I ........................................................ NOW 75 ONLY GIR LS SWEATERS ORIG.l.99 ................................................................ NOW 121 ONLY GIRLS DRESSES 3-1 4 Oll:IG.5W-6.9'i> .......................................................... NOW 200.300 1.00 200.300 2.00 1.00 2.00 2.00 • Save! Over 400 Pieces SUMMER COSTUME JEWELRY Choose white and pastels in neck.laces, bracelets, earrings .•• REDUCED V2 OFF! MENS ~!~~~r;,:'; .. ~.~-~.:.~ .. ~.~~.~.:.~ ... ~ .. :.~.~~.'.!~5 3 for 118 ~~.~~~ YESTE~ KNl~S~°.~T C?AJ,,Sw 19.88 81 ONLY LAST EX -JAMS SWIMWEAR ORIG. 1.99.:J..9'1 .............................. , ........................ NOW 871 ONLY PAIR POLYESTER SLACKS ORIG.9.91 1•.'9. . ...... ,, ......... NOW 100 PAIR POLYESTE R GOLF SLACKS CLOSE OUT BUY! ........ , .. , ......................... ., ........... NOW 326 ONLY MEN S NECKWEAR ORIG. 1.41> ........................................... , .................. NOW 99' 8 .99 6.99 1.00 251 ONLY MENS KNI T & WOVEN SH IRT S ORIG.l.'7·}91 ........................................................... r<(OW 2, 50 STURDY -METAL ~OOilO(KE~~ e 5 COLORS e METAL OVER WOOD e REINFOR CE D CORNERS e LOCK-LATCH e ORIG. 9.99 ass ' 1221 Child rens Canva s FOOTWEAR e DECK SHOES e ANK LE-H IGH e ON E EYE LET TIES lN~~ e OR IG. l.99-4.98 BOYS 327 ON LY KNIT AND SPORT SHIR TS ORIG, 1.69-l.•9 .......................................... -............... NOW 71 ONLY LATEX KNIT SWIMWEAR ORIG.1 ."8 ...................................... -•• ·-····--········ ... NOW 1.50 1.00 ~!e?1~L;~v ~-~.~~~-=.~ .. ~~=:.~~~.!~~~.~. EAN ~ • 50 ·. 600 PAIR POLYESTER SLACKS 0 RIG. 6.97·7 .•9 -............... ---····-··-• ., ....... " .•• NOW 117 PA IR PRE·SCHOOL AND SCHOOL AGE SHORTS ORIG.1.11-2.29 ........................................................... NOW 65 PAIR SCHOOL AGE PAJAMAS ORIG, 3.91·•.91 ·---·----.. -·-... -NOW • Sew for School POLYESTER KNITS A Grand Assortment of weaves, textures, colors, patterns orig. 2.99-3.99 yard NOW 70 ONLY 17 JEWEL WATCHES ORIG, 11.95·19,95 ·-··------.. --:.-..NOW INFANTS 212 ONLY INFANTS PLAYWEAR ORIG.1.tT-2.99 ........................................................... NOW 5 .00 188 Yord 10.88 . 1.00 249 PAIR INFANTS POLYESTER PANTS 66' 2.00 1.00 77' 1.00 ORIG. Jo.7• .................................. -...... -........ _,_.,NOW 25 TODDLER ROBES OR !G. •.91 ····························•·•··-·····-··········: .... --lrlOW 100 ONLY TODDLER PLAYSHORTS ORIG.1.1'-"2.99 ........................................................... M~W 275 ONLY INFANT SUNWEAR ORIG.1.00 .................................................................. NOW 62 ONLY INFANT PANT SETS ORIG.4.<19 .................. ..,.... .......................................... NOW STATIONERY 300 BOXED STATIONERY 3 for 100 Oll:IG. ?FOii 1.00 ........................................ -............. NOW 92 AMERICAN FL AGS -VARIOUS SIZES ll ORIG,5.9'T0'9c ........................................................ NOW "/3 Off ~.~;R~2~~-~.::.~ ••• :..~.~ .. ~.~.~-~?.: ....... NOW 2 ~ 1 sc 300 WEBSTERS COLLEGIATE DICTIONAR"' ORIG.7,t 7 .................................................................. NOW 4.44 2800NLY'BOXEDCHRISTMASCARDS c• c C. .. 1.001 ... n. .......................................................... NOW 2 5 49 60 ONLY HOLLIE HOBBIE STATUES oo oo ORIG.J.oo..!i,00 ........................................................... NOW 2 •3 BACK-TO-SCHOOL SPECIAL! FILLER PAPER e 500 COUNT e SPECIAL SAVI NGS e COLLEGE O~ e MARGINAL •RULE 59c . .. Over 300 Wom ens Sport Tops BLOUsE ·s e SHORT SLEEVE KN ITS e ZIP-FRON TS e EMBROIDERED TRIMS e BIG ASSORTMENT 3 00 e ORIG. 4.99-12.99 NOW SHOES 18 PA IR MENS BROWN OXFORDS ORIG.12.911 .. , .. , .................. : ...... _ .• ,,_,,, ................ ,.NOW 11 PAIR MENS WHITE ZIP·BOOT ORIG.1•.91 ................................................................ NOW 64 PAIR MENS KNIT·K ICKERS OR1G.J.9t ................................................................ NOW 226 PAIR WOMENS BOAT SHOES OR!G.•.98 ...................................... , ........................... NOW CAMERA DEPT. 33 ONLY TREASURY CARTRIDGE LOAD CAMERA ORIG.2•.91 .............................................................. NOW 5 ONLY ARGUS COSINA STLlOOO ORIG. lSt.9$ ............................................................... NOW 7 .'00 1:00 3.00 1.50 20.00 $113 ~20N,~;,~~~U ~~?Sl~~~?~1EO _~!~ERA $150 170 ONLY POLORO ID 107 F ILM ORtG. 2.«l .................................................................. NOW 1.99 FOR THE HOME / 42 ONLY DECORATIVE BEAD SCREENS 2.99 50' 1.00 99' ORIG. •.99 C Doorwo11y size) ........................................... NOW 227 PAIR NOVELTY CURTAINS ORIG. 1.111-3."9 .................................................. NOWPAJA: 76 ON LY BEACH TOWE LS OR\'.1.17·2.99 ........................................................... NOW 252 ONLY PRINTED BAT H TOWELS ORIG.1.33 .................................................................. NOW e DISCONTINUED MUSLIN B'LEACHED SHEETS . TWIN FLAT OR FITTED ORIG.1.98 FULL FLAT OR FITTED ORIG.2.29 OUTDOOR 54 ONLY VOIT SWIM FINS OR IG.•$ ... , ... _ ........................................................ NOW 22 ONLY VOIT SWIM MASKS OR IG.J.t7 ....................................... -.............. ___ .... NOW 108 ONLY BASKETBALLS IN COLORS ORIG.7.t7 .................................................................. NOW 35 ONLY PVC WEB PATIO CHAIRS Oll:IG.11.91 .................... '. ........ : .................................. NOW 7 ONLY PVC CHA ISE LOUNGES OlllG. 1f.t7 ............................................................... NOW 6 ONLY ALUMINUM CHAISE ORIO. 30.91 ................................................................ NOW 8 ONLY ALUMINUM CHAISE/PAD ORIG.U.97 ............................................... ,!':. ............. NOW 18 ONLY ALUMINUM CHAIR/PAD OlllG. 10.37 , ................................ ,, ............................. N(lN 250 ONLY 20# CHARCOAL •• \\ORIG.1.0 ..................... , ................................. , .......... NOW '876 ONLY SUMME R TOYS ~RIG. I.VJ' .................................................................. NOW ~ONLY SUMMER TOYS 10.1,00 .................................................................. NOW NOW 1.60 Now l.90 · 3.00 3.00 6.00 5 .00 8.oo 15.00 13.00 6 .88 99' 1.00 50' SANTA ANA STORE ONLY 3900 SOUTH BRI STOL, SANTA ANA JUST NORTH OF SG UTH COAST PLAZA ' SANTA ANA STORE ONLY Two Big Groups -Wom ens DRESSES GROUP I 96 DRESSES 300 ORIG. 6.00 to 12.00 NOW . GRO UP 11 83 DRESSES 500 ORIG. 8.00 t o 15.00 NO W S DAY CLEARANCE ALL ITEM S NOW REDUCED 50°/o OF ORIGIN AL PRICE LIGHT BULB~Ml.75, lOOWA TT----12 FOR 1.00 SUIT,DRESS.SWEATERBAGS •••• --4FOR 1.00 ASSORTED RAYON MOPS ... ·---·--.. 2 FOR 1.00 KITCHEN PLAST ICS ...... -....... ---·-4 FOR l ,00 KITCHEN GADGETS ............... _ ......... _ 4 FOR l ,00 ASSORTEDCANDLES ....................... -... 4FOR1 ,00 APOTHECARY JARS ................... --...... 4FOR1.00 PHOTO CUBE HOLDER .... - ....................... 4FOR1 ,00 PHOTO FRAMES ....... -.............................. 2 Fot 1.00 CARPET TAPE ... .._. ... -............................ 2fOl1 .00 ELE CTRICAL TAPE ............................... 2FOR1.00 9x12PLASTICTARPS ...................... _ .. _4FOR1.00 MASKING TAPE 1'Ax l800" ................ -.. 4 FOR l .00 D·CELL BATTERIES .... -·---20FOR1.00 TIRE CLOSEOUTS! 2+2 POLYGLASS BELTED J·78·14 G·78-14 25 G·78-15 $ EACH D-78-13 PLUS F.E.T. WHITEWALLS· 36 MO. GUARANTEE RAYON·POLYESTER BELTED G-78·14 F-78-15 EACH H·78·14 $22 G·78·15 PLUS F.E.T. WH IT EWALLS -30 MONTH GUARANTEE 4 PLY NYLON WHITEWALLS J·78·14 ONLY 14.00 E"iCH 27 MO. GUARA NTEE PLUS f .E.T. POOLS-SUPPLIES 28 ONLY MOL DED POOLS ORIG,11.'7 ---NOW 12 ONLY INFLATABLE POOLS OR~.2.17 ---NOW• 18 ONLY INFLATABLE POOLS ORIG.4.91 HOW 3 ONLY MOLDE D POOLS ·oll:IG. ll.t7 --NOW SQ ONLY INF LATABLE POOLS ORIG.5.99 ·-NOW CHEMICALS AND TEST KITS NOW REDUCED TO 75% OFF . 9.00 1.50 4.00 10.QO 2.50, DISCONTIN UED NUMB ERS ' TE LEV IS l'ONS SAV E 10% OFF AL REAQY LOW, LOW RETA ILS N'OW! 1Only13" COLOR TV Orig. 339. 95 I Only 19" COLOR TV Orig. 3'9.95 1Only19" COLOR TV Orig. 429.95 1 Only25" COLOR TV Orig. 6<9.95 NoWSJ06 Now'314 Now'386 Now 1585 PLUS 12 ADDITIONAL SETS SIMILAR SIZ!!"S ANDV AlUESI 1 1 A beaded wedding necklace is one of Mary Lou's reminders of her year in Africa. She also brought back jewelry made of the hair of an elephant tail, a good luck piece if given as a gift. 1 Dr. Furnas talks with one of his patients. He found Africans stoic . • ... • l ' • . . ' • , Dr . David Furnas was known in Africa as Daktari va Ndege -- doctor who flies -• and his plane was a welcome sighf in the bush . BEA ANDERSON , Editor Tllurudy, AUIUll JD, ltn '''" 11 • East 'A rica: Exciting! By JO OLSON Of tti. DlllY Pllet Sl1tf Coffee was 35 cents a pound ·and avocados were seven cents apiece. Beef filet was a miniscUle 85 cents a pound and tropical fruits were abundant. House help was plentiful and cheap - '30-$35 per month -and the climate was cool and hospitable in Nairobi. But the work load was hard for. Dr. David Furnas, a Flying Doctor in East Africa for a year, and living was sometimes di!ficuJt for his family who accompanied him Back in their Corona de l Mar home and back into the routine of wock and getting prepared !or sdx>ol, the Fumases talked about their year, which they ' described as a "fascinating adventure." Dr. Furnas, chief of plastic surgery at UC I Medical School, worked with East African Flying Doctor Service, Inc., a 15- year-<Jld organization started by an Englislunan, Dr. A. ,.1ichael Wood, 't'l'hO went to East Africa for fris health. VARIETY OF WORK '!bough his specialty is plastic surgery, Dr. Furnas perfonned all sorts of operations from delivering babies Caesarian section to removing cataracts. He gave up the year out of his practice because "it was an opportllllily to do a great service and was a delight," Dr. Furnas said. Before going into practice he had considered being a medical mis- sionary, be added. Flying to mi.55lon hospitals scattered throughout the 600,000 square miles of . East Africa, Dr. Furnas carried his own equipment and lighting source with him so he could operate on a moment's notice. With wild animal bites prevalent, he Mary Lou a nd Heather meet Africans (a bov e) and Heather is joined by Brent and Craig (below). often was called on to open his bag, put on his miner's head, lamp, scrub up and repair a hyena or lion bite or gouging from a rhino. In addition, there were many untreated birth defecfs and many Africans with disfiguratk>ns from leprosy and cancer and scar tissue from the holes they pierce in their ears. WANTED SON One of the more heart-rending cases was a woman pregnant with her 12th child, wOO had had 11 stillborn babies. Dr. Fu mas explained that it was very important for her to bear a son, so he did a Caesarian and delivered a healthy baby lxty which she promptly named David. rte also performed the first thumb graft in East Africa and did the first cranial advancement (a repositioning of racial bones). "11\ere is no one to do racial accidents," he explained. Another touching case was an older ~irl with an oversized tongue whose surgery was sponsored by the Save Our Chi ldren Fund. Her tongue was so large that her jaw had become deformed and she could not talk, Dr. Furnas said. After two surgeries the tongue was back to nonnal size and the lower jaw was working so she cou1d eat and talk. An incident Dr. Furnas would prefer to forget is having the Flying Doctor plane shot at by Tanzanian . soldiers during a landing in the northern Tanunian town ol Mukoba. The six bullets ~arrowly missed the plane's gas tank, Dr. Furnas said, but this was not discovered until they landed. IN JAIL· The pi lot and passengers were jailed for several hours after the incident, add· ing to the excitement and suspense. Dr. Furnas sometimes found his work li terally marked out for him . If a patient had been to the witch doctor first, there would be little incisions surrounding hi s Jumps or sore sp<>ts. In spite of the handicaps and dif- ficullies, .the Furnases found living in Nairobi to be exciting and pleasurable. It is a "cosmopclitan city of 500,000, predominated by an Asian merchant class," Mary l.A>u said. "There are quite a few Americans working there and last year there were about 60,000 American, German and Japanese tourists." They v.·ere just 10 minutes away from a game park and a two-hour drive from the bush. They bought a minimum of camping gear and spent as much time as possi ble in the bush photographing and observing the animals. Also, they did skin diving in the roral reefs on the coast. EXTRA FOOD Camping was not withoul ifs hazards, Dr. Furnas conimented. "Kenya is fiUed with lethal snakes and we always took a compass, extra. food and gasoline in our Land Rover. Also, we had good maps of East Africa." Once they were charged by an elephant in their Land Rove r and another time they stood in the rain 35 minutes waiting for a giraffe to walk away so they could get back to their vehicle. Once they were frightened with hyena eyes shining across their camp fire. "Hyenas are dangerous because they have the strongest jaws," Dr. Furnas ex· plained. The Furnascs' two oldest children, ~leather, 15, and Brent 14, learned to I drive in the Nairobi Game Park, with their brother Craig, 10, as a passenger, and Brent studied Swahili during his school classes. ~tary Lou, a dietitian, \Vas suppcsed to give lectures at the Uni versity of Nairobi but was unable to get a work permit, so she did a great deal of reading about East Africa and so1netimes accompanied her husband on his missions. On occasion she was his scrub nurse. MORE SURGERY Dr. Furnas perfonned more than 1,000 operations during the year, many more than he could have· done in America, and in much greater variety, and he found the work to be unending. The Fum ases found East Africa l.p be a changing nation, one losing its primitive character, so they are grateful to have had the eiperience of living in East Africa before it completely loses itself to civilization. It is a year they will never forget and a• year that has changed tbefr-lives. "Every day was a delight and an adventure," Dr. Furnas said. "It was an exciting experience for a surgeon." "It was a lovely place to live," com· mented Mary Lou. "\Ve still ask ourselves if it ha,, been a dream." It was a dream for Dr. Furnas, a dream of helping people which came true. The people of Africa. still weigh heavily on his mind as he describes the stoic men and women he cared for and talkS about the people yet to be helped. "There was ao much work to <k> J hated to leave," be aatd with regret. I I I . . . . .4 ... . • . 22 DAILY PILOT Thursday August .30, 1973 Business NoW DEAR ANN LANDERS : I hate to lay all this on you. but l am so bunied up 1 have to tell somebody or I'll explode. This is the rottenest time in American history to be a barber. J( 1 had known 20 years ago that people wouJd start to go nuts in 1966 I'd have chosen some other kind of work . To begin with, a barber can star.•e to death today. But worse than not having any business is the trouble we have with the parents of these kids with the long hair. The kids don 't want much taken off. The mly reason they come in at all is because somebody ordered them to get a haircut or move out of the house. A kid gives me instructions: "A liltle off the sides, but leave the top and back alone." So I do like he says even though it looks terrible. The next day the old man comes in with the kid and says, "Is this what you call a haircut?" I try to explain that's what the kid asked for. He gets mad and tells me to shorten it up all over. so I do. Meanwhile the kid is arguing with his old man the "'hole time and I'm lucky if I don't cut his ear off. Tonight I have a headache like somebody is hit ling me with a hammer. It's strictly from aggravatioo. If anybody asks you if they should take up barbering as a career, teU them to forget it. - FED. DEAR FED: You told 'em. Dut tak e heart -shorter hair is on the way back. Hang in there. DEAR ANN LANDERS: My problem has no solution. I am not seeking advice or sympathy. I am \\-Tiling because I know thousands of women who are in the same helpless situation and if you print this letter, perhaps somewhere some withinking parent will recognize herself (or himself) and make life a little easier for a son or daughter. My husband died when I was in my middle 30s. He lclt me with four daughters w rear. My father passed away a few months later, so my mother moved in with me. 'Shear' I love her dearly, but !or the past Io years she has talked ol nothing but how sick she is. She has gone to at least io• different doctors ond rec:elved a wide range ol dia,gnose8. Not oue ol ~ doctors had the hones- ty to sugiest a psychiatrist. I haven't the guts to tell her myself. My mother doesn't re<ognize any !onn of mental disorder except "crazy." Ann, she is 65 years old and I look like her sister instead ol her daugh!A!r. I shoold be so healthy! My teenage daughters hate to stay home for any length of Ume because Grandma talks their ears oil and has such a negative at· titnde about everything. I suffer in silence and my Weers (which began "{hen my mother moved in with me) are driving me out ot my mind. Agony · Why can't parents wbo live with thclr children ll!lderstand what e!!ect their chronic oomploining has oo those around them? I hope you will print thi! !or the benefit ol others !Ike myoelf wi1o hoven't the heart to speak out. I feel better for having written it. Thanks, Ann. -RENO MISERY ' DEAR RENO: You aay you doort bave the gull lo Cell yoar mother Ibo needs a p1ycblaCrtst, WtU, dear, l hope yoa won't mllld If I lell you YOU need one. A groq woman wbo would allow benell to be trapped !or Ule by a -who bas pveo ber ukua la In desperate need of eoll.llldlng. I'm glad you Wrote. Now gel going. Discover how to be date bait without !ailing hook, line and sinker. Ann Landers's booklet, "Dating Dos and Don'ts," will help you be more poised and sure of yourself on dates. Send 35 cents in coin aloog with a long, stamped, . sell-addressed envelope and your request · .to the Dally Pilot. AIR STEP -IERNARDO - SCHOLL SANDALE -PASSPORTS MAGDESIAN -MISS AMERICA VINER CASUALS -HAND8AGS - HOSIERY Edwtrch -••rbtrich -Robin Hood PF Flytt• -U.S. Ktd1 -Summ•rettt1 Ctpttio Dt"c• Sho11 Otntt Wttt by Otl'likin 111111111-., Corr.i:tl•• SltMI for Clilld!'H 225 E. 17th ST.-COSTA MESA 548-2778 e IANKAMlll(AID e 8 MAIT•ll CH.1.1191 e Large Sizes All • 1n Day's Work SIZES 42 to 52 I ! I ' f t :. .. \ ' The wome n of modern China, who make up a large part of the labor force, are concerned with keeping fit. While not slaves to fashion , they do pay attention to staying healthy -and daily exercise is part of the program. Ella Sleep pretty in a glamorous nylon gown, sweetened with the little feminine details that make you feel specla I. See these lovelies at Ella Nor's. You owe one to yourself. From S7.00 Sunday Shopper? Full.rton & Hunlington S.Och Open 12 to 5 Orange Coast Residents on the Go : Nor~HALF·SIZE SHOP COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH MM. tflr'll S.t. It -f :Jll DAii.. Y CHRISTMAS WORKSHOI" Oftty 12J Drt'I •Ill ••• 1m l"l'RSONAl..11110 t NRIJTMAS 2fto/ CARDS U 70 lff jMJdf flli iNnfw•rti l;tlftr HUNTINGTON IEACN 1"41 Al..GONQUIN •t WARNER """" B'nai B'rith A Bid 'n Buy luncheon is planned by the Orange Coast Chapter of B'nai B ' r i t h Women to take place at noon Tuesday, Sept. 4, In the THE BOOT THAT MAKES ROUGH GOING EASY As usual, bigger and better selling than ever. The All· American desert boot. Fit To Perfection By Our Erperts Buster Brown. I Mercury Savings and Loan, Huntington Beach. Bay Women 's Association dur-HB Nursery by the state Department or ing a Kaffee Klatch at 10 a.m. Social \Velfare and is a 1HI' NEWPORT ILYD. tN.nh of Tltlt Street) 14 HUNTINGTON CENTll (Nert to lortor lrff.) Proceeds raised by the group benefit Fairview State Hospi· tal, Veterans Hospital, I.oog Beach and the March of Dimes. Thu-""Y Sept 6 ·n ••-clu" Applications are now being i;:i;u;;:i ' • ' 1 wn: ..,. taken by the Huntington Beach member of the Orange County fULUITON....; 224 Ora .. alr Moll, .r Oroltfftitorpe & Harbor house. comnumity Nursery School, a Co u nc i l of Parent Moo.· Ttrl•n. • Fri. 10-t -T11"· • Wed.· Sert. 10·4 Irvine Juniors parent 00-0!' which is licensed Participation Nursery Schools. ••lllrAmerlr•rrl •••• ,., c11.,,,. A Health Fiesta from 8 a.m. ------------------~--~'.'.:~==============:::::::::' AARP to 8 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 8, I will be sponsored by the Irvine Jwtior Women at the Walnut Shopping Center. HlUltington Beach Chapter, American Association o ( Retired Persons is sponsoring a bus trip to the AARP con- ference in San Francisco. The bus will depart Monday, Sept. 3 for the three-day event. ABW A membership enrollment meeting will take place at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 5, in the home of Mrs. Roland Pain, membership chairman for the Newport Beach C h a p t e r , American Business Woman's Association. The regular meeting is planned !or Wednesday, Sept. 12, at 7 p.m. in Richard's Cof- fee Shop. Robert Blyt:i), presi· dent d Richard's lllj/'kets, will speak about food costs and present day marketing. Health Fair Orange County h e a I t h organizations will set up special displays !or the Health Fair, to be presented on the Orange mail 'lllursday-Satur- day, Sept. S.S. Presentations will be Crom 10 a.m. to 9:3b p.m. weekdays and from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sat- urday. Visitors can have their blood pressure checked, take an ox- ygen consumption test and ask questions or various experts. Talks on weight control and aerobics will be given hourly by Mike Turln, Health Fairs president. 3 Arch Bay A demonstration on needle-- point and macrame wilJ be presented !or the Three Arch About 24 health agencies and organizations will participate in displays and/or testing services including free im- munizati ons. Also planned are nutrition and diet cowiseling and vision and pulmonary function testing. Can Drive California Angel s' Wives Guild will sponsor the fourth annual aluminum can contest Saturday, Sept. 8, at Anaheim Stadium. Cans are to be delivered between 10 a.m. and 4 _p.m., and prizes will be awarded to the boys and girls collecting the rnoi;t. Proceeds will aid the United Cerebral Palsy Association or -Orange County. Alumnae A Husbands' Golf Tourna- ment followed by cocktails and a steak fry Is on the agenda qf the Orange 'Co\Jllty Alumnae Club of AlphO Gamma Delta. The event will begin at noon Saturday, Sept. 8, at !be Green River Golf Course. New officers JUe the M'iQes. Edward R e pi ~ , president; James Johnsoo, ......u.;.; and A. J. Duff._ treasum, and Miss Leslie t'8ddock, vice Jll"O"idenl Balle~ Newport Beach B a II e t Association is Sp()h90ring a bus-to-bowl t r I p Saturday, Sept. 8. The bus will depart at 6:45 p.m. from Mlrinet's Library and head !or the Hollywood • Bowl for a performance by the New York City Ballet. ** SALE ** TURQUOISE INDIAN JEWELRY Squash llouom Neclclaces fr,om S 185.00 Rings from $6.0o-Bracelets from $9.95 The "REAL THING" at SENSIBLE PRICES MACHEN'S -208 Marine, Balboa Island '• ' LUXURIATE IN A CAMEL HAIR PANT COAT leave it to Desmond's to deliver th is tawny town and Country cla~sic. Oouble·bre asted and perfect wilh pants.' it sports two pockets. the half·belt hinged by leather·look bucklers. Of 100% camel hair: 8·18. 74.0Q •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••• ...................... ...................... •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ...................... .. .. •••••••••••••••••••••• ...................... ...................... ...................... •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ , .. ~~ .... --. ..._. ~ -··· . r ,. / " ., . A ,SPECIAL TRIUMPH ••• OUR JACK WINTER 001,JBLE·KNIT TRIO Here ii is, quite possibly the greatest fashion·look going. Buttery camel combines with grey for a marvelous fall-bound trio ol 100% polyester. Packable. Non. crush, Machine washable ••• all thrw. Blazer: plaid of camel·grey with Hilken hand: 10·16 46.00 ' Shirt: lons·sleeved polyester crepeincamel: 10·16 18.00 Pant: pull·on of polyester wit'! twill weave In crey: 8·18 22.00 '' ' #3 FASHION ISLAND, NEWPORT CENTER, NEWPORt BEACH • • .. Wedding Bells Ring Nuptials Solemnized BROWN-LUCAS Frank Joseph Brown lII claifned Linda Kay Lucas as his bride during double ring rites performed by the Rev. llaJl,vey Kemp in Aldersgate Uniled Methoolst C h u r c h Tustin. ' Parents of the newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. Henry James Lucas of Tuslin and Mr. and Mrs. Frank' Brown Jr. of Costa Mesa. Attendants were Mary Ellen Minton, M a r g a r et Joy Robinson, Peggy Bradshaw, Richard Brunt Jr., Roberl Ried and Roger Yamasaki. The bride is a graduate Of La Canada High School, earn· ed an AA degree from Pasadena City College, studied aboard Chap1nan College's World Campus Afloat, and received her BA degree and teaching credential r r o nr California State University. Fullerton. Her husband grad uated from Newport Harbor High School. Orange Coast College and CSUF where he ea rned a BS in mechanical engineering. He also has served in the Anny. The newly\veds will resi de in Santa Ana . TERRIAN-ELLIS Kathleen Ellis, daughter of r..·trs. Imogene Ellis of Costa Me;sa. became the bride or Micha el Joseph Terrian during rites performed by the Rev. Thomas J. Nevin in St. Joachim's Ca tholic Church, Costa Mesa. Attendants \\"ere Mr. and r..Irs. Robert Stewart 1\.-lr. a11d Mrs. Robert Sharpe, Mrs. Deb- bie Olsen. Ruthanne Horvath, Eyleen Stewart, Paul Terrian, USC Graduates 'MRS. BROWN P.aul Walling and hlichael Kingsbury. The bride is a graduate of Golden West College. Her hus- bfind, son of the Elmer Ter- r1ans of Laurium, Mich., served four years in the Ma- rine Corps and now is studying at Orange Coast College. 1'he newlyweds will reside in Costa Mesa. FORD.CANDERLARIA Home in Garden Grove are Bradley Dean Ford and hi s bride, the former Debra Jean Candelari a who were married in Sts. Simon and Jude Catholic Church, Huntington Beach. Their parents are the David Candelarias o f Huntington Beach and the Jack E. Fords of Garden Grove. Attendants were Francine Giorgetti, Kar- en Candelaria. Kathy Ford, Marie and Michael Cherry, Randy Moreford, l\.1 e I v i n Goodwin. Robert Campbell, Joseph La Cascia and David Opstad. November Date Chosen Dr. and r..1rs. Richard Stead- man Hambleton of San Marino and Newport Beach have an- nounced the engagement of their daughter, Dorinda Howes Hambleton to William Squire Bishop. He is the son of Mrs~ Fran- cis Marvin Bishop of Los Angeles and the late Mr. Bishop. The betrothed, graduates of USC. are plaooing a home wedding Nov. 17. The bride-elect a t t e n de d Westridge High School and af- filiated with Delta Gamma sorority at USC where she is enrolled in graduate school of educati()n. Her fianCi!, an alumn us of Hollywood · High School. earned his masters degree in bu s iness ad- minist ration and belonged to DORINDA HAMBLETON . Beta Theta Pi. The bride is a graduate of Edison High School a n d Orange Coast College. Her husband, a graduate o f Rancho Alamitos High School, attelXied callfornla S t a t e University, Fullerton HEALY-BECKHAM Edward George H e a 1 y clairried Patti E I i z a b e t b Beckham as his bride during rites conducted in St. Dominic's' Catholic Church, Eagle Rocle. Their parents. are Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Beckham Jr. of Pasadena and Mrs. Edward T. Healy of Newport Beach. Att.engants were Barbara Beckham, Roseann De Luca, Cathy Grimm, Mrs. Gordou King, Mr. aruf Mrs. Robert Beckham 111, David Todd, Gordon Forgey 1 B r y a n Beckham and Rober t Turnbull. n>e bride is a graduate of John 1Mulr High School , Pas~a and the University of SOOthem California where she p~ged Gamma Phi Beta. Hfl'! husband is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and use where he af· flliated with Phi Gamma Delta. They will reside in Newport Beach. November Rite Set Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Cabaniss of Newport Beach have announced. the engage- ment or their daughter. Annie Cabaniss to Larry Frede:rick of Fullerton. • The betrolhed are planning to marry Nov. 3 in Christ Ch!D'ch by the Sea, Newport Beach. Miss Cabaniss is a graduate of West Covina High School and attended Pacific Unlverai- ty and Orange Coast College. Her fiance is the son of Mrs. Marlease Frederick of Venice and Tom Frederick of Palos . Verdes. He is a graduate of Fullerton High School and Junior College and also at· tended California S t a t e University, Fullerton. @aRASS RING w ..... ,Afl,_...,, ·-• N .... Wi.tt e .... SllOIS H_,_ C1oto ........ 1127 f1 5t Co1•t Hwy, Coron• cl1I Mir 671-4741 lfyo11 Y9.11r clothes at Storekeepa: goi~'back to scllOOI WOii t se&lll 'SO. bacL Why do we make a statement like that? Thi St0rekeeper realizes that back to school shopping can be a difficult ·time for both mother and son. lf1 your son· is like most boys, ha grew this summer and as a result you may not be· sure of his si~e. At The S!orekeeper we have lhe people, or storekeepers, if you win, who will take the tilT)e to properly fit your boy. We will take into consideration how the garment will wash and if it's going to shrink and personally assist him from fit to finish. We also realize your son may be hesitant with back to school purchases_ He wants to wear what his friends are wearing the first day of school. He doesn't wan"t to be out of step! We have helped eliminate th is by stocking our boys department with merchandise that has proven to be accepted by the boys in the Newport Harbor area. Levi Jeans and Cords (some cords are now a polyester/c.otton blend for easier ca re). Hang Teri Stripe Shirts, Hawaiian Reverse Shirts , Cotton Flannel Shirts, also shirts in c:lassic~pla,ids and checks, and those famous Pacific Trail Jackets. all wlll enable your son to dress with confiqence and in good taste. Add to all this Storekeepers who are knowledgeable, courteous, and cap- able of being purchase advisors. We·can honestly say, "If you buy your clothes at the Storekeeper .• goiag bacK to school won't seem so bad. Try us, yoU'H agree. , A store of 11tr1ordin1ry cMractlf tor men l boya. , '' IMllltAMlRICAflO •MR• CMMI& --. 1028 l~lne, Newporti'f'••o.h. C•llfornla 92680, Phof'I• 642-1061 • I I • • • ... Thursday, August)(), 1973 DAI LY PILOT %3 ,.Ak:E lT FROM THE FR'ENCH . THE EXTRA SUPER FIT. "rHE MIX OF COLORS AND ART DECO PATTERNS. WE TOOK IT ALL. THE GREAT NEW WINTER COLLECTION OF' CACHAREL •• , IT 1S WHAT A GIRL WANTS MOST FROM PARIS. GAMBLER'S CARD PRINT SHIRT. BLACK. $42. V -NECK PATTERNED SWEATER. BLACK/BEIGE. $·SQ. WATCH POCKET•GABARDINE PANT. BLACK, $64. JACQUARD SWEATER. NA VY/RUST/BE IGE, $52. TWO-POCl:<ET NAVY GABARO INE SKIRT• $66. DICE PRINT SHIRT. NAVY. $42. S HIRTS 1 FJBRANNE ~ RAYON , PANT ANO SKIRT, WOOL. SWEATE"S • WOOL. PACESETTU. Fluent Cacharel · spoken here. I Z.fl'"ASHl dN ISL.AND SHOP THURSDAY ID :D0-5:30 "FRIDAY 10:00-9:30 644-2800 I • ". . ' " " '•'· .~: I i ·' ·I . I I l , I I 1 j • • .._ ~ ~. •, . 24 DAILY PILOT TO PARENTS OF HIGH SCHOOL AGE STUDENTS: Wilt HltV drift, ... Cl .... tlOP lfltlr 11111 P1lt111!tlt Tiit 0.19'1 51111 kl!MI, ffftltlli.Mtl In ,,,., h 11111 1'~wlltl 11d lti.hlo11ecl, WI Ifill ti.1111•1 In, tnll •Htr, • tf.tcl11C1th111••· Mll•IKl1rl111 lllth KllOtl UptrlllKt, lll'Ol'!g!y lti$- ecl on 1'111'1111 mcirtl, 1plrllVJI • llMI tttll<tl tcllltttltll t i Wiii ti ttl .. Int Hilt -.:.o.mlc 1t11C1v Jlrot••m1 lltclH••v to Otvaf.op ""' ltadtNllip tnd 1111 r:.tltnct to ct11llnu1 tnr01191! t•n .... tnd lt •ll mt1nln1tul IUCCtl $- '"' llYtt, llct1911 "' mil91 f19m lo1 AnottlH In tnt S111 Jtcln11 "'°""''It", Dewr1 Sun l!t1 • m11t -..ut11111, ,..c.iul 1nvlre11mt<1t1 corM111eivt 11 1tudy lnll ll!t llt'1'4oPmt<!I of IM wMl1 Pll'IOn, "11t1y cllll'9t •ccred- lltd -Ill tllhltndln .. CIMic•lld 11111, wlll1 1t11 Pf'09••m 111111 11 llffllN 1tv IOOily'1 )'llltll 19 1-.:t the ChllltntH fl 1111 l11lure. E-.ttlc, inwlvlCI ltudenl g9'tt"'-' bildcfll lly ""' tdmlnlllr•tlen •nd ITlllfftl 1111 ltd II Ille lfttlllls.ltlik 51vd.,..I 111PPOl'f ti POp1,1l1r, ltlr d l$Clpll114:, tllowlnt cur· rt11I ffffl ltyltt 111 lllir Ind drt11, wflilt, 11 ltlt umt time, 1 polky ol, "wt Clon'I toltrillt iftYOIYt mtnt In ~,..,.,, licWfr or tollilcco". Tiit 11u- ttnl1 '' Dtstrt 51111 WANT lo lie lllttt! Sflouldn'I 'fOll• 114111 or dlutll· ltr lie ltltrt illM? l<or l<urllltr lnlotll'ltlio11, Co~t•cl : DESERT SUN SCHOOL Dr•wtr ,., ldyllwlld, Ctlll, f2l4t (1141 '5t·21'1 Thursdiy August 30, l 973 Market Moving Cookies, coffee a n d punch will be served during the grand open. ing week of Harbor Key's thrift shop A1on- day, Sept. 10. through Friday, Sept. 15, at 145 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. Half·price and close· out sales now are tak· ing place at the shop's old location, 1570 New- port Blvd., Costa Mesa. Sprucing up for the new shop are (left to right), the Mmes. Leon F'ry, M. G. Dana and Benjamin C. Brown. THE CLOTHES HORSE 11S Marino Ave., Balboa Island Complete • SUMMER CLEARANCE 1/i P R I C E SA LE ALL ORIGINAL MERCHANDISE rANTSUITS -LONG DIESSES SHORT DRESSES -llOUSlS, ETC. SIZES 6 °11 OPEN 10 A.M. -6 P.M. J. C. PENNEY FASHION ISLAND ART STORE GRAND OPENING PENNEYS WILL OFFER ART CLASSES STARTING OCT. lST SIGN UP NOW IN OUR ART DEPT. PRICE WILL BE 2.50 PER LESSON. Artists' Supplies? WE HAVE THE BEST YOU CAN BUY- starting with remarkable UQUITEX• acrylic paint irom PERMANENT PIGMENTS. INC., that works in mcmy techniques on many 15wiacee, thins and cleans with water, and dries fast to a Dezible, waterproof finish. Our complete selection includes: •PERMANENT PIGMENTS" oil colors, mediums and water colors • Artists' brushes •Canvas • Paper and sketch pods • Pastels, pencils, charcool • Eaoels • C.Omplete painting outfits COMPLETE . . . - ' ' Driven to Attraction Car Advice Well Used EXCLUSIVE SHOWING OF AMEil/CAN IND/AN JEWELRY AUGUST 30-SEPTEMBER 1 By ERMA BOMBECK Nine out of every 10 Ameri- can boys tinker with cars, right? 'They arc bo rn "'ith grease under their fingernails and an "ear" for n1otors. When you put a 1·onka truck in their playpen t hey instinctively rotate the wheels. As toddlers they go up to strange cars and advise. •·Your points are going." By the time they are 12, they have assembled a ca r in the driveway using scraps they fOWld in Mother's sewing basket. So meet the mother of the one out of JO . What my son knows about cars you cou ld write in yellow crayola on the end of a pin. Last week he went shopping for his first used car 1. His father, before going with him, advised him on the rules of the Used Car game. "first." he said, "never go to a used car lot like you are interested in buying a used car. Sorta meander around like you are killing time until the bus comes lo take you back to the correctional farm . "Second, even if you don 't have expertise, fl aunt it . Kick- ing the tires ts old hat . Drop a fe w phrases like, 'If I were to take this orr their hands, I'd convert the stick shift to fou r on the floor . get an ai r scoop for the hood to feed more o~­ ygen to the carburetor. change the suspension in the rear end and add slicks and mags.' "When you are sho~'TI a car. go directly to the hood , raise it and stand there tor a fe·.v minutes shaking your head slowly from side to side. DON'T SAY ANYTHING . "W b e n you are ap· proached by a sa les man, ask hi m where the water cooler is. "Finally, don 't ap p ea r enthusiastic, interested, or like a high school auto mechanics AT WIT'S END my husband tiredly. '·The salesman was lean ing on a car and said, 'Hi there, my name is Le roy Magic.' Our son sa id , 'I'll take it.1 " "Tell her the good part ," beamed our son . ··The car was formerly own- ed by a litUe old lady who only The third annual showing of au1hentic hand·made In dian jewelry for men and women offers stunning Zuni, Navajo and Hopi designs. All s1erling silver anri genuine turquoise (absolutely no dyed or treated stones). Selecl one of a kind designs in rings, belts, earrings, pendan1s. Pawn pieces still have 1icke1s attached. An authorily from the Tanner family will be here to answer questions. FASHION JEWELRY, NfWPORT drove tQ Oral Robe rt s L~~~~~~~=J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~ Crusades on Sundays. The car '\-,:' ~ heals itself." 41 I felt betler knowing God NEWPORT • • 1 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT CENTER • 644-2200 was on our side. MON. & FRI. 10 :00-9 :30 •SUN. Noon to 5:00 •Other Days 10:00.S:lO 101 dropout. Got that?" ~;::;::=======d~~==~~~~===================::;;;;:=: "Got it, Dad," he said. 1 ~ Withi n the hour. our son drove up in a car. It was two vears old and had 110,000 lniies on it. When you shut the door. the glove compartment fell in your lap. The trunk ~·as sprung, the door had to be lock· ed to stay shut and lvhen you went over 25 mph the hood shook and the radio went dead . "What happened?" I asked. "We walked the lot," said Pair Plan Fall Rite A November wedding il1 St. Joachim's Catho lic Church. Costa Mesa is being planned by TerTi Regan and Alfred Jerowski . Their parents are ~trs. W. J. Re gall or Costa ~1esa and Mr. and Mrs. John Jezowsk.i of Orange. PARENTS WHO CARE ... Look to International Montessori Schools LET YOUR CHILD DISCOVER LEARNING CAN BE FUN Life long habits are formed earllf ... be silre a love of learning is one of them ~ ART \. . . . The betrothed are graduates of ~1ater Dei High School, Santa Ana and now attend Orange Coast College; Absorbing adventures into music, art, science and the fascinating world of nature ;;;;;;::;;;;~ SUPPLY DEPT. . FREE ART BOOKS TO THE FIRST 250 CUSTOMERS SPECIAL! PURE RED SABLE BRUSHES •1 · 59¢ •3 · 89¢ #6. 1.19 SPECIAL! CUSTOM BUILT SCETCH BOX 12 x 16 1095 JC PENNEY WE KNOW WHAT YOUR LOOKING FOR FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH HIADOUARTERS FOR ALL YOUR ART SUPPLIES ... TERRI REGAN Ar• yoo sertous .tbout losing wrighll ··~ """"' ,_ .. ,,. medical weight.....- reduction ~- OMfGA'S f'lfOCIAM IS TH( S..\ff M£TH00 UNOEI 5TllCT MEDICAL $U"-llVISION ()I MEDICAL [)()(. IOIS. lOSf UNWANTED POUNDS ANO MAINTAIN PIOl'fl WOGHT. Omega Clinic COSTA MESA 646-1633 1869 NEWPORT ILVD. ANAHllM 1,...,1 1"4 W, IMwy. THIS IS MONTESSORI Phone today for IMMEDIATE ENROLLMENT BREA 400 West Fir (714) 519.()321 FOUNTAIN VALLEY 10551 McFadd en 17141 839·17SO COSTA MESA 381 University (714) 646-2134 GARDEN GROVE 9851 Bixby (714) 539-3244 NEWPORT BEACH 20221 Cypress SJ . (7141 979.9241 nternat10nal montessori schools W. C. CARLBERG ENTERPRISES I ' . . . . . . ' ' . . . . . . " . . . Thur$dA)', August JO, 1973 DAIL V PILOT J/S UFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY PUBUC NOTICE Your Horoscope Tomorrow P U BLIC N 011CE P UBUC N011CE ILP... ,ltTfTIOUS IUSUU!SS ·•-nous I USINI SS NAM!! ITATl.MIHT "" r lCTITIOUS •USINl$1 TM 1o11-1ne 119r.on It dOl119 bull~ NA"lll ~T•TIM•NT W'-Y .. Ww .... _ lf21 ~IM. C.t9 .._ -141.0lSt Gemini: Discover Excitement NAMI STATIMINT ai: Tiit-lollowllll .,_,'°". .,... dolf'lf '""' followlng ptrtOlll .,. CIOl"O COPY·PlfllNT, 11i1 s...-J090uln Hiiia w.i-· ., . bullMU 11: lflo.d, Ntw\IOl'1 lttdl. Ct lltorlllt t1'6d TH E Mll!SU.0! CENTllll, 179 l ffdrl HUNTINOTOH I EACH DISTIUI V· Johll Merlin Ovrbln, lAlln Ollvlft SI. Ltoun. INCi!. (•Ill. n•ll TION ASSOCIATES, 500 Ntwll0'1 Cenltt" Drive. Mlt tlon Vll lO. Call!Ol'ftlt tU1J Jo. 8r!<gnoril, 1001 W. SltV9!!t A"'-Orlvt, Sulr• ...0, NIW"l)Ofl B..ch, Thl1 bu1IM11 11 conctvchlll bV 1n ln• No. 151. S"n1• Arlt, Ci lll. t'VOP Ctlllornlt n.60 dlYldHI NOfffft ll•f9l>Ofll, 1001 w. ,,...,_ ""· TUNE UP lncr••H your car't MILEAGE & PERFORMANCE while lowering it1 eml~ 1fon1. We offer 1 new 1 • r.., I c • In automobile tun•up1 featuring: '011• l•w prlc• l1tel16*s pom ot1d lober, 'N• chrt• If we c:o11't help y.ur cor. '15 doy lftOIWfbOCll t11oroflfff. 'U• of .. , .. , ..... 1"1011 tKtl11ol09y. .•• ,w._"' of doJectlw• ...... ~"'-1cMd11ff oppol11tmeJ1t C•r •nd Drlv•r M•g•1ina 1ay1 19/7]) ''Automotiv• E;11viron · m•n+•I Sy1+•mt, Inc. i1 tht hrtd- ing i11da pe ndent emi11ion1 ft1t ce11tt r in lh1 United Sttlt1, hiv- ing ri1en to thet 1lat1,11 t ftar lo1ti119 thou1and1 of "'hlclo1 fo r tho F1d1rtl CJOYl rnmont e11d tho Stele of Californio." AES1 i1 now ••lend ing ih 1or- ¥ic11 to !ht con1umar. To l1ar11 111 the d1te il1, 9i¥0 ''" , call 1f 171 4) 197-0))] or vitlt 01,1r ltbortlory t t 7)00 Boltt Av- •n11• (on • blod1, Et1I of 405 ) '" w.1tmin1t•r. FRIDAY AUGUST 31 By SYDNE Y OMARR Virgo and Pisces a r e q pable ol feigning excessive remorse. Gemini I.& ca pable oC lmi~atlng almost any emotion. Loo overdr4matizes to the point that such can be secon d nature. Aquarius: can s t a r t 1 e associates by overni g ht emerglng as c haste, p ious. Each of the zodiacal signs is able to show another side. to act. p r etend, create an illLJSion. Libra, for another example, ca n appear to be g e ntle to the polnt ot weakness. But this na tive packs a knockout punch -and if you don't believe it, just try getting in the w ay. P retension is part of the human dilemma and, as S\lch, Is cove red by astrology. ARIES (Mafch 21·Apr il 19 ): BERNARDO BERNARDO BERNARDO ''"'e have more of them and at lowe r prlees than any one in the wor1d." ~esla ~ #11 FASHION ISLAND 2oz 011 our usual low discount orlces I Evcrr irtm 1n our hufl;t u ock will he o n SALE 1hi1 wtck·tnd o nly! D11mond Rr11l•I Sen, Sol11a1rt $, Ru· bit,, s .pphUl'I. Au11rall1n Fire Opah, J ades, Go ld Neck <.h~1n1, All Type' (>f Earrin111, 8rJctlt1s. ClXk· 111 1 R1n.11,. •nJ CuhurcJ Pearl Sir•ndi. Thu ;, 1 ~rt11 uppor1un 11 r 10 hur fo r Chrou m•' L•r ·A·'«'ay or 1u11 pl11n "'1td 1 ~·~•ng .. (or yourJ.tlf or 1umcont y<>11 love~ R1:mcmhtr o ur v1lut , 'rl' &u1r1n1ccd H)()~ Sc-1ko w11(ht' noi on J•lt . GUARANTEE Any 1!tm of l<'"Wtlry punh11t<d 11 tht Siar of S11 m 11 &u•r•ntct"I cu 1 ppr111t fur 1c lt•U \nr:;. more 1h1 n rnur purcha1c puce o r rour mo ney ,..,JI 1't refunded! • •t11llr Oht111t , ..... ""' & °"""""' """" •• , 1210 4 &rnurit 11Jbits & 4 cumonas " Ci!opalr• '"l · .•.•• , Ou.JI Wllltcl Pt¥1 Olnritr Rrig. 2 YtrJ llM' s134 •ty MllCIU\ Pf•ls 11'1 ytlow golO l'lll&tl •..•.•• -.• LMlll!s" Cofll & Ruby Rflg, 2 bullanl r,tfll.lll'le $]9 1lbts Sft 10 IOOfn an&thklrl cor.i," petite m11., ...•.. G!lllint ~k St• $jpprwt £1trrigs. p.eicta $J910 stuch. •~ stars s1.11ounoed tir golO Of'~•gn ......... , . M~·s 81.K .. St• Stclplwt Rrig. lllt st• SIPJllllfe $) 30 " ~qo•e Otsi«n yelow r,OICI moun1rig . _ ••••..•.•.• , L.tdie,· ~nt.Wlt r\ust1~hjn r1f! Op.JI Ring. tll"~ $ J 30 llel"J Qp.a!S in Cl.WYPd bMld Style, A Betul)'!.,,, .• , . , -- l o)l)eS. OlamorKl 8rio.M S!t l6Ct.8r~h..,I ~158 O.atne1n4 " 4 PfOl\I l•!!any sets ovei wedOW'lg b.)1'1(1 ••• 81.ck Slai 5.lpphlre & Ruby Cl\Kttr Rrig. 8 line s195 &erllll'lt CUCk 11au eMw:tcl b1 11Jbits. nugget Y' , , . Cl'fUll! A<Ktrahan F•e Opal Tl! lak. $)JIG 'ttf~ htff Slonts. chOOst from rnaiy stylf's. 14K Y<; .•• , CY!ured P!arl & Allly Clu\!tr Dinner Rttg. $)49 OllSlll di lush OU' Pf•ls WIRUllJ or S~t' ..• -•• An ~ ·c1eoo1111· s1yle O¥nOM tttftr ,,,, 5)85 Opttl l'llC&tl W/8 l)i1 St! '1 lefl Plllfln , .. , , . , , • -"""' .... « ., .. , .... '"" 110·~ 1165 rnoutll"& l!Olds bl llWnt 22 Cb Dwlnond \411 YC ••..•• ... 1168 1107 163 131 1104 1104 1126 1156 114 1119 1148 1132 )(11 Ctfl>f PUN • 1•• • W•T ••NC..,tl(;•tti . ••~II• cou•ct • lOMG M•OC. UIJ ,.,..,... A•to. • SAMT.t. 4H.t., '915 M.. ... • TOllAi<t. l•U "--""'-•·•· . wwirn•. 1tt!r••• ..... "· • MIW'°"-l llADI, ..._ 11 , ..... lo'-' • TOl•ANCI, ."'4 ..._ f .. W.. S-• • •100NDO 11~04, s...... ... <-tt• Start Weeke nd, ~arly The weekend begins along the , Orange Coa1t "" Friday. T hat'a Ibo day tho D AILY PILOT publishes ils WEEKENDE R , a lively secllon about !be lively arts - and where to dlne out and other lntetiltlng lhlngs that tan m ake a weekend a m in i vacat~ for you and rhe special people In your lira. Star\ your ~ttkend early n ext Friday. Siar\ It with tho WEEKENDER. N!WPOAT t{AlfllOll llfl UST, ml JOH"I MARTH~ DURBIN No. IS\. S1nlt AM , c1111. n11r CircwnstancC$ now seem to lnently. Emphasis Is on PISCES (1-'cb. 19-Mar c b 20): ::;~ ~:!:!. cH~~r;:r~ t'l.~tt * T~~ 11111~en1 w•~'u"' w1111 1M cou .... T~1' ~111ne11 1• cOtldJ.1Cltd IW • 8'tN'"•1 "take control " Rldo with the bllshing nl Uo DI r l r l ' !all John 0 O'OoflMll 500 Newport ly rk or fl""" ountt on A\lllUll ll. oar lltfl p. l I ,,. tsta conunu ca n g or n orma ion , e:.-pec Y cenr .. Drl~•. svll• 640; Ntwport •••cll. 1•n. ,11~ 11111 1~:1.~~t4:11 ni..t wt~ ~ c-- ti de , especia lly whtrc family. with persons who ar e in-In con n e c ~i on w J l h ~~t~·oo'::u 11 c.onlllltl•ll br 1 G-r•I PMbll'""' O••noe: coeit D•UY .. 1101, iv c1.r1r. of O••f'IO• C::OY111Y M A1111v•1 >. marriage might 00 conc erned. quls itive, a lert. Investment partnership.~, JQlnl efforts, P•rtnwlhlp A-1111. 2J. 30 •nd s991. •· 1), 1t n 26.11-n im ,..,,,,., Be receptive. 'fryin g to force propos al needs investigation. contracts lc:gat' mane uven. J011n o. 0 •0orin111 PUBLIC-NOTl-CE -.. u1111...,.. 0r1119• Cot•• D•HY '°'IOI· · tJo I Ma ' I I Thb 1111.m.nt w11 Jl1ec1 wl111 1119 coun-, _ JO lm 24'2-n issues, ac ns wou d be an er-te o r anot -.er who is c ose rr Cl••k 01 Or•nitt County on July j , 191). :•:w~':"c':·~':·~·:··-=c· ::CC------ ror. O ne . who a p p ea r s CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 ·Jan . to you 1nay control money ,.,.1'1 • ,,.,. 19): Go to source. Some fam1-' . PubU111td Or•l!Oe Coetl D1Hr l'UOI, IN TNI! $Uf'E1t10• COU•T OF una lte r ably opposed to you situa tion. You gain nm t now Augu11 9, 11. n. JO, 1t n t...a.n TH.I! 1TAT• oF cAL1f'o1tNIA 1N will relent, Wait. ly n lembers may be tlmld. thro11oh wail·and·see policy. AND f'Oll TH I COUNTY Of' dllANOI That's fine, but you do have -o PUBLIC NOTICE Nt. A71lM NoT1c1 TO c••DITOP• lF TODAY IS YOUR OltOl lt TO IHOW CAUSE 1'0 11 iUf'l ltlOll COUllT 0, TH• TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20); y our o wn life to live. Refuse to c HANOt DI' 11AMI! sT•T• 0" CALlll'Dltlll" POii: Obtain h,1 n l lrom •-1.. be shunted n side. One in BUtTHDAY you are frank. f'ICTITIOUS IUl1NI SI In 1119 Mii ... ot 1119 Appllctllon ol ll lTA THI COUNTY OJI" o••••• •u " ft "d d NAMI STATliMl:NT MARY U.PINSKI For Chlf'IQI ot N1m1. No. A·7"11 message. fi'ind ways of Im-authority is wilting to lis ten -percepwve, 0 en consi ere a Tiit to11ow1no P'''°"' 1r• doll"lll T111 ol)t)l1c11ton o1 RITA MARY E,1111 of JEllRV OAV•o t.ONG. d Koo · d st d stickler for details -or truth. ooslneu •1: LAPINSKI tor c11t119• ot nt l"ftl. 11,v1119 0«N1ed. proving techniques. Don't quit an to act. w It an an n..-mber should be ~ ol TUSTIN THEATR E. tfO El Ct mlno bHn filed I" Court, I nd II •POtarl119 trom NOTICE 1$ Hlilt Et!IV GIVll!H~": because perfection has not talJ. ~~ "'"' ll:u l, Tullln, Ctlllomlt '26'0 wlcl 1ppllcttlon ftltl IUTA MARY trldltor1 ol Ille •llOYf ..,n11ml'll Intl ;... Your most important months Mt. Frid Stein, ~11 Chino Ct nyon LAPINSKI hit tlltd t n 1oollc1llon Dr<>-th.11 111 pef"IOlll htYlllf ~· .. ·~,• ... Ill '"'m been ach ieved. Friend can of· . ••· Pt lm Sprlng1., c1111or"1' ~2 1101lno 111t1 m n1l"ftl bl cn.09tc1 10 1.1111 dtclldtnt 1r• r.:iu1r o • • ·(cf bo AQUARIUS (J a n. 2G-Feb. of 1973. You sac nfice for loved Mr. Rob9rt st.in, 311' 0ont Soll• REDE LAR. ..iHh n .. r>Kt tuirv vouc:11trs, In IM Clfflt• C1' valid suggestion a ut 18 ): Avoid tendenc y toward ones You are hanny If those Orlv1 s1wio City. c.11tornt1 t ll04 Now. INr•for1. It It ller•b'f ordoered '"11 nf rr.e clerk oi th• i bo.,. •n1111911 court • .,. mode Of dress, CUStOmS. ' rr Thi ~"''' 11 t;or.11 tld b G I clltKt9d, 11111 111 persoru ln• .. e11ed In lo flfllf"I !hem, wllll TIM nKIPlfY Favorable cha nge ,·ndL"cated u· 1 s e lf-deception. See in light of close to you n re pleased. You P•••n'erih!p U( v • -r• 1tlc1 matter ao •PPN• 11e1ore 1111, couri r" v011C.h•rs. 10 1n1 una•~h;inecl ~ ~ Dff1~• actual"ty P e c e i trends Be I but () Fred Sl1h1 01111r1m.nt l on'"' 2nd c11r or Oc• .. 19'3, of Mt .it0tnev. L.AWR N . employment picture l • r ve · are no ange , Y U are Rob..-t Stelri 11 1;00 o'clock P.M .. ot wld oav 10 '"°""HARVEY. Anor,,.r 11 Ltw. 111! E:~' · "in touch" with those who are understandlng, c apable a nd Tiii• \lo1tm1n1 was rnt11 with ,,.. coun-c1V1• 'NllY u .. 10011<111on tor c111nge 01 C0t1! H19hw1v. C0t-elf~, M .; GE 'l[N I (M 21 J 20) m· far away pl"-s. Pis-•, 1u· k · d 1v c11rk oi Or•n;• county on "'"u" '' nomt 111ov!d "°' bl or1n1e<1 ca1110tnl1 nm. 'Nlllcll 11 "" ,..,.c• 1•. ay -une : a...... ...... w tng lo eep an open min , 1973 ' 11 11 turtrier orc11rec1 t11a1 1 cOPv·ot 11111 bu1lne s1 of 111t U'Od1<1l9/>9d In 111 m11ttr• There i.s som e pressure, more Virgo could fi gur e prom-You a llract persons bom l'A(MT, 1tos' WAINI, orc1eor be puollshed In 111e oaily Pilot. a per111nlno to '"' H1•'• 01 Milli 4n~: · I und L Sc · d t!IERHMAllO & SUllS, IN(, n1wsp•J)lr ol 111n1r11 d rcul1tlon. prlnlld within lour month1 1fl•r tllt nr11 p'1b c responsibility. But you will be rnent y. Accent is on t ravel er eo, orpw a n AllMMYI 1n u 1c1 coun•v. 11 11111 one• t&(h wtt• lion 01 tht• no11c•. bac ked by one in authority. a nd learning process. Aquar ius llOt Avenv• ol 11>1 s1ar .. sv1t• soo ror 1ovr •ucc1s11ve wee~1p.rl0t 10 tl'll ot Y 011111 Auou11 t. 1913. ' c1111ury City of u lcl htl<lno . HELE N C. LONG Know it ; proceed w ith con· LK Arieitu, Ciilllonll• toNJ Oeteo this 20tn dar or Avo1111, 1913. .Aomlnlstrttrl• ot thl E111t• fidence. E x c i t c m e n t of 1't100 c11uo1 M. Ow&ni. Df t11t i 1>ov1 n11M11 c1tct01nt t---------------------------1 J4JS-OC Judge of 1~id Superior Courl LAWRENCE W:. HAltVl.V discovery is featured. One yo u P bn~ Or C01t$I 0011,.. Piiot Ll!ON 1. w:Af'LAN •n0tneY 11 Law care for will pay m eaninoful Auo~tt 16, zi '1' •ncl Septeml>tf" 6, Tri. L•t•I c11111c ot J1co11v ' M1y1 rt irn e:11t COid Mllllw•Y I 11 0 .. -B d 1973 ' ' 1559.13 :w 10. L• B,... c .. °"' d" Mt r, C1Utor111 n• complime"'. Respond in ~.,,... oy lng1twood, (1lllWlll1 T•l• (714) •7l·tU2 '\'" _ ,1,norney tor Appllc1nl A!lorntv tor Aclnflnl alralrl• forthright f113n ner . PUBLIC NOTICE Pu bll il\lcl o rano• co1111 0111v Pilot, Publlthtd Or•no• Coa11 01nv l'l1t!i, AuOUtl n., JI), and Stp1em111r 6. 13. Auout t 9, u. 23, 30, lt 7J 2416·•• cA~t:En (June 2 1.J uly 221, Woineil Should .. Tl" •• OUL• ........ ..,, ,.,.,, P ut finishing touches on pr<r .• 1sec1. •101-4101 u.c.c .1 • -•·--be d ' ed Holk• Ii. !ltrwt olven to the Creclllorl PUBLIC NOTICE 1ect. R t:..1w:ic: lo iscourag ol Anotlt l'orlno P ... rlmtn OBA Perlno'I --SU-Pl!RIOtt cou•T Of' TH.I by ooe who C 0 mp J ai n S , GOUfmet Food, Tran1t .. or1 w II o s e NOTIC• INVITING ••OS STATE Of' CALlf'OllNIA lfOlt Roadblock W,·11 be removed. buslMss likl••IS Is -E. 11th sir.... Noll'* h M••bY glv~n lhll !I'll Bo.rd ol TMI COUNTY Of' OttAlllCll Cotlt Mew , COUfllY ol Or1noe:. Sltlt ol Truslffl or tllt Co.st CO<TllTIYnOl\I College NO. A77 .... Olde r indiv idual is not ln· C11llDl'nl1, lhll • bul-lr1n1ler 11 1boul lo OlllrlCI ot Cringe Counly, Ci lll0tnlt, will OltOllt TO SNOW CAUS• Talk Ph be m•cle to W11111m 0. C1rneY & Fred recelv• ,,11ft! bids up fo 11:00 1.m., Fri· In 1119 mttttr ot !ht ""Uci llon ot transigent despite s urface aj}-· . on one Kinner, Trt"'l .. 1e1., whoa• bllllnoss ~ ai~. Sep!tml>lr 7, 1~73, 11 the Pvrcll11lno U.NE JO EL LU NOSTAOT for Cllan;i or ~arances Ari es and Libra clres1 h 1,m Rl!lotboro Pl1c•, TY1.lln, Otpt °' w io school c1b 1r1c1 1oc11K ,, N1me. T r-' COi/iiiy ot Or1flOI , Sl11e of C1IU0tnlii1. 131tl. Adims Avtr11H, CDsll ~11, WHEREAS. LA NE JOEL LU NOSTAO • COUid pJay significant roles. The Pl"OOt•IY to b9 lr1nslff"red 11 loc1ltd C1lllornl1, 11 whtch !Im• wld blcls wlll b9 petllloner. 1111 Hlecl I petl!lon with the LEO (J uly 2'Aug. 22).· t i '" E. 111~ StrHI, Collt Me$t, Coon!y 1111bllcty op9'nld Ind rtld !Of Pll lNT ING ct.rk of lhl• court !or In orcl•~,"","'•'•"'L ,.. of Ore11111. Stet1 OI Calltornl1. OF ORANGE COAST CO L LE G E pellll-r·1 ntme lrom L..A" BrLn' g forth creative abilities. Sllcl prOJ19flY Is deJCrlb9d In (lener•I NEWSPAPER. "COAST LINES.'' FOR LU NOSTAOT IO LANE JOEL ltOt..l.IN';,_ No lvoman who stays home alone all d ay should fa il 11: All stoo:k In 1rec11, llxtvrK. equipment 1tn·14 SCHOOL YEAR. 1T is ORDERED THAT •11 111rsons Adhere to your o wn s tyle . and good will of 111t1 prwpared food All bids 1r• 10 tie Jn ...:corcltnce with te..estld In the •boY• tt1tlt19cl m•ll"' •P- io talk on the telephone for a t least five minutes . Such is buslMU knovm 11 ..... 1no•1 Gourmet Foocl 111e 1n1trvrtlon• and COtldlt1on1 •rid Pl•• t>etor• 1hli court '' 2'°' r>,M. on Your idea s "click." B e and 1ou11111 11 '" E. 17'11 streel, Cotti 5pecltlc•Tlons which art now on 111• arid Oc:•ODf'f" '· lt73 In ~ c~rtloomAn°i! versatile . Give yourself room the counsel or a student of menta l health. Nor should said MUI, County of Ort ng•, Sit!• OI mty bl ~u•ld In 111• otflc• ot '"' , .. ~_rlmlnl ,,.' ,, ... CMlleor o~ ...... , PUBLfC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l • I Ir . Ct lltor"ll. Purc,,.,sl119 Agent of ltlcl Khoo! dlt!rltl. OU 11• v • ..,.. for greater sc -expression. woman routinely ta lk only to one intim ate. To r em ain The bulk tr•ns,.,. w111 w consummtt..i Eech bkkltr l'IW'' 11.fbmlt wnti his 11111 • Or•no• cou"tv. c.u1orr11t, •NI 111ow Refuse to be painted into e mo--b · h [ d h h ds h 'th l on or 11t« 111e 1oi11 ll•v ot S1p11mti.r c11h11r'1 cthck, artlflecl chtek, 0t tiJo-cau11 If •n~. Wl'IY ""' Pflltlon •a..... ..., ng t o eye an c eery, s e nee to c at. WI at east 19n, 11 10:00 A.M .. • E. 11th sirHt, 111,.1 bond mtcte P11Yt bl1 to ""' ord•r ot of n1m1 .nou1c1 "°' bl •••nt911. tional comer. Confronta tion three different conve rsationalis ts eaCh week. cost• Mtt1. countv ot or111111, s1111 01 th• c oa11 commirn11y College 0111r1c1 IT 1s FUllTHER ORDEllED ttllt • ., "th A rt Id be callfornl1. Boarcl ot Trv1le11 In 1n 1mounl not 11$1 COOY ol !hit ordlf" to "-ClllM bl WI qu.a US COU OD so tar ,, kllDWn to !ht Tranlf•rNt, all than llYI perc•nl (5%1 oJ tl\.t wm t>lcl ai. p1,1bll1 hecl In th• Orange>COtll Otllr f'Uot. I agenda. F ew r ealize the r eal n ame of lhe "'""a l Italian poet btlslnn1 name• ind 1c1c1resus vSM oy • ou1ron11• 1h11 1i.. bidder win"""' Into 1 n-sP1111• of o-r•I c1rcv1111on prl1111d ~ , .. ~ Tr1ntftr0t1 ID!" th• thr" y11r1 1111 Pii i. tr.e propotecl Conlr1et It lllt .5trM !'$In Orano• Couflly, C•1lloml1, 011e9 • w", • I VffiGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Dante was Dura nte •.. Soviet telephone system has 1111111.,.""1 trom th• 1bov•. ,,,, s1m1. 1w1n:19d 10 him. In th•........,, o1 ltllur• to tor iour wccM•lve WMll• prior '° 111 h A.NOEL.A PERI NO Pl!RR IMAN tnt.r Into l!Kh conlrect. th• proo:tedl ot dat• 1et lor h!Mlrlnt;I Of\ fM Pl'fltlOll, You can consolida te assets. neit er phone books nor information Transter" '"•ch.ck w1u bl tortelttd. w 1n ti.. cose 01t..i: .1.1191111 ... nn. You get c lear picture of whe re operators . . . Abe Lincoln used to Pvblllhtd or1nge coa$t 0111r P11ot. of 1 bood. 1ri. 1u11 1.um rri.reot win bl CLAUDE M. OW!_'!' c.., August JO. "1913 2716-n forfe-lted 10 .5tld scllool dlslrlct, J udo• ot IM Su"''"°"' you s tand in money mailers. re feree cockfights, t rue • • It's known No 01dder mtY withdraw 111s blcl ror a CNffonl s. Oltklf" C Leo d A .rlu Cr a bs a re a ttracted to brl.ghl gr PUBLIC NOTICE ~rlod oJ fOftv !Iv• (d l dlYI l lllf" lht Alllll"MY 11 LIW BDCt'I' • an qu S een dill ut tor !hi OP1nlng tl\.tre-ot. SUI le 204 Cut,,... MldWIY •uUf1119 could figure p romine ntly. Key lights .. Sports scholar s say the mos t -------------1 Thi BOlrd 01 TN$tees r•1trv11 ,,.. 111111 w111 w.111111ttt11 ~,.. · b lid [ "l · l t" I · bask tb JI • 1Ull prl~lltO• of ••!Kling 1ny and 111 blcls or Cul,,... City, C1llfonlt now is lo u or secur1 y . in erna 1ona gam e now lS e a . NOTICE TO ClllD1TOlti 10 wilv• 1nv ln"t0ul1r111" °' In· ltlll UP'lon •t1:as Strive tO build 00 SOlid base. 0~ •ULI( TU.NSl'l.R !0tm1Ul ln 1n tnr bid or In tfl9 bidding. STEVIH ltllN <Seca. •111-4117 u .c.c.1 Signed : NORMAN E. WATSO N Alllll'MY .. L•W Don 't give up something for Blondes should wear blue as much Not!t• 11 !ltretiy 9lvtn to 1r.. c r«111or1 sacr111rv. eotrd 1.1f Tru11... Attw•r fw '"'""'""-"- oothl·ng as -••'ble -ntends a color ps h I of l'HIL PLIES Ind BRIAN RUFF. t!lld No .a..o lllf.OC · I"'~ • ... u ye 0 • Tr11Ut.rOl'i. wlloH buslneu tddrt11 Ii 011tn: 51111. 7, 1m . 11:00 1.m. f'ubllshed Or•n;e C1111if 01Uy "1IOI, LIBRA lSep l. 23-0ct. 22): ogist, but never red. Can you explain 1'1" wn1ow L•ne. Wtstmln11 ... cavntv Publlshld Ortn99 coait 0111y l'llot Auo11111 30 •nd hPf9"1bolt ._ 1). 70, the why of thal'. NeL""-r can I. of Or~f'IO•· s1111 ot c1111orn11, 111.111 001k .1.ug~t 23, JO, 1m 2'5G-13 19n 1m s.n Surprises. social AC tiVity -un:: tr1nslflr 11 1bout to t>t mad• 10 GLOBE '"---a re featured and y ou GLASS & TRIM coMPAN V. '" 1111no1s PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Uit::IC COl'llOl"l llOll. TrtnlflrH . wholt bU1lnes1 __ __:__:=cc..:._:-.c:_c:_ ___ :---:--:--.-c------;c;-;;; can be happy. Sagittarius, QUERIES e<l(lrf!,I ,, ffJI s. LI St lie SlrHI. Sit. 1060, NOTICE TO COffTRACTOltS or N ..... (oner et• . '. . . '.'' ...• J.ts5 Gemini persons may be in pie· Q. "It has been proved y ou do better mentaJ work cnkaoo. countt °' Cook, Stitt o1 llllnoh. CALLING FOR 11cs FIM Grt<H!r, Hiohw1y and 11r .. 1 P•v•"'ll· Tne ll'OPl•IY lo Dt lr1nst1rred It School Otslrlct· COAST COMMUNITY Alrporh . Jl11nW1ys, 1nd tlrrdlw """ ture. Leave details for another when lying dow n , yes?" •oc:artd •t 212' Hirt.or t!loo.ile\ltrd. co11• COLLEGE 01sTRICT 11e1vy ton11rvctlon ............... s s.rts thne. E xpand hor lZO. ns -see A. In mathem a tics , al any rate. Studies at Colgate Uni-MIMI. eountr °' 0r.,... S1•1• °' Bid OtadUne: 2:00 o'cioo:k p.m. of ii.. o.t>rls H1nd11<1. • · • · ... · · · · · · · · · · • · • ,..., . Calltoml1. 7th elev ot S.plemt>er, 1973. Fleoma" .. · ........ i S,US p icture as a whole. P leasure is ver sity indicate students we re able to polish off math puz· s.111 propertt ls c1escrlblld ln oe111r•1 P1•c• of Bid Rec11p1 : Office 01 111t Labor .... Gentr•I or c-1nrctton .. s s.e.cs ke~ted. zlers far more a ccurately and rapt"dly when they s tretcbed ''' AH •lock In trllCll, fla1ur11. eci1.11pm1n1 Purch•tlfl9 Aoent co•ST COMMUNITY LandK•lll Gt ra.ner & NurMry Man ,,.., J •-and llODci Wiii of lhll rll1U 01111 blislllftl COLLEGE i>ISlRICT, 1110 Ac11m1 k..-1~ ot ptent m•tttlal1 Ind'"""' to oul with their feet propped 8 little higher tha n their heads. kriown •• Ptc.lflc coa11 Gitt• com1111nv ,1,....,,ue, Cos!• Mts1, c1111orn11. t'.1626. pl1n1 them. L•r• out p11nt ,,. SCORPIO {Oct . 23-Nov. 21): •nd loc1ted at 212' H1rbOI 8C111l1v1rc1. Projtcf ld1n t l f lc 1 Tl on N1me: r11f>q9mtn!1 lo follow !he-ltndKllll' Details ronnecled with Un· Cotti Mest, County ot Or11191, Slate ol T11thnol ogy Ptriclnt;I L.ol Acldlflon and plinl ........ .. . ... $ S.l'5 Q "How low does person's bod t perat h C•lllDl'nli . Ml1C•llt11eOU1 SlrNI construction et M0tlarm1n · ·· ·········' J.ffl dercover project could come ' a y e m ure ave The bulk tr1nsf1r wlll bl con1umm1tld ORANGE COAST COLLEGE (1111 ND. Ol'l!IATING ... OINllllS1 t I. ht D.· ct the fi · I to fa ll before said party dies?" on or •fler tile 12th ai r or StolemMr. '36l Ht1llh & w1111r1 . 7k 111'1' tio\11" 0 1g . •-=Je s uper 1c1a · A F. 81 d F So h f h fr 1rn. 11 ttn A.M. 11 Tiie 11nk 01 Pliic• Plini 1j.1 on 1111: ottlce of The Pt11s!on • s 1.20 per llour Insist on factual info nnatioo. • 1g ure egrees . me ave oug t bac k om c1111orn1t , N.A .. .ct c1v1c c.n11r o.-lv• l'urcr..s.11111 At;1ent, coa.sT COMMUNITY v11c1non·S1vl1"111• - Te m ptal,•00 may he to sk L"p a lot lower temperatures, though. One winter's night drunk w111, s1n11 An1. countv DI or1r1111. s111• coLLEGE 01sTRICT, 1vo Ac11ms H1111c11v * 111'1' 11o11r · ed •• de F chill he d ho OI C1llfornl1. Avtn\11, cost• Mest. C1tlfornl1. '2626. Forem1n: SOC per flour over 111t r1T• o1 essentia ls. This would be an sur v1v a U'I gree • , t r ecor s ws. so ''' •• known to 111t Tr1n11 .. ", 111 NOTICE 1s HERESY GIVEN 11111 the 1he 111q11Ht Pll111 Enoln .. r undlr hl1 Re I h and bus.lrit11 INlmet •nd eadrnte1 \!Sid by 1oo......n1mea SChoOt Ol1trlct ol Or1noe 111111rvl1len. e rror. visions, po is ing Tr1n1leror1 tor tl\.t lhrM Yltrt l•st ptl!, County. Ci llf0fnl1, tc!l"ll by and lllrouoh Group 2 . .. " • ........ S 7.Jr remodeling are featured Client a sks the whereabouts of the world's fll'St sched-•re: Ande,_, & Pll•• lnsur1nc1, 103 s. 111 a-n11111 t!ICM1n:I. herel1N1ttw rtt.rTecl c one,..•• mh1•r .,-11or, 11111 MM! · uled airline . Fellow named P. E. Fansler opera ted that. For Gltndor1 Ave., Covln1. c1lltorn11. 10 11i "OtSTRJCT", win rec.i ... "'fl to. ixr1 Sklolotder • w111e1 rvpe, 119 10 ~ yd. SAGITTAIUUS (No v. 22-011!'11: Augvst u. 1913. not 111., thin 111t 1boY1-tt111111 nme. sul· wlrtlollt 1111chm1t11t Dec. 21): You meet people , go a few weeks, a nyway. In 1914 used a Benoist Oying boat to GL.OeE GLASS a. ea bld1 1or 111t 1w1rc1 o1 • C'Or'llr•ct for G•OUP 3 ................ s 1..s1 d betw S P bur TRIM COMf'AN Y. lh• at>oVe project. Ch1lnm1n places and do things. You a r e carry p assengers a n cargo een t. eters g and 1n 1mno11 Corportl1on Bkh ,111111 bl rec.ivec1 In the pl.ct 1c1en-POM1r concrete s • .., Optf'1tor . u--· r -lnl I Tampa, Fla . i'ust 22 mi les. I r: SOI Sii«, Tr•""-11nec1 •bovt. Ind lh•M be oapntd and Group 4 ......... ' .......... 7.62 revtta Lt.'-1. u.::m • V r go Tri. t1111r. ., c1n1w11111, N.A. publ lch read 11ouc1 11 the 1bo'tt>-ttt tH1 t!lo.-mtn or Ml•ffm•n lA1p11111 or Con- persons could fia11re prom--,.., CIY!c C1nhlr D11v. w111 lfme 1nd p1.c1. cr•l•I Rollm1n 'I>~ D E FINITJONS 511111 A111, C1Hfonll1 n 1n Tiii,... w111 bl • ._,.,..n.,,. doll•r G,_ s ................. s 1.11 memo: Let m• d11i9n you • look with tho fin•ll it'•thod of htireuttin9 fo1 h••llh~ htir. MEN 'AND W O MEN To•I Lowen JOE FD!~~~~· LTD. I 64S.5370 I . Bright r e marks by lovable tots rare ly a re noted here , becau se said q uota tions tend to lose their spunk when r~ duced to print. Still. these sm a ll g em s turned up on a sixth grade teacher 's exam papers: I. "The word trouser is an uncommon noun because it is singula r at the top and plura l at the bottom ." 2. ''A virg in for est is woods where the hand of man has ne1-e~ set foot." 3. "The c limate is bot lest next lo the Creator." 4, "The genera l direction of the Alps is straight up." 5 . "Stra tegy is when you don't le t the ene m y know you are out of ammunition, but keep on firing." Address 111ail to L. 1\f. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, Newport Beach 92660. Cop yright 1973 L. lit . Boyd Escrew N•. SWU)I d-'11 re®lrecl hr N ett ttt ol blcl lltelr.hoa Op9r1lor (up to 111111 ltldudlng Publl1"ed Or11111• Co1it 01Uy Piiot clocumenll lo gu1ranl" tfl9 nl\lf"TI In Iii rd.I t ...,A11 tlnllhl Augu11 ». 1m 2111.n goo11 coridltton within -...,., •till' tl!I Ral ll!' OPllr•lor •• .... -or -·• PUBLIC NOTICE bid OPfflh>!l cl1t1. Rubblr Tired E1 rlll MOVlno E_.p....,_l Etch bid mus1 cortlcrm tftd bol (slfl!ill• enol,,., 11p to •roll hx:lud'lno 25 tt'!.P0111!11e lo Ille contrlCt ~1. yd. 1tr11Ckl Eacll bid $11111 bo1 Kcon-$1111911 bY flll Sklp!OtOtr l)per•tor (Cr1wllr lll'ld Wllffl PUBl.IC HEARIN GS WILL IE HELO t!I Y ~1,1rllY r9flrrecl to In !ht con"acl Type ovtr "" yO, 1nd 1111 lo 9ncl I,.. THE COSTA MESA PLANNING COM-clocumtnll and by !hi flst o1 propmld clucllll'O 1 .... y01.l MISSION 11 !ht City H1ll, n Fair OrlY1, iubconlrKlorl . • Group 6 •. .. .................. I 1.tl Cos11 Mtsa, C•lllornlt , ti •:JO P.M. or tt Tht OISTltlCT r_.... f111 rltftl to rt-AS91\tlt or concrtl• Spreecill"lll 0"9r11or ""°" 1s po1slble llltruntr on T1111M11y, 1K t onr or 111 bids or lo w11,,. 1ny Ir-(tamping and nnl1hlnol Septtmlllr 11. ltn . r119uterlllu or tnform1nllts ln any bids or Asph1lt P1vtno M1dllr11 0otr1tor Re-girding the tollow\119 1pptlctllon1 : In ti.. 1>h!dlr19. (!1rber Gr"n OI' llmll1r IYpt -J I. l-lac.ptl1111 f'lf"mll .... ll:·1J·1', Tiie O\STlllCT ho• clfllf"mlntd the screedmen rlqllfredl f(lf' Marlneri SIYIOIU I nd I.Di n Anoe: .. Clfll .. a1 pr.v1111no t ile of Jl9I" dl•m \111101'1 Grl<M Check•r 1S1S Wtslcll lf Orl v•. NIWP(lf'I t!letcfl, In 1119 loctlllY In wtildl lt\11 _. 11 lo be Grtde11 ()p9rttor IOlltr or JOl.ll'M'!'mtft. C•lll.. fOf perml11lon lo con1lruct l4 pertonned for t K h cr•tl or fflll ol lr1lnee rtQlllreclJ conclomlnlvm units lo moet Cl' 111,.. workmtn nHdtll to 9lCICVtl tht contr1cl, Group 1 ........ · ................. 11,e'I clarcls. 10 1llow 1 c1en1ttY c1tv!111on of to bl 15 foltows: Mofor Petrol -Biid• 0111r1tor 1111"1111• one unit Pf' 2112 1q. tt .. and 10 11 Anv cltulnc111on not •nlld 111t9cl 1nd tn0lrie l Yt rlouJ llclf Ind '"' V•rd ..,. bollow llS!ecl llllU bl paid 11 the (Ufref'll T•AM$T•1t11 cr0o1chmen11 In an ~1-C P Zon1, loce19cl w1191 r1t11 tor ti.. 11l>Pllt•lllt ll'"tdt •nd H1allh & W•ll••• • t i 335..Jo45 UnlY•rlJIY Orlv1, Coll• M•••· cl1111flc11tlon. Ptnslon • 1 ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ C&llf. II r111s Utlt(I bllow ar• flOI curter1I w Vat1tl,,,..S1v no•. L lone l!xc1plloot 1'1rmlt N., lE·11-M, t r• revlltd bV 1111« IO".,.,..," clurl"9 Hollcl•Y -I 1.00 P'r llot.rr tor W11ll1m F. Tully. 11162 Colony or .. lhl blcldlno tlm. ot conttruc110ll llm•. Foreman: Wl!tn 1 Contr1t l0!' M'll)lwt on WHO SAYS PRICES ARE HIGH 1 TRY JOE & SAM 'S PRODUCE MART! We stack 'em high and sell 'em cheap And We Can Prove It! ! , e e e e e e e VALUABLE COUPON e e e e e e e e :RANCH FRESH LARGE AA EGGS: • • • • Limit 2 Dot. 75 ¢ Coupon Good 'Til • DOZ. TuH., Sept. 4 e • •••••••••••••••••••••••• • ~ L•tor Doy Sjteelcil-SwMt U.~. •1 -a1uet WATERM!LON .... 3'1Jc lb. POTATOES ........ lOc lb. Fft11t1 orclMinl Jo yo-SwMt Vott>nc.la latge c;b:e 5oH<f -frni ORANGES I 4 lbs. $1.00 TOMATOES ...... 2 lb•. 25c L.,.. le.""' LETTUCE ' ' .. ' .. - SPICIAL INGAROIA . BROS. 011A 19c uch Su~ Ivy! Ne. 1 lrow1 ONIONS ........ . 3 lb•. 25c DISCOUNTS TO llSTAUU.NTI PRODUCE MART WE WE LCOMi FOOD STA.Mf'S GA LAl$0 '$ 11'ALIAN IUtlAO-,R~$H OAIL Y •FR.-.SH CORN I l'LOUll TORtlLLA.S 1t Vlctor11 COSTA MliSA 645·1365 Closed Labor Day Tu1tin, Calif .. lor permls.lolon to 1•cetd 1ucll revl1lon1 llltll bl con"61fecl t Pll'' his payroll • or mor• 1 T"t m1':;1ri tne m••lmum 11\owtd 1101111111 under 1111 of Ill• bllow·llsled r1IH: _-111119 eq11lpm1nl und1t 11t 1 ur C• 1l1nd1rd1 ot Ill• tclopled ·lfllttlm •IP CA.Rf'ENTElt$t !Jon ol the Tunultr•. •xcllld 119 t"Y Df'dlnence to 1llow 1 o11 IC!. fl. grouril HHllh & Wetlart • 7~ per llour 111ulpment In t 1!11n 1lx Ion• ind sign, 11 11. In height. (Allowecl ground Penllon -9k p1r hour m1lnle!llinc• aq1,1lpm1nt, 1111 ConlrlctO" sign fOf TI O MotOl'I . lJ so. 11. In trte Vtc•llon·S.~tng1 • $htll dfflo111t1 ont Teiimt~lf" 1:0..:C••" Ind 1 n. In Might), IOC•lecl ,, 2167 Hallcl•Y -70t per hOU• Foremtn tnd ,.. 111111 rK YI Pit Harbor atvcl., Coslt Mew Cilll. ·1n 1 For1m1n: Rtc•lves not lllP tl'ltn t0c: per hour ~ IMn lht klllohtat TFMmsllf" Cl z ' ' hour mor• thin tl'll hourly ri te of tllt ct11s.lffc111on .,.,,. Wl'I 11 I'll !1 Ol"trTlln ll. 1tti!"~.( .. llOll f'1tmlt ,,.., ZE·7l-IS hlg!Mst CtrPftllll' ct11slllc1tlon over Ori,,., of Trtn11!-Mb Tnrck· und1t 1• ' whlell llt Ms rMj)Ol'ls.lt>U!ty •~cepl rd• ·· ··• ···· ··' '' • for Otnle-1 F. C1.1nll.I, 116 lnduslrl1I W1y. "P lie Nlllltt' ,_,.'st pl .. " Orl"9r ot Trin!Jt-MI• Truck• 3 y01. or Cotti Mtw. Ctlfl.. lor permh1lon 10 _. or ' · • 1 • 11 aper1t1 t n cioen rKr1111on11 v•hlclt C1rp1ntlr · · · ·· · ·•··• ·· · · · · · l 7,05 mor .. , "' • CSMINT MASONS· -• Driver of Otlmp, ... uc : perking lot lncludl119 l>Olls on lrt lltr'• ln H•iltll & Wllltrt , · toe per llllUr Lu.a lhin 11 yd1. w111r lt¥ri $6.511 I n Ml 1-. loc1lld II 111 lndU1trl1I Pl'lllion • tSt Pfl' "'°"' 12 yds. but Ins lll•n 16 \'"111. W1v, Cos\1 M91t, C1lll, Vte•lion·Sllvlngt • w1twr ltY.i . . . • · .. ''·" For furtlltr lnfOfmellon on lllt •boYe Holld•Y • 70C per hour Pipeline ind Ut1111Y workl119 Truc!I; tppllca!lons, leleoflone IM-S24S or c1U 11 Fote,...n: Wilen lllrtoe or mor• C1m.nt Orlv .. , lncllldlng Winch lJuck, but It.. otnA 01 thl Pl1nnlng °'Plrlment, Mi i-On• ••• lmPIO"l'ed on t Job, -llmlled to "uck1 11111tlc•bl• to plpellr19 Roo_m 200, n F1lr Orlvt, COS!• M"41, 111111 bol imploytd 11 1 F0terT11n 1nd end utility work, whtr• • comPOtll• Cthl0tnl1. i 1h1ll rK•l¥1 not kn then 6(1( per hour er..,.. 11 111111 ........ • .... S 6.U COSTA MESA ~thin lht hllllrh' rtle ot !hi ll!ghe$1 Wiler lruck Pl.ANNING COMMt'iSION Cl'O"ltt"ll MllOO ctan lllc1llon OVlf which Undlf" 4000 01Uon1 .. 1 ... , Ii. J, Wood, Cll1lrmtn he hl l ttsponslblllf'f. «lOO g1llon1 and OV'tr .......... s 7.d Wllll1m L. Dunn, SKtlllrY JOUrnt'fml n: .. , ................ Sf.l6 l!.LICllll(IAN1 •nd Olrtt!Ot o1 P11nnlno lnc:llldlrie bu! not restrlcttd to lllt H11Uh & Wet11r1 -Uc: plr hour l'ublislllCI Or•nt1• •COlll'I O•llr Piiot. lvllcrM/19 : Clllpp lf19 J pe!Chlrig: wttlng Pension · JJc: W hour AUOUlf )0. 1971 1719-73 t vrb form and pltnk, 1enlng ot 111'111, Gtnl ral For1m1n ................. llO.t l 1tak1• and oradt1 i •tlllno K"ed" Forem1n ............... 1 t .tl PUBLIC NOTICE wtilcll lnctll'd11 1creed pl n11 culti'19, C•bl• Splicer For-tm•n .•...•. , . , .. 110.J• 1corlll{f and 1aw!no new concrt111 p1119. C&b~ Spilt,.. . .• .. . .... 1 t.31 NOTICI! INVITING •IDS glf19, lllllng Snf1·8oll llol1s1 dry ptckln.g Wireman .. , · l 1.9'0 HIWf'OltT-MISA UNlf'll O concr•l1 tnd Embco1 lendlftll m1l•rl1I Llnem1n ·· .................. $I.to SCHOOL 01$TlllCT F!DM on 1la1K, lloor1 tnd clKkS1 llUsll Technician ·• • ,.,I I.to •OT CE ll1mmedngr pe,tclllng Ind tacklng1 rod· l'AIMTEltS : 1 IS HEREIY GIVEN 11\111 fhe Olng timplftf bil wttl rocld lng mKlllne Htelln & We!l,r1 • Bot,. of Educ111on ot !hi Ntwp0rl-M•M1 tl"ld tlmllir i:,.Pfl. bull f!Ollllng: Pffl•IOll · Unlllecl Scllool Dbtrltt ot Ort ngt Coun!Y, Curb • Guller Mi clllr>1 Op,lrl!or (Ctf1'19111 Llf• l11s11r•rx:• C1lllornl1, \111111 recelvt Mt!ecl 111111 119 '° I I 1 v 1 11 :00 A.M, on tllt !Ollrlttn1h of Stp-~&1tlii:$,"' ....................... I.' ... :~11n~r1tlvt 1\:-0-~ 11 tembtr. lt7) II 1111 otlk1 of •tld School H .. lth & Wtlltr• , 65c per !lout° Ai:>OrlHlllCt ,lllP Dltlrlct, toc:1lecl 111157 P'ltc9nll1 Av«llle, ,.,,,.11on . s I.JS per hOUr Foremtn C• men or ltHJ Cott• Mt11, Ctlllorlllt . et which llrM Vect!lon-5tvlftll• • W1cl bill• wlll bit Ollbllcly OP1n9cl Ind rffd Hollcl1y lSc per hour f'ori m11n (J mi n or mOl'tl for: For-tmtn: ~ '-ltlan SO!;, w tiour MA NUAL TYf'IEWRITERS mor• th111 ti.. h0Vrl¥ we;t tll• ot Ille JC111rn1Ym•" Sor1y 3'I:" °"r llllllr )le per~ lk Pit llour ~ per llollr k Ill• llour O:k per hour 'o.so •bO~ Jwr111Ymtn i o.rs •bov• J01,1m1ym1" J 1.M All bld1 art 10 bl In 1ccorcl1nc:1 wl111 lllO'*I clnllllctllon over wlllcl'I llt hit ~l f'I. TllAOES: COllCllllont lnslruc1lon1 1nd SOeelflcallont 111dl•IMP.. Ht•llh a. Wtlltr• -10"1 ot 9rD11s Pt~roll 'Nfl l(h ,,.. now on IU1 lft tilt olllc• ol Ille A.WINI! lttktr, Lut1m1n & lr-r s ~.tlJ Pi!'fltlon . I•"" ol or111s pn-rQfl f'Mrchl~n.g A9ent °' .. Id SChool ots1rlct. Alllfl.tl! SllOYtltt . . ' S.7•S Vetttlon tlolklaY ,,... llf '""' PIY•Olt 11$1 Plte•nlf• Aven1111. Cm.11 MIMI. l 11911ymot1ll• Ml'O . . . . . . . . • J.llSJ APOl"t"llcl & JourMY· Callfornl1, Citmtnl O\llTlj)tl' !on l ~•rd Of" ltri>er m~n Tr1lnl1111 '"" of orou QtyroH Each blclder l\'lllSI Wtllftlt • bid dtllOlll ml•et •1'111 h1ndllng bulk Cl!Mf\I) 'S.lSS UlltilY l'lpetlne ~or-~ .•. s t.1• In 1119 lorm ol t certlnt'd or ca1hl«'1 C::enc,..lt Curar.ltnWVtou• mtmbf"ane I nd UlllllV 1'!1191!1>1 JourntV""~ ' 7.t• check DI' 11 bla toona equal 10 !Iv.= peoc1t11t 'orm on... . . . . . . I s.ru lrriot•llon .tnd Llwri Sl)l'l~kl1r1 . t •.1s c1-.1 ot !he 1moun1 ot 1n1 bid, mlCte Concr•t• S1w M•n. Cunino, koflng Olli 51~r & srorm O<tl~ 11111111~•· -' l.lJ P11¥11bl1 to ll!t on1tr or Tilt N•WCIOl't-Mt11 Unltltd SC:hoot Olll•IC'I, 1. f'trM!inenA Af'f'lll HTICI: i CMl l>ULI ANO Ill.Tl Bon.a m1y bt rtciulrtd 11 lhe dl i.cr1tton 01 The APOt'90llC1 Rift 1, by •• Of tht J01101141Ymtn't. Rlllt tht Olllrkt. In 1111 tvenl OI f1llMr• to C1a11 lnttrw/1 h i Incl )rel 'Ill lrl'I ""' 1'11 Ith enttr Into 111Cll c.,itr...:t, thl lull '""" Citmlll'lt MtlOl'ls ' mill. IS 1' &l fl ti fl llltrlOI will llt fotftlltd 10 w1a Sci.tot lrrlO•llon t. Oht•ICI OI 0'<•llOI COll!lfy. l.tWf\ $pr11;1r. No tlllkllr m1r wllhclrtw Ill• Clcl llW , Pt ll'ltt" 11erlod of tor•~·llvt (45) c11r1 11t1r tlM O .. •"','"' cl•tt ttl IOI' 11111 OPllll~O tlllf'tol, flf """ J y'1. '° " • fr\Ot, '° '5 14 l l '° 11 7i UH IOO . ""'· 10 10 JS IO IJ '° .... I l ilt lloerd Of EG<Ktllon OI ll'M! N•woort Stw1r I. S1orm f.\911 UnHl..:t St llool Olstrlcl rftl•V•I ""• Or1ln• I Tr\. '° " 1• ll "' r11Jlll to r1)KI lflY or Ill llldt, lf\d f\OI TM ll>'ttOlllO KPllCIUll ol ~ cilt""' ltl tor lflf OPtflllll or blcl1. fl9Ce1t.trlly t CCtcll !hi IOWMI bid, tnd to .,.,,11, 11 blatd uoon , wor-1119 dtv OI " p.tymenr llOnG •"Cl t ~· Wtlvt 1nv l11101"m•lltv or lrr'9ul•rllr Jn tloht !I t l'>Oun, Tiit rti. for hotldt v 11'111 bond wlll IM r11o1wlr.c1 P'lot lo •~tc.vtlon or 1ny blcl rec1lv1<1, O'lrintt WOok .,.,u !Ml t i 1.,.,, llm. ti\(! 1119 cofllrKI. Tiie ot'"'*'" bolld 1nt11 t• Dtlfd Aug, XI, 197) °"'""'II lri Ille form ..i '°'"' I" f"9 con!ff<I HIW"Oltl-MIS~ UHlllll O II 111fn " m11!c11totY uoon the C::ON· doc.\lml'Olt. SCHOOL DISTl'.IC::T t ltACTOll 10 wllOl!'I the «1nlrtc.I 11 GoV9"nl .. llMrcl ol °''"" County, C•Ulotnl • awtf'dtd •rid uocn •~v wbi:ontr.ctcr 11¥: _.!'flt,. I , W1Tto11 t!IY OOrollly Htr\19\' f'w..r 'ftCllt l'l/m, 10 HY net In.I 1"'11 !loot u ld Stcf"lftry. 9otl'CI ol Tr11u,., ..,_1100 llY !him In lllt l•t<UllOll ol !1'1t conlrKI. 1 10 NO. 06 f'vrd1t,lnt A{llfll ~lrll'd r1tt\ 10 1U _.krnen employtd\O"EN· Str•. '· ton -f'°' p m f'ubllslled Or11not CMll Otlh ~UOI, No b!Olltf" mt¥ w'llhdrlw Nl b1c1 for 1 f'llbtltllH Ort-C°"ot o.ily ~ 1,,.. A~t lO 11nc1 lfofemt>tr" lt7l 1no.n period o1 tlllrty ClOJ 0trs t t111' lht .. ,. •uo~t 11. :11, 1m J6#> '1 1 ' • • ' • • I l ! • l l I I l ' l I \ . . DAILY PILOT Thursday AuQust 30, 11)73 TONIGHT'S TV IDGHLIGHTS KTIV m 6:00 -Hocus Pocus. Magician Bill Daily headlines a lively magic show at San Diego 's Sea World with special guesl Ba rbara Eden. NBC 0 8:00 -Cycle o! Lile. This special drama· tizes the unending evolution of life by focusing 011 the birth and growth of a horse. Fess dDanicl Boone" Parker stars . ,, ABC 0 8:00 -An Autumn Affair. No , it's not a story of illicit loye. it's .a look at the 1973 college It• football season by members of the Football \Vritcrs Association of America who will pick their choices for co nference chanlpionships. • TV · DAILY LOG 'ltfiddle of Ni9l1t' Tops Huntington Awards Given Intermission Tom Titus "1'Arlilt MOON" IFG) .... WAN WMO 1,.0VIO CAT OAMCINO" 0 fOUt.;TAlN vAllfY .,~ ''"'·' • D '"''"'' """" •' "" .. "'" 'ilANG T"t D1UM SLOWLY" IPG) • "I.ADY ICI" The practice of passifli out t1wurds ror c.lcellcnce in con1· 111u11ltv theater ha s dcleriorait'<l somc"•bat over the past few years. Theater groups In Costa f\1esa. Lagun11 and Irvine have dlsronlinued U\\'ards altogether. the Lido Isle and Sa n Clen1ente playhouses never did present 1hcn1, \vhlle in \Vesunlnstcr ay,•ard y,·inner for "The Best Man"\ ror hi ::1 s uperb perfonnance as the middle· a~ed lover in "Middle of the Night'' and Alm Cossn1an, who pla yed the mystery Y.Titer in "Exit the Body." Judged best performers in the major sup- porting categories \Vere Sam Brandon for his "comeback" in "Heaven Can \Vail" and Susan O'Connell as ~Jiss Cossman's acerbic secretary in "Exit the Body." ("Wait Until Dark''i us bcsl juvenile. Carla Trick's seltit1g for 4'f\1iddle of the Night" won in its category. whllc Bill ,,1oreland, Don GL'()tge nnd Ron Jones il'hured th c tcchnical'awnrd for their work on "Exit th e Cody.'' Special recognttior) \ven1 to 1 <-;:~:::· :::c-=::-:::·:-:·===:::j Ellie tiebeck, u1lw \\' n stl presented t h e 'prellldenl's award for outstanding con· trlbution to the playhouse, nod Greta S m l t h. Hw&rdcd a special lire membership (or her 10 years' scr\'ice on the theater's board of directors. OOYLI! COS!MAN Coast to ha ve an awards ban· quet this year. The tluntington u"·ards -called Bobbis in honor of retiring playhouse president Bobby ,,1urphy' - \\'ere distributed Sunday eve· ning. . AND THEN of course. there "·as the expected tribute to Bobby i\lurµhy, th~ g:il \Vllo helped found the pla yhouse In 1963, then served ns its secretary for nine years and \ l'tll I NIWPOlT 541·1 SSJ IXCLUSIYI ! TM trHtftt d••I •f fl:• ti\UHG, FU. Minters "DUEL OF' THE IRON FIST" NOW "CRIES AHO ' WHISPERS" 7,00 .•nd 10:40 p.m, also ' "MURMUR OF THE HEART" 8:40 p.m. C•lt tlieotr• for S1111"'Y k~lfS.. --- l I Do . HIWPORT 91ACH fNJUNCI TO LIDO ISll 67l-83SO l~OW ! !=I R~T RUHi Totol lnltrt)llll-nt l there y,·cre no ~l\vards because there \Va.; no season. The l~witington B e a c h season encompassed rive pro- ductions. but when all the ballots y,•ere counted "li1iddle of the Night'' and "Exit the Body" captured all but t\VO of the 11 a\\•ards categories. "r..1iddle or the Night" was voted the top sho1v of the season. earning a best di.rector a\\'ard (or Randy Keene. Other acting a\vards y,•ere presented to Colin Guiver \"Exit the Body") and Ann Parvaresch t "f\.1iddle oC the Night") in the minor sup- porting category. \Van Millay !''f..1iddle of the Night") fo r best cameo and Susan Peck president for her last season. -A1116- Two years ago the playhou" "CUT-THROATS '"'°"'"""''""-named its awards nftt>r her : r;f;p' Sunday night she was l?i"cn 11 NINE'' a:fl Ri'('J '$- Thursday Evening AUGUST 3Q uo o o o m-m a:i m .... (I)®J -0 llonlllU @ C.UrtsW,, If Eddlr's Fltller 0 W\"tld hid or A1iM fD I IJICW I Heals PKa A blend ol 1re1t mqic PtifOfll'llfS, headed by 8111 01JtJ, combinin1 th1 excite· ment of Sin OMiio's Se1 World. Spe· ci11 (UtSt is B1rtllr1 E"n. m""'"' fZJ Us TWfn fE Hod11pod11 Ledet m n11" Sttoru ';30 00 ttoi111'1 Kerots 0 MovM; (C) (90) "Q11te11 ti Ot.11· 1t Sptcr" (sti·fl) ·~ -Zu ls,, Gaitor. Eric flem in1. £D 81ocnp11y ··1n .:iearcl1 of Slrind· beig" Swedish actor Max Von Sydow stars as the dark, broodln1 dram•· 11st/no~el 1~1 August St1mdbe1g. Pro- duction WjS c1ta!Bd from autobiO· g1aoh1cal w1itings of St1indber1. Thus. the fluntington Beach l'lny housc enjoys the distinc- tion of being the only corn- n1 u11lty theater on the Orange TIIE TOP ACTING trophies \\'ent to Terrence Doyle ( n past pla yhouse and Daily Pilot large, lobby-sized portrait of -~ LL:.I herself frO!n "ArSC/liC and Old -R -• COO ftiefwflf'!nMDl f:iM.trM Lace'' as a parting gift. J\ l~~~~~~~~~lll-1~11 !Ti'i'1 Abm!':em?filesllm duplict.1te \\'ill hang in llu:!I:---ffi • playhouse. 1 . AND But it's never all glad hands and backslapping at the Hun· tington Beach PlayholLo;e. Not while James E. Smith is ~ SUpe1 Show ai} Ca1av1n1 M1.1slcal EE Mowit Clllllcs; (2hr) "Public £nemr" (dra) '31-Jrmes Ca1ney, 'I'op Record Executive Donald Cook. H L F F · z around to puncture assorted '''°m"'"'""'•"'• e earns ro1n ai ares egos and demonstrate why ail Dr1"'1 he's known as !he Rex Reed of 9:00 IJ (j)C8S Tllund" Morit: (211r) Orange County. Jin1 , it's said. "Tbt Noon Is ll11t" (rom) 'SJ -was in his usual {ornl Sunda v William Hoklen, Oniel Niven. Maui• By HAL BO\.LE business are continuity and Larry, u•ho studied statistic! as~ he delivered i.Jis anl'!u3•' McNamara. The s,,ucy story of love follO\l'Up. in college. became a captain roastinn of assorted Iota.I I '.\'E\\1 \'ORK (AP I -La1Ty y· do 't h 1· t . lh cd' I du . 0 and lhe two men who fi!Wf it in lh• " OU n ave 1mc O en-in e m 1ca corps ring theatrical figures. I same giil. 1 ·ttal flopped in doughnuts. He ioy the luxury of a hit record. \Vorld \Var II. He said he turn-* 0 = -I -'• p d flup"'•d in the retail clotli'ng I "~ 000 f th d t . h'efl t . ®)~ rtnar.t "rogr1mme 1'.. I 1nay gross '""""' or e e u pop music C:: I Y o THERE WERE l\\O ci111clle~ for Panic" (R) Chief Ironside, 1idtd field. He flopped as a manuracturer, but he may net escape the ordeal of "12 on the birthda.v c<ike 1his 1 ROGEi MOOI( .u 007 I• Je-s 1 .. d'1 "LIVE AND LET DIE" + ..SIDNll" <POITIER, ·~~ ~EGE)IBE~ ' ·--•IC'111<• )''"•'""' ' "'" •.• '_,_,4,. __ ...... ~ , ... '~'(PG• ~ by a tal~ show h~ (James Gre1· song\\Til er. He flopped a cou-only five percent of that. lts hatefu l years of p 1 a Yi n g monrh ilS the only publication I cry), u~s an unainvtnlional meth. pie of times as a music life as a heavy seller usually classical music" as a child. d d I · I ad to trap the killer ol a_youna 1i1I. publi~her. evote exc ustvc Y to CO~l-• @ R1.1n tot Your Ult lasts only about six ""eeks. Al He learned from his t\VO munit v theatt•r in this area f~,: Fto,,, 7 ft.M. "THE MECHANIC" ;i (]) CIS Mtw1 W11!11 Cron~lte 0 Hm C1111 Wiii Timi @) Merr Crtftlll Show 0 Th' But no\v. at 51. Larry Uttal the end of fron1 three to six children to appreciate rock celebfated its anniversarv. 1 with Chortes lroftMft Swndoy c~111h•. 2 P·•· CI} GJ ku111 Fu "The trd l'°S niadc ., fortune as one Of th 't . d d -"' th Man" Caine challenaes the klller ol "" " 1non s I IS ea -auu ere 1nusic, of which he is no\v an That, of course, \\'Ould be lottt 111 Color IR I ~lll•llll••••llllll~ 1 chaiming Irish iambler to be hi t 1\r11eri c:1's top record e.x-is nothing deader than a dead expert judge. Shcnvcase magazine and itsl ~~ ..................... ~~!J~ own judge. ccutivcs. hit record. If you aren't ready personable publisher Pat Bitt·I: fli) Sul fUlll Yin& fH a;,1.M111 r.rr al> Novtl• fD Dtstft TH1tr1 r-m little R111C1l1 EiJHistorias de M1m1, 1'1111 ''Yo11 learn n1ore fron1 Yo'ti r then to f0Jlo1v It up \\'Ith "TllE SECRET is learning ncr. \\'ho hosted commw1ilv • ~ ffiAdor's CIHlice "l'lalt Whitma"" fni!ur·r s than 1·ou <lo frorn ·sue-another hit. ~'ou'll probably be to listen to the lyrics. When theater folks f11rm Oran.i.:r . li ,...-:::: '!), Dnmaric readm gs lrom writinl$ ol cess." sairl Utt al. the bearded. dead soon. too." 1· h I Los An!?:eles. Ri versirlr ni•·l 1 ~ Y. ' 1 • • l you 1sten to t e yrics, you ~· ... American poet, Walt Whitman. unconventional president of Part of Uttal's success I" at -1. be San Bernardino rounlics at --" -' ~ .. '' , Al . " ... find you 1ke rock tter." Ut· 1 ....... , , ~... ow • e11 r• ...,irtz Bf'll Records. one of the lop tributed lo his skill in handling her off.the-beaten-oath abode\ ' · ' · ' ' ·• · 1:00 e mom .... O ltwlkl1 for Win Ci) Mtwle-: (at) "'Tlllnts Kifi!wlY" (dr1) 't~ichiud Contt, Let J. Cobb. (]) Wildlilt Tlleabt o wi..r1 My Line? m I U.. "'1 ID I Dru• If Je1n1il EE Si•pie91111:t M•ril llll ""' • ,._,. m•--m T11t-lnbtl M1.1siul ta! dresses informallv. often !:30 o News ro1npanie s in the business. artists and discovering Rt'\V !!Oes to -\\'ork tieleSs, and ~mong the tu mble\veeds in fDTbt ·Jau Set ''Ray Bryant Trio" necenll\' his firm had the No. talent. " Fontana "· · doesn't mind if his emplo\,'es m Much1dl1 11.1 .... n1 I. No. 2 and No. 3 top bit To those Ytho follow COil'· a!) Comedy sin~lcs (ln the sales charts. a TlJE BELL stable Includes do. too. munity theater an di 10:00 0 '.@ IDDt•n M111in ""esenb: f:•::t unprecedented in the in· stich stars as the Partridge "f look for P"oductivity. not particularly to those \\'Ito ~·'ISic Ccl1.1ntry llay Stevens head· dU!il"Y· F'arnily. the Fifth Din1ension. conformity.'' he remarked. participate in it -ShO\\·case hMs. •nd auests indude: Jerry Oa\1id Cassidv. Dawn. Ed\!=on Larry doesn't write songs has proven an t'\'er-growing Reed, Anne Muriay, Molly llidew11. lllS FIRl\I o,·cr a two-year Lighthouse, Vickie La"•renre. himself anl'more. <ind has fountain of information. cover- Chet Atkins. period has hecorne a leading a featured performer on the never had the urge to record ing \'irtually the en t i r e 0 mW Ntws producer in Britain and turned Carol Burnett television show. any of his old ones. an1ateur theater scene in ~@~:1~~:ui!Sanfiincist1 nut 20 gold r('COrds. each of and youn~ Gary Glitter. who "If I hadn 't o ri g inall y Southern C<il;fC'mia. Hun- fE ~ltaetr .. ,., Room Witti a View" Mike ind ,,·h ich hi:is sold more than a hAs been haile<l ns "The F.\vls !hou~ht 1 could W"ite songs. I til'l~on Beach P I a y house 7:30 fJ l11n1 Dr. llilcl111 "I'm H1ndling Ste Ye iace a~ainsl lime !o pr even! n1iHion discs. Presley of Great Britain." \1·ouldn 't be in this business." followers \\'ill find the next It" (R) Klld1rt is tascinated by 1 the death of an informant about to "But you can lose money. Bell also turned out th e he admitted. "But if I started iss ue pa rticularly interesting. briallt, cap1b!t ladJ doctor who is gt~e evidence. rven on a hit record. if ~·ou original ca~t album of the nlnking records of them OO\Y, since it "'ill feahre n cover lryin1 10 ouldist1nca 11coh<llism. O Movit: (C) (2hi) "Foimula c. s1>end too much for the talent musical "God.spell ." \1•hich soon I wouldn't know \\'here story on the playhouse's nC\\' PtnnJ Fuller 1u1sts. 12/leirvt" (adv) '66 -Fieduit-0" promoti on." said Uttal. "'°" the industrys Grammy rnv next bottle or. nli lk \vould season opener. ' ' Ca c I 11 s Cl) Hop•'• HllHI Suflord. Chris H!wl1nd. "The things that count in this A\vard. ~ roming from.'' Flower," and its leadini; Indy. ! Gent Bfldle~ must b1r11ln lor the m Musiul ....._ ----ic , AN'l'Ot«>Nl'I. a TM Mwttllllftl ''Oeldloek" (R) ED An Amertun f1rnlly I --- return of ple111 !or 1 new elee ,,..- '"'"pmnt n woll n l0< hlsp•rt-l~l00 hlk B"' 1* * • IRiirC * LEVI !1 IABRISll. IE ner's Iii•. (6l One Step lltr1n• I Jt M C'fl:R lJ!'C ~ ----~ ::.~=bo< !l!~::.~:-;:::,:.i. ~ .... Ii rw HEAD«tUARTERS ! ~ POln Q CJ Ml!Mo• $ Ml'lil: (C) (211i} €D Acamp1n11111 "f'" ..,... -~~~~r':s:v~:,;~=tt 00 i!•!::mH•.. ! Y.'~ PARKING · LOT SALE ~0, NE, £i ,-m-.-- mTIMt ... m "·~""'' * f09. m1n.,.1 m•""'~"''""'"' ,.._ CONSOLIDATED FROM ALL STORES fl!) Ac:ciM Chtullt "Esw1mm aJ Morie: "lahnrry Kol>odr" (dr1) "f'" Chams" '60 -Aldo RaJ, William Btndi-. l* (SCHOOL STARTS IN 2 WEEKS) iC ~ All nttAJllS MANN THEATRES !!!I -""" Mlto"lt. Jt. ,. 'f(l COOllO IT lfllM•"'""'~ ll:IS!E~ .... ,. 1 STARTS FRIDAY, AUG. 31 THRU SEPT. 3 ! ..... GIUTOOH t:OlllCIJ Till WIHlltt (R) ~hn·BoJ 11:301J (j)CBS Lift Mowit: (C) "Doc-"'f" -,.. :·;!::~i~~r1,.~~::~!::lrA~I~~ ~:rt~~~l~~l~b~~~a)T~:l~f.-Rich•r• .. 1 * All Reduct'1ons 40% to 60% off * t.' 5A~::~~,;~JS flll\S 1w1y from homt end tt11 Wll· Q !19J er;) JohnnJ C11 s111 Jotf ..,..-'"?' tons like her In. Bishop is guest host. (X) ~ CJ a;) i lflC1AL I C}'(lt of utt 0 Morie: "Deputy M~1'1hll" (wes) ..t_ i Feu P1mr stars In this special 'SO-Jon Hall, Frances L~nfford. """ ALL MERCHANDISE FROM REGULAR STOCK ~~'Jn.. which dr1m1tizts th• 1.1nendin1 rv· O (ii W1r ind Ptm Conclusion. lf-. ->'J!.'ffl! olution of llfe bJ 1oeusin1 on the m To Tell th• T111th * NOW ~ 'J>a birth 1M anMh of I hone. 12:00 00 M1rsh1I Dillon I* JUST FOR HE R!! $ 99 • 0"""' tCI t2ll<) "'""' loto l'J Mm" ft) ·~'"""' c'"' HUNDREDS OF NO-IRON PANTS WERE $1 0.00 2 .>. Spact" (sci·fi) '70-Ntjo 110· bgMs" (adv) '69-Richard Cont'9 * 5 COLORS ..,... llGULAI NtclS 0 (}) aJ I IHCl!LI ~ ...... Rory Calhoun. * iC Aff1ir '"Colle11 football 73 A look m Alfred ffikhctck "°tsenb ....._ iC al the 1973 colle1e lootb1lt season ~ "f'" ~ br members ol the foo!b1U Writers 12:30 m M~rif: "TII• 'Lone MtmolJ'" I* NOW '"" As.sociitiol'I of AmtriU who wi11 pk.II: (dra) ~John Mills, John McCll· lt-t th• wirlous conlenn'ICI winners, the tum. .....__ FOR HIM AND HER!! $399 ~ "' '" ..... ;, "' "'""~ "' 1,oo moo1IJ ••n .... COTTON TOPS FROM KENNINGTON WERE $7.00 lo $10 ~ the prob1bl• Heisma" Trophy win· e Hipwty 1'atrel I* ' AND OTHER FAMOUS MAKERS ~ ner. N1'!fltd by Chris Schenkel, 1:30 1JONrtn * (Jfor $11) .._ i' Bud Wllktn50fl ind OutlJ 01u1herty. z·30 m All·Mipt Sllow: .. fire M1id1111 lt i' @)I lflCIAL.1 LI •wflhe hople · el Outer $91Ct." "Sjl,smullt1 Re· I ------------------------------------~ first of 1 sene~ of pro1r~111J focU$· tums" lt-NOW ~ in& on the Meuc1n·Amenc1n pop1,1. .....__ ~ lltion end their problems. 1:45 £1 MO¥it: "The l.ollltlJ Nin" (wts) 1 FOR HIM AND HER!! $599 ID fftc•n'i Heron '57-Jack P1l1nce, Anthony Perklnt. ..,.-THOUSANDS OF CORDS AND lllh•lo1 I!"""" 011m"" l:IO O M°'": ..,,_. fd<•l '58-* BRUSHED DENIM PANTS PLUS WERE $10 to $12 fB LI Sentn "°"" James Best, SllSln Cummin1s. ....._ TOPS TO GO WITH. it ; (2 for $11) Friday ~mME MOVIES 1:00 m (Cl •it11t Mldnipt Kiu" (mus) Jt. '49--Mario L1nz1, Kathryn Gr1ylOl'L ~ 1:30 O "'Ti111t U111ir (dra) 'S7-Rlchir4 Wldm1rk Richard B1seh1rt 3:00 00 "lllt 0 Wolf M111" (Ml) '41 -* Ct1ude R1lns. Lon Chaney, * Qj "hp of Wine 11141 Rua"' Coll-lt ti. (dl'I) '~Jack Lemmon, LH .. Remkk. N1111t II Ille Q11111. ,.. 3:30 0 "Ulthtr S.krf" (d11) '56-Johll .....__ Dtrtk., Pal.II Dou111s. ..,.- JUST'FOR HIMI! SHORT AND LONG SLEEVE BODY SHIRTS AND SLEEVELESS SWEATERS FROM KENNINGTON FORUM AND IMPULSE FOR HIM AND HERi! THOUSANDS OF BAGGIES I 0 COLORS FROM MALE AND ENCORE WERE $13 to $15 WERE $1~ to $f 6 4:00 e "W•l'Alll ... 1'itr tr (dr•l ·50 I* -Rol>t11 Ry1n, t111ine OIJ. Jt 4:30 IJ) $11111IS10AM lblin1 lf-,--------------, KOCE, CHANNEL 50 * LEVI HAND $1:!99 SPICIAL HOUU Bush Shorts t.J WERE $1.00 NOW • Mister lrltches 600 W. COAST HWY. 642·1074 NEWPORT HACH I NEXT TO MeDONALOS I FRl./SAT. SUN./MON. ,_, 10-6 Come early for the best selection AND LOOK POK THI NAME HANDS LAY AWAY 121e<$1ll ....... cur AND SAVl GOOD FOR . . . ON ANY PURCHASE I IXPIHS sm. 4TM) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . .. . .. . . . . . . . _., •ltOWtt!SlAUGKRl'S BIG RI P-Off !ll MIW"UT II.MO 1U fl! DUEL Of lHE IRON FISTS I •flCOlfl °'" ... ,, ol ~non 511.i21i ONIY OIJVl·IN !llCIWIHG! JESUS CHllST SUPllSTAI ·ai • SILENT IUHNlljG ~I N•.,OO•I r,.. •• , 11 lll~t• St tot Witt MACKl\W~..,; n11"!~i:&miT1 PAPIK MOON "I HA1at.'r'1"':ruo1 ,..,· • Who'll Be First • ID ~~ . . . Chinall \ •• • . . Thursday, August JO, 1973 * OAILV PILOT 2 · · J'oulh Coast Repertor;' IM'4H HIT! "CATCH • 22" I.MT l WHKSI American TV Networks Seeking Pekirig News Bureaus '~ •• easily the best movie so far this Yea.If -Steoh.., Fe1be• W!D. TNRU t:UN. 1U7 HIWl"OltT, COSTA MllA l'Olt ltlSell\IATIONS, CALL -..... 1.S -- CINEMALAND & SDUTHCOAST #2 WEEK DAYS 1 & 9:15 Sii-SUM-MOM 1ol5-4'35·1'0D I s,15 NO RESERVED SEATS MATIHl.IS TOOAYll ORIMGE 111 show starts dusk llSp · "LEGEND OF FRENCHIE KING" $1 .00 Til 2:30 AT WALK~NI l(ids Like To Ask Andy l[()tN(llffi• PlUS ~ IYAN O'NIAL IN "TIUEF WHO CAME TO DINNER" "JF.SUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR" PRESENTED IN STEREO ·~· ......... . • • • . . . . -. . . " 1 1\l\f\l f\llK •,. > O A' ~, J\V' .:. "' ! . ' . ' Gto'R6['c~m FAYE DUNAWAY JOHN MILLS JACK PALANCE OKL •HUMA CRUDE • By JAY SHARBUTI' NEW YORK (AP) De•plle the great leap rorw~ In Sino-American relations there may be a Jong wait ahead for the three U.S. television networks that want to establish permanent news bureaus in Pekin,. The most optimistic forecast comes from Elmer Lower, president of ABC News, who recently returned from a three-week "working vlslt" to mainland China. "It's at least a year away," he says, keeping his fingers crossed that ABC will be the first a1lowed to set up shop in Peking. The com p etition among ABC, CBS and NBC to be the first is intense. Las t April , the networks' high-level campaigning began with the China visit of William S. J>aJey, board chairman of CBS, and Gordon h1anning, a senior vice president of CBS News. ,. 111ESE WERE followed on July 20 by U>wer: Leonard H. Goldenson, board chairman of Ameri~an Broadcasting Com- pany, Inc.; and Desmond Wong, a Chinese-speaking ABC News film editor here for 14 years . Top NBC officials have been trying to arrange a similar vi.sit, but NBC SiYS there 's no word yet on when they'll be allowed to go. Lower's party left China on Aug. 10 with an agreement to exchange tele vlaion newsfHm , documentary and sports pro- grams and personnel. But no Peking bureau was in the agreement. He safd officials or China's Central Broadcasting Bureau , when aske.d about the matter, said there were problems of finding bolh housing and translators for an AmericM ttlevlsion news team. 11So the net efrect of what they were saying was, "We'll give It fu rther consideration.' and the way l translate that ls, 'No, not for the present,' " L<iwer said. HE SAID they gave no in. dictation or when they 'd allow any American news bureau to set up shop and "I do.n't think they know when they'll do it. 1'While they gave these reasons, 1 heard another possibl e reason from people who've made the same request and from people who see it from arm's length -not all of them in broadcasting. "They say that at this delicate stage of U.S.-Chinese relations. the m a i n 1 a n d Chinese offi cials may not want three American networks. the press associations and perhaps a couple of newspaper specials .nm.nlng all around the country doing highly competitive dally reporting. "SO THAT may be a reason ," U:>wer said. "They may prefer to play this game on rotation -letting one new s team in for one assignment, letting one In for another. And actually, they're doing pretty good with that so far." All three networks say they're continuing to negotiate with the govemment o f mainlan d China for permission to set up full-time • • NEW YORK. TIMES. news bureaus !here. But it ap-EXCLUSIVE ~· pears mu ch patience will be I I I~ needed. ORAN GE COUNTY ~ ...... ~, .. ~ 1 "They (tbe Chinese) told us '-'•••.,.,531.un fHGAGfMENT l . c ..... , .... :~!1~~ there'd be no news bureaus forl ~lllli1'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ some time to come," says[~ NBC News' president Richard Wald. And, he added, they didn 't specify h&w long "some time" might be. Fo1·ei9n Sales Specialist ON STAGE IN PERSON New Leadership for United Artists LOS ANGELES (AP) - La st week United Artists toss- ed a party at Chasen's for its new pl'i!sident, Eric Pleskow, and the restaurant was jam· med with stars, directors and producers. No wonder. As boss of one ol the film industry's giant com- panies, PJeskow can wield make-or-break power over the fugures of hopeful f i I m makers. Some of the town's wheeler-dealers are puz:zied by him, since he represents a departure from the traditional film company president. Unlike others who have risen througb production or theaters, VieMa-born Pleskow has spent most of his career in foreign sales. He has served United Artists i n Johan- nesburg, Frankfurt and Paris and for 10 years has been in charge of the international market . "1 realize that I am suspect," the executive said in an interview, "but United Artists won 't be shifting its emphasis to the e x p o r t market. A film conpany can't live without the American market." PLESKOW, 49, remarked that the balance of receipts of foreign vs. domestic remains about SG-50. "But there are di.screpap- cles," he added. "The return from 'Fiddler on the Roof' will be about 4 to 1 in favor of domestic, largely because of the aversion to musicals in the big markets of Italy, France and C.nnany. "Jn the case of 'Man of La ,.fancha,' the ratio is about ~ ·40. The onJy exceptioo to the musical rule was 'West Side Story,' which had a SG-50 split, apparently because it has an intemati(Jl&I appeal.'' The James Bond pictures began with a rate of 2 to I in fa vor of foreign receipts, but now the split is 50-50. There can be no doubt that the Bonds ORIGINAi: AND UNCUT f'RANcolJ:mRE ........... ROMEO .rJULIEf are gilt-edged for Uniled Artists. "ROGER MOORE has been accepted as th e new Bond, both beer . and abro ad,'' Pleskow remarked happily. "In Japan, 'Live and Let Die' is on its way to becoming the biggest grosser in the series. The Same is true in the United Kingdom and Hong Kong." Moore is signed for more Bonds, the next one to be "Man with a Golden Gun." Pleskow admitted th.at the film business is faced with two Hollywood. He predicts a and devaluation o( the dollar. return or filming to this coun· Said he: "This business will try because of inflation abroad survive and thrive." "HIAYY TUfflCl° lXI "WHAT DO YOU SAY TO A NAKED LADT7" "SOUND Of MUSIC" HO RESIERVl!D SE.I.TS Wltti J11Ue Aitdrewa ... "SCORPIO"' major problems: 1. rising in-"LIVE AND LIT DIE" terest rates and 2. the "THE MEc:'A'NIC" IP'G) Supreme Olurt's ruling aUow- ing kK9l authorities to judge "P'APER MOON" (PG} obscenity standard!. ..,. " 'th the "HAROLD & MAUDE" W1 prime interest rate at 9 percent, that "FUNNY GIRL" represents a rise of SO percent And this year," he said . "That ls "Owl altd rile l"lluycot" IPGJ very hard on the f i I m ~~====:;:=~~~=~~~~=~~~~~:_! business, because a 100vie takes at least 18 months from conception to release. I f you're fortunate, you might get your money back in 2Y.a yea rs. So an investment in a $1 million picture can end up costing $2.6 million ." ABOUT THE obscenity rul- ing : "United Artists has never made an obscene picture. But we are concerned that the rul- ing now permits every Tom,, Diqk and l;lany to judge wbat is ~. The whole thiqg needs ciariflcation." Despite such P r'o b I ems, Pleskow rejects the "dooms- day atmosphere '' in For Weekender Advertising Phone 642-4321 _,_,. .•... ,,_ . ~Indlan oo---GAMER ......... I .ep.t . I CJo1Jr {f!lc;'~ .. 1191.) ll:tS HI 2:"'·"" .1.00 ·:: Jim Brewn "SLAUGMT£R'S BIO RINflll'' "DUEL 01' TMI! IRON f'llT" a.tfl In c•1 IRI "NIGHT WATCH" "LADY ICE" . lltll In Colorl IPGJ ,_ LMlllllM "Bill Y J.l.Ck" "'* "-'5r Of~" ....,_,,..~-Cl ·-.... WllBIAm·llYllC.--- I WILLIE DAVIS • CAPTAIN OF THE L.A. DODGERS WILLIE'S BASEBALL CLINIC ASK QUESTIONS AND HAVE A GREAT TIME-EVERYONE WILL RECEIVE A WILLIE DAVIS BODKLET-HPW TO BAT PLUS A SPECIAL FEATURE: JUST FOK YOU "A BOY NAMED CHARLIE BROWN" ALSO COLOR CARTOONS in both theatres this FRIDAY AUG . 31st AT 12:15 ONE SHOWING ONLY AT EACH THEATRE ALL SEATS ONLY 75 c nmll R06E~f 2nd AT BOTH ""°'"' EDW ARD S I\ I \I\ I f \ I f K ".l.~~1J O Al A [I A~~ ')''AV!',,\• ?19 .. 14 1 • • • • i.10 ''''"" ~..... .1 ' .... ·.···-·~··~'''- 'THE CANDIDATE" !Ml DAILY MATINlll • IOfM THU.Tai Cl\ I \I \ I f \ I f K HAPtQll AT Al "'V ) lQ)TA i...f~A • l1')-l l °'I \ • • r I l I I i 1 ,~------· .. 28 DAILY PILOT • Thursday A.ugust 30, 1q73 ' • Ul"I Tti.P~llM ROME ARRIVALS -Actress Elizabeth Taylor and I Jenry \.Vein berg, a Dutch-American business1nan tleft), arrive moments apart for the location shoot- ing of a new fiJm in Rome. \Veinberg has been ru1nored as the new ron1a nce in ~'liss Taylor's life. Ri chard Burto11 Still Loves Liz NEW YORK (AP) -Actor Richard Burton swore anew his love for Elizabeth Taylor as he arrived in New York with a lawyer: f.riend who said the couple prob- ably can't reconcile differences. Burton, Miss Taylor's husband for nine years, tried to put down talk of a divorce Wedn.esday by asking, "What divorce?" and by proclaiming: ''She's absolutely adorablei I love h er." But his companion, lawyer Aaron Frosch, to1d news· 1nen: "I don't expect them to be reconciled." Frosch said he wa s not handling the Burtons~ marital 1natters himself, but Burton was expected to visit the Frosch house on Long Island while on a two-week res· pile from movie-making in Rome. Miss Taylor is in Rome acting in another film . Burton said he was able to get free because his dir· ector, Vittorio DeSica. is ill. A spokesman for thf Burtons announced in New York July 31 that the couple would seek a divorce in Switzerland, the country of their legal residence. Is Tl1ere a Need? Orthopedic Plan Gets OCC Study By JIUOI NIEDZIELSKI ,. Orange Coast College study· \;ng t h e possibility of starting a special program for I h e o r t h opedically han- di capped. A survey is under v•ay to Ne,vton Set For Retrial On Weapo11s OAKLAND (AP) -Black Panther Party founder Huey P. Newton will' be retried on charges of battery and car· rying a concealed weapo.n, Deputy Dist. Atty. Alex Selv1n of Alameda County says. The first trial ended in a hung jury Monday when jurors voted &-2 and ~I for conviction on charges that Newton, 30. and his bodyguard, Robert L. Bay, 29. beat former Oakland disc jockey Alonzo !\filler. Selvin said 1he charges could carry penalties of !>ix months in the county jail or a $1.000 fin e on each of the l\vo counts. The charges stemmed. from a 1972 incident in which l\1iller sa id he was beaten by Newton and Bay in a nightclub here. Selvin s8id the new 'lrial date would be decided at a hearing Sept. IL ' • determine \i:hethcr there is a need for such a program, ac- cording to OCC staff member Thomas D. Clancy, who estimates there are 750 to 1 . 2 o o orthopedically han· dicapped people in the Coast Community College District. "WE ARE TRYING to discover how many of these people, with help, would like !o return to school,'' he says. If a sufficieni nwnber ex· presses an interest in at- tending OCC. Clancy says the program can be started in February. "We feel there are many o r thopedically handicapped people between the ages of 18 an d 80 who would like to return to school. but find it ex· lremely difficult under the present circumstances," he maintains. "We want to offer them the help and assistance they need to return to the classroom.·• THE OCC CAl\JPUS is suitOO for the· orthopedicall y han· dicapped because it is a "one level" campus. 1\1any schools are multi-level and cannot adequately accommodale han· dicapped students, according lo Clancy. "If "'e discover there is a need for this program, only a few minor improvements will have to be made on the cam- pus. Ramps will be built for whee] chairs and special park- ing and lavatory facilities will be constructed," he says. Student attendants will also be available, if desired, to help the handicapped students to and from class. Clancy, asks tlujt interested persons contact him al 834- 5638. "\111EN A PERSON calls we will set up an appointment to visit him at home. We will want to find out what specific problem keeps him out of school and what eUort it will take on our part to enable hhn 10 .:ittend classes," Clancy says. "Persons calling us will be placed on our inailing list to receive progress report& ahoul the program. We will also be able to .arrange s p r I n g registration app:rintmcnts for our callers ... I • • Tru-Test 19-lnch Econo Mower Briggs & Stratton 3 H.P. motor, told·down handle. Model 1S1 -93. 6" wheel's . · 4995 Barbecue Electrically With Electro-Grill Rot isserie e1110 •.•.• 20. 9 5 With patio stood •..•. 129.95 Withpatio<a•t .•.... 134.95 ' I ' Scotts 'Push Silent' 16" Lawn Mower Super quiet so you con even use it early in the morning. Stay sh arp blades, durable wheels. 5M3 . 5295 Attractive Porch Light Smorl sty ling ot a budget price. With clear fluted glass, rustproof block fini sh. 1" -----=--~ -----------= --~·· ~==-----' ..: ...,, .- Aluminum Moulding and Trim Pieces EK.tru ded oluMirium mould- ing is ide-al 'for kitchen, bothroo m, table tops . cobi ntl:IS. Anodized" p r pol· ished finish . l·ppl, 'SO% Limited OFF . Screen r>oor With . 3 Vertical hrs Nbturo/ Ofum ' ~,, thic~ F;!u:hb:' flrtfsh with krckpfote 1 1__ r Ond 1." h ~ · Tl(wd• ..-~ Ordwore. .. ..,s tlec•$SOry . ... , .. .... • • Rima Hardware Will Be CLOSED Labor Day September 3rd. We ere 9iving our faithful employee~ Monday off -"Heve a bell y'all." Be ready to spe,;d your money Tu esda y, Wed- nesday end Thursday. Adiu~table Patio Umbrella Provides welcomed shade when you need it . Assorted bright prints on durable fabric. Tru-Test70-lnch Time Saver Mower With big 3.0 H.P. Briggs & Stratton engine! Rolls on 7 inch adjustable rubber wheels. 2S·203. 5995 • Amber Glass Swag With Diffuser Elegant amber g loss globe gains added impocf with its brass diffu ser for jusl the right light, New Spray-Aire fb!Jcet A tfac~ment Unique trip16 'action ... swings; spray, and aerates. Reaches corne-rs qf sink. Fits most sp::iuls.: 1?19 -. • •• Sale Prices Good Thru Sept. 6 'Doorkeeper' Garage Door Operator Opens and closes your go·. rage door elect ronically. Safe, quiet and easy to in· stall. 1/4 H.P. motor, safety stop. 99aa Waste King Food Waste Disposer The ~osy way ' to BBQ ... 120 V model allows you 10 plug in ond dial your !.el· ting. Provides genuine ·smoky g ood barbecue Flavor . · ' Sonoi."' ,, ... SANTA ANA l okH COSTA MESA · " GOAIAITEED llUM,_llUI••• .... .-n0to111.. -~---Tlf ("8 01t.-T01t'I' Tt:•,.r:O "" ...... •YOU SAVE MONEY .... THE FIRST PRICE MARKED ON THE MERCHANDISE INDICATES THE PRICE FOR COMPARABLE QUALITY .... •THE SECOND PRICE IS YOUR COST •YOU SAVE THE DIFFERENCElll •AMPLE FREE PARKING ADJACENT TO ALL STORES •LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES ON EVERY ITEM ....... EVERY DAVI -- , . . COPYRIGHT 1tn •EXPERT SERVICE AND ADVICE ......... BY QUALIFIED PROFESSIONAL SALESCLERKS •8400 PAINT AND DECORATING ITEMS •EVERYTHING ALWAYS SOLD WITH AN UNCONDITIONAL MONEY BACK GUARANTEE •SERVIN HE PUBLIC FOR OVER 34 YEARS • WINDSOR@ 1'4'fl. ASBESTOS 'OURPRICE 119 HEAW DU11 OUR PRICE FLOOR TILE ~ <i~ ;,. ~ •34" x 70" age COST THE U.S. GOVT. OUR PRICE SPECIAL PURCHASE "' ,r::-/,/ ..ti 100% COTTON OVER PAt.lS .. so. . YD. COMP. RETAIL 1.49 •WATERPROOF•BRIGHTORANGECOLOR • •MARBLE PATTERNS . 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GAL. •1 HOUR DRY •CLEAN.UP WtTH WATER •BRUSH OR ROLL BRIGHT WHITE & COLORS SH~DDED POLYFOAM OUR PRICE 2 LB. PACKACE .c.~~~.: a9c 39C 12 OZ. AEROSOL CAN 'SPR.J\Y Et.lMEl ~ OUR PRICE 39· C 1 --t•TOUGH & DURABLE , '"··· o HIGH GLOSS• FAST DRYING· • . COMP .. RETAIL 79c fi~z. • CAN •. PAit41 TtliNNER . C ~ OUR PRICE JN YOUR METAL GAL. CONTAINER ;,.N!.~~!Al ORDER. NOW ~~:CKOZITE® FASHION TONES "OLEFIN PILE JdRCES ® TUF . • LEVEL LOOP PRINTED CARPETING OUR PRICE •FOAM BACKED OUR 399 •FOAM BACKED . SO. •COMMERCIAL GRADE ' YO, oSMART COLORS & PATTERNS 469 :f..~~~:~o;.",;'TURE CAR' PET PRICE so. =~~~~;:1~~~~ INDOORS ® ;0~~~~LL~i:;;R ~;OcKOZITE1.J\WNSCAPE Lc~'E IN S COMP. RETAIL 7.95 I ALL WAL .... R G OLD IN 2 ROLL BOLTS ONLY • SOME IN-STOCK AND OUR 4ee . DURABLE PRICE •EASILY CLEANED •STAIN RESISTANT ~ SO. YD, • 6 FOOT WIDTHS 100% POLYPROPYLENE OLEFIN PILE OUR PRICE 595 . VINM WALL COVERi•NC · ::~:~01!,A~~~./'Hs so. Yo. 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EAST OF BROOKHURST AT LAKEWOOD BLVD, · 2 BLKS. E, OF BEACH-HACIE~DA •TILIPMCJM (7141 US.1&07 TlLEPHONE tzti.•tatl TlLEPHONl 121JI f9,-610I r • ' , I 30 DAILY PILOT Oemente's Widow Sues; Ram Retires SAN JUAN, P.R. -The widow of Pittsburab baseball ace Ro b e r t o Clemente has sued two aviation com- panies and-_ the U.S. government for IS million, charging tbeln with negligence in the Dec. 31, 1m plane crash In which Clemente and four other men were kill· ed. A similar suit, for41 mllllon, was also filed in U.S. Dis!*! Court ~ by the widow of Ralaer Matias, the night engineer on the McDonnell Douglas DC7 that p1Wlge<11 into the Atlantic Ocean minutes after the New Year's Eve takeo£f from San Juan International Airport .. e .MeKeet>er Retires LOS ANGELES -Middle linebacker Marlin McKeever, a 12-year NatiOQBI Football League veteran and most ~Juable Los Angeles Ram In 1971, annoonoed his retirement Wednesday. )1'.qc'.eever, 3.1, was defensive signal- caller fo r the Rams the past two seasons, cappina a versatile career in which he played 1igbt end, catchlng a total of 133 passes tn five seasons. McKeever is a former University of Southern California player. The Rams also lllUl<lUllCed lhat rookie running back Steve Jones was traded to St. Louis for a future draft choice. The Rams also released five pla ye rs, including Rot• Williams, a third-.year safety from Grambling and Joe Williams, a third-year running back from Wy<r ming. 'I'bree frtt agent rookies were cut - Paul Bradley, wide receiver from Southern Methodist: Mike Perfetti, safe- ty from Minnesota, and Willie McKe1too, comerback from Southern University. e Durhm Succumhs PHILADELPHIA -Yancey "Yank" Durham, an old-time king-maker in the modem world ol boxing, died this morn- ing two days alter being felled by a stroke. He was 52. The manager of fonner heavyweight champion Joe Frazier, light-heavyweight champion Bob Foster and middleweight contender Willie "The Worm" Monroe died at ·1 :50 a.m. at Temple University Hoopilal. His family and Frazier were at his side, a hospital spokesman said. "He was in a coma since be was stricken" at borne Tuesday morning, said the spokesman. e Gruurisen Wal"ed SAN DIEGO -Center Sam Gnmeisen, who came to the Chargers as a 25th round draft choice and went on to start every game for six years and play 11 years, was waived by the San Diego club Wednesday, along with three free agenls. Gnmeisen, from Villanova, was captain of the OJargers' special JealnS in 1972. He started for six years prior to a knee injury which sidelined him for the season in the second game of 1971. Also placed on waivers ~-ere cor- nerb'lck Hal Phillips from Michigan State, defensive tackle Tummy Davis from Teonessee State and place kicker Ray Wershing of. the University of California. Wershing is a Huntington Beach resident. e Asher Drops OKLAHOMA CITY -Barry Asher o! Costa Mesa fell from the top five but re- mained In con!entioo for the $70,000 Na- tional <llampioosbips of the Professiooal BowJers_Association here Wednesday. Going lnro the final block of eight games after the first cut or the field to 48 Wednesday night, Asher was in fifth place with an afternoon pinfaU of 1,545. Earl Anthooy, a Tacoma, Wash., lefl- hander, came up with a third round pin- fall of 1,871 to take over first place by a commanding 161 pins. The :JS.year-old pro, who holds six PBA titles, averaged 2.13 in his final block of eight to take over the lead. The field will be cut lo 24 today with the high five competing for the cham- pionship on Saturday. The winner gets $8,000. e Fisher to Cards CIIlCAGO -The Oticago White Sox Wednesday sold veteran pitcher Eddie Fisher to the St. Louis cardinals for an undisclosed amount of cash. Fisher, 37, mainly a reliever his 14- season major league career, was tried as a White Sox starter but worked mostly in relief the past month. He bas a current 6-7 record and a 4.88 ERA after appearing in 25 games, starting 16 ~d completing two. The While Sox acquired the right·hand-I eel knuckleballer on waivers from the Califomle Angels on Aug. 17, 1972. e Tolan .Missing CINCINNATI. -Cincinnati outfielder B"4lbY :J'olan failed lo snow up Wedn es-day b-the oecoad straight day since betM il!lmtated and bis whereabouts re· mallled a mystery. 'l\llan, who had been fined $350 for a Slonlly argument with a Reds ' official last week, was returned to the active list 'J'uelda7. • c-tr~t Dispede ~PSTEAD, N.Y. -The New York Jell Wednesday placed ruJJb41ck John RiQibs, who left camp ~y ID a con-tract dispute, on the rewve tiJt with a notlllon that be railed to report. 'lhll acUon wlll cmable th<> NaUon•I FoeCblll League club lo actlnte Rlains promptly tllould ·tho 1ormer un1.....i11 of ~ star return lo the rold. Rig&lns ts reportedly seeklng a $130,000 P'"'!· West May Be Serious About Quitting LOS ANGELES (AP) -Jerry Wt1t bas hinted of retirc1nen t before but the perennial all-pro guard or the Los Angele.s Lakers says he's never given it the serious thought that he's giving now . lie expects to decide before Sept. 11, when the Lakers open their National Basketball Association training camp . ''I have ~t retired yet ," West said, "but I have given it very serious thought, more so than in the past. I just haven't made up my mlnd yet. l'.m not going to throw my career aside overnight ." The 6-(oot-3 West, 351 said money is not a fa ctor In his future 111 a player. He has one more year under a contract t!lllmaled It 1300,000. "Every play et has a lime In life when you don't ... you don't feel like you wMt to continue to play. 1 haven't re a 11 y decided what to do. "I think in any sport, the older you get, the harder it gets for you. I don't look f<lrward to training camp and I don't think many other players do. But it does take more for me to get in shape than it has In the past. "Normally I would already be getting Jnlo shape but I bavtn't worked out Ill all thlf year. W1'v1 1ot a oou.P:h! of weelu to go yet biorore trainlll( camp. Thal I'll decide whether I'll go ahead." West, who has ""'red more points In NBA playoff games than any other player, cut down his shooting the past couple of seasons and took more of a playmak.iog role. "I've always felt players can con- tribute a Jot of different waYs," he said, aaylng he believes the Lakers were hap- py with bis perfonnance last season. West was not entirely satisfied, STAN SMITH RETURNS BALL JN U.S. OPEN WIN OVER PATRICK PROISY. UPI Tl._.,. Laver Nab~ Opening Match Ki1ig Lau1iches Defe1ise of Title Today FOREST HILLS, N.Y. -Rod Laver of Corona del .Mar breezed past Harold Solomon of Silver Springs, Md., 6--0, 6-2, 6-2 to win his first match in the U.S. Open tennis championships here Wednes- day. Fourth seeded Laver had an easy time in defeating his youthful opponent in straight sets in oppressive heat and hwnidity at the West Side Tennis Club. Today defending champion Billie Jean King lawtehes the women's segment of the Open championships against Peggy Michael or Los Angeles. More of the heat and hwnidity that hung over the West Side Temis Club Wednesday was expected, but the \\'Omen will have somewhat of a break. Their matches are best of three-set affairs \\'hile the men's are best-of-five. Pancho Gonzalez, the 45-year-old sen- timental favorite who loot in four sets then 8MOWleed his retirement, called the center court a furnace and said after one set he felt like he was carrying IO-pound \\'eights on his feet. Ilie Nastase of Romania, co-faVored with Stan Smith, said he doubted he could have gone five sets. Artlllr Ashe said the heat bothered him, but because of the "anthropological significance" of his black heritage he might be able to en- dure better than others, especially Eur<r peans who "don't know which side is up" when it swelters because sauna-like weather seldom ~ their continent. Gonzalez, a specimen of physical fitness at 180 pounds, woo the flr!t set against Tom Okker 7-6 when he aced him for a 5-4 tiebreaker, ·but the younger Dutctunan, seeded seventh, prevailed 6-7, 6-3, 6-1, 6-4. All other seeded players who saw ac· lion also advanced. "Next year I'm pretty certain r won't play the main event," sald Gomalez, who won the first of his two men's singles titles here 25 years ago. "It's just too hard physically .to play three of. five sets." Nastase had an easy time with Humphrey Hose of Venezuela, a last- minute qualilier like Miss Michael. The Romanian, the epitome of decorum despite the heat, won &-4, 6-4, 6-3. Smith, of Sea Pines, S.C., had it even easier. In the first set, Patrick Proisy of France pulled a groin Jt>JScle and finally called ii quits lvith Smith leading 6-4, 5-0. Ashe, the No. 3 seed from ~liami , was extended to four sets by Australia's C-Olin Dibley 7-6, 6-7, 7-5, 6-2. "I started off deliberately to serve at three-quarters speed," said the affable Vfl'I Tat811ot. ILIE NASTASE BAGGED AN EASY VICTORY AT FOREST HILLS. • •\ • player who won here in 1968 and was rwmer-up to Nastase last year. "You just can't go full speed in this weather iI you have to go five sets." MEN'S SINGLES Finl Round Ille Nntaw, Jlomanla, del. Humphrey How. Vtnelu.la, 6-4, '"4, t..3. Manuel Oranles, Sp.eln, del. Chrli Mollram, Greif er111 1n, 6-3, 6-l, t..3. Roger Teyl(H', Great Britain, dllf, An!onlo Zugar•llt, Ita ly, M, t..-4, t..-4. Ovt Be!>ghon, Sweden, dei. Arthur c.trl119ton, Elllabelh, N.J., 6-3. M , 6-3. R~OI Tanniir, Looltoot Mount1ln, Tinn., def. Haos J, Pohmann, Gllrmany, 6·2. 7-6, 6-•. Jell Simpson, New Z11land, Gel. P1ulo B1rtotuccl, 1111v. 6-3. l-1, reUrO!'d. Stan Smltti. Sea Plllltl, s.c,, def. P1trfdt Prohy, France, 6-4, S-0, def111lt. Onny Parun, Nrw Zealand, del. J11llt Singh, Inola, 6-1, 6-8, 6-3, 6-3, J-6. 6-1. PM! Deni, Aus1ra!la, dtf. Juan Gltbert, $p.91n, .. ,, 6-4, 6-2. M1rk Cox. Grut Britain, def. P1lrklo CMnelo. Chile, t..-4, t-6, 6-3. George Hardie, Longvlrw, Calif,, clef, Frank Froehling, New York. u. 7-6,6-2, t..-4. JMn Chanfreau, FrtMe, def. Guillermo V!11s, Ar;enllna .. 3, t..-4. 6-<I. Geor;e Sffwaoen, New York, def. Haroon Rahim, P11tl1t1n, 1·5, (>.,j, 7·5. Tom Gonnan, Suttle, def. Eddie 01~, Ml1m!, 6-3. t..1, .. ,. John Newcombe, Au5tr11111, def, M1rce110 Lira. Mel!IClll, 6-1, 6-l, .. ,, 6-3. Jlrl HrebK, Cltel\oS!ovakl11, dtf. Dick Stockton, Part Wa$hlnglon,. N.Y .. 6-2, 7·S, 6-2. Bob McKlnlsy, St. Ann, /W:j,, def. lob C..nnldlaM, Ausrr11111, 6._., 6-3, 6-2. Jun KamJwaivml. Japan, clef. Jaime Pinto Br1vo, Chll1, 6-2, 2.f, .. 2. 7~ Arthur Ashe, Miami, clef. conn Olbl...,., A111tr11111, 1- 6, f>.7, 7.5, 6-2. Jllcri.rd Crealy, .l.ustra!!t, def. Miian Holocek, Cr11eholklv11tla, 6-3, 6-3, 6-2. Tom Oklter, The N"heflano1, def, Pancho Oon11l11, Lill V~s. 6-7, 6-l, 6-1, 6-•. B. J. Phlllfps·Mcore, Ainlratla, "''· Ian Crook.nden1 Roanoke, Va., •-6. 6-3, 6-2, 6-1. M11rty Rlftattn, Evan1lon, Ill., ~. lob M1ud, Sou!h Atrtc1, ~7. 6-2. 6-3, 6-2. Nikki Piiie, Yll90SlaYll, def. Jeff Austin, RoH1119 HlllS, 7-6 • ..,_., 6-2. K&n ROH"Wall, Aut.tr1lla, def. Gralltm StllweU, Greet Brll•ln, 6-3. S-1, f>.2. . !small El Sh11fel, Egypt, de4 Frew McMlllen, Sovtl'I Alrlta, '"4, 6-1, M . " lil'Y Moore, South Africa, def. Chico H1g..,., LI JOllil, 6-ll '""· 6-<I. Vl,dlm r Z&nlk, Crec::i-1ov1kl1, def. Torben Ulrich, Olnml~ t..-4. 6·•, 6-2. Brian 1eo1cher, San Ol'jo. def. Wl!ll1m Brown, Sen l.uls Obispo, 6-J, 6-7, t.-1. {I. Cllll Orvsctale. South Alrlce, dtf. Olck Otll, Betllffdil, Md., 6-7, 6-1, 6-41, 6-l. P11! Crafl"ltt, Sou111 Alric.. clef. Vliet Pr1IOW1, Chile, 1·.S, 6-1, 6-2. p,frlce Domlnouei. Fr1~. def, Karl Mtlltr, Wet! Oermany, 7.f, 6-3, H . John Ale•ander, Aut.lrall1, def. Vll11 Gw.1111111, How•rd Be11ch, N.Y., 71, 1-6. M. owen Olvldson, Aintrall1, def, Juettl'tn F•slbendfr, Weil Germany, 6-l, A·1, d~flull. Vffay Amrllr11, lndll, dfl. o-$coif, New Y01'11:, 6-<li. '"· 6-2. ~··---lllod L11vw, C-• del Mar, def. H1r11d _,,_, Sll~r SPf'fflVI, Md,, H , .. 2, .. 2. J111ul A1mlr11, Me1deo. dlf. Anlon1o Muno&, Sp.tin, ..... ,. 7-6. A. J. Stone, Austratl•, lkf. St...,. Sleget, N-York, 41-3, W , M . Andrrw P111tliOl'I. Rllod1tl1, def. Jonn Jtmet, Aintr11!1, 7-6, 6-21 6-3. Brien GollfTl..::i, Fort laVC1erd1ll, Fie., def. PIUI Kronk, .1.UlltT"llllll, M, 6-1, 6-2. Blom Borg, Sweden. def, Roy B1rtn, Aintt•ll•. w. f>.11 '"'· 6-1 , t-2. clllf RIChey, Str1tott1, Fl1,, def Gtrr•kl Blltrlck, Greer Elrflaln, 6-0, 2,., 6-4. U , M . Tome Ovlcl, Romanlii, dtl. Tom Edl1lsen. Los Anoe1r1, 6-1, 6-3, 6-3, 2,., 7-6. Ion TlrJll(, Romenl1, def, ArmlstNd NMly, Timpe, Fla., A'6. M , .... , M~ .... Jim Oll1ney1 P c, /!NJ., def. l~•n Mollnt, Co1ombl1, 6-7, ~~. I ><. Jlot.S C11e, Austr•I ,, dtf. Rl)lpf Horbttll, Swoden. 6-l, ~· 6-2. No Rules B1·oken NEW YORK -A Taiwan official says Tainan City, the winner of the Little League World Series in Williamsport, Pa., did not break Llltle League rules In its victory sweep last weekend. 1 Consin C. Shah, Nationalist China'• munse1 general in New York, flatly denied accusations that the Taiwan represenlatlve had violated age ellglbUI· ty, district size and practice time reguJa- llons. Several team managers and Little League volWlteer admlnlstralon lodged the complaints after Tainan City becam• the lhlrd conS<Oullve Taiwan team lo capture the world championship. however, and he said he never is. "Last year, even though I couldn't ever be happy with the way I p I a y • because I demand ao much or myseU, I made the all-league defensive team and the all-pro team again. If those are guidelines, then I'm terribly pleased, plus the fact that we bad a very fine team Md won a lot ol basketball games. "I feel this year's leam wlll win a Joi of basketball games." Have owner Jack Kent COOke and coach Blll Shannan tried lo talk him lnlo playing another year? "I'll do what I want lo do. They haven't expressed a _w.l§h one way or another," West said. If w .. t retires, he said he'll try next year lo get involved in b41sketb41U agail\ but not as a player. · Another Lakers star, center Wilt Chamberlain, reportedly wants hit con-- tract renegotiated, otherwise hinting or retirement. Two other players, guard~ forward Keith Ertck10n and forward Jim McMillian, haven't signed 1973-74 con- tracts and may be holdouts when training camp begins. Dodgers Bow., 6-5 ' LA, Astros Begin Four-game Series LOS ANGELES -That fluctuating Na- tional League West advanlage held by the Los Angeles Dodgers is now 3'h- games over the Cincinnati Reds as the Dodgers begin a four-game series with the Houston Astros tonight, here. It's the beginning o! the final 28-game salvo In the 1973 divisional championship race for LA -all against NL West foes. After Houston's visit the Dodgers Dodgers Slate An .. met 111 IC•l ( .. ) AUO. 30 Hou$1on 11 LOI AnQelet Auog. JI HOUiton 11 LOI ~lft Ses>t, 1 Hovston '' Los Angela 1:SS p,rn, 1· 15 p,n'I. ':5' p,m, travel to San Francisco for four games, then San Diego moves into Los Angeles. Mona.al third baseman Bob Balley was the key figure in a heartbreaking loso lor Loo Angeleo Wednesday. Bailey, who says he is a "streaky hit- ter," lifted Montreal to a 6-5 win over the Dodgers In tbe closing game o! their ~arne t!ertes. Bailey did not get the winning hit. Boots Day did that, poking a boses-load- ed single through the right side of tbe in- field In the botlom of the ninth. But if Bailey bad not cracked a two--run double in the seventh and a three-run homer in the ninth, Day's hit probably would not have had much significance. The Dodgers jumped m Montreal starter Mike Torrez fur three runs in the fll'St inning -one m a bases-loaded sacrifice fly by Joe Ferguson, the other on a two-run bloop double by Steve Garvey. Los Angeles added two more runs in the !i!th on a run·scoring single by Billy Buckner, who later came in on Willie Davis' triple off the rtg)K-center field fence . And ii appeared that left-hander Tom- * * * LM ""9111• {JI M911trell UI .. rt.rbl L.ooes 211 A f o o Linn: 2b Bvck...-If • 2 2 1 WOOds cf WO.via Cf 3 I l t Mtlt1911i1I If F1tr9U10rt c 3 0 O I Slnglelon rt WCrew!Of'd rt ' O O o B1Jlfy lb 01rvey lb • 0 2 2 H8reecten lb R11&1ell 11 • O o O Jorvttnsn Pf" Cty lb 21 00foll» John p l o 1 O Stln1on c Br1wer p 0 o o O Torr1t p Fri•• en McMelly p F1lrly ph TWalker p "'" .. To11l1 SI S 6 5 Totll1 Ont wt When wlnnl119 run stored, •• r""" • D 1 0 • 0 0 0 J 2 2 D 3 2 2 0 • I 2 S A 0 I 0 0 1 D 0 3 D o o 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 I 3l ' 9 ' Lot A,ng11111 300 020 000 -s Monir.I 000 000 204 -6 E-8r-r. OP-l.Ps Mgern 1. LOB-Los Ar!lleles S, Montreal s. 2&-Buckntr, Garv1y, aan..,., Man. CIVIi. 38-W, 0.¥15. HJl-Ballay 22. 1--Jottn. SF- Fergi,non. IPH••RllSO John tlfJ · 6 • • 2 $ Brew•(L.Hl o l 2 2 2 0 T01Ter 655532 McAn111r 200000 T. Welk,et' (W, 6-Sl I I 0 0 0 0 HIP4'# Torru l...Opll. WP-Torrtr. l-2:01. A-- 14,111. my John, whose sinkerball was giving the Expos fils, was going lo finally post his first win over Montreal after two losses. But in the seventh inning, the ~xpos started to get to John. Pepe Mangual coaxed Ille first ba!e m balls of ·the game from John, who then gave up an infield hit lo Ken Slnglelon. Bailey then delivered bis double lo left. Facelift Plan For Coliseum Under Review LOS ANGELES (AP) -A fl million facelift, involving lowering the playing field 18 feet, adding 23.000 seats and con- structing deluxe suits and a clubhouse. is under review for the Coliseum, home Of the Los Angeles Rams. If approved by the Coliseum Com- mission, the facelift would cost the tax- payers nothing. Rams owner ('.arroll Rosenbloom has pledged to underwril t' the entire cost. Increased revenue is expected to pa y for the modernization within 20 years. based on estimates that the Rams aloDe wou1d garner $1 .5 million more annually. The facelift proposal al~ has the enthusiastic support of the Coliseum's other tenants, the Bruins of the Univeni i· ty of caJifomla al Los Angeles and the UDivenlty of Soutbem California Tr> jans. Major aspects of lbe proposal Involve constructing 20 rows of seats on the present running track, eliminating the seats under the peristyle and con- structing 50 rows of seats in a curving bank in their place and building 75 deluxe boxes at the concourse level, a stadhnn club overlooking the western goalposts, VIP suites where the press box is located now and a new press box 50 rows up the south side. 1 Proponents of the proposal say track buffs who still remember the 1932 Olym· piad and hope to bring another to the C-Oliseum, need have no qualms about the loss of the running track because a new track can be built in space realized by merely unscrewing a few seals. Coliseum officials who favor the pro- posal say the renovation will strengthen college football in Los Angeles through more season ticket sales and rents from the deluxe suites. Only ·Base Hit Off Ryan Should Have Been Out California manager Bobby Winkles, standing in awe of Nolan Ryan ooe day, ·announced lo t!ie world : "He's liable to pitch a no-bitter every time he goes out there." On Wednesday night at Anahebn Sladlum, Ryan did -and he didn't. A base hit -or was it -in the first in- ning deprived Ryan of lmtanl lm- Angeb Slate All ..,,... M KMPC Intl Auog. 31 Ctllfomll 1t Chk;• $«11. 1 C11Uoml1 •I CPllc:tfQ Sept. 2 C•lltomfl et Olk110 S1pt. , 01kllncl ill Ct11!0c'nll 5:55 p.m. S:S5 p,rn. 11:10 1.m. S:U p.rn. mortality, and the ooUet-4hrowing Angel right-bander, instead of achieving . a record third no-hitter in a smgle season, had lo CUJsole hlmaelf with his third career one-bitter In a iHl destruction of -the slump-ridden New York Yankees. Both the Angels and Yankees are off today. Calllomia rues lo Ollcago for a game Friday and the Yanks go home to prepare for Baltimore. The only bit off Ryan -as has been Ille case In each of his previous two one- bitters -came In the fll'8t Inning, wJien New York catdter Thunnon MIUISOO hi! • lime and deep and ~mg dlaap- routlne calcll lor eltbir shortstop RU<IY Meell or second baseman Sandy Alom•r. But both Mooll and Alomar called ror the ball at the same iJISlant and then, unexpectedly1 botb backed off et the same Inotant. The wn dropped In, and II was soored a base hi!. "I came !!lthln lour Inches of catcb!ni It as II was," aald the aad-eyed M~I. who, In each of Ryan's two no-hitter• earlier this year against Kansas City ..,d l Detroit, came up with fielding gems to make Ryan's feats possible. "They could have given either of us an eITOr," seconded Alomar. "'ftlat ball should have been caught easily." Ryan took it more or Jess in stride - unhappy stride. "The way this se3'0ll has been going, it doesn't SW'prise me," he said. Ryan's season has been fraught with brilliant accomplishment some of the little pop fly to shallow center. It was a polntmenl 11""1 of the time. Here is a man who has two r»-hittel"s. a one-hitter, 20 complete games in 33 starts, 314 strikeouts -!he seventh besl figure in history -and a won-loss record whlcll doesn't malcb: II wins and II losses. "l lhought this was Ille year that Nolao Ryan -.Id .,lablisb blmseU as a bii major league winner," Ryrut uld alt<I bis close brush with deotiny. "But I haven't pitched up lo my expectations o the spring." New Yft ltl Clllltimll CSI atrl'lrbl •rlltd Cl1rte tb J O O 0 Pt111on cf 3 1 ' I Wiiii. If A t 0 0 Mtoll M I 0 l MUllllOl'IC: A 0 1 OflRoblnsmdll 4 0 0 Mururef '0 0 OROll....,.~ • 0 0 llomberg ~ ' O O O tp11t..111 lb S O l I ONtttlttJb 1000Mc:Cfawlf JOlj MAlourf 3000Berryc:I 1101 HtOifl lo J o O o 1t1nton rt 4 O O Mlel'lltl .. l 0 0 0 Tcirborg c J I I MIMllch p 0 O' • 0 AIOITler" , 2 2 M<.0111ittp 0 0 0 ONJl:YlllP t 0 0 I Toltf 21010TOlll Z2St1 Htw Yor\ 000 000 CIGt -0 Ctllfvmll tol 000 ... -• 1-Mldlcll, MIOl'I, Milllton, Dfl'-C:.Hfoml• 1 L.01-M ... Yor11; 4 Ct1llfornl1 $. l-P111Mn. t,NAlllll SO Medlcl!O.,IM) 1 I S • t 1 MctM11f1! 1 0 O 0 O 2 N. Jty1t'I !W, IS.I') t 1 0 0 J II HIP~ Mtclldl Ep1t.l11, WP-Medk l'I, T--1:10 A-1L1M. y or xt in lit ng he is s. s al an fl. on ng n- is or m- x- oil itc y rs. oe ly. c 's i- he ,. ve e n ts. ed he ck m- he w by ro- n gb to an u it 'th 33 51 rd 11 ao i& .. .I .. i • J ' " • • • • Thursday, A119urt 30, 1973 DAILY PILDT 3.f Grant Hopes to End Anguish • Despite Record, Dana Hills' Leon Relaxes By HOWARD L. HANDY Of !tit Dllb ,lhl Sltft ONTARIO -Wh"n you're No. 2, you trY a little harder and that's ex11cUy what Jerry Grant of Irvine hopes to prove Jn the fourth annual Ontario 500 Sun- day at Ontario Motor Speedway alter qualifying second. Antything will be better than last year when he qualified No. I and had the pole position only to have his engine blow on the pace !up. This year he again qualified in the front row with a Lime of.198.873 miles per hour second only to Peter Revson's 200.089. Apparently Grant likes the track. at Ontario. "I enjoy fast tracks -the super speedways -and this is one of the best al thnutth I rtoi't bellf"ve It Is the track alone that helps In qualifying. "The men whO work on the cars and prepare them for the race get most of the credit." Does h.'! think about last year as a bad omen at Ontario? "No, J don 't even think about it." Jerry was standing by while Olsonite teammate Bobby Unser prepared for a last minute qualifying attempt on Sunday alter following a pattern or a year ago of blowing an engine on the first day of qualilyinc. Wou.Jd be nm in the 100-mile race even though he bad an established starting position for the big one a week ahead? "Unfortunately, I won 't be running to-- day," Grant admitted with disap- pointment. Costa Mesa Football By STEVE BRAND ot tlM O.Hr ~llot Sl1ff Things haven't been easy for a man named John Sweazy at Costa Mesa High. His two--year varsit y football record or l-17 will never make fans rorget Clare Van Hoore!>eke or Ernie Johnson. But all that may change this year. S\\'eazy, the •year-old W e s t e r n ~1ichigan University graduate, isn't let- ting his optimism g~ carried a\vay but he reel~ his third year at C.OSta Mesa High oould surprise a Jot of opponents. "\Ve have 24 lettermen, 17 of whom were starters la.:;t year," he says. As he rWls down the roster, all but two posi- "tions have a starter returning, either from the position or shifting from another~ However, returning starters off an ().9 team could produce another 0-9 team if that club didn't have something else going for it. "This group oC kids bas the best at- titude of any we've ever seen," says S"·eazy. "Probably more important, the top 20 or so players have a high 8 or low A scholastic average. "It's a tight-knit unit, one which air Top Cycle Races Scheduled Friday '1'111e dee.Won was made by the boss (Dan Our~ev 1 . I woul d have liked to 1·a.ce today bot \\'e are short of engines." Just wh:it would It mean to him {>tf'SOD&Uy to run ln the IOi).mJle quali- fying race even though he was on the front row by reason of bi s fast qualifying time? "1be winner of each race will get $8,000 plus accessory money. Then there's also $125 each lap. When you add it all up, you're talking about $15,000 and that will keep a lot of bill collectors away ." The engines in the machines ~ $30,900 each and with Unser already blowing one on Saturday, Gurney felt it would be better to remain oot of the 100 ' milers. What has Grant been doing when the • DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO Baseball Standings BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS! 1K4 VOLVO 122 CPI. • cr1., • ,,...., l'ldlO, llM!tr t0TS4f Ntw ~ P1illl MIClt lllllfllt, $877 1t61·TOYOTA 4 Oil. All!lnttftc ""~' t.-i.. llHftr, CWlfl .. I 1K7 VOLVO 4 DR 144 • IYI.. llltt. ........ ....... lllltw UN1411. Whitt Ill., ... lilt • $1177 1'70 TOYOTA CORONA 4 DR 4 cyt:i. ...._ frilll ... r ............ . -.._OP. "9rttlllt ........ .... ... $1277 v I AlllERICAN LEAGUE East Division w L Pct. GB Baltimore 76 53 .589 · Boston 72 59 .550 5 Detroit 71 62 .534 7 New York 118 66 .Slfl 101!. Milwaukee 63 67 .43$ 13\0 Cleveland · 55 78 .411 23 West Dlvbfon Oakland 78 54 .591 Kansas City 74 59 .556 411 Ancel• 61 67 .447 15 Chicago 63 70 .474 151.-2 Minneaota 62 69 .473 tS~l Tex a.~ 46 85 .351 31 1h WHMMl't"tO.mn ICtntn City 3, Cltvtllnct 2 Mll>HIJket f, Clllctga G hl11morl 6, T1Ut I Oflro(I t, Nll"'1tt011 S 8otton .. 0.kland • C1lforl'll1 l. Ntw YOtk 0 T ... IY"l 0.rMt Ciwtlenct IPtr"f 1"171 11 Detroit CColtmlft t•13l 8Dlton ICvrtll 2·101 •I Mhw111k" {51ac:' .. II) MlllnbOll IS~ 1J.14J 11 Tix" (II .. 7) Onlr aarnes tdllcN*l """" o.tMt &ostorl 1t Ml~M e1111rnor, 11 "'" York ~ltYtllnct II Otlrolt ki.nct II ICtnte• Cito, Mlnntto11 11 T= C•llloml• tt c et01 NATIONAL LEAGUE East Divlskln w L Pct. GB St. Louis 67 85 .508 Pittsburgh 63 85 .492 2'>1 Orlcago 64 67 .469 21!. Montreal 62 69 .173 411 New York 61 70 .166 51!. P!¥!,adelphia 61 71 .462 6 West Divhlon Dodgel'I 82 51 .617 Cincinnati 79 55 .590 31!. San Francisco 73 51 .557 8 Houston 68 67 .50! 15 AUanta 64 70 ,478 18\l San Diego 46 84 .384 3311 _,.._ s.11 Fr111e1sc:o J. P1'111'"1r 1· 1 MolllrMI 6, LO. Mtelft Ntw YOfl! 3, S..n D1"90 G Atll<lft 1 CllketO 4 Cl11Cl""11\ J, P1t1~ 3 Houston 3, $1, L<Milf1 T ... IJ'S .._ MonlrMl CRtnllo 11.fj 11 PN~l1 (C1rtton 11• "' n:::or;R:!::7 ~~~, .. ~· ,::.;c,::: ·~ " 0n1., ""'" l(heduled Fridl'('1 .. _ Oik11po It Plttsb4.11'911 MOfllrNI 11 Phll10t1ptt11 Ntw "('" 11 SI. LOI.lit Clnc:ll'll'llfl II S.11 = .._,,,,, " l0$ """ Atlenll II S.11 Fr111Cltco ... USAC chnmplonshlp series Is quiet? "l've been testing the new formula 1 or 5,l.l00-5eries car tbat Dan is building. 1 made a run at Riverside last week and I think these cars are really going to be something. They should be tops in the sports car field and l hope to be driving one of them next season." Grant had about as much bad luck In 1972 as any driver could who finished sec- Clld at Indianapolis and was moved to 12th then qualified ror the pole position at Ontario and didn't even get beyond the pace lap. But all that baa changed and he 'll be trying just a little harder as the No. 2 man in the lineup -and for that matter, as the No. 2 man in the Gurney Olsonite Eagle stable where Bobby Unser is the No. 1 driver. JERRY GRANT • Mixed competition • 6 Courts in ploy '' 'I I • •Handicap go}l"le ploy •Trophies ond prize~ Sat. & Sun., Sept. 15th and 16th • Ploc•: So11to Ano High Sc"°91 • Time: 7 :00 o .m. to 7100 p.m. both doy1 BUY A PAJR NOW WHILE THEY lASr SPECIAL OFFER • Short Magic; Knehsl Skis • Knelssl Geze Bindings • Kneissl Scott Poles Complete $17495 Pock age Only ....... FISHERMAN: BEAT THE HIGH COST ,_li)F MEAT '' AND HAVE FUN • Steel hepd season coming soon • Fly Tie equipment ' ' Al.SO JUST RECEIVED • • Nordica Boots (due Fri .) • Lange Boots & Skis • Hexcel Ski• • Scott Boots • Rossignol Skis • K2 Skis • Dura Fiber Skis I WEIK ONLY HUNTING SPECIALS SHOTSHELLS 1 5 °/o ON EACH BOX CASE PRICE 200;0 OFF don'I buy !he $1 . 99 \ BACK . TO c SCHOOL HEADQUARTERS Gym shorts; supporters; gym so:ic1 color stripe tube so:ic; mouth gu'Ords; handball glovesi hand. ball balls; whistles; megaphones; shoe laces; speeda swimsuits ; ny- lon running shorts; warm up suits; podded knee protectors; elastic supports; forearm and h a n d guards; tape; foot powder; sweat- shirts end sweat pants, TEAM BAGS 3.95-for gym and • 1port equipment, SPORT SHOES •ADIDAS For football -soccer -cross c:ountry -tennis -jagging - boseboll -casual. · •CONVERSE For basketball-gym-tennis, •RIDDELL For football. •TIGER Alt purpose--wrestting. NEW 1974 LEATHER .IACKOS • Smart new styles • New ideas in finhh 1 For guys and gals , I • . . . . . . . . . . . . 3% DAILY PILOT AJamito s • Ora1i ge Coast A rea Courses Deep Sea Fish Report NEWPORT LEASES OIDD YOUI '74 MUSTAN$ II NOW 2:400Ww C .. t H.-.,- 645•2202 • Racing ( Enh·ies Chee.king Gals' Golf Results ...., LONG •EACH la.I-I l"lfr) -112 1no1..-.: :n Donita, lliO 1ock cod. no "'9Ck..-tl •• ,... -1111 ll'ltl ...... 1l bl•· reelldl, IO wlld Msa.. ni bonllo, 'IJ~:;;;~~~~~~:;;;~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~;;;;~ Lorraine Empey or El r\1guel Country Club. finished third in the low nel com· petilion of 1he second nlgh1 on !he final day or the Soulhern California \\·omen's Go If Association tournament a l Lomas Santa Fe recently. In C Olg)ll II was B. J. chairman of the event u·ith .\lrs. Don Lenk assistant. lllllllvt. l......,..llf UMiflt) -~ ~; ) yelaow!t ll. "' bonito. l2 G. p In ····-• t 3t1•L c•ll« 1111•. n bl"" bef1. mny ep K'.vuu 3 ,, 1•.t.L. ll!AC"M -1t1 •niuLtn: "i DON'T DISCARD THOSE fltll' TeNttlt Jftnt .... , P1tJ p,rn, IJIUT a .t.el -350 'f'e r111. Oldl ......... nu. PUrM 11.co. Ctot l llt tC..rctouol ~ O' "-wl'tlOOll fCrway) '"""' p-.y tfl11tlol l111!dell• (T1'91111f"t) , , SU!JW 8t iurt {War9l Rolin Rocklfta (l(nl~I) lll9btt si..-IO•h trl IN. °'"9 MllO IMtrl! Nwt'dll Ftyw fa t Mll RO't'•I &er Lad (Smhtll 1 .,. ••• '" "' "' '" "' "' "' ·~ ·~ ·~ s•coMD aac:• -350 y1rd1. 2 '"' o4d1. Cl1lmlng, PurM Jiii(». Cltlmlng po>IU ll500. ar-.i. t&.nk•> Mrtrrv 8•r Ml11 1Cro1itrfl R ing o1 snwr C1Uc1t11> My Piii ~ (0r9'f'trl .tJ'• kid •• ., {MIM'r\1) Straw llolo t~rtl MIM Go Al'locltl O••) THlllD RACE -UO w1rd1. ] Vfff oldl &. 119, CleLmlflO. PurM l\iOO, GOtla 81r Too (81nk1l Rodr.irt ~II Jr. (Warol lltlfl« (Cl1rl1i.ei Lug" ITru wrt) F1"t King Horn !l(.11ignl) Tripi• C Truly !Smltt!J Ill "' "' "' '" '" l'OUltTH ltACE -3SO 'f'trd1 1 'fH• old1. Claiming, Pw11 lUOD. Cltimlnt 111'1'' 13SOO. "' "' m L l111t R.ad Ht11 IH1rl) Sltckld Deck ( Dr•v~·) My 811 01 Haney !KnlGllll FrOllfd Doll (Wa•d) In a mutt and jeff tourney, Anne Teel v.'as lhe A fl ight winner v.·ith a 40 follo"·ed by Betty Spielman and Doris Handschuch in "L:COnd place. Dorothy Howrt.rd arxl Edna Kober were next in line. In B Oigh1 it was Peggy Cunningham the winner with Betty Bratton and ~tidge \\!bite tied for second. Happy Coltrin finished fourth. ~targaret Groz v.·as the C flight v.•inner v.·ith Kathy Bauman serond. A lie resulted for third between ~targaret Sibbert. Nancy Cook and Kay ~fcChesney. Nev.·Jand the "'inner in !he gross competition with 101. Alyce Hubbard "·on net honors with 72 "·ith Shirley Jackson second at 78. /lllsslo11 l 'ie jo ln a combined low net of twosome competition for the women's goU group at ~lission \1iejo Golf Club, Glenda Guy and Alary Bancroft posted a 135 net score for first place. A tie resulted for second at 156 with Jean Jacovoni and Sonia Kelly on one team and Sallie ~feyer and Shirley \liatson on 1he other. Eleaoor \\' h e e I e r and \'irginia Sexton futlsbed next at 159. lrrine Co ast :\fembers of the I.nine Coast C.ountry Club 9romen ·s golf club will stage their lith an- nual member-guest touma· ment. the f light of the But· terffies, Sept. Il-ll Competition "'ill be in three flights known as l h e ~1onarchs. the Emperors and the Sv.'al1owtaJls. Son Juaa Hiib In a mutt and jeff touma· meot with full handicaps for members of the \\'Omen's golf club a1 San Juan Hills Country Club. Dottie La.Fever was the first njght winner. Jean Beck finished semnd "·ilh Jean Donaldson third. In the second flight it was Jackie Lamb the winner with !\anC\· Hichins and ~onna \'oy1es follo\\·ing. The third flight winner "·as Anita 1itcC1oud with Sadie Elliott .serood aod A I i c e Oiambers third. Doris Tedford v.-on the fourth flight v.i th Florene Ril· ter second and Dori Hoffman third. R aarho SJ and l.ola Bartholomew third a1 •«• "'· "' -''""· " u .. ""· IU bon!llJ, • Y11llowt1U. l •f'91 -ltl 31. ""'"" " """"""· •• '''""· M OLD TENNIS SHOESll WIMI b.111. I S l!ttltM, 2S mec:kt,.i. Eileen ''racebum \\"On c MUNTl .. GTOH IEACN (M((l!llllll) flight wil h 25 with Joyce -*I 1119t•r1: 1•s cellw 1111s. 100 uollll D<io!.1, > 111nou1. t relt~•I!. ti bonito. .Ro bert s and ~J axine "A•Ao1s1" cov• _ u• '"'"'': 1 *• ,.,.1r 11111 ,._lltl._ 1H ..,,., et M Wn 111111 Tt'ller11 Mlftt. ANTHONY'S SHOE SERVICI e Wl:STCLlllP' f'U.U. e LIDO e f'A.l"JOH ISLAND e COllONA D•t. MAit ·s 1rJcklaod tied i t 29. DOflllO, 14 c1llco OIU, t.11 rocl. cod. SAN Dll!GO CMllllld..m .. lwl -Ma l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!";~:"'!!!!!!~ Jewell Kuesder woo the O •f'IDI'"' 1 01w tin'""'· ,,t -.,.lio...1111,1· 1'2 roe• coa • .a5 c.Hco btu. JI Der· flight award "·Ith 311,z follo\lo'td rK'l,1111. 2t1 11ar100. by Anna ' -SheUer at 32". DANA WHA•" -,.., •"911F"I: 1n ~ n blu. 1' DOnlta. I MllOUI. 'ICI ractr. cod, 141 --~· ... l In a match vs. par lourna-SAN "ID•O IHMI SI. Lliwll"'I -.. men'. Ph.vii;• •··'ford was the 1,.1..-1. u 1 .. 11ow1"111, :a otrrecuoa. 115 '"" .JM;U. c1llo:o tNU, ~ l'ltUllu"t, I Wiid blu. 15 A flt...... ..;_, three down ban]~ " ml( kit t i. tl rock tod. IY" .. ,."'" ' · MottltO I AY t Virt'I Ll!Mi11tl -l:M Fem Sproul and Carolynn enor'"· 1 Ung coa. 110 roe• toa. 14 \\'albridge tied f•• .~, 1Jt11eor._ IS..• S'-> -161 '"11itr1: ..,. ~vuu 20 11,. ('O(I, LCOt r«t COii. four do'ITI\. OXllAllO -213 .,..1..-1. S -!It 111 DUL m caueo tw11l. •1 ~ tw111. ua In B Right it was ~farjorie Den11o. 115 blve twiu. toO '°'' coa, • 'Ibatcher t""O down. Trud)' IWl,tiT HUl'Nt:Mt! -Ill .ir111ltr1' 75$ Booe lour '-·n and Shirl•Y t •lit"O ~ ll' Dlw tw111., 1'3 boniio. 14 ~ twl•rHUCt t h1!1DUI \\.hetzel fj\·e down . MARINA DEL ltl'Y -.., •"lllt fl' IX! ~· C'OCI. Joyce Roberts won C flight ••DONOO ?J1 1n;11r1: , "th do Pb ills F I ~'l'llooo1ell. JI' blrrlCuo.'I ?ll oon1ro. 1k WI one wn. y ar ey c1llt'O D>IH. l61 bli;e tw111. ' ~•HDUI, ..oJ and Bet'y •·'·--tJed for -....... ,_, .. COO. •1 .... -ICJ •n<Jlt•1: 1 .:lCI........... -. .... ~ Y'tflowt1ll, I blrrtcl>CI, 1) DonUo. 17 and four ciooAU with 7-taxine PNC.WHIP!, 1'1 ror-• COCI AVILA •AY tf'w1' S•11 Llffl) -al Strickland next at six do\\'ll. 111111v1: ns rocr. coc, ' Ung e1111. ... ~1.V. Arquilla won D flight •1:-:;;o.T !Art'• 1-•IMll,.,J _ 71 with three do\\11 and Betty tl'Qllt"I~ n DO<lllo, s1 t111s ' ve11awt111, " rwk coo. (Dl ftY'I lodct r l -UI \1augbn wa.S second seveo M!Gl<tt"I: 1 two"~'"°'· na tioni10, 20I d blu, XI v1flow1111. )IS roc~ cod, 1 Celtllme! • labor Day Weekend. Four great days, each with a stakes race! • Nine exciting races every day exce pt Tuesday. •. Gen'I Adm.: $1 . 75 Reserved seats: $1 .50 Phone (714) 299-1340 • Poet: nrne 2 p.rn. • Via de la Valle off t-5. Special buses. call Greyhound. A'V'1 Qulnon• (l'•O•)" V9911 C•tll•ln (G•r1•l BIOlllM Jot tTr11\1>rl) J1t1 Follf !C•rdow) "' "' IM "' "' Five members of th e women's group broke 100 for the first time on the cham· pionship cot.ne recently. Ginny Bord•·ell had a 95, Happy C.oltrin 96, Peggy Cun· ningham fJ'l. Bett}' Bratton 98 and Dorothy Banks 99. It is a 1"·D-<tay affair with assigned starting times oo. Thursday <Sept. 13 1 and an &:Jl shotgun start on the following day with scoring oo a combUJed panners eclectic basis. own. 11111buf. ~!embers ol lbe \\'Omen·s,,.._...,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii""iii"'"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiiii .............. goU group al Rancho San Joa- quin GoU C.ourse circled any nine boles for scoring purposes and staged a tournament this l'IP'TH ltACI: -l70 ftrdt. J fNr oldl .. up. Cl1!mlng. PU•M SltcO. Cl1lml1111 orlct 11•. "' "' '" "' '" "' "' "' Comt Oii Deck (Blckll) Go Floa1lt Ga ((;1roa11l BM:lg..-•1 8o.s (Tre1wrt) Sc:OOCMr soar! !Knlghl) H1y1ku (B1M.1\ Ce pleln l(le (W1nll FLttt Rullth (Marrl1) Ga AtOIJf'ld (61ntl l lXTN ltAC• -«Ill y1nl1. l '"' ald1. Clelmlng. PYfM 11100. C:l1iml119 price UliOO. Ch1nt Town (Tr11w r1J Metlon Gvv ICre111tyl Thoe E11nuth fl 1nll.O R1n Jay IHt •ll FlrecMrge (CerdoWl NIOkt ISmlllll Trlolle•I• CCIVI' (Marrl1l LIKl'I Pitt (G1r11) Alldf DoM II (W1rd) Caur111eau1 l(ep 1Plt{l9) "' "' "' ·~ "' 111 '" '" "' '" SIV•HTH ltACE -"° y1rd1. 1 y11r olo1. AIL-1nc:e. Purtt llSOO. Truly Hot P1n11 (81nk1) Pl11w Conll1>11ll !C1rclol•) Ont 6old BrMll IBlc1!.1U Sunlhlnt Racklll• (Tr1tM1r1) Sc'"t Of llmt IP1111I Ml11 POii.it Chip {WtrCI) Nevlde Dollf IG1n1) BlfDf Jal (Hirt) Jotln'I Hatt IDrtfer) 111 "' '" "' m "' m m "' l lGHTH llACI -17D yerCla. 3 ftlf akiti fo llP. Cl1lml119. PU1M $2000. CL1lmtng price i:zooo. FtllCY Wiiiow (Page) Sanguine'• Jtt (G1r11) S11lltd Up (Kntghll IC.111111 R11tu1 {Trt t 1ur1) Mf:b( Kllllln (Wtrd) Olt Mnt.,.., Min IB•nk1I SPMd Co\1111 IC.rclo11l Mlawey Tam IBkktll In "' "' '" m "' "' '" NINTH llACI -•10 ak11 £ llP· C\11mlno, Clllml119 price ll'°°- Ro<r Clllnl !Smith\ v1rch. 3 year P"'ll SllOO. Hot To Trot (Halbroaltl Gll'llltt s.m (C1rclol1) Foxy Htr..:: IB1ot1U I 0 1•1 Br1ndy (Garz.111 Qu!nn'1 AUDI COr-1 I To Ga (CrCllOY) J11Ublrll IMattud•) "' "' "' 111 "' "' m "' itle ... oirl•rl< It was a speci.aJ low net event for memben of the ~1eadowlark Co&mtry C I u b women's golf group recently. 1n A night Harriette Glan- ville was the winner with 7l> follo'>'·ed by Florence Baker 1721. Alice Geiger 173) and Diana Hooper 174J. ln B night it was Kitty Mullen the winner with 67 followed by Jean Hight j72l, Robert Carr (74) and 1'1arion Darling (75). In C Oight, Shirley Stcbbings was the victor with 69 followed by Phyllis Washburn at 76. Co sta /ll eso In a low gross. low net tournament for members of the Costa J\tesa Gol f and Country Club women's golf club, Gerry Walson u•::is the A flight gross victor u•ilh 86. In th e net competition, Ann Pappas won \Vith 75 with Fail yn Brooks and Imo Va n Aucker next at 77. Sybil Foster wen !he B fl ight gross award with 98. Vond a Adams, Greta Ianelli and Eleanor Greene finished sec· ood at 79. Following th«! fmal day of competition. a luncheon and awards ceremooy will be held with piz.e5 for gross and net 'i\'lflnen in Rights. :\trs. George Grant is week . In A Right. Ca r olynn Wal bridge "-as the winner with 28 follov;ed by Fem Sproul i;t,•ith 30 and Sally Owsley with 30~. I In B flight it was ~tarion Keeler the v.·inner with 29 \\'ith Mesa Girl s Eliminated Fro1n Softball Tourney By HOWARD L. HANDY Of "°" DIUY P'lltl Stiff BEIL G AR DENS Sepulveda's Diamond Queens ended a 'strong bid for a finals berth by the Costa Mesa Royals girls softball team Wednesday night. 5-1. in semifinal action at John Anson Ford Park here in the Southern California 1'1unicipal federation tournament. A crowd of several hundred people watched E I a in e Cooley·s well-drilled Queens score four times in the bottom or the second to defeat Deana Reed's disappointed Royals. a sensational fielding play by J\Iiss Boggio held the Royals to one run. The Queens shortstop went far to her left to field a shot off the bat of OeDee Ruiz and throw her out before a walk to Kim Aydelotte and a single by Sharon Towner coupled with an error broug ht the Royals' run across. J ulie Feenstra, in addition to getting th e other Costa 1'1esa hit, turned in a fielding gem in the second. Costa Mesa pitcher Sandy Al len gave up four hits and picked off a hard line drive in the fo urth to save a possible extra base hit. Alamitos Results Sepulveda's K::iren Boggio, a shortstop wilh outstanding range and a strong throwing arm combined \'lith pitcher Kath y Bar::iwski's tv.·o-hitter to eliminate the Royals. The loss eliminated Costa ~tesa from the tournament while Sepulveda plays Friday night at 8:30 for the cham·1 pionship. ~.,. AUt,111 "· lt7> ci.r & '''' ,lltST •AC• -«XI y1rd1. 2 yHr okla. C:l1lml119. l'IKll llfCIO. Miu OHtlt ndl I P111t l 66.lO ll .20 7.40 ~ Ll"hlenlna (Tre11urel l .«I 1,60 BtfttrflV (M1IS11111l l .IO Time -10.~. AIJ.O ''" -BIY OlklJft &M, Htctor1 Pet. Un And Of>IV, E....,.ttt1 Btr BOtl, Tr111'r A Olemond, Ce!ld'f'I Ttlnk1t. 11 •11.ct1 -a.M in °""'"" & 7· M-Uflltffllnt, US.Al. SICOND ltACE -lSO ftrda. l yur okl1. Cltlll'llr!g. PU1"M Sl900. TM XI Mu 2111 Clllpler Of Hlil'ltlnotori llHCh of 8111 51"""' Phi. RUii BlobDY Run ISml!l'll Bl11on OlndY (H1rtl Oupldftdoo lTrt11ure) Tlll'lt -l•.07. 7AJ 160 .... '·" ··~ '·" Also ren -Repld 01~lt!U1, lt lc kalt• P1rr, Moon Fn1, Trucktln Angtl. THIRD aACI -CIO ytrdt. 2 Yetr olCll. Cl1lml119. PurM S1600. T1!1 Lor>g B11ch lntern11lon11 Chapter Arntrlc1n But.Inn s Womtn. JOI Fr1z.l..- (P1ge) Whl .. Front CC.rdoz1J Blllw Donttt1 (Bink'! Time -21.CM. 7.ltlJ ~-70 ... Alta rlf'I -Summer Sur1shlne, Pap.. P'f't lteq11tsl, Jldlt Too. Sque1ll"" Jo., Coke Tff Nolf, S••h Coro. D•ndV -· l"OUllTH ltACI! -lSO Yttda. 3 yHr olds fo up.. C1almlno. P11rs1 12600. TruckHn Mlfl (Smith) :!.40 t . ..O 2.olG OH·Sc-..-Skip (MlllUd;i) 7.illl 2.llO DH-Opening Gut! (Tr11sur1) 1.«I 3.00 Timi -11.07. Alta ren -R11n Moon Riii', Mr. IC..in- dy Chergt. Sn .. lry T11ky, Don Biir'1 111'11111. OH -Ottdhetl !or SKond. f'l,..TH ltACI -t70 Vdr<h. l Yt•r S~i.it Notice-(IC.nigh! I ChUlff (Morr!1l 3 . .tO 2.SO .... Several questionable um- p1nng calls did little lo enhance Costa 1'.1esa's chances ot survival in a game that was called in the bottom of the sixth on a 11'2-hour time limit Cotl.i Mail Ray1l1 .. "' "" ' ' ' Tlll"lt -11.t7. Also r1n -Al1medelta, JOYCllJ1 F•'· Mlan;ghl BKkY, Go E!forlle11ly, Lllll• War Chic, Uncle hlc-. l'IGHTH ltACE -l5'1 y1n:H. ] ye1r decision. akl,. Allowence. Purse '2500. Osage COPY CT•e1s11••> 6.20 1.20 1.60 Sepulveda·s four runs in the "tt1':,.'~,r:.~:r: ,1pK,,~:r11 1.1° ~:: second came after the Royals Ou11<.in, 1D Fttrislr•. lD A~l, 55 .-.u'". P Ruiz, c Ayoelollr. r1 Tc-r. II Freg-csl, Zb Re;CI, cf Tolll1 ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' I • • " ' • • I ' • I " Score tly lnnlrtgi Tlmt -II.Ill. had taken a brief l-0 edge in r Ali.o re~ -Cecile's CODY• CQCIYr Girt, . • CC$1l /.le~• 010 DOD -l • I " • • • ' • ' ' ' . , ' . ' • • " • • ' ' • ' • 8 1roee Allen. Go Olck't B•Dv, the top half of t he 1nn1ng. Only $eou:veao 1)41) 001 -s Meyoress. c1ro1·s ore•m, Miss An11e1 -,,_..,:::::::l~lJif:...::::~~~~~;.~~~~~~;.~;~::::~-''"'· I I EXHll -l.0.191 COllY .. l ·Wlllll AT LAST Oes.lrt, Peid Mt.to. ',,.,. U CE -"' "'"· ' "" A COMPLETE R/V oldl & VP· CL.ilmlng. PurJt 11&00. PARTS SUPPLY '''"' '"" """"" .. ~ ··~ .... , Bay Wtr Cl!lc \Smlll!) 6.10 ~.llO Sol Righi (Morr!1l '·'° & s~RV I CE Tim• -20.0l. •. AlfO r•n -Bud Evr. Ovnamo Patrol, CENTER I Al1mllos, S!lp, Jerica. ooor1ce 8Dr, • Lll!ll Sltn, Go Misty JOI!. SJ t:K•clt -t·Burnt svru11 & l ·ll•r wer Chic, f'tld 1:ut.oo. The Biggest, Mos t Complete R/V Store in ttie U.S.A. What Hun tington 8e1ch Triller Supply Means To You! A f•bulou1 ~t"' 'from tht oriatnd up) •v o.ervi'9 ct ntt r du i9nt d IPKlliu llv 11 h.indlt •II flll~ts l "d lo•n ffDm d\mf bt/ggifl It !ht moil lu•u•iDU• mororllo!M. Ou~ full 11~1ct IHll.11«, m~nntd by 1r1intd ~nonn•I, 9Ulft'11M comp!tlt . H hll•U•Oll m cu• ,., •• ,,..,.,, •. wt.•lt youf I V'I btong "rviced, tl'li<JY Ott · cDmlorUble ,...,,,,.9 rcorn er hop our •hurtl t bus f0t !ht 1horl 'idt ID Hll!'llflOIOll Sh~l'Jlin11 (.,,!tr for 1n•trt1hng braw1 rng at Jhoppi119. A w rviq itop CAN M .,,,a,1bl1 I )(l,POO •• ~.,. ''" 1llv•'•' •• 4 K IU ,.,.~ •• If MMJI .. .._ , .. n ... I KrtlliH Vfflcle 1v,,lit1 .,., ..... IHI II Hnlr.l•t IM K <H lt!IH IU,.'"'"~d l•tl t fllflt r"- (f!ll,1111 u n i•• ••I ''''Ir f•clli11t1 s..-1;1~;~• "'1-1.,~ '*6c1tl• (llah t1 11 l6,DOO ... ) =:,111;._;•ri,~r .. ,,.. .... , '"'' ... '"' ,,.,. .. l"'' •I "" ,.r1r11r, •v ,,,,.,. ,,.., s,.rtiq 1..n 1tctt. co1M Sii Ill POI IJ.L TOW. IV NI I••• HOW 01'1.HI HUNTINGTON llACI TIAREl surm 14342 lt-c• II., ll•liflftH ...... C1lil. '2147 • 71+111 -' !'lo ,.;1. "'wt~ of Son O!-frtt~r: ''TOVt l.lTISFACTION Will al OVI •11'UT.l11otl" ntcl• Cl11D. ...:....:._...:._ olds. Allow•nu. Pur1e Sl)OO. Tl\f f!!n·1 Spotted Ber Bull •---------------------------------------, llmllh) ,. 47.«I lS.!O 6 CO G1btr1t1ct (8lekel) 6.611 4.-lll Tet CN 'I Cholc1 (Garz~J •.C.O TIIM -...... OJ. Alta ren -For n~v!d. Un Charge. Llltlt Mls1 Bui. RoYll Pt11, S•van. nlh'I Bay. SIXTM llACIE -l~ yard1. 1 ve•r ~ Allow•~ct. PvrH 17000. l'me Ori (Adelrl ~.00 2.llO ).~ HOii 9_,. !Mtrchell) Ml,lcrfi 51/n Flower (Htr!l TllM -II·°'· '- .. ~ ··~ 3.80 Aho r1n -Mr. Cult 8rllcl!t\, l..lf hlnl n.g I( Ber, E1lf Big Girl, Suoi>• Dupf, M1n• Cal, Ch1rg1hlmdreci, l..111- dla F.ce. SI IPCl'1 -1-l'ml CM & 7·HDhl ._,,1hllU7.lt. 1 ••V•HTM ltA~• -UI W"ll"dl. J ve1r olcll & 119. All-11'1(.t. Purw 5'000. OdchMll!.tr !Hert) 7.00 J.)CI 160 -"';;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;:::::::;;;--1 POOL I TABLES '395°0 -~~....,;;,. •nd up lffl ..... ,_... .. _ ....... ~luch•S..R a;'ldlw, $11.J7 lnCIUdl"ltalL Dll ea SWftce ms.a 1nw;w, $11 .17 lndllll"I tax. Heading north? Then head for PSA and Long Beach Airport. It's nol all that far. 11'1 easy lo gel ,, inlo and cul of. Plenly of parking. And Ihe crowds haven't found ii ye!. Your !ravel agent knows the way. TIRE . Whitewalls 4-PLY NYLON CORD General-Jet WHITEWALLS •Dual Tread Design • 4-Ply Nylon Cord • Oura gen• Tread Rubber 125114 G7l114 12:5115 G7l115 F.l .T. l .JI F78x1 4 77Sx14 775,icl S F7B'x1S $17.95 F.f .T . 52:.2:1 CAMPER · MOTOR HOME HIGH·S~EED WHEEL BALANCE ON THE CAR WI SPECIAL WHITEWALL 95 560 x 15. 600 x 15 59h14 56h1 4 F.E.T. 1.lt HALF PRICE CLOSEOUT Gen eral Calibrated• GRABB ER • 4-P1y Polyester Cord Body $ • Dislinclive 3-Ring Whitewal LARGER SIZES AT COMPARABLE SAVINGS WAS $3S.9S NOW •• Complete BRAKE OVERHAUL 1. 1""911NIW..._,cl.tr .... •d4 .,._lll 2. IMlllU rtie • .,....,.. .. •ti .._.., J. ''"' w.11: .. _ , ...... ......, .., ..,. ""'· (. '""'"' rtr•• ..... ,. .,....... 5, TWll•tnte.n 4 ......_,,... '· 11,.cll: ,, ............. ... 7. AilljMtltr-..eH dlecle~l nlf ....... • I. 1..itett,....r1• .. U. ALL $ FOR ONLY. •• 95 MOST U.S. CARS !DIM Wtk11 Ml ~vd••> Only.:. 95 Si1e E71·14 tubel1 11 whit ewell, plu1 $2.22 Fed ere I c.,•,1 r,. FRONT END ALIGNMENT We cor11ct C11ter, C1mber, :roe-In, Toe-out to .your car . . menufe cturer'• apeclfic1tlon1 · • •. Safety chec:k and adjust your ateerina! $8~ ... uru...,. ... ,...• wmr 1.• COMn10111l!il 01t TOltltClll IMI Don Swedlund C~LETE CAR CARE SINCE 195' COAST GENERAL TIRE 646-5033 540.5710 t ' HOURS: 7:3010 6:00 0.11, ' " •• • , • " • ' •· ' • I AMBLER TUM ~tt::\Vl:EDS ~RIOUS! h'E'S TELLIN' NC THIS IS SEBIOIJ~f 811('1< TO OIRECT1N, O&:E l'LL HANOL& TU& COMtov LINES! 'IOU MEAN YOU'RE TAKINi; A VACATION l'Y STAN~IN!; ON YOUR Hl1AP ?l .-& ... ~'llT & Jl:Fr- ' ; tJ,~~!CY ~H AT'S A S IX-LETT ER WO RD FOR "STUPID '!? ' . eo <MIR '!\If SC1<1P'r WITM TMf CAS~ DE~ I WANN'A TAI..~ TO A/11111.ER,Ol<AVf I HAVE IT • PEANUTS by Doug Wildey by Tom K. Ryan by Al Smith WEU.,I'lL BE A Bt.ANKETYBLANK &LANK BLANK! by Dole Hale by Ernie Bushm iller A S IX LETTER WORD FOR •sTUPID ' IS •s LUGG-0' , I lll:lited all day TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE Gentlemen, or you to <Xl!lle and qet my novel and to Jllbllsh It and malle me rlch and famoos. 1 ! ACROSS J Strillewill'le whip i Point 0111 t Sco111sti river 14 At aoon 11s 1• Nvnle•ieal ! JH8~l 11 Melodt1metfc , , Auto m4K:hanlc 1t Banish 2Q Amerlce11: Comb. IOtfft 2'1 Tie IMlflc 23 Child's ~ playU'lillOI 'I """ .,,. 2 Fly upward 2 Auto P•r1 3 Otencllea ) thorougl'lly 35 The whole of 3t YawMd 3, Prlnclple of - 1 right nOOOOcl •q Sal!Nker, lor t~ • Feminine.,..,,,,. • Orlent•I prefix •$ Bird IOUnd •f Tallleclolhl. i e10. •t Hebrew lellef bl) Aeaault 61 Sl'Nlll "'SM 64 Shop"'°"' 65 Fr191aoc• 17 Oailo:-l'lllired people 70 R1vrs 1one 71 Cockney'• ., ... 72 M.ade loens 73 Sugply wllh NO"' 7ot !n·be!we911 mea11 75 Turnirig POlnts DOWN I Ca11ada's hlgneat mountain 2 "What ls in_ _,. 3 Adult screwworms • F1.me•1I vehicle 5 Pronoun 6 Shut in 7 General_ B1adl1y a F•rmerired bfive11ge1 9 High c1rd 10 Oances 11 Ouartetle leh Yesterday's Puule Sol"'9d:· ---CAPS PADS CREPT ARA IS VC I S l D R D S E 8 U S H E S E P E P A T S ' ' I 2! Seed vessel 25 Cl'leese 26 Flower part 28 100 SQ\Jllll mf!lers 30 BrlOge players· word 32 A8P•d1 leature: 2 'R'OrdS 33 Ship ol 1492 3' Fl11t-boltO!Md bOIJI 35 N lck Charkl1'1 dog 36 Eslab11ahed rules •6 SlaM •8 Hospi11I employee .51 Insolent talk: Slang 53 Subside gradually 55 E•plorer.Jom 57 Actress_ Verdugo 58 Reposes 59 Hardware item 60 Seed appendage 6t RoSlerol JUDGE PA Rl<ER MISS PEACH DOOLEY'S WORLD JUMP_,.. JUMP""""· JUMP SOM• MOR!- SALLY BANANAS OIH'M i!><>I<••>' FeR aValllNcHeM•N ! TUI\ T oi.llll a lN'T 81<» e.io<1coH FeR rue e.orH •• u•! GO~~DO t:•OON Miil' iNS by Charles M. Schulz .-------~ You did not Slow up.· I fl Were you not feeling well? by Harold Le Doux by Mell 52 Deauetl.lde ' -""'-'"' 12 Alone In clus 38 FlrstBlth>pof Perla • 1 Pe1roleU111 Industry o!fici1I ~~· 63 Righ11'1 66 Skill MA,!:'IA'6 I+ 6000, t~ ... YOW&.'-' u Ke 'M~MAUHIO':? t 'THINK l PIGICl.C> THiii _ . ..,. 5 l lllefbug 13 Pheasant 6 Tor!OlM's bl'oods ...... "' 18 Oper1tlng • l ' '3 For l11r fl\lt 68 All 50: Abbr. tl9 N.H., YI., Com .. et1l 11 12 J.) n 1N (i. f.\A!:'!:'IW 1D Ml. LIKe HOW ? "" ·~Pl.ff ... r ""' ENA aABOR! by Charles Barsotti by Gus Arriola by F"'rd Joh-son THE GIRLS "01t, I never go anywhere -I )mt love beartag about dis tant places." DENNl!i THE MENACE .;:.roe. -.,. !o • • .. 'So\IE600f HIT A M(l'.le RI.JN WITH "JM~ MSES ILWlEO JUSf Nll!E 1IE IWSERV\4SCUTON' MV !WR 1• 11 l l 1 1 1 I I • 3-1 DAILY PILOT Another • Gas Hike Delay? WASHINGTON (AP) -The Cost or Uving Council ln- dlcal<d Wednesday th ere coold be additional delay In the start of Phase t regula· tions for retall sales of gasoline. They are scheduled to go into erfect Saturday. William N. Walker, the COWlCil's general counsel, §ilid a third extension of the price free1e on gasoline Is among actk>ns being considered as the result of a court ruling that has the effect of ex- empting most gasoline sta- tions from the "new rules. THE PHASE 4 regulations provide for a system of rigid price ceilings on gasoline sales and require posting of the maximum penni.ssible price on each gasoline pump. The council has appealed a U.S. District Court decision that said these regulations are arbitrary and capricious. "We believe the decision is erroneous and will be disru~ tive to the economic stabiliza- tion prbgram if it is allowed to stand," Walker said. EARLIER, A spokesman said the council may decide within a week whether to grant Phase 4 increases sought by the nation's "Big Four" automakers. The spokesman said the council would rule shortly because of Ule considerable publicity surrounding the re- quests and because a pubtic hearing was held Tuesday. THE IMAGINARY INSOMNIAC liy m1Y 81ANT, R.n Researchers are putting toether sleep data that is dispelling old notions and helping doctors to guide pa- tients v.;ith sleep difficultie.'1. Studies of sleeping subjects and analysis of their brain wave patterns show that there are gray periods of many shades between being fully awae and deeply asleep. The imaginary inso'mniac for instance. arises in the morning with the sensation of not having slept at all and is very tired. Now, It is pos- sible for the physician to show this imaginary insom- niac that he spent a night punctuated by frequent per- iods of light sleep on the bor- der of waking. YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a delivery. We will d<'- llver promptly without ext"' charge. A great many pcoolf' rely on us for their he11.lth needs. We welcome request!\ for delivery service and charge accounts. PARK LIDO PHARMACY J51 Hosplt•I RMd N1Wport IMch '42~15IO Fr• Dellv•ry Kid s Like To Ask A11dy . ' . . . ' .. s lhul'\dar August 30, 1973 K ing o f t lie Edsel Complete New-York Stock-List NIVI VOltK (Uf'U -~Ollowh'IQ 1ri Sal.. N S.11$ Ntf prim Ot1 tht ,.._ Yfl ltodi: El<."--; • r·I! (llcbJ HIQfl L-UST cno. P..i (hall High Low l.1•t (.llQ. s.ai.. Nil c111"'pt ""' . 1 u u » t 1111 r.,.1., .20u 1 " 11'1. u v. n\li+ I" I ~.,T 1»1H • •. 1 ''" ''" •l•+ P·l!lllcb)HlorLOWL.ttl Chg.C~ol11 ,20IO 411•1'1$ I•~ "~arWslF )Ir; 4' 13 I _~ ~"'11 l~D•,.1,••,·· '•" §~filt+l" C:tn11a ,11b U .. 14114 14 14V. iVi r1r11'1 Mtll • ~ .n .+o -T \o ~ •• V ,... u, •• -... 1---" .. -., .. ll"ll +1~,C~M."'11· l ...... 10' ,,"!!.... ~n··ll><+"'.::r:1:~4? I , n:~ ~ -.~1t¥r-~1t2~·· ~41.tt \,\ t\~ ....... _. ... ·-·"' ···.. _,.. i!, i-.-,..pM.Moo· .wi ,-22 -21\'11•ft T-.T'Otos .. tlr'"u----6:2 ~~· :i~v :: I~ ': fil: lH'i 12 ... -~ ... :: l:t: 1~ ,~ 1'f111 Jl'W: 21\'t • a O:OHllMI ~ 1 21.W 1~14 11',jj l'~+ ft nte'rpac:t I • II 15 14\llr.f··· .. (,,,. Miii I 10 s lflt ltV. !At+ \lo CnMPw 1.2' ; 10 • 1st;, 1• lo-. rtc1. P•Pt!' ' • )II ltfl 1•n l~Tl"N inferp,\(of ~ • l JN ~ \Ir. ~--. Aoti~o l.OSO 16 lj\-12 ll"'+ v. t tntSW l.ot 12 n• ,,.. 20 20 "'tloJ>t9 ol.:M> ~ l~ 14\l 15 T \l l'lloolGr .IO ·~ ,._ • •• ' '""'MllU1 .20 I 1 ' • .: ... 11 Sov• l 10 "' S1 .... -~ ~ tltcl ~~;IQ I I ..... ... '" -w '"f:r.;1 •rnd 10 7 Im , ... 'if~ Aoort:M ·'° I 1lll ''"' n+. 1:m+ "Ct<1t Ttl ... 13 111 n 22Mo u + "F•P 1 l:oe I' • 341 311-t 'I ! "'1111 Pw ,n ft'l t~ • + ~ Admlr•I Cp .. lo.\ili 1014 IN+ \'t Cll'rO 10 $ llf l<I~ 1S"' ISV.-1'4 F..:1 2 j 7\'I 1h \'t \'I l~~tfilt ~ '. 1'{ ~ 'ii hhlllv -~ '4 1114 10\t llM!t-1' c.rtn•lcl '30 6 IW. 13\lo l!-+ .. t":~ro C .fOo 10 <I an. Utl ,.V. 'Ml1a:,ru"..i p s 121 no-. 21't\ 22t.!1~ ' .-elflALt I. 6 II 401 tl .... n n l'i+l \'t c;;•rt•ld,Pf '90 26 2" +1 fllw.oto .IO 6 &l liilli IS "\'l+l\'I IOWt I 130 1 21 !"' 17 a AQ.ilrr• 0 11 3 f 9 ' G"'ril .iou • es non 21,.. v.+ ""Fld Flnctl,.p I I• ·~ ""' ·~+ "1-H 1:-'4 I 17 nil 7~ 17s Aflm'fl .I 1'2 11~ 12'.IJ ll"+l\.'I ~n inc 5 l Ys 1\<\ 1"" Fle2.'2b 21 • ~ »"-~ owtPL 1.• 11 21h !'" 21 Alloe11 I~ I( If '"" •~ ~ · · Ctimolnt n I 211( 1tili 11"' lflt+1-. F Vnl J.20 I S 3''4 3''AI ~\Ii; " owtPS 1.4 1 1 11"4 I f • :~~c~I~ .Ill 2t 1~ ff" ff~ ff:t+ ""Chit[ pl l'.20 29 21\lf Inti 21 +t\4 it 1: • 1 'm 1~ l•fto •. !KO HOIO 21 27 ,, ~ •• • A J lndU•lrl 7 2A t~'I l 2V. ~~SP .U IS 3' 17* !Ji,li 111'1 FU1rol(p • 10 10 It ljl'i 12'M .. 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'' +'h IV tnllol II' ··_} -~ 311-'lo 3'\.'1+1 Alblrli .l611 2 11 13 1l ~hKkr Mot 13 ' II 11'-Int-.~ Fll Ml l,QSD t '60 17¥1 16'1& 11\'t+I J-A1c111 Ahl 1 11 ~2 :11\lo """ :1149--y. ... 0011•• .30 • f 1\'t )"' 1111+ "'FsHlot 1.62 10 ,. .O\lo ~ '° + J•ma F .36 I 37 fl.ii. f f\4+ 14 A!co s111 .36 6 711 t"1 a •~t v. -.ntfl"l9tn .ao 6 l:H 1•\11 l'~ 14~1-v. F1tNClly .12 u 1026 41V. .W\to •1 +fl ,>•niie,'1 7.to l 1 11' '!!'"' 1714 ... ' •• 1 I 10 --'l' -·· , .. ChmNV 2 •• • 76 d •t. 41 '1~ \4 l'$INS 8111; 2 7 4 27 'l1 21 •PFd · (b I r 3" ~14 ... Aif::::;nl.b.10: :0 21 ~,\; ,z ~-·· '"tiwsCp i·.~ 11 I it\{ l6 21ltl.t2\;iFJIN9' Sirs .. 6 16 16 16 -i.> .. IPllGt ·fl 21 l$ -.... AlllOn 2.9tb 9 6 ui• U 'h ~! Cl'ltJPcl 1.12 32 ,, ,.,._ 7\V. 1Wl+I .. FsP•CP l.20 11 17 36\.'I l$" 361-'lotl J Cnf>of ··;; .. l!C!i_ I \06 1 -n AllAll)LI .2, 15 21 10\t lOV. 10\ot \4 CtMul .7Jb 6 S2 '1\'t 41\t. 41 \.'I+"" Fsf>MI l.SSb t 2' If It~ 1!¥1 1 ~~~ J·!i '• i£'O W' JfVi :1""+1·· Allt11CP ,10b I 6 9VI ·~· t\11 ""(:hi Mllw cr 7 14 9fi fl,lo N + ~ FslVRIE .\It 1S ' 11\li llVio I ~-\Ii. J-1 c 17' .. It M* i.141 ,,.. AHoll.ld 1.20 6 ll 2• 2~ 2J\4 ChlMllCp p 12 1~ 16 l~•-,.11/lo F1fV8k .'31> 11 42 11 10h ll + 14 JlmW•lt la 6 l)t i!tJt\ 17\4 11""+·14 AHO 1..'1CIOI 3 10 J6.4' 16\lo 36\11-\Ii Ch flntUm 2 f 9$ SI ~ 31114-14 FsWl18 1.72 t l 34\li 34\li 3-6\4+ Ito JlmWl>l 1·60 2 'Ji 22 A!l11 Pw LU l <11• lf'h ltV. lP*-.... ChRICI NW S 13 U\'t 12\o\ F1Wl1 3.07b t 20 36 lSV, lS:lolo-\4 JHn1$c ~·b d N 1914o 9v.-·\t· Allld Ch l.l2 12 1'6 3Sl4 ~ ll i \fo ChodlF .1oe lS 6 5\4 S<"" Slit Ff1hr F ,20g 7 10 10 f~ 10 +v. JH111nv i b 22 l3 ml .. ~. AUdMan .'8 21 l 31 31 31 V. l.llrl1 Cr•ll SO 34 4 .].;.. 31-· V. Fl1ht<$c: ,1, 10 I• fl-1~ m+ "'I JohnM 1 '7 2.sf ... lth-AllllProd .61 6 10 16 .... 1• 16YI l'tChromt JO 6 24 12. 11!6" 12 + FltelElll .1 2 f SO 10\9 10 10'~+ \liJOhn&1n :so 30 1461!7 11 11~ Y, ~:a~~~ ~i~ I ii~ lt\4 1a~ u\.\-1~ ~~~~ 1·:1 4 ~ 21~ 2~ 2~ .... ~::zie.n o::: if ~ 1:~V. l;u 1ut!1v.1~n ivcof~ f 113 3' '°"i; 2041+ ''Ji Attd Supmkt 9 II 4\~ •\t 4'4+ 141 CIMlll I «It! I 6t 17W I~ 17 + II.I Fi111tkot l.ot 6 4 I~ 1614 1Mi "°Jon~ vii .IO ·9 9 lt + ~ A.111! Ch .1611 n sao 121'1 11\'o 12'4+ 1lo c n B•ll '1,30 f a2<1 It 1B"-la~+ \,I l=llntk f Joi' .. I 21Vi 2'Vio 21"" "41 J-•~ 1.35 7 j fflt ,:: ffl:J ~ Allr11lllA .50 6 l I"-IYI '"° ·· Cln GI~ I 6" f 11 :.ti~ 22\<o 22\'o+ \'t l=r. Gh .~ 6 '3 l:W. 131,\, ·1~ JOS!.n• 76 t \7 16"/t 17 ~ "'!tjl:l~/Al11h1 Pl .60 7 5 h \4 1•'4 14\4-1.lo ClnG pff3° O tl011' 11' 114 Fltf>wr l.llO 10 x95 36'4 35'4 3''4+ Vi JovMlll °J.<I021 U\11 34411 U1 ~ ·-~: Alcoa 1.9~ 15 S$2 71 69'nl ~tWi ClnG pf '7 "' 1:20 'Ii 98 ta Fl•PwL J,\, 12 100 33'111 :n~ 33 -"" -It lt--Am~ISu 1.60 I 3 2~\.I 2•1 .. 2•Y. Cln GE pj ( r\00 53 .$2\11 '3 tl\.'I Fl• Sii I.XI S l 22'-' 22 ta\lo+ K•lHrAI ,)(I I' 2J9 21\11 20\t. /l•il ~~,·,·~ .1·,~ ~ ~ ~~ r-~ ~+ ~ ,c,1~e;11." 1~ ,, z30 61 61 61 + Vi ,",~~CP ~ 11 1n ... ...~ •5~ .... K•IAI Ill '"" I SI 51 1 1\11 -..., ... + -. ,..., -ll 3-6\lo 3-4\.'I 3-6\l:i-W • • r ·""" l 206 2~ 2~ U\'t+ I'll ltAI 6N>f 4\li 1 '° 110 110 I Amerac 1.20 6 3 11\lo 11 llli-.-C.IT fin 2'20 10 125 '2 .O •l'l'ltl~• FMC o .IS I 11'0 11Y. ljllo 11\lo+ 1-. Kll5trCt .SO 43 • 1\'I " -. 'h Ame rip .260 . I ll'-' U\.11 l..-+ \to CJlltiSv i 20 n 2J9 (.(i\11 '3'11 (.(i + •.I, FM(: pl 21.4 _. 2 31 S lo\ l2 + \lo KC! pr!r I"-S 15¥1 15V. ll"" ~ ~'!', H,~ .. • 1-?P 11 12213 ~~~ 7», 7»,,.,.1..1lll5'I 2.ilb 11 13 31-14 31""' 31'111-\!. FoodFr .20A •• S4 f\lo 6Y) 6\'i-V. ICltlfM I .10 5 37 l~ IS 1 ".-.i "' ·· ""'" ~ Clly Inv ·'° 5 102 12,,_ lift 11',. Fooll Mind .. 20 t I K•CPl..t 1.20 9 547 j1V. 21\11 NI \> AmAlrFI .42 19 51 20\li :lll"' 201/!i+ \lo ••v tnv wt1 33 2 llil n ·-\.I FoortMln pl • SS nl4o ~ tm-\.I It(: SO Ind 2 1 11 ~ 25 ~ w Am Alrllnes UI 1~ ttlo I~+ l-. ~Uy Inv pl 2 22 2Alo 2• U~+ h F0<dM l.201 S 11SO S$\fo ~ 5'..._+ V, 1t1n GE 1.Sj I f 20 19 .... 20 v. Am81k .20 12 7\11 7 7 -Cl•rk E 1.52 11 30'f 41 .O\o\ ~ FOf Mt~ ,U 6 '9 13~ 13141 13\~ \lo lt1nNeb I.I t I 14~ 14\lo 1~ \._ A8ralld 2.31 7 17 3" .... 3"\4 l<llo'I+ Y.c1arkOll .<IO 6 ll 17\'t I~ 17Y.I+ ~FrMpl 1.IO H 2314 2l 23 +YI KtnPLt 1.4. 9 I 22',~ 2H~ 2214 'loll Am&rcst .6" 11 271 lO :tell! 29\lo+ \.I .. 1..C ol Am S A.J 6"" S\'J ~+ t'lo FortOI .93b • • lS 16:W. 1'\.'I 16'1oio , , lttlV tlldllll 1 6 S 5 5 -V. Am &lclg .21 9 l 12\'t 12\.'I 12h +v. Cl•v C.11111 2 12 ' n:w. nv. n:w.+ ~ FortHw .3SI 21 116 22t'lo :n 2214 " 1(1tv pl I.Mi ' 17\'t lM 11\'t+ ~ Am Ctn 2.20 9 137 21tilli 28\.1 29\'t+ V.1.1ev El 2 :n 10 S2 31 30"-3111-'1 l=os1trw .90 16 lll .o.\lo 3914 <IO\\+ 111 lt•ul&Br .12 II 109 tA\'t 23\'t JA\.'I+..., ~ ~~~p11.:! 10 2? 1!~ ~:t i:U+-~ -=:~~:~0 ':1E 1t ~? "l"' 1rt? 1;;::--m ~~:= ~~ f, ,,! ffi; ffVi tt~ ~ ~.:~R :I 1° 52' ""' 1T~ 1,t;:+ ll A father and son team, John and Richard Weyrick, owns more Edsels than' any-A th•ln 1.20 1 s 27'14 :n11i 2tt11+ % c1u.11P p1 1 .. • u,,.. 11~ ll¥.i+ "" reo1Mn ·'° 2j 1'9 2"" 21 21 v.+ w. """'r .10 • • IM-. l6t~ 161"+ ~ A Cyan 1.<IO 01 250 """ ~ 23\lot 171.MI Inv Cp lt 32 ii\'t l<I 34 '"' l'"rllelwf l ,1j '1 U.. 25~ 2S"'I+ ~ lt~o .10 S ll • -., 4 . one else in tbe world:-74. Richard, seated on one of his cars he says is worth Ao111T•• ·" 23 10 '° ltV.. ..o + "'cNA Fin .51 5 4ti6 11,.. 11v. 11"'= v. FllQ1,1tlna ' ~ 12.,.. 11h 12 -ice1~r 111 . .o s 29 1°" lOl'i 101.4+"' $300, began collecting them in 1961 at the age of 13. :DJ:uo~1 .W : .~v. 1r" 1f"'t ~ .. NAt,1 1·10 .. 272 161'1 15""' 161'1+ ~ <l4lb1t 1nc111 • 1°io;;' ~ 20~ 11o ~=:~ 1:U 1f J? ~ ~ 1m-f t! _________________________ ,Amfll!C 1.90 9 619 u 24'1t :Ut't ~:a~\1 1-: 2'f ll: ~~ 1::.,. 1~;1 .... GAC,' cor,~ • ., .. 1!" 1'1-1'• lttnmll 1:20 • 6 ~ 21\'t U\11 " --Am EXPMI c·· '' ·,, • • 11·· 12 .. 1-' GA p ·-* ... 1 + lil ltenne('O! 2 ' m 31"' )iMI, 311.4 I .. 71 15-16 13-16 ll-16+1·16 ,,,ow · '• , • .,..-'II GAF ol 1.20 11 11~ 17YI Int+ 1' ICY VIII I 7( I 53 22~ 22 27llo W Am expr p1 tlOO 2'lio 2\s 2~ ... clec<11n .~ 16 lS 12W ll\.:o llh-"-G1m Sk 1,30 6 17 21 21,,.. 27\!r lt•rr Mc ·'° v 191 61~ •IV. 41\16 i,.., A FlnSy 1.iO ·9 31 16 1$\/J IS\t+ V. COlllall .5.1 2I 3l7 :&3\.1 ~ i:IV.+lV. G1111Mtlt .ts 21 S6 36~ 3.SV. U:W. • l(ldOf W .llO 6 '9 Ito/I 1914 1•~ • So wn Hits Bread Cost Ch1·ysle r 's Offer A Gn& l.:Jlb ,2 2S Jtl" ts + 14 '-ol!IP Pl 3Vt JIO 50\it 5014 SO\/ot \" G•n:to.tl .7'0 15 lff 21~ ~ l"'i ft Kim Cl 1.70 15 ,90 d 41\\ A.J m A Gns l.09b 17 11 l7\.\ 1 + * Coll&.A!k .56 • 21 10112 /OV. 10\'»+ "'G•s Svc 1.12 l j 14\.\ l• ' 14 l(l!IQsOS 30 1 .., 7~ ,.. '* I\ A Gn Int . 06 7 .. 14~ 1(;\\ ltl'lt +..--olll11$ Fooc:t 11 Jj IO'~ ~ l<W.+ ""G•'-W•v In l 1 ..... 6~ 4lt It r1th c :n • 2 1•11o 16V• It~~ "' A Gn ol 1.eO t ts 2,~ 24"'° Collin RlldlO 11' :UV. 25 25 GCA Cll'"ll 10 l3 N 7"' 7\'t It 1.. M Air! 17 37 .... 3614 1' 1\.1 AmHOl$1 .60 7 11 12\.lo 12 12 + V. ~cl Penn .20 "3 1•$ 58\:i. S6 flB!l.+2•.I. G~Jnl CIP 2 II'." 11\lo 1114 .• KnlGht N 'it jj 97 35\lo """' 35o,Q, V. AmMom .6" 3a Sit .. r. ,3"'° """'°+ \'t ColoriSt 1.0. 1 U9 11~ 14'Mo 14\lo Gtmlnll"'j I 14 24 13'11 lj""' I~ .. KOfhmo :'° S <II lN 12\lo 12"' AH me 111 2 2 200 200 200 +lo •,._1:1tr 11111 ,70 6 A.J 14\'o 1• uv.+ II. Gen Am nv .. 10 I~ 1 Iii 1ll4t "' Koooer 1 11 7 n l1 31 Sl!Jo-~ Al'r!Hosp .lB "° 210 '2'11 ,2 nv.+ Colt~IA 1.'° .. -2 1th 19\'t 19111+ 14 t A~I ·~ \! 39 21l>'o 211fi 29Yt 'lrll ICr•llco J°77 11 SO 4'l •11<'1 41~ 14 SAN FRANCISCO Sen. A1an Cranston (D- Calif.) has complained here about price increases of sourdough bread. Slo,vs Optim is1n Amlnv,.I .50 8 2S f\'o t\lo f + 1Ji ~J ~Of 1~'ts iii 121 ~~ 'fi\\ flt:+ ~ Gnt,. :1 1;tt., r1 ff~ ;m <16'1t17.,, I krt-:20 i. S6.5 311' J6&\ ""'-1 A Me<11c1 .12 6 ..n :~ !YI !~ .... c , s sire1 1 .. . 12 2111o 21v. 21"" +~"' Gena•M .76 1 13\lo 13~ 3~ ~=~",jg 1~ .l lr' l'mv. I:V.t v. A Medlcor11 • ••v '•" -.. COi Plclurff . , 62 .ttt ..._ 4ll-\1' Gne11>1e .SO 1 65 '"' IV. 11'1 I( I ~. • 10 •-• 12 12~ • A MetCx 1'11 11 fl lHo :MV. l<l'h+ rr 1.0IS Otl 1.92 9 36 26 ts"' 25'11+ ~ Gn Cgr 1,20 7 I 5 l•l"ll 1'~ 1•~+ \lo VIOi" ·--l ~ -"' ~~ oi.o~;;. ' ,J "¥. I~ 8r'+H'o ColwM 2.Vb 9 29 21\<'J 21 zm+ \~ G11 Otveloo 1 so w. 1\lo 1\lo-\lo l.KIM1 11.'J 1 2 lf\'i 1tiA If;\ ~~~~~ ~~ ;:, 26t 3~~ ~ 3,1:1+ v. ~::Uv 1:U ~~ ~ m: ~"' rJ~+ v. ~E1~"i'.~ ~ 1~ :r; £:: =+ v. t!~~;r .ri 0~ 1~ \f \~v. \f" -·~ ••• .. C.:mwEd 2 XI t 161 29\lo 29\o'o 29\'t+ ~ Gnl=OOO l.40 11 153 U jt~ U + V, LtrMi 2 QSb t 13 21'MI 2114> tl"lo+ 1,r, Cranston addressed newsmen Tuesday in a local , bakery and blamed Secretary Earl Butz for a rise in the price of a pound of sourdough bread from. 50 to 59 cents. "The price of bread is a stunning example of the bust that Butz has made of food policy" he said. DETROIT (AP) -United Auk> Workers bargainers, re- jecting a Chrysler Corp. con- tract offer as a "mockery," resumea efforts Wednesday to win an acceptable pact from the automaker. "We're not clear about what happens ne xt," UAW Presi· dent Leonard Woodcock said Tuesday after union bargainers unanimously re- B id to Ste m Growth 'Foreigners' Score -One, Locals None SACRAMENTO (AP) -An effort to stem the spectacular success of foreign banks in California -primarily from Japan and Canada -has been de feated in the Legislature. The issue of foreign banking competition has become a na· tional one and will have to be settled at the federat level. John J. Balles, president of AUTOMATIC GARAGE DOOR OPENER SALE OR ANGE CO UN TIE~ VOLUM E DI STRIBUTOR LOWEST PRICES! ln~tollotion & Service Gort19 e Ooot Hordworc Re ploceod 642-3490 Sea Coast Builders Supply 165 1 Plaeentia, Cos ta Mesa the Senate Insurance and Financial Institutions Com- mittee. It had passed the Assembly. Entry of foreign firms into retail banking in California had triggered a battle by many of California's smaller, independent banks which were feeling the competition. THE FOREIGN banks, ex- empt from federal banking regulations, often are able to offer lower interest Joans and free services when their California competitors can't, said Assemblyman Leon Ralph (D-l<Js Angeles). autllor of the biU. "We allow foreign banks to do that w"hich seems a little contrary to our laws," be said during the 90-minute hearing. the Federal Reserve Bank o( San Francisco, told a state Senate committee Tuesday. HE AND OTHER witnesses said that proposed s t a t e legislation threatened to in- fringe on national foreign policy. ~$~:1'f 1:~ ; 1~ tt~ ~:w, tt + ~ ~~~:i0~.J. :: ~ tt;i li"' tt~ 1• 'rr,~~ ·'r 'i \~ \t',~ \ov. \i1i+ "'t::~:1:r' il! • 3t Ja J""' l~+ jected the offer minutes after Am Strid .50 • 121 13~1 1:m 1J;o . ewe Pt" 190 5 2, 23..., 23.._ \~ Gen 1n11r 2: 15 u1 m1o "~ 20 t 11o l.MK<1 c 4o 5 .. 11.,, 11 n v. ~ Chrysler submitted it The of-:~::f1~ ~;:) i5 ,; ft'" ft~ f~'"+ '' t~~:11a=-: ~~ 214 l': .~ :: · g~M'11r'1:J: J: l: ~ :!v. if:f3 ~ t::~ ~ 31 1~ = 1m n'iC:. ~ f . AmT&T 2.eo 10 1439 ... \ .. 4614 •Aii+I ComwOll tk 21 106 f\!J • 9\'I GMIU pl '" 2 90\'J 90\'t 90\'t l.et•b&N 50 20 3 1)! 13~ er called for 3 percent wage AmT&Tpt ~ 61 56"11 55\olo ,w,1+ ~ cw01tp11 12 , 21H~ '°"" 10...,_·\I,; G11f:: 2.fOb • 1202 '5\'t 63111 u v.-2"' LltllM ·50 1 9 1~ " lf'+.,, hikes in each of the next three :~Tf~AT 3~ 1~ ? ':~ •r ++~ coms•1 .61 " 39 "'' 41\0 "~1v. ~of'11?";t ~ ~~ 3~ -?1~t t un ,., c M ' 6 13v, 11i.;, 13v-i+ \lo AmWalr ~ 1 10\9 1~· 11m+ .... C0n,ou1t Scl )l l'w\ 211 , Gen Port Ill 1 12 ICMI, 1~ lCN + " l.lfl V•I Incl 11 1¥1 l" !\lo years. AW!r 0, i\~ l200 15~ 15~ lW.+ ..._ ConAllr .l7b 1 l 13\'J 13'4 13\lt+ V. .., P1JbU 1 ·'° 1 111 ltft lf,,. 19'+11+ \i l..elltnfl l"'itl 4' IS 1•\.'I ls + " • -.. Cr.neMI 1.09 6 1 1"" 16* 16-ft+ V. ,.. __ R ' .., ~.... l..llf!fl•r C 11 • 19 1V. 71.'1 7~ 1Ji AW•lrpl H> l150 1$\li 151Ji 15'4 Cn.,Mt 1.42b 12 6 19'4 It It -V. ......, ~Kl .., 11 ""'" ~~ ~ '1 Lenox Jn .0 17 ll SI '2U. '3 t i THE UNION HAS not detail Awtr pl l.'3 . 11150 II 11 17 -1"' COflrtCC ,60 • :u 15"" l~ ,~ ....... nslp:•l .65 lf .. ... .al "' +I Lev In( is. 1 ll~ llfo 11~+ v. ed d emands .·~=~~ :t&, 6 5 ~1113't~1~~13~+v.conEd 1.ao10 11s 21~ 21""' 21""' ~nTsr'l.';t 10 SI~ ,!'1" ,\';, 2J14-t..evlstT•.•n 19 ,._ M~ 2'""+"' ~a~e in Am~•fl( .10 1 22 13.,.. 11 13 _..,, ~=~: f'.J 11 ,J ~ ~ =+ t' ~TE 111 2v. •. 1 »Mi ~ ""---"" tr~n t:~ 1,011g '"' ~"· 1 -1<t negohatmg with Chrysler the AMF In 1.0I • 119 29\.\ 21 .... 211Y,+ ~ Conl=dp! '"" It 76 7SVI 7s>lli+ tt. l>TFl•ot 1"' .. PO 1~ 1~ ISYt-\'t Llbb\IO .220 1 " ~ ,,~ ,;~+1" ba . , . 'kj, Aml&C .6" 1 62 16\'o 1~ 1~ ~ C F t 5' I ,7 14'1 I•~ 14~ "' GTIFlpf 1.30 . . llO 16" A lM-.+ ~ LOF pf -P4 2 .... rgauung target m see ng AMP inc .11 d 153 6'!• " 11~+ VO c:isN'C! 203 •S 26 ""° ~ un Tlr• 1.10 s 1tt ,,.,, 11\lf 11"4 LlbbY Ml::NI 45 24 ~ "!"" "r-\~ ·...:: t ts •th th AmPCOP .36 1 6 1\11 ..... •1to+ \lo consm,..,; 2 •, 1"9 ur. :UV. """+'A Gefltt(; .3'1'1 SS S\lo S\to S'llr. LlbrtyCo .30 f 11 I' . 1 • new coo rac Wl e na-Ami>ex co 31 s2 •I• •V. ·~ v. con P 171 '"" i30 ss:w. uv. 55,,.. Gen1f•r .10 1 1 lN 1~ 1~ v. l..lbrtvl..n 60 6 M l\lo 7YI 1 tion's three largest a u to :~'rfr ~°;t f ,1J 24S4i J:' u~+ "'ConP ot •.52 . t«J 6'Vt 6'\li ""'-1 qenulnP ·• 31 f1 "'"" .a"' '3\.'l+l'MI Lllltr o1 iv. 2 13 -1nii 1ra-"" k Co . h A~T~rot i's 2 3'V. 361io 36\0o-¥i Conll Alr 1..11 17 166 ll'o w. • Ga PK 1'I Ii 23 ~ 164\ ,...__"'" Lloo Ml JV. 10 1• 35 "~ ur •... ma ers. ntracts w 1 t Am'ir Pf ".68 3 ,.. t 'A ,,,.._ 11o en C•n 1.'° • .sa :u:w. 2.4"' ;mt \lo f!'":r' f:u ;1 'f'2 1171'1 ft.A ft.,. -.1~ 1..Utv El .If • 151• a\lo IO to -i:w. Chr I F d d Ge I Am1ted 2 60 "7 22 40'io 3nC (0\14 Cm C~r 11 3S 6 ~ SV. \II \.'I ,.. ,.,. n Llric:Nll I.Cle 11 1"4 :W\ori 36 '6\lo+ \'t ys er, or an nera Amtt1 in :w f .,, fV. 5 sv.+ \~ cont1co 2 . .0 1 1s ~ ,.,. a .. GttlY 1.111> 2' 11111111111'"' l16\lot3'4 1..1nc:Nt1 pf 1 'I n ,,.. 'Jn+• Motors evnire Sept 14 An•con .371> f n I"' 20 21~+1~ c,.11cp Pl2V. , . 1• •2 ov. <11~ "'° G~, ,.1.~ 1, 's 19~ lfl't l?t'! , .. LIGMI Corp 11 1 1¥1 ~ l't -t' • • AnchHC I.Qt 6 IS3 7fl 17'Ao 1~ \'t c C~I 2\'t .. I a .Q 42 + v. gr •1 -...,. flt --.• 1..1non 1\'JI 1 16 :i3"" 1i.i. '4t .... ·:1 don't think they wan! a ~=1f~ :t8 1: fi i= 1~ \fit.;1"' c::,\~vi'i,. '7 :; 1!~ 1:~ 1~ + ~ q1~t~~1 .:_ ; ~ \l~ \l l~+1" ~111::.,~~ otp1l VJ f~ 1:,,., '~ tr strike, but they're not working .e."'"' co •JC • • 1l'h 1m 13~ "'conMto .•11:1 10 n• lO't t Yt 1"'+1 G0','•'•111L~.! 7 "1 1"', •• 1',~ 11,~+ \'J Loe, •-11, • •,,1 n"' 6 61to+ "' . AP4Che .36CI 1 '1l n:w. 12\'t 11\\-v. Cmll Oll IV, I 310 31 ~ ~+11• . ......, •• ., .. Ol'WSC • 6 "' u 2:1 -1-\o very hard to avoid one," UAW .a.oco ou ,11, 6 79 1J>,< 12v. ,,,. . coni Tai .92 11 1u 1~ 19\li 19v.+ ~ ... mtrt• 1.so 21 •12 lllY~ S9.\'I to~+''-LOINl•l'j .l6 10 ,. 1 ~II-'\ 11v, .. V. p ·d l Do F A~OCp .16 1t 26 ~ lb 31'1 Conlrl O•I• I J<IO U,~ 33\li %IV-'ii Gll\0$ lncor 1) II /'\1 15\~ 1,"io+ '11/o l.omM ,3$1:1 11 21 lt sth 39 + t\ ice res1 en ug raser A p 1.. coro s s ~ "' ,.,,,_ v. conoiOI 4..., 110 51 51 s1 . i.1u1on .u ll 121' "'"' lJ,,. is .• + 1, 1.onc1on M'l s ' ''"' 1; 12 said after seeing Chrysler's of· ~~1>~1~ t'Jl JJ 3~ 1,::z 1J~ 1J~+~ ~=°un 1:~ ; .t ~ ~ 21t: ~ fl::Ln ~:o' 1/ 1j] l:v. :;~ l:~+1:: t.:: ~.!.nc1,v, ? ~ 1~~~ h"" ~~~•\' fer Arc•l~N 1( •• 41 ~ ,,,, 6*+ ""COOP Inell 90 11 5 2'YI ,,..... '29\lo t v. GolllWst FCI • 32 l»"• 12Yt i~+lli ton siG' I.Mi f d nw. 2''1fo+ v. ' ArchtrO .50 1, 53 38 !17'4 Jllto-\.\ Cooorln pf 5 2 to 90 90 Goodrich 1 6 53 21"i 20h 11,;,+ \Iii Ol'IOILI l.'*6 10 n lf\'t 1"'-"' William O'Brien Chrysler Arc1Jc En10 2s 13 5Y.i 5\4 si. . ,_, o1 2v. · 1 Sl $3 Sl -1 Goodyrtlr 1 1 1w tJ 21 22 +1 1..-eo .S6 "' 16 'I 16¥1 11 1 1 . . ' Ari)lior .72 6 11 l!Mt IOV. 1014.· 1'1 L Ll ••15 7\lr ~ 7"' GOl'"o;IOnJ .:U 9 1 12111 12\'I 12Y)+ 1Ji l..or•I Coro ll S. V. 3 '"' V. VlCe president for personnel ~·It PS 1.16 I 62 1i'lto I~ II"' ~{r I~ 7 -2 1•'14 14\'t 1~ Got/Id Int" 1 I oM 211\l 22Vt 22"+ ._ l..1L.,'CIE XI 10 161 "4'4 ).ti ~-. 1,4 ·d 1 t k 111 t th ' Ar~ Be)I .<Ill 1 15 10 w. 9~ \'t c Td ·ni. 1 l6"'. 1~ 161'_"' ... r1e1 w 1\.'I lo 1S1 n:v. 2214 22..,1" •1 L•P.ctk .20 n 616 ~ 3'\\ ~ l"i S31 as wee a e COm· Arlen Ri!O~ 8 fO ~ '"' ...... + "-c:=lncl 4 12 72 l~ \9 1f\t> Gr11'1d V .Ill f 1• llYI 11\li 11\li+ \I l.ouGt1 1.IO 10 6 ft n~ H:; '4 pany's offer would be within !~ri:~f 1~ 1: lM .~::! 1i~ 1~~ ·~~:a~ ~ ~ = ~ ~,.t1v. g~:~:vw \~ ~ S.: ~ ffl: m;+ ~ tfr*1co<': : ~ •fl .~ ~ ~ federal guidelines holdiog.:~~p1 2.j~ :· it3 hMI rs a -:··coro.ir• (:p. 99 'v,tol~1~+1~~~'i~'"1.:: 1l 21: J~ 3f~ ,;i..+~trv~:~o~. sl ;. ... D 1~1~-: wage and fringe benefit hikes ~i~:iik 1·.:t 1! ~ ~ lf4 ~1 ~ ~'!i~1·1}ji1~ ~ ~ l~"t 24..._ l~ +""' G01 ~&P i'tl .. 61 12"i 12"° nlto -t~~'l't :~ n ~ ~ ~ j'L. 1: t 6 2 t Arc co 90o 1 6 1( I• 1• It Call It'd 3 Sl• 1.1 U\* 2•~'o 26\\t ~ 11..~D 1.209 19 6 I~ lf\'t l,_'I' '.:Ii l..udl-I OI • ll 13 l t'lt jlt; \lo O . percen • Arvlntlld · s2 13 25 11111 1w. ll\'t YI CPClntt 1.n io 62 29 2111~ 21v. ---l\ ... •N tr 1.\0cl 12 s 10 .v. l~ I~ _,., t"'Ss11 :.O , u 2:21'! 21~ 22 l " ASA •Ltd 'so 13" ""~ "31111 ~ 1 Cr•MC ,lllq s l.S UHi! 15\'I 1~+ llloGIHNell; 1.¥1 12 "'•1rlo •i. ....... +'"' v Coro II .. •fA ' '"' Va TUESDAY HE told A$t!IOU ,·.JO ·, 192 2M-. 15"4 26'4! •t.crellltl'I . .o e 26 l'h 1 I -"°G01w1Fln ·'° ' l20 in-l•i. lN+lli-1..,_1 Ygitn 11 lOS s.. ~ S'4 \lo t AiOrvG I .O 10 1SS 3;µ4 lJV. 33'lo fl Ctoc:ktr 1.66 1 2"9 23 22.V. 22rt-" 1 West Vn '· 9 l'lli l"' l'ho+ ,,._ 1..Yll of J.l2c '3 19-If lf"' \lo newsmen "We don't intend to Al Sor i.20@ 1 1 22"" 22~ ~ ~ cro1•11• 1t .ID 1 2 1J 13 lJ + 14 GI wi1vn pf • 10 ll 12Yt 13 + l..'(l'l(hSV · ,, i' , , 1 6 ' . All<Y. Tr:i~ 4 6 ' 6 CrouwH .Sol lS 10 2n-22\'t nv.+ \4 Grt W~il'I In . t ,,. 2"I 2'9 ._,. ""-- talk about costs. We'll JUSt say Athloi-.1 .52 ' 4 11"' llWo 101!.-\'ii Crown Cert 14 121 24~ 24 2411.+ t.lo Gm Glint I t 6 l,,. 19 ff411+ 4' Mac.A.I' ,l1b 7 ii 111'! 111' 11\4o-'ii . . .thin A<l(MI 1.SOb 1 26 \6tA 16 16 Crwn ZI l.20 10 l30 n'4o Jl\lo ~ Vo Gre'flld I.CM f 15' 15'l. IS'4 S'.lo-\1o MtcOoritcl 11 1( 3\6i S1' 31' 1t IS WI g 0 v er nm en t AllC!vE 1.d ' 12 ~ 20V. ~ ""CTS· CP ·"° 6 ~ 1S't 1Ai 1S\lo+ VI Grtl'hnd wt 121 3"' ,,,., 3~+ h Mac:U .30 6 13 61Ji 6\.. 6\~ VII gu·id·l·ines" At Rlchflo 2 21 315 8$14 86¥. 87 -lo\ cunlo•n .30 13 • 12~ I'm 17<\ .. Grolier .to JS f\S '"'° 9r.+ "' MacM.lt .10I> 6 t6 6¥1 61oto 6~ "' • A.Reh Pt 3¥. .. r260 ~1 SO SO ·· Cumln1 .&It I( 1:11 42\t> ~ 93 Cll \'JV. Grummt11 21 IOI\ W. 10V.+ I' ~y R H 1 t 62 :it•.~ t.lli 2~1~ Wood k I d I. ed A!~e pt 2.80 . «t S9 57¥1 51 + *cumins .Ila 1( 12' •11' 39'111 41\r'ri-211' Gutrdl•n Jn 15 17 If~ 1f\lo lt&+ 'It Miid Fii .SSb 2f t 'h t'4 9\it \,\ C0C a SO ec 1fl to AURcfl pr: l .. 29 lSO\'o 141 1'18 +\ Cvnn Oruo I 10 6 s>,. Ro.-14 GUM!g l.llb I SI 34¥1 :Miio J.m+ \lo MM:I S41Hr• 11 '' 6 )*1o 6 .. discuss over-all costs of the ~~i~ Ince~~ "l ~ ~ lt: rn+ ,,: c~:7~1.i ~~ ~ 3~ m? y"" ~1~ g~:: oh11e1 ~ ~ .,! ~ ~""' l~ ~ =~It :~ 1; ill 1:: l:: 1Z"" ~ Chrysler package saying "I'd Alllom Oat1 " 3S 51Vio 56~ S7'.4+ 14 Cvc:t-CP I ' 12 n .... ttl'o ~ GtJll Rt&Ch I " I V. I I MtH•rv<:o 1 10 • 21'1fo 21 21 -VI , ' Automl lrid$ I 57 ('114 ,,., •'la .. CVPt"UI Ms l 10 31 3"14 )( '4\'t+ ~ GlfRpll .20c: I ni... """ 11 ... + \6 Mtl-M .32 16 12 llYI 11v. 21\'tl . be ashamed It well could go Avco Corp ' 2• fYJ 9V. fv.+ v. -o o--GRplb l.30c ' 13\11 u,,.. 13.,,._ 16 M111111ne11 .Sol s 23 10 o 10 i,.a . . . Avco Cp Wll . 42 2 l .... I~ Dimon Cp 32 41 "'"" •Jt'o o.,.._""' GutlStV l.12 11 n lW. 17"" 17i'.+ ""' M•llPW .IO I ,. 16\li lj""' lt \'i liltO the negatlve.11 Avco Pl 3.20 S 35Y.i ~ lS>~+,,. OanRlvr .SO I 22 t ~·, 8'1t+ \\ G SU pf 4.'60 110 S$ J$ SS -\4 Mt11 Mn 1.56 11 ltl l~ 3 35\11.-\\ • AY•r,Pr .is "° ., ~$'11 •s ' .. ..,. 01n•CP 1.36 6 JO 76"'1 """ 26441-'.4 GU&W• 6"a • 320 2(1/t. 2.3'11 2•1Ao+ 1-'1 M.A~CO .54 11 5 2'1,\ 29\'J m.i" Woodcock said the only new Avis In<: .AO 11 !~ 23..,~ :n,·.· ",~+ !2 01rt '" .:Jlla 10 24 21V. 2(Y.i ~2 Guu&w1· WI .. 61 6V. 6\to 6\.__.,, Mar•tl'lon M 5 • lnlo 11 12\lr "" · Avnet Inc .XI 6 "" •7• .,. -.,. Otrtln<I pf 2 "" ~ 29 XI -3 Gl!W) Of 5"' 1 1'01io Jll\4 i'OV. Mtr Oil 1.60 10 CO ~'A :11t,~ )Ali; 1~ money in the offer was a 75-AvonPr 1.<IO so 2921• 111•7• 1111,~ 111•7 + :1 oa,co 1.1, 6 9 16V. 1Fio 16'~ .. Gulton lnott 12 30 5 '"" •:W.-"'Mtrcot" ,90 f 3¥9 l•V. 2ll't 24 ~ . thl . AzleocOll 6k 41 v• +-.. 0.fPLI 1.6' 10 9' 20\\ 19~ !F,\l" -H M-M1rcPt"ol 2 14 4\'> ~ •ni+ II cent boost ID mon Y pensions -• a.-oa,c Pl •V. 1100 61 61 61 ,,.. Hackw 1 :w 1 3 ""' 33:i., lllit Yo Mtretr1 .20b 1• l<I ~-. Mi 4'\lo+ .,. for each year Of service ~a~WU 11fi \i l~ ~ 21\t 2~+ V. 01vtonH .5' 7 &5 1314 12~~ 12'ii \I ..t111!bl11 1'.12 lt 115 162'4 Ito 16 1+ ... o'MrMld l.IO '7 116 JAV. mli 2A t ~ • IC • • 'U' 2.$\lo. 26 +I Oav1l11111 2• • " 1 ""4 ~ Yt H1mP111 "° 14 197 16t. 15'41 16\'t+l ,..,.rtonL .21 31 17 36 ~ 3' •loll Chrysler pensions average ~·te~n ·~~ P, il ~ 2t\'t 29~ .,,, 0cianw;1 .'6 6 '3 Tllo 1v. 1¥1+ ·~ ..tamOCo ·'° 1 11 9 , , + ~ M•r1et1 1.11 tt ., ,...,.. ~ "'"" +• a e • 1 2 13~ l:ffll i:w.+ ·~ Oe.,r, l.4Qe 10 ISO 16'111 ~ 16 + ~ Handlem Ml 1 IO 9 1¥1 •~ "' Mlrqtl C.m 11 •1 tVI F.1 914+ ,,.. $225 per month and the in· ~·fiJ!M .. ~ , 86 2~ :HI'! uv.+ ~ OelP&L 1.16 8 53 I~ \Silo 1~+ ~ rl•odv M 'n • I 17 11 11 Mlrlott 2'htl. '3 192 30';, 29"" :mil .. '. ul '. a I s . 00 SS SI SB + ~ Oel Mnt 1.10 I 21 17"'1 11Y. 17\lo-... H•llftCP .'° 6 14 1m 111/i 12~+ ""-~•rJllF 1.2• 10 5' 23i,., l3 23"' . crease wo d bring them to ~u~s of t,.11> <IS tJ86 ll\.'J 321.4 33....,+1 DeltaAlr ·'° 1• 205 """' °""' •m~ Hannt 1:u :u 31 Sl\lo .s3 53 _,,., M•rtlnAI ·'° 69 6 no. m i"h-·t~ $240 to $255 1111 a illl pc 23 IV. n;, p,·-\lo Deltec ln!ri 4 10 W. 1 11.'1+ V. H•rcourt8 1 I l 11h 111/i 18!\ MartMr l.IS 1 ~ 1~ 1'111 16'Vi+ ~ mon y. ~1'*'P of 1 ' 2 22¥<1 22~ 21>,...+ 4io Dell-CP s 14 11~ ll:V. 11'14 H(tcllles 1• 17 67 13'111 13 ' 1S'4 +'•MO Cw .so I 2S 16Ys 16 16V.-~ •no.:i HY 2 6 • ~ J:l:Vio 32\IJ+ v. Oennlsn .80 1 66 21 \.'J 211'11 21Vt+ ~~ H•rflllll f20 6 .sJ 2611.i 2$V! 2, + ~ .'AllCOCP .20 l3 .SO 51% SOV. lO"ll t\\ THE AUTO MAKER said its g=~k Va .18 l! 3 26 .... 26'4 26'11+ 1A C«inlsl'I pf 1 ' 11\'t 19\'t 18'h-"" H1rral'll .22 1, 1 lSY:i 15"' l5YI+ ...., MtWlllll• .so 16 •13"6 =-33\IJ 33"'+ "'• BankTr.iit 3 10 60 ~ 53;~ s.t'l'I+ ¥. OennfS .06 16 21 12 114\ 11 + Y.i Mtrrl1 11 .12 11 SS 27"' U JAi+ ~~I-..30b t 213 JSV. U','o Fi + ~ offer would boost wages !or B•rt>trOI 2k .. 44 21:i.r. 21\'t 21111 .. Dentt.o1' .'8 15 110 20v. 19v. 2(t:lt;+1 Harsco 111 6 11 lMll 1M 1~ MIC111 1.011> 3 11.., 11v. A ... Bal"d CR 14 3' .. U:V. 26 26V.+ Vo DISololn .60 t 26 12 12 12 · Mir!Sr.\11 N I l<I \flt; 15'11 1Sllo Ms lnlv .541> 41 \2~ 1141 2~1+ YI assemblers the I a r g e s t earf\ft 1 96b f JO 2•v. u 2•111+ VJ OeTEo!• 1 .AS 9 63 11Yt 11'4 1ra--"' MarteH iob 9 11 1111<'1 101Jr. IO't'I+ ·"" M&Mll 1.4'1> lO " 9 ''"" lf + \'o 'f . . B•skln·.O 6 S lht $ ~~+!f10ttEo19.32 ll0113 113 1U +\.I Haw•Ell1'lO 27 i!\'12.$V.JS\lt-"'M•lwto .JOb I 2:1624 2l'l'IU category o uruon members, sates Ml Jo 11 1 1011t 101tt 1iw.-"' oe1e Pl 7.61 JjMI ff ff " +1 Maves Alb. I 1 7 1314 uv. 13y. Mtlttl #111 ill .-. ~ ~ " from $4 48 to $5 21 hourly But BaletM pl I l• 16.• 11',Yt li'A ~ 1: ~ ,n., f?V, ;1\l:i-\'t Htzttllna 10 11 ~.,, SW Sl-1+ *=::.~As I~ I~ 1oe, Lo I;~ u . . . Bath Ind .:JO 6 •' 1 .,, t p1 5v. l• Ith 69~ 69'111+ VI HKk 1111; .12 f 26 I' 13 13 M aJW · that offer includes 30 cents per e1usc111.., 12 1u,2 !~f ~X:: fi:(: ~+ 1 tp .21 is 1 16V. 16\.1 16¥1 Hec1 1aMn 211 ,, 292 1~ 1w. 1m+ Vi~~'" 1;: 1: 1: ,.,':: 21~ 29~t U hou · l f 1. . Btxler ~ ..., '"° 9""-ln 5' 12 16 'lO'h 20 ~+ YI He limn ·"' 6 f'M 9\lo 91~ . MCA Inc: 64 10 , ,,.. 4 .... ft•<.. ,. r m COS 0 IV 1 n g BevukCll .JO 11> 21 ,"',,.._ • ., .. '5'h lnt( 2 9 66 3l'Vi ~ Jl'N+l Mtlnz H 1.09 15 3S ..... 45\lo .<14\'t+ 1'l McCord 'n 6 ..., 1''~ ...-.1•> -l•"t" II hich th UAW Bffrlnos AO '~ ~.. hm l 1 70 1t•t. 11~11 11~ V. tttlen.IR .16 210 It •Vs 16.\l •Va+2 · ..., '" ' ~ "' a owances, W e eaa1 Fllt .62 16 '167 2'l 22~ 22'4,,,,_ 2 2 2lll ,.,4 nv.+ v; kell•rinf .k 11 11 3' »VJ )6 + "" ... c .. rov 1.201 3•1 1"" IN. !!Yt llli \lo I d •t he ha &eckmn .50 11 905 »Yi 28... .. 1 20 • 15 1•'111 15 H-1mePr 6Ct 10 22 I•,,.. 16"' 1•,,..+ .,.. '""" rrnot 7'9l._ ,_ ,..,.-1\.4 con en s 1 s mem rs ve aec111110 .u 21 x1u 311\'t 31v. JM+ · .. 10 195 10y, 10\.i 1~ 11o Melm&P ,jo 16 1.,. 30v, 29~ 30 _ ""Mcoon111 co SB ..s2 ~ .,,. ~~ ,. earned already. Be«Mk p ,·~ ' ii l~:2 ll"' ~l~~ '°° 22 '° 511N 51 Sllito+ 1h Heml•p CaP • 2 I~ 2 + "'~~~ ·~ t 1~ u~ n~ Uv:+l~ 8• 0 ti 12 I~ I""-.,.,. IA 0 Of110 .66 6 22 N 9'11 ~ 'II Hem Ill ,SOb ll.6 6illii """ """+ Mc:G HI M f -4tl6 \6 ••-1,' •,·~ l•' 154 31 30ti u.Ololl•I EOOI 41 111 N:V. •1~ .. -1\4 Htrc.ilH .IG 17 ,, !<IV. ~l<l~t v,MGJipl 1 20 3 l,•, .. 1'.~ 1.1~~ ell 'Hw .... --, .• ,.. l v. OllllnQh ·'° 12 37 "" 6\.'I 6\11-'4 H•rthy 1.10 lO "" l•Yo 1• 1414 I ' •• ... -... 81m15CO .llO 7 4 l•7• n;J; ,,;.; ~ OlsnevW .12 .s4 273 171/1 IS\lo 17"1'1+1~ Hei110ll ,2\b 11 2" 3'\lo :w• l61t>+l"' M( ntvr• P rlXI st 511'1 SlV.+ 14 8"41~ \·'1 e 1 ~ SI 11v..+1 Ol11lon .12b f 71 IS\.\ 1.R& 14~"•+ V. Ht11Cltln t.2 2' W Sl SI 52""-+1~ ~~::n ·~ 11/ ri ll n~ ~~~ tnndc~ ~.15 1 201 2,.,.. 27 ~v. .. g1~~~~11~ ·r: 20 ti ·~ 'l ·~ -"'~=~!ft E~ ~ f{ 1m -=~ 'nt+lv. .',\cL!hS 1.'° 1 31 I~ 19i\ 1~ (o Bel!CPJ>f 21'1 ·· 1100 .. 30~ ~~ 6.1'11-l'4 OlvMI 2.15b 'f 100 22111 22 22 -\to H!litnbr A IS l U 26 26 _ 14o McNeil .15 7 10 /lV. lSll 1-.. ~-~--............... --.-......-.,_ ! ( ~--~-1-000-§ The bill to restrict expansion of foreign banking in the state then was killed on a 2-6 vote of Food Price Relief Not 8enC Of 4.JO · · 6 S4 OrPe111>r .:U SP 106 2,.... UV. 27\Ho l'I HUion Mtl l 10 132 :z.. ~ %1~+1111 MHd Cp ·'° 10 "2 7\lo 1~ 71.+1~ &tl'ICOPI (li'J 10 ~ "'"" .s;.... ~"' OorneMn 11 ,, ., 14'1t " " -v. HMW Ind.it 17 ' m 3~ i\9+ v. ~ffdr~ J·IO '. 1( ~ ™' 37\li+llolo i:rn:: ~~ e 17 !Hi 11\lo 11"' ~.:U1J ·•t; ll !f ~ ~ ~t 14 HoblrlM .12 lS It 26~ 26 :t6 -lt'o M::.. itt ·7 1~l ~ flt ~ = &ethSI 1."°41 7 112 J6.\\ 26 26-\\+ ~ OorintllY A lS S3 22\'t r1" 221/> 1, .. Motrflff ·97 f 111 33\'i 31"'° 33 +2'" ME I C01p f 3' 2"" 2\1 2~ \.I Bi11 3 1nd .n 11 1,.00 1>12 •1•221;1!!"-•+ ~~ oor1cco .32 s ., 11 .. 11 11\lo 'A !::i'tO"in~~~ 1l ,~JV. J\'t :J -+ ~ ~ISl'IOf ~ 11 .a 2:JI,(, 22\to 2l1Jo11• r ORDER ,eautifu1 YOURS TODAY! Kaiser Sets Air Plan In Fontana 81lt(k D l.ot 30 • '{4 •• .,. ~Uwr I 5 "'° &YI 8'111 ,.. mll'l•loCO -5 40 ~ '""' f .-. &lalr Jn M 5 16 7 ~ We-YI .10 S 170 Sl4 S SV.-Vo H In A .I.SO 1 ""' 33,,.. 3ln+1'to Mtrc Sir ,911 ti 2 71 70 :vi 71 1 &ll"L l'OI 111 6 11 15* 15\ii 1S'4 p 1.IW 10 2 31'41 :J1'to 3741>-~ HOU'l'SU .75') I 2 12ft ll l't 1Pf+ ~Merck 1.11 31 4CM f4\'I 13\4 ... -Vo Block~R .32. 11 2S7 11\4 IO'M 111,\+"' hem 1 21 6tt .UV. 531lo 5'~tl'l1 Momeiit,.k I 16 90 •2\lo "1~ (J~ .... M1rrltl..y .M ll llS l ~ 1714 l~ ~ &luel•ll .6S 6 t7 1•" 141A ltl'lli PF lnco •1 ""'·~ •:W.-\6 Honywl l.«I zz 17•1ll 10IY!109 +"-M-fl•l .1020 12 71\<'-?O.,,, 71,,._IA Bobbi• 8rlt• ' •I ' ~ 3~ YI •vo llJ: • • 27\.'i 21111 mro ~:i~ 1i: ~ ~ 2"~ ~~ ~ ~ MIMbl .7,b 10 3l N .... ,,,.... YI aoeino c '° f 336 16\.'I IS:r. 0151,<\-.,,, Or'"41r1..0 1• 61 u v, "' •i V. M0$01l•I ~tf 1 9 "" f'• · f~t lt, Metro ·~ ' "' 12\.t 12 12\'J+ ~ WASHINGTON (UPI) _ Bo!M c, ..... s·cd 7 "'°•I~ 1~ 1::;:+ ~ ~::,.J·~ ' f1 al? ~l; = ~ HOIPCP .12b 13 ti 16 I~ ld ' +to =iEt.n3'.1' ,1 1.!!70 ~-.,"., • ...... ,. • 6ol>d 111 ~.. ,,._ 01"el(ll ).561> 1 114o 191' ifl,;, \II H06f 11'111 ..36 f 5 llV. 11\lt Uy.+ Y. ' "" --.,. •• ~ Adm m~tration spokesmen ::=a{~ 1 10: = = =t ~ or•v111tCO 1 i' so • 11'11 • -"" u=1~ ~ t ~ If~ 11~ ll"'-~ ~Jgf\u~~ ~ 2' \!" \~ ~!"+ ~ held out llttle hope Wednesday &or11 w 1.35 : .u 2•Yi 2• :uvo-"" B::t: ~ ':j 11 11=1~ 1=t 1=-~ ~" Fa1:1r1 11 111 10 t1i1o 10*:± "'~!trodol ·"' ~ ,. 1av. 11~ 12""'t ~ for significant relief from ::i":~1 2.'£. ~~ !I~ ~ XJ'P4 ~:.: R!'.!!~ri1111 c': n 1n 'l{( 1 ~ •;11o +ll% ~~u::F; ;t IO ~ :::: M~ lm~~ M!~:~tr 1 :1 1i m: f:111 ~+YI soaring food prices and eostEpf 1.11 1uo 109 1111v. 1oe17"-+ ~ OUPont JMit> 1l 1201llOIA 1..ti~ 160 + "" MousFpf 2v. 2 .uv. 014 '311.-"'-!.1","M,u 11.:201, 1110 '"• n1,~ H1.._. a...+ ., lo\Jrnl Inc 10 17 17 16111 "" DuPll pf 4\.'I l 6'~ 6:;t; 6'~~ VJ HousLP 1,40 13 llf 36lli "" ~ '4,., .-...-IS + ~ credited consumer resistance eran11A1r 31 10 159 10"' '" lo + ...., OUPn o1 3v, • s1a $\'t sm:1 111 HooNrGs .,. 1• 11 2m 22 mi.+ " :;:\r"ou,, 1·~ 1•, •1•, "•" !~~ IN+ VII • • 8r!OQIS 1.60 14 211 5'111 ~ S3fr."' Duqnrtl l ,l't , 5'P 21:\t !J:tfl 2 YI HING pl 2.... .. 2 Mi¥! '6'6 11641o+ _. H ._ • _,. •S + \lo In the Stars f Special to the Dally Pilot FONTANA -Kaiser Steel Corp. officials have announced a $6 million program for the design and construction of new air pollution control facilities at the Fontana plant. to high costs with isolated eris MY 1.:n 21 1121 60\lo ff4-. .o +-. DuOUit P'10i t~!2 llm. ft• ?. "'Howarc1J .20 11 ,.,.. lill, 1.-11 -1-. ~J'1 ·1"0 ,." ~I,." 11~ " +!II d .~ ts Brl1 My pl 2 I )tjto ~ 3'14+ .... O\IQlof 2. _. "' 4g Howmet .10 t 110 13 12\fJ 13 + Vt '-lfM°I • .., S I~~ OWilWruu ffiOVemen , Brllfl•I .27b 20 20 1Mt 1JVlo 1)~ V. °"'1MI In .:IO 10 4 I I ~ lW.-V. Hubbd 1,5'b 11 q 1f 18\.'J ltlh-Vt '-.1 nnPL 1."6 7 2' lltio '"'° 11 ....... • ll'Od H•t ea 15 31 31V. ;)Cl .... 30'--11 1-HIXl8•Y 1 '° II 1 "" ,, .... 26\11+ "'Mlrro~t .N I l& 1S1/o IS 1·· lncreas01g suppties 0 f 8clwyMI pf 2 11 S71io &!.'A $61'+ v. E~r· Pl .91 • " 2"\'t ~•'A JA\4-"' "111(11\tlH ·.o • ll 6\41 ' •tt+ ~ MlunEq .2• 12 26 ,.~ 17~ ~I~ It i ed . eroc:IC GI 75 s n ·~ 13th l:Nto Fa.cot .:tb 6 ' 11'4 II 11 .... + '4 HuohtT ,o., o/' 171 6114 st ~+1-. Miii Riv ,,. 10 1f 15\lf 151,Jo 1m+ \.(o scarce ems: was v ew as e..vnG• f 72 10 32 21,, to¥o ~ "' east•m Air ,,, l\.'I 1" m+ v. Huni Ch • 11 3 IAll 11111 ,._1 "' '""" '"'' A s s • 1'0Va hi 1011t • , 1 t Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Order For You rself or a Frien d· Mey b• us&d on envelopes as return address le.bels. AJso very hal'ldy as identification lebefs for m•r•in9 personal items such •• books, records, photos, etc. Labels stick on gl•ss end m•r be used for rt11rkin g hom• cenned food items. All labels are printed with stylish Vogue typ• on fine quelity whit .. gumm•d p•p•r. The new instatlaUons will bring various mill operations Into compliance with future emission regulations which will go into e!fect in 1975. These new regulations were •dopted by the San Bernardino County Board of Supervisors In 1!172. Acoording to J ohn D . Saussaman, Kaiser Steel vice president and chalnnan of the company's . environmental committre: 1'Tbe program 1S the culmination or many mo nths of discussions with our our county alr pollution con- trol district. "Kaiser steel has already invesled weU over ISO million In environmenlAI qualUy con- trol facillti~• and thll progrnm Is a continuatlon of our ellorts to ktep our Fontana plant clean." tile principal ho~ Of the eX· Brawn c0m 1 JO 111\t 11\.\ 11"°+ V. E•stGt1F JI 11 Mi ltV. IB 1''4+ 1'i H\lllOll E ~.O 2S 114 JV, illo illi MPCtm 1M 1 t 211Ai 2114 jH4+ Y, y~ BrGrouo I\.'/ 7 7 23 .. 23Jt mt+ 1,1i Ets!Vtll 1\lf 12 4 lt 17°" II HllY(kCp 24 3) 41 30 mi, )I) Mo Mobl1t H .~ I 22 lOh 10\'J 01' . perts in halting the food price em Sl'lrp ·'° 10 11 IOIA 10 IOV.+ ""E1t Ko I.HI 3S '911~ !).t'folo l»\l.+1-.i H)'f:lromt :1, 1 n IVI All l \lf+.. IOI 2.to f .01 51\ti stV. Jt'4+1\4 . BrF•rrll 12 11 1• 1$ 1(\.1 15 + 14 E•lllCp I.to 1 140 32\'J 32V. ~14-14 -1 1--1,20 t 20 20\.\ 19 .... I~ Ill spiral. OruntwlC :2. 12 306 , ..... MVI UY.+" i:,-,,~~",M, ..... ~.. ..!\ .... ~ ~~ l.i..++: .. I(~ l'llarm 17 q JOY, IOV. 10¥1-"' =r bot '. ~\ 1~ •• ~ ,·.~. ,,••+ ii Tr •·-t G Brush w • .o 9 10 26\t U\.'f 261/t-\If ""' • -T• .,.,.. T• ld•ho P 1.11.1 10 n 27Vo ~ '11 +" ltb .. "" 'JI+ \t easury ;;x:\;rc ary eorgc auc:v e 1•20 13 12 33\'; ~ 32~-VI Eckel' JIC .20 • * ,..,.. :uv. m-.+1~ ,c!M!B•• ·'° , ~ 1414 1, 1, + i... Mol'b eor, ' " ,.._ 13~ 1~+1-P Shultz sald government Budd co ...o • 31 1)lt 1N 1m+ eckd NC .u 20 • il.v; 21\11 21~+ ~ 1t1tt1eo1 '"' 1 11 71 " _1 ~olvtiof 2Vt 2 2111o #14 21"'+ \'I> • lutMOll lnll I '"' ~ ""-v. EdSllBr 1.20 ' 1 21 21 28 lllNI Tov •I f l( 5\.'i ~ ' ... on•rth ·'° '! 2 llr,t, 11"' ll~ \\ policy is to expand supplies surF" 1.20 f 3 JOI\ ~ ~ , EG G .10 n 111 1• \Al'I isi-+1"' ios RI l,&Ob 12 i " Ullo 'S*-·v. ""'01¥1Gr•m 37 "" ~ ~f ll autll!v '•7b 11 33 "\lo 211111 2' .. + tit El9ct AllO( 1) 6 "' ..V. 4'\+ 16 !llCtnln I 30 • U 1114 li\to 1el6+ VI M6nrotA • .U 14 62 i5 24\lf ,_, "and you're going to see some q.~,w~w· .70 t 1 1f'.\ lS'l't isi-.-._ Eos cp .2.st1 21 21 Ul4 :M isv.+114 r11c1" PIA. 6 , 1t14' •4 1~,._1,., N1•w11•,.to 2 11 "' .o .av. 60 1v, I ' . " ft lJ(lkrlf lOb 6 ,. '" , .... .-+" Elttt Memo 11 II ,_ 3Yt 3¥1+ 16 lUCtn Pf la IJ •2" 41.,, 42\l 1,41 Molls of 24' ' ft 6™ 'f I\\ g gant1c increases in various RlWIR "' ·1..., lf u 1w. 1e + " ~· ~ p1 N~ ·· il 1;\.'i 1J14 1!11o i4 111 Pwr i.20 11 • 21"' 26'11 2roi.+ .. =:IP~~.: J 1i ll~ m"t :+ " items soon. But he said .. we ~~~I ~o ~·~ 1: 1~ 2'i~ ~:l ~~t ~ E1rx1r 1nd ·4 21 s1t ~ ~= v. :~=~· 11 20 .! ~~ ~ 211v.l14lt Monivs .ei7b ,, '" l'"" 21t•+ 4' have a bulge in inflation ahead nu~'N 111 ·'' . , 1 1 1 -v. e1Pa11e1HG 1 6 1s1 lPt-. 1sY1 1'1?-"' tNACo 2.1 I ~1 ! ll~ ? '"'~YM ;!'l'I 10, 11 .10.. o.,, lll'M-"' f 1 Blll'll!!VC 11 12 7 tt 72 22 + VI J:llr• C.p 1,,.. 1 ' 29'-' 21"" 21"'+ 'II I""'"' 1• t4 ~·-·.,nor•, "'.. f l:Mto 1JY, l~ V. o us ' · """'I-+ Emtr El .45 tt 131 •At ~ ov.+ ~ i;lJ ~ , !" ... J 1. 11 l.tS 6M ""' '1V.+ ._ . 811rrohs ,80 .Q .. n1v. -"* EmEI I tO 12 651' 631'1 6J +2'n t Inc ' S .. 1~0l'Ttlt . .iot) ' 24 1eVO 17"" 1114 At the Western White House. r ebLT 1720 11-<, ~ ~ 2411o+ \..,Emry/tr :,, " 2~ mt 63'4 "1\11 \Id ''° · ! ~ 1 i I I~+ v. MMM "5'f1 P,,' 1 1 "" 1' ~ ,,,. 1•14-·~ ~esld t N. • ch··• I ,..~co' n a 6 30111 lOV. lOtt• ii:IT)tr¥1n .~l 9 3 7¥1 "6 ~ v. f'ldG•• 1.M ~ •V; one" . n el4 ~ 1 rr en llODS ha 0 '°.tt'MIC. .1;,... 4 lf ""' ' •I.to Eml'Mlrt 1.20 6 u t8" ltVt 11\11-14 lndPwl.. 1.62. 1 I •Vi+·*~t11T,~_1.J21'1 I 11 II"',, 16 .. : taff Al nd M Ha. 'd ,. • l..M I Lt °"' 14 ,, Wi ~ ~.. llldPLol ''-" u.~ VI .. ··ti"...-.•• t l30 1• lt 11 • S • exa Cr • 1g, !al ',.~f:t Wd 1 I~ m ~'! ~:.t ~ EmoDI i.:11 O 29 16\41 lffi 15¥1-... ~N•ll I.JI 10 . 10ft'tl ·-~L Ill .lCll! l• ~ 21Vt 2'2\l ~ ''I think It's important that we ;::11 "",.""~ n 15 '"" ~ ''"+" ~1~111G!: / : 11': 17111 1fL"' r~x.rl?i J!' II ;;;· "" ~":t1:: ;;:·;:~:~ 1 :2 ~ 1o;: ~,.,.. ~It jf~ 1"' don't set for ourselves an>j .. :;;:L2:::;, .J, ~ ~~..., '~ t tt/11110 .a 12 160 11h UV! '!~+ ~ /:;f~ofil 'I 1 ,,.. G)7 • + ~:,s:~ 1-s ': l~ 'l:t'JU 'J:t ~ claims that"we-canlmng-d:own ~~11!~11 lJ 111' ;"" ~" '"4~ ~~~~ll F J ~ .m JUJ0111-~ i=,4 " • ·~ 1~ +-~ ~vmno 1:&"-.... , ,,..., 171i11 IJY; ::: food prices 11 ,.,...p.,,. J I" 11 ff 16\\ 16tlo f!.... ~ :;aulmrk ,AQ 1 2 151.!o 1$ 151.41+ ~ 1n1/1c~ c .10 ~ ll ~ .~-, ,4=1 1~ t1 11 '6" 14fii IS! .. · f11n Crtln ~ l' Ut 1114o •1 '114-4-\':t .. ~O•• ~.•o 7 1 '9~ Hfi t~\+ 14 In' rcyaf 114 l r,,. l~!o\t ~" o · .WW t.Ri -~ The A . ......icullure "'-"rlment ,."n""kl' -'~ 10 t~ """ '1" ~"'t-.. 1<11.1~ 1.ub 11 's 2'fJ 13\11 ,,.,. • "~"'' ' ! lw; 31•~+1"" .. & 11':: 10 ,J ;:.i. f"" '"'f ~ 15•' ..,.,~ ,.3 .. M' 1.ltt'I ! lj ,,,.. ttn. ''14 \l "S&lnc: I.Ill t 17 2~ lSVI 25'11+ v. 111 nv t•b \It 11111-111 '°' L • 11 ' 14~ " said meat product.lon last ,.•rit '"o ,,.,, 1 ' ff'~ •1~ «1.i.+11~ i1em&rk .1r • 114 22lt. 221': tt'\+ 1t \n t!l«I .u a "" ~ u. v•rt ·'° '_J J'~ 11 .. 11* _,. • r:11r11i. ,41 1 '16 ln'I 11\.41 1n• _.,.. i:tqu tnc .32 6 J '""' l\.\ WI+ " n ti> 1:1' I le 31 31 -~ N 111 2.30 II 171 F......,. month was down shghUy Crom rarr1&0tt , l50 6~"' ''~ •1"+ ""••MX•111 M 1 tsl4 1•1' ''~,.. •'M ,"' ,·!.' ll' •'r,1 im"~1.!l~j ~:,J?i, ;..., n jl ~ "n" =tt+ li J to • .. bill. ...., ...... '"11mlFrt .AO 7 7 IU .... l\ti' iifttltl\ "° 1t 1 JlA $!<11 fl• 0 ... . -"'~le 60 11 41,6 1.t I 1.1,+ "' une, ~.u.r JOO ,,... ......... '"i.r11PL 1 '2 • .4 f'l\ ''" ,,,, !t~ylCQfft I ' IS JO M ~ ~·w ~ ~ ., .. ..~.""l'e '52 to 0 """ Alo im' but that Shortages mJnl.t be Cll'l!Tt 1'.ll'I 6 13 ~ '!0'4 ~\ft • V!Of 2.(0 1 Jl~ 41 .II -lA ~ H•rvl ' I ' IM I lf~ ~ •i..>! A 'f •11) ' ,r1 ''~ f,.,._ , +-» &'' t",,,.,,ti<: SJ ,, u. 1'i' 2nM ,.,.,. ... 1~ "'"·~ ·'°° I ,. \..,. 1.-1•\.'it \• ~ 7"' , ... ~ ....... "°'l'l 1113 .. 13 1 + ~ easing. However Anne "'11rrr. 1.1ott 1 11" ,,.. 1111o ... Iii ••10 .;o 1 '' 6'~ 1·~ 1.\16 t . .,.~:;$.'f; n I) .., ~'. ~~ ~~-1-1 ... , .. ~ •· ·• , ...... ~ •~ 14 • "11•IWI ,«IA 11 ,f)' 1Mt. 1ftl.4o lll~t. '"' -..,~,. 6 ( 1 ~ 7 ... , M"'l,.nci 2• f,\.(+ "' .... .,.~~"' IO U$ )4 k ""'ti .. Armsttong1 a White House "'M¢"4G• .n 1 21 111• u;z 11 '-11 tfl Jb 11 "' .,,. lf\t. i~ 1 • .,.~'l'r 14 I! , " ~ 'I'"~ ..... .:,,.~ ,. 1• "'"' ;9 11 14 c:ounselor, said, "I don't see ;::~·;~ iti ,; 1ff lr: ~~it~~~~ :s~• . .o 6--r.~ ~ .t .,.;p .. ~kt\~ Ji 11 ~-ii:Z t '~!:!~j1.,,;r j J = ll~ l.,. ~ much of a decline in meat -t·c ~°'"c:: • ,f = 1l ~ ,~ :;,,,"" :\~lb \•1 ... ~ ·m .,. ""m+~ ~r :~t~.: 11 ·~ \~ ~n ~ ... ~i;;.'?;· .. v .u • ,,~ ~ Iii ir + ... .nd that's the No I prob!-" ::"° c.. 1 ' ' l~ ,..., 14'1+"' ll'•lrmt!I! 1\11 + "'Jiii T&i11~ • ., t.ti ifli 3 + v. .,.,,~oo "'° , ii u. ""' • ' ...... Cel•nnt ' 1 tn ,, ~ JI + •• ,. ...... ,, , "' .. I Tlol' Ciri • .. '-'"' ··-.. iA+llii Nitti a.n .JO I .. . 2 ti,. .. "' <. Wednesday's Closing Prices-Complete New Yori{ St~K Exchange List Stocks Continue Week's Rebound NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market ran a hot streak Wednesday, adding substantial gains to the recovery that began Monday. . Advances enjoyed a commanding lead over de· ~lines, and upward grQup trends developed, 1nd1ca t. mg the rally was strong and broad, according to analysts. The moderate-t~I1ght volume was consid· ered .~ood for a pr .. Labor Day week. The !nlenslty of the market, coming up before a lon g holiday when traditionally the market eases might mean that the market Is bottoming out" saJ(i Mont~ Gordon of Dreyfus Corp . ' -.. , August •• 197J • s, DAILY PILOT Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List e "lelllcal Spedal to Ille Dally Pilot LOS ANGELES -National Medical Enterpru.. ID c, reported nelf hlgha In net ttvenues, earnings and earn· 1ng1 per share for the year end<d !My 31 . The !tock ls turrently trading In tbe $10 range. Eamlnp per share ror ti>• year from continuing open· tkms increased 37 percent to $1.!7 compared with fl.22 a )'eat earlier. S.ln Ntl P·E (hd1I Hloll low Ust Chg \ S•lef Net P·E lhdl) Hloh Low Lnt Chg seies NtT P·E ll'ld•J Hhh LOW' Ui1t Crit .s.tM Net f".E (1'1110 Hloll Low Litt Chi l 5•1t1 P·E (PldsJ Hltll Briefs 0 Dollar D01Dll LONDON (UPI) The dollar dropped in value on European money m a r k e t a Wednesday in the middle of a see-saw week. Gold held firm. The dollar dropped "!onday, clunbed Tuesday and then lost value: again Wednesday In London, Frankfurt, Paris and other currency exchanges. tosses were fractional, and dealers mentioned no specific cause. 0 Silver Probe LOS ANGELES (AP) California Corporations Com- mi~loner Brian Van Camp has received court permission to investigate operations of a silver brokerage firm but has failed In his bid to obi.in the company's records a n d lodgers. Superior Court J u d g e Campben M. Lueas ruled Tuesday that Secure ~tonetary Systems Ltd. ol Los Angela had failed to prove it has the right to interfere-with Van Camp's investigative poYi'ct. e Whittaker LOS ANGELES (AP) -• Whk .. k<r Cori>· has reported , a loss of $4.IM mUUon for the three months ended July at~ compared with a profit ol $3.37 million, or IS cents a Ihm, a year earlier. The companJ snid TuOlday losses from operations dispol- ed or and to be disposed of alter tax aod before e1~ tnordlnary Items amounted to ~.3 million. . . . . ' . ' . .. ' ' ' . 36 DAILY ~llOT Thursday August JO, l973 OCC Classes Set in CdM PUllUC NOTICE PUBUC N<mCE l"l(TlflOUS-1usi1o1-as·--lllCTITIOUI 1us· .. -,-,c,--- JlAM.I STATIMINT NAMI! STATIMl'tn Tht lollowlng ff''°"' ~r• "°''1'~ Tiit hlllowlllO ~rton It dolllll bvllntu bl.151'1,KJ iU: ''°" L .. L IENGINIEf RING. ,2092 Sf DOD'$ PET SHOP , 1!1 No, SYCll'!IOl'f arl•tOI, NtwPOrl ll••th. tl101, -' ' St•,..!· so~•· -.n~ Call!. f't,'01 An I $1~ P•wl Lt"1:ht. 1:/02 W. l(lm11tr· MlcMllt Dllllt« Vick. ft<ll LAn'tPWlo arrt1y 0 56 courses Wi)I ty Pl ,, ""'-~tlm, CtL!fOl'l\lt 9'1602. G&'<lin r;,,.vt. CtUt, '1.,1, • be offered this fall by Orange u~.·1~!,~~~.~~· ~rr;: J•,...e• Clr· ,,;-:::~~· ~=: ~~1r;:~1'. ~;;,~•· APf, Coast-Evening College -~1 Pl!,':::.~'.'9" 11 C'Ol\Guc:1td ttr, ganHit ~:., ~'.~~~l ~.~••4 or A Corona del Mar High School. Tiiis '~~=,L::;~·111.i w!lll '"" eou.... Tiii, ,~:,: •• ::,,~Iii~ .,..lit, '"' '°"'"" Regis\ratlon for the 'classes ~73~i.r1t o• Or•f\tli Coun1y on A119u11 1, rv Cl•tlr. or OrtAO• Cou~•y on A11Q111l 11, ·11~~1 -w1 i....:: 11t: d by appointment ,..,,* l'·t7m ll'Ubllshed Oranot Coa11 01lly "!101 Publtl~ 0.•~ C0t$i .01lly Pll(lt onJy 00 Sept. -f from ~9 p.m, Auoull f , 16, 11, :JO, ltn 1'65-1:· Avgusl 23, >C, t.W S•Oltmbt• t: '!· \f,; at th• high •ehoot Persons PUBLIC NOTICE ,,...,, may arrange for a1>P9intments PUBLIC NOTICE ,ICTITIOUS •USllrlESS by contacting the 0 cc NAM!. STATl!.MENT SUJl'EltlOR COUltT OP THll Tiit followlng pll'MNU •l re :!(ling bu11. STATI! OP CALlllOllNIA 11011 Admlssk)ns Office at 834-5733. _, ••: THE COUNTY OF OltANGI Registratiin ., I I h o'u t .~ H & M WElO!NG .. SHEET METAL. NO. """u r I04 so. Ctftllr, s1m1 An•• C1. 92705 NOTICE Of SALE OP ltEAL PltOP· pointment will be conducted kott D. M•vn•rd, 1"861 lu•nl'l .. m Cir.. ERTV IV AOMllrl lSTRATOlt AT Se~ 6 r· lrvl11t, Ca. 92105 Pilll\IATE SALE t''' rom ~9 p.m. Late Normtn L. 111..,1.,r, ~$11 Charle~llle 111 Ille m111e• ol tht '"-'' ol JENNI E registration will be held Sept Cir., lrvl ... C1. '27!1S VINCE NZ.A TE OESCO, OllC"Hd. 11 13 11 and · · Tiiis buSlnMt 11 cond~le<l tlY • 11enttll No!lte ls 111.-.bv lll"ttn 11111, Jr.L8 ERT , , , 20, Classes Plr1ntnllip. TEDESCO IN! LEONARD TEDESCO. co-begin Sept 11 Scott D. Maynard 1dmlnlstr1rOl's of the 111111 of JENNIE • ' This lllltmenl WIS fllt<I wltll Ille CQ1Jll· VINCENZA TEDESCO, ~e1sld, wlll i.tll The class 5...i.A.1ule '•eludes· l'r Clerlt ol Or•noe Counlv on All9"'* 21, 11 11rlv1!~ 111e, lo 1111111g11est 11ld tM beat l.:IH:ll .,, ltn bhkler. uN:ler the titrms 1nd conditions courses In such subject. area! F·1"51 M•el1111ter mentioned, Ind subl•el •to as· agrfCUilure t' · If' '"1.lbll111ed Or11191 Coast D1!1v Pllo!, conll•mallon by Ill• SoPl!rlor ..:ourt. Ol'l lOI' · . , 8f , 8Vl8 Oil, AIHl\111 23. 30, 1.W St'PlembtT 6. 13, orter Septembe• 20, 1973. 11 Ille hour Of business home and familv liv-1m ?616-)l t ::io • m •• OI' 11\fr~lter within the tlf'l'Ht I l ' 1110\W'd t>v l1w, et the oflle1 ol ROBERT ng. anguage and spe~h. R. WVAn, ATTORNEY tor 11ld CO-Id· mathematics music social PUBLIC NOTICE m1n111r1tOl'1, 111 io1u Los Al1mll111 et'ld .. , • • l os Al•m!los, C1llfarnlo1, ell !he rl11llt, t!- sc1ence, supervision and trade l'ICTITIOus ausiNl!'SS 111. 11111r11'. 1.w es11i. ot 1111 d1c1aad, and technical ' . NAME STATl!'Ml!NT 111d 111 ltle rlglll, 1111,, Inter•~!, 1nd fll1!1 The following penooJ 1,1 clGI llllt !ht •sl&lt of JENNIE VINCENZA ";";;-::==-=---fbusl,,.u 11: llO TEDESCO, dll<tffed, l>a• ICQu!rld by PUBLIC NOTICE GOURMET CATERING ins Wh!ttl Ol)fl'lllOl'l of Law OI' otherwise, otMr tl'lln -----_ Cost• Mes• ffl21 ' _,., or In •ddlt1on to, that of 1o1ld dtcta1ed, 11 ,ICTJTIOUS aUSINESS H1rG1d Harrlm1n, 111$ Wl'lltller C()ll lllt llm1 of ll1r de1tll, ln Ind to all th1t NAMW: STATEMl!NT Mt.11, Callf, 9'2621 ' 11 certain r"I pr-rly, 11t111ted In 1111 City 11• "'' I Joen Herndon. '4t Flow•• C , of An1helm, Countr of Orang,, St1t1 ol I s; Oii !IQ ~ 11 doing busl,,.11 Miii, Cllll. m27 ' '"• Ctll!,°'"!1, dtscrlbed 11 follows : A~!!:'~G~-~;R~ 0 ~Rim, c 111 e1i!~~11~1!11t1s is condvdoa by 1n In· riK:~~J 1': 8~c!.t,30t!ge!s1r;~ i~'1tt Clel Mlt c · tt6's • ox ' Of"Dl'll Joaro Htrf\don Maps rttOl'lled 111 Or1ng• County.'' Sam Ji:,y~ P1lm!ller, 1n Avocado ty T~~.:111ei;r1 w11 filed wun flle Coun-c.!d~~l~. 1~~seC:::,fo:i. t•,i::~t c~:~· No. 1(, CorOlll dll Mir, C1, 9162S ltll ol r•nu• C011nlr °"' AU(lusl 14, e•ff'""'llts, 1.W e~Lsllrog 9flcumbrances 0j Tiiis buslnes• 11 conducled by 111 In-' record cll~ldu.I. F-27491 T~-"t d ' ' Sim R Pitmlll•r Put1tl1he4 Or•"lle Co.SI OtllV Pllo! '"' erms an cand I ons of sale ire: Thl1 1t1t1<T1e"nt ,..11 flltcl with Ille COii/i· All';luSI 16. tJ, 30, •n.d Sl'J)leml.ltr 6 ~.'s~ In •,•wful money ol 1111 Unlltd Steles ty Clerk -• -C · 19n , ... n' "' ... mer ca OI' 01ner ~lr1c1 term. Ten .., ... an~ ounly wa Avoust 29, -· percent ol tile amount bid to 1ccomo.-11v 1m · · the offer arod the t>al1nce lo be paid on Publl ~..... .... 111 27111 PUBLIC NOTICE confirmation ot stle by Iha Court T1i11 ''""' ..,.1nge Co1s1 Dally Pllol, 1Nl oremh1m1 on tnsur1nc1 •Ctt'Pi•ble to Aug111t lO Ind September 6, 13, 70, iwrcna1er shill be paid by buyer 1s of tht 1973 27!11·71 FICTITIOUS IUSINess d1le ot conflrmaUon ol ... r .. The e•· NAM& STATEMENT 1mlro11tlan of lille, r1tcordlng of con· PUBLIC NQTICE The following p.rson It doing business vevance arid anv lllle lnsuranc• POiier ---====cc-----as: 11'11111 Ile 11 the expense ol the oorchai.tr PICTITIOUS aUSINESS 8EACHCOMflER COFFEE SHOP, Atl t>ids lr>d otters must bl In wrlllr>D NAMR ITATRME~T 2Ul W, Cotlt, NewooM Beecll, Cal. ll~d will be received 11 the offlcl o1 Tiie lollOW!r>D peri.on 1$ Oiling bl,111,,.u Erwin Hlnatn, «It E. Mlrkel St .. ROBERT R, WYATT, 107!.1 Los Alamitos '': . Long &•acn, C1lll. 90805. Blvd., Lo& Alaml!os, C1Hforn1.,, 1ttorney GOOD IMPRESSIONS, INK •• 731 Wes1 Till$ tlus.lrtHJ Ii COl\ducled by an tn· !or 1al<1 administrators et 111r time ifltr l61h St., Ccsla Wu '7621 dlvldu1t. 1119 Ursl 1111bllc1tion of !Ills notice Ind Gtltdden F. Evin:r.. 22612 Modeito Erwin Hlnoen bf!lorf lne making of said ~411. Drive, Mission VleJo, C1hf. Tiiis 1t1lerMnt w1s 111«1 wUM 1ne Coun· For further !nformallon •rod bid forms Thl$ bu$11111ss ls conducled by in In· tr Clerk of Df11'1Qe Countt on AU11ust 11, 1ppN .al !he oltlce af s.a!d 1tton1ey '°'the olvl<1u11. 1913. admlro•stralOl's. Gladden F. Evans . F-276SJ Tllr right I' reservtd ta reject 111y 1nd Thll 1tateme11t Wll Hiid with tlle Ccun· Putlhsl>td Or1ng1 (GISI Dally Pilot, •II blds. IY Clerk of Ora119• Counlv on AUllOSI 211, Aogusl 23. 30, 1.w Stpttmblr 6, 13, D11te<I : Auciust 2), 1973. lt11 1973 2638·7J S/Alberl Donald Tt*SC~ F21M7 Administrator P S/l eonard Tedes.:o Publ!shed Orll\OI C1Y1! 01lly Piiot, UBLJC NOTICE Admlnl~trator A111tusl 30 and Septembet' 6, ll, 20, -~·-:=====-----ROIERT R, WYJr,TT, lllOl'fltY fll" 1973 2702-73 PICTITIOIJS aUSINESS 1111 Admlnbtrlf(H"I NAME STATEMENT 107'J LM Al1mltot llvd., PUBLIC NOTICE The !allowing oersons •re doing Los Al•mllO•· Callfou1f1 -------------buslr>ess as: Publ!sllt<d Or1hge CCYsl Oa!lv Pilot. PICT ITIOUS aus!!ESS AMERICAN POOL SERVICE, 2417 Aog. 'l'I'. 30 •nd Sept."S. 1971 2691-T.l MAM9 STATl!MINT Or1roge Av•., C11111 MeSI, Calif. 9'1627 The tollowl119 Ptrsons ert ooino Jack Tnomss C•agnill, Ul7 Oran1111 PUB LI C NOT ICE bu1ln•$S IS! Ave .• CoSll Mno, CA 92627 ---- TOWN & VILLAGE PATIO SHOPS, Wllllim Prier Odom Ill, 176 Munt, PUBLIC NOTICE 1311 No Ori°"e Mall Orll!Oe Calif Vl•tl, Cnst1 Mr51, CA 91627 I 6IStf 9247 · ' ' · pa~~:,=:;,'!"'" 11 conducted bv ' Ql'fleral Por•oanr to The 1greement belwHn tlle Al1n L. Sherman, 91'1 Vllla WOOCIS Jack T Cra,l'llll Federal Hiohw•v Adminislral1on and the Dr., Vll!1 P11rk, C1Uf, 9lM7 Tiiis slit · 1 fled will! 1 C National Wiidiife FeOerallon, Ille followl119 Geotoe Antllonv McH•rris, 12472 ty Cle k o1 'f:' wi~ ' 1 ne oun· Is 1 llsl ot hlghwav secllons which ire D1rtmoulll, Tustin. C1llf. '26'0 lffl r •"II• oun 'I' on August 21. sub/eel to the Federal H I g h w, y TlllJ busrnts1 !1 camlucled by • general · Administration's Nall~n•I Envlronmerilal fYflMPfSlllP F27m Poll A 1 I ' ' ' ., · L $h Publlshed Or1ntte coast Oellv Pllor er c reasse•imen o de erm ne •n H tf"me~ AUOUJI 23 30 ,,o S ' wllt!her an l'flYlronmental s111ement Tllis 11,riiment w11 fi fed wltti Ille Coun· ' ' • eplemfllr '· 13, should bl 11,e11ared and considered tr Clerk of Or1npt" Countv. on Aogust n . 1973 2624·73 • 1973 1. tn Humboldt Coun!v on State Raute F27IOS PUBLI 101 from nor111 of Richardson Gro"" Published Or.n11• Coast · Osltr p1101, C 11."0TICE s•~te f'art 10 Stat" Route ~al AllOll. Aogu11 30 111d St0temt1er 6. 13, 20, Two coro!cch •re proPO•td lro 11111 S«· t91J 2106-73 STATl!MENT" OF WITHDRAWAL lion. The tl•st )J 1.7rnllesof41.tn1 K · l'ltOM llARTNt:lllSHlll OPliRATIHG ceu controlled hlghw1v from llOl'!ll ol PUBUC NOTICE UNDl!lt flCTITIOUS IUSINIESS NAME 1111 M<!nrlnclno C"unfv 11111 to Ille Snulh Tiit loUowlll!I person has wltndr1wn 1s Fark ot the Eel ll:lver erJdcie r>ear Be,.. • o-r1I coartner from the partlllf"shlp bow. Tiie siK:nnd Is '·4 miles of 4-tane l'ICTlTIOUS •USINl!SS oper1tlng under fhe tlcllllaus bUsl11tss ecu-ss controlled hi11hw•v 111 Ille com· NAME STATEMENT n1me Cl munltv of Rl'I Ot!I! from south ol 01vls l'- Tnt following r:itr50fl Is dolr19 bllsinest C & W PAINT & BOOY SHOP, ltSS Slreet lo Bellvlew Avenue. ''' Cnurcn SI., Colli Me•a, CaUtornla 92627 2. In Molllf!rl!V Coun!v nn Stile Route LIN·STITCH, llS5 LOllMI SI., No. 6, Tiie flclltlous bllsl111ss nlmt statement 1 from !he Fort Ord Mltll1ry Reserva· C0$11 Meta, Cal. 91626 for ltle 111•lr>enlllp w1s filed on January lion to S•~te i:!oull 156, lncllldil!O IM J1mes K. Andr~. 257 Slerks St., 29. 1t71 In Ille Covnty of Ori119t. Route 1 8yp1u of tne community ol COS!• Mtst, C1. '2627 Full Name •nd Address Cl the-Per.on Costrovllle. 1.2 mlles of 4. •nd 2·1ane Tl'lll butl11ess II Conducted bY an In· Wltllelrawlng· l'll"hw1v wllh access C0!11rol. Oiv1d111I. Oon.lld W, Woods, 651 Joinn SI., CO$ll 3. In Santa B"rro~ra County °" Stale JOJl'IVI$ I(. Andrews MISa, CaUfornl1 ·tt621 Rwte 101 '' Turncolke Rold Interchange Tnl1 1t1lemtnl w11 111..:t wllh 1ne Coun-Donald w. Woods 111d OYet'helld ~t m Sant• 81rt11r1, tr C1e-rlr. of Or1tlQ'I C01J11!y Ol'I A~gusl 3(1. ,. ... 1Sl1 re<onslTuct lllbllno structures and 11> 1'73 f'ublfsMd Or1nge co1u1 0111y Piiot, coroacnes lo torovlde 4 !111ts will! lelt· l'·t7M6 August 'lJ, 30, 1nd seo11mber 6, 13, lurrt median lanes le reto1ece Ille e .. PublltJled Orang• Ca.st Delly Piiot, 1913 2576-73 lsllfl!I 2·1"!'11 facilltles on Turnolke Ro.d. Auousl 30 and Sl'l)lembtrr 6, 13, 20. 4. In Kern Countr on Sl1te Route Al lt73 un-73 from soutll of Ille C!tv ol Stwilter ta the PUBLIC NOTICE looctlon of Stile Route U In th1 Clly ot PUBUC NOTICE PICTITIOUS IUSINESS FICTITM>US a USIN ESS NAM! STATEMliNT HA.ME STATEMENT" Tiie IO!lcwing /)erlOll Is dolnt bus!nffs The folloowlng plrs0!01 •rt doln II: buslnest 1s: g ACTION SWEEPING SERVICE, 4200 ROCIC ING p ENTERPRISES. '611 Pl~k Newoort, Apt. 213. H.wport Btaen, COf•I Trff Line. lrvlne, CA 9'266-C · C1ht, '7660 Mlchffl Fr1ncl1 Paoowrol•k "'611 J ohn Ronald Crltcfllev, GOO P1rk Corel Tree L1111!, Irvine, Calif. 91664 N~WP<lrt, Apt. 213, Nr.vpott &Heh, Clllf, Sharon Farlow Poriownl1k. "71 COl'il '91660, · Tr" l•lll 1rvl11e Cilll 92664 Tiiis bUs!n1s1 11 ccnducttd by 1n ,,.. ' ' · d1v1du•I Tl'lli bullMll IT Cond\IC!ed by • geroer11 j R '' c ,,_, p1rtnersnlp · CW11 r .... er M . F. Pocoownlak Tl'll1 at1t1men1 11111 HIM! with !he coun-S~ F. Popownlalr 1Y Cfll'k of 0••1194 County on Jr.vgu1t 21, Th!1 st1tement WIS f!lfOl with !ht COil,._ 1973• ;~T.)Clert; ol Or-1!'1111 County on AllCIUSI 28, Publll/led Ortnge Coast Dilly ",?r,~ FitlOJ A11911sl 2), 30. Ind Seplem~ 6, 13, Putolll/l.ed Dr1~ Coa1l 011lv Piiot, ~!3 2626-73 AU(IUSI 30 IM Septlf'!'l~r 6, U. 20. 197.) 16119-13 PUBLIC NOTICE WOJKO. B.9 mll1s ot 4·1aroe hlpllwav. S. ln Kern Cavrrty on Sllte Route SI In !he Cltv ol 8akersllelCI from State Route ' "to Sla!t Root• 18~. 7.1 lTllles of '-lane freewav. E11terlv 4.0 miles ore pre$ently under conslroctio11. 6. In tne City of Lm A11<11tei °"' State Route 11, construct lnt1rche11ge at Redondo 8e1cll Boulevard 111 reei!1ce-- m111t tor eilstlng Alorldr1 Str111 ln1erch1ng11 to be deleted. 1. In Iha City of L°' Angeles Ol'l SM!t Route 101 from SIJftset 8ou1tv1r11 to Stat• Roull 101113.41170 lntercll1nge, widen 6-lar>e freeway ta I 111111 tor 1 Olstance of 2.1 miles 1nd install r1mo control fOf 1 distance of S.5 miles. f , In 11!.t Cllv ot Le& Angeles on Slat1 Fl:oute 111 betwe-en 8elboa Avenue WMt ot lntel'$1•1e Route .COS and lnlttsl1tt Roule 405. 2.S m!les of I-lane frHWIY. 9. In Orange County on State Route 73 Jn Ille Cllles ot NewlXll'I Beacll ar1e1 Costa Me-11 from sou111 cf &oni!a C•n- yon Ra.d et the Unl.-er1ily ot PUBUC NOTICE : FICTITIOUS auSINl!lSS c1111om11, lrvl11t c•mous, 1o 1nters111e ----_ NAMI STJr.TEMENT .as. ~-' miles ol 6-1rod t-lene freeway, l'ICTITIOUS IUSINllSS Tne following personi 1r1 dol"!I lncllldlng 111 lnterchllnge: 1'11111 11dtHng NAM&'STATE,,_ENT buslnn1 at: S!ate Roule SS. Tt. following person Is doing bu,inesi MSM COMf'ANY, 15261 Vermont SI.. 10. In Ille City col San Olf.go on Stile 1,: Wn!ml11st9!'", ca. 926113 Route 7J lrom NM 01 lnter11a1e Rcut1 DAYCO SECURITY SYSTEMS Bldg ar1o1ce Stephen OObbs, 1.5262 Vtrmonl 805 lo lnt9!'"1t1t1 Routt 5. 1.1 mlles ol 4- VI, Sull• 707, 3001 Red Hiii Ave : Cos!~ St, \Vestmtnsllff', Ct . nw lane freewav. MISI, C1llt. 92'16 Marla f'11 Dobbs. 15262 Vermont St.. Maps and othar lnklrmllfon regarding Waller M. ~venpc.rt, mt Flimlngo \'leitm111~ter. c1. 92&113 Ille IO<!ve M."cllons are av1ll1bl1 t.)r Or. Cosl1 Mew, Callf, 9'26'6 Tiii s t>uslnes1 Is cDflducled by 1 genitral r.vlew at 1111 followlnQ C.llforQla Oe1>1rl· Tiiis buslne» 11 conductoo by in 111• 1>1rtn~rshlp. ment of Tran1POr11tlon Oislrlct Offices: cllvklv.I. Bruce S. O!JbbS For Humboldt County, the Dlstflct Of. Willer M. D•Yeflfl()(t Tiiis irate,.,.,nt was filed wllll ""' Coun· lice Is loc1led at 1656 Union Sir"'. Thl1 1!1tement wa• fll«l wltn ttlt County IV Clerk of 0••>!0• County on Avgull 14, Eorelr.a; talellhont (707) 4'7·5761 . Cl.,.k of Orlrogt Counlv on A1o1gust 21 1971 Jgn For MonlitreY County and Sant• ,.:21'0l l'·t741f 81rblra County, lha Olstrfct Office 11 Publlmed Or•nte COM! Dally Piiot Publlihed Ora119e Coast D1llv Piiot loc1ltld ti .SO Hlgoer1 Street, Sf.n l.u!J Aogust 30 Ind Se¢ember •• 13, 20' Aogusl 16. 2J, lO, Ind $epll!!'lber ,: Obispo; leltOllone (IOS) S49·317l. 1tn noo.ri 1973 2560-73 FOf KIH'n County, Ille Oh!Tlct Olllc• 1s _____________ 1 __________ _:=::c.;1toe1ted 11 1352 West Ollve Avenue, Fr•Sno; telephone (709) 431...-014. PUBLIC NOTICE F=OI' Los Jr.noms •nd Orang1 coun11n. PUBUC N<mCE [---====~=~---lttie Dlltrtct Ofllct Is 1«.aled •t 120 SOuth PICTITIOUS IMJ$1Hl!.$S PICTITIOUS IUSINl"SS Spring Street, Los Jr.ngelesi telephone NAM& STATEMENT NAMI nAT•M•NT (2ll) 6'0-3550. The followl119 ~ ltt c1011111 The folluw!ng lllfSOl'!S ire doing fl For San Diego Cou11ty, Ille Oltll'ld Of-1>1i1)1.....,1 11: bus.ln111 11. Cl Is localed 11 2829 Joan Streel, S•n B~~~~~.· ~ .... ""',°",,,· •. "' ... ',,"' NfVfllOrt ' AM & M METAU 173 w lnh $1 Diego; tellol'lont (11•) 294-SIM. "' Cos!OJ Mtsl, C1IH. ,Un ' " PHWA Crtlllf'll fll" Robert H. {hOJ '"""'-,..,. MMll-. ll:o!Mrt L. Mc£1rCJV, m w. WlLSOf.I, NEii.ii llQMSll'lttttl AVI •• Wttf!Tllllller, Cllff. '2683 ccs11 MIM, Clllt. 9'2.627 Jr.n ertlllronrMrot1l statement al11ll bl Rudy LMtfn. 721 Scull\ Shall&, WIS! Richard A Mc:Etror 2i1s A ' A ~""red •IW j)r"OCflsed In ICCOl'<lll'IC• Covin.. C1lil. t1190 San11·""' si Costa MW c Ill II . ' with Pf'M 90-1 tor N CI! lllOllWl'I' te<lton T"1s blnlnes1 Is conckldMI by • g_,itl Tnls bu!fMU''1s canclutlld 't>~ aa iieneril Wl'llcl'I 1$ 1ub]ect to lti.e FHWA't NEPA Hrlnlr.iiip. pi1rtntrlll!p. •e•5•Msmen! If, In !ht !odllmlnf of IM Rotilrt 1:1. Brown R/dlllrd A. McElr di vision engineer, lmplemenllflOll (If file This 1!1temt111 w1s fl!fOl wlltl ttw '°"'""" Thh l llflmlnl w•s flied .!rtt. tne COl.Hlty Netlonal EnvlrOl'lmtnlal Polter Ad !fl Ille tr Clerit of 0...11191 Gounry on Avgusf 21. Clll'k ol Or•no• County on Jr.1111\JSI u 1973 lul!esl t~ltnl ponlblt requires PAOtr•-191J ,:21.., !Ion and processing (If 111 eflvlronmenl•I ,.IJIM Pvbllll'led Or-Intl CCYll Dilly Piiot stattmtnl. In making his ludll!Tlll\t, !ht llllltlllshed °'"'111'1 Coesl Olllr Piiot, August 16. '2. 30 Ind Sl'pll ber-6• division engineer ll'l•ll eom1>1r• 11/ of 1111 Aogl/SI 30 •rod !o<eptrmtier 4 13, 10. im ' m U4-1J sltps 1t•eWY l•lr.fil low•rcl cOMfNC'tlon Oil '"l :tw-73 !tie 111onw1r i11<tlon w1th •II ol !he 1tept PUBUC NOTICE r11 10 be 11ken •n<I ,dot,rm1111 wMfMr' PUiluc NOTICE !hf nlghw1y ~fctlon Ills reocMd Iha ,, ... -----[(If com111tt1on whart llM cost1 eil c1tl1ylng ,KTITl.OUJ IUSINISS Ille P'OPOStd h1gnw1r cieerlr outwe!9h 1111 l'~.:~~~Nl!~S Tiie to11!.t":IEs!"~~~=~ Mine.. ~:!1:1',,g thl!ndml~~OC::.1~trl~ Ir: '.1'11 fdlowfng l*'Wl'I Is OollllJ btllfntll 1s: vlronmental i111ement. wrien ltlf'dlvl1lon N . GR AN VILLE MANUFACTUllllNG engl-r llll clout!! wllftl'ltt oir not 1n en• C r;::•:,e,.,oou.s. t05 .lMl11 $t,. hltllll. CO., m J1smlnt c1rc11, C11t11 Mesa. vrronmen111 stelH!llftf slloUld bt .,,...,..,. I • C.lllornl• nw. 1rod corocess~. the atall!Mflf tltO!Jkl bt "~~·= ~~n.::•''t £. Ck:ftn L Grtnvllll 91.c:k, 2411 VI• ore1>1r~. In "'11klng his' Otttrmln1llon. TM. t.u.i 'f -~ MlrlOOil.I WHI, i.tOOl'll HUI .. C..llloml1 Int division englt'lflf" t.hould conlJIW: (I) -I bV "' ltt-~. •ny wrllftft rHMtmrrent P"N'"' br 11'11 di.,.,.,~ A • " Th-11 IMIMU Is COl'ldUC:ltd br ·~ In-$1111 1'11Q1'1Way att(ICY pul'Jul nl to "'" M -dlVIClutl. P•••11r•P1t 5.c of ,.,.M f0.11 lb) tltM of T ..... •ttf9mefrl .... fflttl wtltt Ille c-L. Grtn .... lt. lllC:k WIY •cqul•lllon, lnCkldklO dtinolltlon ol tr Oetk of Orilllft Cfllnfy on Jlll'I' 11, TN• t.111-1 ..... , tlled With lht Coun. l111oreivtmtntt wllll1n "" r'IOltt of WIYI 1m """ tr Cltl~ Oil Or•11t1 CO!lnl'f O!I Jr.ugull 1. (cl nu!'llbtr of twrillltt rtMutH lfld · tm. lhoSI rt! IO be AllcuH(I; (di tf'r.t O:ftf'lt llllltlllthtd 0...lf'ft COii! DtllY flllot, F•tn66 lo ~lcll ni. COMtructlon 1lrt&dr com-~.llfWI '" t:I. JO, and ~-!!. llubl lll'wiO 0. .. 191 c.e.11 o au.,. Piiot l)ft'ttd lnvolv" 1n lrnlrlev•~ ~· ~n •• Jr.UOV1t t, \" n, xi, 1m J.u.n mltll'llf'll of "''"''' rftOllrca1 111 llMf' -btnlllt• ,,, . ater\11 fl'Oll'I' •JM propeised PVBUC N011CB PUBLIC NOTICE h1Q11w1y1 u1 ,,,. mtnt 10 Whlcti "" oro--------·------t--::-::::::=:=-_;_;_;_ __ fllOSld lllgltwlly Is conlNIVIBltli (tJ ,.,,.... --,ICTITIOUs ausiN•ss •v•UAl>lt lntormatlein ein. ,1lgnllk.11tt_lm., P'CTtT10Vt 141$1... N,\MI. STATtMINT IJICll of tlle Pl'OOOHd Mgbwey, lrtd\ldlllf JIAM8 nAtaMlfff TIM folio.wing "'"""' 11 dol blls.I lmp.f>(ll on tit .incl .,.,., qu•llty. nolM Tilf ...... .,.,.... ,. dllM' --••: /Iii ""' ··~'" Mid l•nd I/Ml (l'I) 1111•~.. to 111 ~F INT11JtNATt0 NAl lO«I C mln~tfl1te lllV HVltM llllOfttt of tht 111'0- HlW IMMM. Ga c ...... 0r1..... Unt. Golla MIN, Gll!for~I ,,~ •Prl l*ld ...,,,....,,Md If) enr ofl'!tr ''""'"' ,,........, l•~.C· ttiW0 t•VIJt 1t1J Vlderl1 Melt;•• z.o c' fKlort. """*"" '"· t=t..i. ,...o ltect Hiii c-11 ~. c.u~1 mu ""J L1111, tntemtld ~ .,.. '"vlteod to •uDmll ... _..... TllStfll. "' ... Tilh twaint1'i Is llfl . commenl• ,.1.111111 f"HWA't Criltfl• far 1NJ ...,,.. It ~A-., • 1,.. !NI(~. . "' tGlld;tC:IM Ill' •n NE"" ,.. ..... NMl!t lo *"" "' ... of "" di~ Vldorl1 Mlltt•r lllOI\.,...~ Mdfent 11'1 1T11 •bOYI ll1l wlltlfn A,."""' t' ....,,,.. TN• 1t1t.meri1 trltd wflll ll>f C-30 d1'fj fl'Ollt lttl NII' of this publlc•flon. TNI .t•twMn• ... " ........... ~ o.t1i: ti °''"" Coul'lt A Commft'lll .ilOVkl llt tddfffMd I• Mr. D. t...-Ii Or ... a-tt #I "*""" t, ly TMl"fl• M. Wt~ onbt ~US! 7, ltn E .. Trull, Ofvblon inq!l'ltet, Ftdtr1/ ~D • C~ PlllY Coynty Hlgtlwlt Actm!nlttr1tlon, "· O, IOll lf1J, ,...,,.,. Slcl'llMll\tO. CA '*'-f.M.... 0-..., C... Olly' 1"11&4, ,_ltllH Ofltltt COMI O.! P•UlQ Pu!JlllMcl Orll'l(ll Co.ti 0111~ i-1to1, ~ t. 11. A .. IP~ :NN3 ~ f, 1 .. ». M. "" · IV 1!!,lot A11g111I )0.. ml • W'l·n ,, 6 ~ 2 - 5 6 7 8 c L A s s I ' F I E D 6 4 2 -5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T .--' . -' ' lti\11 .. Y Pll~ttT WANT i\ltS Gen1r1I HEDGE AGAINST [ _,..,. 11~11 _, .. ,. j[~I ( ..,.,.1.,s• INFLATION!! I :;· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;~-~~-.;.;· ~ - I~ Olscrlrnlnating buyers Will I• appreciate this Romantic General General hidden oasis near $hopplng. CUstont home and lnconte \vilh pool. Priced right at $59,500, CALL COL\VELL &llJ-OC,Q;, EXCHANGE-SELL 12 , Apnr~nts. 1'.f a 11 y alternatives to financing and ownership. ~ta.y Trade Do\vn for smaller Wlits., * ~eneral CORONA DEL MAR 2 COLORFUL COTTAGES * llare offerin g of ocean si de of the hwy. prop- erty of two houses on one lot , live in one, have income from the other, First time of. fered. at $89,500. ~fay, .Trade for Land suitable for. 3 to 5 units. fr1ay carry 2nd Trust Deed. All units ~!shed. Good Renl Schedule. Heated and. filtered pool. Call anytime, NIW Tlll'l.EXis ,; DUPLIXIS CORBIN -MARTIN IN COSTA MESA 8 1 J'. OL FINANCING :t2 :tO AYAILAIU . REALTORS 644-7662 Coll Anytime 6'6--0555 ASSUME FHA 30 YEAIS . ' General General LOAN Almost new professionally lanrtscaped 3 bed r o o n1 home. All eleetrie built-in kitChen, family room and con1plete ly enclosed backyard. Sho"'s lots of T.L.C. If you're looking for something real special in a high demand area of Hun- tington Beach, you've found it in 'this beauty. $46,500. Opon Dolly Plocontlo Ave. 11 Wilson ORANGE COUNTY APARtMENT EXCLUSIVE AGENTS, 547-6791 VERMONT FARM HOUSE IA CUESTA YlllAS Call &16--0555 SPARKLE PLENTY 'Vipe your feet first! Shows. like--a-model home. SEE this 5 bedroom ?t1esa del i\lar beauty . one heck of a nice home · in a quiet neighbor· OOod. $45,000. co: rs ' WALLACE REALTORS --!514441~4141- (0pon Enni"t•l 4 BDRM. • $26,QOO Can't beat this combination \\'ith large bedrooms, 2 baths, built-In kitchen. dou· hie car garage, w I w carpets & drapes. Better check this one out TODAY. ~ \\'estcliff Dr., Open eves, 646-7711. Walker &lee •t•L l lT•TI NEAR HARBOR HI OPEN DAILY I to 5 1514 Rodlond1, C.M. 4 Bedroom 2 BA comp painted in & out, Re\\' car- peting. R·2 Jot. m1 for an- other uiiit. l.rg lot. Owner ""1.ll help tina"IC't'. e CALL ANYTIME e 646-3921 or Eve. 673-4.Sn Lachenmyer Re,lltor General VNiciut: ~fS CORONA DEL MAR Tl\'O separate 2 bedroon1 home!i on R·2 lot. Rru-c, but \l"e just Hsted thcn1. Both conlpletely renlOdclcd in cle<gant tnste in 1973, in· eluding i.vpper plumbing, 11-iring. lhe \\'OI'ks. Eal.:h has its own p1'i\-ate patio, la\1,1 and charn1. An in· vestor's drean1 or an own· er'9 detieht. i19.900. Hurry! UNIQUE HOMES REALTORS - 675-6000 ' * * * R. C •. Coale 1541 Miramar Dr. Balboa You are the winner of TWO FREE TICKETS ID the SHIPST ADS & JOI.IN SON ICE FOLLIES Sept Srh thru 16th at the · FABULOUS FORUM (subjt'Ct tO $1 sef"\ic& charge at the l''oru1n) Please cail 642-5678, ext 33.1 to ctabn your tickets.. (North County toll free number is 540-1220.) * * * BAUOA PENINSULA POINT Active, -...-ater viC\\' on d1an· nel. harbor rnu-ance. 5 Bed· roon1s, 4 baths, hu-ge dining room and sepal'ate maid's qtn. 45 feet of \\-ater front. age. Large p1·ivate patio, pier & slip. S:il9,000. CAU. 6Th4000 to see. SIMON SEZ PETE BARRETI step into .,,, • bedroom, I'< -REALTOR- bath mini-castle. Easy·care 642-5200 floor plan in an ideal family !~~~~~~~~~~ neighborhood. AU the extras ~ P1'1" "'~ cove>"ed patios. OLD CORONA Just $29,950. Simon Sez Call Now! 962-8851. DEL MAR NEW 4-PLEX $80,000- NO FINANCING PROBLEM Seller will supp:irt financing! Beautiful 4-plex vacant and ready for that f irst owner tax advantage. Submit land exchanges, commercial or units in this area. Call Red Carpet, Realtors 5l6-!l640 (open evenings) A REAL BUY! UlWEST priced 3 bdrm. 2 ba. home in Ba.fboal -4 y'rs. old, Spenlstl style; A"b'.cssed for 2nd story. $(lj,000, c.u, 673-3663 SJ0.7914 i:v.s. associated BR OKERS-Rf Al TO~ S :c1~ W 8clbnc 671 lbll Triplex Rxer Start your estate here! Messy but eound, 2 BR unit. • paint, oolish and profit! Listed at $39,900 . 10% down or TitADE: ! ! Call 645-8400. GO BY! WHERE? CALL!! Beautiful old Spanish home on double lot large enough for the largest ta.mily. Spec- tacular view only steps to the beach. Take a look at this fabulous h o m e , 673-8550. , •• !~1/CQ • ffS FllNTO/JE NICEI SPACIOUS CAPE COD Huge t\\'O story family home -...1th over 2600 sq. ft. of liv· lng. Immediate possession available fot this 4 bedroom, 4 bath, home with c;hanning formal dining room ... A real steal at $45,000. Call Red Carpet, Realtors 645--8080 ( o p e n ewntngs) • ME";:SA~,V~E=R~D~E-.- fuot time -• Beaatltul 3 BR, 2 BA + family room. Only $43.500. Ginny MOrrloon,,Rltr. * 567..WO...:•:_ __ ---C~O.NDO Adult park Uke community, clubhoue, pool, p u't l •I n g greens. an bulltln kitchen, air conditioned 2 bedn>om [VII*' How1nl&Co.l 'l4 .bath .. Noar 171~· and , ..,__ Tustin~-~!¥ $22,900. Call · • Red urrpc:l1 Realtors --• I • • $46-8G.$Q ' REDEc::~~D AND , '* TRE_,_E_SHA __ D_E_D_*_ ReocntlY rtdecoratcd 3 ~vely l 'bdrm. Cood Eut· bedroon1, 2 beth plu.t·famUy. aide IC!C·: EXtra large lol. room on quiet cul~e;ac Spac. hvin,g rm. w/ttpl, 11tretL _tn __ J.teaa Vtrde. An· for S32.500 Unusually la!'(<! bedrooms. lrALBOA .BAY PROP. Beautiful largo shad• 1I'f<• * '42-1491 * everywhre. Act qukkly on thi• one al $41,500. Call Red Carptt, ~altou 645!lllJll (open everilnp) ___ .___ With Pool $32,!00 P•rl< tltc. ytrct. Sharp; bdrm. l•'amily nn, fireplact. Din· tna nn, gas buih Ins. Move in condition. brlc,5j0.1720. TARBELL l YEAR NEW 3 bedroom home ln £1 Tom. PatJo Olt- ment and walks m In . Beautiful drapes. AJf'.COno dltioned. Real!y lo O\OVfl In. Possible to tak'8 owr loen of 1~'"'° '4i th $7(0), $7307. It'• a brffze. • • .teU your items with eue, -• Daily Pilt>I c;liMffiod. -· ' -·, General llACl< BAY BONANZA $57,850 Secluded cul·rte..sac property in prestige estate area of finer home-s. Dramatic ca· thedral ceilings in living roo1u wi!h crackling \\'OOd· burning fireplace, open plan fan1ily roon1, spacious gm·. den \'ie\\·: for1nal dining roon1, 4 large bedrooms, aud gourmet kitchen \11th breakfast bar. Peek·a-boo l'ie'>I· of Ne\vport Bay. Please call toda)' for an.ap- pointnien! lo inspect this highly desirable property. Cati 5.J&.2313, OPEN Tit 9 • IT'S FUN lO BE NICE/ !~ THE REAL ESTJlTERS TRY ••••• BEFORE YOU BUY Harbor View Homes A rart> ch~ncc tn lease in llarbo1: Vit'\I" l-lott\C.'S, \11th an opUon to purdmsc nex1 year' Char'ming 2 bedroom. plus convertible den home, in sparlding. condition. Span· ish tile entry, heavy &tlake roof, furmai dining room, cus1om carpets & drapes. Price reduction makes this the 10'\\·f"St priced horne in this nu>St sought after neigh. bortloocl $62,950 -Not Lease. hold C. F. ColeswDl'thy RHltors -0 SHORE CUFFS TI1c bet;t: ~'II in to-...·n! &·atllitul\y an·anged hon1e old bri<..-k and charn1 gall)re: \VHITE \VATER VIE\V. See today. tomorrow ma,y be too late! Call 6T:..7Xl5. YOUNG FAMILY Wanted for this cozy 3 bed· room home on oversized lot, Room for lhe trailer too! N~r·new roof. c o v ere d pauo. Great "starter" home and iow down payment pos. sible on price of $28,2'::{), Call Now • 842-4535, Space Race?? Roomy 3 BR, 2 BA home on tree shaded comer Jot. Cptg, drps. bltns, private patio, -..."Ork shop! Clubhouse & s.,.,imming pool near by! $33.500 -low do\\'Jl OK!! Call 645-8400. ---·---EASTSIDE- POOL HOME with 3 bedrooms & large lam. rm. Move-In conditk>n with lots of extras -new paint in & out. Owner may lease wlth opt1on. $36,950. 2043 Westclitf Dr., open eves. 646-77U. Walker. 8 lee ••a~ llfAT• ~ ACRE · REDUCED $29,950 Rolling green lawns and stalely trees su1·row1d pi<'· turl!squ f Vermont fannhouse. Old '" o r 1 d charm and architecture. Forn1al entry, Step do1vn 1naster suite .,.,.Ith 5th bath. Man size den -...1th rugged beams. ~faids quarters. 23" TAVERN KITCHEN \\'Ith cathedral beams. Banquet fomial dining, EI e g a n I French doors to secluded garden paradise. Walled patio with outdoor fireplace and B.B.Q. RED BARN 2nd story in·law apartment, 2 guest <."Otlages and covered dance pavillion vverlooking 1nagnificent free tonn pool. ENTERTAINERS PARA· OISE. CALL 645-03m. I OHi.' I I. Ol \0\ .,,,,;,rpp BRING THE KIDS and move lnto this one year ne\\', 4 bedroom home. The unique, open Door plan pro. vides space plus pri\facy. The \'aulted living room ceiling is great for hlfl and wanned by a beautiful fireplace. Brick fence sur• rounds a plantable yard. Easy access to the com- 1nunlty pool. Only $44,900 . y,·~e it lasts. Di~ 962--8851. !i•mRMTOM-1~ DUPLEX 90°/o FINANCING 8'/2°/o 'INTEREST An ideal summe-r/\\inter rental only 6 dOOrs to a super beach. Chl•n tor profit or occupy for pleasure. Only 184 .500. Ou!" fantastic te1ms may not last longl so caJl quick. CA L 644-nll /Jxi NIGEl • OAILEY f,, ASS!JCIATES MESA-VERDE- BEAUTY Recently redecorated home on quiet cul-<le-sa.c in ex- cellent condition. Unusually large bedrooms. Antiqued \\'Ood\.\'Ork, covered patio shade trees and close to schools $41.500. Call Red Carpet, Realtors 546-8640 $2900 Total Down As.sume 7~~% VA Loan! Trim 4 BR, 2 BA Ranch Style, shake roof, bltns, huge lam nn . decorator fresh! Asking $37 ,950. Sub- mit any ofter: No loan rosts! ! ! Broker 645-2133 EASTSTDE . FIXER UPPER Fonnal Dining room, Jafge pool, massive fireplace, ex- tra large family room, all this plus 20' x 20' Av11lobla prior to schooll 1 Due to Credit Rejections: e Not a Condo or Townhouse • You O\vn The Land Ttiesc lll't? single family, com· rnon wall homes wilh 3 BR . 2 BA. lg fnm rm. liv rm . kitchen -...•Hh all hltns • front yard landscaping with sprinklers . itide yard fenl.'t'S, full detachtcl 2 car gar., shake & Mission tile roofs and ABOVE ALL -BUILT BY AYRES!! 1342 Sq. Ft. from $30,490 Convention•! I 0 Y. Down Model at Adan1s ,t,: Florida • one block W. ol Beach, 1-luntlngton Beach, 5J6.1'4S SOUTH COAST PLAZA Super hl'O sotry 4 br/lorrnal dining & den. Tu·o fireplaces -v.·et bar -peneling & gorgeous tile floors. Cre-at ™'"' family hon1e i n Sa.ndpolnte. Walker & lee lllL ltfafl EVERY BODY ELSE KNOWS NOW AND IT WON'T LAST LONG Just listed. Back bay area. Ne\\'port Beach c u s t o m home 3100 sq. ft., nvo S1one rtreplaces. And large pool roon1. $66,::ioo. H u r r y . 646-71Tl OPEN TIL t • frS FUN 70 Bf MCEJ ~ ~ PRIVATE ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH BY OWNER Leaving area, immediate OC· cupe.ncy, 4 BR, 5 BA luxury 2 year old hom e. J\1any de- luxe, custom features have been built into this oUtstand· ing waterfront home • cus- tom fun1lture & 1967 Cruiser included, Excellent terms. $279.000. Also available un· furnished. For info • call 67J.Tl82. MESA VERDE RANCH STYLE BEAtrr. RAMBLING 4 BR .. 2 BA. one-story home. Heavy shake roof, picrur. esque atrium, lrg mod kilch, family nn, beaut carpeting and paneting. Spacious lot on quiet cul-Oe-sac close to new ~I park $46.SMO Open EvH. •'~,...HERITAGE . , REALTORS workshop -3 bedrooms, 2 1 .,,"!!'~~!!!!!!~""'"'"""'~I baths, owner mU8t seU I' NO DQW-N 135,950. Ca ll Red Carpet, Real ton 546-8640 T DANA POINT * VA A secluded, ocean front estate on the very tip of hi.stone oana Point. 3 BR .. 3 ba. Spanloih home on 165 ft. trwta'!f' .. SZffi,tXKI TURNER ASSOC. MESA VERDE --1100 N. C<r -• H .... , LaguM DELIGHT 494-lln Brighi new paint & carpels, a truly lovely home with gardens beaut i fu l on tree-shaded l!llle. O n I y $21,500. Lots of tree• and shade. ~ BAYCRES=T~*-- Brick patio hand pal ted w blue niextcan Ute in kltc~•n. N A BUDGET . alkef f} lee walking distance to shop. Larre 4 BR., 3 ba. fAnuly 1111. ,.,411.. ·Pin&. 4 bedroom 2 bath I home on a .Jn.\ we.II ~ated 54G..002'l home wlth. family 1'00fl') jutt lot. QW'n('r 111 eaving town • --· ~ · -·'---136,soo, Coll Red Carpet A hat frleed 11>• home for A HOUSE WANTING ~eolton •l~. OPEN q;ik" • le. 'S'.'Nl. TO BECOME A HOME HOUSF.S CORBIN-MARTIN Needs love • children Md n MESA VERDE Rultors 644-7662 Utile pain<. eon., oee this De•trabte 4 bedroom on * BEAC·H-DUPLEX * 3 bedroom + Den located cul"'(kHac, great locatlon Bl-a. near tjlut-chts, IJChoolJ and only 145 950 and only 10% ~ ..,.." to Wa~r ShOps, Call for appointment down. HURRY CaJI Red Real cutle! 1 4 2 Bd:tms. prlnc!Pfli• only. 545-5196 ·Cal'JlC!!t Reattof. ~8640 Ide.al home A Income. ' M5-8l5i. ' !open ~venlngil !'~' ,v !5'.000 · -CONDO ,21 - EASTSIDE SPECIAL I CAYWOOD REAL TY Very sharp 2 bt!di.om 11> Bright and airy new all elec-_ * ~12'0 * bath condo located tn choice Irle country KttChen, large CUSTOM! 'J BDR ~"f111'1foolon C ll<aCh locotJon, C.ml\y roOm wtlb ..... brick $67 !00 • -arpet, Realton tlrepl,ce, large peUo, toads Lovely CUlto''n 110m1 wUb -IQJ>tn cv~lnzsJ__ of cJau·and what a delJaht. double Wied brick fireplace ANume 5114% Loan ~~rru';.~.~~lov~ beamed ¥ce 1Jlni" and l-:\•n~·lnte 4 bdnn wllh R;e,,... .. ...!!..~..., Re' 1 l bt1utlful a1rturn. J,.ocalfd ln tam~-m , lire place. Oln\ni _.l"'.. ~ 4'rl prime NeWflorl locntlou anrl nn, oullt-lna &: dishwasher. 546-8840 (Cpen Mnintl> 1lmply fnlmaeulA!e, Call PaUo. NMr achool1. $33,250. rut nsultJ arw 1tMt a pbone Red 01.rpe1, Re-a 1 tors brk 540 .. rm cal\ ai11ay • -· , 645-eOt!O (o(lf'n <>'tll!npl TARBI~'::.._- -· I), 1il, PILOT Anf¥iuncemer.t .. • . ' soo -!i>4 The r,tggest Marketplace on . the Ora111e Coast . Mobilt Homitt • w. . . . m . M9 Autoh dW . . , . 9SO • 990 loats • ,.,.. ,,,,. :ootloment 900 -9l4 .EtnP1'~.,, . . . 700 -799 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ftl.nonok. ' . . ' • , , . • S2S • SfJ Peli ond Svppli.t • • • • • • ISO • '99 Real [51GI• Gen.ral. , , , . 150 • l9f -••. 200 ·'199 . ••. 100 • 124 • • S.SO • S74 ,,900 .149 You Can Sell It, Find It , Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678) One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval t.ntol . . . . . • • • • • . JOO • .., Sthook ond lmtnxtlon • • • S7S -'" s.-.icet ond ..,,.. •••• 600-699 TrCH1tp0rtotioti. • • • • . • • ~s · Mt -·---"' ~~~ ERRORS. AdvertiMrs should chock the ir •di d•llY & rtport errors Immediately. The DAILY PILOT a11umos liability for tho first Incorrect Insertion only. -------=------------ General General ei;nJa J!J/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT Linda Isle Waterfront Lovely 4 bdrm., 41fi. ha. home with swim- ming pool, pier & slip, panoramic view of main channel. Lge . family rm. w/space for billiards & family dining. Waterfront formal dining & living rm. $275,000. For Complete I nform•tlon On All Homei & Loli, PIHso Call : BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 B•ysido Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 Gener el Gen.ral CHARMING TOWNHOUSE MOST POPULAR large 3 bedroom/dining room model , patio, double garage, bltins, clubhouse & 3 pools. Best of au no yard work. Lowest priced big three at $24,300. LOW INTEREST LOAN LOVELY, BRIGHT & CHEERFUL 3. bedroom home w/family room , on quiet tree lined . street. Present 5% ~O loan can be assumed, or new financing available. Asking only $34,600. ~'. ~?>· HERITAGE REALTORS. *DUPLEX* Artractive ground fioo r, fresh· ly decor. units. 1 & 2 Bdrms .. dbJ. gange + fenced park· Ing. 2 BJks fron1 17th St. shoppng. Owner finance . $38.500. FABEL WALKER res. 642•2668 m otA\fQll' • 2 SMALL HOl\IES on one lot. Good, clOSLe·in loc. v.i th 540-1151 Open Eves. Gentral MESA VERDE 5 BEDROOM Sparkling clean with nev.• paint, this 5 bedroom, 2~it bath home has fomial din- ing room and large llving room overlooking park-like yard with loads of fruit trees and covered patio. Beyond 11 ~~a. 0111 !>46-2313 to see 1<thl1 great value todayi $f.C,900, alley accf.>SS. $32,900. ..:....:.:....:...::.:=:=::==.. * 4 BEDROOM, 2 balhJ, 6-UNITS-l'IEWI double garnge. S3C.'l'.l0. Best Choice corner lot In best of terms. * COt.fl\1ERCIAL ZONE _ 2 Eastslde C.O!ila Mesa rental aN'a. All units are 2 BR ~'O ~ory older Mme, bedl"OOTll, l bath and building corner lot 124,500. 1 . be! 1 ~ Roy McC•rdle RP•ltor 9 JU!t ng comp etn.i. Be the first ov.·ner and take ad· 1810 Nev.,port Bl vd., C.?if. vantage of · ma."imum tax ~m9 benefits. Priced to go at Need a "Pad"? Place an ad! Call 642-5618. $130,00l. Call Red Carpet. Reahort 645-&l!O (Open evenlngsl· • Gener•I Hyoute~a ~t-~ Half gone in half a year and the rest will not last long. Hurry to see this distinctive Newport Beach development of condominium homes, built·in clusters around handsome courtyards. Eight superb models, each a masterpiece of luxur~ comfort, convenience and quality construction. Sundecks, fireplace, wet-bar, elegant t'1aster Suite, Sun-Liteo kitchen, private enclosed double garage. Recreational faci lities tnclude heated swimming pool, lighted tennts courts, sauna, therapy pool. All exterior building and grounds mainten(\nce provided. Satisfy your curiosity-see Newport Crest today! Two, Three, and Four Bedroom Condomlnl~ Home.a from $62,995 ~%'~.~ ·~ Financinq Available at 7 3/4 °/o * From Paci fic Coast Highway ""!la.'"'""'-' wd Superior Avenue (Balboa Blvd.), drive up.Superior to Ticonderoga, Md directly to Newport Crest lnform.111\on CentetTelephone: t714) 645-6141 Sales Office open daily ' 10 a.ni.. to !unset • l~ I _,,.s .. 'A114t<M-s.td ~ AlllASSOCIATfS REALTORS 2828 EAST COo\ST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR. CALIF. 644·7270 MORE THAN JUST A DUPLEX IN CdM BeautUul rustic 2 bedroom, open beam ceil- ings with charming brick fireplace , builtin kitchen in this front unit. JUST BEING COMPLETED, so you can pick your own colors and carpets. 3 Bedroom, 2 bath , cozy fireplace, builtin kitchen. Best location in Old Corona de! Mar. $95,500. LUXURIOUS BLUFFS CONDO LIVING Live in the prestigious BLUFFS. New Span· ish tile entry, new carpets & drapes pleas- ant fireplace, large homey kitchen.' 3 bed· rooms , 21h bath~, right-on the lovely Green- belt. One of the best ' $62,500. • A BOAT SUP GOES WITH THIS CONDO This lovely 2-story end unit has everything --<!Ven a BOAT SLIP. Ultra modern kitchen with all new builtins. Attractive stone fire- place, 2 Bedrooms, 2'h Baths. SUNDECK overlooking the water. All this can be yours for $86,500. When you list with us, YOUR HOME is adver· tised in Home for Liv- ing Magazine in more than 900 areas.-ancl cus- tomers are sent to you as referrals from our over no •ffillates of NMLS. 2821 E. Coast Hiway Corona del Mar General General * *-** ** * TAYLOR CO. * LUXURY ANI) QUALITY422S,OOO A jacuzzi large enough for the entire fam· ily & a great covered patio for entertain- ing. 5 Bdrms, FR, lge DR, 4'h· baths & 3- car gar. Air-cond thruout. Abundant marble. Finest constr. Land incl. Dover ·Shores. 1337 GALAXY DR. OPEN THURS. 1·5 TWO NEW LISTINGS * THE BLUFFS EVER POPULAR "E" PLAN ON WIDEST GREENBELT. 3 LGE. BR. & FAMILY RI\I. LIV. RM. IS PANELED, \VITH BEAUT., BLT-U-: BOOKCASES. $76,500. * ONE OF IRVINE TER- R.ACE'S SHARPEST 2 BR. & DEN HOMES \VITH PLENTY OF EYE ' APPEAL. PLANTINGS & P A T I 0 PRACTICALLY ELIMINATES MAINTEN- ANCE PROBLE!\1S. VERY IMPRESSIVE ENTRANCE. 1'>9;500. PLEASE CALL 675-3000 -m 11.n · ,, 11ic.,r1i' llE.ll:f\' l:\'C , ,[ST 1;1q ~5 ~~O!j ONLY $25,950 . ... for this 3 BR, 2 BA, huge 20'x22' rumpus rm., new crpts. Close to Estanci!:I High. Priced under market. BACK BAY DUPLEX 2 BR units, dbl det. gar, on large 71'x100' lot in country at:niosphere. Priced right at $39,950. BEACH DUPLEX Exterior l'K'wly painted, 3 BR & 2 BR, uni.ts, firepl, dbl gar. In process of com p in· terior decorating. Best buy on the beach. $76,500 1797 Orange, C.M. 642-1771 ~21 Gen1r11I General ** ** ** * TAYLOR CO. * NEW-IN "OLD" CORONA Real .pride of Ownership in this new duplex. Builder's own home, an architectural trend- setter. 2-Story beam ceiling in LR. Mezza- nine library. Mstr suite w/frplc & balcony overlooks Spanish courtyd. 3 Bdrm & 2 BR units. Really Choice! $149,500. LINDA ISLE BAYFRONT419S,OOO Exclusive island of boating offers the ulti- mate in prestige living. Private tennis, beach and security entrance. Architect de-- sign in this lovely 4 bdrm home with library, form DR playrm & 2 wet bar•· Pier/float. HIGH ON A HILL412S,OOO Brand New! Ready for you to occupy. See this large 4 BR home m Spyglass today! fam rm, formal DR & huge rumpus rm. Circular stairway, 3-car gar. Incl. land. IRVINE TERRACE4172,500 You'll LOVE this fabulous view of the ocean, jetty & boating activity. Pius custom qual· ity-built 3 bdrm home. Walnut paneled FR, formal DR & 3 baths. New sauna, 3,. fr. places. Beautiful pool in !rt courtyard. LINDA ISLE4265,000 A new offering! One of the most charming & friendly homes on the island. 5 Bdrms, FR, formal DR & 4\/2 baths. Like New. Beautiful Kitchen, great storage, wet bar. Fine location on lagoon. Pier/slip. By appt. IRVINE TERRACE4119,500 Beautiful view of lights, ocean & Catalina. Call today to see this lovely 4 bedroom (2 mstr stes ) home. FR, dining area, den w/ wet bar, 4'h baths, pool & 3-car garalJ.e. ''Our 21th Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hilla Ro•d ''Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club'' .N!i'WPOR.T CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 _T_H_E_C_O_M_P_LET_E_ Gone.rat . . G"""r•I HOME ~******************~ It bas EVERY'nlING from the 4 spacious bedrooms and 'large famtly room to the en· tert:ainer's backyard com· ple'te wfth s))lll'kling fOUJl- 1.a:in and ~ tire ring. The frosting on this cake is the total u~ throughout including -""""""' and brand new di.l!hwas.ileT. Assumable 6% V.A. loan SUPE·R SPECIAL-BRAND NEW Choice of two of finest 4BR, SBA homes in NeW]>Ort Beach-Spacious interiors, super locat1on OPEN DAILY 1 TO S PM, STOP IN & SEE 1801 Santiago Dr., N.B. 1600 Harrow Pl1c1, N.B. $220,. All this and a good 645-7221 with montfll,y payrnents or OokJ locatiOn too • what more "' * Typhlcal conventional financing of 30 year loan: ''Our 28th Year'' coWd you want for Just · . , "21' 1733 WESTCLIFF DR. Cas price of Plan 1 $62,995; down paym~nt $39,500? Ca:H nov.r to S"e'll il ~ $12.695; 300 monthly payments of $361.00 (pnn· WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 841.oo!O. ~ 11 . NEWPORT BEACH cipal & ;nter"'lJ al 8~ % ANNUAL PERCENT· 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road oe£NnLO• ITTl FUHTOEENICEI '"'**** ****** •.• ** ***** - -NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-1910 General G=.•:;..;"°='°:;..;I __ _. __ AGE RATE. ''Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club'' i ~ 1 - ~ .......... ,.....,hdflcM,C.,lK. • -. 1-r-..._H.Gr•c.p.......,~c..1nct& -..= ' General General EASYSIDE POOL AND TOOL l"'"' ... "'""11111 ... 1 --~,..-'-"·----·~-·-~•--EASTSIDE :.::.:EA=S:;..;T_Sl_D_E_C_.M_.-I ---CUL·D.E-SAC Choke Earufde Co.ta Mell :oi .. "::':..:::,:::-a:.:;:.~~.1,::Z.s..:!°'!:!1;.i... 4 UNIT~EWI $39,950 loca,tion. Ch arm 1 ne ! COSTA MESA OPEN DAILY 1-5 VACANT Super sharp 3 bedroom. 2 bedloom 2 bath home with General l~~~,,,~~~ll;G~e;n;•;••;1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;G;en;•;•;a;I =;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I Red Carpet, Realtors proudly bath . home with al! new family room and , huge $25 000 2545 WestMinster Ave. presents 4 custom units at electric country kitchen. flr@place plus a 14x 28 pool Lu XU R This 3 bedroi:m home has 3 BR 1 lf.i Ba w/large added $80,000 In choice downtown Large i;haded patio with for these wann days and • y large shade trees and a rui:npus . rcJ?ID, Cr es b I y Costa hfesa location. You loads of glass. Uke to play huge "'Ork ~p cl~ by. THE BLUFFS BEST BUYI 0 X" Is this super floor plan. One yr .• old condo is being offered for $69,500 INCL. LAND! 3 BR's., 212 ba., lam. rm. 1800 Sq. It. Call Toni Escobar $79,500 TO $129,500 French, Spanish or Californian -we have 7 Harbor View Hills, Lusk built homes. Pools, panoramic views. Excel. com. loc. Let Us show You . Burns. EARTH TONES . highlight the interior of this 3 bdnn., 2 bath home. Recent winner of Home & Garden Tour. $69,900. To see, call Howard Wells BAYFRONT CONDOMINIUM Three BR's.; three baths. Over 2,000 square feet. Complete privacy. $149,000 Full Price. E. M. Vreeland BALBOA ISLE BAYFRONT Large home, 2 Jots; pier & fioat. 5 BR.J den, bonus playroom; 5 ba . Sandy beach . Move in for summer. Excellent · financing. 1317,000. Russ Flynn LUXURIOUS BIG CANYON Beautifully decorated by Cahn ell & Chaffin; 5 BR. residence. 3 Fireplaces, Good. loca- tion, with outstanding landscaping. •t42,500. Pat Hug CAMEO SHORES BARGAIN BeautUul ocean view. Very large living nn. & mstr. bdrm. with parquet fioors. Beamed ceilings. 4 Bedrooms, 3 baths. $ll9,500. Carol Tatum 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., H.B. I CONDOMINIUMS BY THE SEA NEWPORT BEACH large lot. It's today's buy palntc:d 1ns1de & out. Boat will have to see this one. pool? Call Red Carpet, ~ you i~agme this lov.• and \\'in be tnmorn'.J\\·'s steal. <>a1e into h11ve :vam. SEF.! Call 645-8080 r 0 r ap-Real!ors 645-8080 (o p en pnce of '35,~. Bett~ call Take a quick look? fi46.TITI. e CALL ANYTl,.,E e pointment. Check our everungs) on this one; Red Carl>et. ,.,3928 E .,. ~16 various methods of financ-Real!-On 6-15-fmO (open OPfH 11L II • IT'S FUN TO BE HICE! -or YI. ~~ ing on th is package. CLASSIFIED will sen It! cec.ve::rung='::'-----1 2, 3 & 4 Bedrooms-2 or 2'h Baths Formal Dining Rooms. Pool, Sauna & TenniS Courts. SPARKLING NEW-MOVE IN NOW f ~ ~ -~ -~ ~~ ·t~ ~I .Lachenmyer ' Rea ltor ANXIOUS-MAKE OFFERS EXCELLENT TERMS Real Estate Consult•nts 1525 Superior-Suite 3 NewP'!rl Beach (7141 645-3230 ' General CASA DE SANTIAGO . Executive home! Ullintae in privacy & <l('C()r. Lovely gardens • provide exquisite setting for unique pool! Of· fe~ at $5-4,'!iOO in Santa Ana's f Ines t residentlal aroa. Walker &Lee fll.t.l ,,,.,, P.Jn NIG[l•"• nAIL[Y & · ASSLICIATES LAST ch•nce for prime loc•tion condomtnfum1. 621 VI• Park Drive, Lido Isle, hi & 3rd lloOf. $14',SOO. 67S:77io. -----General BY THE LAKE BY THE LAKE BY THE LAKE You \11ill sing a happy tune y,•hcn you discover !his new 4 bed1'001n, 3 bath, Lake Forest home. Forever view Will never . be ob~ructed. ffave your own dock & boat at )'Q'..!r door step. P L U S cluh house & recreational facillUes with your home owner's 11.!SOC, Own ll piece or the \\.·ater! 637·9101 . Like to trade? Our Trader's J I PB.rod~~ column ls for )'OU! Want ad resulla ..... 642-5678 I Gener•I General I MACNAB IRVINE BIG CANYON CONDOMINIUM New-ready for occupancy-"Dover" plan -2BR, 2 bath. ~ofessionally landscaped. Lease flOO/mo. ot sale $85,000. Bille Matt· son 644-6200. (F13) EASTSIDE COSTA MESA Attractive small home on R-2 lot. Excel- lent transportation nearby. $39,950. Sul>- mlt offers. Elaine Svedeen 642-8235. (F28) ISLAND LIVIN~' SLIP W/LG. DECK 100' of bayfront on your own semi-private Island. Panoramic view of Newpor\ Bay activities. Luxurious custom 4BR home tastefully decorated incl. walnut paneled library, Enjoy the superb view from mast· er BR enhanced by a lovely marble F.P. & beautiful master bath coordinated In ex· pensive onyx chalcedony. $385,000. Walter King 644-3200. (F37) --'Wr. ' ' [Irvine 1-~~ .. -,c--I ... __ ........ I t"' ..... ,,,,., .... ,... I ' HARBOR VIEW HOMES ONE-OF-A·KIND MONTEGO 4 bedroom s, family room. formal dining, creative decor. You'll love the landscaping. Immediate move in. Price retluced to $74.SOO BRING YOUR SWIMSUIT •.• when you move Into this imniaculate 4 Bdrm, family room Harbor View Home-next to community pool & park. Includes: Welbar, 2 fireplaces, w/w ahag & many other extras. Submit your !arms. $81,500 ANXIOUS OWNER Monaco-2 Bdnn & den, well decorated, shows like a model home. Lets make an offer! HARBOR VIEW HOMES REALTY NEWPORT BEACH 833-0780 INFORMATION ON OTHER HOMES AVAILABLE •. • " • " ' I' I I • • . . . . . . . -. . . . . . • • • • .. JI .. . .. , 1 ,, OAllY Pl.LOT Thursday August 30, }qJ.) ~I -[-..... -.-.... -•• -.-,~-, -_-,..-.. -,~1 r[-...... -.-,.,-... ---,jl~/ [ _,,,_ 1~1 :1~-~~ ... ~u.~~.I~ 11~J '-1-~_'"-~ie_. _,j[j] ·~.~f" I.Ill] "'~:::"· [iJ 1-1 ~-.iii~~iii.~;;1:::~~:-iiiii j !;;;;~;;;!;;:~.;;;;;;;.;;;.11~~~~~~1 } G•n1rot· General Costa MeH Huntlncrton BMch Leguna Buch Newport BHch Income Property 1'61nconM Property 16' Rnl Ett1t1 Wantecl 184 '1 4000 S.q. Ft. EXQUISITE OWNER""''"'"' .. ,... pion VACANT Cj)u·1et _C_Hnv_on svt',~l~~!T ~om INVESTMENT-INCOME PROPERTIES -* CLI ENT* - C d POOL HOME I borne, '"'" dcl Mar. 3 Lg. "' 1-·• wlsl1's to ''"'·chu" dl•u<"'d I' orono el ,Mar lnlcrior de<.'Onttor dream br v.•/dbl closets, 2 bll. :.t cur MOVE·IN-FASTI Cltarin1ng 3 bdnn., 2 b..'lth built 4 BR+ lrg, Jo"'am Rm, Medical-Dental--26 Suites pi'OP\!l'fll'S, h0111l'S 01' Income ro.r ti~ v.·bo . aPpl'Cciall' home. 3 bedroom, 2 bath gar, n1•\.\' cptg liv rm k m11tr Rnnlhling 4 BR La CUesta home in quiet Bluebtrd Can· 2 t.llirter !JH. + 2 fr'plcs, 26 'd h' . La t U11ll11 for lhe purpoie of I fbl('.I l•Ut-!O!l\ l'OJ1Stt'\1ction a nrl horn(' in cbojtt 1'.1csa Vurdc br, ll('W "''lllJillro1u; Solarlt&n -6 B.lock!i to ocean. No qual-yon. Lu.rice Uving room wilh ll~J LR, fonn~ Dr. Com-l?rl 8 of owners tp suite s. rge cen er. l'(lllovarlni: & J'e-liClJLng. 1''or ex"-e_llent tern\.", ::i bcd.roonls, location ,.,.Ith rustoni Jacu:czi floor (.'()\'Cring in ktt. 'Ideal ltyl~Jw;t am.une this 6* % fin-place, <.'Oey dlnlrt: area, P 1,,;.,_Y lpvirivute ' ~thvered1 Ma1or cross streets. Over 27,000 :3· ft. }Ii info call 545-&l21 SouthCo I I-\\' lk lo all sch! VA k •• , .... , .. ~ •• & .-~"' hack OU uvvr I .ti&' area Wl ush t Lo Int s 1 I I c R It rw111Jy ruon1, rorn1W tlinl•• & PoOI \\'ilh toads of brick ,..... a s. ...... ance. '"' ...... -... .,..... .. , 1 wt re urn. w rna enance. eason eases. nvti;1n1cn o., ca Ql'I. .... · 137 500 "'" ~o ONLY $252 PER MO v111·d !or •·mn>-lun. •~.500 _ and!l<:ap1ng. Ch\•ner 11 roorn, lartte game twrn w.:cking ·~ !Jnnui.culatc • · .,.........., .. , · " O'> --~ ""'u finance responsible buyer. $200,000 down. Call for profit analysis. \VANTED ltei1idential Lot I and tt. glorious punonunic home an S<'IJers n r c O\VNER · 3 Br, 2 Ba, frplc, PAYS TAXES, ~I PrinC'lpals only 64>7500 5000 to 6000 1>1.J. ft. llB. area. ocvan view. motivatl'd. Pri~ to go fa §t i:;cf"(>('ned patio on large 1ot. PRINCIPLE, v'TOel"' a. BEACH DUPLEX ·-hard to 4•Plex-Reduced-$47,000! \V\11 pay cash, call 1tft U P~t PLUS nt $79,500. !~I'd Cf111x>t, $26,000. R32-5524. INTEREST & "11,-,,, 586"6<141 , '"""""I ol one non·stt~ohn·-Reallo" ll45-$)8t) 1 o" c n Dan• Point REAL ESTATE !Ind 4 BR, 2 8A + 3 Bil, 2 Sharp units. Just reauced to $47,000! Fur· I~~~-~-~~~~~~I l al pamiion C')(ptl.nds the evening~) INSURANCE · DA & great loc. STJ-5569. Dished. Low vacancy. 7.3 times gross. Per- t l .,A ... \Q Desperate owner will c111Ty · ll90 Glenncyt-c St. f t tal 1 ti C II tod game room o a uJJ ~ Balboa Penintoula 1'UR Sale by o'vner. Xtnt second TD if 494-MTJ 549-0316 Newport Heights ec ren oca on. a ay. 11 • l I n.in1(M1s roou1. cond, 2 BR. 2 BA, fam nn, llh•I .1h d yoC uh-~! G V finlf!Cill ANO * P.EACH HOUSE * w/w "~''· Ml"· 2 mlm 'P "' ""~-"'~r• reot aluo * Motel--107,000 Sq. Ft. I 80'1, fin1u1clng cun'l'nlly $'5.000 Bt•l'' ,."'" 2 bdr·•·· front marina, $ J 8, O O O., eel iilngs. niassive adobe f..·e· Sea ·rm'B<.-e Garden 1-lome. 4 BDRMS. * S't d . t I !Ir Alm t I "•U •·1 1 $"·'""' " "' " A9' 5029 pace, garden patio kitch, N 1 · t e a J8Cent o reeway o amn os H•< uv t' a approx. 7ll 1•, shar·p, rtisllc (!tX'Or. \.llalk ., .. ,.. . plush cat'pets, cushione<l ear OL-ean ront <..'Omn1un1ty. 2-Story, custom built home f'.' ·rop v1h1t• at Sl:.5.000. 10 brach. Valuable R·2 Jot~ Fountain Valley fl . Upgraded 2 bdJ1n, 2 bath "'Ith shake roof 4 Bdrms 2 2¥.t acres! EZ Terms. BU.ild to sutt. Perfect CALL 644-7211' GEM oonng, designer drapes. with den. \Valk to conunu· ba. 1 --. mslr. BR.·,·• 2 for motel, restaurant, commercial, units. l ---1---u,ads of n1odel e)l.1ras. Deal · v1 '4" BusinMs Opportunity 200 - - NESTLF.O BEllIND HUGE re.u tlU'U, niust sell fast! nlfy ccntt-r ' th ll'nnis frplcs. 500 Sq. ft. recreation Only $l.02 sq. ft. Call DO\V. I lID-F 'fulltin Ave., N.B. PINES & EUCALYP'fUS is OPEN ROUSE All. \VEEK-courts & pool. ProJ).)!lltlon 20 rm. Con1e sec & buy! -BAYV!E'W DlJI>Lf.X "Classic" home with a ----"=-'-'==--this rn.-ea, $0 values should CALL ~ '"'·1414 I' . I ', '• REALTORS 642-4623 a rambling 4 bedroom END. Bkr. 962·55ll. h~s cW1ailed developm('nt in $68,500 546• 1600 2 Bn. 2 BA, °'" y,,.,. old. heavy shske rool, plush BEACH LOVERS '''-'" '" the near !Ulm•. ,, 0:,,; INVESTMENT DIVISION MOBIL OIL CORP 1-Jas high volume s<>ivlce sto. lion with i.:ood hack room sules potential In the Ana· ht'in• arc;1. Pttid training to start ln1n1roi11.tcly, Phonl' San1 Rl'(!dick, 71•1·521-1381 days, 714-968·9244 t;Vl'S & \\'rekend!j, 2 Dble garages C'arpets and unique lighting, $55,600. hrk. 494-8003. ~ I MOVE IN Now Ag<ol * f>lS-2121 '""'"bly equipped kilchen, COUN1'RY FRENCH ELE-TARBELL REALTY · master suite \vith private Nt•r Ktwport Post Offl<t I , balh 1 d t GANCE sets the det.'Or in "O 1 k. "- * Vacant * Corona del Mar , oo s o square veroo 1ng In•: Paclfic"1 ~=--------. footage. Hurry, won't last at this rambling ocean r etreat. f\.1agn1flcent Monarch Bay VACANT -OCEAN VIE\V OCEAN VIEW l.OSii39ii,900iiii.iiiiBiiKiiRii. ii96ii2ii-55iiiillii.iiiiio Custon1 flooring, designer Terrace 4 Br, 31,; & home. Great 2 Br, 2 Ba, 2 trplcs, ,. • l ( I. I: I ' r . ,, I r ·'· •' ·' 1; BAR HAtlBOR • 4 Bodroom and family rn1 plus den. Gran1n1ar sC'hoo\ & 1.iark "a s1'one's t.hrow a\\-ay." Will sell NO 00\VN TO VETS!• drapi:s & \vall coverings, 4 ;\II redv.'OOll & g I a s s . huge fam nn, split-level IMMED. POSSESS. den-size bedrooms including cu st o n1 e 1e g a11 c e home. Obie gar. Immed e Cocktail bar Sl5f.1 down e F.Jectronlcs Sys -Sales • Children's Store -beach e Sw<>eping Scrv. 68 accts 100/o DOWN 3 BR, 2 ba. Comp. rede<-'or.. ~lh i~l.ated1 bamthast"'c sui!e thl'oughout. Olfered at posssession to qua I i fie d -'==~~=~==;;~~==~ w< priva e . eran11c ~'lJO 000 b JO" d M I ~ Dramatic 3 BR, 2 BA ho!nl' nev.' carpets. r·i,......lace. ""' · · uyer. ,o n. uat se I 160 Holland Bus Sales ·~..-tile COUNTRY KITCHEN GRUBB & ELLIS · k O ly '" 900 has walled privacy on strre1 Shady yard. qu1c · n .,..,.., . Call has all the latest fLxtures. R It B k 1 't "'~ """6 --------645-4170 or 5-10-0608 side and spectacul ar oc-ean S?.5. 'r.iO • 10'i~ 00\\'N SUNNY B R E A K F A ST ea ors 1' r or app · ~ Vlf."Ws fron1 breakfast nook, BALBOA BAY PROP. ROOM vie\lo•s its 0,\/Jl PATIO 2863 E. Ci:;t. Hwy., Cdi\1 ASSUME 7% VA 3 BR, 2 • * • Roger Meislne-r 151$ Lincoln Lane Newport Beach You &re the \\'Inner of S\VEEPING Ocean View, l . BR, 2 BA <.'Ondos. New, NE\V beauty shop for sale m Avail now. Open 33692 Blue Newport Beach, low rent, 6 Luntern, Dana po \n t . station · ~2816. $41,500 ramily rm, living rm, and * 556-UOO * GARDE'N. loads ol square. 675-7080 BA, Fam Rm, fp, on cul-de· master suite, Carpcts/drps !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' footage and priced lor last ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!P l sac, $45,000 646-151-1 or like nC\\', U:>ts or storage. sal .,, 900 BKR BEAUTIFUL location -521-T~. no agts. A -• b h e at .,...,, . ., f.1ontgon1ery Tt.E, 493-5881. 240 Newport C'C.'<!$S ,.., ·' pvt ea c es· El Toro 962-5511. SOU'.l'H LAGUNA. 1 block * LARGE, 2 BR house, nice Open Sat/Sun 1-5. \Ved/J.'ri to beach. Ne~ly remodeled yard, $38,500. 642-7056 after TWO FREE TIC Km Money to Loan •t Fairview -6-46-8811 (anytime) -1-7. · 4733 Oirtland Dr. 1 year NE\V 3 Bedroom 2 Bdrm, family rm, large 6 Pf.1. in CanH.•o H igh lands . home, Patio cement and $27,000. deck w/ocean view. Guestl-"-'--'-"-------- Income Prvporty 166 Pos1T1vE cAsH 1st TD Loans $71 ,500. 673-3177 walks are ln. Beautiful BOAT GATE apt. $62,500 firn1. By o\vner. San Juan Capistrano CHARf.fJNG vine covered d r a P es . Air conditioned. Call 213-721-!tlJS days. Sunt· l----'.;.;.;_;..:;,;.;;;c.:.:.;c:.__ to the :::.'HIPSl'ADS & JOliNSON FLOW FROM A UP TO 90% R d Real sharp 4 BR 2 fl BA's _..__, · _ _. -single slo"" duplex. South or ea Y to move ln! Possible mer ,..,., ... ,.,.,s ronstdeh._,,_ TRIPLEX San Juan Cap),. ., t t k I l 71•ro-: on an extra lrg lot, 67' x ICE FOLLIES SWIMMING POOL? This one is ,, .. ,cd for sm 2nd TD Loans highway oa quiet dead-end o a e over oan o ,~ 1c trano, income •""""., I•-· -1h s·ooo "~ ~·i 110', w/hoat gar entrance L'd i · 4<JJVU ·~ ..... stre€'t. Units have Jnroe '"'1 i · ....,..,.., ...... • ___ , -'-0'-'-'-sl--'o------l lot for 4 to 6 additional un1·1s ~.. from alley. The kitch is _ C Wood decks \11ilh permanent huge and the bedmis good or ntorage, $TJ,500., 492-82&t Sept 5th thru 16th a mo. to 4-plex owners. In addition. you gt"t a tre-lowest rates Orange Co. MANI URED view of canyon. 211d floor Huntington Beach LAWNS addition \\·01,Jld havt> view or 1;;;;;;;;;:;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;,;;;;::;::;:;. size. All crpts & drps, bay. $72,000. &Iler \Viii iv/$1400. dn., sellrr will pay THE BIG WHOPPER buyers loan fee/!\-1o paymls sun'Qund this nearly ne'\v im· fi~ance. Brokel', 642-2171 or abt :S245. don't miss it! niaculate do1lhouse. It has 6or7865. I-luge 2,IXKl £Kt ft single story I' the bright and C't'icer!u1 .,...;de-*'DUPLEX * \vith giant pool,. 4 Bedrooms, 11lage Real Esta te look lhal · l · · 1 :\.l baths. formal dining, open is so appea · Sharp 3 'bdnn., 2 bath; iin-r ·1 /fi I ing. This 3 bedroom 'has had nl'ar . .cond., plus brand llt\\'• ann Y room w rep· C(IV· 531·5110 ( r.:t J 531-5100 h~able cat'9 for all of plush 2 lxlrrn. v.rith b!tns. & C'rcd patio and 15' x 48' pool. its sJ;lon life and it's \vai!ing dishwshr. An xlnt buy! ~~~-84~~. too. $49·995· 1 '""w""E""B"'u'"""y"H"o"M""E'"s""' for ·:vour -in§pection. Just MORGAN REAL TY OWNER $33,900. Call right now. 673-6642 67>6459 l Ca!lh tor yo11r equity 847.0010. TRANSFERRED 2. Will pick up back paymts OPEN TIL 9 •ITT F-UN ro BE NICE/ RUSTIC 1 Br in CdA·f on R-2 Says fO selJ his hardly us€.d 3. No charge for appr. ~ - ' lot. $45,000. Principals only. 4 bedroom. 3 bath Parkside CAIL US I ' • 1 By 01-1.·ner. 673-4169. tv.u story. This is the favor-FOR AN ESTIMATE r Costa Mesa ite model, wi!h forn1al din-NO \VAITING ' ' -;::;::;;;;,;;;;::;::;;;;;;;;; i11g, huge family room ·\\ith CASH NO\V ---.. • \\'et bar. Priced $t"l,450. 842-9311 Fi ht I fl t • $36,950. ~fESA DEL !\1AR . Terrific bu.v. CALL 963-5621. 9 n G IOn Vacant 3 BR 2 BA, plui;h FIXER UPPER Crow your 011.·n vegetables shai;, spotll'ss move-in ronrl., POOL HOME and O\\'n ·your own ho111e: rovered patio. Hi aso.-umable Jo~ecd your tan1ily abun-1''!!'1:-. loan. $262. ""r,mo, or ~ Bedroom. 1s.< bath. family ,, . ··~ area and kitch to 'the rear of dandy from this producing 10',t· dn. 2878 l\Iontert'y. the house. On cul de sac garden, plus fruit trees. Al-• tractive 3 bedroom, 2 bath $29,90l. POOL . 5 Bed!oon1S, street, lovely No. llwiting· borne •,vHh family room & 3 baths. custom frplc., quiet ton Beach area close lo --C--AL_l_F ___ R_U_S_T_l_C_ dining are11. Ne\v carpeting, no-tra!fk: i.11'.'Cet. Custom Golden \Vest College I.fan!. New floor in kitchen & bath. J-f&F pool in huge private 1y any lavm care. $34,000. On tree I~ street. Ora· Inclosed patio. Santa Ana yard. 1003 Post Road. Ch\'tl· Would be much n1ore iI prop. n1atic entry lo fan1 size liv address . Garden Crove er will curry 1st 'rD at sr;., erty \\'RS up lO par. CALl. rm 1\'/ unusual designed school distTict. No do\\'n. Vk\ minimum dosing cosls. 846-3377. firepL ,\ distinctively dif· tcm1s. $31.800. 637-9101. ferent wood paneled social $25.TJO. l'ifONTJCEU.O CON-center "·/stand behind wet 00 • 3 Bedroom, 1% bath, har, lux shag crplg, 3 lrg lush_ shag. $192,per nm. pays BR. huge lucd back yard all. 159 Yorktow11, right on abundant \iith tropical fruit the square. lrees, Uniquely dee thruout. A must-see to appreciate. $41.500. htESA VERDE -4 CALL The Real Estate Fair 'Bedroo1n, 2 bath. f.ireplace. -:=mm::;I!:: 5.36-2551. 1800 ·sq. !r. on cul·de-sac ii ---"------ ""'"· J1niq"' hlcodiog of A GLEN-MAR COUTWNTORSYTOMARYNOR rro clay lile floor "'/hlack 'vrought iron divldrrs cre<ite. YELLOW & WHITE ... in xln't nbrhood, gracious a fabulous kiJchen-fam/<lin FARM STYLE !iv rm w/wood burning fire. *COUNTRY CHARM* et the 3100 Sq. FL lamily livability. FABULOUS n1cndous r<.>Cree.hon room + S Ill Mt C !2f 3 Bdrm Apts. Ior only • er 9· o. 4 BR/4 ba .. Huge !iv. rm .,,11,r------..,,, EJ,/ FORUM rec. rm .. din. rm .; garden MabltHomee vie\lo's. D e co r a to r rond.1 ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;:iiii.: {subject to $l SE."l"Vil'e $152,500. Ii charge at the Forun1i $57,500. The choiC<' part ol 642-2171 545-0611 ~n apt_ complex. thi:i won'l Serving 1-larbor area 21 yrs. last Jong! °'''ncr \\'Ill li· DON'T BORROW * $79,500 * M b'I Plea!e call 6j2-5618, ext 1'1 Spanish stvle home on large O 1 • HomH to ciaim your tkkets. iN011 . .h Borrow on your hon1e equl1y nance at 8%. 'TIL YOU CALL USI Jot. 3 BR & den, open For Sele 125 County to.JI tree InJntbcr is for any good purpose. SeJv. beams, interesting fpl. Near'I -----'-----';:; 540-1220.) ing Los Angeles County for Lido tennis ct. * * * MOBILE H 0 M E * * * over 20 yeani and NO\V in LIDO REAL TY *** for sale by private Oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiiiii Orang!' County! 3377 Via Lido. N'pt Beach P8;f1Y: 21' completely ron-* * * 625 FOOT 1'1lONT· SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO, * 673-7300 * ta1ned AR IS T 0 CR A 'f AGE . Brookhurst St.. l714J a5&-0100 -l.ANDLINER \\'1th private ,-· 4500 Cam"''" Drive, N.B. $67,5001 sbower & stool, "'at0r A?.',1~a-tn ~A:f.,•00011'.Y· !l S II I ,_ .. .. "'" ~.,., par n9 nvestment $500 to $100,IXX> for 3 BR, 2 BA home heater, hand I av a I o r Y · --~C::o;'C!P::·.:1::3::3-c,:35::544:::;,,-~-I Business or ""rsonal needs Agent, 67'5-0123 clothes closet, couch C!ln· * * * 5 ACRES, R<i • Chok-e ..-~ N t 8 h v er ts to a r u 1 l J-l untington Bt'ach lo-NEW 4-PLEX UpoN~ .~=t~~b requlredlli•" 10 pay ewpor we bed/breakfast set to a ~• cation. Near schools, ,.. 'I bed. lnads or storage &: pru·ks & shopping. Brand tie\\', Spanish n1otif, 3 U illiam Fox, INC DUPLEX CORONA DEL MAR Ocean sich? of highway ronvenient to beach & shopping Live in one unit and orr the oU.er Each \vlth firepla~. shag carpel. Con1pletcly equipped kitchen and converti ble den $82,000 HARBOR COMP'ANY REALTORS SlNCE 1944 673-4400 drav.•er spaet', C'.xtra Jong BH, 2 ba. delux~ unit counter top in Ji\., area for ~ \\"/!rplc., & 3 2-BR units <'a. Th(' Action Broker drt>sser use. 2 Fw·naces _ 1 \\'/pal.kl or sun de ck. CollN:l (J) Zl31386-7433 \\'ith blower, butane refri,g & ' 1-.Astslde Cmta r.resa nr.l.,..oiiiiiioiii;;;iiii;iiiiiiii;;;o;j 4 burner stove with "·an rt..,.f7M)963"'4567 Ne\\'J)Ort llts. Buyer gC'ts ls! 2ND Trust Duds oven, automatic safety shut· · user ta.x depreciation. Ask· oft system, double v.·cll ing SUO,CXM>. Make otter! PRIVATE FUN.OS AVAIL. kitchen sink, (ail sinks are 2.9 ACRES, Siskiyou Cnty nr. CA.LL ~. '''·2414 Any Amount stainless), water carrier & lake. Cash $7500. Ter1ns 9•'1:/•'•• * CaU 67.s.4494 BKR. $200 Dn, Bal $60 ITIO incl 7';1: pump + battery for lights int. O\vner TI4: 499-~3 are under seats of cute con· I£ A 1,. TY venient bt-eak1&st al't'a. It's C Nc•r N-•ort Peil Offl<• omm-.rci•1 open, roomy and attractivt. OOSTA r.fESA 4-plex $62,500 Has had TLC! All ' vinyl l -;;;;P;r;;o;po;;r;;ty;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;lS;I~ I S&W income pays prtn, int. "'OOd walls, viilyl tile floor I• tax. ins & util. 10'i;, dn, no rovering. Included are ce· * 3-UNIT * pts. 673-8193 or 1·728-2749. ment pyramids w/jacks for le~eling if park~ perm'ly, COMMERCIAL BLDG. BEST Eastside location. at 16 attached rolJOut awning "'ell lo<!ated w/olf-strcet 2037 Laurie Lane $66,000 frame-needs new canvas, parking. Owner will carry Webb Realty, 831-2170. safety skids, extension mir· T.D. $59,000. lndustrl•I Property 168 rors for car when pulling- CLASSIFIED HOURS Advertise rs may place their ads by telephone 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. l\1onday th1·u Friday 8 to noon Saturday nev°' been US<d, two-7 gal * 59'x2'1' LOT * ** M-1 ** GRANO-OPENING-butane tanks louvered \\in· C-1 WNE COSTA MESA Newport Bay Towers dows & 2 ceiling vents. bat-$32.500.. E-Z TERi\1S 63 x 300 FT. COSTt\ ~ESA OFFICE 330 \V. Bay - 642-5678 1 & 2 BEDROOM lery or elec \Vall & ceilin~ Roy McCardle Realtor NE\VPORT BEACH b Purchase your fan~ily and youl' yac<ht one of th<' n1os! beau1iful cuslorn built homes on Nev>'porl's "'tlterf:ront. lruagine 4 bl-drooms includ. ing m~1er bedroom· \Vitti rireplare and sun deck, fan1- ily room \Vi1h plt & fireplace, .!ll."(>arate dining roon1. Ja· cuzzi pOOJ and a large slip for your boat. \Ve 1rou!d be proud Lo sho\v if to ~u! 673-&'"150. area. One or a kind. 6'; wtth heavy shake! 4 Hu~ pl, country style kit/fan1 assumable . loan, or 10';, UR, ns. a yard rich bro,vn rm, 4 lrg BR inc 2 mastl'r down. 1653 Palau. Do not shag cll}ts, decorator papers bdrm suites!! Country gar-d~turb trnant, call for ap-& paint. Model hon1c in den setting \v/huge patio en. CONOO~llNIUl\.I HOi\IES lighls, sniall fan above lSlO Newpor: Blvd. C.~L Plans for new bldg. 3333 Newpol't Blvd. stove, \\.TOught iron room 1: .. 111m9 · RIVIERA REALTY 642-5678 Baylront J-lomes divider. Has match Ing ~ Boat Slips drapes & covers in orange & -:=m::::1mmmmmmo: I .1:1A<'I 149 Broadway, C.M. HUNTINGTON BEACH ., ' •• " ' ' , ' . / I: 1 • I? ' t )' I• -t : , 1. ' !-.. .- po111tment. model cond one mile to ha.need by the fragrance of C M OCC8ll. Only $33,500. tov.'ering pines. Side patios osta esa Realty provide safe tricycle paths *548-7711 * I' for play. Truly a family After 6 PM . Call 557-461 7 home! To delay means dis· J6Z.4471 ( =:::J 546-o8103 appointment. CALL The cusroM BUIL 7' t-rOifE On com er lot, Ci\1 Back Bay area, 4 Br. & 2 Ba upstairs, lh•. rn1, din. rin., kitchen, "'l::mim£ I Real Estate Fair. 536-2.551. ii CALIFORNIA home 102-4 br, ASSUMABLE ' ba, ""°'· ~'1.500. By appnt. only. 551-3834. Can Full Security Highrise yellow on deep green. All Ii IJ'IU7007 645-5690 Eves. 17875 Beach Blvd. Steel & conc1-ete ronstruction ready fo travel an)'\vhere. NEIGHBORHOOD Lots for Sale 170 540-lZ.20 Private Balconies Asking $2900. SEE anytime SHOPPING CENTER 2 garage spaces per unit at 2Ti9 Thurin, Apt. No. 2 NEAR 68x110 LOT. 1607 Cornwall LAGUN A BEACH . Roof top sundeck or Inquire at red house I~ Mile Square Park Ne\vport Beach. Nr. shop-2z..i Furest Ave, Unusual Opportunity to Pur-front for key. Owner home Fountain Valley ping. Owner. 673-6293. 494-9'J66 ~~~:O~a.e~~. Property 1n alter 5:00 & week ends. $1,275,ooo.. Ranches, f•rms, SAN CLEl\-lENTE 1 3l0 F nd Rd NB i\IOBILE Home, 2 BR, 2 BA. Call now for details. Groves 180 305 N. El Camino Rea ema o ., . . By Owner. 20x50 .\\'/porch, _;o.;.;:.::;::o_ ____ ..:.:~11 492-4420 675-8551 patio & sheds. Jn Bayside ~ 10+ acre beautiful young ~ Fnm., den & Ba do,vnstairs. Lots or closet space. Lrg '===o~5'0~';"1== rovers. Citrus tree s . IMME-DIAT-E~ \Voodland Sehl distr ict. POSSESSION! S.1!7,.'.'>IXI O\vner 548-4732 or S:ll-ooGO THE REAL -LOANS -"'sume VA. 1~~~-------BEAT TIIE BEACH Cottage 2 Br. patio, lNTERES'f RATE boat gale, carpt>t & drapes T\\'O • FOUR BDRJ\1S. some by owner 536-0256 IQ\r do\\'Tl wi.lh 2nd. Others 1 ·1-r~v-in-1--"-"''-'-=--­ CARMEL MODEL VIIWgc, N.B. $13,500, Ph: ~ Hass avocado grove going ~~R~ ~~~ VIEW ~6=~~21_26_._______ "-'UM)91U~ on four yt8. Good set for Outstanding H.V. J-lom~: 3 2 BR in exclusive adult park, !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'I next year. Fenced, $115,00J. CLASSIFIED bd •·-n · · be h ~-1· 29% down! near Fallbrook. rms., , ... ,,, y rm., ~ush pnv. . ac , <N<tt sip, Condominluml O\.\'ller wi 1 ...,......, ..,....., .... , DEADLINES 4 BOR-CAPE COD FAMILY HOME Extr1t large two story home \\'ith ovc·r 2600 :>q. ft. or Jiv- !nt:. -4 h<'<'hoon1, ·1 bt1lhs, fan1ily roon1, Iorrnal dining rooni. nc•\\'l,v rl c r· orate <I hon1r, i:nnlfodi.'ltr possc•ssion to 1hut f.:isl ut1h1g family, 1u·i<:f'<l !or !l last 11nlc at $4.i,OIXl. Call R~1J Clirf)('I, RP11l!nrii;: M6-S640 (open evenings) VA $22,500 • NO MORE No closing costs -no 1lQ\\•n 3 br in goocl Santa Ana area Walker &lee •t •~ ts111r SEE US ! For rhe right hotnt• fnr you. Complete ~!'l('cllou or homes in th<' 1*::tch ar<'a. HARBOR VIEW HOMES REALTY 833-0780 BAY VI EW 5 SR., 3 IiA, sk~ps 10. A\11i\ • $250. per wk cir wfnlt•r !l'li.'l<.> or for itale f1I l~.000. PACIFIC l.,ROPE:RTIES 675-6712 or a,1'{..11796 QUICK SALE! Owner's request • Bring off Prs! Bt~autirully kept 3· !11'(!room 2 Oath hon1e "•iUi all the Ql0<je111 ronvcniences. C'o-.101'('0 ~atio and mani· cured yard. O"·ncr \Vill he4p finance. $36,950. CALL 5·1.i-842-1 SouthCo Realtors. Why Wait •• ,. 'Til Interest Rates Go Down?? 1-\ssume 6~~1 .FHA on Eastside 3 BR, 2 Ba hon1e, fam rm, rrplC', high be-ams, lge. yd on cut-de-sac. 645-6646. Brok- ai:; litt'le as $4500. to assume. Pticcd as lo1v as $26,000. and "P- larwln realty inc. 968-4405 (24 hrs) California Classic WOW See It To Believe Ill I O~ TIIE !rtODEL STREF.1'. By owner, 3 years old, 3 Br. 2 Ba. plus trunily rm. Includes an all glass kitchen, carpets & drapes, fully land· scAped, including brick patio with cover. By apt. only, 846-5494 aft. 6:00 pm. To Each His Own A JX'droom and bath for her , . . a bedroom and bath for hlm. Delightful 8.lTangc- ment in this 2 bdrm., 2 ba. to\\'Jlhouse '"ith fireplace. double gara~ and Jots of trees. $36,900. Vision- red hill gold carpeting, decorator .}8cuzz1, pool, c lubhou se ........ ;. , ...... ~."' D dl . f & kill dra""". Vali"'v '"'.'5&, Fi·-. $10,500. 675-5918 Se.U/lease. ;;'°::;';';•;;l;o;;,;::;::;::;;;1;;60;, I Principals only. 714-178--2341. l'a ine or ropy s .,,...., '"" v, , "' Is 5 :JO p.m. the day be- tiine offered. $74,-. .r·ee $20,000 r.10BILE Home for Re•I Est•!• fol'c publication, except (you 0\\'11 the land). sale. Sacrifice for $16,950. TRANSFERRED Exch•ng• 182 !or Sunday & 1i1onday CORBIN-MARTIN All conveniences. 646-4660 ARTIST,,r•-LEAVE. Tai· Editions \lr'hen deadline Realtors 644-7662 ,"'•"ft"6 7 . ==~~=== • u~a BRAND NEW, Ocetmsidc, 3 is Saturday, 12 noon. 1, entOO!y decorated 3 BR BR, 2 BA! Private hillside PORTOFINO -1-1. Vu Homes OCEANFRO~ TRAIL~R tov.-ilhouse, Spae grounds w/ lot, tall pine lrees -ocean CLASSIFIED 1 Year nev.•, many extras, Lrg. glassed·m deck, quick beaut pool & landscpg. Lots view. Builder asking $39,500 REGULATIONS 3 BR, 31,2 BA, bonus roon1, sale _· $&)00 cash. Call or tree", ocean bree?.e in . submit Orange Co. prop-ERROHS: Advcrtisen available school opcning.1 "'494--0~0'5119~-=~---~ quiet adult on!y com1nunify. ertyorTD!! Broker645-8~'X> should check their ads O\VNER will finance resp. 36' PANAM house traller. Perfect location near New· R I E daily & report errort1 buyer. Fee $89,500, &14-4448 $700 or offer. After 6 pm, port Bay. Priced o n I y •• state Wanted 114 immediately. THE lTIS Newport Hills Dr. \V 646-6488. 333 W. Bay, Sp 28, $42,500. HOME or 4 wiits in San DAILY PU.OT assume1 * OCEANFRONT * Costa Mesa 546-5880 Open Eves. Clemente, Dana Point, 'Or llablllty for the tlrst ln- 4 Furn. units. Lg. sundeck NEW 2 BR DOLLHOUSE Capistrano. Have $20,000 lot correct insertion only. 2 Dbl. garages. \ViU trade Newport Bay Adult Park in gd. Fiint Ri~IPasadena CANCELLATIONS: Jor inrome in San Clemente si5•500 540-3672 area + cMh a., down. 1144 When killing an. ad be or Dana Pf. $125,000. 8x3S MOBILE home, space .~1~rama Dr., Arc ad i a sure to make a record REAi.TY BALBOA BAY PROP. rent 147.511 327 Wilson St., ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""" i :C"iC'i'c.-~---=~~ of the KIU. NUMBER U A Company Wilh Vision * 673-7420 * Space 38, CM. 642· 7863. Classified Ads . . . 642-M78 Sell Idle ii ems . . . . 642-5678 given you by your ad $26 950 'ni\'. Park Center. Irvine --.:~in;;;/;-~::;'.-,~:-:;-:l-==='=======0..:.'=;i;;==::'-:0:::::::~;;:i:.:;:;;;=:==:;=::::-:;:::,:=-E._:,::11 k I OWNER ANXIOUS -3 , Call ,\nytimc. 552.7500 NE\VPORT Crest C 0 n d 0 --ta er as rece pl of your lwdroom & den covered BRIN~ YOU$ POOLTABLE O!ti""' 1.-.,.., 8 AM 10 8 P"I / uf cancellation. This kill er. lo th be I 2 BR d ""' uvu.... 1• w spectac ar panoramic $©\t~~ llar..~S number must be pre-patio, la""e rcn<X'd vard. r IS au , con O. I I N rt H ~ " 8 · ~ " Bo 20' 20· 2 v ew o ewpo arvur. 19 -sented by the advertiser localed neur schools and nus rm . x · car Racquet club 3 bl completely Move In immed. 3 BR. I f di shopping, c(•n1ent drovev.'a.Y encl. gar., blt1ns, xtra cab-upgraded & lush decor in formal dining rm. $2000. J, n case o a spute • • 2 cn.r gar~e. quict street _ tncts, shag crp!s. Adlt occ. prime area_ 10 see it is to below market price. Pri T af Intriguing Wbrcl Game with a Chuckle CANCELLATION 0 R prin<'. on!y . Call ror op. Fro 1 nts grceREDobelCt &A steppsEtTo LOVE IT! $4600 down. Pty. &KJ-0'.XXil, ldit•tl. by CLAY I. POUAN CORRECTION OF NEW poin!n1en1 545-5196. 545-S157. poo · R BLUFFS ~iiiiij;""""V"}"' AD BEFORE RUNNING: (;QRGEOUS ~'fe~ Verde 5 Realtors 536-8836. O lteorronge letttr1 of the ~ Every effort 111 ml\dc to B 3 I WANiT 5.,_ ~-'-mone ? CJ·-' nt owner 3 Br, 2Mi Ba, over· four 1eromb!td words bo· kill or ---ta new ad r.. m.: 2800 Sq. It. Huge 711 ,.., Y· ...... ce 1~1..1 b ~.c7 500 A'"' '····to fonn four simple words. .. ......... country kitch. bltn. clec· Huntington Ber1ch locntion. Walker & Lee o.am.ong ay. "" · · ~ -thl\t ·ho.s been ordcrt?d, 1 h 2 ~ 5 B d Vista Parltda. 644·1180. I but · we ct1nnot guaran· fronic oven & RBQ. 150 yds. "-""e ory, r + en + •l-'l .,,,,, L I T G E 8 I 1,1 couiitry club. ll·Iany cust. DR. 3 full baths. $24,500 . BEAUT, new 2 BR, 2 BA + 1 I" 1 j 1 1 , tee to do ao until the ad fen turc:s. $75,000 557-8396 a.~umahle F'HA 5%'7n loon. 546-0022 _______ den, OJndo. Coastal Bluffa. .. ha11 l\Jlpcercd ht the COZV COTTAGE Asking $45,500 & O\\'fll'r y.•111 ASSUMABLE V.A. Under mkt. price & Int. paper. 2 BR, cov('red patio, double deal. 9G2-9650 1'~antastic buy. Culverdale. rate. 673-8437, S35-3700 DBtE-A-UN£ ADS: g3'agc, ·~rl«hllp. full! REPO aSESSIONS A>sume 8% loan wilh JO'.; HARBOR View Home . I p O O ~ H , 11j Th.,• ado u e sJrlCllfi I R 2 Lo Bkr ""9?2! -~w• 4 n•-5 2" baths Montean, 1 level, 4 J\R, nice ""•h In a• .. an-by ma I recs. -t. · .,.or :·or lnfor.malioo and location "'v '" ow'" ·· '1'2 ·' .. ..,,, 1:1. ""'' uv "'" or 644_4670 fnm1ly rm. Covert-a patio. view. 7.9 ,o ln, new unit, I' I j I or nt any one of our of. ot lh<'J;c f11.A r.:. 't/A homes, Jmrnedtate o cc u I) a n 1.· y. 644-48.tl. flees. NO /hone o~rs. OiARMJNG 3 br, 1,1 ba, ('0~·1cl • "''=~'=~~~--· · -· •-1 1 f'-_, S DIA 14.1,"10. NEWPORT Holghts area Deoqllnr: p.m. Friday, .. ., C. nu PA nt, un "1lsh1~1 KA A N DAVID O. CARLSON dupleK, $13,000 d•'l'I. assume t Costa Mesa office 12 Spanish Castle play rm. copper plumbing. REALTOR 83'9293 FHA loan. Agent. 64!H>W I R E y A N I i -_, noon -all branch or-dhL gar, lg. ft!nct<l yd on Reel Estate 962.6644 ~ 1tfl 1 pm • What a man needs In gar.. fices. llugf hadcnda \vith massive quiet street. 1$6 Flower St, AS$1JME ~% h'an, J ml. to OWNER-sharp 3 br, 2 ba, ""'==o,,-~~~-~~ : I I I Ii. denlng .is a co~t lton bock, tlre roof, almost 3000 S(j. {!. O"'-'Mel' 54it-0014 .. _ I ,,~ ,, 2 -.,, srioo dn, 7?f, VA u~um, ttl BLUFFS Condo $60,000. 3 Br. • . • • . . TltE DAILY PILC'Yr re. ol plush. thrck, d:ter cur-,,., ... c 1• ,....,, $CJ. • s,_.;1, 2Mt Ba. OY.11cr. Walk to ten· With a-On it. t .. Jo serves the right to clu-* 13Y OWNER : ~1uttifnlly profeii!lional lllJldscaplng. pymnlg $2n. S 3 3 -1 J 0 3, I JK"IS and deconltor ('8.Tu~s. droorn1~d 4 RR, r11 01 nn, 513,500 dwn., p & I Sl50.74 SS2--9503 -":::i;;,•~o~bo,-.::61.::0-:::.::IOOO:::::_____ I C A V E D I I o1;lfy, ·r.dtt, cen80r or re-Swteplng rtv.lrs ·to 11ppcor " BA -1 -n 1 . ~ .~500 Ph 3BR houi.c, near ocean •--r:..:.r-:.,.:...;....:.,...-1 fu11e AO.V Bd\lcrUscment, m •.. ,. ol k~-n. &· ,.,,,,,. ,) ' comp W1 u llll!l, IN>P move Ill "'"ny, .,.,..., ' • CALif'ORNlA Home, 3Bll. r I I I I r 0 c , , th h kl ,_, ·-· ' Cha !•· -~· • & ,_ I M $59.00J Lo dwn. Miles Larson Ofl'lP.. • ( UC: • quo 9'l ullU .0 nge .,. rotca hoWJe ma.1tf'r suite. St'l'lu11f;l A ,"1 • ""'1· .~2'1000'eer.!07_'.P7£; 96fi.3$\ 2BA Pool, $44,000. By ap. Realtor 673-856.1 by rilllng Ill tfi• mi»ing word &. rcgl1lstll'lns without _..mt'! .. retreat {or hU&t' " ng on Y ~ • · aa -'I ()..> SUNKEN L o v £ PTT pointment only 551-4.'lfl8 .__. __ ... __ ... _ -""--""---' )'Oii devtlop frc>m sttp No. 3 b•low. prior noUct. dbnnJIOT)•). J:'om1al Jivl!ll BY Owntr • 7% Cl loan, any \\.'/FR.PLC. 4 BR, 3 Ba, Liguna Buch TRADE Newport Sfach nn "-dlnlna, huge. fie.rTa rm one can take OVt!r • 3 br. 2 f'nm rm, Din rm, 7'tli% VA 1-.,...-------Prop. For Out-Of·Town A PRINT NUM8EREO LETTERS IN 4 S CLASSIFl,ED vi~"S l8' x ..o· c1;11loin !HI' ba, upgtaded. cri>t, nu loan. Ill' bch, $ -4 7. 9 5 O BEAU1'lFUL oceBJ1 view Jot Prop, Bkr. 714/673-2058. V THESE SQUARES MAJ LING ADDRESS rid Cor&o wc.-u gQUtmrl dt"lwc:e wattr 10flncr. Prin-008--8273 Bkr. Only $12,000 BAYCREST 4 BR. 7· .. O!\ J P. 0. Bo)( 1000, kU~;,.,n. Cf.i n/I be dll:Plicu.tl'd. clpuh' only. 9~ 3 BR, din rm. frpl , bltm, O<:eanvlew Realty 673-8500 5~',(,, Boot yd. $75,000. s. Ct UN1SCR0 Gll~B-~ENASwBC?~E UnEIS I I I j I Costa ~ft$a Pluntb4nsr f1dibn ,.-111 derl· O\VNER. AJOOous. lArge 2 shag, 2 Bn, patio, pool, ten· BEAlTl'JFUL ~on vJew Jot LOnprt, Gen Dcl, C.~t 0~11• '"' " ~"' • • . • • • 92626 ..:liM=~'orc.:' Jf":::KR.::,....i::..16U51L::"':..:'0~,."'--'•_•_,' ...;Ms"'w""~"-· ""s 8"'':,,n.:::;k"'"'~u"'~"-'r=r. Try~;;:;;,.. 221.::.5;::.~_3_122._000_· _0w_"'_· -'0ce=an::::v1.:.:~.::."''.:.:n.::::1;,,,?iy'l:1Jc....::6n.g;oo= , ·A-"vf"'1"""'"=~"-""-',_a<1_11...;•_jl1)0Cf __ l:J-_:S~C~RA~M!·~L:!:ET.!.S~A~N~S~W!:E~R~S~l~N~C~LA~S~S~IFl~C~A~T~l~O'..':N~9~0~0'.....1'======~1 • '· • / • Th°""', •-1 lO, lWJ DAILY PILOT I JliJ l1 ~[ ~-~ ... ~R<ot~I~~~:~[ ;;-;;"';;-;;;;;~I i!!-~"'-~• _,,,_ I~ I -"'-I~ ~I~_."'_-~···-·b"'•-~lrt~1 1 ~·---1\tl Money Wanted 250 Houses Furni$tied 300 Housts Unfurn. )OS 1 Houses bnfurn·~ HouMt Unfum. 305 .)uplex•• Unfum. 350 Apti. Fum. 360 Apt. Unfurn. _ J6S ~· ~.nfu~~rn.;;;..• __ '.....;MS~1 P,\Y lO';'c Int n~ 10 rts frir Lido Isle--·--l Co;o~~"d.,1-M~r -lrvfnt · ·-h Huntlf)ttoll hKh __ ~. •·1 Ma• c.0111 -S20,000 lrntn. \Viii ptty S0·10 I , , .N"c;•.;cw.:;po""-r!;_;Beo;..:;;;.;<.;.h:__. __ 1 Newport S..c ~ 1no nnd ltstif!.::n well.....;t'Ct1IX..i ~ALr; , l.E1\SE Benut, honie SPACIOUS ~-:Xec h ome, YES, \\1E }JAVE' REN'tALS 1-lARBOR VIE\V HOMES $l4S. $lli5 LARGE 2 Br attached $64,0001.11t TD hS COll{1ll!rlll. ~ Br, 37' Iv rni patio & w/t11bu!Q11.:s view of harbol' May wt; be of :service $575/per mo \o.tllh oardcne-r, NEWPORT'S FINEST 8t,.~RI& 1 BR., patloti, garage St45 ' 2118 D "Bo.-.: 3, ,\111Jlr \j 11 11 f' y I pool, 70' 101 si200 ll)O. l~ly lites:, 0Ct!11n. 3 BH, 2~. in iOlvlng 5BR. 3BA. plulih, ~ar ''""] BEACH ::r c'l'I pr v. g~a -..... -Placentia. ~ Sal 10-S: (714 ) 242·3144, bi~j9 Ba, r11m rm dbl(' fplc. CUbi Your hoUsing needs? & C'lubhOU!"SI!. 1860 p;;.t BRAND NE.'W 3 BR, 2 BA, Divided bath &. Iott ot ~ Mortgages, ffiKTF.!\11~ 4 Br '.i B· f. 1 cpts/di·ps. C:ai'dcner, SUIO '. F\tl'm $3J5-$450 Carlo.,.,•. Ready St:pt. J5. Eltic kil. W/w cq>t'g, drps. ~~~~b~· ::1ria ~1th: f>,. Ort• ~::10PICAL POOL e Trust Deeds '260 I \JJ1ns. Clo!lt' 1.u ~:uwi.' $,&3 1 nio. Le~. Owner 644-2979 ' 6·1il-1295 or 642-2222 Ycurly. $35()1?it0. See for yourself. 17301 2 Or Studio, l~ Ba. Frpt. nlonUi. \\'luk•r. 675-49'23. l-IARI¥JR View Hi l Is. . Santa Ana 541-2119 Keelson Ln. (1 blk W. ot TOWNHOUSE 11plral atrete. $200. El IN t B h Spc._c10'.!S S BR I dt'fl / fl"am ----------Beach, 1 blk N. o( Slater!. 2 Br, fireplace, pool, private on 18th. 54S..1168 WELL SECURED ewoor eac rn1, pool, i;pcctacullll' vu. $275. NE\V 3BH.. l\\'nhs~. =~-.-,718-,-.-,-.------842-7848 patios: '-'?ntincnta.I llr~ak · 2BR duplex., <TPlS, drpe, ldt $8400. 2nrl Trust Oet.'<I 9'·i I $1(),1 • VIII Pd Or"rinfront l\1o. I<> ~In. l-ental S850 wlth nvall., dbl. gar. patio, F urn. o r Unfum . 355 fl.1'EN, small beach hotel. fu~. ~pac1ou~ .1r,.'l'011nds, near stve, xtra lrg closet. Sl6D intert'i;I r1uc 3 rri;, \~,i~I di11-1 Bat·hclor. ideal stuJ~nt. pool nlllllll. 6~4-2359 \V\V/C, drps, d\\', SC oven, Roon11 $21.50 per ..... k. Apts shopp1ug & fllle bench. Fw·. ll'IO AdulL, no pets 1.'0un1 $.'~40. to yl('lrl 1.l '. $~~i(l . Ulil Pr!. $.)l'ludcd & LRC. 3 BR. 2 bn ho1ue. ..SfNCE. 19-16" , pool, tot lot, S. Main &: 8-lbcN p I I $95 per month. !UG-7056 n~hed or unfu111hdil'd, ftvm 54i-Oso ' ' SICNAL;,~tr)~~GAGE ((). 1 L"h:u·ni!il;.: l Bi'. rriilc hntnc, ijltns, crpL~. drps. Near 1st \\1cstc.rn Bank Bldg, Oyer, l.ise, O\vner 546-3146. en niu • Laeuno.Beach !~;..11 Col'ona dcl Mar, 28R, !Ba, dsh/wsh, bllhls, (Jl<ll ~-'HOG Cci~'I. t:ll·n1. M:hl. yrly lease. $450. .•/nlversi'v p .. ,.~. Irvine San Clemente 2 2l2 30th _ . '"'"..v 4500 Cart'\l)llS Dr, N.13. $:!().) '3 Br. L'01nplt:1cly n.>tlt-c. ;;'~··4-ll61~~1~r·~r~a"'p"ptc.. ----1 ·~D~·~v~·~55;2;-7~000;,..;N;l=g~h~t·: I n~~· ~ Near ~~~: l BR apt, vtew, Cl0$t in, . ~~ $1~arr001. c~~d s:~ $100 000 11 fl , 1 1 , 7 , ,. I ~'rpll' hon1c. Bnlbou Pt'nin, Coste Mew $350 mo. Beaut hill top home 6#-0386 eve & \veekends. patio. tJtll11 pd $190. 494-9643 2 BDRl\1,, ne-.v crpt, redec· PRIME M••• ve-"e ·-a _ vv, " • '.I-' \V1n11'r. Laguna Beach in $60,000 nelghlJorhoo<I, r 497 -o •t··' I I s•~; ._,,.. ,-,,, """~ -ooo 1 t 2nd I t I I NU 0 -"""'' 1" ~. 00 · ~ mo. 0o"-•ta•-2 BR w/gar. "'"• s · ru~ .<l't"t j -VIEW RENTALS NICE Bach -$125 con1plete. view of ocean. harbor A 6733850 "'~ .... wanted S40.000. 3 tu .1 ~1'8 fii'i·~IO'W 0 , 494 32 Students ok. Util Ptl. $165 • 1 BR. Near beach. hills. 3 Br 2 Ba, built in Lida 1•1• · Mature adults. No pd.ii. guarn. re-1iµyn11;'nt. \VII! p;1y ·_ ' 1 · -IH PRIVATE paLio \1·/pool 1 br Chlldi pet welcome! kitchen Inc. refrig. Water & !OJ $160/MO. 968-1155. Ad No. &%. J)a!ly r1101. P.O. ;tgt•ru. l 1~ iJ!ks frorn oc1.:un . STUD IO 2 br i i,.J ha $165. Apt. Bit-ins. Huge deck. or (213) 646--0604 gar. Winter rental. $350 plus DELUXE schl , bus, shops. $175. [ max int. \Vr1 tc Clas.'ilf1ccl I YEAH.LY housc< rent a I J.'ul'n $145. Sngls ok. $250. Nice 2 BR, Ocean View gardener inc-. ln4J 6TJ.5470 Apartment' for Rent ~ 2 BR, 2 BA, bnck fprlc, dbl Cost• Mela 3 BR, 1% Ba in 4-l?lex. nr. Box 1650, Co~tfl M<'sft !'l2i326 -s ory hOust., co1111)letely Clost> to !r11.)' & college. $.t10 • NEt\R New 4 + fam Houses Furn. or util. 613·1"'93 alt 5 pm. APARTMENTS 546-3226 or 549-42'25. · 1 fu1·11 . + library. Tenant Cil.n GOODIE: 4 HI', z Ba $27$. trpl · dbl have sununcr rental. Avail F'rp'. kld•/oeis, fncrl ,, 1,.qr. ~~unn ~ig~~e_w· gar, Unfurn . 310 Apts. Furh. 360 Newport Beach Air Cond. f'rplc's. 3 Swim· $140. UP. 2. Br: 3 Br, 2 Ba. I HIMnforRent II~] I s"OEWA. c~130H-nA>OR. E67AS-.l.109c mo . ALA Rentals 642..a313 $400 • 2 + Den. UniqUC G --.'"n-.-r.-1-------1 Balbol J1l1nd BALBOA Bay Club, furn, ~~~~isp~~~u·ts l-~e~~ms~d l~a:l~-1~~~.p~a·y·~ :1 : ~ " " ' :1 ' : I I• : l I 1 Ii I I I I ' I . . ~~Al\.1U.Y !tome. Avnil Sclll r-hi'liinin" frpl"' '·ome. water-front , 2 Br, 2 Ba, sub-Billiard Room, 2 BR, 1% BA Dix Studio, l ~jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj~;;;; I lease -See to believe 6, 3 s 1., 1 ~;, Ba, (lt;h/.,.,,sh. NU-VIEW RENTALS LOVELY all Elect. l Br. apt lease n1in 4 mo. $100'.l mo. l BR. f't\lin .~l50 $175 utU pd. Shag, pool. 1978 II this gorgeous 3 BR. Fi~'lc, lovely shag ca ....... t 6734030 or 494-3248 Lido Isle, 3 BR. 2 ba. yearly. nu carpets, very priv. Park· 543-9486. Aft 6 PM call 1 8 1, , 0, 1• Sl!lO •<aple 6'5-5&1l H F ' h d 300 " · ,,~ $400 rito. i boJ A ail Se 645-5000 Eh'T 315. Priv pty " '" en ronl 1 • · ouses urn1s e 1' lovely, furnished home throughout close to \Vilson. Latuna Charmer N'pt Beach, 3 BR. 2 ba. Un· ng, cony, v pt. 2 ~R lro1u $210 . LRG . 3 BR, 2 BA, upstairs. I $375 . mo. AGE. 646-3255 RC'a, Estancia &:h, $275 F'in.'l time for rentt 1n1nHtc. ( y ly •~<c 4th. $185 mo. 219~ Abo.lone ON The Beach -2 BR turn 2 RR. 1 i1•nhses Ftv1n SZ>O crpts, d'""l', fresh paint, nr. Genera ino., 1st & last n'Kl. clean· 3 BR 2 w·n. r . oN-£"• Ave. Owner there al· lower unit w/washer & MEDITERRANEAN .,., I i-BP.-ovrrlooks hay: Balbo'il. Ing. 979-5814 · , · ba. ho111e, fTJllt'. Cdl\'1 3 BR, 2 ba., vie\V, Furn. temoon/Sepl. 1st, 2nd & dryer. All util pd. $32.5/mo. OCC. $179. 507--0350 • • • P atrick Walters Pl., .. 1.1.,,.1 1 .1 , ..... Close in section of U1e $500 !\lo/yearly. 3rd. A ·i Se 8 h -J VILLAGE LARGE 2 B< 2 Ba crpta , <> ' .. 1C or unt s s lu .ing 3 BR, 2 BA. liv/dln/fan1 village. \\lalk to beach va1 pt t une }St. , , • $90, Nt!1Vport, lfntg Bch, rms, 2 patios, 2 car gar. ~opping, etc, Ref. ........ , Penin. Pt. 3 BR, 2 ba. tJnf. CHEERY 2. Br, upper rear 66-8569. ctrps, bltns. $170. No pets, 1 Co1>Ta ?11fr~a. Seal Bench. BM)nd Ne1v. $385/mo Close $350 lt'Iontl1 .~... $.375 l\Io/yearly. declt.· gar, built Ins, w/d. by OCEANFRONT 2400 u,t·!~15a~.1~%1 C.i\I. small child. 540-gm 218V1 Sierks Costa Mesa Yo l W'" •f! r·u••I' o~ TWO FREE TICKETS Agt. Fee. 979-8430 to South Coru;t Plaza. nr MISSfON REA·LTY 494-0731 the wk Sept 1·8· s-i5, YEARLY &. WINTER OPEN EVERY DA y 2 BDRM, stove, retrig, 1 2 BR Cott:.ii;:c. furn. $285 n10. Bullocks. 992 Carnation. TOP OF TI!E WORLD monthly there aft, $215 mo. 3 Br, 2 ba, frplc, Waslt/d•-. Hours: ~·ri-Tues 10·6 tllshw962hr.8910363 Shalimar. $160. for ~j ino·s. Plush. 3210 Sea· CM. 675-0m OCEAN VIEW, I•-3 + ~ Amethyst or call .;,• 1no -vie1,1,· CtlM Ready Sept 1~ -a~ 642-5766 642-6793. \Ved. & Thurs. t0..7 . ' c-~ • • • :>. MONTICELLO Condo 3BR bed 2 ba WINTER Re I GRAND OPENING • * STUN NING 1 Br. w...i.en I l\INGAARD R.E. ""·-. ' • room, th newly nta 2 b 2 ba I U'U l."4 2BA. New carpets, clean, decorated, new draperies. WINTER OR y EARL y , Mod . ti I~ . P'RIMA CASA APTS Apt. Pool. Rec area. $145. to thr SllIPITT'.\Dt'. & .f01{NS0N ICE FOLLIES CHARMING BEACH gar, water pd, No pets $225. fireplace, family room, built 124% Garnet. 2 Br, den, 2 ern, pn. pa o, · per 710 \V. l!lh St. C.r.1. COTI'AGE 1st last • deposil Leaoe 1 ""' 00 h BA. mo 673-4657 wk ends , 1838 Placentia Ave, CM Dana Polnl ' . o.: • • ns, .,......,. per mont Newport Beach 213-2$-5703 weekday•. ALL UTILITIES PAID 1:1 blk to ocean, \\'inter ren-Ava1t now. 546-0191. 644-2013 · *673-3245* ---·-------1 tt11. 12-t 35th St. 673-3056 VACANT 2 BR, 1145, all ' 3 ARCH BAY 3 Br, 2 Ba, 0 R I DELUXE 2 Br. Garage, year-$35 & Up. 1 BR., 2 BR & r~a,mily Units -Children OCEAN view, spacious, 2 lge \VINTE F ease-customized, 1 $300 Bachelors. Color 1'V, nlaid \\clcotne .. Large 2 BR, 1 bdrma, 2 Ba, new crirts, & * R RENTAL· 4 BR· welcome. Plus 3 BR beam ceiling living rm spacious, 5 br, 3 ba, 2 story Y· Z~7~3063* serv, pool. The Mesa, 415 N. BA. Refng, ~shwhrs, btlns, drps, dining area, bltns & S<!pt. 5th tlu'U 16111 BA YSHORES. Bay View. Te ah o use $I90/Singles. trplc, Charm. Lease Opt'. exec. Npt. home. For the Newport BL, N.B. 646-9681. patios, v.'alk-lil closets. gar, yanl. $100. 837-3927 or at 1hl• $4D;l/mo. Agt. Fee. 979-8430 $2000 dn. $ 3 7 S /mo . best in schls, recreation & NEW 2 br, dee. fum apt, }'?'· crpts cin>s & POOL FABULOUS •Call 548-6239• BRAND new 3BR lownhse. Own/Agt. 4%.0451. family living. Call 644-0687. ly 1325. Winter $26'. Avail OCEANFRONT 2 Br, 2 Ba. ;w.i2Jo1MO. • ·1,:::83c:,7-',::l:;.780--~~~--1 FORUM LOVELY 4BR, ba'h, outside pool, patio, dbl gar. 1% mi 3 ARCH BA\ _ Small Condominiums Sept. 8. 6T.r3703' or 67J..-OUO. Crpts, ctres, re.trig, wsr, Call C.J.S. Real Estate 2 BDRM with lots at grass. , sho .... ·er, Bayfront, Winter to So. Coast Plaza. $275. English cottage, 3 BR., 2 DELUXE 2 Br 2 Ba tio dryer. $37:1. Avail Sept 15. 54&-ll68 or 833-0584 \Veil landscpd. 4 unit build· (subjr~·~ to $1 SC>rviel? r('nt11!. 400 381h St. 673-7860. 557...&468 BA, frplc. $425/mo. Ref'll. _ _;;Uc;.nfu::.:,r;;n.::· ___ __:320:= I sundeck, ~-yrJ).. 1ms; IZlll 286-5570 or 646-2118. ing. $1W. TI4-968-3563, collec- t•hargi· al !ht· Foru1n• NE\\'PORT Beach \Vhrter 3 BR/2 Ba nr heh. Cpt/drp, own/agt. 4!K-0451. Newport Bea& mo. 1 Br, $200. 673-8193. Beach Ren:t•l·Yrly El Puerto Mesa "tl:.:v:cec:tol=l. ___ ~-- PleoS('J 1•11U 6-12-5tli 8. cx1 311 Rentnl Fum 3 Br, or 2 Br. Nr. schls shp'g. $425. EMERALD BAY; avail. mid 2 BR, 2 BA, patio, 50 f't from 1 & 2 R "nfu 2 BR apt, sweeping ocean to l'l&101 )"1u1· ~1~ki;ts. 1 North apt 675-26.56 or 737-1078 Before 10 am or btwn 2 & 5 I Sept. thur June. $850 mo. 2 BRAND NEW Balboa Penlnsul• Ocean. 1 rr. old. Gar. Furn B Aptt., v rn. view, $195. No dogs. Adults Coun!y toll h'l't' TllUllbl'r is \VINTER Rental -Ocean· pm, 675-4034. BR, Priv. beach area & Lease with option to pur. or Unf. $280/mo 67J-6935. $J:'U. ,..: Up. "o:::nl:<y_493-ro.19=..::::::c·:.....----1 5-10-l2'il•J.l * * front, 3 br, 2 ba, fully furn . t'OZY 2 br, trplc, pool, small I, facils. TI4-682-7030 chase, ? Top quality? $35 WEEK & UP OCEANFRONT, . 2 BR, All Utl llltie1 Paid HuntinMon BMch • 2 e Slttpmg' Rooms decorator furn, winter or t"'OO & Recreation •• ~~=. -'----'-I $350 mo. 673-46.37. yd. Adults. only. Refer. 1 3 BR home, beaut patio, gar. & 3 Bedrooms G 1 S OWNERS OF $ E t 'd 1200 Ca 11 1250 So L • 2 Car Garages • Housekeeping Rooms yearly rental avail. n4: nra"e or renl VILLA YORBA $ REAL PROPERTY S Houses Unfurn. 305 W:,."!OOP.111 e. • 1 ~n:, 21i.2S7l~ tma.' i1v:>;1. '"'l'flll'MhPr a Ocean View Apts 548-7575 or 213: 6&4-7698 1959 Maple Ave1 C.M . APTS. We're here to 11ervl' you! Ge ne ral NEW ~ Br townhOme, nr Laguna HJll1 PHONE 645-6141 BALBOA INN OCEANFRONT · 2 BR du· aiJIET.PLEASEi-16000 Villa Yorba FREE OF' CHARGE! Try pool. Ready for occup. Sept. BLUFFS 3 Br, 2% Ba. Newly l05 .Mai~ !5treet plex. Sept. 15 · June 15. 2 BR, 2 BA, nr hospital. Huntington Beach Ua! Call prior to vacancy. 1st. $285. Jack. 979--1633 3 BR., 2 ba., bltns. incl. decorated, nu crpts. Wet i;rs..8740 lower -$250, upper -$300. Parle-like ~g. Bttn kit· (Off San Diego Frwy., So. oo Don't lose $$. Save Tltne. 4 BR, fam rm, frplc, 1% ba. dishwshr., \\'8Sher/dryer. bar. Lse. avail Sept. l!lt. WINTER Lease ; (2) · 2 Br, 642-6277 dlen, W/D, W/W crpts, Beach Blvd., 1 blk. beyond S ALA RENTALS $ RENTALS Water pd. Please call Pool member ah i p &: $475 .. 644-1CWl7. 1 or 2 ha. Elee. bltns, pvt 2 BR, 2 BA, all bit-ins, near drps, closed gar. Adults, no Edinger to Stark, E. to Newport & Bay. 0 1 642-8383 893.-0426 for appt. gardener incr. $255 Per mo. ! pat. Mature adlts. $175-$195. bay & beach. Avail. Sept 15. pets. $190. Malaga. rum right.) ~ CAPRI Realty 6#-7525 Townhouse Unfum. 335 j 675-5394. $275. 673-0473. 2126 Thurin St. 545-5800 714/142·?622 Duplexa Dani Point LiCiO Isle LRG 1 or 2BR \Jceanfront 2 BR upstairs, near beach&' NEW ADULT LIVING!! HARBOUR VULAGE Hun- -\ l aguna Niguel apt, $300 per mo. winter stores. tJtil pd. Gar. Winter. BAOIELOR Units & 1 BR's tington Harbowr are& only EXE'C. Home'-Little Island. CLOSE to Dana Po I nt LIDO lale, Lovely 4 BR 3 rental. 646-5995 $185. 300 34th St. NB. w/Lofls. Ft:plc'a, beam Z1 2 · & 3 Br. on 2 ~acres. N .. rN~ei\1·. 4 1 br, $5503 ba & •• !'..•\PORT BEACH Marina. New 3 Br, 2 Ba. be., den, wet bar, 2 car g'a:r, 3 BR, 2'h ba., in Sea Terr. * 2 BR. Furn. Winter. Util SMALL, plush· bachelor for ceU .. pado & pool. bltins, & Adult & , Fam ·sections gar. ice Y urn. mo. 190 . Ut•·I Pd. Furn Bach. On lde.a1 for adults or w/l w/electronic door opener, Good ocean view. Avail. 'ncld'd refrig avail 1160 to 1225 ' Se t ••J 15 Or"= 9/! I 1 • $225/mo, Near consecutive, 01~-person . · . · Brand nu. From $180. 4561 P · ~ une · ._,,.,mo Beach. Ideal for student. child. Lease. No pets. $275. 5(l .yrd11 to pri bch; tennis · on yr. ease $380. Ocean. 675-5366 $150 mo. ~829 Util pd. No ~ts. , Hl!il St. 846-ll.66 or1846-50'l6. Y1·ly lease. Ref. 673-43S4. Sl85 . Furn. 1 BR. On Water. per mo.· Eve (n4J 54f'1678. privl, immac oond. $.575 mo. 6#1618. 393 Hamilton C.M. 1140 ., llD N 1 Hn n-b. 3 BR 3 BA ho Bayt t yrly 1st • I t ~ d D I F 345 ........ :t 1t~1 M:-r NICE ·& c~· 1 & 2 BR ,. • ., ••••or ,.A .. oc.,... • ni •• o . tg = , use, ron . Sml dock. Yearly. LEASE-3BR, 2BA beam · as · _..., ep. up exe1 um. ~ ou__, 2 Br bl Pie~. Also 4 BR, 2 BA on COSTA MESA ceiling, shag, epotlf.ss, view ~r 673-0541 a~t 6 pm BDRM Apts. Avail Sept ALL ELCCTRIC · tru, cpta, .<ft'Pi. pool, Grand Canal, $450 mo . .cach. $150 • Cozy 1 BR. Encl gar. $37U. 1mmec1. 0 cc u P . 1 wkdays & anytime on B•lboa Island TEACHERS LOOKING 15-June. 675-p318 ~ , • play yard, carport. & b)(fey 9 mos. lease, GTa-7762 Slove/refr. Child ok. 496--0767. 7 •"\re=nds=,. ~~---------------Private 2 br, CdM, winter 2 br ·l-blk-oc'eM· patio GOLD ME[)ALLION t~le·& 1 sm child ok. BAY front~3 br, 2 ba, llllins, $185 . E/side 2 Br home. , M••• del Mar LITTI..E ISLE . winter to rentaJ. &73-3'l21 or 833-1691. $215 }.rty· adult 'no pets 2 BR Apt w/patio, encl gar, 8 aft 5;30 pm. Sent. 8 to June 15th. $350. Gar. Yard for kids/pet. fount•in V1n-7/10. W/boat dock, 12x24 BACH apt. Awil Sept. 4th. 128-46 St: shag: 6'12-3331 w/storage & · laund. facil. · .CHILDREN.OK 6~-• 1225 Pr! 3B horn ., BESTSch LR 2BR food bar te 1150 Ca11613-.,.,. ' ' Adlts onl,y, no pets ·-2Br&3BRI'=• per mo. ·~ • vate r e, gar, lµ'E!a, 4 ijr, 2•Ba, • • • 11 reo per mo. 1vt5; in 81'..0CK to beach.· 1 & 2 ~· 0, Melody Ln .. in , • ~., WATERFRONT ... WINTER, fncd yard. ,Klde/pet ok. IMMAC. 3 BR, 2 BA, tamil,y ba, nuly decorated Inside&. !!!,_US~.~ .. ,gar. 2 adults. $215. 6'13-9403' BR · gara~ w Inter CM 77 or ,_1809 $199. Crpts, drps, closed P · $375 4 BR 2 BA bit~.. LAGUNA BEACH nn, blt-lns, frplc. New out, lease $350 mo, .or leaee r=·~·~=~;,..,,...-,-,~=~~ ' \i ' ' ' . .,,.,. . rage ~ar: Beadl & Slater ' ' ••· 11= Block ·~ I B I d 11ng· •· & drpa ti 499-~ Cosio Mno avalla le Sept l. '7""640 TIRED OF NOISE? ~.· n-..;: 0'"3646 . trplc, 2-car gar. dock. Pvt. ...., • to""""·. r, stv ecora , crp..., . op on, 11n or 833-135.5 WINTER RentaJ. Uttle Isle. ,. ...... r~ ....... '""" pty G75-472G refr, yard for ch1Jd /pet. Ideal loc-2 min. 10 s.o. j M•!5• Verde ~~ blk to beach. 2 & Den, 2 Casa de Oro . %~b~ ~O 1:~ ap,~;J, Wilson Garden Apts. 2 Br, WALK TO BEACH · $250 . 2 Br. + din nn, fr;>!, F'lwy. $310/mo. Ca I I --'--'="'-----BA. All elee. kitchen. Large 673-0000 or sil1370 1%. Ba, crpts, drps. Pool. · l lc: 2 BR, Crpt/drps, blt· ~°!~ER ~~rpn~l. Fuu7il 3 ~R yard for kids.'pet. G'i'3-0032. ·,SHARP Lrg 4BR, 2BA, un-patio. $27S w/util. Pri. pty. ALL UTILITIES PAID _.,,.::,:..;=:..::..::::::::::: __ I Mature adults, no pets. Ins '"" .. 308 16th 536-8548 or ~ Din J~299 · In· HUNTINGTON BEACH 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 car gar., all , furn. house, Ose t 0 Owner, 125 Jade, 615-7817 Compare before you rent LRG. 1 Br,1 Ba apt. 1 blk.tn ONLY $162.50/MO. 847.3957 200 1sfu 961).1749 · · $120 · 1 Br. Stove, cpt/drps, bltns, 11wim pool, kids OK,, schl-shppng Avail Sept. xi. 3 BR, 2 BA, all electric C11Stom designed, featuring: ~ or Ocean. Yearly 2283 Fowttain Way East • ' · tot ok. like new, only $249 mo. No $295. 540-3058. kitchen, trplc, patio & BBQ. a Spacious kitCllen with in-$185/mo. 675-4QXI days. (W. Of Ha:rbo.· on Wilson) 2 BR twnhse w If r p 1 c , 6alboa Peninsula CHARl\.11NG 2 BR. t ih BA cottage. Sept 17-June 30, 2 cnr gar, frpl c. 1 blk to ocean & Bay bchs. Adults. 613-""8 3 BR, 21-4 BA New remod. int. $305 'fl.10. \Vinter. 3tE Mo n fer o. 714/879-5991 : 2131115-4696 Huntington. BHch ADULT park, 50 ft. from ~If course, flicing blue· Pacific, 20'x53' · mobile home , beautifully fum. Rent $215 mo/Will sell. i:o see, phone 53G-l615 or 548-Zlll 1-4 Pfl.1. 93· BR.-FURNISHED Nr bch, nice Yd. frpl \". pa<io, W11 11.•t pct $25.'i /mo, 675-5810 or ~-0825. L•gun• BHch $155 -Util Prl. Oceanfront Bach. Beaut. vlrw! $185 • Util Pd. Nlc.'ely furn . 1 BR. 2 blks beach! $300 -Utll Pd. Roomy 2 Br. Frplc:. yard, patio , ch11titpet. NU-VIEW RENTALS 673-4030 or 494-3248 1 BDRM house. Ocean View. UUl pd. $300/MO. Al!IO 1 BR house, $175/MO. Winter ls e. •94-5 5 72 o r 213/-. $285 · 3 Br + den, frp!c, gar, fee. Agent 842-4421 I -,,j~. i".ln Vi•Io """" Lease Sept-June. 638-8470 direct lighting Call 646-2846 . washer & dryer. bltins, l:iM 'net sn~Js. H 11 11 h , ·~-------or .~8831. •,Separate din'g area Apt. Unfurn. 365 FOUR SEA~Ns ·-. 96H8crpl, 46drps, $185. mo . BEACON RENTALS un ngron NC ---· . ';c:,;::~:c.:::~=-.---e H 1·k ~ ~·· FOR Lease -3 BR, 2 BA. 1 B.lboa Peninsul• ome-1 e storage 1 !boa p 1 1 Spac. 2 sty 2 BR, 1% BA, .=~:.:;c~,...-~=--,-~I * 64S.OJ11 * LOVELY 3 BR HOME hon1e never lived In. Avail :. ~~eg=! w/sto~ .~ •n nsu ol Dltns, crpts, drps, prtv NEW 2 BR, D/W, elec;t FURNsach 1100-. nr bay. on quiet cul-de.sac Jot, 9/?. $300. Wtr pd. 837-7309. 2 & 3 BR. Winter. $245 & e Marble pullman 3 BR 2 BA, ~----~-t eo• patio, pool, conv. loc. No rang~, drps, shag crpts, Nr ' Un!urn~.,..~B"" 1 b • pets. 1165. 735 Joann st. Huntington Harbour, Adlts, Ulil pd. Avail now! n t c e l y carpeted & HARBOR View Homes -$295/MO. 114 E. Balboa. • King-si Bdrms do. . ~ o a CM ... 1450 no pets $200 846-4360 3 BR, only S195. Sngls ok. draped dshwshr & blta "Montego" 4 BR, 2 BA. n4/87S-5991; 213/3.15-4696. a Pool -Barbeques -sur-Pen l n s u I a . $500/mo. · · "'"" · =""'=''~"c~=~c--1 Fncd/gar, CI D. kids/pets. · ' I led lease. $425/mo. Ca 11 Newport Beach rounded with plush land-675-6296. 4 UNITS Avail. 2 Br, crpte, 3BR. 2BA, w/den good loca- l BR & Den. 2 Ba, $235. Clse ms, sec U. r e a r I 644-1077. I ;,.;;;.;""';;.c._:c.:..;;..:..;;.___ , sea.ping CHARMING duple.-<, 2 BR, drps, bltns. Upper or lower lsttlon nr moshpgCal. Al vall Sept. to s.cl!J, kids/pe:" fncd /gar. yard. $28~. per mo: I Newoort Bffch WINTER Lease, 2 BR turn, Ad ults. No Pets newly dee., adults· only, $150/mo. 1st & last + $501,.0:=;$275=='c"''O'c7-==-~~=-1 4 Bl1, :? BA, $375. Students. VILLAGE R E A L bltins, crpts, drps, close to LARGE l BR, ·n90 close to ocean/bay/shops. dep. No peta. Call 548--8196 NEW 2 br; 2 ba, 2 car gar, "'!~..,,. • 11 "°'f'?1, .\11 ··1rl\~. ESTATE 962-4471 , LRG Bachelor. $150 Now. ocean & bay. $250/mo. 365 W. Wilson 642-1971 675-8T.ll or 985-6822. or675-6676 or see ~A Can· ,$1.95. 548-3446 days, 494-6364 ALA_ Rentals_642-8313 I DECORATO°as shov.· place. Refrig. Util pd. Student Avail Sept 15th. ca 11 LOW )YEEKLY RATES BACHELOR to 2 B yon Dr., C.M. .~ec:,ve;,:•c,· ~-=~-~~I DO )"OU \\'ai:tt to be near All new inter, 2 story, lrplc, NOW • Nice 2 Br & den $250 675-0544 or 884-1858 or E·xecutlve Suites monthly: 1st & last. r' BRAND new 2 Bdrm. $215. LRG 2 Br, 1% Ba, studio. G.rade & H1-S<;hool11. ·shop. 2 br, l'ii ba, stove, retrig, Patio, fncd, gill', no pets. 875-0831 2080 N Bl d (213) 697-1496 Open for your Inspection Encl gar, mature couple, no Pl!J& Center & Beach. See washer & dryer. Adult com· BY Sea 3 br/2 ba $300. CID, NEW, LRG, QUIET 2 BR, ewport y ' PENTHOUSE l B ll85 bet. 4 PM & 6. PM Wed. thru pets. $157.50/mo. 84~. 1111., 4 Bdrm., 2 Bath. munity. Pool, club house, frpl, bl!ns, ref, patio. 'ftlilc, dShWhr, self clean. Cott• Mesa First & last ti!"~ pd. Sun. at '201 E. 16th ~t. 1st EXTRA Lrg _ 2 BR 2 BA $325/on lease. 646-1772 aJter steps from shopping Lease NEW 3 br 2 full b1 $.'i85. 2 oven. in: blk to bch, Newport 641-2611 (21a) 697_1496• u 1 es • Mo. rent + $100 depoatl Dlx poolside apt. Nr.' beach. 6 pm. $225 mo 962-2913 or 534-3896 ~-.r. frl.·r-11 ''-'lpl'11. Now. Peninsula. $300. 213/600-7219 STUDIOS&. 1 BR'S C del M JID.tAC. 2 BR triplex on $160. Z120 Florida.~- -s ·LANOLORDS_$_ 3BR 2BA stove & dsh w•h cul I ALA_~.•nt•ls_642~ \Vkdays. • FREE Llnens I ;;o;;r;;o;;n;;•iiiiiiiiiiii.,iiiiiiiiiiiil quiet street, garage plus LRG 2 BR. 1" BA STUD'O, Lei i S retlt Utt :Jl'Ocertle~. tle snc: lent•.:;.; iwlvtl. % mi $210 -Nice 2 BR, bltns, gar, 3 BR, % bllt: off beach, a FRE~ Utilities II prkg, bltna, carpets, drapee. encl gar tn~t ok no ~ts We y,·ork with you. FEE to bc:h. f.ltia mo owner will pa'io, 1 blk. oeach! sunoeck, w/kar garage • full t\.llcht>n ~I Scott Pl. Apt 2. $157.50/rOO. 84~ _ ' FREE. Many Clients. Call consider sate or lse opt S325 -3 BR, 2 BA, trplc, Yrly. Utils pd. 213: 944-4890, • Heated Pool ~ - prior to vacancy. Save $$. PRlNCIPALS ONLY. Call bltns, gar, yard. Westcliff, .122.::;,,42nd"";.;:S::l._:NB;o:. ... ,__~,..,-I• Laur;elry Facilities ~by 1 &. 2 BR, m.A:, ll35 &; $165. 2 O.~dfe.nO~~la rpe~ g ok: $ALA RENTALS S before 10AM or aft 6.PM $450 -New & nice 4 BR, YEARLY·Seashore by 5lst. • TV &: maid serv avail. fl. ~ Ort• Crpts, drps, bltn. ,range &: 1145 Call 847-8149 Newport & Bay CM 642-8383 (TI4J 552-8326 frplc, ·1 house ocean, Bal. Lg 2 br, immed. c..ccupancy. • Pho11e Service oven. Covered carport, close · · LANDLO. RDS'. l200 UP. 3 & • B•. No 1ease 1 PN'u"··VIEW RENTALS $300. 548-1607/~ •wi•11 w,~~3GRMWO~h55ed, ON TEN ACRES to shops & beach. Children* 3 BR. 2 BA STUDIO. \Ve Specialize tn NewpoM Bea.en e Corona del Mar a & Laguna , Our Rental Ser- vice is FREE to You! Try Nn-Vk>w' NU-VIEW RENTALS 673·4030 Or 494-3248 Balboa lslend GREAT 1 br w/palio $195. required. Others avail in 673 4030 4"'3248 OCEANFRONT-nice upper 2 n4.n : iw-•ua Apt~. furn.lunf•Jm. Least' OK. 830 Center St. 548-7900. ~195JiM~\v ~~ family. Ot>g Cty. Call Dept of · or .,... Br tum. Sept. to June. $225. apt. with same for % rent F'ireplace . priv. patiol BRAND new 2 Bdrm. $215. v · 1' r a n spor t at Ion , mo AJultzt, 67'3-&lG7. ~. P.1'1. plus 1,i utilities Pools Tennis Con!nf l Bkf5t Open for your inspection 2 BR Studio, New. 1~:1 Bath. 7131620-3310 from 9. 3 ttWATERFRONT -<water furnished). Not 900 Sea Lane CdM 644-2611 bet. 4 PM & 6 PM Wed. thru Garage. 2 blk3 beach. CaU wkdays. New 2 BR, 2MI BA ' __ u_,_1e_v_•_•_1_1_n_1u_r-"n".--'350"-deluxe but reasonable, •MacArthur i\r Coast llwyi SUn. at 3)1 E. 16th St. tst aft 5:30 962-3005. VACANT 2 BR. $145, all Condo: Double garage General clean, comfortable and near Mo. relit + $100 deposit. Huntington Harbour I Pl 3 BR d bo sli .,,. -.::;~~------Bay & Newport, C.M. no NEWLY d 2 Br 2 Ba we come. us: an at p, ~· -lease, cleaning fee or ht &: ecor. · Teah,o u a.e.$190/Slngles. HERITAGE REAL-1..RG. 3 BR, 2 BA duplex, last.SEE-atter5PM,eves • • • • • • • • • 1 $215.lBR.$170.lncld'sgasRENT or lease new 2 Br Agt. Fee. ~ TORS 833-2560 pvt. yrd. 1 child ok, bltns, or wk ends. Avail Sept. isr. e e e & wtr. Adults, no pets. twnhse, shag crpts, drps, 3 BR, 2 BA;eteCbitns, trplc, • ' $195;mo. 847-3541, Ask for 2079 Thurin No. 2. NEAR BEACH deluxe 3 BR 646-4095. ll4 E. ~h St.. dshwhr, pool, rec rm, pvt d · ·-~ d Che'""! Limbert ' • C l'rI patio cloee to bch. !.fu,,t DELIGIITF"UL Vacant 4 Br, Frplc, C/D, util pd/WOW!· 3 Ba pool home. Ref's. FSTRADA 2 br 1i,, ba $UO. 2 Sept-Nov . Own/ Agt patios, (rpl, Cncd, 2 gar. 494--0451 NR. Feny ~ 3 br/2 ba $315. crpts, rps, u"'v Yr . 3 BDRM, 2 Ba house '" • $30 WE Ek & UP 2"' BA. Huge owner's unU · · see 'SZJ)/mo call collect. Brookhurst & Pacific Coast. Newport Shore!! area. Com· Balboa p.,.rnsu1• . in new custom duplex, beam $175 -Lrg 2 BR, 2 BA, nr. 213ins-4sts · $290/mo. · 213:697-0042 munlty pool & tennis. ·---• Studio & 1 BR Apts. clng, view, patios, fplc, nr trwys. Walk to shops & alll;;"'-'~""'·7----- LEASE/optlon 3 Br, 2 Ba, Gardener &: uUI pd. OCEANFRONT upper 3 Br 3 • TV & Maid Service Avail. sbopplng, no pets, $425 mo. schlB.No pets. Avail Sept. MeH Verd9 a Phone Service -Htd. Pool 6 p ··~38 home. S500 down $270 mo., $315/MO. '642-2563 or Ba + Den & dishwasher. • Children Ir Pet Sectkln 673-0960 th. h: ..rtlrv.J • DLX 2 &.. 3 BR. 2 Ba. encl 1 -''-"'='---~.11-~11 Nlte, appl$, (rpl, elc/gar. 1 BR. furn hse, t !a or 4 BR, ·2 BA $425. Appll's, salaried bachelor, 8 trplc. Fro!, rbilti/pct ok. NO\V. No ""'· 1170· 4!l4-8l70 oves. ALA Rent1l1 642-1383 South Laguna call aft 5 PM 842-3423 '=6'','!\-4599;,...:;~·--~~~~ $550/mo. Yearly. 673-5729 2376 Newport Blvd., CM 3 ROOMS $85/mo. 1 adult gar. $170 up. Rental Ofc., 4 BDRM 2¥.t baths, h\'O story : BIG Canyon -5 Br. 3 Ba 3 BAYFRONT yrly lewse, 2 MS-9755 or 645-3961 • • • • • • • • • 1 over 35. No pets, :l>36 3095 t¥tace Ave. 546-1034. In xlnt toe. $350. Ask for frple, separate maids rm, BR, 2 BA, frplc, 2 yrs old. {Ad good for $5 on rent) -Pl.tJSH EXEC. APT. Ws;!rkstml5 Sntst~1Ave. Inq: 240 Newport a..ch Dale 96>-4471 ~t# gan!ener ·11200 mo. Pvt bch. 1450 mo. 67'..a762. HOLIDAY PLAZA For Leue. NU VIEW APT. 4 • ~" · YEARLY lrg, gorgeou;:-ex: 3 BR 2 BA Carpet! Corona del Mar DELUXE S I l BR br, 3 Ba , tam nn. All elect. New 2 &. 3 BR E /ak:le PENIN. Water Front. Spac, 3 i BEDROOM & Den. Ocean ecutlve home 3 Br. 3 Ba drape~. t.arie yard. No HARBOR Hlghlllnds 3 br, 2 pac OlUI · bltns, crpt/drps. $750 per Call 675-M88 eves. Br. 28' boat sitp, Avail, $.125. View. Large deck, 1 block to Fam rm. intercom, 2 frplcs, pets. $275. 847~115 ba, yrl~se. $350 mo. Call SPECTACULAR VIEW furn. apt n40. Heated pool. mo Too t to -• ----- be.ch. All remodeled and steps to Ba..v $750 mo aft 6. -~ Avail Sept Del ~ 2 Br 2 Ample parking. Adulta, no • tiO. " Callmany6..., e~2s NEW 2 & 3 BR E1kle Wtr/$330 )T, 1se (n-O redecorated. Deluxe. $350 1-'613-6002-"''--"=------* 38R, 1% BA. 1 Mlle fl'om , .-.... • • l1Xe "IUUCl" , BA. pets. men n.. i.>-0:.-.1 cau 675-6488 eves. 5'18-4395 I 674-2796 V CANT B<'ach. $2'l0 per r6 o t ~15~"'~·-------Frple, garage, 1600 sq. ~ . 1S65 Pomona Ave., C.M. BRANJ? new large 2 Br apt ALL El 2 BR l BA 1 BEAtrrIFULLY decorated 2 ru~mf:t~ ~ih 1s:_:~~':. 3iR. ~~W1c;:rc =~ 536--1144. ) BEACON Bay winter-.pvt Adults. oo ~· Yrly. $.'50.-3 ROOMS, newly decorated. -W(beam ceilvllngs, bltns & chlld oKc. $175 nlo e ..... '120 Br toWJ'lhouJe, poola, view, 2 ••• ·~ ~· I ~ss lrvl-be.acb & tennis. 2 er, 2 Ba, -406 Dahlia 673-6004 Behind Mesa Theattt. Bus tree top ew 4 00 ~ ' . . ~ car pr Bluffs $350 213: ~OOQ eves. ~ ...... : year y, ..,,.,....~ .... !rplc bl-· pati·o Avail DUPLEX So ! H Jasmine, ••~ 6.,;1658 Albert No. 7. CM 64G 5996. --"1'15 . • • 721-5115 dayg. 1,;;;::;::;;;;;;;::;::;::;;;;;;;1 · • """• · · o wy, 2 Br, service. Mature J&dy, no .,....... '""' 01.ru 1 ,::~===----1 :B:.•:.Yr.;•::;h::o;.;r•::•:_ ____ I' now. $350. Ml-95.34. 1~ ha. SUndeck. Gar. $300 pets, amok:ing or drlnJdnc PJtIVATE, quiet 1 b r ' *BRAND NEW Deluxe 2 Br ~ BLK fron1 beh. 3 Bt, 2&. 1L :;l;clo:;l;•l;•;;;;;::;::;::;;;;;;. j 3 BR., 2 b8 ........... · • $475 BAY & Ocean vie .... ·. 3 Br. 2 mo. Mr. Osmond, 52lw2703, $UO mo. MS-3938 w/small• sun deck. Yearty, in tJ.:if.ile0x.;..,..~~ .. 350 awldeck, gar. $.325/~tO. ur I• CORNER lot. Lrg. 2 Br, 3 BR., 2~ ba ..••••• $3851450 BAi, carptts, drapes, stove, Eves 963-4355. · NEWL No. of Hwy. $190, per mo. '"~'"or oi.-44th St. NB 67S-017t. * AVAi L. NOW * ~~,,,.";'tltss "!.!t ~pl., 2 BR, 2 ba, den, A/C ..• 1275 r<!rir. walher .l drye<. $400 TWO • 2 BR"°"'· '38 & '38\1 $200. { :.C-~~. ~:;.I~~ :; A•>all Sept 15th. 644-4064 3 BR I %BA, Spacloos. 1170. l700 WESTCLI Fl' DR H •••54JO aae. 4 BR, 211 ba, .......... U75 Call 613-7300 Fernleal. -ea ~ty •·-. , d I t 3 BR 2 ba ••~ ""\' Dahll 2286 Can)'On Dr Ready • 5 BR.p~~.J~p on1c =~==·'-·------2 BR. 2 bath.a, tam rm. $350 BLUFFS, 2 BR, 2BA charm, Ph. Peggy;'&';.>-f:i!XW)'iaf, ~ "' wtr. A u ts, no pe s. 0oefi s.(ic ._.S~n 1~: Sept, 1st. 642-2222.. 2 BR, 2 BA. Bltn. appHances. LIDO REAL TY Coron• d el Mar '• BBR-R 22 bbo•!~, .......... !10015 spoc, Conm. Prl CO< vu, Do111 Point mt9;. 114 E. 2'Jth St., 613-250!. 2 BR a pt near Oran&< a.am Pool. 642~274. 3377 Via 1 1 " • ''l! Brach 3 on. 3 Ba, adult.a. AU new ' "1 ••• ··'" • ... PoOJ, fpJc, avail nQ\\', $165 -..;:;"'-.:..;;;.;:;_____ STUDIO apt, tum. Penon '250-2 BR Jtove trplc vu college. Jl70. Vtlls pd, avail 2 br, 1-blk;-oce&n; p.tio paint, J1!P, et.atom drpt. S BR. 2 ba., air o::mct. •• $215 l11t, adfb, 64o--0746, 968-4981 PANORAMI€ OCEAN VIEW ovtr 40. $115/mo. 2191 incld'g elfc. Adu'its, no 'pets'. now. ~aft 6 $210 yrly; .no pets: refri& * 67'"7300 * frplc. patio, gar, stove. l3S& Vision-3 BR-2 BA, poet. \I blk beh. Xtra lrtt 3 Br, '"' than 1 yr llarbo>" mvd.. CM acrou m Hellotrop<, Apt c. CdM. so. of 17th St. i..,. newly 128\1 46 St: "'''" 642-33l1 2 BR, 2 BA, rA~ heat, fptc'. I.so 417 Nnrcl'lsu11. tamUy~ 9nly, $400/mo. old, 21' Jlvtng nn, bltn from K-?.tart. Spaoe 19. 2 SR., newly decor. Carp, dtt:. 3 BR., 2 bn. Adlts, no EASTBLUJT l Br. 2 BL dble •ar, w11~h~r/d"''ef, RUSTIC 3 Br. 2 Ba home, 493-5768 k.ltcben .. Spectacular view of 1 & 2 BR, 1-. $165 Ii SUl5. drp$, ·bltns: pool. $220 Ma.. pe'1t. $225.. 646--2414 Agt. Pool. $365u_7 -· wtnter $340. 67""3-101" c.'On1pletely remodeled on , .... nt: 11llp Rvl: patio -1!$-2895 New crpt. Swlm'g pool. yrly. lease. 644-7fi62 ~nt 2 , 1% BA. Crpta, drps • .1 ----'"'-==------., ed h•11 , Ba·-lights at nJg:h' $300. mo. ... BR w - 4 BR 311-Bil dr>n Sept lftrge . comer lot. t oo r I $500 yrl):': 4 bdnn .. 2 bsth .;:.::...::=-,-,...,-,,..----Adults. Ideal ror Bachclor. 1245 . 2 BR stow frplc vu blt·lns. Patio & ear-.ige. \'EARLY lC!tMI 2 Br .• Om thru 'jw,-; $45'i.' -' ' Jn.!lmlne. ·$425. 673-1~ untutn or turn. 64W331. N.w~ 8eKh 1993 Oiurch St. 543-9633 lncld'g; el~. Adulii. no Pets'. Adults. No pea. 833-37lt. 1 Ba, S290 mo._ 61~7667 5 BR., 3 ....... &., ~ trpl, lge. RF..ALTY $.3~ 3BR, home, . at 316 OUUXE du:ple)(, near beach 3 BR. t \1 BA. m l:lellotroPtt. Ap1 C, Cd~t NEW spacious 1 Sr., cn.rpets, * 642-1169 • W 4-'roH lhl!: boo.lll go b)'. 2 Cnm. 6!'..,in. 2 ~·II gut." S$50 A Company \Vlth Vii;ion ar St, 8N3ewvo1 21.,,..rt Shores. & Udo shops. 3 Br, 2 Ra, =7 Sh_plpstalnD. C M 2 BR. apts, from $210 to $300. drat p<kl, .. ~~1;!,"1"'1 a· .. JC!lrnge, 1 LARGE\. 2 Brl • 2C~l· ~ !!'! BR, 2 & Bayftont. Wlnttlr ~~o .• ,~O~O _ ""' Y . -.. Univ. Parle Center, Irvlnt -~" frplc, bltna. dsbwbt thag i ;i ™mar r., · ' Alao, unf\Jrn. houtes. pe 0 · V1.r-.10 w' ;>, mo. ~ Y· ai ; ~"" ttntal. 6~M6. "-.; NE\'.' 2 BR. CONDO. Call Anytime, 552-7000 LOVELY ~llll'bor Vu..4 br, 2 t:!fta:· \'rly/'mo. $ l 5 0 . * RltAJ>Y ELMS-POOL BOYD Real ton 67"';>-5930 LRC 2 BR. S140/l\JO. 1,:;•<c_6:.;'l!h1600:;.. ='---~~ "1'1.ak~ Roor.t Fo: ~· NEAn CHINA COVF., ,\p. Ofiice' lxY'l'B 8 AM to 8 PM baa fncd yd. & Pfl!IO. Nr. MS-.1346. • Adu.It~ Poolside $150 up. Yoo don't nttd a cun to Ctpts/drps., bh-ln.•. oa:~,. vmv, yearly, Du.,tex ••• clean out thll gnraae J~cc~~ .....,. 6f.\-.89:'1'6. U . Letie 644-0.196 att 5 pm. NC\\' tusto1n duplex. Uj)per 4 177 E. 22nd St. CM 64)..3645, .. Draw 1'~.ut" when )'OU l child ok;. • ~_,.J686 2 UR~ &: ~P"il ~ •. turn U11l junk lnlo CA•h Al\f dl\,V ii tl1'? em DAY to 3 BR. 2 BA, kP"1c. bltns, 4 BR. 2 Ba. Avail.JO/I, PoQI, br I 2 ba. Ba,yV\V. USO mo UtlMACULATt l Dr SUS uUI place an ad In the Daily SPACIOUS 2 Bclnn. Apt. mo. Of with ~ Dally PUot Cl1ul!lified run .an adl Don't ditl\)'. -. cpm ' drpt. $295 pet' mo. tton1s crt, walk to bch. $435, yr. Lowtor 3 b1', 2 ba $350 mo pd. Srtal tt)'. Cpt/drps. prl PlJot \Vllnt Ada! Call now t.1taa Verde ~ Oldtr Thi! "Ytl.ow Pai'tl"' Ad. &IW6'13. .caU today 6'12-5671. *Phono 837.$115* mo. 61&-3139 yr. !145-2141, -L pa1lo. Qolet adltL m-211l4. • -. · cbUd ok. $160/MC>. 962-«>ll claultled, • .-_ \ I ' • , \ \. I I • • ' • ! • • ... ... ' ..... -' . . ' OAILY PILOT ... tall I~ I l~I Afit. Unlurn. 365 Rooms 1~-~-~--~ ~ 1001ce Rental 440 Person1ls 530 Lost JITT1 1 ;;;1 ;;;ri .... ;;; ...... ~1[111;:;1 J 1 l-/" H.;.;.0,,_...;.;.,;.;l.;.;N,;.;n;..;lnt;::.. ___ I Help Wonted, M & F 710 Ht lp W•ntod, M & F 711 555 Ceme nt, Concrete Newport Be1ch PARK -NEWPORT APAR TME NTS Bachelor 1 or 2 Bedrooms 11.11d Townhouse. >"r. iiw.:;o Open 9<l Dolly Spa Poolis Tennis Act'Ol!IS from Jo"'asbion Island kf Jantboree OQ Son Joe.qwn Hills Roe.d. ( 714) 644-1900 THE New·-- BA YWOOD APARTMENTS in Nfl'WPOT'l Beach are ready. 1'he Wes office is open daily from 10 AM to 6: 30 PM. MacArthur Blvd. & San Joaquin Hilla Road. 644-5565 BACHELOR APT. • Near the Ocean, New, Full, Security, Pool, Gym, Sawut, $180. Ask f o r Maureen.~. OCEAN VIEW 2 Br, 2 Ba, new, Di!shwruller, Fireplace, Pool. Clubhouse area, $385. Ask for Kay, 645-<l242. * * * Tim R a bun 1311 Beyalde D r. Corona de l Mar Yoo fJ't! the \vinnr 1· or TWO FREE TICKETS "' the SHIPSTADS & JOHNSON ICE FOLLIES Sept. 5tlt btru 16th "' ... FABULOUS FORUM (wbject to $1 llet'Vice charge at the Forun1 J Please call 642-5678 elCI. 333 to cl aim your ticket~. (North County roll h"ee number is 5io.12'l0,) * * * ROOMS S2Q wk up w/kit $30 wk up apts. ChildN'n & pet section. 2376 Newport Blvd., CM. 548-9755, 645-3967. Room & Board 405 Room or Room & boa.rd Mesa Verde area • 545-2tl!ll ~~-~---~-'BAYFRONT OFFICE S INDISPUTABLY attractive, Pre«tige offices ovt>rlooking J>lris:Jc woll\8n \vith literary B<J boa Bll.y In Ncwiiort interests would like to meflt Beach. various .st2e xultts al.ugle mali: 111 thirites or as lo\v as $120 per mo. In· similar leanings. W r l t e cluck'S drvt. crpt, utllllil'I, Ch1ssllied 1td No. 699, Dally janitorial servi<.-e.s. Monthly Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Coat& or lea!W. 3700 Nl'11.•port mvd., Mesa, Ca. 92626 NB. 075-1220. FULLY LICENSED COSTA M S * SP,IRITUALIST * * E A * Sp iritual readings 10 am-10 Nt'\v office bulldlng • Thrt'C pn). Advice on all matters room suite nvni.lable, 100 *l· 312 N. El Camino Real, San rt. ALSO 2.00> sq. ft. • all Clemente. 492-9136 492-0034 or pan. All ut!l!ties, janl· PttOBLEM u-.-n--y. Con. tor st"rvicc. 2706 Hartx>r .-• .,,.,.....,. Bl d RobertN ru fidenl, iJ ympat heti c i;U'.14ss. a.ttress, tr. pregnancy counseling. Abor. lion & adoptions ret. OCEAN VIEW APCARE 642-443tl Spacious, exec, office In PREGNANT? Thinking Union Bank Bldg., Newport alx>rtion? Know alt the facts Center ,.,./recept. are a, first! Call LIFE LINE -24 phone service. Xerox & part hrs, 541-5522. time set')'. Mr. tttcrarland,A '"'==;,11'00-CLI°'c"s'-~A~non-ymo--u-s. 644-9440. Phone 542-1217 ar write F'Ul~L SERVICE P.O.Box 1223. Costa Mesa. Westcllff Building s · I Cl 535 Cort~r \Vestclifr Drive & ncui Ubs •GENEROUS• HOU~'E OF CLEAN --· • ···---•• ----- CUSTOM Concrete Work. Steam Carpet clean.Ina, wln- Rc1nove asphalt drtvewys. dow1 & Doors, &ee est. Replace w/conerole 6Sc. It. 642=QJ24. •REWARD• No delays. Free est. Walks, I cD::EP::::::E:::N:::D:_A_B_t_.E_Ex_'pd_La_dy_ slabs, patios. No job too Good and reliable. Ref's. • s1nall. 638--3325. Major Newport Bench firm ACCOUNTING NCR Operator For retun_l or any ln!q~a· CUSTOM CEMENT WORK __ _,,e_,Se;'l3-811~;:7,__,,e:.__ netda exper. NCR..395 op. tlon leading to return of a Di-Ives WALKS Patios DAY work, experienced! re( eru.tor (or AIR &. A/P who gold tour lea..t clover pin, Pool decks o00 642-8514 ' vicinity Harbor area. can 1,ype 50 w.p.ni. Some .i.pprox. 2 lnches in diameter, • ' •548--033• t al ed t1o i witJi jeweled horseshoe In CONCRETE Work·Pat1os & orm Uta n n accow:it· center; also, gold locket Driveways, Walks. 645-3802 I :;M.;.•:;•;,;o.;.nc,ry,______ ~:1i!n~:.mable. Ex· (was on chain), approx. the or 557•1898 For est. SLUMPSTONE, bk>ek wnlis. size of a nickel, inscribed ::hlld Ca re Planters, marble en-Please Call in 8Cr!pt, FLA. These are ___ ...;,;;_____ tryways. Expertly instal'd; Mrs. 1'1ekler deeply treasured !~Uy *Llcenllod Chlld Ce,.,* ,...,.nably priced. Bob; 9:3~12 Noon mementos & the loss u; 1r-t.1o fher has opening tor 1 64:>-4930 644.J389 replaceable. 1 P LE A S E , chtld, age infant thru s 1 ~"'-='------- ASSEMBLY VARIAN HAS 2ND SHIFT OPENINGS! VARIAN DATA MACHINES PLEASE help it )'Ou have years. 2 playmates. Lots of Painting & THE IRVINE any inlonnation -642-3589 toys, 'fe0t'ed yard, private _;.P.:•::.po,;:r;.;h.:.•:;n.;!g:;l:.;"11...____ COMPANY Openings f 0 r assemblers Eves. & weekeuds, roon1 for nap. Balanced EquaJ Oppor, Emplo)'tt" willing to work 2nd shift. al p1 t TLC GE0rge Painting Ir: Decor'ng 1 ............... ;;!;,;;;;,;;.., WEIMARANER Pup, 9 l110!i me . s, enty o and at· Interior & Exterior Varian pays a shill di!· old female, needs medlca· tentlon. 9684971. Guaran, Top Quality Pror. ACCOUNTING CLER-I( ferentlal + these regular tion. Has brown leather col· CHILD Care in my home \V km hl & M t ... ~•-Beautiful modern bGM. New o uts tan d Ing compUny Jar, !Mt in vie. ot James Balboa Peninsu1a. Enclosed ~ est8:'15 p 8S:s:;i6 braJ'ldtes opening which benefits: St. 1n Costa Mesa. Ca11 yard . 675-aSll. allow 'for rapid advanw-• 64.>-7506 or 54!>-1850 Contractor PAINTING in C.M. in· ...... Salary to $450. Call Competitive AUG. 24th several gUns were ter I exter. Small j 0 b 5 Helen Ma.son, 5 4 0 • 6 0 SS, Irvine Blvd ., New v or I Beach. Mr. Howard 645-SIOl. stolen from a gunsmith's JACK Taulane rep a 1 r, ~~e. Free est. Jim. Coastal Per.lonnel Agency, Salaries * INTRADATA * garage .in CO.ta Mesa. A remod, add.' Lie B-1 =-=c.o·-----~2790=;;,Harbo:;;;~r,;B::.:lvd"'.'-'' CM=·-• Basic Maiar QUALITY matches substantial reward ts of-269072. My Way Co, 547-0036 No Wutlng ACCOUNTING t ra In e e. , wi'PHOTQ fered tor the retum of the . * WALLPAPER * Aects pay/ree. 10 key Cale & Medical ,.5 .. , --.·st ,·n Cai"." two \Vinchester riDes in-E lect rical When ""''call "Mac" LU ty · XI t .,,.,,._, & Business Re ntal -LAH;:... u volved. No questions B.Sked. 548.1444 e pmg n ---.r • 6 Days Vaca• __ .;,,;;_;..;:;_::,.._,.;,:;: (Call NOW for FREE sam· Contact PM. Air Services, ELECTRICIAN-License No. · eves. Co. benetlts in nu a/c bldg FOR LEASE ple profile on 1 prospective TI4: 968-2689 233108. SmaU jobs, maint & PROF. wallcovering state Dlsc Instruments. 102 E tion after 6 SEACLIFF Manor Apts. 1 Br. Unturn. $145. Pool. Ask _G_u._e_st_H_om_ce:_ ___ 4:c;:l5 about our discount plan. - 1525 Placentia Ave. NB. Ne\v stores or ofGces will be match. 24 hrs.) REWARD _ part Siamese re~s. 548-5203. lie. no. 219514, Insur., all Baker, CM. 979-5300=·=~1 months, 12 available in about 3 months., 714 -638-5920 I LA 658-6283 C'at. (Declawedl beige & Furniture types ot paper. 714 : 842-4386 ADM SECR ETARY 54$-,,,;Jl~ New Custom Boyfront w/PRIV BCH & PIER. 3 BR, 2 BA. Frp\c BBQ. $485/mo. Yearly. ~I or 644-4510 oc:EANFRONT 3 BR., 2 be. , Yearl)o. $450 Month 2 BR., 1 ba.. Frplc. 1-Blk. to ocean. Yearly. $325 Ask For Mike JONES REALTY 1)73..6210 $45(1/Mo. Oceanfront + Bay Vu. New dlx 2 Br, 2 Ba con- do, full sec. frpl . 213-272 -71 76: wknds 714-673-4131 BRAND NEW DUPLEX Ocean view, walk to beach 4 BR, 2 BA, frplc, $295/mo yearly. '61·1266. Son Clemente NEW 2 BR, 1 % BA. Ocean View. 1225 SQ. ft. + 11.·ork· sbap. AH deluxe features. Walk to pier ~ shop'g. 314-A DEt Mar. $2i0fli.fo. Adutt:s. 400-2264. S.n Ju•n Capistrano 2BR condo, 1 be, stove, ..trig, "Pis. dtp•. 2 miles New Marina, $200 mo. -ms 1 BR. I ba, yard S17S + uti! yearly. ht & last mo'a ad- vance. ~m. Apt1., Furn. or Unlum. 370 Cost• - PRIVATE & semi private rooms avail w/nursing care, good food & laundry 642-9278 ldeaJ Huntington Be a c h LADIF.S -Summer Special 1 \.llhite. Ans. to ltappy. Vic. HJ-QUAUTY, 1.DW $ Fee Paid. Recreational di· days after 1 10t.-ation in shopping center. yr membership $.5. Call of l.a.Pala, Mission Viejo, FU~.URE Stripping state Lie. No. 280044 rector needs top see'..y to F?r in~rrnation call Jerry 'PARTNER' 836-1271 or SUn eve. Please ea 11 re.finishing, repairs, an-... 542-I701 . . . handle reservations fO!'clubs year. Gillespie ~548-~~14~79~.~~~~~~ 837..f,615 tlquing. Chem-Clean West PROF. painter, hon~ work, & keep his busy dept run-e Chri'stmas & Village Real Estate 892 "~ <>< -· sm-ly G t PR 962-LOST·. M'--··ked s•·-·se ""°" reas. Int/ext, tree est. · rea 2456 or Eves. 968-2974 ...... a.1 ....... "' spot Start $666 Al F N y OFFICE I al kitten. 9 wks. N e e d s G d . Refs. 548-2Th9, 642--3913. Joo,;, Can Kay. w""1 • .... •w ears on Newport Blvd. I medication. Vic. 40lh & ar •ntng DITERIExter, aceous. oeil· "Al\,_,,,__. ~-· ~--· week off. Summer Rentals 420 AV AIL 9/1 to 9/8. 3 BR, 2 BA. $175. Avail on lease. Partially Lolt and Focnl R' ....:__ ~ ........,..i:l,I r="3Vl'u1<:.1 furn, carpeted, ait/cond, ~· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;;;,;~ iver, N.B. 673-7142 or * * * ~'Ii sprayed. Lie, ins, loc. Agency, 2'190 Harbor Blvd., e , parking. Approx. 1000 sq. ft. • S75-498G. Diane Letterman refs. Free est. 645-0809. CM. Profit Sharing, Rentals to Shire 430 ' $250avaf.m. 0 1d· •alw'"",,r~n"'-c~-'°r. Found (free ads) 550 LOST IO sp, Blue Dawes, 11674 Poppy ALL types or wallpaper, tree ADMINISTRATIVE secre.-..... k ti" NEAR OCEAN. 67S-53'66 -----u " ... v U<l w Schwinn, Vic. 17th & F t • v 1114 est., Lie. & ins., call Les & tary 60 + typing ti S1V'o> op ons, * * * WORKING ~8-Lm.6 FEM. puppy, part cocker & ~=·~~ren~iamf·1:: y00ou;~:,l'i!n,.,~~f Joe. 66-4449 or53&-0548. stmhnd. ~~ ~ retirement WOMAN SS, will shore CUTE ADOBE HOUSE, 1000 e;ther terrier or poodle. Can D Co M TWO FREE INT/EXT PAINTING Jenee necessary. Muot like I 3 RM furnished apt sq. ft ., adjoining busy cor-Beige & brown w/blk Yon r., sta esa. Quality Work. Reasonable detailed worlc. Npt, Bch. pan. , h I ner, for business or office overtones. Vie. Fountaln RUST brown small mixed TICKETS Ref's. 61S--01.60, 673-8186. Salary open. Call 646-<628. wit same or Vi rent u 11 e . c 0 s 1 a Me 8 a. Valley, Hawthorne St. of:! dog, w/short tail. !.est Aug. lilese positklns require ex· ($65} & share util ities. 645-2020/642-6560 • Ellis & Bushard.. 962-2853. 23. H.B. Ans ''Page' ' tn !he ~lri:.te r, P a tCh, Ra pa Ir l ..,...,ttlll'loo,_.,,_~Jtjll'\o•"'"-~Jtjll'lo••"-\ perience in the following Water fumished. Not Three story-7200' available REWARD. part Siamese cat. ~~d.;g tags, Reward ! SHIPSTADS & JOHNOON -After 5 PM By Appointment areas. Cabling,/ wirewrap, deluxe but comforta-at 24e a month. Opposite (Declawecn beige & white. 1 · ICE fOUJES * PATCH PLASTERING * Civil Engineer $18K+ or mechanical assembly. ble, clean, reasonable Newport Center. Possible Ans. to Happy. Vic. of VERY friendly oil white dir-All types. Free estimates , Methods & Procedures Don't& h:e 1 left out 1-Apply and ne•r Bay & New-trade for local Jourp.lex. La.Pala, Mission Viejo, Sun dty plump rock-a-poo type Sept 5th thru l61h __ _,CaJ,,,,,t_,540-<825o::;:=:c· ___ 1 Analyst, S&L exp $121<+ now )0 n a grow ng com· rt Bl d CM SEE Bkr, 675-7225 eve. Please cau 837-6615 CMO!i!:· ~-~nta Ana River, at the Plumbing Control Engr/BSEE to $l2K pany. po v ., , ' "THE Fact-Ory" has a lrg FND' Blk !mt poodle w/pur· . ~·~~ not home. Coll FABULOUS Digital Test Tech to 1866 Please Apply Tn Person -after 5PM eves or wlc shop avail. $I85/mo, In pie collar & flea collar long 546-3786 L.R. OTIS PLUMBING Memory Test Tech to $866 ends. No lease, clean-Cannery Village 425 30th st. tail Vie. Heil & Gothard REWARD, Lost BI a ck FORUM Remodels & Repairs. Water C.Onstr Secretary $T':XJ Ing fee or 1st & last. NB. 673-9606 or 642-SSa). H.B. miniature male poodle. . . heaters, disposals, furnaces, FIC Bookkeepers to $1SO Av.I.I Sept. lST. 20-WANTED 7 847-1525 \Vearing flea collar. 53&-8264 (subJect to $1 sefVlCe dshwashrs. 642-6263 MIC & PC Brd Inspector-to S7S() 17 • approx OO-OCKJ SQ bef noon. or 213-335-0281 charge at the Forum) B/A. Complete Plumbing Exec. Secretaries to fr:Xl Thurin #2. ft . !or competitive Jwiior 3 to 4 MO kitten, orange collect. Please can 642-5678, ext 333 Service. C.Omputer Operator to $750 Wear Shop. Tril.ttie & reas. striped • white front • Vic to claim ·a (N • -• •--WORKING woman would rent nee. 675-3084 aft lOam. Femlear & Carnation. F1ea REWARD· Ladles BI u e your Ii ets. orth PLUMBING REPAIR "-&"" »=retar1es S700 like to share apt or home collar Call aft 6. 675-423S or Cashmere sweater, betwn County toll free number is No job too small A1P Bkkeeper EDP to $650+ w/same. Have furn, Mission !600 sq ft INDUS'f. shop, 673-5956 Acords & Heisler park 541).1220.) * * 642--3128 * * AIR 0-& O:il.lect to S560 Viejo area. 837-m13 after 6 .$225. Also 300 sq tt office Laguna 494-5258 ' * * * --"TIM-",-'s"P"L"u"MB"-''-IN.:.G'---Dictaphone Typist to $600 pm $95. C.M. 646-2130, FOUND: Aug. 12, Long GOLD Rim, Bif. glasses in MOW & EDGE SERVICE AND REPAIR Journeyman Printer $600 WORKING girl will share Industrial Rental 450 ~t~ll~y rece~~~; hr. leather case, betw'n B & EXPERT & LOWEST RATES 673-6578 :ie~~~st to ~ Or Contact. J. Fuller VDM 2722 Michal-Dr. I rvlne, C•llfomi• 83:1-2400, oxt. 336 charming 2 Br, 2 Ba. in vie. CuJ..,~ale home•, L Sts. Vie. Bch.-Balboa DEPENDABLE "'·nentJ Otfi-t S4~ CdM Frpl bal = uo •~ n. S ""' '-" 0 •:J Equal Oppnr. Emp•·-• e, cony, etc. NOW LEASING Irvine 552-9483 ~/'N ~w. Call For Prompt, fl!wing/Alteratl?nl CAIL TRISH HOPKINS lllll!!!!l!l!ll!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!w!!!!,-!!!!j Let's enjoy a peaceful Huntl~ton Beach GR MALE Weimaraner mixed Frte E t' -JERRI WHIITEMORE • -home. 644-7153 eves. •.• AY & white Persian cat. 7 T /-·"I s •m•••• EXPERIENCED n--·"-:I NEW M-1 Red rhinestone collar. Vic. puppy, mo. an w "~ -968-0812 '""'""'-'"..,.., rR\flNE DCDel"'Vrt.""rn ASSEf.ffiLY, inspection & FEM. room mate wanted to 940 Sq of Bayshores, N e w po r t . ed tail. Reward. 962-3620. & Alterations. Reasonable. r U\,.J\..11 'II "lt l shipr,tng he.Ip required for share 4 Br, N~rt apt, 3 · Fl & UP ,,0 2381 LOST EXPE-RT e 963-511'.1; e $CDlll(f5»ArfNCY '· •.tn I el-tronlc pn rt,: blks from bch:·;;,3 girls, ~n :r ~51t ~. Calico kitten in spots. -re':.1t~~1~yta~~ JAPANESE Alteratlon5-642-5845 488 ~17th St~~hll-\C~.1 fabrl.c:tlion~"Day shift, good ~~mo,+ utilfi75..8432orl """~~~"""~""""'"" Newport Hgt.s. Approx 6 caJJ 645-lO'lS. GARDENING Neat, accurate. 20yeanexp. Suite 224 642~Jll70 ~d11in~s & b ene fits . 4001 BIRCH NB mos. Green coUar w/bell. ~~~~~~~~~~ Complete Gardening Service Television Repair WANTED woman to share • 642-5107 Free Estimates 546-0724 M ,,. • 'V-• ...... A'ITENDANTS & Waitresses private pool home w/girl & 2000, 2000, 3£00 sq. ft. or com. "'°,7'""'~~----1~ E xp. Amor. Go__.____ COLOR TV Repair, expert, Jo,ttime. Mature women 1 child. Miss\on Viejo Area. bo. thereof. Avail. 10/1173. SMAU. \\'bite dog male • nr. I r.. rU91191" ...... ~nab! -in ho A FUN PLACE ~'d Good company Will consider same. 586-0980 Mr Ba gard SU Newland & Indianapolis. Instruction ......... Maint, Cle-anup, Decor. Shrub •"'""""' e, '"""'~ me. · THE EXcr!'ING · wn ner, -5032. Wearing old tags from . trim Lnd & Sprnklr Free estimate, H.B. N.B. & tits. Pleasant working PALM MESA APTS. SHARE Apt or Hou,. Save II 1,875' Ml space. lmmed oc-•-·-"" ,.10 s.rv'. ""l.930scp. £:.M:......Bcrt. Ga 11 em ore, TO WORK cond. Apply In peroo~ Call HOME PARTNER cup, 200 amp, 220-3 phase. ~~o==o;•'0·7~=-"""'-' -~-.,....,. _,,G.l Newport VUla Healthcare, ~o~uW1'FliRN~ 836-ll!W or 548-1479 CMAvaiJCall. 709~~3597lpMb,ounFriit !'-· FNShoD ... ~~~5k.>l&c LaggreyN'f!i;m1'e1 & Sc~ools &. JpeAPrANaEeSaEnu~ardy~'3r·,.""rv. Tiie :Ji~ JZ t 4CXXI HJlaria Way, N.B. Unbelievably lare:e apts , 3 BR 2 Ba ~use to share in .r..r n-· 1 ul(t.U-"' ... y 1nstruct1ons 575 : ,,~, a.1u · ATI'RACTIVE e o ck t at I huge pool, Jaeuz:l elect blt· 1-IB, $8.5 nto utilities. 1300 Sq ft M-1, wtfront of-Momrch Bay, Anaheint, ,;;;;;:;::;:::;":;::;::-:~---~-:1 :~& neat. Free est. CERAMIC TILE NEW & e U en \valtress, exper. under 30. • tns, shag crpta, drps, aauna * 962-29U * lice. Lrg rear dOQr. $180 mo. TlS-6450, Ask for F..ddy WESTERN riding le590ns & · remodel. Free est. Sm. jobs Apply Beach Ball, 21.16 W. etc Adu1ts no pe1' 2 BR 2 Ba. 1 646-5033 days . Eves FOUND German Shepherd horses trained. Call GARDENING -CLEANUP welcome. 53$-2426, 53&-8589 Ocean!ro·rt, NB Th.I-"$ • Sat. · ' · ~ · in FV, poo • rec. 64&-0681. 1791 Whittier, CM male, brown & black, vie, 545-963U/548-5I04 eves. Ask Reasonable Price -Free Est. G. ~ lOAM-lPM. SlNGLES From $150 center, $1<E mo. C.aJ1 aft 5 I Top Soll ="'="'="'=~===~' 1 BEDRM. From $165 963-2987 M-1. CORNER, 1 27 X 9 O • ~~~~nt Wilson, C.M, for Les ey. e SU-2043 e • I! BABYSrrrER NEEDED 2 2 BEDRM. From $185 oP=E=RSO=~N~20-30~---00~-1 w/building. 991 W. 19th St., Complete Lawn & Gardening 1r QUALITY * Sch age children, 12:30 to 6 Unfurn Apts A· .. aU Fro1n $10 want ° C.M. $225. 642-3490. FND. Gray long hair cat I I~ Service • Hauling & * MULCH & TOP SOIL * Now Hiring PM, nr Golden West & to $15 LEs.S. ~o~ ~Jft. $100. Rent1ls Wanted 460 wtwhite markings ~g Senba ind~ Qeanups, 548-0405 58&-6930 Mansion. Transp & ref. You're right, they're under· =----~-~--~~ ·---------\vhite Oea collar. Vic ot 20th l ~mmmmmm~i:..~ I EXPER. Japanese Gardener. T rH Service B b & Work: 556-7924 or Aft 6 pm (r:,c:!~ ~~Blvd.I Garages for Rent 435 RETIRED ge nt I em an FN& DTustinSma645-1382 alt 5:30 Y&ard serv, Oeanups, Relia. us oys .. "961}-="1"6=·=,,---,:-,...,c-c 541>.~ ENCLOSED garage loc 2009 desperately needs space : U kitten blk Ba byslttln neat. Free est. &12-4389. TREE Trimming Inch.Kling BABYSITTER • Substitute ·-~=~~~~==~--Pomona St. CM $30 mo. NO\V in Adult Trailer Park W/whlte Had pink collar g JAPANESE Gardener. Palm trees, and tree D1"shwashers teacher needs responsible , PREVIEW OPENING o .... "l21or548~ for a 12' x 52' with porch & Vic. Santa Ana & Beacon Garde .. 1..... Se · Ir! removal. Gen. clean up, woman on part time basts. --' · · ·~ & 3 b ~ -rt ~• CM Npt•llghts. "'"1914 BABYSITI1NG my home or ..... '6 rviee, m· R • l -~ 847 1'191 ~3 d••s a ·-k, 7·-".~ AW&.tu winning 1, 4 r carpo • •1-.:.ier .. area. "==="'=-'~=="--~ yours mother with own ming, cleanup. 645-1796 eas. °' n,, ... ~. • · '" ~ ........ a.11.....,"" , apts w/famUy rms. No Tt~E Aaragefzs Del Mar \Vil! consider buying similar WHITE female toy poodle transp. attentive care eves Gene ral Services TREET . and Stump Remoyal. Full Time ~~· A .... ~ter. C.ar n e c . lease. Sorry, no pets. From 6u NI9esa. · a mo. lvith lease of lot. 546-0135. found Vicinity Baker & aft 6 or \vkends 55&.J4l7 _ r 1 mm 1 n g, Shaping, ,,,........I.Vt just $175. OUR TOWN Aft 6 PM or all day Babb, Costa Mesa 546-1~ refs. ALL types home repairs. Spraying. Call Dave , Apply 3-5 daily BABYSmER for 6 mos. Family Apts, -1%iO Adams SINGLE CAR GARAGE, cw'-eek~;:,en;;;ds:::... ~=---~r:rings, BABYSITITNG my home ActuaJ time & material. , ~675-5435. old, my home F. Valley; 3 • Ave. (Adams at Fairview), $20/m o. Harbor/Adams LARGE2 3BRho · h 151 E. Coast Hwy. •-d•• 5 '"" ·"· &tart or use wit fo~EMALE cockapoo white, fenced yard • Jovin"' care Fast Serv. No job too sm. •u· -v• .....,-w.., ' Costa Mesa. Phone 556-0100. area, C.M. Call 968-1155. slab floor for elderly couple Vic. Harbor Blvd., CM 556-0855 .~... F&B Home Repair' I mJi I Newport Beach 9/13. 842-57!1 *CASA VICTORIA * Office Rental 440 not over $200 mo. (213) 545-7240aft5. LICENSED Babysitter. My 642-1403. I f l ; 1 l f l=Eq::i:u:al:O::ppn::r.::E:nti:pl:o:y:er:IBABYSITI'ER, Teacher 1. 2 & 3 BR, Furn & Unf. 438-2155 SlAMESE, alt-' male, PORTABLE . needs respoosihle woman Carpets, drapes, D/W, TV PRESTIGE MATURE couple needs 2 br Vic. Harbor & "'\Vilson, CM ~~~n~v~1:! ~~tt. WELDING SERVICE for care of 2 chUdn!n. ONn ant. Pool, etc. 525 Victoria house w/yard. Rent, option 64&-2337 . Will come to you evenings Job Wanted, Male 700 ANCIENT transportation. 552--9183. St. at Harbor, CM. 642-8970 OFFICES to purchaSE>. Costa Mesa BABYSITTING in my home, weekends. No job too Small'. BABYSJTIER _ Odd hours Ask about Move-In Fountain Valley, Beautl-area. 673-4924 alter 6 pm FOUND -Set of key! • Vie. Cost a Mes a ar e a, 54&-8212 64&-JB24 BOY 13 will do odd jobs on MARJNER older woman preferred in AllowanCe -ful Dew building, ground GARAGE in Newport Beh., C.?lf. High School References. 642-0384 ' Balboa Island. Call Jon my home. Refer. 968--1372 EXTRA Lali?e 1 or 2 Br. floor, 3,000 square feet, CdM, Costa Mesa area. 54;>.3581) BABYSITTING f SAN CLEMENTE AREA Bowlus 673--4619, Btw 2-5 Heated pool From $145. will divide into smalle.r f'OUND St. Bernard. Vic. of T cite• hild c or Paint'g • Plumb'g ·Repairs. !~=·==·=~-~~~ Mature adu1ts. Infant ok. No offices. 50c per square 644-0788 Eves + ivknds. N. Costa Mesa. ca 11 ea r 8 c · 0 st a Mob. Hms & Apts 496-5TI7 Job Wanttd, Femi le 702 Now Arx:cptlng BABYSI'ITER needed by f · I d QUIET hach. below 20th (or 54~-"'"'" Mesa, Westside 646-1861 646-0977. · ' Applicat'.ons For substitute teacher for 5' mo pets. 1887 J\l o n r o vi a. oot, me u es carpets, ,,-"""" 645-2174• drapes, all utilities, jani-Jehovah \Vit. Pay $75. util MATURE, dependable, fenc-Hauling NEED help at home? We ffBJ daughter. Miss. Viejo 7-3:l:l tor service. CaJl Marilyn Incl, eves 642'-0J8CI TIGER -white Kitten. 3 ed yard. My home. Rets. have aides, nu r a es, call 586-5628 REDEC. UNF. 2 Br/2 Ba, Stovall {TI4} 832-5440. 1 BR-retired lady -no pet mos. old vie. El Toro Good lunches. 545-lf.67. GET RID OF UNSIGHTLY ho us ekprs, companions. BABYSITI'ER-r.,n turc sitter $215. F1JRN 2 Br/11,4 Sa, K-mart, flea collar 5!lH575 Carpenter TRASH & DEBRIS. 112 Homemakers Up john, 1 2 11 · • t 3 d ~ 1 Br I'~ Adults oo '""""""""""'"""""'""""'I wants walk dist to church & 547 .. ~ Broile r -KltcL--or mo. o ( "' "'n. Y'S a _,.,, .uu. ' NEW OF. FICES shop perm 642-91)j9 FND: Fml pt-Pomeranian, I.DAD. COLLEGE STU· o=.o-o=:;;'·=~----nen week. my hO'""' during fall pets. 114 E. 20th St. I ~~~~~~~~~~ 11.·ht, older dog. Vic Del AL~RATIONS. REPAIRS DENT. 548-6428. SECRETARY, mature , No Exper. Nece55, semestcr. 83.1-3759 I 646-4095. No lease ~~~~I service, 1'far & Elden, CM. 642-6357. Pa(tio C0vei:!:_,decDks, a11,types SKIPLOADER & dump truck personable. Exp. fork lifts & Hours 9 ... ~ pm BAB y s IT 1' En needed / mellliBAU ZI drps, cpts, music, air cond., I II ... , FND Male Chihauhau Vic 0 c;arpen .. ,. ~aw n g 9 work. Concrete, asphalt, construct. equi.p't. Bilingual. Mon-Frl, Hpm. Woodland 2 B 1 $220 all util. Single offices from A~ 17th & Orange, CM. available. Phone, 548-?806. sawing, breaking. 84&-nIO. ~ n Selectric, SI H · Apply In Person Sehl area. 642·1904 att 6 pm. l 2 :: i at: Jis $125. mo. ~------~ 548·6893 ALL types work. New, GEN Hauling Tl'ee/Shntb -".:...:;:;1c:_______ 3 pm-5 pm, Mon·F'ri BABYSITTER.Christian for I um PALISADES CENTER FND: Male Irish Setter refimodh, add, ~ter, fraL ~e. trim. Gar & . Yd cleanup DAY Work. General Oean· 2607 W. Coast 11\YY. 2 boys. Mon & Fri. Own 15l*E~~ ... C.M. 2082 s . E. Bristol Announcements 500 Mesa ven1,.e,2895CM_. 962-""196!'. repa.ll"S. IC. Est. 531~, 557-6904. . ing, housekee p ing . Newport Beuch ~1 tra.nsp. 979-1.fn. Newport Beach ss1-1010 .,. Transportatkm. Realiable, l ~~""i~;,;;,~~"'l!;,;;,!le:"fi~fj"fif'i:R.lii"te l l Huntington Buch (Campus·Irvlne Intersection) * * * FND: Blk & white Kitten Ca r pet S.rvlce ~~t'.11°~r~~ ~~~~:1.'t ~Ml=·::.9330=·c....~-~---AsHmblers & TrainHs B.!~~;~JgT4Ed~s ~.t~ f BUSIEST intersectipn i n Joyce Ber tholf Fie ti VI 2 5 Ba 53A BOOKKEEPING • my ix>me AU 3 ahUts. Apply at gate bo"" 4 & 7 CdM, ""1968 alt DELUXE Adwl Pool!lde Newport Harbor. .., ___ _, a co ar e JOHN'S r--1 • Upholstery rry. ...-l846 or 673-0647. AIR AJP p•.• t ha 7 '" ~ I r.~ 8 al N ~"'"' 24551 Alto Vo'sta Dr •3 Westminster Ave "'"'1"" ...,....~ "' • • ou.. e c., \'I! am · 3 Pm & llpnt. 6. I va.iuen ung ow. r • story in Unique I.Jomes Dano Point • · '"_. "" Ori Sham~ free Stotch· HAULING, lite mo v Ing, car, vie. Magnolia &. MacCregor Yacht Corp, ~B"E=UT=rc"t"'N""'"'n,,..._...,..--1 ocean. Frplc, lrg patio, 6 Building. 800 sq. ft. at MALE Kitten Red tiger -Kard. Soil Retardants). garage & yard cleanups. Edinger, 839-4542. 1631 Placentia Costa Me8n A A • .,,.. your own ~~.n sauna, ten n Is. $350/ino.; 600 sq. ft. at YouTWareO'tlle 1F.,.;RnoE,"'Eo( H0.,.ho1. r hVICie\v homes -Port Degreasers & au color ~129 or 548-<>405. SECRZI'ARY aeeka position. 'Ao;UTO,;;:,:;.M;.:0;;:TIVE;::::=· ==..:::"·::.· boMN • reBcnht ri.,...ur t!a::!}2811t6ation. 0'1V"V..,,,.. •"M/mo. Both with views. un icg 'r. ~77 brlghteners & . 10 minute 32 ~. ~mNITURE Van tor ' · "'----"'---' wpt '4V· ""'u-l Bdrm From $135 ~ r1 r vr. typing, SnunncuJU, gen'I Plll'tsdept.haascveralopen-D.-QC I . . 61;>-6000. TICKETS FOUND grey kitten "Hot bleach 'for white ~ts. local furn hauls & gen'l business, exper, 496-0037, U lngs. Including part I gvaf • • n1pector Newport S.ach STORE/Of lice for lease, Dog" vicinity Newport Save )'Our mooey by saving hauling. 548-I862 557·2'136. pm. counter man part!! helper C.M. Rare opporturdt;y for ,,~ 11 F v $ho 1 to 1~ west, 968-723) me extra trips. Will clean,\~;;:::;::;;::::;~·;;;:;;;;;;::;:;.:,;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;: & parts dn·:~r. ;..,,_, eo'. qualit:led. Gel Coot & - STEPS FROM BEACH .wvu sq • · · · PP ng I•""-rm dt'nlng rm &·I vo; 5 """' ,..,,,.. Ce •·· p t 1 11 .... ..-1 SHIPS1'AOO & J'Olffl'OON FOUND Blk & whi h ·-·.. · ·• 0 A-tlts. phone ( 71') du--~-.~ h~ut. -1·-• 3 Br apts upper or . n..,.. ar a Y .,..... .... : te s aggy !tall ~· Any rm 17 50 °""" " "uv" ... "'w~., ....... -1..=.. ~ pl ,_1 model boned. $250. mo. days I"[ FOLLIES dog. Female, older, mediun1 couch •11-'-'0· Chair tt • 15 ;,_• 646-9303 Call 642-0044 flX' appt. II ;t'Win;;;!"or ';:;!:. M'ust ,.,.; ~;!!:.t.d •. 9 6 8-0 3 27 .. ,1,e. MJss;on v;e;o 586-5.139 exp. I• ;.hat .;;;,,., '.;.;; Trader's Parad1"se AS-L -BKKPR-BAYSIDE OFC to apprec. 913 w. Balboa. Sept. 5th thnl ]Sth FOUND, small gray kitten method. I do work myself, SEMB ERS Substantinl lnvHtmcnt co. in , ~ alter 6 or ~itends: C.D.M. 900, 800. 500 Sq. Ft. nt ttlt> on High Dr., Laguna . Good ref. 53l-0101. N.B. has opentna for a OCEA.HmONT 2 or 3 Br. F'rylm 37 cent~. Air cond, FABULOUS 494-2971 DON'T take chances wjth 1 • El(tctronics firm Deed! e,x:. bookkeepers a.11 i It tan t n..1• 213· 338-846I ext 419 pnv. parki n g. will FOUND: Siamii;e eat ' your carpet, I et pn> Ines "'"'riC':nct.'d u.scmblms ror w/aecurat& typing aki1l1. I ~ 4 alt i:. 'uect redecorstc. 2700 E. Coo.st FORUM Laguna Beach, 71~2860 fcssionala who know what "'" Must be a norHmoktr, well or •Jq-.., co H'~'Y· C.W. Ma.~ers Owner --~hey dof hcl productSon dept. li'uU time groomed, & enjoy meeting 213; 685-11'.m Realtor, 67J..41XI (wbject tfl $1 service FOUND female go I den 54G-67:e ng P you. t1' mes emplO)'mcnt A cxccllcn1 people. Plcue send resume 1200 SQ. FL office bldg. cha~ at the l"orum> retriever puppy mix in ear-HOUSE OF CLEAN benert111, Just 15 min. from & A<dl'lry rtqUlrementa to lr""'Al llnrbor BJvd, K·Mart, Pen-Please call 642·5678, ext 333 Iy June. 836-8846. --"'=""-=-"==-Santa Ana. P.O. Box 1ns, Newport f ,, .._.~ nf'y's area. Plenty ot prk'i· to cie.im )'OQr tickets. fNorth PAUL'S Bilre. c~~:f,1!. ~:c'it~~ •;,.~ dollars • Cati For Appt. Beach. ca 92663 ~;~~~~~:~;1 380,t .w.Pb\~l~"?,!l~· 20c per ~~.rn tree number ii M~.~~~· estimates. l Tndustrial r~a-~ns -Bciokdkeeper TralnH • u . • ~~--* * * ~ ~~ __ ,.,ec.541Hl919 e (7l4) 4-I Groat mnco ID 9llll1 in a I -400 DESK spaoe available $50 --------Lost 555 Car.:, CIH n::r., · , cler1cal posltloo. Bcaut!IUI mo. Will provide furnlt1,1re NEW talent, new materlnl liA VE 21 1'3 F'ireball modem bank. Call Salb' -cmusrrAN home, !di prM. ot IS mo. Answering service needed lmmootaMy tor new MAN'S gv!d wtdd!ng band, Floor ere & W I ws home on 1 T. Dodge Ch,..':l~ WANT """ & clear Im· TELONIC llnn, 54\J.!lJ55, CoMta! p,,.. pr. -· -· No smok· avall>.ble. 17875 Beach Blvd. ra>IJO show on KNAC. link gtyfo, OexJlJie, lost s.a; Dutch Moint. Serv. 53'7-150! "ltt nnder wnrr. 7400 mi'. prov..i nnch ordclcrt prop-IN D U I.TRIES .,..,el Ay.<'QCY, 2790 -In«--1586 w. Baker St. Huntlniton Beach. 642-4321 ~:legio~~u~~up~ San Clemt.nie 492--<MO DiBERNAROO and SONS \Vlll til't'q)t car in trd or 1 erty, Tft~ $1.ll,000 Trust :It Blvd., Cril. -· J617 WESTCLIFF -N B 0,,.,...., tour.. SRO LOST Fri. n;te, blk wallel carpe1t sa!Fr••· ~~s1I'.!!!t!e,'!,.& Sl'>-3700/58&-5807 deed. 2nd, 6 pm, Logun• Beach Tl~E FOR ROOM --t. Ma .. --~ a. 540 Sq Ft Amp! E 1 · 77! w !9th St ~nnis John Scholl 542-0700, ttpa. rs. cc ....., . ~~..,, 1 838-4651 _ ,.. ·~· _,,_ • . . e n erpn,.., . .. 1302 5 5Y<:a s A. t 5 L ke to 1rade• Our 'l'radcr'o Equal O!>!l"r. T:!np!O)I"' ~U 'C K CASH -kr .... man. No ..1...: .. "',1-. J)IU'tring. UUI , Beumgardncr, Costa Mesa, f7l4)64.2-89&l · · more · a l • Cement, CoHcrete ...... d'" 1 · '·lo . 6392 Navajo Rd, We11m. I~~!!!!!~ ........... ~"'.""! 'f' ' · ""' ~ ·-.. ~1 5032 LOST 2 to " mo ol' Collie rw·a .,,e t"O umn i;i, r )'OU. 1 · Canv •nl en I loeotJon. ~ ·CF.. S Auto Tnn•portation 525 I'UPPY. ••n',. whi~. N.D. PATIOS, w•lk>, ,,,., .... Saw, 5 line• 4 °"· 2 bo. 16\l3!1' den, 2 c:ar "Mal<• Roon• '"' -0,,ddy" YH!tO U GH A -om . " PACE . Start your .,.., Rew•nl. ~!in. break, "'move & l'<l>i•ce 5 d•-gar. lflOOO oq rw TD, I'""" ... clean out lite ll'A"'K• D A tLY PILOT Raoml a:i a Up. Ovmook-day with a HarOOr View. RIDE needed North. Wlll scs.8668 i "V"' boat orr h1nc. Only. • •. turn lhal jUnk Into cash tlW hUtlot • oc!Nn. ~ blk Spnce mw av!lllabJt' In tha """1l> Mfti gas, Cd: 1'tle la11le1t draw in Cl'lt! West. ('l')ncret.e. · or est. for S bucks. 517.IJSf wlth a DalTI Pilot Cl&aattlcd WA, NT AD ...... 2500 S..vlt!w, OIM. , _,LlDO=:;...::D;,:Uc.on.o=tN;;.G::;·...;-===~· ,_ _ _;;;*...;~:;:57:..·"71128=-•:;,__ • •• Dally Pilot C\auU\od IY ~~ou~··~l !!(fnd~l~t .!:'"~C!au\~~liod~_I ·----------------· Id. can . , I I I " -. ------ ' 1~~~~~~~~~~1 1~~~~~~~~,1 ~~~~~~~~1 ~~~~~~~~~ ................ 1 l~~~~~~~~'l 'l!!!!!!~~~~~T~hu~nday~,~1 A~~~u~st~JO~,~lq~7~3~~~~~~~0Al~LY~P~l~LO~T~4~~~1 ~[ _..__ .... _,j(ll] I .......... ~ I ~-· J[)J1 I -.-l[Ill I ....., .. _ l[Il] I c..-,.... l[ff [..___ ...... ,,,____,l[Il] '. ____ .....,_ .... _,][[{ [ .......... IITTJ Help W•nted. M & F 710 Help W•nted, M&F 710 , Helo Wonled. M & F 710 Help Wa nt·", M & F 71'· H 1 W M F O 7 H I W1nted M&F 710 ~ • t:t.elp Wanted, M & F ~ H•le Wa nted, M & F 710 Ip •nted, " 71 Help W1nted, M&F 10 • p • BREAKFAST & hiuch cook DELIVERY l\1cn, pcrnl JJ11rt : EXEC SECRET. ARY ;,OusEKEEPY.;-, llv; It~ f"r RE'•• 'ST "•LE'SLADY fo•· c:--., ... , .. TELEP. HONE answtrfnn ' nc.'Elded. llour11 6-2:30. 10 time. E~nrl)' nior.,nln"I"' •. •, '2 "1 ~ •·1 L\I~ tot• :f·ll & lt·7 relief, NEED wo11wn to do ill<' JU.. E At'i:. SAL.ES ..,,.._ u11 .... ·•e yea.rs expt•r. & fill nround ne11o•SJ.>8,.pcr ditlive 1 ~ c e~ l aid. 1 op Fa:ih!on l.'!lland nuu !is. '<' hon1c, W·fl I Xl11'1 wages. Olli 642-2·110 housekeepinf · ·&-help tAkf' SUCCt.:SS CAFtEt:!R Betvtt..>en 22 & fO yrs. /\ppl:v 11...e..r v I Ct' o Pe ra l 0 r kitchen y.·ork. Some local hOnll'~ In N.B. $200 fX'I' nio lh rn neecb .sharp Jn(l1v, to mod conven •ncc11 ln prlv. or apoly, 1445 Su~rior C'lll'ti of 1.2 yr. old hoy In t·~· New or ex perienced. Join the between 8 a n1 -12 n oon· \Vestmln~lf'r a~a reft>r. 310 \V. ·1th Sl., Sant11. & bonus. Call l..ri ·rtnl ~ fill k..-.y poB1tlon un mnhOK· LAguna suburb. r-.t ust be AW'., N.11. change tor room & board & Wo1·ld's largest and fastest 5-tlhlO:.U. 273 r:. lill1 si: 892--1212 Ana. li'l2-4800. ' t' any .1'01\•, Sulary to $700. Also 111a.tw·c & Cfl pahlc of hundl-I oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• I reu11. salar;y. \VNI & \Vknds growing ressle organization Costa fl1c.sa., Cup ca k e TELL ER . ~ It'<' Jobs. Cttll 1-lclen l\1uson Ing hornc ~·hl'n owne!' sv.•ay. ~nc!iirtl!'! off. Call 962-6056 or aft. 6, with a nehvorls-of over 300 &kery • Bl'uut irul ne.,., nlodcm bank. BUSBOY for ,..prlvttt(' club. C>F-.L:IVERY & St~.:k work. 5·10-6055, Cottstal Pcnionnci UnleSli cxp'rl, ctepcndrthl.: & 96S-1190. off.ices and bocomu a Must be IS 01' over. Non stU· Ftt1n1e. Apply, Auton)utlve Agency Z790 }{arbor Blvd de!lll'e pc1·n1. poidtion please Pro1~rt-s11i\·l· rnanufaetur inK n1embt>r of our MIU.iona1re SALES.HOUSEWARES f:::::i':.:t~~ ~:,ir~~~t~n~~ dtnt. Mull t have exper, $2.1' Supply Co. 1522 Nc\\lf>Oi'I Cri.1. ' " do not apply. ·IHl-36St C\'.llil()IUly,. xlrl'I wol'klng ('()II· Nite Receptionist Club, ?o.fu!U-ntllllon dollar 1'.:xp 'd pt-cf. l\1ust be able 10 CWl Sally Harl, 5"o.oo55, hr. Apply In person, Daily Blvd., Costa ?\fesa llOUSEKEEPER . I" ... 0,.k dilions. r"'ringf' bt>nefits. Rcsicl. Crtl'e faelllly, l l:30 adverllsin~ pw..-.-ram. Free \\'Ork Sut & Sun. KERi\I I '" •··111 nt "lg Ca C . EXECU TIV ES v • PM • 7·.30 A•!. 8''-TI""· ·~a--RI ~!,\ llARDWARE, .... ,.,. C1laSlal f"ersonne "6ency, ~ a · "' nyon oun· J) r: N ·r AL Recentlo•t;,t. in a1 1111ctlve convale•e<>nt ln1m,....\1·•1P Clncnin'!: For: " ~-"° guarantee< lu.-en&lng school. .moo CM h""" Club, No. 1 Big Canyon 0 h 1 ,. • $12 000 to $75 000 Tho lluntlnglon, IS 8 5 1 E 11 t al 1 · · J-fr1rhor Bl\'d, Co~hl i\l t'S<t. 2790 Hurhor Blvd., -· " rt 0( ontic pr act i c e ' , holiJJital. Flexible hl)ur11 for xcc en 1> Cll r1u1ung. Dr., N.B. oul :1tundini; opportutilty fo~ I Se11d resume or cull TODA y full OI' Jl<ii1 limt• cmployt'{'S. AUTOMATIC SCREW Florida St ., llunt. Heh. \\'hut Ji; your license v.·01111 SALE:sr.11\N, n1u~I he cxp1•r. BUSBOY • Days, no ex-tJu itllflffl.l person. 1'o $700. for confld~nlial NO COST Xlnt \\'Orking conrl. & pnyt'd MACH INE NO\V going lhrout,1h planned to you? Check ow-rnonthly $1 hr. \Veekends & tiVt'S. AP-perl~nce necessary, ju!!t a 8end resun1e to Classifit•d executive interview. v11cu1ion . A!lJ>ly at 1-1~5 OPERATOR 1•s1mnsion. Need 12-15 yrs. bonus program v.•hich nicans ply, i\lr. Britctws, 000 \V. wlllingnc11s to learn. 210 Ad No. 001, Dally Pilot, EXECUTIVE SERVlCES, Superior Ave., Ne\\lpor1 Expt'r. Unish cabinet$$$ to you! Please call Const Hwy,N.B. The Balboa Bay Club No\~lpot't (."enter Dr., N.B. P.O. Rox t;i6Q, Co~la !\1c~1• !NC. B<-ach, or call 6-12-2410. Bro\1'n & St111rtlt' or T1»1Ub, n111kers. M0-2860. Virginia Jones 835-4811. SALES girl nl.'«led on Ralhou 644-2601. Ca. 92G26, Rep!les sr1·ictly SSS N ~fain, Santa Ana llOUSEKEEPER • Eldet·ly setup & Op!'ra1c. Nurses A ides-REAL ESTATE SALES 1.~land. Call 6734i2&1, afto:or li ls No\\I At'l'Optln(J A11plh11!lous r·or BUSBO\' full time, nn1st l:M! l'Onridt'nt\nl. lTI4) 547-9625. n1an ,e,. invalid \\'ife n<'ed SHUR-LOK CORP O rderlies _ca_l_l -l.i3_6-'_·_1s.1_9_~--~-I able to v.ol'k xplit i;hifl DENTAL. Exp'd Chairside Experienced nwture \1·omau \1•ho need.~ \ Openings all shifts. Good N 11. . 1 "~' B 1 Sult'sgirl for 'fabt·1c sh•Jp. MAIDS & PORTERS ' lunch & dinner. Hungry Assistant tor Costa J\.1esa of. home lo live in. Financ. ar· h · PS· starting 1vages . xln'l bene-ew 0 ic11 n~ ~"nu ca~.1. A1>ply tn person. Tiger 1641 \V. Sunflower , rice. Plev.se: app!y 10 Box no Boat Carpenter 111gnlh!r negotiable. 121:11 Ro e cientific rits. TrainC'ell accepted, Mus_t. be lticn~ed, but \1 111 1 c. Abbott's Fabric$ Santa Ana. 940, l'Jo Uaily Pilot, PO Box to i1·01·k on 37' Tra11'lcr 43S-Z155 926 So. Lyon St. older W{')n1en pref'd LYN . l'Onsuier eager, ne111 salf'~· 2610 E. Coast f-hvy ., Crl~l BUSBOYS wanted, Beach ].56 Costa fltesa, Culif 92626 yachts. HOUSEI<EEPER ; SiUer, Santa Ana Charge u .7 shirt: Rf'l lef Pt->0ple. fl.·lanv a~vnntu~es. For Thl' Openinc Of Our Nt''.\" Guei.:t Units House Inn, 619 Slrepy DENTAL A 8 s i 8 t a n 1 Pal:!lic Trawler Col'p, beginning Sept. 4 r o 1· LYN ~ All shif1s. Bayview Contact: Dorie Sm 1th llollow Way, Lagu111t Beach. Chliirsi<le, at Jea!lf 6 nio'.!I 547~90H leacher, 7:30-4 Musl huve MACHINIST Conv. tlospital &-10·56!10. American Home SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS Ap11Jy 1\ton<lrir th)i1!ol frid:1y 9 AliJ.3:30 ~I \VANTED Busboys apply in expe.1·. H.B. al"~, 816-3.-l·lO EXP. oUice girl , p/tinie, ,0• transp or live nr OCJ'O, P1u·1 ur full tin1e. Day or Realtor 1-l"n. 0 12 ant .~'I''''· ~6-7254. · 11 1 ·11 ·r ''"'"' 0~ N c l H l A1>pl1ra11ons bcin• ac·C<'ptrd pcri;on. Alley West 2100 w. "' .. " ''"""" prox. 19 hl'li/wk. 'l'yping, 1nb1 SI!. -op pay. "'... 01:>:. s . 1ey., ..aguna P eraonntl Office ocea.11 front NB 675-1TI-I. l)F.NTAL. assistant, res•v•nsi· llkkp'g & payroll. Appl,v HOUSEKEE PER Call 5'10-5206 RN-LVN-AIDE • 494-1001 • foi· &pt, c niploynil'nt ~y 1221 W. Coast Hwy • • ~ U 7 & b h'f !'onti·ae!or Op('raling 111 CASHIER TRAINEE hie position for gi rl e.~p'd in \Ved, Thurs & Fri, 8 Laguna Niguel arra l\'rACHINE 11·ork, lathe & • ' ot er s 1 ts. Top P\'t REAL ESTATE SALES Irvinr Unifil'd &hoot D!l'lt. Nationally kno ..... n stock brok. all phases of dentistry, l!.B. AM-noon only, 3;{.13 \V. 2 days per \\'eek as.<;cn1bly. LitC> n1anuf. No duty pay_ !mined. pay fol' FREE LICENSE Per~,.,ns holdin2 valid Sl'hOOI 1.,.~N,,•.,w~po'!r!!t"'!B~e~a~ch!!!!!!'I I. .11 . office. S.16-0697. Coast Hwy., Suite 402, NB 4\lti-0958 prod uction. Call ~S-5435 OI' floor duty. Co unt Y 11· Id f' TRAINING b .. , d>"•t•e•· 1.,.,.,,·1,·cat" 0,.,1.,1.1~ era.gt! ttin W1 train s.ha1·p ~8-421 l. TntlVWs. il-1on-Fri 9-5. " ... The Rusty Pelican Individual \\'/good niath ap-DIF.TARY Aid · to l\'Ol'k in FACI'ORY helv, \\·ill !rain. 1-IOUSEKEEPER, Hve in, for Lescoulie .Nurses Jtegistrv Fanmus Real Estate Licens· Training progran1 avaH rot· ind!vitlua.I \\·/good ll\ 11. 1 h <1 t t 1· active Convalt"sc..'f!n\ \'oung n1ature \Vo n1 a n en1ployed couplt'. $7:i. 11·k. r.1AIDS-no rxper nee. Apply 351 Hospital Rd., NB (Loh'. ing Course now ttvailfihlc those \\•ithout t.'(•rtifica1f'S. Restaura nt aptitude &. n<:t.:Ulill t' lite hos1>ital. Flexible hours for prcf'd. St $2.10 hr. C.i\f. re fs. req'cl. Reply to P .O. in person, The Rode\\•ay by Park Lirlo B 1 d g) thru Tarlx>ll Hcaltors. Frl'C Xln'l sa.laril'S & bc nt'fits. !las 01)<'ning l"ol' typing. St1111 s-tiXI. Call Kay fUIJ or par! tin1e employee. area. S..15--0-\01. Box 1438, Laguna Beach.. Inn, 1400 S.E. Bristol, C.rilf. 642·9955 540-995i1 Placen1enl Service. 1')·.:-e Call: !\Ins. \\'alp, til·I) ./ Maintenance · Dish11'ash~r \\.'Ing~ 54(1.f.055, Coai;tal Per-Bencflts Include paid vaca· FEr.1ALE Contpanion for l-IOUSEKEEPERS Sat .l:t Sun 557-R700. ' . _ '. Training Pi'Ogram, Euni 544-1170. i\-1on.r·ri days, A1>:1>IY in [>('\· • .!IOrtnel Ag('m·y, 2790 I11u·hor tions, & l11con1e replace-sume.. 58. Live infout for pleasant working cond apply MAfD, FOR fl10TEL, NURSES , Aide~ i-J p.n1., J 1-7 while you learn. Call Al ~""!'~!!!!!!!!!!!!.--!!\ son. 273.1 \\". Coast Hv.·y., Blvd., CM. men! plan. Avply 144:i Sept. Possibly longer. Pref. in person only Nc\\'fl0t1 Laguna Reef Motel a.m. \\e \\'Ill train n~v.· Sloan (7)oU 8.lZ...5440. SCHOOL Rus d ri ver s 1_N_ew~"°-'-' _B_c·a_•_·h_. ___ _ Sup<~rlol', Nc\\·port Beach, driver. 546-l57j, Villa J-lealthcare. 41XXi 30806 s. Coast !-l11·y., personnel. Xlnt benef1tsl;;-;;--;;7.=="°'~~--11·anted, routes in your arC'a. CASHIER/SECTY or cull &12-2,110. which include income R.E. SALESl\1E_N W'll t · Goo<l \\' l'k. 1----------1 Bl'okera""' (lrm nee<ls Cash. I='~°"'°'°..:.:;:.::_~~~-FULL & Part Thnc 1-lelp 1-Iilaria \Vny NB Laguna Beach, 499·2005 replace1nent & 2 wks-vaca· V.'hy not "'ork m n~c hottest 1 rain. 0 ing TRAINEES .,~ 011'..'TAH.Y Ail.le, full time \V ,~ 0 21 I t a r e H 1, 1 cond. 10061 Dale St., Stun· icr/~"ly, Exp. J>rcf, but not an""""''· 'i.'.er · w nea lion after l yr. Apply al 1445 a · ~ ~ n n g 0 11 ton. ·raylor Bu~ Servicc. \\!ill lraln de]X'ndabl(' \\'oincn r<-q 'd. \\'ill lrain extremely niorni.ng shift, xlnt trinb~ clean appearance. Apply in *HOUSEKEEPER* MANAGER Superior Avt>., Newport Beat'h~foun1a111 Valley. Let I to becoine injl-ction niolding ldiarp gal "'ho tyJ>(':S 1,·ell. bnfls. Beverly Manor Conv person, l\lc & E<l'is Pizza, Xlnt \\'Orking c:onclitions. Em· Beach, or call 642-2--1lO. us. train you! Ask for Mr. S S E O"" 'fl.lo , i\tu.sl hfl\'C O\vn for apJJt ('aJi Shern! Dunn, Hosp., Ct1pistrano Beal"h, 410 East 17th St., Costa ployee beiic~ts. No t'Xp. NURSE"RN Sn1dl'r, VILLAGE REAL ecretary-uper XeC c:;~1 be1 ~hl l to. tand e tire 1 '" 496-!"1786. fl1csa. ded &1'.l~. .,. or L V N · ESTATE 962--4171 ·Should (Xlsscsg all required · '.· l' s 11 at 494-9781. ne-e . ~ • TRAINEE Increasing staff for ~nsus ---·------secretaria l skills plus sound shift & . ~ able lo \\'Qt'k CASHIER & r.eneral Olfice ~i~~\V~~~ERSun~\·eB as~iif~ GARDENER-full Time llOUSEKEEPING . Ll!e, . ~li.gl.b. Need 3·11:30 charge ---------• I ho okkeeping l>ackgrou11rl. i1~en1ls ir nrtesf;~ry. Corinthian Yacht Club, tOOl h C II "t·' =<>-• No E N 1· I p k · ' t st 11 ' sl ft 1$208 \\'Ol'k. full & part time. afte-rnooni;, 5 Dayii. r-.1ust ~·lllaff nurses. & 11·7:30 RECEPT · !\lust be quali[ied, in-Openings on. t.Jaysh1.ft <Sl.95 l\fust be over 25. Contact ave car. a "'"-"'1"" xper. ecess re ie. ar Ltdo Heal!h telligt'nl and 1\'t'il {.'l'OO!llt'CI. o ar , J l\'111g u ·. , r.lr. 1'-I e i s c h l' r CIO Bayside Dr., Cdr.t. See Che/ \\'anted 5 rln.ys per 111eek: HOUSE\VORK, 4 htiurs ettch Earn As You Learn Care, 41i6 Flagship Rd., • Able ro accept responsibil· to start I & gravey-<;'J'd .:shtff ' Hoelscht'rs, South Coast [)(obus. I d c pendable, experien{'ed, morning, Mon thru Fri. S.10 N.B. 642-8M4. ities in exchange for ex-{$2.23 to slal't). Raise In 30 Plaza, Costa Mesa. DI Slt\\'A~Hl-:R, full lin1e, gardener tor landscaped \\"eek. Ov.'ll ea r. 556-15TI. If you are anlbitious, career Nu Rs E s . Aides, expcr. cellent salary plus fringe days. : CH-F'F cd d :=-.~ced-l,'tlOd bt•n(•fi ts. t'Ommercial properties in minded & want total involve· pref'd. F/time 7.3:30 shift e Exehis-ivc Local Designer benefits. All !'<*:es "'elconie Apply 11 an1·4 p~ 1 Apply 'Den~e~ 1'~i~~~n Co, 642 ... tm. Newport &ach. References 1ncnt w/peop!e we can de-& J.ll:30 \lliift. P/time 9•1 e E.>1cellent Typing 10 app:y. Equal opportunity * Orange Coast Plast1cs * TI9 \\I, 19th St, Costa Mesu, DOME8TIC. Help George drcquiif·ro.1Cnll ~ 10 1 64°2•1ce626k· INSURANCE SALES velop your management pn1 & 5-9:30 pm. Park Lido • Poise & Personality en1ployer. Cal! r.1r. J\!orri-S50 \\'est 18th S!· ' 645--2'.\~'.1 Alk·n Byland Agency, 106-B ays or nterview, · . ahilities thru our n·aining Health Care, 4fi6 Flagship e Top $ . NO FEE son, 55R-0921 Cosla l\lesa, Cahf. *** CHILD CARE . E. l6lh St., S.A. 541-0395 * GARDENER * N program. Rd .. N.B. s.t2--8Ml. p 'f' p I o exp nee., earn \\"bile you ac• 1c er sonne S $800 (l--8 Id • II & r Be your own Boss learn, pa11 Linie. eves & J b S b'I• NURSES Aldes all shifts, ecretary TRAINEES yr. 0 gir ite 1 full or p/tilne in your ,1,knds, full Unie v.·hcn quati-O ta 1 lty xlnt fringe bnfts. Beverly Services, Inc. F~ P"1d Abo Fee Jobs Inimed. openings for "·oinen hf ouslelwo,rk for2 tteasching DAY own area. I-11gh income. fied. Group Insurance Car-.t an or con v hos P . 500 Ne\\'(Xlrt ~nter Dr Sales Rep $800+ on all shift s; Accepting ex· em y, rom O p.m. Guaranteed Customers Fanncrs Insurance Group =~·'="=ra_,_.,.~Be_a_c_h~, _<9&-5_._786_.1 Suite 900 Newport &.-ti fl.1ktrr r>1Eiior. 1-2 .Vl'S exp per. molding mach oprs & 1 d eily__.,.rm . for school DISHWASHER No Cash Down Ed La.ni * 54fi.1834 Paid Vacation NURSES Aids • Day shift. too.1~)70· WESTCLIFF tl'ainecs. Clean. lite 'W'Ork in year. Near Bolsa Chic• Ean 1 r\0111, Pav La.ier Automatic Salary Hntg. Bch are a . Con-24 Central Tower, Orange Personnel Agency new bldg., Shif1 bonus pren1. & Westminster. Please 968-0812 IRON\\'ORKER EXPER. va.Jescem Hosp. Exp e r . 547.6446 16a1 E. Edinger, S.A. for nlte v.'Ork. Oppor. for c • I I after 6 p.m. Experienced ORNA...\1ENTAL Increases pref. 842-5551 {r.tark Ill Center) advancement & ;o,;ln't fringe 892.0560. • • .. LAGUNA 494-6376 Advancement NURSE Aides \\"anted, will • P.P.S. 542~ benelils. CHILD care & sn1I amounl house care, n1y home. 2 I ii 6 Daily ~1/F Start 9-Il Cnll aft 6 545-6489. Apply ln Person W indy Guio "J'f'S F'un to \\'Ork at Far· 0 ""1'1·n~ .. }..a.l..u5nfa Beacth area, SEC'YS & BKKPRS s~~1!-17:~1.-3pnl, Jpm-llpm, I 17272 Forbes Lane l"t'll's" Find out "·hy. Posi-ppor. c'~a';:'.~~~·~or~•P~P~·~::-l•!!E;;.qu;;;";.,;0,;;p;;po;;';.· ,;.E;;;m;;•,;10;;"',;.';,.. Great variety: sh/no sb California lnj. ?1-lolding Hunting.ton Beech lions HVRil for bu s .. NURSERY TRAINEE I Gen'!, Sales, Land Dev, Mkt 200 Briggs Ave. boyfdishwasher. No <'xp. 1714) 835-7417 •----------· Lrg/sm office. $50().$900 Cosla 'lesa \'ou are "he 1·rinn"r of Ra 'd d R • G d ,. " CLE1\i.~J1'G lady, 1nalu1·r for office sui!es. l'\e,1·p<1r1 l~ch, 40 hn wk. nights. Exper. lx>ndablc . 644-000S. CLEAN ING g&I, needed 1 day A \\'eek. Ne\\'P. )II., local refs. required. 675-0102 rlt.'t', · p1 R vancen1ent oger S ar ens RECEPTIONIST FREE FREE FREE tlrv\ne Indus. Con1plex) TWO FREE pQssible. Apply r.ton·Thurs. Tic Toe Systems, Inc Needs dependable. friendly L ' R · d A 2:00-6:00. at 16301 Beach D nJ h iz eui ers gency TUTOR & typist. ~tust enjoy TICKETS help 11.•/stocking maint, ay or g. I, no. exp._nec., 4121 Westerly Place children. Could do -me Blvd, Huntington Beach Equal Oppor. Employer ,........., t & odd · ~ Good --fun JOb WW tram no s · lt' ---·"-Ou JOut;. -~~, • • uite a. NB 833·8190 typmg· In your home. Pay to the Equal Opportunity Etnployer 1.,,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,...,,. oppo r · typ1nu or shorthand etc I r. or aggressive young "o . • · SEC'Y B'~·pR oot hlgh to staff.. 8 Cleek. $11IPSTADS & JOJ·INSON JACK-:fN~TH.E-BOX 1nan. Apply in person, 2'ln Apply m person any aft or n.r.. 0 7 .. Cos M 16 Fashion Island ICE FOLLIES No\\' Hiring Clean-Cut In-MANAGER TRAINEE Failview Rd., Costa Mesa. eve. at 2930 \Vest Cst HI\-')'., MARINE ORIENTED P .. box w, ta e¥a. New·port Beach dividuals to \\o'Ork Night or D)-'llamic rapklly grmi1ng -'-=-"=====c1 N.B. * 64~3861 * 1~926=2'~-===----- Grave Yard Shift during finn \ioill start w/co!legc 2 OFFICE:. UIRLS SENIOR TYPIST lll't\\n 9 & 11amor 3 & 5 p:11 Sept. 5t h r'ht'U 16!11 81..'hool m-Onths. degree in lheir manage· NEEDED RECEPTIONIST BOAT ASSEMBLERS In1med. long term temp as- Commercial Tetter Equal Oppor. Employer al the mcr.t· program. SI.aft S525. needed ln11nedlately. Apply sign. Sharp girl, independent FABULOUS Apply In Prrson Great IX'flefits. Call SaJ!y Radio telephone dispatch Roger's Gardens at COASTAL RECREA· worker, engineering bkgrnd DONUT Shop, 6 a.m.-2: 30 FORUM i~~'1i~~n ~l~'d~. PJ.h·. Han, 540-0055, Coastal Per-'1usAI be125.1 a~ lo drive Personable & dependable per· TION 940 W. 17th St., C.M. helpful. , p.m. Fen1a.le, age 25-45. Ap. sonnel Agency, 2790 Harbor YELPLP'lw" c'A<rsoB "co son needed weekends only SERVICE Sta. f\-:ta.nager, ex-e Overload ply in per.>.an, Mr. Donut, (subject lo Sl service JANITORIAL position, even· Blvd., C!\t. 0 • to answer phone and do light pel'. Smog lie. Lite mech. e Office Expe1ienced P /timc UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK iilii35ii'iiEii•iistiilii7t;;;h;;;. ;;;CMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio cl1arge at the Forun1 l ~grm=~~'. ~rt h~-i m\\~k: "MA=N""A'G"E=R,.-,T°'R"'A"""IN=E"'E 186 E. 16th, Costa Mesa typing, Apply in penon at Very neat in appear. $800+ 3T..?3 Birch St., NB Plea..w call 6~2·5678, ext 333 $2.SO/hr. Vets only. Call for Outstanding op(Xlrtunity 10 OUR business requires an ef-~ Fairview Road, Costa ~r n10 lo start. Apply 557-0061 Dr's Assistant Young lady ll.S-28) to assist in health spa. \\1111 train, no exp. nee. Apply in person any aft or eve. 2930 W. Coast H1vy., N.B. to claim your lick<->ts. (No1th nppt. s.is-7775, A.<ik for advance to managerial posi· ficient girl !or shlpping · & esa. c"'Morns, 2590 Ne1vport Blvd., TYPIST County toll free numtx-r Is Bruce Hnnlw.n. tion in 3!Hi0 days. Our cur· othfr related duties, salRry RECEPTIONIST 5-11).1220.1 l 7.===-'0'C"7-~~ rent manage r s earn commensurate w/exper. • * * JE\\IELER; Polisher; dia· $1000.$1500 mo, l\tust have Sludio 12. 540-9495. WEEK END ONLY 9 General Machinist niond (:"1:fr·9\~~k door to door canvassing ex. PARKING Attenoant, over A.M. to 5:30 P.M. Real 309 !\1ain Srreet lluntington Beach ~16.f<SU Protolype work. Advanced Ott : . cpei·ience. 18. Calif lie. J>art & I/time. Estate Sales Office Kinetics, Inc. 1231 Victoria JUNI R SALESMAN: all Mr. Ne\vman 979-5W Cllll betwn 9am & 4pm. Call ROSS BARTLETT Equal Oppor. Einploy('r DRYCLEANING -Counter Gir1, p/lime. A.tterns & Sat St., Cl\-!. 646-TI65. Equal Op-Eam $.20-$40 per week v.·ork-MANAGER TRAINEE 494-5762 846-0641 por. Employer. ing aftel' school and SallU'· Fee Paid, Nationally knov.n PART time saleslady wanted . . llll:m::l:lll:im:::m=:m: I a llday. Call 646-1.233. == EARLY mom. newspaper COMMERCIAL TELLERS deliv('ry, r.1ust have car. Over 21 . Pay· approx. $200 nm. Hunt. Och. Ar I} a . R-17-2300 bcf. 10 a.m, GIRL Friday "'/typing skills d_ays selling ne111 ~ubscri p-rorp l\ill train t'Rl'eer in new art gallery in RETIRED or sem1·retlred & 1.Hing ability. Needed for t1o~s ~or the DA!Lt PILOT. oriented indiv. Start $6,300. Lagwia. Must be attractive man to oversee Laun- 6 wits through Oct. 15 fronl Thts is not a ~per route A:lso fee jobs. Call Ed Woll & over 25 yrs. Average 15 dromat NB 673-1690 fl.ft 6 10 AM to l' Pf\-1 daily Studio ~d . does oot in_clude de-• 540-6055, Coastal Personnei hrs. per wk. Starting at Pil-1 or 61:>--0334 day 12 540-949S ~1ver!cs or t'Ollec!Jng. Ope~-Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd. $2.25 w/early advancement. RETIRED man'! Looking rot· Experienced Full & P /tlmo · · 1ngs 1n Costa Mesa, Fountain CM ' ·Personal interview blwn. work'! Need part lime GIRL delivery driver 19-25 Valley and South t luntington .=~·~~~-----11 A?o.f & 5 PM at 1516 S. dependable \\'arehouse man ELECTRONIC ASSEMBLERS yrs. Overseas Motor Parts. Beach. Apply now by calling MAN for days or eves. Coast Hwy, Laguna. lite assembly in CM . call 1900 Harbor Blvd. CM 548·3013. Fairgrounds Go-Carts, 100 =7-'.ll< F · o c M PART time jobs. Ideal for "" -. GRIN & "--r lt _ 0--•·. ~-"al Oppor. Employer all' r., osta esa. d 1----------o=" =" ""I stu ents. Inside \\·ork. 4 hrs., _________ _ UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK sharp reliable girls for full KENNEL worker for animal r.1ANAGE Apartments, Older M·F & 4 hrs. Sat am.1· lime ni.t:h l \\'Ork. Please ca ll hospital. NB-Irvine area. couple, handy, bondable, _•"92-o-2258 __ ·-oo,~-==~c 1 Reuben's :>48-9949 Full or PT. \\lrite Classified Nc\1•port Heights. Resunie ~ to '°'~ v nt Bl d P/Tin1e Clerk 12:30-5:30. HAIR STYLIST, nmle or Ad No. ~. Daily P ilot, -""'.(;' e ura 11 · Filing, typing, re Ii ef 26151 La Paz Rd. Ml11lon Viejo, Calif. 137.oo66 Equal Qppor , Employer T;i~=. ~~::. ~~1 1~: female iv/some follo"'·ing ~026. Box 1560, Costa Mesa.. i{~~JT,_f~i72i~73.or call switchboard, g 3 3 -o 911 19 .. 3 ~·anted. Apply Contessa "'o personnel. Pl kh 1 • I-lair Fashions, MATURE all Al"Ound man. an ouse e 1010 Bayside Dr .. N.B. Phone 1--/thne, \\'Ork sonle wknds. PART TIME, full lime, CX· Trainees 675-3385. Keypunch Operator ea11 002-1111 per not nee. Enquitt al \\lilJ perform citbling, wiring, Straw 'Har Pizza Palace, COOK -lcn1alc, Convnlesccnt 2 Yrs n1in. exper. on IBr-.1 i\1EDTCAL Ofc .. So. Laguna San Juan. & nie<:hanical assembly ol nM'ds co b Rece t/0 --ty/ Jfospitnl. Full & part time. i;ub-assenlblies. HELP! T\C")'iJUnch & verity equip. m · P ~ PASTE-UP artist, full tinle. Will train. 642--0598 029, 059 & 129. Bkkpr.1Business exp req'd, No e<p nece•sa~• Co !\tedica exp useful. Include · •3 • • COOK. Ag,;t M. "'g er .• Experienced ROYAL INDUSTRIES Seely PO Bo 147 bene !i'" Apply 1545 graveyard shift, 6 day wk. r.un. 2 "''l'I ex ..... r·. know color :!HO E. Oyc-1· JW. ';;~~~~na :926n' x ' Nel'.rport Blvd., Costa Mesa Jmmed opcllillJ!. Co. paid "· .. -Santa Ana 540-3210 · · pnx r....-..... · llcneflts. Jack In The Box. cod(': rerogni.:e com ponl'flts: Volt Instant Equal Oppor. E1nployer 111/f '.\-'IEDICAL Recept. exIJl'r. for ,;rvtce",l' H .... B .. ~~" i::,r:;;;enng 1205 Baker St., Costa Me8U. 11bUl1y 00 l'ead !Jl(..tlemali ts. large group pl'acticc. l'tlrs. 536-8881 Apply ln person. dra\11\ngs, & 1vork frun1 KEYPUNCH OPRS , Austen, &:ltHI>45 nthcr 1,1,·rit1en & vcrhal in. p I M ddl PET SHOP assistant, must ** COOKS ** srructio115. efSQOOe Day & Eve Shins i e·Aged ·Couple be able to \\'Ork mo111inga. First & second ('(')(lks. xlnl 'ASSEMBLERS full rinie, l\laJntcnance-clean· 962-8000 \VOrking boW1i. Eniployc Please Apply ing for apartm<'nt romplex. benefits. 642-351}.'i. ENOEVCQ NEEDS Trainees Live-In. No ch ildren or pets. CCX>K-Exper. .Institutional. Trvhie 540.4450 Salary Open. lmnted. opening, Park Lido • Secretaries 17802 Sky Park Call 644-:ltill tlealth Cnrc, 466 1'~1agshlp 21.ml Avenida Aeropuerto • NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO MOTEL ~-faid-5 hrs \\'Ork in. Rd, N.B. 642-8044 So.n JuBn Capistrano Typists Thmpo Temporary Hclp exchange for apt or salary. PRODUCTION TECHNICIAN Perform electronic checkout l$ Now Hiring Full Timi Day Dishwasher & Busboy Apply in Person 12342 Brookhurst Ave. Gordin Grove 539-3202 Equal Oppor. Employer COOK _ Experienced, all Equal Oppor. Employer mil • Keypunch KITCHEN help wanted, idefll Exp'd. 2376 Newport Blvd., shifts available. Apply In job for mother "'Ith children CM. ~975.5. · person. 3099 s. Bristol, Cfll. EMPLOYMENT OFFERED • PBX Oprs in sehooHl who ne-cds txll·:i. MOTEL MAID \VANTED of microwave prn<l"c" & * SALESMEN * RS components, Technical VandeKainp's, A division of Male, s1n11ll Ute n\fg c:o inoney, rs 8:30 to 1. Mon 1vill train. apply in person Tiny Naylor's, needs reliable f f t I 1n e 'fctnpor'..\l'Y Sc1·vlcc thn1 Fri. Penguin ~1alt Sh(lp Costa !\t esa Inn. ·' employee. Oppor. 10 ow.w '"',t° Ca•npu• Dr Su1·1e 100 9Al S. Co<U>l H"·y, l..aguna COOKS "dinner & Broiler" ll'>'v •>I'" ·· " • 494-L\1.'t MOTHER'S helper. Live-in 1 Apply in person Hours 2 to 6 wfco. r..11n. exper. req'd. Newport Beach 546-4741 child, Pvt room. Corona de! ltungcy ~r Rett. 16'1l w. 9~2290. Jhn C I In e. Equal Oppor. Employer LA:BOR • full time . 101· Con. 111nr 640-8468 or (2131 Sunflower Sa.nta AM. wllilQkdayti. 1 '-!!J!!!~!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!~ stMJ(!tion • n1ust be harfl 4SG-SZ27. ESCROW OFFICER 1lr EL p wanted·Rldlard's "'101-ker & able to 1vork \\'1 th· or service school training In Do you take "Salesmen electronics & fl1 in 1 yr Wllnted" nds with a grain of related experience. salt'! Can't !SRY I blame you. I follo\l.•ed up a few myself Call For Appl. In the past. The job seldom Jndustrlal neln11ons Jived up to the claim in the ad. Service Station Needs EXP. ~IAN. Good Pay. Per· manent. Days. UNION OIL, 393 E. 17111 St., C.M. Fee Paid. Beautiful n e I\' modern office in Newporl Beach. Co. Will train good typlst to USeM1'ST-1nachine. Starl $445. Call Sally Hart. 540-6055, Cnaslal Personnel SERVICE Sta Attendants. 1 ~ncy, Z790 Harbor Blvd., Full & 1 pftime. Neat in1 ~~· ~~~-~-~­apf>ear. Can train sharp TYPIST/Proof Re a d er man. Apply morns. 2590 P/time. Good s p e 111 n g New(Xlrt Blvd., C.M. essential. Apply in person. 2 SERVICE Sta. Attendants 1 Pennysa.ver , 1545 Newport Juli & 1 p/time. Lite mechl =B"lv'Odo'"o'c:O-.M:'-. -~~~­ exper. Apply La gu na TYPIST w/bkkpng Chevron, 604 s. Coast Hwy, background. Pref. sh, not Laguna Beach. retjd. Perm. full time. SERVICE St Att d t Public Accountants Ollice a. en an 536-2047 536-3793 a.ftern & eves. Over 18 ?-.-lust ' ' be exper. Apply ~1901-larbor WAITRESSES -21 .YI's or Blvd., CM older no e.xper1ence -~--~~1 necessary, Just a Jot of SERV STATl~D.M enthusiasm. Comp l et l' Top Pay + Profit Shanng training in store. 644-2601 5 Day wk, Sun ofi. Prefer 210 Nl?Wport Center Dr., exper. l>ilone 673-8SL~. N.B. ~~~~-~~---1 SERV1CE Sta. Nile Manager \V Al TRESS -dining rooni. w/mcch. exper. Apply In Housev.·ife needed to work penon, Hoover Chevron, 15 hrs per 1\•k. No !!X· 3048 Bristol, C.M. perience nee. $2.25 hr. Santu SERVICE Station Help. Full Ana Country Club, fol" in. or pftlme. 990 E. Coast terview call 545-1161. H\\'Y, Newport Bch. WAITRESS over 21, needed SHIPPING CLERK Wed-~t Lunch .l:t dinner ~d P/time. $2.50 hr. Expcr. benefits, P\el15'.' apply 1~ 642-3472 person, rrom 10·10 979-623.1 ' ask for Nick. 3i09 S. Bristol. SNACK Bar Girl . n111st be S.A. neat in appear. & he avau.1~------. ---lx1wn g am & 5 pm. Please \VA.ITRE.S~xpcr1enced, 8;11 11 &14-2060 shifts available. Apply 111 ca · person. 3099 S. Bristol, 0.1. STOCK CLERK VandeKamp's, A division of Tiny Naylor'ii. \\'AITRESS \\'rull('d, on grlt1'<' Read bills of material. Fill yRrd shift. Apply aft 10:00 job boxes record entries & at night. Odies Restaura111 ' 1•100 Pacific Coast H"'~" NB re-stocking. Expc.r. helpful. Call For Appl. ' ln(lus1Tial Relation!> (714) 494"9401 TELONIC INDUSTRIES \\'AITRESS & dishwnsher for c..'Offee shop 11 1 26.13 w. Coast f!wy, Ne"·port Beach. Call 642-8475 Crom 1 A.i\1·8PM. Wanted :. Immediately COOK -Breakfast & Lunch. Rairldly growing firm In 1'us-l\larket. 1660 MacArthur out supervision. fti6..195l. MTST OPERATOR ~\ ;fu ~ala Rl•st,. Un. 1..easehold exper. hclP. Blvd, NB & 3;1.'U Via Udo, LADY for grill in f11.st food 'lYl>ing 5:.l wpm. 4:45 to 9 PM. l fut, but not nee. Salary to NB. l'l!slaurant. IO arn to 3 pm, TMl"V1nepc,o1mple~,., 11,,rct"'io' Call (714) 49+9401 TELONIC INDUSTRIES Do ycuniel! a f1\vor & e.'1· plore this one. If you'd like lo make $250 a week ln1· Lagun• Beach • WAITRESSES COUNTER Girl (or c ry $700 C ll K IV . hO wknd11. 53Eh.tt\5 r!I. ll on, "ru-u , cleani. ... plant Apply One . a ay in g, Helpl Houseke•per NCR OPERATOR "'& 5-10-6()55, CoastRI Personnel n-•-•. --• ch'•ld c•-. l, O AN ( Mor t a age ) Hour ?o.farlinb:ing 2 2 0 0 A -II"~" Bl l '°"·<n:"'.I ""'·" ...... " "' p t Q ~ llarbor,CostaMcM. gency, """' N"UUr V(., CdM, bench arcn, 540-9468. Pro c ('gsor • Jt,1esid rec ac:t perale new .);IV CM. bllildcr-aln10rl area i.n for corp. or~. Greo1 hene- COUNTER glrl, pnrt tJme. HOSTESS N.B., Call 833--1300: F'or fini includ ing profit sharing. ~ hand OU!, 10:30 to E'xec. Sec',v $700 Ovt!t ZI gd PtlY & benefit!!, Appl. Sltirt $600. Ali;o, Fee Jobs. 1:30, 5 daya. ~9156 In llouite Council 1<>mo (h1Y & sonic eves shifts LOT MAN Call Kay \Vlnao. 5.-10-00-:>5, CREDIT Glri w/acct'IJ. l"t'C. ~retary $650 Apply in pel'!'IOn b<-1wccn 9·11 Coa.~tal f1t"t'Mnncl A(l:cncy, exper .. 8-5. 613-34~!0 or Sales Scc'ya $600 AM or n\akt apµt , Nted exper. man. Jnclurlf'l'l 1,.2790iiiiiiHiiniiriiboiiriiBmliivdii.ii, iiCiiMii. iiii• 833·94TI Alk for Mal'ga.l't"t A/P Clerk $500 WOODY'S WHARF notmal tx.·~fits. Contact 1 · or Crall: NCR Operator $4~ 2.118 W. Newport Blvd., NB Mr. r.""'1.,. "' NEEDED NOW! DELIVERYMAN for early Lc•s;ng ••I l'rl $400 Sl5·M74 THEODORE ROBINS morning J.A : Time• home F/C llkkpr, Coron:\ l ---~1=1o"si='·=Ess=·~--FORD delivery route. Musi have ri.~~ye~~iltlng ~~ e BLUE DOLPHIN e ~ Harbor Blvd., C.~f. et."OnOtTI.lcnl ear. Good sun. """""" Vl Lldn N B .. &-c'y • E!crow $625 ~..,,.. a • • · LUNCl-I \Valtn.'ss, Lacave plem<m!ary inco1ne. No R eollcitlna, no collecting. 211~ J."'/C Bkpr/CoMtr $750 ltOTEL ~ tront desk clerk, l!~tAurnnt, 169:5 tr v Io t' hrs. dally. Over 23 years Gal Fri/Comtr bckgrnd $600 e~per. pref'd . Apply ln Ave.., C.1\1. Apply ln person 0 Id . wealmlnstcr/CArdcn Sre'y/RCC(!pt lt"Vl IO $650 pereon, The rtode"·n.y lnn, 2nd noor. f\fon • 6 '28/73, Cif'O\.-~/HUJ1tlngton Be a c h fl.1cmory 1'c!lt Tech S4..$5 hr 1400 S.E. Blls\o\, CM. 10Am-2pm a~a. 638-2924. Dlgitnl T.,.., -c,.h "1·SS-hr 1 _'~~-7-o3~700-------LYN full or pltin1e. 3-11. , Wh El ph , NEWPORT 1-IOTEL hou!ft'man • no ex-Hunt. B<:h Conv llO!!p, l RS"l! ' 11' e anti ' QVer· P1r1onne l An.ency per. nee. AP1>1.Y In 1)4!non, Flor1tla St •• H.B. 8-i7·3.'.i15. runnln£' your houatit Turn • Th them Into "CUh" • , , sell 833 Dover O r., N.B. !! J«idrway Inn, !400 S.E. LVN, full A p/tinie. ~todern them thru a Dally Pilot 642-3170 Bn!ltol, C.h1. 557-8700. oonvnleltCC':nt Imp. Ca 11 l !•l!!U1!!!!l01!!M~•!!d!!l _____ c,,,..,..,..,..,...,.,..,..,,..1\Yan1 ad.result• •••• ,&&J..5678 1 __________ _ I e DISHWASHERS e BUSBOY e COOK, P /TIME ~1u5t ~ clean & neAt. Over 21. Dt'pendable. Xln't v.--ork. In~ 1.'0ndltlons, Apnly in pt'.l"'On SURF & SIRLOIN ~ \\'. Ccnjst H\\·y, Newport Beach Laguna Beach Equal Oppor, Employ('r n1edla1ely, 1vilh nn eye to I . much n1ore in thti futw-e, F;quaJ Oppor. Employer I'd like lo talk to you. If . your qua\Ulcationll malclt STIJDENTS. apply now for our requlr<'mcnts, tills could p/tln1e concession job!i. $2 be !he caro.•r you've bt.'t'n hr. Over 17. ~1.S. Tait, • BUSBOYS A11ply 2·5 Pi\! Tues, \\led & TI1ursduy No Phollt' Calls P!eltM' Radleloglcal Secy. looklttg fur. 8.'m-)186 bef noon. PRrt lime TY!)(' X-ray Jntervie\v apPointn1ent l(}.4 SURVEY l'.'Otk in NB, work Kelly's Prime Steaks report11. EXp only. Contact PM, \vetkd6,)'s, 586-3182. 4 hrs per day on suntt:)>' tor 209 p I N B Dept. Radiology Coita l\1esa Sales Nallnnal Cable TV CO. !\lust 1 m .-• • Mernor it1l llo11pltnl, 30l Vic-TOY &. G!F1' PARTIES Uc 01.'t'r 18. Hrs +-8 P~t Ap- toria. 64Z.2734 Equal Op-HouSMvive~ demonstrator~. ply ln pen10n 2624 \Vl'.st \VHO WANTS' ·ro \VORK'.' portunicy Employer earn to S-2,000 by Dec. 1. No Con.st 1-l"'Y· NB. Equal Op-DRIVE A CAB! R--:E. SALESMAN dellvrn ~ no .colltt·tlon. (XlM.unity E n1ployer. CHOOSE your hours. work F'ref' 1-T™le.'l>i g10~. need * SEWING ~1 AC H I N E tor )'Ollf'8t'lt, be your own Invcstlxtite lhe nc1v ap11ro..1ch 1 • ~u. ~ten or \\'Omen. Can It lnnov1t•lvc niur'ltcting car. 523--M84 Gifts 'n OPERATORS, li\\10\ ""~r. be .~1iJiihtly hl1Mlt11ppc.'tl. technlq~3 of Tf.IE GAL-Gndacii 37'00 Ca1n1ius. Dr.. N.B. Ne n 1-0ean Appea.rance. LERY OF HOl\IES .. You SALE&,L\.~ & Man a re er, ~ll. Vis, rel.i.rl'd. Age 2S ti) 'ro. will be glad you d;d: Call male & lf'>lt. S.'ZI & up STOCK CLERKS Suppl•nt<nt your ln"llll•· 96.l-5611 r.,r appotn1men1, monthly 2\1a1'fl. U qualified. nrlvr n l'flb 6 hrs or more 11. LlcrnsM or on.llccnsed '\'C No «<.Qrr. f14.'C(>SS, ~1r. Lee-, Sonie expc-r, Pl\'f'd work In •lay. Appl)' in pmion, w'I'' inln. !213) 770.8543, w/cl<'ciron1c co1n110nent1. vf'l1)w Cab Co .. ts6 E. 16th Should kn()l11 rol('lr (,'O(le. SI C I 'I Yoo don't nt!<'d a gun to '\VhHr> Elenhant~ · over. .. °"a ~· l'Ak"'',,--,,--• A....i .. ln .... ~. -"Drow f'n•l" y,1'Jen )-'OU n1nnlng your house? Turn "''"' ,.. "\\'e«I It le R~ap" pla~ an ad In !ht' Dail)' !hem inlo "Ca.<1h" ••. 11ell Computer Automition From ~a.sum t11 truh Pilot \\'ant Adil! CaU now lht'm U1ru a Dally Pilot 18651 Von Kllnntin, lrvint• Tum lht'm htto CMh ... 642-5678. clAsslfl~ ndl Sell tdle hemt •• 142-!;678 CAlJ.. Dally Piloc .1 .' I • • " ; ..... 4 ... --- • • PILOT i nursday A11gust JO, iq, .. ~~~~~r-~ , ____ ! 1 iiiiil ~-l ~J I_--·· 1(§} _ -I~ -I~ .---, -............. ~,~ iiiiii[ - HelpW1nted,M&F7lO . · / """'TE M I~ r ·~ •• You I~ ;;;;;[ -;;;--;;;-;;;];;;;~1[ ...::1+ i~ Mlscoll1neou1 liiim l~3i· ;-L;:ine:::-,,-;2;-T;l;::m::e::,-, $2.00 Boats, Gener•I 900 BOii•, Sall 909 · · JApph;incM 802 Furniture 810 Gar•2• Sal• 11 2 Ml\tt llaneous 'i\10l\IAN over 30, hu.11y D<'J I, ·--· - 818 Colta l\1csa, knowledgl' of ' MOV 1NC:·Wn1nut t r Ip I t' R Ul>1l\1AGF: Salc·Fo"ntnin Italian food h e Ip f u 1, R. W. Kerr 1!~·~ll<'1', ,.1lr ror. n I K h t V:1Ue" \\'nnr111i1 CI 11 b , *AUCTION* ~tontt-r -ttrvief>; USC"-o!-18052-Norton &lane!, des!<, $L'l0. Book \\1urner at l\tllJ;n<ilin, Thur.$. Ev4rything goes, new slicel'$, & lood huo<ll b1SJ:. ' Irvine rd1+'lv1•(, PJ (!bl. ti1 ~lc·t1·betl .\·1;: 30th, 11·4prn. owners take over l\1ust ~·ant lo wcirk. duties y, r "!i 111 $~::i: t"!rlf'nt::i l bra~s ltl~le. 1 aA1V.c1:-S:Je Tl\nr:::Frf. n ttJCf Wffk, arc Tuc-s·Fri. 9am-3:30pn1. TWO FREE S2:J Snnrf\('I mn•I\ ·"-11~~. Sat. fl a.m. til 6 ().m. 1516!!( FRIDAY 7 ·.30 PM For appt, 549-1252 never used $30 : Misc. ladies: L f· 11 "t \V• ·1 · r·lothiru! ~1 12 & 13, m1u·h ·1 ,,ye e .... " ... s ''111t<:ter .• 1 AUGUST 31ST \VOP.lAN 40-55:-6-8 hrs front TICKETS J 3:30pm. Give & take orders more. 646..0140 ewelry 815 1 fi r•tei't' Fren ·h Provincial & Info on phone. No sales. •J '''IC ~tOVING. ~In! cond, baby GE"ERQUS !)('(lroor\ s-·I, al1'0 1uodf>m St. $1 .6.5 hr, Training period. ~l llf'S't''T)' '~ T"·•~SON furn. Crib, ,.hc&t, port.-;. e 114 e IY'<lroom sMs, dinette sets, Nr Hoag rtosp. 646-4071 ICE FOLLIES 1:rlb, i;:tmllcr. pla,v pen, I (•hlna cabint•t, <l I v au s, 10am·l0pn1. ml$C, 2 f.1 1\,r:navo:c speaktrs , EWA eht.tirs, lnn11>s, pictures, \VO!\-tAN ~·anted for babysit· frplc, equipn1en1, Hollyv.·ood • R RD • ro\or TV's, stereos & com· ting, lite duties, hHe af· $(•pt. 5th thru 16th bed, Kenmore elec. i~·llhl' & Pone n t s, Rcfi'iger.11ors, 1en100ns. Own transp. Non· 81 the dryr. Besl offer. C al I for return 01. auy tn· I ivashers, dryers & lots of smokcc pcd'd. 11 h ,. . FABULOUS -• fonnatioo loadiog to cotmn : "'w"'i·N"O' y' 'S AUCTION 557-7318 bclv.'n JC)am & FORUM DAVENPORTS; cu st 0 m or a gold four leaf clover , noon. made matched davenports . pin, approx. 2 Inches In : \VOMAN for part time office lsubjel'f to $1 service 66" long, designers bold rlianu•ter, ~vlth j e 111 e I e d I COME BRO\VSE AROUND \\'Ork, mornings. 449 \V. cha1"ge al the Forum I quilted print . beiue horseshoe 1n center: also, 20751. N 11 Bl d Bay, Costa Mesa. Plea.<ie i:.·all 642-5678, ext 333 backgrnd/beaut. <-ond, $200 gold locket lwas on chain), :<""l t;WP<> ~ ·, tQ claim your tickets. !North for h\'O or $135. each. appl'OX. the size of a nickel, 1 &~ind Tony s Bldg. f.latl s. County ioll fl'e(' number is Lnguna 494-5992. inscribed In script. FLA. ! Costa 1\--lesa * 641).8686 ll§l 540--1220.1 These are deeply treasured ! N d d • * * ....... ---------...,,,,, I family mementv~ .~· the lo~s I ee e to CUBIC foot refiigernlor BH~po-;:t, , Le; irreplaceable, PLEASE, •Ac Id PLEASE help If )'\'1'1 hnve I .,-.v. J\.lolor 1 year o bef Excellent Cond. $40. any inforntation -642-3589 Antiques 800 9ant & aft G: 30p)n, 847-4871 480 'Broadway Eves. & '"'eekends. 1--~;.;... ____ ...;.:; LADY Kenmore elec. dryer, Costa Mesa .ANTIQUES: Set Victorian near ne\v, Xlnt c on d. Balloon back chrs $695. 551-Jl..W. ~· .,,,,,.._,,.. Kingsize Mat.tress & Box Springs Brass scales clock ~ramk·s \VASHER * DRYER gold silver \\'fl 1 c h es , Po11able Dishwasher 545-0753. 1 _ _:;!50:;_ each * 646-5848 LOTS of unusual furni!U l't'. REFRJGERATOR-$50. Clean SOLID Birch din. rm set, 4 C1ean & Good cond. $50. Please call Oct 6 & S pin. 548-78:81 ch.rs & china cabinet S200. 9· Full oafP(.>ling for Delores couch & toveseat SlOO. 3 model in Bluffs. Gold color, aluminum bar stools $100. fine condition & cleaned. A I.., __ .._ _____ _ Vanity & chest, Victorian Call 557-a793 after 3 pnt. desk, {;n<l tables, etc . Hurry! Al! in xlnt cond. 830-6498 real buy! Approx. 171 yds. aft 5. $200. Call for detail s. w· h Th;s Ad Duncan yfe dropleaf table $45. 0 wooden rocker $25. 7 dra 'er desk 'N 'chair $15. 9 dra1l'e!' dresser \v/n1 il'ror $45. Misc. USED USABLES, 2560 Nev.'}Xlrt Blvd., Costa MeSa. Tues thru Sat. 536-8026 Building Materials 806 GOLD I green couch, match-_6~7~~~3730~.=~=~~~ ing LS, black naugh. sleep CLOSING-OUT SALE! ANTIQUE Sall", Thurs. Fri, ---~ & Sat at 541 Mountain Road, e. Surplus Building Lfl guna Beach. MATERIAL . llY'.Al's of NE\V Appl iances 802 FREIGHT Damage Sale, washers, dryers, re(rigs, new "'a1Tanty. Re b 1 t \\'a s her s /dryers from $39.9j, Bf'ach City Ap- pliance. ~623 \V. \Varner, S.A. fl Bick F:. of HarborJ KENMORE gas dryer $30, stainless stt(.'1 220 volt builtin range SIO, nt>11' C'ar· rie1· 80,000 BTU uµflow lnrc· ed air fur nact> $8.i, all \\'Ol'k perfect. Call 979-86:-IO ITEMS! Doors, lumber, ply. 1vood. alum sheeting, mold· \n_1t. winclo1vi;, etc. sofa; Club chair & recliner; Everest & Jennings \.Vhecl Walnut din. tbl., w/4 chairs; chair, used only 1 n10. Orig dbl bed v.•/headboat'CI; coffee rost $250, sell $100. AJso tbl: 548-7840. used crutches & 1valkers . LEAVING stale, must sell _ reasonable' &15-8699 anytime •-!!-... '!-!!-... -'!!!-... '!-!!-... '!-!!-... '!-!!-... -~ Relrig, stereo. couch , FR/place set & gas log $25. BUILDERS SURPLUS 2406 So. Main St., S.A. ~lon lhtu 8at 10·5 tab I es, beds, chair, Signature \VSh/dry Cprtone barstools, many e x t r a SlOO. 2 oil pntngs $35 ea. 714: 546-1032 items. 646-36St Kennedy tool box & rnach JlEMODELJNG . Bdrm set. tools $100. 10 No. Co2 fire Furniture 810 ext $25. Al! firm 2501 living rm set, long glass top Grunge, QI. coif~ tbl, end tbls, lamps, l\.fAYTAG S.: K en1nore \Vashers $40. Keninore 600 \Vasher $65. Whirlpool gas dryer $30. Cuar ., & free deliverv. :1 4 G-8 6 7,2 or 847-8115 CANOPY bdrm set, 5 piece, xlnt con<l. 541Hl107 * COUCH & LOVESEAT * nevci· used, both for $155. Usua lly ho111e. 968·7910 •SOF1\ & CHAIR* Jlilatched contemporary Xlnt cond. $65. 646-49'1.fl DJNE'ITE set w/Walnut forn1ica top & 12" leaf, 4 Rent Washers/Dryers chrs, SSO. jj2-971•1 $2. \Vk. Full 1naint. QUEEN hide·a·bed, Plush * 6.19-!202 .. velvet sofa & loveseat. All KENNIORE gas stove: 11·01·ks like new. 675-0869 good & in goo<l cond ition. 8' DAVENPORT, ~·h i te + $00. 6.J5-l309 naugahyde xlnt conditio·n. Gas stOVea.llnost new $85. Call 644-6500· S.100 * j$.8652 Sell idle items · .•. 642-5678 -~--------4R.IPmYU JW8ZL>S:W LWYL For an ad ln Woman's World Call Mary Both 642·5678, ext. 330 Sew and Crochet! Instant Crochet hanging lan1p & n1isc. 645-0341. PAIR of blue velvet Barrel chrs, $150. O'Keefe l'ange 40'' Delux, 6 burners, 2 ovens, 2 broilers $175. 6Tr1465 1·6 DRAWER & ntirror .. 1·9 dra.1ver d1-esse1· & mirror, 1· antique French prov. chest & min'<'.lr; 1 lg. antique cor· ner cabine1, lamps. 536-6965 MUST sell: 8' \Valnut stereo console $500. \VaJnut. Teak & Cane din. set $400. \\laJnut coffee & end tbl $125. Misc. 644-1384. MAPLE dining room set, $6.'i. Brown couch, 80", $50. 2 lounge chairs, $10. Col'ner group. $40. Refrig. $25. Call 536-5029. l\.IEDITERRANEAN couch $65. Nev.• fruitwood coffee table, end tables $150. 2 ceramic lamps $15. each 55&-8324 * NEAR new 2 wing chairs, hed divan, $125 e a c h . Retrig. $15, Misc. drav.·ers & 1ables, golf bag & cart, &47-7929 TWIN size ~'aterbed w/walnut frame & the1mos1at htr, all access $69. 675-5887 CORNER group 1v/rable & bolsters. Extra firm mat- lress, Like new. ·$ 7 5 . 67311767 BAR·light wood w/fonnica. Lo uver doors, ideal for den. 37" high, 56" wide, U75. 548-7408 9' COUCH, diamond tufted Crushed velvet. Avocado green. 1 yr old. Xlnt cond. $150 firm. 6Ta-6495 \VALNUT 12 Cun Cabinet $75., Walnut Zenith Stereo $20. Love Seat, chairs. Tables, Cheap. 493-4755 . . i DOVER Shores Home furn. for sale. couch, chn, din set, hutch, pie t ure s, 646--0964. Send no\\' for our popular, \VALNUT 12 gun cabinet $75. \Valnut Zenith stereo $20. Love Seat, chairs, tables, cheap, 493-4755. LOVELY burnt orange velvet hi·bck chair $90. Hex- agon commode table, dark fin. $30. Xlnt cond. 642-2977. 812 MOVING into l\'lob!le Home must sell, elect dryer $20. Mini bike needs clutch $40. Ping Pong tbl $30. Pool tbl $40. Blue 4 Poster Trundle bed w/matching chest $125. Sewing t.Iat'h $10. Record player $5. Lots of books. 3044 Donny Brook C.l\I 5W-ll89. I hC'!pful lnst:u1t Crochet Book. MOVING! Come See! End Begin to c1'0Chl"l 11 tables, chairs, kite h en bea utiful f a s h ions, ac· items, garden tools, bikes. L . 1fT, __ 1 • ...,"f1T',_!"ff_ ces.<;0ries in Instant Crot·het books & games. Household "'t lllh, lllt...\1"--Book r ight a11•ay! Step-by· knicks·knacks, posters, step pictures leach basic, misc. Fri. lhru Mon. 1()..4. f 1·1 I 128 p•=s 2912 Alta Vista Dr., E8't SIX prt't1 y lllU1ners to se~· a ncy s 1 c ies. ......~ . plus gHy potholder \•est to l·lurry, send no1v! ,B::l:.;u:;fl-,N"'°.B::.·~----- crochet! \Vh ip up lhi1' quickie Sf;\'F.~1'V·l')V I~ CENTS GARAGE Sale, Tues thnl 1 wardrobe in crisp t'Ol!nns to for euch pattern -add 25 F'rl, tools, J>\\T tools, hydr. I delight n little girl. ctnl8 for each pattem for jack, jack stnd, beds & ac· ,1 Printed P<iiter11 9 1 5 2 : Air Mail and Special Handl· cess., kit Utensils, silver, OdJd's Si7.cs 2, 4, 6, S. Size 6 in,e:; otherwi!«! third-class V.W. parts, furniture, refrig shit1 l yd. 4&-in.; pt1nl s 71~ delivery 1\'lll take three & misc. Cheap. 23571 d Pf ""at Dru~!>j ~iw 1vticks or more. Send to Treviso, 1 ........ 8 HUis. Y • ea!Ml "" c · ~ · Alice Brooks. the DAILY ..._. ... , -VM'n.!l'JVr~ CENTS GARAGE SALE 968-5497 tor .. ch ..... Item -add 25 PILOT, 105. Needlecraft ~ De 1 Bo 163 Old Ch I Furniture -all kinds, cloth· CL•nts for each patte111 for o .. x · e sea . 1 ' -'f St 1· N• Yo k NY Ing, campin<Y, P ctures , Air Ma.ii and Special Hauu · a JOn, .. w r , . • ·~ ln2: otMrwise third-class 10011. Print Name. Addrb•, OOds & ends. 21381 Pinetree delivery will take lhree Zll), P111tcrn Nnmlier. Ln .. (Bushard & Hamilton) weeU or more. Send to N EE 0 L ECRAFT '72! HB ?ilarian Ms.rt.In. 1he DAILY Crochet. knit, etc. Free TRASH & Treasure sale, 531, P --·~ p umi Dept directions, $Oc.. Son & Mon, 10 am 'till. u..u.a • ......., a · " ln•tant ... -era-11oo•. 232 West 18th St.. New ,...., """ Hla/ht'r KOil set. rollaW'38 YCrk, N.Y. lCOlL Pr!nl Basic, fancy knots, pat. & mott. 1270 Londonderry, w, -ADOBF.aa wt th ten111, SLOO. ~·"'·ta Mesa. ,,.....,., ~ ln11bu11 Crt'lt.l~I Rook -"""' ZIP, mr; anti STYLE Leam by pictures! Pat· FURNITURE, e~tr'lcnl ap. X1lllDE 5 _ RM. O"D Q 0 1 ck terns. Sl.00. pliances, garden tool!!, mi!IC.. -r..::. ·~ Complete t1111tanl Olfl 8nttJt F'ri·SiJn, 10-6. 351 Magnolia, ~~ ~ C::: :~ .. mo~ than 100 gitb CM. n£.Summer cataloa. All Si!~plele At-'-·n Book _ FUNKY -F•bulous Ga.rag!" ! Only 50c, A•-Sale. Friday & Satumay. INSTANT SEWING BOOK n.oo. ~w De Anza Coron• del ll'W today, we8.r tmno:i row. 1$ Jiff~· Rt~ Rt1t1iu1 • SOr. Mar. "• Onnl; 11f It rrlw Al1t11A.n .. 41~ ,., 5t1,. GARAGE Sale • F'umiture, INSTA.VI' f' ASH I 0"' f'nlll ll ... If 1 1,; pnllcmi toy~ & Mbe. 1101 Devon BfX)f( Ffl!Odrt.'tll (I f 50r'. Lane, \Vcstellff NB. Sel A fll.Jhlan blrt.~. Jl •• ___ ,\ft••rw•• Qulll fflioll t ~o~ly. Fo.~ th•t itcn1 U.ndt'r $50, U)' !O:. hfOVYNG_,__-,-w-.. ~k~!~fUm,.--. the PttU\Y Plnrlm'. Qulb fnr 'f•..t•.1'• 1.ilvtftc tools, tof.ll, ptano, TV. 1506 Llnt'Oln Ane, N.D. • I • The DAILY PILOT Invites You ONLY APP£ARANC£ IN SOUTH£RN CALIFORNIA ALL NEW 1974 WORLD PREMIERE DON'T LET YOUR FAMILY MISS THIS BEST ICE FOLLIES EVER!!! ORDER YOUR TICKETS TODAY!!! OPENS WED. SEPT. 5 THRU SUN. SEPT. 16 SHIPSTADS & JOHNSON ICI fOlLIE.S INTRODUCING AMERI CA'S SWEETHEART JANET LYNN IN HER PROFESSIONAL OEBUT AT THE FABULOUS FORUM •1 ili'r~~r ~ ,.. :'II! MANCHESTER& PRAIRIE PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE WED. "..... •• . ••• 8.00 PM THURS. ~ •••• 8:00 PM r1u • •. •••• ·•·OO PM SAT, ......... 1•00 &8;00 f>M SUN, , •• .. , 1:00 I> 5'00 f>M ,, fll[ FOllllll, r•ttflC sn11co MON .••••• NO PERFORMANCE ft)f S, llll) .t. All MUTUAL Ill.,. TUES. •'.' '' •'' • ·' "8;00 PM Clll 1110 tlC•lTllOll 111 ill lllllS, WtD. ' '' '''' •' · • "8:00 PM MAf co .. lllO•OW.t.Y • w••o• THURS •• '.'' •• ' ••• •t :OO PM FAI. , .. , •••• , , , , .. 8:00 PM Pour 015tOUJftS (lO Olt MOlll) SAt •• '. ' • ' ' •• 2100' 8:00 f'M Cl ll 11•.fOOO t.lt, 1M SUN, '.\ •• ' 1:00 ' s·oo 'M FOR INFORMATION CALL THE FORUM 673-1300 Win a Pair of Passes I~ to II senice ~ on Nd! plSS usedl Tll<t DAILY' 'ILOT tMllH It "''f• ..... clled ...... ft tM cl.u.1"'11 *'i .. fw ...... il'*t "'"""'' ......_ If y•• fl#4 .. ., "°'" littt c.ell 642·6'71. bt. Jl4, ""' .... ' e.-. •H I ,.-. t• .... •"911•_.. te pld •p .... , tldtrtl et •If ce11ftllktlt DAILY ~LOf llffk•. " _W..;..;1;.;nt;.;ed;;:;... ___ ...;8~ BEAUT. t yr. male Irish * * ---.--lUlOOES J3.C,~stc re.cl~ \VANTED: Engine and Setter to hon1e w/lge yard. c Jonn champion "HANAJIUU.'" nu;omo.1ic trnns1nlt11don for Loves klds. 646-()()U or ]1'. G' 1u. Pl Top i.'O ndltlon. $6:i00. Ph: 1960 thrt1 1969 Falcon, 6 cyl . ~. .,. r n•t •c• 1 .:;61::::\.,-"l;;232::·c_-~--- Must be in good 3hupe. loLO"oi'v'°E"""ro'",.~,,=R=E=E~.-A-do-ra~b~le Lagune Beach 12' KORALLE S fl. 11 boat lteasonable. 96&-4971 Shepherd mix pup pie 1§:. YoTW.t "1'·o·' FR"'EE. of sil·634oo~. wli~~C:k ~:. ••NEEDY family wants 673-4510 Days, 6 4 6 -O l 7 3 VUUA any repairable household 'Eves. TICKETS llntgn Beach. g~s. Plea~ call for P/U, •-"'-F-'-RE~E-pu-pp-ies_&_mo_th_e_c_• 18' Y Flyer Sailboat and 963-4062. * Poodle Mix * bJ U1e trail('r. Planing. hull Xlnt WE want wn spc_'L'<IS, man's * 5Sl-3609 * SHil,STJ\DS & JOHNSON co11d .. (213) 330--52'28 and \V01:i·Hu1'$ in {,'00(1 cond. 4 BABY kittens jusl about· IC£ FOLLIES 8' SAIL boat. fully equipped 213-592-2161. 1--ready to be 8 d 0 P t e d , tnusl sell, $175. CHJLDRENS play hou s e Adorable. 549-32'19 (C."M.) Scilt. Sttl lhru 16th * 673-.J.1SS * 1vanted, please phone, MALE Schnauzer 4 mo., at the Boats, Slips/UOCks 910 5#-8814. shots, no papers. • FABULOUS Mu1lcal lnstrumonll822 962-1275 FORUM AFFECTIONATE 1 yr rust BOGEN P.A. amp. 60 watt, male kitty, altered, shots, use w/horns or s~akers. box trained 644--0139. 24' BOAT slip, liarbour $45 mo. Call 848-2678 Hun to Any ohms $100. or will trade =~""~7-'--'i~~-­!or comparable electrical SPRINGER Spaniel, 10 mos, guitar 01· bass. 847-4772. good w/children. Shots. TI-IE Guitar Repair Shop. A ~1.B09 To good home. Complete J n s t r u nt e n t KITTENS 6 \vks old. Hou.se Repair Service. 513 Cente r broken fluUy black & whtte St. CA-1. 548-5277. David A. 0644--0903""'.:;:-'"--~---­ Sanlo, Luthler FREE to good home. 6 ntOS YAMAHA FC-180 acousticaJ feni . Setter/Golden. Spayed guitar. wfhard shell case. ObL"CI . trdined. 494-3245. Both xlnt. SllO. J i n1 3 MO. Old female Shepherd/ &12-8802. Coyote mix puppy. MUST sell! Double S€t Call 5:l8-6709 SHngel'land Drums. $200. or QUIET multi-colored kitten. bt'st offer. 640-0168 Free. Inclds box & food Piano $175, gooc( cond dish. 644-6878/557-3050. 979.3255 or 979-1461 BLACK kjtten, very affcc. n<'eds good honte. Female, 642-6745 ater 6 p. m. Office' F urnlture/ ~qu;p. 824 FREE -2 \\'hite kil~ens, 1 -----1 Jonghaired, 1 shorthau'ed. 10 3 OLY?o1PIA iype"t'iters, 11·eeks old. f>l8-6355 aft 5. h~avy du1~, elec. 13". car· FREE ~2 Lab/German Shep r1ag~. fa~r1c/curbon ribbon, puppies. To good home lO_pitch: 6 1110. old, Sell ne~· w/yard. 8 v.•ki;. 536-7241. $550, "'tll sell (or $300 eu. ~~--'--'---""'--'-"-=:;__ 546-4903. AFFEC.IIONATE 1 yr old EXEC s1\'\'l chrs $15/25 Sec chrs $8/24 Desks $20/90 Pierce 867 W 19 CM 642-3408 rust. niale ki tty, altered, shots, box trained 644-0139. Free Mixed Breed PuppiC'S 5,ig.. 7352 (subject to $1 service charge at thr Forum) DOCK for rent, power only. Please call 642-5678, ext 33J U~ to 26'. Newport Island. to claim your ticketi. (North \V1nler only. 673-3053. County toll tree number is BOAT slip, up to 40' ln ~12'10.) Balboa Covelli. Avail Sept. * * * 1st. $65. mo. 557...().U SCRAM LETS Boats, Speed & Ski 911 · • 16' SKI boat & trailer, 283 ANSWERS ~;.'\5, good rood 1900 Giblet -Photo -Yearn -1~J~T .• ~0~· 1~ ~tercnd. AdviCi? -HINGE s s, ]a<.'11.elB, ,..,.c, co ' \I/hat a man needs Jn gar. $1.250., 493-0\80. dt;ning is a CM1 il'on back, Y.'lth a HINGE on it. I T~tkln 11•1 11' FIBERGLASS, cathedral . hull, skiff/car top boat.l'j;jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilii.:;~~ F6'un f\oo.ta!ion. Askinill . $175. Days 494-8572, eve & C•mpers S•le/Rent 920 wknds 646-4780. I--..:....-•:...._.;_ __ ;.;__ BOSTON Whaler, 13' w/'1$ '71 FORD Truck &. 11~' ft. HIP motor, xlnt cond, $1000 sab-Over Ho~est Ca1npe~. also 9'11 H/P motor less \-8, ~uto, Iii~', ?7.000 1u1. than 10 hrs, $350 Pt'iv party Both like ne~. $5500. Musi 673-3438 see to appreciate! 586-2561. 16' OPEN Bow, 283 Chev. TRADE '71, 8' Pilgrim Berkley jct, fish/ski 50 cabo~er camper for good n1ph. New lrg whl trailer. 11uu11ng V.W. Bus or Bug. \Ves, 673-0471 or 646-3213. c4:::99-3::..::779=-------I • EXPLORER . HUNTINSlllN BEACH '"" "'" ''· ' ' I '. I •, T • < ' , , GMC Motorhoma 23' A :is· fMMEDrATE DELIVERY Orange Co.'1 F.>el'fuslve i>ealer Biil Barry Ponlloc GMC REC. CENTER 2000 E. lit SL, S&nta Ana 558-1000 liAVE 21' T.l Ff,.ball mt< tmne nn 1 T Ood~ cbuabl 1t1ll under wn.rr, 7400 ~: W111 •cc:ept car ln trd or what • havo -you. MH766/58!Hl601 , • • Motor Homes Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmportttd Salo/Roni 940 ---'--<---.....;...:; 970 Autos, lmportod l·D-ALE-.-,-M-ot-or_H_o_m_e_n,-.,-tab ASTON MARTIN New 23-26' & Mini',11 Fn.-c mileage & insurance 9 llll 9. 838--0900 FOR Rent '73 PaceArrow 27'. Loaded, sleeps 10. 548-4037 or 540-7796 Trailers, Travel 94S Ci.ASSJC Astin .Martin DB4 Xlnt cond. Very fast, 2+2, •n4: 492-~* AUSTIN HEALEY -'63 Austin J{ealey Sprite, $375 6'!>-0.120 1970 NOMAD . 211,2', fully 11elf ---_:c;c:::::.,. __ _ contained. Xlnt oond. prl BMW pty. 962-3670. '69 SHASTA 13'. cloan. CREVIER ·BMW Sncrlfice $625. or make of- ter. f.1ust sell &16-5566 Salt$ • Servic:e • Leasing Auto Service, Parts 949 208 W. 1~ St., S.A. 853-3171 USED BMW'S '62 JEEP engine, 4 cylinder, '73 BAVARIA (DEMO) some extra parts $l!'Jf), ,71 BAVARIA 542--5967 after 6: 30. '72 Tll FASTBACK hardtop, 850 Fiat. ,70 3.0CS COUPE ~~;· ' '69 2002 [ ~ _ ..... ,,._s.i.~J§] '68 1600 '67 2000CS CPE '68 1002 'oRAN"~G'"E""""co"'u"'N°"T~Y7.'A'S OLDEST JAGUAR ' NEW XJ-12 E Type Cpe. + Conv. XJ0 6 Great Select~on Ready For Immediate De livery ~I·~ 1 !;!r ~ ~ ! ~ ~~i\~J· l ll t l} ( ~j ~ ', .. ~· ' . '71 Ja9uar V-lZ E Type Coupe B. R. green, loaded, local ~car (0627BW), $6666 Antiques/Cl11slcs 9S3 1933 FORD. Chop~ 3 win- dow cpe body Y:ith chan- nell'd fran1e, '59 0 Id s engine, :1 spd lrans, new front axle. 837-5.)48 aft 6 pm. ~lltan1111~; lllutino !ll!Oll ~ ~ W.!1 ~ \1"'0 .. , .. ' . ,, " -..... " ...... 0 JENSEN HEALEY SALES-SERVICE-LEASING JENSEN-HEALEY OVERSEAS UE'.UVERY Q.60 in 8.5 sec. with 24.5 MPG. ROY CARVER, Inc. Thlnki"g of one? If so, lam personally offering some- 2:;4 E. 17th St. thing to you. Cnsta Mesa 5'!~44 e I • l\1G Mittin car cover MERCEDES BENZ JIM-SLEMONS IMPORTS MERCEDES BENZ AtJl1{0RIZED SALES &: SERVICE Jim Slemons Imports !SOI Quall Newport Beach 833-9300 ENTER FROM ?\1acARTHUR '66 P..1ERCEDES D I e 1 e 1 . Stick, reblt eng, $2500. or of- fer. Pri. Pty. 714-493-6276. MG '69 MGC. 6 cyl, xlnt rond. $1750. or ofier. Call 586-17'l6 MGB '69 MGB ' - Rdstr. 4 speed, AM/FM, rac..-ing yetlow wtlh black in- terior. YQC083. $1777 ~UJM. Ltwi.4 W TOYOTA 19616 Harbor, C.M. l.9f:6 T-Bird, new tires, paint, new chrome, new interior, new engine, Cost $4,500 to restore, will sen for $4,000 tirm. 644--0STI days. e 2 -Your first 500 miles Bob Mclaren, BMW "rvice free. OPEL Recre1tion111 Vehicles Inc, Only 7 cars IC'tt. For that 1--------- Sales • Service • Leasing personal extra, eall or see: 169 Opel G_ T 9S6 850 North Beach Blvd., Stephen l-larvey La l-labra British 1'1otor Car Dist. Silver finish with red Interior, 140 HP Corvair Sandrail 1n4) 87g..5624 1601 s. Anaheim Blvd. {ZRROn>. w/oand & notation ""'' & •!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!-.....!.An~ahe~im"='77;,4':!·4'!:1l!i:O_ $2099 trlr. Dave aft 5, 543-3697. '53 DODGE military am-CAPRI MAZDA BILL MAXEY bulanee < whl dr. V4l. auto. TOYOTA $1200. or offer. 642--0727 * Mazda '73 Rotary * Trucks 962 $66 MONTH 18881 BEACH BL. 847-85.15 36 Jl,fONTl-IS O?EN LEASE HUNTINGTON BEACH • Will accept trnde·ins '67 OPEL Kadette. good '65 FORD FlOO. 8' &yleslcle CALL MR. FRY 842-0066 cond., but needs some work. ~~•omN~:b. ~d~: •• uz:: ~~:u~~s "W1~ Hunt. Beach !~;. Ph: Bob. sn-3085 '65 FORD, ;J ton pickup Sport coupec~:r'. body side MAZDA WITH XLNT SlfELL, R&JI, A/T, new liret, battery, & mouldings, reclining front smog devit-e $800. 545-1476. seats, contour rear seats. 4 Like new 645-8614. speed transmission, power '67 INTERNAT IONAL, 20' front disc brakes, style steel vim, good cond. Great for wheels, bucket seats, radial moving or hallllng. Priv pty ply tires. :nx>cc en,g. $2500., 492-6664. (GAECNB42801l. 17331 Beach Ill. 842-66:;6 BOB LONGPRE MAZDA "IO 1 Ton Cab & a.as,;.,, 4 OVERSTOCKED! speed, duals, p/b, pi s, IMMEDIATE radio $1650. 839-4000 DELIVERY -SERVICE FIRST- EXCLUSIVE . ., CHEVY I> T. Oat bed, GUSTAFSON good shape, $500. firm. MAZDA LEASE 645-3520 a11 & Lincoln-Mercury ·n DATSUN Plck·up, immac 16800 Beach at Warner 1st Street at the Santa Ana Frwy. 2001 E. 1st Street cond, low ml. Huntington Beach *646-83'19* 142-11144 * (213) S92·S544 Vans 963 ''Home of the Viking" Santa Ana 558-78n '72 Mazda Wa9on 631GAM. 4 speed, radio, heater. '62 ECONOL[NE Van. Re- cent valve job. Rebuilt trans. \\'beels. ln great run· ni.ng cond. $700 or best of- fer; Or trade for a good r V\V . 646-ml. 1967 FORD SUper Van, xlnt cond. 3 spd. mo. 548-0Z12 '72 DODGE Van with all ex- tras. $3500. or trade for 4 whl drive. 645--0390 '64 CHEVY Van. xlnt cond. ~w mags & tires. Needs paint. Asking $950. 846-7202 1966 FORD Station Wagon Van. Ex . .,cond. ReB!Onable. Call eve or Sunday 64&--3431. Autot Wantod 961 TOP · DOLLAR PAID IMMEDIATELY FOR ALL FOREIGN CARS WE ARE IN DESPERATE NEED OF GOOD, CLEAN FOREIGN CARS TOP DOLLAR-PAID FOR OR NOT! Call or come In to see us. NEWPORT IMPORTS 31CM' W. Coast Hwy., N.B. 642·t405 TOP CASH for clean late model cars, and trucks! Howard Chevrolet MacArlhli:r and Jamboree Newport Beach 833-0555 WE IJUY IMPORTED AUTOS BEST PRICES PAIDI Dean Lewis Imports 1966 'Jtr.r'~ C.M. JMPORTS WAI\"l:ED Omnae County's TOP-$ BUYER BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blv :. H. lkllci> PH. •'1.sss! WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CAns If )'Our car is extra clean. ate 111 fin~. BAUER BUICK 2925 •1arbor Blvd. Costa MelA 979 2500 Autot, lmpo<tod 970 ALFA ROMEO ALFA ROMEO SAAB Buy or LHH Sales • Service • Leasing • Rent&ls i!:1\1rh Jhnp1111~; +;) " " ' ' ' ... ,.,.." " , ••• ,, 1 "~ ' ' ALFA ROMEO • SAAB In NEWPORT DATSUN WE'RE MOVING BIG SAVINGS ON '73 Demos 510's Pickups 610's $2B77 ~w..L.W W VOLVO 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-93'!3 ~tCllJr"'..ftl'lr '73 l\1AZDA Rotary Wagon, '"\,;;" "'"" air. & other °'"'as. Assume DATSUN lease • 30 mo. to go. $97.'rl mo. If interest£'d, phone 888 Dove 536-1615 or 548-2111, 1·4Pl\1. Newport Bch &13-1300 Open Sunday '73 J1,1AZDA. RX-2, 2 dr, auto trans, air cond, R&H, Angel 1973 DA TSU NS Blue, 2500 mi. Orig owner, ALL MODELS !3800. or b.,t 0""'· -'72 MAZDA RX 2. Low mi., IN STOCK mag ww., must .. 11. $2700. Call 847-£379 BARWICK IMPORTS 33375 eam1no c.p1atrano MERCEDES BENZ San Juan Capistrano 493-3375 or 831-1375 SO USED '11 DATSUN Wag., 4 spd., MERCEDES R/H., ai<, lugg. CRCk, clear 11.s25. Pvt. pty. 83t.2538. ON DISPLA y ·~~Al~~u~l.Pick-up, immac Sharp New Car *~379 * Trade-ins '67 DATSUN P.U. New tires, Coming In Every Day reblt engine. $750 or best of-Ask About Our Unique fer. 645-2642. Used Mercedes Lease '67 DATSUN Rdstr 1600, 2 Plans 10"'· asking $800 °" be•• of-House ol Imports fer, call bef 4 'PM, 536-8667 FIAT 6862 Manchester, Buena Park <Jn the Santa Ana Frwy m.1250 '72 FIAT '63 MERCEDES 300 SE Sun 124 SPYDER 11oo'sf~.u1:"~0n. 12,100 original miles. AM/* c-1~!164~~MB=~190~~S~e-d"'"..,-, FM radio, maroon exterior, automatic, immaculate. blk Interior, radial tires. $1400. * MS-9603 #49(166. $3177 TIME FOR "'UICK CASH J)w.. Ltwi.4 THROUGH A -TOYOTA DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 1966 I-Tarbor, C.M. &16-93'!3 PORSCHE '73 PORSCHE 914, new gold metallc appr gr o u p , AM/FM stereo, 5-50,000 guar. Extremely clean. Aft 5: 30, 536-0430 'liO ROADSTER w I s p e c . equipt. nu 150 H/P. xlnt., must see, make o f f r , 919-<;996 '57 PORSCHE Coupe, xlnt cond., Rebuilt engine. 3000 miles. Sacrifice sa I e ! 55H728 POROCHE '72 911T, Xlnt condition, S.spd, AM/FM stereo, Maintained corripany car. SQl50. TI4: 983-3649 PORSCHE 9 11 E'; '69 sportomatic A/C. str/radlo & tape. 9L1S Trim, xlnt cond, drk green, 644-0705 '60 PORSCHE. Good mechanical co n dition. Xtras. $1850. 979-9144 RENAULT RENAULT R·12 4 DOOR'S Automatjc Tralismission SALE $2499.00 DICK MILLER MOTORS 120 W. Warner. S.A. 557-2132 /RENAULT+! TOYOTA WE BUY USED TOYOTAS ALL 1973 MODELS IN STOCK ,-11ta•·1111i~• lllnttu~• llmllll ~ slit>~ SIMI " "' ' ' ' ... ,. , ' ... '70 TOYOTA COROLLA 4 Spd, (!>19BQXJ $1399 BIU MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 BEACH BL, 847·~ t-IUNTIN'GTON BEACH • .,. Thursday, Au1Wst 30, 1973 DAILY PILOT TOYOTA $2021.95 plus tax & lie. Is the Delivered Price for a 970 Autos, Imported 990 Autos, Usod BUICK '61 BUICK $150 company-... t-tumlshed me a Cllr so I MUST SEU. 2 dr, V8, auto. Good body & my l97'l MAVERICK in like Int. Runs good. Prk:e firm. now condition, automntic. ./ 543-3691 ./ power steering, 250 cu in 6 1971 BUICK Riviera, Ute cyl, with low miles, v.·ide green met .. beige int. Load· lires, sacrilice below blue ed. Xlnt thru-out $3500 or book at $2085. or make or- MERCURY PINTO -,'"-1-1-=-c""'o-.,,il""G""A=R--·n P!N1'0 s,,uiro s .. Wng00, R & II, auto, fl.Ir~ rrui,gs, like new, $:l200. 979-1797 I 1971 PINTO. ;iir, auto, 2000 cc, new steel tires, mint~ $1450. 645-8173. " Immaculat1.', vinyl top, auto- matic truns., factory llir. radio, iOw 1nllf!'S, TMADO. $2177 besl. 642-2184 aft 7pm ft'r, 847-3095. '1\ L • BLUE '67 Buick. 29,500 nt.1.1 '·1"!'"'r"o"'R'°'D'°'L"T"'D'"9:-pa-,-, "w'"ac_o_n -Wt fAli& VS. Air. Radio. Needs new Xlnt cond. 400 eng. COod VOLVO '73' DUSTER, 6 cyl, auto, '73 TOYOTA PLYMOUTH COROLLA ure1• $8564900. f>-18..-0297 n1ileage. $300 below book. p/s, & p/b, vinyl roof, Sec to Appreciate? 846-1321 7 1966 i-rarbor, C.i\1. 646.9;i.o3 An1.fn1 la<lio, fact. air, 5.500 at CADILLAC Um to 5 inn wkdays only. nu. $3,42'0. Pvt ply. 831-2538. --------l'63 FORD l'akon xlnt cond., MUSTANG 19TI SATELLITE custom! ;ow Ltwi.4 -TOYOTA EL DORADOS nu tires & bait, meeh per! Land.., lop. A/C. P/s, $350 art 6Pl\.1 53&-0568 1968 MUSTANG, v~. auto, P/b. Lo mi. $2300. Pvt. Pty. 14 TO CHOOSE --,60 FORD $200 f.lO\\'er steering & brks. s:t~209H. CO S-co"VERTIB ES 1\ir/cond. Ycllo1v 1v/blk in---~P~O~N=T~IA~C=--UPE 1~ L 4 rlr, V~. nuto. Runs good. terlor. Runs Hke new. $1200. 1966 Harbor, C.Jl,1. 646-9303 • Prit'e firrn. ,,~,, "'39 b 5 • 7 DE VILLES * >13-3691 * ~~ twn • pm on-ly. 38 TO CHOOSE '68 RANCHERO. -s1ue, fac-l,-;690--MU="~t"AJ"<"G:-C°'o-n-vert=ib"'le '71 TOYOTA COUPES lory air, r.idlo, fiberglass 302 V·8, auto, p/i., p/b, Order Your Color Today! '70 GTO 400, P/S, P/B, a/c, ralley '''hf:e!s, vinyl top. Xlnt t'1:ind in & out. Prl ply. $23(X). 55-l.--OS65 SEDANS cargo cover. Sharp looking. AJ\lfl.-M sterro, 36,000 nii., 1200 COUPE CONVERTIBLES $1195. 833-0070, lh>pm $1400 ~7 White l767BZW) Many excellent colors ·n FORD Galaxle 2 dr hdtp, "'69""""'M"'U"ST=.-:c;;:o-=n"",,-=-p1",-. -=,""1tl $1599 Choice of interiors Extl"d Clean, $1395. radio. white \V/b\ck 1op, '68 FCREBIRD. Auto. /\ir, rblt eng. Xlnt con d. $1400/best offl•r. 833-8.WS eves. (Cloth & leather) 4!»-5886 hick lthr int. $1~00. :-0:33--."2·16 BILL MAXEY Factory aJr conditioning '61 FORD Galaxy $200 or . Full power. Cho;ce of, tt •MUSTANG '70, 1>1•. p/b, TOYOTA Stereo AM/FM radio best ofr. ~-4~7 air, R&H. top condition. GREAT buy, Pont i 1.1 c LeMans \vagon '69, new paint A-C optionai. gate. Call after 5 p.n1. ~. '68 GTO, auto, air, P/S, P/B, viH yl top. Xlnt cond. $1500. 494-0081 after 6. _ Crwse control $2095 s.t0-1416 18881 BEA~ BL, 847·8555 Trunk opener & more 1969 MACfI I Mustang. 351 HUNTINGTON BEACH All in Immaculate 1:onditlon JEEP engine, air, has all, pricr'd Largest selection in to sell. 5.51-3346 Orange County '71 JEEPSTER Nabers Cadillac s21HMV TRIUMPH '6B TRIUMPH TR4 AUTHORIZED DEALER $3177 il6{)(I HARBOR BL., COSTA MESA t\ L . 4 speed, heater, \VVV413. 540-9100 Open Sunday -UJJf. f.11114 Back to sd>ool special. '72 CADILLAC Sedan de TOYOTA, $1277 Ville. Must be sold at a :0 L • sacrifice. Has been lovingly - ltlliM Altlll cared for by one owner 1966 Harbor, C.M. 64S-9303 Ufl'. oUlllll since bh1h thru 16,000 VOLVO mile~. Call 646-7227 <or MAVERICK details. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 ·73 COUPE DE VILLE, '72 MAVERICK Pri. pty. 2 ~~-~----.-bro1vn ext brown Jthr int Dr, Auto Trans., P.S., 250 '64 TR-1, new engine, tires, f 11 · 6000·' . 1 k " cu in 6 cyl, low miles, wide brakes, seats. 56,000 mi. u pwr • mi.· a e over 1 · , S'085 k fl Mak H Ev 0•0 7895 lease payment or buy for ires, . or ma c o er. e o er. es . .rt0-• $6700. 552-972S _84_7_-3095-7-o' =-===-- CHEVROLET • ., VIV Bug, 135hp, OO)ec, --------·II Dual carbs, mags, Must '64 STINGRAY Sacrifice, 673-3512 Immaculate, original paint & '65 V\V Bug factory reblt interior. AM/FM, 4 spd. Ex· eng, new brks, clean. $575. tremely low 'miles, garage 837-6956 kept, 1 owner. MER.CURY OLDSMOBILE Sales & &>=-vice OLDSMOBILE GMC TRUCKS HONDA CARS U~IVERSITY OLDS '67 GTO 4 spred, nu tires & clutch. Best offer. 91\).8178 T-BIRD T·BIRD '69 Landau Coupe. Full l)O\\'er. Air. 4 3 9 ThunderJct. 1 owner. $1695. 2850 Harbor Blvd. 675-8811, 644---0183. Costa i\lesa 540-9640 ·55 T·Bird. reblt eng., '61 OLDS sml Sta. \Vgn. New hardtop, original, x I nt tires, battery, etc. Good cond., $1650. 838-6988. shape. $300. 640-1$7. '66 T·BIRD sharp clean xlnt '65 OLDS 98. good cond., new appearance & mecb (n4) tires $400. 552--81J5 $700 827-5500 or 963-1435 l965'"°~T=-""s~m°'o~."2"""'dr-."h::a=rd"1op:7.I '65 OLDS 88, n1ust sell $300 All pov>'er equip. Call or best offer. 545-3001 960-1741 PINTO '71 RUNABOUT. Auto trans, 2000 CC. New tires. 31,!XXI miles. Call Jim, 979-4670. VEGA '71 VEGA H atch b11ck, custom upholstery, b i g engine, perfect condition. 847..1650. 940 '68 VW, auto, lo mJ, new valve job. reblt trans, excell cond. $995. 645-l:i69 '11 SUPER Beetle, AM/FM, steel white walls. '$16ttl. NEWPORT I IMPORTS 20' MOTORHOME Roadliner 6y Redman 545-6543 3100 W. Cr>., ... '·l•vy., N.B. '63 V\V Cust. Camper, new 642-9405 eng. wn7,00J_ mi. Must see '69 CHEVROi.ET~~!m-pal~a -must sell $750. 640-1818 Custom 350. power steering, '71 VW Bus. 2000 miles on factory air, tinted glass new eng & clutch. $2250. complete, automatic trans 543-9645 in console, strato Bucket '68 v .w . l\-1allory ignition seats, Vinyl roof. radial life headers. Immac concl., runs saver tires, radio, heater, good Must sell. 494-9937. good condition. Best offer, phone 644-4687. '68 SQ. Back. Must sell. $900 or offer. Good mechanical * 1973 CH~ B 1 a z e r , t.'Ondition. 644-8012 .f.:-whl. dr. 350 w/auto trans, ,:::;::::'="'-"'-";=..~.,,-.,,.cl air, Tacoma whls. w/Gates '11 VW Bus, ~ cond. Fatr· tires. AM/Fl\I stereo, r6\I ly lO\v mtleage. $2()00. bar, rear tire mount. 5000 835-8581. mi. $5350. 673--0360 ·n V\V B;us for sale., Good •n EL CAMINO. 4 spd. cond, fairly low mileage. mags, fm, tape deck, just $1.900/835-8581 reblt, see to a p p re c . 1970 VW Bus, 4,00J mi on 64>5398 reb!t eng. Sunroof, newd .,°'72,..-,V"'E"°G"°Ao--ha=tc""h7ba-c:;:k-, -="·'11 battery. $2100. 644-7442 cond auto trans, white 1lde ;·68-VW-Karmann Ghia wall~ drk green, $2000 $950, aft 6, 675-3625 '"673-4=-..,'73==c-o=:-c:--ccoll '62 vw runs good . good tires 1968 CHEVY lm~a V-8, & engine $300 557-8870 auto, P/S, P/B, air oond., ' new tires. $1000. 968-9661. VOLVO '57 CHEV. Convert. P/S 283, I -----:-"'."."~--I 3 spd. Needs ~vrk. Make of· COME IN for 646-&S6 TODAY '11 IMPALA, p/s, p/b, ail· 2-door custom coupe. Xlnt cond. $2150, 846-8581 '62 CHEVY, runs good $250 TEST DRIVE luxury with economy '73 Fuel injected VOLVOS or best offer/cash. 1684 Whittier Ave, Sp. 25, C.M. CORVmE SHARP '69 Corvette. Blk, 427 4 speeded. loaded, $3000 Firm. 642-4274. lf\A.,I lw illJ!'-"'• COUGAR W YOLVO LEAVING oountry -Must 1966 J-larbor, C.l\-f. 646-930.1 sell! Immac. '70 Cougar Autos, Used 990 ~7 ~~Jso air, loaded, Of· * * * '70 COUG. Conv. Lo mi. Frieda Wiiiiams Blue/v.1ht, P/S, P/B, must 2168 Placentia '0 sell. $1700/offer 645-7569 Costa Mesa ·57 COUGAR XR7, loaded, lo You tu'\! 1hc ,.,,inn<>r o[ ml, SUOO af! 6 PM TWO FREE *84 '""' 10'* TICKETS DODGE 10 the Sl-IIPSTADS & JOHNSON ICE FOLLIES $epL SU> thn> )6th nt the FABULOUS FORUM '68 CHARGER RT mAculate Md loaded extras, $1,600, must 892-M26 or 892-5146 im· with see, '&7 MONACO SlaUim Wgn, all pwr, fac air, r/h disc brks xlnt c:ond. $ 9 5 O • 644-0834, ! 3 Burner r111S1• With oven, Nftlroom1 lur!WIU, 0.0.H. t119. ~ dlessls, V~. •utonwitlc fT1nsm uion, po-stetrlng, dlK br1kft, on wheel, du.I re1r ...neers, el«:tronlc Igni-tion, OROEll: YOURS TOOAYI •s688 $688 Down $74 Mo. s.oea 11 lot1l dn. pymt. $74 Is 10111 mo. pymt. tncJ. 11111, llcens• & 111 c1rryln11 eM~ on llPflr. credll !or 12a months. Delerrea p11yment price $9.589.60 IM:I. 1111; & llcen1e. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 10.99'!!> 28' MOTORHOME Roadliner by Redman Ood9e 440 chassis, V-8, automatic trans· mission, plu1 full factory equi pped. ($20· 3003851 5 7988 20' MINI-MOTORHOME Fling by Rodman 160 cu. in. Oodg1 v.a •n9in•, 1uto. tr11u., 4 burn. •• range, b•tltroom, d1ul r11r wlt11l1, betlery con• vert1r, power sle•ring, pow1r br1ko1. 'F205·2· oa 1 al 55688 $6BB Down $74 a Mo. t6l8 Is 10111 dn, pymt. $14 is 10111 mo. pyml. Iner. tax, llctnso & all c;irrylng cMU'9'5 on appr, crt'drt Iii!" 120 rnGfllfts. Deferred peymtnl prl~ st~.60 Incl. llJt & UcenH. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 10.99% New '73 DODGE All Star Van Conversion v.t, 1utomatlc tr1nsmls1lon, bubble too, U-dlnt:lte, l Durner 11ov1, ri'frlgft'elor, but1n.e, dr1pe1, and loh ol s1Dr1gt! 53788 $388 Down $64 Mo. 1388 11 total down pymt, u~ 11 lot11 mo. Pymt. lrw:I. tax, ll«ttH, 1!1d 111 urrvino ch"'941• Oii 111111"· credll for ·~ mon1h1. Ooeltrrflf 1>4ymt11t price ,, U1M Incl, llll .. lkenw. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE II.ATE ti-SM j j DAILY PILOT ·'73CHARGERS These are all BRAND NEW 1973 CHARGERS. Fully aquipped. • Ser. #'s (WL21 -C3G -242330) (WL21-C3G-242329) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY $78 DOWN $78 A MONTH YOUR CHOICE •2saa $71-tfi tot11' dn. pymt.\171 i1 total mo. pyl'l\f. incl. t1x, lic.tnlt and 1tl °CtrTVi"9 eh1rq11 on 1ppr. credit for oi2 mo1. 01ferred pym( pric1 $315~ incl. f•x & lic1n11. ANNUAL PllCENTAGE RATE 11 .JO•.•. . v.a, auto. trans., mags & tires, radio & heaiter pl us full factory equipment. Used, low mileage. (83026Nl . · ' . 2 D '73 DART HARDJOP Power steering, radio , h.eater, high back seats. Used u low mileage. (221FWC) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY $71 DOWN $71 A MONTH FULL PRICE •2.o·aa $71 i1 fot1l ,dn.,,pyrnf. $71 i• tot•l·mo. pymt, incl. t••, lit•ll•• I •II c•rry;ng ch•r9•1 on •PP'· cr,dit for ]6 mo1. Dtftrrid pymt. price $2775 incl. ••• & lict n1t. ANNUAL Pll· CENTAGE RA.Tl 11.41 1/ii. . •· ' 173 DODGE WAGONS SEDANS ' . . EVERY BRAND NEW 1973 POLARA-MONACO-CORONET WAGON OR SEDAN WILL BE SOLD ·THIS WEEK FQR 'ONL'Y $59 OVER INVOICE. IMMEDIATE DELIVERr ·. YOUR $59 OVER CHOICE INVOIC£ PLUS ADMIRAL PORTABtl 'TV' . With.purch1se of Polara. Monaco . Coronet · Wagon or Sedan ' ' SPORTSMAN 8 ·100 A FULL PRICE IMMEDIATE DEllYER1 SN II "Nl & P'J'ml.sN k t. fll mt..ll:)'ml, -lnct_ hlx.· llanM & ,.. ~,,.,..., ~ ... . ...... ~if ftr "· -°'"""" pymt, Jlliee $#74 Incl. tn a ff. c.M. ANNUAL Pll!•CENTAGI RA TE 11."""- V-8 engine, auto. trans., AM(FM radio, $ 3 6 8 s· power stHri.ng, horn l:Nr, du.I mirrors, . bright bumpers front & rear, 5 wtt..11 1 SxSSO. (B 12AF3VOS848n . FULL PRICE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ECONOMY CAR C·ENTER ONE OF THE LARGEST SELECnONS IN ORAN.~E COUNTY! PINTOS e VEGAS e DATSUNS e DAl!lTS e TOYOTAS • COLTS • MAVERiCKS • VW'S YOUR CHOIC'E $31 Dn.$31 Mo. $l l i1 tot•I down pymt. $]I h tot•I monthly pymt. incl, t•11, 1ic•nte, ind 111 c1rryin9 ch1r9•1 on •ppt. credit for 16 mot. Oef•rred pymt. prico is $1 1-47 iMI. tex & li1;en11. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE ll.51 "·· '70 FORD MAVERICK· Radio, Heeter, fully factory equipped. l 185BQH I . '71 DODGE COLT Radio, heater; chrome wheels l6HllK15105846 1 '71 TOYOTA Coro\11. Radio, h•ater, fully factory equipped l615DBVI ~69 DODGE GT DART Dart. Hardtop, automatic, power ste•ring, vinyl fop. IZW5861 ' '72 PINTO RUNABOUT '70 PLYM. FURY Ill $34DN. $34Mo. Autom1!1 ic, eir cond., R&H, poweer 1!01rin9. [991A\IK ) $]-4 i1 tot•I down pymt. $1-4 i1 totel monthly pym l. incl. $988 '72 DODGE COLT AUTOMATIC TRANSMI SSION, RADIO, HEATER, (#109962 1 $43 DN. $43 MO. $"] i1 tot•l down pymt. $43 i1 tohil monthly pyml. incl. t11•, licen1e, ind all c1rryin9 ch•r9e1 on •ppr. crodit lot ]6 mo1 . Deferred pymt. price ;, $1591 incl. I•• & licenso. ANNUAL PERCENT- AGE RATE 10.JI ,. •. '69 MUST ANG $31 DN. $31 MO. f 111! f1ctory ~uipmenl , 1612EPQl. $]1 i1 lot•I down pymt. $]I 11 tot•I monthly pymt. incl. l•x, licen10, •nd $888 illl c•r1Yin t cher9" on •PP'· credit for 36 mo1. Dof•rred ' Fvll PY"''· pi:i<• i1 $11 47 incl. ta11 & /i1;ea1e, ANNUAL PER-Price Cf:NTAQE RATE 13.51 'Y.. t1x, licon10, 1nd 111 c•rryinq ch1rqo1 on 1ppr. crodit for Fvll 36 mo1. Deferi~d pymt. price i1 $1251 inc!. le• & licen10. • Prke ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 12.50,. •. '68 CHEV. NOVA $31 DN. $31 MO. Autom1ti1; lr1nsmi11ion, radio, healor. ( 1035) $31 it tot1I down pymt. S)I i1 lot•I monthl,. pymt. incl. I••, licen10, $888 end .,tr c1rryin9 ch<1r9e1 on •ppr. credit for 36 mo1, o.. Full !erred pymt. price i1 $1 t-47 in cl. f<JX & licon1e. ANNUAL Prlc.e PERCENTAGE RATE ll,51 '!'.. , 4 SPEED TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER BUCKET SEATS. (4lOEXEI 543·. DN~. ·543 MO. $"] '' tote! Jow11 pymt. $4] i1 fotel monthly pymt, in cl. t••, lic1n1•, •nd •11 c•t.ryin9 ch1rgH on •ppr, credit for l6 mot, Dolerrod pymt, P,!ce it $1 591 Incl. tex & liconw, ANNUAL PERCENT- AGE RATE 10.ll'}:.. -San Clemente Capistrano • VOL 66, NO. 242, 4 SECTION, 60 PAGES • EDITION • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • THURSDAY, AUGUST 30,.1973 Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks " " ' TEN CENTS Educator's. Letter Shocks Environmentalists By JAN WORTH Of tH Dolty 'llot Sl1tf A letter from Dr. Fred H. Bremer, president of Saddleback Community College ln Mission Viejo, urging devel~ ment of coastal areas bas produced a "shocked" if delayed reaction from the pivironmental Coalition. Bremer'a letter to the Citizens Direc- tioo Finding Committee, dated June rl, U11ed "all CX1nctmed officials and agen- cles" to encourage "active development of coastal areas under the term,, of Proposition 20 (the coastal comervatioo irUUaUve)." "It has been called to our attention that the Coastal Qmervatioo Com- mission ls prone to succumb to pressure exerted by Individuals and groups who apparently are 1ttempting to thwart types ol developmenf which can be beneficial ••. " the letter stated. Private Boats Council Bremer cited J.n particular bluffs developments planned between Doheny Beach and Sborecllffs in San Clemente. 11We are very much in favor of the area being developed for this purpose (reoldenees, Including multiple dwell- ings), because-it will oootribute to an in- cteased tax base for the Saddleback Community College District without adversely affecting the environment," Bremer stated. Debates Testimony By Hughes Expecred Club's Presence SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) -Billionaire Howlrd Hughes has agreed to com• out of hldlng long enough to give a deposition In a 111111 which charges be was bilked in the $9 million purclwe of worthless N~a mining claims. ti a telephone affidavit from London. HQahel agreed to testily in a civil damage suit filed against on~ of his former advisera and several busineumen by Hughes Tool Co. ' '"!his document ii btle!lded lo 0011fU;D1 !hit I expect to be avail¥"• lol - such legitimate questions. at such time and under such reasoraable cimmstances as the court m a y berf,altel' detelmine to be necessary to the case/' Hughes said. '!be lffldavit filed Wedn...iay was taken by Lever B. Mylar ol Salt Lake City, who wu described as a friend of Hughes for more than 20 years, ofter the billlonain! took the oath by telepbooe. ffiiihes' lawyers had Mylar appointed a commissioner of deeda for the United ~ in order to administer the oath. ljUlltts said he "cannot conceive of < (See HUGHES, Poge I) < ,_ The presence of the Sao Clemente Boat Club on the public pier in San Clemente stirred strong debate Wednesday at an unofficial session of city councilmen, and the matter promises to become a cause celebre in coming weeks. , 'I1le bulk of councilmed -IOd com- missioners attending a joint study session at the golf course clubbouse ,ap- peared to .,... that the club't excluotve uae of its own facllltlel .., tho l'Ublic pier lllllUld be lborolJFly revi""6 lllCI the faclllty ~ ~ to lbe ·public. '!be clil~. which baa petiisted for decades at the bale of ·tho pier, affords memhero the chance to lllol-t llllall crall and gear In lockeni and to Ilse to use the city-owned hoist at the pier end for 1aunchin1- 1n the days before Dool Harbor, the facility W"I the only fonnal launching area between Newport Beach and Oceanside. But popularity of the lawichir.i there palled aa soon as the blrbor opened. Parks and recreation commlaaiooers. reacting to 1 bid by the club for ,......a1 of a loog .. tanding subleaae by the club - .. Reeall Continues ,'.;; Firm Seeks Decomposed Tuna ·t jASHINGTON (AP) -The Food and Drug Administration said . that the recall from Hawaii and California of nearly 80,000 ..nJ' of tuna, some of it decomposed, has been essentially completed >. from stores and warehouses. But the remainder presumably was pur- 2 chased by consumers. 1 Few if any cans of the Bumble Bee brand chunk light tuna are • ·believed to remain on the market, an FDA sp<ikesman said. -The agency sald It told the processor, Hawallan Tuna Packers of Honolulu, on July 25 that federal tests showed four out of 24 can• ;sampled contained decomposed tuna. ' A recall was initiated Aug. 13 by the distributor, Bumble-Bee 'Seafoods, a division of Castle & Cook, Inc., Astoria, Ore. The recalled ''cans Ire coded 21 WO-L202. . ' . ' • The decomposed tuna is not considered to be a health hazard, the FDA sald, but would be esthetically distasteful '• ·' l'.mtl0nlng In Newport have recommended rejection of the renewal pending a complete.evaluatlon of the situation. And most of the members Wd strongly that they believe tlie club should either be made l!lO{e available to the public or not all.wiod to pOr1jtt 011 the prer. , The entire facllltf and itS role d ID in- (See BOAT, Plge I) Woman .Says She Kil'led Own Father ASHBEBORO. N,C. (UPI) - A murder warrant bas been issued against a young wnman who told police she shot her father and dismembered his body because be had sexually assaulted her since she was 11. The warrant, issued In Phlladelpbia, where the slaying allegedly took place, was expected here today. It charges Camella Megllno Robb)ns, rl, bt the shooting death ol 50-yeaMld Frank Megllno. . Mr1. Robbins told authoritie.s she killed Meglino two years ago as he lay sleeping in their South Phlladelpbia home. She said she and an accunpllce then hacked up the body, hauled the remains to Miami, Fla., ood burled them. Philadelphia police Sgt Larry Grace, who questioned the woman at length Wedne3day, flew to Miami today to 11.ttrk with the Dade County sbertfrs office in trying to locate the remains. Mn. Robbin> walked into the Randolph c.ounty .sheriff's office late Monday and said lhe shot her father si.I times. With the help of a woman she said she knew only as Tami, and who she said was her lather's gtrllrieod, they cut up the body with a hacksaw and botcher knife In tho buement, lllulfed the pieces In gorbage CID8 and rented a trailer to transport the cans to Florida. Publisher Hit .by Subpoena By JOUN ZALLER CH .. DtllW ..... IWI Tile publtsbtr of the Lao Vegas SUn oald Weclnooday in NewfJOl1, Be1ch that .. bu been subpoenaed to festlfy before ihl Senile Walerpte Committee. ~ llanti Greenapun, who clliml an at· fltllDPled bundarY of his ofllca may haV<! ~ tho work ol Watergate COlllplrltors, ~ the subfloena waa served Tuesday at Ille Balboa Bay CUb where he ts vaca- lk*ifltl. -Gr .... pun also di-!hit Io- feittcatoro from the Seoote Committee ipent two afttmoons this week in- terrogating him aboUt Preaident Nixon's -1ectlon campa~-' 'Ibo questJCllliog _...,uy stems from Greenspun'1 claim that a sh:<llgur~ Howard Huabe• contribution to the fl<elident'1 C11Dpelp may be 1lnl<td to liVOl'I H.,.,,.. r..,.;ved from Ille U.S. Juetlce O.partmenl iljowewt Oreenlpun declloed to meal details of the conV<!rsation he had with Terry Lenmer. assistant majority coun- sel of the Watergate committee, and R. Scott ' Armstron(, a committee In·. veotigator. Greenopun's oome wu finl brought Into the Watergate Investigation last •May when James McCon!; 1 convicted Watergote.. coospirltor, te.tilled before tho Se<late CoourJttee that G-Gordon Uddy ~ McCord of plalla·lo bn!ak Into Green,piirl's nlllce In Lu Vegas. , McCord said the bul'glara were lfltl" documents they thought could tie Sen. Edmund MU!kle CO.Maine) to organized crime. Greenspun bis maintained tllere Is dear evidence that 10meone tried ..,..._ _ • coltduily to jimmy bis oewspoper's safe. Gl'ffospun said Wednesday be believes tbe effort m1y blve been the work of W1terga!t butglaro but !bit he cloubll II .... for the purJI* of pthorlnc r. ' • formation linking Muskie lo organized crime. "I did have in my possession a~docu­ menr tying Muskie to apparent wn>og- dolna/' Greenspun said. 11But It tnvolVed Only 1 relaUvely ' unimportant Inmlinl violaU°" foe wbich he paid a ffne. 1 thought the matter was so trivial th1t I never even publiabed ll" However, Greenspun said that since 1'71 be has been asking queation1 of Ni•- on 1dmlnlstration officials about a "large cub cootribuUoo" from Hughes to Nix- on'• C1Dtpai1" !Uod "! hadn't ooonected my jimmied safe to the campalin oootrlbutl_on UDUI this May when : l1eord McCord say that Howlrd Hull>ts' airpl111e waa ltODding by to talte the burgl•rs to ·Central America after they burgllrized my of- fice," Greeaspun said that, since Howard Hughes ,... hlmall ht Central Aloerlce (lee WITNSSS, Piii I ) The Coaltion reply, dated Monday of this week, was signed by Bob Snyder, Lake Forest resident and the Coalition president, and Dale Secord of Costa Mesa, chairman of the project evaluation and planning committee. "Your responsibility as president of Saddleback Community College ls not that of lobbying for increased develop- ment along the coast," the reply stated. "You have the responsibility of pro- BC.iFtfl · Getawat1 viding quality educational opportunities for citizens .: the community. This is not dooe by enCQuraging rampant develop- ment , but by hiring quality staff, establishing sound educational policies and an effective administration." 'Mte Coalition letter added rapid development can seriously affect the qual- ity of education, citing the overcrowded Capistrano Unified School District as an example. PhQto'grapl!Jlr Art Sales makes ·a quick retreat from a burning blaze, ·purposely set in .;in· abandoned house · on the Emory University cam- pus in Atlanta. The .fire got out or control during a training exercise for roolqe firemen. Nixons to Depart Coast For Capital Late Friday President Ni.Ion plans to end his work· ing vacation in Safi Clemente late Friday with.a flight to the nation's capital and a quick hop to his retreat at Camp David, Md., for the Labor Day weekend !'rm aides have not yet announced the exact departure time for Nixon, his wife, Pat, and daughter Patricia Cox, but they did say that the trip would be late In tbe day. ·Initially, ·the President had planned to stay three wetks at La Casa Pacifica and spend the holiday weekend in San Clemente. Press spokesmen gave no specific reasons for the cutting short of the visit to !be .South Coast, but dld say that the Pr•sident preferred to spend the holiday_ Summer Session Attendance Up 'I1le avttaga dally attendance for the summer __ oessloo at Saddleback Collece jumped 39 percent over the 1972 summer session, according college Dean of Admissions Howarit Marcou. Some 1,54-0 students registered for summer cl1SM:S and took an average class load of 4.116 units. Reilstration (or the fall quarter at Saddlcback Colltge· will be cmducted Sept. 11-13. Furtli<r ln!OrrnaUon may be obtalood by cal!lng 831-"7GO or 411"4950, Marcou said. •• • with his entire fa:mny. His daughter Juli~ Nixon Eisenhower is in Washington, D.C., awaiting her f~'s arrival. Other than a press conference early in the stay the President has made no of· ficial public appearances during the vlsit. The President has remained secluded at his estate and office compound, emerging only for walks on the beach and private drives which have not been announced ahead of lime. Deputy Press Secretary Gerald Warren said the President bas not gone out to dinner during the visit, but instead has dined at l;lome. Unlike his previous vi sit, which tasted tllrough the Independence Day Holiday, the mood ' this time is far from festive at the Presidential compound. Two major events occurred this trip. The Watergate-dominated press con- fererice was followed by the release of a complete audit on lhe entire financial ar· rangemeots surrounding the purcllaae ol La casa Pacilica and the President's Key Biscayne property. Crop Duster Killed BAKERSFIELD (AP) -A crop duster on a training flight was killed Wednesday when his plane cartwheeled and crashed In a cotton fleld here today. police said. Courtney Edens, 21, Bakersfltld, was ejected when a wheel of his crop duster opparently caught on a brand> of a cot- ton plant as be ·cruised the fi•ld at nea>- ground level, olficen added. "The resultant impact of your sug- gestion callDOl possibly serve the beSt in- terest of the community," the letter con- cluded. "Overconcem for the tax base for your district only indicates a single- minded approach to educational ad- rr.inistration. •• Copies of the letter were sent to all Saddleback College trustees, the Orange County Grand Jury, the Cojstal Com· mission, and the state chancellor of com- munity coUeges. City Starts Loop Link Campaign By JOHN VAL TERZA ot ni. c.i1Y ,, .. ,..., San Clemente City Counci lmen members and t h e i r oommlssioners launched a campaign Wednesday to con- vince the Orange County Transit District tbat a local bus route would be -and m_.ied by eorly next year. And the pwJh by the city ollictsls dlow a fa~ll>le respoqse fnlm ~ for the district, whi> early today laid that if tho diatrict board is coovinced of the local need, ouch a llel'Yice oould be latmehad before next summer. and~ ~~of::. ir:: miS9lonx agreed to launch a ltrong cam- paign to sell the oooeepl to local residents as well as to the dl!trict. A route, lormlog a loop tllrough Sao Clemente, has already been researched and plotted, and it could link up with other routes serving other portions of the South Coast. And Tom Albert, an administrative assistant for the transit district, said that the Sao Clemente proposals are ''mo61 compatible" with planning and goals which his agency is un1ertaking. He said the biggest hangups at present are the delivery date of tmre than 60 buses on order from a major manufac- turer, as well as tbe favorable nod from the district board. "What we have planned and what we detailed Tuesday to officials in a meeting in the South County Is a route strolcblng !rum Santa Ana to the South Coast com-- mwtities. nte San Clemente loop could fit in very well/' Albert said. The tone of Wednesday's session, however, was not one of. tota.l un- derstanding of the current plans by the district. Commissioners beard predlcUoru that no service wou1d come to San Clemente in any form until 1976 -and that would only be a straight link to the central county area. . Rising to that prediction , the delegates at the session agreed that a pilot pro- gram -even possibly at city expense - might first be needed. Fonnal actions on the bus route pro- posat will come when the council meets in regular session Sepl. 5 and Is expected to approach the issue on several fruits. The officials agreed that public bt- (See BUS, Pqe I) Orpge Weather A fairly nice day is ln store for Orange Coast residents and visitors Friday~speci.ally after the morn- ing clouds clear olf. lligbs in the 70s at tbe beacltes rising to near BO inland. INSIDE TODA 'Y If yoti've got a spedcl fntere1t in a highwa11 project, i t 100uldn't be improptr to inoite tM entire Ca liforna HighU10y Commission out to di'nntr -such aa Che lr· nine Compau~ did n ctnUJI. Storu Page 18. L,M. .. .,.. tS A1111 1.H9trt H ... ,,"' ,..,, """* l+D ta11fw1111 J ~ ,,.... '' Cll.iftlll ,._... MttitMt Mtwl t C-kJ ,, °""'" (""" ..-u CrM-• ~ '-" »a Ollftl Httlc" t•tl .... _,.... ... .......... ...... ' ,........ " • ..... -' .,, TlllletWI ...,, lllMMll )t.a ...,._. • ,., ftM •KW 11.1.. .....,.,, ..... tt<U ~ ti '#WM,... 4 •• 1-tnk• lt ' ' .it ..... 1., 1 f'ILU 1 President Resists Judge's Request for--Seeret Tapes - \VAS111NGTON (AP) -President Nix· on bas vowed to resist an historic court order commanding him to deliver secret Watergate tape recordings for a judge's SIRICA DECISION AFFIRMS JUDICIAL PREROGATIVE, Poge 4 private Inspection . au.r U.S. Dl!trlct JUdge John J, Slrica .. ordered Nixon ThuMday to produce the tapes demanded by special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox, but tem- pararily withheld the effect to allow time for an appeal. Nixon refused to obey tbe order. The While House, in a statement from San Clemente, B!Ud without elaboration that the President's lawyers "are now con- sidering the possibility of obtaining ap- pellate rev iew or how otherwise to sus- taln the President's postUon." The order and a companion 23-page opinion fueled the Presldent1s clash with the court• and the Senate Watergate commlttee over access to the tapes ot his conversations with key advisers im- plicated in the Waterrate acandal. The dispute has been carried fW1ber than any similar confrontation over presidential power in U.S. history. On a key point, Siric a squarely dl!puted Nixon and ruled that it ii not the prealdent but lhe court wblcb has ultimate aulhorlty to determine whether material IOUgbt In a criminal investigation is protected by ex- ecutive privilege. Nixon has claimed that a president's confidential record!I are privileged Crom dislosure. The existence of the tapes became known last month when a fofrner White House aide told the Senate commlttee. that Nixon routinely recorded bis Ova\ Office conversalionl. cox, acting on behalf of the Watergate grand jury, lhen subpoenaed topea or eight meetings and one telephone call between Nixon and hit adviler1 at the C:Ompany Project Central Irvine Village • Zone Plan Gets Airing By GEORGE LEIDAL Of fM DtlfY Pli.t ,,.., A new "village" with a population twice that of Laguna Beach is expected to be a reality withln the city of Irvine by 1982. Irvine citizens next week will be first to see Irvine C.otnpany plans for the largest single vil1age development yet Martha Intends To Stay With Husband John By HELEN THOMAS W ,,.. 1111• NtllMI Martita Mllchell denies reports she will Jeave lbe foriner attorney general, saying she Intends to slick with bJm "to the bitter end." .. Published reports quoted friends as saying abe intended to leave former At· tomey General John N. Mitchell soon. •t'l'bat'• a damned lie," Mrs. Mitchell said Wednesday In a telephone caD from her· New York apartment to this reporter, wllo Is with the Presldenllal preaa corps 1Jaylng In Laguna Beach. , "I'm ataylng to the bitter end." Sbe aa1d the separation rumor was "like all the other atorles about me." Under the clrcumstances, she said, "I'm holding up" and "John Is gelling along." lo a similar call last week, Mrs. Mitchell saJd her husband was no longer speaking to her because of the strains on their marriage by the Watergate and related acandals, and that !he had talked with a lawyer, but never thought of leav- ing Mitchell. She said they sun love each other very much and she feels she must 11hold up unW John ii convicted, dl!barred or cleared." Mitchell is due to go on trial in New York Sept. 11 OD charges o! perjury and obstruction of justice In connection with a $200,000 cash contribution to President Nlxon•a reelection campaign by flnancler Robert Vesco. Mrs . Mllchell, lnlonned that U.S. District Judge John Sirica had ordered President Nixon to produce the tapes and documents of conversations relating to Wateraate, she said: "That's great, ex- cept they will be altered. There's something screwy about this.'' Mra. Mltcbell has displayed Jncreaalng bitterness against the President over the Watergate affair and what It has done to her marriage. l OIAM•I COAST IC DAILY PILOT 'nle Ol'anot Cot1t DAILY ,ILOT, wllJI Wlll(lll i. cprnbm.d !fl.II N ....... Prftl., It PYblitl\M by 'fl-:Ol'Mif9 CO.tt P\lllll1hlllt Cem ... nr. ,.,,. ,... 11111111nt ... Pllllll•!!td, Morlll•r flll'Oullh Fr~r. ,., c .. 1, M ... , Nft'llOrl Bffdl, HWlll"'lllorl 81=11'1 V•ll1y, LIOWI• a-th, INIM / .,_. lln Clemlfl!f/ 5an J!,19ft C.plt""-. 4 1111;19 r19hlnll •fflotl It "*'"""' '4!111N1r1 .nci Svr\d1n, TN prlnci,.1· Mllftllfll t19111 I• 11 DI Wfll '11r l1"'9t, C.I• M-, tllllomi., '216:111. _,i,.,t N. W1.4 ''"'""' ... ,ubll"* J 1•k k. C11rlty \lk:f ,.,..IR'lt ..... 0...1 ,.,.....,. n'"''' ic..n1 .. ,,.. llio11111 A. Mwpliii"' M ..... lnt Eltllllr Cht rlM H. LMt l ldttr-4 P. Nill ~111 MIMOllll t!1111itn ._ Cl1•11a OMM JOI Neriti ff C1rr1h11 l•1I, 91671 o;i.. ....... C:..11 MeM; m w-:.::.r I'""' =htdlt JmH ~ *n1 "" IMdli 11'~1 •9ldl ltulw4r41 """"" a.di! "' ,tl'tl1 """"" Tt1.,e1a1 C714J •4J-4JJI C~ A4Nttl t..v Hl•J67t S.. C......_ AU 0.,..r•Wal , T1t1,t 111 492 ... 420 c.PllM. 1t1J. °''• ." ,i*lltllfl'lt ~. fllt ..... 1Mri., IN11ttrtlfont., ..,..,... --.,. lll~trtl......,rri ,...,.. .!!.'!!r..._ ... ,. ...... -"'*" ...,., .. -., ..,..,. """"· --dN ,..... "" fl C..lt MeM, .....,.... ., _,,_. .... CC:' llf' "'911 l.l.11 lnllllflll'I llllllflrt _ _._ .... .......,.,, • contemplated for the new city. It is the Village of Woodbridge, a plan- ned community for 27,000 people on 1,715 acres In central Irvine. Community association representatives will view the acres at 7:30 p.m. Wedneoday In Rancho San Joaquin Intermediate S c ho o 1 , Unlverslty Park. Later In September, the plan• will be officially flied with the dty. The vlllalie, ll approved by the dty, will occupy land presently part of the San Diego Creek Flood Plain u delcrlbed by the u.s. Anny Corps or Engineers. That is most of central Irvine. Some features of the village plan were discussed by Douglas M. Gfeller, director of project adm1nlstratlon for the Irvine Company, In a company announcement of tho zoning pre!elllation, Gfeller aald the village will be a recreo-ented """" munlty, Tbe plan fealurel a mull~ purpo,. actlvlty corridor l'llllllin( parallel to the San Diego Creek chl!ftl. Two man-made lalcel totaling 70 ocret in size will parallel CUiver Drtve and Jtf. Irey Road In lhe cenler ol the vlllaie which 11 also bounded by tho Sin Diep Freeway OlJ the IOttt& and Moulton Parkway OD the north. The lakes are Part or the total Oood control program propooed by the Imne Company for the village. Other features or the Oood protectJoo plan Include: -Widening and rtiocaUng the San Diego Creek bed creating a :I08 foot wide graas channel to replace the preoent 40- loot creek bed. -Preservation or the lreet presenily lining the creek. -Development ol an envln>nmentol corridor segment (a controvl!l'l!al land U.9e suggestion of the compeny11 overall general plan !or the 5.'1,000 acre dty ol 430,000). The eegmenl would parallel the creek between Alton Avenue and Bar- ranca Road. -Earth berms woold be placed along Alton and Barranca to contain flood nows in the "activity corridor". -C.ommercial facilities -the prop- erties to which the Irvine Company usually retains tttle when a vWage Is completed -"will be built on ralaed pad!." East Smothered By Heat Wave;. Smog Terrible :By The Associated Press Hot and hum.id weather smothered the East coast and much ol tl1a MklW!ll again today u utllitiea strualed to cope with Increasing demand !or-electrldty. For the third straight day, the New York Stale Power Pool ordered a I ,,...._ Ci!nl cut In voltage. A spokesman aald the state1s power Syatem wu atr•lned to capaclly by huge demand&, primarily to operate air cOndl tloners. The N•lional Weather Service aald there was no relief frOm the heat In alght until next Tuesday. But 1 power pool spokesman said lndustrtal clotlnp over the holiday weekend would ease demands for electricity. Some 200,lllljl New Yorkm were !ell without power Wednesdoy night a!Jer several feeder cablca burned oul The blackout aflecled an area or Queen& ln- c11"11ng LaGtwdla Airport, w b e r e passtnger terminals were darkened 1"11 emergency power kept runwa)'I llJhtecl. Tbe blackout luted nearly 15 houri before power wu res.-to Ille aru this mornlDg.. The Tennes.oee Valley Author 11 y reported it w~ relaying to New York: power gcneraled by prlvale utilities In Tex.,· and the Sootheaat. Temperatures rea ched 95 Wednesdoy In New York Cily, JM In Chicago and 98 In Wublnglol\. Tbe National Weather Service warned that air pollullon In the capital metropollian area wu at 1-.1 levels. A General Moton plant In Linden, N.J. bid JO abut down whan ooma of the 1,7!0 workers Ihm walked oU their job& because .or the 11 ... 1Jertq heal time, John W. Dean m, H.R. Hlldeman and John D. Ehrllchman. The committee also filed suit to compel dlaclosure after its own subpoena wa• re- jected by the White House, as Cox's had be.n. Cox and the committee say the tapes are vital to reaolve contradictions In the testimony of Dean, H a 1 de m a n , Ebrllchrnan and others allegedly Involved Jn the Watergate ooverup. Cox sa.Jd he wa s "very pleased" with Sirica's ruling. Watergate committee chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr. (0-N.C.), called it "a great victory for the search for truth." Slrica recognized the President's need ror confidentiality In the rormallon or public policy but diaagreed wllb Nixon's clalm "thal' It Ja the executive that finally determines whether ill privilege ii properly invoked." lie 1Jated : "For the court!: to abdicate this role to presidents or anyone elle, to make each olftcer lhe judge ol his own privilege, would dbbonor the genius of our consti- tutional system and breed unbearable abuse." ' Sirica added that he was not suggesting Nl:ron "could not be trusted ,as his own Judie in matters of privilege," but said he could not set a precedent "that might permit or encourage some future high executive officer to become a despot.'' Describing his judgment as ,Ill attempt "to waJk: the middle ground," Sirtca said it would be "an inexcusable course ol. con- duct" to order Nixon to produce the tapes !or a run grand Jury Inspection. The judge settled on the compromise ol demanding the tapes for his inspection in chambers to detennine which material, ll any, obouid be turned ctrer to the ll'lltd jurv. ·;rit 11 true," be aid, ''thlt U material prod"""4 la properly tbe subject or prlvtlege, even an Inspection In chambent may constitute a compromlae o f privilege. Nevertheleu, It would be an exln!mely Untiled lnlracUon and In this case an WJavotdable one. 11 He elaborated : "U privileged and un- privileged evidence are lntenninlled, privileged portiona may be ezclaeCI ao that only unprivileged matter 1oeo befe>tt the grand jury wblch also meela In aecret proceed.1np.'' And ll the two ca~ ""' oo ln-terwlned "that aepanilon ~ lm- poatble, the whole mUll be prl'11epd and no dlscktlure made to the srlDd jury.'' Bombs ExpWde lnsi.de Stores In Birmingham LONDON (UPI) - A fire bomb ex- ploded In a Birmingham dty center atore today and, minutes Utter. two ltllall In- cendiary devtcea ""'' oU In two nelli>y ttores, police Aid. In London, Scotland Yard c:mled out dawn raida all over tho dty In the aean:h !or bomben. Blnnln(ham'• aaslstant cble! con- ttable, Maurice Buck, ta.Id 1 man went Into a oboe store and placed a parctl by the door. An .-nt became IUIJ>ldous when be NW a clock inllda. The lllff Oed the building before the fire bomb exploded. The other two Incendiary devices about the size of a cigarette pack were placed in a bookJhop and a greetlnl card abop. About 30 firemen , some wearing breathing apparatus, fought the oboe 1bop bl ... , tbe WOl'll of the three fire&. In London, l!O det«Uvea from Scolland Yan!'• bomb and Oylng oquads, special branch and regional crime oquad searched premise! and interviewed persons suspected of cmnectlon with 36 bombs in London alone. Bomb oquad and opeclal branch del<c- tlves also went to Blnnlngham to help local police investigate two bombs which exploded Wednesday night in the city 's Solihull dbtrk:t. From P .. e 1 BUS • • • formation and 118111Pllnll ol I o c a I residents' opinion are lmportonl The council a!IO piana to eeek a strong dty stall sludy ol the transit aystem serving the clly ol Laguna Beach where the operaUon Is aoparate rrom the county transit district. In that clly, San Clemtnte ·official! will find dlli: !or a dty to go It alone It re- quires strong doses of federal and state grant !undo plua aettptance tA an- Udpated 1MuaJ dellclll. The La'""" Beach l)'llem. touted u highly success!ul, -1't11!1Ched with slate and federal !unda before the county distr!ct waa born and tho JP'&nla now tolal DMrly '200,000 !or tbe Plll'CN .. ol buses and operating ··-· The roule, "111ch ..,.... city reoldenla and llnb with the Saddleback Valley, runs Into the red by about 11,000 an- nually, ........ aald. Tralll .. ParkJnc Qmlmflalon Cbalnnln WIWam Waddell, a •tronc champion ol the locaj route, llrwed lllat the publlc mUll be Wormed about Ibo plw to try lilt loceJ route. "We beve to pt the word out to them and .,. II they can let ua know eucU7 how lmporWlt they thlnlt lb1' l)'llem -Id be," he aald. < U,I TtMif'fMlt Trapped Suh Duo Await Sea Rescue .... CORK, Ireland (UP) -A team tA divers anned with ''the rn o ~ t .. sophlsticated equipment ln the worl~'' raced to sea today to try to rescue t~ 111en trapped with a dwindling air supply ln a disabled mlnl·submarlne oo the sea lloor 1,175 feet beneath the surface. , The lrapped crewmen, Roger Mallinson , 34, and Roger Chapman, ~. radioed that ''we're okay and that our morale is fantasUc." The miniature submarine Pisces III was damaged and sank during a c.able- laying operaUon Wednesday. Th e crewmen have enough air to last witll Saturday morning, and perbpas longer. "We have the most sophisticated eqUipment in the world, the experience and the know-how, and we are golng to get -two men up," said Robert Starr, head of \SlX·man canadlan diving team which will make the rescue at- ' tempt. , Starr and five Canadian divers flew In- to Cork today along with Pisces V, a newer and more highly developed mod.el or the submarine on the sea bed. MINl·SUB PISCES Ill BEFO.RE ILL-FATED VOYAGE Frantic Efforts Under Way to Rescue Two-man Crew The white , U~loot-long Pisces V waa joined by an orange sister vessel nownJn from SCOtland. A giant crane hoisted both aboard the Vickers Voyager, the 4,&00-\,0n "mother" ship of the sunken sub~. It set off for the accident scene - about 150 miles southwest ot Cork and some 94 miles from the nearest point -of Ireland -several hours later than plan- ned . From Page 1 WITNESS ... at the time the burglary was supposed lo have taken place, he immediately suspected that there might be a con- nectloo between the campaign con· tribution and Justice Department favors for Hughes. Greenspun said his suspicion was further aroused when Jeb Stuart Magruder, deputy director of the Com- mittee to Re-elect the President, later told the Senate Committee that Atto rn ey General John Mitchell had personally ap- proved surveillance work on Greenspun's office. Greenspun is acknowledged to possess an extensive collection of handwritten meDlOI from Howard Hughes to his varioul 1Ubotd1nates. However, the puhllsher flatly refused lo aay whether these memos proved bls suspicions about posalble J'usllce Depart- ment favora for Hughes resulting from campaign contributions. "'lbere are leadt ea this mauer ·and they are being followed up," was all G"""'""'"' would say. He remained noncommittal about whether he will lay out bis collection for the Watergate COmmittee when he ls called to Jesllfy. "These are newspaper documents and I have a right to lt:tep them con- fidential,'' Green.spun said. Samuel Dash, chief counsel for the Watergate Committee, said Wednesda y in Washington that he doe! not expect to clash wtlh Greenspun over the memos because It is "not tbe committee's prac· tice to subpoena newspapers' source material." The committee is scheduled t o reconvene nezt month. Greenspun's sub- poena, signed by committee Chainnan Sam Ervin Jr., does not specify a date for Greenspun'1 appearance. Contractor Convicted LOS ANGELES (AP ) - A Q>mpton contractor wu convlcted of gross negli- gence Wednesday 1n connection with an explosion and fire 1n a aewer Pipeline that kllled three workers in February, 1972. Roscoe R. Walker was found guilty of three counta of grog negligence and five of violating the state industrial safety code. 2;1LANO W.t.lfS .. U,I N9Wl!Mt TRAPPED -Newsmap shows locatio n of mlni·submarine carrying two Britons 1,375 feet beneath the surface while lay- ing a transatlantic cable. From Pagel BOAT • • • tri91te one. . ,, Tl)e ,p!fr, 115ell, is city Pl'\'perlY oc- cupyiJ\g stile-regulated U4~1alitls. The clubhiiuse · ind locke( ·area, however, ate the pioperty ' of the club, itself. Councilmen and commissioners agreed that In onler legally to chan.&e the sla1U5 of the club, some purchase of private structures could be made. · Parks Commissioner Donna Wilkinson chastised the policy of the club eic1Ud1ng members of the pubUc wishing to use the picturesque nautical clubhouse. "I think local groups would be delighted Jo use the clubhouse lor meetings and dinners, but they can't right now. because they would be ex· eluded ii they trled .'' she said. A dissenter, however. ls fellow com· missioner Bill Greenwall , who stres.sed that under present rules anyone can use the launching facilities, provided he is willing to undergo the problems of ac· cess. The cumbersome procedure for a would-be boat launcher amounts to find. ing a parking place in the pier-bowl area for car and trailer. After that he would have to detach hl.s boat and trailer and manually wheel it through the lifeguard accea late, across the rallrood tracks, along the beach !ronJ- age road and out to the end or the pier. Then the boater would have to operate a delicate crane and drop his vessel over the side and lower it to the water. But Capt. Leonanl Edwards, !be Voyager's skipper, said he expected ~lo reach the scene about mldnJght and U.,t rescue work would begin immediately.· ''To put it bluntly, we'll send one of the submarines down to put a rope around the stricken sub, and then we'll yank .1t up," Edwards said. • A gale was blowing in the rescue aria today, and Starr said "Jt won't mak~_lt (the rescue) any eagier." .. Edwards said surface vessels were tn touch with the trapped men every hl1f- hour. He said he told the two not to tilk to each other to conserve their air sup- ply. to lie down and take plenty or fresh fruit and coffee. In a similar accident this Jtme, Al stover, 51, of Juno Beach, Fla., and Clayton Link, 31, ol Binghamton, N.Y .. died or exposure In another mlnlatunl sub trapped on the ocean floor. The research submarine was freed and recovered later. · '\.rot11 Pfffe 1 HUGHES •.. • I any manner In which my te1Umony miaht be of use" 1n lhe suit, wblch ac- """"' ronner Hughes employe John ·R. Meier and nine de!endanll of oooaplrinf to aell the tool company mlnlng clalms for prices "far in excess of the vaJue of the property, .. Hughes Tool Co., wblch has changed Ila name to Summa Corp. since the au.It wu filed, paid more than 19 mJlllon far the clatma while Meler was the finn 'a Iden· tlflc adviser between 1967 and 11181, Other defendants Include Toledo Mining Co. of Salt Lake City and It• president, Anthooy Halls; Globe, Inc.: John D. Suckling; Charles W. Adams; E,B, Walswn ; h-1alaga Investments Inc.; lnrespro, Ltd. and M a a ts c h a pp i Intermovle. Meanwblle, the London Dally Express said today Hughes was "smuggled Into the London Clinic" for an operation on his hip when a surgeon refused to oper- ate In Hughe1' hotel hideaway. The newspaper's gossip column, writ- ten under the pseudonym or~-n Hickey, said Hushes brol<o~l bone ln his hip and sent two ald'es to pen\lide an eminent sura:eon to perform Cor- rective surgery in the ninth · noor hotel suite where Hughes, with charactertatlc . secrecy, has been secluded !or months. • LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE ••• RAISED ELSEWHERE Adn1lrol NO· DEFROSTING Adn1lra1. RIPRIGERATOR/FREE%ER ALL THESE GREAT _ _,,.1,FEATUR,ES • Fuu Width "Sookc .. " ''""' Door ShtU -for ln1t1nt I Vllltbillty. • Ou1I T1m~tlhHI Contrors- Mlect Ult rlaht ttmp1ratur1 for 111Ch sKtlon, 1 Twin Pol'Wtln Ct!1pttS-kMJ>1 fruit, we:et1bltt 11nien fmh. • Em. Urp Rtfrl11r1tor Door SlltlWl-holdl Mn t.U quirt botltMI , MHef NT 1J J4 - No drfrottl"9 Nftijttt,.r 11df1t1t with Arr.tit Al~ fl"I' ..,..+9llt fw flill 1ycl1 clrc11l1tio11. SLIMLINE REFRIGERATOR II ... C1111 • 'un Width ,,._ a.t t -WW..-:.,.. ltfnPl'litYN C::.W , $2 5 99 5 • Jttd ViMlll Defrmt-Omlr kMAallDr t/i:i7;fy : ~-==-"'.::.. Chlll1r Ql'"IW'lf . 159'5 m . 'Moniffr tf u Califwnla'a Lar111t CASH m. c_.att .. 1vy1n, Group With Tht WITH Al'l'llO'ID Volume luyln1 ;;CHllT • , --l't-tf 110 Storti -~ "., ·-~ --- · 90 DAY 1815 NEwPoRT BLVD. Dawntewn Costa Mesa -PllOne 548-7781 • \ AMBLER I TUM!IU!WEEDS YOU MCAN VOU'll.E 11\KJN!; A VACA1lON ~y STANDING' ON VO!lR HliAP ?! Mun & JEFF j t-JA~ICY ' WHAT'S A SIX-LETTER ltSJRD FOR l STUPID'? eoow~'llllSCR...­ w1TH TH! CA~~ DI!~ I YMNN'A TALI' TO A/lllllSR,OKAVr ~ ... , ........ _ I HAVE IT PEANUTS by Doug Wildey by Tom K. Ryan by Al Smith WELL,IUBEA BLANKE1'Yl!LANK el.ANIC &LANK! by Dale Hale by Emie Bushmlller A SIX !..ETTER WORD FOR •sTUP/P • JS "--~ •sLUGGO' DOOLEY'S Y(ORLD JUMP oHal· JUMP'IWIGll· JUMP SOM• MORI Ho SALLY BANANAS .. a~·M lPo/<•l'l' FeR aVall1NcHeM•111 I TMI& TolJN •IN'T BIG eNolJGU FeR TMe &dTH oF U 5o ! GO~tDO MOON MUL! INS by Charles M. Schulz .-~~~~~~--. T~DAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE Gentlemen, Ycu did not show up.-Were you not feeling well ? ,.,CFIOSS 62 Small m.a fi4 S~wom 1 Slrlk• wlll 1 fi5 Ff~r•nc• whip ,, 01tlt•hllfed I point out P•oPll e tlcoUlal'I riYer 70 Ravra 1ot11 14 )1 e.oon 11 71 Coollney·1 1se;r1c11 .,.,,. .... 72 M1ctt loen& 18 elOdr8"11llC 73 S~lywtlh 17 Ji11to mec'*11o Nedi 19 tllllth 74 ln·bllWlef'I 20 tm•rlcan: ""'''' omo. lotnt 75 Tumlng poltlte 21 1i.111b1la 23 ~tllld'• DOWN l1ytl'llng1 24 ·~ bOyl I C9!l9d1'1 27 r iv upw1rd hlQM•t 2i gu\O Plrt moill'lllln 31 11ncl'le1 2 "Whal I• In - f:OUQ~ _,. 35 whole of 3 Adult 37 T1wned IC fl-~ 39 'rlnclple of 4 f ul'llral i!,gllt r.orO.ict vehlcl1 •O lmlk91',lor 15 Pronoun ,,.. e Shut In 42 t•mlnll'lllWM 7 Geotral- .... tltnlll Pt*~• Br1dl1y 45 .ltd I Ound I Ferme11tad 471•bleclolhl. bev•r•Q•a ~" 9 Hlgn c•rd "9 brew ltlhlf to O•nces 50 HIU!t 11, Ouartetle I ... 52 111etude .... &4 '>-end IC*' 12 Atone In Cl•H 66 ~rtluQ 13 Phe••et'lt 69 onolM'• brooda 18 Oper•tlne 1 • Ye•terd1y'1 Puule Sot~: ~.~ • .,,,~,~ [ p 21 S•ed Ylllll 25 Cltae•e 26 FIO'#ll pll't 28 100 IQUll'• tn11er1 30 BrlOge players' wotd 32 Al!Plda l••lure: 2 'A'Orda 33 Ship 01 1.,u~2 34 Flat·bottom.d bo1t 35 Ntcll C'*"•'t '" 36 E1111bll1Md rul•• 38 Flr1t 8!shop of P1r!1 "1 P11ro1eum lndll1lrt on1c1a1 43 For ltar thll • I U H E H N "8 Sllnt 48 Hospllal llllOIOyM .a l IMOlt>nl tallr.: ..... M SUbtlde 11rldu11ty a5 f JIPIOttf: John 57 Actreaa_ V•rduQo SS Aec>Otea 511 Hardwtrt """ eo seed .......... 11 Ro•tarot -· a3 R~hlly 66 Skill &8 All 50: Abbr, .... 811 N.H.,YI., Cor11., •t II JUDGE PARKER J;Jlllll!ll9lll&llil!llE~(,;vou:xi"&;suiiRiEE>KNO<NOwwl Mff.. DRIVER. IT'6 SURE IT'l5 5LAOE ft09!Rr6 AND HOW TO HURT A A P\.EASUR! TO H'f:'S HE"-E TO SEE YOU! GUY, GLORIA! NOT M.EET Y9U, 61ft! Pl.e'A6E ... GET Ml& AUTO· ONCE OtP y0U GRAPH FO" ME! MR. ASK FOR MISS PEACH -n.'T!llRI> OMI. IS· -llGA RUN ~Oil IT. MINE! 'MlfMA1'MIO•.? LIKI HQW? • I I e by Harold Le Doux by Mell r by Charles Barsotti by Gus Arriola by Ferd Joh "san ·==---- by Roger llalell ,.....,..--...-----, . . . .. . . . . . THE GIRLS "Oii, I never ro uywben -I jost love beartq - dllllal places." ' DENNl!i THE MENACE ·~;,- 1 • I :J-1 DAI LY PILOT SC Thul1day Augu$l .30, 1'11 .. Gas Prlees Retailers Asking I THE PICK OF Punch I 13~ ® Controls Block .lj; WASHING TON ! AP) -The pvent"Dait today exttnded tlN!: rel.&U prtce freeze oa 1• oltDe for u additional week lo give gasoline rttalltn more time io port new i:uoliae price ceUlng1. WASHINGTON (UPI) -A group of gasoline retailers has made an emergency appeal to Chief Justice Warren E. Burger to block the Imposition or price controls on 165,000 VW Recall Of Ghia s Ordered WASHINGTON (AP) Volkswagen of America has agreed to recall an estimated 112,000 of its Karmann Ghias to correct possible gasoline or gasoline vapor leaks into the passenger compartment. VOLKSWAGEN promised the National H i g b w a y Transportation Safety Administratior.. to initiate the re<:a.11 to head off any fire hazard to occupants of the cars. 1be recall involves all Karmann Ghias manufactured from August 1967, through April 1972. In letters to go out to Kannann &hia owners Friday, Volkswagen warns: "Until the (repair) work is completed do not use any open flame or cigarette lighter inside the car under any circumstances." 'Ille safet)' admiflistration investigated the problem after one of the cars burst into flames in Ba1tim0re about the same time an owner wrote to the agency complaining of gasoline fumes. THE AUTO CLUB o f So u t b e r n California subse- quenUy interviewed 83 KarmaM Ghia owners in its area and found 40 percent complained of an occasional ftiel odor in their cars. Volkswagen followed up with its own survey of 240 cars and found evidence of some mrt of leakage in 22 percent. Area Firms Get Bids Congr essman Andrew Hinshaw has announced oon- tracls tolallng i.t,359,1189 by Orange County firms by federal agencies. Parker-Hannifin of Irvine has been awarded $3,789,089 for the development and analysis or the fire protection system for C.5 aircraft by the U.S. Air Force. Total value of the contract amounts to Sl~.2 million, with $8.4 million previously awarded. General Automation, o f Anaheim , bas received a $570,000 c o n t r a c t .for automatic data processing computer systems by the General Services Administration. THE IMAGINARY INSOMNIAC by tnlY •U.NT, l .ft Researchers are puttJn.g t.oelher sleep data lhal l"' dispelling old noUons and ht:lping ctocto..,_ to guide pa- tient.a \\ith 11lecp dlftlcut.u~. Studies ot sh.>epln« 1ub,Jt'Cls and analysis of their brain ~'ave pattern$ show that there att CT&Y perlods . or many &hades betv.•een beu'lg ruily awa.e and deeply asleep. The imaginary Insomniac rar instance. arlacs In tM momlng with lhe sensation or not having alept tt all and ts very tlml. Now, It la pot-- 11ble for the ph}'Siclan to '"°"' this im.11.gtnsry fnsom· nJac that ht spent a night ~1nctun.ttd b)· fl't'Quent oer- IOlh ot 1l1d"lt •lctP on the bor- d<r ot wakl,,.. ' YOU OR vovn DOCTOR (".AN rT10NE US whr:n you nl"Ml a dl'liw.ry. W t v.111 dt>· Uvt.r omm.,11v wttht'Yt1t ~ rtuu1tf'. A .,.fi.t mllny f)('Of\]I' M v nn 11<1 frrr thf'lr hftt\Jth ~ Wr UTlmrne reout"tt• fr)t detlV'"f')' "" r v I ( e and f"M.l'"ltf" ftCMUnts.. PAllK LI DO PHA•MACY :151 ............... ~ ... 1o ... ,.....,,, -_,_ ,,.. 11o1i...., brand name dealers this weekend. Burger took the request under advisement, with no Im· mediate indication when he would rule despite t h e possibility that many service stations may shut down in p~ test over the Labor Day weekend Ir the price controls go into effect On schedule. THE NATIONAL Congress of Petroleum Retailers peti- tioned Burger to set aside a ruling by a speelal appeals '~'To build It tod•y th• m•rihm•llow •Ion• WOJJ!d colt 140<XJ ... court Wednesday which would --------- allow the Phase IV controls to go into effect Saturday. The appeals decisio n over- ruled an action last Friday by U.S. District Judge Barrington Parker which would have prevented the price control 'm;::. Supreme Court ls In recess until Oct. 1 and in- dividual judges can act on such special appeals either on their own or in consultation with lhe other justices. , LA WYE R S FOR the retailers asked Burger to vacate the ruling of the ap- peals court and to reinstate the decision by Parker which held that the price ceilings to be applied by the Cost or Liv· ing Council were discriminatory, arbitrary and capricious . The petition also asked that Burger allow oral argumentS to be heard, but that was unlikely in view of the Supreme Court's recess. In Pittsburgh, John Huemm· rich executive director cf the ' gasoline retailers organizatiofi. said he didn't know whether or not a widespread shutdown w~d materialize over the holiday weekend. 11WE ARE NOT advocating this, but our members are very angry and when people get angry. anything can hap- pen," he said, adding that if a protest action occurs, con- sumers should "blame it on the U.S. government, not on us." The retail dealers maintain that the controls discriminate against them because oil com- panies raised prices two cents a gallon on Aug. 2 and dealers would not be allowed to pass that added cost along to con- sumers. "We have to eat that increa.9e and any other in- crease the oil companies may make," said Huemmrich. 2 Top Ford Heads Vi sit In Newport Henry Ford 11. c!Wrman of the board, and Lee Jacocca, president, of Ford Motor ~· visited Newport Beach this week for program reviews at Philco-Ford's Aeronutronic T>i· vision. Executives of Aeronutronic and other parts of Philco- Ford's Aerospace and Com· munications Operations, brief· ed the two executives on ma· jor programs. THEY WERE accompanied by Paul F. Lorenz, executive vice president-, of Ford's Diversified Products Opera- tions, and Harold K. Sperlich, vice president, Product Plan- ning and Research. Ford and lacocca came to Newport Beach from san Diego where Ford Motor Co. is holding its national press con- ference for the 1 9 7 4 auton1otive line. Late Tuesday, they fl ew to San Francisco for meetings Wednesday at Philco-Ford's \Vestern Deve lopment Laboratories Division in Palo Alto t or communications sys tems presentations by both WDL Division executives and executives of the compan)''s Communication S y s t e m 1 , Division in Willow Grove, Pa. PG&E Sets Plant Revamp Program SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Pacific Gas & Electric Co. has announced a $100 m.lllloo pro- gram of plant modifications and a deep sea port in California to avert what it called an "electric energy crisis'' next year. Dean Worthington, senior vice president of the utility company, said plans call for a new offshore port in Monterey Bay foi: giant oil tankers for the Moss Landing plant. TIIE PROGRAM also would modify electric generating plants so they could bum oil St. Louis Lion Park Gets Delay LOS ANGELES (AP) Construction of a new Lion Country Safari park in St. Louis, Mo. will be delayed fur one year because of "~ring interest rates," the operating company said Wednesday. Harry Shuster, president and board chairman of Lion Country Safari, Inc., which" rum the park in Orange C.Oun- ty, said unexpected interest c.arryi~g costs of the SL Louis park would result in a trading IOss when it opens. "Solely for that reason," Shuster said, "it wouid be pru- dent to suspend costly con- struction. The construction costs to date have been relatively small and will not be wasted when construction resumes." The St. Louis facility had been scheduled to open next spring, he said. Lion Country Safari said its plans lo open two o~ parkl in Kings Island, Ohio, and Richmond, Va. are not af- fected and are proceeding on schedule. San Diego Gas Spedal lo the Dally Pilot NEW YORK -San Diego Gas and Electric Company has announced plans to aeU 2.000,000 additional shares or common stock in December and $50 million In mortgage bonds in December o r January. PLANS FOR the sale were dlsdosed in a presentatlon by Walter A. Zitlau, company president, and Ralph L . disclosed in a presentation by Meyer, vice president-finance at a mooting of the New York Society of Security Analys18 this week. Money n.bed from the stock and bond Iaues will enable the company to Uquldate 118 sbort- tcrm Joans and to lurthcr finance itl current con:_ strucllon program. Reporting oo comp1111 ao- tiv1u.. and tspllllloo plam, Zllau Aid San Diego Gll and Electric Company . ..,.... one of Jhe fastest growing ene!1Y markets in the. nadon, and this bas mulltd In lncreued Ales and revenues. FOR THE 12 months rnlled Jwie IO, O()enltin& revenues for el~ty. ges and..cleam totaled '215 mlllloo, an 'whldl the COITIPlllY oarned a net Jn. come of W.T mlllioa, or 42,11! per lllare ol common alOCk. 1For a COITtlpOOdlng per1od a ')'f!lt earller, revenue1 were Voluntary •' Complete New . York Stock µst ·l ' . I ' • • r .. • . . . I . ;. • Wall Stre~1-·-eoes Into 'Consolidation' NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market backed olJ its advance Thursday, starting well into the plus zlne and finishing slightly off. "It's a consolidation period," said Martin GQOd· friend of Bruns, Nordemann & Co. "We've had a meaningful advance over the last five days, and it's time it took a rest.1' Goodfriend and other analysts poitned to a broader base of participation In the gains as a sign that the market was recovering and that Thursday's easing was only temporary. • ' . Thund11, A-' 30, IW3 SC DAI\. Y PHAT (II Kids Like To Ask Andy Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List Finance Briefs f e Gold Steadg LONDON (UPI) ,,,. dollar fluctuated on European money markets Thursday and the price ot gold remained steady. The U.S. currency opened fractionally lower In Frani<furt, priced at 2.44 marks. But In early tradlng jt picked up to 2.4 marks, a figure Mgher than Wednes- day's 2.4420 marks close. e Debt Trustee SAN DIEGO (AP) -Thne banks which have asked that a trustee be appointed to settle payment of debts for troubltd U.S. Financial Inc., say they don't know whether tht other creditors will join them in the action. "We doni know how the olher creditors wlll line up," said Ralph Pray, attorney for the banks which Wednesday asked a federal court to remove present management and place USF under a trustee. e Buttuma• LONG BEAC!l (AP) -The board of directors ol Buf~ fums', reporting sharp first· Mlt gains in earnings. has an· nounced a quarterly en.sh dh•i· dend or 15 etnts a share. Vaile G. Vouni. chief ex· ecutlve ofncer of the 1..-0ng Beacl>-beadquartered depan- ment store chain. s a I d Wedneolay the new rate of 611 cents a share on en annual basis reprexnts an lncrease of 2$ percent over the previous rate of 48 cents a share • e Jtforlgages WASHINGTON (AP) -The government so u g h t on Wednesday to make mo~ money aval11ble ror home mortgoges by doubling Ille amount of t111e certificates of deposit that iavlnga and loan as10CiatJon1 may Wue. The Federal llomt Loon Bank Boan! lncnased from 5 lo 10 peromt the lhare ol totoI savings depo!its that can be .Q the w1e cert1flca1e1. \- 38 DAILY PILOT OCCOa sses Set it1 CdM An arri:.y of 56 courses ~111 PUBIJC NOTICE PUBLIC NarrCE ·-==c--''C1'1TIOUI •VSIHIESS "ICTITIOUt IUSIH•St NAMI ST.t.TIMllllT MAMI STATl:MINT ,.. lllf 1o11owl"9 H•Wlfls ar• d:ilno TM 11111-1111 llfiMlll It ODlne btnllltlt Mlfl•U 11; tt L 6 l fNCINEElitlN(., ml SE 108'' Pl!!T SHOI", Ill Ho. S~ufl\ort '""°'· N•-1 BtKft, t'l?01. SllNI. ,.,,,. ""'· C.!lt. ruo1 • Sl•llhfn l"t ul lttche, ltclll 'w .C:lmDtf· MlcMllt Dtfllft-t VICll, ~I ll""*, IV Pl .. Al'OllMI,.,,, Ctllfomlt '*1:2. C...•!Mfl r;,,,,.., Ct lll, '2 ... 1. Ottl•t E"°""t l ... Ion:> Jtnac1 Cir· P11A W. l(llOJI, S'S '*-' V"1otlt , ~I, be ofrered thi s fall bv Orarui:e ci.. F°""'"'" v111rr t11t'f t4, ,_.,, M1w. c111torlll• .,.,,, l"h IM;llnttS 11 Cond!K•td by . ocne••I Tllll MIMIS II (~'" br ... Coast Evening Collel[e at 01r1,,.r11110. G-••I P1r1......-1h!p, d I • h I sr~ L••<llt l"MI! w. Kl\OJI Corona e Mar Jllgh Sc 00 . Tiii~ Ullemtn• w•1 lhl'd wllll ~ C:oun-'~'· ··~•--"fl! .... , 1111(1 w\111 IM COl>fl. Re · l II f t•-I ty Cltrw ol 0•1r.o. Coon!y on A11911'l 7, '" c1.,1i; ot 0111191 County en A11911!.I 11. gas ra on or aic; c asses "''· .,,,, 'JI be h Id b I I I ~ "·'7* fl.n,st WI e y appo n men Pvtl!l1Md Orlf!Qt Co•1.I 01Uy Piiot Pl.lblllhld Or•l\99 COlll D•llY Piiot, oflly Qn Sept, 4 from 6-9 p.m, Al/Oult f, 1,, 23, )0, 1913 2"6.l•T: A!IOUli 23, ](I, I/Id ~l•mDtr ., l~'u\~ al tbe high school. Persons PUBIJC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE may arrange for appointments ,1crn1o11s au11N1:ss b lactln the 0 CC NAMI! STATl!MEHT SUPl!:lllOll COUllT Of TNI! y con g Tiit foll-'n11 Ptl'IOl\ll <tte 1011151 bull· STATI! 01'" CALIPOllNIA ~- Adm'--lons orr· I •• , '7"" lleU ,,, TH I! COUNTY Of' OllANGI! ~ ice a --~ N · H .. M WELOIHG .. $HEE1' ME TAL. NO. """'IS Regi!tratlin w i th 0 u t ap.-2CW ~ Ceftl..-. S1n11 AN , Cl. 9?10S NOTICI 0" SAL• 0,. lltlAL PllOfl· Pointment will he con.l.·cted $(0rt D. MIYnl•d. 14061 1111•1\1\iim Cir.. 511~:",,',v •• AOMINISTltATOlt AT 11\.1 lrvlnt, C1. t2105 Pll I •A L Sept. 6 from 6-9 p.m. Late Honmon L. Ha11.i .. , •511 c111r1e~u11 In "'-m1111r o1 tilt 11t1te ol JENNIE ' I t' 'Jj be h Jd Se I Cir .• lrvlr>e C1 9110S ' VINCE NZA TEDESCO, Dtc .. Wlll reg1s ra ion WI e p . Thh tM.osHl.H1 Is '11111:1...Cled by • !lt /\efOI NOtltl 11 hlr•bY llllfffl !1'111. AL9ERT 11 13 18 d 20 CJ P1rl11tnll" TEDESCO Ind LEONARO TEDESCO,<~ , , , an · asses •• IP;. 0 M •dmlnlt1r11or1 of tM 1H•1t of JENN1e he · Se l l .... o.. . •vna•d gin pt . . This 1111-111 WIS Ultd wl!l'I Ille Coon-Vl'ICE"IZA TEDESCO. d«•1119d, wm Wll The I -•-• J · Jud ty CMrk ol 0r•f191' CounTv on Au11usr 11 , "' prlv1tt Jiit. 10 ltMI l'llgllt!.I ll'ld tl'lt btil c ass S1..1~u e inc es un t1-1d11er, under ,,,. ,..,.ms and condlllom · h b' ct F·27'S1 Mrt ln1l!•r mtnll-d. lf'ld lublt<I to courses . in sue so Je . a~eas PIJbHsrwo Or•ntt co.1st 0111~ Pnoi, tonll•m•llon by tt.e SIJQef'I« ..:ourt, onior as: agr1culture, art, av1ahoo. A11<11111 2J, 30, 1nd SeptemDtr 6. 11 1111r .\tlp11mb9• l'CI. lm , 11 '"' "°"" o1 bus• h d f 'J j" 1t7J 2616·11 t :JO A n1., or lh1r11tt1r Wllllln 11\f llf'IW 1ness. ome an am1 y 1v-1t1owltd by 111w, 11 11'11 ciuce of ROBERT ing. language and speech. PUBLIC NOTICE R. w YATT, ATTORNEY 1or said co-od . • . mlnls!rllor1, at 10113 Loi Al1mll(IJ 9 1vd., ma themahcs, music, social t<H A11mno1, c111 111<n11, 111 1111 ,1g.1i1, u. science. suoen'ision, and trade PtcTttious BustNEss ~!t ~:1r,:1;,;11n,d ,1,i~"rn,';!.~';8 .C:!~:::i~ and teclmical. NAME $TATl!MENT dot 11'1111 IM ,,,.,,. ot J°eHNIE 'v1NCeNZA ---------l~~s':'s~l\O per~s ''1 llO TEDESCO, dtc1111od, l'l1J Kqulrod by · oper11lon ol law or oll\trwlM, otl'llr tl'lln PUBLIC NOTICE GOURMET CATERINO, lns Whtn1 ..... « 1n l<kll!lon to, thlt of sild dte•iled. 11 ----_ _ _ Coua M-'2627 tM llmt of htr dHlll, In •nd lo 111 niaf ,ICTITIOUS •USINISS HM"old H•rrlm11n, lnS Wllllller, Cosf1 (.,.l1ln r111I prooerly, •ltu.tlld In 11\e City NAM• STAT•MINT Mlsl, C•Uf. '1627 ol An11h•lm, Cwntv ol Or1ngt, St1l1 t1I Tiit followlft!I Plf'IOI\ 11 doll\O butlnes1 JOlln Herl!don, ~' Flow•r, Coal• C11111 .... n11, <l•!IC:rlbed 11 lollows; 11: Me-II, Cllil. n.627 "Lot l of Tr1cl lOSS. 11 ritr Mio STflAtGHT-AeRO MAR1 Ne, 111 This bl.nlne1& Is cor.Guctlod by IR In· retordld tn Book 9'l, PIOft 17 lo 11 of Avotl!lo No. 11, P.O. Box m, C11<on1 dlvld1t111IJ. ••n ._. ..__ MIDI rteor<led In Or11191 County." d•I M•r. ca. t2'2S ""' .. er,.....,, Sublett to: currtnl taxH, (ov-nti, .\am flavmonci Pa!mltl•r. 1n AVOtodO Tl'lls 1111.,_,1 was fli.d with !Ill Coun-condition, rn.,.v1tlon, rlotlt ol WllY, No. 14. Coront dll Mor, c1. t'.162.5 ~ Ci.rte ol Ori~ Cwnly on A1111u1.1 II, Hwments, Ind 1xl1tl1111 MKumbrances of This 1>111lnt1& 11 cond...cled by 111 In· m. rt<;ord. dl..td..,.I. .... , 1'·214111 TM terms and condlllons ol sale are: Sim II. P1lmlll•r Pu,,,IJl'ltd Ori r111i CO.II D.tlly Pllol, C1il1 In l1wlul money ot Ille Unlled St1le1 Tlll1. s1111m1nt w11 Hiid w1111 the COii!>-AU11'1fi.t !6, n. )(I, and .September I, of Amerka or 01111r con!r•ct 1.,.m. Ten ty Clerk ot Or1noe Cwn!y i n August lt, ltn 2S4-7l percent of Ille 1mount bid 10 K<OfftP•ny 1en 111e ofter 1nd llM 1>1l1nce to bt 1>1id on P: 21111 PUBLIC NOTICE tonflrm1tlon ot Wle by the Courl. Tl•U flubti,~ Or111111 C011! Dilly Piiot, And 11<1mium1 on !n1,,,,.1nc• acceoiillble 10 Auuuil JO I nd Seoltn101r 6, 1], 20. purcl'llser "11111 be p11d by OUVlr II of lllt UJl 2701-r.I FICTITIOUS 8U$1NES$ o.i~ ol conllrm~Tlon of 1111. The e•- r HAMI!! STAT EMENT amin11lon of !Ille, recordl119 of (Oii• PUBLIC KOTICE Tne foll»Willl! person Is dol1111 Mll'ltss v.v~nc~ an<1 any l!lle 1n1ur1nce POiiey 11: 111111 be 11 llM t•Pfllll o! Ille put"Ch1ser. --~,c"c,c,c,,c0cUcS-ICUCSOOc,cEScSC---! 9EACHCOMllER COFFEE SHOP, All bids ~nd oll1rs must be In -ttlfl!I MAME STATl!MINT l6Jl W. C0&1t, Nt\Np()l'I Beat h. C11. l <'ld whl be received ii ll'le oltltt of Erwin Hlnckn, 409 E. Mlr~f"I SI .. ROBERT R. WYATT. 10783 Los Al1m!loa Tn1 lollowh111 l'f•lOt'I 11 dOlng bl.l1lne11 LOI>!! Selt ll, CiHt. tQIO}. fl tvd., Lo' Alamll<H, C1llfornl1 1t1cr11ey i s: GOOD IMPRESSION$ INK 711 W I This bu•lnt11 Is Conducted by I n In· 111< 111d 1dm1nls!r1tors 11 •ny 11,,,. 11!et 06• SI 'COii AWs 92627 " IS dlvldVOL Ille tlrlt Publlt1llon ol lhll notlct Ind ·• 1 1 Erw!r+ Hll'lden belor1 Ille m1kln11 ol w ld sale. Gladden F. Ev1ft1, 11612 MocM1to This slll-1 w11 flied with tllfl Coun-FM h1r1111r ln!orm1tlon 1nd ti-Id lorm1 Orlv1, Mll&lon Vl1lo. Cati!. iv Clerk ol Orl"!I* counly on Augu" 21, apply 11 Ille offl<I cl wld 1ttomey for lh1 Tl'lls buslne1& 1' conductl'CI by i n In-IJ7J. admlnl!.1Tal0!""$. lllvldutlGllddtn F E ..,,, fl·27'5$ TM right Is re1ervtd to ,..ject ll'IY Ind Thl1 1t1tem.nt .;..,,vtllld wHl'l tht Coun-Publl$hlld Orll'lge C091t Dilly Piiot, in b!d1. ty Cltrk of Orlllfl CounlY on A!IOUll 211 A1111ust lJ. lO, and .\tlptembef" 6, 1l. Oated: AUQu1t 23. 197l. ltn ' 1'7l 2638·13 S/Albtrl Oon1ld TedtK O FUlll7 Adm!11lstralor S/Leonard TltdeKo Publl1.llld Oranwe C1Mst Dilly Piiot, PUBUC NOTICE Admlnl•tral..,.. Ao..,usl lO 1nd S1p1Jml>olr 6, \], 20. -ll:O Bl!llT Ir. WYATT, 1ll•r111' lor 1973 2702-7'.I FICTITIOUS •usJNISS <' lhl Adllllnlltr1klr1 NAME STATEMENT 1171S LOI A .. mll•I Blvd., PUBLIC NOTICE The toMowln11 perM)tls ''' doing Lo, At1mlt111, C11ftoml1 IM.lness 1s; Putl-ll1l!e!I Or1ng1 Co.111 0 1llY Pt1ot. ---,-"-_,-,,-,-0-.,-,-,-,-,.-.. -.-,-5---I AMERICAN POOL SERVICE, 2'17 Aug. l9, 30 f nd .S!pl. S, 1913 2691·13 NA}oltE $TilTIMENT Or•llilt Ave., Ce111 Me11, Call/. 91627 Thtl lolloWll\O persont are dolno J1tk Tloom11 Cr111hill, U.11 O•lfllle PURLIC NOTICE bu1lnH1 11· AVf!!., CO\IA Mes.. CA 9'l627 _ __ ~---- TnW"I i. UtLLAGE PATIO $HOP5 Wllll1m Peter Odom Ill, 116 Monlt l"UBLIC HOTIC£ 737' No. °'"•"II• Mtll. 0••1111•· c1111'. VI•'•· COlll Mew. CA '1617 • ll&SH t:lfb7 Tllll buo.ir>ISI ts conducted by I general Pur$utnt 10 the agrffmt nt bt~n the Al1n L. S1Mrm1n. e1s2 V!l11 WOOd1 ~rtner-.:Wpk T C !lhlll F~eral Hlnhw1v Admlnl1tr1llon and 11'11 Of" .. V\111 Park, Cllllf • .-)k\I Tllll 51'f .;,1 ri flt .. !Ill 1,,. C ~allon1I Wlldllft Federation, the lollowl119 George Anll\onv MtHIH;t, J21n C I.... Wll W oun-1" I 1111 ol M9hwl V Mellont whlCl'I l<I 01rtmoutl\, Tustin, C•tll. 9'680 \~ ltrk ol Ort~ County on A11911it 2l, 1ublecl lo Ille Fldt r1I H 1 !I h w a y Thl1 busint ss 11 conducted by 1 oener11 • FV•U A11mlnl11r 11lon'1 Nlllontl Envlronment11 Jllrlner~:~ Lee Shtrmln PUlllltlle<I Oran111 Coatt 01lly Pllot, =~~ A<!n '':=:':~11'1° '::!:= .. > AuglJSI :2l 30, 1nd Septembl1" 6 ll Thh stlltmenl "'II n11'd will! 11\t Coun-nl'l ' i 2 73 should bl ~ep1red •nd con1lderld. ty Cle•t. o1 O•tnllt COllll!Y on Augu1t 211, 6 •· 1. In Humboldt countv on s11te R0!.111 ltn 101 trom ,...,..111 ol llicl'l11r<11on ~ F27MS PUBLIC NOTICE ~1 .. 1a P~rk to Stlle Roule J1i 111 Alton. Publlll\ld Orlfllll! C1111t 01\ly PUOl, Two pro.ltc!s •re PrOllO'led In lllls sec- AllQlftl 30 1nd $tipf•mbtr 6. ll. l'CI, STATIM!"WT Of' WITHDRAWAL tlon. Ttlt flrsl 11 1.7 ml'" of t Lane_ It• 197l 2706-7l ""OM PAltTN£1lSH1P Ol"a!IATINO t tss conlrollltd l'llgl!w1y from l1(lrtf\ of UND•ll FICTITK>US •1111N •ss NAM• Ille Mf'ndoclno CrHonty tine IO Ille Snutto The lo41owtng person 11111 wllhdrtwn 11 Forlc ol 11\t Etl RIY1Y 9rldo1 ne1r aen· -------------1• 11tner1I p1rl1>er from tht 111rt"""shlp bOw. TM oecnnd Is 2.• miles ol .. ,ft,,. FICTITIOUS 8U$1NEIS OPerllifl!I undtr the fktl!loui butlntst l tc•11 Controlled lllollw1y 1n 11'11 Ctlf'l"l- PUBLIC NOTICE NAME STAT•MENT n1mt o1 ..,unify of Rln 0•11 from 10tllll 01 ·0.ul1 The loHcwlng ptfM)tl 11 cloln; butlntss C & W PAINT & BODY SHOP. ltS.S S!reel to Bellvltw A\llnUI. 11: Cllurt h St., Costa Mew, Calllornli 92611 l. In Mnnr .. •ev r:ountv nn Stele Route LIN·ST ITCH, llSS Login $!., No. •• Tl\1 fkllllous busfn1S$ n1.,,.. sf.tlllmtnl I trom fh1 Fort Ord Mlllt1ry ReHrVI· C<Hll Ml tft, C1I. '2626 tor ll'lt pertl!e!'1hlp w11 filed on Jinuiry lion lo 51,.11 fl oul1 15', lnclu<llll"I thl! James IC . AndreWI., 257 Sle•ks SI .. 'lt. 1911 In the Counly ol Or1nge. flou!1 1 BYOllSS OI Ille (ornmunlty ol C01!1 Mesi. Ca. '1621 Full N•me 1nd Address ol tl'li PerM)tl c~strovllle. 1.2 ml!1s of •· 1nd 2·11n1 This business la conducllod by 111 Ir+· Wlll'ldr•wlfl!I : hh1hw1~ w!tl'I AtC111 control. dlvld1t111I. Oon1ld w. WOOds, 651 Jo.Mi s1 .. Casi• 3. ln S1nl• e~-~~'• County on Stale J1rnn K. Andrews Mn1, c1lllorn!11 92627 Aouta 101 11 Turnpl~I fl~d lnterch11191 This 1t1!9mt"nl Wl l !lllod wlll'I Ille Coun· Don1ld W, Woods 11111 O~otrl'INd Wttl of Sllnla 81rtwor1, ty Cterk ol Or1nge County on A119111t 30, ,. .. 1111 recon1tru<1 ~11ttriq 1trudur11 ind •P-1tn Putttlshtd Or111119 c11151 Delly Piiot, Pl"o.lt hft lo 11r0\ll~e 4 l1n11. wltll lell- F·11'N AU9U$t 23, JO, Ind Stpttmber 6, ll, turn median 11,..1 lo r11)11ct 11\t tK• PIJbll1lled Or111ge COis! Dilly Piiot, 1971 25111-n h ll"'!' 1-l•ne !1cm1!11 on Turna!ke floa<I. Auoull lO and Sapltfftblr '· ll, l'(I, ._ In K•rn County on Slllt floul1 «I 1f7l 1'9'-n lrom IOU!l'I of Ille City ol Shattet" to !hi PUBLIC NOTICE functton ol Sl1tw R~ U I" Ille City of W~ICO. t .9 mUa ol l-l1n1 l'lll'l'IWIY. FICTITIOUS austN•SS s. In K1r11 County Ol'I Stal• Rouff 5' 11'1 MAME STATl!MiNT lht CHv ol 81kl!f"sllt ld from Stale Roull ,-KTITlOUS 8USINISS The following person II doing business '9 lo St1t1 Route lM. 7.1 miles ol 4-lane PUBLIC NOTICE HAM• STATE.'9\EJfT II" fr-y. E111ttlY •.0 mllei 1r1 ~.!~1 ':~1'1111 penon1 1ri dolno . ACTION SWEEPING SERVICE, noo P1'11'tnlll( undlr (on1tructlon. -,DC,,,·. ' ,,.,,,,,,,, .. ,, P1rk Newporl, Ao!. 2\1, Nl'Wpot1 911(fl. 6. In Ille City of LOI Anatles on Stilt ' • -C1llf. 92660 R~ 11. constnxt lntertl'llll\Ot 1t Cor1I TrM Line. lrvl .... CA '2664 John A-Ill Crlldltcv. ~ PMk Rldonclo Be1ch Boulr.oortl IS reolM~ Mlcl\MI Fr1ncl1 PQPOWnlt k. .,,n Newpart, Apt. lll. NfWP(lrt h xl'I C.Uf ment for 1x11111111 Alond11 SI•"' Cori• 'TrM La,,., trvlnt, Clllt, tUd<I 92660 • · lnt1<ch11191 10 be deltllld. sn&ron Farlow POPOM111k ... ,, Cor1l Thia · bvslness Ii conducted by in In-7. In lhl Clly of Loi A"!llllts on Slate TrM Lar>e, lrvft'll, C~t!f. t766-I dlvl<luil Rout• 101 from Sunset Boulevarll 10 Tiiis MIMU is cond...clld Irr a 111ner11 j _ Ronald Crllcl'llev St111 Rout1 101/13'/110 ln!e•cl\lnge, p1rlntrslllp. This llatement Wll liled wltn Ille (our.-w!dtn 11-l•rwi lreew1y 10 I 111ne1 !or • M. F. Pooow!ll1t ty Cltrk of Oringe County on .Auguit 21 d l1!anc.1 of 2.1 mll~ •nd ln11111 r1mp Sharon F. Popownl1k 1t1J ' control I«• dl111nce ot s.s mll11. This tllll!Ylllf'll w11 lllld wllll the COii~ " "17"4 t. In till C!tY of Loi A1191les an Stale ty Cltrk of Or11111e County on August :II, Pvl>llslle<I Orlngt. COis! Deity Piiot, lloul1 111 betwttn Balbol Avtnu1 west l'n A 1 23 30. o1 lnt1r11111 Route ol05 and lnterslatt 1'27M2 ugus • and S-epleniber t , ll, Rout1 o!OS. t .5 m lltt ot 1-tane frttwav. PllDl!lhed Or1111119 C11111 .Dally Piiot. ~ 21211-73 9. Ir+ Or11191 County on Stall Roule n ' '.,,11111111 30 1nd 5ept1mb•r t, 11, ••• ,".~ PUBLIC NOTilE In "" Cl!let ol NtWl)Orl B11cl'I •nd .,.. ·~ ~ CO'lt1 Mes. from ICUlh of Sonll• C1n- -----~ yon Road 11 ll'l1 Un1.,....ity cl FICTITIOUS WV..-tsS C1lllornl1, lrvl,,. Cl"1t)lll, to ll'llfrslell NAME STATl!MENT .OS. •.1 mlltl ol II-Ind l·l11>e freew1v, PUBLIC NOTICE ,.KTITtouS ausl Nass Tile following ~1 ire Oolfl!I l11cludlng 111 lntercti111g9 with ex111t119 bv1lnes1 •l: St1t1 Route .». NAM& STA'TE"IENT MSM COMPANY, 152'2 Vtrmont St., 10. In 11\t City of Sin 011911 on Sl1te 111';ht tollowlnt1 Plf'Sllfl 11 dolfl!I business W!11mlnsttr, Ct . ni.n Roule 75 from H fl ol lnler•l•ll RW11 !)AVCO SECURITY SYSTEMS, llldg. llrutt Stephen Dobbs, 152t2 VlrTftent IOS to lnl .... lllt floul1 S. 1.7 mU11 of 1- Vl, Sulll 201, JODI Afd Hiii A._.., Costi St., WH lmiMttl', Ca. 92613 line lr-1y. Miii. CiMf. 9'12' M1ri1 Pl1 Dobbs l5:U.2 Vermont SI Mlps •nd other lnlorm1tlon regardll'O Witter M. 01venoort, l'Cltt Flimlll!IO Westmlnllotr, C.. ~ " lhl •bove ltellon1 ire 1v1il1ble lor Dr'. tosta Meu. c.nt. n•26 Thl1 OO.lnM1 lt cOl'lductlld 11y 11 uener•l ....,law at 11'11 tollowlr>!;i c1111oml1 De?lrt- Thlt bulll'llis 11 cond...cled by •n In-1>1•tnerslllp. """"' of Tr1nsport1llon Olstr1t1 Offices: dlv!dt.ltl Bruce S DobM FM Humboldt County, Ille Dl11tlC1 01· Waner M. Da""'oort Tl'll1 1tate11Wn"t was tllltd with ll'le c_. flee 11. loo::111td 11 1'56 Union Street, Till1 ll1!tn'lltlf w11 flltd with lht Counl tv Cltrt. of Oru-.ge County on August I• Eurtkl , ltl~ (101) u:l·S161. V 1,13 ' Fot Mont.fT( Col.Inly Ind S.nl1 Cl«k of Or1nve County on A11111111 ~·,:l P-tl4" 81rblr1 counry, Ille Dlslr1ct Offft• Is '1.lbllll'lld Or•l!lll COHI Dfilly f.11 1 Publllhtd Orlnot Co1tf 0 1!1y Piiot, IOO::•led_ at SO Hlgutr1 Streel. San Lul1 A t JG nd ._. o' AU11U1f 16 23. 30 and Stflllmbtr ' Dbl'PO, lt ltPllOnt (IOSI S,ft.J171, UllUI • _,.,tmbfr 6. IJ, l'CI, itn ' ' 25'!0-rl For Kern Cwnty, lhe Dl1trltt Office 11 Im 2700-13 loc:altd 11 1lS2 W•1f 0 11.... AVtnUt, PUBLIC NOTlro Ff'ffl\Or lllffhone fXltl IQ-11114. ~~ PUBLIC IW"VPS~ For Los .(°l'l!ll+n and 0rlflll'9 Counii. .. ---;;;;:T;i;;,;;-o;;;;;;,.;---l---;,:;;;;;:;.~'~;;;";;~;,;;~ ___ 111'11 Olstrlct Office 11 loo::ated •t ,,., Soull'I f'ICTITIOUS aUSIJflSS FICTITIOUS •USINl.SS Spring Street, los A1191l11; ftlepl\onl! N~E STATaMINT (211l 620-l550. Tile followlnu pmon1 1r• dolfl!I Tiit fot::..'t'E STAT•Ml"NT dol For S111 Dlf90 Counly, th• Ol1trld Of· bulillnt ••: bullneh 11· "' Pll""IOl!I ,,, ""' "'' Is lot"lled II :1129 J1,111n SlrHI, San MA.STEAi AUCTION, 207$'h Ntwpott AM a. M METALS, tn W. l7tll SI. D!rgoi leltpllont C71•l 29'-'111. •lw .. c ... 1. Nitti. C1Hr. 92621 Cotti Mlw C1llf 9'1'27 l'lfWA Cr11111• for .... !~~(=· t~·Je: Mtdl111n Robert L.' McEirov, 7tJ W, WILSON, An 1nv1:!!!!i1~~1::;s..::::: thell ti. •. ~ , ~, '" •-'~ C:ost1 Mna, Callf. '2427 -•rtd and ...., ' -~-""' ~~n. -•l'I Sl'llst1, West Rlcl\.ilrd A. McEITOI'• 261S Apt. A. ~j;; ••M ,.., ~-~~ k.~ .. ·.~,--,~,' Covin.I, Cllll. fl7'0 S1nl1 Anl SI., Cosl1 Meso, C1lll. Wiii h I '"' ....,,,, ""'' tee on This bullnnt It mnducted 0,. I g_,-11 Tiiis busl"tll Is COl'ld\lcild bl' 1 llll'lltll ( s Wbitc:I lo Ille FHWA'I NEPA S19rln1rthlp. P1rtnersl'llp re.11.essment 11, ln ttle ludg,,,.nl ot 11'11 ll:ori.rt H. •-1t1thm:i A McEl division t1111l11Hr, lmplement1llan of tilt Tl'll1 1111-1 \QI flied with Ille c....,,._ T hi• tlli-nt wH lllld ':f1t11'11t Covrlty H•llonel l!nvtron/1"11!1111 Poller Act to JM II' Clt1'k ol Or111111t Coun!y on August :II. Clerk ol Or•--Count,~ • ..,.., 16 ,,..., f\111•11 lltllnl llOlllble requlr~ ortl)lr• 1t7l .... ' ·~ lion •nd pn1tn1!ng ol an ~v•rotlmtnl1I l'·tl'IM Pvbll l'·t?• 1t1tement. In m1k!119 1111 lud!lmenl, lht l'ubllll'lld Qrtn09 COl11 011!y Pilol, A 1 ~ Ori~ CO&lt Di iiy Pllof, dlvltlon eng'lnetr 111111 to:>mP-1•1 111 ol' lht AUUVlf JO .rid St'P1'tmblf "" 13, l'(I, lt~i.n 6• :U. 30. •ncl $eptem~fJ llfl)a 1lre1dy l1k1n tow1rd co111tr!#(lloro ol 1tn 26h·13 IN l'llghw111 Mdlon wltl'I 111 01 1111 11eos 111 to bl ll«•n I nd de1.,m1,,. whll!Mlr PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE 11t lllohway MC:flon ,,,~ re1c11e<1 1111 ''"" ---:~;.~;,.~:;.:;.;_ __ ,r--... :m--=.,,.---jol' compltllon ~I tl'll COSll of dtl1yll'll • ,ICTITIOU$ 8USIHllS !ht pt'tlPOfM hlgtow1y cle1rlY DUlwtlO!'l ll'll l'ICTITIOUS •us1N•Ss ,.AME STATIMl.NT wn.ni, nitl might ti. dtrfvtd from NA.Mii JTAT•MIHT TM lollowlng PlrMlll 11 cto1119 busl.,..1 pr..,_,..ng •!'td processlf'l!I 111 ""°" Tiii fdtowtng "'* h dOlfll bUsllttM 11: vlronm'1'111I 1111-1. W1!tn Ille dlvltlon 111: Gk AN VILLe MANUfl"ACTU'llNG '"Ill-1111 OOUb1 wf'lltt'llr DI' nat 111 .,._ TffkE8 DOU.I. '°9 ~1n JI.., hlbol, CO .. nl J1smlnt Ch·t i.. Cosll Mt11. vlronm1ntM 111~! alMlo.U be Pl''"1911 C1lll. '2MI , C.HIDl'llll '2626. Ind pnic:nlld, !he 1111-1 11!ould lit .....-iv """ lfflntlt. '"""' !". OC.en L. Grlnvll!ot 91tct. 2«1:).11 VII pr""f9Cl In ~111111 1'111 det-INHOl'I. Front. IMtloa. c.llf. t'H61 Mtrlcioll We$!, ~ Htu ... C.Uloml• !I'll dlV!llon fl'llll-Mould conslOtr: ,., TMJ IM#nnt Is co'!dllclwd by Iii ln-n6j( '"' wrltffll ""--' P"tJllrlid bY 11'11 tllllhfwl_. A "'--1' ntu ii Candlldld b)I 111 In-$1119 1'11911W1~ l'flllCY PWWl'ftl to NI _,....,1 dl ... !'9'• H•WfPtt S.C ot PPM f0..11 fb) rloht o1 Tllh dl""'-f wH Hi.d wllll !I'll t-. L. rtf'lllltle •1tct w1y tcQVftllto!t, lndud?nf oe~l!toft of tt a.rt ot Oranee ,_,.,. Oii J ulY \I, Tl'll •l•t-t wts fll«I wmt !tie COUl'I-tmOl"OY'tfl'llftts wllllln 11'11 right ol 'MllYI 1m ....... ty c II ol OfMtt Countr .., ~ '· ft) numb«" of t.m!Un ,.,,_.,, """ • .._,, 1m. ll'loM .,.. to bt fll'lol.IMd1 (d) tllf •l!lent "'""""' Onol\OI (04P1I Dtlty Piiot, P•171U to \.tikfl fhl canstl'\lctlon •ll'NdY c-"'UOWI 1"" n, ll. 11'111 llDt"""l!'" 6. "ublll\td Ol'MOI CMit Dilly Pllot ,._Id In~ 111 lrr1trltv1blt COl'l'I· - .. _io ___________ v_~_c·7J il\IOllll 4 16. t), :IQ. 1tn 2Af,).1J !ftllmtlll of Mhlr•I ~"l (ti wsw ---'*'-'lta fO t«tW from 1111 pr090Md PUBUC NOTICE JUrAUC NOTICE ~1111 ... ..,., ro·t11t "'"" 1b Wl'llt11111o,,... 1---.,·~ ..--,;::::::,:;,=:,::,::;;.--tDOJld . hltf\Wlly It can1ro ... ri111; lg) IL,.. 1-,ICTrnovs IUSINtiS 9\tH•DI• lnklrmtllon an slanlfl(an+ Im· ,tCTITtOUS •UlllflSS ~I ITATIMllfT ~ of !I'll Pl'OOOMd lllgllW•Y• IM.1UdtM Iii.I.Ml ITAT•MlNT TIM followll'!f ,.,_ It oolfll WU m111Cts on ,,, encl ...... Qlllllly, llOltt ~ kl!lowif'Pf "'tOn 11 doll'll llvll11t:t1 I'! l'IHI lt'ttll, •lld llnd 11111 (II) IMtNI ..... to .._. GOLfl INTlltNATIONM... ):)40 (. I mlrotmlrt •nY •clv.,tot lfl'IC*ll of fM ~ l'ICW IM.AGI. •Ml CamDllt Ori.... lint. Cleta"'"" C.Hfonlla f'H.2'•pr posld lllDllwlYI llMI Ill l"Y ollltf rttnenf ~I tNC"fl. Ca. f?."8 l'-1111 1117) Vlcfon1 MtlrtM ~ ,._. Lii l-ClorJ. ~ft. 5*VWllll. l>Ml-D •..i Hiii cos11 MIN c.au1°"'1i t2''6._.., f'lt. 111..,.."cl "'1'tlln• 1r1 tnvttlld to IUb!NI A¥WIUL TlAfl"-Cl. t2'IO Tf'111 111111,_;.. It 11e1n9 ~ltd OY tel'llmttllt r.!1ttr111 'HWA'I crlltl'la !or '"" ~ •• ctfldUf.lfcl Of "" 111-lflcllriO•I In Nll'A , ..... ,_, to 111r or •II of 11'11 ~ vkt.11 Mfft.ffl' lllflrwlr sttt1on1 111 "" 1~ 1111 11V1tlll11 Aft"'9IW JI'. StWrW . TMt ,,...._,,. ll)M "711! ftlt c-t al drn ,,_ !tit clllt ot 11111 1Udk.1tlon. '"'"•'-""" "' ftltll 111111 fhe ~ Qer11etOr .. ~111'1 Avtlllt I If~ C~1 lhould be .odrH.-i i. Mr, D. "" a.ti ., °'"'" ~ 911 ........,., ). •v -nw.w M. Wtff. ...._~, c' ... E. Tl'\llt, DtvlMOll !1111,,,..,., Ftdtr•I aw. ..._.., oun., HJa!Nrll" Mml11h!rt llon. "· 0. lo.; 1tlS. "47m *'lmttllorM"I\ "'"· ,,..... ar.,. Coi&t Dt/ty f"lklt, ~lhtd DI" CO.SI Otll ,_.VllP' ~ltMtl Ortn09 CO.II O.llY l'llot, ., "'" sa.. .. 1m ,.,,..,, A.,., •• '" n. T"" , i:.,_ .. ~ -. 1m ""·" ., ~.. - -~ 6. ~ - 5 6 7 8 c L A s s I F I E D ~6 4 2 - 5· 6 7 8 D A I L y· p I L 0 T D/\11 .. Y ANT i\l)S ' . HEDGE AGAINST [ -10<-II~][ -"'" .. Disc~l~•~ Tl~~! "111 1 ~-~--;;;;;;;~-!iiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiii!!iii~ appreciate thla Romantic G.n.r•I General I~ General hidden oasis near shoppina:. Cul!itom home and Income wtth pool. Priced right at $.)9,500, CA.LL COL\VELL 64&-05,;5. EXCHANGE-SELL 12 Apattments. alternatives to and Ownt>rShip. r.tany nnanclng J\fay Trade Down fQr smaller units. !\ley Trade for L&nd suitable for 3 10 5 units. !\h1y carry 2nd Tru.<rt Deed. All units furnished. Good Rent Schedule. Heated end filtered pool. Call anytime. .&~ * CORONA DEL MAR 2 COLORFUL conAGES * Rare offering of ocean side of the hwy. prop- erty of two houses on one lot, live in one, have income from the other. First time of- fered, at '89,5-00. CORBIN· MARTIN REALTORS Coll Anytime 644-7662 NEW Ril'LIXIS a. DUPLUES IN COSTA ~ESA FINANCING- AVAILAILE 30 YEARS ASSUME FHA Open Daily Pl•contl• Ave. •t Wilson LOAN ORANGE COUNTY APARTMENT Gener el VERMONT FARM HOUSE ACRE · REDUCED $29,950 General LA CUESTA VILLAS Aln)Ost new proress ionally EXCLUSIVE· AGENTS, 547~791 landsce ped 3 b e d r o o 111 1 'l!!!!!!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!"'l!!!!!!!..,!!!!!!!!!!!!! home. All eleclric built-in I Gener•I General kitchen, family room and I -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; • Available prior to 1choolll Due to Credit Rejections! cO mplet e l y enclosed 11 BACK BAY BONANZA backyard. Shows lots of T.L.C. If you're looking for something real special in e high demand area of Hun- tington Beach, you've found It in 'this beauty. $46,500. can 646-0555 SPARKLE PUNTY Wipe your feet first! Show8· like--a-model home. SEE this 5 bedroom Mesa del Mar . beauty . one heck of a nice home 1n a quiet nelgtibor- hood. ;.15,!XXl, co: Ts · WALLACE REALTORS -~S'Ml4'"44141- (0pon Evenlnvsl 4 BDRM. • $26,000 Can't bear thla combination v.-ith large bedrooms, 2 baths, built-in kitchen, dou- ble car garage, \V I w carpets &: drapes. Better check this one out TODAY. 2043 Westcli ff Dr., Open e\•es, 646-771.L Walker &Lee •Ill llTITI NEAR HARBOR HI OPEN DAILY 1 to S 1514 Redlands, C,M. 4 Bedroom 2 BA romp painted ln & out, new car. petlng. R-2 )ot, rm tor an- other unit. Lrg lot. Owner will help ti.m\--ce. e CALL ANYTIME e ~or Eve. 673-4Sn Lachenmyer· Rc,1lfor SIMON SEZ s~:J:h l{l~in~!5a:u~~·c;:: floor plan in an ideal family neighborhood. All the cxtraa plus two covered p atios. Just $29,950. Simon Scz Call Now!~l. Seller will support financing! Beautiful 4-pfex vacant and ready for that first owner tax advantage. Submit land e.'l(changes, commercial or units in this ana. Call Red Carpet, Realton 546-9640 (open evenlngs) A REAL BUYI LOWEST priced 3 bdrm., 2 ba. home ln Ba!boa! 4 Yrs. old, Spanlidt ~e; stressed for 2nd story. $65,000. C.U: 673-3ll>.1 83().11114 E.n. associated BQ OKE R~-QE~LTO~S ]l'l~ W flolbo,. t.11 l6t} Triplex Fixer Start your estate here! ?.1j:!S&y but sound. 2 BR units . pain!, polish Md profit! Listed at $..19.900 • 10% down or )RADE!! I Call 645-8400. . '"" . ·_i. ,. '!!'ol\~' . ·-; ... ==1 •1 =,-1 j 1•1 .. ~. ·: ' .. ' . ' . . P?'."'--~ f\ ~'Hit i' :: 1 .... f. IJ~l~I: 11()"-'H CORONA DEL MAR T\1"Q scparalc 1 bcdroon1 he mes on R-2 Jot. Rare, but v.-e just l isted then1. Both rompJetely remodelrd in elegant ta.Ste in 1973, in- cluding copper plumbing, wiring, 'the v.'Otks. Each has its o\\'11 private patio, Ja,\'11 and chann. An in- vestor's dream or an O'Nl'I· cr's deti<>h t. $19,900. Hurry! UNIQUE HOMES REALTORS 675-6000 * * * R. C. Cook 1541 Miramar Dr. Balboa You 8.l'e ~1e winner of TWO FREE •TICKETS to ... SHIPS'TADS & JOHNOON ICE FOLLIES &pt 5th thru 16th nr Ohe FABULOUS FORUM (subject to $'l s:cn ·ice chruye llt lhe ro1·un1) Please calt GU.56i8, e.'1 333 to cta.im your tickets. (North County toU tree m.Jniber is 54G-12'20.) * * * BALBOA PENINSULA POINT Active, water vie\\• on chan- nel harbor entranC'f'. 5 &>d- rooms, 4 baths, large di ning room and separate maid's qtrs. 4.l feet at "'ater f.ront- age. Large pri\"af~ patio, pier & slip. 0:219,000. CAU... 6T0>4000 to sef'. PETE BARRETI -REALTOR- 642-5200 OLD CORONA DEL MAR GO BY! WHERE? CALL!! Beautiful old Spanish home on double lot largo enough for the largeS"t family. Spec· tacular view only sieps to the beach. Take a look at this fabulous ho m e , 673-8550. OPEN nt II • "'S FUN TO 8E NJCEI $57,850 Secluded cul-dt'-sac property in prt'81ige es'lale area ot finer ho1ncs. Draniatlc e&· thedral ceilings In living room 1vi111 c1·a c kUng v.-ood- burning fireplaN. open plan fan11ly 1w n1, spacious gar- ck>n vit>1r, fonnal din ing 1wn1, ·I lai-ge bedroon1s, and i:otUTI1e1. kitchen 11ith b:-eakfa.;;t bar. Peek-a-boo viC".r of 1\1?\\"JXlrt Bay. Plea!W:' t·a ll roday Jor an ap. poinrn1cnt l.o inspect this highly desirable property. can S-16-2313. OPEN 11l 9 • IT'S FUN TO 8E NICE/ THE REAL ESTATERS --TRY ... ,. BEFORE YOU BUY Harbor View Homes A rart' cha.1c(' to lease In I larbo1: View I !om~. with an option to purchase next ye&T. Charming 2 bedroom, plu1 convertible den home, in sparkling condlHon. SJ>nn· ish tile entry, heevy shake roof, formal dining room, CUS'l.om carpets & drapes. Price reduction makes this the i<M·est priced home in this most soogflt alter rtcigh- bortlood. $62,000 • Not Le~­ hold. C. F. Colesworthy RHllO<I 640-0020 SHORECUFFS The best addr'e!\'" In fo\.\'11! Bcaudlully arrangM hon1e, old hrii'k anl"I ;;Juu-m gaJore. \VHITE \VA TEJl VIEW. See roday, tomorrow may be too; 1ate! Call 6'Q. 7225. YOUNG FAMILY Wanted for this cozy 3 bed· room home on oversized lot. Room tor the traile-r, too~ Near-ne·w roof, c o v e r c d patio_ Great "starter'' hotm and low d<M'?I ~ pos. s.i'ble on price of $28.250. Call Now -842-:535. OPEHTlt II• "'S FUN 10 8E NICE/ ij . ~ Rolling green lawns and stetely trees surround pic- turesque Vermonl fam1house. Old \Yo r Id charm and architecture. Formal entry. Step do\\'n n1aster suite \\'ilh 5th bath. J\lan sizf' den \l'i lh rugged beams. J\1alds quart<'rs. 23' T 1\ \'Ei"lN KITCHEN with cathedraJ beams. Banquet formal dining. E I e g a n I French dool'S lo secluded garden paradise. Walled patio with ouldoor llreplace and 8.B.Q. RED BARN 2nd story in-law apartment, 2 guest cottages and covered dance pavilHon overlooking magnificent free form pooJ. ENTERTAINERS PARA- DISE. CALL 64a--0303. I Olli\ I L 01.\0\ " ""l "f /.. T (}Iii' I BRING THE KfDS and tnO\'e into 1his one ye ar new, 4 bedroom home. The unique, open Door plan pro- vides space plu:ii privacy. nie vaulted li\•ing room ceiling ls great for hifi and 11.•armed by a beautiful fireplace. Brick fence sur- rounds a piantable yard. Easy acceS11 to the com- munity pool. Only $44,900 • "''hlle 11 lasts. Dial 962--88j]. ~iliiii DUPLEX 90°/o FINANCING 81/1°/o INTEREST An ideal summer/winter rental only 6 doors to a super beach. Own for profit or occupy for pleasure. Only $84,500. Our fantastic tl'rrns may nol l&t long !JO call qUick. CALL '44-nlI /Jxl NIGEl • nAllEY & ASSOCIATES MESA-VERDE-- BEAUTY Recently redecorated home on quiet cukle-sac in ex· cellent condition. Unusually large bedrooms. Antiqued \.\'OOCl\.\'Ork, covered patio shade trees and c lose to schools $41.SOO. Call Red Space Race 77 c.,,,.1, R•alto" 5MHl640 Roomy 3 Bl!, 2 BA home on $2900 Total trtt shaded comer lot. Cptg, drpti:, bltns, pri vate patio, Down work shop! CJubhoue & As.!ume 7%~ VA Loan! Awlmming pool near by! Ttlm 4 BR, 2 BA Ranch $33.500 • low down OK!! Style, shake roof, bltns, Call 645-8400, huge fam rm • decorator l:t fresh! Asking $37,950. Sub-·VISlefl..,·"'--~ 4 Co.] mtt any ofier: No loan . ~ --·.,-rosts! ! ! Broker 64.>2133, EASTS TOE --£-ASTSID. E-FIXER UPPER e r:.!ot a Condo or T6\vnhouse • You Own The Land These are single !am Uy, com- mon wall homes with 3 BR -2BA . lg tam nn .llvrm -kitchen \\'l!h all bltm • front ya.rd landscaping with sprinklers . side yard fences, full detaC'hed 2 car gar., shake & l\1i..Sl'!ion lilc 1oofs and ABOVE ALL -BUILT BY AYRJ::Si ~ 13•2 Sq. Ft. from $30,490 Conventional I 0 "!. Down l\lodel a t Adanu1 &: Florida . one block \V. of Beach, J-luntington Belich. 536-1445 SOUTH COAST PLAZA Super t\.\'O tiOtry 4 br/fonnaJ dining.& den. Two f'ittplaces -1\·et bar -peoeling & gorgeous tile floors. Great ne"' lnmily home I n Sandpointe. Walker&Lee •Ill l•llll EVERY BODY ELSE KNOWS NOW AND IT WON'T LAST LONG Just listed. Back bay area. Newport Beach c u s t om home 3100 !IQ. n., two stone fireplaces, and large pool room. $66,500. H u r r y . 646-TITI. Lee.vtng area, Immediate oc- cupancy, 41 BR, 3 BA luxury 2 year old home. Many de- luxe. custom f~atures have been built Into this outstand- ing waterfront home . cus- tom fumUure & 1967 Crui.9er included. Excellent tenns . $279,000. AlfG available un· Iumlsticd. For info • call 67.1-7782. MESA VERDE RANCH STYU BEAtrr. RAM'BUNG -t BR., 2 BA. one-story home. Heavy shake roof, pictur- esque arrium, Ira mod ldteh, lamily rm1 beaut carpeting and pmel ng. Spack>us k>t on quiet cul-de-Mlc close to new r"l"donal park, 546-SllO Open Evo1. ., ~ ... HERITAGE . . REALTORS Formal Dining room, large SPACIOUS CAPE COO POOL HOME pool, m.,.ive fJreplace, ex· Huge two 1tory family home with 3 bedrooms & larie tra large family room, all with O\'er 2600 sq. ft. of liv· lam. rm. Move-In condition this plus 20' x 20' lng. lnimediate possession with lot4 of extras -new wOrkshop - 3 bedrooms, 2 1 .,.,.~ ... ~~"'"!!!'!"'"~I available tor thls 4 paint In Ir oul. Owner may baths. owner must sell NO DOWN bedroom, 4 bath, home with leiuie wlth optkln. $36,950. $35,950. Ci.U Red Carpet, charn1ing formal dining 1M3 Westc.llff Dr., open Realtorw 546-8640 room. A real steal at eves. 646-7711. *DANAPOINT * VA $45,000. Call Red Carpet, A 11eeluded, ocean front Realton 645-8080 ( 0 P e n e11tate on t.he Wt"' ti~ ol evenlni;rs> · J • ME-•• VERDE e historic o.,,. Point. 3 R .. .... Walker & lea 3 be. Spanish home on 165 Pim time offered . Beautiful •••L 1,,.,1 ft. fT'onll\1'1'. ur;,cm 3 BR, 2 BA + family room. TURNER ASSOC. Only 143.500. · -. MESA' VERDE ll05 N. Co--' H•vv., Wil\111& Ginny ·MOl'rlion, Rltr. DELIGHT 494-Un Bright ne"'• paint A. cs.rpetS", a truly lovely home wlth ganlens beaut i ful on 1rce-shadefl Jane. O n I y $27,500. ---*=!67-4130 * Loll of tn!<o and 1hada. * BAYCRES=T-*-- CONDo Brick polio, -painted ·ON A 11uooE1 · Walker & Lee Adult park like community, ~4= ln :t~hen. Large 4 BR.I 3 ba. family RIAL tlfATI . d ul>hotae, pool, putt 1 n I. '-. 4 bedroom 2 :c; I home on a ~-wtll Jocated M&-0022 lfl«ril, all bulltln kitchen, !:~ wlth family room Jutt loi. Owner i. \ .. v1ng town -A-HOUSE-WANTl uft air """1tloned 2 bedroom l36:500 Cal' Red Cui>ei. & bu priced the bom< for ""' 114 both. Neu 17th and Reallon ~"4o. OI'E:ll opk:'t o-Ic. •S".1'0. TO BECOME A HOME Tustin. QnJy~m950. Call HOUSF.&-_ CORBIN-MARTIN Needi 1ove • chlklrtn and a """ CarPoi. lfe e llo ra -MES.ti Vi!RDE Ro•lto<1 144-76'2 llltle pe.Jn1. Come ,.. lll1' RE-DECORATED AND. 54H640 J bedroom + o.n located READY * TREE SHADED * O..lrtble 4 ~m on * BEACH DUPLEX * ,, .. , church<s, ICltoola and Re<ently redecoralcd 3 Lovely~ bdrm. \iC>od Eaat· g::1~!Jlio f.:t"on1lo<a~ Block to W•tor ""°1>'· Call tor .appolntmtnt bcdrooin, 2 bath plus tamU)' aide lot. ~ ~e lot~ down.~URRYo Calf Red Real .. title! 1 _ & 3 Bdrm1. prtnd~ls on?)', ~. room on quiet cuktl!-4Ac S""P8c. Uvlril: "nn. W/trpr, C.rpet, Realtors M&-8640 Ideal home 6 Income. ~S,, __ _ street In Mesa Verde. . '11 fOr S3250'! (open evenlnaa) """' •• '".5",!l'Y,I CONDO ,21,0001 Unu.ually 1,,.. .. bedroom~ BALBOA BAY PROP. EASTSIDE SPECIAL! CAYWOOD REALTY V•l'JI •harp 2 bed,,,.in 111 B .. ytlfu .. ln .... •h•da 1.... * 642-74'1 * * 541-12'0 * both condo locO!cd ln Cholc• evel')'Whn!!. Act qulck\y en ,.,n Brt;ht and aJry new •JI el~ -HuntlnirtAA Beach IOCRlion this ont 81 $41,5()(), <).II Red I YF.olln NEW 3 ~m tric country kitchen, large CUSTOM I 5 BDR Call RCd Caroel Reeltori Carpet, Rellltors ~ home In EJ Toro. Pt.UO ct· taml1y room -.ith Ultd brick $67,SOO 546-8640 (OJll!l'I evCnincsl fopctn ctveningg) ment and waUu1 are In. tlrcplace, 111.rp pit.Uc, loedl" LovtlY eusto:n home with -. - -With p-1 • .., ~ B<autJM drape.1. AINOn-ot '""'and """ a ""lah" double Ul<'d brick flropllce, Assume SIA% Loon 00 ~,,, dltianed. Reedy to move, in. 3 bedrooms. 2 batht, loVely be.INed c e 11 In I• and t'V1lne 1 lnte 4• bdnn with Parle like yard. Sharp 4 bdrm, Possible lo ltkt over but of home for oob' $38,950. Ca1J beautiful atrll.lm. Located ll'l family nn, fll"llplace. Dlnlns f'am.Uy rm. n~aee. Din· 7~1 % Yrith S700>. •T3m. Red Carpet, R. ea I to r 1 prime Newport localkla anrt rm, bulh-Jn1 A dlshwaaher. "1r nn, Pl built 1111-M°"' It's a -~1 -~ 54W840 fopm -I simply •----·late. CaD Patio. N•ll' school1. $33,250. In -lion. brli 340-l'r.ll. " " -~ •·-r -··--Red ~~--R It bric 540-172! TARBELL ;;:'cW:::.J:~llall1 ~~~=·~·-615-!lJiOr~n-ga)oro TARBELL .. ::... ___ ,~ • l • . ' , \ .· Lagu11a Bea~h ED·ITION Today's Flnal N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 242, 4 SECTION, 60 PAGES ORA NGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1973 TEN CENTS Educator's Letter Shocl{s Environmentalists By JAN WORTH Of ttie Dally ll'ilot Stiff A letter from Dr. Fred H. Bremer, president of Saddleback ·Community O>llege in Mission Viejo, urging develoir ment of -coastal areas has produced a "shocked" if delayed reaction from the Environmental Coalition. Bremer's letter to the Citizens Direc- tion Finding Committee, dated June 27, urged "all CCJncerned officials and agen- cies" to encourage "active development of coastal areas under the tenns of Proposition 20 (the coastal conservation initiative)." "It has been called to our attention that the Coastal Conservation Com- mission is prOne to succumb to pressure exerted by individuals and groups who apparently are attempting to thwart types of development which can be beneficial .. .'' the letter stated . una, Trash Men Ge t Holida y There will be no trash collection In Laguna Beach on Labor Day. Monday. Thereafter, city trash collection will ·de delayed one day from the normal collection schedule. Friday trash collection next week will be made on Saturday (Sept. 11). Billionaire Will Surface During· Trial SALT LAKE CITY (Ul'I) -Bllliollaire Howard Hughes has agretd to come oul cll hiding long enough to give a depoaltioo in a suit which charges he was bilked in the $9 million purchase or worthless Nevada mining claims. In a telephone affidavit from London, Hughes agreed to testify in a civil da.mage suit filed against one of his former advisers and several businessmen by Hughes Tool Co. "This documeqt ls intended to confirm that I eipect to be available to answer such legitimate questions at such time and under such reasonable circwnstari'ces as the court m a y hereafter determine to be necessary to tt!e case," Hughes said. 'Ibe affidavit filed Wednesday was taken by Lever, B. Mylar o( Salt Lake City, who was described as a friend of Hl}ghes for more than 20 years, after the billionaire took the oath by telephone. Hugties' lawyers had Mylar appointed a cOaimlssioner of deeds for the United Kirlgdom lo order to administer the oath. Hughes said he "cannot conceive of aqy. manner in which my testimony ni!Pt be of use" ln the suit, which ac-ruses fonner Hughes employe John ff. Meler and nine defendants of conspiring to sell the tool company mining claims f91= prices "far in excess of the value of -Aueer'ty." H~ Tool Co,. which has changed its ~'me to ~umma Corp. since the suit was r.~. paid more than $9 million for the claims while Meier was the flnn's scien· Ufic adviser between 1967 and 1969. '·Other defendants include Toledo Mining Co. of Salt Lake City and its president, Anthony Hatis; Globe, Jnc.; John D. Suckling ; Charles W. Adams; E.B. Walsum ; Malaga Investments, Inc.; ~pro. Ltd. and Maatschappi ln.termovie. .,~eanwhile. the London Daily Express so1d today Hughes was "smuggled into the London Clinic" for an operation on hll hip when a surgeon refused to oper- •~e in Hughes' hotel hideaway. • -,. ~Cat .Burglary' . Suspect Cleared . J., bartender from Laguna Niguel has ~ cleared of charges stemming from i..ae.rles of "cat burglaries" in wealthy li'vlne Cove, a private community north QI 'Laguna Beach. , Two counts or felony burglary against Keat Hall WUlard ,-31 , of 293?2 Las Cruces were dismissed by Judge Rlcbard ~•!llilton during a hearing in South c)!>uoty Municipal Coort. ',Willard, a bartemh!r·in Newport Beach, sbriendered himself to Laguna BOach jiOllC. July .9 after learning a warrant 1i4d been Issued !or his arrest. · · : !'ollct said more than .$1000 cash wa~ \lfled from various homes in the walled QH1llt1Unlty during May and June. ~al homef wero entered despilo l)aavy police stakeouts In the area. Petition Efforts •- Continue By JACK CHAPPELL Of .... °""" ...... staff The effort to overturn the Laguna Beach City Council's doubling of parking meter fees rolled on today with referendum organizer Richard Willetts hoping to beat a Sept. 14 petition deadline by' a week and a half. He expects to present his petitions to the city council next Wednesdday. Willetts said, so. far, he has received back "ft..'(e Qr six" full petitions each with 30 1ignatur,s. 'l'bose names were being malched with precincts by volunteers. About 12 petitions are still being circulated. 'The referendum if successful , would stri ke down city council actions in- creasing parking meter fees from 10 to 20 cents an hour and eliminate installation of new meters on North and South Coast Highway and Laguna Canyon Road. The increased fees and the revenue from additional meters will bring an estimated $168.000 to the city this fiscal year after expenses for installing and changing equipment. The forecast is for $300,000 annually beginning with fiscal 1974-75. City Manager Al Thea! said the city has not yet purchased the new meters or the equipment to change over the old meters. He said such purchases would not llO!Tllally be Diade until the :J(klay IS.. PARKING, Page %) * * * Mayor Ptedicts Electio1i Over Parking Matter Laguna Beach Mayor Roy Holm said torlay if the referendum effort succeed s in garnering the required aignatures of IO percent or the electorate, he sees a special election being called on the park- ing meter controveror. "I can't see the city cooncil changing its mind with respect to the meters on tbe basis of a J>etition signed by 10 J>t\l'- cent of the electorate," . Mayor Holm declared.· "It isn't all that hard to get JO perctnt of tbe electorate to sign anything. We shouldn't allow any 10 percent segment of the community to be considered as representative of the community. "It ls virtually our responsibility to put this matter to a vote in an election," Mayor Holm added. ' · The mayor said he hoped his views ex- pressed tbe consensus of the council. He said be ls dead set against the relerendum, and said thal OILthe matter of meter fee increases, and increases 1 in the number of meten bangs the future of parking improvement in the city. "I am very ooncemed that people who are asking.to "kn the petitions ask que .. tlons and do as much as they can to understand all the lmpllcatiOll.'l of signing that petition," f&nyor Holm said. "Alnloot everybody in the communily would agree that parking is an absolute and critical problem In lown. We are on the verge or taking a great step forward In solving the pn>blem," be said; Mayor llolm said thou&hts of financing parking structures from an 'asseasment district among merchants was "fan- tasyland" and said there ls no way that 100 to I!() downto\\'11 merchants could !lnance a $1 million parking structure. Mayor Holm Hid he bosed his tJiouchts (See MAYOR, Pap t) • ' Bremer cited in particular bluffs developments planned between Doh<:!ny Beach and Shorecliffs in San Clemente. "We are very much in favor or the area being developed £or this purpose (residences, including multiple dwell· ings), because it will contribute to an in- creased tax base for the Saddleback Conununity College District without adversely affecting the environment," Bremer stated. . ew The Coaltlon reply, dated Monday of this week, was signed by Bob Snyder, Lake Forest resident and the Coalition president, and Dale Secord of Costa Mesa, chairman of the project evaluation and planning committee. "Your responsibility as president of Saddleback Community College is not that of lobbying for increased develo~ meitt along the coast," the reply stated . ciYou .have the responsibility of prcr vlding quality educational oppcrtunitics for citizens 4 the community. This is not done by encouraging rampant develop. ment, but by hiring qu ality staff, establishing sound educational policies and an effective administration." The Coalition letter added rapid development can seriously affect the quaJ. ity of education, citing the overcrowded Capistrano Unified School Di strict as an example. 0.SIY l"llot Sl1ff """° ARTISTS, CRAFTSMEN STILL SHOWllNG, SELLING IN LAGUNA Discovery Festival Pafticiparits Get Good Prices and Critical Acclaim ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Artists Re111ain Irvine Planning Biggest Village Development Yet Discovery Festival Still in. T O'Wn By . GEORGE LEIDAL Of ltlt 0.il"t·l"l .. I Stiff A new "village" with a population twice that of Laguna Beach is expected to be a reality within the city of Irvine by 1982. Irvine citizens next week will be first to see Irvine Company plans for the largest single village development yet contemplated for the new city. It is the Village of Woodbridge, a plan· ned community for 27,000 people on 1,715 acres in central Irvine. Community association representatives will view the acres at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Rancho San Joaquin Intermediate Schoo 1, University Park. Later in September, the (See VILLAGE, Page %) ' When the artists of the Festival of Arts, Sawdust and Art·A·Fair packed their palettes, buJ:tdled away their booths, and generally folded up shop Sunday, ex- hibitors at Discovery Festival nestled in for another week. Discovery Festival at 364 'N. Coast Highway will continue to exhibit the wares of 40 artists and craftsmen until Tuesday, under agreement reached with the city in granting of a conditional use permit for the exhibition grounds. Festival organizer Guy Bevill said he viewed the new festival's first season as a great success. The Discovery Festival artists, Joe Eaves and Leon Barnard hav~been singled out for special art awards during the season. Vacationing in Newport A work ' by Eaves entitled "Strange Flower" an interpretation of a dream, was selected for acquisition by the Brea Neuropsychi,atric Center. Barnard, has been awarded honorable mention in the • Second Annual National Art Competition sponsored by the Grand Galleria in SeatUe. Barnard's entry. a $2,500' oil painting entitled "Study or Ken" was selected from those of 3 artists who made it past preliminary judging. The artist is listed in "Who's Who in American Art," and his works have hung in Long Beach and ·Loll Angeles art museums and internationally in galleries. Hours are from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. dai- ly, with free admission, although a dona- tion is requested. Publisher Hit by Subpoena By JOHN ZALLER details of the conversation he · had with Of ,,.. oau.,. .. 1 .. 1 stttt ,TerTy Lenmer, assistant majority coun. The publisher of the Las Vegas S\!n sel of lhe Walergate committee, and !\. Said Wednesday in Newport Beach that Scott Armstrong, a committee ln- he has been subpoenaed to testify before the Senate Watergate Committee. vestigator. Hank Greenspt1n, who claims an at-Greenspun's name was first brought tempted burglary of bis office may have into the Watergate investigation last May been the \\'Ork of Watergate conspµ-ators. when James McCord, a convicted said the subpoena was served Tuesday at Watergate conspirator, testified before the Balboa Bay CUb where he is vaca· the Senate ComrrJttee that G. Gordon tionlng. ' Liddy told McCord o[ plans to break into Greenspun also disclosed that In-Greenspun's office in ):.as Vegas. veatlgators from the Senate Commltl.e McCord said the burglars were alter spent two afternoons this we<k In-documents they thought could Ue Sen. terrogatlng him about-President Nixon's·-Edmund Muskie ([).Maine) t<> organized ~lection campaign. crime» The questioning a~reqtty.stems rnim Greenspun has maintained there I.s Orcenspun's cl.aiin ttiat i six·figure clear evidence that someone tried tmSUc. Howard Bugbes contribulion to the cess!ully to jimmy bis nowspa.per's safe. President's campaign may be linked to Greenspun said Wednttday be believes favors !lug~ received from the U.S. the effort may have been the wotk or JusUco O.parlment. W«tergat11burglars but that be doubts ii However Grcenspun declined to revear was r..rtbe purpose of gathering fn. f fonnation linking Muskie to organized crime. ..I did have in my possession a docu· ment tying Muskie to apparent wrong- doing," Greens pun sai~. "But it invol~ed only a relatively µn1mportant hunting violation for whlch he paid a fme. I • thought the matter was so trivial that I never even published it." However, Greenspun said that s.lnce 197-1 he has been asking questions of Nix· on administration officials about a "large cash contributlon° from Hughes to Nix· on's campaign fund. "I hadn't connected my Jimmied sale to the campaign contribution until this May when ~ beard Mc:C.ord say that Howard Hughes' airplane was standing by to take the burglars to Central America after they burglarlz.cd my ol- fice." Greenspun said that, since Howard Hughes was himself In Central Am<r!ca (See wmrass, Pa~e 2) .. The resultant impact of your sug- gestion cannot possibly serve the best in- terest of the community," the letter con. eluded. "Overconcem for the tax base for your district only indicates a single- minded approach to educational ad· rr.inistration." Copies of the letter were sent to all Saddleback College trustees, the Orange Ccunty Grand Jury, the Coastal Com· mission. and the state chancellor of com· munity colleges. Irvine Out On Issue By JOHN ZALLER Of Ille Dllb' ""' ..... Newport Beach and Laguna Beach of- ficials conferred for 70 minutes Wectne. day on their respective claims to the Irvine Company-owned coastline between the two cities. The meeting, also attended by representatives of the Irvine Company, was held behina cllo6ed 'Cl(IOl's:in ·Newport • Beach City Hall to discuss the overlap, ping spberes of infiuence of the two cities., Following the meeting, repreaenllttftS of Newport Beach and Laguna Beach made statements indicating that the two are not in a "tug al war" over the prop- erty. , 1'The issue is not who gets how muda of the 10,000 acres," said Laguna Beach Mayor Roy Holm, "but how that land is developed and how it will affect each ci- ty." Holm and Newport Beach City Manager Robert L. Wynn also said their pooition is that Laguna and Newport should have "first shot" at the downcoast area and that the city of Irvine should not be pennitted to compete with them. The Irvine Company made a statement after the meeting saying, "It is our posi- tion that all options should be kept open, including the possibility that the ~ Irvine might want the area in its of influence." Holm said he understood from the meeting that this was the Jrvlne Com- pany's position. However Wynn said that ur had the clear impression, that the Irvine Com- pany will agree to let Newport Beach and Laguna Beach have tbe first opportunity to include the area in their spheres of m. fluence if they want to do so." The meeting was called by Wynn to iron out overlapping elements in the sphere or infiuence maps drawn up by Newport Beach and Laguna Beach. The cities generally agree that Newport Beach should get the area between Corona del Mar and Crystal Cove and that Laguna Beach should get the area between Crystal Cove and its cl· ty boundaries. The Local Agency Fonnation c.om- mittee <i.u-ci will meet Sept. 12 to con- sider Newport Beach's propooed sphere (See COAST, Page t) Oruge «:out Weadter A fairly nice day b in store Jor Orang• Coast residents' and visitors Friday-especially alter the morn- ing clouds clear off. HigM in the 70s at the beache& rising to near 80 inland. INSIDE TOD.\\' If you've got a spt!da! interest in a hiQhtD01f J)f'O'jtct, it wouldn't be improper to invite tlte entire Californa Highway Commission out to dtnner -tHch "" tht Ir· /line Company did recently. St.cry Page 18. L M. ..,. 11 Allfl L-~ •-. • ....... .... -·---, ....... ~ ...... Clll....... $. MlftMI t'lllMll W (IKlltltll ,._.. N•tltlltt ...., ' CM!fa s:t 0t1..,. C-'Y 1 .. tl , __ n s...m at-st °""' .... l4-1J .... MM11:tb ,,... l:lllttrlll PIM ' T ... ....._ lilli l 11ttrt.i.,_1 M.J1 n-ttn N41 .,...,.. ...u ... ,.. 4 ,_., ~ llteuni IJ,14 .,.__., Ntwt lt•D MtrM<.. H Wtfff Newt 4 Ill hr¥la lt • t J! UAJLV PJLOl LB 0.llY PllOI SllU PhOIO CALLED BY COMMITTEE Publisher Greenspun From Page I WITNESS ... at the time the burglary was supposed to have taken place, he immediately suspected that there might be a con- neCtion between the campaign con· tributlon and Justice Department favors for Hughes. Greenspun said his suspicion \\'as further aroused when Jeb Stuart Magruder, deputy director of the Com· mittee to Re-elect the President, later told the Senate Committee that Attorney General John Mitchell bad personally ap. proved surveillance work on Greenspun's office. Greenspun is acknowledged to possess an extensive collection of handwritten memos from Howard Hughes to his various subordinates. However, the publisher flatl y refused to say whether these memos proved his suspicions about possible Justice Depart· ment favors for Hughes r esulting from campaign contributions. "There are leads on this matter and they are being followed up," was all Greempun wou1d say. He remained noncommittal about whether he will lay out his collection for the Waterga te Committee when he is called to testify. "These are newspaper documents and I have a right to keep them , con- fidential , '1 Greens pun said. .. Samuel Dash, chief counsel for the I Watergate Committee, said Wednesday In Washington that he does not expect to clash with Greenspun over the memos because it is "not the committee's prac· tice to subpoena newspapers' source material." .·The committee is scheduled to reconvene next month. Greenspun's su~ ~. signed by committee Chairman Sam Ervin Jr .. does not specify a date for Greenspun's appearance. From Pagel PARKING ... 'vaiting period between enactment of an ordinance and application of it begins. Theal said that if the referendum cuts out the $168,000 revenue, the city council would be forced to go back into the budget and cut out certain allocations. The ordinance as enacted also stated that monies received from parking meters would be expended for regulation and Control of traffic, maintenance on meters and parking areas, acquisition and leasing of off.street parking facilities to include public transportation tenninal faci lities. _ However, it did not direct that the " monies received would be placed in a special fund for such expenditures, and that is a point Willetts has attacked. Willetts called recent criticism of the referendum "the same garbage they gave us in 1969," when he sa id monies generated by an increase in parking meter fees then were supposed to ha\'e been placed in a special fu nd for creation of 'dditional parking. OlANGI COAST u DAILY PILOT TM Orante ~I D"'ILY PILOT, with ""'lcl'I 11 comt:tlt'lfCI f"-Hews·Pttu, 11 PllbU.,.t<! l:>Y "'-On.1109 CD..i PWll11'1ir1!1 Como.nv, 5~· [I .. tdltloril ••• ~l1P1«1, 'Motldly !llrovgti J<,io.y, fllr COi!• Mtst, NIWf!Ort &tKll, Hunllngton. 8tklllPOWi!•ln Vtllty, Ugun1 l+letl, lrvl11e/s..odi.btdr •l'ld s.,, C:lemt>1!1/ S.>1 J1111n C..,i111'1J11L " •l"tlt •tvicntl tidlllOn h llUC!lltl'ltd kturd1y1 .,..., S\ino8y1. Tiit: P'l..C~I Pllb!bMtlCI Pl•n• ,, II ))) Wnt ••Y S!rffl, COl!t ~. C.l!lornlt, rnH. Robert N. W11d ,., .. 111..,1 ,,..., P111111.,,.. ' J1ck R. Ct1,lty Vic. hmlo:lt111 •!WI 0.-11 Mllnt0tt 1'1101t1•J Kttwil ldiltr 1"110t'l'ltt A. Murph!nt M411t&l119 l!~l!Ot c1t.,1.1 H, Looi ~<ch11' r. N•U Aa111t1M Mt~atlnd' £Clllorl ........... _ 222 Fotttf Awenut ~•lllt1g Atltlrt••t·P.O. lo• 666, 92652 ...... .,,.... Colla M ... : UO Wtlf hY'Slrlfl H..,ort 8ff(PI: UU HtwpO!'T Milllftt•CI Hll"tlr19'-1 &Ncil I l1f7t lt<K.i'i IOl/ltw1rd ""'°""'"-!•; ~ ffof!PI El c.t.mllw:i llMI ......... f7141 '42-4J21 d 'fW "'"""' .. 6U.16Jt L.,... .._. AR hpz1aclfl1 ; Tths •1•1 4H.t46' • """""'' lttJ. ()r1.-qt Cof•I PIA>lf.t.'"8 '*""'"'· ,., Mwt tllrip. l!11t1ttr11ion., ..,._,.., fMfftt' ., ldvttilltlfttfltt fltl'tll! _.,. lilt ~ w1"*'1 tMtltl ""' IMf'" flf apyrlfl'l1 -· .... delll !*!tos Mid 11 (Ollt Mal, Cll"'"'la, liltlMrl"IOll IW ao"lltt AM ~"' n """ u .11 ln0fll!l!y1 m!n,.,., ....,.., ... ltM "'°"'911w. Beacla Fettce Lagunita Agrees To Seek Permit- The Lagunita Association agreed Wednesday to seek a use permit from the Orange County Planning Commission to al101v a fence to remain on the beach below the private community. The association's action followed a warning from the county building depart· ment that it would seek a criminal com· plaint against the association ror viola- tion of the Beach and Recreation District (BRD) ordinance. According to the building department. the fence was erected in mld-Jul y on I.he north end of Lagunita's beach without the use permit required by the BRD ordinance. Cecil Collins, an attorney and resident of Lagunita, said the application ror the pennit will be filed with the planning department staff within "three or four davs." After processing, the pennit wilt be considered by the planning commission during a public hearing. ''I have full confidence we will get the permit,'' Collins said. The association also will ask the permlt cover con- struction of another fence at the south end of Lagunita , he added. The existing fence, Collins noted ,. was buill along the north boundary of "Lot A" which includes about half the beach below the Lagunita bluffs . Lot A is shown on the assessor's map for the area and has been consistently taxed since 1938 '"hen Lagunita was formed , Collins said. Because of prescriptive rights court rulings which allow public title to beach property if past public use can be demonstrated , Collins said, Lagunita has actively sought lo keep the beach private. "If "'e don't we could lose title," the attorney said. Collins stressed that beachgoers are free to pass along sands between ~A and the water. Collins, a past president of the Lagunita Association, noted the fence or chain barricade has exis ted at the north end of Lagunita for years. "Of course, occ-asionally it is washed out by the surf or kicked down by van- dals," said Collins. When destroyed, the fence is routinely repaired, he said. But the BRO ordinance, he noted, re- quires that use pennits are required for repairs and well as c o m p I e t e replacements. Barry Todd Miller, president of Lagunita, said the hassle with the county over the fence stemmed from a "mlsunderstanding" or permit pro- cedures. Divers En Route To Rescue Pair In Trapped Suh CORK, Ireland (UP) -A team of divers armed with "the most sophisticated equipment in the world" raced to sea today to try to rescue two men trapped with a d1vindling air supply in a disabled mini-suhmarine on the sea floor 1,375 feet beneath the surface. The trapped crewmen, Roger !\iallinson, 34, and Roger Chapman, 28, radioed that "'ve're okay and that our morale is fantastic ." The miniature submarine Pisces III ,1·11s damaged and sank during a cable-- laying operation \Vednesday. The crewmen have enough air to last until Sat w-day morning, and perhpas longer. "\Ve have the most sophisticated equipment in the world, the experience and the kno1v-how, and we are going to get those two men up,'' said Robert Starr. head of a six-man Canad ian diving learn 1vhich will make the rescue at- tempt. Starr and five Canadian divers new in- to Cork today along with Pisces V, a newer and more highly developed model of the sub1narine on the sea bed. The white, 19-foot.Jong Pisces V was joined by an orange sister vessel flown in from Scotland. A giant crane hoisted both aboard the Vickers Voyager, the 4,~ton ''mother" ship of the SWlken submarine. Jt set off for the accident scene - about 150 miles southwest of Cork and some 94 miles from the nearest point of Ireland -several hours later than plan· ned. But Capt. Leonard Edwards. the Voyage r's skippe r, said he expected to reach the scene about midnight and that rescue work would begin imn1ediately. ''To put it bluntly, we'll send one of the submarines down to put a rope around 1he stricken sub, and then we'll yank it up," Ed\\-'ards said. A gale was blowing in the rescue area today, and Starr said "It won't make it (the rescue) any easier." Lions Clu11 Slates Pancake B1·eakfast • The Lag_una Beach Lloos Club will bold it.s lradltlona.I Labor Day weekend pan· cake breakfast from /, a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday and Monday al Heisler Park. Tickets are $1 .25 each and arc available at the breakfast or from Laguna Beach Lumbe r, ~f o ore Hardware, Avis Men and Boys Wear, Knox Crow Mobil Service, Laguna Auto Parts, Blll Thomas camera1 Dr. Leon Axelrod, Dr. E. Douglas Tignor, Dean Wllter & Co., i.Laguna Imports and ?¥1Uchum, Jones & Templeton. Proceeds benefit charities, -· Ile said the association had no lntenUon of breaking lhe law. John Wolfe, chief of the building department's zoning Jaw enforcemen t division, said Wednesday he is satisfied with LagWlita's decision to seek the pennit. He indicated there would probably not be any legal action since Lagunita has agreed to comply with the BRO ordinance. Aide Details Main Beach Finance Plan Details or financing the $1.2 million Main Beach Park project were clarified today by Tom Meade, finance director for the city of Laguna Beach. Of the $1.2 million cost for develop- ment ana land acquisition, $.500.000 will come from federal grants, $600,000 from bond money, and $100,000 from county revenue sharing awarded the city \Vednesday by the board of supervisors. Earlier. Meade had indicated $500,000 would ' come from hood momey and that an extra $100,000 would come from the city's share of federal revenue sharing. Meade stressed that council-approved "shopping list" for the city's revenue sharing .,.... including $267,000 for open space purchase -will not be changed. The Main Beach Park project is scheduled to begin in October. The park will feature heavy landscaping, trees, a curved promenade and new lifeguard facilities. The project has received approval of the South Coast Regional CoMervation Commissioo, but that decision has been appealed to the state Coastal Conserva- tion JCommission. 'l1ie state \>'>llY will take the appeal under consideration Sept. 5. Petitions Filed For November Water Election With the deadline · for filing nomination papers ju.st a day .away, six persons have taken out petitions to run for office in the Nov. 6 Laguna Beacb County Water District board election. Terms of directors Alfred Hastie, Paul Waterman and Paul Beemer expire this year. Each of the incumbents has taken out nominating petitions and Watennan and Beemer have already filed theirs with the county Registrar of Voters. Mrs. Frances Englehardt, 1 7 2 3 Thurston Drive, has also filed her nomination petition with the registrar. Deadline for filing is 5 p.m. Friday. Papers aJso have been taken out by Gwynne Kirkpatrick, 1415 Skyline Dri~e and Stanley Hietala, 430 Ruby St., while Kirkpatrick said today he definitely plans to file the petition. Hietala said he "probably" would return his. . Summer Session .. Attendance Up The average daily attendance for the summer session at Saddleback College jumped 39 perce~t over the 1m summer session, according college Dean of Admissions Howard Marcou. Some 1,540 students registered for summer classes and took an average class load of 4.65 units. Registration for the fall quarter at Saddleback College will be conducted Sept. 11-13. Further infonnation may be obtained ·by calling 831-9700 or 4944950, Marcou said. Fro1n Pfl!Je 1 MAYOR ... on the assessment district on discussion \vith Chamber of Qnnmerce represen- tatives, downtown businessmen and other merchants. "It won't fly," he said. ft had been noted, too, that the Glenn- eyre Street structure ls the least ex- pensive of the series of parking facilities deemed necessary for the town. 1be land is already owned by the city and future structures will cost more because land acquisition will be necessary. "lf it (additional parking) is built, it will be financtd either by residents of the community by property taxes alone, or by a corobina.ti on of residents, toW'ists and visitors w~ use the parking spaces and put money in the meters. "What it boils down to is: should the resident foot the whole bill by fln1111clng through his taxes?" Mayor Holm sald. Woman Found Dead OAKLAND (AP) -The body of Joyce Brannon, 30, was found In her apartment Wednesday aller ahe had been shot or stabbed to death, police sald. Site was the 6Sth ~rson to be murdered hero thla year. 'TUSTIN MCAS eOSTA Ana r---' MESA IRVINE INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX ~ NEWPORT BEACH UC I El T0t0 Mnie Corps Air Station IRVINE •, EL . TORO .: LAGUNA BEACH PlllY 1"11111 Htwtme• SHADED AREA SHOWS LOCATION OF IRVINE COMPANY PROPOSED "EW VILLAGE Pl~n Shows Homes for 27,000 on 1,700 Acres In Central Irvine; Village Would Be City's Largest Woman , Admits I l Killing Father After Assaults ASHBEBORo; N.C. (UPI) -A murder warrant has been issued against a young woman who told police she shot her lather and dismembered hla body beca""' be had sexually assaulted her since she was 11. The warrant, Issued in Philadelphia, where the slaying allegedly took place, w.., expected here today. It charges Camella Meglino Robbins, 27, in the shooting death ol 50-year-<>ld Frank Meglioo. Mrs. Robbins told authorities she killed Meglino two years 8"' u he Jay sleeping In their South Pblladelphla home. She sald she and an accomplice then haeked up tile body, hauled the remains to Miami, Fla., and buried ·~ Philadelphia police Sgt Larry Grace, who questioned the woman at length Wednesday, flew to Miami today to work wilh the Dade County sberill's office In trying to locate the remains. Mrs. Robbins walked into the Randolph County sheriff's office late Monday and said she shot her father six times . With the help of a woman she said she knew only as Tami, and who she said was her father's girlfriend, they cut up the body with a hacksaw and butcher knife in the basement, stuffed the pieces in garbage cans and rented a trailer to transport the cans to Florida. Philad<lpbla authorities told the sher- iff's office here they found human blood- stains on the sofa, basement steps and basement of the abandoned Megllno house, vacant since h1egllno disappeared in May, 1970. At the time of the murder, Mrs. Rob- bins said she was ttdte months pregnant "''ith her daught~. who is now 3. She now has another infant daughter. When she first made her confession, she told the sheriff she had been wan- dering across the country, hitchhiking, but authorities later learned she was married to Dewey Robbins and the cou- ple lived in an Asheboro trailer court. From Page 1 IRVINE VILLAGE ... plans will be officially filed with the city. The village, if approved by the ci ty, will occupy land presently part of the San Diego Creek Flood Plain as described by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. That is most of central Irvine. Some features of the village plan were discussed by Douglas M. Gfeller, director of project administration for the Ir.vine Company. Ifl a company announcement or the zoning presentation, Gfeller said the village will be a recreati00-0riented com- munity. The plan features a multi· purpose activity corridor running parallel to the San Diego Creek channel. Two man-made lakes totaling 70 acres in size will parallel Culver Drive and Jef. frey Road in the center of the village wlti<:b ts also bounded by the Sen Diego Freeway on the south and Moulton Parkway on the north. The lakes are part of the t9W flood cdnlrol program proposed b1 the ltvine c.ompany for the vtUagl!. Other features of the flood protection plan inciude: -Widening and relocating the San Diego Creek bed creating a 208 foot wide grass channel t.o replace the present 40- foot creek bed. -Preservation of the trees presC!ltly lining the creek. -Development of an environmental corridor segment (a cootrOvenial land use suggestion of the company's overall general plan for the $3,000 acre city of 430,000). The segment would parallel the creek between Alton Averwe and Bar- ranca Road. -Earth benn.s would be placed along Alton and Barranca to contain flood nows in the "activity corridor". --Commertial facilities -the prop- erties to which the Irvine Company usually retains title when a village is completed -11\\-ill be built on raised pads." The City of Irvine has yet to adopt flood plain 2'lll.ing. County flood plain overlay zones, notably in the Laguna Can- yon watershed have been subject to much controversy jn that they restrict replacement of buildings and call for new construction to be built above the level of expected flood waters. Gfeller said, 0 We aren't suggestihg that people will move into the area until the flood control solution is fully im- plemented." Most of the commercial development proposed for Woodbridge will be within Lhe flood cootrol-environmenta.l·activities corridor. Restaurants, a theater and variety of specialty shops wiU be added to the usual gasoline station, drug store, supennar1r.et and bank mix provided in neigtborhx>d or village shopping centers. Also proposed !0< the acUvlUes 'fO'" ridor are schools, churches, public park!. recreation centers and "some residential uses". A minimum of L33 acres of open space is promised, including the lakes, parks, trails and flood control. Present city Jiark standards require 122 acres ol this Id be improved park land dedicated to the city. Gfeller said the Irvine Qimpany ;l>aa "proposed for public acquisitim tw.•afr. ditional community park sites that total 58 acres." 'nte park and lake amenl lies would ....,,e a populatton o! 27,000 propooed to be housed in "a greater variety of hous- ing than any other village built to date" oilers. Proposed are ·both aUached and detached single family homes, pitio homes, duplexes, condominiwns and apartments. "Each neighborhood cluster wi.11 con· tair1 a mix of housing types," a company spokesman said, noting that overall density of the village would be about five units per acre with densities ranging irom two to 25 WJ.it.s per acre. FromP.,el COAST ... of influence. Wynn said he called the meeting partly to discuss · conflicting claims between the two cities over Los Trancos Canyon, which opens onto the coastline at Crystal Cove. But after the Irvine Company stated that it does not want to be ipcluded in any city's sphere of influence at this time, Wynn said he decided there Was no immediate need to resol ve thi.$ problem. LOW PRICES AR·E BORN HERE ••• RAISED ELSEWHERE" Adn1lral NO-DEFROSTING • Adnrln.I. . REFRIGERATOR/FAEEZER ALL THESE GREAT ·...,..,,,_,.FEATURES ' • full Width "BookclM" ,,.."' Door Sh.tlf -for ln•t•nt 8v&U•blllt)'. t Dual Ttmpo:ratu1' Control•-••IKt tho' r11flt ttmPtfttul't for toch stC'tlofl, • Twin Porulatn Ct11Pt~-ktt9S frillt. vt1tt8bltt 1ttd1n fresh. • Extr1 ~I'll Rtfrlre~tor Door Sh•tvn-holdt ..,.n 1an qu1tt ...... , SLIMLINE REffilGERATOR No dtfro1fff1f ,..f,Tf•t•t'Or ttctlot11 .... ·Cl 1 J:l with Arctic Air flw ry1t.M for full , full Width ,t'Nltl' Chm iryclt clrcul•llo~ , Wide-Rini• Ttmpenitur. Cotrtrol ALL THIS $1· ·5, 9' 95 . : :i:,:::; :;:::,:"°' '~'"" FOR ONLY. • full Width frttn·Mett ' ' CO!tlor D..- ' 15995 m Mamller of u C1Ulwdl1'1 LI ...... ' 90 DAY . ' CASH O~up With The WliM Afl'IOftl rn. .cio~Jve ,..,1 .. Volume • ..,,., COIDIT •• 11 AWA"9 Power ef 110 Storn ''~"'•tt·•·!, ~ ........ ..,....,.. .... ' fODJ 1115. NEWPORT BLVD. Dow11hnm Cesta Mesa -Phone 548-7768 ' ' ' I I I I I Sa~dlehaek .. " VOL. 66, NO. '242 , 4 SECTION, 60 PAGES EDITION . - ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today's Fin•~ N.Y. Stoek.8 THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1973 . ' TEN CENTS Educator's Letter Shocks Environmentalists By JAN WORTH Oi !tit D1llr .. llOI Sllff A letter from Dr. Fred H. Bremer, president of Saddleback Community COllege in Mission Viejo, urging develop- ment of coastal areas has produced a "shocked" if delayed reaction from the Environmenlal Coalition. Bremer's letter to the Citizens Direc- tion Finding Committee. dated June 27, urged ''all concerned official s and agen- • I cies" to encourage nactlve development of coastal areas under the tenns of Proposition 20 (the coastal conservation initiative). 11 "It bas been called to our attention that the Q>astal Conserva tion Com- mission is prone to succumb to pressure exerted by individuals and groups who apparently are attempting to thwart types or development which can be beneficial .•. " the letter stated. Conflietint1 Cluitns Newport, Lagun~ Confer on Coast Newport Beach and Laguna Beach of- ficials conferred tor 70 minutes \Vednes- day on their respective claims to the l.rv4Jle Company~wned coastline between thej "-'O cities. Ttie meeLing, also attended by repi-escntatives of the Irvine Company, was held behind closed doors in Nev.•port Newpor t Asks · To 'Share' . Jet Noises By L. PETER KRIEG 01 lflt' Dtl1Y P'llol Sl•ff Newport Beach may open up still another front in its wa r against the Orange County Airport. tjty councilmen are talking about demanding that commercial jets disperse their takeoff patterns so the noise is spread over other communities -Costa Mesa and lrvine. Councilman Paul Ryckoff suggested the dispersal during a counc il "study aesslon" Monday afternoon, although councilmen did not order any specific proposal be made to either Orange Coun- ty or the Federal Aviation Administration. ''Has anyone ever popped the question about changing takeoffs so they don 't come over Newport Beach every time ?" Ryckoff asked. ~ayor Donald Mclnnis said that the pri>posal has been made but said it has never been pressed . !'The FAA has looked several times at the possibbllily," Mcinnis said, "but ndtblng ha! ever come of it." A Fl'derat Aviation Administration SROkesman said this morning that the FM does not have any takeoff pattern ~hanges under review at this time. Neithe r doeS lbc county, according to Ron Chandler, assis tant director or Orange County Airport. '1That method is a common pro- cedure," Chandler said. "The question bait come up from time to time. "Jt amounts to a qu estion of exposing J'.'l'lOfC of the people to noise less of the time or exposing fewer people more of ~!i time ," he said. Qiandler said It •would requirt a study 1>¢1ore any ch11nges could be made. Uclnnls, himself a pilot, indicated he (See AIRPORT, Page %) School Seeking Teacher Aides ;University High School Is seeking ap- ~ants for teacher akje openings lhls laJl. Jobs are aVJIU•ble both run and part-u.me and noon Kour ,.,_pe:rvilors also a.re netd<d. ,_ )ntervlews will begin In early Sep- lelllber at the bJgh school, 471t CimJl"S Delve, 'lllrtle Rock. 'J>epartmenta needing persons to belp teJchers Include: Englloh, guidance. riiu.slc, physical educBtlon, business t:d\lcation, home economics, speech, languages. library and tcchnlca1 educa .. don. Applications are available rrom assi> ·tail! principal Greg Cops. • Beach City Hall to discuss the overlap- ping spheres of influence of the two cities. Following the meeting, representatives ot Newport Beach and Laguna Beach made statements indicating that the two are not in a "tug of war" over the prop- erty. "The issue is not who gets how much of the 10,000 acres /' said Laguna Beach l\tayor Roy Holm, "but how that land is developed and how it v.·tn affect each ci- ty." Holm and Newport Beach "City Manago..-Raberl L. Wynn also said their position ts that Laguna and Newport should have "first shot" at the downcoast area and that the city ol Irvine should not be permitted to compete with them. The Irvine Company made a statement after the meeting aaying, "It is our posi- tion that all options should be kept open, including the possibility that the city of Irvine might want the area in Its sphere of influence." Holm said he understood from the meeting that this was the Irvine Com- pany's position. However Wynn said that "I had the clear impression that the Irvine Com- pany will agree to let Newport Beach and Laguna Beach have the first opportunity to include the area in their spheres of ln- Ouence if they want to do so." The meeting was called by Wynn to iron out overlapping elements in the sphere of influence maps drawn up by Newport Beach and Laguna Beach. The cities generally agree that Newport Beach should get the area between Corona de! Mar and Crystal (See COAST, Page I) Howard Hughes Will Testify At Suit Hearing SALT LAKE CITY (UP I) -Billionaire Howard Hughes has agreed to come out of biding long eDougb to give a deposition in a suit which charges he was bilked in the $9 million purchase of worthless Nevada mining claims. In a telephone affidavit from London, Hughes. agreed to testify In a civll damage suit filed against one of his former advisers and several businessmen • by Hughes Tool Co. .. Th.is document is intended to confirm that I expect to be available to answer such legitimate questions at such time and Wlder such reasonable circumstances as the court m a y hereafter determine to be necessary to the case," Hughes said. The affidavit filed Wednesday was taken by Lever B. Mylar of Sall Lake City, who was described as a [riend o( Hug.ht!: for more than 20 yean, after the billionaire toot the oath by telephone. Hughes' lawyers -had Mylar appointed • commissioner of deeda for the United Kingdom in order to admlnlster the oath. Hughes said he 11cannot conceive of any manner in wblcb my tesUmony might be of use'; In the suit, which ac- cuses former Hughes emplofe John IL Meler and nine delendanis o conspiring to sell the tool company mining claims for prices "far1 In .excess of the value of the property.'' r • . Hughes TOl>l Co .• which has chansect lis name to Summa corp. a1ncie \be •Ull was· (See HUGUES, Pip' I) Bremer cited in particular bluffs developments planned between Doheny Beach and Sboreclllls in San Clemente. "We are very much in favor or the area being developed for this purpose (residences, including multiple dwell- ings), because it will contribute to an in· creased tax base for the Saddleback Community C.Ollege District without adversely affecting the environment," Bremer stated. The Coaltion reply, dated Monday of this week, was signed by Bob Snyder, Lake Forest resident and the· Coalition president, and Dale Secord of Costa Mesa, chairman of the project evaluation and planning committee. "Your responsibility as president of Saddleback Community College Is not that of lobbying for increased develop- ment along the coast," the reQly stated. ''You have the responsibility of pro- viding quality educational opportunities for citizens . the community. This is not done by encouraging rampant develop- ment, but by hiring quality staff, establishing sound educational policies and an effective administration.'' The Coalition letter added rapid development can seriously affect the qual- ity of education , citing the overcrowded Capistrano Unified School District as an example. ''The resultant impact of your sug- gestion cannot possibly serve the best in- terest of the community," the letter con- cluded. "Overconcem for the tax base for your district on1y indicates a single- minded approach to educational ad- rrJnistration. '' Copies of the letter \Vere sent to all Saddleback College trustees. the Orange O:amty Grand Jury, the Coastal Com· mission, and the state chancellor of com- rnunity colleges. ' anne TUSTIN eOSTA MESA .. ta MCAS Ana IRVINE INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX ~ NEWPORT BEACH IRVINE EL TORO LAGUNA BEACH ~IYl"llllf"-J' SHADED AREA SHOWS LOCATION OF IRVINE COMPANY PROPOSED NEW VILLAGE Plan Shows Homes for 27,000 on 1,700 Acres In Central Irvine; Village Would Be City's L•rgnt --- Vacationing in Newport Publisher Hit by Subpoena By JOHN ZALLER Of t11t C>all"t' l"lttt Slaff The publisher of the Las Vegas Sun said Wednesday in Newport Beach that he has beep subpoenaed to testify before the Senate Watergate Committee. Hank Greenspun, who claims an at- tempted burglary of his office may have been the work of Watergate conspirators, said the subpoena was served Tuesday at the Balboa Bay Cub where he is vaca- tioning. Greenspun also disclosed that in- vestigators from the Senate Committee spent two afternoons this week in- terrogating him about President Nixon's re-election campaign. The questioning apparenUy stems from Greenspun's claim tbat a six-figure • Howard Hughes contributioo to the President's campaign may be linked to favors Hughes received. from the U.S. Justice Department. However Greenspun declined to reveal details of the conversation he bad with Terry Lenzner, assistant majority coun- sel of the Watergate committee, and R. Scott Armstroog, a committee in· vestigator. Greenspun's name was first brought into the \Vatergate investigation last May when James McCord, a cOnVicted Watergate conspirator, testified before the Senate ComrrJUee that G. Gordon Liddy told McCord of plans to break Into Greenspun's office in Las Vegas. McCord said the burglars were alter documents tbey thought could Ue Sen. _r Reeall Continues Firm Seeks Decomposed Tuna WASlllNGTON (AP)-:.... The Food and Drug Administration ·said today that the recall from Hawaii and California of nearly 80,000 cans or tuna, some of lt decomposed, has been essentlally completed from stores and warehouses. But the remainder presumably Wu pur- chased by consumers. Few if any cans of the Bumble Bee brand chunk light tuna -are believed to remain on the market, an FDA spokesman said. The agency sald it told the processor, Hawlllan Tuna Packers or Honolulu, on July 2.5 that federal tests shoWl!d four out ot 24 cans sampled contained decomposed tuna. A reclll was lnlUated Aug. 13 by the distributor, Bumble Bee Seafoo~c a dlvlslon of'Castle & Cook, Inc., Astoria, Ore. The recalled cans are coded 21WO-L202. The decomposed tuna Is not considered to be a health hazard, the FDA sald, but would be esthetically distasteful • • ,. • Edmund Muskie (D-Maine) to organired crime. Greenspun has maintained there is clear evidence that someone tried unsuc- cessfully to jimmy bis newspaper's safe. Greenspun said Wednesday he believes the effort may have been the work of Watergate burglars but that he doubts it was for the pUfPOSe of gathering In- formation linking Muskie to organized crime.- "I did 'have in my ~ssion a docu· ment t~g Muskie to apparent wrong· doing," Greenspun sBid. "But it involved only a relatively unimportant hunting violation for which he paid a !fine. I thought the matter was so trivial that I never even published it." However, Greenspun said that since 1971 he has been asking questions of Nix- on administration officials about a "large cash contribution" from Hughes to Nix- on's campaign fund .• 0 1 hadn't connected my jimmied safe to the campaign contribution until . this May when : heard McCord say that Howard Hughes' airplane was standing by to take the burglars to ~Central America after they burglarized my of- fice." Greenspun said that, since Boward HugheJ was hliruell In Central America at the time the burglary was supposed to have taken place, he immediately suspected that there might be a COil· nection between the campaign con- tribution and Justice Department favors for Hughes. Creenspun said his suspicion was further aroused when Jeb Stuart M•gruder, deputy director ol the Com· mlttee to R ... Ject the President, later told "the Senate Commflleo that Attorney General John Mitchell had personally ap- (See WITNESS, Page I) • . Zoning Eyed By h·vine Citizenry By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 "'' o.nr !"Utt S'-'f A new "village" wit h a population l'¥\ice that of Laguna Beach is expected to be a reality within the city of Irvine by 1982. Irvine citizens next week will be firs t to see Irvine Company plans for the largest single village development yet contemplated for the new city. It is the Villa,e of Woodbridie, a plan- ned community for 27 ,cm. people an 1,715 acres in central Irvine. Community association representatives will view the acres at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday In RIDcho San Joaquin lnterm<dlate S c b 'o I, University Park. Later In September, the plans will be officlally filed with the dty. The village, if approved by tbe dty, will occupy land presently pan ol the San Diego C...k Flood Plain u detcrtbed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. That is most of central Irvine. Some features of the village plan were discussed by Douglas M. Gfeller, director nf project administration for the Irvine Company. ln a company announcement of the zoning presentation, Gfeller said the village will be a recreation-oriented com- munity. The plan features a . multi- purpose activity corridor running parallel to the San Diego Creek cbaMel. Two man-made lakes totaling 70 acres in size will parallel Culver Drive and Jef. trey Road in the center of the village which Is also bouoded by the San Diogo Freeway on the south and Mou1too Parkway on the north. The lakes are part of the total Oood control program proposed by the Irvine Company ror the village. Other features of the flood pr'otectlon plan include: -Widening and relocating the San . Diego Creek bed creating a 208 foot wide grass channel to replace the present 40- foo t creek bed. -Preservation of the trees presently lining the creek. -Development of an envirorunental corridor segment (a controversial land use suggestion of the company's overall general plan for the 53,000 acre city of 430,000). The segment would parallel the creek between Alton Avenue and Bar· ranca Road. -Earth berms would be placed along (See VILLAGE, Page I) (;out Weatller . A fairly nice day is ln store for Orange Coast residenb and visitors Friday-especially after the morn- ing clouds clear off. Highs In the 70s at the beaches rising to near 80 Inland. lNSIDE TODAY 1/ JIOU'ti« QOt 4 special intne.tt in a hfahwa11 project, it wouldn't be improptr to fnvite the entire Coliforna High.,.y Commission out to dtn.nn -sueh °" the lr- oine Compan11 dld rtcentl~. Storv Poge 18. L.M. ...,. U: .... ""' .. 1. CallfoMla S CltMllltll J6~ CO!nlc• u C1"9M_. t• ONltl "ttktt '' 1411tff'tal , ... lllllK'lllllmtlll ,. • ,l_t ~S '"' ttlt lttc.,.. 11,H -" It s-lc:t 11 I AJlll L...., it --MlffU.al l"ll!lfl 14 ,.., ............. 4 o-..... c-ty 1+11 • ...... -.JO "•ft Mo.a .. ...,, ; w i ' """ n.J w...-111 Hft'l " I D•llY Piiot St•fl PhO!O CALLED BY COMMITTEE Publisher Grttnspun From Page 1 WITNESS ... proved surveillance \\'Ork on Greenspun 's office. Greenspun Is acknowledged to possess an extensive collection of handwritten memos from froward Hughes to his various subordinates. However, the publisher flatly refused to say whether these memos proved hls suspicions about possible Justice Depart· me'ot favors for Hughes resu1ting from campaign oontributions. Led "11 Viejo Ma n Marine .Squadron Leaves Thailand BANGKOK (UPI) -A squadron or U.S. ~1arine Corps A6 Skyhawk jet fighte r·bombcr led by a Missio n Viejo man flew out of 1'hailand today to begin the American phase-out of Its last bastion ol military power in mainland Southeast A~ia. The first plane to take off departed Na1n Phong Airbase, 240 miles northeast of Bangkok, at 6 p.m. (PDTJ Wednesday . It was piloted by Maj. Ron Merrihew of f\1ission Viejo, n squadron commander o( J\larine Air Group 15. J\1rs. l\-1errihew and their two children Denise, 12, and Linda, 9, haven't seen Merrihew since April, when he left for his third tour of duty in southeast Asia. Merrihew. a career Marine with 3~2 y~ars to go, has been piloting A..fi ln!rudcr jct aircraft. U.S. and Thai military spok~men sai d the sq uadron was returning to its home base at the Iwakuni Marine Air Sation in Japan. By Saturday, 2,100 men and 36 planes from Nam Phong· will have departed, the spokesmen said. A second squadron of Marine F4 Phan- tom jet fighter·bombers was to leave Nam Phong Friday and the last F4 squ adron based there will leave Satur- day, the spo kesmen reported . statiooed In Thailand at tile time of the Aug. 15 bombing halt In Cambodia. It was the large.st concentration of U.S. airpower anywhere outside the Unl ted States. E leven Seek Four Posts I n District Eleven persons have taken out papers for four openings on the board of the Irvine Ranch Water District, but only four have completed. the nominations process. The filing deadline is 5 p.m. Fri· day at the Orange County Registrar of Voters Office, 1119 E. Chestnut St ., Santa Ana. Unless at ]east two persons file for each seat, there is no need to call an election, a coun ty voting official said. And, even if two or more persons filed for each opening, the wiooer will be decided .by the Irvine Company. Unlike other public agencies, the Irvine Ranch Water District is a califomia Water Distri ct - a bi'eed of public agerr cy created when farmers ,needed to bring water to irrigate thei r fields . "There are leads on th is matter and_ they are being followed up," was all Greenspun would say. An initial troop withdrawal from Thailand, expected to be completed by the end of this week, involves 3,550 American troops and more than 100 planes. Talks on a second phase pullout begin early next \Yeck. The United States had about 45,000 servicen1cn and more than 600 planes The landowner is king in a c.alifomia \Vater District. -Only persons owning land within the district 1nay serve on the IRWD board of directors. There are three openings, but only landowning residents of the district who also are registered voters will be eligible to vote to fill those seats, and a fourth office, that of treasurer. The treasurer, who levies the taxes the agen· cy collects, need not live in the district, nor own land in the district. The in- cumbent treasurer, Warren D. Fix, who has comPleted his papers, lives in Corona de! Mar. He remained noncommittal about whether he will lay out his collectioo for the Watergate Committee when he is called to testify. "These are newspaper documents and [ have a right to keep them COO· fidential," Greenspun said. Samuel Dash, chief counsel for the Watergate Committee, said Wednesday in Washington that he does not expect to clash with Greenspun over the memos because it is "not the committee's prac· ticC to subpoena newspapers' source material." The committee is scheduled to reconvene next month . Greenspun's sub- poena , signed by committee Chairman Sam Ervin Jr., does not specify a da te tor Greenspun's appearance. Viejo's Service ' Station Plan Back to Pa11el Tbe Mission Viejo service station plan was OOunced back to the County Planning Commission for the second week in a row Wednesday with orders to delete four more stations. Last week. the Board of Supervisors sent the plan, which called for 18 stations of 21 requested by the Mission Viejo Company , back to the planners with a re- quest to consider the deletion of one sta· lion at La Paz Road and ~farguerite Parkway to allow a combination station· car wash. The planners refused to go along with this request but the supervisors approved it anyway. The commission wanted to keep stations at diagonal corners. The new suggestion reduces th e sta· lions allowed in near future in Mission Viejo to 14, with seven of those existing. The four sites eliminated Wednesday were those designated. for stations but riot yet sold to an oil company by the land· owner. The Mission Viejo Company originally requested 31 station sites but the Plan· !ling Commissioner reduced these to 18. Supervisors Ralph Clark and Ralph Diedrich said the plan called for too many stations in view of the current gasolin e shortage and the o t h e r ;upervi.sors went along with the reduc· lion. ORANGE COAST " DAILY PILOT N.e,vport Ma yor Pushes Airport Expa nsion Airing Ne"•port Beach ?\otayor Donald A. Mclnnis said today his city will press its demand for a public hearing on proposed expansion of Orange County Airport facilities. Councilmen made the demand Monday night but Tuesday Airport Director Robert Bresnahan said that the county has held the only hearing it's going to hold -when supervisors approved the budget. Bresnahan pointed out Newport Beach did not speak out against lhe two proj· ects he has proposed for the airport, lie won approval from supervisors to enclose the "sterilized " passenger holding area -the place where travelers must wait after they've been through security checks. Supervisors also approved a plan to relocate the airport's administrative of· fices to the J\.1ission Beechcraft building just north of the terminal so the security office could be expanded. Bresnahan also challenged Newport Beach's contention that the changes are truly "airport expansion" He maintains they are the results of federal and state requirements for tighter airport security. Mayor Mclnnis this morning admitted there is little chance the city's request for an additional hearing will be honored, but he insisted it ought to be. "I don't know if they'll have another hearing or not. r tend to doubt it," Mero. nls said. "But l'vtr. Bresnahan 's position is not a good one. ··Before supervisors authorize con- struction of any kind they should hold a public hearing specifically for that purpose," he said. "Their whole budget v.·as subject to a hearing, but we're talking specifically about expansion of the airport terminal." F rom Pagel AI RPORT ... feels the chang~ could be accomplished . "This is the only airport I know where you make a left turn from a right runway," ?\ofcJnnis said. Commercial pilots are instructed to bank to the left immediately after takeoff and aim directly down the middle of Upper Newport Bay. "The standard departure for a right runway is , to make a 45-degree turn to the right. Why at Orange County Airport they m'!ke a nonstandard left turn has Tiie O•lll\le Coi1! OAILY PILOT, .,..lltl Whlctl lol Combilll!d Ille Nf!Wl.Preu, ls PVbllV.fd Irr Ill• O••noe Coa11 Publl1hirt0 ComHnr. hp.I. ••'-fdlllorts ire 1>110flth.cl, Mond1y tl\ra..,P Frl•h v. IOr COi!• Mno, N• .... POr1 8fid'I, H11t1lln9h1n 8t•ch!J'"""'"' V•lley, L'9Vfll IMtji, l'V1n~l~lld1t1Mck Ind Stn Clffl"lfl!'°t/ s... JIHOn C•pllll'-. " •IMI• revl-1 tdHlon Is f>Ubll1he<f ,S..•urd1y1 •rid Slltld•f', f"e princl1>1l P\lblllhln(I pJtnl It 11 l JO W~t 8•r Sir"'· COl!I MIW. C..litoNllf, '2'16. Rob.rt N. W11d Prnlclt"' 111:1 P11bll11!tr , -always been a mystery to me," MclMis sai d. Jack It. c.i,1.v Vk t l"lni4e<l1 Ind Ot'l't•I Mln1pw Thom•i K11 .. a Edl!l>f Tho m11 A. M111phi111 • M•n-Olng EO,IOf Ch1.f•1 H._ Loe» R.iditrd '· Nill ""''"'•nt M•n•oino Edlll>r\ Offk• ... Cflll Mtt•: Q Wtsl l1y S!<'t" N~I 8Hd>: ll» IMWMrt 8ou!tvlrd l..~9\lfll INC"; ~12 f:"Ot-nt ........ lit MllflflllPIOll f111t11: 1117' fllKtl •o.,i1w1rd 6'11 (lltfl'lll'llt : JIU Norffl El ClrJlitlo R11I ,.,.,._. 17141 '42-4121 Ct.stlfld Alll-..rtl•f .. 642·1'71 • S.. C.._... All hpctrfllltlf'I: , ... , •••• 492-4421 too"l"IOlll. 1t1:J. Orl1111• C-.0..t l'Vl>01Mno (On\Hlly, No MW\ 1lorl11J, lll1111f1lloflf, ltdltw>et 1ntlli'• or 111!...,.!ltt9T11tl!1 "-'win fl'llY 0. l'flltadlKM "'illloul -I.ti Pf" lllktlon ol COPY•IOl!t owrwr. s,..,., c.t.u -'•Ot Nld 11 to111 Mtw, C•ni.mit, lllbtC'rfllltlor\ by (lrrlu n." ITIOllll'tlYt ~b¥ mfll U,1! montlll¥J Pl'!il!l•ry ami11111o11t • n,6' lf!Oflll!l•. • "The small planes turn to the right," he said, .. it's only the jets that make the left turn." Mclnrµs said that past studies of the takeoff patterns "have not been pursued to tbe degree they ought to be". HA1aybe if' -we pu t some heat on we could get some answers," Mcinnis said . Newport officials already are prepar· ing a lawsuit against the county almed at ending the use or the airport for all com· merclal nights. City Attorney Dennis O'Neil said that suit will be riled by the end of the year. 'I'he city's !Wt will be the third iJl. volving the airport. More than 900 homeowners have joined in an inverse condemnation suit claiming $25 mlllion in damages and a citlzens group, the Airport Action Association, has just filed a $150 million class action suit over alleged noise and air poUutlon caused by the airport. The electon, ·not only restricts votes to property owners within the 100-square- mile district covering the Irvine Ranch, but weighs those votes according to assessed 11aluation of land held, the coun- ty voter spokesman said. That means the Irvine Company, largest landowner in the district, f!l8Y vote its holdings and select from the field of candidates the directors who set tax rates of the district which provides water and sewer service to the agricu1tural and residential areas of the district. Those policies of the IRWD, In large measure, determine where future resi- dential development will oceur. By law, a developer must prove t~e will be adequate sewer and water sel'Vlce available to a development in order to get approval to build. , Two of the four incumbents have retW'tied their filing papers to the registrar of voters. They are Fix, and director Jerry Choyke of 3711 Sur Avenue, Walnut Village. Other incumbents expected to complete papers by FriJay's deadline are: Frank Hughes of Newport Beach, an executive of the Irvine Company, and Elwood A. Crandall of Turtle Rock Village. Of the 11 taking out papers, the four having completed them to date, are: Choyke and Fix and Frank Godoy of 18212 Mayapple Way, University Park, and Lawrenre 0 . McDermott, 13702 Onkayha Circle, the Racquet Club. Godoy is seeking the treasurer's position held by Vix. Persons who have yet to file the re- quired petitions signed by at least 10 registered voters are: c. Orville Reinhardt, 19335 Sierra Inez Rc2d , Turtle Rock; Jerry L. Frey, 14S91 Countrywood Lane, the Willows; Angus F. Duncan, 18665 Via Torino, Turtle Rock. Also \Vade S. Beyeler, 18092 Gillman Sl.. Uni11ersity Park; Ronald C. Lazo!, 14891 Dusk St., California Homes; Robert .r. West, 3572 Carmel Avenue, Walnut Village, and Robert Misen, 19482 Sierra Mia Road, Turtle Rock. Fron1 Page 1 HUGHES ... filed, paid more than $9 million for the claims while Meier was the firm 's scien- tific adviser between 1967 and 1969. Other defendants include Toledo Mining C-O. of Salt Lake City and its president, Anthony Hatis; Globe, Inc.; John D. Suckling; Charles W. Adams; E.B. Walsum; Malaga Investments, Inc.; Inrespro, Ltd. and Maatschappi lntermovie. J\.1eanwhil e, the London Daily Express said today Hughes was "smuggled into the London Clinic" for an operation on his hip when a surgeon re£used lo oper- ate in Hughes' hotel hideaway. The newspaper's gossip column, writ· ten under the pseudonym of William 1111.key, said Hughes broke a small bone In his hip and sent two aides to persuade an eminent surgeon to perfonn cor- rective surgery in the ninth floor hotel suite wheie Hughes, with characteristic secrecy, has been secluded for months. "An operattng theater would be set up" at the hotel, the newspaper said the Hughes aides told the surgeon . '"A fully qualUled anaesthetist would be hired. And, it goes without saying, ex· pen.se was no object." But Hughes "ran up against the Im- movable force of British medJcal cti· quette,1' the newspaper said . The surgeon told Jlughes' men "be had never operated in a hotel room and never would no matter how high the fee." UPI Tllfflllf9 Trapp ed Suh Duo Await Sea Reseue ~ CORK, Ireland (UP) -A team of divers arn1cd with "the mo s·t sophisticated equipment in t.be world~ raced to sea today to try to rescue two men ..trapped with a dwindli11g air supply in a disabled mini·submarine on the sea floor 1,375 feet beneath the surface. The trapped crewmen, Rog e·r Malllnson, 34 , and Roger Chapman, 25; radioed that "we're okay and that our morale is fantastic." The miniature submarine Pisces III was damaged and sank during a cable- laylng operation Wednesday. The crewmen have enough air to last until Saturday morning, and perhpas longer. "We have the most sophisticated equipment in the world, the experience and the know-how, and we ire going to get those two men up," sa id , Robert Starr, head of a six-man Canadian diving team which will make the rescue at- tempt. Starr and five Canadian divers new in- to Cork today along wit h Pisces V, a newer and more highly developed model of the submarine on the sea bed. ' MINI-SUB PISCES Ill BEFORE ILL·FAT ED VOYAGE Frantic Efforts Under Way to Rescue Two-ma n Crew The white, 19-foot-long ·Pisces V wa! joined by an orange sister vessel flown in from Scotland. A giant crane hoisted both aboard the Vickers Voyager, the 4,~ton ''mother" ship of the sunken submarine. It set off for the accident scene - about 150 miles southwest of Cork and some 94 miles from the neare st point of Ireland -several hours later than plan- ned. From Pagel VII.I .AGE . • • Alton and Barranca to contain flood flows in the "activity corridor". -commercial facilities -the prop- erties to which the Irvine Company usually retains title when a village is completed -"wiU be built on raised pads." The City of Irvine has ye t to adopt flood plain 1.0ll.ing. County flood plain overlay zones, notably in tbe Laguna Can· yon watershed have been subject 10 much controversy in that they restrict replacement of buildings and c~ll for new construction to be built above the level of expected flood waters. Gfeller said, "We aren't suggesting that people will move into the area until the flood control .solution is fu11y im· plemented." · Most of the commercial development proposed for Woodbridge will be v.·ithin the flood control-environmental·activitics corridor. Restaurants, a theater and variety of specialty shops Will be added to the usual gasoline station, drug store, supermarket and bank mix provided in neighborhood or village shopping centers. Also proposed for the activities cor· ridor are schools, churches, public parks, recreation centers and "some residential uses". A minimum of 133 acres of open space is promised, incl uding the lakes. parks, trails and flood control. Present city park standards require 122 acres of. this to be improved park land dedicated to the city. Gfeller said the Irvine Company has "proposed for public acquisition two ad- ditional community park sites that total 58 acres." The park and lake amenities woo.Id serve a Population of 27 ,000 propo6ed to be housed in "a greater variety of hous. jng than any other village built to date" offers. Proposed. are both auacbed and detached single family .homes, patio homes, duplexes, condominiwns and apartments. "Each neighborhood cluster will con· tair1 a mix of bausing types," a company spokesman said, noting that overall density of the village would be abo ut five units per acre with densities rangin g !rom two to 25 units per acre. IRflAND ~LAN D WA ll S .r •. • UPI Ntwt!"lllP TRAPPED -Newsmap shows location of n1ini·submarine carrying two Britons 1.375 feet beneath the surface while lay- ing a transatlantic cable. F rom Page 1 COAST ... 7 Cove and that Laguna Beach should get the area between Crystal Cove and its ci· ly boundaries. The Local Agency Fonnation Com- mittee (LAFC) will meet Sept. 12 to coo- sid~r Newport Beach's proJ>O¥<l sp~re of .mfluenc~. • , Wynn said he called the meeting partly to discuss connicting claims between the t\vo cities over Los Trancos Canyon, \vhich opens onto the coastline at Crystal Cove. But after the Irvine Company stated that it does not want to be included in any city 's sphere of influence at this time, \Vynn said he decided tbere was no immediate need to resolve this problem. Illegal Hunting Cha rge d to Heir SAN FRANCISCO (UPC) -Procter and Gamble heir George Franklin Gam· ble, 35, has been charged by a federal grand jury with transporting illegally killed elk and big horn sheep. Some or the animals were spotted by plane and buzzed until too fatigued to escape. Assislant U.S. Attorney Brian Denton said \Vednesday. Indicted for aiding and abetting was Jack Atcheson. Butte, Mont., hunting consultant, taxiderm ist and writer. But Capt. Leonard Edwards, the Voyager's skipper, said he expected to reach the scene about midnight and that rescue work would begin immediately. "To put it bluntly, we'll send one of the submarines down to put a rope aroWld the stricken sub, and then we'll yank it up ," Edwards said. A gale was blowing in the rescue area today, and Starr said "Jt won't make it (the rescue) any easier." Edwards said surlace vessels were ln touch with the trapped men every baff. hour. He said he told the two not to talk to each other to conserve their air sup.- ply, to lie down and take plenty of (resb fruit and coffee. In a similar accident this June , Al Stover, 51 , of Juno Beach, Fla., and Clayton Link, 31, of Binghamton, N, Y. •• died of exposure in another miniature sub trapped on the ocean floor. 1be research submarine was freed and recovered later. ., Summer Sess ion ~ Attendance Up The average daily attendance for Ute' summer session at Saddleback College jumped 39 pertent over the 1972 summer session, according college Dean of Admissions Howard Marcou. · Some 1,540 students registered for summer classes and took an average class load of 4.65 units. Registration fot the fall quarter at Saddleback College v.·ill be conduct~ Sept. 11·13. Further information may ~ obtained by calling 831·9700 or -494-495&, f\1arcou said. Two Pris oners Shot SAN QUENTIN (UPI) -A guard shot two San Quentin Prison inmates Wednes- day as the pair batUed In a cellblQ\lk with a prison-made knife and a wooden club. The unidentified guard Bafd lie heard a commotion at the rear of Ule cellblock after dinner and found Charlts KeUuril , 28. a con11i cted burglar f~ Merced County, fighting Steve Bonlllp, 23, Los Angeles, serving six month5 jo life for assault with a deadly weaP911. ~ LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE ••• RAISED ELSEWHERE Adn1lral NO· DEFROSTIN.G Adnilral. REFRIGERATOR/FREUER ALL THESE GREAT ---1,FEATURES • Full Wicrth "BookCIM" Fretnt Door Sntlf -for ln1t1nt ev1H1bil!ty. • 01111 Ttmperature Control•- •tltct th• rlsht ttmPtr•turt for each Met/on. • Twin Porulaln Crl1pm,-keeps fruit, veg1t1bln 11rdiln trun. • ~r1 Llf'lt Reffl..,.tor Door Sttetves-l'IOlda tven Uill qu•rt bottles I Mo4el NT 1J34 No d1frto1tln9 .Nftl9er1tor ••ctlo11t with A1cflc Air llo" 1y1hm f•r full s ycle circul•fio11. ' ' . ALLTH/S s2599s FO/fONLY ' SLIMLINE REmlGERAJOR ..... C11Jl _ • f11U Width ''"'*'Chest • Wlde-R1n1• Ttfr1ptnllura Control • Red Vliutl Defro&t•tlrntt lndltelot • Extra o .. p Door snelf • Full W/dtl\ fmtt•Mlrt Chiller Dra'fl'I! 15995 .Mombtr• of· '° DAY C1llf0<n l1'1 J .ltgtsl , CASH Cooporollvo .luyl nt , Group With Th• WITH .... on• • Volum1 Buying CU Dtt .. lli••Powor of 11 0 Stores l!£;;1 ~ ...... AllMIATW m y ....... 11 .... -. 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7788 • .... Huntington Beaeh Fountain :Vall.ey , * * Today's ~lnal N.Y. Stocks VOL 66, NO. 242, 4 SECTION, 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1973 TEN CENTS Skylab 2 Gets OK to Continue Space . Mission SPACE CENTER, HO!llton (AP) - Spece agency officials gave Skylab 2 astronauls a go ahead today to continue man's }ongest space mission. William C. Schneider, the Skylab direc- tor, said Skylab 2 astronauts Alan L. Bean, Dr. Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. Lousma are medically fit to continue their space voyage until at least Sept. 7, the 42nd day. Skylab 2 Is scheduled as a 59-day mission, but medical delta on the men are Conviction Demanded In Slaying By TOM' BARLEY Of IM n.!IY Plttt Sftff Condemning' defense tactics a s "Imaginative and misleading," pros- ecutor Robert Chatterton today asked an Orange County Superior Court jury to quickly (ind El Toro Marine Sgt. Jared Allan Wallace guilty of first degree murder in the slaying of Fountain VaUey cocktail waitress Nanette Post. Defense evidence relating to Mrs. Post's alleged sexual promiscuity and the possibility that another m a l e ac- quaintance could have raped and stran- gled her last Feb. 9 is "pretty farfetched" Chatterton told the jury in Judge Ray· mond Vincent's courtroom. :"lam satisfied that Wallace picked her up that night, handcuffed her, raped and strangled her and then shoved her nude body under some bwhes in Hlllltington ~ch," the Deputy District Attorney • And he reminded the jury that police hr -,Ollng the kidnaping Feb. 4 of South Llguna X·ray tecboiclan Clrole Ann Rowan. 24, found several of Mrs. Post's IM\fongings, among them her purse and dieckbook, in lhe Vietnam veteran's possession. Chatterton told the jury that Wallace, 26, had been involved in ;•several bizarre incidents" in the weeks before. Mrs. Post, 'll, was killed shortly after she left her job at Good Time Charlie's bar. "He put a gun to the head or a 16-year- old girl and told her he'd blow her brains out just because she told him he was a aecurity guard and not a policeman and <XIU1dn't question her forever," he said. And he reminded the jury tha~ just five 4ays before the Post .ldlling, Wallace. dressed in his blue security guard uni- form, halted Miss Rowan's car as she wu driving along lhe San Diego Free- way. Miss Rowan testified that Wallace ordered her at gunpoint to put on hand culls and lie on the floor of his car. .. He said she slruJgled ·with her abductor and matµlged to Jump from the car and seek help a few miles farther along the freeway. "That's what he did with Mrs. Post," Chatterton said. "But he had more sue- ~ with her. She put on the handcuffs making herself helpless and she was then raped and strangled." He asked the Jury to find Wallace guil· ty of first degree murder for the Post killing. And he asked the jury to also find Wallace guilty of kiclnaping and assault with a deadly weapon in the abduction of Mlsa Rowan. Chatterton described W a I 1 ace's testimony that he had a lapse or memory sJlortly after the Rowan incident and did not recover his memory until he found her sitting in his car with him as ""absolute nonsense." examined each week. Based on these studies, officlaJs decided that Is safe for the mission to proceed. Schneider said approval to continue the miss.ion came on the rerommendation of Dr. Charles Berry, the space agency director of life sciences. 'Ille Skylab 2 astronauts, in the 34th day of history's longest space night, are in excellent health, officials said. Bean, Garriott and Lousma conducted hours of telescope camera studies or the sun today and planDed. to lake pictures of the earth, including .,eas in Africa hit by drought and by locust swarms. Approval to continue the mission today was the second elCten~on, giVen the Skylab 2 astronauts. StudieS· last week resulted in apprOval to stay in space past the 23-0ay record set by Skylab L Bean, Garriott and Lousma went by that mark Saturday to become history's longest.- flying space travelers. UPI T•ltPholo MINI.SUB PISCES flt BEFORE ILL·FMED VOYAGE Frantic Efforts Under Way to Rescue Two-man Crew Divers Seeking Two Men Trapped In Submarine CORK, Ireland (UP) -A team of divers armed with "the m o s t ,wphistlcated equipment in the world" raced to sea today to try to rescue tWo men trapped with a dwindling air supply in a disabled mini-submarine on the sea floor 1,375 feet beneath the surface. The trapped crewmen . Roger a.1allinson, 34, and Roger Chapman, 28, radloed that "we're okay and that our mora1e is fantastic." The miniature submarine Pisces III was damaged and Sahk during a cable-- laying operation Wednesday. The crewmen have enough air to last until Saturday morning, and perhpas longer. "We have the most sophisticated equipment in the world, the experience and the know-how, and we are going to get those two men up," said Robert Starr, bead pf a six-man Canadian diving team which will . make the rescue at- tempt. Starr and five Canadian divers flew In- to Cork today aloog with Pisces V, a newer and more highl y developed model of the submarine on the sea bed. The white, 19-[oot-long Pisces V was joined by an oran'ge sister vessel flown in from Scotland. A giant crane hoisted both aboard the Vickers Voyager, the 4,600-ton "mother" ship of the sunken submarine. It set off for the accident scene - about 150 miles southwest of Cork and some 94. miles from the nearest point 0£ Ireland -several hours later than plan- ned. But Capt. Leonard Edwards, the Voyager 's skipper. sald he expected to reach the scene about midnight and that rescue work would begin immediately. "To put it bluntly. we'll send one of the submarines down to put a rope around the stricken sub, and then we'll yank it up," Edwards said. A gale was blowing in the rescue area today, and Starr said "It won't make it (the rescue) any easier." Nixons to Depart Coast For Capital Late Friday Edwards said surface vessels were in touch with the trapped men every half- hour. He said he told the two not to talk to each other to conserve their air sup- ply, to lie down and take plenty of fresh fruit and coffee. In a similar accident this June, Al Stover, SI, of JWlO Beach, Fla., and Clayton Link, 31, or Binghamton, N.Y .. died of exposure in another miniature sub trapped on the ocean floor . The research submarine was freed and recovered later. ' President Nlton plans to end his work· lllg vacation In 5an"Clemenle late Friday with a !Ughl lo the nation's capital and a quick hop to bis retreat at Camp David, Md., for the Labor Day -kend. Presa aides have not yet 8IU10UllCtd the wet departure Ume for Nixon, his wife, Pa~ and daughter Patricia Cox, but tileY did say that the trip wOuld be late In the day. Initially, the President had planned to Jlay lhree 'Weeka at La Casa Paclllca and apend the holiday weekend In San ,,. .91~mente. Press spokesmen gnvc no specific reams for the cutting short of the vlslt to the South,Coast, but did say that the Presldmt P"'ferred to spend the holldoy with his entire family. HlJ daughter Julie Nixon Eisenhower ls lo Wasblni1on, D.C., awaiting her family's al'TivaL Other than a prw conference early In I the stay the President has made no of- ficla1 public appearances during the visit. The President. baJ rtmalned secluded at his estate and office compound. emerwlng only for walks on the beach and private drives which have not been announced ahead of time. Deputy Press Secretary Gerald Warren said tJi'e.. President. bas not gone out to dinner durtn1 the vtsl~ but instead bas dined at home. Unlike his previous •!ail, which lasted through the lnd~\ltneo Day HoUday, the niood this time is far from festive at the Presldential com)>OUlld. Two major ovmi. ocairr-.t this trip. The Watergat~ominattd press: con- ference wu rollol\o-ed by the release of a complete audit on the entire financial ar· rangements surrounding the purchase of La Casa Pacllica and the President's Key Biscayne property. INGLANO wt! TRAPPED -Newsmap shows location of mini-submarine carrying two Britons 1,375 feel beneath Jhe surface while lay· Ing a transaUantic cable. • If their mi!sk>n goes the ruu 59 days, they will more than double the 28 days of Skylab I and set a mark that may stand for years. Skylab 3, the final manned mission aboard America's or b iting laboratory, is scheduled as only a 56-day miss.ion, and no other Ion g -t e r m spacefljgbt has been planned. Meanwhile lbe National Hurricane Center in Miami said today the Skylab astronauts spotted and photographed a tropical depression that has been moving "·estward across the soathern Allant!C' Ocean for t"'O days. Hurricane forecaster John lfope said the "budding tropi cal storm" reported by Bean was technically classified as a tropical depression. Although the Skylab astronauts did not pinpoint the tropical d i s I u r b a n c e , forecaster Hope said it was located about 1,300 miles east of the Lesser Antilles Islands and was moving \Vest\vard at about 15 miles an hour. Hope said that on the basis of satellite photos and ship reparts, the depression was packing top . winds or 35 miles an hcur. A military v.'cather reconnaissance plane will attempt to reach the disturbance~ater today. If the rec aissance plane finds the depression h a definite clrculalion and sustained winds ol 40 m.p.h., it will be named Christine. Beach Woman Dies Mission • Ill Vain By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of "" Dllll' Piiot Stiff Sophisticated medical equ'.ipment was airlifted to Inglewood by the Costa Mesa police helicopter Wednesday night, in the battle to save a Huntington Beach woman critically injured 24 hours before in a f~ak jetliner mishap, but the victim died this morning. ~1arjorie Payette, 44, of 6181h 14th St., never regain~, consciousness at Cen- tinela Valley ~unity Hospital. Assistant hospital Administrator Paul Hopper said after Mrs. Payette suc· cumbed at 8:23 a.m. that death was ap. parently due to massive in t e r n a 1 bleeding. She also suffered a fractured spine Tuesday night wben a TWA Boeing 7f1l jetliner encountered violent vibrations at 28,000 feet, inbound for Los Angeles from Honolulu. (See earlier story, Page 5.) Investigators today continued to ex· amine the plane, which landed safely after u.! biumo lncldent thaf tnjui'ed sev.en other per80DI . iD addition to· Mrs. Payette. Severe bleeding and shock as a result of injuries suffered when sbe was hurled about inside the plane Jeft Mrs. Payette in critical condition when admitted to the hospital Assistant Adminlstrator Hopper said her bloOd pressure fell so low Wednesday that a special ultra-sonic monitoring device was needed. to measure it. The oniy one available at Centinela Valley Community Hospital was In use and could not be taken off another grave- ly ill patient, a pattern that proved true at other area hospitals. A call was made to the machine's sup- plier in Irvine with a request to the California Highway Patrol in Santa Ana to race a technician and the equipment to Inglewood with red lights and siren. Ranking CHP officers said the mercy mission would be virtually futile on the commuter~logged freeways at rush hour, so the Costa Mesa Police Depart· ment helicopter was enlisted. Patrol Sgt. Cliff McBride ..:;aid the Eagle I chopper, already airborne, was simply diverted from patrol toils base at Tallmantz Aviation at Orange C.ounty Airport to meet the factory represerr tative. Observer Officer David B r o o k s clambered out of the two-man chopper and the company technician, identified only as Robertson, clambered aboard with three of the blood pressure monitors. Pilot Officer Randy Nutt made the flight in 30 minutes. He set the chopper down at Hollywood Park Race Track and the technician and equipment were raced to the Inglewood hospital by emergency vehicle. Hospital officials conflfllled this morn- ing the blood pressure-sensing devices - which monitor life signs when ther'e virtually are none -could not itself have saved Mrs. Payette. The machine was critical, however, in measuring her vital functions while medical personnel Sought to sustain life. A doctor, plus her son and a daughter were with the victim when she died, hospital orficials said. 'Appellate Review' Nixon Plans To Resist Order To Give Up Tapes WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix· oo h!is ~ ID resist an b1storif court inter commanding him to deliver !ecret Watergate tape recordings for a judge's SIRICA DECISION AFFIRMS JUDICIAL PREROGATIVE, Pago 4 private Inspection. Cbief U.S. District Judge John J: Sirica ordered Nixon Wedn'9day to produce the tapes demanded by special Watergate prosecutor Archibald C.ox, but tem- porarily withheld the effect to allow time for an appeal. House aide told the Senate committee that Nixon routinely recorded bla Oval Office conversations. Cox, acting on behalf of the Watergate (See TAPES, !'ac• I) Bombs Explode lliside Stores l1i Birmingham Nixon refused to obey the order. The LONDON (UPI) - A fire bomb ex- White House, in a statement from San ploded in a Birmingham city center store Clemente, said without elaboration that today and , minutes later. two small in- the President's lawyers "are now corH.., cendiary devices went off in two nearby sidering the possibility of obtaining ap-stores, police said. pellate review or how otherwise to sus-In London, Scotland Yard carried out tain the President's position." dawn raids all over the city in the search The order and a companion 23-page for bombers. opinion fueled the President's clash with BinnJngham's assistant chief con- the courts and the Senate Watergate stable, Maurice Buck, ~d a man went committee over access to the tapes of his into a shoe store and placed a parcel by conversations with key advisers im· the door. An assistant became suspicious -plicated in the Watergate scandal. when he saw a clock inside. The dispute has been carried further The staff fled the building before the than any similar confrontatlon over fire bomb exploded. presidential power in U.S. history. On a The other two incendiary devices about key point , Sirica squarely disputed Nixon the size of a cigarette pack were placed and ruled that it is not the president but in a bookshop and a greeting card shop. the court which has ultimate authority to About 30 firemen , some wearing detennine whether material sought in a breathing apparatus, fought the shoe criminal Investigation is protected by ex-shop blaze, the worst of the three fires. ecutive privilege. In London, 160 detecqves from Nixon has claimed that a president's Scotland Yard1s bomb and flying squads, confidential records are privileged from special branch and regional crime squad dislosure. searched premises and interviewed The existence of the tapes became persons suspected of connection witts·ao known last month when a former White bombs in London alone. Bomb squad and special branch detec· Mesa Savings and Loan Hit by 2 Armed Bandits lives also went to Birmingham to ·help local police investigate tw{hbombs which exploded Wednesday nigli('in the city's Solihull district. Orange By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of ltll Dally Pllol Stiff A pair of gunmen burst into separate entrances of a C.osta Mesa savings and loan building Wednesday afternoon, lined the tellers up against a wall and stuffed all the available cash into a pillowcase before making their getaway. The Glendale Federal savings and Loan office at 2300 Harbor Blvd. wu hit by the two heavily armed men at S:07 p.m., while one customer was ati11 ln the building. No one was hurt during the robbery. Police said one man wearing a bandlt· atjle bandana over his nose and chin brandished a rifle and leaped over a gate Into the teller's Brea, while hls partner held the other employes and the eustomer at bay with a pistol. Although police and a team of FBI speclallsts have pieced together moot of the details surrounding the bruen daylight boldup, Just bow much money was taken remains a mystery. A teotative figure of 1<veral thousand dollars has been mentioned. 11We ~till Jl~'t know/1 Sgt. Keith Carpenter said this morning. "And we won't know until the savings and loan has completed it.s audit." The rifleman then ordered three tellen up against the wall and scooped up the contents of their cash boxes before in- structing a woman employe to open the vault. Investigators said a substantial tSee ROBBERS, Page !) Huntington Girl, 11, Hit by Auto, Injured An ll·year-old lluntin«t'"' Beach girl is listed In satisfactory condition today at orange County Medical C.ntcr after being struck by a car when she darted into the street. Police said Kattn Uhlen~rg of 8091 Taylor St apparently ran into the path of a car driven by J1mes C 1 au de saucmnan, 21, of 711 Pacific Coast Highway. Huntingtoo Boach. The ac- cld<nt occured at &:!O p.m. on Ellis A•enue betweon Patterson Street Md Demlon La.. . Weailler A fairly nice day is·in store for Orange Coast residents and visitors 1'"riday~specially •aft~r the morn- ing clouds clear off. •Ughs in the 70s at the beaches rising to near Ill Inland. -INSIDE TOD.\Y If you've got a special interest in a highway project, it toouldn't be improper to Invite the entire Callfoma .,Highway CommUsforl Oltt ~inMT -sucPl (1S the ,,... "Ille Company did TecenUy. Story Page 18. I 2 OAl lY PILOT H l llursoay Auv~st JO, i.'lt'J B ·it-r1r11 l11 uestit1r~o1i Family Arrest~d . . In Beach Brawl i.~oor nlembers of a Hunlinglon l!cach family and a family friend arc in custody today, fol\O'l''ing a right 'l''ilh police of· ficers over a minor hit-and-nm traffi c acci dent. Booked in city jail on charg'es of assaulting a police officer and rcsisling arrest were Salvatore Capello, 57, and his wife, Eleanor - who refused to give her age -a £amily friend, Richard Balaban , 25, arrested on charges of assaulting a police olficer, plus a 17-year-0ld OOy and 14-year-old girl ta ken into custody for alleged ly int erfering with poli ce officers. The trouble reportedly began when Of· ficer Charles Poe and Sgt. Carl Vidano arrived at the Capello residence at 8371 Woman Says She Killed Own Father CastilHa n Dri ve , looking [or a van in- volved in a hil·and-run accident earlier that evening . 1'he driver of the van had allegedly backed into n car stopped for a traffic light at Ne \\'lru1d Street and Pacific Coast !Iigh\\•ay. . No inj ur ies \Vere reported in the ac- cident. but the driver of the car noted the van's license number as il drove away. \VhC'n the t"'o officers arrived at the Capello home, the address listed for the license number copied at the accident scene, they were met by the teen-age boy. The officers said thal as they ques- tioned him about the accident, his parents, Balaban and his 14-yea r-old sister came out of the house. Th e t\1·0 office.rs allege that Mrs. Capello would not allow her son to give lhem an y information and afte r repeated attempts to quiet her failed, she was ar- rested for allegedly interfering with an ...-Qffic:er. At that point the t1vo patrolmen assert the fighting broke out, as the Capellas and Balaban attempted to prevent the arrest. Order was fina lly restored and all fi ve \\'Cre taken into custody after six more officers arrived on the scene. The teenage boy was also booked on a charge of misdemeanor hit and run. o.ll'/ .. 1101 Sllff """ Nevada Publisher in Newport By JOUN IALLEft Of !flt O.ltr ~ll•t ,..,. The publisher of the Us Vegas SU!l said Wednesdny In Newport Beach that he has been subpoenaed to testily before the Senate Watergate Committee. Hank Greenspun, who claims an .at- tempted burglary of his office may have been the work ·of Watergate conspirators, said the subpoena was served Tuesday at the Balboa Bay Cub where be is vaca· lioning. Greenspun also disclosed that in-- vestigators from the Senate Committee spent two afternoons this week ffi.. terrogating him about President Nixon's re-election campa ign. the questioning apparently stems from Greenspun's claim that a six-figure Howard Hughes contribution to the President's campaign may be linked to favors Hughes received from the U.S. Justice Department. However Greeospun declined to reveal details of the conve rsation he had with Terry Lell1Jler, assistant majority coun· sel of the Watergate committee, 'and R. Scott Armstrong, a committee · in· vestigator. Gree nspun's name was first brought into the Watergate investigation last May when James MCC.Ord, a convicted Watergate conspirator, testified before the Senate ComrrJttee that G. Gordon Liddy told McCord of plans to break into Greenspun's office in Las Vegas. D•Hr Pllal Sl•lf .......... CALLED BY COMMITTEE Publi1her Green1pun nection bet\vecn the campaign con· tribution and Justice Depa rtmertt favors !or Hughes. ASHEBORO, N.C. (UPI ) -A murder warrant has been issued against a you ng woman who told police she shot her father and dismembered his body because he had sexually assaulted her since she was 11. l'l'omPage l OFFICER STEVE NASH LIFTS PRINTS ON GETAWAY CAR DOOR Bank Bandits Abandoned Stolen Sedan in Nearby Apartments McCord said the burglars were after documents they thought could tie Sen. Edmund f.1uskie (D-Maine) to organized. crime. Greenspun ha s maintained there is clear evidence that someone tried unsuc- cessfully to jimmy his newspaper's safe. Greenspun said his suspicion was further aroused when Jeb Stuart ~·l~gruder, deputy director of the Com· mittee to Re-elL'Cl the President, later told the Senate Committee that Attorney Gf'neral John Mitchell had personally ap.. proved surveillance \\Urk on Greenspun's offi ce. The warrant, issued in Philadelphia, where the slaying allegedly took place. was expected here today. It charges Camella Meglino Robbins, 27, in the shooting death ol 50-year-o!d Frank Meglino. Mrs. Robbins told authorities she killed Meglino two years ago 8.s'he lay sleeping in their South Philadelphia home. She said she and an accomplice then hacked up the body, hauled the remains to Miami , Fla., and buried them. Philadelphia police Sgt. Larry Grace. who questioned the woman at length \\'ednesday, flew to Miami today lo work with the Dade County she riff's office in trying to locate the remains. f.frs. Robbins walked into the Randolph C.Ounty sheriff's office late f.1onday and said she shot her father six times. With the help of a woman she said she knew only as T1:1mi , and who she said was her father's girlfriend, they cut up the body with a hacksaw and butcher knife in the Maement, stuffed the pieces in garbage cans and rented a trailer to transport the cans to Florida. Philadelphia authorities told the sher· iff's office here they found human blood· stains on the sofa , basemen t steps and bilsement of the abandoned 'Meglino house, vacant since Meglino di sappeared in May, 1970. At the time o! the murder, Mrs. Rob- bins said she was three months pregnant with her daughh:r, v.·ho is now 3. She now has another infant daugh ter. When she first made her confess ion, she told the sheriff she had been wan- dering across the count ry, hi tchhiking, but authorities later learned she \vas married to Dewey Robbi ns and the cou· ple lived in an Asheboro trailer court. Jr. Lifeguards To Be Honored f\.1ore than 400 area youths will be honored at the Annual Junior Lifeguard Awards Night Friday by lhe Huntington Beach Harbors and Beaches Department. The ceremony will be at 7:30 p.m. at Edison High School, 21400 ~1tag. nolia St., in the gym. Certificates and medals \\i ll be presented to graduates of the sL"t·v.·ee k ocean safety training course taught by city lifeguards. This is the first year girls partici~ted in the program, \\'hich hJ.d be?n restricted to OOys, "' DAILY PILOT Tiit Or.lnQt CH1I DAILY PILOT wllPI "n•cll b ~ined Ir.. NtW1•PrtH, II P\/Dlilhtd tf ..._ Or• .... CMlt "'llbllsllln9 C~'f. 1t 1>.1- ~.11f .,l!iot'l ... pUb!llllecl, N,o..df1 tt\f'0\1911 Frld•r. for Cnl• Mei•, Newi:ort R~•cll. HIMllnQIOn lh•th/P'OUn!llA Valle .. , U;uM BeKI\, lrvlnt/Stddltbtt.• ~ S~n (lo!..,.Me/ S:.111 Jll.ln Cti*tN""" A lllJ,lll~ t!';lorlll 1111/lion II Pllbll1l\llJll $tN/Cll'fl INI 5..Nl~vl­ TIM JH'lnc~I ;u-.111111119 1111nl II " lJC wnt ••r l !rHI, Cn11 Mn.I, Ct!l~rnl.I, fUMi. Jlob•rt H. w •• d Prft~t t nd P\lllll1lltr J•t.lt It, Cu1l•v Vi<• Prnldtlll •nd Gtrier1t MI Mfllf" Th-11 kt•vil Etll,... 1\ol'lltt A, Murptlint "'""'If!' !'ClllOt Ct.arlM H. Loo i Rit.h•rcl P, N•ll Altlt!tnl MtntOinO EOllO<I T1rrv Co .. ille WtW Or•noe c_,,, EllllH' H•lwft-IMcll Offlc. 17171 lett.h loultv•l'd M.elU11t Alltllr11u ,,0 . 101 1•0. 9Z~•I ..__ Ltf\11'11 lud'lt 222 l'orn t AO'tnlll GMI• Mna:-»O Wttl 11, Str~ NIWllO" •tK111 U)) Nf*pOrl I01t1!"'1rd "'" CIMntnlt; :IOS NOllll ti Ctfftlne lttlf , ........ f114, '42 .... JZ' Ci..tf!H Ad~ 642·5671 ,._ Nani! Or•• c-ty CtfftllltftilNI 140·1221 GOPyrlf!ll, lt1l. Of't"" Cpltl "uttl"lllflf (Of'!'ll"ll'· Mo 11'"" tfltl'?ft, rn_,.,•t tlont. •twi.t -''-.,. 1lvwll1fll"tll!J 11..-.1n _, .. ~-..,.,,., ...tilt .,.... ........ ., OO¥•lt'll .-. ..... t:Mtt ~! ... H lll f l CIHll MfM, Ct""'""t. hltlllet'•lllln bt' Utfltr ll.U ~ITi W -!I U,\I 1M11tfll'l'1 f'l'lnlltf'Y .....,.. .... tt d ""°""""· TAPES ... grand jury, then subpoenaed tapes of eight meetings and one telephone call between Nixon and his advisers at the time, John W. Dea n III, H.R. Haldem an and John D. Ehrlichman. Th e commi ttee also filed suit to compel disclosure after its own subpoena was re- jected by the \llhite llouse, as Cox's had been . Cox and the committee say the tapes are vital to resol ve cont radic tions in the testimony of Dean, l-1 a Id e m an , Ehrlichman and others allegedly involved iri the Watergate coveru p. Cox said he \\'as "very pleased" with Sirica's ruling. 'Vatergate committee chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr. (D-N.C.}. called it ''a great victory for the search for truth." Sirica recognized the President's need for confidentia lit y in the formation of public policy, but disag reed with Nixon's claim •'that it is the executive that finally determines whether its privilege is properly invoked." He stated: "For the courts to abdicate this role lo presidents or anyone else, to make each officer U1e judge of his own privilege, would dishonor the genius of our consti· tutional system and breed unbearable abuse." Sirica added that he was not suggesting Nixon "could not be trusted as his own judge in matters or privilege," but said he could not set a precedent "that mi ght permit or encourage some future high exec uti ve office r to become a despot." Describing his judgment as an attempt 0 to walk the middle ground,'' Sirica said it would be "an inexcusable course of con- duct " to order Nixon to produce the !apes for a full grand jury ins pection. Company Project Judge to Rule On Counselor's Rehiring Bid Orange County Superior Court Judge Walter W. Charamza has scheduled Tuesday as tbe day he will examine the demand of fired student counselor Clarence L. Netwig, 49, for reinstatem ent to ·his post with the Huntington Beach Union High School District. Netwig demands his reinstatement ef· fective June 21, 1973, to the post he lost April 13, 1971, when district trustees ac· cused him of responsibility for the pregnancy of a 16-year-old student at his school. lt was alleged that Netwig frequently dated the girl and that he stayed overnight with her in Las Vegas. The girl, now 18, has since married her fonner counselor and testified as his wife in subsequent court action. Superior Court Judge William S. Lee ruled that the district could follow up on its suspension by firing Netwig. Judge Lee affirmed Netwig 's dismissal for "im· mqral conduct" but made no finding with respect to the pregnancy charges. Judge Lee didn't find that Netwig stayed overnight with the girl in Las Vgas. Although he found repeated "social contacts" between Netwig and the girl, he made no finding of "dating." But the Fourth District Court of AP""" peals in San Bernardino voided Judge Lee's findings and reversed his judg- ment, thus paving the way for Netwig's current demands contained in his Superior Court writ. Centr(ll lrvine · Village Zone Plan Gets Airing By GEORGE LEIDAL Of tilt O.lly f'llot Sltff A new "village" with a papulation twice that of Laguna Beach is expected to be a reality wit hin the city of Irvine by 1982. Irvine citizens next week will be first to see Irvine Company plans for the J;irgest single village deve lopment yet contem plated for the new city. It is the Village of Woodbridge, a plan· ned community for 27 .000 people on l.715 acres in central Irvin e. Communit y association representatives will view the acres at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Rancho San Joaquin Intermediate S c hoo I , liniversity Park. Later in September, the plans will be offi cially filed with the city. The village. if approved by the city, \\i ll occu py land presently part of the San Diego Creek Flood Plain as described by the L·.s. Army Corps of Engineers. That Is most of central Irvine. Some features of the village plan were discussed by Douglas f\.1. Gfeller, director of projcet administration for the Irvine CompM?y. In a rompany announcement of the zoning presentatlon, Gfeller said the vill age will be a rec reation-oriented com· munity. The plan reaturee a multi· purix>se activity corridor runnin g parallel to the San Diego Creek chaMel. Two man-made lakes totaling 70 acres In size y,•ill parallel Culver Orlve and Jef· trey Road in the center of the Village \\'hi ch is also bounded by the San Diego F'reeway on the south and Moulton Parkway on the north. The lakes arc part of the total Oood control program pToposed by the Jrvine Company for the village. Other fea tures of the flood protection plan include: ~Widening and re locallng the San Diego Creek bed creating a 2113 loot wide grass chinncl to replace the present 4~ " foot creek bed. -Preservation of the trees presently tining the creek. -Development of an environmental corrido r segment (a controversial land use suggestio n of ~ company's overall general plan for tne S3.000 acre ci ty of ~30,000l. The segment \vould parallel the cree k betv.·een Alton Avenue and Bar- ranoa Road. -Earth berms would be placed along Alton and Barranca to contain flood f!Oll'S in the "activity corridor ". -Commercial facil ities -the prop- erties to \vhich the Irv ine Company usually retains title when a village Is completed -"\vill be built on raised pads." The City of Irvine has yet to adopt flood plain zoning. Coun ty nooct plain overlay zones, notably in th e Laguna Can- yon watershed have been subject to much controversy in that they restrict replacement of buildings and call for new construction to be built above the level or expected flood waters. Gfeller said, "We aren't suggesting tha'. people will move into the area Wltll the flood conll'<ll solullon is fully Im· plemented. 1' Most of the commercial developmen t proposed for Woodbridge will be within the flood controt--envlronmental·activltles corridor. Restaurants , a theater and variety of specialty shops will be added-lo the usual gasoline statlo11, dru g store, supenna rket and bank mix provided In neighborhood or village shopplng centers . Also proposed for the activities cor- ridor are schools, churchcst public parks, recreation centers and "some residential uses". ROBBERS •.. amount of money was taken from there. As quickly as they had arrived the two bandits left in a two-tone black and green Chevrolet Malibu which was discovered parked at the Mediterranean Village ·apartments by police about 1 0 minutes later. "We assume they switched cars," said Sgt. Carpenter, adding that the car, also bearing a stolen license plate, 234 GRC, was determined to have been stolen from a used car lot in San Bernardino. Sgt. Carpenter and Identification Of· ficer Steve Nash dusted the car for fingerprints and took it apart, searching for clues, as apartment tenants stood around and watched. Several pills, believed to b e barbiturates, were f o u n d on the floorboards . The car had not been hot-wired and Sgt. Carpenter said the steering lock was in the locked position, leading him to believe that the bandits had a key for it. New Students In Ocean · View Must Register All students new to the Ocean Vi ew School District have been reminded by Superintendent James Carvell to register begiruting Tuesday at any district school . Carvell said administrators will be on hand from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. and from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. to aid parents of transfer· 1ring students and new kindergartners in registering. Entering kindergartners must be live years old by Dec. 2, while parents must bring along their child's birth certificate or baptismal record. In addition, Carvell noted that new kin· dergartners must . have recent im· munizations for measles and polio as well as a current DPT booster shot. Questions about attendance areas will be answered by Joanne Walker at district headquarters at Beach Boulevard and Warner Avenue, 847-2551, officials said. Greenspun said Wednesday he believes the effort may have been the work of Watergate burglars but that he doubts it was for the purpose of gathering in· formation linking Muskie to organized crime. "J did have in my possession a docu· ment tying Muskie to apparent wrong· doing," Greenspun said. "But it involved only a relatively unimportant bunting violation for which he paid a fine. I thought the matter was so trivial that I never even published it." However, Greenspun said that since 1971 he has been asking questions of Nil:· on administration officials about a "large cash contribution" from Hughes to Nix· on's campaign fund. "I hadn't cormected my jimmied safe to the campaign contribution until this May when : heard McCord say that Howard Hughes' airplane was standing by to take the burglars to Central America after they burglarized my of· lice." Greenspun said that, since Howard Hughes was himself in Central America at the time the burglary was supposed to have taken place, he immediately suspected· that there might be a· CUl· Greenspun is acknowledged to possess an extensive collection of handwritten memos from Howard Hughes to his various subordinates. However, the publisher flatly refused to say whether these memos proved his· suspicions about possible Justice Depart- ment favors fo r Hughes resulting from campaign contributions. "There are lea ds on this matter and they are being follov.·ed up," was all Greenspun 'o\'ouJd say. He remained noncommitt al about whether he will lay out his collection for the \Vatergate Committee when he is called to testify. "These are newspaper documents and I have a right to keep them cm· fidentiaJ ," Greenspun sald. Samuel Dash, chief counsel for the Watergate C.Ommittee, said Wednesday in Washington that he does not expect to clash with Greenspun over the memos because it is "not the committee's prac- tice to subpoena newspapers' ~ material" Low-cost Body Disposers Dispute Assembly Bill SACRAMENTO (AP) A con- troversial move to give the state Board of Funeral Directors and Embalmers jurisdiction over low-cost body disposal organizations has been sent to the Assembly noor. Opponents of the bill by Assemblyman Robert Badham (R-Newport Beach), said it was aimed at putting the low-cost organizations out of business. "We object to being regulated by a comjieting industry," said Tom Sherrard. an attorney for San Diego'!> Telophase Society, a low<ost body disposal organization. "It is exactly like the railroads regulating the airline industry. They have tried to put us out of business," Sharrard added Wednesday in testimony before the Assembly Ways and Means Committee. Badham said other organizations simllar to Telophase have sprung up and his bill is not aimed specifically at the San Diego finn. Unlike funeral directors, Telophase and similar societies do not offer such func- tions as chapel services. embalm.log or casket-showing. It does store bodies prior to cremation. The Stale Board o( Funeral Directors: and Embalmers says such body disposal may pose a health problem and It Jacks the authority to investigate them. San DieGO health officials contend Telophase poses no public health p(Olr !em, the staff analysis of Badham's bill said. Badharn's bill went to the full Assembly on a 12-3 vote. It is AB lll28. LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE • • • RAISED ELSEWHERE Adntlrol. 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' • I l r> • Thur>d,y, Au9ust 30, 1?73 , H OAll Y PILOT 3 J Tunney Supports County Bid for U.S. Court By TOM BARLEY Of IM Dilly ~II'' Stall Orange County's lawfers have come up '''ith a .powerful ally in their long and . ~rus1r.atmg fight !or a lcderal courthouse :jn. sMta Ana -Sen . John Tu:mey <D-.pllf.). . • Tunney met with the Orange County Bar Association's fed.era] court com· '. mittee and guests at the Balboa Bay Club '-his week to pledge his support for the , project, particularly from the Senate floor. , ''But it's not going to be ~asy," Tunney ·:Warned local lawyers and )Udges, among .lh$ county bar president James W, ~::pbrien, past president Robert S. "Sam" 7jlarnes and Superior C-Ourt Presiding :! ·. Judge Bruce Sumner. "There Is top level opposition to the location ol such a court In Orange Coun· ty," 'l\Jlmcy said. "The proposal bas been rejected at least once at high federal Jevels but r c~ tonight suggest what I think will be a new and better route for your future claims." Tunney, an attorney from Riverside, recommended to the committee that its next bid for what the group feels is a tong overdue federal courtroom in Orang~ County must be channeled through the Federal Judicial Center board -a group of seven judges headed by United States Supreme Court hief Justice Warren Burger. Support from t~t group would weigh ~Led by Viejo Ma•• Marine Squadron Leaves Thailand BANGKOK (UPI) -A squadron of U.S. Marine Corps AG Skyhawk jet • fighter-bomber led by a Mission Viejo man new out of Thailand today to begin the American phase-out of its last bastion of military power in mainland Southeast Asia. The first plane to take off departed Nam Phong Airbase, 240 miles northeast of Bangkok, at 6 p.m. (PDT) Wednesday. It was piloted by Maj. Ron Merrihew of Mission Viejo, a squadron commander of Marine Air Group 15. Mrs. Merrihew and their two children Denise. 12, and Linda, 9, haven't seen Merrihew since April , when he left for his Eas t Smothered By Heat Wave; Smog Terr ible By The Associated Press Hot and humid weather smothered the East Coast and much of the Midwest again today as utilities strugg1ed ~.cope with increasing demand for electr1c1ty. For the third straight· day, the New York State Power Pool ordered a 5 per· cent cut in voltage. A spokesman said the state's power system \Vas strained to capacity by huge demandll , primarily to operate air conditioners. The National Weather Service said there was no relief from the heat in sight until next Tuesday. But a power pool spokesman said industrial closings over the holiday weekend would ease demands for electricity. Some 200.000 New Yorkers were left ·without power Wednesday night after several feeder cables burned out. The blackout affected an area of Queens in· eluding LaGuardia Airport, where passenger terminals \\'ere ~ned but emergency power kept runways lighted. The blackout lasted nearly 15 hours 'before power was restored to the area this morning. . • • • .. ' third tour of duty in southeast Asi.a. Merrihew, a career Marine with 31/, years to go, has been piloting A-ti .. Intruder jet aircraft. · tl:s. and Thai military spokesmen said the squadron was retumlng to its home base at the lwakuni Marine Air Sation in Japan. By Saturday, 2,100 men and 36 planes from · Nam Phong will have departed, the spokesmen said. A second squadron of Marine F4 Phan· tom jet fighter-bombers was to leave Nam Phong Friday and the last F4 squadron based there will leave S&tur- day, the spokesmen reported. An initial troop withdrawal from Thailand, expected to be completed by the end of this \\'eek, involves 3,550 American troops and more than 100 planes. Talks on a second phase pullout begin early next week. The United States had about 45,000 servicemen and more than 600 planes stationed in Thailand at the time of the Aug. 15 bombing halt in Cambodia. It was the largest e-0ncentration of U.S. airpower anywhere outside the United States. Jur y ln,dicts 17 Steel Firms WASHINGTON (AP) - A federal grand jury indicted three major steel companies today on antitrust charges involving a $40 million business of selling reinforcing bars in Texas. The· Justice Department said the indictments, returned in U . S . District C-Ourt in Houston named United States Steel, Bethlehem Steel COrp., and Armco Steel COrp., plus 14 smaller companies, as defendants. Sixteen steel company officials also were named. United States and Bethlehem Steel both said they would have no immediate comment "'et'Y heavily In any futur~ voting on legislation designed to give Oi·ange Coon· ty its courthouse, 1\lnney :tid ... But even so," he warned, .. Jl could be throe lo four years berore you get the federal faeiUty you are seeking." County judges and lawyers huve been arguing for years that a local fcderul cc.urt was Jong overdue in terms or popuJation and tiling statistics alone. Federal authorities have been bom· bttrded in that time \vlth complaints thut litigants in fe<teral actions consun1e many boors in freeway travel and find it difficult to obtain parking space when they arrive in congested downtov.11 Los Angeles. It was conceded to Turutey that Santa IJPI Ttlffhtlo 'SEXLESS JOURN EY' Capt. Mar ia Bjornstam 'No Love 1naki11,g' Aboard Sex Raf t, Skipper Claim s MEXICO CITY <UPI) -The blonde Swedish skipper of a raft that crossed the Atlantic on a 101.day sociological ex- periment swore Wednesday there was no sex among the six.·\\'Oman, five-man crew. The man who organized the expedition. Dr. San~ago Genoves, was asked what they did for entertainment. "They answered my questionnaires." he said, and studied water pollution that Y.'as so bad it had blackened the teeth of sharks. ''I did not participate in any sex and I did not see any lovemaking aboard the raft ," said the unsmiling captain of the raft Acali , Maria Bjornstam, 30. Her answer to an explicit question from a Swedish journalist ended t\vo hours of haggling bet'¥veen Genoves. 49, \vbo kept talking about the sociological consequences and scientific data gleaned frof!1 the 5,000.-mile trip, and reporters who kept pressing le ss academic mat- ters. "The only things I recall concerning sex \Vere the questionnaires and an oc- casional joke." said the still unsmiling 1.-liss Bjomstam at the crew's first news conference si~ce thev reached Mexico from the Canary Islarids Aug. 20. Genoves organized the voyage to test reactions of persons confined together in a small area for a prolonged period of time. Martha Intends . To Stay Witl1 'Husband John B~ELEN THOMAS Ullltt.I ,NU llltemllio~I lifartha Mitchell deni es reports she \viii leave the former attorney ·general, ' saying she intends to stick with him "to the bitter end." Published reports quoted friends as sayiJ!g she intended to leave rorn1er At· torney General John N. Mitchell soon. "That's a damned lie." Mrs. l\1itchell said ~ednesday in a telephone call from her Nc\v York apartment to this reporter. who is with \he Presidential press corps staying in Laguna Beach. "I'm staying to the bitter end ." She said the separation run1or was "like all the. other stories about 1ne. ·· Under th e circumstances. she said. "I'm holding up" and "John is getting along." In a similar call last week . li1rs. Mitchell said her husband was no longer speaking to her because of the Strains on their marriage by the \l/atergal.e and related scandals, and that she had talked with a lawyt!r, but never thought of lcav· Ing M!tche IL She said they still love ench other very much and she reels she must · "hold up unUl John is convicted. disharred or cleared," • A1·t for Ar t's Sake? Doug Tyler, the "phantom painter" ol East Lan sing , Mich ., struck again recently, thls time on the side of a barn. Tyler's painting is a reproduction of an old Japanese lithograph. which dwatls Jill O'Con· nor (lower right) whose parents own the barn. Mhchell is due to go on trial in New York Sept. 11 on ch arges of perjury and obstruction of justice in connecHon with , a $200,000 cash contribution to President Nixon's reelection ca1npolgn by financi er Robert Vesco. ,.. ' Ana's nine-story federal buil~ng, now almost completed, has not been designed to include the courtroom facilities needed if Orange County should get approval of its bid . But Corona de.I Mar architect \Villlan1 Blurock assured county bar me1nbers that he silY+' no proble'nt in the con- struction of an annex to the new building or a separate courts building as part of S:inta Ana's civic center if an Orange County bra.1ch is authorized. Orange County is part of the Centra l District of California. The region also comprises Los Angeles. Riverside and San Bernardino counties and is in tern1s of population alone the largest single jurisdiction within ·the district courl system . fl'ecleral authorlti('S have been told many times in recent years that l.Os Ange!(>s' cra111ped and outi:lated federal bi..Hding is the only place where the legal issues ereatcd b;· the lives of more than 10 1nillion pt'rsons and activities of many thousands of priva te and mun icipal en· lilies can be .resolved. The county bar has pointed out over the years that one has to look to such fccic:ral jurisdictions as the Virgin Islands. Guam, Delaware, Rhode Island and the District of Columbia to find other sit uations in which just one federal court building is available for an entire ju risdiction. Local la\vycrs have the support of both the Riverside and San Bernardino county bar associations for the bid to put a federal courthouse-in Orange Q>unty, lt was strcsseo at the meet.ln,g. r "It is vital to have all these statistict cvntained in any i;tudy the Federal Judicial Center may carry out or order to be carried out," Tunney said. "You obviously badly need a f e d e r a I courthouse here and it's hard to see ex- actly v.·hy you've been denied one thus far. "It's probably because you're going against the power structure," Tunney said, "But that kind of opposition will be difficult to maintain in the light of a study that \'.'ot1ld so clearly denionstrat~ the strength of your argument." Better Fill ~er Up Open Gas Stations Scci rce Over Holiday ~ I Uy JOHN VALTEl\ZA 01 !ht D•H~ Pllol Sl•tt Are you headed for the desert, the 1nountains or the sea this Labor Da y weekend? If so, it would be wise to keep your gas tank filled because the fuel shortage is not quit e over. Ifs not that service stations are lo\V on gasoline -although some shortages do exist in certain areas -but in many cases they \Viii be closed because the employes want a holiday too. (Re lated story. Page 34 l. "We're closing because everyone's been hollering to gel off,'' said the manager of Airport Te xaco. 4678 Campus Drive, Newport Beach. His station will only be open on Saturday. Another gasoline retailer who will be closed Sunday and 1'1onday is Dan's Chevron. 1597 Euclid Ave.. Fountain Valley. He ha s ahvays followed a policy of closing on holidays. In liilission Viejo, dealers on La Paz Road. one of the major thoroughfares had not yet 1nade up their ininds mid- \veeli whether to close or remain open over the holiday period . ·'\Ve don 't like to cut each others' throats,'' said a spokesman for \Varren 's Art'(), 26001 La Paz Road. '"\Ve have a nice thing going here." "If one stays open. \Ve all sta y open. If one closes, we an close. And we're debating right no\v whether we'll stay open or closed." he added. In addition to some stations closing si1nply because it's a holiday, the American Autontobi!e A s s o c i a t i o n report s that the gas shor tage continues to affect some parts of Southern California. The San Diego Freeway through Orange County, an Association spokesman said, continues to pose dif- ficulties for motorists because many gas stations are limiting their hours and late night stations arc "few and far between." - Jiowever. there arc some all-night service sta tions in Encinitas and Carlsbad, and the Association reports that '·almost all" stations a 1 on g Interstate 405 are planning to be open on Labor Day. If you're headed for the San Bernardino mountains the going will be consiaerably rougher. Although more than half of the mountain stations were said to be operating "nor1nally," stations Billiotiai1·e 011t of Hidi119? at Big Bear are closing early in the eve- ning and all are rationing purchases. ti.Iotorists are warned to enter all n1ountain areas with a full tank of gas this weekend. Nationwide. the AAA reported inr provement in the availability of gasoline for .the eighth straight week. ''This week 58 percent of stations con· tacted are operating normally -main· taining hours of operation in effect before the _Jummer fuel pinch and anowing motorists to fill their gas tanks,"· the association said. The AAA said this compares with 55 percent normal operation last week and 43 percent on Jwie 28, the low point of the summer. Some gasoline retailers had planned a gasoline shutdown over the weekend to protest Phase 4 price controls on gasoline but the protest plans did not filter down to retailers contacted by the Daily Pilot along the Orange Coast. The Phase 4 price controls are cur· rently being argued in the courts in Washington D.C. but it is unlikely that the developent.' will have any immedi· ate effect locally. • Hughes Read,y to Testify SALT LAKE CITY (UPI/ -Billionaire Howard Hughes has agreed to come out of hiding Jong enough to give a deposition in a suit Which charges he was bilked in the $9 million purchase of worthless Nevada mining claims. In a telephone affidavit lrorn London. Hughes agreed to testify in a civil damage suit filed against one of his former advisers and several businessnlen by Hughes Tool Co. "This document is inteqded to confirm that l ex pect to be available to answer such legitimate questions at such time and under such rea s onable circumstances as the court m a y hereafter determine to be necessary to !he case,•· Hughes said. The affida vit filed \Vednesday was taken by Lever B. Mylar of Salt Lake City, \Vho was described as a friend of Iiughes for more than 20 years. after the billionaire took the oath by telephone. Hughes' lawyers had Mylar appointed a commissioner of deeds for the United Kingdom in order to administer the oath. Hughes said he "cannot ccnceive of any n1anr.cr in which my testimony 1night be of use " in the suit. which ac- cuses former Hughes employe John H. rvteier and nine defendants of conspiring fo sell the tool company nlining claims for prices "far in excess of the value of the property." Hughes Tool Co .. which has changed its name to Summa Corp. since the suit was filed . paid more than $9 million for the claims while Meier was the firm 's scien· tific adviser bet\veen 1967 and 1969. Other defendants include Toledo ~1ining Co. of Salt Lake City and its president, Anlhony Hatis: Globe, Inc.; John D. Suckling: Charles W. Adams; E.B. \l.'al sum; ~Talaga Investments, Inc.; Inrespro, Ltd. and Maatscha p pi Intermovie. " • l\feanY+·hile, the London Daily Expreu said today Hughes \Vas "Smuggled into the London Clinic" for an operation on his hip \vhen a surgeon refused to oper· ate in Hughes' hotel hideaway, The newspaper's gossip column, writ- ten under the pseudonym of William Hit.key, said Hughes broke a small bone in-his hip and-ien'ftwo aides to persuade an eminent surgeon to perform cor· rective surgery in the ninth floor hotel ' suite where Hughes, with characteristic secrecy. has been secluded for months. "An operating theater would be set up" at the hotel , the newspaper said the Hughes aides told the surgeon. SEMI-ANNUAL Includes Spe cial Promo tion on leathe r .JJ.J. (jarrefld SALE . . . 84 inch leather sofa ' Luxurious sota covered in leather a unique look and feel of luxury. A full 84" wid e, available in 3 colors 1n leather. leat.her chair and llULlching OltOll/.(tll Select a button tufted chair with matching ottoman in your choice of 3 colors in lea ther or suede. now $499. 11.J.GAl\~ElT fllRN lTLIRE PROFESSIONAL Opeo Moo. 2215 HARBOR BLVD. INTE RIOR DESIGNERS Th,rs. & fr;. E•es. COSTA MESA, CALIF. I -··· \ 4 DAILY PILOT 2 Doctors Produce Test Tube Einbryo_ MELBOURNE , Australia (UPI) - Doctors at Queen Victoria Hospital suc- cusfully achieved humon ...._uon In a test tube, a hospital spokesman said to- d•y. le/t fallopian tube was blocked. 111E FAUOPIAN tubes carry the eq to the uterm, or womb, and .,..... quently she was 181· able to become pregnant. su<h an operation has been performed. Dr. Daniele Pelrucct ol Rome repon.d ill. 196rt11at be achle\'ed laboratory fertJlla. band and f•rtil!zed an egg from the woman'• remaining ovary in a test tube chamber. indicating f•rllllzatlon . _ The spokJ!!11\111 said the egg was tben lral\lfemd Into • apecial JIJ'Owth solution conta1nlng 20 percent serum taken from calves. The egg and solution were kept at i 99 degree temperature. into the mother's womb, the svckeSJ!laft said. I Im "Oo the Jourth and filth days a ter . plantation there were definlte indlcatJ~ns. - from ttsts that the embryo ~~ m· planted and was developing, the spokesman said. The spokesman said the fertilized egg, _ which was later implantMln a woman's womb, survived for nine days before it eborted. 'Ibe achievement, the result of four years of intensive research, involved a childless married couple. The woman, described as a housewife, had her right ovary and fallopian tube removed in an operation when she was yoong and her The team ol doo- tors was headed by Professors C a r I Wood and John Lee- tong. The operattoo was carried out six tloo of a human '" more than 40 times. He said at the thne that one survived 29 days, much Joager than the time re. wooo ported tn Melbourne. 11IE EGG WAS drawn from the -...n's loft ovary foor bours before Jn. somlnaUon, and wu kepi alive In Its own natural Ould Jn an atmosphere of 90 J)e!'· cont nitrogen and 10 pereent calilon dlox· Ide. The egg, or oocyte, was transferred from JU life suPPorting solution into a diluted ooluUon ol operm. AFTER•SHOURS,azyiOf.e,orthrt~ stsge cell ' division stage QI development, was reached. Sixty.seven hotw$ after inseminaUon !be egg had reaclled the six.to-eight-cell division Blage. "A pregnancy -and proof ol .socce~ _ was measured by reading ,,V& Gonadotrophin (hormone) excretions. The spokesman said surgical com- plications from another operation lhe woman had days before the implantation probabJy caused the embryo to abort. LllTOHO weeks ago. ll was not lfUeved to be the first time According to the hospital, the doctors removed sperm from the woman's hi.I& Twenty hours after Insemination the outer layer cell of the egg disappeared, 'l'he eightccell egg was then ll'ansferred ' ' ... Cambodia Opens Supply Highways PHNOM PENH (AP) -Government infantrymen reopened one ol Phnom Penh's two supply highways today and a convoy of more than 100 trucks sped Into the capital. In South Vietnam, the Viet Cong in· creased attacks southwest of Saigon ln a drive to isolate the Mekong Delta and its rice from the South Vietnamese capital, military sources said. THE CAMBODIAN troops blasted through the last rebel bunkers aloog a t'Mrmile stretch of Highway 5 that leads to Batt.ambang Province to t h e northwest. The province is a major rice producer. The highway has been cut since satur- day at a point 35 miles to the northwest, causing food sOOrtages and leaps in food prices. The Cambodian oonunand ~d opera· lions were coolinuing to reopen the capital's other major supply route to the coast, Highway 4, blocked at Moha Saiog, about 30 miles southwest of Phnom Penh. districts of Cai Be and Cai Lay, areas of traditional Viet Cong control in Dinh 1\long province in the northern delta. The Sooth Vietnamese command said three government soldiers were killed and 20 soldiers and civilians wounded Wednesday when !be Viet Cong hit the Cai Lay area 4S miles southwest of Saigon with 120 mortar and artillery rounds. VIET CONG troops also shelled a militia past two miles from Cai Lay and followed up with a ground attack, killing foor militiamen and wounding 11 , the command said. There wu no report or Viet Cong casualties. ·Bank Victims Still Dazed A ft,er Ordeal 1.1''1T.._... He's Boss U .. ITtl~ ' Hard fighting also was reported farther south on Highway 4 at the Prek Tbnot Dam, 29 miles beyond Moha Salng. A communique said government forces repulsed several Kinner Rouge attacks, ''lhe enemy suffered some losses, and our side suffered seven killed and 10 \\'Ounded." STOCKHOLM, Sweden (UPI ) -Doc- tors said Wednesday four freed hostages dazed by "shell-shock" from 131 hours in a bank vault at the point of a submachine gun may need several weeks or psychiatric treatment to recover from their ordeal. MEXICAN PRESIDENT ECHEVERRIA (GLASSES, CENTER) TOURS WRECKAGE Cills Quake Worst in Mexico's History; Declines U.S. Aid Of~er The Chinese Communist Party met in Peking today and re· elected Mao Tse-tung as chair- man. The 319-man Central Committee also elected a 25- member Politburo to run day· t<Hlay affairs of the party. THE MlLITARY sources in Saigon said the Communist oommand's goal is to cut South Vietnam's Highway 4, the main highway through the ~1ekong Delta to Saigon. The drive now is centering on the · Merge1· of Egypt, Libya Approved in Comp1·omise By United Press International Political sources in Cairo sa id today the announcement by Egypt and Libya or "the birth of a new state" by a gradual merger into one country has forced Li· ( IN SHORT ... J byan leader Col. 1tfoammar Khadafy to drop his demand for immediale union. A joint aMouncement on Cairo Radio told of the last-minute compromise Wednesday between Khadafy and Presi- dent Anwar Sadat of Egypt. It said the merger would be in stages and came three days before the two countries were to have voted on approval of the plans in a referendum, "'hich has now been postponed. e Bugging T 1·lal NEW YORK (APJ - A fed eral judge has rejected dpJense contentions that massive publicity over Watergate would preclude a fair trial for former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell and ex-Commerce secretary Maurice H. Stans. ·u.s. District Court Judge Lee P. Gagliardi on Wednesday ordered that the trial begin Sept. 11 as previously schedul· ed. Gagliardi s"Bid the only way to determine whether a fair bial is possible would be to impanel prospective jurors and question them under oath about the effects or pretrial publicity. ' e G1uunan Dead SPOKANE. Wash. (AP) -A gunman wounded two detectives and set his downtown apartment building on fire Wednesday night, theo apparently sbot himself to death alter dueling with police for more than an hour, authorities said. Authorities said officers were at- tempting to serve a "mental warrant" on Jack Magney, 57, l>ileo be opened fire on them. They said be retreated into the three-story building and exchanged gunshots v.·ith officers as the fire burned. Doctors compared ,the three women and a man, held by a bandit and his con· vict friend in a downtown Stockholm bank for S1h days, to war casualties. DR. LENNART Ljungberg, a St. Goeran Hospital psychiatrtsl, said the hostages were ''still in the first phase of something res em b Ii n g IShell-sbock" Wednesday, a day after police firing tear gas stormed the vault to free them and capture the two desperados. Dr. Jan Agrell, a specialist in military psychiatry, said "the methods normally used to break down a person's mind are identical to ~ treatment the hostages received." One of the woman boslages -slim, dark-haired Kristin Enmark, 21 -was quick to defend the two gunmen and said at the hospital the bandlls didn't harm any of the victims. "I've read some of the newspapers," she said. "But it's all Wl'Ollg. They never hanned us in any \\'ay. I never felt they really threatened me. We were more afraid that the police would do something which \vould put us in danger." PSYCHIATRISTS, however, said she had beeo under "severe stress" and ex- pressed doubts her description of the caplivity was accurate. Ljungberg said Kristin and the other hostages -Birgitta Lundblad, 31, Elizabeth Oldgren, 23, and the man, Sven Saefstrom, 25, "appeared to be doing "·ell under the circumstances and they are sleeping peacefully." Gulf Coast Cools a Bit ' Eas,tern Se aboard Still Roasti1ig in Heat, Humidity 19.11 \OWllT TIMPll AfUttS 0 .. ~" ... " 111'1 WIA1*1 fO«XA\t Cl ~'"'" lf~l!!,/1wow m'7l ... "' ,. ~SMOwtn 11crw 'T~tcl'\fd lrom IM Gulf cot1t 11«1h lrt-lo MISIOUrl ena 111111011 IM •cro11 IM northern 111<1 c:tnlrtl Pl1ln1. Tnunderttlowe'rs 111e1 dtm~ tell· ltrtd 1re•s 1cro11 thl conlf11tnt -tlM W1Sl'llnglon co.111 Wl1con1ln, UllPW Mlcnl11•n Incl r>erh or Ntw Engt1nc1. Paris or P1telllc COis! skl•t Wtnl tllrouoed In clOUds •nd llllCk f09 form. fd OVft' Ifie Aooaltcl\11111. remPff'llUAt before Own In tl'le e11t1m !>ffl of tt11 n1ll01> .,.,..,.. mosllv in Ifie 705 ht c;onfr11t to Ol)Olff Ind d•ler levers In Ille SO. 1nd to. -ffMI ..,.Jlt rn hillf, with tflit f)IC9Qtlon of d•5trl 1re11. Wldntsl:J•r"s KOttl\lfll l\Nt 111 the"°' CIUMd ~t'I)' l/i<trlcel llfllltltl IO CVI bK-on ¥Git~ or ffll cvstomtr1 to reduct PO'W'*r C'Ol'ISIJlftPtlori. kYtrtl ~r Flllurwt ""'" r9j)O(lilCI ICl'IMI !tie ~llOll. W•ftl' 1Wftl'"9 •• 1 Dt"ttlllttn 111 ton'lt llrtt clllts wtlWt cttllllll'Wf'I 6Ptl'ltd ""' 1'1ydr1nt1 to cOlll off. T '"'""'"""" ""'*-dtwll '""*' '""" "' 11 Ivins..,.. Wyo., to '1 II Coiutnl Weather l'lrtty Mtl'll'l'f todly. UPI vlrilbtt wfl'IOI. IWtht -"*"""' Min llt<OM-lng wttl fe IOllll'lwMI 10 to le tl!'llta /ti lritn'IOOM IOOI., Ind P~.,. H/911 fodly, tilth'°"' C6ttt11 ~,ltvrn ,..,.. fnwn ., fll n. Intend tem~ltvm """' from ff to 7'. W1t1r lt"'P91'1hn't 70. Snn, Moon, '.l'fdes TNUlSOAY hCond l'lltft ............ 10:.tt "·'"· s.s hcOl"ld ._ • •·· . .• •1• p.m. ... l'llOAY Pfl'tt P!1tft .............. ll:U '·"'• 5,7 Fl"t low . , , • , , , •• , , , S;k t.fft. O.J k<otld .... .,, ............ 11~ .. "" .. . Ste:ond low ....... , .. JrJ.7,_l'l'I. 0.1 $1.11'1 l ltta •:~ •• ,.,, f9fa 1in .,,.,. Moon ··-f ;Ml.m. ''" l :U11.m. Mexico's Worst Te11ablor -Death Toll Still Climbs ORIZABA, J\le.lico (UPl),_ Mounting casualties from Tuesday's· -earthquake put the unofficial death toll al nearly 1,000 today and President Luis Echever- ria said it was "the worst earthquake in Mexican history" in tenns ot persons killed. Heavy rain and shortages or water, electricity and even \\o'OO<i for coffins hampered rescue operations today. The rains turned dust and debris to mud, thwarted salvage crews and sent loose roof tiles and bricks falling into the streets. WORST WT WAS this Swiss-style city, which sat at the epicenter or the quake tfiat registered 7.2 on the Richter scale. The rains forced Echeverria, who toured lhe half-ruined city of 50,000 persons Wednesday, to stay the night in a Uncle Charged In Soap Box Derby Incident BOULDER, Colo. (UPI) -District At- torney Ale1 Hunter said Wednesday the admission from a prominent businessman that he convinced his 14- year-old nephew to cheat to win the 1973 so8p box derby '"makes me sick." _ Hunter f.t.led two counts of contributing lo the delinquency of a minor against Robert Lange Sr., the president of a company that manufactures ski boots. EAl\UEJ\ IN the week, Lange issued a five page statement taking I u ii responsibility for advising his nephew, Janes Gronen, to Install a magnetic nose in his racer to get a faster start. "At the father of two boys, this state· ment makes me sick,'' Hunter said. "I c•n't understand the Ingle of this. It's five pages of •well, everyone elJe does it. ti • Lange said he convinced his nephew to Install the device so he could compet e with the "profeatonal builder a." DAIU' l'ILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtli"'1 of l~ D1Hr Piiot Is 9111f111lttd Mtll"t""lt"'*"1 11 'f'tlt fil 11tt ~ rwr ,."' .., 11• '·""'· c•ll •llf r9'H' e-.r "'It' ... ....,,.. .. ,... till• .,. ,. ...... , ,,. ''""' ··~, ...... ,..,,~ " ...... ''" ,.,..... ..... ..,, .. tr t ··"'· s. .... ., .... ' .A\1111, ...... ..,. , ....... C9lt? .. " ........ ""' " fW. C•i. .,. !ell .. tlfrHI 1• 1.1'1'1. Ttltphonts M .... Of•llft CW!ll., .,.,, '"'111well ...... "" .... •••«~ ... Wnfll'IMtlff '*'"' $.111 (It ........ , (1,hlrl ... IMCft, ••11 n111 c .. r.u1,,.. 01111 ,..,.,, lllWfll \. ....... 1.."will "'""' .... ft1<44M doy;ntown . lio~el instead oI returning· to ~feidco City as planned. picturesque Oriiaba, ISO miles ea.st- southeast of Mexico City. Several were killed when a threc--story apartment building collapsed as they were asJeep In- side when the early morning tembk>r rumbled across 200 miles of Mexioo's Eastern Sierra Madre mountain,,. The president told reporters it was "the worst earthquake in Mexican history in terms or loss of life." The worst previous earthquake was in 1941, when 150 persoM died. By early today, the oUiciaJ death toll had risen to 527. But unofficial reports by various newspapers and government workers put the total near the 1,000 mark. The Health l\1inistry said 414 .people died in the state of Puebla, 113 in the neighboring state or Veracruz. TWEr-.'TY SlX or the victims died in Meanwhile. in San Clemente, Pesident Nixon olfered American sympathy and help to earthquake \ictims. In a letter to l\texican President Luis Echeverria , Nixon extended "deepe!lt sympathy" from the people of the United States to the people of ~1exico, and he directed the U.S. Embassy in Mexioo Ci- ty to report to him "any way in which the United States might assist" f\fexico. Judi~ial Power :: ·: Judge Affirms Right to Privacy • • WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix- on has won a federal district. court's en· dorsement or his righl to protect official privacy. Still, It was a defeat for the chief executive. Chief U.S. District Court Judge John J. Sirica acknowledged Chat the ~ for presidential privacy e&rTles with it a ( NEWS .ANALYSIS ) privilege to withhold evidence. Yet. ?:Us decision was an affinnation or fudicial prerogative. THESE SEEMINGLY cootradictory results from Wednesday's decision by Sirlca in the WJtite House Watergate tapes controversy stem from a refocus-- ing of attention from the question of privilege to one of power -judicial versus presidential. Lawyers in the case -special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox on one skle,~the White Howie on the other - spent much Ume on lbe need for ~ tection or presldenUaJ privacy, and the purported great or small Joss lo f.reedom and•candor In the White House ii privacy and confidentiality cannot be guaranteed. Sirica touched on tbooe arrwnents only brielly in bis 23-pego oplnloo, concluding, "the court Is willing here to recognize and give effect to an evidenllary privilege ~ on the need to pnotect presidential privacy." Btrr SIRICA -on onlll' demabcl-inl! that Nlxoo tum ...,. for private JuaicJal intpoctlon tapes of nlne White House conversations louch.lnJ o n Wate.ra:ate. Despite the agreement over privilege, Nixon and Slrlca each claima for bis branch of government the power to dctennine when that privilege may be In- voked. Nixon and his lawyers have argued that an Incumbent president is and must be beyond the reach of a court ordor. "A ho!ding that tjle President is personal!Y subject to the ot'dcrs of a court would elfectlvely destroy the stalus ' ,, ' 'JUDICIAL PREROGATIVE' Jud119 John J. Slrica of the executive branch . as an equal &nil coordinate tlement of 1ove:rnme:nt," they;! argued in an early brief In !be case. •: 'I'ltey argued tha1 the President Is ~: above the Jaw, bit rather beyond Jw:! reach save !or the method Ht forth ~ the ConaUtuUon: impeachment. ' Sirice would have none of It :; "THE AV AILABILITV of evidmce Jn.:: eluding the validity and acope o(.• privileges Lt a judlclal decl~on " Slrica ~ d~a.rect ' .: ~le said ''For the couru to l.bdfc1te.'.: this role to presidenta or anyone me. to"'• make each olflcer the Judge ol ·hl.t own 1 prlvUegc, would dishonor the genlua ol ' our consllfuUooal system and breed unbearable abuses," ho wrote. .,.._..,.., Orange C~!!' T oday's · F~~ N.Y. Stoeks : VOL. 66, NO. 242, 4 SECTION, 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1973 N TEN CENTS Councilmen Want to 'Share' Airport Sounds By L. PETER KRIEG ot ,... 1>a11y !"not stiff Newport Beach may open up still another front 1n its war against the Orange County Airport . City councilmen are ta1kit1g about demanding tha\ commercial jets disperse their takeoff pattern! so the noise is spread over other communities -Costa Mesa aod Irvine. Councilman Paul Ryckoff suggested the ·dispersal during a council ''study sessl(lft" Monday afternoon, although councilmen did not order any specific proposal be made to either Orange Coun· ty or the Federal Aviation Administration. "Has anyone ever popped the question about changing takeoffs so they don't come over Newport Beach every time?" Ryckoff asked. Mayor Donald MclMis said that the proposal has been made but said it has ne:ver been pressed. "The FAA has looked several times at the possibbility," Mcinnis said, "but nothing has ever come of it." A Federal Aviation Adminlstratlon Ne w port, Laguna Me et spokesman said this morning that the FAA does not have any takeoff pattern changes lmder review at this time. Neither does the county, according to Ron cpandler, assistant director of Orange County Airport. "1bat method is a common pro- cedure," Chandler said. "The question has come up from time to time. "It amounts to a question of exposing more of the people to noise less of the time or exposing fewer people more of the time," he said. Chandler said it would reqoire a study before any changes could .be made. Mclnnis, himself a pilot, indieated he feels the change could be accomplished. "This ls the only airport I know where you make a left turn from a right runway," Mcinnis said. Commercial pilots are instructed to bank to the I!ft immediately after takeoff and aim directly down the middle of Upper Newport Bay. "The standard departure for a right runway is to make a 45-degree turn to the right. Why at Orange County Airport they make a nonstandard left tum has always been a mystery to me,'' l\1clnnis said. 1'The small planes turn to the right," he said, ''it's only the jets that make the left turn." Mcinnis said that past studieS of the takeoff patterns "have not been pursued to the degree they ought to be". "Maybe if we put some heat on we could get som~answers," Mclnnis said. Newport officials already are prepar· ing a lawsuit against the county aimed at ending the use of the airport for all com- mercial flights. City Attorney Dennis O'Neil said that suit will be filed by the end of the year. The city's suit will be the third in- volving the airport. More than 900 homeowners have jojned in an inverse condemnation suit claiming $25 million in damages and a citif.ens group, the Airpdrt Action Association, has just filed a $150 million class acUon suit over alleged noise and air po-Uutlon caused by the airport. Oowncoast Probed Ne~'J)Ort Beacll and Laguna Beach of- ficials conferred for 70 minutes Wednes- day on their respective claims to the Irvine Company-owned coastline between the two cities. The meeting, also attended by representatives of the Irvine Company, was held behind cloaed doors in Newport <:ompany Project Beach City Hall to discuss the overlap-- ping spheres of influence of the two cities. Following the meeting , representatives of Newport Beach and Laguna Beach made statements indicating that the two are not in a "tug of war" over the prop. erty. Central I r·vine Village Zone Plan Gets Airing By GEORGE LEIDAL 01-. DllU.f"fttit ..... A new "village.. with a population twice that of Laguna Beach ii expected to be a reality wltllin the city of Irvine by JINIZ. Inine citizens next week will be first co aee Irvine Company plans_ for the Virgest single village development yet " tontemplated for the new city. ' lt b the Village of Woodbridge, a plan· ned community for 27,000 people on 1,715 ures in central Irvine. Community association representatives will view the . teres at 7:30 p.m. ·Wednesday in Rancho San Joaquin Intermediate S c h o o 1 , University Park. Later 1.n September, the plans wlll be officially ftled with the city, The village, if approved by the city, , 't'ill occupy land presently part of the San Diego Creek Flood Plain as described by the U.S. Army eo.,,. of Engineers. That ii most of central Irvine. Some features of the village plan were discussed by Douglas M. Gfeller, direq\or of project administration for the Irvine Company. In a company announcement of the zoning presentation, Gfeller said Ule village will be a recreation-oriented com- munity. 1be plan features a multi· purpose activity corridor running parallel to the San Diego Creek channel. Two ~made lakes totaling 70 acres in size will parallel CUlver Drive and Jef- frey Road ln the center of the village which is al.to bounded by the San Diego Freeway oo the soutb and Moulton Parkway on the north . .. 1be .lakes are part of the total Oood control program proposed by the Irvine !:ompany for the village. Other features of the flood protection plan Include: -Widening and relocaling the San Or uge <:out Wea tller A fairly nice day i1 1n store for Orange Coast residents and visitors 1'Tiday-i!speclally after the morn- ing clouds clear off. Highs in the 70S at lhe beaches ri.stns to near 80 inland. INSll)E TOOi\l'· If vou'vt got a special jnterest in a highway projec~ it wouldn't be improper to invite the entire Colffoma Highwav Commission out to dtnner -s~ as the Ir- vin< Companv did recentlv. St1Jr1,1 Pag• IB. Diego Creek bed creating a 208 root wide gross channel to ~ace UJo present 4G- foot creek bed. -Preservati111 of the tretS presently lining the creek. -Development of an environmental corridor segment (a controversial land use suggestion of the company's overall general plan for the 53,000 acre city of 430,000). The segment would parallel the creek between Alton Avenue and Bar- ranca Road. -Earth berms would be placed along Alton and Barranca to contain flood flows in the "activity corridor". -COmmercial facilities -the prop- ertJes to which the lrvine Company usually retains title when a village is (See VILLAGE, Pqe Z) Bandits Hold Up Savings, Loan In Costa Mesa By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of tt.11 Dtilb' Pl ... Slaff A pair of gunmen burst Into separate entrances or a Costa Mesa iavings and loan building Wednesday afternoon, lined the tellen up against a wal1 and stuffed all the available ca.sh into a pillowcase before making their getaway. The Glendale Federal Savings and Loan office at 2:.10 Harbor Blvd. was hit by the two heavily armed men at 3:07 p.m., while one customer was still in the building. No one was hurt during the robbery. PoUce said one man wearing a bandit· style bandana over his nose and chin brandished a rifle and leaped over a gate into the teller's area, while hi! partner he.Id ..... the olher employes and the customer at bay with a pistol Although police and a ' team of 1i·n1 specialists have pieced together most oC the details surrounding the brazen daylight holdup. just how much money was taken remains a mystery. A tentative figure of several thousand dollars has been mentloned. "We still don't know /' Sgt. Ke.ilh Carpenter said this morning. 11 And we won't know until the savinll• and loan has completed Its audit." The rifleman then ordered three tellers up againSt the wall and iw;ooped up the contents of their cash boxes before in· strucUng a woman employe to open the (See ROBBERS,. Pase ZI Local Option Given .SAC.J.MENTO (AP) -California's massive .program t9 fll antlsmog devices on Its five million 1964-70 mode1 cars would become a local-option f)(Ogram un- der a bill approved Wednesday by the Senate and sent to the Assembly. The senators voted 27-1 0 to give county supervisors a choice wbether the pnr gram ....,)d apply in tbelr counties, "The issue is not who gets how much of the 10,000 acres," said Laguna Beach Mayor Roy Holm, 1'but how that land is developed and bow it will affect each cl· ty." Holm and Newport Beach City Manager Robert L. Wynn also said their position is that Laguna and Newport should have "first shot" at the downcoast area and that the city of Irvine should not be permitted to compete with them. The Irvine Companf made a statement after the meeting saying, "It is our posi- tion that all options should be kept open, including the pos.sibility that the city of Irvine might want the area in its sphere of influence." Holm said he understood from the meeting that this was the Irvine Com- pany's position. However Wynn said tbal "1 had the clur hn.,,..-. ilia! 'tbo Irvine O;>m- pany will agree lo let Newport Beach and Laguna Beach have the first opportunity to include the area in their spheres of in- fluenoe if they want lo do 90." The meeting was, called by Wynn to iron ~ overlapping elements in the sphere of influence maps drawn up by Newport Be.acb and L3guna Beach. The cities generally agree that Newport Beach should get the area between COrona de! Mar and Crystal Cove and that Laguna Beach should get the area between Crystal Cove and its ci- ty boundaries. The Local Agency Fonnation Com- mittee (LAFC) will meet Sept. 12 to con- sider Newport Beach's proposed. sphere of influence. Wynn said be called the me<ting parUy to discuss conflicting claims between the two cities over Los Trancos Canyon, which opens onto the coastline at Oystal Cove. But after the Irvine Company stated that it does not want to be included in any city's sphere of influence at this time, Wynn said he decided there was no immediate need t.o resolve this problem. O.lly Plllt S.tlft' ...... PAUENGERS WA l·T FOR PLANE IN 'STERfLE' A!JEA AT ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT Coumy Plans to Eni:IOM Ar .. lo Protoct Fol ks From WHlher. Jot Blu ts Mesa's Helicops Lose Race to Save a Life Newport May or Pushes Airport Expansion Airing By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ot 1M Daill' Piiot •"" Sophisticated medical equi,pment was airlifted to Inglewood by the 0Cosla Mesa palice helicopter Wednesday night, in the battle to save a Huntington Beach woman critically injured 24 hours before in a freak jetliner mishap, but the victim died this morning. l\1arjorie Payette, 44, of 6181h 14th St., Newport Beach Mayor Donald A. never r~ained consciousness at Cen-Mclnnis said today his city will press its tinela V ey Community Hospital. demand for a public hearing on proposed Assistant hospital Administrator Paul Hopper said after Mrs. Payette sue-expansion of Orange CoWlty Airport cumbed at 8:23 a.m. that death was ap-facilities. parentJy due to massive i n t e r n a I ~ Councilmen made the demand Monday bleeCl.ing. night but Tuesday Airport Director She also. suffered a fractur~ spine Robert Bresnahan said that the county Tuesday night when a TWA Boeing 707 • . , . jetliner encountered violent vibrations at has held the only hearing 1t s gomg to 28,000 feet, inbound for Los Angeles from hold -when supervisors approved the Honolulu. (See earlier story, Page 5.) budget. Divers ~See king Two Men Trapped in Submarine I~vestigators today . continued to ex-Bresnahan po~ted out Newport Beach amine the _plane, .wh;ich landed . s~fely did not speak out against the two proj-after the bizarre mc1dent that tnJured . seven other persons in addition to Mrs. eels ·be bas proposed for the airport. Payette. He won approval from supervisors to Severe bleeding and shock as a result enclose the "sterilized" passenger holding of inju~i~ suffered when sbe was hurled area -the place where travelers must about lD.Slde the plane left Mr.s. Payette wait after they've been through security (See VICTIM, Page 21 b •·· c ec...,. CORK1 Ireland (UP) -A team of divers armed with "the most sophisticated equipment in th e ll.'orld" raced to sea today to try to rescue two men trapped with a d\Yindling air supply in a disabled mini-submarine on the sea floor 1,375 feet beneath the surface. The trapped crewmen. R o g e r Mallinson, 34, and Roger Chapman , 28, radioed that "we're okay and that our morale is fantastic." The miniature submarine Pisces Ill was damaged and san k during e. cabl~ laying operation Wednesday. The cre wmen hav e enough air to last until saturday morning, and perhpas longer. "We have the most sophisticated equtpment in the world, the experience and the know-bow, and we are going to get those two men up," said Robert Starr, head of a sii-man canadian diving team which will make the rescue at- tempt. Starr and five canadian divers new in- to Cork today along with Pisces 'Y, a newer and more highly developed model of tht submarine on !lie sea bed. The white, 19-.foot-long Pisces V was ioined by an orange !lster vessel Oown in !rom Scollal)d. A giant er.,,. hoisted both aboard the Vl¢kera Voyager, the 4,600-ton ••mother" ship of the sunken submarine . Jt set ol! for the aceideJit scene -a~t 150 miles llOUthwest of Cork and some &4 miles Crom the nearest point of Ireland -several hours laler than plan- ned. · Out C.pt. Leonard Edwards, tho Voyager's sl<lpper, said he expected to reach the ..... about m$1ght ana that rescue work would beQi!i bnriitdlatey. Bom bs Explode ~LAND In.side Stores Iii B irming ham LONDON (UP!) -A fire bomb ex· plocled ln a Birmingham city center store today and, minutes later, two small in- cendiary devices went off in two nearby stores, police said. TRAPPED -Newsma shows In London. Scotland Yard carried out location of miru·sU arine dawn raids all over the city In the search carrying two Britons 1,375 feet for bombers. ~neath the su.rf~ce while lay· Birmingham's assistant chief con- ing a lran&JUantic cable. stable, Maurice Buck, said a man went .J.nlo a shoe store and placed a parcel by . . , · ~e door. An assistant became suspicious "To put 1t bluntly, we. U send one of the when he saw a clock Inside. submarines down to put a rope aroond The staff fled the building before the the stricken sub, and then we'll yank It fire bomb el<)Jloded. up," Edwards sald. The other two incehdiary devices about , A gale was blowing ln the re9Cue area the size of a cigarette pack were placed today, and Starr aaid "It won't make It in a bookshop and a greeting card shop. (the rescue) any easier." About SO firemen, eome wearing Edwards said surface vessels-Were in breathing apparatus, fought the shoe touch with the trapped men every half· shop btaie, the worst of the three fires. Supervisors also approved a plan to relocate tbe airport's adrRinistrative of- fices to the Mission Beecheraft building . . . just north of the tenrunal so the secunty office could be eipanded. Bresnahan also challenged Ne'J:VPOrt Beach's rontenUon that the ebangtt BA truly "airport expansion" He maintains they are the results of fedenJ and state requirements for tighter airport seturity. M~yor h-1clnnls this rrlorning adn\itted there is little chance the city'& request for an additional hearing will be honored,. but he insisted It ought to be. "I don't know If they'll have another hearing or not. I tend to doubt It," Mclrr nis said. "But Mr. Brem.aha.n's position is not a good one. .. Be.fore supervisors authofize con- strucjion of any kind they should hold a public heari ng specifically for that purpose," he said. "Their whole budget was subject to a bearing, hut we're talking specifically about expansion of the airport terminal." Newport-Mesa Board Sets Special Meet hour. He sald he told the two not to talk In \.Ondon. 160 detecUves from to each other to conserve their air su~ Scotland Yard's bomb and flying squads , Tnistees of the Newport Mesa Unifie4 plXo to lie down and take plenty of fresh special branch and regional crime squad school Dbtrlct will hold a special meet- rrmt and coffee. .. searched · premises and intervtewed • ing at 6 o'clock tonight Superintendent In a slmllar aceident this JUDC, Al persons suspected of ~Uon with 3$ John Nicoll has aMOUncid. Stover, St , of Juno Beach, Fla., and bombs in London alone. He said the purpooe of the meetJnc Is Claytoo Link, 31, of Binghamton, N.Y.. Bomb squad and special branch delec-toward a contract for the disltid's...,., died of tlJr)J05Ul'O in another miniature tlvea also went to Birmingham to help ploye health benefit program. n... moet. sub trapped on the ocean Door. Tbe local police investigate two bombs which tog will be held at the Ensign lntermedlo reseorch submarine was freed and exploded Wednesday nl&)lt in the city's ale School cafeteria, 2000 Cllll on..., recovered later. SOllhull dlstrict. Newport ee.ch. • ... ~-D::41::L::Y_:P:_:l::LO:,:T ___ N Thursd.t~ A11911st 30, 1913 --- President Resists Judge's . Request for ·Secret Tapes WASHINGTON (AP) -PresUlent Nix- m has vowed to resist an historic court 1rder commanding him to deliver secret Watergate tape re<:ordings for a judge's ~rivate Inspection. ordered Nixon Wednf-Sday to produce the White HOll!e, In a statement from Sao tapes demanded by special W11:tergate Clemente, said without elaboration that prosecutor Archibald Cox. but tern· !he resident's lawyers "are now con· Porarily \\'ithheld the effect to allow time -'"""Ing the possibility oC obtaining ap- for an appeal. pcllate review or how otherwise to sus- Chief U.S. Distrk.1 Judge John J. Slrica Nlxon refused to obey the order. The tain the President's posltlon.'' *** *** Nix o11 s to Depart Coast For Capital Late Frid.ay President Nixon plans to end his "'ork- lng vacation in San Clemente late Friday with a rught to the nation's capital and a quick bop to bis retreat at Camp David, P.Jd., for the Labor Day weekend. reasons for the cutting short of the visit to the South Coast, but did say that the President preferred to spend the holiday with his entire family. His daughter Julie Nixon Eisenhower is in Washington, D.C., awaiting her family 's arrival. Press aides have not yet announced the !xact departure time for Nix.on, his wife, Pat, and daughter Patricia Cox, but they did say that the trip would be late in the day. Other than a press conference early in the stay the President has made no of- ficial public appearances during the visit. The President has remained secluded at his estate and office compound, emerging ooly for walks on the beach and private drives which have not been announced ahead of lime. Initially, the President had planned to stay three weeks at La Casa Pacifica and spend the holiday weekend in San CJemente. Press spokesmen gave no specific Cheap Body Disposers Fight Bill SACRAMENTO (AP) -A COD· troversial move to give the state Board of Funeral Directors and Embahners jurisdiction over low-cost body disposal organizations has been sent to the Assembly floor. Opponents of the bill by Assemblyman Robert Badham (R·Newport Beach), said it was aimed at putting the low~st organizatiOM out of business. "We object to being regulated by a competing industry," said Tom Sherrard, an attorney for San Diego's Telophase Society, a low-oost body disposal organization. . "It is exactly like the railroads regulating the airline industry. They have tried to put us out or business," Sharrard added Wednesday in testimony before the Assembly Ways and f\.teans Gommittee. ; l3adham-'"' said other organizations similar to Tclophase have sprung 'Up and his bill is not aimed specifically at the San Diego firm. Nixon. Elects To Appeal Judge's Order President Nixon met today with bis top two White House Iawyen and decided to appeal Judge Jolm Sirica's order that the President must relinquish secret White House tapes. In a cryflUc, one paragraph an- nouncement , spokesmen said that appropriate papers ·for obtaining a revi~ of the federal judge's order will be filed with the District of Columbia court of Appeals next Thursday. . It is that day that the time for obtaining a review will expire. The Western White House did not say which members of the White House counsel's office flew to San Clemente to consult with the Pres- ident. Nixon has emphasized sev. eral times that he will honor only "a definj.tive decisioo" by the U.S. Supreme Court and has tenned the conf(Qlltation with the lower courts as a serious threat to the privilege of coofidentiallty in the executh•e branch. Major Pay Raise Cuts To Hit Hard on Coast A . major slash in pay raises due 100,000-plus California civil servants, im- posed in Washington, D.C. today by the Cost of Living Council, will hit hard at Fairview State Hospital and UC Irvine. They are the two largest state in· stitutions on Uie Orange Coast. Faculty members at the University will slip in under the wire with thelr first raise in four years, a 5.5 percent in- crease. The picture isn't so bright for non- academic campus employes, whiJe far more than 50 percent of the state hospital 's staff must revise their an- ticipated 1973-74 income downward . Cost of Living Council officials rolled beck a pay raise averaging 11.9 percent among all state employes to seven per- cent by today's action, touching oft a furore. California State Employe s' Association leaders in Sacramento branded the pay OU.HGI COA.ST N' DAILY PILOT Th• ,0!'•11111 COH! DAILY ~ILOT, with Wl'llcll 11"' c1mbl....:I lh1 Ntws-Prti,. Ii Pl.lb\jfhld lty ~ Or1no1 Co.1l Pllbllal'llllO ComNny. Stpt.• rtt1 lllllltor11 •r1 IMlllllll\tcl, MO<ldt)' ll!r011Dh Frkl1y, IOr C•I• Mt .. , H9WPOrt llt1cn, H1Jt1!lf10lon ll11cti11'01m1tln Vt11.-,, L•tunt BN'11. 1.-..1n1/Stdd1.o.e1c ffld ''" ci.m.n111 $tn Ju1n Caplslf"~llO A 1lngf1 1'91110 ... 1 .illllon It Df,obllthto klunl1v-11111 S11hll1Y1, TM prlMlptl CIUDll1ftl"11 pl1n1 if 11 UO Wfll lltV 11r .. I, C.!t M ... , C1llf0,,,l1, f1'2'. ltob1 ft N, W11d Prt10l•nl I'll "'AU.,.... J111k It. Curl1y Vic• Prelcltnl 11111 G.ntrtl Mtntgl!' Tho1111' K11wi1 EOltol Th•11111 A. Murphin• MtMQlflt EO!lw L. '•'•' Kri•t ..,...,,.,. l1«fl c11, l::o11w NllWP9ft hlcti OHie• lJJl N••p•rl l111 l1 ... 1rtl 1 M1lll119 Afltlrflu P.O. 101 1175, •2661 °"'"'°""" COt;t1 MKll DI Wnl ... , &trfl'I cut an outright swindle and urged Governor Ronald Reagan to appeal it directly to President Nixon. This is the second year the council has cut projected state raises. "Oh ... this is the first we had heard of it/' said Mrs. Pat Wallace, ad- ministrative assistant to Fairview State Hospital Superintendent and Medical Director Dr. Anthony Toto. She said virtually all 1,667 employes at the Costa Mesa facility for the mentally retarded will be affected. Hardest-hit will be nurses and peychiatric technicians, who comprise more than 50 percent of the work force . Nurses were to receive a 17.5 percent salary hike, with a 10 percent increase scheduled for psychiatric teclmlciall!. Certain other job classifications were to receive hikes up to 20 percent, Mrs. Wallace said, adding that all hospital employes due them will get pay raises under the seven percent ceiling. Instructors at UCI were granted a 5.5 percent pay ralse this yea.;.· -unaffected by the Cost of Living Councll action - \\'bile clerical, maintenance and ad- ministrative personnel had a 12 pc.·cent average raise coming. UCI campus spokesman said some ·of them will be affected, while others' in· dividuaJ pay hires were under seven per- cent. Announcement of the federal agency's raise rolJback action was given top priority for discussion at a meeting of Gov. Reagan's cabinet slated for today. The council cut back last year's pay raise by one percent, but that was restored at the end of the Nixon ad· ministration's Phase II economic con· trols. The state workers got the "ad- ditional one percent beginning in February. The new raises were to have gone into elfect July t, but have beon stayed pend· ing a ci<dslon of the coonc1l. The order and a companion 23-page opinion fueled the President's clash with the courts and the Senate Watergate committee over access to the tapes of bis conversations with key advisers im· plicated in the \Vatergato scandal. The dispute has been carritd further than any similar confrontation over presidential power in U.S. l)lstory. On a key poinl, Sirica squarely disputed Nixon and ruled lbat it is not the president but the court which has ullimate authority to determine whether material sou5.1t in a SIRICA DECISION AFFIRMS JUDICIAL PREROGATIVE, Page 4 criminal investigation is protected by ex- ecutive privilr.ge. Nixon has claimed tbat a president's confidential records are privileged from dislosure . .-The existence of the tapes became known last month when a former White House aide told the Senate committee that Nixon routinely recorded his Oval Office conversations. Cox, acting on behalf of the Watergate grand jury, then subpaenaed tapes of eight meetings and one telephone call between Nixon and his advisers at the time, John W. Dean III, H.R. Haldeman and John D. Ehrlich.man. The corrurtittee also filed suit to compel disclosure after its own subpoena was re- jected by the White House, as Cox's had been. cox and the committee say the tapes are vital to resolve contradiction!!!· in the testimony of Dean, H a I d e m a n , Ehrlichman and others allegedly involved In the Watergate coverup. Cox sald he was :·very pleased" with Sirica's· ruling. Watergate commlttee chairman Sam J . Ervin Jr. (0-N.C.), called it Ha great victory for the search for truth." Sirica recognized the President's need for confidentiality in the formation of public policy, but disagreed with Nixon's claim "that it is the executive that finally determines whether its privilege is properly invoked." Front Pflfle l ROBBERS ... vault. Investigators said a substantial amount of money was taken from there. As quickly as they had arrived the two bandits left in a twD-tone black and green Chevrolet Malibu which was discovered parked at the Mediterranean Village apartments by police about I 0 minutes later. "We assume they switched cars," said Sgt. Carpenter, adding that the car, also bearing a stolen license plate, 234 GRC, was determined to have been stolen from a used car lot in San Bernardino. Sgt. Carpenter and Identification Of. ficer Steve Nash dusted the car for fingerprints and took it apart, searching for clues, as apartment tenants stood around and watched. Several pills, believed to b e barbiturates, were f o u n d on the floorboards. . _ _ · The car bad not been hot·wired and Sgt. Carpenter said the steering lock was in the locked position, leading him to believe that the bandits had a key for it. Newport Readies Emergency Plan For Disasters City fl.Janager Robert L. Wynn's office is preparing a new "emergency operation plan" to deal with natural disaster or er.t:my attack. it "'as learned today. The new plan wasn't spurred by the re- cent noxious gas scare that prompted Newport Beach police to clear the city's beaches. and. in fact, "Will not even deal with that type of local emergency," Judy Kelsey, administrative assistant to the city manager, said this morning. She said work on the new plan, which will replace a civil defense disaster plan adopted nearly 20 years ago, has been going on since the flrst of the year. "It ls just a coincidenC"' that lt is bOing to councilmen at lhis time," she said. "It wasn't prompted by the noxious gas scare." ''This emergency operations plan just happens 10 be coming to the council at this llme,'' Miss Kelsey said "and it is designed to deaJ "'llh 'proclaimed disasters' such as typhoons, earthquakes or war." ~flss Kelsey said "day·tt><lay" type emergencies are dealt wllh by the police department. She said police acted prop. erly in their handling of the gas scare. "From what I've been -able to determine everybody rollowed standard operating procedures," she said. uti11111 tlKfl1 m ii'••' """"'" Hlll'll'"'*' &Herl: 1"1J l•tll """"'~ a.fl ~"\ JOI NOMll II Ctm1111 llttl Ttl ...... tn41 '4J..Ul1 c:f•ff'W ......... Ml-1671 ~t. 1tn. °''"" C'.otlf J"111t1i.~1nt COl'llfll1i'r. ,.. MM ,..,.... ll!Wtrtll•••· ... ..,... _,.., ... .-wrtil-tJ ~'''"' ~ .. ~ wlfDOwt •l*lfl _. WI ... ,_ _,.,,...,,, -· Both the CSEA and the Reagan ad· ministration had ,appealed to the council to approve the full pay raJae in spite of the 5.5 percent wage guidellne. Both .. groups argued that the full Increases were needed to put state workers on a par with those doing slmllar jobs in other nelds or government and int""private enterprise. "CSEA members are shocked and onraged at thi3 totally unreasonable and Wlfalr order of the Cost of Living Coun· di. '1 said LeRoy A. Pemberton, president of the 102.000.member employea assoda· \Ion. She said the new emergency operation plan is the result of new state guldellnea handed down last year. These include in- structions to do away with the name CivU Defense so that attention will oot be focused on the potential of war or enemy attack. • ....... dMI .......... w 11 C..11 ~. Clllfwlllil. ~ltifl 11'1 carrltr ttf.S ~I 11r 1Mlt U l.f -"'IYI l'l'lll"lrt ... !Ml.. ttM IN!!lf!IY, She said. the police department drofled the new suldelines and sent them to the city attorney's ofDce . She did not release •ny deiJllll of the new plan. I • ' TUSTIN !i!!l!!l:::::::.,_._._.J~~~l:J~!!!!!i!22.._JEIT~oMarine MCAS COSTA Ana MESA IRVINE INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX $80 NEWPORT BEACH C~ps Air Station EL TORO IRVINE • LAGUNA BEACH D•ll1 Piiot Htwtl!tlll SHADED AREA SHOWS LOCATION OF IRVINE COMPANY PROPOSED NEW VILLAGE Plan Shows Homes for 27,000 on 1,700 Acres in Central Irvine; Vill199 Would Be City'1 Largest Nevada Puhlisl1er Called For Watergate Testimony By JOHN ZALLER Of IM 0.lly Pilot $1•ff (_jhe publisher of the Las Vegas Sun said Wednesday in Newport Beach that he has been subpoenaed to testily before the Senate Watergate Committee. Hank Greenspun , who claims an at- temp ted burglary of his office may have been the work or Watergate ci>nspirators, said the subpoena was served Tuesday at the Balboa Bay CUb where he is vaca- tioning. Greenspun also disclosed that in· vestigators from the Senate Committee spent two afternoons this week in- terrogating him about President N!xon's re-election campaign. The questioning apparently stems from Greens pun's claim that a six-figure Howard Hughes contribution to the President's campaign may be linked to favors Hughes received from the U.S. Justice Department. However Greenspun declined to reveal details of the conversaUon be bad with Terry Lenzner, assistant majority coun- sel of the Watergate committee, and R. From Page l VICTIM ..• in critical condition when admitted to the hospital. Assistant Administrator Hopper said her blood pressure fell so low Wednesday that a special ultra-sonic monitoring device was needed to measure it. The only one available at Centinela Valley Community Hospital was in use and could not be taken off another grave- ly Ill .patient, a pattern that proved true at other area ho6pitals. A call was made to the machine's sup. plier in Irvine with a request to the California Highway Patrol in Santa Ana to race a technicia n and the equipment to Inglewood with red Ughl!I and siren. Scott Armstrong, a commillee in· vestigator. Greenspun's name \vas first brought into the \Vatergate investigation last ~Jay when James McCord, a convicted \Vatcrgate conspirator, testified before the Senate ComrrJUee that G. Gordon Liddy told h-lcCord of plans to break into Greenspun's office in Las Vegas. ~tcCord said the burglars were after documents they thought could tie Sen. Edmund Muskie (!)..fl.Jaine) to organized crime. Greenspun has maintained there is clear evidence that someone tried unsuc- cessfully to jimmy his newspa per's safe. Greenspun said Wednesday he believes the effort may have been the work of \Vatergate burglars but that he doubts it was for the purpose or gathering in· fo~mation linking Muskie to organized crime. "l did have in my possession a docu- ment tying Muskie to apparent wrong· doing," Greenspun said. "But it involved only a relatively unimportant hunting violation for which he paid a fine . I thought the matter was so trivial that I never even published it." However, Greenspllll said that since 1971 he has been asking questions of Nix· on administration officials about a "large cash contribution" from Hughes to Nix- on 's campaign fund . "I hadn't connected my jimmied safe to the campaign contribution until this ~1ay when : heard McCord say that Howard llughcs' airplane was standing by to lake the burglars to Central Americ11 after they burglarized my of. !ice." Greenspun said that, since Howatd }Jughes was himself in Central America at the time the burglary was suppose<t to have taken place, he lmmediately suspected that there might be a con- nection betw~cn the campaign COit- tribulion and Justice Department favors for Hughes. - Frona Page 1 VILLAGE ... completed -"will be built on raised pads." The City of Irvine has yet to adopt flood plain zoning. County flood plain overlay zones, notably in the Laguna Can· yon watershed have been subject to much controversy in that they restrict replacement or buildings and call for new construction to be built above the level of expected flood waters. Gfeller said, "\Ve aren't suggesting Iha: people will move into the area until the flood control so lution Is fully im· plemented." Most or the commercial development proposed for Woodbridge v.111 be within the flood control-environmental-activities -corridor. Restaurants, a theater and variety of specialty shops will be added to the usual gasoline station, drug store, !lupennarket and bank mix provided In neighborhood or village shopping centers. AJso proposed for the activities cor- ridor are schools, churches, public parks, recreation centers and "some residential uses". A minimum of 133 acres of open space is promised, including the Jakes, parks, trails and flood control. Present city park standards require 122 acres of this to be improved park land dedicated to the city. Gfeller said the Irvine Company has "proposed for public acquisiUon two ad· ditional community park sites that total 58 acres." The park and lake amenities would serve a population of 'l:l ,000 proposed to be housed ,in 1'a greater variety of hous- ing than any other village built to date" offers. Proposed are both attached and detached single family homes, patio homes, duplexes, condominiwns and apartments. "Each neighborhood cluster will con- ~ a mix of housing types," a company spokesman sakl, noting that overall density of the vlllage would be about five units per acre with densities ranging irom two to 25 uniLs pel-acre. LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE ••• RAISED ELSEWHERE Adn1lral No ·. DEFROSTING REFRIGERA TOR/FREE.Zlllll ALL THESE GREAT --1,FEATURES • F'uH Width "Bool«:1st" '"""' Door Sl'l•lf -lor ln1t1nt 1v1U1blllfY, • Du1I T1mptr1tur1 Control•- Mltct ttl9 rt1ht t1mp1r1tur. for •tch HCtlon • • Twin Porc114Jn Crl1pera-kffp& fruit. w1et1b1tt 11rdtn lmh. • titr1 Larp Rttrlltf'ltor Ooor S~lvn-holdt Mn tan quirt boltlHJ Mod .. HT 1JJ4 No d1fro1tlr19 rtfTlg•r•+or tKfl•"• with Arctic Air flow 1y1kM for fwll •ycl• clrcwl1flo11, ALLTHIS $25995 FOR ONLY SLIMLINE HEFHIGERATOH Mo491 C11J2 • NI Wlcttl't FrteJ:tr Cl'ttst • Wlft.Aan1• T1mptrtlUtt Contnll • ~ Vi1utl O.frott-tlmer lncHcat« • Extra O..p Door Shtlf 1 Full Width FtlUt·M.ttt Chl/Jtr ,Dr1W1r 15995 M1mbtr of C11ifornl1'1 L1r1nt CooP.r1llvf Buylnt 90 D~Y CASH Group With Tho WITH •rnon1 0 Volume Buying ;;JCHDll •••••• AllOCf&na Powtr of 110 Stores ll•d•uw.-. ~ .......... ,..., .... 1115 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7788 I •• Today's Final N.Y. Stocks ' VOL 66, NO. 2'42, 5 SECTIONS, 68 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1973 c TEN CENTS Newport . Wants to 'Share' Jets With Mesa .. By L. PETER KRIEG Of IM Dall' '°llOI Sltff Newport Bea~ay open up still another rront in war against the Orange County Ai t. · City councilmen are talking about demanding that commercial jets disperse' lbelr takeoff patterns so the noise is spread over other communities -Costa Mesa and Irvine. ·Councilman Paul Ryckorf suggested the dispersal during a council "study session" Monday afternOon, although councilmen did not order any specific proposal be made to either Orange Coun· ty or the Federal Aviation Administration. "Has anyone ever popped the question about changing takeoffs so they don't come over Newport Beach every time?" Ryckoff asked, Mayor Donald MclMis said that the proposal has been made but said it has never been pressed. "The FAA bas looked several limes at the possibbill ty," Mcinnis said, "but nothing has ever come of It." A Federal Aviation Administration spokesman said this morning that the FAA does not have ·any takeoff pattern changes under review at this time. Neither does the county, according to Ron Chandler, assistant director of Orange County Airport . "That method is a common pro- cedure," Chandler said. ''The question has come up from time to time. "It amounts to a question of exposing more of the people to noise less of the time or exposing fewer people more of the time," he said. Helieops FI,: for Life Mercy Missio1i • in Vain; Hu1itingk>11 W oma11 Dies By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of IM rt.UY ,llef Sl1H Sophisticated medical equipment was airlifted lo lnglewood by the Costa P.1esa police helicopter Wednesday night, in the battle to save a Huntington Beach woman critically injured 24 hours before in a fr,ak jetliner mishap, but the victim died this morning. Marjorie Payette, 44, of 618YI 14th Sl., pever regained consciousness at Cen· tfneJa Valley Community Hospital. Company Project Assistant hospital Administrator Paul Hopper said after Mrs. Payette suc- cumbed at 8:23 a.m. that death was ap- parently due to massive i n t e r n a I bleeding. She also suffered a fractured spine Tuesday night when a TWA Boeing 7ffl jetliner encountered violent vibrations at 28,000 feet, inboWld for Los Angeles from Honolulu. (See earlier story, Page 5.) Investigators today contin ued to ex· amine the plane, which landed safely Central lr·vine Village . Zone Pla/n Gets Airing By GEORGE LEIDAL Of fM O.lty ~llllt Sl.tt A new "village" with a population twice that of Laguna Beach Is expected to be a reality within the city ol Irvine by 11182. Irvine citizens next Yl'eek will be first to see Irvtne Company plans for the largest single village development yet contemplated for the new city. • It Is the Village of Woodbridge, a plan- ned community for 27,000 people on 1,715 acres in central Irvine. Community association· repre~ntatlves will view the ~cm at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Rancho San Joaquin Intermediate S c h o o l • University Park. Later in September, the plans will lie offici>i!f!iled with tbe city. .·The' vlllage, if approved by the city, MU oCcupy land presenUy part of the San Diego Creek Flood Plain as described by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. That ls most of Central Irvine. · Some featurts of .lhe vilfage plan were dlscuaed by Douslas M. Gfeller, director of project administration for the Irvine Company. Jn a company announcement of the toning presentation, Gfeller said the village will be a recreaUoo-Oriented com- viunity. The plan features a multi· purpose activity corridor running parallel to the San Diego Creek channel. Two man-made lakes totaling 70 acres ln size will parallel Culver Drive and Jef- frey Road in the center of the village \•thich is also lxtunded by the San Diego Free\\·ay on the south and Moulton Parkway on the north. 1be lakes are part of the total flood control program proposed by the Irvine Company for the village. Other reatures of the flood protection plan include: -Widening and relocating the San Diego Creek bed creating a 208 foot wide grass channel to replace the present 40- foot c1·eek bed. -Preservation of the trees presently lining the creek. -Development of an envlronmentat corridor segment (a controversial land use suggestion oC the company's overall general plan for the 53,000 acre city of 430,000). The segment would parallel the (See YIU.AGE, Page I) " Newport-Mesa Board Sets Special Meet Trustees"'tif the Newport ~!esa Unified School Dlstrict will bold a special meet,.. ing at 6 o'clock tonight, Superinteodent John Nicoll has announced. He said the purpose of the meeting is loward a contract for the district's em- ploye health benefit program. The meet- ing will be held at the Ensign Intermedi- ate School cafeteria, 2000 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach. ... after the biz.arre incident that injured seven other persons in addition lo Mrs. Payette. Severe bleeding and shock as a result of injuries suffered when she was hurled about inside the plane left Mrs. Payette in critical condition when admitted to the hospital. Assistant Administrator Hopper said her blood pressure fell so low Wednesday that a special ultra-sonic monitoring (See VICTIM, Page II Ch~per Body ' Disposal Bill Sent to Floor SACRAMENTO (AP) - A con- troversial move to give the state Board of Funeral Directors and Embalmers jurisdiction over low-cost body disposal 01 ganizations has been sent to the Assembly floor. Opponenls of the bill by Assemblyman R<>bert Badham (R-Newport Beach ), said it was aif)\ed at putting the low-cost organizations out of business. "We object to being regulated by a competing industry," said Tom Sherrard, an attorney for San Diego's Telopbase Society, a low-cost body disposal organization. "It is exactly like the railroads regulating the airline industry. They have tried to put us out of business," Sharrard Jdded Wednesday in testimony before the Assembly Ways and Means Committee. Badham said other organizations similar to Telophase have sprung up and his bill is not aimed speci!ica1ly at the San Diego firm . Unlike funeral directors, Telophase and similar societies do not offer such func- tions as chapel services, embalming or casket-showing. It does store bodies prior to cremation. 'fhe State Board of Funeral Directors and Embalmers says such body disposal may pose a health problem and it lacks the authority to investigate them. San Diego health officials contend Telophase poses no public health prob- lem, the staff analysis of Badham's bill said. Badham 's bill went to the full Assembl y on a 12"'3 vote. It ls AB 1828. Coast Hurt By Pay Slash Civil Service Cuts Hit Fairvietv , UC lrvi1ie A major slash In pny raises due cent by today's action, touching off a 1\111.000-plus Ca!Uornla civil servant<, Im-luro,... posed In Washington, D.C. today by the Calllomia Stale .Employcs' Association Cnst of Living Council, wlll hit hard at leaders in Sacr•mento branded Ille pay F1lrvlc1V State ll"'Pltal and UC Irvine. cut an outright swindle Md urged They aro the two largest state in-Governor Ronald Reagan to appeal it •Ututlons on the Orange Coast. directly to Pr.,ldent Nixon. Faculty .members at the University Titis Is the se«>nd year the council has wlll slip In wider the wire with their first cut projected stal<l raises. ,alse in four years, a 5.S -percent .Jn, •• -!;°"-..!Jlls-11 .tlle .flrlt !"">had hea<11 of crease. It," said Mrs. Pat Wallace. a<f. r The picture IM't ao bright for non-mlnlstratlve assistant to Fnlrview Stale .academic campus employ.,, while lar Hospital .Superintendent and Medical more than IO ,pen:enl of the state Director Dr. Anthony Tnlo. llO!Plt•l's stall must revise their an-She said virtually all 1,661 employcs al tlclpaled 1!173-14 Income downward. !be Coota Mesa Jaclllty for lhc mentally Cost of Living Council officials rolled retarded will be affected. back a pay raise ••erasing IJ.t percent Hardest-hit will be nurses and among all stale employes to seven per-psychiatric technicians, who comprise I more than SO percent of the work force. Nurses were to receive a 17.5 percent salary hike, with a 10 percent increase scheduled for psychiatric technicians. Certain other job classlficalions were 1 to receive hikes up to 20 percent, Mrs. Wnllace saidc adding lhat all hospital cmployes due Uiefn ..UI gel pay raises under the seven perC<nt celling. 1 logt.rUctors at UCt were granted ai5.5 percent pay raise this yea. -unaffected by Ille cost or Living Council action - while clerielll, meintenance and a<f. mlnlstratlvec persormel bad a 12 petccnt average raise oomlng. UC! campus apokesman said som< ol them will be all<cted, wl!IJC otbers' ln- (See SLASH, Pap.I) Chandler said it would require a study before any changes could be made. Mcinnis, himself a pilot, indicated he fee ls the change could be accomplished. "This is the only airport I know where you make a left turn from a right runway ," Mclnnis said. Commercial pilots are instructed to bank to the left immediately after takeoff and aim directly down the middle of Upper Newport Bay. "The standard departure {or a right runway is to make a 45-degree turn to the right. Why at Orange County Airport they make a oonstandartl left tum has always been a mystery to me," Mcinnis said. ''The small planes lurn to the right ,'' he said, "it's only the jet s that make the left turn." tt1clnnis said that past studies of the takeoff patterns "have not been pursued to the degree they ought to be". ';f\.1aybe if we put some heat on we could ge t some answers." Mcinnis said. Newport officials already are prepar- ··esa Deity ,llol Stiff ,,,.._ OFFICER STEVE NASH LIFTS PRINTS ON GETAWAY CAR DOOR Bank Bandits Abandoned Stolen Sedan In Nearby Apartment$ Divers Seeking Two Men Trapped in Submarine CORK, Ireland (UP) - A team of divers armed with '1the m o s t sophi$ticated equipment in the \\"Orld" racecflo sea today to try lo rescue two men trapped \Vith a d\vindling air supply in a disabled mini·suhmarine on the sea floor 1,375 feet beneath the surface. The trapped crewmen, Rog e ~ Mallinson , 34 , and Roger Chapman, 28, radioed that "we're okay and that our morale is fantastic." The miniature submarine Pisces Ill was damaged and sank during a cable- laying operation Wednesday. The crewmen have enough air to last until Saturday morning, and perhpas longer. "We have the most sophisticated equipment in the world, the experience and the know-bow, and \\·e are going to get those two men up," said Robert Starr, head of a six-man Canadian di\ti.ng team which will make the rescue at- tempt. Starr anA, five Canadian divers Oew in- to Cork today along with Pisces V. a. newer and more highly developed model _of the submarine on the sea bed. The white, 19-foot·long Pisces V was joined by an orange sister vessel flown in from Scotland. A giant crane bolsted bolh aboard the Vickers Voyager, the 41600-ton "mother" ship or the sunken submarine. TRAPPED -Newsmap shows location of mini-submarine carrying two Britons 1,375 feet beneath the surface ~ lay- ing a transatlantic cV rescue work would begin immediately. "To put It bluntly, we'll send one of the submarines dowrf to put a rope around the stricken sub, and then we'll yank it up," Edwanb said. A gale was blowing ln the rescue area today , and Starr said ·1tt won 't make it (the rescue} any easier." Edwards said surrace vessels were in touch wilh lhc trapped men every half· hour. He said he told th~wo not to talk to each other to conserv their air sup- ply, to lie down a.nd tak lenty of fresh fruit and coffee. ing a lll\\'Sllit against the coun ty aimed at ending the use of the airport for all com- mercial llights. City Attorney Dennis O'Neil said that suit '''ill be filed by the end or the year. The city's suit will be the third in- volving the airport. !\tore than 900 homeowners have joined in an inverse condemnation suit claiming $25 million in damages and a citizens group, the Airport Action Associalloo, has just filed a, $150 million class .action suit over alle ged noise and air pollution caused by the airport. Pair Line Up Tellers Along .Wall By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI DI ltHI DlllY Piiot Sllft A pair of gunmen burst into separate entrances of a Costa ~1esa savings and loan building Wednesday afternoon . lined the tellers up against a wall and stuiled all the available cash into a pillowcase before making their getaway. Tbe Glendale Federal Savings and Loan office at 2300 Harbor. Blvd. was hit by the two heavily armea men at ""3:07 P=JTl,, while one customer was still in the building. No one was hurt durlng Ille robbery. Police said one man wearing a bandit- style bandana over his nose and chin brandished a rifle and leaped over a gate into the teller's area, while his partner held the other employes and the customer at bay with a pistol. Although police aod a team of FBI specialists have pieced together most of the details surrounding the brazen daylight holdup, just how much money was taken remains a mystery. A tentative figure of several thousand dollars has been mentioned. "We still don't know ," Sgt. Keith Carpenter said this morning. "And we won 't know until the savings and loan has completed its audit." The rifleman then ordered three tellers up against the wall and scooped up the contents of their cash boxes before in- structing a woman emptoye to open the vault. Investigators said a substantial amount of money was taken from there. As quickly as they had arrived the two bandits left in a two-tone black and green Chevrolet Malibu which was discovered parked at the l\1cditerrancan Village apartments by police about 1 0 minutes later. "We .asswne they switched cars," said Sgt. Carpenter, adding that the car, also bearing a stolen license plate, 234 GRC, was determined lo have been stolen from a used car lot in San Bernardino. Sgt. Carpenter and Idenfificatiou Of. ricer Steve Nash dusted the car for fingerprints and took it apart, searching for clues, as apartment tenants stood around and watched. Several pills, believed to b e (See ROBBERS, Page I) . Orange <:out Weather A fairly nice day Is in store for Orange Coast-residents and visitors l'~riday-especially after the morn- ing clouds clear oU. Highs in the 705 at the beaches rising to near 80 inland. INSIDE TODAY lf uou've.oot a special inttreRt iu a highway project, it toouldn't be impro per to invite the entire Califo111a Hi ghwa11 Co n1mi$sio'' out to dh1ner -such as tilt lr- ,i1ne Company did recently. Story Page f8. ... ". \.lnftrt tt -K ,.,, Mwtu1I , ..... , I• lt set off for lht aectdcnt scene - about 150 mlJes southwest of Cork and some 94 miles ftom the nearest point of Ireland - several hours later than plan- ned. But Capt. Leonanl F.dwards, the Voyager's skfPper, said he expected to reach the scene about midnight and that ln a similar accident this June, Al Stover, 51, of Juno Beach1 Fla.. and Clayton Link, 31, of Binghamton, N.V .. died of exposure in another miniature sub trapped on the ocean noor. ·The research subawlne was freed and recovered. later. Miit.Mi,.... ' 0..1.,.. C9'111t'f l4>1J '""' ..... S!Mll Mll'lltk ,... ,...,m-. • '"'"''" ,..» • .. lttff ' ._., ,....11.u w.... ..... 4 I j • ' ~ UAILT PILOr c Thu~ay August 30, 1973 De ~11 Testify Nevada Publisher in Newport -Uy JORN ZALLER Of llM Dellr PUOI Sl .. I The publisher of the Las Vegas Sun said Wednesday tn Newport Beach that he has been subpoenaed to tesli£y before the Senate \Vatergate Committee. llank Orcenspun, who claims an ;)t• tempted burglary of his office may have Woman Say~ She Killed Own Father ASHEBORO, N.C. I UPI I -A murder •warrant has been Issued against a young wom111 who told police she shot her father and disniembered his body because be had sexually assaulted her since she was-11. been the work of Watergate conspirators, snid the subpoena wu served 1\Jelday at the Balboa Bay QJb where he ls vaca· Honing. Gree11spun also disclosed that ln- \'t'Stigiltors fron\ the Senntc Committee .!;ipent two artcn1oons this week in· tC'rrogating hi1n aOOut l'resldent Nixon's re-election can1paign.' The qucstionlng apparently stems from Greenspun's c.lalm that a six-figure llo\•:ard llughes contribution to the Presi dent's campaign may ~ linked to favors liughcs r~ived from the U.S. Justice Department. However Greenspun declined to re veal details of the conversation he had with Terry .Lenzner, assistant majority coun· sci of the \\1atergate comm ittee, and R. &otl Armstrong, a committee in- vestigator. Creen spun's name was first brought into the \Vatergate investigation last li1ay when James McCord, a convicted \\l atergale conspirator, testified before lhe 'senate ComrrJttee that G. Gordon Liddy told l\-1cCord of plans to break into GrcensplUl's office in Las Vegas. I TUSTIN COSTA MESA MCAS Santa Ana IRVINE INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX ffi :I " 0 ~-----t-·Conviction • IRVINE EL TORO Demanded .. In Staying By TOM BARLEY 01 tt1t 0e11r r11e1 uteff Condemning defense tactics a .s "hnaglnatlve nnd misleading," prot- ecutor Robert Chatterton today asked an Orange Coonty Superior Court jury Io quickly find El Toro Marine Sgt Jar<d Allan Wallace guilty of first degree murder in the slaying of Fountain Valley cocktail waitress NMette Post. Defense evidence relating to litrs. Post's alleged sexual promiscuity and the pcmibility that another m a I e ac-- quaintance could have raped and stran- gt<d her last Feb. 9 is "pretty farfetched" Chatterton !Old the jury In J\xlge Ray· mond Vincent's courtroom. "I am satisfied that Wallace picked her up that night, handcuffed her, raped and strapgled her and then shoved her nude body under some bushes in Huntington Beach," the Deputy District Attorney said. ' The warrant, issued in Philadelphia , where the slaying allegedly took place , \vas expected here today. It charges Camella Meglino Robbins, 27, in the shooting death o( 50-year-<Jld Frank Meg lino. McCord said the burglars were after documents they thought could tie Sen. ' Edmund Muskie CD-Maine) to organized crime. NEWPORT BEACH LAGUNA BEACH And he reminded the jury that police in· vestigaling the lr.idnaping Feb. 4 of South Laguna X-ray technician Carole Ann Rowan, 24, found several of Mn. Post's belongings, among them her purse and checkbook, in the Vietnam veteran's possession. Mrs. Robbins told authorities she killed Meglino two years ago as he Jay sleeping In their South Philadelphia home. She said she and an accomplice then hacked up the body, hauled the remains to Miami, Fla ., and buried them. Philadelphia police Sgt. Larry Grace, lvho questioned the l'1oman at length \\'ednesday, new to Miami today to work with the Dade County sheriff's office in trying to locate the remains. Mrs. Robbins walked into the Randolph County sherilf's office late Monday and S{lici she shot her father six times. With the help of a woman she said she knew only as Tami , and who she said was he!'" father's girlfriend, they cut up the body with a hacksaw and butcher knife in the basement, stuffed the pieces in garbage cans and rented a trailer to transport the cans to Florida. Philadelphia authorities told the sher- iff's office here they found human blood· stains on the sofa, basement steps and basement of the abandoned li1eglino house, vacant since .Meglino disappeared in May, 1970. At the time of the murder, Mrs. Rob- blns said she was three months pregnant with her daugh~r, who is now 3, She now has another infant daughter. When she fll'St made her confession, she tol.d the sherilf she had been wan-- dering across the country, hitchhiking, but authorities later learned she was married to Dewey Robbins and the cou· pie lived in an Asheboro trailer Cmut. From Pagel VICTIM ... device was needed to measure it. The only one available at Centincla Valley community Hospital was in use and could not be taken off another grave-- ly ill patient, a pattern that proved true at other a_u!a hospitals. A call was made to the machine's sup- plier in Irvine with a request lo the California Highway Patrol in Santa Ana to race a technician and the equipment to Inglewood with red lights and siren. Ranking CHP officers said the mercy mission would be virtually futile on the commuter~Iogged freeway s at rush hour, so the Costa ~icsa Police Depart· ment helicopter was enlisted. Patrol Sgt. Cliff McBride said the Eagle I chopper, already airbome, was simply diverted from patrol to its base at Tallmantz Aviation at Orange County Airport to meet the factory represen· tative. Observer Officer David B rooks clambered out of the two-man chopper and the company technician, identified only as Robertson . clambered aboard with three of the blood pressure monitors. Pilot Officer Randy Nutt made the flight in 30 minutes. OU.NII COAST CM DAILY PILOT TM Orlll§t C.0.11 DAIL V PILOT, will! wflldl b combllled ,,,_ JM..s.P!'ft1, 11 llVbllll'led W ltle Dl'IOIOf C.0.11 Pllblltlll!IQ C0m1Mftf, '~ ralf fCllllo!l1 1r1 ,ubllthfCI, M-•f "'l'Ol1!' l''idt\'. IOr Co1!1 M-. NeWl'Otl INCi!. Huntlrogtvn l1lt(flff0Jlft"ln v.11..,, Lt(lune 8Nch, lrvlntfltddlMiKI! Ind Stn Clem.nit/ ~n J1,>1n CtPltl!'tflt. A 1l119l1 r'91on.tl fClll;on ls M ii.,,. S.IVrcll'f' end SllllCll\''t .. Tile IH'illc~I PUbll1llinq ,ient 11 er Jill WOI 1!11~ Str .. r, Cott• Mew, CtlllOl'nlt, 'lilt. Robert N, W11d ,,...IOtllt '""' PllM!tll« Jae• R. C11,fey Vb 'rtli.tllf tNI O-tl.M-..- Tlriom11 Kt1eil Eo:ilter Thom11 A. M•tploiin• Mt"'81fta Eo:l!lor Cherfet H. Looi IUcheHI P. N1M A,nllttnl Mlfletlng l!~lton C.... M-Oftke JJO W11t l1v Strief Meilin' Atldre11:'P,O. 1111 1 l•O. f26!6 -........ N....,ert ... di: sm N""PM'f 1ov11v1,.. u..-eMC111 m ,_, "- Mllftllr"'°" •fKll; \N'S leeodl loli1tv1.,. i.ln CltrNl!Ni: ».S i'tof"' a1 Cemin. 11.ttl Tlla,~t• C7141 641-4J21 c-.in.; u ..... -. '41.1•11 C9Pt'tllht. 1'71, ~ C.0.\t .. UIMIW\lllf ~,. He ,..... 111trlft, m111tre1-., lllllltwllll INhflt II' M""1lffmtlllt •1111 ..-y ... ••""«111111 'lfl9'IOWI .-cltl .... ........ ~··-· ...._. d.--'• .... tt Cettl MN. c....-! .... -..Ion h urrltr Q."5 =u,.., ....n II.IS "*""tr1 fllltltt1' -· ..... ,,... .... I Greenspun bas maintained there is clear evidence that someone tried unsuc-- cessfully iO jimmy his newspaper's safe. Greenspun said Wednesday he believes the effort may have been the work of \Vatergate burglars but that he doubts it was for the purpose of gathering in- forrnation linking ~1uskie to organized crime. "I did have in my possession a docu- ment tying Muskie to apparent wrong· doing," Greenspun said. "But it involved only a relatively unimportant hunting violation for which he paid a fine. I thought the matter was so trivial that I never even published it." However, Greenspun said that since 1971 he has been asking questions of Nix:- on administration ofCicials about a "large cash contribution" from Hughes to Nix- on's campaign fund. "I hadn't cormected my jimmied safe to the campaign contribution until this ~1ay when ~ heard McCord say that Howard Hughes' airplane was standing by to take the burglars to Central America after they burglarized my of. fice." Greenspun said that, sil\te Howard Hughes was himself in Central America at the time the burglary was supposed to have taken place, he immediately suspected that there mi ght be a con· nection between the campaign con- tribution and Justice Department favors for Hughes. Newport Mayor Pushes Airport Expansion Ai1in g Nj:'!wport Beach ~fayor Donald A. h-!clrutis said today his city will press its demand for a public hearing on proposed expansion of Orange County Airport facilities. Councilmen made the demand Monday night but Tuesday Airport Director Robert Bresnahan said that the county has held the only hearing it's going lo hold -when supervisors approved the budget. Bresnahan pointed out Newport Beach did not speak out against the two proj- ects he has proposed for the airport. He won approval from supervisors to enclose the "sterilized" passenger holding area -the place where travelers must \rail alter they've been through securiiy checks. Supervisors also approved a plan to relocate the airport's administrative of- fices to the Mission Beechcraft building just north of the terminal so the security offi ce could be expanded. Bresnahan also challenged Newport Beach's contention that the changes are truly "airport expansion" He maintains they are the results of federal and state requirements for li ghter airport security. ~1ayor MclMis this morning admitted - there is little chance the city's request for an additional hearing '•\'ill be honored, but he insisted it ought to be. "I don't know if they'll have anoU1er hearing or not. I tend to doubt it ," Mcin- nis said. "But ft1r, Bresnahan's position Is not a good one. "Before supervisors authorize con- struction of any kind they should hold a public hearing specifically for that purpose." he said. ·:rheir \vhole budget was su bject to a hearing. but we're talking specifically about expansion or the airport terminal.·· • TONI GUT "CATCH 22" -Souib Coast Repertory Theater, through Sun. 8 p.m. FRIDAY, AUG. 11 MOTORCYCLE;-SPEEDWAY RACING -l'airgrounda, 8: ii p.m. DellY .............. SHADED AREA SHOWS LOCATION OF IRVINE COMPANY PROPOSED NEW VILLAGE Plan Shows Homes for 27,000 on 1,700 Acres in Centr1il lt'vine; Village Would Be City's largest Chatterton told the jury that Wallace, 26, had been involved in ''several bizarre incidents" in the weeks before. Mr s. Post, r1, \\'as killed shortly after she left her job at Good Time Charlie's bar. '.'1.ppellate Review' Fron• Pagel VILLAGE ... "He put a gun to the head o( a 16-year· old girl and told her he'd blow her brains out just because she told him he was a security guard and not a policeman and couldn't question her foreve r," he said. ' Nixo11 Plans To Resist creek between Alton Avenue and Bar- ranca Road. And be reminded the jury tha< Just five days before the Post killing, Wallaer, dressed in his blue security guard un i- fonn, halted Miss Rowan's ca r as she was driving along the San Diego Free- way. Order To Give Up Tapes -Earth berms would be placed along Alton and Barranca to contain flood nows in the "activity corridor". -Commercial facilities -the prop- erties to which the Irvine Company usually retains title when a '\tillage is completed -"will be built on raised pads." Miss Rowan testified that Wallace ordered her at gunpoint to put on handcuffs and lie on the noor of his car. WASHINGTON (AP ) -President Nix:· on has vowed to resist an historic court order commanding him to deliver secret Watergate tape recordings for a judge's private inspection. Chief U.S. District Judge John J . Sirica ordered Nixon Wednesday to produce the SIRICA DECISION AFFIRMS ,JUDICIAL PREROGATIVE, Page 4 tapes demanded hy special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox, but tem- porarily withheld the effect to allow time for an appeal. Nixon refused to obey the order. The White House, in a statement from San Clemente, said without elaboration that the President's lawyers "are now con- sidering the possibility of obtaining ap- pellate review or bow otherwise to sus-- tain the President's position." The order and a companion 23-page opinion fueled the President's clash with the courts and the Senate Watergate committee over access to the tapes of his conversations with key advisers im· plicated in the Watergate scandal. The dispute has been carried further than any similar confrontation over presidential power in U.S. history . On a key point, Sirica squarely disputed Nixon and ruled that it is not the president bul the court which bas ultimate authority to determine whether material sought in a criminal investigation is protected by ex- ecutive privilege. Nixon has claimed that a president 's confidential records are privileged from dislosure. The existence of the tapes became kno...,·n last month when a former While House aide told the Senate committee that Nixon routinely recorded his Oval Office conversations. Cox, acting on behalf of !be Watergate grand jury, then subpoenaed tapes of eight meetings and one telephone call between Nixon and his advisers at the time, John \V. Dean III, H.R. Haldeman and John D. Ehrlichman. The committee also filed suit to compel disclosure aher its own subpoena was r~ Nixo n, Elects To Appeal J uclge' s Order Presid nt on met today with his two White House la,vyers and decided to appea l Judge John Sirica's order that the President must relinquish secret \Vhite House tapes. Jn a cryptic, one paragraph an· nouncement, spokesmen said that appropriate papers fo~ obt~lning a review of the federal Judge s order ,viii be fllOO y,1ith the District of Columbia Court of Appeals ne:<t Thursday. It is that day that the time Cor obtaining a review wlll expire. The Western White House did not ' say which members or the White House counsel's orfica new to San Clemente to consult with the Pres ... idenL Nixon ha s emphnsi?.ed sev- eral limos that he wil l honor only "n definitive decision" by the U.S. Suprome Court and has termed !he confrontation with the lowc_r courts as a serious threat to the prlvlle11e: ol confidentialily In tl!O) eiecuUve branch. jected by the White House, as Cox's bad been. Cox and the committee say the tapes are vital to resolve contradictions in the testimony of Dean, H a 1 d e m a n , Ehrlichman and others allegedly involved iri the Watergate coverup. .. Cox said he was "very pleased" with Sirica's ruling. Watergate committee chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr. (D-N.C. ), called it "a great victory for the search for truth." Sirica recognized the President's need for confidentiality in the fonnatlon of public policy, but disagreed with Nixon's claim "that it is the executive that finally determines whether Its privilege is properly invoked." From Pagel ROBBERS ... barbiturates, were f o u n d on the floorboards. The car had not been hot·wired and Sgt. Carpenter said the steering lock was in the locked positioo, leading him to believe that the bandits had a key for it. One theory is that the bandits drove the Malibu through the open, empty lot behind the Harbor Shopping Center and roared in through the southerly driveway entrance to the Mediterranean Village Apartments, zigr.agg1ng past the business office and recreation facility to .the first carport stall on the north side, where they apparently had a second getaway car parked. Carpenter said police were notilied of a "bright" sports car leaving the area around the time of the robbery. Both men were described to be in their mid·30's. shabbily dressed, white and about six feet tall. One of them was wearing a leather jacket. The City of Irvine has yet to adopt flood plain zoning. County flood plain overlay zones, notably in the Laguna Can- yon watershed have been subject to much controversy in that they restrict replacement of buildings and call for new constructioo to be built above theJevel of expected flood waters. Gfeller said, "We aren't suggesting tha'. people will move Into the area until the flood control solution is fully im· plemented." · li1ost of the commercial development proposed for Woodbridge will be •ithin the flood cootrol-enviroo.mental-activJties oonidor. Restaurants, a theater and variety of specially shops will be added to the usual gasoline station, dn.ig store, supermarket and bank mix provided In neighborhood or village shopping centers. Also proposed for the activities cor- ridor are schools, churches, public parks. recreation centers and "some residential uses". A minimum of 133 acres of open 5t3CC is promised, including the lakes, patks, trails and flood control~ Present city park standards require 122 acres of this to be Improved park land dedicated to the city. Gfeller said the Irvine O:mpany has "proposed for public acquisition two ad-- diuonal communily park site. lbat total 58 acres." The park and lake amenities would serve a population of 'J:l ,000 propGiSed to be housed in "a greater variety of hous- ing than any other village built to date" offers. Proposed are both attached and detached single family hornet, patio homes, duplexes, condominiums and apartments. "Each neighborhood. cluster will coir tain a mix of housing types," a company spokesman said, noting that overall density of the village would be about five units per acre with densities ranging trom two to 25 tmit.s per acre. He said she struggled with her abductor and managed to jump from the car and seek help a few miles farther along the freeway . "That's what he did with Mrs . Po.st,'' Chatterton said. "But he had more suc- ces,, with her. She put on lhe handcuffs making herself helpless and she was then raped and strangled." He asked the jury to find Wallace guiJ.. ty of first degree murder for the Post killing. And he asked Ille Jury to also find Wallace guilty of tldnaping and uaault with a deadly weapon in the abduction of Miss Rowan. Olatterton described W a 11 a c e ' s testimony that he had a lapse of memory shortly after the Rowan Incident and did not recover his memory until he found her sitting In his car with him as "absolute nonsense." FromP-.eJ SLASH •.. dividual pay hlces were ~ seven per4 cent. Announcement of the federal agency's raise rollback action was given top priority for discussion at a meeting or Gov. Reagan's cabinet slated for today. The council cut back last year's pay raise by one percent, but that wu restored at the end of the Nixon ad- ministration's Phase U economic con· trols. The state workers got the ad .. ditional one percent beginning in February. The new raises were to have gone into effect July I, but have been stayed pend- ing a decision of the council. Both the CSEA and tha Reagan ad· ministration had appealed to the council to approve the full pay raise in ap°lte ot the 5.6---percent wage gukteline. LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE ••• RAISED ELSEWHERE Ad111lral NO-DEFROST~NG REFRIGERA~OR/FREEZER ~~ ALL THESE GREAT •sr1:,,,._1,FEATIJRl!S 1 'ull Width "'BookctM" FfMftf Doo r St11l f -tot ln1t1nt •v•ll•blllty. • Duel TtmPtr•tYrt Controls- MIKt th9 rllhl t.fnPftalurt fOt I tch hetion. • Twin P'l)f'ctltfn Ctlepers-btr:- frult. watt•bln 1Mdtn fresh. • Extr1 Lll'I• Rlfrlpr1tor Door Sl!t -b9ldl awin ttR ~·rt ... " M..W NT 1334 No i4efro1tln9 Nfrl91t•ter te.cffent with Artffc Air ft.W ._.,.t.111. fllf hill 1ycl1 cltc11l1tlon, SLIMLINE HEmlGEHAffiR ..... C11JJ • run Wldttl Fttenr a.t • Wk»Rl&l'lll T~ O:witto1 $25995 •RM Vm..I Dtlrott>tins h'dlmW :~:'fr · =r~...;.~:. . '15995 m Mtmlitr ef tO DAY U c.111om11't i..~· CAS'f C-•lit. lvylnt , . , Group With The WITH .,..om Volume lvylnt CllOIT .. .... _ '""'."' .. 110 s•-EI ~ ..•. .., .. 1115 NEWPORT BlYD. D11nt1n Cata Mesa -Pllw 548-7781 • I ' I . r ao .ea ... · ......................... ~------------'-----------------------~ , .. DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * FRIDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 31, 1973 VOL. U. NO. Mio 4 llCTIOMS, • PAOll . • ..• •• . . • • • • Flying Blin1'ing • • • • • Objects Seen Over Geo.r.gia ... • • • • - UC Irvine Installs Atomic __ Pace,maker • Un Piao Blatned Mao D;eath .. Plo.t ~1 'l'li<vo (AP) -Premier Chou En-lai, In ·.;, 'i,;,portant policy speech lo the 10th CliineJe Ql!!lmunist party congress releaaecl today, said Detense ~finiste• Lln Piao attempted to assassinate CMD- munist party Chairman Mao Tse-tung bJor• dying in a plane crash In 1971. Making his first public . o f f I c i a I ~OIUl'e o! the events which le<: to the death of Mao's heir<lesignate, OlOU told th8 congress Aug. 24 that Un, a military hero, plotted not one but two coups, the first during the secood plenary session o! the Ith Central Coounlttoe In August J97tJ, and the second In March 197\. Entitled "Outline of Project '571,' " the SO«nd <>JUp was launched Sept. 8 that year "in a wild attempt to assassinate our great leader, Chalnnan Mao, and set up a rival central committee," Chou said. Five days later, on Sept. 13, "after bis conspiracy collapsed, Lin Piao sur- reptitiously boarded a plane, fled as a defector to the Soviet revisionists in bel'rayal of the party and country and died in a crash in Undur Khan In tbe People's Republic of Mongolia," OlOU caotlnued. 'nle teil of OIOU's speech, approved by the congress Aug. 28, was distributed by the official Hsinhua news agency and monitored In Tokyo. The fiv!Hlay party congress, which wound up Aug. 18, condemned Lin and Milo's long-time friend and former. China/ private secretary, Chen Po-ta, described as linked to the coup, and posthumously read the shy fonner marshal out of the party and ·all his pools. Chou said that Lin, though named in the party constitution as Mao's' suc- ceslOr, attempted with Chen to put through a draft in the 1969 9th party con- greu which would have negated Mao's line that the major struggle ln China was between the proleteriat and th e bourgeoisie. He said that Lin and Chen portrayed the situation as a fight between the Sociallat system and the backward pro- ductive system, a view Chen held since the 8th party congress in 1956. Only• after his efforts were frustrated did Lin grudgingly accept Mao's line, Chou said. ApparenUy the setback rank~..._ eel, for "in spite of the admonishments, ~ rebuffs and efforts to save him by Mao and the Central Committee," he began plotting against Mao;s Ille, Chou said. "The shattering of the Lin Piao ao- llparty clique Is our party's greatest vic- tory since the 9th "Ingress and a heavy blow dealt to enemiet at home and abroad," said Chou, named by the just- (See CHINA, Page ZJ Burton .G.,e~ ·· Ba~kstage .. ' I • .. ' .I ~ Richard Burton and his 15-year-old daughter, K;ite, visit backsta§e withithe stall after seeing the awaro- winning musical "A LitUe Night Music" on Broad· ... .way . .With the Burtons are ,Jlermi'l!'e .. GiW!old (left) '1'and·CJltnis:Johns (right). '" · ·' •"' . . Flying Objects Seen Blinking Over Georgia New~t Manhunt lfegun C.ut . Girl Assaulted on Coast . Energy Used -To Pows:r Man's Heart 'Ibe first county resident to receive an ' atomic heart pacemaker was released t~ day from Orange .County Medical Center .. One week ago, UC Irvine-California )q>llege o! Medicine surgeons impiantod .\ the new device which will keep the 21- year old American Indian's heart pump- ing normally for the next 10 to 20 years. ·That's 10 tirr.es longer than Loy Davis of Orange has experienced £rom two ordinary battery powered devices which have been implanted in his chest in the - past three yeara. Dr. John E. Connolly, chairman ol UCI's . department .of surgery, inaerted the atomic pacemaker unit in Loy 1ut: Saturday. '. Today he told why the implant Is ·~usual. . '.'8? Car, the Atomic Energy Com- · .. m1ss1on (AEC) has permitted less than )00 nuclear units to be installed on a trial /l;>asis," Connolly said. ~ •· The llllit is about the size of. a bar of soap. It is inserted under the skin and conr.ected to the heart by wire leads. Regardless of PoWer source -battery or atomic energy - a pacemaker stimulates the heart to beat at a normal rate. Persom whose own heartbeat stimulating system bas been damaged by .Wsease,·agi.ng Q( surgery.in~ liye.ne11Jy normal lives with . imp1antatior. of a pacemaker. The advantage to the plutonimn powered unit is lasUng power. Davis' new pacemaker will nm as long as 20 years before he must come back for surgical replacement. Battery units ·last· only 18 to 24 months. · -· · In a year's time the new atomic units errJit radiation equal to 0 as much radia- tion as is received from one chest x-raY, " Dr. Connolly s;:;1 foday. Units similar :io · the one Davis nov. uses have been tested in France and have been in use there for two yearl. ' ' Weadter ALBANY, Ga. (<UPI) -Unidentifed flying objecls, bllnldng,ln various tolors but mavtnc 1llently, were reported sighted over a wide area or 10utb Georgia early today. . By ARTHUR R. VINSEL , . .. Defin~parall$·exis~l>etw..,.the·tw~ . .-Her companion~ who rode a .bfcickf' kiclnapings, however, inclu-ding the _, fled in-•panic and reported the ab- "The nuclear-powered unlL ls encated • (See.l!.t.~''l'-.' -" Look for more of the same bro- ken rocord weather Saturday with _ night and morning low clouds burn· lnC off to sun In the alte~ Highs In the 70s lows In the low !Os. . . . INSmE TODi\ 1' LaQun4 Beach tnds its 1um-,,.., of art f"tll!C1' with two on- ,. .. 1-lr: The B.U.t Alfresco of lhe Laguna Beach Civic Bel· . let and the mwical of lhe Lvric Opera Anoctation of Orange Countv. Ste todou'• Weekender,_ At' Yw ltrrfn I 'L..M. ..,. 11 ........ 1t.M -I c..t ......... c::.:. • t1 c ~ .,_... Mtftctt It . .......,.. ,... ' . ,..... ,,.,. ,., .......... 11 ...... UPI tt ..... u.ew. • .. ...... . Of .. Dell' ,\let Sl•ff ' Reports of the mysterious ·ny1ng ob- ~ came from police lo Atliany, Dawson, Cordele, and Adel. Reports also A tattooed, muscular man who ab- came from Macon, Leary, Pelham, dticted a young girl at knifepoint and sex- Ashburn, Vienna, Moultrie and Leesburg. ually assaulted her l'hur.iday in the same Military · autllorjllel ·at -. llOblns Air · Corooa del Mar ·area· where Linda Ann ·rorce Bue.!!! MICOll, the Naval Alf SI~-O'Keele' was kidoaped and strangled tion Jn Albiilj and F.glln AFB In Florida aeven weeks ago was the , object of a were alerted. police manhunt today. The duty ofllcer at Robins aeknowledg-The victim, a• if.year-old blonde visitor eel 1etting ~ o1 tho objocts. But he to 'the Harbor Area, was freed .within an said there were no plw to aend planes hour, following her ordeal in the back of tO investigate. a dirty white ·vah-parked ih a secluded He said the re~ will be turned aver area on Spyglass Hill. _ air p0lice 'which makes all In· Shaken but physically uninjured, she vesllgaUOlll of UFO reports." · calne-"lUlllllJfr· to meet a team of ''11le · reporli, sent over the statewide unlronned o!ficers and ·detectives con· eouce network, said the objects .... gregaled at the spot where she hod been slghled lhortiy alttr midnight, with .other taken. ~ptl'l)!,ln , i>Md clayUght as a hol\ sightings made Intermittently unW after rlfied friend watolied. · e a.m. DetecUve Sgt. Doo Picker today doellJ>- The objects changed colors as Ibey ed to draw any diroct link between moved through the night, flashing blue! Thursday's Incident and the tragic Linda yollow and _.. :i-algllted 1 O'Keele case In July . Albany wtre mo'1fte north, Jli--"We tan~ dlsoount It, ol course," Sgt. said. Picker remarl<ed today. geographical area and the fact a van was duction. mobl.Uzing .a team of policemen used in each case. under command of Sgt. W811y Kerr in the Investigators said· today, ..that they field. . have much more· iilfonnatioo to work The {irl was reportedly-bound and con- with at an early stage in the probe: than cealed 1n the .rear of the wtndowless vehi- they did when the O'Keefe girl disa~ ~le under a canvas or tarpaulin, at which Propane Gas To Be Allott,ed peared. ' time the. !attacker drove. up into · the. The drama that immediately triggered Spyglass Hill area. WASlllNGToN (UPI) -The a widespread qragnet for the girl and her He apparenUy Parked so. he was but of Administration has deClded to proa abductor began shortly before 1:30·pim., aerial view ,of the poli<;e h_ellCOPW crew pose strict, mandatory allocation of acrordlng to Patrolman Mike Blitch. which crlsscrossed i th~ area near Big propane gas, a critical fuel in big She and a girlfri'end with whom she is . Canyon Reservoir. · . fann states for drying crops, it was staylng were cutting across a grassy "Approrlmalely SO minutes -after her learned today. field after a window-shopping expedition abduction,.the vi.clim was released by the The propane inventory of about at Fashion Island, they told POlice. suspect," .police explained in a fonnal 46.L million barrels u of the end •f A.dirty white van prove l;)y, aCCQl'.d.blg .,..press rtJea•. •. .. , ' 1;;· °' :-; ·~ •· ... .J~is'8-below tt#lt.5 mUlion1 lo ,.pertl.:aro ~•1811teef •. · 'TltebMmdO<!Hltaget· tilll'lo follllw • •• .,,..,-il!t,•lllo'Olliee'ot'Oll'llllr · directly at the girls. the roadway back to the spot where she ·Gas of the Departroent of Interior Shortty thereafltr, police said, the was picked up and where Sgt. Picker and iaid. suspect surprised tbcm on fool with a other lawmen were directing the in-under a mandatory allocation, knile in his hand at San Joaquin HiUs vestigatloo. . supplies Will be directed to aros ol Road aod·Crown Drive, forcing the vtc-"She was distraught," said &gt. Picker, greatest netd, parlicuiarly Mldwut tim Into the ....,. ol his vaa which was adding that both girls .-ere still able 10 fsm states. parked on • side street. (See 'J'ltlROR, Pqe I) -• ;. • •• < . • • • . I Jl UAJL'I' PILOT c De~ll Testily Nevada Publisher in Newport By JOHN ZALLER 01 Hit ~lly Piiot Sl•U The publisher of the Las Vegas Sun said Wednesday ln Newport Beach that he has been subpoenaed to testify betore the Senate \Vatergate Committee. Hank Greenspun, who claims an at- tempted burglary of his orfice may have Woman Says She Killed Own Father ASHEBORO, N.C. (UPIJ -A murder ·warrant has been issued against a young woman w~ told palice she shot her father and dismembered his body because be had sexually assaulted her since she was 11 . The warrant, issued in Philadelphia, where the slaying allegedly took place, \Vas expected here today. It charges Camella Meglino Robbins, 27, in tile shootiqg death of 50-year-o!d Frank Meg lino. Mrs. Robbins told authorities she killed Meglino two years 8go as he lay sleeping in their South Philadelphia home. She said she and an accompllce then hacked up the body, hauled the remains to Miami, Fla., and buried them. Philadelphia police Sgt. Larry Grace, 'vho questioned the woman at length \\'ednesday, flew to Miami today to work with the Dade County sheriff's office in trying to locate the remains. Mrs. Robbins walked into the Randolph County sheriff's office late Monday and said she shot her father six times. With the help of a woman she said she knew onJy as Tami, and l'.'ho she sail:! was her father's girlfriend. they cut up the body with a hacksaw and butcher knife in the basement, stuffed the pieces in garbage cans and rented a trailer to transport the cans to Florida . Philadelphia authorities told the sher- iff's office here they found human blood- stains on the sofa, basement steps and basement of the abandoned Meglino house, vacant sin ce Meglino disappeared in May, 1970. At the time of the murder, Mrs. Rob- bins said she was three months pregnant with her'daughrer, who is now 3. She now has another infant daughter. When she first made her confession, she told the sheriff she had been wan- dering across the country, hitchhiking, but authorities later learned she was married to Dewey Robbins and. the cou- ple lived in an Asheboro trailer COt.Ut. From Page l VICTIM •.. device was needed to measure it. The only one available at Centinela Valley Community Hospital ,.,.as in use and could not be taken off another grave- Jy ill patient, a pattem that proved true at other area hospitals. A call was made to the machine's su~ plier in Irvine with a request to the California Highway Patrol in Santa Ana to race a technician and the equipment to Inglewood with red lights and siren. Ranking CHP officers s"aid the mercy mission would be Virtually · futile on the commuter-clogged freeways at rush hour, so the Costa Mesa Police Depart- ment helicopter was enlisted. Patrol Sgt. Cliff McBride said the Eagle I chopper, already airborne, was simply diverted from patrol to its base at Tallmantz Aviation at Orange County Airport to mee t the factory represen- tative. Observer Officer David B r o o k s clambered out of the two-man chopper and the company technician, identified only as Robertson , clambered aboard with three of the blood pressure moni tors. Pilot Officer Randy Nutt made the flight in 30 minutes. OUNG-1 COAST CM DAILY PILOT Tiit> OrtPtgt CO.II DAILY PILOT, wilt! wh~ 11 COtMlllm ltt1 Newt·P!'ftl, 11 PllbllSlleCI •Y 1!11 Or•ntt CO.II P\lbt11lll11D Com119ny. $t0t- rett td!!k>nl e,-. pUbl{Jllfl;I. MOlld1y ftlt'0\1911 Frld1y, !or Cl>ltl Ma.t, NtWpOl'I 8Hdl, Hun!lng~ 811<11/f'O!"'llln Yell..,.. UQ11n1 llHC-~, 1,.,..lnt/StOdi.blttk M'd Sen Clt"'lnlt/ ' ~n J..-n C1pJ11rtn0. A •ll!Dle •Plllontl fdl!lo<! 11 M lltMd s.1ur'(l.t,.. olt'ld ~nd1ya. Tf\a ptlnc!Qel P\lllllJ!lfno Pllnl II 11 Ult Writ Btt $trtet, c._11 Meu, C.llfornit, tUU. Rob1rt N. Wttd Prt111knl •nG PllOll•llfl' - J•i:" R. Curler • Vb l"mkltnt •1'111 GtMr11,M...-w Tt.om11 K1e•fl EdllOf 1"011111 A. Murp)tin• , Ml"t llll'IO !dl!Qr Cherltt M. loo1 Rii:li•"' r. Nill ,...,l•l•nt M1na1l119 EO'lhp"• c.... ..... OMeei )JO W11t l ty 5+1ttl M1lll119 Addrt••t·P.O, It• 1160, tl626 .,_ ....... fftwOOrl ht<fl1--1w-......., &ou1twrw ~ IMClli W: FOl'ftl Avtn1,11, Hunll"8ton llttd'I: Ultl IMd! 80ultvtMf -$111 (lttl'lttllt: J05 HOfl!I I I C."llno ltNI ttl• .. •• 17,41 Ml-4J21 a..IM 4111111 .. MM•fl c.tflll'!t, ,,,J, Ot•ntt Cotlt f>uDl..,,i..t ~..,. ... "''" ·~ "'""""• •t!Wltl II""'-: tr MWrtiMrM!I"' Jrter.rfl _, ... ~ ... ...,. wtellt Pl'· Mlil!I .. ...,....,.. o-. ...... ~ ...... ,.111 " Ctltl ,,.,... CeltflW..re,. ~*' lrY urrlu a.u ~ 1W ,...11 U.lf "*"",.-, nlllftl,., ........... ~· "*"""'· \ been the work ot Watergate conspirators, said the subpoena was ierved Tuesday at the Balboa Bay CUb where be l.s vaca· tioning. Crecnspun also disclosed that in~ vcstigators from the Senate Commlttee spent two aftemoons thi s week in- terrogating him about President Nixon 's re-election campaign. The questioning apparently stems from Greenspun 's claim that a six-figure Howard Hughes contribution to the President's campaign may be linked to favors Hughes received from the U.S. Ju stice Depar!Jncnt. However Greenspun declined lo reveal details of the conversation he had with Terry .Lenzner, assistant majority coun- sel or lhe \\'atergate committee, and R. Scott Arn1strong, a committee in- vestigator. Grcenspun's name was first brought into the \Vatergate investigation last May when James McCord, a convicted \\latergate conspirator, testifi~ before the Senate Comrr,ittee that G. Gordon Liddy told ~1cC.Ord of plans to break into Grecnspun's office in Las Vegas. J\1cCord said the burglars were after documents they thought could tie Sen. Etlrnund Muskie (D-Maine ) t-0 organized crime. Creenspun bas mai ntained there is clear evidence that someone tried unsuc- cessfully to jimmy his newspaper's safe. Greenspun said Wednesday he believes the error! may have been the work of \Vatergate burglars but that he doubts it was for the purpose of gathering in- forrnation linking J\.fuskie to organized crl1ne. ';I did have in my possession a docu- ment tying Muskie to apparent wrong- doing," Greenspun said. "But lt involved only a relatively unimportant hunting violation for which he paid a fine. I thought the matter was so trivial that I never even publ!shed it." However, Greenspun said that since 1971 he has been asking questions of Nix- on administration officials about a "large cash contribution" from Hughes to Nix- on's campaign fund. "I hadn't connected my jimmied safe to the campaign contribution until this May when ~ heard McCord say that Howard Hughes' airplane was standing by to take the burglars to Central America after they burglarized my of· fice." Greenspun said that, since Howard Hughes was himsell in Central America at the time the burglary was suppased to have taken place, he immediately suspected that there might be a con· nection between the campaign con· tribution and· Justice Department favors for Hughes. Newport Mayor Pushes Airport Expansion Airing N~wport Beach Mayor Donald L\. Mcinnis said today, his city "ill press its demand for !'I public hearing on proposed expansion of Orange Co\U'lty Airport facilities. C.Ouncilmen made the demand Monday night but 'fuesday Airport Director Robert Bresnahan said that the county has held the only hearing it's going to hold -when supervisors approved the budget. Bresnahan pointed out Newport Beach did not speak out against the two proj- ects he has proposed for the airport. He won approval from supervisors to enclose the "sterilized" passenger hold ing area -lhe place where travelers must v•ait after they've been through security checks. Supervisors also approved a plan to relocate the airport's administrative of- fices to the Mission Beechc:raft buildi~g just north of the tennina l so the security ofTlct: could be expanded. Bresnahan also challenged Ne\vport Beach's contention that the changes are truly "airport expansion" He maintains they are the results of federal and state requirements for tighter airport security. lllayor Mcinnis this morning aQmitted there is little chance the city's request for an additional hearing will be honored, but he insisted it ought to be. .. J don't know if they'll have..anotl'ler hearing or not. I tend to doubt it/' Mcin- nis said. "But Mr. Bresnab3.n's position is not a good one. "Before supervisors authorize con- struction of any kind they should hold a public hea ring specificaJly for that purpose," he said. '"Their whole budget was subject to a hearing. but we're talking specifically about ex-pansion of the airport tenninal." TONIGHT "CATC H 22" -South Coast Repertory Theater, through .Sun. 8 p.m. FRIDAY, AUG. 31 MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY RACING -Fairgrounds, 8:1S p.m. ; TUS TI N COSTA MESA MCAS Santa Ana IRVINE INDUSTR IAL COM PLEX sao NEWPORT BEACH • • IRVINE El TORO ....... LAGUNA BEACH - Conviction --Dema nded In Sla ying By TOM BARLEY OI IN o.tlr pt6of It.ff Condemning defense tactics a s "imaginative anti misleading," pmt- ecutor Robert Chatterton today asked an Orange County Superior Court jury to quickly find El Toro Marine Sgt Jared Allan WallaC6 guilty of first degree murder in the slaying of Fountain Valley cocktail waitress Nanette Post. Defense evidence relating to Mrs. Post's alleged sexual promiscuity and the possjbillty that another m a 1 e ac-- quaintance could have raped and stran· gled her last Feb. 9 is "preUy farfetcbed" Chatterton told the jury in Judge Ray· mond Vincent's courtroom . "I am satisfied that Wallace picked her up that night, handcuffed her, raped and strangled her and then shoved her nude body under some bushes iii Huntington Beach," the Deputy District Attorney said. And he reminded the jury that police in- vestigating the kidnaping Feb. 4 of South Laguna X-ray technician Carole Ann Rowan, 24, found several of Mrs. Post's belongings, among them her purse and checkbook, in the Vietnam veteran's possession. . ,.._ • OlltY l"llot HftVNll SHADED AREA SHOWS LOCATION OF IRVINE COMPANY PROPOSED NEW VIL LAGE Plan Shows Homes fo r 27,000 on l ,700 Ac res in Central Irvine; VIiiage Would Be City's Largest Chatterton told the jury that Wallace, 26, had been involved in "several bizarre incidents" in the weeks berore. Mrs. Post, 'll. \Vas killed shortly after she left her job at Good Time Charlie's bar. 'Appellate R e vie w ' Frona Page 1 VII.LAGE~ .. "He put a gun to the head or a lS-year· old girl and told her he'd blow her brains out just because she told him he was a security guard and not a policeman and couldn't question her forever," he said. Nixon Plans To Resist creek between Alton Avenue and Bar- ranca Road. And he reminded the jury tha~ just live days before the Post killing, Wallact, dressed in his blue security guard uni- fonn , halted Miss Rowan's ear as she was driving along the San Diego Free- way. Order To Give Up Tape s -Earth benns would be placed along Alton and Barranca to contain flood flows ln the "activity oorridor". -Commercial facilities -the Pl'OI> erties to which the Irvine Company usually retains title wben a village is completed -"will be built on ralsed pads." Miss Rowan testified that Wallace ordered her at gunpoint to put on handcuffs and lie on the floor of his car. ~~GTON (AP) -President Nix- on has vowed to resist an historic court order commanding him to deliver secret Watergate tape recordings for a judge's private inspection. Chi_ef U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica ordered Nixon Wednesday to produce the SIRICA DECISION AFFIRMS JUDICIAL PREROGATIVE, Page 4 tapes demanded by special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox. but tem- porarily withheld the effect to allow time for an appeal. Nixon rd' used to obey the oraer. The White House, in a statement from San Clemente, said without elaboration that the President's lawyers "are now con- sidering the possibility of obtaining ap- pellate review or how otherwise to sus- tain the ·President's position." The order and a companion 23-page opinion fueled the President's clash with the courts and the Senate Watergate committee over access to the tapes of his conversations with key advisers im- plicated in the Watergate scandal. The dispute has been carried further than any similar confrontation over presidential power in U.S. history. On a key point, Sirica squarely disputed Nixon and ruled that it is not the president but the court which has ultimate authority to determine whether material sought in a criminal investigation is protected by ex· ecutive privilege. Nixon has claimed that a president's confidential records are privileged from dislosure_ The existence of the tapes became known last month when a former White House aide told the Senate committee that Nixon routinely recorded his Oval Office conversations. Cox, acting on behalf of the Watergate grand jury, then subpoenaed tapes of eight meetings and one telephone call between Nixon and his advisers at the time, John ,V. Dean Ill, H.R. Haldeman and John D. Ehrlichman. The committee also filed suit to compel disclosure after its ourn subpoena was re- Nixo1i Elects To Appeal Judge's Orde r f>resident Nixon met tod ay with his top two White 11ouse la\vyers and decided to appeal Judge John Sirict's order that the President must relinquish secret \Vhitc House tapes. In a cryptic, one paragraph an- nouncement1 spokesmen said that appropriate papers for obtaining a review of the federal judge's order will be filed "·ith the District or Columbia C.Ourt of Appea ls nex-t Thursday. tt is that day that the time tor nbtalnlng a revie"w will expire. The Western White HouSf! did not say which mt!mbers of the White House counsel's offlco flew to San Clemente to consult \vilh the Prcs4 ident. Nixon has emphasized sev. eral times that· ho tvlll honor only "a definitive decision" by the U.S. Supreme Court and has termed the confrontation with the lower courts a.!I a serious threat to the privilege of confideDtialiLy in the executive branch. jected by the White House, as Cox's had been. Cox and the committee say the· tapes are vital to resolve contradictions in the testimony of Dean, H a I d e m a n , Ehrlichman and others allegedly involved ifl the Watergate C<>verup. Cox said he was "very pleased'' with Sirica's ruling. Watergate .: committee chairman Sam J . Ervin Jr. (D-N.C.), called it "a great victory for the search for truth." Sirica recognized the President's need for confidentiality in the formation of public policy, but disagteed with Nixon.'s claim "that it is the executive that · finaUy determines whether Its privilege is properly in voked." From Page 1 ROBBERS -... . barbiturates, were found on floorboards. the The car had not been, hot-wired· and · Sgt. Carpenter said the steering lock }¥as in the locked position, leading him to believe that the bandits had a key for it. One theory is that the bandits drove the Malibu through the open, empty lot behind the Harbor Shopping Center and roared in through the south erly driveway entrance to the MOOiterranean Village Apartments, zigzaggtng past the business office and recreation facility to the fir st carpo rt stall on the north side, where· they apparently had a second geU!way car parked. Carpenter said palice were notified of a "bright" sports car leaving the area around the time of the robbery. B;oth men were described to be in their mid·JO's, shabbi ly dressed, white and about six feet tall . One of them was wearing a leather jacket. The City of Irvine has yet to adopt flood plain zoni ng. C.ounty flood plain overlay zones, notably in the Laguna Can· yon watershed have been subject to much controversy in that they restrict replacement of buildings and call for new construction to be built above the.level of .expected flood waters. Gfeller said, "We aren't suggesting Iha~ people will move into the area until the flood cootrol solution is fully im- plemented." Most of the commercial . development propooed for Woodbridge \rill be within the flood control-environmental-activities corridor. Restaurants, a theater and variety of specialty shops will be added to the usual gasoline station, drug store, supermarket and bank mix provided in neighborhood or village shopping centers. Also proposed for the-activities cor· ridor are schools, churches, public parks, recreation centers and "some residential uses" . A minimum of 133 acres of open space is~ p · , including the' lakt~· parks, trails and lood control .. Present city park standards uil 1%2 acres of this to be improved pa d dedicated to the city. Gfeller said the Irvine Company bas "proposed for public acquisition two ad- dit' nal community park sites that total cres.'1 • e park and lake ameniUes would e a population of 27,000 proposed to be housed in "a greater variety ol hous- ing than any other village built to date" pffers. Proposed are both allached and detached single family bomes, patio homes, duplexes, condominiums and apartm~~. 1 "Each neighborhood cluster will con- tain a mix of housing types," a company spokesman said, noting that overall density of the village would be about five units per acre with densities ranging irom two to 25 units per acre. He said she struggled with her abductor and managed to jump from the car and seek help a few miles farther along the freeway. "That's what he did with Mrs. Post," Chatterton said. ''But he had more suc-- ccss ~·ith her. She put on the handcuffs making herseli helpless and she was then raped and strangled." He asked the jury to find Wallace guiJ. ty of firs t degree murder for the Post killing. And he asked the jury to also find Wallace guilty of kidnaping and uoault with a deadly weapon in the abduction of Miss Rowan. Chatterton described W a 11 a c e ' s testimony that he bad a lapse of memory shortly after the Rowan incident and did not recover his memory unUl he found her sitting in his car with him as "absolute nonsense." ·-From Pagel SLASH ... dividual pay hkes were wtd& seven per~ cent. Announ cement of the federal agency's raise rollback action was given top priority for discussion at a meeting of Gov. Reagan's cabinet slated for today. The council cut back last year's pay raise by one percent, but that wu restored at the end of the Nixon ad· ministration's Phase II economic con- trols. The state workers got the a~ ditional one percent beginning in February. The new raises were to have gone into effect July 1, bul have been slayed pend- ing a decision of the council. Both the CSEA and the Reagan ad· ministration had appealed to ·lhe CQUDC!l to approve the full pay raise In. &plte of the 5.5 percent wage guideline. LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE ••• RAISED ELSEWHERE Adn1lral NO-DEFROST1NG Ad1nlrol. REFRIGERATOR/FREEZER \ ALL THESE GREAT -""""',FEATURES • ruu Width "Booke ... " ''"z•r Door Sh •lf -for ln1t1nt •v•lltblllty. • Du•I T•rnp1r1t1.1r1 Controt1- 111ec:t.tbu1aM ttmptt1turt for -.ch uctlon. • Twin Po~ol1!n Crf1Ptrt:o-ltffpl fruit. wt•l1blol 1ard•n fmh. • Cxtr1' Ltra• Rttri1tr1tor Door Shelw$-holcb evtn tt!I q1.11rt bottlH I Modol NT 1)14 No dtfro1tin9 ttfr:gotttor 1t,etlon1 with Arctic Alt flow -i1.,1+trn for flill 1ycle circ.11l1Uo11, SUMLINE fllimlGEHAIDR M .... C1111 • FUii Width fr91Hr Chfft ' • WkM--ftanet T1ft,l*'lltur1 O>nttol ALL THIS $25995 FOR ONLY . • ,._ Vltull Olfrolt.tlnW lndllltor • txmiO..,Dootlh1tl t Flill Width f,._·Mart COU!ot°""" ' 15995 ' M Memlttr ol 90 DAY M C1lllornfil IA,,_... C:ASH :._Coopof•!lvo luylnf . Croup With The WrlH .... ~YD Volume l uyfnt cuon •w.uoatcl.tt-l'owor of 11 ~ Storn SI ~ •WHT-.mc. 1115 NEWPORT BLVD. llontawn Cesta Mesa -Phone 548-7788 ,._ ' •