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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-06-10 - Orange Coast PilotNewport Outing Turns to Terror - I Driver Survives . ' . JOO-foot Plunge Off ~aguna Cliff - .~ ' •' ' ,_ ....... • .,.., ""' ,..., ...... DRIVER RESCUED BY HUMAN CHAIN OF FIREMEN• POLICE Cir Plunged 100 fHt Over-L1gun1'1 Crncent Bly· Point a Driver Okay Mter Coast Cliff Fall .. By J ACK CilAPPEIL Of t111i o.lly l"llM Stf ff A »year-old man survived the 100-foot plunge of his car from the sheer cliffs (If I;aguna Beach's Crescent Bay Point today. John P . Wagoner, address unkno'A'n, was released l'rom South Co a 1i t Community Hospita1 following treatment for cuts and scratches received in the 3:30 a.m. mishap. bguna Beaclt Police said Wagoner had been outside the car· when it started rolling toward the cliff. Wagoner either attemptOO to halt the onrushing car with his body or attempted to get in it and apply the brakes just before the vehicle toppled into the ocean below, police said. .. He a_ppa,rently . w~ ~~C}gged; by the car for •about 40 ··feet dOwn the ctrfr before breaking loose. Laguna Beach firemen and Police Officer Don Abshier fonned a hwnan chain to retrieve the man, in shock and blef!ding from a small projection on the cliff. It 18 the second time recently that an auto has plunged over the steep cliffs. Previously, a foreign car was driven over the oceanfront cliff in what Police believe was an attempted suicide. He Downed 21 Sausages BALTIMORE (UPI) -Joe Deckrel probably won't be eating Polish sa~sage for a while. Saturday, Deckret;, M·, 2ss. J!O'lllds. beeame the record·breaking winner of Polack Johnny's seventh armual Polish sausage ea.Ung e1travagant41 by downing· 21 saUSllges in one hour:Thc old record of 17 was set two years ego. >AftelitlD~initia1 mafl}edi burp.., the De'* champion announeed "I feel great." '"l'he:y were dam good sausages.'' he Nuclear Hazard _ Chances 'Remote' EAST LANSING , Mich. (UPI) -Dr. Dixy Lee Ray, head of tile Alomic Energy Codlmisslon, say1 chances a'!-e ·•extttmely remote'' that a ~rrornt group. such as the Sy mblonese Uberatlon Anny, could ca\.lle a radiauon hnwrd at a nuclear power planl In answer to ~ reporter's que1tlon Sunday durina a news conlcrence on the tttichigan State University campus. she said "there's no question'' that a professionally trained group of tem>rists c o u I d damage a commercial power plant. , · ·~y could cause a lot of dnmage. to tht generator plant and tl)c machinery," she said, "but they couldn't cause a catastrophic radiation accident,'' • • said, "but tonight I think I'll switch to steak for diMer." Deckret came from behind in the final miDqtes,.ol.Jbe.uiqtesi to edge 23-year-okl 1o>p00i)d Suzie Hawes. ~1iss Hawes, the only woman in ·the coolest, gobbled 18 sausages be.fore giving up. "1 just got sick," she said. "l couldn't go on -no way." Deckret won $100 and a fQ111-foot trophy. 'Tarzan' Recovering BR!DGEPORT, Conn. (AP)-Clarencc "Buster" Crabbe. a former Olympic sy,immer who portrayed "Tarzan" and "Flash Gordon" in films, was reported resting comfortably at St. Vincent llospital here with a virus. , • I • ----Nixon Draws L_ine On Tape Subpoena With 2nd-Refusal • • ~n an, a ea ' I Newport Terror Coast Guard Mesa Girl, 12, Raped After Kidnap at Pier A Swxlay morning fishing expedition to Newport Pier turned into an ordeal of pain and terror for a Costa f\1esa girl,' 12, who was kidnaped at gunpoint and raped by her captor. The victim, confronted and abducted in the area Or 28th street and Balboa Boulevard, was driven to a hilly area near Orange where the assault occurred. She was abandoned in the rural area and sought help at a residence where occupants called police to report the kidnap and rape. Newport Beach Detective Sa m Amburgey said the girrs ordeal began only a few minutes after she and her brothers were dropped off by lhei!' mother to go fishing. Daylight was just breaking when the youngsters were let out of the family car about S a.m., and the young girl started toward the ~1cFadden Square area and Newport Pier with her tackle. She did not wait for her brothers and went alone while they lagged behind , . police said. The girl told investigators at that point a man in his early 20s pulled up in a light brown or beige four-wheel d r i v e recreational vehic le and offered her a ride. She refused, she said. Investigators were told the kidnaper then brandished a pistol and ordered the frightened girl to get into Uie vehicle, which then headed inland to the Orange area. The victim described her assailant as being about five feet, nine inches tall , of medium build , wilh shoulder lenglh light brown hair and ""'earing faded denim pants and a dark blue jacket. Nixon Refuses to Give Tapes to Panel-1!gain WASHINGTON <UPI) -President Nixon refused again today to comply with a HOl.IM! Judiciary Committee_ subpoena for 45 White House tapes and documents, saying there would be no end lo the impeachment panel's request Irvin e Coach Goes to UCLA UC Irvine baseball coach Gary Adams has reaigned to take over the reins at UCLA. Adams, a UCLA graduate "'ho played for lhe Bruins ba!et>&ll team, initiated the b a s e b a 11 program at UC Irvine and coached the Anteaters to ·tv.'O successive NCAA col le ge d ivision championships. H1s most recent tenm complied a 44-8 record in capturing the title. See sports, Page 16, lC'lr detalls. "unless a line were drawn somev.·here." He added: ''.Since it is clear the committee will not draw such a line, r have done so." The Pres ident's response to the subpoena, issued May 30 on a 37·1 vote by the committee, had been expected in view or Nixon's sta tement May 22 -in turning down an earlier subpoena -that he would not comply with any further demands. Nixon's reply, in a letter to Judiciary NIXON LEAVES ON MIDEAST PEACE JOURNEY, Page 4 Chainnan Peter W. Rodino Jr., (0.N.J.), was made known at l!ae White Hou se shortly arter !he President departed on his ~Uddle East trip and just after the 7 a.m. PDT deadline set by the committee for surrender of the materials. Nixon said if he yielded to the committee demands. it would stmply lead to furtht'r requests for tapes. "Onct cmbnrked on a process of contlnunlly dcn1nnding additional tapes whenever those 1he committee already tSee REFUSES, Page Z) \ Hunts Pair, Navy Craft A HWltington Beach man and a ,friend were believed lost at sea today and are the object of an intensive· U.S. Coast Guard search. John Sheehy, 47, Or 8191 Kenington Drive and Dennis Kaiser of Santa Ana were reported missing on board Sheehy's 34-foot t'Oflverted Navy launch late Sunday night. Sheehy's wire told authorities, "the men are always home for dlMer." She said she wasn't even aware they were going out on the boat until she received a call late Sunday from Mrs. Kaiser . Mrs. Sheehy said her husband had just installed new fuel tanks on the unnamed boat and apparently went to sea to tesl them . The obviously shaken 11-irs. Sheehy said she is afraid "they just might be out there and not getting any fuel." She said she reported them missing after calling friend s to check the n1ooring "'hich is located off Lido Isle. Orange C.ut • Weather Night and morning low clouds and local fog with hazy sunshine in the afternoon Tuesday. A llttle Lwler days. High~ at the beaches in the 'upper 60s rsing to the mid- 70s inland. LoWs mostly in the SOs. INSIDE TODAY Go-go g~ys perform in scanty nylon bikini briefs be/ore won1e11-011/y audie-nces in a Southern llli11oi! night .spot. Chicks ogle "dudes" who are paid SJO an hour in this retl4!rse chau11h1ism. Story, Page 7. Al Ytw hn'kl J ••• 11.., 11 L. M .... ~ I C1llhnlll 5 ClllnltlMI H·2t c-1u n (f'ffl-nl lt DNtll MoHc•t ,,... 1!1111.ml ,..,. ' l!•lllr1~1\I M 1'1 ... llq '"" H~-U Al'll'I LI....,_ 14 M•l""X 1t """"'¥ Tl'N,. • Ml'O'ln • "'''-"'' ...... 4 °'-c_,., • SYlll'll .-.net' 11 s,.n1 '"'' Sltdl M1rti.et1 1141 ffl•vh1t11 Ill ,.._,.... . WHll'tw I w-11·1 Newt 1>11 W"lf N-I • • 2 DA ILY PIL_OT __ _ 5 Monday, Jun~ 10, 1974 Me x ican ,Heroin \Traffic to U.S. Increasing WASHTNGTON (AP) -After two poppy plants grown ln western ~te1.ico, But some otnclals acknowledge that years of declin e, heroin traffic into the then shipped across the border. efforts by the U.S. government to cope United States is reported on !he upswing , Al the same time , there Is growing y,·ltll tile Ullclt activity have been with ?.fexico replacing Europe as the primary source and conduit ror the trade in marijuana fro m long-established lrnpeded l-0 ~ extent by bureaucratic narcotic. :sources in Atexico. leading to an Y.Tangling among ageneies w i t h Federal drug enforcement officials inttsified anUsmuggling campaign along jurisdlOl.ion o~er certain aspects of lltlr· say the heroin is being refined from the 1.400-mlle border. I cotlcs control.~ :;....:::::....=-::::....:~~=.:.~::::.......:.:.: . .::.__!.._.~~'---------'-------- A portplltral Issue In this conUnulna feud has been tbe qullltlly "'' drup reechlna the United Statel trom foreign sourctS. The d.lapute appartntly stems in part from friction between the dru& enforcement agencies. The OJstOIJ'a Service, which has been concent raUng lt1 border drug interdict.Ion efforts dllefly against the Mexican marijuana trade, contends that heroin tramc from that country is negligible. Although heroin remains priority No. 1 bec1use of the danger it poses, customs officials said synthetic drugs are their biggest l\'Otr'J at the moment. Hm1o'e'Y"er, the On.lg Enforcement Admlniltration, a year-old J u st l c e Department agency with which CUstoms his frequently clashed over enforcement policy, sa)'I that Mexico hu bea>me tbe aource of as much as 50 percent. of the heroin reaching the United States. This is a dramatic change from the peak years of heroin traffic, 1969-72, ~·hen' up 10 80 percent of the narcotic reaching U.S. shores cafl"M!· from oi' through Europe and only about 15 percent from ~fexico. Mexican heroin ts easily identlfie.d by its brown color, as <>ppOSed to the more refined white product from European laboratories. But officials say there is no dilference in the potency. John R. Bartels Jr., direct.or of the drug agency, said in an interview that the brown heroin, once confined almost rotirely to the West C.Oast, recently has been turn ing up in East.em cities as well. He said this is one indicator used by his agency to determine the source of the drug, and "the fact that they're not getting very much heroin along the border doesn't mean it isn't t'Ollting in." The heroin situation is assessed by a variety of indicators such as seizure!.' qU11ity of the drug, street prfts; which give some clues to availability, and the number of deaths from overdose. Deprived of some of its ftmctions when the drug agency was created in President Nlxoo's general overhaul of drug Go Fly This. Kite U~ITI ......... and flyi ng a.re Price's hobbies and he was preparing to fly this monster of his own creation in a Balti· more kite festival. .. enforcement systems a year ago, the Cusoms Service has since concentrated JDOlt of Its efforts in the interdiction of marijuana from Mexico. It would appear that, when someone told Robert Price of Burt.onsville, ?t1d., to go fly a kite, he took them quite seriously. Actually, kite building Belgian Given Long Term In Try to Poison 'Rival' BRUSSELS (U PI ) - A 26-year-old Belgian pharmacy student apologized to his rival in love for trying to poison him with enough Belladonna to kill 15 men. His intended victim accepted the apologies. but the jur:· didn 't. It sentenced the student Pol Brouart, to 10 years in jail with hard labor even though the prosecution asked for only a three· year sentence. "I want to apologize for all tile suffering I caused you," Brouart told his rival, Jean-Pierre LaPaille, when La- Paille testified. "It was silly of me." The handsome , dark-haired LaPaille nodded and $1.id, "I accept your apology." Nix on Cussin g 'Not Or iginal' BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UPI\ Professor Owen P. Thomas, an English specialist and an expen on omceoe language, says President Nixon and others speaking in the \\tat_erg~le tran.scripts didn't use much lmagmallon when they cussed. They sounded more like a "bunch or lZ. to-15 year-old boys sitting around tile locker room." he :said. Thomas said the transcripts show that Nixon "uses a fair amount of common obscenity," but "those obscenities do not have any obscene reference." He said obscenity generalJy referred to various bodily functions and actions, often sexual. Ol AMMCOAST " DAILY PILOT Th9 ()t-Coot<! o.;ly Ploof. -..rodo " -"'-11111! He"'·"'-.. --"'"'-°'-ea... Putlht""'G CoorOOI'¥ s.oo...-. ed•-.... Dutil•-"',,_,. ,,...,,..,. r .. ,.,, b CMlo ........ -a.-~""°" ..... II'°""'" ... ~ .... , .. ,, l-"" ..... ""''-'Sod<!-~ - s... ~ ... s--~ c. .... ., • ...., " """" '""""""' ... ....,,. .. ~So""""'.,., s...-c. ... '"" ll""C"* "'*,....... Jll"" '"oi lJG IYetl ~ S1.-c, eo.t1 ..._ C.lob'""· 91911. "And please apologize to Therese as well." Brouart added. "Okay," said LaPaille. Brouart and Therese Vandermoten met in 1971 and dated for tllrce weeks. He gave her a gold necklace and told his famil y. "We're almost engaged." But the lively Therese said stIB found him as "boring as rain" and sent him a Jetter explaining site couldn't accept his proposal. Therese then met and fell in love with La Pa ille. On F'eb. 14, 1973 LaPaille received a letter containing a wh ite pov;der. "ThUJ is a new product to prevent colds," it said. "It's a real vitamin bomb. We'd lik-e ywr opinion on its efficieocy." LaPaille, used to receiving test rneclicatioo from drug companies, poured the powder in a glass of water and drank it. Doctors said he drank about 750 milligrams of Belladonna and 5 0 milligrams is enough to kill a man. But before collapsing with a wildly beating heart and trembling limbs, LaPai\le called for help and had his stomach pumped in time. Aft.er LaPaille recovered, he married Therese. The day Brouart's tri al began, she gave birth to a son . 5 Inn1ales Inju red SAN QUENTIN (UPI) -Five inmates suffered minor in juries Sunday in a brawl at San Quentin Prison; that was broken up when suards fired two warning shots. A prison spokesman S;:<1id the fight between black and Chicano inmates took place in the south block of the institution an the shores of San Francisco Bay. From Page 1 REFUS ES ..• has !ailed to tum up evidence of guilt, there wou1d be no end unless a line were drawn somewhere by someone," Ni100 said. The subpoena was fr committee's fourth and it was issued along with a letter in wttlch committee members warned Nixon that his refusal to oomply with their request was "a grave matter" and that they wouJd feel free to draw "adverse inferences" as well as ulti· mately recommend hi! impeachment as a result. The subpoena requested materials covering the period from Nov. 15, 1972 l-0 June 4, 1973. In his letter to Rodino, Nixon maintained the committee would be wrong to draw any inferences ·from his actions and he was merely exercising his proper pol\-ers by claiming excecutive privilege in refusing to tum over subpoenaed material.!I. "From the start ol these proceedings, I have tried to cooperate as far as I reasonably could in order to avert a constitutional confrontatioo," Nixoa sak1. "But I am detennined to do nothing which, by the precedeoce it set. would render the exet'Uli.ve branch henctforth and forever more subservient to the legislative branch, and "''Oul.d thrertbY, destroy the consUtutiooal balance, ' Nixon said. The President previously refu!ed to tum over 42 tapes subpoenaed by the committee. Instead, he made public on April 30 voluminous White House transcripts of Watergate converutions of 32 of tile tapes. Officials said tapes either did not exist for the other conversations subpoenaed or were not available. The bulk of the «immittee's subpoena dealt with recording or conversations between Nixon and former aides H. R. llaldeman , John D. Etlrlichman. Charles W. ColSOD, John W. Dean Ill and Gorden Strachan. · ~tost of the tapes and other material invol ved also are sought by special \\'atergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski, who succesdully argued for a U.S. Supreme Court review of the President's policy in resisting subpoenas. This has paid off in a near doubling of the number of individual malijuana seizut'9I in 10 monU.. Customs agents seized more than as tons of marijuana bet\\'een October and Atarch and 25 tons in the March·April period alone when the Aiei:ican harvest was in full swing, official reports show. In the same pertod. there were 8.33 pounds of heroin seized by customs agents at all U.S. borders, of which 5.83 powxb came from Melico. Because of Its sheer bulk. marijuana must be smuggl~ across in truck.s, cars, airplanes or oo foot or horseback in isolated areas aJong the border. 'Ibe smaller and more easily concealed. packages of heroin, however, nonnally are brought through a regular port of entry. Partly responsible for the shift to Mexico as a major heroin source, has been the success of federal authorities ijl breaking up established COMecfJOO! that brought It in from Europe, the Middle ·East and Asia, o[ficials say. Under cooperative agreemenla the Drug Enforctment Administration has agenUI ol iUI own in about 40 COWltries and those stationed io Mexico frequently accompany poliec and troops on forays into the ruged mountains where the heroin and marijuana are produced. Bart.els says that while t h e international heroin traffic always has been controlled by the Mafia, the "fexlcan ronnection has been until recently a less organized system. But there are signs that "these guys are now starting to get organized," he said. First National Dips Lend Rate To 11112 Percent NEW YORK (AP) -First National Bank of Otlcago, the nation's 20th largest bank, announced today it was reducing Its prime lending rate from 11 .6 percent to the ll'n: percent prevailing at most major banks. Early last week, !he bank rtduced its prime from J~4 percent. A few smaller ban.kt dropped to 1111, or 11 percent 'nlC reduc::tkm were the first since early Mattbjn the prime rate, which is charged 1 bank's biggest and best corporate customers. A sustained decline in the rate can signal changes in , COR!lwner interest rates, although the two are not dlrect1y linked. First National of Chicago's rate cut, which takes effect Tuesday, seemed to be In line with the June 3 prediction or its president, Chauncey E. Schmidt, that "the upward push on short-term rates appears to have subskled." Going Too· Far?1 Burn Thi s Me mo Befor e ~eading WASHINGTON (UPII -The White House penchant for secrecy once went a little too far, according to the Senate Water~ate com· mittee staff report on efforts to politicize til e executive branc.•h. One memo, said the report, was headed: 0 Burn Before Read· ing." Scribbled in the margin was the word "Always ," by Frederic V. Malek, a White House aide to whom the memo was addressed. }.1alek, named by the staff as the chief architect of the re- sponsi veness program," said Jn his basic memo in 1972 th~t "written communications would be kept to a minimum -to avoid adverse publicity." 'With Serittapitag' Retail Food Cost Decline Of 30 Cents a Week Told ' WASlUNGTON IAP) -A dip in retail food prices in April meant a family of [our saved 30 cents a week during the month if it scrimped on n1cat and served lower-<:OSt items, a c c o rd i n g lo government figures released today. 1be Agriculture . Department said a low-cost menu for a four-member famil y, including two !Choo! children, cost $43.40 per week in April, down 0.7 percent from $43.70 in March. But It was up 18 percent or $6.70 per week from April 1973. Ofticl.als said it was the· first decline in the family food indicator s!.nce October. More affluent fanl.Uiee as the moothfy series has shown in the pest, enjoyed a slightly better break relatively with food budgets. A moderate-col!lt menu that cost $55.10 a week in March was 60 cents or 1.1 percent less erpen!ive in April. 1be April menu; however, Wa11 up 15 percent or $7 .20 from a year earlier. The department's plan for liberal eating cOst $68.10 per week in April. down 80 cenll or 1.2 percent from 1oi:arch. But it was $8 or 14 percent more Senator Files Suit UNCOLN, Neb. (UPI) - A Nebraska catUeman, State Sen. Loran Schmit, filed a $1.5 billion suit today against two of the nation's largest supennarket chains, charging them with conspiracy to fix meat prices. '111e antitrust, class-action suit was filled in U.S. District Court against the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea C.O., Inc .. known as A&P Stores, and Safeway Stores. 'Not My Frog' eXt>ensive than in April last year, llome economists say the various meal plans are computed on tile ba.,is of food quantities consumed by family groupg and prevailing retail prices. The low-cost plan relates to families with yearly incomes of $4,000 to $8.000 ; t_.he moderate $8,000 to $10,000; and the liberal $10. and over. • One basic difference is that lower- income meals under the USDA food plaM contain cuts of less-expensive meat. more cereals, bread , potatoes, dry beans, poultry and fish . The figures are compiled by the department's Agricultural Resea r ch Service and publ.i!hed each month in Food and Home Notes by the USDA Office or C.Ommun.ication . A fourth meal budget Is called the economy plan. a bare-bones meal guide used for computing the government's food stamp allocations. It was $34.'ro In April, only 10 centi lower than in March. It was, however, up lS percent or $5.40 more then April 1973. CHP BUS AFO UL OF EXHAUST LAW SACRAMENTO (UPll -A charter bus carrying about 30 california HJg}nray Patrol employes on a gambling junket from Sacramento to Nevada ran Into trouble. Bob Fahs. a patrol information officer who was on the junket, said a fellow CHP oUicer stopped the bus near Placerville and the driver was given a citation for excessive exhaust emission. U,IT ....... Joey Koza's frog is special to him, and he's not anxious to donate his pet to the University of Michigan for research. Scientists at the uni- versity are hoping to obtain the rare albino frog to observe its bodily functions through the transparent skin. " Happy Birthday~ Donald °"'"M-m-..e.-,""-'t ,.....,.,.. ....... "" ...... -~ l--m•oo...i •.....,. -l'Q!Ofl .. /1'JI '"'"~..,...... .... ..... o._ Xllo-lJC...-..AtOI 1...,.....17141,42·4121 Ci.tMffe.4 A"'ll'tlM!ot '42·S,71 '"°"'°"""' "'' ... &o.l"Gl l--. .. ...: .. 492·44.IO ,_~0.....,."'°""'v'°""""""'" 140.1 J.10 "-"'"'· ,.,,. o-....t Q:otor ~ '-" """NoO--___ .. .,.,_ t/11 ......... ,_,.,.. """"" ""' 1"' '""""""" """"".,.....,..__ei_..._ ~~·" -·· """lllOltll ,,....o. ..... .... ltAKllpl'O"' .,,_13oo lll(IHN1,11y...,~ 10 oo-•"'t'."'""..,~t-1.'.l.OOfllll'll'*"' • Dlltr ,1111 t-11ff l'Wlot DONALD DUCK CELEBRATES 40TH BIRTHDAY Oianty Star Shown Wilh 'Voice' Cl1rtn<.t N11h ' • I Dis1iey's Duck .Celebrat es His 40tli Aun iversa ry ... ANAHEIM -Donald Du<~ joined the over 39 generati-On Sunday with his 40th birthday, but to millions of his fans. there ls no generatk>n gap. Donald, the animated dpcil: in a sal~ outfit, is sti ll their hero . Donald, who became one of filmland 's most lraaclbly channing and durable cha.recte:n f4'1lowtng his debot In 1934, has managed to fuu and quack his wa.y through mono than a hundred Walt Disney artoon.s and feature film s. With hi• throaty, barely understand· ' able voice, Donald's firlt appearance' on a scene was in a bit part In "Wise Uttle Hf!ns," rt>leased June 9, 193t Though his role was minlscule, moviegoers thought he was !he 1t.3r and began dcmandin.I more. pictures. 1hat started a boom which made Donald one o( thret fiimous creation~ or the Disney st ud ios and spawn~ the birth of an entire duck family. Including Donald's uncle:, Scrooge l-1 c Ou c k. Pro fl'!SSOr Ludwig Von Drake, nephews Huey. De wty and Louie. Cladstone Gander, Grandma Duc k and Cousin Giu. • Donald's first stnrring role y,•as tn "Don Donald" In 1937, 1 cartoon which introduced Ills J,adlng lady, "Daisy." Some 127 c1rtoons and feature fil m..!1 followed, with Donald Qllinlng 1 reputa tion along with Dtsney's other famous characters, i\fickey ?.louse and Goofy. Donald's animated career ended In 1961 when Walt Disney Sludlos bag an cooccntrallng on llve•&ctlon movies, but the lovable · duck still continut>s hi' eM:apa des In comlr mAgaiine.s 11"4 newspaper comi c strips . • • • ' , At Your Servic·e A Sunday, Wednesday and Friday Fealure Ol tbe Dally PJlot .Slule .Self·•ufllt'le111? DEAR PAT : \Vhal is the current status or California's own oil and natutal gas production? Is there any chance of the stale becoming sci! sufficient in fuel? lt.T., Corona del l\lar l.atest Department of Conservation flgurts show u decline l.o oil and natural gas production during 1973. 0 J I production was down 311 mllllon barrels, 3 percent under lbe 19'72 Ugure and natural gas production fell 10 percent, fro m 542.8 billion cubic feel In tm to 487 cubic feet last year. These Ogure1 include produ ction from slate tidelands. New oil and gas wells drilled In 1'73 also declined from 1,341 to 1,!91. California's potential offshore oil reserves, according to Division of Oil and Gas estlamtes, are about %3.1 billion barrels, with potential onshore reserve& of about I. 7 mllllon barrels. fuel self-sufficiency I o o k s doubtful , especlally since CalUomla lead s the nation's automobile population and Is one of the top energy consuming states. Pahltl119s Admired DEAR PAT: I want to surprise my husband wilh a Jack Kay oil painting for his birthday. Kay's work features boats and harbor scenes in a very impressive style. We saw his paintings at the Ninth Wave Restaurant in Huntington Harbour, \vhich now has gone out of business. The receptionis t there told me 1 could buy his paintings al the La guna Niguel gallery, but there is no such establishment. All my other leads have come to a dead end loo, so I'm asking you to find out where I can purchase a Kay painting. L.1\.1 .. lluntington Beach. Jack Kay's paintings can be leased or purchased at Fine Arts Rental&, Z4321 La Hermou, Lagv.na Niguel. Sever1I of the paintings you saw at lhe restauant are now available plus some otbe". If you prefer to commission Kay, • ~1ontana resident, to do another peinUng for you, this can be arranged. Contact gallery owner Jack Veltman at 831-0%2% for further information. Cheek Vanishes DEAR PAT: J think I've got a problem! On Feb. 12 I sent a $10.85 check. to the American Song Festival in Hollywood to order an entry kit containing a blank cassette, songwriter's handbook and an offic ial entry blank. I've written to festival president. Malcolm Klein, three times and he asked for verification of my entry fee, which I provided. I'm st.Ill wailing for the entry kit. A.C., Laguna Beach An American Song F e 1 t I v 11 I representative will contact you by teleplloae to request another copy of your eaactlled ebeck. No 'f'tcord can be found of prior communication from you. The cassette will be: malled immediately, but 1ny tong entry you may have sent Is IDellllbl:e for competition prior to verUlcaUon of paymtnt. Last year 's contest run by a dUferenl promoter, folded ' prior to the scbedoJed final contest. This year'• effort bas some backed up entrle1, but A.S.F. claims it is trying to correct any c o m p I a I n t s recelvtd. American Song Fe1tlv11I can be Cflnlacted by writing to 1,.0. Box 57, Jlollywood, Callfomio, 90028, or by phoning 213-937-8460. • Amerka' Lost DEAR PAT: How can a company advertise book.s it can't seem to deliver? I've been ge tting the run-around from Literary Guild since January. when I ordered "America ," by Alistair Cooke. \Vhal's going on? R.G .. Balboa llazel Skelly, Literary Gu 11 d 's custo1ntr strv\ce supervisor, says lbt reprinting of "America" bas been completed, the book Is lo stock and your copy Is being malled lmmedlately. She says the demand for tht book was not accurately estimated and the use of phtographs In the book complicated and delayed the printing proctu. Literary Guild stlls "club editions," "'bicb often are specially printed and may have dif- fere nt paper, binding, marj::lns or type size 1han books sold at retell. Brak'" Ref1111d DEAR PAT: Last year I purchased a power brake conversion unit fo r my 1970 Chevrolet from J.C. \Vhllney. \Vhile I \VA!l driving :-about 50 miles an hour. the com(l3ny thrl'e Umcs foh the $16, but accident. but the failure left me stranded and repairs cost $16. A bondl'd brake repair shop told me tha t the linkage rod supplied in the kil was t"·o inches too short and lhe installaUon instruction11 did not 'eorreclly show the method of <'!djusting lhe push-rod and brr.kt pedal noor clearance. I have written the company three tigmes !or the $16, but I'm still waiting. J.F., lrvtne. The Chlcai:to auto parts mall-order firm I~ processlnR your refund . tts presldtnl, R.\V. W:-irsha"·sk)'. says lhe brake unit Is made by Bendix Corp., tbat It ls safe and thtre hns bttn no other report sacb 111 yours. ln ~tructlons are being chccktd for adequacy , 1llhough Whitney'• buying office 11poke1man, Charle• Waterfield. Mlleves lhal the unit was Inst.lied 'tncorrectlJ. • Otll'f ltli.t Sltff ltllt,_ Nlondt1y, J1mf 10, l'J74 s DAILY PILOT :J Overcrowding Cited County Juvenile Hall Fiinds Dolecl .4·way 'l'v.'O Orange County mminal justice agencies appeartd to be on a collision course l<~riday over crowd conditions in the county's juvenile hall. Chief Probation Office r Margaret C. Grie r lold the Board or Supervisors in a Jong letter that the California 'Youth Authority has threatened to revoke the county's juvenile ball certification Wlless the overcroy,·dlng is relieved . 1be findings are exactly opposite findings in a report made earlier this year by Keith Concannon, executive director of the county Criminal Justice Council. Concannon toki supervisors they .,.,.~d be \lo'ell-advised to scuttle plans to build a second juvenile hall. He said pleflty of room is available at various county Laguna Girl Charged in Leary Plot By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of '"' D•lr'f ltllOI SllU youth dttention facilities to handle the lo:id . \ Based on Conrannon's report , the board began chisell~ away at u $500,000 sum set asid' in this year's budgeL for acquisitiDn of a set'Ond juveo.ile hall site. Within the past se\•eral months, :S214.000 of that fund has been transferrd to other projects. Including $120,000 fof desi gn of new courtroo1ns in the coW\ty courthouse, $50,000 for medical center air oonlid.itioninc and $33,000 for utility Y.'Ork . The Probation Departrnent , ~·hich is ~es~sib\e for administering th e Juvenile court and detention system, fought. the whittling down of the money but failed to prevent it. In her latest report to supervisors. Miss Grier said a state youth authorit y inspector has served notice he "ill invoke Settion 50!I of the Welfare and Institutions Code dealing with conditions in juvenile facilities unless something is done. If the code section is invoked, i\tiss Grier said, "it will result in the C<lUJlty being given 60 days in which to correct such chronic over c rowdi ng or certification will be p e r m a n e n t I y withdrawn until such corrections are made." She suggested several alternatives to supervisors bot noted they will be cxpensi\'e ancl temporary at best . I These Include : -Constru~1ion of leAsed portable housing.units on the existing juvenile ha11 l grounds pending construction of a I pcrm.:incnt facil11v -Establishn1e'n1 of temporary group homes lor children nov.· housed at the county's Albert Sitton Home and use of that facilities 40 added beds for juvenile detent ion. -Possible USI' of 50 detention beds at the Youth Training School in Ontario. "Regardless of v;hich alternative is selected and 1ntplementcd. provision should OC> made to design and COJ1struct a minimum of 60 security-treatment beds ad.jacenl lo the present juvenile hall," Miss Grier said. 1 She estimated such construction "'ould tak e more than l\\'O years to implement and acti\·ate. "Such construcfion could be t~e first phase of construction of a second juvenile hall on this acreage,'' ?o.1iss Grier noted. She said tbere is roon1 on the current 14.4 acre site for construction of a new 300.bed facility exclusive of the 60-bed facility she is suggesting . ALCOHOLISM AMONG YOUNG IS GROWING PROBLEM Counselor• Larry Flores and Lynn Girdler in San Juan Multi ple criminal charges have been fill'd against an Emerald Bay v.'Oman and her alleged accomplice in a $20,000 extortion plot for the retu rn of stolen memoirs and man uscripts of imprisoned i\1iss Grier said her department has already started looking for additional space at the Los Pines Forestry Camp but can't place many of the juveniles there because it ls not under lock and key. Tom Bouraue, chief deputy probation officer, said in a memo attached to ~tiss Grier's Jetter that the nC\v hall could be a modular design n ecce ss i la l ing dcmoli!ion of the old Grttlev School and C'xpenditure of a1 least S5 million. ---• New Disguise psyc hedelic drug guru Dr. Timothy Leary. '._ Alcoholic Teen-agers Arraignment was scheduled Friday for the pair arrested Thursday night when police staked out a San Francisco motel. . -A 'Growing Problem' Robin Viertel, 21, whose last listed address was 522 Emerald Bay, a wealthy Laguna Beach enclave, and Charl es Dewald , 36, of San Francisco were By PAMELA HALLAN 01 Ille Dlll'f ltllot Stitt Alcoholism has a new disguise, a di fferent look from the skid row bum of the late, late show or the tension-filled businessman "'ho has to drink to "relax." The new alcoholic wea rs sneakers and does homework. He's a teenager. It begins with experimentation - sneaking a shot glass full of Scotch out of the cupboard when mom's at the grocery store. just to see what it tastes like or to brag to friends. It ends with dependence. reaching for something, anything to kill the pain of a seemingly insoluble problem -and reaching again and again. Alcoholism among young people is a growing problem, according to Larry Flores, director of the San Juan capistrano Community C o u n s e I i n g Center. And it will continue to grow until parents recognize it as a seriou.> problem , something many refuse to do . "Many parents won't admit that alcohol is a drug," said Flores, whose center ls funded by the National Institute of Alcoholic Use and Alcoholism. "They say, "thank God he 's drinking and not on dnlgs'." The Counseling Center, located at the erd o{ the corridor in the Provincial Building in downtown San Juan, not Onl y counsels people with alcohol-related problems, but any kind of problem. The adv ice is confidtntial and it's free. Flores and'his assistant, Lynn Girdler. serve an area that stretches from El Toro to San Clemente. They will counsel on the phone to named or anonymous people and when th e problem exceeds their scope. they'll refer the person to someone else. Th ey provide com munity education programs on alcohol and drug use and they screen needy famil ies for food basket distribution during holidays. But their main thrust is in alcoholism - dealing not only wi th the problem dr inke r but also his family. "Experimentation with alcohol usually begins in junior high," said Flores. ''Some parents don't realize their children are drinking because they don't drive and because it's very easy to obtain liquor outside the home.'' He said a poll taken in Orange Count~ schools two years ago revealed that 86 percent of the secondary school students admitted having taken a drink. "We reach many parents through education programs," said F 1 o r e s . "SOmetimes parents know what's going on but don't know what to do or who to turn to. Here they can feel free t-0 come in and talk about It." Miss Girdler stressed that th c counseling center doesn't take a Carry Nation approach. It is only interested in problem drinking, something that affect<; 12 million Americans and causes related problems for the othe r 114'0 or three me1nbers of the problem drinker's family. 'Full' Hearses Beat Ti ckets SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) Police have Jidvised the city's meter maids that they're not to ticket any more hearses "'ith bodies in them. One such vehicle v.'as to11i·cd lro1n in front of a hospital while the driver wtts inside gtttlng a death certificate. It v.·as nulckly returned when the body wns "noticed. Flores estimated that his staff has seen named in complain ts issued Friday . approximately 300 people since opening They are charged with burglary, the office in September. Some eome possession of stolen property and weekly, some monthly, others walk in off extortion as a result of the incident at the the streel, some are referred. i\lill Valley home of Joanna Leary. "Sometimes we come to them," sai d ~1iss Girdler. "But that can be sticky if She returned from a visit and found they don't want us. \\'e know when to her home ransacked and 200 letters, 40 back off." cassette tapes and ty,·o unpublished t.tlss Girdler said it is well known that manuscripts au thored by Leary stolen drinking problems are more easily from the home. hidden in highe r income communities. l\.tiss Viertel, was employed until three And young people and housewives are the hardest to readl. v:eeks ago as a secretary to Joa.rna "Women are protected. There's a guilt Leary authorities said, and the tapes and r to · 1 ed" ·d ~r G'rdl manuscripts were recovered after her ·~a;y ~;;P ~ sPouC::1 horn: to Jus;y capture. thei r dri nking. i\fany are bored or The scenario as revealed by i\1arin anxious about their children or feel County Sheriff's Offlce in vestigators inadequate so they start drinking. involved the payment or $ 2 0 '0 0 0 Alcohol removes inhibitions. Ce rtain demanded by a woman telephone caller parts of your brain go to sleep." for their safe return . The first step in solving a problem is Joanna Leary, a C-Ompanion of the facing, it. Both counselors said problem notorious LSD researcher since he \vas d r i n k e r s are very good at captured as a fugitive and returned to rationalizations, providing ex cu s cs the U.S. and prison is not his wife. but without a valid reason. recently took his name in a legal maneu ver. "Then we work on a one to one basis," She is Jivi ng in Mill Volley while he said !\fiss Girdler. "If medical treatment serves a sentence at the Californ ia is required, we see that they get it. i\tedical Facility at Vacaville, a VINNIE TORO, LOUISE HEATH IN GREAT KISSOFF They Logged 96 Hours in Earlier Smoochathon Great Kissoff Fi·ve Couples Sn1ooch for Record I Sometimes we refer them to self help minimwn security prison. groups." The former Joanna Harcourt, heir to a CH"ICAGO (UPI) -Despite pregnancy One Detroit couple. Andy and Janice "We evaluate the individual situation British publishing fortune, met Leary in and a possible case of food poisoning, the Bartnicki. had to drop out four hours and try to prioritize their needs," said Europe . He had ned there after escaping grand national k~">SOff contest continued after !he contest began Saturday, Flores. "Then "'e lry to find out v.•hat from the Los Padres t.ten's Colony at smoothly as couples shot for world 's because ~Jr . .,. Bartnicki felt t h c their problem is because the bottle is San Luis Obispo in 1970 shortly after record and a \\'est Coast cruise. kickings of their unborn baby. only a symptom." starting a l~year tenn .. . Five of the original couples still had The male member of the Sealtle team He had been sentenced in Orange th<'ir lips glued toget her early today. fell ill and "·as taken away by ambulance !\lost alcoholics. they have found , live County Superior Court on a conviction for breaking apart for a mere five minutes to be treated for possible food poisoning. in the suburbs, hold dOY.1l jobs, can live possession of marijuana stemming fronl each hour. Cootestants from New York and perfectly functional lives at first, but a late 1968 arrest in Laguna Beach. '--''\\'e'\'e had it." Jeff and Peggy Uhlek Atlanta ga\'e up during the day Sunday. tend to deteriorate. Leary, a for mer Harvard psychology of Chicago .said when they dropped out of T\\·o couples lrom Detroit -including Symp toms of first stage alcoholism professor who y,·as a so metimes-Laguna the contest lat e Sunday. the Bartn ickis -share the y,·orld record include needing a drin k at a certain time Beach resident along with his wife Contest <>fficials disqualified the tea1n of 100 hour . ., set in local competition, but "each day; beco ming upset if you don't Rosemary and a son and daughter, still from Charlouc . N.C .. 'vhen Jeff and several of the veteran couples are have a drink when you get home from faces a l~year federal prison term in Sherri Moore fell asleep after more than expected to surpass that easily by late work; inability to stop drinking once you Texas for marijuana possession. • 30 hours of kissing. \1,-'ednesday afternoon. start; lapses of memory; needing a drink -------'---'--------------------------''---------- to be sociable. "Alcoholism was once a moral issue," said Miss Girdler. "Now it's recognized as an il lness. so there's less of a stigma. Families of problem drinkers tend to either push them away or overprotect them. Ne ither approach is good." Both counselors said they welcome questions and are in the community to serve. The center has a commun ity board of directors and hopes to be se]f. supporting throogh contributiom. "Everybody has problems," said ~tiss Girdler. "Everyooe n,eeds to talk to an outsider sometimes. That Is our job. People can come in or call us-493-7333 -and we'll do our best to help." Armed Robbery Gets Marine 5 Year Term One of t\\'O Camp Pendleton 1'1arines who kicked and pistol v.ti<flPCd a Cap- istrano Beactl store owner after taking $1 ,000 at gun!)Oint last Jan. 27 hM been sent to state prison for not less than five years. Orange CoWlty Superior Court Judge James Turner ordered the maximum armed robbery term for George Wayne Green, 24, and a ot.e-ye: • counly jail term for co-defendAnt i\1arine Stt\'Cn Roy Ellis. 18. on the identical conviction. Roth men Y.'ere arrested by sheriff's officers after they held up a store at 26891 Camino de Estrella, Capistrano Bead\. pocketed more than $1,000 in 1akings and then kicked and pistol "'hipped 0"11cr Berkley Clsre Burch. Judge Turner dlsmiMcd re I ate: d burglary charges against both Marines. " ' ' , '°' tha! Soec1al Occasion . , Judy Shafran is wearing the "perfect long dreS$" of brown checked gingham by Florence Eiseman Judy is a student at Harbour View SchOol and the daughter ot Mr and Mrs. Allen Shafran o1 Huntington Harbour. THE RED BALLOON LTD, !,.,,.,'i \r("l!,)Nl~., t'"'•"'t" 11 •• ~:.f.~ !"I ,Nf1'11i ICIN ""'"llOlJR )u 8•e<-1Mt ' \ ' ~ DAI LY PlLO __ r __ ' _· ________ M_o_M_ay Ju11t 10 11 ... Sust 1:' Coasting,~~ J Nixon ·Departs on Mideast Peace Trip t . -·;·: ~ with Tom urphine W eather1ne11, Use Your Toes UPCOAST, DOW~COAST:· Short· timers here in our coastal region often "'onder ho\\' it is v.·e ca n have a beautiful v.·eekend like 1his last one and eod up having it all to ourselves. Well. it's really quite simple. You can attribute ii lo the v .. eather forecasters. You take Saturday, for example . You aren 't going to get too many June Saturdays along this best of all possible roasts which are any nicer than the one just past. Beautiful. Despite the near-perfect C<>nditions for beach-going. lireguard estimators suggest only about 140,000 folks sho~·ed up along the shoreline. One lifeguard spokesman suggested the scarcity of beach bodies could be ai1ribu1ed 10 "erroneous w cat her forecasts." . INDEED, HE \\'AS being very polite. \Vhat he meant \\'as the predictions were clear of(. \Vrong. Dead wrong. l\1istaken and nor \\'Orth a hoot or holler. lVhat the weather people said Friday • was that here along the coastline. Saturday V.'as going to be filled with chilly airs, clouds and drizzling skies. F~ with a forecast like that, even I would stay away from the beaches. \Vhat Saturday turned out to be was blue skies, balmy breezes and a brilliant sun v.·hich pumped the temperatures up • into the 80s. • \\'ASHINGTON (UPI ) -Expre~ing hope that he is starting on "a new journey for peace," President Nhr.oo left today for a tour of five r.tlddl e East nations. "\\le befleve !his trip, Ukc the other .iourneys \\"C have taken. \1•!11 contribUte to that lasting. peaco '•"hiC'h \1-'C. as Americans are so deeply d1..>dicated,'1 Nixon said in brief speech as he and J\lrs. Nixon left the \\'hite House on the 15,000. mile, nine dar 1rip. Nixon thanked a large group of foreign diplomats and government officials for coming to see them off and said "We hope and belltve this "'ill · be another journey for peace." THE PRESIDE~'T likened his trip to historic 1972 visits lo mainland China and the Soviet Union. Those were the first trips to either Communist capital by a sitting An1l't'ican president :'Ind he n01ed that he v.·oulil be the first president to visit four of the countries on his f\1ideast agenda. "Both or those journeys "·ere ones that had a profound impact not only on the relations ot the nations involved but also on building a, structure of peace for the v.·hole world. "Th.ls trlp \\'ill take us to a part of the \\Wld tbat has known nothing but war <lver the past 30 to 40 years. And as we go to five nations -four that have never been visited by an American President before -:-we realize that one trip is not going to solve differences that are very deep, that go back tn so1ne cases, many yenrs, <'.lnd in son\ cases centuries, "BUT WE Al.£0 re a Ii 7. e that a beginning must be made.·· Referring to cease-fire agreements that Se<'retary of Stai~ Henry A. Ki53inger -\l'ho 1crompenied him on the trip -niegotlated between Israel and Egypt and lbetv.ttn Israel and Syriu . NfXOn said: "A beginning has been made. toward 11. different relation and a better relation between the nation& In lftat area. We have been proud to play Hi pa.rt In that begiMing." His trip, the President said. will "provide an opportunlt)' to reoffinn our support tor these iiUUaUves that have been undertaken, to explore ways that we can have new and better relatiOnfl between the United States and each nation in the area •.. and also explore ways in which those nations in the area may have better relations with each other and build toward the permanent and lasting and just and equitable peace * that all of them. "'e know, want ind ce11aln~,.....that we wont." BEFORt.: llEADlNG for Cairo on \\'ednesdny, the Presldl!l'lt and his party v.·Ul stop orr for tv"o ni,qht11 \11 the Austrian city of Stllzburg. This will give hinl time W~get a.ccu,'iWmcd to jct lag. Ttlere is a sevcn·hour lirne dlf(erentL1J between Washington and the 1'11ddlc East sto~ on his schedule. lie Oies to the Egyptian capital ror a lavish wefcome . Wednesday momin;:: following a three·hour, 45-mlnute flight from Salzburg. From Cairo'.. he will go, In order, to Jiddah, Saudi Ar ab i a : Oamagus, Syria; Tel Aviv, Israel. and Anunan. Jordan. before returning to \Vasfiington -after an overn ight stop in the Azores -a week frorn Wednesday. Palestine Issue Urged at Summit By The AssOclate-d Press Syrian sources called for the Geneva peace conferen ce today to deal on1y with restoring Palestinian rights and com- pleting Israeli withdrawal from occupied territories when the session resumes. IN DA!\fASCllS, A highly reliable Syrian soure:e...uld P~~js_a~i!ely trying to bring about "at least one" Arab minisummit in the very near future for the adoption of a joint :itand calling on the Geneva conference to take up the question of Palestinian rights and Jsraeli withdrawal. 1\IEANWIULE, ISRAEL accused Syria of "brutal torture" of IMaeli prisoners and said it will protest to the United Nations. Syria countered v.•ith charges tha t Israel mistreated Arab prisoners. Each government denied the o t h e r ' s accusations. 1lle Israeli government W.sued arr offitjal statement Sunday expressing "indignation and revulsion"' at reports from returning POWs that they were regularly beaten with rubber truncheons and bu.med with electric lights. The prisoners said they "'.ere given poo r food and medical treatment. Some prisoners said they could oot publicly reveal the worst of the tortures. "It is with utmost gravi ty that the government views this conduct wh ich violates every international precept ," the Israeli statement said. Now some of our coastal folks, who like lo keep the place pretty much to the hometowners, would react by saying, "\Vonderful. We should have wrong forecasts like that all the time and we'll keep the beaches from ge t ting overcrowded ..• " LINCOLN VILLAGE TRAILER COURT NEARLY DEMOLISHED BY KANSAS TORNADO Five Victims found in Emporia Facility Rubble After Saturda~Eveni ng Twister The source did not reyat v.·here this one or more minisummil! ~oold be held, or who would attend them. It v.•as sunnised, however. that Syria, Egypt and Jordan, who will attend the Geneva conference, \\'Ould want to meet to coordinal(! their policies following the signing of the disengagement agreement between Syria and Israel. Despite the exchange· of atrocity charges. an Israeli military spokesman said disengagment or forces on the Golan Heights ~·as proceeding according to schedule. SORRY, BUT THAT'S not so good . You have to remember that coastal folks plan ahead on the weather forecasts too. Like the chap ·who reads that grim Friday forecast for Saturday and groans v.'ith · disgust. ··won 't be any beach weather tomorrow , Martha ." he advises the little woman. So he goes ahead and moves all • the living room furniture and starts the • painting job he will finish in the alleged gloom of the June Saturday. Thus he awakens Saturday morn to ~.that brilliant sunshine. But it's too late. He's already stuck with the painting job. ~IA YBE IT JUST proves you shouldn't Jock you r life in around weather foreca sts. Some have called forecasting a science. or maybe an art, or possibly and blend of witchcraft. Well, I'll tell you what it is. Jt's guessing. that's what. Weather people get paid to guess Y:ith barometers, gauges, scales and three little scoops that spin around on a po1e and ·look impressive. Others. like f\.fiddle Son, predict the size of surf by how his big toe feels and the atmospheric conditions on whether his long hair flies out like an electrified cat or lies flat and limp. CO;\lE TO THlNK of ii, he probably has a better guessing average than all those official people "'ith the 1nstr11menrs. TAKE Y OUR PI CK H0~1 E (UPI ) -The steady increase in Italian food prices is bnd enough. But today the National Cooperatives Associa- uon had more bad nev.·s: A 10 percent incrl·asc in the pri ce of toothpicks. 3 Midconti11e11tal States Cite Twister Deatl1 Toll By United Press International Those who live in the counlry's midsection knov.n as "Tornado Alley .. are hardened \'Cterans of \\'eather catastrophes but Red Cross \'O!unteer Peggy Glen spent the 1,•:eekend with tears in her eyes. "Ifs hard to bcltcve what I've seen.'' she said while operating one of four disaste'/e\ief centers set up in Tulsa, Okla. "PE OPLE ARE coming in \1·ithout any homes. I stopped at a neighbor 's on my \\'-ay here and v.·here four houses had stood. there was nothing there but vacant lots." It v.·as a v.·eekend of killer tornadoes, torrential rains and flash floods in portions of Kansas. Oklahoma and Arkansas. As the last vestiges ol the "'"eather system moved peace r u 11 y eastv.•ard Sunday. the official death count stood at 23. hundreds v.·ere left homeless and property dama ge v.•as expected to exceed $55 million It began Saturday night \l'ilh a tornado ripping the roof of a crov.·ded nursing home at Drumright. Okla .. and cutling a mile-long. three-block \1'ide s y.· a t h through the community of 3.000. But the violent weather quickly spreaij to other sections of the state and to Kansas. At Emporia. Kan .. a toniado cut a mile·long path through the town. de stroying all but five of a 103-unit trailer park and v.-recking 22 businesses in a shopping cellter. Five of the city:s victims y.·ere found In the rubble of the mobile homes. The sixth body was found in an apartment near the shopping center. "It looked like an explosion, a big green explosion." Liz Wilson. 14, said of the tornado v.·hic.h swept by her home. BY TIIE TIME the storm system reached Arkansas, the tw isters had died out but a deluge in, the form of more th an a foot of rain sent creekS and rivers over their banks and into homes. Tv.·o persons drowned in El Dorado, Ark .. Saturday when their car stalled on cJty streets and was swept away. Two youths were killed Sunday n e a r i\tagnolia. Ark .. when raging waters sv.·ept av.·ay the gravel embankment under a culvert. Farther \\'est at Guthrie, Okla., a creek sv.·elled by almost five inches of rain drove about 100 families from their homes Sunday. City officials said the small tov.n was cut in two by the r"'aging "·aters. State officials said it cou1d have been much v.·orse in Oklahoma had tornado v.·amings not gone out as early as they did . "The v.•cather over Oklahoma Saturday \l'as very similar to the weather over the midv.·cst several months ago during the killer tornadoes." Red Cross Director Joe Cunningham said. "That is why v.·e activated a little earlier." U.S. Midsection Calming Golf Bull-sized Hail Pelts Texas; Tennes see Soaks Temperature~ Hit~ "" AID•nY " .. All•nll " M llo>!on " ,. llull•l11 " " Cll•rlclle .. .. Cll•Ca~o .. .. C•nc•nn.t!I .. .. Clc~~lllnd " " O~llft~ .. " Oenvr• " " .. l'c,. ·" ~ - '0 ~l:i,l~nd vtrl•O'-winds wlllN'l<I uo t~"" .iond lou•·IOOI w•vt' from Point Con<:fOllllll to TM M••k fll bordfr, IJ.S. S11mmar11 Tfl1111dot.,lllf'"'' dlml11hlted over lllt 111111on•s mid-lion !OdlY 1ntr l1,11lna 1•e1s rrom low•• Ml<hkltn 10 1h1 OHo Sou1h wltll M.,....,. r1ln,. Qll•lV wlndi arof fl1il. Ot1•0;1 .. Hon~IUIU KtnU• (ITt .. " l •• Vfll~> .. lOU>i~lll' " " " " ·" .. ,. " '"(""'c'•?'-•-f;.::;~~-Jr..-...;:r:;..-:; Ou•l"G "'' 11lgf\I, 11111 !he 1111 of ocu ball, pel!ed L~reoo. l ••· In 1 ''•·h<>u• ne•fod, J aCk}Ofl, Tenri. rectlwt<I well c•er I n incll ol rtln 1nd •bOUt I 1..cn 1111 11 Mon•oe, L•. Somt llOOdlnq 1ccomoen!KI IM illl!""m, In Mlul11lppl trod .,,..stt1n T~neuee. Mi•ml .. " Molwtu~tt " " Mnl'lttl>Qh~ M " N•w O•lt~n• ., " tltw Vot> " " I •Ll 1!11 ~I Ioli DELIVERY SERVICE Oeliver1 ol II-. 0.,1, P1~1 1s 1uarantet1l _,, 11.U,. II ,,. M 111 la11 Jiii ,.r 'J ~.I••., UI JM t•"" 1111 k lrlll~I 11 Y•· ~ Ill !JUI Niii 1.ll .... Sll•UT Mi S.-, H YI' M Ill 1ecn fl" ~ .,. 5 1.• S11•~'Y • I HI $llCJy ul • ' "" ..... lrOtt~t " "' ca"' 1t1r• l!llil '' ,. ... 1elelffl1ts ,, 1.0~ llll!t 911111• c.rri, l11n .•.•• 642-4321 llOl!-1UI illEl\lllfl• k1t- .. 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"°" II I•• IOUlll II Ole.I•~· Ill !hi onto V•Uf'I', ,_.....,, o'°''";of\I 1trn0tr1tut11 rlll'lllMd lft ll'oe "' Cnas lal We 11lhe r MO.lf'f Wf'llY !Od-ey, LIOll: v1rlfblt Win<h ~""1 •l'ld l'IO'ftlne llOl/tl Mo tomfng wet! 10 IOUthWffl I ~ 11 ~llO!> fll 1!1tt-• to111y 1NI l llffCMI¥, t-11(111 1001r In 111<1 • Cll*ll•I ,,..,. Hr1IUl'"t1 r.entt from !' "' t.e In· l•nd 1tmci-"lfurt1 ''"" from .M 10 ... Wtltr lt!'lll)er'1urt U S1111, Jtloo11. T ide. MONOAT $«ond low I JO p.m. ~I TUISOAT "!•I! 111,,, 1:13 •• ..,, t 0 lfl! ~ •;• 1.m. 0 1 Stcl.llld ~•Oii J;U p.m. ~ 0 iftlllld low t·n p.m, 't Sun rll" j I! t111 S.lt 11).t "m M-rllt1 11.l/ p ..... .!of!) 1~:$0 •"'· A .. Gloucester Duke Succ u1ubs ut 7 4 At Co untry H on1e LONDON (AP) -The duke of Gloucester. last surviving child of King George V and uncle of Queen Elizabeth I I. died today after a long illness. He was 14. Buckingham Palace announced that the duke died in his sleep at Barnv.•e\I Manor, his country home in Northamptonshire. Th e 72·ycar-old duchess was at Bo.mwell v.•hen he died. ( IN SHORT ... ) e l'ila111h1 Spat \VASH1 NGTON (AP) -Sen. \Villiam Proxmire, D.·\Yis., a physical-fitness burr, today blasted the so· ca 11 e d Recommended Daily Allowance (RDA ) of vitamins and minerals as a ··capricious, unscientific and illogical standard.·• In a prepared Senate speech, Proxmire said "The Food and Nutrition Board of the National Research Council ... is influenced, dominated and financed in part by !he food indusfrf. 1t represents one of the most scandalous conflicts of interest in the federal government." e l11111at es Capl11red CHA'f'TAHOOCHEE, Fla .. (UPI) -The last of five escaped inmates from the state mental hoopital was flushed from a pine thicket and wounded in a brief gunbattle with Sheriff's deputies today. Four other escapees from t h e Chattahoochee State Mental Hospital \1•ere recaptured without incident earlier today. e Fre 11eh F lr l1111 PA RIS !UPI) -President Valery Giscard D'Estaing told his cabinet today he fired a newly-appointed minister because his criticism or France nucl ear tests in the atmosphere was "inexact." The president , emb roiled in a fron t· page government crisis a scant two weeks after he took office, dismissed !\1inister of Reform Jean.Jacques Servan- Schreibcr late Sunday. Il is expected the minisummit will take place later this month after the end of Nixon's Middle East tour. lt is aLw expec ted that Arab leaders hosting Nixon \\•ill endeavor to convince him to openly adopt the basic Arab premise that there can be no peace without complete Israeli v.•ithdrawal and restoration of Palestinian rights. SHOWN EARLIER THIS YEAR Miss Cornell, 81 TIIE STATE RADIO said Israeli troops were establishing new antitank defen.c;es \\'est of the Golan capital of Quneitra and bulldozing a high embankment between the Syrian city and nearby Israeli settlements. RAVEN HAIRED ACTRESS Katharine Cornell in 1938 Lady of Stage Katharirte Corn ell Succ1unb s lit 81 VINEYARD HAVEN, Mass. (UPI) - Katharine Cornell. First Lady of-·the American stage for more than three decades, died Sunday at the age of 81. The star succumbed to pneumonia at her summer home on the resort island of !\lartha's Vineyard, Mass .. where she had vacationed $Ince childhood. "SHE FLEW UP from New York 10 days ago. She appea red to be in good health. But she was quite frail and \\'eak." said a close friend . Mrs. Phyllis 1.teras, managing editor of the Vineyard Gazette. Dnuna critics from George Bernard Shaw downwards exhausted t h e i r superlatives in seeking to define l\1iss Cornell's art. A Shavian eulogy described her as "a gorgeous dark lady from the cradle of the human race." Friends of Nixon Lobby The actress developed a mild early in terest in the theater because her father. a physicion . partly owned and partly managed a theater in Buffalo, N.Y .. where Atiss Cornell grew up. But it was a glimpse of the lmmortnl 111aude Ad1ms in "Peter Pan" that persuaded the fulure star to switch hc.r ambitions trom nursing to acting. ·Against Impeach Moves WASHINGTON IAP l -More than t.000 persons who clatm President Nixon Is being lreRtcd unfairly arc going directly 10 Capito! llill to try to stop the impeachment proccedlngs. J\1cmbcrs of the Committee for Fairness to the Pre~idency planned to mcrt "'i th Individual House and SeMle members today to present their case in suppart of the President. Their lobbying effo1 ~ were to follov .. a prnycr bre.1kfast. • At a lunchton meeting Sunday, Nixon told tht group, "With your support 1 shall do nothing that will weaken thi!I offict . "You came from the heart of Anle.rica and you have touched our hearts." Appearing with hi s wife and t~·o daughters, Nixon reiterAted that he would not leave office untll January 1977. Then . Nixon said, It wi ll be "with our hellds held high." "A strong American president is esstntlal Ir 'll't are to have: peace In the world," said the Pre!iident before dep·arling for the A1iddle East. SHE BEGAN scoring-~ her great triumphs shortly after her marriage in 1922 tf) one of the country's premier directdl's. Guthrie ~'cClintlc. After ~tcClintic's death In 1961. she made no further stage appearances. Miss Cornell 's.forte wa!I the creation or character. and she rescued many n wtnk play by her stunning interpretations that held audlmets spellbound. She had dark brown ltalr, high chctk bones that gave her a slightly Orlcnlal look . prominent eyebrows. and an c~tranrdinarlly mobile face l h :'.I t permitted hc.r to express a wide range of emotions with dazzling facility. • r I r t n r r 0 r k t k ii • I r Flom·noy . .\nnounces Net Worth LOS ANGEi.ES (AP\ - GOP Gubemelorlnl candidate llouslOn I. Ji"loumoy aays his ncl worth Is •sa.t'i4.45. .,;1 In a statcmtnt or his pe r ll o n ii finances released Sunday, !he state controller said hls o n 1 y debt I~ a hotTic mortgage. lie paid $7,284.48 in redera1 and ( S tate $1,725.46 in state income taxes last year, the statement ~ shov.·ed, and bad income of . $12,166.Q'l ap.'lrt rrom his state !:;:~ salary and allowances. · f"'-d · · S Flournoy c a I I c d on his Corra 114!' Rt eU Democratic ri val. Secretary or State Edmmund G. Brown Jr.. A 1,200-pound Brahma heifer was lo\ved ashore Sunday by the Coast Guard to aJso make a full disclosure when she tried to swim across San Francisco Bay. 1'be heifer was being un- ·to restore "faith and loaded from a plane at San Francisco International Airport when she vaulted confidence Jn our elected the pen's loading ramp, galloped across several runways and leaped into the orflcials. '' bay. The Coast Guard lassoed the f\ounderlng beast and towed her back to But Brown, in an safety. appearence before the ~---------~ ------------------ California Political l\fedlcal Action Committee, said he'd already released a r u 11 accounting "several months Quake Hits • .\ccused W 0111an Denies agn." Ridgecrest She S11itched on SLA He pledged to update it and chided Jo"lournoy for n o t supporting Proposition 9, the campaign reform measure boosted by Bro~'Il and passed overwhelmingly by Califnmia voters in the June 4 primary. "I welcome him as a convert to the cause of political reform," Brown sa id. , RIDGECREST (APJ - Tv;o -earthquakes· rumbled beneath this e en tr a I SAN FRANCISCO (APJ -A Carr had not snitched to the California town b u t 1 ... oman accused of being an enemy." authorities say there was in(onner by the Symblonese The obscenity-studded tape no damage reported. Liberation Army denies that remained. the only substantial Th "e seismological clue to the three fugitives "'ho she lipped ofr police on the h · laboratory at California vowed to continue t e1r violent , S 11.. TechniCal Instrt.ute i n home where six of the s t ru g g I e against law • J\!unel fr n:e Pasadena said Sunday's terrorists died. enforcement agencies. SAN FRANCISCO (AP )-A first earth movement at f..fary Carr. in an intcrvicv.•, 1\ recording engineer at strike by registered nurses 3:28 p.m. registered 4.2 on said "she never did nothing to radio station KPFK. which against 40 San Francisco Bay the Richter scale and the nobody." received the la test SLA area hospitals entered its second temblor at 11 :44 Her com ment s were c omm·unique Friday. f h d tod "lh p.m. registered 4.4 on the published. Sunday in the San confirmed that the tape had ourt ay ay w1 no f · E · h"n "washed," or filtered to indication of a q u i c k scale. ranc1sco xam1ncr. ucc setUemenL Published reports h a.v e remove background no i s c Negotiators for both siclC!I alleged that P.1rs. Ca r r before being replayed live at a Z S kin provided the tip which led news conference. met\ through the weeketandff" to 00 ee -g police P.1ay 17 to the SLA The original tape is being reso ve emergency s · ing Ch l C tl h"d ho d b held b'-' station officials, "'ho problems. Though more than eeta 1 l l ' coot -a use owne Y h' I . half of the Callforn ia Nurses her daughter, Emily "f..!innie" say t ey are re uc tan t to give SAN DIEGO (AP) -A tiny Le~·is. The house burned to it to the FBI for fear this Association's 4,400 nurses cheetah cub apparently has the ground after a gunbattle might block further chances stayed off their jobs over the been stolen .,Irom the Wild between police an,d t he for communication lrom the \veekend, the nurses agreed to Animal Park of San Diego guerrillas. SLA. staff emergency units that Zoo, police report. SLA fugitives Bill and Emily The FBI has asked the U.S. could not be handled by The six-week~ld female cub Harris and Patricia Hearst Attomey's office to subpoena doctors and s u P e r v I s or Y weigtis '.., bv. pound.i and ii, paid lb a !aped communique l.tlC tape from KPFK and personnel. belieftd to be the smallest fast Friday : "The pigs would station officials have indicated Contract talks have not been creature" ot its species ih not have located our comrades they ,,..·ould obey a court order reswDed since they broke oft captivity.-~ if a collaborator named Mary to surrender the tape. Th~sdayrughl. 1--=:=:.:::._:_~~~~~--=-c....:.=.._:___:__:c._~~'-~~~~~"---~~ e Four Kiiied MAMMOTH LAKE t AP \ - Three adults and a child were killed Sunday when the plane they were using for aerial photography crashed in the Upper Dry Creek area of f..1ono County northwest of here, authoritJes said. The 11ingle-engine P i per Comanche crashed in a grove of pine trees. according to a spokesman for the Mono County Sheriff's orfice. Names of the dead -two men, a woman and a· 1-year- old child -are being withheld pending notification of next or k~ e Witt Al'l'e•ted WENDOVER, "tah AP ) -A T<Xsele County sheriff's deputy said Carl Thomas Witt, 24, arrested on a Cati£o rn ia murder warrant, w o u 1 d be rctumOO to San Bernardino l\londay. \V itt was arrested Friday in connection with the stabbing death of Gary Dean Tudor, 28. in San Bernardino Thursday. He has been held in the Tooele County Jail. Tooele. Dcput.y Marion Carter said he arrest{'(!. Witt in front of a Wendover residence on a tip from California authorities that he might be visiting i;omeone ia the western Utah town. e Baby Kiiied SE~UNOLE HOT SPRINGS (UPI J -A new-born babr girl was killed in a car accident on her \V3V home from the hospital Sunday night artcr the car she wns in was hit head-on by aoolher vehicle. The Caltfomia H i g h w a y Patrol said Ladislav Kuzcla, Malibu. was bringing his wife Nancy, 37, home from the hospital where she had given hirth to their daughter four days earlier. Kuu.la was driving soulh on the Kimberly Canyon Road near the Ventura County line when a northbound car driven by Gloria Demtrs, 28. Sylmar. failed to make a tum and went into h!s larie. Music De.,rcc Susan Rae 1>ctcrson, 312 E. 16th St., Costa ~1esa, tias been granted a 88.chc\or of Music degrr.c at Pa.cine Lutheran University In TB~ma, Wash . • Make a date for an individual seminar with the Geminesse-Max Factor beauty experts Bullock's South Coast Plaza invi!es rou 10 make a dace to attrnd th,· Gc1nin('SSC·t'-lax F,1c!or Q.A.D. ~ beauty hour l <Questions. AnS\\'Crs. Dcmons!ra!ions'. During the week of June I 0, the Gcfninessc bc:iury experts \vi ii be here to conduct I ~our individual srssions c1nphasizing skin care, wig s!yling and n1akc:-up ... it1s1 ri.:;hr for you. Included in c.:oich M:ssion is" ,·er~atik: s if1 (01(.'. ,,·ith any Ge1ninl·i1st· purch;i~. 1\1.1kc r~·si.:r \'.lC ion~ at a convcn~cnr hou r by phoning 566-0611, ext. 211 . Cosn1ctics • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . . . •.. ' Tues.·Sat., June I I· 15 • • • .. :.~:·~SUMMER FABRIC •••• . • . •• • • ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• ••• • •• • • • • • • • • /_... ' ' ·' " i I I DOUBLE KNIT GINGHAMS POL Y~lT~~.oo 88 Now you can have a beaut1lul Gingham ou11•t w11h an enc advantages of mooern easv-ca1e double knit Full boUs. several su mmer colors 60 wide FG s reg LOW yd, pnce 3 49 VIVID SCREEN PRINTS Values to 3.00 Machine Washable Cotton 1n a Flaming array ol sunny colors and paHerns You ·u wa nt several for pat io skirts. dresses and blouses. 45"' wide FG"s reg LOW price 2 49 COOL SUMMER SOLIDS Values to 2.00 Mach1ne·washable. Perma Pre ss tor easv summer hv1na. 100% Collons and Polv·Co!ton blends. Great color selection to solo or mix with prints. 45·· w+Oe. FG "s reg LOW price 1 49. :····································1 : SUMMER VOILES CRISP SUITING : i r!~:f ~::~. 12! :~:::. ,.. 22! I • •• • • • Ano1hcr great fashion look. and color selection !or Brighi. ne w summer colors in mach1ne-weshabte • • patio loungers. beach cover-ups, camisoles and 50%. Poiyes!er-30% Acryl1c·20°/e Cott on for lhe • lormal s 45"' wide . Machine-wa shable elegant su1t1ng look. Also excellent for dresses and :.e;;;:;:;~G~;;:;;c~ ••••• ;~~;~F~;~l~W··-~; ••• : SWIM SUIT ELASTIC Values to 25' yd. ,~ inch. Chlorine resistant for ac!1ve sPQrtwcar and beach lash1ons S!ock up now! REMNANTS SPECIAL! FG's r•~ 30.50°/o off r•tatl pric•. NOW JUST 37~ Grea1 assortment ol labncs less than one yard length · many hbers and blends. A bonanza tor cruldren·s fashions, patchworl1.1ng palio pillow covers and many other creative ideas. HEW,OltT ltoch 20 F1.W-l"-d U'C.i~. /,1(1~' ,.,, 10 4 JO f' 1.1 '-1' IC..b t I</. " l'b P.M LA~UHA lfACH 271 F-ontl A,e. Orf" '.' ' 'i.~ ~ ~ 111 1· '.' s.. .... 1; .. 1-1.• COTION KNIT PRINTS B•st s•l•dion in town! Valu•s to 4.00 Grea! color seleci.on and manv oat!erns-noral s. geometrics. wti1ms1cals and others Designer lengths machine wa snable. 58-60 wide FG"s reg LOW proce t BB SPORTSWEAR-NATURAL LOOKS LIKE RAW SILK Values lo 3.00 501'> Polyester-SO°/. Cotton tn natural color IOI'" pant slli1s. dresses and hosless sk11ts II s mactune waShabte and Penna Press for eas~re 48 · wioe FG's reg LOW onoe 1.59. ' • - • DARY PILOT EDITOWAL PAGE Critical Orange County supervisors and the University of California are in a critical stage of negoUaUQns wh ich in the next week or so could determine whether or not the medical school rentains in Orange County or even at the University of Californ ia, Irvine. There is -grave danger that if-these negotiations· are not resolved promptly the medical school co uld be taken out of Orange County and relocated elsewhere in the state. The basic issue between the county and the univer· slty is how 1nuch money -if any -the university should be required to give the county ror talCing_ over the Orange Coun ty Pifedical Cehter as a teaching hospital for UCJ's California College of Afedicine. Time is the critical problem. The 1974-75 state bud- get must be adopted by July I of this year. That budget should include the initial allocation of funds for: tile medical school classroom building at UCI and a 200.bed teaching hospital on the UCI campus, and plann ing for the renovatjon of Orange County lttedical Center. The legislative conference committee on the budget meets \Vednesday. If there is no real showing in the next week or so that the county and the university are close to agreement, the state director of finance, the legislative analyst and the legislative committee are likely to conclude there is no valid reason for including lhe UCI medical school building funds in next year's budget. Negotiations financial loss lo Orange Co unty would greatly exceed any an1ount the county ever could hope to realize from sale or lease of the present Orange County medJcal faci- lity for another hospital operation or for other uses. In tilne the UCI medica l school will be the equlva· lent of a n1ajor Industry in ternls of operating-payroll, construction budgets and the addltlon~I Industries and commercial activity which a major n1eClical school at· tracts. Further, loss of the medical sc hool would preclude any possibility of the eventual addition of other health science programs such as dentistry, nursin g, veterinary medicine or public health at VCI. The legislature has authorized no money for any form of purchase of OCMC. The legislature is however prepared to authorize an expenditure of $9.5 million !or the renovation or Orange County li1edical Center into a rnodern facility for patient care and teaching. OCMC c urrently is operating at an annual deficit of somewhere between $4 million and $10 million. lf the county retains operation of OCMC it will be an in· creasing financial burden on county taxpayers and even· t.ually will have to be almost totally renovated at tre· mendous cost to the county, or abandoned because of obsolescence and inadequacy of facilities. So it would appear that even were the county of Orange to turn OCti-JC over to the UCI medical school and just walk away fron1 it, as the university has plead· ed. the county could save itself millions of dollars a year in all of the 40 years ahead, during which the university would guarantee to operate the facility. Even more important, however. is the value of the UCI medical school and hospitals and the live out-patient clinics to the provision of better health for Orange Coun· tians. ; , ..• ~~'f.R!'\'. t.&...~*·.,,..~·-.. ~ ··~ . . . ,,,,, __ , I And, there also have been strong indications from Sacramento that if an agreement is not concluded before October, tile legislature will seek to cancel all funding for the UCI medical school building and fo r the reno· vation of OC~1C, and will encourage -or direct -the university to relocate the medical school in an area more receptive to it. Certain regents would favor transferring the medical school to another area where there are fewer financial obstacles to be reso lv,ed. Should the UCI medical school be lost through pro· crastination, misunderstanding or miscalculation. the But what is very urgently needed now is a strong &ignal to the governor and the legislature that the agree- ment that will insure keeping the medical school in Orange County will soon be reached. 'There are encouraging signs today 1/111t the worst is behind u~.' Matching Funds Can ( RUS WALTON J Remember that big fat deficit I \\Tarned you aboul the othtr da y? The one that c<lllld put the state in a $600 million hole next. year? Well, here's part two : The way things look . Cali forn ia's cities and countifs also face a huge deficit for 1975. It could go as high as $1 billion. One billion. Color that red and add it to your local tax bill. You can't pul all the blame for tha t :zoom.zoom in local spending and taxes on your city and county officials. Neighborhood spendthrifts and inflation are onl y a part of the problem. It's the birds in Babylon and Caesar's Palace on the Potomac that are putting local governments In a fiscal box. For yea rs those guys have legislated countless rostly new programs designed to "help" local governments. ~1ost of those programs have been on a "matching funds''. or "local participation"' basis. That has forced the city and county governments to increase their budgets and forced the local taxpayers to carry a larger and large• tax burden. CHECK THESE records of state and federal monies going to Californ ia cities and counties during the past 15 years. In J957·8. those subventions totalled $6l t 5 million; in 1972·73. total federal and state payments to local governments \\'ere $3.8 billion . That was a six-fold increase in 15 years: it will be even greater when the 1973·74 data are in. Despite that flood of outside money. local governments have had to run like mad to keep up with state and federa l "matching fund " programs while taking care of local needs. In 1957-R, total re- venues (i.e. those raised by the cities and counties via taxes, licenses, fines. serv· ice charges. use fees. etc.) came to $978 million. By 197Z.3, that figure had jumped 1nore than seven times and stood at $7 .3 billion. Wttle wonder local governments are in Dear • Gloon1v Gus Regular government ~mployes en· joy a paid holiday on election day \vhile the precinct election boord members receive $18 ror a mini· mum of 14 hours of work, Some· thing is out of line here. J .i\I. GIOemr Gui commtnll 11rt i.u~ltltd llY •••Hrs incl do ,.., 11tcHwrl1y r.-111<1 lftt vltWI of ,.. IM'WIP•Hr. Setld rour "'' -v• It Gloomr G111. DlllJ ~llol. a box afloat on a sea of red ink. Their resources are near-depleted. slate and federal agencies continue to mandate more spending. and the taxpayers are about to revolt . THE POLITICIANS here. or in \Va shington, 1ide lhe great \vhile horse of social consciousness \vh.ile local officials traipse along behind with" bucket and broom ; they get the pressure from the local groups that want the progr[!m, "now," and they face the irate taxp<!yer \Yhen he gets his bill. SB 90. the Reagan -Moretti tax shift of 1971, was supposed to put a stop to all that -at least as far as state government is concerned. It prorniscd that Bahvlon \rould not n1ar.d atc locnl progran1S v.:ichout supplying the rnoney to pay for them. But politicians being v.·hat they are· and weasel \vords being what thcY are -and since new laws drive out old laws -the slate conlinues to pass additional laws in Babylon and additonal costs to local govemmenl. Sonic of those programs call for outright expeo.diturcs. some simply set up more red 1apc that necessitates additional administrative costs for the city or county. If these \cgislator·birds really want to help local gove1nments out of their fiscal bind. there arc several things they can do. nO\\': I. resolve that any slate ·'surplus" will be diverled lo the. local gove rnments: through st ring·free subventions, to help red uce costs and allay potential deficits : z. pass a straight and and honest law that declares that nothing required by state mandate -nothing. no new regulations. no new policies -will force local expenditures above the 1973-74 budgets. Those things should be done. But. don't expect it to happen. ltlcGovernites Still Control ltlatay Areas Democratic Left Alive and Well \VASHJ NGTON-Obscured by incessant Democratic National Co mm i t tee propaganda claims of the regulars reassuming party command is this hard and ominous fact : the ~lcGoverniti!s rirmly control essentially the same areas today that they did in 1972. In early delegate selection for the first Democratic midterm convention al Kansas City in December, New Politics activists have dis· played skills used two years ago to nomina t e Sen. George ~1cC..ovem. Vi rtually unnoticed , they have \von con- trol of the Io \Va. \\'iscorlsi n anrt i\lin· nesota de!egations and picked up im- pressive minorities elsewhere. The pro- jection is for Kansas City to be only slightly right of the 1972 Miami Beach madhouse and well to the left of pre-1972 Democra tic conventions. THAT PROSPECT casts a long dark . shadow toward 1976, suggesting that !he McGovernite takeover at fi.1iami Beach was no aberration. Rather. just as the Republican party shifted 1ight afte r Sen. Barry Gvldv.·ater's nomination in 1964. the leftward Democratic slide may well be permanent. If so. the 1976 presidential no1nination cannot possibly go to a genuine cenwist. That means Democratic national chainnan Robert Strauss is falling short of his grand design: to nudge the party back to\\·ard the center without alienating the left. In fact. his centrist critics (especially in the AFl.rCIO hierarchy1 believe Strauss has inadvertently aided New Politics forces by lulling party regulars irl1o complacency. Slrauss and his lop lieutenants long h11v<' claimed the regula rs '-''Ould solidly control al Kansas City and that the real threat would come from Gov. George \Vallace, So far. however, Wallace's delegate search has proved a fiasco. while impressive successes have been scored by l\·lcGovcmites. as follo\vs: \Vtsconsln: practically a clean S\\·ccp for the New Politics. Even Democratic n:itiona l oomn1itteeman Don Peterson. a national founder of the old dump-LBJ movement. "'as denied a delegate's seat because he had voted for Strauss as ( EVANS·NOVAK J national chairman. As in 1972, G<>v. Patrick J ~ Lucey did not become involved. Iowa : Helped by NC\\. Politics paid professional Alan Baron (a native loY1anJ. ~fcGovernites \\"On 17 out of 20 scats. The left.of-eenter Communicat.ions \\'orkers ol America and United Auto Workers helped dominate precinct caucuses while AFL-CIO forces took a licking. ' ' !Ulnnesota: New. P91itics delegates associated With Rtp. Dcinald Fraser ·\\'Oil up to 18 ~ats against 10 for party 1eaders linked with Gov. \Vendell Anderson. Not wishing to rile the left while seeking reelection, Anderson kept a lo\v profil e in delegate selection. In c on servative \Vyoming, ~1cGovemites v.·on 6 of 1.2 seats. In even more conservative Kansas. they \\'On 6 of 16 seats. Ultra-conservative ~lississippi remained under domioation of a \\'hlte liberal-black coalition after the n3tk>nal \\'alla~ organization shied away from a confrontation. The most st riking example or Ne\V Politics staying po\\'er can be found in l\1aine. All eight delegates are controlled by national committeeman Gecrge 1t1i t c b e1 1 , unsuccessful McGovemite candidate for nationat chairman after the 1972 election. Fa; more revealtng- was the runaway tl.1aine Democratic convention session ~fay 17: proPoSing unconditional amnesty for Vietnam draft- dodgers. advocating civil rights for · homosexuals, censuring Ch a irma n Strauss. LAST WEEK 'S pr imary in Pennsylvania gave the regulars clear-cut domination or the delegation -an important victory. Other· indisputable gains by the regulars have oome in Tennessee and Texas. The regulars ha ve kept South Carolina. and Walla~ retains Alabama. But this does not add up to the centrist movement both Strauss and his AFlrCIO critics believe is essential. Nearly inevitable New Politics victMies in the nafion's t\\'O most populous states, New YOik (in September) and California (in December) \\1UJ Insure a left.loaded midterm convention. Even If Stremi uses his considerable skill to keep the lid on at Kansas City, the resiliency of grass roots McGovernism will be manifest. The Demise of a Very Polite Sport The end of civili:lation as \1'e had come to knO\V and love ii ran be dated precisely from tilay of the year 1974. II \\'3S then tha t avaricious promoters staged the firs! malches between professional tennis teams representing \·arious cities. They formed a league. sold franchises , signed contracts. drafted p I a y e r s . simplified the scoring system and (was nothing sacred?) actually encouraged fans to "get out and root for the home team!" -the home team generally consisting of half a dozen Australians, Yugosla vs, Romanians and South Africans. This compulsion to sell tickets by stimulating mob hysteria proved the fata l blow. For tennis had hitherto been one of the las( enclaves of genteel sportsmanship in a world gone mad. FOR ONE HUNDRED yeal'S. tennis enthusiasts had remained a breed apart. \\'hile it \\'as perhaps permissible lo fa\·or one pla yer over the other, it was an unforgivable breech of etiquette even to hint that one did. The only sound allo\\·able from lhe stands was polite applause. Both players on entering the oourt \\'ere to be ( ART HOPPE J applaudt'd equally. as were good shots citb<'r by one's !'eeret fa v9rile or his opponent. Bad shols .,·ere. of course. received only in si lence as the Jans shared the player's shame. And as the players shook hands after the final point and the applause rose for the skills they had demonstrated. the audience glowed in a warm bond of decency, fair play and the other att;ibutes of an unhostile and civilized community. Consider. then the historic first match .between the San l''ranclsco Golden Gaters and the Denver Racquets. The home team Gaters. \\'Caring uniforms lfor God's sakes!), were cheered. the Racquets booed. Peddlers raucously hawked beer. peanUts and pennants as a pom·pon girl cavorted about. ''FEEL FREE to cheer for the home team!" cried the announcer. ~'hipping up enthusiasm and future ticket sales. And feel free they did. By half time llhey ha\'e hnU times. for God's sakes!), the home team was trailing by tv.-o 1don't ask for an explanation of the scoring system, for God's sakes:) And the crowd was not only cheering Denver's double faults, but \l'hislling. stomping, cat-callling and exercising their hitherto alienable fi&ht to boo the il:mpire. · "Well, this v,ill certainly make tenni! a popular spectator sport," said a happy young man during the h a I f -t i m e ceremonies. all 001.ainly will,'' gloomily replied an elderly gentleman. buttoning his blalef' and heading for tbe exit. "And I'm going home before I get hit by a bottle .• , WITH THE disappearance of clvill1.ed tennis. lhe end was inevitable. 11 came during the 46th move or the second Boris Spassky-Bobby Fischer chess match ~·hen the Russian cheerleaders w-ged the frenzied crowd to : "Give me a S! Give me a P! Give me a .. _,, ti-1r. Fischer at that point entered the Guinness Book of Records by hurling a chess board 168 feet. three inches. And mankind entered a new Dark Age of vocal mass rage. savagery and bloodlhirst from which it has not yet emerged. Legislation Tailored to Woo Conservative Support 'VAS HI NGTON -\Vhlte House aides !lave taken pains to remind members of Congress that they are .sitting on lhe imJ)('achment jury and, therefore, t.h:it it is Improper for them to discuss the case a g a I nst President Nl~on. l t would seem 10 be even more irn· proper. however, for Nixon as the defend· ant to court nlem- bers of lhe jury. ''ct he has taken k t. y se.natoB and n.>pre.stntatlves on cruises c1o~11 100 Potomac. He has made White l!ouse planes. limousines <1nd other privllcges a~·a 1lnblc lo them. lie has pampered them with sudden attention . Tll~ PRESIDENT Is even tailoring his lt'gislatlve program, at leasl In part, lo •ppt.nl to the conservatives whose! votes h•' ls counling upoo to keep him In offict. TI~ pollllcs ot Impeachment rather than ll'le 11l(!rits or the leglslntion, now seems to dclcrmlne. what bills he will supper!. F"or example, the President had halttd / \ . I). the construclion of a cross-Florida bar.:r canal to prese r\'e the beaut)' or northern Florida's Okla"'aha River . As rcccnlly as six \\'eeks l'lgo. the White. House. re.· assured F1orld3 conservationists of the Prcslden l's support. But t~ promises \vcre for~ottcn 01ftcr a contingent of conse rv ative eongressmen callt.>d upun the Whltc House to go ahead with the ~1rge canal. The President hastily withdrew his opposition. TIIE SA~1 E thing happened to a federil land·ust bill, \\'hich the Prrs1dent had described as his ''number one environmental priority" In his State of tile U11ion message last January. Rt•p. ft.lorrls Udall. U·Arlt .. ~·orking closely v.·ith the Interior Dep.1r1men1 . drew up a bill to accomplish the President's ob Jee live. But ~r\·atlve~ \\l're afrnid the bill \VOUld allo\v lhe fedcr:i l govcrn1nent, lor Ole sake of the envlroment, lo Infr inge tln 1>rlvate O\Vner&hlp. HOU$e flcpublic1111 leader John RhOdfls and n p. Sanl Slefger, R·Arlz .. arranged a private visit ~Ith the President and urged him 10 abandlln th< Udall bill. ·. (JACK ANDERSON) Allhounh the bill simply codified his 01\n prop o s a Is, Nbcon accepted the suggestion of the tv.·o p0wertul conservatives. Steiger helpfully provided a wenkcncd $UbStitutc blll, w h I ch the l.,resl(lcnt qui ckly endorsed. Tlll S KILL ED the Uda ll bill. It \Yns a victim, snorted Cdall, of "\Vatergate polltic11.'' Agreed a staff member privy 10 1he backstage rnaneuvcr\ng: "Th is ~'as clearly a case of Nixon trying to shore up his conservative support.·· The Prt•sidcnl has also shifted tils !'ltand ag;iir.st other con .s u mer , cn\•ironmcntal and ~ial prograols, 111hlch the conserva!lves despise And he h:is sho\1ert'd thc.111 11 it h other \\1hili! llou~c blessings \\'hen &:n .• Jr•hn 1'p:irkm:i11, D-Al11,, rntllld frnm Paris lo con1pl:ii11 abou1 a !ll'Cond·ratc Air force pl11ne th11t had been provided to ny a congressional ('(!11· tlngc•nt honie from Europe, the \\1hile llousc hastily dispatched Vice Presldenl Gerald Ford's plane across the AtlRntic to pick up the Sparkman grour. Another time. the President gave. Spark1non and Sen . Jomes Allt'fl, R·Ala ., a lift home fro1TI Alabama and pro\lided them \Vlth limousines at the airport. And Vice President J"ord gave Sen. Hiram f<"'ong. n.11a~·ali, a ride to l~;i.waii last month. FE\V l\1El\f8ERS of Congress used to get In to SC1? the President ~'hen the Oennan shepherd dogs. H.R. Haldeman and John Ehrllchman. were guarding the: door. Liberals are still excluded except. on ceremonial occasion$. for example. Sen. "'Riter tilondale. [).~flnn .. hasn't Ix-en in$ide the While House since the late President l~yndon Johnson occupied the place. and Sen. George ~1cGovern, 1> S.D .. couldn't even get an official list of C~1binet members from the While Jlousa for Rn inquiring student. But the doors lluvf! been thro\\TI open lo the conservatives. ~uch a! Sen. Strom Thurnwnd. R·S.C., Robert Dole, R·Kan!.. Pete V. Domenici, R·N,Me1 ., .Jruncs Eastl;i.nd. 0-~tiu.. and W a 11 er Huddleston. 0-1\y .. "'hose nani~.1 are ca a list of !44 to 39 hnrd~re conservatives whose vote lhe President needs to save · himself from remov11l. Sen. Wallace Bennett. R·Utah. and Russell Long, 0.L..'l., were Invited lo a private breakfast ostensibly to discus.~ trade with the President a couple~ of weeks ago. Earlier. the President played lhc piano at a birthd.iy parly for Bennett nnd Long "'ii:! granted a 90-minute audience \\'ilh the President. DAILY PILOT ., Robtrt N. \Veed, Pubti.llier Thorna& Kttvfl, Editor IJarbara Kreibich Editorial Page Edifor Monda y, .lune tO. 19N I .. SF.N. Ji\tl.IES BUCKLEY. the New York conservative. had dinner at the \ll hlte flousc 10 day5 before he asked Nixon to resign. He hasn't bl-en invited back. • A spokesman for conservative Sen. J. Ocnnctl Johnson. D-L.a .. put it even more cnndidly. "The \\1hile House Is wooing Johnson. Nixon has bten doing favors for Southern senators ... (for) snyone who's a swing vote on impeachment." Th(': ~ditoriaJ pace or the Oa.ily PUo! .ettks to 1nfonn -and •llmulate r..Mk!rs by prtM>:nting on lhil PR&e divt;r'M) com~ntary on topics of In· ten:-.st b)' t)lndictted rolumnt•a and cartoonl1r1, by provldin1 a fa.rum for rtadtrs' vit.'WS lll'ld by pttscntlng thl!I l"M 1A11p.11pcr'a opln~ and idca1 on rurrmt top'IN:. Th.c cdl!orlll opinions or lhr Dally Pllo1 appaar only In the ~dllori~I rolu.n1n ar the lop o( tht: l'32e. Opinion.~ f'..11pres11 d .bY th" co/. u1nnlii!S and t•i11100oi1t1 and l1"114:r" 11.'rilt~ &.re lh .. ir own and no endtlrse.. 111COI ol their l'le\VI by UllC Dally t•nnt •Mttld be> lnlc:md. ( 'Body ltlissiles' Caltech ~xperts , " Tackle Medich1e By THOMAS D. ELIAS both in animal, and human If thare.'J one thing !hot · te~t subjec!s, the two hope Coltecb has perle..ctecl, it's.. the ir technique ~an be used to pinpoint guldani.oe for mfss11ca detect, diagnose and treat"1he and 1pacecraft evcn whcrt disease. , 1 , they're millions of nliles from . S1nce the ~rt!Cl!1 can carry the Pasadena Institution's Jet di.es an~ rad1oact1ve-tracers. Propulsion Laboratory. Its possible they·coutd be used to te s t apparentJy.bealthy Jacks o1i 5 Sc ratclied ' LONDON (AP) -'Tfie J acks on Five, an American rock grol.IP~ his canceled a lour of erttatn for re11r or a repetltk>n· et the ma55 hyaterta that greeted singer D a v·ld Cassidy. A J4·year-old Cir I suffered a fatal heart attack ill a Cassidy concert in London as \5,000 rans 5urged forward to sec the singer. Now co~es . word from lwo persons during r 0 u t j n e Caltech sc1ent1sts that they've physical exams. Jf the '------------' de~eloped a guidance syst~m microscopic spheres w e r e \~hi~. may be able to provide injected and then concentrated s1nu!a~ a c. cu r a c Y . for in one place. doctors could be med1c1nal missiles shot into pretty certain that a cancer the human body . y,•as developing there , even if SUCH A BREAKTllROUGll · it \l.'er~. still too small to detcci would be a significan t step in otherwise. the y,•ar against cancer, since VERY EARLY treatment y.•ould then become possible. Since the survival of canCer Car Pool Declared Failure SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FOCUS vlclims today is directly A computerized car poo1 related to how early the organized {lot Orange Coast 'disease is detected, this could College during the height of extend tbe lives of thousand~ the energy crisis has been or people. most cancer treatments destroy healthy cells at the same time as they work on tuimrs. Dccausc or this, n1any cancer victims are so weakened that they actually die of other diseases like pneumonia \vhon the tu1nor itself is being controlled . The tjny particles may also pronounced a complete failure he useable during conventional by Ken J\1owrey, dean of treatment to monitor Its ef· admissions. fectlveness and let doctors "1t just didn't work . know both when more treatment is needed and when Americans have learned to a patient is frtt or cancer. become rather independent in The technique devised by JPL chemist Alan Rembaum and Caltech biologist William Dreyer has been tested only in laboratory test tu bes. The 1wo use tiny latex spheres coated ""ith antibodie s and radioactive clements which "-ork only against parlicular chemicals found on t h e surface of cancer i:ells. Jr this kind of benefit should their transportation." he said. resu lt from the Ca I tech Of the 26,500 students who researchers' y.·ork, it would be theoretically could have taken a direct spinoff from the space advantage of the car pool and military research in program. only 600 actually progress in Pasadena. expressed any Interest. SO:\IE OF TUE s a n1 e How many of the 600 electronic and radioactive actually signed up and began technology \rould be used, pooling it to .school has not \vhile ne"'·, still experimental, been dclennincd, bul l\.1owrey methods have resulted from a estimates It was a ''small sort of in\vard-turning of the percentage" of the student missile guidance systems. body. THE METROD WAS tested r---''-_:-'--'-'----='-'----- in so lutions containing red blood cells from cattle. In the ellperlments, the liny spheres attached themselves to cancer cells while ignoring t h e healthy cells floating in the same solution. The late.s: spheres are so small that more than 1,000 of them can be attached to a single cell. They are attracted to a cancer cell by 1hc chemicals on the c e 11 ' s surface. chemicals produced by the body in its own internal effort to fight the cancer. Dreyer calls the t i n y particles "smart b o;m b s , ' ' because Ibey single o u t particular targets in much the same way military bombs can be guided by laser beams or television-like eyes to specific targets. ''We tiavc succeeded in giving the spheres that kind or specificity in our first tests.·· Dreyer said. REMBAUl\.1 ADOS, however, that "the techniqu e is stilt in its ea rly stages." THE FAMILY ORCUS ; ,.,,., ... ...- -·-~­ ·By Bil Keane "Isn't there anyth ing good to eat?'•. If it eventually proves out '~-------------------- Coast &deral has somedling for people with big ideas and a litde money. W'db the help of Coast Federal there'• DO rca.soo wby evaybody. slowly but 1urcly, can't build up a bia savinp account. High Interest Rates. Based on an annual rate of 5.2S%, our rcaular paubook. accounti yield 5.39% annually. And you can take money out anytime. Certifica1e accounts return up to71h% a year, the highest rate allowed by the aovemment. Federal resulations require a substantia1 interest penalty on all ccrtiftcate account withdrawals prior to maturity. Our free book.kl tells all; ask for ooc at any Coast office. Fringe Benefits Package. Here are a few bcoefilS.. Free Checking Account. Free pcrsona1 check.in& account at a major bank; jusl ketp a mini· mum balance of $2,500.00. ' Free Safe Deposit !Jox. With a minimum balance of $2,lOO.OO. Insider's Oub. s.vc"" appliances. furniture, jewelry, tickets for show• and aama. All it takes is a St ,000.00 minimum bl.lance. Free TnYeler.i Checks. lnsldu's Club member' do not pay aservieecharae : lhc 1amc applies to money orders. Jlomt Improvement ~ Loam. From carports to ~ cupeb. Saturdays. We're open Satur- days from !>:00 a.m. to I :00 p.m. (Fridays. all offices q:cept down· town Loe ~ni;tles, m open until 6:00p.m.)_. ' COAST FEDERAL SAVINGS e More (or)'Ollf money. ,,.....,.,. ltwb Offkt: 91 Hwitlnston Center (714) 1197·1047 • ~1al11Urfk:t: 9th&. Hill. 611-llSI Canvenknl Offlta Throupoul California ' •• Monday, J11ne 10, 1q74 'DAILY PILOT 7 What ~ Chauvinism~ Cl'llL W411 Ol.OOUNS Good Deed Fernales Ogle 'Dudes' Doing .Go·go ' ~ANNING'S CoLLECTORS SHOP ·~ ' make the scene Sundays t18':,0~L_fJ~"D• in the l1t1lijiji(1]i CARBONDALE, lit. (APl - A SOUtbcm Illinois ge>-go par- lor ls cashing in on \\'hat one member of its audience calls re verse chauvinism." One night a week go-go girls step aside for go-go 1uys who perform in a scanty nylon bikini briefs before a ~·omen· only audience. "WHAT'S ti'AJR is fair," Carol Rose says ·as she \\'atches the bumps a n d grinds. "They ogle the ehick3 all the time so why can 't we check. out the dudes?" Paid $10 an hour for an 8 to 10 p.m. trick every 'nlursday night, the dancers find the ~·omen just as aggressive as men at the regular shows. During o n e performance. women cavorted with a male • danL-er on stage. .. \\'hy not?" a coed at nearby Southern 111 1 no i s University asked . DENNIS SWEENY, 2 2 . signed on for a show but complained, "They pinch me in the rear." And Mike Winton, another performer. says "Girls come up and ask. me what time 1'1n Co pter Hike SAN FRANCISCO ( AP I The state Public Untilities Commision has authorized SFO Helicopters to hoist fares by a dollar between San Francisco and 0 a k I a n d international airports. The current rate is $13.50. bare naturals Sondols, light-os·oir. Open to o whirl of su mmer activities. Stepping softly, cooly, a cross '; •• .. . .' city streets. Around country clubs. A. By Penaljo: ToHy. white leather, 24.00. ~ .. B. By Naturalizer.a.·: Linwood, while and other surnrner colors, leather. 20.00. Mail and phone orders 1nv11ed. Women 's Shoes. 15 gelling off." ~~~~·~·::~-~-~·:·:":··:'~~~~~~~~~-~-~·-~-~-~·-~-~-~ Sweeny says , "You see a ----- new side of women y.·hen you come down here." !\1ary Gables. a Southern Illinois University senior , says, "f wanted to see fhe other side of It -tlow it felt to ·be og ler instead of being ogled.'' AN.D FRO~f JUDIE llolt. "I think it's about time th<'Y turned the tables and lel the men get up and make fools of themselves .. , Robert \Veiss, director of the company that bwns the club. says the performances are profitable. "We're looking into the possibility of doing it tv;o nights a "·eek'' he says. "But Hair Slaves, Go Free! ..... ....... ,., llllrt w ....... r.ii... ....... y .. .., -.... M Mt ,..., '"'' ... , .. n.. Htlltel c•W tW ._., ......... " -ltl _... .. tt; ....... ,. ..... ... .._ It. We -..... lfyllltL A lltrie Wt MfMf ,._ ... ....,. ... , JOSEPH'S SCISSOR STYLING t5'4 --..... Htoltlfottoo ·-~ '"""" ' JOS N. Korbor llYd. ""U..... -Pl. 17'-:tt4J MOW JOI YOUI CONYINIDfCI ••• OPIN. DAILY • I A.M. lo 10 P.M;-SAT. I SUNDAY.' lo 5 P.M1 we don't \van! to ovcrexpo>~se:·_:__~!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'""""""""""""~~~~ • ) '.,\· ' . ,\ i ' , -! i ! • " If Lhef.__ ~ROADWAY --·~,&,Mf,tM ,>11..JJro"T •-M (t i..~~j (II•) Sl!Mll2t ~1 ~<WIO'\ I~ (ll•l 644 1112 • is the Summer .. ploce HI INGTON !I· •;r; ,,,, l_d,"Qel l,y~ 171•1 .i~2 (:-l:o\!../Gi: ~/\LL a. CJR..1.t-;C.~ 1 N Tu"'" 5.'>H' (7141 ~a.11 11 ' (f;:~ITOS 500l~(.,..fO)~12131 ~·. fI ··1 .rf '( ~, ' • I ..-' • ,. ' ... : ,,. ·;.; d ... ,1 ... .. . , ... .... ~· " ' " ..... • •< ·1~ ; ... •t " ..... '•' ' . l ~ '~· '~·. '" •J ,, ' .. "' .. , '.: ,. •\ " l·,1 . ' ,,. ,, .. -. ,, J ~··. ·~ . I j ' "' " l• " 1r •JI OI \ 8 OAILY PILOT Mcnclay, June l O, 2q74 QUEENIE By Ph il lnterlond i . , , ' ! • ' . . ·. '. .., . ~ . ,\ ' . . ··uh. oh. l see some head!i_ rolling during this meeting." ~-------------1 ,_.. ----------~----- L.M. Boyd Sn~okey Bea1· ~ A Millio11ah·e Am surprised to hearltte·reporr that rour out of fiVeor Japan's business calculations still are done on the abacus . . Smokey the Bear, like !\otickey Mouse. Lassie and Snoopy, is a mill ionaire ... One pollster contends more citizens nationwide recognize a picture of Andy Granatelli than of RoberJ Redford ... As many as 10 bank robberies a da y \rere reponed this \\'inter in Paris ... Gambling Y.'3S outla\ved in anc ient Egypt on the popular theory !hereabouts then that it made men effeminate. F£'minine client asks why the la· dies of the liberation movement don't quote the great Afsop \\'ho claimed you allrays should judge a y,·oman by her mind , never by her appearance. f\laybe so. Still, our Love and War man says it's exceedingly difficult to ignore somebody's looks, man's or \roman 's. How Lady Godiva looked \\'hen she appeared in public lingers larger in human his. tory than \\-tiy she so appeared. QUERI ES FROM CLIENTS Q. "\Vhat's a big fat rattlesnake v.·orth, if anything?" An. Its venom, about S.15 per milligram. Its meat, about $4 per pound. Q. "The S<rcalled 'long dozen.' sometimes called the 'baker's dozen.' is 13. \Vhat's a 'long hWJdred'?" A. That's 120. Q. "\Vh ere'd y,·e get !he y,·ord 'potato'?" A. All I kno1v is the Indians used to call a sweet potato a "batata." No. sa!t \\•ater fish arc not necessarily saltier than fresh water fish, young lady. LANGUAGE i\IAN Those descending lines on a geological chart look some· thing like the footprints of a crane. Or so an imaginative Frenchman once thought. He identified such a chart as a "pie de grue" meaning "crane foot." \Vhence cometh , says the Language man our word "pedigree." The class ring originated in this country at \Vest Point Remember. that gallon of Y.'hile paint \\'ill C'Qver a Jot better if you toss a couple of ounces of lamp black into it. This nationv.·idc firm of private detectives tracks do\vn 1nissing persons. T\\'cnty five years ago, it reports. the ratio or runawa y husbands to runay,•ay \rives \1•as about 200 to one. Just 15 yea rs ago. it was approximately 100 to one. Today, it's almost but not quite ty,·o to one. Surely, still more husbands than \Vives take off. But you can see from these statistics that more and more v:ives every yea r are going over the hill . ~ Hea lt h News Yawn, Stretch ... and Pop A Pain In The Back! Wh1:1l does it mean v.·tw.-11 you .vav.·n or st retch and liUddcnly i;ct a sharp pain in the b;i rk? That question v.·as put to Ur. Gary Couture of the Cout ure Chiropraclic Office. And ar('Or- din~ to 1he Doctor, lhal rriL"k or catCh, or call it v.·hat ynu lik£'. is a dan'1cr s111:· nnl not lube ii!:· llOfl'll. "'\l,'h:il h;Jj)• 11cns. ~ar~ !Jr. Couture ••1s thnl lhl· p<:rson is l'~llt•nenc·1n1< ii rih POIJ!llll~ f out of fN 1~11101i. -: usuri lly tht' in· Dr. Gory di\•ldtHll r;1 n C""'". D.C. work it h;u·k uuo place by doubling uri anrl 11utllr1g his arms l:ross-v.'a~·s a<'rrnls.his body. llow£'t-er ," he iidds, "il 's a sure-fire 1ndil·at1on that the indi vidu al h:1 ~ a misplaced vertebrae in his up- pt'r back." "'And it ii; D oomber por1enl t)f things tn come," nr. C11u1 urc 1•nnllnues. '"The most rommnn nf lhC enmplical ion~ of a JIOJ'I pinA r l h ar c neur-11., :11111 ncurahti:.i. The pop11in11 nh r•i_1n <'1t:-1ly t{MJSC hursiti~ .. And nn1· 111 the mosl S(•rious eom11l1 l':••1un:o is shi n1tlt'11." , '"Consider Shingles, r11r f>XUffi• lllf'," ~ayd Ur. (:outure ' OO<'t.' 11 rib pops oul .. , unlr·"~ the m1s1.1ll1t,hcd \"Cl'U!brae h, correc· 11 tl'd ... il will m~l surely hap·· pen again . t:ach rcoccurrence v.•eakens th e musrlc strucl ure and ll lakes proAressi\'ely less and Je ss effort for the rib to pop out again. "\\'1th each inci1lent of the rorpe<I rib the nerves in the af- ft'tlr1l art'11 l>rl'OOIC C!VCr-extcn· dr rl :ind da1n:11!cd. .I u~1 a~ lhl' 'ri h pops oul C':isicr. tllt' llCT\ f' (';111 /~ O\'f'r·l'Xlt•nflrd t" tht• 1.1111111 th:it a '.'lrus :1!\a{'k f,,Jln11•s 1'1n111l1•s th1·n n:-•• nvt·r 111t• :if!,•1·tprt a!'t•a 1-.·1usu1~ a ~1•\'1•r1• 11eh1 ni.: at·ron1pani1•(1 h.\' st.•\'t•ro• jt:nn." '"l nt.·1dt'nlalh. 1111.~ 1s not '' niAhtrn;1ri~ll ('01uli11n11 that :1 f. ~l't'l ~11nl,v ;in unfor1unalt" lcw. ll 1.~ :1 1·ommnn, 1110,t painful ron· dit1on th;it r('{1u11·1·.' tnrrf'(•\11)11 :rt lhc sour1:e or the rliff'it·ulty ... that n11sa l i.r;n1~l vcrtt>hrrit. "'1\rllt thr fl('l"Mln "'ho bellt'vi;o:- hf' 1·11n aJy,·;1y~ s<;lr·1·nrr{'('t ;1 pu111u•d rib is Otl :i tn1('·Y.'UY :-1rrt•1 lO i;erious d1fricull.\'." :.;1y~ hr , C'outurt" "'fll•men1ber, i1 ... tht: "'lilt' m<in onel' ~uid. "a 1111 1(• learn1nA ·~ 11 rluni:l'rous 1h1n i.:' It'.!-<'nouuh that th<' per· '1111 rt"url the dan1tl'r s111n1i l J•flJflt'rly 11nd to 11eck 1mmtd1atr 1•nrrr1-1 ion <ii thf' p"1totcn1 ·· !Jr ('nu lure ma1nt;11n~ 01f1rr .. :ot The Coot urr ('hlrnrirarl 11' ill l11·r. :!f'M3 \\' ··~lt•H Ir Hr., ;\'.1•w1)!1rt ll••at•h 41'nn11·r 17Lh & lr\Hlt' 1n•;1r t ·o,,•1 ·,.. ~ Phont• fl-15 .\:UXJ (fl,\ FIS 1!114 • Mesa Stuclent ·Alvarado Given ·Covete~ Hqiwrs Graduation Sched1tlec) Thursday • One of Golden We s t College's 1op honors, the R. Dudley Boyce Outstanding Sludent A\\·ard, has gone to H.ayniond J, Alvarado, 28, of Costa l\lesa, a high school dropout who will be graduated this 1nooth. The social service major v.'as picked by a selection committee from among seven no1ninees as the student who best demonstrates scholastic ability and leadership ability of vision.organ I za lio n . comlJlunlcaHon, action and concern for others. THE AW ARD, named in honor of the college president. "11s announced at the recent Go Iden \Vest scholnrship a\1'an:ls banquet. \\'here JM other students rreeived ap- proximately $12.000 in schol- arships. Alvarado, \l'ho is planning a career in juvenile probation. is a native of Orange County. He quit high school in his junior year to serve four years in the Navy. He earned his high school diploma in ·night adult classes \\'hile working days to help support his mother and sisters. Alvarado's l e a de r s ii! p accomplishments since en· rolling in the social st'rvices program at Golden \Vest In September 1972 Inc I u d e serving two years as president of the college chapter of ~1ovement of Mexicun·Ameri- MOST OUTSTANOING Ray Al va rado can Students in 1he SOulh\\'CSt . A~IONG' THE events the group has sponsored under his leadershi;> arc a f\.texican- Amcrican cultural day; n summer progr a m for disadvantaged children and a presentatilln by El Teatro Campesino. a pioneer barrio theater group. He also worked in the college child care center assisted \v ith the ne\\' Spanish hel pline and started a ··"'ood for Farm \\'orkers" drive on campus . Graduation exercises for 1nore than 1,600 Orange ('.onst College students have been scheduled for 7:30 p.m, on }hursday night o~ LeBard Stadium. The co1nmencement speaker will be OCC student Randy Hoffnian of Santa Ana . His speech is titled ··occ I-fas a Better Idea-the 1974 f\todel." Of the 1,621 candidates. 1,009 are June graduate s. Thi' rem a ind er matriculated during the year. ' 1.fEt.tBERS OF the college's faculty and administration will lead the procession o f candidates into the stadium. Music y,·lll be provided by the OCC concl'rt b:uid and the chorale. Dr. Norman E. \Vat son, chancellor of the Coast Community College District. \1·ill present OCC's ~nnual Outstanding Citizen A\vard. The graduat es \\'ill b c presented by Collcp;e President Dr. Robert B . f\loorc and dean of instruction Dr. Jack A. Scott. .... FOR TJI E THIRD con se-::u- li\·e year a s p c c i a I :.Hvard 'rill he p r esented to OCC's oulstanding iflstructor \\'ho has been chosen by balloting en campus and his identity will be reveal ed during the ceremony. * * -:r ·~· * 1.r The av.'ard carries $1.500 in prize money and y,•as provided through the efforts of Nicholas Sa.Igo, chairman of the board of the Bangor Punta Corp., of Greenv:ich. Conn. Grh11es Elected At Golden West Rabbi Harry Sherer of Ten1plc Bat Yahm. NeY.rport Be'ach. \\'iii delh'er th c invocation and benediction. Peter Grimes, 20, of Newport Beach, has been elected president of Golden \Vest College's 1974-75 student go\'ernment. T"·enty three candidates, an all-time high. ran for 10 student offices in the recent election. Steve Nien h au s of f;witington Beach ~·as chosen as ..,;ce president. 0 t h e r officers i n c 1 u d c Steve LJ:>ngacre of Newport Beach , Kay Rios of Huntington Beach and Rich De Leo n of Westminster. all elected to the college affairs council. f\1erri C halenor Huntington Beach and Bill Hodge of Garden Grove, both to president's ca b i n et ; Patricia Staggs of Huntington Beach, to the academic senate ; Charles Ce micky of \Vestminster and P h y 11 i s Kaplan of Huntington Beach. to the council on curriculum and instruction. Crimes, a journalism major and interested ecologist, laterl~=:;:;::::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;~I plans to transfer to the lini· h versity of California at Berke-You can C Orge Icy to prepare for a career ~s DAILY PILOT a newspaper reporter. He 1s Cl "f' the son of Golden West Col-I ass1 1ed Ads lege philosophy instructor! 642•5678 Pierre Grimes. I LEROY NIEMAN re nowned sports artist Exhibit & Sales thru June 16 Brentano's SOUTH COAST PLAZA llaurs: M.·f '. 10·9 Sat. 10-6 Sun. IZ-5 556-7533 • • Three Days Only: ' ' Mond ay, Tu esday and Wedn esday Our Entire Max im ili an Fur Coll ect ion 1 /2 Off Plus' a selccl flfOllP ot furs al 20% off. A special repfese'ntative to help with your selection. Fur produc1s labeled to show coun try of origin of impal'ted furs. 1.magn1n 2 fASHION SOUAR[ ·SANTA AtiA . • f I % % EARNS I FLEXIBILITY FOR YOUR FINANCIAL PLANNING! ANNUAL RATE ANNUAL YIELD $ 71/2°/o EARNS 7.79°/~ 6 31 O/o 6 980/o 14 EARNS • ** 6V2°l0 EARNS 6.72°te 5¥4°!0 EARNS 5.92°te 5V4°!o EARNS 5.39°/o 4 VEAFl.S 51 000 OR MORf. MAXIMUM INTEREST AVAILABLE ON INSURED SAVINGS 21/~ YEA RS OR MORE $1000 OR MOR E SHORTER TER~.1 FOR MORE CONVENIE NCE. t YEAR OR r..tORE. $1000 OR MORE. STILL SHORTER TERM FOR EVEN MORE CONVENIENCE. 3 MONTHS. 5500 OR MORE DAY IN -DAY OU J' PASSBOOK SS MINIMUM. NO PENALTIES. EASY AVAILABILITY! .;.In terest compounded daily earns indicated annual y•eld when mainta•ned for one year. **Federal Regulations riQu1re a substantial interest penally tor ea rly w1thdrawa1. SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES • TRAVELERS CHECKS MONEY ORDERS • TRUST DEED AND NOTE COLLECTION CHECK-A-MONTH PLANS • SAVE-BY-MAIL SERVICE NOTARY SERVICES • TAX-SHELTERED RETIREMENT PLANS INTEROFFICE TRANSACTION SERVICE A TRANSFER OF FUNDS • SAVINGS COUNSELING SERVICE INSURANCE TO $280,000 • Ask for details NOW! FREE CHECKING ACCOUNTS 'l1l'J"'Jl1 rn11ur -.!aft W•d•. lJan l< '''t')'!l l Tu cuslr,rn<Jry ti Hrk ,•nlr, ,, 1rirJ1v1tJ1,a1 accounts only \ * Capital a11d ,.,,N,,I"\'(,,<; ()i•f!r ''''ice le{4al req11iret11enl."J. I ' *ASSETS OVEF( $4 BILLION STRONG • SAFE SINCE 1885 Member: Federal Home Loan Bank System Federal Savings and Loan Insu rance Corporation .Affiliate: First Char tef F1nanc1al Corpora11on Garden Grove 12141 Garden Grove Blvd. at Harbor 81vd. 534·8690 Huntington Beach 7830 Edinger Ave. at Huntington Center 842·9311 Buena Park 823 1 La Palma Ave. across from Buena Park Center 52 2·2801 Costa Mesa 3110 Bristol St. in White Front Center 979·9800 OPEN SATURDAYS Convenient offices 1erVing Southern and Northern Callforni1, Including: ALtiAMBAA . AZUSA ' 0EVE.RLY HILLS. euF.NA PARl'i . COSlA. MES·\. GAROfN GROVE. GLENDALt ~1AWTHORNE • HOLtYWOOO • HIJNTINGTON BEACH· lAll(EWOQD· LANCAST[R • tA PU(fllf(_ LOS ANCl:'.LES·W•LSHIRE CENTER· MANHA.TTAN Q(ACH ' MQNrCLAIR • MONTROSE ·NORWALK• PALMDALE PALOS Vf:ROES ESTATES. RE.CONDO BEAClt' SANTA MONICA. SHERMAN OAKS . soutu BA't' CENT Er\ l ~MPLE CJT'f . WHITT!ER-urJOWN 'w1-11TTl[R·tAST • [L C.'IJON·SAN OlfCO ALSO IN: SAN rAANCl$CO • QA,.,1.ANO • 8Er!O:[L£Y ·SA"-JOSE• SAC.114Mf NT0 ·DALY CllY'll[STLAK.E SlrN MAT[O . REOWOOD Cir'!'. 5,i.r; fl •rA(l · MO~TER~V . t L CERA1"0 . n1c11M'ot.<o. WAl NllT CRE.EK SAN BRUNO• v;•LlFJO ·I.OS C.A:OS· SIJt,NYl/Al(.• 'REMONI · H.l.~WAAO ·SAN l,.fANORO ~·ff f • •. • 1,,y Junt 10 1974 DAILY PILOT 9 c__:c.~~~~~~..::=::...:..::::;...~ DeathsElsewh ere Children's Home Boost to 1'fitaorities TRI EJUU.'S .. '' ..... MADRID, Sp1;n !AP) Miguel Aiu~el A11turl111, 74, the Guat~alan author who won ft>e ~?Df'.l Prlte for literature in 1961, tlied Sunday. AstuMas, who also won the Lenin Peace ·Pr lie in lQ&G, w a s the Guatema lan· ambassador to l''rllJ'Ce. GREENWICH, Conn. 1AP> -Graat Gilbert Slmoion1, IK>,· retired president of t h e Sim1nons Co.. maker:s of mattresses and other home furnishings, died Friday. · Dealh 1\'otlces DAVIS ... rll> Fr1nc:H D1vl5, tttl-ol lffl\IM BIKll. Ott• a4 ckllll No.Iv J\, ltl4. Survlv9d bv Ill• IQ" WIUl1m F. O.vl1 ol YorlN Lindi, C1IJI,; ftv. 11r1/IOl;h!klr.., 1-.d two trNI Qll<'MXl'IHdr1"; 011f llltitr, "M1rq111r l(roflln, N11>9, C11ll. ~e<n0rl1I -Vitti will 119 1191<1 J:OO PM W.in.sd1v, f>t cllk VI-CM~I with 11M 11 .... l!lruc1 Oi.!11r•,:,~~i 1"ilir~~urnpr:;','rc P':i'!~ MOrlUIO', Olr.clor.. • • ll:lDla I M1r111•tl Gould Ekllr ot 111-. C1lll. D1ft ol Oetth June I, 1t11. ~u<vlvt'd by lief" M)ll, Ht11•v I(, E!cle•, Jr. of N~-1 _Bttdu ll'lrff firrllldCllll4rtn, Htnk, 8111 I. Alld1, Strvlct1 11:00 AM T11tS4fY, 51 J•m•• er,IK-1 t.ftu•cll. ln19fmtfll, Ptclllc V ew ~m<>rltl Perk, Pacl!lc l/ltw Mortulry, dlr1Klor1. HIN0Elt50N R-rr P. Hencitroon of NtWPOr1 8tach. Datt ol 01o11h Junt 1, 1t7•. Survlveo oy 1111 wilt Clalrl Htndtr"'"; dau1111!1r, $utllt Vlgll ; two grancleh!hlrtn; Mottier, Mr1. Still• Elltlbtlh HtrldtrlOll; lwo 1>ronwrr1, Ltt H. I. Jtck R. Ht~rMlll. 5ervkH t rt 10 AM TUHdty, PKl!lc View Mtmorltl Perk, Ptclllt Vltw Morlu1ry dlro<;IOfl. McCAllTNIY GrKt E. Mc:Ctrl ... y, Otlt ol <111111 JuM 1, Jt11, w11 t rti.14-nr ot Ml1tlon Vltlo, Ctlll. SurYIYl'CI by two IO<ll, Wlll!tm J. MC'Ctn,..,, Mllilon Vltto tnd J1m11 M<.- CtrlMY of 0.1 PltlMI, llllnolo; daugl\ltr. Mr1. Jove. ll•toll<I· Ml. Pr-l. llllll0!1; lwenlY·IWO gral'ldcl'llldl'fll 111d T111•n grNI· ll(tlldelllldrtn; two brother• Ind two 1!1lftl. R:9<1ul1m Mo1n, MOndtY 10:00 AM. 51. Nlcnal11 CtthOlic Cllurtll,. Ltlluna Hllh. tn1u mtt11. AKlt'Klon c~ ... .,. McCormick L191,111o1 8HC:h Mor1u1ry. . PltUTON Miry Ev1 PrHlon, rijldMI of H"'111nglon Betel\, CtUI. A<te IS. Otlt of dl:tlll Jooe ~.J:1~~· !1""');:*ro~T •• '-c:11:'.911~~' ~:: R"""' Pa~. Ctlll.; TllrM brall''"' tnd -1111.,, 111 ol Ottgon; IW<;I gran<l- 0111111\ttro, Mrt. J1cqut Gttn, 5•nlt Ant " Mr•. Ttrrl G1u11. Monre11l1, Ctlll.: II• qro111dd1l1ortn. Kl!ft~th G1tn tnd K1vl11 Gtul!. Mrs. ~••llon wts • memDft' ot Co11var11 81t1tlsr Cllurch. 51r11k n M<>ndt'f. JUM 10, 197' ti J;Xt PM, Smlth'5 Clltpel wUh Rev. 8111 o.mmlnul C1lv1rv 81ot111 Cllun:h, olllcltllflll, nt1rmt11! G90d Slltl>llt<d Ctmttlry. Huntington B••th. Smtll'r'• Mortu1•v, Ol•KIOfl. SMITH l(tnl Wlllremtn Smllh, re11ckn! of Lo• .a.t111el1s. C1llf, Ollt ol dtllh Juno 6, "''· Survlw.d b'f 1111 p.1r1nt1, Mr. .. MrJ. Home• G. Sml!ll al Oc;11nslde. Calif. ~tr!Orltl MtYICtl J:l)(t PM Tueod1y, P•clllc Vll!W Clltlltl. lnllfmt nl PKiflc V'lew Memorlll Ptrk, Ptclllc View Mortu••'>'• dlrKIOfl. AllUCKLE & SON WESICLIFF MOllUAl:Y 427 E. I 71h St.. Co~ro 1-1ie,o 646·"888 -·-IALTZ·IEIGHON FUNUtAI. HOMl C0to110 del Mor Cosio Mesa -·-llLLllOADW&T MOttTUAltT 110 8roodwoy. Co~10 Me~o 642·9150 -·-McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MOllTUARY 1795 loguno Can.,on Rd. 494.94 !5 -·- . ' Officers Elected Schools Given Grant PIU .............. Mlll Air C• Timt llartt .,,...,.._ SANTA ANA -Accountant Roberl Vernon of Irvine will take office Wednesday as chalnnan or the o r a n g e County District Board of Children's Home Society, a f..oast Ma11 Faces 1'ests In l\'lolest SANTA ANA - A Newport Beach man who admitted having sexual relations for nearly a year with a girl of minor age has hei!n ordered to undergo testing to determine if he is a n1enfully disordered sex offender. Orange County S u p e r i o r Court Judge James Turner appointed two doctors to examine Gentry L e s 11 e Blackburn, 45, of 218 21 st St.. Newport Beach. He will rule on their reports June 10 with Blackburn in the coortroom. Blackburn had e a r I i e r pleaded guilty to rape charges filed by Newport Beach police after they learned late last year of his alleged illicit relationship with the victim_ Conviction on the charges, if the mentally disordered stat~ejected, couJd mean a state prison term of one to 50 years. statewide child w e ' r a r c agency . Vernon, partner In the Slt1ta Ana firm or Ernst and Emst, succeeds Willard Pool, Garden Grove attorney. · Vi<.-e chaltman will be Mrs. John Kille!cr of Corona del Mar. Mrs. William Clark of Newport Beach will continue as secretary-treasurer, NEW BOARD members Include Mrs. Allen Walker of El Toro, who is curreritly serving on the Orange County Grand Jury and Mrs. Oaude Owens of South Laguna. ORANGE COUNTY Auto Firm Sues 1'rio In Fraud SANTA ANA -The Santa An3 and Orange unified schoo l districts have r e c e i v c ti Department of Ii e a I t h , Education and Welfare grants totaling $2,035,640 aimed at reducing the negative effeets or racial isolalloo. The grants, aceording 10 Santa Ana as s istant superintendent Tony Avina, arc given to districts which have ended racial segregation to help minority students <ittain a higher level or academic achievement. "We have been able lo integrate tbe entire district," Avina said. "Tbat is why the funds were grante<:.." p e rfor1n students." below other The Orange distric t received1 a similar $200.IHO b asic: education grant. Such grants, llcp. Andre"' Hinshaw (H·l\'fission Viejo ) said, are designed as an incentive to school dist ricts to voluntarl1y end r ac ial segregat ion praclices. Ball Injur y Bring.~ Suit SA~'TA A l\'A A ltltll"l·llddltOICk All Otlltn 495·0~01 •42-175) JIM'S INTERNATIONAL HAIR STYLING CENTER Nf''.W D1~11<:NSION~ JN ltAIR M~N-WOtlllEN -Ct-lllOREN o ,l.llP• •'~ fY.oo•o • fol.100~4 ()•1'"1~' f..:;o.11 Strud .. d ROFFLER SCULPTUR llUT METMOD • "' ~l I lO~) >l•" ";•.>,"'l •Cul.lo"' t11.r P'9C11 '"'"'-""'"'Colli .• 642-2631 222 E. 11th St.-Co!laMe.- Torme~ting Rectal Itch Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues Promptly Relieved OU~r one-year directors arc Dr. Fred Kay and Judge James Perez, both of Fullerton: Joseph Daniger of Santa Ana ;and Dr. Robert Schuller of Garden Grove. Tit; GRANT was 8\\.'arded. Huntington Beac h \\'om a n SANTA ANA _ A Costa he saici . following a federal \1ants $1 00.000 in dam"gcs ~1 review of the dist rict's racial from the Huntington Valley In many c:ases Prep:\ration H dreds of n"ticnt.s showed th;a esa firm of auto import ers pol1·c1·"s las\ year. L1'\t)e League lo• asse•1edl y ~ Beginning three-year terms are Mrs. J.R. Whittle of Laguna Beach, Mrs. Joseph Fahey of Fullerton, and Mrs. Jeanette Banoczi and Mrs. Laurance Mosier, Anaheim. h .. ' ' .i::ivcs prompt,temporaryrelief to be true in many cases. In as sued three f 0 rl) e r In ~ddition to a basic grant serious injuries she suffered a froru such p.ain and itchini: f:ic t, many doctors, them -- employees for $100,000 With the or $1.2 million, the district year ago when a pop fly and actually hC'lps shrink se lves, use Prrp<Jration fl® or claim in its Orange County received a $258,000 bilingual soared into the stnnds and s11o·elling-of hc1norrhoid ul tis· recon1n1cnd it for their fam-· Superior Court action that the education grant and a $368 ,000 struck her on the head . sUC's c.1uscd by inflammation. ilics. Prc~ara~ionjiointincnL trio bought shoreline land \Vith pilot grant to be used to 1'1rs. Shirley M. Herin gton Tests by doctors on hun· ur suppositories. imp!einent new programs. states in her Orange County 1------------pa rt or ~II of the proceeds. The nioney, Avina said , will Superior Court action that she 1 ,.. ____________________ ,. ROBERT TURNER of Lawyers for Dean D. Lewis be spent on training teachers \Yas a spectator during a p.,,,p,,.,,.,.,,..~_,-.,...., Laguna Beach current 1 y Imports, 1966 llarbor Blvd., to \\'Ork with minority stu· game at Yorktown Avenue represents Orange County on Costa ~1esa, name offlce dents. for remedial education ""'est of ~lagnolia \\'hen sh>:! the state board, along with manager Jerry Erv•in and and to purchase materials and was struck by the ball Qn r.·Jay Mrs. Howard Lawson and office wr.rkers Bar b a r a equipment need~d to help 9, 1973. John Porter of Newport minority students reach a 1========-=====I Beach, Mrs. Samuel Gendel of Bloxom and Shirley Craig as higher level of scholastic r Fullerton, and Pool. ro-Oefendants in the action. work. ~· ;jl RABBITT Children's llome Society It is alleged that the trio '. \Y HAT FREQUE~TLY rq.·, .a.UT0-HOMEOWNER$ provides social ser\'ices for conspired to falsify entries happens." Avina said, "is that ·~~~ INSURANCE unmarried parents and their and records at the Le\\'JS even after minority student s ...,, ' 1914 Harbor lowlevord KEEP ORANGE COUNTY GREEM COUNTY LOCAL PARKS.INITIATIVE children, scrvi~s to . c.hildre:i company and that the def al-are integrated into the system. COSTA •MESA ~ and parc :-,ts in crJs1s_ and---C<Jtions "'cre--nol discovered they continue to suffer the 548-5554 --~-s"""~:~~"'~!s~~.:T9:,.:::troLe~ °J!~l~..:I! fast~r ramily and adoption untll 'about JI.lay 3, 1971. -~e~f~fec~ls~o~f~p~a~s"_l~;~so~l~a~li~on~a~n~dti========~~~~~~~~~;.;;.;.;;.~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~ services. l\larine Base Will Host Police-public Seminar A police-community rela· lions seminar is scheduled for June 17 to 21 at the El Toro Marine Corps Ai r Station. • CQ-hosts for the week-long \\'orkshop are the Orange County Sheriff's Department and the El Toro Provost ?t1arshal's office. ''Not onJy do we hope to enhance the lliarine l a \V enforcement image in the community, but \\'C also feel this seminar will produce closer Ues with all area law enforcement agencies." said Captain Bob Courtney, El Toro Provost ?t-1arshal. lie said the t\•10 hosting agencies recognize that better education is needed on "police· lo-people" relations. Tha main Iheme of the seminar will be urban police problems. Special agents J im Siano and Larry 1.fonroe. instructors from the FBI Academy in Quantico, \'a., will be the course instructors. Also scheduled is Col. Archie Van W ink e I, US~fC (Ret. l medal of honor winner and former director of security and . Jaw enforcement at J.leadquarters ?t1arine Corps. \Vi\liam Sullivan, assistant director for the Los An,l:!eles area. is another scheduled speaker. Municipal police agencies from San Diego to Los Angeles have been invited to the seminar, as we 11 as repesentatives or Mari n e provost offices in the West. Pistol matches and a golf tournament are scheduled for the last day. More information may be obtained by calling Capt. Courtney at 559-3529. • OSI • McCOllMICK MISSION MORTUARY 28832 Comino Cop111rono 5011 Juon Cop1~tro"l 49.5.1776 -·-PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Morruory 1 1ll eat Packers F'c~ce Priso11 in Pa)·offs size • 1sa Cho~I 3500 Poc1loc ll>ew Drove Newporr Beach, Cololorn1cr 644.1700 -·-PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 780! Bol~o A,e .. Weslm•n~le• 893.l.525 -·- SMITHS' MORTUARY H11nl1n91on Beath .536·6.539 --WESTMIMSTU MEMOllAL P.UI( °"""' l~!l)t l!ecrch Bk! We1•1'1+1'\ler, CoiilCl'"<l ~31-172~ LOS ANGELES -The co-give the n1eat a high-grade owner and a salesman at the label. Sanla Ana 1.leat Packing The Company are facing prison guilty pi cas stemmed terms of up to eight years from a series of indictments·in follow ing their guilty pleas in J\.1arch charging 11 people and a Los Angeles federal court on fi\•e meat-packing plants with bribery charges. bribery. Judge 1'1atl Byrne Jr. set The t\\'O entered a guilty Ju ne 24 for the sentencing of plea to a lesser charge of ~laier Gerson. 67. the plant co-giving gratuities to a federal ov,.ner. and Donald Morgan, officer and face a maximum 52, \\•ho told the judge during of two yea rs in prison on each their trial they had been count. •·paying off" federal meat l<=-=-========='i• inspectors for the past four years. They said they paid a meat grader $20 on four occasions in an effort to influence the grading of inferior meat..-rhey noted that the grader did not THE NEPTUNE SOCIETY Cemplelt C•tmtliM Str'flcp WUll dkHmlMlion ti HI Tiit OltfllllM Sl"'Pll .a.u1,....ti'l1 Te Tne c .. 11., lnvol•td Mottu1ry l'Wlltt'l l Ctmtltry IJtlt"' 24 Ho11, s.,wk• 714·646·74]1 FIE E- PUBLIC MEDICAL FORUM Prese nted by the Medical Staff South Coast Community Hospital Wednesday ETenillCJ June 12, 1974 Subjecl: ADVANCES IN PLASTIC SURGERY by Dr. Go~ Brennon, Dr. William ConoHr and Dr. Roy Hon«rson 7:30 • I 0 p.m. ' South Coast Comm. Hospital Auditorium 31872 Coas1 Hwy, South Laguna Free Porl<ing Inside Co\1499-1311 Ext.136 .. , • I, •• • size Our main r>1npha~1~ 1<; on an t:xi:rcis" pr oqr,1rn, es1)ecio lly dcs1gnPd tor your 1n{!1v1dut1I n""cls. Evf'n though we coun sel vou ~v 1 th .1 du·tarv "rogr,1rrr hi hf'l p you shed those r xcess pound -. 1! ... onl y part of you r physor ,11 t1tness neP.ds. A few pound<;\\ ill nol sho~" n1u ch. /Jul .i fcv .. inches will show ii 1l19 (!iflr>r P11 cc. W11 h our modrrn . ~r>.1ce ·age equ1 pmr.nt and prul1 •c.-.1onal sup•·rv151on you \viii firn1 up and trim <1own f'V•·ry part of your body f>Spccially those p)accs 1h .;t n•·Pd 11 '"oc,1 You II bP !11m \v1thout thal excess !!ab. BPlor,• ~ou ~nc1~v it you 11 l111d your self bcau11fully µ1opor11o nerl t11n' f11 ,1nd tnrn Thl'n you ca'n abandon you1 s<.:ll to thoo:,r• luxuri ous i .Jcd1 t 1l.!s-Stcam. Sauna, Sun and fiydro·massa9c whir lpool, Sw1n1m1ng and much m o1c. kl twenty v1s•ts you n'<lV havP the resul:s you need. You may wo nt to •• l.ont1'1ue. the decision 1s yours • Special Introductory 5 we ek Program 20vlslts '20 for 2 Ttlal's S tO P'' Person Regul.Jr Memberi.h1p A¥a1lable at Lo w Co~t, lower co~t on your l1r~I v1~1t. 1 n•'H' ,lr" SEVEN d•ller•·nt prog1ams to c.noos,. !rom 10 su11your 1nd1\1 1du,11 needs. H@~nd©l~ $,i ~~~~~Hw~l~88 call today. ""--- BUENA PARK ~10 S. Be1cll Boulevl•d . South ot L111c.ol n Awen1111 826·0381 ORANGE 622 E1•t 1(1t1 ll1 Awtn11t, Wttl ol lu1 h11 "'•n11t 639-2441 COSTA MESA 23 00 H1rbor Bo 11ltv1rd , H1111or Cerller 549·3388 WESTMINSTER 1,51 w111mu11111 Av1nut. Wtstmo11t1t1 C1nl1r 894·3387 HUNTINGTON BEACH 11~15 Main Sl1t11. M11n St. tt B11c.ll 81,d. 842·1451 LO NG BE ACH 4101 All1nt 1c. 801111v11e1 , Corn er 01 C111on 426·8874 ENCINO 1101 1 v1n11111 eou"'1Y11 u. Wott o• B•lbo• 986·6330 l I • J ,J DAILY PILOT Mond<l)', JuBe 10. lq74 38.3% Decli11e • Japfil1: Cru·s Take Dive it1 America TOKYO (UPI\ -Sales ol Japanese cars are plummeting , in the United States and some American dealers are starting to sever their tics with Japan's car manufacturers, industry sources say. The financial nev.•spaper Nihon Keizai said sales of Toyota, Datsun and other leading Japanese passenger cars in May totaled only 47 ,852 units, a decline of 38.3 percent from the same month in 1973. THE NEWSPAPER said J ap ane se automakers abandoned hope of matching last year's sales performance of 720.000 cars. truck.Ii ;,.nd buses in the United States. They are no\v shooting for a <;ales goal of 575,000 uni1 s, a drop of 2 percent. tt was a fresh jolt of bad ne\\'S for Japanese car makers·, already plagued by a sales recession tn their home market in Japan. The Japan Auto Dealers Association reported new car registrations in J apan in May totaled only 196,771, a decline of 45 percent from f\tay, 1973. L.A. CALLS 41/2c "'' p,;,.ote-UMt -llittMnt Sft"l'ic..- Oflly -Cd for ltrec'-"' .t -twy , ... -s. Fr-itc• LiM l A.f1il11M- The Telephone Company Of California 3001 l.cllill.C.M. !7141979-1234 Kids Like to Ask Andy . ' . j ;1 ' :! Industry sources said that because of recent c o s t incrtase Japanese cars are no longer price-competitltve with rival American models. THEY SAID American dealers are overcoming their shortage of small and medlu1n sized cars. and that with the easing of tbe oil crisis lhe An1erican public is turning again 10 large cars, which Japan does not make. "The slump in sales or Japanese-made cars h a s created a bad atmosphere, and a quitting movement among dealers \\'ho handle them has appeared," said Eichi Ohara. president of Fu ji Hfavy Industries w h i ch exports Subaru automobiles. - Other sources said some dealers in the United States were scrambling to drop Japanese ties and establish connections with American manufacturers. Nihon Keizai sa id thJt Toyota and !'.'issan, the big tv.·o of the Japanese au to industry, both were hard hit by the decline in pa ssenger car sales in America in June. .. IT SAID TOYOTA'S sales ~·ere 19.947, down 35.5 percent from P.1ay a year ago. The figure for Nissan, which ma'ltes the Datsuii WaS13.521 sales, a decline of 48.3 percent, the financial pape r said. The only Japanese export car to buck the trend ~·as Honda, which specializes in compact mini-cars. It rang up sales of 3.363 units up 0.3 percent over a year ago. Japan's &utomobile industry is 1he second largest in !he \vorld. l t built slightly more than seven n1illion cars, trucks and buses in 1973. and soltl 2.076 million of them overseas. Americans in 1973 bought 72,754 imported Japan ese vehicles, more than one third of Japan's ei:ports • MISSION VIEJO IMPORTS -MERCEDES BENZ - • -· Sales • SerVice • Lea sing 28701 MARGUERITE PARKWAY 495-1700 MISSION VIEJO 831 ·1740 S-Dte4)0 Fwy. to A'~ Pkwy. tilt, ril)ht ... M.,-IJMfit. Order Yours NOW ••• 1000 • .AS'.~f ~ Stick-on · Labels 1T -'I • PERSONALIZED •STYLISH •EASY TO USE ',., ~·'Vv '' ;, 0Nl'f i' $1 -;I' 25 c.,, ...,~ "' CUJCFO •ORDER FOR YOURSELF OR A FRIEND SH APE AND SIZE Of LABE L Mrs. John Doa 121 Mein Slr•al An~lown , Any1111• 123•$ L•b•I• Oo Nol "•ve A P'rlnttd l ordei-. Stylilh Vo9ut typa on fin• qu elify whilt gummed pi per. r---------------------, I I L_ I Fill in this coupon, clip •nd rn•il with Sl.2S lo: Piiot Prinling Ltb91 Div., Post Off ice Box ti60 Costa PM ... C1t iforn i1 92626 O••• .~ .. OO•N "" ..... , .. ~M.,••~•N .. U•ON• la l1i1r• t• "'" J •ur 11, C9'1 1411.114;1o11•ua --------------------~ ( Still Burning It IJp Speeders Add to Chane~ of Fuel Shortage Let Tlae1•e Be Light ' And there was. And it was good, according to Eugene, Ore. pla.nt shop owner ?itrs: John Fairweather who claims.using fluorescent lamps produced by GTE Sylvania Inc. generate's radiant energy which is beneficial to plants. She says the light enhances vegetative and reproductive growth of many plants. By SYLVIA PORTER On Westchester County'J ' 1 m111 Ion · do llar-.a-mlle" lllghway 684, driving back to New York City this past Sunday, my husband set the speedometer at what hns betome our customary "· Every car within ' 1 g h t whizzed by, some at what eould not have been less than 75 to 80 miles an bour. On New Jersey's Gardon State Parkway, return 1 n g trom gradu- ation week- end at ~ton­ mouth O>l· lege, we ran low on gas. We passed at least n half . dozen stations ~ fore we saw a Texaco sign advertising a maximum $4 of gas to a cus- tomer. With relier. we too k our tum in line, waited quietly for a chance to buy enough to get us home. Me1norex 'Supermari' · Ban k;:p-t-;;~ ™~!t Y~~!~~:~~~.~ and -if we do not: practice Wi1iner Either Way • Bids Filed ~t~ig:;:.i:;:~~g.wi~: energy in this country? Have By l\llLTON ~fOSKO\VJTZ Chnonldt 1'11t11r.:-1 \\'hen the troubled stockholders of i\1 e m o re x Corp. gather ror 1hei1 annual . meeting next Y.'eek. they are slated to approve one of the most generous employment contracts ever drawn up for a corporate executive. Stockholders sometimes ab- eliminate competition. lB:\t has vigorously deni ed these charges. \Vhatever the root cause, it's clear Jl.1emorex is floundering. lls 1973 r eport ~ was horrendous : On sales of $176 million, 'it registered a loss or $119 million. At one point, during the halcyon·days of the 1960s, its stock sold as high as $174. It traded as high as $79 as late as 1971. lt was recently being traded at $5. (MONEY TREE) The following persons have you fo rgotten so soon the shut fil ed petitions for bankruptcy sta tions. the odd ·even in Santa Ana Fedenl Court : constraints, the around-lhc- TAVLo• ouncin ln wr•nc• block lineups. all lhe · other ag1n1. 2.tn1 e1 c1111-7i;;, El Toro. frustrations of thia p a s t Ll1blli1!11 N0,ti2, IHlll "7.100, •,-Wiltter-? Jterertt A:K. l"fwlPI• TAYLOR Jove• A., dtrk. •It other Apparently, millions have. A d1llill II 100¥1. 11.1.Le "-'"' O•Yltl, cerpet 11nr, national survey by the Opinion rec• cir drl.,..r, io.111 MODnCtu l Circle, h Co (ORC I · b HUf\1111111 .... e1ect1, L11!!lmln sm. 110, Researc rp . m t e ••wl• s14,1.o. Reo1r" Prie. e111o11.. period Alar. lJ.24 disclosed 73 llALI M1r91rtl IClf'>lll. hou,.. ... u •• 111 atNr e1111ns •• •l>OYt. percent of us driving less CLAJIK George C., I I I• I "~A-A f th rt'l)rtwnt111.,.., 2110 Hlf"bar ll!Yd.. uo:i..;o.USe 0 e e n e r g Y cosi• Me••· Ll1b11u1" "'6.M •n •I• shortage" and 51 percent less $-1.15 ....... " PheTp1. f h h I cLa.11:1< Edn• R .. 11o1Jsew11t. rnn because o ig er gas pr ces. W1rn1r Ive.. HUflll119!on Beecn. I I II• u-·· Mar 27 Llat>llltlas w ,11'1. 1u111 u JJ. R1!ar11 I\. a O .,w-up S • • Y · • Phelp•. Apr. 7 .the figures were 72 W•Hl!HICl"L Ken111T~ Flavd Jr.. t d · · I be f man11o1e 11u11oer 11\d "6'1 mvtu11 cler~. percen r1v1ng ess cause o 1m M•v-• Pleet. c ... 1. M•~.t. the energy shortage and 48 l l1bllll!n '6,Sll. l i Ml1 l$j(I, Rt!"H PMlp1. percent leSS because Of gas prices. sltl.illtlon la terribly prtearlous ln the Apr. 11).21 apan, the and we cannot poulbly eolve figurts had 1Upped to SO and our problem,, '!'lthln l be f.S perant. By Apr. 24-May s. unttall!tlcally short span or only N percent wcrt driving 1980 set by President NJron. les1 betause of the energy CONSIDER THESE ratts aho~ while 58 percent had put t.ogeth« tor ino at a cut their driving bcca~e of recent luncheon interview by hlghtt gas prltes. John Kircher, newly elected president and chief executive WllE'l1JElt OR NOT you officer of Continental Oil Co., think aome of the profits ·and Howard Hardesty, Jr .. reported by the oil companies Coooco's e1tecutlve v I c e are bloated is not the point. president. While e n e r g y Nor is the point whether or not e x p e r t s -1 n government, )'OU suspect the • energy industry and the academic shortagts of winter w~re c 0 m mu n lty-cllsafrff on exaggerated; many of the many issues, on these' faca panic stories were indeed they are in u n a n i m o u s O\'erdone. agreement. Nor is the point whether you -The margin between pla~ the blame for the energy adequate gasoline supplie! and crisis on private industry's reap~arance of lineups at profit-motivated policies or on flllin~ stations ls a "razor's the red er a I government's edge, 1 perh8pl;110 more than 3 polities-dictated non-policies or percent. "1! the Increase in on the · Arabs' unforeseen gas eona:umpfion lhlt summer emergence rui !Ophislicated is held to no more than 3 practitioners or global power percent, we'll get by," says polities. Kircher. "The w or Id 's What 1.t the point is that distribution systems are just over the sl)ort pull, there is no about full because demand answer to painful energy has remained relatively low. shortages exctpt continued But a retum to soaring de- conservation by you and mands could cause haVOl'." me-as consumers in the -rn recent years, t h e home, on the road, in business annuaJ growth rate in u·.s. gas offices and factories. What i3 consumption bas run betwe en the point b that if we return 4 and 6 percent. Our own to our past wasteful, energy-cons er vat Jon policies. consuming h a b I t s this however. have s I a s h e d summer, we'll rapidly make a consumption so far in 1974 that energy situation far back to 1972 levels. "But if tighter. even less than half of 1UERE IS A fundamental-Americau C001Umers resume difference between our short· the old. bum-it-up ethic," tenn and our Jong -te rm warns Hardesty. "everyone prospects for ample energy wou.'d,, be waiting in Jines su pplies. agam. Over the long term, by WE ALONE have achieved develop!ng alternative energy t h e precark>us short-tenn sources and by better use of balance by our attitudes and the raw mate.rial and actions : smatler cars, fewer indus trial resources we have, long trips, slower Sl)OOds, car wecanandalmost;;urelywe poling, better car wi ll be able to provide maintenance, use of mass adequate energy supplies. transit-and resistance to high Over the snort tenn, our gas prices. ject to the high s um s paid to to p officers. But there's no l likely to be many pr o - tests rrom Memorex stiareholders about the Memorex is based in Santa Clara. and the most pained I •----~------------------------------------... Wilson's assignment is clear: Save the company. If he can't. It doesn't make any ditference, to the sharebold- .. ers, what he's being paid. Everything wJJI go down the drain. J\1emorex stockholders have every reason to be troubled. What was once an exciting investment in a glamorous performer in the computer industry has been washed away in a wave of operating disasters. l\IEMOREX \VAS -and is still - a leading mantltacturer or magnetic tape. It also had the temerity to challenge IBM in the market for peripheral computer equipment. The disc storage file9 supplied by i\temorex are dire c tl y competitive y.·i1h IBi\t pro- duct s.'-.......__ The comp')ny-claimed, in a lav.·suit brought late last year. that 181\t used its "monopoly" pov.·c~ to control prices and observer of its collapse is the Bank of Amer ica, 40 miles away in San Francisco. The BofA, the nalian's largest bank, has loaned Memorex $150 million and to protect that loan. it's now calling the shots at Memorex. ITS PRINCIPAL shot is Robert Wil s on. who's considered an ~xpert a t rescuing a i I i n g ~mpanies after his -three-year ser-vice at Collins Radio, (previously he spent 28 years ~·ith General Electric.) Wilson. who was earning $238,000 a year at Collins. ~'as enticed to take the helm at Memorex wii h the following contract: I. Annual base salary of $200.000. "subject to annual adjustment to reflect changes in the rost of living." 2. A minimum annual bonus of $125.000. 3. A retirement b on u s equivalent to one percent of the company's profits before tax es, to be pald each year. with the provision that the maximum payment be $600,000 a year. 4. Options to buy 250.000 sha res of ?o.temorex stock at a price of $3.32 per share. "'hy Is Unleaded Gas Expe11sive? · OI<:TROIT ! AP) -General 1'.1otors says service stations selling unleaded gasoline at premiun1-grade prices a r e charging too much. Lead·free f u e I currently costs an average tv.·o to four cents a gallon more than regUlar fuel. but G~I says both grades should cost the same. "The pricing is a little disturbing to us," Executive Vice President I<:.Jl.t . ''Pete" Estes said re<:cnt!y. ~xcc1>t for the inil1nl ex- pense or increasing production nnd d1~tribu1ion of lcnd·frce fuel this fnll , he said, "I am not sure \1'c undcr~tancl u·hy unlci'dcd cos!s n1ore." S&L Gets Brancl1 OK ?tfercury Savings &i Loan Association o r 11unUngton Beach, aMounccd that ii has been advised by the California Savings & Loon commissioner thot it has been grointed pcnnlssion 10 open a n d operate a branch :i t Los Alto1- ?llountain View In Stinta Clara: County. Thi~ will be Jl.lercury's second northern C11liror11in ornce. the 11ccond In Santa Clara County. l All of GM's 1975-model cars and mMt of the other auto com panies' models w 111 require unleaded fuel because they will be equipped with catalytic converters, which can be poisoned by lead. The mulfler-like converter! are being installed to reduce exhaust pollution levels. Estes said the engin~ of Gf\1 cars were redesigned in 1970 S<1 they could nm on a low 91-octanc grade of unleaded gasoline. Before then small ca r engi nes required 94-9~ octnne fuel while big engines needed 99-100 octane premium grade gasoline. Lead wns added to achieve t h c regular·grade octane level and again lo boorJt octane the additional four to six numbers for premium- grade. Dividend Set At McCarthv • Tht board of directors of !he t.lcCarthy Co. or Anaheim fiectared a quarterly dividend or 21 ~ cents per share ont its common stoc k. The dividend is payable J un e 23 to shareholders of record at the close of bu!incss Juoe 14. Complete .Mid .. day American Stock List ' I , l l I . . • • ~MONG THE GREAT -, Here, among some of the great newspapers of the world, is an old friend. The DAILY PILOT looks as much at home on this international newspaper rack as it does at ·the front door of thousands of 0 r a n g e Coast area homes where it is dropped daily. That should tell you something. It should tell you that a "home- town newspaper" can be sophisticated and still not lose touch with what's hap- pening at city hall. Whether it's news from around the w or Id or . down the block, the DAILY PILOT packages it best for you. And the simple fact is that, because the DAILY PILOT emphasizes local co.verage, you'll find a lot of stories in it you can 't find in any other newspaper 'in the world. On this international news rack, it 's among the great ones of the world. But at home, it's the great- est one in the world (for local news). • • • ONES . I l J . ' :-=-:~~ .. roPAQCTb-OT~M3H~I -_:}li~f.~3 ~;:' _, • • • - • DAILY PILOT -... I I l ,, I. ' • ,. I ~ I'• ~ 1; • . l ' \ ' • I I I I • I ~ • • ~ s • ! ~ j i i .. Moflday, Junt 10, 1914 -t Boston Plans Sin Zone THE !>TORE THAT RROUGHT LOWER PRICES TO THl BEACH AREA O.llY Piiot $1•H PMt. Visits Girls State E.5tancia High School student Linda Wolfe, 16, will represent the Harbor Area at Girls State June 2a.July 3 in Squaw Valley. Mi ss Wolfe, 1730 Centella Place, Ne wport Beac h, is sponsored by the American Legion Auxi- liary 455. ---------- Orchestra Officers Installed Niw band and orchestra officers for Newport llarbor High School have b e e n installed and certificates of appreciation presented to 22 seniors. In addition, drum major Sam ~1ello received a scholarship from the Coast ~fusic Company. Newly e I ec ted orchestra officers are Jan Kliewer, president: Pat Dunc an, secretary: and Ken Telloian, librarian. Installed as band officers were Jeff Fier. president; Linda Frankl i n , vice· president ; Kathy Alderfer, secretary: Roberta Capalbo, librarian; Lyle Haskell and Doug ~1ader, managers, and Susan England , un i form officer. Certificates of appreciation were presented by Richard A. England, director of instrumental music, to Valerie Miller, Stacy Cochran, l{im Kay, Julie Sear!es, T I n a Cherry, Karen Boyde, Carol Coll ins, Sheree l\1oritz, Joyce l\1cVay, Jennie Smart, Scott Fier, Susan England, Robert. Pelletier, Karen ·eradford, Robert Schmidt, Co n n i e Bradford and Linda Hart. 23 Music Students Honored BOSTON lAPJ -The city that once made hbanned io Boston" a household phrase is zo ning a district that will be !he exclusive domain of porno shops, sex films and gir!il! shows. The two-block·long strip in downtown Boston will be zoned as an "aduJt entertaining district" by a planning agency that hopes this will keep the sex businesS from spreading to other parts of the city . "WE FEEL AS if the \vhole matter of the obsc.enity thing may be slightly out of proportion," said R a I p h l\1emolo. a spokesman for the Boston Redevelopment Authority. "By allowing it in one area. Sale Prices Honored Through Wed .. June 12 - Twenty ·three young~-----­ musici ans have received spe- cial recogn ition at the an· nual awards night of the Fountain Valley Sc h o o\ District Banci. Special awards went to Christi Alumbaugh fr om l\fc.Dowell School. who \•:on the outstanding bandsma n award: "'e hope to contain it. If it'1 exclusively there. people can avoid It. And fr ifs your fancy, you can go there." The new district will be in a place called the Combat 1.one -an area already dominated by .:<·rated theaters, stripper bars and adult book stores. THE AGENCY PLANS to build two p.."lrks in the area. start shutlle bus service and helo owners fix up storefronts. The facellft should improve l~e area's sleazy image, l\1emolo said. What goes on inside the bars and theaters will be between the owners and the police. Anything that is legal will be welcomed. Neig hborhood groups i n residential parts of the city Jackie Hlavin, F o u n t a in Valley School, most musical Stoinle~~ Steel growth trophy; Robert Littreell . Fu 1 ton School, most honor poin~s trophy and partial scholarship to Arrowbear J\.1usic Camp at Arrowbear Lake, donated by Coast Music Service of Fountain Valley. Two· other students received trophies for earning a high number or honor p0ints, Alex Licudine of Harper School and Jeanne Braasch from Tamura School. Seventeen other students rccetved perfect attendance trophies for attending all rehearsals and concerts. The band includes musicians from all 17 Fountain Valley Schools and is under the direction of Marlowe Earle, district director of music education. ANIMAlog i<W., ''"'" \ BAR SINK & FAUCET "Bu ild Your Own Wet Bar!" • Hi1k'I plat'd slainl,ss 11,,1 sell-1imming sinli. RIG . '29.98 • Hond polished rim & bowl edges -1011ncl damfl'MI und,uoot -de'p bowl. s249a Sink & Fa1111I Full Sile Flo!\ GROUND COVER ''For A Carpe f 01 Colorful Gazonzias!" • Pr•vides color and cover fir parkwoys, flower bi!ds, hilhid,s. • rost g1owing arMI 'osy lo tore for. • , RIG. '5.99 s4•9 had been worried a b o u t planned urban renewal for the Combat Zone.-They were afraid this"'would drive the stores and bars lnto their areas. 11IE COMBAT Z 0 NE blossomed as o location for these stores and theaters when an earlier urban renewal project replaced the o 1 d Scollay Square section \Yith a complex of g.o vr:r nm ent buildings. "If you go in and have whplesale redevelopment, you have to relocate buSinesses," Memok> said. "Now where the hell do you pot 90mebody with an X·rated book store? Do we say, 'We have a nice little spot !or you on Newbury Street,"' a fash ionab le shopping areaf Sei: is here to stay, and lhe city ls better orf to put It in onr: place rather than try to stamp it out, Memolo said. "It 's part ot the urban fobric," he said. New Juclg~ SACRAMENTO (AP) Ollle 111. Marle-Victorie of San Francisco "'as appointed by Gov. Ronald Reagan to the Munic.ipal Court bench in ~ Francisco. She replaces Judge Claude Perasso, who wu elevated to the Superior Court bench. PHARMACY WE QUOTE PRICES OVER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME CHICK THIH 5UPU: SALi SHCIAL5-.,_ ..._ SURE Antiperspirant. 6oz ................ $1 .29 LYSOL SPRAY Disinlectant. 14 oz ..... : .... 1.49 VASELINE, ,,;oz Jar " ..................... 49c Q. TIPS, !f.1 70 ........... , .... , ........... , .. 1.09 Ow • 't. '!!'-$1 . w 1.35 42' 89' 270Q . Coast Highway at Fernleaf, Corona del Mar AMl'LlrAHIHGIHHAI 644-7575 HOWt-t:JO • 6:00 Oeitr c.....,.....,..,._ Truckload Sole ! SOLID OAK BARRELS · "Rugged; Rustic & Fun%_y -You'll find 1 OO 's of Creati•e Uses!" • Honest-to~oodness old whiskey barrels , rugge:dly <onstructed ofsolidoak. · • P&.t iR 'em, sit on them, use them as table bases, handcraft yo:,, own funky furniture. , ~ j : ,~:~~'.I ~onl severol of these hard-to-find barrels. , .,,. . HALI IARRILS 11"1 25" RIG. '14.95 95 \' 1 5 Gallon Sire DWARF CITRUS • Grow yo11r own lr11il ... th,se wa11ld lave ID be plan!,d in a hall ba11el. • Ya11r chai1': lemon or lim,, healthy & hardy flee s. REG. '5.99 ' 54!,! 4 fl.•8ft, PEGBOARD • \1 ...... 1;,io1'9'!1l.ft1M-, s""'" ,...,. ;...;uh. .1 11.1 1 1!.1 lll'"Tlli•~-••1r ,,,.;,.,1., RIG. '3.99 s2•9 WHOll BARRELS 3S'' I 25" RIG. '24.95 . 2!? Gol. fom ily·S1le t ' PICNIC ~ _:0 JUG . \ ' \.... l "· I' . . ' "Insulated For Hot '-< or Cold Liquids!" I • leakprool spigot and 1ap. I • Wide mDllth lar 'asy filling ·~ and 1leaninq. ' I • Brightly 1ola1ed high d,nsity I ' ., ' poly,thyl,ne. RIG . '5.99 s399 .. 'llllliilllllli111ll I . \. ' N'w Glomorene' DRAIN OPENER "You'Yf Seen Ir On T. V.!" • Goe' ta work on clogged ll1ains in "1ond,. • Saf,, llSY lo IUI Dt!OS1I -pl,asanl pine sc1111. RIG. '2.29 ) - (1. la. • ' .• I , • • e BEA ANDERSON, Editor MeMty, ,,_ 11, 1t14 , .. ,, .. " Swimming program in Huntington Beach offers one-to-one attention to ' handicapped children and young adults. Swim Prag .ram Pools -Ta lent STORY ond PHOTOS by ALLISON DEERR 0t Ille Dilly 1'110! Sllll The scene looks chaotic. Splashing, laughing, diving, yelling, giggling, coax- ing. Noises ecbo ore the tiled walls. But there is order within the chaos. "It may look unorganized, but within every little circle, learning is going on." .. It's Thursday evening at the Huntington Beach Parks and Recreation pool. The swimmers are there for more than swimming lessons, more than family recrea.. ti on Many of the child ren are handicapped -autistic, brain damaged, retarded, physically or emotionally han- dicapped. Ages of students range from infants to adults. Consulting instructor Larry Bunch explained that the program wa s initially designed for children with emotional problems. "ln 1968, I restructured the program W include all types of handicaps .'' Parents take to the pool along with their children. But their time is spent with children other than their own. "Working with other children they learn to be good teachers as well ," Bunch said. The· le ssons, oo Tuesday and Thursday evenings from 6:30 to 7:30, cost $5 for 10 lessons. · POSITIVE EXPERIENCE "For some of these children. it's the first positive experience they've had. It gives them a feeling of suc- cess, a sense of accomplishment.'' Bunch explained that he structured the program for some of the young swimmers so that a majority or the lessons was devoted to social play. "I found that many of these children did not know how to play the way ot her children play, so I incorpor· ated social play into the lesson." The swimming also develops coordination and the positive learning experience carries over into other areas, Bunch said. Robert Burton. president of the Orange County Chapter, National Society for Autistic Children, is among parents of children in the pro.eram. "Parents work with other children and it makes us expect more of our own children. I've found that I can say 'no' to mv son and expect more of him than before." The mother of a year-old bo.v said the program has helped develop the child's ability to use his once-para· Iyzed limbs, the result of a birth defect. The father of a 15·year-old blind autistic boy, said the progress of his son "was fantastic. Larry can com· municate with Jeff when no one else can get through to him." He pointed out his son, learning to find the opposite side of the pool bv listening to the echoes . "Last week it took four gu:vs to pull him away from the edge of the pool. Now he will stand there, and listen to Larry, and there he is heading for the other side." A little girl whose problem was a stiffening of the limbs now had freer movement because or work in the water. A set of 19-year-0ld blind twins had learnec,\ to swim and dive under Bunch's guidance. "The program is structured." Burton added, "and the children know that every 'time they come, it will be the same. They know what we expect of them. and they may protest a lot at first, but they soon love il" He pointed to a young autistic boy in mid-pool. "He screamed, yelled, had fits at first. We had to duck hfm and pull him out into the water. Now, he loves it. He's like a little fi sh." FAMILY SHARES Not all of the children in the pool ·are handicapped, Burton noted. "That's my daughter over there on the steps. Many of the parents bring the other children along. It helps give the handicapped chil dren an example, something to shoot for, and it makes the lessons a family exper- ience." Bunch noted that he also has volunteers working with the children . .,, The fact that Bunch has a. physical handicap him· self, noted one parent, says a lot to the children. "They can't say 'I can't do that' to Larry. He knows better. "He knows the limitations and the capabilities of each child. He doesn't Jet them get away with anything." There is an obvious respect for Bunch among the parents and the children. They watch, they listen and, it seems. they learn. "I think this ls the most important thing that's ever happened to my son," said one mother. "My son's come a long way," added a father. Maria Zartman, a volunteer who is herself slightly handicapped. credited Bunch for the program's success. "It couldn't happen without Larry." Consulting instructor Larry Bunch (far left) and four volunteers coax blind, autistic teen away from side of pool. Parents learn by working with children. ·1 o:P.,,, ''' • • •• ) \ , : l ' t • ! l l I I I I I I J ,j DAILY PILOT Monday, Ju11t 10, 1974 ) Milestone • Marked Job ! ak.en Lying Down I • After thfir "·t'dd1ng in 'Toronto In June. 1914 . British· bom tilr. and ~1.rs. Janws Loudon tra\1eJed lO Cttl iforn la ''here lhey ha\·r made thei r home C\'er sinre. The honoree!, y,ho have been re!iident!; of i\e"'port Beach for 12 years. marked the i r 6 0t h w eddi n g snni\'ersary Y.ilh a fainily celebration in thei r hon1r. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am ready to pttlUon God to excuse me from the hwnan race, or at least relieve me from active womanhood. J never thought I'd see the day when llttle old oonservaUve me v."Ould become a card· carrying Women's Uberationlst! never t0nvince me ~•t 1 wmaa lul11 '° 1leep wll.b lier boss In order IO t\K:Cetd. la fact. I believe the oppo&llt ta true. Tbe smart w o m 1 a rtmalns vertlcaJ-whlcll I• lbe logical po1Uloa-lf 1be wat1t• IO I• up. ____ '4_-_~--~---@l '. Attendi ng \\'ere their sons and daughters and t h e i r spouses. 1\1.r. and l\frs . Voter \tiles of San Diego. !\tr . and ,\lrs. J ames V. Loudon, Lido Isle : l\1r. and l\frs. \\1i\liam A. Loudon, Sherman Oaks, and ~liss Irene Loudon , Ne"'J>Ort Beach. They also ha\'C six grandchildren. The senior Loudons have played an acti\'e part in both American and British social. altruistic and co m mu n i t y wo rk. A native of Scotland, Loudon \\'as a\\'arded the Order of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth 11 in gratitude for his efforts in British·Amer ica n Lf'nd·Lease activities. Ile also established one or Lo s AnReles' oldest custoin house brokerage finns. It's going to take more than the Offil'fl of E q u a I Opporlunlly and tile U.S. Congress to change t.he male's attitude toward women ln business. Two weeks of being paY.'ed, patted and pinched on the fa.My has me convinced. llere Is my letter o f application for a new )ob: "Gentlemen(?): All I want is a chance to earn a living. Please hire me because I am competent, experienced and reliable. Skip my 36-lnch bust, big brown eyes and lovely smile. Just look at my work . record of 18 years. "It may be a shock to Your ego, but I don't want to sleep with you. I will rely on my business skills to make my way." 1\\'o weeks ago I lost a good job because I wa sn 't "cooperative." lt makes me "'onder. Ho~· about yo u, Ann? -DISGUSTED DEAR ANN LANDERS: I read with interest yo u r response: to "Hlah Umbrage" on the subject of whether "Negro" is acceptable as a description of those or us \\'ho have.black African ancestors. However, it was an error to say I preferred ''Negro." I prefer "Negro'' to "col<l red," since t believe "colored" was used to &\"'Oid the reality of our black heritage. I don't care what people call me. but I 00 care about the attitude behind the word used. Either term is acceptable to me if the attitude of the user is one of respect rather than bigotry or conde~nslon. bl1cll: Is the abae:ace of color." Jaleresttq? DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 11, divorced, and have been going with an attractive man for nearly two years. We are very much in love and last Christmas he gave me an engagement ring. 1'ty problem is whenever "'e have an argument he feels justified in eoln1 to cocktail bars and picking up strange women. He claims that if I would shut up and not argue with him, he woul~'t do all these thliigs . Am I crazy for letting him hurt me this way? What kind of Hie will I have with him? I need some answers.-CON· FUSED. DEAR C.: Second que11tton flrSt: Your life with him l!i -:C-~~~~~iiiiiiiii~ hlghly predictable. E 1 t b e r jili ~ you·u keep yo ur mouth shut Your Search :;~1 do~x;~«fi.:s ~~a)'!;:r 'frs. Loudon .... ·as born in England an d r ec ei ve d co mmendations for her work Y!'ilh the American Red Cross and Bri tish \Var Relief during World War II. Mr. and Mrs. J1mes louden at SOth Anniversary P1riy, Celebrate 601h DEAR 0.: Sorry, Butter· cup, but plenty of Females have made il on abilily. You'll For myself. I have opted for black, bu t mv fri ends \Vho have v.•alked Picket lines and gone to jail in the 30s, 40s and 50s for the cause of civil rlghls have an equal right to respect the term Negro. -PATRICIA ROBERTS 1-!ARRIS t \·ery argument and plel( up For The M>me tramp. First question: , JANIS MILHAM August Rite Set Co m munit y Chur c h Congregationa l. Corona dcl ~1ar "'ill be lhe setting for the Aug. 3 marriage of Janis Anne i\1ilham and Stewart James Slykhous of Newport Beach . News of the ir betrothal and forthcoming marriage has been announced by h e r parents ~tr. and ~1r.i. Richard G. ~lilham of Fullerton. DEAR PAT: Thank you for ''es, yoY are crazy lf you let Perfect setting the record straight. tum continue to hurt you tb.11 The ''ast majority of _ way. !!!HER"S American• ~ilb block Afrl••• ancestors wbo wrote -t o Officers, Plans Announced comment also preferred black. -----------111 D 7' 'l" A reader from Olllo made a A I fascinating observation. He said, "Tbe word 'colored' I! a GI FT complete misnomer 1 I n c e Mothers ' Ma rch Ne w officers of the ?\;1others' 1.farch Advisory Council of the National Foundation & March of Dimes v.'flre installed at the home of Mrs. R. Patrick Quigley. the new president and O ran g e County Mothers' March chairman. She will be assisted by the Mmes. V. Ray Van Pelt. Howard Salquist, C. Michael Jones, John GoeUen, Sumner Mann. K.R. ScJlicht, Roger l\1arsh, Jeffrey Dougal, Lee Grannell, Frank Cox and Fred IluM. Writers The "'riters workshop of the Laguna Beach Branc~ of the Nation al League of American Pen Women will continue to meet through the summer. although the branch will not meet again until October. "L The y,·ork shop is conducted by Isabelle Ziegle r the second Monday or the n1onth in rne1n- ben:' homes. Ra pe Li ne Volunteers arc needed to open a rape crisis 2{-hour hot line planned by the South Orange County \V o men Against Rape. Training and informational packets will be given to those who are interested in participating. The group .,..;n meet at 7 p.m. 1'1onday, June IO. at 19261 S ie rr a Inez. Ir v ine . Investigator Lynda K. Giesler of the Costa ~lesa Police Department will speak to the group on the department's procedure with rape victims. Lunch eon The Women's FellowshlP of Congregational Church, La- Would Require Comparisons guna Beach, \\'ill sponsor a I u n ch e on at 12:30 p.m. Tuesday. June 11 , in Bridge Hall. A card and game party will follow: Proceeds will help buy long tables for the church. Final Meet The Orange County Chapter of the American Association of Medical Assistants will hear about the bum unit at Orange County Medical Center during the fmal meeting o{ the season at 7 p.m. Tue5day, June 11, in the Grand Hotel, Anahein1. Harbor Star lifrs. James Graham , worthy matron, will initiate Mmes. Oifford Wes do r r. William Applebee, A Irr e d Gallade and Frank Pajzk into the Harbor Star Chapter 568 of 1he Eastern Star at 8 p.m. Ends At Tuesday, June tt, in the r;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;::;::;::;::::;I $I 500 fo :~~'.c Temple, Ne ..... port artist-of-year ~/l~[k~~~ A The C.lll/ini1 artist lJ\! ~ Q Delta Gamma ·• 01,..,oommrttee ~41ilf:l1~~ will seek out UP-anck::oming ~~ tJ IJUJ~ e --s Ana N rt artist with e11ces>tlonal talent iuc anta · ewpo during 13 different ar1 oFONIO Harbor Alumnae of Delta CffiQfi'$ "°"""'Mion• SO. COAST PlAZA Gamma will meet at 10 a.m. SPORTSWEAR here at Huntington Ce,~:;:. COST A. MESA. Tuesday, June 11 in the home April thru Novem .. Ar mo<e 10"" .. cAllOVt&U"ra u,.-OflM t &I.' "II.' l'M •\&T. "Ill. 6 l'M of Mrs. Ronald Klingelbofer, than ,..., n To,,.._ ........ Yt'BTQIFFP!.AZA . BAlBOAIStAt(I I 10.000 In a'IW8fds. write Ml~ Santa Ana. Newp:nBecch 216fottineAw. of Year. 12'4 Huntington j ioH ,_ ~w iiil j on ·~Sculpture and the 1t1any 1111 Edi~. H.B. CA 92&47 Muriel Reynolds will speak I!~~ .....,~~12~1 ~~~·~';~;";"'~!lJ~~~~;~~~c.;";"~'·JJ~~·~'~"~....,~~·-~~~~~· Joys of My Llfe." AAMA The Orange Shore.s O\apter of the American Association of Medical Aasistants will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, June 11, in the Alrporter Inn to hear Dr. Peter Bramwell speak on Hypoglycemla. Newcome rs SUMM(R fABRl~S TWINNl-MINNI COTION PRINTS Delightful design s that colo r coordinate on m.ich· ine wash cotton/polyester. 44"/45" wide. ri.tiss Milham is a graduate of Sonora High School and will complete her ba che l or s degree in social ecology at UC lrvinc in June. Bill Aimed at Movers The Newcomers Cub of Irvine will meet at 11:30 a.m. Tuesday, June 11, in Victor Hugo's restaurant,. Laguna Beach. In lieu of a program. mem· hers will spend the afternoon browsing through shops. New officers will al.so be announced by Mrs. Albert C. Nelson Sr., president. They are the Mmes. Charles HeaOlco, Dean Stayner and Frank A. OJ.rcio. Rcg.149 NOW ' 9~¢ Her fiance. son of ri.1r. and i\lrs. ri.terle A. Slykhous of Nev•jlort Beach. is a graduate of Loara High School and UCL A bill co-sponsored in C.Ongress by Sen. A I a n Cranston YlOUkl req_uire major shi ppers to provide customers with "vital statistics" supplied by the Interstate Commerce Commiss i on on their operations and the operations of their competitors. emotionally, by part i a 11 y ol"fselli ng the inflat ion which has hit lhe moving induslry. Carriers h a v e increased their rates 2J percent in little moved to just six other states. And nearly sa,exx> people moved from those states to California. • Tell a lriend-·- over a year. he Sllid. --;;;;;:";,;;;;;;~:=;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;==;;:;;;;;;;;;;= ''If the customer can pick a 1 p ~ STOMACH TROUBLE company with a lower damage •n,•-n r•n•J or Jost goods rate, he can vUlt.U llrifRo HAHOI SHOPPIHCO CIHTll COSTA MESA Infonnation would include comparalive re<:ords o n punctuality. breakage, speed in settling claims and accura cy in estimating moving co~ts. of(set part or perhaps all of 1t •u1r 5AtON& for Appl . 549-0757 Resoonds to Ch1roorac11c Care1 tha t 23 percent increase. And that kind of economic press ure can induce all household goods carriers to upgrade their service." he said. Dr. Joke W. Pivoroff C~"W.:1111 Pal..,..G<..,ul!• Corona del Mar, Ca. 673-6070 Cranston said the measure \\"Ould help co n s um e r s financially, as v.·ell as lfe pointed out that durin~ !he past 10 months since July 1973, nearly 42,000 Californ ians ' Annual Sale of Fine Jewelry 20% to 50% off There is no better-or more beautiful- investment today than fine jewels and precious ge~s. Once again, you have the opportunity to choose from the ex tensive Layk in collections assembled in ou r Los Angeles Salon to give you the grea test selection ever. The collections include many exclusi ve Laykin et Cie desi gns, as wel l as exquisite examples from our treasury of antique' and es tate pieces. Here are beau tiful gems th at grow more precious by the year, now at once·a·year savings. 1 WILSHIRE Al NEW HAMPSHIR[. LOS ANGms • With or Withou t Appo1ntmen1 Open Sun. & Eves We frost your hair with a warm heart and color-full •Y•-~llillOIX . lolloii7 And of COUl'H with ~ "Sheer Delight" bBCIUM 11'1 the love/Je1t lightener we know. And our color-full eye, lo lighten luat tho right rn@~~~~ ........ c ....... 11rand1 to make your new coif sparkle. A 1500 bewitching combination that makes love-sorcery ln your heir, to let you look 11 sublle or es daring as you like. Come talk to us about your new hairdo, and about Sheer Delight frosting. f'iO charge for conaullallon. YD. DAN RIVER WOVEN SEERSUCK ER PLAIDS Good selec tions of colors and combinat ions o n machine wash polyester/cotton. 44"/45" wide. Reg. 229 NOW ! IMPORTED OTTOMAN SCREEN PRI NTS Perky designs on textu1ed cotton. They machine wash, require li ttle or no 11 on1ng . 44"/45 .. ~v1de. , Reg. 2-19 NOW ! 192 MULTI-COLORED l)~~ Outstanding design and color combi nations on p1es tig1ous machine wt11sh polyester/silk double knits that will "'pack and go". 58"/60" w ide. Reg_ 4'lPi/598 NOW ! J8v~. llHOUSE OF F~BRICS • alway1 f irsl quality fabrics Swffrl CH1t ..... ........... ~-.. C0tteMt.-.J41-ISI' .,,._, ... _ °' ............ _ ,.. .... .., 12,·22J4 -... .. llll t .............. ,.... IJ .. 1141 ' HOMr,_n• ,,..,._ Saftt• "-S'41·5551 lwno '•k Cff!ftr It_ .. ,_ l~no ,wlt-121·6121 Mondi)', June 10, 1974 DAILY PJLOT JS Vows Exchanged Your Horoscope Tomorrow Libra Gets Job Done CYNTHIA JOHNSON ·september j·Wedding Planned ~ Cynthia Ellen JohMon and :Peter Glenn Gaw are planning ; to marry Sept. I tn the : C o m m u n. l t y Presbyterian : Oiurdl, Laguna Beach. : News of their engagement and forthcoming event has been announced by h e r parents, Mr. and Mrs. Forrest David Johnson, Laguna Beach. Miss Johnson is a graduate of Laguna Beach High School and attended Saddle back College, where her f1ance studied. I He I.< the "" of the Joseph c. Gaws, alaO of Laguna Beach. BLAKELEY-OLA TY Susan Marle Blaty and Gordon AJexander Blakeley were married ln Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church, Westminster with the Rev. Daniel McGinn officiating. Tbey~are the daughter and 80l1 of Mr. and Mn. Edward H. Blaty Jr. of Huntington Beach and Mrs. E t h e l Blakeley, Westmlnsler. '!he bride is a graduate of Marina High School a n d attended Golden West C:Ollege where her husband graduated and was captain of the baseball team. He also is an alumnus of Westminster liigh School and plans to attend Chapman College on a MRS. -RINKER 3 ways to make short work of your . Father's Day shopping: The swimmer's short set: OUR BANDANA PRINT CAB.t.NA SET IN COOL POLYESTER/COTTON. FUL.LY LINED TRUNK. RED OR YE'U.OW. S-M-l..-XL. TRUNK• $15. 'SHIRT• $15. ROBINSON'S MEN'S SPORTSWEAR COORDINATES. The walker's short: WARM WEATHER SHORTS TiiAT STAY CRl~P AND SPORT PLENTY OF COLOR . IN SLUE, BEIGE ~A RED PLAIDS OF POLYESTER/ COTTON. 30-42. $11. T EXTURIZED POLYESTER SHIRT• SUPER-COOL! SHIRT-JAC STYLING JN "WHITE. BLUE, CAMEL OR YELL.Ow . S-M-L-x L. AT $15. MAIL/PKONE0 ROBINSON'S MEN'S SpORTSWEAR. The bike-rider's short: atECK·ntE TUNNEL BEJ..T LOOPS• 'niE 4 P(\Taf POCKETS. EASY CARE POLYESTER/ CC>nOH CHINO TWILL. WHITE, TAN1 BLUE OR NAVY• 30-38. $9. HATHAWAY1S ,ELEEOING MADRAS SHIRT• RED, BLUE. GREEN 1 BROWN OR YELLOW PLAIDS. S-M-t.-XL. CO'ITON,$17 • ROBINSON1S M~N1S SPORTSWEAR. baseball scholarship. Honor atten:iants w e r e Cheryl Hayes a~ K e n Blakeley. Others in Uie bridal party were Shelley! Ripple, JeaMc McGovern, Jane Blaty, Tom Houghton, S a n d y Stclndler. Mike Dodd and William Whitely. RINKER-MUHONEN Making their home In Santa Ana Heights will be Bart Fredric Rinker and his bride, the former Lynn Dee Muhonen woo were married in Otrist Lutheran Oiurch, Costa Mesa. The bride, daughter of Sally Muhonen and Wayne E . Muhonen of Imperial Beach, attended Chapman College. She wa s attended by Lucia Muhonen, Lynn Chamberlin, Sabrina Mubonen and Mrs. August H. Reiter III. Her husband asked Bryan Hatch to be his best man, and Reiter and Eric Hansen to serve as ushers. · Son of Joyi.elle Kemble of Garden Grove and Harry Rinker, Newport Beach, the bridegroom i! a graduate or Robert 1.Duis Stevenson School, Pebble Beach. TUZ-DUNLEA Cheryl Loui&e Dunlea and Thomas Neil Tuz exchanged nuptial vows and rings before Msgr. Thomas Nevin In St. Joachim's Catholic Church, Costa Mesa. The bride, daughter of the Joseph Dun1eas of c.osta. Mesa, was attended by Mrs. Elliott Stewart;""' B e v C-Y'I y 2 FASHION ISL.AND • Rigney and Maria and Valeria ~lolnar. Best Man was B r a d Davidson, and ushers were ~1ichael, l!ar'ry and Jacque TuJ. The bride is a graduate of Mater Del High School and attended Orange Co a s._t College. Her trusband, son or Mr. and Mrs. Walter Tui of Santa Ana. is a graduate of Corona de! Mar. Currently he is serving in the Army at Fort Ord, and the newlyweds will reside in nearby Mooterey. SCHWIND-FOSS St. Andrew's Pmbyterian Church, Newport Beach was tt.e setting for the marriage ceremony of Carolyn Sue Foss and Steve W. Schwind. The Rev. Dr. Charles II. Dieren1ield performed t h c double ring rites for the daughter or Mr. and Mrs. Herbert C. Foss Jr. nf Costa Mesa and the Fred K. Schwinds of Newport Beach. Bridal attendants were Mr. and l\frs. Thomas Foss, the Mme,,. Terry McGuire, Alice Sorenson, Richard Noling and Robert Palmer, Donna 'Ford, Dan O'Brien, Robert Foss, Lynn Parker, William Hessian, Roger Johnson and Chuck Smith Jr. The bride is a graduate of Estancia High School and Southern California College. She also attended Orange Coast and Westmont colleges. Her husband is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and California State , OPEN ,f MRS. TUZ MRS. SCHWIND University, Fullerton. H e attended OCC and ;:Hans to enter Fuller T t{e o I o. g i c a I Seminary, Pasadena ~xt fall. SUNDAY 12 T O 5 < ' :;.' 'I . . '' 0 ! f / ... ': " ' " SHOP MONDAY, tO:oo-9:30, TUESDAY I0:00-5:30 ,, ) r, ,f .. 644-2800 ' . ' ! ' 1 ' '"'"'"' .. ~ •,, . , . . . . I 1· J f DAILY PILOT MOl'ldq, Junt 10, 1"74 Adams Takes Coaching Pos,t at· UCLA j I -. . GARY ADAM S Switchel to UCLA )\ By HOWARD L HANDY Of ... Otlty ...... , ... If Cary Adams, the man wbo built the UC Irvine baseball program from scratch to twO NCM college division champion· ships in five years." is 1 ca v i n g the Anteaters liistitutfon ror a sln1\1Ar post at UCLA, the Dally Pilot learned exclusively toda y. . Adams met ·wJth UCLA athletic director J. D. Morgan toda y to discuss the details of the job following an emotional a.MOWlcement to the UCI team, parents, family and friends at the annual team picnic Sunday on the Anteaters diamond. "I will not be back at UCI next year," lhe head man said. "l have enjoyed the LA Trim Cubs, 4-3 Unhappy Joshua Keeps Delivering I.OS ANGELES (AP) -Von Joshua had just broken up a 3-3 ball game with a ninth-inning single, giving Los Angeles a 4.3 triumph over lhe Chicago Cubs. But later Sunday he was emphatic y.•hen asked if the game-winning single did anything to temper his desire to be traded. "No," lbe Dodgers outfielder sad flatly, '1it didn't. But I'm not going to keep pressing it. There are two reasons. One, it's hopeless. The other. we've got a Dodge r s Slate AU G"rlfl •n KAK HMI 7:1S p.m. 1 25 p.m. 1.7~ p.m. J p.m. ----great chance to win the pennant and I don't \\·ant to be the guy causing any trouble ." The victory kept the Dodgers' lead in the National League West at eight games over second-place Cincinnati. The Dodgers host SL Louis tonight with the Cards sending Sonny Siebert (IN) against Doug Rau (5-1). S1ri11gs Tangle ~'ith Housto11 In TV Match •• SAN ANTONIO -,,ie Los Angeles Strings clasll with the EZ Riders of liouston tonight in a televised match (Channel 5 at 8) 0£ World Team Tennis action. Meanwhile the Strings strengthened their hOld on first place in the Pacific section of W'IT with a 25-21 triumph over the Chicago Aces Sunday night. In the women's singles, Chicago's SUe stap defeated Kathy Harter of Los Angeles and her suMtltute, ~larita Redondo, IN. But ln the men's singles, John Aleunder or LA downed Butch Buchholz, 6-2. In the women's doubles, Miss Harter and Karen Hantze Susan edged Miss Stap and Janet Young 7-5, while in the men 's doubles Alexander and Geoff Masters deafeated Buchholz and Kim Warwick 6- 2. Chicago won the mixed doubles as Miss Young and Graham Stilwel dofeated ?tlra:. Susman and Masters, 6-3. lM AllMI• ts, (l!IC ... 21 w--Sl•P eel llMt H•rt .... 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Tonight's TV Ga1ue nn~TOi>i -The American League \Vesl l<"nding A's of Oakland !angle wltll the Hflstnn Red Sox tM.lghl on television (Channel 4 at 8) at Fenway Park. .. Joshua said he's going to remain quiel the rest of the season, then again state his demand to be traded someplace v.·here be might play regularly. He feels that his .462 team-high batting average in the spring should have earned him a reeutar job or at 1,ast a platoon role. So far be's been primarily a pinch hitter. "Pinch hitting is tough," he said, "but I guess I have a little edge because I u.sually make cootacL" . Arter his sharp single to Jen scored \Vill ie Crawford with the winning run, Joshua broke for second base as he saw the throw come to the plate. •·r didnt know the situation." he admitted Y•ilh a grin . "All [ thought about was ge tting to second and n1ay be even third. I forgot that "·as the \\'inning run.'' Relief pitchC'r Charlie Hough earned the win. his sixth in seven decisions. and continues to be the No. l surprise in the Dodgers bullpen. With 11-3 scoreless innings Sunday he's worked 11 straight innings v;ithOut allowing a run. His overall earned run average dropped to 1.24. "I'm happy manager Walt Alston has the confidence to bring me into the game and throw a strike," knuckleballer Hough said. Hough pitched out of a jam in the ei~hth ,1·hen he replaced starter Tw.my John . Jea,·ing runners at first and third. The Dodgers finally won it in the third \\'hen Crawford led off with a single,· was bunted to second by Bill Russell and can1e home on Joshua·s single t.u left. Los Angeles took a 2-0 lead in the first with two unearned runs, the reault of two errors and a passed ball by the cubs.. Steve Garvey drove In one run with a sacrifice fly, tying teammate Jim Wynn for the National Le.ague lead, both with 51 . and Joe FerguBOn singled home the second run. Jose cardena1 doubled home the CU.be' first run in the fourth. But another unearned. nm in the bottom or the fourth made it 3-1. Successive doubles by Carmen Fanzone and G e or g e Mitterwald in the !Utb. and then Billy Williams' eighth heme run of the season in t.be sixth tied the game at 3-3. CHICA.O ... ' """ LOI Af40 •Lal . '""' ' • 0 0 IC-ul11g9r, s. ' I o LGPff, 2b Mondey, d 4 I I 11/dlnir, If llWllH•ms, 111 ) 2 I Wynn, cf C•,..,_I, rf 4 1 I G•rY•Y• 111 JMor1I"' II ' 1 11 F9f'OllSOllo' F_, 3b 2 I 0 C9Y, :lb Mlrtww9k:J, c 3 2 I WCr•~· r1 11.0llllo. 711 2 G O R1/M911, M Wtrcl, 111'1 1 0 0 JOl'ln, P H1rrl1. 2tll 0 0 0 HQUlll, p H0610fl, 11 ) 0 0 Jo..l'lvt, pll ~dloc~. pll I O O HPl,..,p 0 0 0 Totel1 31 I J TOl•l1 ' 1 2 0 3 I 0 0 3 I 2 1 ' • 1 1 ' •• 0 3 1 I I ' 0 0 0 , 0 • 0 • 0 0 0 I 0 I I On• ovt wh111 wlnn111$1 ri1n KOrlld. Cllk•oo 000 111 000-3 Lo1 A11Qfl11 200 100 001-4 E-8. Wllll•ms, F1nt-. ICMtl/'IO« 2, LoPft. OP-los ol.ng1l11 1. LO&-CnletOO 6. LOI Antt!H 1. 18-C•rd1n1I, G1rv1y, Fin-Mlll-1ld, klt- 11. w11111m1 (I J. S.-llo1t1to, F1nzO!lfl, lll111MM. s'-0•,.,..v. w. Cr1wlord. I~ N Ill •111. 1-+ooton I S J 0 k , Pll\I (L, W) l/) 2 I I Jolltl 1 J/) 7 l j HO<.Otn (W. '"ll 11/l I O O P&-MHM.-..IO. T-t1JO. A-J:U01, H IO ' ' ' ' ' . ' ) CURRA N SIGNED BY KANSAS CITY Pat Curran rtporta to San Joee ht the California Cla.. A league Wedneoday following his inking of a Kansaa City professional baseball pact. CUrran, who was picked by the Royals organi.iatlon on the fo.urth round or tho recent draft, signed ror a .11lzable bonus. He prepped at Marina lllgh prior to stint! at Golden West COiiege and Chapman Coll~ge, years I have spent here Including building this facility but I am leaving the school." Whil' Adams didn't mention UCLA In his closing remarks, It is knov.n that he talked at length with Morgan today concern ing the Bruins job. Wh'n the team returned fi;om winning· the NCAA college division championshi p In ,$prlngfl('!d, Ill. Adams admitted he liad bei!n olfert'd the UCLA position . "There are some things that will have to be worked out before I go out there as coach," he said. "But they have offered me the job and it's mine if I want i1. "I am meeting with J, 0. ?11organ and will discuss the entire situation with him at that time." Adams, a fonner UCLA captain and their conoem and several indicated thtlr ties. In reglooal playoff mnpeti&Joo. 0.. ! second bast:man, apparenUy made up his eons would probably move elsewhere to Anteat.era: were 7-8, milking tbe playolfa mind to take the Bruins job before • the junior college lev~I and then to consultblg with Morgan. llis decision • another four-year institution. etch of the five years. came just prior to the p\01lc Sunday. AthlMlc director Dr. Ray Thornton, In the NCAA natkl'lal tournament , "}le didn 't even tell nie about his was noncommittal on the selection of a however. UCI po!ted an 8-1 record In decision until II o'clock thls rnomlng," new cooch. winning U')e title the pest lwo seasons, wife Jaoo said following th e-"'We won't panic into hlrlng the flrat--l'hia giv.es_tbem a 15-t playoU r~ l unnounce1ncnt Sw1day. one thnt applies for the job," he says. under Adams. "I doo't know v.·hethcr to go home and ·:we'll just have to ~n the c:andklat.es 'l\vo former play,rs are playing I pack, to sell the house and prepare to available and make a decision.'' professional baseball at the present tJme. l move or to just sit down and cry." Adams has been baSt.>00.ll coach at UCI Rocky <nlg and Dan HllMen both wiUt Adams Was near tears when he made for live years and spenl an additional the Kansas City organizatkln.' the announcement that brought stunned yea r building the modern playing lleld Jeff Malinoff and Gary Wheelock from silence to those who have participated in and recruiting the nrst Anteaterw team . the current team algned wttb the and followed the UCI program closely in He is the first and only baseball coach California Angels Friday and Ray recent years. to elate at UCI. Humphries and Keith Bridges are Parents of aome of the younger players Jn that time his teams won a total of expected to sign with Kansas City this with addiUonal eligibility at L:CI voiced 188 victories against 69 defeats and five week. Ul'I T11911M'9 CHICAGO'S JERRY MORALES BEATS THE TAG BY DODGERS THIRD BASEMAN RON CEY DURING SUNDAY'S GAME. THE DODGERS WON 4-3. Yarborough Cools Foes on Hot Day RIVERSIDE (AP)-The next time Cale Yarborough sits in a race car on a hot day, he will probably be weariog what will be calll'd a ''cool suil'1 It is a system of tiny tubes that wrap around the race driver's body that carries ice water to help keep him cool inside the furnace-like cockpt l of a NASCAR stock car. Yarbl)rough admits !hat he could have used one Sunday when he won the NASCAR Grand National Road Race at Riverside International Raceway in a '74 Chevrolet, but almost collapsed from lhe heat in the winner's circle. TrojanS Seek Second Win In Series Pla y OMAHA (AP) -The 28th College \\'orld Seriel was scheduled for a four- game card today. 4 A first-round game between Seton Hall and Southern Til!nois was pootponed Sunday for a second straight night by wet groun<b, setting up the a..wded schedule. Se10o Hall, JH. lost, 5-1, to Sou1hem Jlllnobt, 47-10, this morning and !Jiced Texas, 52-7, in e.n elimination game this afternoon. Miami, 48-9, will battle Oklahoma. 43-6 tonight foll~·ed by the game between Southern Illinois and delendlng four-time champion Southern California, 46-19. O>aches Richard "Itchy" Jones of S..them llllnois and Mik• Sheppard of Seton Hall talked to lel'les games -~mlttee about !he hord!hip of the 1ooer playing two 1Iralght gamea. "We fell It woold ha poycho!Oil<:aIIY hard lo come l1&bt -and play another game wilh only 30 mbl.ltea rest," said Jones. '"Ille p!ll<S Cll!llmlttoe said any other format woold llel the tromament back again," he said. ''They have their job to do, and we will abide by their decision.'' Northern Colorado eliminated Harvard 4.a and Southern Calllomla surprised Texas, 9-2 1n·saturday'1 only games. Medics gave doses of oxygen alter the race to revive Yarborough and Bobby Allison who !inlshed his ~4 Chevi 2.7 aecoods back In -place. Yarborough won in record tbne, covering 381 miles at an average speed of 102.442 miles per hour. Afterward, he described the ordeal "I ran out of water half way through the race." he said. "?ily thennos jug was completely out. I "'as just getting dehydrated. I didn 't have anything to drink. "Man, it was so hot you wouldn't believe it out there, but it never did Lo~ Again, S-3 bother me as long as across the short chute and along the straightaway I couud put my hand out the window to get some fresh air. "When I pulled up and stopped and that dead heat hit me. it ""as just like hitting me in the fa ce with a sledge hammer. you know ." 'larborough said he "'as going to look for his long-unused cool suit becnu~e all lhe rest of this year's NASCAR rar"s ar~ going to be ho! likr the one Sunda} in the 92-0egree Riverside aftemoon. Yarborough was helped by "'hat nu1y have been two monumenta l goofs by tv.·o of his competitors. Slump-ridden Angels. ~ Look to May .for Help NEW YORK !AP) -Nolan who? Sunday the Detroit 'ngers found out that Nolan Ryan lsn't invincible. Ryan had won six consecutive complete games against the Tigers dating back lo 1172, Including a two-hit triumph thla seuon. He also notched a no hitter agalmt the Bengals lut year. But Sunday, before a noisy Free Bat Day crowd of 42,491 lit Tiger Stadium. Detroit racked the Calllornla fireballer A11gel• Slate All OM!* • ICMPC 17111 J11119 10 C•11fornl1 •• NIW York J-11 (11 tornl• •t "" Yorl J-11 Calltornl• 11 N9W Y0111 JllM 14 lo.ton •f C•lttoml• 4:SS 11.m 4:H p.m •:U P.ft'I. 7;Hpm., for 11 hits for a 5-3 victory as the Angels continued to slwnp. lt gave tbe Tigers a sweep of their three-game oer1es against the Anget., who are fifth in the American Lague West and have lost 10 of their la.st 13 games to fall 7'n: games behind leader Oakland u lbey open a tbteeogame oerlH agalnll the New Yori< Yank,.. toolg)rt. Rudy May (M) plldles aplnot New York'• G<orge Medleb 174). The Tigers odlved Ryon early, acorlng two n1111 In the third Inning alter falling behind 2-0 In the top of the frame, then addJns three in the fourth . Shoddy Angels fielding wM Ryan's downfall, along with daylight. ;<Le.st time we ptayed under the lights. J think il makes a big difference when the balters can see the pitches better -in RUDY MAY Faen Y1nk"' Ton ight daytime," Detroit manager Ralph Houk sa1d. Gary Sutherland, who had two scratch hlls which led lo the lr1umph, e<hoed that sentiment. "I thought he had as good or better $luff than when he beat us lrtst tir:'le," he said of Ryan, now 7-6. The AngePs star gave up only five eamcd runs in his la.st six games against Detroit. The flf'St, pole sitter George Follmer, broke into a huge lead after only one lap, but his '74 Matador suffered engine damage after seven laps. Car owner Roger Penske reported the damage occurred when Follmer missed the shift and overrevvl'd the engine. Then. late in the race. Bobby Allison c\ft"tl'd to come into the pit for gasoline, and gave up the lc:id lo Ya rborough. It "'as a lead he never got back . After the rnl'e, Allison's crcv.• chief, Bill Hamner. emptied the gas tank to see if Bobby had to n1ake that stop 20 miles from the end. "I don 't think he had to," Hamner said. U.S. Open Next rlfter Green Wins at Philly • PHILADELPHIA (APJ -Hubert Green admits that he Is mentally tired - that the week-1n, week-OUt grind of go!! i& getting to him. Mier pockellng !30,000 for winning the $150,000 Philadelphia Goll Clasa!o Sunday with a l7·under par 271 , Green talked more enthusiastically about a tW().week "·acation than this week's U.S. ()pq! Championship at Winged Foot Country Club in Mamaroneck. N. Y. ~ "I haven't missed a tournament ~ months," said Green, who comptlid rounds or ~7~ for hill third toir victory of t.he year. "But the grind g.di:: to you.'' "! What about the Open, the mcit prestigious title in golf? ~ ."I'd like to win It. but I enjo)41 winning here," he said, waving towadt the 6,708-yard Whitemarsh V a 11 4' Country Club course he had l"lt wrecked. "I like to do well, and the ~ I've played the last few weeks is nol.t\q to tum my ~ down about. ~ "I'll get In my car and drtve to Now York_and play bard. If I get wtrlppej, fine. I'm going to take two weeks off,.I won't play again unUI the Milwa& Open." : The 27-)'<ar-old Green, who prev;ously this year won Ole Bob Hope Deaett Classic and the Greater Jacksonville Open. boosted hls 1974 ea rnings :10 $156,165. second only to top money-winner Johnny 1\liller. Ashe Bids to Over~ome Jinx Today Lcrrin'LaGrow, It.niggling much of the way, uppod his record to a-4 wtth John Hiller shutting the Angels out l,he last three !Mings to t:am hls 10th save. CALl,OJIJOA O•TlllOIT _ !·le shatt~rcd the 72·hole tournament record at \Vhitemarsh by three .etrokcs. Billy Casper and Tom Weiskopf had ~ won here with 274s. ~·Ml!ng KOrH 1n!I ,,_... WllVll/'IOI 11'1 lht l1JD#lll !"lliladfl11nl• Goll Cllttllc: H~ Gf"ffn, 530,00CI 1'0-61~ H•I• 1 ..... 1n, 111,100 , .. nmEii PARIS (AP) -Help Mutholf, a finalist in 19'?0, reached the quarterflnaJs of the rain-piqued 1174 French Open tennis toum11 ment today with a 6-4, ~l victory over Elvira Welleriberg of Arge ntina . The day'a pro1ram began 1 ~ houri lat@ becau5e of rain, and only the center oourt and side &iurt were playable. Following the match brt~·een Mrs. Ma!thoff and l\.ti!s WciSt':nbtrg . the r;i ln M:gao again, dfllaylng ll ~ntcr court, thlrd round battle between Pierre Bartbet oC F'rance and Onny Ra.run of New 2.ealand. I When playlq -alter -hour's delay, Tbomu Koch of Brull beat Toehiro Slkal of Japan f.l, f.7, H, H , f. 4. The match wu stopped becau9e of rain Sunday night afttt thrtc !el.I and wa.s Interrupted again today with Koch leading 2-t In th! fifth ttt. In another interrupted match Sunday and completed today, Raquel Glsc trimmed Nathalie J.'uchs of Franct: 6--i, ~ 3. Play had been hlllted Sunday with MIM Fuchs leading 2·1 In the eecond &el. Meanwhllt, Ar1hur A>he ol the United Siai.s was scheduled lo play Manuel Orant" of Sptln In hopes of reachlnc the quarlerflnll1 and overoomlnl one of his lq·Ume J!nxn-playlq on the rtd clay courti at Roland Ganw Stadium. Ashe ""'" hu golten beyond lhe fourth round here , but he was favored to &et by Orantes, 'Ven thouih the Spanll.rd plays his be s t on slow surfaces. Orantes won the Italian title in 1972, wa:o1 runncru p in 1973 and was a semifinalist in the French tournament in 1172. Ashe la one of rive Americans among the Dnal 18 seeklng the 134,000 lop pr1"' ln !he PI0,000 tournament. i l •• , "'"" •• '""" 111:1._.,,, ff j I t I MSt"'\.fy, cf $ 1 I 0 OOorf, 2b 4 I D 0 Su1111!11111l.1b S t I 0 Alemlr, pf! I 0 I 0 t(IU119, dl'I S J t I Sllnten.. rf 4 O J 2 WlotOl'!Ofl. 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HANDY Ol tllt 01U1 '"" SllU UC lrvinl' will open defense of its NCAA college division tennis chainJ)lonship wilh only enc retun1!ng tetf l!rn1an in the lineup when tcHon gets under wny-'l'uesduy n1or111ng on lhe 12 c11n1puii c:oui'ts. There tu·e 31 schools C'nlered in the 1ourno1ncnt. Bob Chnppell, the winner In both sin~les and doubles a ' year ago Ln the NCAA event In . Pennsylvania, had another yea r or eligibility remaining but' optfd to play \Vorld T~atn Tennis with Pittsburgh. ti.1ike l"is hbaek . a sophon1ore. advanced to the doubles finals with Greg Jablonski a year tlRO but lost to th e C.'happell -Glenn Cripe duo in the Unals. Fi~hback ha!t dropped out or school after a disagreement on pollcy recently and ""'ill nol be available to the team:He was playing doubles this year with No. I singles star, Scott Ca rnahan. In addition to Carnahan, UCl's hopes or retaining the Aztecs Roll, 3-0; Rutl1e1~fo1~d Wii1s ROCHESTER. N.Y. -The Los Angeles Aztecs blan ked the Rochester Lancers 3-0 Sunday Jn a North American Soccer League game marred by the stoning of a referee. About 2Q lo 30 spectators rushed to the sidelines near f.·faxwell had to ssed o u l Lancers forward D a v i d Proctor and Aztec mid-fielder Pedro Martinez, but it was Lonardo's ejection wh ic h appeared to irk the crowd. e Texan Rallies the game's end and hurled f..11L\VAUKEE -T exan , stones at linesman Bi 11 y Johnny Rutherford ' survived ~'laxwell alter he ejected early troubles and charged Lancers dclenseman Roberto back to victory in the 25th Rex Lonardo. ~1ays 150-mile race for U.S. f\1ax\vell did not appear auto club cars Sunday. hurt. but y,•as escorted by The smiling Texan made it _J>Olice off the _fjeld at the two st ra igh t after his completion of the maTch--:-lndianapOliS-500 V~tory May Nearly 4,900 other fans 26, outdueling second place remained In their seats during finisher Gary Bettenhausen the brief fracas in 90-degrcc an a race-ending surge of heat. rain drops. The stoning occurred aflcr Rutherford and Bettenhau- Los Angeles had scored all it s sen, both driving Offenhau~r- goals. tY.'o by Jerry Kazarian poy,·erecl ~lcLarens. came <ind one by Doug McMiUian. finish at least one lap ohead Tony Douglas assisted on both back from spins in the race to Kaza rian points. of the rest of th e 2~~llr field. Earlier in the g a 1n e. • A titllOJlfJ WitlS Buc s, 9-4 Jack Hudson and J i m Sparks belled two-run homers in the nm inning, sparking c:oldcn 'Vest Coll ege to a b;tseball victory over invading Orange Coast College Sunday_ OCC's Tom Johnson slugged n fifth Inn ing solo homer. Or•ntt Co••I UI .. ' ' .. ' ' • • . ' ~~ir.;. •;, Swan10n, Jb Morrow, lb B•cwn, n L1>11t1. rl :RlghllY. rl ,John.on, c · z1r"'"'"" 1b H~rlle•. ·1D Ol~Y. Dh Yol!, D Kono 11, Gouall, 11 SI01111n, 11 Tcltl• ' ' ' . • • • • ' . ' . l ~ ' ' ' . ' . • • • • ' . , . " . A g • • • • ' ' ' . ~ g • • • • • • ' . . ' Goldtn Wtll ctl 1b r II rlli Not1n, n HU{l!.Of', ct Mat1111ev. ~· E tc~andy. 11 511•·~·· .. Runoo, lb Brow.,, < ./<bl)Oll, Jb·C Mor!11<1. d~ Oro1co. II CtMllltl!. 11> w~neltv. 21> M&!klen, p II~~''"' II to11111 • ' , ' • • ' , ' , ' ' ' ' . • • • , ' , . ' , ' ' . ' , . ' , ' • • • . ' . b & i A 0 0 0 0 ~' 9 1$ ' l<o•• Ill' lnnint• • • • l DO\VNEY -Earl Anthony , faced \\'i\h a stunning come- from·behind challenge, has rallied to whip l'vtark Roth and 'vin the $75.000 Professional Bowlers Association Championships. Anthony, of Tacomll, Wash., defeated Roth, 218-188, after Roth won two one.g ame playoffs to reach the finals. e /HcGriff Hot RIVERSIDE - Hershel J\lc- Grif( drove a 1969 Chcvellc to a 40.8 second victory in lhe California 100 stock rar rJce here Sunday. The event was a pre!imi11nrv to the Tuborg 4,00 N1\SCAH e\'ent. ~lartiu Win s Track Award Ch ris f.tartin '\'as named most valuable track and field athlete at ~1atcr Dei Hi gh School Su nday at the annual sports a\\1ards rest. S(l('cial ay.·ard y,•inncrs: Vtttill' Trl~k MD\t Valutb!e· (htl• Ma r Ii n. Outsttndi"'I ~un~lfWl E~e"t Joe Dowtir.g; Dvl5!1ndll'l9 Foeld f¥•nl ; Pal Cunnlnq~a"': MC.I lmorovt6: Pl! Mcl(ecn; Mesi ln•11lrationtl; Mar~ Fitil)atrlc~; MMI Valuable S<>1>~ornpre: Biii SI. John; Moo! Valuaolf FrMhll'lan: Jot P•r19ra 1lo, te1m title It has won the past four years rest on slnglH players David Thornburg, a fr e1hn1an, and two ~phomores, Bob Wright and David Eastman. Carnahan and Thornburg wi ll be together in doubles SPORTS while Eastman and Wright '---------J form the other combine. Crtpe, a doubl es participant with Chappell on t h e championship team a year ago, didn't make the squad this time around because of mld·season illness. He is a senior at UCI this year. Seeding of the players from all over the U.S. was made this artemoon with singles competition set to get the action under 1,1,•ay Tuesday moming at 8. Other favorites for the team title include Rollins College of Florida, Hampton Institute, Nichols State of Loul1iana. ?YIJT and .Northwest Missouri State. UCI finished the regular season with a 29-S dual match Pro Net, - Soccer Standings Pnllld!lpflll llo••~ ll•lllmcr1 Ntw Vor~ ••• .61S .111 "' •• ' ,,, " ' ' •• W11ter" DIYlllon record. 'The Anteater.a lost to Gvtf·,111n1 s1ctltft Stanford, UCLA, USC, ~~~:11 /J f :~: California and Pepperdine but ~~~~~ I ll ;!~l came back to win return l'•cn1c•itc11 .... ' • ' h 'hlh I t th L""Ano;ie1t1 n 1 .63? mate es w1t e at er rec Goldtn Ga1er1 1 1 .s11 1 sthools. C h a p p e 11 and ~1-1"":~.11 ~ i: :Wi i~ l<'i~hback played in most of the •-<l•v•l•nd·H•wall 111• m•lclt no1 lf>C(U(lt(I matches, however. s•11m11r'1 G•nM1 The Anteaters y,•ill be ~~,:, J~·10~1~~ ~~Pr-21 ktn d t d r.fth Otnver 79, Hou1lon l1 sec g an unprece en e I L01 Anoeie1 JO, P11lladtlonl• 11 straight championship. B<>1ton "~"8!~,T~e~11';? Three of the wins have been Plttotiuron 21. 1"or0f'10-euu110 11 outright victories and the ~T:v~~-:1~,;.~11~~:1:1 nth er was a du al ,...,._11r1 01ma '· I sh! . h <R 11· . BlllJmor:e....1•\ .,..,...Y0tk _. champ on p wit -o ins 1n -a°''°" V1. Pr11<11a.111.111110 11 11111111o 1972 PJll~'Vfl II Dttrcll • Loi Antelt1 11 Hointon The championship finals in Ftorld1 11 Ml""''°" • d bl ·11 .__ Pl'lllldel!>l>ll II Goh:••• G1ttr• si ngles and ou es WI '-"" Tu•"''"'' o'""' played Sa t Urda Y '"-'ith ,.::;:urQll YI. Toronl0--11111110 II semifinals on Friday and the ~i:~:r.~ ~r"~~.r quarterfinals Thursd'ay. '"' socctr NASL NolMm Dlvhll" Baseball 's Top Ten NATION AL LEAQU£ Pl1¥tr·Chil 0 .llS a Garr A.II Sl 211 lol R. 5ml!h 51 L " 700 JS Grcm. Hrn .SJ 1111 30 0 1,...1¥ LA SI 211 41 MtdCIO~ SF .SI 2Jl ]I Reitz SIL Sl 201 1.S 811tk11tr LA St 1" 28 o. C1sn Phi $6 111 l~ MOr9tn Cln .5-4 lU JI Zl1k Pgh 41 15' 2J H Ptl . 91 .l87 IS .315 J.11 l .•1 11 .lH 11 .Jll 66 .377 " .321 15 .:»S l>3 .323 50 .121 H..,., ltuns wy-. Ltl A.,.1111, 1•1 Schmiot. Pllll1.,.111111a, 14: l tncn. Clntlnn,,1. 11; Coy, LOS ARqtlH, Ot Ctd-. HCU1.lon, ... Rw•• a1l1H Gtrvey, LOI A ........ 11 ; w1nn, LOI A"'''"' Jl1 R. Sm1!h~ sr. Louis, 50; Cey, Lii Ang1lt1, 4S; Lflle,,.,, Hcu oton. "· AM!lll CAN L•.llOUI! Pl•v•r CIUI • Al It M tartw MIJ\ 51 700 ll 79 A. J1clo:ion Olk 4t 176 3.S 61 Ollvt Min II 161 17 .s3 81ombtrq NV •J 136 "tt •• 8. Robln1on 811 SJ 1'1 l.S '3 Jluctl Otk J.i 211 16 67 p,l(ellv CM IO 1$f 11 50 ll:tndlt Tt• 19 U.S 11 4.S 11111rrouo111 Tel ss no :11 6' P!~ltll1 NY 4 111 Jl Si Pel. .J9S ... .321 .J?l ·'" .J\6 .Jll .JIO ... .JC9 Home llU~I R. J.c:-oon, 01-lalld, lS; W. Horlnn. Dtlrall, l•I D. Alltn. CMc100. ll: llrloos. MllwaukH. n: G. H•lllt•. Ne" York, 12: Ma"fbtrrv. 1(1nM1 Cl!v. U; 8u,,ough1. Tt•••· 11. •vft1 ••ntf I" Burroughs, Ttltl, SJ; It, Jack ...... 01"-l1nd, •11 D. l<llen. Cnlctgo. 11; Rudi. 01~ltnd. •1; Mlybllrry, Ktn1;1~ c11..,, .o. PUclli"' l• DKllllftl) G. Ptrrv, Ct1.,..l1o"ld, 10·1. .tt9: Edlildg11 Mllwtu~H. 5-l. . I J] : Fl•1mprrf,. K1ns11 Cltv. s.7, .Ill: l'lf\lle,., O•klf"d, S·7 .. 11•: C..ellar. B1111more. 1.J, 100: B. Atvnoldl . 8~nimore, •·1 .. U1: J. llrown. Te•ao, •·"L .661. WLTW ,TT, Toron10 • l o ' ll Bo1ton 3 • 1 10 31 Aocflel1ler 7 6 o s 17 to wVerk 1 11 1h E11ttrn DIYlllll'll Pllllt!Hlo~!t s 3 0 11 l l Bel!lmore 1 2 O 11 J& Mltml 22 h:lt w1111ln111on 1 • 6 lS Ctnlrll DIYl•lon 01llt1 SI. Lt>YI• Oenvtr , j ? ll 3! ll0141' 1 6 0 ' 19 WnMrn Dlvitllll LOI Angtl11 6 0 7 21 '3 iealtl• I I D 11 l5 S•n Jose l • 7 lJ 31 \11nc<K1.,..r 2 • l I 2) S•tur6•r,'• G1mn L~::01. 1 s't..'1~ "llJ~1!r.r.1k•r Sllfl'lll"t'I GllMI llos!On •· 11111!mor1 1 Nrw Yark 1. Pl'llladtlplll1 t , II• brtlktr Lot ,o,no.ltt l, Roc:l'll1Hr 0 SfflTll 2, V1nc011V1< 0 T~y'I lltllMI W1Jl'llnol11<1 11 ll•1tlmor1 Club A!Mrlc• CMt•l<ol II 5•~ JOI.I, eihll>ltlon WHMlffl''I Gt mt.I SI. L0\111 11 Tlll'll'lllO eo•ton 11 PhrttdelDhit Th11r1f1y'I Otmtl Clvb Arnerlc1 (Mt•ice> w1. 51n Joie al S1cr•mtf\!o. e1n1Dit.on Frid•Y'• Gilmtl Denver e1 Roc:l\!'1!1• New Vor~ et Mltml s1111rd1v•1 o~mes T!ll"ontc 11 Boston W•~hlnqton ,, P~lledelpnl• D&llas 11 St, L11Uh Baltimore ill See!lle S~ndty'I Glm•ll San JOM II LOI Anotlll B11timort 11 \lancou~tr Uni~erllaad (MOndur11l 11 New YIJl"k, t•hibilion Laguna Dinner Laguna Beach High·s annual sports au'ard banquet honoring the baseba ll . volleyball . golf and tennis teams u·ill be lleld tonight in !he school cafeteria. beginning at 7. The track team will be feted Tuesday evening at lhe Top or the World School \\"ith a potluck affair starting at 6. BUY Baseball Standings " OR LEASE 1974 VOi.VO 142 2 door. (4163521 • BUY OR, LEASE NEW 1974 TOYOTA Corolla, l 11701 67) ... MOKTH t TM. 16 NG. 0& VISIT OUR USED CAR HEADQUARTERS '72 VOLVO 142 2 Door 4 speed, radio, hEla.ler Juel 1n1ecl1on (18tiELT) 52977 '72 TOYOTA Cnhca 4 dr 4 ~otted, Air Cood , mags, wide oval Ures. (!>1SESHJ 52177 AMERfCAN LEAGUE East Division w L Boston 30 25 !l.-1ilwaukee 28 " Cleveland 27 27 Detroit 27 27 New York 28 30 Baltimore 26 28 \Vtst Division Oakland 32 " Texas 29 27 Chicago 26 25 Kansas City 26 28 Angels 2S 32 ~1iMesota 22 29 Sw11C11y'1 Gtmtl Detroit S, AMtll 3 Tt••• 3, 81l1lmor1 1 Nevt Yer~ C, Ml~!\t14tl 3 l os!Ol'I 10, Cnlt1~ ' Cltv•llncl I, 1(1n11t C.lty I Otllll~d S, MllWl\lkll ' Pct. .!45 .538 .500 .5\J\J .483 .481 .571 .518 .510 .431 .439 .431 GB ,, , .• 3 .. 3'6 31:: 3 31\ 5 71'. 71.i ,~,,~1·1 01mt1 Te•8S (Brown \.?) a Oe1<oll (C~ltm~" 6·61 AJ\tlll (MIV O·H ti New York (Medi(h 7-4) 01llltnd {8hot i·Sl &! Bo»tMI {ll6n! I·~) l11ltlmor1 (McNellv •·'l el Mlnntsoll lCot'bln )·0 or Gct11 1.11 Onh 11•mH Kfll!<IUl!d Tue,d1y•1 G1mt1 Olkl1nd ti B1"ton Tex11 1t O.trolt AMtl• •• Nrw y~ ~\llweulltt at 1(1""' C.lll' t lltltrllll't 11 Mlnnno•• c11-..r1ne1 11 Cl'tlc-aa NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division w L Pct. GB Philadelphia 30 26 .536 St. Lou is 27 27 .5\J\J 2 l\.1ontreal 2' 25 .490 212 New York 23 32 .418 6~~ Chicago 2t 30 ,41 2 6" Pittsburgh 2Q 32 .385 8 West Division Dodgers 42 t6 .724 Cincinnati 32 22 .593 8 Atlanla 3t 26 .544 10·~ Houston 30 28 .517 t2 San Francisco 30 30 .500 13 San Diego 23 39 .371 2t ' • r.101111"~ J1111~ io 1117"1 South flas th e Quickness , Says San Cle1nente?s Yoder By ROGER CARLSON Df 1t11 .DtllY ,IMt Sltll Some people might be undt'r the Impression thal lf the South can contain the sco ru1g ~nch of All-American r-.tark \Vulfemeyer to some degree of rea$0n the south sh 0 LI Id reverse its four-point underdog role &lturday night at Orangi.: Coa!I College. It's the nlnlh renewal of the Orange County A 11 • s t a r baskelball game and one of ' the key performers for the Rebels of !l.tarina coach J in1 Stephen! is San Clemente's Bob Yod er - a youngster on his way to l!SC in the fall . Yoder's ei:periences at San Clemente include competition ! ai;iainst El Dorado's Jim De\Vcese and Katella's Jcrr \Yelshans and he quickly dispels the thought that if you stop 'Vulfemeyer you stop the North. "I was in a matchup with Deweese for about a half oiice and he posted up pretty well with a four-inch advantage," says the 6·2 Yoder. ;'And 'Velshans is good around the key and on the defensive boards. ''But I think we can do the job. we·11 have to beat them 1,1,•ith speed. There isn't as much riding on this game as during league. bul everyone will be up for the game." Y®er. is pla[lning..:.... o n attending USC after earning a 3.8 g.p.a. academically and will try to make th e Trojans' basketball squad as a walkon. Yoder has the South 's offense and defense down pat si nce the Tritons at San Clemente utilized the passing game offense and man·to-man pressure defense as thclr basic tactics. The only p1·oblen1 Yoder ha$ experienced is roUnding in!o shape physically -and !hat i~ becoming less of a task each day. lle missed the South 's first tv;o y.·orkouts. but additional work on the weekend and the good attitude in Practice is making Yoder one or the ma}o r cogs in the South oittack. "He 's a i:tood kid," say~ S.1uth assistant coach Sh!I'•· l'opov lch In St e p h c n s' ~b~{'llC't'. "\V e think he has the hel1th1 :ind ubilil y to c on I a i 11 \\'u!tcm~·ycr, but we hal'cn't really n1:idc up our 1n1nds yet huw we intend to play it. .. Yoder's best shot Is lhl' outside ju1nper, although he exhibits a smooth s!yle on the fast break and played guard and forward during his senio r ye:ir. lie faced Wulfemcyer in a pre-season scrimmar;:e and the Troy Hig h fl:1!Jh didn't do ntuch offensively and p!ayt'<i Yoder toos4'.?ly on dcfcn.sc.. But Yoch~r won't say much about th<1t co 11 Ir o n t oi, t ion t:Kpla1n1ng. "neither of u.s playt."'<l all the way. " DlllV Piiot Sllll PllOIO SAN CLEMENTE'S BOB YODER ------ De ep Sea Fish Report )AN DIEGO -991 a~Q1e•i )'I ve\lowlill. •l9 ba,.acud•, Ill n•llhut. l4 1>onl10. ?,SllO •Ge"-cod, 71) (oOh<ll l>a'~ SEAL 81E.llCH -UJ angler\ ?.}(JO •OC~ coa. I <OW cad, I lone er.cl, 'ClhCC b~ii. 1.1 mtckerel. 1111'"'9 -Ill 4nqle'" 60 l)Ollllo. • •end tuu. LONG tr.EACH IS-'fi1llin,) -191 ar>gltrs: ? yet1ow!1ll, HJ ttllco blH. Ii~ fOCk coa, 11 tlllCQ l>IH, 3 n111Dut. 1.6~1 '"""-coo. NEWPDRT IAH'1 LllHlffll) -16S ano1e .. • 121 twrr1cudt, 711 t•lico 11o11.-. 7S fOClc tod, Sl l>l>ltbfn, I hAl ll>Ut. 1 mac~erel, I 11lmon. 4 D•Y•y'• LOC~l<I -1:xl anqle"' l3 1>1rr1cva1. IS ~•~d 1><1s1, 310 rcc:k coo. I h•ll1>11!, I 11lmon D.\HA WHARF -'1'17 •n91~r1: 1,lll cah•o btn. n l!M•tc11<11, IC• !>Mil~. 1) ~~llbut, UI tock tod. l wMI~ Stt DI '"· REOONDO -JH angle<s: 11 ~eHOw· M•l, •IS cal.CO tui•" ISl blue tMo••· l •,oe -71• anole•s= 11 1a"d Nu. s n1llt>Y!. 7.tJI rock u1ct. OC EANS IDIE -111 lnQltrs: l'I b•rf•Cuct1, ot llCl"llo, !""It ~•nd Dan, S wnlle lll baJI, 1 ¥ellowttll, 4 h11lDul, IQ m1clcerel. SAN l'IEDRO U2o.d Streel Lllldlf'l!I) -!90 l "<ll•'l: 18 vtllowt•ll, '•!? c1 lico bin, S!IO blut wn. :)U rcc:lc cod. SO Dlln•IO CS-'lllN"t) -1'7• •no1tt•: '9 ~eHowllll. S boftllo. '31 tallco btn, 150 •OC:k tod. Di<IL v PILOf . I Racing Entries Cltlf", lf•ck ltM, ,l'lt .-t t1H .... U ••"• tlr•I r11" IS 111tr11 6tll. •~ •M fltl r•tn. ,.llliT llACl -).1.0 1d•, J Vttr olllt Cltl"llng. Pllfi.t 114.00 c111mr111 ,.-ke ..... No*'"' rJ. C•••o•rl P•m'1 Aocktl IS. Wolk.,.) Min t<tlhle l1r II(. Clt•lll.I) "no'""' Wl\lr !ti. Ctrao11) Ttw Lii eum Cl , LfDll•"11 ,,.oonl!rt IJ tlfl>Ott•I ll:llotfl JQol! !R, Ad•Jr) HOW'l $!11"1nY B!W Ill. !linkO S•. LD\lh Jr. (J Wtll~l Mt. T~ SDOI (A, Ar tll1l SIECOND llAC.I! -I/II vtrds, J Vt l' (lid\ & \ID. Cl1lml11g. Pulll 51.00. c1~1,.,1nv prict 11600. Dlomond Bari IL. ll•ltcu ) ereeit ,t.c~ount !~. W1lkul Yo Qu l"o IL. Mvle•I Wtr P1ten fJ. K1nls) Miid PUDPY (0. l(nlghll "''"'td Ctllt IJ. WllKll'I) OOl'I l(.ar IE. Gtrr1l Mlaw1v Tom (I(. Hartl THlllD ltACE -)lO Ytrd1, I Vttr 01!11. C1a1,..,;1111. P11tst 11600, CltlfTlll'IJ pr ltl ...000. ll!Wt! Go Flt~ IS. Trt1 •..,tl S110ill!l1 F!rll CJ. R!c~rctl\ Plt6M Remit CJ Wtfdl Nickl J•d II(. li1rll _.. B"°'' LOii! IJ. C•e•of'"rl Fiil' S\Jst!le fl . ~Vlw<IJ \'lt•PV W1r .. or 10. M"'"') l.llorotv Mtdlint CM. lic~eH SMl••n B•• Vo co. KJ\iQhtl FOU RTH 11.llCE -110 y1rao. J ~•u OIGI & UD. c111 .... 1n9. l'ur:.e 1'200. C l1imlt19 p.rlte '3XIO . Pl.,gtd In cs. Tte••u••l o~ Tne House !A. Aa1lrl Allrulnlt; (R. 8•nk•l • C1ll!or.,i1 S11>c:11 (J. Cre1gerl G•oerlno (T. Ll~fltm) 8trrlno fl(. Htt!l FIF TH RACE -600 y1rd1, l v11r old• a. up. Cl1imlno. Punt $XOO . Cltimloo Jl'ICt $1J,(l(I, Rlglll On B•Dll!'r (R. 81f1•1I Co11n1y Ftthoni'-!T. LIJKi1m) Cfllllfr (J. Frtrerl Nl11 Fllghl (C. Smit~) FIHI Coov CR. Ad1lrl Svrter SlndV (H. P•ge\ w1 .. w1111, IE. G••1a1 Rat~ on Man IJ. llroo•O Sl l(TH ll:ACI! -IOO vards. l ~t .. r old•. AHowtr.ct. Puri• nooo. Ge Red l"o• (J, Rl<~~•d1) Pre~I Club fl. Mvll>I $nM111n CL. Ballou > F1ee1·~ Oupe: (J. W•rd) Dual MllS CT Lii:>fltml Dlaie'1 Vtrn CJ. Cr,~gfrl Sol~nollo (0. CerGo1al Ratnl Jtl (S. Tftt1urt1 1.111e"Oc: Nole cc. sm1lh) D'lll (II:. Adair) SIE VEHTH ll:ACIE -JSO v1•ds l Yt~r Olds & ~p. Allowante. Purse '4000 Myrl') ((oOY CH, Pii;t) Ro•tl Go Go lL. 81!1oul Mortg• Roc:•el lE. G1r"I Mr, Thr" Wlfl (.fl. Ar1ll•I AuDY legonl1 (J. Wtrd) 1(1wten Ber CR. Adlirl Top M1•ttr (S. W•l•trl l.\onkv'• Angel (0. l(fllgnl) GG For Two (S. T••••Uft ) I'm For Vcu IT. LIJKi1mJ EIGHTH RACE -000 v1rd1. l Y~•r ol<i1. C11 lmlnQ. P~r1• '2000. Cl1lmlng Pritt Sl>OO. Wfle1llencl I K. Hirt) Miu A~llo 1~ co. Morrl1l Smootn JI Ol'e• IS. W1lktrl Vall~V Betv (S, Tr••..irt l M•. Wlli11le !J, w1rdl Bo BloODY (J. Wtli.cn) V•ll~n! Gltnf\ (I(. Clerl1M) Jolly Old Soul JT. LIDhl ml Priml~lla IL. MVlts) wnhutr'• Geld (M. l lcke!l NINTH llACE -JKI y1td1. ] '''' old1 & up. (.l1lml"ll, PurH 51.00. Cl1lmln9 l>fk• 51600. D~MV'I Jet lR, 81nlt1J Jo BurfeH 4J. Wirdl (•MD B•y 8•r {E. Glrll) Jl~ylnm Mi n ID. C1rd011l p,eler 800 CC. 5mlllll Bold Roman !K. Cler11H) Little Olt• ltt (I(. Htrt) EigM~ WOfldtr (R. Ad•!rl Mldwev Oandv tT. Ll[lll1m) Gold $11<ll"QI (Q. MOrfllJ Utsy Ford Courier d urability starts with a box·section frame reinforced with seven crossmembers. An independent front suspension feat ures big coll ~ springs and a stabilizer bar. Long, wide rear springs have six leaves. Dual cylinder brakes have 2 brake cylinders at each wheel. The all-steel box is all-welded. And a Courier easily carries up to 1,400 lbs, of payload and people. Sporty The Courier pictured at right and below sports a dress-up kit that includes such optional features as stripes (i n your choice of 4 colors), wheel covers, mirrors and a rear step ra1t or bumper, There 's also a popular bike-bar option (right). And a deluxe box cover option (nol shown) has tinted side windows. Automatic transmiss ions and air conditioning are also available options. Th rl•rty courier's spirited ;soo-cc. engine gives you all the operating economies you'd expect from a 4-cylinder import. And . . the engine's S main bearings ... for rigidily and strength ... are designed to help promote troubte·free service over the long haul. For more details on this gutsy little economy pickup ... and its little import'price ... see your Ford Dealer. • ur1er ' See your local Ford Dealer • • FORD COURIER FORO OIVI SION .. I~ j l l J 8 DAil Y PILOT Mo11d31, Junt 10, 1'114 Newport's Beaucha~p Bi:others Place I ~21 --_-~-~~~-.. :-l:-:-~-:-~-~-~--:-:---1~~!~~~~~1\~Fo~::~~~;=~~.1~~::=~~r~:i~·=~J~~.~~~~1~:~~~~.~ Regattct The Beauchamp famil y of Newport Beach were well represented at Coast Catamaran·s \Vind N' Sea J T... IOlll!Wlnt Pl•-1 ''' dolnti M•V ti, lt14 M IMll 11; on "'°''°" ol MtMll9r Tl\om~I (, CIRCll tltl!ALTV, IHl1 M•onoll1 C1w., duh• 11Concl.cl 1MI ctrdld, IM $t1ff!, Fou11u1111 11111..,, c.iuornl• t21'0I 1oi1ow11111 R1.01u11on w11 HO!)ltr. JOHN ltALPH RVSSO. 10210 1!1 WHEREAS, II 1opt1r1 !twit !Pis 51tltl MOll!t•I'>' """ Founltn V I I I 1 y, Ho.pl111 E11m..,11ry 5<'1«11 11!e (1to911 C•lllornl1 t210t OUtrlptlon 11t.c'*d r.er~ ll'ld m11~1a GI.ADY$ LOI.Ill!: RU$$0, 10210 Et 1<•~11,ilt "A") eor11l1ll119 I "lut/mln11k MGflttr~. F1>Unttln \11lli1y, C1l!!o<nl• 1cr11, the Sitt• Ho1pll1I 1 i.rm1<ll1!1 ,11, tUDI lllJlltl d11crlp1I011 1tt1c l\trtlll •lld 1 T~l1 MIMtl 11 Cor>d!Xllld l>Y •11 m•rktd Ealllbll "8"J ' 1itllflll ol II l11C1lvld111I. plu1/ml11u1 1e11, t p 11011 ol ln.t JOl'oll tlttpll •uoo T111~er El•mlf'flty I.. ( I.' • 11 Th!t 1l1l1mlf'I w11 !lied wllh tM d11crlpUan t llltllld ht,.lo 111d mtrktd Co.inty Cltrl 61 OrtnQI COUMY ~ Mtv E•lllbll "C") t0111l1tln; Of $ plul/mlnu• 23, ltl( .cr11 tlld • portion 61 lllf W•k•h•m , '" 3'111' lnltrmtd!ate 1111 Uto•I OtKrlpllon PUl!Jl1htd Orl!'IQI CCNlll OallY f'lktf, 1!1acfltd llerelo 11\d m1rked Exnlbll "0") Mtv 17, 11\d Ju.,. 3, 10. 11, 1911 11'1•11 cot1~1llllO 01 10 pl111/m!n111 It••• ,,. no1 now 1N1 wlU f\01 bt netdtct l<1r 1e11oc1 c1111room bulk:lh1911 tlld r."HEll:liAS. tl\t CllY ol Co1ti Mt11 n11 '--:=====:--:-:-c=:---1 Ol!trtd10 l)Urth&M ••Id r11I prOJMrTY I« 1· SUl"Ell0111 COUJIT OI' THt: park tlld rKr11tlon purl)OW• on tlll bt1l1 PUBIJC NOTICE STATI •• '''"01Hll. FO• OI 1:u.ooo l)fr "''' ror the Sltll HO$plt1t Elomenttry .it1. 133,s1• PH 1cr1 tor •he THE COU NTY 0,. OIAHGE $!tit Hoip!tal lnl1rmtdl1!t 1l1t, Ul,Utl i N., A•IOt per acrt lor 11111 pa1!fon cl Int T1n•g~r Regatta at D,.ana Point Sunday f:.._-.-."~"'--~-"<\:<I'"""'~~··.·~,..~~--~· ..... ~-­v.•ith brothers Bob and Dick • taking the first tv.'O places in NOTICI! 011' Ml!AllNG 011' ,l!TITION fl9m41nt1ry till Ind Ul,120 r--r acre tor 1'01 P'IOIATI! OF WILL ANO FOi '""' part1011 ol 1111 W•~"1wlm ln!U ml· dl•lt olle propallld to be co<iveyni; 1nd Ll!nlill TliSTAMENTAlllV CIOND WHEREAS IN ro1weva<1C• ol ~aid rt•I WAIVt:O) ' E1111e ol ROBERT MARTI~ KOENIG, pr-rly 11 111 COl'llormlly w. t II tka ROBERT MARTIN KING, nC!'C .. H<I. Governm•nl C<>M Secllon 6s.ia? IP'l<I NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVE N 1tllt cannot and will nol ll1vt 1 1lo11Ulc1nt FERN CLEETOH KOENIG llt• tlltd al~! Oii !Ill tnvlr()llm•nl: COURAGEOUS WITH MAN UP THE STICK Tuning For America's Cup Tria ls Intrepid Ending Overland Voyage NE\VPORT, RJ. (AP ) - After a cross+('Ountry journey marked. by blistering heat and a stop sign from safet y· conscious police. the 12·meter .\·acht Intrepid was expected here today to be put into shape for its attempt at a second straight America's Cup. Shortly after the flatbed truck carrying the yacht began its journey in San Diego, i\fay 29. it encountered temperatures above I O O degrees in Arizona t h a t cracked the yacht's paint. in Long Island Sound to Newport under tow. at 2 p.m. THE BOAT WAS to he removed from the 11·ater here, repainted and measured. It is expected back in the ~·ater by next Saturday and its cre•v IYill arrive from California to sail it. America·s Cup trials .begin June 24, \1:ith observation trials scheduled for July 13·24. Before it can defend against a foreign foe the cup it won in 1970. Intrepid must get past ~1ariner and Coorageous, two American yachts it wilt face in elimination races beginning Aug. 15. The deadline for s e 1 e ct ion of a U.S. representative is Sept. 2. ' the Hobie C.at-l6°A division and the family yacht Dorothy 0 on the scene as race committee boat. The two day regatta drew 112 OOats. Results: llOBIE-16A -(I) Dick Beauchanlp, Corona de\ Mar; (21 Bob Beauchamp, Corona de! ~Iar: (3) Hobie Alter, Capistrano Beach. HOBIE·t6B (t) Jay Gifford, Huntington Beach; (2) J im Brooks, Huntington Beach; (3) Jim Cotton, Dana P()int: (4) Yell Geilinger, S\l·itzerland; (5) Dick Kun, 'Big Bear Lake. HOBIE·l6C -(I) Nick carter, San Diego; (2l Lance Consaul, San Diego; (3) Glen Pickren, Vista; (4) Paul Clemmer, l\lission Viejo: (5) Rick Andrs, San J u a n Capistrano. HOBIE CAT·JU -cITJOfiil Golden, San Diego ; (2) Phil Berman, Newport Beach; (3) Terry Haake, Tustin: (4) Lon \\'alcker, Newport Beach; (5) ?>.like Bolman, San Diego. HOBIE-14B ·_ (I) Denny Soden, Anaheim: (2l l\1ack \Vright. Torrance; (31 Paul Mayeski, Spring Valley. HOBIE·l4C -(II Ray La Fleur. San Diego. HOBIE-12 -(I ) Ste\'e. Hatch. San Bernardino. _ Langford Outlasts 19 Others Kurt Langford of \Vindjammers Yacht C lub beat 19 contenders to "'in the .~, '\. OlllJ P'l .. I Slfff PholtM J htttlll • PtllllOl'I tor Proti.lt ol Will ind NOW, T If e R E F 0 R E ' 8E IT for lnu-..:• ot Lt!tefl Tesl1l'Nnl1ry to RESOLVEO tllal 11111 BCNlrd ot EdUClllon 11\e .,.illlontr CDOl\d w1lvtc1) refert nce to htfetw 1lgnlll11 Ill lnTtnllon lo convey wlllcll 11 mtde lor lurtnu p1rtlcular1, and Mid reel propertv to Ille Cll~ of Co••• 11111 1111 lime and pl1c1 of llll•rlng tht Me•• pur1uan1 to Education COde Slcilon !lllme l\11 l>Hn •II lor June 11, 191~. 11 16201 et 11q. tor 1111 prl<e lat fortll l\tf"el~. o:)I) 1.m., . 111 tl'le c011•1toom ol abave on 1ne following t<ldlllonal ,,,m~, Oeparlmtnl No. ! of 1•ld tOllrl, 11 700 (I) Tll& p.11rcn1s. price 1llall bl t•lculltt<I Civic C1t11ter Orlvt Wiii, In 1111 City o! upon 11\t cornplttlon of a sutVIY or Other S•nl1 An1, CaUlorn!1. ' verUlct!IOll ot 11\t are• ol uld ilta 1fl(f DllMI May Jtl, 197• •n1n bl p1ld In c1111; (2) An escrow sl\lll WILLIAM E. SI JOHN, lie opellld with 1111 Flnt A~lc•n Tltle -Countv Clt•k Comp1ny, s1ld escrow to be tompleled IUCHAJID C. HAl.T during June, 1'1,, al the e•rlit1t AtlOl'M'f II l•w pr1tllca1111 dalt, tll'll'Mt COl1l o• IUC:h 424 S..111 .. W'l'l'f OrlYI 11crow lncludlng 11111 Insurance 10 bt 11110 8l""''f Hllt1, C11itornl1 "111 by 1111 clly. T•li Olli 11t..»J1 BE IT FUFlTHER ll:ESOLVEO tn.1 11\t All-f hri 1"11111-Clerk ol 11111 6o.ird 1n.H publl"1 thl• PR·7SO Reso!ullOll In tl"ll O<"lnot Coast Dally P\lblllhtd Ol"ill\Clt ::CN1•I Dally PJ1<1I. Piiot, a ntWtP&P•• put11l11\ed In lllCI ol Junt l, 1, 10, 1911 2011.11 11-••l clrculatlOl'I !n this 011tr!ct 011ce 1 PUBJJC NOTICE 111111ek tor rllrM Wffkt prior to Junt 19, 197" tl'Mt d•lt H I 1or Ille m1~!119 of !UC:h .. ,, bV lhfi 8CN1rd. AVES: MEM8fRS Am~url}fV, lltt· gelOll, CIH~ lftnder\Ol'I, M•CMllll1n, Cha11apa9ne ILP'•JUM s~~~wscr;ociMeMTerr-no ... SUP'EllOll COURT OP' THE ABSE NT: MEMBERS -none Marilee Allan (left) and STATE OJI" CALIFORNIA FOR $TATE o~ CALIFORllltA ! Nl·n a Nielson !second THE COUNTY 01' OIANGI ) 11. ,. .. Am5t COUNTY OF OllANGE J from right) and crew-OIOEll TO SHOW CAU51E 1'01. CHANGE I, Marlal'I c. B1rge$Ol'I, v t ( e OF NAME Preslde11t1Clerk of Ille Board ot EducatlM men Nelle Alexander, 1n 1111 M1111r o1 MAHIJEL Ll•cto ()l 1111 N1wport·M•1i un111t0 schocf N • c d OIOSDAOO For Chl'IV' of Heme Ol1!rlct ol Orlfllll Counly, C1ll!ornl1, 00file OOOey an WHE REAS, 1111 appllcatl~ of MANUEL hire~ certlty 11111 the ~bave '"" Anne Preston toast Lucio 01os0Aoo 1or cl\eng1 01 f\lm1 torf90Jno ReK11u11on 111111 duly and na1 t>te11 duly llled with tl'Mt cltrk ot 11111 r~ut1rly ....,.,,ed bY Ille wld Board •t • ~-their Princeton victory C011r1, •lld n. aPP:..r~ti'OiTl"Ti -·nvut1r~mee11no ·T11t--rot01 liil"d °" 11w~21s1 in the COCkpi"t Of the lppllcallon the! wld appllcanl Olllrts lo dlY of May, lf14, Ind pissed bV I navt his n•mt '"'""" to the prOPl)Ud unal'llmou• v<1te or an mtrnDtrs ol wld Lido-14 after final race n1ml! of MANUEL OIOSOAOO, JR. lloird. HOW, THEREFORE, 11 lf l'Mtrtby IH WITNESS WHEREOF, I hl•f of Women's National ordered •nd directed 11111 111 oer1on1 11er111n10 se• mv h1nc1 and .eal tnls 2111 Intercolleg.ate S il · g lntere11ed In 11111 uld men...-of Ch.il"'Ufl of day ol May, 1971. I a Ill name •PPt•• befwt •bave 1t11lltled court, M••lon c. Berge1011 Championship. M i s s In 0tp1rtmtn1 l '""""'· locattd at 700 Viet Pr1s111en11c1erk of All I f Civic Ctnltr Orlv1 Wtsl, S1nl1 An1, wld Bord ·of Educ:allon an ( e t) and 1\.1iss ca111orn1a, on""' 2'l'ld day o1 Jutv, 1,1,, ,, Aodet"kk H. M1cMm1111 Nielsen congratulate tl\e nour ot 10:00 •.m. the<i and 111ere 10 orv1t11 AmDuroey $1\oW caust, If 1ny tlley htVf. lfllllv Ille 00111ld E. Sm1llw'>C<I each other on 11Tigress" •aotic111on for cn1nge 01 n•m• sllou!d not Tllllm•' c. c1r.ey · l · h be oran1td. Thomts W. Henlk!rMll\, Jr. VIC Ory OVer n1ne Ot er IT 15 FURTHER OltOEREO 1nal 1 Ar1nur F, Thompson schools (left). ccpy of rnis order be publlsned In tM Mtmbers ot 111e bu•d ~' -----------. 0111., ~/1<11. • ne-ws1>1oer 01 {lener11 ~d~::i'Scr::!oi'~is~ri:'t~'-M"" -drcutahOll, prlntt<I Ind put>lhht<I In IM ofeiigt County. C•llf\)f".1i1 July 4th Race 2nd Largest Cllv ol C<1111 Me11, County <If Or1ngt, Published Oranoe Coa1t 01lly P!lo!, S!att of C1lltornl1, orw:t a Wtek for June ~. lG, 17 1914 204'·1' lour (I) successive we.~s arlo• 10 th• •'""·-·------· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmw daft allOYt r.et for ll•t 1111rlf'19 of s1ld ap. p11cer1on. C11ed Mav "· n1' • FRANK COMEHCl-!INI Judge of llMI Super'or C~url llOKALD M. P'AENNEI 3U Wtsl TlllrG $1rfff S11'1t1 A111, C1Wtor11l1 011) 511>4Jl1 A1tor111r• for P'ittlll-r Published Orlngt CCNI" 01lly Pilol, LEASE A '74 610 SEDAN 'tt"mo. , fa•lll'l\O.OE.l COSTA MlSA DATSUN 2145HAllOl11.YD .. C.M. 54M410 MIV 20, 21, Ind JUM 3, 10, 1911 1810..71 ... """""""""""""""~"""""""""~ The Marina del Rey to San JUNE SALE I JOE CARLOS Diego yacht race in seven ' PLUMllNG CO. ye ars has grown to be the We need your Trade! L"c.N<>, 21952~ nd I t · t f Prc1m1um prices p<11d. Pho1t1 seco arges • in erms o EXCTLLENT SELECTION 548-5558 WHEN THE TRUCK reached Ansonia. Conn.. at about ll p.m. Saturday, local police stopped it. It remained in a parking lot for four hours before being al1011·ed to resume its trip. Jack D.:i\·is. the tr u c k driver, said police 11· ere concerned about having the large truck on !he road during normally heavy traffic hours. The challenger will be determined in a series off here. beginning Aug. 2 2. bef\\'ccn Southern Cross of Australia, and France II of France. Westlake Cup in \Vestlake -------------------- Yacht Club's third annual entries. to the Newport to I d Del 1675 Superior Ensenada race. mme iote ivery Costa Mesa \\1hen the seventh renewal of NA B E RS l~oc:•_,,. The vacht reached a Branford: Conn., shipyard at 5 a.m. Sunday and began its trip The best-of-seven series to determine this y e a r ' s Ame rica's Cup v.·inner begins off here Sept. 10. - regatta for the t r o p h y Saturday, The Westlake Cup goes to the winner in the largest class. Langford was the winner in the 20-boat Sabot fleet. The regatta drew 81 boats in 8 classes. Summary Mari1ta del Rey SABofr 1!0) -II) Kurt Langford, WVC; (2) Tom Linskey, \VYC: (3) Charles Heatherley, WLYC; (4) l\f. Folkman. \VL YC. He1111essy Races Set f 01· August CORONAD0-15 119\ -II\ Jim Holder, \VLYC: ( 2) Dennis Parker, \\'L ''C: f3 ) Del Parker. \VLYC ; (4) Dick Ohst, KHYC. The Hennessy California Cup for offshore J>O"'erboats ,viii get under ...,·ay Aug. 24 in the waters of r..1arina del Rey. The event is the foren1ost offshore powerboat race on the West Coast, featuring custom-designed ocean racing boats that plunge through seas Balboa Skippers Do111i11a .te Balboa Yacht Club skippers dOminated the Lido-14 Fleet I championships, sailed Satur· day and S u n d a y insicle the bay, taking nine out of the first 10 places. THE WJNNF:R \\'as Dave Ullma n of BYC. a former national chatnpion in the class. \Vinner in the consolation flight was Don Bartz of South Sailing Club. Winner of the trophy for thr tlrst Class B skipper to finish was Jim Forsyth of Dahi n COrinthian Yacht Club. Summary: CHA~fPJONSIDP FLIGHT -(I) Dave Ullman, BYC: (2) Bllt McCord, BYC : "1 Argyle Campbell, SVC; (41 .Jack McClarty, BYC ; 15! Scott Schoc:k, BYC : (6) Jim Tyler, BYC! (7) J\.111rty Lockney. LIYC; (8) Gared Smith. HYC; (9) John Thorne. BYC; (IOI Rowland Lohman, BYC. CONSO~ATION FLIGHT - -(I J Don Bartz.SSSC; (21 Oon Webb, BYC: 13) Fred T0<p<I, BYC. ) LIOO·l4A (7) -( 1) Harry at speeds exceeding 80 miles \Vood. ABYC; (2) Dana North. per hour. SGVSC; (3) Larry~aker, The start and finish line \vill CYC. be just outside the entrance to LI00-14B 17) -1) Verne l\Iarina del Rey. Hess. Pt. Dume YC: (2) Bill The race is co-sponsored by Frisch, KHYC; (3) Jenn the Pacific Offshore Pov.'er \Vright, SBYRC. Boat Racing Association and / Jas Hennessy Co. Host \\'ill ~eVCLONE SEl\'TOR (JO) the t-.larina de! Rey Chamber (I) Gary \Vard, Ana YC: (2) of Commerce. Lou ~fcKee. \VLYC: (3) l\1ark Besides the Hennessy Cup Bratton. \VL YC. for the overall "'inner, other CYCLONE JUNIOR <1) - trophies arc the Hal Roach (11 Glenn Uslan, \VLYC: (21 Trophy for the first boat to Ole Eichhorn. Ana YC; (3) reach the wes t end of Catalina (,'hris Rista. \VLYC. Island and the Cat a Ii n a HOB1E·12 (7) -(1) Bill Challenge Cup for. the first 1'.1essenger. t>.ff-IYC: (2) 1'.fike boat lo round Catalina. Byrne, VVC : (3) R 0 b Ouhs Ask Labor Day Entries Dana Point Yacht C1ub and Silv.ergate Yacht Club of San Diego have called for entries in their second annual Labor Day San Clemente Island race scheduled Au~ .. ~1. Sep!. 1-2. The race is open to Per- fonnancc flandicap Racing Fleet. San Diego Handicap Fleet and ~fidget Ocean Rac- ing Fleet yachts. The race sta~ Aug. 31 at Dana Point. leaves SRn Clemente Island to port and fini shes at San Diego. The distance is 134 miles. Deadline for finishers has been extended this year to 3 p.m. ~5cpt. 2. Safety equipment as specified for each class for offshore racing will be re- qvfred abo:rd :ill entrants. Last Y<'ar·~ lnau "ural race had 8l1 str.ncrs. Th is year's rl}Ce is likely 10 hll\'l': evf'n more, acron:lln.~ to Coin· modore Charles Smith and race commiuee chairman Keith 1.Iinctte of DPVC. • ~tacFarland, LBYC. Pair Take Windsurfer Trophies \Vindsurfers. those standup sailing boards, i riv a de d· Castaic Lake Sunday and t"·o Newport skippe rs b r o u g h I home trophies. Winner in Class B was ~tac Coombs of Newport Beach and Frank Walter, also of Newport placed fourth In Class A. Results: CLASS A -II) Matt Schweitzer, PacUic Palisades: (2) Doug Day, Pacific Palisades: (3) Pat l.ove, Santa ~fonica; (4) rrank Waltze, Ne"'Port Beach; f5) Malle SIMer. Pacif ic Palisades. CLASS B II\ Mac Coombfi. Ne"•port Beach: 12 l John Bayless, i\lalibu ; (3) Ann Day. PaclfK' Palisades: ( 4 I Wes Ogle. Santa i\1onlca : (5/ Neal Johnson. Simi Valley. the July 4 race gets under way ~ '"'' the entry list is expected to ' • Ow Specialty approach the limit of 300 "For• Wottt Hffffr · • Kit· Transhay Race Zeus Captures toats. The race is co -0"EN 1 0"vi; clwlt or A loth in StyW -Please Call 540-9100 lllld For R o1 Qui k s.r · sponsored by Windjammers 2600 Harbor Costa Mesa ' c •ic• Yacht Club of Marina del Rey l ~==========~~G~·~··~•="~Jo~·=··~·~·~·~·~··===~ and Southwestern Yacht Club\-ot San Diego. Overton Honors Pre -race activities start June 29 with the San Diego to Marina de! Rey cruise by ,: yachts expecting to participate z Phil Gilbert's custom· designed 39-foot sloop Zeu.s (rom Pacific Mariners Yacht Club ...,·on California Yacht Club's Point Dume Transbay race Saturday to s e c u r e overall honors in the six-race Overton Series. Zeus' best five of six races "·ere four firsts and a second. The 52-mile Point Dume race had 105 entries in the Overton, and Matt Walsh series, all of \lilich sailed the same course. (3) Damoise\le, Steve Deskey, in the race. WYC will stage a ! CYC; (4! \Vhlte Cap, t-.:like pre-race party on July 3. 1 Eisenberg. \VYC; (5) Emily Post-race activities are J J Ct eye centered a t Southwestern An. oe ay, . Cl PHRF _ (1) Boopsie, Dan Yacht uh. They include the ... Cohen, \VYC: (2) Fortune post·race party July 5 and the ~ Cookie, Alan Bergen, SCYC: trophy presentation July 6. i. 13) Sundog, Hal Snyder, i DRYC; (41 t-.fanua, Bob C G d i Morris, CYC; (3) Windbome, OUSl Uat• ~ Howard Ryan, CYC. -I MORF-A (Matt Walsh Made Switch 1 Series) -(I) La Diana, Fred 1 Huffman, BWCC: (2) Blue The Coast Guard servetl f Ribbon, Jon Williams, CYC; under t he Treasury:& IOR OVERALL -(I) Zeus; (3) Su-Dy III, Andy Lockton, Department throughout its (41 Bacchanal, George history until 1967 when it (21 Rubber Ducky, BoYill and Kaneko, PMYC; (5) Magic, became part or the !\liller, DRYC; (3) Firelock, Henry Peper, SMYC. De t I f T '"l" John Field. CYC; ( 4 ) par men o ranspor .... ion. ~·.,:··-.:;JS:·· lmpetuous Berger and Lee, MORF-B -(I) Live \Vire, By law, the Coast Guard is 4'};:'."N,~ DRYC; (5) Jano, Bob Kahn , Duke Jones, \VYC: ( 2 ) one of the nation's five armed .. \ ~ Medusa II, Don Ad a ms, services and becomes part of r ,,.-. · C~~ASS A _ (1) Blackbird, SMYC; (3J Groovin, Baker the Navy during time of war Allen Puckett. CYC; i 2) and Sachs. S~1YC; (4) Maia, and at the direction of the i\1amie, !\'lilt Smith, CYC: (3) 1 _J_oe_Ma __ n_·n_o_._s_B_Y_1c_. _____ P_re_s_id_e_n1_. _____ _ Olinka. John calley, eve. CLASS B -(t) Zeus: (2) Jano: (3) Aquavit, Milt Baehr, CYC. CLASS C -Rubber Ducky (2) Firelock (3) Impetuous. CLASS D -(1) Free Spirit. Jeff Le<, DRYC: I 2 ) Quickfire, John T r o e g e r , KHYC. CCI\ (Tanner Series) -(1) Celebrity, Folkman and Jfoward, KHYC; (2) Moon Day, Geo rge Wolford. Kl·Li'C; Remodel Relief ••. Do-It· Yourself! J&B Rare Scotch. Castagna Triumphs A rare pleasUre for. a rare man. .Joe castagna's cruise r Castagna Results was the winner of tJ1e Ritts Trophy predicted log race out of California Yacht Club Sunday with an error or .287 percent. Runnerup ln Class A was Marylyn Ritchie's Bobber II wilh an error or .548. I .. ............. -.... (Father's Day is Ju,ne 16.) Nearly Everyone Class 13 ~·inner v.·as Mlsty Sea, skippered by Tom Collins ~·ith an error of .3869 and r u n n e r up v.·ns [)r)fi 1-lofd.t- \l'Orth's For 14a Too. 1.361. 1.361. HOME SUPPLY CO. 645-3571 Free Es11ma1e & Oe&•on Sftrvioo 711 ,...,,,_ Wrr-C.... ~ Listens to Landers • TUMBLEWEEDS MUTT AND JEFF FIGMENTS ·• NANCY RODEO ..... u••,.oo ·•·--• ,.,.,,_._, __ ... by Wrn. F. Brown and Mel Casson Sllf VOJJ '!WT tvt,J 'IUY 1t/INIS! MOU! 00 </OU exi:tA1rJ "fl.IAT ? NONstNS61 L01S4 LOCK! V00 HAV~'T 611DWN AN INCH IN 1WW1¥·F1Vg VeAl\S! ' 1'1€ <;AMe UJA~ L liXPl.AIN j"c_f..;;_?, . M<I Ar"t.ETe '5 Foor. 1 ' ! ~, J! ll J ! • by Tam K. Ryan 1\\A1'5 W\Vif t\URf5, by Al Smith by Dale Hale by Emie Bushmiller ~~~~~~~~..-'--~ l'M GOING TO B!j( A RODEO RIDEK WHEN I ARE YOU STIL.L G OI NG TO BE A ROD EO R IDER 1' t DIDN'T SAY RODEO RIDER--- ! SAID RADIO WRITER GROW UP DOOLEY'S WORLD MIS~ DORM£151'E'- 5AY5 ! (,OT'f'A LFllRN To W>:rn:: MOJ.!r LHi lBLY Dr. SMOCK r:oR' PlhlNE.::::F'?, DO You WAN,.. eou ... e:P CH 1CK!S1'.J or< ME.A-rL-OAF7 wfE i:<e OU'f" OF=-M!SA,-t...OA~ GORDO 1sT'Ml:S ~AAT T!Ul: A/"'TER-JJOtlflS TC>IJ"-CON51!'..>T5 ""~ MOON MULLINS 1s TMIS 1"e Nl~MTL.IFE '"" lo ·IO • Monda~. Juno 10. 19/4 DAILV PILOT by R09er Bradfield IF Hr 00£$, ~H F [L r1NP OLJl~ HL CANT SPI LL by George Lemont OH, su~e:-werRe: AL.SO OU,.-o;; 5"f5AK, 1"U~K6Y, Po-r ROA51". HAL.-1eu1 ANO' 1,...AMe CHOPS ~/, by Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnson ® l WANT TO SEE l,<IHERo You STool> · 1N YouR CcAss ... IN THE Coi>NER WITH THE: ~-· PooCIN<; PA INT, MDSTCY, BUT SOMIOTIMES IN TH' ONE WITH ~ ... , .............. :-. ....... ~ ..... _ _, ANIMAL CRACKERS I DUNNO LtJ LE. ... THEo CRACK5 IN -~ TH' pcf;STEJ< ... ~\ / ~0 by Roger Bollen .., ·' .. ~•·>'·~·~--...... . . '•·· ......... TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE PEANUTS w; i-IAVE~'T hi:-;.., S1Na::: !'AZi'ED .: .. ~.\ ... :Ji .\.\..W EVEN MAKE IT KJ.Y.E IN ONE" PiCCE: . ., by Charles M. Schulz ... A~D FJR~f:'~ TJ PJi THE KICK-STAND DJll.lN! ACROSS 45 EJClremely careless 48 S10bU1 : Informal • .. 4 Lew -··-·-·: ..... H"' au thor ·. 5 Fefnate . peraon • 6 Ore•I "'mb<f 7 Also known " e Organ 40 Soll slush 9 Eccentric 43 Brief time 10 Book « Settles 111 division struggle 11 Function 46 Goa1 12 Employer 47 Stately 13 Make 49 Relreated disorde1ly rapidly 18 Type . 52 "Gypsy 22 Polynesian Love·· • herb composer 24 Small • 53 Growing spots outward 27 Proposed S5 Placed projec1 unoer 29 City of prohibition Alasl(a S6 Ham it up 3J Chinese 57 Ancient dynesty G1eell 31 ReQUested region to go 58 Wirid 32 Sharp blow 59 Trieste 33 Pulled to fJleasure pieces 60 In good 3'·Horse order color. 6 1 Canada 35 BefOl'e balsam. for 38 Oesigna• Of\e '. ,hons 6S S1ate:Abbr. JUDGE PARKER Y!S! SEND ™E DISTRICT ATTORNEY HIM IN, 15 !'ERE, JUDGE! M.ARG.\RET! CAM YOU SEE HIM? MISS PEACH . :J HEi.LO, JOE! I WAS UP AT STATE WHATS ON PRISON YESTERDAY YOU!t MIND? ANO TALKED TO SOTM STRAMO ANO WAKEMAX! by Harold Le Doux THERE'S NO QUESTION TMAT WAKEMA.H WAS L'fl/'16.' SAM f"!Rl\IER WAS TELLING THE TRUTH! WAKEMAN WAS GUILTY AS CHARGED ANO S"'M 010 A THAT'S GREAT JOB OF _ _,...__.-I GOOD TO DEFENDING MIM! HEAR! A C:,,1F'T 6NL.l~TME'NT IN 1"H£ by Mell FJZE:NC M F'Q"°61GN LEGION. a i..:.::::::.:=~' !.---------'~"""""· '"'I"''""" "" DICK TRACY by Chester Gould ~~~~~~~---"IT Wl>S LEFT IN HIV CAB VESTER.DAV.• 5 ME WAS A REAL. KOOk'.! MERE'S MV LOG SMEET I I . . WITM MER ADDRESS . "For P<'le"s !>lk<'! Do .''OU kncn\· \\'ha( it'.i. goi ng to dl"I to1norro\v or don 'l .''1111~·· DENNIS THE MENACE 'STILL CHILLY, 6UT \llAAMIN' UP A Lim£." I 10 DAILY PILOT Monday, Junt 10, 1~74 Court and Spark, Asylum TONIGHT'S TV HIGHLIGHTS ~~Tops in Pops 10. CHICAGO -Chicago VJ !, Columbia OOU•,'RY SINGLES I. I DON'T SEE ME IN YOUll EYES ANYMORE - Charlie ltlcl\, RCA • NBC 0 7:30 -The Targel ls You. Martin \ Atilner of TV's Adam·12 narrates this document· :.. ary-drama exploring the widespread threat to life ' and property by such crin1es as shoplifting, bur· glary, pickpocketing and bunco. \. KTLA O 8:00 -World Team Tennis. Eight matches are televised 'A'ith Tony Trabert and Bobby Riggs providing the co1nmentary. KBSC IJl 8:00 -"Mayor of Hell." James Cag- ,ney stars in this 1933 drama with Afadge Evans. CBS D 9:00 -Here's !,ucy. Milton Berle 1 guests as himself as Lucy wins his services for a p ~i night on a charity telethon. . • L'-... "" ""7.~f;!,·'I'"· .. ···-'•'"' I • TV DAILY LOG Monday Evening JUNE 10 Q) Jho.it: "M•JOf ti HtU" (dra) '33-Jamn CaEM)', Madat lv1ns. 1:30 ~ C!Nful s,ort1 Lt1111ds GI Merw Griffin Show By The i\11soclu1ed Press 1'he follo\vlug <ire l?Ulboard's hot record hils for tht! ~'·eek endiog June 15. ns lhey appear in lh•• UC;\I \\'eek'$ issue ol Billbo11ra tnagazine. HOT SINGLES I. BILLY. DON'T BF. A HER.O -Bo Donaldson & the 1-leywoods. ABC 2. ''OU J\tAKI+: SHAND Nl:\V !\IE FEEL -The fOU1"••1111 ~ALHl ... ~'· 1 2~ · S•• S..n. "'°" Iii 2 lO "''"",...... "Dirty Metry, c,._., 1-Ty" Alw 'iHl LAST DETAIL'' Ill ,.WHHETHE LILIES ILOOM" .... .. JEREMY" 1'61 6:001JC!IO CiJ O>m Gl Ntws ()):(HJ (])®i Ci) (13f, (ill News 01eu1111 1!J M..it: CCI (901 "Mai' ol the 1'111111d1" (adv) ·51 -RitindO 1-------------1 Montalban, C~d ChArisse. (A) Ho1111'1 Ht1oe1 O 1tvu1r Hinllmit1 11Q1 Major U11uc law ball Olk land 11 80510ll. m Mi!Sloll: lmpo uiblt m uMS..1d EE D NIM Co1111t1 ~ lllewie: IC) (2111") "DtMrtc" ldr1) ·~ -Jtan Simfl'IOl'ls, ~illon Brando. ED llOd,tpMp LH&• m Sptttl 111eer • i :lO 00 Dtaltr'1 CMict QDidVa• tnt I (I) Hfpn'I tltrli'I ZMM! Tiit P'Mitttrs Mu11rtu o·ranill Show Liftle l1salt 7:001J !]) 0 0 m al) (D Ntws 0 ltwli111 !0f Delllrs I Judy C11l1MI Sinai Wild Wolld ti Anl1111ls Wh1t'1 My Une! I lewt luq ti T1•11 A Thitl (11) l]) I 0!'11111 ·01 Junnie tl} EIM1r1JN · ~l m ... .,., €D W.Uiio(toll Strlltht Tirk f~ @ J lobb)' Cold~• Sllow €!)Dt•• m TM•• s1oeps"' 0 WORLD TEAM TENNIS * HOUSTON E·Z RIDERS vs LA STRINGS NEWCOMBE/ALEXANDER 0 CI) 11~ rnm!U Tiit Its! ti Werkl lta111 Tennn. Tony h1ber1 111d Bobby Ri111 p1ov1d1 lhe com· ment1ry lor !Ms series or elllh1 Cf:) P1non111 No.ela m.lchts ol World Te1m Tenn is. ll:OO O Movie: ''K11m111 Cu110 .. l11hl 0 (fi1 (})Cl) The ltH-it1 "Cry 'JS-Brian ~nlevy, Cl111e lrevo1. Woll" (R) Rool!it1 Wtbs1e1 1nd Gil· ( 6] Tht ltil1ern111 lis 1111 to 1tspond to I CIH for m Movit: (C) "The lliz1misl~ (drl) htlp l1om 1 widow who ol1en phonn 'SJ -Join Fontaine, [dITTQnd 1111 Pollet when she is l1i1htened 0"8rien, ld1 Lupino.. or j111I IOM$0mt. Thi1 lim1, how· m W1M1flud e•tr she his been robMd and bt11en. Joan !Hondel! 1111115. 1Z:30 m Day tt Nit ht I Dul11'1 Choke ·O> O ~ T Safari to Adwllturt I. · ~ t!Mnew J11!11 dtl Aire 1:45 II Mnit: "Munier on Mond1y'' Turbulellt Ocun C1mH1s !ravel (dra) '53-Rilph Rich11dson, J1cll underse• in s11rcll of mystuiCHJs H1wkins. lt\ar111re! l ti&hlon. deep u. eddies and one1pla!ntd storms "'hich mar bt Ille ktJ to J:IO II Mowit: (C) "Slnt1 re Pauatt~ .... 1111e1 loreustfRI-(wtsl '$S -Y...onne DtC11lo, Rod U) h lltll"U: C1me1on, r1ilh Ootrie11ue. Tuesdoy DAYTIME MOVIES ':oo o 1c1 °'llll11llf" l•cN> ·sz - Miurt1n UHarl. R1d11rd Boone. ':XI 1J "Mlit lq ltobbefJ" (mJO ·~1 -ltt P11te1son, flay C1t111d. tl:OOD '1111: omrt 11tlida7" (dtl) 'JO -Paul Lukas, "8~ Caffoll. "A Hilht h1 N .. OIN:t11s (1!111) '42- Preston f osl11, P1trlci1 Morrison. 11:00 m "Slffp My Lm" (dra) '48 - Cl1udtt11 Cotbel1, Oon Ameche. 1:.00 9 (ti ''SM:Glld Its! Stcrd A1enl i• tbe Whtie Wttld~ (t0m) '6~ - rorn M1m1, KMtl Stepantk. Z:OOQ"A111itt!ef hlf 11 tbt rort1t" (cltl) '4&-r1td1ic Marclt. / ID (C) "The MitlllJ Jun11t" (1d•l '64-Mu:lllall Tf!Ompson. J:DO (j) (t) "ltrR ta It IN" (dri) '50 »in fon11ine, Robt1t Ryan. n"Oi (Cl "Dminw 11 A Spy" (dr•) ·0-A~lllonJ Qua11t. Lorne Grttoe. Q_j 11) "Nt11ty A Na11J Atcldent .. (mys) "61-Jimmy (dwards. ):30 IJ (C) "Th JofJOft SIOfJ" (mus) '46-ll'fY Parks, l~tlJn KtJC~. W <CI "24 ffturi tt Jl:ill" Cdr1J '65- -M1c11er llOOtler, lei Barkt1. Q (Cl 4'11as Atross tht ltlwtr" (ad~) '66 -Dean M1r11n, l'ett1 G11Yes, Alain Dtlon.' (!Ii(]) "lllt P1nlhtt'S,Cl1w" (myO "'42 -Rick Yat!in. 4;30 (:jf; ([;) "M111 On A Sirin& .. (dn) '60-Ernest 9or11nine, Coleen Oew- llunt KOCE, CHANNEL iO Orange County's UllF ttlevision station, KOCE-TV, has sehe:luJed the follo wing special programs today. Detailed listi!JS or Chanliel 5'1's programs are carried in the Daily Pilot s TV Week each Sund a)'. l ;.. Mtfloti'lll-((;I tllt l!OtV of I Wlte0ntln lfld/tn lrlot'I 11r119qf1 to 'lllon tri.!r llncl 10 11wrv.il011 ....... t1M .,.,., ....... !Cl t 1JI •"9tlrk C""""llY ICJ liM Sftlmt llrftt ICI ,!.. FM.. Orlflt' CWllfY f C ) ''°""ttllt Ee-le f'f\'tlAe,.,..M Pj•n" ., l'IOll Jim COO!* ... 111 ti IC-ol11'Jt to cr1111 1011' •or 1n, vnemolCTtd In Otlfltll C.....,,, •1:iit 111(11 "tllHcat •1wtt -'II !Cl Witt blK~ AM11l,ll'Jt IOtm I rh lrtl maror .-illllt&l P>'r•rl 11JI OfMI... .. CCI "Tiit Ot.•w•,d ) $19"" -Wiii olt<uu ltlt 1!1111tltJ of ll•t dtll llllOtn! ttl fltr" 11'11 """""·""· l :N N.-.e IC) ''Tile Ml~lllf of 1 Nllllftl i'lhtorv Film" -WI"""' of ll'lt 1nllf!Wllltnlll Emmy tt>h !Um Is 1110111 !he Mh:~l•b•t--• 11~. t:M Wtio'1 Alttff of 'I'll Ottrtt ICI "ltioor.tto" -JIM" 5u1~11na, Jl"flt lllOhllllllll lrtm Vtrtll'I l1m0111 ~·•· l 1)t Uflftrtl'ltllllll f'ltm IC) Ftef!\ rnmm1~•• to tll1lrl[)l;tor 1 o -!•n~t -It tJplored In 11'111 -wt rd Wl nnl"ll dot1Jrrltnllr1. (lO 1111~1 • O•The Peninwla 671-8150 FIRST RUN! 1'£11! ,_ suw &lllltil DIRTY MARY CRAZVLARRY -·--DEMMIS HOrrY W .t.•Rltl OltTtS "KID BLUE" m\'I• .,, .... ~ ~"' !.~!~ ,., ~ (OROl<I~ OEL ~All "IHURDIRBOLI ARD LICHlfOOI" IRI Gl!iilJ.- ..... CO•~··"" '"•CAIT-k••. l4 ... JU .. ~ "EVOLUTION" ~··--· ... ···· -·· •URBOR '"' woo ...... -~'.!:. .r. ..... .... •.:.r+t· . . " H•llOI •f .... lOl'I ··•-lt•• Stylistics. A\'ro 3. SUNOO\\'N Gordon Light foot , ltepri.<:e 4. 1'HE STREAK -JUI)' Ste\'ens. Barnllb)' fiOO 5. BA.NO ON Till-.: RUN - P8.ul t-.'lcCartnC)' & Wings, Apple 6. DANCING MACHINE - 'T'he Jackson 5, ~1otown 7. BE TltANKf"UL FOR \\IHAT YO U GOT -William De Vaughn, RCA 8. THE ENTERTAINER - ~larvin llamlisch, Rr-.'fCA 9. FOR THE LOVE OF r-.IONEY -O'Jays, Columbia JO. ~ll DXIGHT AT THI:: OASIS -~taria ~l uldaur, lleprisc TOP LPS I. PAUL ~·lcCARTNEY & \\'JNGS -Band on the Run , Capitol 2 TllE ST ING SOUNDTRACK -MCA 3. 'GORDON LIGHTFOOT - Sundo\\·n. Reprise 4. CAT STEVENS -Buddah & The Chocolate Box, A&M 5. MARIA MULDAUR Reprise 6. JOHN DENVER Greatest Hits. RCA i. GRAND 1''UNK -Shin' On . Capitol 8. ELTON JOHN -Goodbye Yello1,1• Brick Road . ~!CA 9. JONI ~IITCHELL HELD OVER! 2nd BIG WEE:IC ! ~;~~f!~~s~:. pho 0111' A.U-Tit11t Mo•I 'o,.lor S11rfb19 Fillll "PACIFIC VIBRATIONS" 2. 1'111 S Tl!\lB -\Va)'IOn Jennings. RCA 3. W YOU LOVE ME LET AIE KNO\V -Oliv ia Newton· JcH1n , t-.1CA ~. \\IE COULD -Charle)' Pride. RCA 5. ROOM FULL OF ROSES Mickey Gilley, Playboy 6. I WILL ALWAYS LOVE YOU -OoUy Parton, RCA 7. THEY DON"f MAKE 'EM LIKE !\IY OADDY -Lorella Lynn , !\1CA 8. PURE LOVE -Ronnie Mixlap. 'RCA 9. HE THINKS I STILL CARE -Anne !\1 u r r a)' , Cllpitol 10. l'!\1. NOT THROUGH LOVING YOU VET. Conway 'l\vitty, fl.1CA EASY 1.ISTENING I. 1SUNOO\VN -Gordon Lightfoot, Repri se 2. YOU WON'T SEE MEJ - Anne Murray, Capitol 3. IF YOU LOVE ME LET ME KNO\V -Olivia Newton· John. MCA 4. OH VERY YOUNG -Cal Stevens, A&M 5. I WON'T LAST A DAV \\'ITH.O U T YOU Carpenters. ,A&!\f 6. HAVEN'T GOT TIME .. ·~!ii ' 1884 Newpo rt (o\ta Mesa S48 -1 SS2 ' . 'THlN>IAIOLT A.HD UGKTFOOr 1•1 ' ''THE GREA.T GA.TSIY" IP'GI R06EAiREDfOr1il" mlAFMAOW ·~·rl"llllMAof<;f< lllltAllO•u CI UOI 1·11 lt OIUI 011\.1• I.II Coo<TIMUOUi >•T '~""- ITWIO '"'•"' ... '°"'"-· CJllDI Wl.l "OT Ill !.NOW" NII II AUO '*)W- GofOIOI C, 'ton .... -.... , "'O<l•-4 Cl!IM~ • IRI ENTERTAINMENT FOR THE PAIN Si1non, Elektra 7. HELP ME !\1itchell. Asylwn Carly Joni 8. YOU MAKE ME FEEL BRAND N!::W Th c Stylistics. Avco 9. t-.IY GIRL SIU. -Jim Stafford. !\1G!\1 10. !'VE BEEN SEARCHIN' SO LONC -Chicago , HELD OYER! UCLUSIVl Alli EHIOAGEMEHT A VERY FUNNY MOVtEI "ONE OF THE YEAR'S TEN BEST" L.A. TIMES "THE TALL BLOND MAN WITH ONE BLACK SHOE" '" .... WALTER MATHAU ~ "I( Q Tl'}f" ll'GI Columbia ____ j .~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=: • • • Twsdor. City • Sovth CMd LA.DllS • SEH. CIT. soc 'ii J m MANN THEATRES ti..1-·-··M•T'I II' DOCI" O..,ot1·1"-41 \ot/ ... J •• , ... 1 .... •".IUt•tlOTIUH" ...... Jlhl/ .. 1·4:~ S.A. FRwv IMANCHfSTf.R [>I.I G.0. FRWV (CI TY DR. f.X.) "HlWMAH'S U.W'' PG "THy S~1•f """''" 'm41 U.$T DllAIL" I -..~tty M.W.Alloi•ll•" s-""' '"°" t2:30 10 1:00 ...... (ue9pt Sun.• HoliUysl S1.00 ilp~o. LJ ,,fy " 1 H I •• ·--"!MITT M.t.•T, Cu.J.TU.UT" 0.., 1-11:11 , .. , ... J:tMc:l'-f:.JI , ....... ..... ._. ....... ...,., .... lot/S. .... , .. ,,., "•LICI Ill •OlllllL- Ofllr "-4' '-'''-,, ............ . '1'1Ulll!Ol ••CTOI" OollJ J-Ul:U Jot/M IJ:J .. J:tJ..J.tt:ll '·. ~.·,fi:-1.111 .,, mlliTING • tt1,011o1•NCll • _,., .. .,..,.._~1:1S.t:20 fri·6:tS·t:tQ.I 1:00 ~•I-I J:OO.J:I S·t:I0.•:41-t:JI). t I: IS » t J:OO-J:I S.4:JIM:4S.t:JO ,., ,,.. ........ ,_•u• c,., .... ;:· ... • ......... ·~! Cc=>2•PGI Wi !Tt1A00·· 2 •w,.' "'"'" .,., "'"' 0 -· H ,.., ' ..... •• : I I -::r::i.~ .. ~I _.. .. ,,. ... Oii -. ,...,._...,,, '•""' ' ..... _ ... , 111..,.,.._ Hf.f"I ·~1 --·· ............ . . -· ~--·-~ ......... . 11\10 If H•llOI "COIO TUll!Uf "i i : ........ 'l:~r:2 ..... .: ~•••o• •• • .,.,.•.couo ... ... .. -.. ....... -.... --.... _ ................. -....... . ...... ,.~"~'"'"'"J ..,,._," ., --ti "'"'"' ....... """ GEOHGf-(".~.-arr \llKI "11.llOf_!>,,, TllE. L>AY•'•~ OOU'lllN w~-,. .. ~o..c .-­, • .,,..o ..... ......... • .... -..... , ..... ' 111 ... ~ JUUt G~50M H.U:tr IMAM 't•MTON K;:\'&.\:\&i,-.. ,-.~-=: WIU-1'1• •l••---1f ... .. , ; \ • ' ,. ll.onda~. J11nt 10, 1'114 DAIL V PILDT ;J KATHLEEN ROBINSON , 7V2, OF COSTA MESA, TAKES HOME RUN SWING Iron Mike Meets Mateh 'IRON MIKES' AWAIT ACTION ON THE FIRING LINE BOB BERGHOLTZ, 12, HUNTINGTON BEACH, BLOWS BIG BUBBLE . . " ' .. ...... ·"' ! . \ 1. CANDY ROSATI , 16, COSTA MESA SWINGS STORY, PHOTOS by RICHARD KOEHLER • . . • JOSEPH ROSATI , 10, COSTA MESA, WIND S UP TO HIT 'ONE OUT OF PARK . . BASEBALLS LINED UP TO BE SMASHED • HISS, HISS, HISS could be the sound you hen. or you might be thinking lhat was a quick STRIKE ONE. STRIKE TWO, STRIKE THREE AND YOU'RE OUT! These may be your re.actions when you first try to hit base balls pitched at between 45 n1iles· per-hour and 90 m.p.h. The pitcher is right -handed and hiS name is 11Iron ~like." YOU WILL FIND him located. at what the n1anagement calls the "newest, most modern base- ball range on the \Vest Coast." tt's in Costa fl.Iesa and is called the Harbor Baseball Batting Range. There are 10 "Iron fllikes." each with a price tag ol $800. Two-machines fire balls at 90 m.p.h .• two at 80-m.p.h.,, two at 60..m.p.h. a.nd four at 45-m.p.h. Eight more machines for Little League players. with the pitching distance of 45-feet. will be added by July I , ending Phase I. PHASE 2 IS due soon with construction of a private 600-member famil y athletic club. This facil· 1ty is to include two tennis courts, lour handball courts. and men's and women's spas with saunu and weight rooms. '. • I \ Z2 DAILY PILOT . Monday J1111e 10, JC)74 rUDLIC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE "Mttl PUBLIC NOTICE ·---PUBLIC NOT ICE PublllMd Of11111e Cot•I O•_"~'_".'~"~·~· j---.. <i'm0u;-;W.ru;u;---J un1: l, io. 11, 24, 1974 u u .14 ----,ICTITIOUI I Ul lMISI 1--------------NA.MI ITATl!Ml!NT "ICTITIOUS IUllM•SI PUBLIC NOTICE Tiit fdlowh19 ~rion ,, dOlr19 ~MU NA.MI ITAT•M•NT -------l t1o. The tollowl119 Pit''°"" ••• dol119 'LP·UJll JOHN II:. ONSTOTT REAL ESTATE, butl111H 11: f"l(TITIOUI IUSINISI 2'3412 Lit N1r1nl11, Lt.et.IN Nl9..,.I, SCHOOL PERSONNEL IN,URANCE NAME STATlMliN1' C1lllornl1 n111 At'1£NCY, rn a~~ ... 5ul!t o, Cosr1 TM 1011ow1n, ~roon b IMll"D llUslneH John II:. Oni1o11. 1~1 L•s Nw1n111, M11.1. C1lltornl1 '1616 11: 1..19111\.1 Nlt119I, C•llfornl1 r.•n JllMI E. L_ ....... 1101 w. SllV- GOROA Lil , too ll1y1kle Drlv., Ttils bu1lrcn ls tonel\Kltd by 1n Apt. 1,1, S..n11 An1, (1llfornl1 11101 Newi>orl llpact., C1ll!O!'nl1 ~ lndlwl<tu1I. Vlrw;"'t J. MlA, ?lfll E. Qulrw;y, FAR w tST SERVICES. INC.. • JOM R. onttoll 0<•~· C11Hornl•f1"1 C.iitornl1 co111or1Uon, 1171 Rovnolch , Ttils llllirmeftt WIS tiled wlltl tM l "IS tluSlll9SI 11 C-\ICled by I ~-II S1n11 An1, C11itornl1 '110~ Coutlly Ci.tit OI Ot1na-County on M1y P¥1n.-5Np T~l1 but.IMH II Cond11Cl9d llY I '°• 014. J1""'1 E. L-man COfl)O<fl•on. I" Mtn Tl'llt sr11tm"'I w•• lllld wltl'I the FAR WE5T SERVICES. INC. Pu!lil11'1td Or1n9t Co.111 O•lly Piiot, Cou11ty Cltr .. or 0.lnQt Couft!Y 011 ,.,,_y Wdllirn c.. Mclnty•t Ju,,. 3. IO, 11, l•. 1'14 'l'OCl1·1• }Cl, 1'7'-vite Pre110tnl -"J.olttt Tll•• "•1ttnefl1 wo! !llf<I wi•ti ttK PUBLIC NOTlCE Publlthed Otlf!Of! C~~I D•llY Ptlol, C01111ty Clt•k o1 Or•n9f c ..... ntv on M<lyl ------::.,-,ccc------l:':~::.:'·-':'c· :"c::· 2 .... 1t1• lff-1·7• 17, 1~1'. SONENSHINE & ARMSTRONG SLP·14JU PUBLIC NOTICt: -KeWl'lr1 Cir. 0•. l<ICTl1'10YS IUSIHES"I l---- NtWl'lr1 Bt1c~, C1tilor11i1 t1UO NAMlli STATliMlNT Tel iMHUO Thi trol'-l"!I perSOM lf'9 doing . L•OAL NOTICE l<Dttl t1u1lMn i s; NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN t1'111 t1'll PvDll•he<I Or1nqt c ... 1t DllilV P\lo!. J .. J ENTERPRISE!. 15'0 SuDorrlor foll-Ing n1m1 OI llMICI .... WYtd pr-rly W,.y 1(1, ~1, 111<1 J~,,. J. 10, !ti• 191..._7' A"1111Uf!, CllS11 M111, Cl~IOfllll '16'1 . NVI bftll hlld bl< 1111 Poll« Dt1>1•!-nl -_ --J1mn A. Ln, 1517 Hl9flllnd otl"11, Of 1111 City Of CO.II ...... W for 1 porlod In N""'-1 8ffc1'1, c111rornl1 n..o u cns Of nl,,.ty It'll) dl\'5: Jlclt M. Syk_,, 11211 tCl::.'ltlV>er O<lve, Red 80V'1 lllkl (2). Whitt lla'('s ll!ltl (1), Brown 11<1'1''• 111 .. 1, Bronn. t crr•s HUnll"Glon llw<:h. Clll!orn. """ lllkt. lllue 8oy'I lllk1, 111111 Gl•l'I ll(ltt PUBLIC NOTICE SLP·)UOf Tllll bU$1MU II bll119 conducttd b\' t l?l, Wtillt Glr1'1 8lltt UJ. Gr"n Gl•t·s PICTITtOUI IUSINEIS part.-lohlp, lllltt (2), W11eti, Rings Cl), Rlflt, NAMI! S1'ATEMEN1' Jlmt9 A. L" Suri-rd, llrn. W11l1I wll1'1 ~y, TM' lollawlno ll'lf$0nl 1r1 llolno Ttllt sltl.,...nl tllld wllll Ille County Piper curr.ncy 11 Dri). buSIMU 11: (;lerk ol Oranot CounTy on ~y 17, 1974. NOTICE IS FURTHE R GIVEN !NI II CELCO, P.O. llDK 1Sl01, 1109J P11llm1~, PMOOO no owner lllll'•tt 1»d pny,i1$ lllt fry1119, C1lllornl1 92MO P1tbllsl'!e<1 °'""!le Co•sl Dilly Piie!. OY<Mrllllp ol 1111-proptrty wilh!n u ven 1. R•lllh Clock. 1001 c1111 Orkr , "ltw· Mey 20• v. •nil June l. lO, 1'7' 1111·" (ll d1ys lollowl119 Ille publlc1tlon ot tllls pet'I Be.tetl. C1!1fcrnl1 Nollc1. 1111 llllt ll1"•11o 111111 Yf.11 In the 1 ~·ctn~ c.. Clock. '.«l1 c1111 OrfYt, PUBLIC NOTICE tinder. 11 tllert be one, or In 1111 City of N~pllrt Be_•cn. C~~lfOfl'ttl. , Cot.If M .... , In wllkh CIH Ille prape•ty '11\h b11S•ne11 1~ CDll'JJC·ed by l'"ICTl1'IOUS a USlNEIS tn1U be $0ld 11 publlc IUCTlon 11 I llrn1 111.i!v!du~:jpl\ Cloe~ NAMI! STATEMl!NT 1nd dlE!t •.o bl 1nn0~nctd. tllCHAtlO .... llttOw ... JR. lrc lollowlllSJ PtrMln \1 dol119 llUi.IMll OAT o . Ju ... 5. fU tlOBIEtlTSOti. HOWSEtl 1l!CI GARLAND 11: R. IE. NETH. •>II C1mpu1 Drlvt ANDERSEN ENTERPRISES, 1hl2 CHIE F OF POLICE ... wpOrl 9 t1Cll. C1tilantlt ""'' Florld1, HU11lit1gl011 8tokl't. (llilornll Publlst'lf!d 0 •11'1!11 Coast Dlity Piiot. 11U) S40-S400 91-June IO, 1974 )Ot.t.]4 !"his 1!11emen1 w.11 111..r ...i1t1 11'1f P"-' H1rrv Anclersen. 11132 Florlll1, - County Clerk ol Ora~ Cou~Ty or1 ~Y tt..ml11\9'1Dn 6etc1'1, C11ltoml1 t2'44 • PUBLIC NOTICE 11, 197•. Tlllt buill!KS h c~ucttd b'I' 1n1--.....:----------- "llttt 11\dl~l!IUll. l<ICTITIOUS aUllNEIS P11bll1t.ed 0•1"111 c ... 11 01lf\' Pi!ol, ,.,.,,. H. Al'ldtnen NAMI" STAT•MlN1' M_c":..~_·c'c''c'c"".:...'_"c~_•_"_·_'_"_' __ ,_.,_>_'.4! This 1111_..1 ...... llltd w1111 !hi 111e 11111ow1119 pertOl\I 1,1 doing Coun!Y Cllflt OI 0rll'l9t County Ofl ~y ~MU 11: PUBLIC NOTICE ' n. 1f1• ACIE COflC ... le •lld Aljll\111 s .... lng F3411f Co., 152 C1brllla St.. Cosl1 Mtst, Publll!Md Ot... Cotti O.lly Pllol, C1Ulornl1 t2'l7 a 22JM #.1¥ 11, Ind JUlll l. 10, 17, 197• 1911·1' ~trd Aillll Lui!, 10 ll:oehltl« $1,. Cosl1 Ma.I, C1Htornl1 11627 NOTICE TO CREOITOtlS SUPElllOtl COURT OF THE S1'A1'E OF CALIPOllNIA f"OR THI& COUNT'!' Of" ORAlfOE PUBLIC NOTICE RlllMll Anf1'1Mv 5tockDn, IS2 C1brlllo. Cosll Mi-$1, C1llf0tnl1 t'U27 N•. 11·7'7" 1Ll'-7C311 "ICTfTIOUS aUSINESI HAMS STA1'1!MENT lol'-!no;t pe.-i II doing Tiii• 111111 ... 11 It oon<tuclld by t gf!M<'ll p1r1111tllllp, RUHlll Anttlon\I Sloekon T~l1 sl1lt!T1f!nl w11 !!lid wll1'1 l1'lt buMrcH County Clerk Of Or1ng.a Count~ on J~M s. 197'· Eil•I~ ol HAL D. HUGHES, OecAlltll. t:OTICE !S HEREBY GtVEN !a TM crti!Uors DI ltW 11b0ve n1mtd lllc~nt Tiii 11'1i l 111 ~rsan1 h1wll'g d1lm~ a91lnst tilt 1s: ~•Ill dfl:&d~nl 1r1 requlr9d to Hie llltm, BAXTER'S 5TREET, <46'1 MICA•l"'1r wl11'1 the 11ecnuiry ~ovs:llers, In TM ol!lce Blvd .. Newport Be1<1'1, C1lllOfn!f 9U&G, of 11'11 clerk o1 Ille 1bo'lt 1111111111 tour!.« FAii: WEST SERVICES. INC., 1 10 Pfe>enl !Mm. with tl>e ..ocess••Y Cellfornla corPCl'tllan, 16n ll:tYnol<li, ,, .... Pllbll:slled Orlnot C011I 01llY Piiot, J un• 10, 17, J..1, J11ly 1. 19}( 2014·1' vouclle•s, 1a 1111 ~r11vned 11 S1c11r!1y s1n11 11n1, c1111ornl1 t2705 PUBLIC NOTICE p_.d flc N1ll011fl 11anw, Trust Oepertmtnl, Tiiis iiu.111eu 11 cor1ductt11 by 'l ---====-===~---P. o . Ba• 1160, ~' B•1<~. corpor1T!on. C•lllcr11f1, whlcn Is Ille platt ot buslnesl FAR WEST 5ERV1CES, INC. l"IC:TITH)UI IUSIN•SS o1 Ille l/lldlf"l!fned In ill matter~ WllU1m C. Mc!fllvrl NAM• STATEMt NT Plfll!nll'(I 1o !ht 011111 of 1.1ld oeceOent, Vice Prnldenl , Tiit followlng 09riont ,,. doing !lull· wl~lll11 tour mor1tht. 1!ter 1111 liri! T1'1s 1111emenl wn llltd wilt. the nei.t 11; publlUJlion Of 111!1 no1lc1. COUii!\' c• ... -ol 0.11'191 County on MIV GALLERY "· 1120 Q 5oulll COlll Oiied M11 21, 1'74 11, 1t1'. HW'I'., L111u111 ll11e11, Cllltornl1 f'U51. 5ECUlltTY PACIFIC 5-.UNM ltod A""lf,_, Mr. 1rld Mrs. M1n1111" Ind 11:11'11!1 M. NATIONAL llAl<fK SOf N-perl Cir. Or. An!.lr!, f211 Btlvecllrt SI., Irvine, llV ! R. w. C•vtord ..... ,.,, •••ell, C1Wfet1111 t2UO C1litornJ1 nru. Tr1111 Qtt!cer 1'""7 '"Is bu1lnt11 b cO"ClllCIH ~ a11 E•eculor ol the will ot ,,.,. Pvbtlsl'>ed Or1noe Co.i•T D•lh Piiot, 1no1v1d111L •bl>ue n.arned lleCedtlll MI V 20. ,,, I nd J\IM 3, 10, 1974 1111·14 Aenlll Ansari TKOMAI L. LORD Tl>IJ 1l1t1menl w11 llltd Will\ Ille 2Jn1 Pa111 ell v1Mll<i.J, Sulit 2U PUBLIC NOTICE County Cltrlt 01 0.1ng1 CovntY on JVM 1. L.111111 Hllll, C1Mlornl1 l---------------·llf1•. T1l1 C11•l 5*1-.3Mt ,.,.... Allomn tor E•tcltlor f"IC T!TlOVS I USI Nl!SS Publlt/llCI Oring.a COl'lt Pilty Piiot, Publlsl'>ed o.1noe Cols! Dilly Piiot. Yk-ti~Ml!i. STATE_M•MT June 10. 11 ,,, JlllY 1. 197• 201S.1' May 17, and June l , 10. \1, 1916 1t l2·1( '"'" lollDWl"ll C>lr"°n ti dol"'lil llvlllll'l11::::..::::-c'c:,:,c:co-o==-""-"-"- ----------1a•: , • PUBlJC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE SA II.\ ~,.N E '$ SU N5HINE0 -------------EMP041:1UM, 65'1 Glor! 0 r I YI .i· H11n!1119rot1 B11eti. C1Ufornl1 t2"'7 STATI M•NT OP' AIANDOHM•NT MUNICIPAL COURT OF CALll<ORNIA, P1'1Ylll1 J . He11on. 1511 Gift! Orlrt. OP us• OF COUNTY 01'" OtlANCE, 4H1 J i mbor'9<1 HunrlnOIOll ~Kil. C1lflorrtf1 t2'47 "ICTITIOUI a USIN•SS NAM• It ... , N-porl BN<h, Cl lllorrill , Tri!s buSilltSI 11 conducted Dy 1n The lollowlr19 porton lllJ 11>1~ Ille 0 R " N G E c 0 u N T y H A R • 0 R [ndlvldu11, ""' of ,,,. llcUTIOln tlutlntis n1me: JUOICIAL OIST•ICT PhyU!1 J, Hf&10fl VA.CTRON PU.S1'1CS COMPAN'r', 111 CASE NUMalEtt ln>t Ttil1 1l1!omenl wt1 filed w'll1'1 1M W. 16th llr .. t, Cotti Mew, C1!1fatnll SUMMONS Co.ir11v Clerk of Or•nge County on ,.,..y ""21 Pllln!lll; EDDIE W, ZIEMER v1. lO, 197•. The FldlllouJ llu1lnn1 N1mt rllttrtd Dtlendl"" RICHARD MEDLIN P'JCIH to lbOYI Wll llltd In 011119• County Ofl To The Oefendanl: A civil compltlnl Ml P11l>llsl\ecl O•an~ Cotrt 011ty PllOI, 1111'1" tieen filed bV 1M pt1ln!IU ao1!n1! Y""· u June l, 10. 17, 24, 1914 200l-1• Roltnll P. Sclw!U .. 1114 1t1l1l9h Str.e!, fOU wliti to defend 11'11• l11w1111T, ~OU n'MI COl!t Mfll, C11!tornl1 '1621 file In 11111 court a wrlnen plflldi"!I In PUBLIC NOTICE Tiiis llUll,,.n w11 <ond11Cltll by '" rt'Spgnse to !I'll compltlnl tor 1 wrintn Dr lnolvldv1I. or1I plNOlnv, 111 J u1tlc1 Cwrtl w11hln >I SLP 1uu Aol1nll P. Scflutll lltVI •lltr 11111 !iUmmonl ls Mrved on you. NOTICI! TO Ctll!!OITOtlS l hll 1!1temen• WIJ !!ltd "'1111 ll'lf Otnerwls... Y""' lltl1ull w!ll be tnllrf<I on SUPER!Otl COURT OF TNE County Cllrlt al <>ring.a CounTy on~""' S, l 1>Pli!1llon by Ille pl1l11t!U and It'll !OUfl STATI! 01' CALIFOtltilA "09: 1'1' Fl'Jltl1 m1y enler t 1""9rnent 19elnsl l'OU '°' !hit THE COUNTY Of" 09:ANG• PublllMd Dring.e C.,.$1 Oil!\' Pllol, f">Ol\eV or Ollltr relle! re<111Hted 111 ll'lf ND. A•1'1M CC>ll'lpillnl. • Etlllt OI F RANK N. RUSH. Ol«li.l'CI. June lO. 17' 1'. July \, 191' ~U ll ''" Wlll'I lo seek Ille l"!Vlt• "' lft NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN " 1111 ' llllilrfllY IR ttlh m1!!1r, ""' ':""Id 110 II u MUO•S OI the lboYt Nmtd decldlnl PUBLIC NOTICE ,.._i1y IO tilt! ,_ pltid•lll• II 11''' 1na1 1U ptrM)lll l>lvl"" <l•llM .,11 .. 1 11111--------------"'IY .. "ltd Ill !!one. · '"' · IOU O"• ••• Oil!MI Mlrt1'1 1,. 197' s11d dKf<lefif ltt re<:1u"ed lo flit tMrn. "ICTIT S v IM M Hamlin ... 11n l1'lt nectssarv vouchtf1. Ill l1'lt Ol'lkl NAME S1'ATEMt NT ctf r1': ot 11'11 cte•k ot '"' fooYe entitled t;QUrt, or The tot~ porlOlll 1r1 oolng t.u1I· Bv Jaytt E Clement lo Pl'"""' IM"m, wl!1'1 11'11 nt<tt!.ITY !IHI 11: 0t I ' Vovtl'llfl. lo Ille 1tndersl9flld 11 11'11 Ltw VACTRON PL.AST IC5 COMPAl<fY', 111 /SEAL) 1111 y Olllce ot N!C.HOLAS. tC OL LI NE R , W. 1611'1 Slrlf!I, Cosll ,,.,.,.,, C1Ulornl1 LIPl'OLO, HENO£RSON ANO MYERS. O'ANGELO & GIVENS, JlOl 't2J.77 , DINSMOOtl Willl'll•e 111"11.. S!t, S()O, Los A.,....., II. S. S. Corpor1llon, A C1lilornl1 cor• AllOn'l1iYI it L•W (alltornl1 ~0010, w~i<1'1 h !I'll pllCe 01 POrlllon, . lS1 HQWlllll Rotd, Htwpor! 150 E11t 1111'1 s1., S•ll• 111 busines• of tl'lf """eo-stoned In 111 m1tltf'"I lletcll. C1Utornl1 '16'0 COiii MIMI, Ci llklrnll t2U1 ~r11lnl"11 to IM H!ltl of 1110 dKldenl, lllll bUilnlU ll C~!ICl9d Dy I cc<· TtltplltM: (711) 5-41·771' wllnln tour months 1n1r Ille llrlt porill°"R s s Corrioritlotl Att.,....ys tor Plllftlllf public•!lcn ot tllls noHce. RC.0.:.-S 5.lncllrton ' PublllMd Dr•nve Coa1I Daily Pilo!. 0111<1 May 11, 1914. Prtsloleni ' M1v 11. 11\d Jllflt! .1. 10, 17, IJ/j 1'11).74 ELOISE 5WENER ION. 11'111 lllltmtnl w11 lllM wlTn lM E~ec11tr!1 al '"" "1111 a• c ..... n!v Clilrlt of Or•J!Ot County ot1 June 5. PUBL-NOTICE '"" -..... named dect111111 1974 n., NICHOLAS, KOLLINElt , MYl!ll:S, ..... --------·-----D'ANCELO & GIVENS NOTIC~ TO CONTlt.AClORS llGJ WILSHIRE I LVO .. STI!. JOI CALLING "OR 1 10$ LOS ANGELES, CALIFOll:NIA '°'11 Scnoal Ol1lrlcl: Newport.Mes• Unified nu1 Sll).1UI PutJllslltd 0.-1ng.a Co111 D•lt~ Pllct, Ju!lt 10, U, 24, J\11¥ 1, 191' 20'1 .. 14 PUBLIC NOTICE Scll!IOI Oh!rlct. Allorney1 for EXECUTRIX Biii Otadllnt: 11 :OD O'CIO(lt 1,m. O!'I Ille P~o!i111ed 0 •1119e (01,r D11tv P\101 MIV l-------------- 1Sl1'1 lllV ol June. 191•. ,7, J une l. 10, 17, 191• 1901·1' P'ICTITIOU! a ustNl!SS Pl•Ct OI 91<1 Rt>(.eipl: 11~7 Pl.Ken!l1 ----NAM• STATEMEN1' Ave11ue. Cost• Mtt11, Celltor~i1. PUBLIC NOTICE lhe 1o11owt1111 Pfr""" 11 lloi119 Mints' M1lti1111 A-etl! P.O. lloi 1361, Ii : Newport 8eiK", C•lltornl• •2663. SLP·l•J2l NETZER CONSTRUCTION CO., !IU Prolll'CT ldlf>tl!lclllOll NAme; MA~O~l· N01'ICE YO <••OITOR• Port Wl'olller Pl., Ntwpotl !ltacl\, RY SHOP WALL -l:$TANC1 A HIGH • Ctlltornl• 111660. SCHOOL SUPE•IOR COURT 01' 1'111! Stuct 01nl~ Nelle•, 111S Part Pl•c• PllM •rt Oii Fiie: 1'57 PllC'!<llll STATE 01" CALIPOllNIA FOR Wllteler Pl.. N•WIK>fl !INC~. C1tltornl1 Avenut1, Cost1 Meil. C1lilornl1. THE COU NTY OF ORANOll! '1660. NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN 11111 Int! NO, A·1'l'M TM~ Duil,,.11 It condllCll'd bv Ill •boYe namell Scl'IOot Ol1lr'c1 ot O•fnQf Es!1lt DI NICtC 0'AL015E l~I 11\dlvldu•I. Counly. C1lltornl1, llCll"!I bY llnd lll•OUOJll NlCHOl.AS O'ALOISE 0.Ce•Jt'd. 8ruc1 O.nlt l Ntllll'f" 111 GoYernl1>9 Bo¥d, l'llrelnafter rt+trrtd NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN IO 11'1 Tiiis 1!a1emenl W81 l!leCI wit1'1 !I'll to '' "OISTRICT". will receive Ufl To.~ crt<ll!6U OI ltW lllOV' n1mt<1 decedent County Clerk 01 Or1r191 County on JVl\ft S, not 1artr 1t11n ,,.. llbovt iTMtd llmt. '""' 111 Pl'"""' l>IYi!IQ c111m1 1111ln11 1111 lt7• · ~•led bidl tor Ille twlrll ol I contrKI llld <leclden! ••t ttQ11ire<1 TO 11!1 IM"m, ":MUI !or Ille 1oove project. wllll !hi neceiw ry vouct>er1. in JM crt+c1 p11tit1111.., Ori119t C11111I DlllV PHO!, llkh .,,.II bl rfCtlwid ;;1 l~t l!fl<t ot ll'lt tlerk ol Ille abO~• enli!leCI COllrT. or June 10. 11. Ji. Jut• 1, lfli 2011·1• lclentltlld .~. •lld 1na11 11e Cll>fne-ci •"" fO ore~! '"""'· wol n Tt>e nte1ot11rv1c-------------put1Uc1y rtld 11cud 11 1111 _...., $l•ttd \.ouclleri. la !l'lf vncttrlign&O 11 6'20 L1 PUBLIC NOTICE 11..., 1nd pt~. Tiier• lllYd.. 5uilt 2fll, Loi. Anoele1, T1'11" will Tiii . $1000 -~n •"l!Ui•t'd Ctltlornl• .00.J. W!OICll ii '"' o!KI otl--------------tor HC1'I tel ot bid llOtu..-11 1a bvll!lft• Of !he 1111C1e11ifjntd In 111 m11ttr1 "ICTIT10US I UUNISS Q\llfallln !hi """" In ·-cOlldlllon por11;,,;;ng lo ll>t 1t!•Tt Of 11lo dtcldtnl, NA.Ml STATEM•NT wllllln 10 dlJ• tlte~ ll>e t!Od -nll'g di~. wl!l>ln ~ monlM lllff tht llfll 1'M lollcrwl119 .,.,..,... 11 dolna bvlll'ltU Eecll bid ....,., conform 11\d bl oubl>c1tion of tN1 roo!lce. •1: ,,~ IO ""' conltllCI doo;l,lfMl\11. Otlld MIY 22. 191', tllVINE RANCH FA It ME Its E•cl'I bid 1Nlt bl 1<caml)1nl..t bY IM. l"IOMElt W. FA11lCHILD. MARKET, 1'0C)t Mv!or<I lld .. lr>1ht1, HCUrily tfle<'"red j() In ll'lt Conl!ld Euc:11tor of .... Wit! OI "" C1lltornlt t2'70$ doC:-'t Ind bY 1111 1111 OI pr~ lt>OW nfmed dea'denl Jon Hu~blfd, 10J VII 5.., Rlft'IO, su11<onl•tclor1. HERlll!RT •• WAULEIEN, Jr. Newpo<I 9eft1'1, C•llforft!I n..o Mr. JI,... M. Mllsl1nd, Olr«tor, Al11rrcy 11 L.-. Tiiis bus!nen h COlllhltlM bY 1 n S<noot l<a<:lllTlel, Melnltnenct 11111 UH LI TUt rt BIH., S•Ht 2tl !nlllvlduAI, ()fl8'-1!1-, will "'"1 wltll !l'lott pet~°"' Lff A11911tt. C1Ufotlll1 toMS JOfl Hubb<lra 1ni.•11ttd 111 lourlllQ 1111 1111 11 TM Scl'loctl nn> "41·nJ4 TM1 11111n1,n1 wa1 fl!td wllll tM Fl!lllllH Ollfct , locl!td .i Vil Olkllf' Atl°""" f'tr E•Klltttr Counl1 Cler\ Cl Or~nOt' COllnlV Ofl JUM J, Strffl. 11 10 :00 1.rn .. Tt1vri.o1v. June 11. PubH1htd Or1nve Co.11t 01!1y Piiot M11v 1t14. lt1•. 11, Ju111 l . 10. 17, 1'U l'l'O'l·74 Tiii OISTlllCT rHtl'WS '"' rltM to nlec:t 1ny or 111 bkll or tv w11.,. eny PUBLIC NOTICE l•'""Olllfrlllt• c< !nlor!T'1lltlt t ln 1ny bla1l---------~----w In Ille blddl119. SL•·7•U2 f thl 015TRl(1' 1'>11• cHlt.,¥1lntd !hi NOTICE TO CREDITOR' 9tfll<"•I pnivllllnt ,.,. ol ptr d!.... ..... IUP•••o• COUll:T 0, Ttil! In thl loelll!V In W!Okft ''°"' ,.,,... 11 lo bt S1'ATI. 0' CALIFOll:MIA FOR TtU! pertOrrned lot' I Ktl trlll G' Type ol <O" TY P'J•Qt Pllllll1htd Or"nOf C0t1I 01!1Y PllOI, Jwnt 10, H, 1•, Juh I, ''I• • 20'16·1• PURL.IC NOTICE • 2nn IUPElllOR COURT 0" Ttil SfATE O" CALll'Oll:tilA FOR THS. COUNTY 01'" OllANOI -"""'" ftltdld lo tllKUlt !!'le contrtcl. "ti' 01'" Oll:ANOI! ,... .... ,.,,., TlleM fl"1 lrt on !Ht 11 IH1 PIKenli1 E1l11t 01 MAll:Y A. Fll:AME, Oece1Md, Nt. A •tu ............ Celli Mew. Coco!" ..... , tie NOTICE 1S HEll:ltlY OIVEN lo ""MOTICI 01' HIARIMO o" l'ITl1'10M obl'l'l!>td Oii r1q11e1I. II.'°'" If tlle11 r111t1 (rtollort O'I TM l-bO¥t f\l!'!ltcl tl«tdenl "OR Pll:Oa&'fl! O• WILL AND FOR ""41 0. "''" •I lhe IDCI )!If, 11111 •II --N Ylno cl1lrn1 1111!1111 1.... Llnlll:S T•ITAMENTART Tiit toretO!roa K l'lttlull o! Pt• ''"" Wkl •tdtn.I ... r9llUIAll la lllt """'· Etllle ot FllEO c . OUESLER. •19'• It OIH>ll -• Wfll'\lno;t d1r al wl!1'1 !he llKll!.l'l' ¥0U(M rt In Ille olflcl °""* llOlll fl ) l'IOllr .. 1'111 111k DI holiddt 11\d ot 1111 <lll'fk DI "" lboft lfltilllll CllUfl or NOTICE IS HEll:EIY GIVEN tilt! OVll'lln'lt --.iwn ... , ..... , 111¥11 -to prtlltll """" wl11'1 1111' f!IC.,.:.TY WALLACE E, OltJ$LEll: .. FREO a. Ol\t-hlll. YOV<herlo lo "" \llldor110fwd 11 IM LIW OUE5LER N I llltd """'n • oe1111on IOI' II lltlll tll INlllUtlorY 111!(111 11'11 Sin Ml9'1ti Dr Stt ™' ,...__, l t at.1'1 Proo.Ill ol WH! Ind !or lswlll<I of C.OHTll:ACTOR 19 """Om !ht rontrKI 11 Ci lllofnli n..ci. Wftl(ll It 1,.. Pl•(t oi Ltlltrl T1tl1fMflltry lo IM Pttl llonlf ...... dfd, Ind UJl'O!'I ... , sutlr.ont•Kt~ bUil...,,1 of Ille \ll"CM'O~d !n 111 mtlltrl ret-nc;1 IO -,rlllrti II .....,. IOI' 1111'11'11!' ""'°"" flffn, ,, ,., l'IOI ..... lt\I~ 11'11 I.lid pet!llftlfMll to !hi ...... ol !.1'11 e~tdfnl, p.orll<ulM\, Ind 11'111 1111 11,,.. tM tl!K e 9"<1ntd ,., .. to 1tt _.,....,. trnlllovld .. 11n.lft '-monll'l'I •lit• Ille 1 .. ,, pullll<•· OI ~ ... Ing lilt 1.11¥11 htJ llltrl Ml tor JUlll bY ttwm 111 1"9 t ..cution of IN conlrKT Moo Cl 11'111 ""'"' ... ,,, ... , • )ti • ,,, • In ""' c-•·-OI No llldOtl' m.,. wllhd•IW h11 ~ IOI' • Oiled ffoly ti, '"•· DiPl!r1mtt>t No. ) OI wlcl caurt. 11 1CO IM'l"OO of fmrty<l!vt (•~I ll•Y• •flt• "" fRANC(S l' llA.Ylt..TON CIY'lt C1nlt• Orlw W11!, lri 11'11 City ol <11Tt .. , lor 1111 "'""1no;i ol bodl I Ad,..lni\lrl!Ot' wl11'1 !I'll W111 lllnl• AN, (11110!'1111. A """'"' llor\(J IM • llollt!Of,,,•ft(" -'"""~Id Of ttit l\11 .. Of Dl!ld Mlily ll , 1t7• bond win"' reqvlrtd pr!of TO t •te\lllOfl 01 '"' .. be ... Ill-<11<~111 WILLIAM •• SI JOHM IM <Onll'KI. 11\e l)t"f"nfllt bOlld .~.II boll •An, Cl.!l',O•CI HUTTON Cov~•Y Cit•• Ill IM ton'l'I .. I lor11'1 In !I'll tll"lfltl Mt S~ll MIJUll 0.., Sii. JU WM. A. WITTllAAfl dOCUmotlll.. Nt•Ptrl l fltl\, Cllilou llt ,,... UIJI •• 1 ... "'111 ........ f'tlllt •• GovtrnlllO llMrd UUI ffO.llU 111111 P'1 Sl'ri""' Ctllflrftil *" II~ DOll:OTH'r' HAll:VE Y Fl~HCR. All-Y , .. Adtlllnhl••tt• '"'' c2111 .u .. 111 PVrc""lflf /.§Int Wltll l!lt WIH Anntltd AttltlllT .,, .. 1!11- fl'lltllb llltJ Ortl\91 (.fllll O••ly Piia!. 1>111)11111ed °'""!It CIMll D~llT Pilot, PUOlllllf(I Dl'l"9t C.0.tl Dilly P'lt~I. J-J. It. ,,,, ln•.tf AAI~ 1t. J\lllt l. 10, II, ,,,, !tOl</4 Jun•),'· 10, 0 14 ~,. 6 4 2 • 5 6 .7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 . ' w 1 .......... , •.• 1000-2999 Thi Bluest Markttpltet on the Oranat Coot ~,.,.,."' & ........ , ............. ,, D·•1•v PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ~ .............. ,,..."" ...... 1nw111fllll11 & M I. I . M1n:hondlt1 ••••.. aooo.'°" P\rloN.1111 •••••••••• 5000.SIMt loot• & Mllil'lt . ..__, ,.....,, You Can Sell II , Find II , [ 642 •5678 J One Call Service .....,.,, .... ···· ..... -. ""' & ,._. ...... 5050-Sftt ~ It Wi A... AutllllGbltt & ottw ~-~·~·~•;•~··~·';·~-~~~~~,,r~a;de~~~lt:h:a:wa]n~t~ .... ~;~~==~~~Fa;s~t ;Cred~~it:A:.ppr:oi~al ,,~.,....-.... t100.-~ 11 ~} ~G;";:";°';•;I ;;R;.E;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1002;;;;Go;;;n;••;•;I ;R;.E;·==;1:00=2 Gener•I R.E. 1002 Ctrner•I R.E. 1002 [ ...... _. ... T1CI - Gonorol R.E. 1002 BUY A WARRANTY HOME GREAT FOR THE KIDS! University Park. End Un it on Greenbt>lt, Clof;e 10 Pool , 1''an1ily Roon1 "11h Pallo. 4 Bedroom:!!, 2' ~ Bnths, Gns Bui.ll·ins. Drick 1-'ireplact's in l'\1a1'1el' Bedroo1n lo. Llvin1; Rooin. $56,500. CaJI 6-M)....():)55. 18.1.12 Pi1andrn.ke OPEN llOUSE. SAT. & SUN. 1 to 5 . . . ' ~ . ' \'.\LI.I·:' Rl\1.1\ "" o' I LY• "•' ' ' e'• ') '• 10°/o DOWN 8'/1°/o 'INTEREST C.D.M. Look at those terms!! They n1ay be hi~rory !IOOn so don't hesitate. If you v.·ant nn extr'a sharp 2 BR 2 Bt\ POOL home in CORONA DEL Pi1AR on a big 60xl00 lot 1vith pri\'lltC ('Ommunity beach accc&.o;. Only $69,500 Call 644-!2U mm 4 PLEX/BEACH $50,000!!! Today's aPpreclation f o r YESTERDAY'S PRICES, It's true. $50,000 4 plex near the beach. Goorl Income. Ex c el lent fin ancing available. OWNER \\'lLL HEL.P FINANCE if re qu i r ed . TAKE ADVANTAGE! CALL ~2-2535. T\\'O fireplaces!'° II u g e separate fa mily r o o m • Formal r'linin~. D e I u x e 2-sto ry \'M)' closc to the beach. $a4,5001 Cell Agt. 8~7-6010. C R EA!\1PUFF! Gorgoous home in d esi r a bl e Huntington location. S11pcr inside and out. At $38,:,00 ifll go fnst. Call Ag1. now a! !147--6010. [=~INDEX ] ( _, .. $Mo l~ Cla ssification 1000-1098 IN MESA VERDE The UNIQUE Feature' Of Thl1 Home Are: The back yard! It's big! And beautiful! It ha s 70' frontage and averages 140' deep, with every inch beautifully landscaped. The home is spotless! \Vith grand piano-sized living roo1n , formal dining and 4 bedrooms. Delight· fut neighborhood. Presented al $57,000. UNIQUE HOMES Rea ltors, 546-5990 2850 Mesa Verde Orivt , Co1ta Meu EXPENSIVE IMPORTED TILE • in entry. breezeway, kitchen and roar yard' ol this exquisite Po r t o f in o home \\•ilh view of Jo"ashkln Island . Jo'EE land. 3BR, 4BA + bonus 1·n1 and many nior C' cui;tom f<'atures, all [or $96.000. CALL 64~72 LISTINGS NEEDED White Picket Fence 3 Br's -2 Boths ASSUi\.tE VA G!~c;;, $16511-10. PA Y~fENTS You bargain shoppers had better ' co1n c and take a look nt this \·ery nice Costa r.te!m ho1ne. The modem kitch en and huge lot are just n fe w o f the features offered by this fine home. OFFERED AT $33,500 W ALKER & LEE ItEAL ESTATE 545-949 1 l'M A FRIENDLY LITTLE COTIAGE Ch('f'rful 2 bedroom cutie in old Corona de! l\:lar on R·2 lot. \Vann friendly firepla<'t' with double garage stressed, for guest unit Ca ll 673-S560 to see for your.;cU:. OPEN TIL g • rT'S !'UN TO BE NICE/ 1002 BUY A WARRANTY HOME BRING YOUR IMAGINATION This hon1e Is a dccoratol'!I rl1•1ight. Super Clean 5 &'Clroon1, 3 B.'\th J-lon1C'. Excellent Vic1o,• from l\{aste1· Bedroom and Private Sun Deck. I-luge Kitchen . Fam ily Room, F o r ma I Dining, 2 f"lreplec e i'i. Offered for $107,000. Ca ll 6'6-0055, " \'.\LLF,. RI \II\ .,, . . " ~ COSTA MESA FOUR-PLEX Call US about l h j II hard-to-lind I n v e s t m ent opportunity In a better \\.'esl.!!ide location backing to a golf COU1'5e. $610/mo Income could be more low-low vacancy on 1 y $61,500 call &H-7211 .. IN MESA VERDE Anolher "NEW" listing. Just 2 yrs old with 4 bedroon1s, 2 baths, huge CATI-IEDRAL CEILINGS, a nd a. beautllul ATRIUl\:f off the formal dining area. Squraky c lean: Hurry, be first!! Just $~9.9j(). BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLUB Great view of l<"'ashion Island fron1 \his pop- ular Broadmoor model. Expensive custo1n drapes & cptn g, VanLul1,vaUpa1>ers. 4 lldrms, FR, DR & 3 balhs. Large lot. $159,500 WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 21 11 San Joaquin Hiiis Road NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 General R. E. 1002Gener•l-R.E. 1002 -Ir Balboa Boy Properties * COSTA MESA NEWPORT HEIGHTS FIXER-UPPER? J..-2 Bdrm homes BR 2 b /! Will t d 3 .. a.. w am. ra e rm 2 frplcs. X I n t '4>,000 Call 675-7060 Heig hts loc. $49,500. I S42·749J. JUST THE SPOT For a Larg e Family College Park, C.1\1., in a nice neighborhood. 4 BR., fam. rm., study & pool. $46,900. 556-8800. NOW ... Irreplaceable 2 3-BR 2 ba. units \v/ocean view; y, blk to beach & shop. ping. $119,500. 673-7420. m REALTORS Lil 5 Local Offkes To S.rve You General R.E. 1002 General R.E . 1=====-1 1002 OCEAN VIEW PRIVATE BEACHES Set' this comer location J bed1'00m, family r o o m home. Highly upgraded. Enjoy the placid pool or use lhe private beeC'h. ,\ super large lot. A truly besl buy at $92,500. 644-nto CORONA DEL MAR HOME WlTit INCOi\.tE Cozy 3 BR. 2 ba "·ith fireplace + new 2 BR rentaJ over gardgt'. Priced at $90.500. f·or a dditionel i11Iorn1ation CALL 540-1151 .,,_ HERITAGE ' • REALTORS CORONA DEL MAR BEACH HOME PLUS RENTAL Lh-e In gorgeous new 3 BR unit with fireplsce, dining room, 2~~ baths, patio. Wa.lk 10 beach 11nd TT-IEN ~nt 3 BR on renr for $350 n10. This property Is brand spanking nl'\\', !IOI.rill or highway. Call immediately. 673-85.'iO . OPEN TIL •• /T"S !'UN ro BE NIC€r ~ ~ ~ Dana Harbor View Lovely family home. Top 1_-ondition! J BR., 2 full ba. -t bon1L! rn1. $65,00'.>. -GE.MMi-- l:ZO.f"' Tustin REALTORS Ave .. N.B. 6424623 THE REAL. ESTATERS COATS Oassilicd ads sell big items, The fast.est draw tn the West. & small Items or any item. • .A Dl!ily Piiar Classified PACIFIC PANORAMA High on a hill above Corona dcl l\lar a hixurious -1. Br cus lom home lvit h large gan1e roo1n, Koi pond. big ll'Ct'S and a 1-cmurkab!e view of <..'Ommunity I i g h I ~ Catalina & S11 n Clemente . WALLACE General R.E . 1002 General R.E. 1002 REAL TORS I ';;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I -~544-4044"4141-I• (Opon Evonlnt•l JUST REDUCED PRICE 5 BEDROOMS 3 BATHS Islands and u n s po i I e d Price reduced $2600. 5 large rolling hills. bedroon1s. EX11lA LARGE ' Classific ation I tOO $1~9.500 F Ai.,·llLY ROOM wilh wet I c___-_''_"""" __ )111P) A sma11 price to pay_ tomovemtoa Call u.'I • You 01vC' it to bar. ifuge m I rr o r e d youl'S<'lf • 644-72U fireplace, over 2600 r;q. fl . of Reil E1t1te, ..al! el1I\ liv in~ a rea. Don't delay . c.. __ o._M_'c'_' __ ...J .IWI call ~767. l C lassificat ion 1200-2999 ~ OPEN TILt •rr'SFUHT09EHIC£1 ~,,::::::~I al!~~ •.~":,~t~~:~il~~:a=k i II ~ l Ap•rtment1 !or Rent l ! fi I Classification 3700.3999 '--"-'"''_' __,)~ Classific•tion 4000-4650 fiNnc~I I~ Cla1sifi cetion 50 00 I """"""'"""" I ~ Cle ssificetion SI 0 0-5299 I lctlt .net focnl I ~ Classific•tion 53 00 I l'lrsonals l ~ Classific•tion 535 0.5499 I SIMcea end R ... ]~ Classific•tion 600 0-6099 I Instruction I ~ c1.1sific•t ion 7 005 I ~"*" l[Il] C \essific•tiDn 700 0-7199 !'---___,)[§] Clessific1tion 8000-8099 .__-_ ... _i:._::_ .. _ ... _ .• ~!I ll I Classification 9000-9099 ,,.._, .. ~ ll'iil C!a,tificet ion 9100-9-499 c,...-A~"'-" ... _ .. __ 11 ~1 c1.,,ificetion 9500.9999 of new olfk•e building. Pro· perry in tront line of <level· opn1ent. Present i n c om e $360. a mQnth. $·13.500. $.~2.!JOO~ A real clollhouse. So i;harp 11nd 1•lean you c an 1novc right i11. But at this supc.'r lo1v price you'd bf'ttrr p;:1ck no1u: To S('(' call Newport Hei9hts Near 1-larbor Hi. Assumable VA loan. Immaculate 3 beclrm., 11/, ba, bltns , fin?place, new c pl, drps. Dblc gnr. Lgc yard. 646-3928 or Eve. 548-2426 847-6010 Ag!. J1s\'f! something you want.to The fa.sle~t draw In the \Vest. sell! Classified eds rlo it ••• R D11ily Pi.lot Classified [ .. ..-ell · call NO\V 642-5678. General R.E. 1002 General R.E . 1002 macnab I Irvine realty "A-8-C" Adorable-Beautiful-Condon1inium. 3 bed· rooms, 21h baths, dining & breakfast areas. "'A-MUST-C" in Park Lido. $48. 750. J ack Custer 642-8235. (Zi4 I SWEEPING COASTLINE VIEW from atop Turtlerock ! Catalina to Palos Verdes. Exquisitely decorated 5 bedroom, airconditioned home adjoining future na· lure park . $135.000. L. Sharkany/H. Wood 1)44-6200. (Zl6) SPARKLING 3 Bedroom, family room home -neat as a pin & gay as a splash of sunllihine. Pool sl1e yard -view -fee property. Amy Ga ston 64 ~·82~'-IZ23) 101 OOY9t Otfve 642•113$ K-44 MICArtllUf 644·6200 Ntwport B•attl, C.lltorni. t266J Make an a lmost immediate move. Newport Crest Is the exciting townhome community that overlooks Newport Harbor and Iha ocean. EUg, bold spacious homes. Residents' Swim end Tennl1 Center. Exterior maintenance provided. Corne - let ua show you how you c•n't afford not to live et Newport Crest. 2·3-<4 bedroom re11dence1 .XeWom~.* g From P1clflc Coast Hlghw1y and Sup11rl0t Avenue lntettecllon, drlY• up S11P1rlor to Newport Cr"t entrance. Sile office: •12 Rot>on Court. Optn dilly 10 A.M. to Sunt et. (714) &4Wl41. TOWNHOMES 0 10.,:ro. oonn111lonll tir.rw;lnt OI :IC "41r IDMl,_Ctl1'1 .,11;, el Pl.n '· Wl.OOOJ tot-I tl'CI*" ll~Vl'l\fnl OI ul'°.ao' JM mvri1111, "'',,,.,," OI s~ s.i CDO"tncff>.tt1 1/ld I 111fttt11 lt•n •nd 1110CIAllon !en •~l!ICMI. 10.t,.._ ANMUAL l"IRCIN1'• AOI •ATI, N~ c .. 1 ff, I 11m'"1 ol P1clllc N. c .. Ille. 6 Aotlln H. G11nl COfpdlltlOfl, 0-tl Con!ttc:IOI'. • \!JI;::--..=. .,11:, ol!OllG Ott Dl9fi l lld -*-IO" ft Tiie "'" puttNn Driee M I~ f\of!'ll 10 •~icti Wiii tie 100ld lll'f "'°'tl0n1I 0111tgtt lcn IOI pl .. 1111umt nt Ol>llOllt l 111...-1• C•dt•~d II)' B~ Tiit 511111. Plcilit: ti. I;. Inc. 11se,....1 \llt 119n110 Chl~OI P'lelt. lll'll11Clft9 1nct b~lld•"D P'•m l lld IPtCll~l!O~. ,..,!l'lol.1 llOllfit , 0111•-•~ .... !, ;-;;:::::::;-;;-;:---;:::~:,..---,-,.-.,----,=~--,,,..--...,-.,,.,.---.,.,,=r--~-=-=-----==-,,---,-,-,.,----==,_--,,_.,.~---=--=-,,--~----Monday, Junt 10, 1974 DAILY PILOT 23 ;;G;;';;:";;';;';;;'l;;.;R;;.E;;;.;;;;;;;.;:;;;100=.;;2;;G;;•:;•;;•;;";;l;;;R.;;E;:.;;;;;;;;;;;;;1;:00;:;;2~ i' General R.E. 1002G•nor•I R.E . 1002 Corona dtl Mor 1022 Corona dt l Mar 1022/'o"• M"• Til24 I Huntington Beach 1040 1 ~eguna BHch 1048 1 OUR BUSINESS IS HELPING PEOPLE LIVE BETTER BIG CANYON-BEST BUY! Large healed & Hltcred pool: brand new 4 txlr1n .. ~i;~ ba. horne -lge. ra1nlly rm. & formal d 1n1ng 1·111. All the latest. bit-ins. 3 car garage. Owner transf. Xlnt buy al $154,000. J'roperty located •6 \Vinged Foot J.anc (left on Burning ·rrce, right on Winged Foot). l'lease driv~ by & c:a ll us for app't. DUR 25111 YEAR BAY ANO BEACH 875-3000 .li!407 le. COAST HWY CORONA DEL MAR BALBOA ISLAND * PROU D LY WE OFFER ••• * MESA VERDE Price Reducec! , OPEN SUNDAY 1-SPM CUSTOM $2 'OO 1414 Morningside HOME PLUS INCOME-for under $100.000 4 New listings-Quality Duplexes-Quality renters · ,'t • Nt:u·, Nf:\\'. Nfo:\\'.!W.·l'eping Balboa's sharpes t 2 bedroom ho1nc + 1 bed~ 22 ~2251/: MARGUERITE-$84 500 ~ i;oo Sq. Ft. 11. hulld1·ni O\\'n 2 Bdrm. + P~cl \'tt'w of ocean I.: hlll1. room a partment. Like ne\V Inside and oul. 2 ' h0n1e. '1 nr . 5 twdroom1 A•11um l'nl~. lot11 of 'NOOd Extens ive ly remodeled with quality material 42 .. 16V2 ACACIA-$78,950 llUJ.":e llvln~ roon1 + lan)ily $22,600 & Rl&ss. opi>n bl:-nm ct"11'11, d 60G-6001/2 ACACIA-$79,500 1wn1 plu~ run1pu5 roorli' nr You ('iui r•nv .2000 riic.n 1 ... 111 2oum1t't k1lch, 3BH. l1unrm, & workmansh ip las t year. Tasterully ecor· 71 a..718112 ORCHIO-$J9,soo Lilll!u'd rooin, J oo1tv;, 3 l·ar thl5 for 1; uc>"" unit, r )'tlu 28.\, rn1 for rool A11kln11: ated and great location. Two blocks to beach J::&rage. A worhl of fcaturr~ can buy my upi::rn r!,..tl unit s21131.500T. o .... ·rl('r ""ill c11.rry and steps to s hopping. Call now. 546-5880. For app'l to see. please call: & l'h.•i.:11n1•1•· Only 2 yl'an tor s2.00~tx•loi\ "''Iii •!1rocnt 1 "1· n .• __ , nrw. SS!l.950. 616-TITL I COLLEGE PARK-POOL HOME RACHEL~E ROBERS, R~ALTOR °"'""'""""'""BE """ i '"Mm, oondo., "''""h't I ()CEAN .& CITY VIEW ON JUST ARO T COR grountl tevt•l f!(lt'Jr ii!·in. p · Cl~C'·ln. t 11hul11us ~pl!r levt>I POOL SEAS UNO HE ' 3333 E , COAST HIGHWAY ,ti yea rs nrw, 1-'ni~i"I)' p.,,:1111.'~ :'iBlt f111nn ~1· wet llflt' & NER! Beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath realurirlg CORONA DEL MAR I 675 •2373 v.·ith rasll'fllll\' , .. .,1• 11 .1~ untl fpl, h1JJ::1• 100 1tl'1·k, x11·ai an outstanding Palo Verde stone fireplace, mirrored li\•ini• ,,,.., 1 l•l•Jsh grtlorc, sulta~lf' lo_r Z lr1n1lly rc1nodeled kitchen \\1ith new flooring and tile waIJpa~rc-d ('10111" lil~a sharlng:. S9~ .. IOO. Xlrir trrnui. I nha!! l'a'l>ct~. & ~ t·uslor~, SUr.1~1J::R RBNT,\LS t\VAJL. counter lops. l on1e centers around very pri· Generil R.E. 1002 Bilbo• Peninsula 1007 3 BR, +dinin~ 1·n1, U1g back drio iK"s, ovC'!'!li1.C'd ruuitry *AMERICAN HO~E* vate pool area with man y fru it trees, block ---1-------1 yard ""'ffrun 11~·c~. BBQ aN)a, cusi'>•n tll!' l~ltuitcr REAL TORS \Vall , and covered patio. Walk to all schools C ITY CLOSE LG . " ~. clrn. 11r. Racquel m~ c.1v~ 1>Blt'· 0~1~, lop!!, llhakc roof. l\{'IJ r :.':':'":':~'1:'':::::::::·~1':~:1~00~11 and shopping. CALL 546-5880. Clb., bay r:tn1p. $97,500 ' . s u'!'.; ()l)n. i; 8(•hools, 11:ilking d1st11nr'P !O Co L FE 01vner/A)'.(""' 6T~1600 for G11:t!, ~~l. <iJt\ UNTRY I II"'""'~" C<O\el', """' WOOD & GLASS ~o.s» HERITAGE . • REALTORS 546-SlaO Open Eves. ORANGE COUNTY r.1JNl·RANCJI $3-1,000 ~'U LL Pl~ICE ·=-==-~~. -~~ tnin!,C pool 11nd n1ru1y riark Corona del M•r 1022 HY fJ\\'Ni-~1t. Pr1mc l\tesa nreas. No\I• 12f01 twloiv l'OSI ----------1 Verde Joe. 2 yrs. new ~" lP r I n c I fl 11 I s only BUY A · IG;;::,::cn.::,::,71 'R'."E-. --·1'"00=2 -G""•-n•_r_a'l "R~. E~.-----1"'00""2 . , ... , ~ral R. E. 1002 Gene,,.I R.E . 1002 \\'ow Brlpg your kld.11 an<! pets and 1.'0n1e look iii lhl!i WARRANTY HOME CAH.Df:N 110:\tE. Exec. llll':tse). r .. 11 Ir.rill\' 4nRJ3BA, t"/R, I o r n1 11 847 3095 V ~. lh 1·aul1rrl L<eihngs :====·====:.! lhhl()UI & lg <iiry \l•indo\\'S • An oil wood honll:' ol rustic qual11y thn1 con ta I n ll l•Xp&fl<;I\'(' l'lf>ll'! Of !ht' nat11e flora of rhc W.guna zone. This 3 l)clrrn. rh1t>lllnt: is ('01nplirne11!ed by the f·Xt£'ni;1\r liM' nf rulorlul ~lexican Ide. 1 mp or t e 11 11oorl:-lron1 l\t111nu 1· :II ('f\7}' loft aOO\·c> !he 1'f'ntrat C'n1ena1nn1cn1 roon1. Sfi6,:i00 Concept INTERVIEW.ING for twelve top s alespeople. Must be experienced, productive and have cooperative attitude. Exceptionally gener- ous con1missions ·sp lit plus terrific prof.it s haring p rogra n1 . The finest location in New- port Beach. ''The l~state Realty Building", corner of Newport Center Dr. & Farallon. Individual offices for sales people. For con!idenlial inte rviev." call Gordon lloney, President 673-1516 or Bert Reedy, h1anager 6411-1120. I ;G:.•:;n:;•:;,r.:•l:...::R;;. E::· __ ...c.1 00:.::2: I Gener a I R. E. 1002 ON THE COUNTRY CLUB SIDE $68,000 Of ?.Jesa Verde drhtl' amon~ lhe 111s1on1 h 1\ rn cs! Charming l srory, ·I BUY A WARRANTY HOME REAL ESTATE SALES NEW QUALITY THROUGH OUT Just move rig ht into this first class, beau· tirully landscaped & upgraded home-Ab- so lutely MUST SEE! $74,900. one. Just 11 fl'\V of lh1s hut• MAGNIFICENT ho111!''s features arc: bullt· 1 Jn rangt> & O\'f'n, shag Tht' l'le1\' fl'o111 thl~ pro[l('11y ,·arix·ts, t.'Overrd pati<l, arf'a OI 1)1(' h~), ocr11.n and f11nuly roon1 an<I huge, huge t f>('nnlsul:1 1s unht•hc1·11ble. lot. All ol •his plu,s on eai;y Gracious, ove1-slze t 1v o to take over Cl Joan with bedroon1 "cof\du" on 1hc paymenls ol l168 mon1h. • hay 11•lth slip 11vailable. Out WAL.KER & LEE · ol area O\\'OCI' \\'ant~ en offer on 1hn,; one of n kind Corona de\ r.Iar property. 1·rc111e bright, t'heery atmo~. [ OWNER 2 Lri;. St'fl. bk yds. prof. 1 lrl~pd . QUIET.""' '"Id><. ANXIOUS ' Upgraded & ln1muc. $63,900 \\'c h111·e prosprc1ivc ,\i,surllL' ;•; \',\ l uan buyers. so hurry~ j..11)-9238 Payn1t•11ls $261. P!Tl. 3 HUGE SH DE Bedroon1s, hug£' CO!'ncr Jot , ~'4 A "°"I .,. U'a<l•I' ""'''"· 0 a.· - TREES $27 500-Bcu u ti ful " pane ting., II/ ' •· 1 cepl"~· ,,,.,,,,,,.,wlly REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE HUNTINGTON BEACll 842-4455 • • conc1elc. Huge covered l2!l0 C!ennry1·e SI INC M 1anc1scapl'r1. Lot;; or! . DUPLEX Hurry~ ThrC'e bedroon1 home patio Hurry! Only s.IO . .J;JO, 494-9-113 5~9:0316 at this price ,,·on'l lasl long. I Ra.re "Old Corona" 1ncon1C'l 646-7171. · l' ECONOMY , • , •• pro:ipcr1y consisting of 1\1·0 OPEN ril 9 • 1r"S FUN ro BE NICE• srcunty &· hrauly! 111d1vldual do1J hOuses. Roth ~ 962·4471 ( :::: ) 546·8103 IRUSC'/oplinn. lkuutiful 'J. <ll'<' leased to 1vcll quahf1t-d 1 , bclrn1. O\\ltl youl' 0"''" 11p1. GRUBB & ELLIS CO. 0 REALToRs 61s.1oao $10 0. Dn. I o:!""'"'"~~="""""~:'::~~!!!!~~~!!!!!!!!~~!INorlh Cus ra !\lt•sa, 3 1 G;;.;";;;";;';";;l;.R;;;;.E;;;;~;;;;;;;;;1002;;;;;;G;;e;n;e;r;a;I ;R;.E;;;;. ;;;;;;;;;;100;;;2;I ~~~'on 2qui~t~u1-d~~c~ l• strC'eL N1>wly pain1ed and eflJo !J!Jfe LIDO waterfront. 3 Bdrm. & Jge. family rm ., or 5 bdrms., \vitn 6 baths. Lido Nord. Spec- tacular view! Pier & float. $275,000. WATER FRONT LOT ON LIDO NORD 40'x90'. Mag nificent view! $250,000 LIDO NORD 5 BR., 5 ba. Prize 60 ft. waterfront lot. Pier & float. $375,000. 30xl05 Ft. Lido Nord View Lot. $165,000 ha.11 good shag CIU1X!ling, $30,000 FULL PRICE 2211 Newport 81. Costo Mesa 646-8811 Sun/Eves. 644-8312 SWIM 'N SAIL GREAT FOR KIDS \VALK TO LAKE HUNTINGTON O\\'NEJl !\!UST SELL ten<1nts fol' S\460 a yrar , ALL nr. beaches & shop11ing. $265 Asking S69,"i.Wl. ,,llh a 2nd .• , '.,, BOARDED r-.tonth. TD 11vaih1ble. ~ • I PRIME LOCATION !JP ti! ~· ~~. fszi PRIVATE BEACH .. , ncur South Coast Plaza. TQ Pl'Otect this complc•tt'ly . ....,.. ~ This lovely !hrec bedroorn 4BR/2BA, Jlt'i.'pl. 001·crod ) 1' er u t• h .1 sh£' d g t1 v ' I home eni·oys the use or patio. Cho.·ncr &ns: i o us . ' l'l'PQs..~es~1on l3r.tnd I}\'\\' ?IOO !•2.~. CW'J)l'ls & bhns. 4 Br. 2 BA, ••4 ·5~71 4''· prh·ate bcachc~, secluded " "'JV s 1 l't' et s and has a CALI.. 968-4441 .... ·alk 10 th!! beach. EMERALD BAY ·-1·-·I•• ~,n ,,,,,. * C t ' R It Only SZ7,9:.0. S2050. dn. . ' .~ .... ~ '"-" ' ~"' ~· . res ea y JADE R There fin• S\\'('('plng ocr.en Sho11·n by appo1nlmenl onl)'· EAL TY \'i~·s from lhL~ lge. fnn11Jy SS0.500. SHARP · REPO . 963-7805 home, 11·11h n1str. suite & 3 lrg Br, 2 Ba. d~ pauo. 1 l Bl ~kl ...... Be: ~nest rm. on m&in livi~ .LUSK 2 STORY $XI~. A;lso beaut. 3 Br. SPRA\\' oc. ~ to . each Tc\'1.'I, & 2 bd1-n1s., 2 bit.th .... & Th£' absolulc rock boltom $361\. \V11ls Realty, 546-Tl39 LI.K<;; EXEC home fan1ily mi. i1·1th frplc. on "-" h . Harbo y · features 1sola!cd master I I I \ 1 pct , I fJML'l.'\I on1e in r 1e....· Dana Point 1026 suitr ,..1111 . . . 011rr CV('. , cttss o 1. l l'IJ Llk ncrt' · "' 1 < ren 5 .... 1 n g · Bead tennis 1-& poob 1 s: £' . n<'11' co. 1 ion, gardt'n i;ourn1et kitchen '· e s. · · s~ar.IO~s . Hi!l~boro model, 11·ith sunnv breakfast roon1 Sl7'9,000 vie1,·s in al.I d1rec1ions from LIVE NEAR YOUR viell'S 15.~3o ~p;1rlding pool? I TURNER ASSOC. Spyglass No. 0_!lt'. and fee BOAT 4 Largt' BR's, roaring 1105 N,-COast ll\\•y., Laguna land. Ol'!!y S107,.)00~ i;1 unit 2 BR 2 ba garden fircplac'f', no 11·ax flooring? 494-111'7 Call 675-7?2';J Condos from $31.500 .Just blcx.·ks 10 \X"ean. ~!ill IMMACULATE!! bedroon1 hon1c. \'ou'll Ill' thrillt!d. nt lhc sizC" of th._. room~. 5cparn1ed ITIFlllh•r betlroon1. i\lass1vr s1n1w douhle fircpl11cc. Bl'.'l uli lully landscaped exrr:1 ilrivl'1v11y and par! for boat s!ornge. Call ~16-ZJl:I. BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR LINGO REAL ESTATE shiny as ne11· and only z Bdrni ., fr th Jonie· Tl · · · t h h 1 ' "" ~1~7 S45 oon full pt·iee>" Hkr ·· • iJ 1 • ff ~·1J11 are presently 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 ustsn i ;us 11 omc.-11 •·1 493-74,,,;; 4"' ... "'' oo2~··i i .. · landscnped, \l'ith lgc. tr·Pes r.n111loyCfl in RC'al Estate but l-;:=:::::::::::::i::::::::::::::i::::ez1::::::Z:::::::l::=i:=i:=i=::=ii::::;1 new way of !ife for l'OU und · ~ · & brick p11!io. Close to nl'""' \\'OUld like a change for Ii your faniily. ~:veiythinA Fountain Valley 1034 5 BR Single Story l\lnrina. Hurry on this one OPEN tll. 9 • IT:S FUN 10 BE NICE• THE REllL ESTllTERS i\10RE opportunity. l'Ontact * * CAMEO SHORES * * ftun1 the shake roof to 1hc 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; $45 500 at $36,500., us. \\'e have> all the loo\s for hUi;l' lot. rncans fnn1ily I I• You to .,..'Ork .,..;th. lf """' al'l' NEW LISTING i..'On1!011 in thi.11 21·i yca1· I Paint Brush Special! E 1 .@, " .;:1 ftma.Sll!Wbll'&fsll' d.,, 1· ., 1 "" 1 0 '•"•"in ,. youn11 lx:>auty. Just list(!(! so i ----------P LUS ,\SSUMABU:; 71 ! ; xcellrnt l't'siden1ial loca1ion _....,... __ '""" " ""' .. S · · t ' II I 1· 'I•-h I k -1•\ose to i\TcDonnell-~-·f"l, ""l' need vn"'· weeping ocean view. excep 1ona y ge . pa 10 .you ( uo:tter u11-y anc a~ loan. :{ Bt>tlroon1 hon1c. .. 1 " .. ,,. .. ..., " J'" 'd I f t · · C 11 f 'I ho t 1' 1· N "'31 I • >ug as. All bllns., st9ne Increase your earn;....., \l'ilh area I ea or enter a1n1ng. a or app , us a u is .1ng ' o. :JoJ nt\1•ly paint e cl, n c 11 y -~-ff d $ WALKER & LEE 1 -" d , ~ r · fireplace, f a n1 i I y roon1. •••·5•71 4•9-1100 CALIFORNIA RANCHER NO ON TO VETS our inct'nlive program. For to view. 0 ere at 114,000. anuscape · ..... rge l\'lng play yard, 2 baths and ---------- a private, con fid en tial REAL EST,\TE mon1 i1·ith brick fireplace. freshly painted inside and THREE FOR ONE in1el'\'iew call no 11• Ontu 8,2_4455 GOOD f"amily roo1n, sun drenched . "" 1 out. Call i\lr. Risser, 3 LOTS composl' th 1 ~ between 9:00 and 5:00, ~ kitchcu, Ill'\\' pllllO. ar~c 545-.~2'1, SouthCo. Realtors. oulstanding build1n~ sitP . 64&-0555. CORBIN-MARTIN, INC .1 ----,A~S~S=U~M~E~-MORNING! 101.i\love-incondition. EXCELLD:T oci-:AN ~ -~ REALTORS 644-7662 A11·ake in beautiful Cdi\·I in The Real Estate Fair Irvine 1044 \1E\\'. 100 Fl. OF ROAD AN\'ONF. CAX ASSUl'l11: . ,, "''""'''"'•·~····· VA 5~~ ~; LOAN There are mr1ny .... ·ays that you can 011·n this bcauliful Ra.nc·h Style hon1c. No do""•n VA. Low do..,,·n t'HA or toke over lhc cxisring loan 1vith payments of $136/nio. Thi~ beau!Hul horn£' musr be sure to bC' appreciAtC'r:I. Just lli;ted llt s:'I0,950 full price. ~~or fu rthl'r i11fo111iation, pll'a~I' call. WALKER & LEE RF.AL ES1'ATE Costa Mesa 545-9491 STREEEEETCH ~ '. ! your p1u·t·tiasc po111<'r on thi!I al\•arrl 11•inning 4Bll. 3B,\ ~1esa \Voods marvel! 1 ,\ fabuklus family ho in I' featuring large pr iv a I c yarrl, buill ins, 11 I us h carpcling, 2 fircpla(.'(!!I, htJJ,:I! faniily roon1, forn1al dinini,:. ove1-sizcd garugc1 ! Ju1il listed at SGI.900. · Subnut offr.r 01· lracl{'. C1\U.. ti4:i-8400 V. •:. ll01•<1nl & Co. tL-.1 •:-'"',...,...,.. \'\LI,~:\· Rl \LI' "' '' . ..... ~ .. ,, .,, ..• ,,, ....... Harbor View Hornes Lovely 4 Bdrn1, 2 bath homl'. Prof. landscaped, t;:i ll irt"es, b1ick & ivy., carefully n\aintained by professionals. Beau 11 fu I intrrlors, designed by CanfK'I & Chaffin 1vilh Jerge country kitchen. Fan1ily·rm. Spacious scp Oining:·rin and sunken Living-rrn, n111ny extras, all in mint condlt1on. $St,:i00 ]"~ 640-1120 EASfsJDE Sll.900 Assu1nc 7 •z V1\ S\99/n}O :IBD. 2BA. FP. patio, dbl gara1tr. $6000 Oo\\·n, O\\'C 2nd Call Pl! 64:H)6-16, Open House Sat & Sun CLASS SEU,5 -642'-5678 General R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1002 IVAN WELLS BEAUTY! See this 4 bcdroorn. J~t.;: bath family ho1nc in Baycrest. Large pool. r~ormal dining room. family roon1, 2 fireplaces, separate SC\\'ing room off kitchen. Tree lined street. Offered at $l03 ,500. AWESOME BEAUTY •.. descr ibes this remarkably detailed & crafted vie\v p roperty in Dover Shores. 4 Bedrooms. 41,t,.1; baths. For the discriminating buyer only. $465,000 DREAM HOME LOCATION \Veil located vacant Lido Isle lot. Near ten· n is courts and sandy beach . Plans available. Aski ng 170.000. HARBOR VIEW HOM.ES Very clea11 Ca rnie! n1odel . 3 bedrooms, fam. Uy roo111 , 2 ba ths. One house a\va y from park and ~lay areas. $7!.000. . • EXCEPTIONAL CONDOMINIUM Choice Monaco 3 bedroom model. Big .Can· yon. l~xquisitely decorated in soft colors. Brick terraces with a view of 10th and 11th fairways. Hi ghl y upgraded. $160,000. BEAUTIFUL LINDA E legant country English, \Va rm woods, deep carpets. formal dining. 4 bedrooms with ba lconies. d en. 3 fireplaces. 2'h baths. Boat slip , gated community & m ore! $230,000. PRICED TO SELL! I 4 Bedroom, 2YJ bath. fa1nily room, cathe-- dral ceiling ond fireplace In mas ter bed· room. Near pool and t ennis a rea. overlook· ing golf course . $56.950-land included. DIAL 644-1766 2161 San Joaquin Hills Rd., N.B. A COLDWELL Bf<NKER CO. , 70;0 LOAN this cheery 3 bedroom home. FRO~TAGE, graded & Plcnly ol room for a second 536-2551 or 839-6133 ready 10 build on. This FULL PRICE unit on thi!! R-2 lot. It'll go1I~===~=====: 2 BR .. 2 ba ............. S3:Q pren1ier building site is fast fll N,000. Call 67>T.l'L'll 3 BR., 21~ ba · ........... $350 offered for onlJ, General R.E. 1002 General R.E . 26 500 Assume 70;0 Loan J BR .. 21 ~ btt ... ram ..... 1175 528 900 J002 2 slory rond~ convenient to Huge 2 story, 4 bedm1 on 3 BR. 2 ba, bonus · ...... S3&"i Oll'nC'r 1rill ~nsid. ll'l'tll~. ==== OLD CORONA H 0 ti! ES, UNSURPASSED OLD C HAR I\!. OUR AVAILABLE INVENTORY JS SUBSTANTIAL. 2, 3 ,& •l BEDROO~lS: SOl\1E \\'ITH OCEAN VIE\VS, DJ::NS, F'OR~1AL DINING & ~·A~·I. ROOl\IS. PRICED FRO~! $57,;;oo. SUBtl11T 1 0 <,; 00\VN. OUPLEXF:S FRO~! $62,500. CALL F'OR A PERSONAL REVIE\\I. COMP'ANY REALTORS SINCfo: 1~14 673-4400 k I . ·" I . h .l BR., 2 ba., new ....... S400 ~JISSfON RLTY. -4!»-0731 par , poo, transportation 01·ersiz ... ,, l'Orner ot 11·11 3 BR 2'' •· r •ioo New 2 Bedrm Homes schools, 11nrl shop ping . boat gate. Needs son1e TLC. 4 " ~ ua, ani '" ..... TGo/o DOWN Go I ., • P<Tl BR., 2 ba, fant ........ $-115 10°/0 Down From $26,950 urmct kilchc11. Private Payments on Y 5J. · 4 Hit., 2'~ ba, fani ..... $425 r-.ro1·e into brand nc1v ot'Can J BR Mesa Verde $41,500 4 BR Eastside $47,850 3 BR Duplex Eastside $47 ,950 pa!io. Gobs of storage. High $42,900 4 BR., 21,~ ba, new ...... $-165 vic11• multi·lel'cl hon1c. fashion carpeting-, Assum" 1 ~=----~~~~ 842-7411 Eves: 963-4062 bean1('(f ('ei!ings, nr11· decks. <'Kisling 7'/r loan. Total 2 Bit, 1 ba on R·2 lot. Ne\\' 1nastcr suite, n1irrorcd payn1ents SJ68/n10. Don't pninr inside & out. Ne11· c BRASHEAR) eloscts. dr;in1atic entry. niiss it. Call 5'1&--2313 hltin ki!, drps, crpt, bath & Red Carpet, Realtors OPENTJLg •"'SFUN10BENICfl hxlUl'C:s. frpli·. $6 4 ,500., _ REALTY . _ 497•1761 " Own<. 640R.'39. [I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;.. J .Joh 11Plli l, ---11.r allor Laguna Hills 1050 THE REllL , l BR, nrw paint and c11rl)f'I. ~ ·costa Mesa 1024 VACANT ~ ~ , OPEN SUNDAY Big 2 rar gara~c. Park-like Beach Duplex $79,500 1 ::0~~...:~::::::::::::::::::::~ Mesa Verde Pool Home yarrl. Ooly $26,00CI. l\lust Call For Details GOV'T REPO 5 BR. highly upgraded pool sell!~ &:•st Buy in Fountflin lsl \Veslem Bank Bldg. Univer~ity Park, lr\'int:' Days 552-7000 Nights ~ BR J ba, air cond. 11·et bar, prof. landscaped, sprinkler sysrem. Assu1nable 7 "1C 492-78~1. 581-2-176 642-177l honic. ne\I· crp!g. nei\·ly Volley. Ln..,,· do11·n, fo"JIA-VA CHOCOLATE BROWN 3 Ikdroom, 2 both. faniil~· pnint('(f, bl':iut. ac('f'nlcd & terms. CRll anytin1e. I.01·ely ne'v carpeting gives a Lake Forest 1054 roorn. Norrh Costa t-.lcsa. 2 appointrd tlhllouL 1590 .\li· SCOTT REAL TY !<t1·ik1ng appearance to this 2 -......0-"-CC:..----"':.,; I Patio~. On cu I -de_ s a r 1to1'l'&. AGT. !l'i9-8i5.1 536-7533 bdi'n1. hon1c 'll:ith C':Ustom 7°/o Assumable Loan strc.l"t. Shag carpet, fresh dr11 perics and lo!s or 3 BH. 2 ba. t }T nt'11· home in . EASTSIO~; ft'\C'r. Perh.'l'I li\li\IACULATE .1 BR, 2' Ba. n1irrorS. • __ _.,,,n~""'I loi· h p;iint insi de. Last years .__ 3 B d • bl 1 ....,"""'""'"-' counrry side, SI0,800 cas 10 . 1000 _._ stal'\t"I' 1iun1e. . r, f'n. ~11n1 rm, tins, crp l<, f'~s.y •• ,-., .• l-•I"" ""•"" • & fll'lCf' al $30,000. S , uu\\'O rl' · I' o. Ch d f d I I I & " '-"",. ,., '''"' '"' '"' ",";" VA loan. Prine. 1n1ng 1·111. ~ °"· ttt)' rps, ..: )'<. x nt oc. 1, .. ,., •nd pool. ,, 1-al 1,,,.. . 1 + rlnsln, t'Osts to anyone. kll 1 , ., -1 1-9 1 67• ~2 & knd"' "' " • 1nrrr. of on y sun. prr mo. C 1cn. I.A' Sll.C :I X j COtK, ...-vuu C\'t'S II .,. IOI' onl)' <'39,0~. . Call no .... ·. bids available al I f Th · +< """ For appl. t71 n 5,SJ-0270, Next to Beoch Just Listed Assume 1797 Orange. Costa l\tesa HcritagC' Real Estate ~~:s10 ~dd.1~~:1 \l'al~~~i1 1.H;;;u;;n;ti;;;n;;g;;to;;n;;;B;e;;o~c;h;;;1;;;04;;;0,1 CALL 552-7500 Cun·an,2 f{eal!y Co. 1 ;::;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 CALL 540-1151 now.\\'. T. i\fill€!1'. Rcaltor.11 • VISION • Lido Isle I &12--lSll. Mother-in-Law's Suite CHANNELFRONT COLLEGE: Park. A chanc(> \\'ith its 011·n kitchen & !Mith • Gracious Living IOS6 S1mll 10 beach. L n rt: e tcrraio formal e n I I' y . Pril'ate living roon1 \1•ith fireplace. F'ormul dining roon1. Island kitchen. Large f11n1ily roo1n \l'ith huge s1onc fi1'l'plocc. 4 fan1ily· si1.rd bcdroon1s. Covt•n'fi pulio. Pool siz~. 1~·aJJed yard. ASSUti'lE 7", ,.: loan. \Von't lus1 call fl63-6767. DUPLEX to huv a Jot of housc.•3 Br, in this rantbling rench style Red Hill Realty Chnrn1ing 50 ft. corner ho1nc. Pier & Jloal. Xlnt location, I ~: ·Bn. Avail. middle or ho111€!. 3 full baths & lots of REALTY REALTORS 3 Bdrins., rlcn; v1c11·s o! 2 ncrm<s from N e 11• po r 11'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! t'nd Of J une. Ask f(ir Liz or othet• rooin ror your fan1i!y. Univ. Pnrk Cenirr h·vine I patios !h1·uoul. $1~9.:iOO Island .. 2 Bdrms. each unit.I' ~NAP IT UP!'.~ Ken, A~cn1s, OH6-!l:'l21. It has an nssun111ble low I ~!!!!!!!!.--!!!!!!!!~·!!!!!!!!,. Waterfront Triplex bolh ll'llh large su~c!ct"ks. Surfside Pl'ninsul11 Duple>:! O\\'NE, R. ,i\11•s11 VP!'<le. Sharp ~~~.t rate loan, so hUlTy. -S2995 Down 011·11cr's apt .. 2 sturllo Apls., ~~~~ ~;n5r42.l~ation on Roo111y. 011·11rrs .uni1! 1~11int 3 BJ., 1-.: has, Fan1-nn, 2 Ch. t' a Realty BC'fluttrul det'01':11~ \Vahiu1 ~irJl~15· ~fli·I~; l!!tis('l'IO~d. Call · 6..., ~r,.3 97,_.,190 E and ,n11t1nr r'<'11.~1rs n'qutr('~. lrplcs, nr1v rpl. Prin. only. ri~ 1an ~1uarc tnll'nl1uusl'. \\"itli :!' • · aiu cfln <' · •·..-.iw ves \VfJn t Inst al S1~,000.-Subn11t S·l3,001. ~}Hi-30:-i& 6916 Warner hdrn1s, 2 h;11tis. Fan1ilv NpurchnsBl'd. L & T . your nrfrr. COSTA MESA at Golden Wes t rno111. h 111 !1 • ins & ear eacn enn1s CALL61;1-8IOO 6 rll:<hwa~hf'r. Jn clurlf':< 3 2·1)(>clrn1. tlpls,, steps to associated DUPLEX 714 : 842-748 1·;or1w1~. dt".~""'s, ""bl.:• TV, evc1-ylhing! SJGj.000 !'IDff1fY5.~r;t'().,<J!'IG·JJ'NU~' 213 592 5568 ,,~ '-" B lb OP£NT1t g . rT'S FUN ro SE NICE• fJ $.17,300 \If\ ok, Agl 5!6-9521 : • lhll -~ l'l'I' 111'1'.'I. S29,950. a oa i~ ~ \: f:. llu\1rtnl ~'\· f.o. )1ESA VERDF::; BR, t 3j ba. C11ll ,'W().!720. 4 ,\djllC'<'nl dupl('xes. \Vfll('r ' ,, ,· R...,l ...... ti..""-f<1111-1·n1, frplc, romel' lo!. $212 Per Mo. [ Ol'il'nte<l. Sl 10.000 To o:r:r;ir.11 By ownf'r, S~l.SOO. S.l6-897G CAPE COD JARBElL J s11:1.000 cl\ch. JI~ i'r.;. old. BROKERs--AEA LTORS 2015 W Solboo 67l-l,&l ~:::~::::::I IRVINE SHO\VPLACE LI DO liil.F. $7!1.~iOO EAST c.~I. $l21.Xl dol\·n. 3 Surrnundcd by p ;\ r k. I 1 k I' ~ • Buy Ollt' or 11.ll. Dcrora1or fresh 3BR, JBA. Suprr Sh~1rp :\BO. 2RA, Bl, BR. 2 Ba, S·l9.N..JI. &t>-7SO'l g!'ounds, 01111111110111 2 lel'el Best Univrrsity Park F'P. Lari!r Lll'i~ Roon1, 'NV WOULD YOU loc111ion! Amenities galore· 17:1 ZUflICll Brand Ne1v. Ca!X' Cod, Rll .11hu11C"rt'd. •,.LIDO,REALTY -11·· 1,. 1,.1 .. 'II . *673-7300 * sufl{'r kitchen, p I us h OPEN HOUS~: SAT & SUN llnvr son1ething you '\\'ant to pRp<'l't'Ci & c;irprt<'ll. Llll'l!'.l' 295."i Harbor Blvd. BELIEVE carpeting, fun fireplace, Call Prt'sli"C Homes fur Info SC'll'.' Oassif!cd eds do lt ranch siylc kitchen ..... ·uh jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii LIDO ISLE B O 611. 01 A bl L ? "' ceran1ic hltns. TV run1pu~ 1 -Y wner 11 10 s1uma e oan formal dining room, fam ily "64=.-~;..$l6=~======"-';"~''='=-='='="=N=O=IV=642~-56;:7S,;·=! 23 ~ I L'nusunl 50· mmcr lot, lop Sl-e this sharp new listing . .1 roo1n, private patio! Serious ~ rni & separnie ""'' :;:anll' LOVELY .spacinu~ '! <il•w~ location. Rustic Oiarni. Bed 2 I II '"lh 11 k' '"I~ y room! Assume 6',. VA IOitn, 1~ 1h I room, u ...., s, cnzy 5C' er as 1ng .,., ,......, .. ou ..,me. wi ru~t1c· 11•~1< •Spaeiou.11 :I Bi·. den. 21~ fin:p1ncc, sl'C\uded patios uwn the land!! only $212 per mo. PIT!. f'ull r~r~nor, 4 l~·cht10111. fnr111iil Hath~. huge f 1 1. r P I n c e, i1nd beautiful 1n1crklr decor. CAL.I.. 6-15-8400 ~@\\.~~-~ £!1-S e PRrioeEPs42 0 .950S·S. EB's's"io2-5Na11S d1n1n~. 1a~1!ly 1~,11,n1, io.11 1'()1110,uni!y 1ennis l' r 1 • \Valk to 5Chool~ and c.lec1r1c kitchen, b 1· 1 t' k , ... ,,.11. 1115.000. Gi:>.107' 'I CYr/CfS & 'lXJ ·..KJIV US ' I I " i;hopping. Fust possession. W ,/ G h Cit l/ nl'JI at'l', nc\\ shnc: ~·Hr/1t't:< Won't last IH $.1..1,500. \: r.. ll1n•urd & Co. Tho# I riguing or ame wit 0 UC e For lnfol'nlfllion EHK! lll<·a llnn lhruoul. 3 Cnr i:-:1r;1g1'. (J11il'1 ~~Y~si~?:':~~:· J~~i~~C'4 ~l 11...i t:.i .... u.."""-------l1Ui.t11tr CLAY I. '°'-LAN of these FliA & VA hon1es, CDR ~!l't't'I. S~,a<JO .. Bkr I ~...,. BEACH INCOME \'OU CllOICE OF 3 SUPER OCEAN Al ltES -All lnd ivirl1.1a lly prlcrd be<1u1lfully dccon1ted and fu11l11Jht'd, 2 wilh ,vil'\\', 1\'ilh t'XCt'llf'nl Jnt.1Jffi(' n't'Ord~. Call us for furthl'r ck-toils on th~·!ll' popul111· ocean-living ifl('(lml' unit~. PETE BARRETT -REALTOR- 642.s200 $36.300: Low c~h To 11JUtnml' 7,.~,.; CXLlitinM: 10:111. Prlnl(' l111nti11gtC1n Be11Ph 11)1-nti<ln. )'Ou'll IOVC' thili f100l'1Jh1n. Olll X.17·6010 for cnore infor- ntAllon. AJl:I, ClA"S Sf.:Lts -&12-~'ill BLUFFS CONDO-O lt~rrono• 1•"9rs of th• ,--,,,,..--..,.,,,..-, contat·t • 91~1J'.i681 n1nids/,\ll thC' 1.~111cnltie11. N C11ll lo r>.:aminc and be 1011• scrombl.d Wo<d1 b.· THE FINEST! low 10 I01m IOllf timpl• wo•d1 Sp1•i•111I en(! unit. G-Plan wi1h KASABIA plerisnn1ly surprisNl. BKR. Real Estate 962-6644 RACQUET CLUB s i~-1 1 18 4 i<ll'mS.. lo.·mol dloh ... , IG ul ,T IH 01 RI' I SHARP & CLEAN JEWEL rln.1111111!~· drron1ting & open bl.•11n1 ctoilin~!I. La r g c _ p1·iv11tc patio 10 display your 3 Jkrlrornn. 2 h;"1/ pfll'k·likl' Popular 3 HI'. ~ hf\, nll l'l1•r .. yard. Top·nnl,•h nric:-hhnr· nlr roorl. B1·11ut. l:in(isc111)f'li. 001<l. Cl01W ro 11<·hooti;•st}Op-North ln·in{', By Qy,•nrr. ping, A~s11n1e low inlC'l'C'~I 544-275l g111'(!~ning tall'nts, S79,000. I p Y T D E I 'i· C. F. Colesworthy 1---.: 1 -:.. 1 ,.:....l:....;;,..I ~ lonn. Asluni;: only $36,750, AS..~U~lfo; 7•;, :1 Br, 2 011, Cull. IJonu~ room & patio, l~r yrl, Realtors 640-002.0 _ _ _ _ f SCOTT REAL TY 10 fr11(.'f', abut,; gl'N'nbcJt & FIXER UPPER • 53'-7533 tJ'l.'('5. By 01111tr . opp! only. Sol6,000. S."..",..$."1tt, ~I r . Buy a!I ts and AAvt lhnusands I C A p I N 11 Two fl@as started ovt for 11 Oli"IW'r ll'IQ\°f''I. IJK9j do .... n. I ""II 2 ·-· 2 . I llRS 3 hdrml'i. 2 bath~. rrplc. •l "'' flt'll. .,. .. .,room, I I' I w•llt. One soon tired, turn~d 1 •· h • 1 ~ 1 · l11m1li• Rrt'H. n'Ar h\' n~ rtn. 1~11 , fluu t cnnuum n1um . to rke olli~r. and a•kod, "Shall 121000 I II · SI"'"" · · · Bulll·inll, rtl~hwi111her . , 11 price. ...,.., we __ a d ...... r.. 1 Do\\n. Payments Jes!I lhfln I N I T B O A I ~... Cn\'f'rN! ri11rio. spr nkl!'r!I ~n1. Bltn rang~ a.nd <>vl'n. ,,.,o front ,(. l'l'nr. S38.0C'.tO. bkr Pool. Expansl\'e l:f"Cf'n bell. ·s O C~l•t• lh• drv<~I• qUOl.d Call 96Z.,.:,,il)6 Brok«!r 36.-.1206 .___IL..._IL...~lc...~l-~1_, bv f1llll'IQ ;11 111.! l'!liump word1 5-B-R-.-,-,,.-.-,,-,,.,-,,-,~d~~I.-,~,,,-,, -y0<.r d•"*loo lrom 11119 No. l !Mlow. I $36,500! Nt'arly ne" fl(')me in patio.~f11111 h'N'!t. e11.t11te ot, 1(1'1"81 beach lol"a!lnn. Nh·t' PR1Nt NUM8EREO lf.T Tf.RS IN J 4 ) 0\\'nt'r fiflfltlN.'.111v'•· S4:i.OOO family roorn. Perlr(1 hon1c fHE!lf SOUAI! s Rl'nl Ill f"~1·rm1' t'l~e:oi. !162· for )'<lung tan1Hy or retiring :::=====~!:;:::;:::;:::;:~=:;=~::::;::=*=~I 5721 or n;..111~ r\·cs l'OUfl[C. C:l..11 rlghl now . e UNSCtAMMl AIOVf. \f.T TlRS I I I • I I BEi\UTlrliL ~,17..(,()tO Ag1 , --~10"-'0~•~·~•~N~S~W~t~•---..L. -~--'--'"-""'""' .Just listed l Br. 1Jt tot, qulct •. a Dally Pllo\ Classlflctl tll'C!tl. $:\5,flMI. \\'Ills Realty, Ad. 6-12 56'18. SCRAM-LETS A"swert In Classific.atlon 8080 ~rl6-i739 ·. \\'ahner. TURTLEROCK: TranslelT(>d °''nrr mur;t st"lt ~ BR. 211 bar;.. 4,~ Fam-rm. sep Dln-nn, 11trium. patk>. Nr. pool, 1>ark . t-.lany xtras. $69.500. \n('I land. 833--9208 LARGE, Lli;tht & 1..ovely, Nrw 2 RH . 2 ka, Unil't'~lty Pnrk. $44.!ro. Includes lend By 011nc>r. 5!'12~iJ6 *BEST BUY* *IN TURTLEROCK* 1"!1111 I. 3 UR, 2 bu + (:1111, T1·nni~ ,(. JJ!'ll'll~ 833·33-11 NewP.Ort Beach 1069 BY OWNER Ha rbor View Monaco :!' lilt + Ucn, 'l ba. 3 doon from prtrk. pool. & enbana.. $69,000 F~. tilN:_._·'69_._·~~ • POOL • ~lid i::nld Joe. O""'tK'r \I ants out, \\'ill help. :lBR. $71,900. Cnll for more lnlo. Pa.cillr S e r '' I c e ~ Renlfy. &IO--!ll:iO or 831-1514 THE BLUFFS/CONDO 3 BR. 213 BA. 2 ~Y. BAY VIE\\'. s:;.;,000 li.-t T.O. ~'ull p:il'r SS.1,5("(1, Ol1•fll'r nrok- er, 644-17.W OR 642-0.'illO. Hf<RBOR VU, Ctrmol 3 BR. 2 Bil, F't1n1·rn1, Bc>tlt locS\rlan on i;reen belt. Q\\·nrr. $i2.!l'll. Aft. 8, S.!!l-j~7J Tiie fA.'lle~I <h'R\I' In the \Vf!1t. • • , 11 !Jally Pilot Classlned Art Call til.2·5678. .. DAILY PILOT M11nd~1, J11nt 10, 1974 ...,,.....-..,--=:::--.,.,.--.,.,-=,,-,"'r-,--,,.--,-,..-,,-,,-...,-,.--r---rr·--°"'=-=-,--:--0----:-:-.--,.--c--r:-:-:::-:c~rr:'.7.".'.::'"--ewport Be•c t069I Sunset B.••ch 1090Tne0me Property 2000 Hou••• Unfurnished Hou1e1 Unfurn ished Hou••• Unfurn lahed Ap1rtm•ntt. Unturn. Apartment1 Unfurn. _:;A:::P;;.";;t;.;m.;;•;..n_1_,_u;..n_l_u_r_n_. SUPeR "£" OCT..\~F'llO!'o:T I.lit. 7.orn·d TRIPLEX Gtntrtl 3202 Huntington &11ch 3240 Newport a11ch 3269 Coron• dtl Mtr 3122 Hunt. H1rbour 3842 "S:;;••;.;';;.'.;.A;;.n;;;• ____ 3_8_80_, ON FEE I ~~ ,.0,',",' .. 1 .... \!.· ... !~·!21· on1r NEWPORT • W BEAUTIFUL .-.. ~ BEACH AREAi Id"! for 2 "'011' 3 Ur. 2 Ua 2 ml. lO 'VIEW·VIEW·VIE N~W ,.. If you ha\'fl -nalr for lhc J ff I d .ALA l.INTALS \'Ollple. SIZl. 1181 ¥8r8j,:(', bc•ch. l'et Ok. Deluxe 1 Br. frplc, IUU dct'k, UEAU'rlFUL, QUAl.IT\' .,-·nd'··· & c"··rful- drlm.tlc .all U •• bo"t th'·, ust 0 Nowporl ll '' • nn1r or TRLR G t "• t f 2 3 Valk ··-·-•~~ tJo Good necc!SS 1u Nt'wport "-""¥' .11. c. "'"""u 1.1\'E nr bl!ach1 Sl30. N~· c:atpOrt, stortta:e area. 110 t Br fl Br Apts. \ to ten.a ital property, Tr"~ r -I~ Costa l\l{'lll -San DJctO WI \lt(IAl.IU .. lllVl(t nu 3 Br. frplc. Sn&h1 ok. 1ha11: &r. n:dtt. Child/pet. Wltft'r. Adults. $29511\10. bt.'6Ch, l!hoppl~. Ul\Cl,,;ill'fl· apaclou& 11~·· the 10u1ht alter 4 Bit ~Htmle Jillll fwy. Cenirt1l r.te~a locetlon. PET \~'ELCO:'ifEr 2 BR REASONABL.EI 2 Br wJaar. 646--4731 or 61).7561. ed. no p.erty y,•11.J~. pallo~. : :~~· f~n; s. c PIDU FamUy Room 'E'" Pl~11 In ~mmiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;·:;-~1 0v.'rtt'nc uni! 11115 3 Wrooms f fill MOUSIS ~·/1\•11.sher & d r ':I er . Kkl/11, pell. San aen\ente. OPEN dally. Ei03Y. Jitamhlf'. 1111 flic.llhlet. e Rec facU &: clubhou14'.! n " ... .-... " --n -chld -m ,, ~ I •••••.. Homeflnder• * 642·~ I I __ ....::::::..:::::.::.::....__ • 2 It 3 BR-Sorry, no pet• !~i't• Bhrl,1 1•1_!1•1 1•,.hly 0,", .. r&d0od111 -dlnltli' room -f1tmlly Uls lllOJr.tO. Hom1flnd1r1 * 642·'900 New, be•ut. 2 BR. + den, Call 968-9108 I ·• 1 t "·bll H '"" 1 -..... •vv -' ----77""' ]!ARBOR vt·EW 38R or ~·et bar, trplc .. flll b I,. !'Ill, lrvt'n• 39•• • FROht 119011'10. m mn, ""uttcn. op arat c mv e omes 'lreplact>5 • lndoor BC". 36' • :::::.. _____ :::.:;..:.:~ c11rpet and '''nil oovC'rlngs fol' sale l lOO polio clreled In \\'roURht lron NIWPOIT & U.Y, c.M .... 1-1111 SHORT W1\Ll\. TO UI<J\CH ?&den, great view. New, 213 ba. Scenic Pro fl . ·--PARK PLAZA II Jr )'OU entl"rtain th!~;~ yow· _ :Znd polio. pluJ goi'i!OOU~ <'O....,'TA l\11-:SA BrAnd ne¥i' 1, 2 & J BR. S.'rW · nw. )Tly. Pacific ,6~-'-~"-26~------I PA{lKWOOD 8{)3 \V, StC\'Cll!I homeO! ~. •07 ·-,._ I CltSf0'.\1 2b:62. Lg II\'. r1n, n101'\'! Both other units 8J1' \'Elt\' Clc:ttn! Li~ Bach $150 I mined. OC<:UP>'· Oix:n for I :; "r v I cc 1' ll ea: l l y , 3824 New Adult & Famlly ( OU Sunflower l 1u)' ~ ,;J<,r<; '' 2 Bit 2 ., , 2 BR I I rl !urn. has 2ar11.ac & klry. h\8Pl'<:lion Sat/Sun 10.t). 6'1D-8250J831-l!i1·1 Co1t1 MeN Snnla AM 5~~1121 644~7211 lnnt n11, .. , ,,,~ -Pl.\l~ -cncosl.' Hl• •. \n. l Ur1dplx $150 JIO...,'. N.\V. L'OMl<'r \\'llrfril'r & -';;;;;;;;:;:;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;1 Apt&. ~IOOC'rn r:1t. 0 1\' u l' r . gara~r;. All th!~ for only ~lnts. Dolphin Realty 1213) Newport Shores 3272 • I •l\13~3\00. 10'-.:: dO'\'n • Ju!lt redu1·~·d. ...11·, C&O, 1iet, gnrrigc'. \.J BR'1' f'l'On1 $1.SSlnw. Bit· Wt1tcllff 3896 N' 1 l"2 ·~ c 11 Bl'Dl.ET 2 br hse $110. fncd 37&-:W.~4 NEW in nui;;e. garbage dii;posul. I • BA'r"FHOXTPk.,l.iu,:::<'2br, 011' on y I ,>NIJ. t1 ii/""I', _, .. ,.,.. UNIQUl: 3 Hi'. 2 00, trplc. d11h"•hr.Dc.luxc&hll"'l'l'Pt'g. . I ~ 1 lltn f\ 1 1 i52·1700 "" .. ~ ... .. Hunt. H1rbour 3242 imt!o, ron11n . pool, trnni5. 2 Orl1perle... ,. Nf;\\ILY red1~(·., 3 BR. 2: h11tll ~ ~~~:~ 1~!1;~~!· s12.9~. &1'.·,.53~ ' tNYtsTMll~~~~'l!~l l~~~~~:· ~i~i:~ 3 ~;,5215 lnt•d l'{ll' lo!li.1'. \\'alk to Beath. 1, 2 & 3 BEDROOM 17560 Jnl'ilan Avr. ~2--llllOO J~~~~\'~:°1· $ 29 :i. nlo. • I I uxury I l l Acreage tor 11fe 1200 ; i ; 1>d. Iii\ /rt•f. JZ{tl'tl~t·. I fo1'1l11ll rl jnlng roorn honl4'. OPEt\ 10-4 Dally. l lil', 2: 8 ;1, aguni •IC Apt• Furn/Unfurn 3900 ---rh°I I L I [~ ~ r,, C~·l·3 Or S325 No11! ut U f::LEGi\NT l BR. f11111 rm, Coll 6Mi-2219· L B h 3848 Lil.I'll.:" ,.,, i'1ll 1'1' · ~ nu. -, · \\' \LK 10 Pl •r Btt('l s9-N1•\IJ crpt11, x~nt landll('Hpln~. I \\'11lk tn lxh. Pool, 1t•11nl!1 S llt Level Apt U f i1·l1hln ...,.ulkint-: dlst~nct• 1,1 •INJ•l.ATION llEDGt.: 1 ; '11\JNTINt.TON B~;Ol "· \'at·ant $525. nlO. Yl's. I~. p1·11•. l.sc $3$0. 30\ \Valnut p I n • Spect•cul•r, New 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 pool&.· school. 1111.i< 3 ba11liii. TAX SHELTERS _ -1 Ch · 1· R It s r oos..·~2i OCCUPANCY JUNE 1 Ocean Vu Townhoutes 11 fan1Uy roo111, chef'.~ kitchen 'IND ·\Pl"'E"t \'110~ \\'AUi ( '1" !Plt•r , ~I Ch S95. ris iono eo Y , . a• , BRAND NEW · · ..., · ' "' ... ' • nu1 r on y w·11 ut1 pd I BF \Cl! POOLS TC:NNIS \Vnlk lo be11ch. 2 BR -+ den \\'!lh ~t'lf7t'l<'lln•ng (l\>{'ll. Appl'OX 15 ll{'l'f'S, V~sta atta. Duplex near the Sea ' . '. ' . . 6916 Warner ·' . . I • .+ \\'{'! b;o·, tile IJ{llioi. trpll', Exiensh·f' Hf'i'kln~ .~ pal\n I H 1 1 d , ,1 · :\'U Piunt. 1 hr. s-rnt Sl60. G Id W :1 Bit + Den, 2 ba, bll·in!I, •-• Tinted .,., ind1111·~ cru y,_ o .I''' op • .,,,;,_~o nu l'i'pls, stv/n:f, pct ok. at o tn est Fi·pk·. I.SE $375. 642·l31il!. F'EATURING : custon1 criilM, drp11 , VERSAILLES ., • · a\·{)(·it<tt•!i ul' cnrus. *""""· voo«\'' 2 "-d Ix $14' l 714 842 7'a.1. uppllance:1. $430 )>er mo. l o I\' 1o m n In re ti 11 n <'" p,.r acr~. Ed H 1rl 1j l ,. , 3 Bl"droo111. 2 hnlh each. One " "" ' ..... P 118 s : • -Sa J Loft Bedroon111 • }'rplc'a • 837 \aruJ~cnpln1:. And 1'('.()Ul for ll.C'al1ul' 6 4 6. 8 ~ 11 or year olrl. r:nclo54.'d J.!;\.1'111.(1!5, I s-,,.~. bNI~ WR31'rB. pet, ok. 290 213: 592.5568 I c.pui:~rano 3278 Ceran1lc !He klt1·he1 I I.. f:x.1..:::::,-1~8]1"-"'--==~~ you!' bo:I!. 5i~.j{)(). CBll e1·e~/Sun ~2 buill·in.~. H1•nt~ a11' $17:1 • r.a:. o.,...! . r. ba $ . J)08ed Be11n1 CcllinJlis e En· * OCEAN VJE\V·2 BR * 614-87j(). . ('ach. All r't'ntrd S-7:.!.000.1 friilr, ? <'llr, :;ill,(.:lcs ok. Irvine SHIRLEY'S duplexrs. Ney,• cl0tied P11lloi;: e Pool & * No pcLS. LRG POOL. * Commercial Prpty 1600 Age11t 53ti..ss36 l.ACUNA HEACH 3244 dt•lu\'e 2 BO. 2 BA. n1811y 01h1•r u11\Cnil'11~·t•J!.f~~~'~""~· :...::1"=.,· ~67;""~t~"''=- [ TARBELL J I !'LI' be! ,. l BLUEBIRD Bach. ntale $150. •li"hll':;hr bH·ins / 2 C'&r Adults only, e FM'TASTtC c:lttan \llC'\V, ' ' to 1· . '' 11 l HOUSE; PI.l,;i' T\rQ blk y,•atel', !um. util pd. Bradfo1-d Place • Santa 1\nR · 1· I / 1-, nc1v 2 Br. 2 Ba. Norlh I r.v.>~O 0 l'l.ltn111C'tcl11I Jut 29,jO() i;q. . IR '.! B\ S,E·;:.',E,'··.R·A"Ll;t pdB•.c~.'.·,~ .~~ .. ·Sl~. i:.:nr 111'1\' yes crpt .. ., w•..smu~~ IT. JOO' front~(' al mo LI\'(' Ill 11('1\' ~ '! . '., " ,, ·~-...... 3 bdrms. 2 ba ......... S27:i tlrps ~'{)1Y111l('I(' pl'i\'8C)'. I HAY LOFT APTS. rnd. 5350. 494 -7929. Crirlsbnd Bl\'d & 1 0 0 · house and ren~ 111·0 2 B~. ~ BEi\Ol Cottage 3 br S350. Callfo1·nla Hon1cR · lr\'ine :S:'.1:1. ~96-:~'="'='-~-~-$PAC. Studio, .1 blk 10 main ' GOO ;\Cl\'jJOL'I CC'll\L•I' lll'llL' h'OlllA:'.::t' on 334 Crdar St, BA. apt,•. •,rplc!.'' ooopat.1os. dt-ck/\'iC\I', lin1(' r . p .. 3 bd,,rn1s.,,~,, .. , . F.R, ... ,,. •• Sl20 f{E~Tll.S~ llCll' 1 b1', 2 ba. 183 AVOCADO bcurh, crpl~. drp, $1T.i. C•11! Cat'l~b:;1.1!. Calif. Old but garages, nuni 1~·. '"'· · 1e · oii•s • rv e Bltns. Cai-den pat, upgraded I ·lfl.1-1791, 6-1~11~. --WE$i'CLIF_F__ ~vod shRpe hQvsr on l'f'llr nt 8'i/i-, Bullrll'r r:t;..f.111. trC:~l.L US FOR i\IORE. :; bdrnts. 2 ba ......... S2!K> thruoul, 2 c11r gar., pool, COSTA MESA lido Isle 1201 & 1207 Highland !)It 1 t'tlt'ncr of PJ"?f!Cl'!y. $79.500. Lots for tale 2200 \Ve scivic.:-all the bcRch Gr.lentL'CC llome:s • Irvin.:! S250 nto, 496:-0738. 645--0143 PI' e 5 I'.! n t I y u n d <' 1· By 0\1'111', 1f ·no ron1n1 . eities & inland Ornrig-c Co. 2: bdrnls. 1 ba. f .R. ·"' U25 RENT/LSE 2 hr + a!covr, 2 l\lon·Thurs 5:30-7:30 pn1 LIOO ISLE Dr1unatic eonsu·u\'!ion lll'<'St~"e l::Xlt'..' in\'oh·<'rl. !714l7~~21. o AN A POINT·Rt•indentinJ $ LANDLORDS $ \lillHge 1 Univ. Pork· fl'\'. 00. upgradOO thruout. Pvt Sat·Sun t0-4 pin v I c I\' -\Vn t t't·rront IBR, tuston1 hlln1ci; . 111 ~1' c 11 Condominium• lot, l\larinn At·eo. Ot'Can FEE fRE:E Cull Us To<la :i hdrins. 2 bn. ••• • · •• • S.175 patio, bltns, 2 car gar, pool. Condo. Apt. $375/mo In\' l'st11bll~hcd 1'j'1ghbo1hoo1l. f I 1700 ,.1""" N. (If Const Mw')'. & ALA R t I 642.!)Sly 2: bclrn18. Iba ......... $3JXI 12'>0. ·\96-0739 3 BR, 2 BA '195. UtllK. No pet.a. By O""ner. l!:ach honll! •I BR, 3 full or sa e Crystal 1.an1crn, $l5,000./ en a s Viii~ .. c 11 Unil', Park • lrl', --.. 675-0534. baths, lonnal dinin~. I~. I BY Oy,•ner, Cor'ldo., Tustin. 2 ~;, dn. 12131691-3293 3 bdrms. 2 bu ..... $400/$425 N!O:\V, 2 BR Condo. OrBpes, f,\~llLY UNITS, sturllo, lll'.!1\'J..;::.:::;~:.=~--,..,-.,,-~ ran1 n11s, \\'Cl bar, sun~n ! BR, 2 bo, l,O:iJ sq ft. Neii• HAi\llLTON' ST, C:>it. R·J FREE FREE \Tillage Ill Univ. Park. Jr\t. Ci·pls, Rcfrig., I au n dry, shug. hltins, private p11tio. BAY VIE\V nr. pvt beach. con\' e 1· s :t 11 on p 1 t,, kilch, bath 8.:: cpl. Air~nd, 26•250 sq !1. St3.ooo. Agt. •Professional Se1vice • 3 bdt'ni. 21~ Lia ••••••••• $450 pool, p~tio, 11all!r pd. G:ir. \\'alk 10 srhls, shopping. 3 Br. 2 be.. Lg Iv nn wl trpl. + n1n~~ fabulous l<!atu1·c,,, bh-ins, Dishi\'ushel', gynl, ~8-J:'>.ll, l'\·e!i 5l8..S562. *LANDLORDS* 3 bdrin. 2 '·1 .......... , $35() attch. $210. 493-3406 64~7857. mgr. S325 lse. AdultR. 675-3022 Tf'll!. 6.;.>-:nJS fur uppnl. pool. ~<'cur\ty gi'lll!. S~.iiOO .. M t' O Homefinders * 642·9900 Garden Jion1es · h-..•lne E\llV\ NICE, 3 BR, CrJllS, FOR n1uxlmun1 privacy-see Me11 del Mar 3861 BAYCREST HY; On. (Hj-TI92 oun n,, eserl, California's L.;1rgest 3 tx1;n1. 2 ba ..... S335rS315 dl'p!I, 2 car gar:. Pool, our Bal·h. & l B1· Lott Apts. POO L ResOI' 2400 e Rentul ~ITire!e I' 1hl! Te1i·ace · ll·vlne lnundry, patio, \l'lr pd. $23.l. inrl. uril, t'l"frig, <!nl·I E::t r. 2 Bit, l BA .. hl1-lns. Rt'frl· 4 OR 5 BD~?.IS.. BY 0\1'111?1', '.:BR. 1 1i ba. -_ ? _ Br. 2 bu . new. furn ... S360 '193-3~06 i;tol'agc. Adult.~. no pl• Ii<. i:;e:rator. Upper. Adults only. Dining·1·1n, t-nn1·n11. kl1chcn enclosed palio. lrg dbl gar. CRESTLINE AR EA 2: B.R·C:'lt $1 ~.J, ~ .!3R? HB, J Bt" 2 ba. nl.'1\' .. S3.".0 '$4001 No \V a t r r I) r rl s . :~~ S\10 eno. M:l8·1lAI. 1\•,eating ,1rca,:: bi; .. l'l ~li1r n~11· _carpets, Yorba_ ;tnrl~, J HR. 2 h;i, \l"tll' t'Ound hon1e. 5165. I BR·NB. 51.hl. -BR. Tul'tlf' H0t:k • 11'\'ine Hses Furn/Unfurn 3300 llamilton, Cl\!. G'l:t-<1·111. Mese Verde 3863 1111., 2 frp\c~ .. SpnC'IOUS ~-4.!'l.lO. appt only, al.·8~2:".' :-rr-luded. '1tll u111. 17111 Crl'.\I $200. J BR. ~at 3 bdrl"' 2 })R . F .R. S.;t:i1S•IJO "-"'-"'-'-.:...;"'-----'-'-" bn1,:](:.·a1·d . ,!;: bl!: ini·1r111:; _o1• Sl2·6731. ! ~..St-O:liO. Currnncl Rcuhy Co. Bench. 53:l0_: ~Ing I" s , CALL 552•7500 CONOO 2 .. Br, Sll.11 ~uan CHJLOREN \\IELCOl\fE 3856 ON Tl lE LAKE Al SI. uth Coosl Pl"za. Poot . Al'llPUICO AllUR Bar ·a Jacwli. Speclacular 8 Acre Lake w/Tov.'erlni: r ount11ln•. ~:i 1\1111\on Dolh1r ClubhoUlie, Gyn1, Saun;i, Total Secur\t\'. l111mediaJC' lX'C\IJXITll'Y ADULTS Sol'ry, Nn Pc1s Bachelor, 1, 2 & 3 Br'•· from $175 per mo. Santa Ana 3700 l'laza Dr. 714-556.0466 £f§C@e8mu EICITlllt MEW cotlClPT I lDUll l.lKESID( LIVINC i $M.UL ~Ii ACCl,UD j • Bo(helors •I 8R ,2BR •2 BR & Den [ From 1 l75 • $485 pool. l\Ja1·111c1~ St.:hl ~rea. \·~li~fl:: 51 ,, FJI\ Doll . r11.n11lle.o;. kids/pets. Ag!. I Cull'.°. Pool!s't~e. but pr\\-ale. 3 Br, 2 Ba condo, !'-;e...,•f>Ol1 l\1F.S.\ Vl::HDE lront 1 ~1y, 2 r ee lnn1t SIO" 000 Prill . ~. 2 i:1 ( :i 't '111 ~I~ C.\BlN', Big Bc!ar 1\re11. Fee. 97~1l430. • VISION • P:iho, Seclll'll)'. \\'shr-dryr. Rh·Jcra. Pool, lounge & IJr, rtrn, lrple, Jk'l!lo, hhins. only. By f;ivrn·i· 64&.;;is.s. · ~~:1:~~1'0l'j -.....-: :~·..;,.,~t....,,:.7 n 1 $.i'(XKl. te1111s. A l~. 6. C d 1 M-_ . __ 3212 ~ "' l <.:h.ild. s.tn pet. 5235 .. 495::6346. pa~Uion, Llkl! rounrry-c:t\l_b ·nu:cri>L, .~~cld i;tar, al'all Zli Mesa Verde Easl & Adams \.iiii.ii.ii.iiiiii.iiiiiiiii.iiiiii 1 1 ...... a ' ~w.>NV· .,....,...-__. ~12:-201.• I orona e ar ~ ! tilt 6 &: wkods. liy1ng! $325. on l )T lsc. Junl.'!, $210, 546=-2315 -540·l800 - SOMERSET MODEL : Income Property 20001' Out of State Prpty. 2600 LOVELY :i BR Ham(' close j Red Hill Realty Condos Unturn. 3425 '''m. Tom l\llller, 642-48l I. • ltO~lE AT~10SPHERE a bedroom 3 bath large lot 10 UNITS I '" brnch, Ctl~t. H11s All~ I REALTY REALTORS -VERY Nice J Br. 2 Ba, fain Ot'luxr-2 &. 3 Br. Rental ofc, . & I si1i 99· . I 12 !\TILES lroin Sw1 Valley, ON REACH 11'/l'iCI\'! 3 Br. Univ. Park Cent.!t, lrl'lne L~ ,gotr COUJ"S(': 2 BR + exp rm, ..... ,s.Dd~.!~hl. ···~1~!rryig, r:.'2 ::1()9j l\tace Ave. S.16-1034. I ~ poo.; ,.,_ '. J . ~ $l 4S OOO Idaho. 3 Bdrm ho ni e · 1 Chil d/pet ok Bal boll Prnin hl'ing nn, 1\·111 convert to .,. ,. ... N h n;B -:; 8 . r J;.;TERtST I ' 530,000. 60X120 lot. ).18-0046 SF:CLUDED Bach $115. Shng.12 BR Condo .... $235/mo L..c 3.rd BR. Dbl gar. plu!h car garage. Adulta. $300. ewport Be1c 3869 I HARBOR VIEW .... ..,r. <9">I'S Ref's. 642-4163 att 5 P~1. 'Tl,, HOMES I Cl!Orgcous aarden. setting Real Estate Wntd. 29001 c1·pt. fncd yd. \\'estmin~te.r. 2 BR Condos ..... S26:i &: S2!~ .... iras. ""-"· ,,. ., · l':r!.!._ and 10 sharp units. Best I Homefinders * 642-9900 3 BR Condos ..... $265 &: 52 1,1 BLUFf''S N.B. 4BR 2BA 2 LRG 2 BR. 2 Ba, din rn1, CHANNEL FRONT REAL TY 133-0780 looklns; placl! on the block. \\'c \\'111 List At I . 3 BR ll"mes , $300, 5325, s3:t:; 1 c!l r g11r.' Lense $450. Own~r. cpt/drp, stv/ref, Po 21 • 2 BR .. 1 be . Room for bonL 2 BR. To1vnhouSl'. frplr, I Tl\'O five unit buildings. 40/1 3 BH. 2 BA, fr~ c, r11.n1ily 3 BR lfon1es , $360,$315, $39j ' G·I ~l:i12 · A~IU;, _no pets. $ 1 'O . s.11:1 Un!. yearly. rrorn $~. l BB., lrom St93. LIDO ISLE-By Owner !111'<>n1c 51«3 per monrh. o I roon1. C'rpt.~. drps. $-IOO. per 4 BR Ho111cs .. 53.1.3,53.(}J, S42:i l . 645-8965. WALK TO BEACH Pool, tennis, conunCnt:1.I Cnusu:il :>O' C'Qrner lot top Garages. 01\11er 1,. anxious. f'I::E • 1\1.~ ... !l Boards nlO, 6(;>--0361 RANCH REALTY I Apartments Furnished • TROPICAL POOL 3 B~lrms., 2 bathii break(11st. &parate family lo<'~riu11 J:ui;t\.; Cl;Brni. P1·i11i1• localion. Call now J\\'alla_bl~'. .'lOlO S:il;spe<1plc. I \VANTr;D * 551·2000 * I Balbo I I d 3706 2 BR, i1:; baR., spiral Yf'Ol'~ 1"ase. $325 !\lo. secuon. CloSt' tu ih11pp1ni::. Sp·iciou~ ., Br d<'n 21 .. 1 i:•2-1i00. C. QUINTARD Rf.Al TOR 1" USED BRICKS * R.\Nnf REALTY 1 1 an ,1,1-, •.• , frpl•, PAI'•, YA~l. COR NA DEL MAR & rlnc hr.ach. 644-2611 I ' . " · ' ' . STM£NT D Sui:c :!!l.l · Lldu Bid'!. N B. g·o..;;,&.1 * ~ii6-6800 * · .... '"' ' "' " 1 b11th", h~1~<' f1re.pla c <', INYEIV!SlOli 1871 ll;irbor, C.:\I. 612_29~1 1 TUSTIN HEALTY 2 RR, 2 ba, ~~mn1er S150. \Vater&Ga.~pd.5-18-1168 2 Br. J ba, unf, yrly. S275. THE F.X<.:ITINO I r'fln111111 n11~· t('nn~s e r!. [12; ~ --.----,-.-. -Costa Mei• 3224 83.,. 1110. Yrly S31J. 1110. furn • DELUX~ 3 D 2 "· II PALMMESAAPTS. I bench. 511:i,OOO. 67 ... 1079 1P\T. PART\ \\A~TS TQ * ... Jill * or unf. li'i:'.-71111. l-728-2749. ''·. r, n.'l, n ADORABLE I I BUY 110'.\IE or HECT s . .. :1 13P. I l UNIVERSITY PARK -hltn~. frplc, gnr, pool. ?>.IINUTES TO NPT. BCJI. .. • '. FRO\I P\'T PTY -~9-396'J. · l!'\GLf-.!S ?k· · " encl'f , , Corona del Mar 3722 A~d;"='="~· ~S3=25~-~64=.=2-~l~t5=5~. __ Bach, I & 2 BR. frorrt 1157 13 Bdrn1., '.! tmth, rornel' . _ · . '1" -I )'Ard fol' kids & pet. • . BRAND NE\V CONDOS. _-. homr. Best prl('(' in llorbor 1 -----. --~ -PP.T\11\TI-. Pa.r1y 11·~n1~ 10 I FRPLC Jlome-J BR, F.V. ~ rplc, . wet~r. prlv ~!lo. 1 BR. 1; blk 10 ocean. 3 ~.R .• Child ok, no pet:s, Adults, No Pets. lllehland.~. 569,j(X) Call for I .A . PAIR OF FOURS buy li·12 un11s, prtocipals Child/pct ok. Cons id er pool, J~~z1. 2 BR, $32:1: 3 1 S\7ji:O.JO. Ulil Ptl. No pels. Slra., 153 Sh_nltm~r. 1361 h1esa Dr. Informal ion \\on t do n1uch In a pok<'r only, &14-186'9 i;ngl~. OR. $355. 541-6791. 2."J(]() Scavle\\', C<t~f. I &l.i-0165 (j blks from Nl!Wport Blvd.)1 640-4050 ga1nc.but thl~ pair of FOUR I BACl!t-.:LOR Pad· Sha_rc part TURTLEROCK·lovely 3 nr. Cotta Mesa 3724 Extra Uu'bt' Bache:lor, $140 * 2 WEEKS FREE * ~9860 HUG HOMES PLEXES can do a lot for 1 1~ 1'1.'nt f~r It. duues & 2 Ba, lg fam rm, tennis & 1 mo. util pd. Nr. OCC. No Vista del Mesa Rooms 4000 >:our .Plans for a secure Rtnt&ll ~ c<11npanwn. pool. $425. 613 -l 2 3 S; pets. Call 979-0UI. FOR sale by (l\l'llf'r. Easl· hn.ancllll future. Perfectly I Hom1findtr1 * 642·9900 61:..-5982. A ba sador I UPPER 2 br, cptJdrp, rn.i;e, ADULT GARDEN HOMES SLEEPTNG Room, refrlg, bluU 4 Br, lainlly rn1, liUll<'d for ;;1111cr ()('(!Upanc)' , m 5 ftft . I.RVtNE AREA AT r.1ESA IJ'('{'S, t.'OZ)', prh'. cntr, shoi\'fllacc yard. lmmac. or in\·estn1cnt. $71,500 each, COLLEGE PARK -3 L1guna Be1ch 32481 BRAND NEW O\~n. l'Chii_. no pets. S!50· h1o\'e ln ...,·/deposit or.ly GenUeman. Ref's. No move.In cond. Ben u t . to .... · in~'.On1es tha_! ca11 cas!ly Hou5e5 Furnished \ Br, 2 Ba, water, 91r· 51;..t).NICE 1B N h -; $34.50 & Up 7a'.!·D Shalimar. 548--0liS. 1 BR. S190 2 Br. S230 snioklng. $120/mo. 613-52:21. Spani!h til<' 1hn10ut, Open be raised to S430/n10. 9•;. diner paid $375 " r . · ort "11 • SINGLE STUDIO APT XTRA LARGE J Br. 21.ii Ba. Day & Night Security, Pool, llousr Sun. &1G--1627 I scr;. loan possible or?? Sold General 3102 54.>o22a . \\~lk to ben~h & !Ol\'I\, . . Stud io. 2: ~ly.· S22j/l\10. No Jacuzzi, Ree. Bldg. \V/{';'l({'J"-FURN. ROO~t \l'ith young l IB l G CA •.·. 1 , 0 ,N C . C . togt•!her or separately, S185-1 BR . North end. ;..'.C'ar I SPECIAi~ \VEEKLY RATES pels. :tt,;...J:l.')4 or 546-9222. else rni, billiards, color TV. roupll' i;:tudcn111 pr r r . '~ Call 64+-7211 $165--BAO-I nr. beach. Patio. MESA VERDE beach. kids/pet "''<'lcon1l'. 2211 Harbor B~\'d. Ea. Apt. hnii dlsb\\'aSh<'r, f:;i.stsidf' Costa :\ll!'sa, &lti· o~;i u,·lllC'. :;:)()() St1. fl. •I Hr, s:m UT IL pd Charn1lng rcur C t M 64548-10 2 Ek>droom a PR rt men I . 0S70 nrt 6pm 1. 3 Bn., spel·lacuhir ,·1e11· ... Pel ok. Lagun~. 3 br 2 ba top location a-· os R · esn. SlG:i/l\10. 796 Shalhnar Dr. ref1:g, shag cpl & pvt patio ~;..;."=-="-~-~~-! Sls.5--\\'int<'I', S2:7~ sunimcr. ' ' • t.'Qltagc, frplc, lol'r>ly a.rc11 . 32 0 or deck. LRG Room East Co5ta $1:J9.j00. G 4 ·I· 8 ! '} :! VI'' ~ Pool. Frplc. I blk bear.h. I W•t•r & Gardener P11d $265-2: Bl1 .. bltns, lrplc, deck, $30 WEEK & OP I facing PIR~ential. a4S--I . l\Iesa . o .... ·n h11th, rntrnll('('. I • 6~2-49j(J. 11,\' OW/l('r. I • -:--+-l..i~~Ul11). $425 Lease. 545-0228 . 1 _blk , beach. • Studio & 1 BR Apts. LRG 2 br ' gar, I ,~ ba . N'l~ :lt!).485:) Klich pril'I, lri yrd, $98mo. -.BAVSHORES e $19;>--UT l_L PD. 1 br. rrplc, 2 HH. houiie. lg<', yd. S200. + S325:NEWER . 3 Br. lrplc., 1 • TV & Maid Scrv!Cf" Ai·~:il. shopping. Adlt11, no PE'!s. PARK NEWPORT 5.1g.j!)!Jft 0\1·ncr de!lpc_ra11', lcu"ini:;; • dl'c~. ''1C1\'. gar. l~1i;u1111. Ulil!. Couple over 30. Nr. g~1, yard, r.11~s\011 Vlcjo. •Phone Serv\cl!-lltd. pool 2293 rordhnzn Dr. 616'-'.\.ISj. APARTMENTS ~,,~oo=,~1S~"'1=w~k-u-,-. -w~"~h- nrcn. ·I B1·, 3 ba. den, Costa Mesa Units l\'.U·VIE\V RENTALS.. Shopping. :-i 4 6 -9 9 3 9 or S350-2 BR. 2. BA. all bllns, • Children & Pet Sl!ction 2 BR. I BA, Encl. gar, c1'()ts, Bachelor 1 'lr 2 Be-drooms k' 1 SJO k S69.900. '.\lake o It er , 5 fantastic units in excellent 673·4030 or 49•1·.:.248 &12..fi.\17 s~3 yari~ V1~w\ 1 I 23iG Ne\\•eo11 Blvd .. Cr.I d1'Ps. palio. 175./mo. and TO\vnhouses 11$~8'~9Th~, 0'r '~a..~; pt. 6-.l:!-3·l!l l. area. R.oon1 to add 1 mol'f'. 590·~ l1R l~ou.!'f'. kids ok. 3UR llouf.C, util pd, 5210. Also l\IR.gn!flce~t ~~1~\e P\~':tc~ . S48-9'r:>:1 or 645-39fi7 * 84&-7l'.!9 * Fi'. SlM.50 Open 9-6 Dally BALBOA ISLAND, S2:i wk. lLARSOlt \"IE\\' HO~ll::S. All 2 1.>edroon1s \\•Ith lots of SlO~l BR :'IIob. C · ~1 ., 3 BH. HB 5210. singles. lan1i· Vic...,•!. :: HR, 2 BA. fpl, ga1nc, n11. Spa Pools Tennis summer. :\tan. quiet, non· ~lonaro niodel 2BR & dl'n, pri\'acy. CAil !or appt. 101 SlOO BaC'hclor,. 11•alk to l tics .. o\gt Fee. 979-8430. NU·VIEW RENTALS rncd yd. 1nc lawn care. :s~ Dana Point 3826 Across tron1 Fas~Jon Island k Sh bath 6_. 361 3 2:BA. l\lflmy xrras. Xlnl see $11-000 \ ll('ach, llB. 2 BP. lloUSo'. --· . un or 5425 furn 545-3182: at Jamboree on San Joaquin snio l'l'. • fire • '~· • d s · 9 • 0 0 E e 6 · .. :.'· · . ti 1 Cd:\!. $200 vi1cflnl. A11;1. rec. 2:RR & gar. Al'lu!ts only. l\'.o 673-10,10 or 4!M-3248 · · · SUPl:R 2 BR. APTS. HUis RC1arl, Nicely furnl1hcd room in i::d ~1.i3TIJD~y~:J 5.J&...1110 I' : on~ .,., roon1 units. a or 919-.&t.10 P<'IS. $190. Call NE\V 3 BR., 2 bas., house. LRG Bachelor, !iv rm. sep. Great Vie"" ThOmpson (714) 644-1900 loc \1;/kltch prlv's. S2(}.f $19.:JOO. ' · :>18--0401 kitchen. bath. Wlr pd. Pool. Managl!ment Corp .. 493-0141. 11·k. ~IH'149 1STROl.l. 10 OC'f':'ln. Sleeps 12. 2 units on one lot. S4.3.800. Corona del Mar 3122 1 N'ICE 3 8 21,, Good 1 . Be&utifulAOCf!an vlew from Adult, no pct. Sl40. 645-896:i. 2 bclr.. 2 ba., upper, "'C:...'-"7'"7----~ over 2,000 11q ft .+-dbl :;nr. C!\'e us ll c111I, \\'ere open · . , r, . · . oca all tm!I. vail. July 1. S·l2~. Ea1tbluff 3830 u n fumi!lhcd, nll-electrtc. Lnl'l[c sleeping rm, priv. 568.900. 0Jl''ll hnu.o;e; S11n. ·llll e\.·enings and weekends. 2 BR. Couplt'~ only, ~o P£'1~. lion N. C~sta ~lt'sa. SJIO yrly l<'nsc. £(2:.!J.l01. BACHELOR, ~rn. SUO. mo. i\'e\I• C'us1oni. carpels, drape~ bath & entr11ncl!. Employed 62n<-I Sr .. NH. Bkr. 7111!·2'!11 H<'d Carpet , Invcstn11'nl LRnSt', 1'\.50 n1onlh. JTIIJ, (l.12·0.14·1 I NO. LAGUNA. pt, fun1 2BR ~1'Jl.1~id. Pets al\o\.\·ed. UNUSUAL 2 Br. 2 Ba, !iep. <1nd paint. Dish\11asher and man. r,.tcsa Verde. :HJ.-2822. BE:,\Cll HOUSE s:it.500 Ol\'islon. 979-2.i.10. f l':inklln. RJrr 'i'r.l·2"2?l P.EADY July 1. 1974, 3 BR, 2 hse nr heh & storP.11. Lcasc/ H .-ti ~. h 3740 din nn, trplc, pool. Adults. \\'O(){i-buming fiN!placc. ll Summer Rentals 4200 Pri\•acy. Charat·IC'r. CALL I Fourplex Hunt Beach Cost~ Mesa 3124 ha. ch~Udrcn OK, Lii:. fenced adlts. $260. 673-3159 un ngton u.tc ~~Jj MO. 848 Amigo:;; \\'ny. block to \Vcstcllft shopping. · f , pl 6"' on1 4 ~ . \Cl. &l.'i-0122. 1 L N' t 3252 497-1917 or 644--0906., Laundry, carport, storage. 8 Al.BO A 1 , 1 ,, n ,1 ,,,1·1K'r, 1n o"" ap · ..,.."" · U::'C' ,, bt'flrn1 01\T1cr unit, E SIDE 2 BR FURN · 19una igue Be1ut. Garden Apts. $285.000 on lease, Call 5'1~-0!HS or 17141 ::~·3233. Plus 3--2 hedroom~. Bltn~. • • Dana Point 3226 1 Private patlO!I, 8 Pools, Huntington Beach 3840 &l2-2t;..2:. \\'aterfmnt·Al'Ril Jul)' Isl ro OiOICE Lot·PRO:'llO:'\TOltY f lnscd ;arai.:c~. Sw1111 r>n0I. Water & gardener paid. • t"OR !..EASE: 3 BR 2 ba j · · 2 ~~~'-c-~--,--July 29th. SJOO IX'r \\'k, 4 BAY. f"('('. NH.:r ifit•f'. r;o.l'J inr'Q111r .+-tax sh<'ltcr. $295/mo 54.S..0228 Hf.1\\..'T. ~. BH.. 2 ba., home, Good yard ~:~n~ik·g~~~1e 1~"~~ch. CHILDREN New & Spacious BR. 2 ba. hlin~. 2 car gar .. 511. 000 (h -14g..96oc. only 562.930. • • -\ Dl11-rn1, ram-r n1. custoin \\'/covered brick pallo, near dock , Pr 1,.. pt)' . • J. • i·nei'. · · F irst P ioneer Realty Huntington Beach 3140 drp~ .t cpl. 2 Patios. Fncd, ~('hool, Jake shopping '1!).). F''ron1 Sl35. 84£i.02.39 and parents love the I. 2. & 3 BR, bll·ins, pool 21~2-12:\6. San Clemente 1076 842 4421 prof. lnrlscp<l . $3.30. 962-2194 1719 !\JEN, small beach hotel. large, spaclo..tt apart· llec. ctr. Fr. $185 tu $350. , • NEAR 1..nke Pork J BR Sum· -. -. --3 B • I 3 S Roo1n11 S21.50 ...,.etk. \pts t B b NEW PORT VILLA PHESIDENTIAL HEIGHTS WALK-TD BEACH iner nnl>·~ S~2a. t;til. Inc. Bf.AClt HOUSE R close Lido 11 e 2 6 19 ""7""" j • ment1 a an u r y l' 19 Pl U A NB SU'.\ll\1Elt nc11t11I on ()('('an front, NC'\\'port Be11rh 2 BR house romplctely furn, slp11 8. dlsh 11•11!<.h, avnll July & Aug, 67:l·!HOG. n.. 1 3 Bit 2 ,. 8 \ ... ,6--032t « 1 to Dann J-farbor, Lease opt.. 5/n10. S.:)11"" VJO· Cross. "'. acen a ve., .. f or sale nr lea. e. l!l 5411 All deluxe '''nt11r<'s thniout. Lido lale 3156 1 eguna Beach 11 Chlid"en 6 & youn~cr NE\V J BR, 2 BA. hltn r/o, ~ .. :can ,. ei~" , : 2_! 1• · 1 Ne1v rll1plc\'·3BR/'2BA t'arh. "". · · c..ves. on y. -Si'!:i. ~95-4486, 499·1331. HOUSE for year leaae, 3BR, L 3748 7I•l-&IZ-2357 South Laguna 1086 Xlt1t lluntln~ton Be a ch I El Toro 3232 2bll' 714-538-5410 BACH. at Cre1cent Bay. Col. O State licin~t'd pre sc;hl D\\', rcfri g, fplr, 1111 ('t'f!ld .'V. loc11rion. ;;36-S&ZI 2 BR. 2 BA. Sun~n1i:>r or NF:\V 2 .1 d 4BR 2 b Mesa Verde 3263 TV., Ullls pd. \\'kly $55., • Chl1dr1!ns pla)' IU'l!a drpcl. Vic1\' of bor1ts pnssing 23:.¥32 Paln\van c 1 r c J e, c:rr;1lrl S. Thon1a!I, Re;1l t0~ ~·~nrl{ 1~.'Cn!~.t· ~'~;11\. .Julr· 1 hliln~. si;p~~ <~lrii~. 2 c:r ~10. Sl60. up 494-2:j()g : ~..aa'fult 21,1'.!~. 3ce~~r!1pts. lnss than 2QO' away in \ht:! NF.\V Dr!u:\(' 2 & 3 01'. OcP11nfront AnlboR Pc11 ln, to.fr. Swing, Xl5 -l011 dnya. 842-2806 eVC!I. l\loni;irch Terrace. Qulllhy is OLDEH, J.I Sp11 t·e trailer ~II 2 .. ) ,.,,..() • · !t"t'· rel' <'enter \\'/pool. No 3 BP., 2 BA. frpl, game rm, STUDIO great for 1 person. e Easy acce15 to n10~1 1•111. c ha n "c 1 · Elec gar \\'hrtt you expect 11s you park in cxf'cl . !'nnta Ana Newport Beach 3169 pets, S3~JO n10., 6T:r-72.'i0 fncd yd. inc la1\'ll, crire. S350 s1;;.; Incl. ulil. Walk to beach ployment ni·ca!I ofl('ner. e!c. s4:i0. nlo. Bkr, approth'h 1hi~ tl(!W cuslo1n loc .. $10,00l Cash spendahle, , . d11ys, ur 962-1022 <'\'es un. or $425 furn. 545-31~2:. 491·15a9. e Nr. shOPlling Rt tr....•ys. G73-45S:1'-,,.=--=~~ b11\!t 3 Bit 2: ~1 ho1nc , S~.0.000 On., f.P, Sl9j,{XX'I, 221 Vin LH.lo Nord . Vf'lt Y ~!CF ., BR 2 B Newport Beich 3269 3769 e from $165. LAKEl-7HONT. open daily Z·5, \\t. NF.\\'PORT, 1 h1k ()('<'nn. pool. SJ1)S ~. Xtrris. E·Z prkif. lmmFu·. rtcn~. Call 642-876.'1 or 545-4159. I Qu11llly ~hu11l~ out c111 ~·ou 1-.: xi' C' I f i nun c tn~ S\.1()11 1110, c\'crpt Aui.: t.!f~ .· 1 ' dbl' " · A. Newport Beach 2215 II en 1 her Ln.. of! cnte1· O\'l'r ll!r rloor~ ,r,,_ ga7.f' 1~n1:-..·c:_u~.\~li ONLY: Ag1.: n 0 10; C~l\ !2131 931·0920 •ii' ~c1:;~;,';1 yd. ~~;·r Lri:: LUXUR IOUS Ha r.t E. \\' / $3SIWK UP. 1 Br. 2 Ba. & BANBURY CROSS 2.1rd & Irvin.:!. 4BR., fam. & nr 1h•• hrn111cd ttl1in1<~ & £\·es. ,116-6lf.l l~l.\1 210.t1.17. "". ·"l22t. mo. I (N n. ] d & \V ) 1li11. rn1., "'pie. Lease' •~ui expansh·e ll\'ln::: IU't':i. On('(' ,,,~.-gorgcou1 view of pre1t 51'.0UR Bach. Color TV, nuild seiv, ear ""'Reh B v &mer 642 9123 .,,,.,,, lnsldc. 1 ll! p;Htul~ .. 111c occau '1 ,\PT ~nil~ on 1!1.~ ~ ft Houses Unfurnished t Fountain Valley 3234 Santa Ana Country Club. 3 J>OOI. TllF. ~lF.Si\, 41'.'i N. 11:161 VtE\V POINT W\r!E ,•~n~o.~A~g~1~· ~-,;..::::,,==~ RENT our hon1c In Kona b)' "'·eek or n'Hlnlh . Phone 67'".>-4444 ,,lei\' \x>ronif'!! i>Url ot your lot · 7.oned. C·2 l'\c1\pa11 1 BR. 3 BA. Den. libr11ry, 2 NCY;·port Bl, N.B. 646-9611. • 842·6604 • NEWPORT CREST daily lift'. Sll!t,OOO. I Blvd., C.~f. $;).10 mo hl('0~1c. Gener1I 3202 13 RR. 2: 1, BA. bonus rm, frplc's, gardener. A I' a i 1 OCEAN1'~0NT 2 8 AC ll NF.\\' 2 BR. Oen, 21 ~ BA. Cdt-.1, my charmlng 2 BR, l hR . home, fully furn . Adults only. 67>3~82:. LINGO REAL ESTATE Goort tor comm~rc1r1l t I Frph'. flflllo, dbl gar, lndr; June 15. M!ri/?110. 828-4495. A Fu 1160 y UNDER NEW ()('l'1111 Vir11" Puol. Tennis. I I t 16 • •oo LIVE HERE ~~" ptJ. m .. omo. car 494.g().9,6 '199-1397 I ( c-:e opmen · ·1:" • • rm. fenced yd~ S::°"'.:-per mo. 3 Bedroom $450 per mo round. Incld all ulil. 673-15.11 MANAGEMENT $39-j. !162-1n1 5; 642-3490. OCEAi.~ FRONT S 7 7, 5 0 n O...,n<!r·Broker, &;2-0.i!IO. 2 br . Irvine · S2_!0 He fer: req. ~. llARBOR VTE\V HO~lES, NEW 2 BR, 2 BA, king u 2 BR. Blt·ln.111. Ne 11• I)' 2 BR, prtv. gill', Newport Vac1tlon Rentals 4:250 Furn 2 on 2 b a R2 G8X1JO. Room tor 1norC'. 2br. CDi\1 . s:i.10 I Huntington Beach 3240 near li\\'lmmlng pool, park & hedrm.<;, all bltnt. nr beat:h decoralOO. Encl g:arai:l'S. lfcl.i.:hts flttR, \\'oodland O\VN"''OUR-O\\"N A p T : InCC!me 52700., taxes $~80. 4 br. Bay-dock S800 I . , recrelltlon fa c 111 t ie1. & buy. $200 \\'k. Bia'·673-4.185 Beaulilul landsc•plng. Lrg Place oil Tustin Al'e, $195. FABULOUS Bay k City linmed Jl01!S G 0 r g 40 0 u 8 Asking $32.000. 612: .. WiOJ. 1 11 . h rt ~ ENCED, 3 BR, 2 ha. btlln~. 640-$230 A 1 1 U f pl&y area· a child 's dream!. Call Ownr to iihow, 5.';t-2180. View, I.A Pl11ya bayfron1 · · . . h •-•f ,.._ Our n:nt11 111 •~ :ii; o fpl rov "atio 11• 'g11~ BBQ 11'1.ar men • n urn ,..,_ t ho 1 & hi '"'""nd floor lrg 2br 2bB VIE\\', ltOOd ~<'cu r 1 I~'. Dnn't d~p I e .,... · · · ~t because we rent !hc111 f11:1ter ' ,. ''s200 1· ' BRANO NE\V TO\VNHOUSE r--• Q;'il~ o 1 Pf ng 1~ h 8· LARC!:: lBR, on Bay, gttlll e•v-' ' CO:\.fE SEE S\\·nrtz Rea1r y n job With a lo...,•-cost D!111Y 1t111r1 11·<' ctln !Incl n<'\\' onc!li ~ ~ :'\.~·1.!" · mo .~c. 3 BR, 2\fi BA. View. End General 3802 ren. \\'e come. : vie\V, pool, new condo, lull condo, sun patio, fvt, acrosi. '19'J-3()0j Piiot C\a!l51fll!d Ad~ ~12-5678 I! you ('(lu ltl u,1. our · ·.· la Unlt on 15 ac. '"""'nbelL 556-41SO, If no ans, 847-7111.. sccurlty, $<150. 6/;r-'1520 from Kon& Ka C 1 u b · '::===~============~=~;I CLEAN 2 B l\IGR 2610 •· ~~ turn/unfi.irni. odl!s, no pcls; 11c1'Viaa In llndh11c tenants • r. · · Private patio, crpt.~. drps, DELUXE unfum I BR. 2 Blks to Beach. 2 BR, 2 BA . 2: BR, 2 BA, relrig, bltns, pvt fron1 June-Ocl, S700 mo, Cir ~ t'A.11 tlJ 111 6~72'll rlorldn . No pet~ .. or Sgl~. hlllns, trpl«. $3•10, l\lo. Ph. Garden Grove, lrC'e laundr"y 11 1 1 I I · I ,Bi~' T~,, <~II' R ~.,,, ,-'.'-,"'ElD~~ ".... 1 Child O.K. $1i5. mo. 64·1-1480 or 557-.">770 ext . 446. servlce, Avail now, s175, Lik<' Nc\v, rncd priv. yrfl. pn .o. flOO~i <'ct: RlU' cpcnC'r. case 1" op11011 to 1uy. call IU .I'-r :,::2-393'3 Child ok. No l)l''ls. S21j /l\t0. S28J. 613-.J.I().~. Mlsi. Engl!M, 222-836.i or ·~-----~I I TERRlf'IC J AR 2:'i DA 842-<IM4 1t\'!dl June 7. 96,11--()652 1ifr 4. SlJBl.EASE. 2BR Pu r k 297-.1807 ,1.1111 }t L1•-• 1:1 Bit, J ~, ha .. blt·i n~. crp1 s. Pll.l'k Lido To...,·nhouso ne1:1r B1lbo1 Peninsula 3807 --N 11 ~~~--~----¢(_.· .. ~ t it 1'J. v~"' o~.1, "'.i'"''r c •. J• "V" ,.. , ' • , dr11~, fcn t'l'rl, r <',. c n I I Y 1-foug. h11H1 In lntt!rcon1. Bea ut. Gar den Apts. .e111po1·r unt Jenuel')' 197j, ~ 0 E L: I G H T F U L Co ~· •'!-. 11 A'~" 1 ,,11Q:~'1',t1:.J:r,•,·1 ,'~1:~~,.s:~T., ... 1i:v, ot1 i.-:••'l.' 11 1•i11li•d. $:.!T.1. 11111. Stt'reo,poolandmuchrnort NE\V Luxury 3 br npUI 12J Privute '{l:tl1n11, 6 pools, Call 6'14-!ll77 \ (lomniiumll. Lnkl! Tnll(I(\ ·1 :.::: ... ,.!! ;; • •l·od .,1,.11~(,.,, r ,,,1 ,,~ trni"" l.lf•) ~i !~ ~.; ~)(j :.!1 3-SSl"...O:~l~ or 21'.:-:;.12-1:'.7·1 only S3W/lll(I, Gt4-72ll ,\i!. Hay .L oceun v If'\\'~. 511.\lnRS, ,fACU7.2:1, lf'nnl8. 2 San Clemente 3876 ~ 1i Bl~~t}~ \Vcrk.fo.~t3onth. ''l"·.,A u•ui "'Y"'"Zo.!.ml "1 'I" -.co•rio 1:1 UH, 1a.:-u11. m1n p. l'<'flf'C. Ul.UFl"S CON00·3 UB, nciv J\lultllevel,·frplcs $600 n10 rur prk'R. Bike to b<!ach. ----Bn · ' -or .::262 ,.<~ l'" i· ~~:~··~• 11 :· :, ~~~ .;,,. oC"r JI, LANDLORDS! Beautiful on·o. Sl2.i. 010. df'ror. Blt·lns, t'l"fll~. Ill'!>'.', yi·ly. Mr. Swing, ~1011 Front 5135. 846-Q2j9. NFJAR new cxlTa largr. 2 .-=-';"~·'=~~~~==~ , ~ ""'' 1~ 1 c (,,,,•~• 1 ., • , 13 .,..ft., ~.l• 1, '. \1111 Pcrly, 842-Sli-I or prlvlltc pul!o. ~I t. li:nn l1 d11y1. tltl-2806 cve!I. CllEZ ORO APTS BR. 2 BA, dshwJhr/paUo/ VACATION AT fllAJ\fMOTH ~•·l1&ii19 • l•~ J • < -• • l•.._. 01 111 ~ 18 31 :'. l\Vl' Specialize In Xe1\•por: S~i-6010, nellr by, No peel$. S3~1MO. 1 BR w/gt1r.4 1repl, crptll, 8234 AtlRntn gardl!ns. $200. Adult8. David Condo ~·Jllnrn, k i t ch c n, 1.111• 11 ~ ~~~:1 • .., 1~ ~.,:·.1 ' :; ;.~~... J6 ,.,_. N 7 lieach e CnroM del ~lar • VERY nice 4 bedrm. 2 bath, GTS-S..'l&I: 644-5771. drp11 . Yrly ltt. S230 mo. Call 1,2 & 3 BR. Prlv gar .. pool, \Valttr Rllr .492·7790 sunpnrrh, pool, j a c u i 7. I . 1t ~ .. 1 ~1 1.,.,., '"~'l.o..•1vi & l.Aguna. Our Rcnl:tl Set· cp!ll, dl'Jl!I, bltn.•. 2 cRr .1t11r.. •SUPER HOl\IE .J Br, 2 Bii, 979-l.52l washer, dryer. Oose to DELUXE 2 iiR. 1~ BA, Slttps 4 to 10 111 $20. d~, :t'::! ~:~~~~ ;~~';!';"'.(!"I'"" .•O• 11 1 : \;Ce 18 J.1\EE lo You!. Tr)' l'nC'IO!ll'd p.11io, $290. Ask for lrg yrd. lH $500/mn. incldll BACHELOR, ll~". '·t & 1.,t be11ch. 5.'\6-0336. ...,.alk to lown/beach. OceRn SUIO. per wk. 844-156.S. JVlll I' "-. /J!f 11 ... 1 t 4 ::l~,, \.10 , J' II b ,\. '• '; /I I. ·?!11lJl) ~ •1 !.>1.1 VIUIO ( • ••'l 11 • f 111· 11 (J ,; :.!, . ~II~?~ •, • 10,\o)·tt-I ·~".i·-... T,)..Y~ 0,, Pl r~ Nll·Vlew! llBl". 91\.1-6746 rdf ;)2.1 A . Ln UV ..., NE R 2 3 BR J ~iew Adults <19S-0036 11 """ ,1\.....,. ... 1 11 ~-"' u 17 lJ ~ NU VIEW RENTALS i:a J?Cr. 1· n1ta · 305 E. &y, No. 3. CRll A new & 'v • · Rentals to shire 4300 11 ~·~ •)~. 12 ...... e. 11:18 tllJ9,_(: • 1:\1i\1ACULATl: 3 BR, 2 BA. f'or iippt call l»l-1121 or 213-697-1496. hltns, nr. shopk, frwy A LARGI-: 2 BR apt. In S. Sn.n :!=~. :~:;,,..,, ;!(':".;',..Pd , ... ,.icoo• 61'3-4030 er <19l-32411 "rp1s & d!'p11. Bltn~. $24U. f'Vf'~ 6rNto.t Cepi1trano Beach 3118 ~O PETS. 646-J786/ Clemjn~ VT~ii_g Shag E~fPLOYED mature \.\11man 1)1.'."'r ·~r·rr•·1 1• t-•• ;1 • ''REl\i."TERS::'' I RED CRPT R LT RS H.V. Hnmes, <:Amtel 3 BR, 2 . · r ptsf 8 ry 4 P\'@. lo shArt! Parle Newport Apt . 1•'• !j:::;...• ~~~""' ;• ... ,..._,, Ynu Get All The llotlBM ArleM , 893-1151. ba~ .. Fnm-rm, Cor;rtm. ~I, OCEAN Vitw new dupl~. 2 \VALK 10 hl:!ach, new, iluirt. NE\V, extrll hll'i" 2 BR , 2 1\•/ ume C11\I bcf .4, !i~~ !:tr..i• ~;r·.~... ft~-!~ill(J H~"{IL~t~cr -~~1~1T~)li ~ J BR V11c1nt Hou1e, s21 0. S.1-~. ~M •xard nr. n. BR. 2 ba , dsh11v, rtftig, upper, d~e 2 BR. 1 ~ RA, pool. l~cltlna C'ily & 1 =-~"7=·..,...~-~---»lc••~ ~!"''' 1 ..... :".~,, •9u·11~1 tlni~ ii'L'Ck. 1\1.~ J UH'~ utll pd, mo, 00 Y'· 151 $235. Call 528-8202, 1;30 A~t. A~l:His, Id. 8Js ~j A ()('ean \'i<!\\'. S2.wl. 496-081(;, TID\', 11tr111ghl fr n1 a If' ' •• ,1 ~~_:!. >:>"""' .: "·'' ·~ . IHomtflnders * 642-lWMVI C~I. k1rl~/P<'t~ ok. AS!t. Fr•" Nfo;Alt Beach. Nt:!w 4 Hit 2 Corona del M.r 3822 ulL I es pa . Sin Juan de~trns si1111e. ~rirP lwM134• ......... ,.., 77uv 9i9-8430 9,\, To1\•nho""· f' r p I <, 3 RR. •~. Ch<'ld-o k ]!l'ts + 1,· Util~. Nr. Beach, II"' >Jro1-~, .... .,, ,..... '" ., " I .u.iv "' C I t 1no 3178 "" ~~i!"J<:•Jl"t t i;: .• 1 :::-:-! , , 10 .,. 1:12 Ct1hrHlo, C'.:otl IRH , 2 bn., iic11·1y r!r((lrnled, co~p.1~or. ~I. lennl1. URAND New 2 Br. 2 Ba, suu 01\. 16902 Lynn ~!. CnJ.I _.:.:•~P~1:.:.;.';;;:.:_ __ ;;.; mo. 64S-231" 11ft 6 1,, .. ,_ ~'"' I" ...... ,_,, JI •l 1• \\'O;o;·T f.AJ\' Chr11p. 2 Dr. nt l)C111•h, no pct~. ll!a11r . .!'!:_!~1 ~6·15-lS::>.ll. deck, frplr, blln oven, rnrt, 8"8-06.11. 2 BR conrto , !)0()1, enc gar. fE:\1Al.E fl) shan-nev.-2 BR ,, .,.,.., s1 ; .. lf ~: ,. ... , t 1\CU trp1 , i;:nr. Kid /pct~. ii~ls ok, $310. 9(i:H 111. \\'ESTCL.JIT 30R, 2 1~ bll, Dshwhr0 crptg. drp1, rc11r. 2 BORl\f.. rlo5('(1 g1r!IR:t. nr1,·ly r c d e(' or• I ed . 2 IJR l\li'flhll'.l In ln •lnc $110. :·:~·· ~~''"' .,';.·t· ii r 1 ' INE)l.'Pf;.\'~r\!F'.! 2 Ur. C&D, !IAA-4i21j l'vcrythlna ne .... ', S •125 , SJ!i>/M . 67:1--1171fir6'*4·6274 Child or 1mell fN!t n.k. $16.:i S1!t:i. 4!l6-7~1fl'i or 495-0821 mo. !Wn1i furn. Cnll 832--3il~l ;;o()o '10 •-. «r~'ii"1-•~·1 ., •• t lnrlry rn1. Kid~/cnt uk ilANC!lO LA CUESTA 6'12-0841 494-9907 t:A'RCE lBR with e!CJ)anslVfl • S.17·81~9 * Vnf'an1.:1c11 C'tlllt n1noey! fl1111t or 552-·fl600 . ·~· <,; ..... r .~~ \,hu"' { ''"' 1 ~t,t~:'' · P,0<,2!~ ll~m1'-Nl U1.,11N1r,. lrg l.Jt·ilUt. 4 Br, 2 Bil. k rem ti BR, 3 BA. 2 trp1·~. cpl-9, vlt1v nr hay & ocean nr Slil per nlO. 2 DR, 2 BA No \'0111' hOUllCI, apt., slol"' STRT. prof, m1J1r M't~ 1• • n.-... YRni. t11r n I Rn1. Close 10 the bl!ach. 1 yr drpa;, lnd1cpg, view. O:>ntm. China Qi\-e $273. IR\VIN &: J)('l11. Gllfld loc&tlon, l child bldg., etc. thru 1 fla.lly Pilat same. 3BR, ocvu. Lnir. llch. Homeflnders * 642-9900 l't, SIX>l mo. !'162-2734. . 1IJ'IOJ. 8t tennis crt. 6'14-1'"1. IRWTN. Realtors ~-1-61.U ok. Call ~l~l~. ~Cl,,,•o:•,,•l:!!h!':od!...'.!Ad"'.-----. hm1-. 49.J.2'161 1-l!t.'l·G!l!'iO eve. • l.1"n0117, Junt 10, 1974 Ger•g•• fo r R~nt 4350 Bu1ine11 Oppor SOOS ·--··-····--··-Ctrnent/Conc ... t• 6019 Hou1eclunlng DAILY PILDf 25 F 7100 6054 Help W onted, M&F 7100 He lp Wanted, M&F 7 DO elp W•rled, M&F 71 00 Help 1-.:._ _ _;_ __ MINI WAREHOUSES STORAGE No ?.fove-ln or Mo1·~·'lUt =«11. l''rrin1 Sl.5(1 l)l•r H.a.mllto11 & N,.v•lnn<I Sr, 113 ALLSPACE . ff0.1970 e HAMBURGER STAND Est. 8 yrs. $. steel equip. Nt1 t'Omrietlllon, ind. arta T.y $10M t»wn HOLLAND BUSINESS ~170 SALES S.1().06lll -]~ 5350 CONCltETE Patlol. P11o1io 1W1C£ AS J.~AS1' • 'rWtCE C:O-O. QuA!lty worit. Reas. AS E>TICIENT Llc:enltd. 642+8514. 2 Christian c:ollpge gtrlt wtll Cf~ENT: Patio, drives. do 11-1: 11 t houitekceplng. w11JQ.llel)llin,, uw &. f~ le windowl extt:ll. $3. nimove. 1-'ree elt. 544-8998 ptr hOur each. M&.-0869 KAJlEN It BrLL ~ff)RRISL-Y PATIOS-DRIVEWAYSSJDl: ,t"'Dam~~"""p°'m"°."'"'--,-,-,,-- Where are yoU. •• !f 11 ~ AC-c .WAL.KS-CLOCK WAU.S. JAPANESE l_ady would Ilk«: thlll' plt8.Jle c111l u.<1. We rn1sl * ~ fir to hol.ltw.-cl<'an. Need"" ll'fll\S· ASSEMBLER TRAINEE Delivery-Sunday Only OF DAILY PILOT TO CA RRIERS. RE- QUIRES TUt USE OF A URGE ST~· TION WAGON OR VAN. CON1'ACT MR. BENTON IVILLlAMS, 330 WEST llA Y Imm ediate !st shut re-STREET, COSTA MESA . TELEPHONE qulrement for small 642-4321 ~'OR APPOINTMENT. DRY CLEANING Counter Help Finishers 1\lan11i:;11r. ror ~ &: t:icilting plant&. \Vtll tra.ln·ExP. pttf'd. Call 644-(1893, Office R•nt•I 4400 WESTCLIFF BLOG. f-Ull Sl RVICE .. -., '·'' I , .. • '"'' """" 6J"'1 DistriS-utor Wanttd 1-'ull 01· Ji<u1 Ume. Earn S\50. l'xlrll. fl('!' w(!()k. ~7 hni of your un11~. No selling. Con1p:u1y !!:f"tW"!& outlets. $4,!l())!. 111,·1::-1t 1nl·nt required. you! KarTn & Rlr.hard JESS Cenlenl Contractor. portation. S2'.80 ph 645-l~. MS.2178 (or If anyone J \ 1 d J k p I / 3 k~ whel'I' we ean contact I a· vewa)'tl, • e wa II'' • ntlng P1p•rin9 607 Kor~~ A 13111 we would .J"F''lo:::•::.·..:"4-::::::::11'15:::::·---==:-: l·---------1 n 1>fl~illle )'OUr he-Ip-thunk Contractor 6021 ltOWARD Painting, •louse &: you/ I Apt. Interior • Ext('rlor. GErtWlCK & Son Bldk· Shrub Trtn1mlng & H11.ullna:. Conlr. Add, remorl. St. II<' ~7-9969 alt. t:i parts mechanical _as· An Equal Opportunity Employer sembly. De sire a high A'.;..'.:""':!...==='---school grad w/local Help Wa nted, M&F 7100 work hi story, Compa- ny paid medical & li!e Bt1nk lnsurtu1c~ .. 1nodern a/ Experienced Help W•nted, M&F 7100 C L ERK TYPIST E LECTRONIC TEST TECHNICIAN ilfon11faciurini; hrm rt."(}'s tl"ellnlrinn for tl'fiinR; & trouble 11hoO!lni; tor complt:x rtig-itlll & 3n,'\IOE: voicr l't'SP')nSf• isy1ill'm'1. t.1u!lt be l111nilur "''/llli.:lt:ll l02il", r1rcuits & O.P. ampll ns US{'d in audiu. \V<Jrk '"'/ !'nhnn1um J..'l1l!lanr.i.,_ \Ve otrer )(ln'I PffY ad1111ncenwn1 o pportu11lt l e1, proht sha11111t, mOOlcat & denial 111.~urance, 10 paid holidays. So-·cure<I hy lnvl.'.ntory. 12 mo SPIRITUAL. READER l\'jlW'Ch11s..• (lJtrt-el\l('J\I iJ fll'I\ Open 10 AM to 10 PM 11a~h1UiL'<I. Cal.I Don llarvlc. hdvic~ on o.U nH1tter11. .... ~ ......... ,, ' ' .111 Mr liow,utl 1,.1 •, b t(J I cond facility & ample parking. New Accounts ~~'i1\J."2 i. 61 ,_1'1~E~XT=ER=l~O~R~O-N_L_Y 17141 77~1700. 312 N. El Cl.mine Real JACK Taulaoo, pati o!!, LlcenM.'d, ln11ured, Free Esll· Affi/lntc Mllllufncturlng SMn Clemente. For •111n-remod, add. Uc. B-1 269072 mnteii. Richard, 979-33.'\5. 300o/o GROSS PROFIT Cull m-9034 49'.l-9L16 My Way Co. 642-4703. PROF. painter, honest work, == NEW OFFICES DUNCAN Clerk To Pl'rfonn elerlC3.I du01"! in !ial<"S dept. for product i1peciali11!11. Mui;t be KOOCI 1ypist with cl('rfeal aptitudl.!, Contact personnel d c p t • Master Speclaltles Co., 1640 Monrovia, C.osl!i Mesa. Equal opportuni!Y employer IN LAGUNA NIGUEL Only 42c per sq. ft. 400 fl, It UP. All ulil lt1cl. Crpts, drps, Dlr, "'l!tblir. 27992 Ca1nlno Caplatrono l:OOSSIBLE MASSAGE & SAUNA Drl-.ieway1 6028 reu. In I/ext '. ltte Electronics, Inc. WI" C>ffcr moldis & trolnlng Oean rooms, p 1ea1 ant I ;:;o.;,;""'"-'..;_---=-1 estimate. .Wf.s. · S4S-2'1"J9, 2865 Fairview Rd. lu munulliclW"Or fiberg\u.si1 utnlO!ipher<?, TV & lo~. DR fVEWAYS resurfaced, ~64>-39=-=13~·-------1 UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK ~1 ASTER SPECIALTIES CO. )640 ~lonrovia Ave Coota M"" hoora or cultured marble Call Donna at 9153--1247 pntched & slurry ~a.led. FIRST CL.ASS EXT./INT. Costa Mesa 222 Oce an Ave., slnk!I, locally. For full de-8839 AdRn1s Ave. llnlg. Sch. Bx c i;Uent worlonanship. PANTING, PAPERllANG· (Comer i'"nirvlew & Adams\ La guna Beach Cr & Collect ~fW" tal111, call Mr. Lowry, 714-PREGNANT! 838-8090 ING, 1-'l-ee Ettimates Equal. OpPOl'. Employer (714) 494.6546 Sr. Project engineer Equal Oppor. Employl'l' $12K Sltn Diego f'rwy to Avery Parkway turn oU 831-1600 NEWPORT BEACH Walerf'ronl f')(CCU!lv~ otf\N!'!!; onr w/frplc .. 'llo'Ct lx1r, pr~v. balh: one 2 roon1 11uUt! with view of ho.el'! & "''llt<:r. 773-1700, ext. 2Ul. Caring, con Ii den l I al 979-5294 JndUli prod. deVt'!Op $19K M W 1-• 5030 11~ &: f I E lectric•I 6032 An Equal OppoMunity General Oflice to $<17!i _o_n_•~Y __ •_n_-,;;,.._..,;.;,__ 1 Aceoo"""'rt'" ·~ •" 1'1 r r a &. ~ PAINTING & Repair. 3:1 yrs LE Eznployer Clerk Typist I<> $.iOO Sl::i,000 !or 1 yr. Will 11s,i;ign keepl;:'g~' a 0 P 0 n ELECTRIClAN Llct-n.<ie workma.rJshlp gua_r. T • k~ ASSEMB RS [::;:=:=:::::::::: [Sec")' lo lre!I. to S700 Biil Grundy. lll!r. 67'."1-6161 * I fi10. Fl\E..'E n.ENT * No lea:.e req. IJ!x . offices, adj. Aitporlt'r llolel. ri5c &1. F't. Incl. A/C. full servi<.~s. 2172 DuPont rm. 8 833-3223 (9 tll noon) 1501 WESTCLIFF DR. NEWPORT Jo,h11ulCial Center La•sing.Offlce Spece CALI. ON-SITE MANACE.lt ITI4) 642--3111 ext 246. DESK space avalJable $50 mo. Will provide furniture at SS. mo. An s w eri n g service avallnble. t 7 8 7 5 Deach Blvd., 1-luntington Bt:ach. G12-1321 . $61,0CIO 1st and pay IO'ffl wwJ APCARE 6'12-4436 No. 233108. Small joh!oi, advtllllage ol my ex P Legal Sec 1-orp RE 5800 10 polnts. Box 3. Apple VASECTOMY n1aint & repaln. ':'118-5203. 536-70'56 Electronic instr u men I BEAUTY PW'l'.:halie Sec'y to Sfi.;IJ ELECTRONIC TECHNICIAN Valll'y, Callf. (TI41242-3144. ----------I mruiufacturer needs expcr. Pllyt'Oll Clerk 10· SG50 Con f I dcntlal Information G d 1 6045 PllOI-,. wallcowring, st11te agscmblers for production OPERA TOR Six!n"tiiry, PR $600 Mort Trust Deeds 5035 counseling & referr.tl. ar en ng ---l1c. No. 279514. l115ur,. till dept .• final assembly, PC !ie<'.rC'tary In SWU -. , /\PC/\.RE, ln<Xlf'll. A Non· GARDENING ~ce. clean· types paper. 714/842-4386. board soldl.'ring. Full-lime Ex~rience Nrct'!!sa.ry Call JC'annle Sisco Jnin uir. &-~I'()"'' ·~;/us. 'lou LOANS UP TO 90"/o Prolil Agency., 642-4436. ups is specialty, comp lav;n p A p ER HAN G IN G & employment. Excell en I To Take Over Clientele or Judie Ste\n<'r rl(l('(! 10 kno.,.,• how to troublr- 1 TD MALE 25 wishes to meet fem & plant renovation & painting. 21 yrs Harbor salary & bcnl'fils. 15 1.:hn. NEWPORT shOot .-ystC'ms using relay St Loans for re~·1 .... evening tennis installation, tree est, exp areu.. Refs. furn, no. 183281. from Santa Ana. Montgomery Ward p I a... & solid st111e loglc. •-Da ·~ -11 bl ~1tn2 2 2356 Beauty Salon ersonne ...,,ency i\1echanical a 1111 em b I Y match,,_~8289 Y'M~_.~1""": re a e. JU..-64 -.. Call For Appt. Ill Dover Or., N.&. kncm·ledgf' desirabll:'. 2nd TD Loans •evP"ALM-/CAR.D R~EAD•ER * EUROPEAN Ga rd e n e r . * 10% DISCOUNT * Industrial Relations 7m Edinger Ave 642-3870 Contact Pt'te Southworth Maintenance -Landscaping. \Val)papeMng & P1dnting Huntington Beach I ~"'!'!!!!~':""!!!!!!!!""~ I COROTEK CORP AD/REDUCTION Tree rem o va l . Very Free Es!. Call 536--0548 (714) 494-9401 CRU !\ti!;.'> Dina • Low•'t r•t•s Or•n9e Co. S•ttler Mtg. Co. 642-2171 545-0611 SC'rvii;~ llarbor area 24 yrs. $l't79 2nd TD, disoounted to fl700. 10"/o int., 1% mo. 3 yri; due, JUl.1 103: 546-9754. 1-l 0 .. h Bl SI t bl ,, • ., .,_.,.,.. j7J•lt 89'4!-6611 COt.1PANION 1cm. for Sat & l28!2 v .... 11 SI-I Sl7.3406ucac " an on. reuona e. ~" eves. *Wallpaper Hanger* TELONIC Sun. J'.1ust drive. No Carden Gro~"' '89s.-1389 LANDSCAPE,~· &OU cond. C. Rebko 646-2449 BEAUTICTAN. smoking. HB. 962-5224. LIFE 0~ DEAF~\ Let 1°"' ClExeanur;. ... 8~:J,!!kler repair. INT/EXT PAINTING INDUSTRIES licensed, lo as.-.ist o"'ncr. COOK, ronv. home. Fltime. ELECTRONIC Assembler. babies live. or ... ternet ves per. ,,_-........,, .,.,,_.1:.,-,0 P .,.._ ... ,. ION ll Llh~E All Ora Co J ' 57-l"l.'l!I .,...,......, enn. po8luvn ... m expe1-. Exp nee. Sml company w/ ~JN~~k. 24~rs. · ~· J attr"se. Apt,!ld~-nge · im ;>-• Laguna Beach BEAUTY QPEP.ATO!l req'd. Apply 4Ei6 Flagship pleas11nt surroundings in omes. can up. es· *WALLPAPERING Rent spacl'. 11Alll CHALET. Rd, N.B. See l'>lr. Miller. Nev:port Beach. Apply al ROBERT C. HARKE 545-2!lr!I No waste "Mac" 548-1144 Equal Oppor. Employer 644-7101 642.SO.W. Newport t\1arine, 10am.ilpm, Announcements 5100 UNIQUE -3 sepa rnte ·:;,:_...:,;,:;: ollicp. ha.! ~Ink f11cils, Na ncy Feith Presents alonge, $165. mo. (Ir l<'ss. 01ildf'('rm Arts & Crafts 446 N. Newport, N . B. \\'ol'lcsl\op/Piano Lelisons. 642--llll • Starting Juoo-2'8th." !}..12 .11.t wherever you are eall LANDSCAPE, sod, soil con<!. Pl t /R • 6077 BLUELINE COOK \\'M'TED. Familiar 507 Superior, 543-2622. (4Ji) 91$-5463. ~~P~~er repair. ••er eparr I ASSEMBLERS OPERATOR w/dlC'I. 10 hour "1"Ck. EX. SEC'Y to $850 BEST MASSAGE IN NB. "'""l""' PATCH PLASTERING Ex & d ·• bl C 11 fringe benefits. Laguna Fee Paid. Su""r drl'.'anl 11po1' 3400 Irvine Ave .. SUlte lolB. PROFESSIONAL JAPANESE . per. {'J)(_'•l\IR I.'. a Beach ot!'M-9-158 \"o"· tor '"pres. H:andlc ~, ... closed Tbun:. Ann. GARDENER. :_...,ndable. All typesCall. ~ ,,~tlmales I Bea Tuckl'r, 979-6775. y '" vyc ~,,.. ......,...._.., BO TSAII rl . COOK-TRAINEE personnel. Varioous exec. _557~. FREE EST. ~_j.__ 1st & 2nd...Shlfts __, wo¢'k • F:X• comm· ~ Salary~ att0rding .tQ... eXJ'!. dut~.s. Also F~ ~PosiUons. NEWPORT BEACH Joe., 3 niy studio. 5 4 9 - 2 8 4 5 Rm oil.ice + bath&: shower. (Teacher mw ('Xhibiting Prlv. entr., k 2 car prkg. ,;how at studio) Ulils Incl, $400. mo. 673-<210 POLICEMAN & w I f e MOW le EDGE expert + Plumbing 6078 Five day "'Orie week. ls! ~ipay. Pf~~· Yachts Prefer no students. Exper. Call O:introl Car • er available for Howie Sitting, dependable. call for prompt L.R. OTIS PLUMBING Shift, 7M f-3:30 PM. 2nd,1 0675-".:'..~l39:l=, ___ ~---pref'd., but wiU train. Apply Employment A gency, ~:i~es:';all ~~6 your tree est. John 546-3446 Remodeb: &: Repairs. Waler Shill . 4 P~l-12:30 AM. Bookkeeper Analyst bet"'-een 2:30~4~ P, m. ~. 3400 Irvine Blvd., ,;:c::::=:o::!.='-"=-==--MOW nd&blEDGCallE expert + heaters, dispo&als, furnaces, Elepenence $2hell5pful, but .. ~~ With 2 yrs aillege & 2 yrs ~d:~~f. !k ef~r ~ N.B. EXECUTIVE Ilg] depe a e. klr prompl dshwashrs. ~ MIC & necessary. · per ,......... Noo:l . t H NEW Plush office Bldg, 2 to ~iiiiiiiiL"iiiiii'ii'""iiii--iiiiiiii::.~ 1 _..,_ 1~ tree est. John 546-3446. BIA. Complete Plwnbina: Good company benefits. e"~r. accur.a e agen. SECRETARY 6 'RM ~ultes. Conference .:o;::_~~~=:c.:c.:::__I Se~ -U 2T.E94 Paid health, life insurance, typing, Ex:cltlng ~variable COOK Rm. Xero)( <.'Opier. Near FINE EIXiE mce. c. · va ations & siek leave. work env1n::nm~nt. 3020 lntelligmt, mot i 11 ate d . o.C. airprort. 8l.'h1640. Y:ll'd Mi.int~ Service Pool Service 6079 c Newport Blvrl, New p 0 rt Short Order Relief dynamic individual wanred Lost & Found 5300 ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiii: [ Cleanups/Ha.ulmg. 548-8625 Apply In Person Beach, 675-35.'11. needed by private Country lo manage, small fast OFt.ICE SPACE now av11 iL ::;;;c,_;o..:_.,:;o;;o:, __ ,.o.;..:..; I OF ES S IONA L Pool Club, 40 tml/week. Apply in growing prof. oUice. Salary Besl CdM locallon. JR\VIN CALIF. ANTh1AL <X>NTROL AdO..A·Room 6002 MOW & EDGE • nlOnUtly p R RI MARK BOOKKEEPER, 4 hrs !>Cl' person. 23700 Club House open. 646-1234 & · lllW!N, R''ALTORS maintenance yard cleanup Service & ~fain!enancl:'. P day, must be good typist. 0 La N · 1 6.,61 11. "' Huntini.:1011 Beach SheJtrr & hauling. George, 548-{il 42 Efficient & Re Ii a~ 1 e. PRODUCTS CO. Call bet"'" 10 & 12. 64;)..7261 r., guna 1 g u e · EXPER. FRONT OF~"JCE ...,.. 8.12'1 Edison SL r:~l!. 2511 PAWMBO Construction Co. ""•tom Pool Ser,.'',, •'~96-ii.i5~76~7~a~fl~.~l~0,~30 ... iiiiiiii-.1 G t R L \"A " T F. D DELUXE. i~aOl."IC'd, sl\o1vl•r, !Back ot l!um~ietyl since 1923. Quality work, STUDENT cpl. will m~. 644-..sns .: . BOYS & GIRLS It-.1MEDIATELY: M'~ tu re Air cond \Vithi 15 x 24 stor-ANL'rtAL ASSIST. LEAGUE com Pe t l I t v e prices. weed, ~. trim. Lo rates. 2620 S. Susan Newspaper Carrier&. MJn, COUNSELOR quick learner, In busy age nllached . C.1\1, 5.t8-97GCi Adoption, spaying & member BBB 962-1961. 598-nOJ for est. Top Soil 6092 Santa Ana. Calif. age 10. Lido l&lc, Balboa Immed. opening in our Chiropractic Office. Ji ours Neutering inform. 53fr2513 EUROPEAN GARDENER. (Between }!arbor & Peninsula & Balboa Point. beauulul ofc (or a sal~ 9-1, 3-7. o1-. Gary Couture, 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB ANLMALS lMPOUNDED Babysitting 6008 Landscaping -tree service *TOP SOIL * t'OMPOST Fairview, Contact Mr. llac'.<&trom al minded, sell motivated 645-5300 ~.1200,2300 sll !>il-5032 Terripoo. B/W, female l'C'asona.ble. 642-5329. * MULCH ii REDWOOD South of WarneT) the DAILY PILOT or call individual. Salary guarantee 2043 WestcUff Dr .• suute 107, Business Rental 4450 Bloodhound. Tan, fem. BABYSITrER, my home, GARDEN Service-clean ups, call 586-6930 An equal opportunity 642-4321 & leave applicalion. + comm + bonus, Exper, Newport Beach NOW LEASING £':~i~ ~fW.Bl~:~:t. ~r~e2 t~ :._ct.~~'. ~.'~. ;n_r;ntion, Window Cl11niftg 6098 Employer m/f Bra ke & :iii~:d· Good location & EX"PER. stereo technician Lab Blk, ma1 m-ms Alignment Service Jason Best A .. ency Full or part lime. Liberal VIE\Y. IX'I Obispo Road, puppy, e ASSEMBLERS Salary + comm. Coo.st Auto ~F 1 Wary arran~ments. 179 E . Dana Point. 2 story, of!ices, Olihuahua, Brn & Wht, F. E.XP. 1'1om, refs, to)'9, yard, Gener•I Services 6046 * SlTNSHINE WORKERS * Service, 644-8022. 17400 Brookhurst. · VY· 17th St., Co:: t a ~1 es a, bl r do Poodle Black fem. """k. boach & pi .......... 1es. Industrial, re!idential Suite 213 9&3-6m 64,. 2442. suit a e or c Io rs. • • ..-......,...... F: t 642-6931 BUSBOYS dentists, archllectB. etc., Dachshwxt, Brwn~m. 646-7880 HANDYMAN-NO job too · "C es · Im med. o p e n I n g s lot' COUNSELORS needed, ma-EXPERIENCED waitresses. stores, boUtlque1. ExclWllve X-Canine, Brvro, e small. Painting. carpentry, Schools & mechanical assemblers to English not necessary. Ca · non c om Pet itive area. Terrier mix, BIB, fern. Business Services 6009 electrical, plumbing, ('tc. Instruction 7005 assemble processing equip. See Personnel t.1anager tun!, for YOSE'mite ~·ou\h ~t!U:~~n.Ave ~~ Occupancy end or 1974. Cock...a·poo, \Vhite. fem. Call Sam; 673-8300 or leave -----------for the .semi conductnr Balboa Bey Club trip. cau 5-18-6930 12-2. SC 0 w n e r /B r oker, (TI4), ~~/~· :f:.• :~· fem. BOOKKEEPING, payroll, mt'SS&ge. READlNG Spec I a 11 s t industry. , Im W. Coast lfwy, NB EXPERIENCED back office &12--0590 taxes, typing. Kathy':\ Book-OK'S .. Handy Man Service a\-aila ble for tu1orlng-has Contact Jim Gentry BUSINESS OPPO~TUNITY COUPLE . E R ·1 S 21 Terrier mix, Tan, fem. keeping Services. 645-2650. <f!lahf1ed in repairs (If all OV.'Tl materials. Ca I I ; COROTEK CORP, S ALESMAN, Real t"SI. Mldd!e-agod, experienced for assM"s;',·tanbet fo~_,.""'yl~~l•'i~: FOR LEAS eta1 tore Lab mix, Blk, fem. kinds. clean--ups also soml' rA"39"" " .. '-'"'"' ""' ... Carpente!" vu rl~'Clrlcal .,..,.tallation ...... u 1 Knott treet No money cl'uneh here. \\'e h N x 46 in shop11in,... centl"r 33.1 Terrier mix, W/B, fem. L"IS ,_A ' ,.._ .,...,.... '"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~([ 2812 • S salesm11n !ired or houses. n1ainrenance of la r g c 644-8722 mornings only. E. 17th St., CM. $300. a Cocker/Terr. B!W, M. pup David-K 673-5333 Garden Grove • 898-1389 ~ill !rain. Jf you w••t •~ :iparlnient ouse, l'irpott FABRIC CUTIER ITl()nth. 673--0140 61";>--0707, Shep/Collie, Brwn. male FENCES-GA'fES..S'I'EPS l{IJ) ..,, "' Bench, Live·ln, 645--2450 Tcrripoo, B/\V, male RAJLINGS-D.,.,_,..,. ETC HOME REPAIR ""Ork. Call Earl DeWoU. Call 494-1268 No ('spcr. necess. Irvine al .c.o.-....,.. • carpen1ry, Plumbing ASSEMBLERS PAClFIC BUSINESS SA.LES J\l't'a. Ask for Patrlcta, BEAUTY SALON for lease Sht'p mix pup, Brr, m e -:-:::::;Ms-7.163:=7i:cv::-="::·-;;;;;; l ~E:t>lce~tr~le~al!:_.!;Re~a~'~·~-!':'1!!!004~ 2nd SHIFT 2052' Newporl, Costa Mesa, CO LE l ~M<>-... 36S;iii4ii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiol on or abou t June 15th. For Shep fem & 5 puppies , C S • ~16 "'"l1'IO ~'ll'l UP to manage new information call 548--1050 Cocker mlx, B/W, male •rfMt ervice ""' HANDYMAN, Homes & Apts Job Want.d Male 7025 ASSEMBLY EXPER. ,,...,.. • .,,,,,.... ., · bldg. in Costa Mesa. Good STORE/off'-nr. No.unnrt Gl'nn Shep/Lab, Blk. male JOHN'S ,...~--t & Uphol.tery Conscientious erattman ' CONOLON CORP. CASHIER salary & J\pt. No children or factory Assembly "" ··r.;nn CATS ....... }"<' * 646-1461 * MOTEL manager looking for llll E. lifcFadden, Santa fu!lief for 1oocl & bcVt'rage. _oee:;.:"~·~-;;.~m~7=~=--p k• Post Office. 322 Sq. Ft . ...,.,, 2 Tabby J .... hair kittens, Ori Sb am P 0 0 • <Soil __ _,;:_:::::;.o::~=---small or medium mot('! to Ana Mn-""'· & dependable, & GC: lftCJ Monlh. Agent 646-2Al4 "6 Retardants). Degreasers & II ••sl al , portu ·iy 1 CROSSROADS White, fluUy, Ing. hair. all color brighteners &: 10 Hau 119 vu manage. Keeps business up. equ op ni emp oyt>r Some lite bkkpng. Pt tlmc. RESTAURANT Days & Nighla. Interesting 600 SQ. FT. C.M. $155 Calico, lng hair, fem. mlnute bleach for white tlave references. 6~1731 or ASSI'. ~1gr.·Retired couple See Personnel Manager, ~'(Irk located in Costa Meaa w/2 pri. nns. 646-Zl.30 t.ng, hair, trl color, fem. carpets. Save your money LOCAL ~&: hauling by 646-3632. Lite duties. Nice apt +. Balboa Bay Club •WAITRESSES area. Start lmmed. We can Industrial Rental 4500 Assorted Kittens & pups by "-me extra trips. student. Large truck. Reas. E/side C.~f. loc. Call 1221 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. •HOSTESSES kl'l'p you as busy as you f do 1· Barry 531 1235 or 539-9438 =·==--====-~"""-646--5542 ~'ant to be. Please come in or 8 pion. 2S Will clean llving rm .. dining ' -' BOAT SKIPPER; 15 yn -"'°""=·------CASHIERS \Y1ltlted. Gulf e BUSBOYS f · t rv1 & t AND OTHERS, 536-13 rm., &: hall $15. Any nn. H A U LI NG & YARD exp .. need tuJI time position. Auto sales self·servc. 6 days/"'('('k. Apply In pernon, 18ffi!l Brook· ~~ f~n~~w.ew go 0 You can afford a beautiful $7.50, aiuch $10. Chair $5. 15 CLEANUP. ODD JOBS. Exp'd. mech. & ('lee. SPORTSCAR Full Ume. $2,25 i;tarting hunt at Talbert, Fountain APPLY NO\V l NDUSTRlAL C0!\1t\1ERCIAL OFFICE SPACE for lease m dlOicc M ls~ion Viejo area. Good frwy acces.~ al Avery Prk'"'ay. Rea l tors participation s o I t c I t e d . 831-1401. INDUSTRIAL 3000 1q. ft & UP LAGUNA NIGUEL 2799'.! Camino Capistrano Sll.n Dleb,'O FrttWll)' 10 Avery Porkway Tum Ofl 831-1600 NOW LEASING Huntington Beach NEW M-1 !MO Sq. J'I:. & UP !Iamllton &: Newland Sr. 960-1970 NEW BLIX; I M-1. 1200 sq f1 $1'16. 2400 sq. It. $355. 220-l ph. fronl offiet', crpts. lrg rear doors. Anaheim & Tmnlnal Way, C.M. Days ~or eves 64&-0681. LE A SE OFFICE WAREHOUSE 2800 8Q. rt. Jot 5(bc311, Part fenced $600. Avail. Oct. 18$ Laguna Oln· yon, Laguna Beach 658-0869 NEW M-1 1<100-2800 sq ft shop &: otfl~s. Ampl 11rka. 208 3 phal!C pwcr. tr11sh M'nl, xlnt loc nr SD frwy. 646-1252. M-1 SPACE CO~A MESA 12PJ 1K1, fl. LOGAN !'1' ()wfl(!l' 64fl"'1.252 6'1·1-2m 10c PER SQ. FT. 3000 sq. fL 4001 Bir.;:h, NB Raumgnrdncr. 541{,0.12 RENT new M·L l:Dl l/r UP. From $l70 wt ofc. 20$-3 ph. R.H. Mulltt,R.t;. fi73'.-'l0l9. ( l[i] Busine ss Oppor SOOS *WANTED* ON & OFF LIQUOR LICENSES Ul:ivti depc...11! eht.-ckl HOLLAND BUSINESS ~~110 SALES '4Q.OOll8 INVEST In AUSlrallA to nn World Food Caltle Nefii. Net JriO.MO yt"r, fil!'~l29 home or office tastefully yrs exp. ts "''hat counts not REAS. RATES. 963-2611 213-392...Q;2'7 pay. Appl icanls ovf'r 50 Valley, Ca.I f. ASK FOR GAIL dt'Sij,.'fled by top profess. mC'thod. I do \\'Ork myself. GENERAL Hauling. Tree Job Wanted, Fmala 7050 SALESMAN welcomt'. 1010 S. El Camino DELfVERY man for C'arly TASK FORCE int 1 erior .de11igner1 1 .-<>r that Good ref. ~11--0101. Trim & Removal. Free --E:<cellent bt'nefils &_ r1oori..:.R~'~"'~'~SC""------morning L.A. Timt"S homes TEi\1PORARY SERVICES un que p1re o unuture you CARPET CLEANING Estimates. 531-3743. TEEN. AGE sisters tralflc. Ask lor Co"l;-. CHAIR side assl. 11"'nt-•, d 1· Ad t 1 12344 ~Iarbot· Blvd have bt'en longing: fur U yoU !Oc •• II. No x•-~. 1-•<OVING, Ha"""". Exper. inlerested in sumn1er '"'()· rk ~.,, A•tn "~.... full time. ~1in ... l .,,.." c;;'p. e ivery route. u ts on y, GBJ'den Grove CAil me at 548-8636 also ,,.. ..... "''6 .... w.u15 h l I ~~ ~· !\lust ha\'e economical car. "'LI052 spoling· or re-""""" furn. Reliable. Reasonable. Free sue n s lOUS('C eaning, Slart immed. Salary open. No soliciting or collectlnu, 6-modC'ls for builde~. My ......... 15 .. b 110 1ypl 1 I " Be I ·~ Al30, windows&: floor care. est. 832--7581. .,:i ys ng, ng, ec. n AVON ,.cwport aci area, good supplementary income. prices will delight you. Reduoo:l prices for empty HAULING & MOVING, fast Mesa area. 54>-4240. ~I W est minster/Huntington LOST (6-2): lrg male Irish apts. Dulch Maint. Service, low cost lel'Viee. Ext 617, Hel,p Wanted, M&F 7100 Asks • • • CLEANING lady. 5 nights 1 ,,:Bea"'°eh;:;,;,are'="a~."m.=-2924='--Factory 11etter, white star. 1 yr old. 53115"' .,. "'-PRICES ARE GOING UP k 6PM 2 JOA't N rt SHIPPING CLERK V;. Dana POinL..,,.. reward ..=::,,;·::::~·=~----494-100.1, ~.. • w. ·: ". ewpo DELIVERY men p erm ., ,0 ; lnl leading 1~'~ry. JOURNEYMAN car p et Gen. Hauling-Moving· Trash ACCOUNTING S ti 0 U L D N 'T YOUR Beach ollice bu i Id in g. p/tlme. Early morn needed for large mail order 33901 Copper Lantern; DP. Installer, all typea 41h: yrs Tree & shrub trim (Ir f<-AMILY INCOME? You Steady work lo reliable newspaper deliv. to N.B. Company. No exper. nee. •• o-·•--h All al E o.o .,15 can help by earning extra woman. r hone 644-060.1. ll0n1es Approx 2 hr.< $200 Must be wllli""' to work 6.18-1415 ..,.p, ..... .,....... .. re-1........ • remov . 11t . .,...,.,,. . 0 · · · · '"" LOST-iLlver & wht Gem1an ::: J~~leed $l yard Moving •nd Hauling CLERK ~~~ R ~ s E~ T ~ ~r.·:. CLERICAL :~us~~J.as allow & =!d1.e c!;'~~:ayllpai~~ shorlhr puppy. Vic Mnln _.::::::..;.=:,.:::~---~=I $10 & up. -. OOJ.6452 i.~laxlble bolll'!. l'!l train JOBS 0 1 I A · t t benl'fils. Applici1t1ons taken St., HB. Male •. approx 5 L&R Crpt Clnn. HR S24.95. you. Interested? C n I I en a s11s an mos. \Vcaring bm flea rol-Rm $4. Sim hM! S3!l.OO. Sofa _H~o~u_•_ec_l•_•_n_i_ng,._ __ 60_54_1A!Ret·ci11abtc espN. includ· 5-fil..7041. Pl'riodontist needs expcr. 8-<1, MST~iCREST lM. Reward. 53&1734 ~$~14~·~95~·~c~"~"~"~7~7~6-5-"!7"'-0--1 ExCELLENT rn:iusecleaning ini; handling <.'Ollcclions &l ~"""""""""""""""""""I JOBS ~~r~A;';.'lil.' ~~J~·F:xp~~ra~ ·OF CALIF. Ornn"", Calif. Black &: !fill C•ilings 6018 rlone by lady w/er.p. [)co. credit investigntions. Type BABY Sitter. 5 days a , ... eek, I 1· H B 3l•! n~ !llll. 1·-1" ''''"· "' H ~ 10 •.. dl 9 5 0 t G---' ru ies oppol'. . . area. ...., ,m LOST 6/6, art Park, pendahle. Own l.nlns. Ph. "" l\'.p.m. n.ey 11 ier. lo · \Vil ransp. uuu (7l ·1l ~2~n. Conl('r of Rt•tl 11111 &: orange, C.allf. Black & (an • 'VILLARD PJ\INTTNG * 847-3637 Some experience requited. pay. G.r.1 . 8.14-3985 o r JOBS PaularillO !~:~,...,g:7rman Shepherd New Acoustical Ceilings + Dedicated Cle•ning Call F'or /\ppt. 546--8456 C'VCS & v.•kndll. DENTAL ASST l"'""""""""""""""""'I ~~ repainl. Drywall & '1.itll BABYSITTER, full time. g Chainidc. Ch a 11 en gin g f CTORY · 1ext. patch plasterlna:-No. * \.\rE 00 ::YERYTHING * Industri11l Relation11 10 6. •1_ thru Frl. C·• MTST ..,,..tlon. Sal"~ 0 pen. A trAUK't'!<, no exp ~-No: Sml brown male dog. ltef F'IYe ~28..19 """' .... '""" ~.; ne<"". Apply in pcf'Y!n. 32972 \Vhite markings. No collar. 28l03R. 642-57'15 s. est. (71.f't 494--9401 neceunry. Start Junt: 13. Newport Center, 644-2.i:i.; Calle Perfrr to. SJC No Vic. Bank of Allier. by The fa1te11t draw in the West. Have aomething )"OU want to Call aft 6, 545-003.1. TRANSCRIBER DENTAL RECEPTIONIST phone callll plPase. rurport. 494-2310. • , . a Dally Piiot Classllied sell? Oassilied ads do U TELONIC BABY Sitter --~~. < da. iTyp' 60+ wp m I Exp'd, computer bi 11 in g .1 ~:::;;;""""'CS-='::-•~<:;;,.1-,, Ad . Call 642--5678. "'eU -call NO\Y &U-5678. 7 4 '"-""''"v " mg -. · ' Prel. yng. mat\JJ'(' woman. FLORAL i.le1'l~°""· '""' "" 1€~:dLad~se~~ova b!t~d INDUSTRIES ~·k, 1~ai1°~sp. KEYPUNCH =G'=anl~·=""'G"""'c--''~· ~5.14-0c-""'109"""~ I ~:kt~~r~~~u~~ ~ iv/diamonds, Reward. C.J'.1. EK & ffND'"' BAB y s ITT ER, needed !Swing Shilt 4Pi\f·t\fldnighll DENTAL assistant-Oral ~ for appnL 645-2'206 SE Types of Trade L•guna Beach lmmed, 4 days \\'k, 9-5, call 6 mo's "''(Irle t'xpcr, rcq'd on RUrgery oUice. Over 23 yn. G~ to help "·/expand bu1. FOUND: Yng. Basenji mix 557-32'Z8 bet 7pm & lOpm Univac lTIO or 1Blt1-0Zl or 842-2521 H.a Full, pit. Top $$. Car. t R • ,,. (', Cl :; p 1-: X c:, 11 \ :0. t: t: X r II \' Equal Oppor. Employer ...,,, .,.,,. pup, Fem. Vic . o " BABYSITI'ER wante-d w:J. DENTAL Asst, chairside. PhollC'. l\lr. Lyons 0'1<.>"'~· Indianapolis & Bu.!hard, •: X C: II II X 1; I 1-; \ II II \ T R .\ U T t: nlte/week. Reft't'cnces. TYPIST f/·ime in Newpon C1·nter. 11.B. 962--2631 ACCOUNTANT JR. * 496-7158 * X·ray lie N'Cl'd. Call ~h\'JJ 8 * GARDENER * \ I up ,\ ft T ·' 11 It o 11 \ 1" 11 Mon-F'rl 6404160 LOST:Female Irish Seller. 3 ,1 ... C<'ncral att0untlng runctkms BAB YS I TTER "''an!t'f! 50+ w.1i.m. · lk yn-.:r Olvn boss! Part or yrs (I]{!, on Fri. 5/:ll. Vic. T A S K ;\ 11 H ~ 1: \ 11 \ ,\ 41 for sninll mnnul. co.•ftt'11r· '"'kdll.)ls niy home. II to 5:30, FIGURE CLERKS DENTA.L Ass.Isl., l'h11lrsidc. f/Ume. Your QY.'Tl nrea.. \l.·e~tsldl', c .r..1. Rew11rd. for payroll .'I..: po~· r n I 1 child 18 100. (lld. ll.B. ar('a Exp. de~h1"d. Part t!n1c & High lncon1t. (;uaranteed INi-2057 rt 1. R J jl 11 II ·r ' \ \ I. n \I reports, µurlll IH'l'flUnt\nJt: '!Warn<'r & ('.olden \Ve~t,, ~1ath orlt'nted w /I 0 nl r possihlC' full time. Age 2l 01· Cu~1on1rr1. Earn Now. Puy fND. 9.10 wk old short hair 1 1 , 11 K f 11 1 ~, 'machine runs, Pl''Plll'£ fitl satnry. 84z.-0.t9J after 6 typinit. 01't'r. 962-2~32 J.11er. k\Hcu w/f'lranJ?c &. l''hHc Jom:na l enlryii. /\Uh· to 11m. IJENTAL ASSNT, LflJ.;unn 534-7187 or 5J4.3144 111~rkini-: Vic. Bushard f .V. fl '.'Ii ,, R E 1 fl \ 1: I\ as 5. i i< 1 n <' l'O u n 1 i n it HAHYSITIER for boy 7, •rlrl ;\1,ply In Pe!'f«lnnel Dept 11111 f.l Toro 11tc•a. J:.:111>t'r. !!!!!~~~~~~~"""'I 008-22SS K II C \ MUpervi~r. K'.noo'led11:e o! II, 8·$ l\lon-F'ri r!nrin,11; 9 l(l litm, r.1on-Fr1 ehain;ltle>. Salary o P" n . Gi\RDEN llELPER FOUND: Bally SI 8 mes r 1 ., I' 11 \ oompur1.>r 11~s~04 ewntlal. •1r1mm<'r, N.B. on lx'ach. PACIFIC MUTUAL Rcpli1.,; t't'Jrtfldenrlal. i\30-U30 645-58SS kitl<'n . Vic. Brookhurst &. ~ E ll T \' ~ 11 S 11 '.\1 N 54 • 1 612-3."'i67 'iOO Newport Ccntl'r Dr. DENTAi: AS~,.. chn.ifllldf', ~G~E'"N=E~R~A~L~O'"F'°"F=1c"E="" "i'orktown, H.B. ~n6 or Equal Oppnr. Employer Nc~-port Beach chttrful. X·R~ Jlceni;c ~ (; B .\ R T E «I II ,\ t' T II t: AYA E BAKERS HELPERS Equal Oppor. J mploytr rtq'd. N.B. 644-9211 . ~~~!., ~·st F~;:ie. 4 ·~ 1-~D: Labr11.dor puppy ' r l> '.'\i A K " '.\I 1. ·' ll II '.\I I ., R I A/P BL CLERK To $425 DENTAL A.s.'11. chrut'llide. proficient wfllgtlf'tl. We Vicinity of 20th Street Md FCtl Pt1 !d. Bl'autirul modern x·ray. Nonsmoker. J;>roler-will -1n1in on k('"""•nch. SMtA Ana, Costa ~1csa. (J i\ ti. 11 l' 't tt .\ \' T 11 s T R It P )I I 11 ofc in F11!1hlon 1.sland. Som(' Mel• & Fema le Rbly under 30. 644-0011. 1•10_,1 ·-•. --!..'" 12.~ 64&-2252 ftCCOWllifll l)ftckground k JO ftgurt'S, figurea rM!t')'When! " '"' n v• ._ .. 111U ON ~ )t ll 6 t: 11 ~ \ R ~ 1 c: ~ t; Cl V r II :"Ii Key 11.dder. Se.hu-y 10 s.mo. Fun-Time o a.v Shill for the prrson who likn DENTAL HygicniAI. Sat. hr. call Bc!v('rl)', &&5-5800. 1-~o u ND : l-t . B _ a r t-a Aloo fM! Jobi. "'-11 Sally E:icper. Not N~sary boo kkttpil\I. lmm«liate only. Fountain Valley area. GEN'L OFC CLRK Do~rmAn, male, m 11 d T 0 )f '' :"Ii T \' A \ ~ I) s T r R (I t: T •: Hart, ~. c~"' st a\ hire! (TI4) 847-&'"IOI. Gl'0\\1Till . inllboial rnamd. tr:mpered, well tn lnod n ~ R 1. .\ 11 1: T R .\ o t: R 11 t T •: R r Penanne.1 A1;.ency, 2790 FAR ¢Jt1i+nEER'VicES NEVER A FEE DENTAL ASSISTANT. full nc,'f!ll~ youni!: t"ner"f:Clle Pl kk!n1Lfy l-TI4-347~21m H11rbor Rh-d. O f or part time. E'<perlence ~I wfftJ;:urt's , Ute typlna:, t..o!;T Siiky Tttrlcr. Short ln,tnirti•1tUl 1",. hl'i.1~11 11..,.,, .• 1 .. 1.·,1 1'.hi~ .,.. .... , 101"~•J. 1672 Reynolds Avt . nectssnry. 6~ t'al{Cr to 1r.arn. 11111, fem. No O>Unr, S&.nt11 ""'~"11't u,, ''''""· 01 d"~""'ur mm,· I'"'·(._,, 111..i f1'.1t ADM SECRETARY Sant a Ana DISHWASHER Cnll 9<'11. 642-8961 Anri Sf.1.-39G9 hidJ,.11 11•1i.· ~nJ be)\ it •n 1, Mu11on. d Ir bl Oortnell P ersonne l Ou ',N' 0 , _. ~t• 1 1\,\,"I)(!; Co\lrrV.L MA"KFT l~o,spltahl "'-pi.,r. kt"tt •n .~:.. Etju>tl Op[)'lr, EmplO)'t'r Service Agencw r..·c:at , Clean. Jklinblc. ~1r.L<tl GtHl. 1-'Rll>AY. some typing, ~' ' : ~~ "" t: mae SAltTI-R 1'.XOIANCE MO/\IV .. u!ll llVf" II II .,.. , ~~11·:111)'. drpendttblf' at'('(\\lrlllni;!. & il rood dog. Vic. Dt-ach k Hell. JA:IAAR tJt10RTS TR~t: RmJT! ,. h I J:'. h I y n1 a I Iv ate d · ~ICKY DRA\VERS Cfll\ be Ne wport Beach 6404470 w-orkcr \\'1!1 trn111. le It' ph one pcrtenalltl'. s.i~n CA.llAVAi"il t!itPORTS TRADl!'IC POST Out~tAndlns; I'm PI o Y c !' rnadc coak't lo apcn by O range 547-1694 Suri l Sirloin f;a In r y c· n m m cmurate FOUND: Illnck & white, TOf!MllT'Ow: Ro1111aGoda t ~nt>rlt1. Good 11 In rt I n K applying candle Y.'IU or ISJOl\P 5930 \\', Cn~sl Hwy. NR Y./l"X?l'ril'!X'f'. Huntlnston ~:,1c,...01o11),!,ti,. Ae~py, llunt. LT-.-.-,-,-.. -,-,-,-.-,-.~11=.=,,~,:h:,~.~,,~ .. ~ .. ~,,-d:-:: .. .,,,., .. ~.~._crf;~nd~.~.~ ... =,~.~ •. ~I ~~n~fu;r!,OE.AJ~~~~;r,.:~: on dra~r ... 1 runncl'!I. \~ CLERKh T\"P,..tST.1 r.1an·~~u'i· DISHWASHER ~~1n~r1 J~~u';:."s c "" ~ .......-.uv num!'l!!n; l lhnlu&h '1,tcnd60ccn11 £or c:ich.mak1n1 rhttkl O.til ?ifeM ,.l~marl•I 11rore 110me~_!1Kll you wonl lTilL'l1t aveJI 1 .J!ng-.lc• •11 _LI·? shllL O""""''Y'S LOST, vie N(l\\--pt)rt, Afthnn PJY•blr lo '"St-el: &. Find," S1:11-Tc!r$rt1n Syndkl.tc. Add rm IJ09pit11.I. JOI Vlctorill. Colla ever ll!W",.!. ~ ..... ~n!'11h " 1---P ea&ant bl<' c"k"'11e vo d .>-HciTAURAN1', 3170 '}(~~·bor fi mo old m.ile dog. Re> ~11r:nlnt1renr 1his11r:w~pmpcr. Mesa. 011ny ·p11t11·.._UUJW.1tv Ad. Jmtll"!llWC" a(' t::r oun I r•1 01t~!df!cd A~! Call &n-M1I 111111'd. !li:l-lOtl Cnll 64~ P1"-"(tmd . rt.'i6-Gf.'9 ~B~··:!:·..:..:;·";,·:,_____ tod~yl " • . ' ' I ' ' • WALKER & LEE HolpWonieci, M&F 7100 Holp ~ontod, Mil' 7100 , Holp Wontod, MA• 1100 ;_H;.,;•l.:.p_W;.,;•;.,;nt_od..;,_M_&_F_7_160_1 I .. DAJLV PILOT Monday, JUM 10, lll74 Holp Wanted, M&F 71 00 "'IP want"" M&F 7100 Holp Wantod, M&P 7100Holp Wantod, Mll' 7100 1 -;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;.:;j..:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~j'_;_~..;._~ GROCERY PEOPL E Full & p/tlme. Wiii train. Must be mature-& depend· able. Apply in f'IC!l'IOO, 3.lll E. Cobt ltwy .. Cd~1. t.1.r. Adami or Ptnnlf11{to11. GROWS AGAIN 1-TOW TRUC< DRIVER ROBINSONS S>:CRETARY Qye,. 21. "P. lDp .,.... + MACHINE PCB BOARD PRODUCTION ADAMS • MAGNOLIA OF FICF; NE A RS COMPLETION · comm. Apply A.C. Auto PUR~ING SeNlce: 1~ N El Camino f •1hlon l1l1nd Re.i; San Clemente OPERATOR Vi'" wUI be openina·our new olttce at the. comer of ?ftagnolla le Adams In lhe MAIO SECRETARY TOW Tnrck Drtver, '"" P"'· Top pa.y le frlnKe benefits, appl,y Shell StaUon. 17th & GUARDS Men A Women, full nnd part· time Unltorms lurnl~hM. TOP Benellt11. CUARI>- MARK. INC. 909 N. ~pul· Vlida Blvd., El S.:gundo, (213) 640-0195 An Equal Op> portunlly Employer. Some cxpet. in milling mA.chincs, lnthes & drill press dt>Sirnblt•. \Villlng to train ~mootlC \.\'/e~per. In hlgh·school ntachinc shOp. HELP WANTED La rge Company E•panding NOW HIRING ff'rmanent Y.'Ork \n manufacturing, distributing & in11tall atipn. No experience necessaty due to excellent training program for men & women 18 & over. TOP WAGES For More Jnronnatlon Call. 536-2591 . Call Mon & Tues Only HICKORY FARMS ·- Accounting Clerla: to $468 Indus/t.tech Engr $13K Sec'y/Bkkpr to $900 Cpl mgr \.\'ine cellar $800+'/c f1-IA/V A Loan Proc $800 F IC Bookkeeper $800 Corp Ex Sec'y to S800 Sales~ffg Sec'y $T:i0 Field Claim11 AdJUster Call For Appl. Industrial Rehtt,ions (714) 494-9401 TELONIC INDUSTRIES Laguna Beach Equal Orpor. Employer MACHINISTS Small precision p a r t s . general prolo & small quanti1y runs. Small shop, Day st1ift. Good v:orking conditions. MAINTENANCE MECHANIC NIGHT SHIFT :r.tust have experience in the maintenance of production machines and p 1 a n t equipment. ?ttust h a v e mechanical aptitude. 4P~t· 4:30AM Mon thru Fri. Apply In person: PRIMARK PRODUCTS 2620 S. Susan Santa Ana. Calif. Near Harlx>r & Wamtt Ave. (TI4l 540-4020 Equal Oppor. Employer MAITRE D' IS TOP DOLLAR SI We 1r1 looki ng fo r: e EXPER IENCED LEAD IN TOUCH-UP e EXPERIENCED TOUCH-UP PEOPLE e EXPERIENCED TIP PLATERS e EXPERIENCED SCREENERS Ost & 2nd Sh ift) We also have openin gs !or TRAINEES. Join a leader in the industry. Excellent frin ge betnefits and salary commensurate with ex- perience. Apply: DICEON ELECTRONICS, INC. Call For Appoin1ment 540-5050. •xt 30 Equal Oppor. Employer 1\1.EN & WOMEN WANTED No exp. neces.qry. $15. per day, Work !rom your home taking catalog orders by mail. \Vrite Na1 i ona l ?I-failing House. Dept D, Box U588, Los Angeles, ca. 90011 MTST OPERATOR 4:43 to 9 p.m. Ability to \\'Ork unsupe?Vised. Call Diane, !>46-6170 NEW FACTORY Branch cutlets just opening in area needs the following: l\.lgmt T"'1te $185 \Ilk Servmen {2) S3 hr Salesmen Open All benefits, carttr positions. Trne, degree to $72j Sec'y/Tille Escrow to $700 For welt lmo\vn So. ca.Ht 494-1064 private club. !\.lust be exper. I oiiiiiiiii..io.;.iiiiO.iiiiiiii• I Friday "person'' $650 G. 01~/Recept to $600 Receptionists to $550 NEWPORT CENTER PUBLIC RELATIONS v~'I')' near future. We letl ~ 1hut thlA oltlce will be the Exptrlenced Pof!Uon available lo 1h.arp Ultl f ·-• R aJ experienced career minded mate n "' to.... e Exctllent Benellts It lndlvldual. ;\[iP'"'" 6 O • 7 O Estate &ervice C\'nter. We Uberal OlllCOWllll u~ have Immediate openlnK• , w.p.m. Fam! lnr w/blddl111 both ror licensed !l&Jt'B Appl,Y Pi!nlOMel OUice procedurt.8 "-con I ra c t people or people whO wauld 12·3 PM, Mon lhru t"'rt admlnl¥lruUon. bpt!r. In like: I I k d t f ... F "Ion t I nd B i.:onslnlcllon field preferred. o u u a van Hie o u"" No. 2 a&u 3 a , N Excellent co. benetltt & 'Valkcr & Lee Llc.eiliie Equal Oppor. Employer wori.1 .. ,. oonditlom1. training program. 1' o r 1...-...-:::::i=::::::::i=Z===i ~~ further lnrormuUort pleaae 1---. Ple!L&e Coll rail Jack AYonr •l ~. ROBINSONS THE IRVINE CO. Walker 3. Lee ._ ... l •• ,.,. Fathlon Island lfa1 Immediate Opening For ( 7141 644-3319 9AM·NOON F.qual Oppcir·. Employer SECRETARY WarehOuSe Tnie $2.75 hr P /t PBX/C. Ole $2.50 hr CAIJ.. TRISH llOPlONS JERRI WHITTEMORE 488 E . 17lh St (at Irvine) CM Suite 224 642-1470 submit resume & salary desired to ClaS'Sified ad no. 164, e/o Delly Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, calil. ""326. ritAN needed for olliee supplies delivery. C. 1\.1. area. Energetic, neat. full time. 556-2922 or 645-8300. GorgeolL'I office across from 0. Counties most glamorous shopping. mall. Secretary to VIP. TOP SU for the right gal. Permnality is most Important on this key position. Cr .garic.us Jass who can give talks to groups. schools & clubs. Articulate communicator who is a ··c1ean Up The Envimutnent Enthusiasist. ~ JANITOR, P /time Or Utime janitorial ottwr duties. Apply T •pmatic, Corp. 1851 Kettering, Irvine + MANAGER TRAINEES Full & p/tlmt Tnterviewlng Now for Posi· Hons in Orange Co. P.1ust be over 21, lx>ndable & in good physical cond. Have car & telephone. Go to Tic Toe J\larket ne8l'ellt you or tele- phone our offices ..• 1n41 835-7417 100 % FREE 556-1100 AAMES Bureau Of Employment Agency 2700 Harlx>r Blvd. Solle 207 Costa Mesa 100% FREE 556-1100 AAMES Bureau Irvine, Newport ae.ch w ANTED: Wom&n to care lor htle, 2. ch.lldren(10lt12} jo; prepare dlnnrr for ~ mother afternoons st&rt Aus li t. M/have own tranlP· !111-0038 I •d I. Auc1ion IOl5 * Col. R.F. Byerly * & AS.50CIATES JR. SECRETARY This position is w/one of our finest companies. W o r k w/sale11men keeping expense & salel'I records. Good typing skills & 10 key Adder . Co. pays I/• fee/Also F'ec Jobs. Siert $500. call Sally Ha.rt, 546-00S5. Coastal Personnel Agency, 2 7 9 0 Harbor Blvd, CM KEYPNCH OPR $575 For Information TIC TOC SYSTEMS Equal Oppor. En1ployer Newspaper canier11- BOYS & GIRLS 10 yrs & Older DAILY PILOT WANT To I °'""'ifi•d Auolloo"""' LAND, TURQUOISE, AUTO'S &. ETC. Local manuJ. firm in Costa Mesa. Must have 1 yr cxper. on 029 or 5496. Fee Paid. Also Fee Jobs. CaU Rita Johnson. 54(Hi055, Coastal Personnc.1 Agency, 2 7 9 0 1-larbor Blvd, O f LEGAL SEC'Y $700 Fee Pa.kt. Assist attorney & manage olflce. Great spot to grow, Also Fee Posltiions. Call Control ca r e e r Em)'loymen t Ag!'ncy, 556-3505. 3400 T r v I n e Blvd, NB MACHINISTS Immediate opcni~ ror jour· ne)'ITlnti machinists 1st .t. 2nd shift~. Producls oriented co. Xln'l bencf\t111 Include pnld holld@, V8CI & l{J"OUP Ins. Contnct Jim Gentry, COROTEK CORP. 1m2 Knott Street Garden Grove 898-1389 MACHINIST Lngan turret lathe operAtor. All!IO machine ~hop tralnte. Lok·FUt lnc. 864 W. 16th, Newport ~ach. MACHINISTS Top pay ror skilled l(tOCral machinist•. 111ust know riuneh preu setup It die ttpnir. 0.-lA Meta. 642·8(8), l\tACllINJST ProdU£tkm or trv.Ct!I' lnthe operRlor. Part or run Ume. 1s1 &!or. 2nd ahlft. C714) 54()..5'200 Outdoor gparta IOI! I t a appeal? !itU your ~lpmcrtl with a low...ca&t Da J>tlol Cliwlflod Adi 64:1-1.6 . MANAGER Part time eves. Holiday Roller Rink, 175 N. Way· field, Orange. Ca. Y..IGMT Trne, route sales co. Future. Age 2349. Car nee. Y...tr. Richards, 846-5455. MEDICAL People oriented aecretary who can handle emergencies hourly. Work w/olher o ffi ces & employees. ShArp & quick are key requirements. 100% FREE 556·11PO AAMES Bureau Or Employment Agency 2706 Harbor Blvd SUl1e 207 Costa Mesa Has Routes Open Dana Point Ca~strano Beach San Juan Ca~strano CAU Mr. Lowder 492-4420 NURSES Aide & Orderly. 7. 3. ~· pref. Jntcrvwa Mon-Fri. Mesa Verde Conv. Hosp. 661 Center St. CM. 548-058>. NURSE Aidet!' f/time, perm posltioru;, Expcr prcf'd. not nccess. Apply 466 Fln~hlp Rd, N.B. NURSES Aidc11, 7.3, WARD Clerk 7.3. \Viii train. Me~a Verde O:inv. tJosp, 661 Ct!nttr St.. C.M. NURSE:S AIDES, EXPER. Prtf'd. All 11hins. Bcvtrly Mt1nor, 24452 Via Estrada, "'•un• 11111'· Walker 6 Lee MEN & WOMEN NURSING: t.VN Relief for -~~=·=·=·=·~"~'~'~"~:=~ii •-17-34 pm & olto •hltt. RN charl:e ....-•to ·;::,..:r~i;;""='· 64:.::l-3505.~~~~ REAL ESTATE Jmml"dlate Opcntngs in -NAGER School• & Jo"' Jn tntclll-l OFFICE GIRLS MA ...,..,, Oerlcal. Stock Con· NEEDED FASHION ISLAND, trol, t .. OOd service & lOO's Radio telephone dispatch NEWPORT BEACH More. P:tld While TraininJr:, )l.tust be 25. llblf! lo drlva P.1ajor franchhte. Mu.st bt 1\1• Frtt LodR"ing. ?.teals. Uni· Appl~ in Person i:i:reWve. kno\.\·laigable and forms. llool<&, J\fedlcal & YEL LOW CAB CO. lndlll!l riou~. Fully 111aflcd DcntAI + $326 Per l\to. 186 t:. 16th, Co:octa riT<'Sll ofnet'. all brrwnts, challcm;:· Quick Adw.DCl"lnent. C l Bill illi' opportunily. Repl lc11 & TuitJoa PJl.ld \Vhlle Sen ·· confidential And only by Ing. AJ .... :Y ~!ting, 9-5 mail. \\'rite Cla.,!iflcd ad daily. Ch No. 131, OaJly Piiot, P.O. 962.a821 645·1163 You con orge Bo>< Jr;;G. °""'Mesa. Calif. 5-42-2435 DAILY PILOT 92£'6 D<rn't .. ,,. up the •hi>! "List" lt in cfwlfled, Ship to Short Resulta! 642-5673. Cl Iliad •..a l)ut YoUr l>Udget b8CIC on ast -• the track .•. Sell ldlo llen1!I 642·5671 with A .,..._t Dolly Piiot C1.wltkd Ad! Call &C~ today! Full or Pait Time Needed lo stall new uni!& or a rapidly expanding chain or fine !amlly restaur· ants. Good working conditions & bene· fits. APPLY IN PERSON 9·5, MON THRO SAT JOJOS RESTAURANT . 17271 Brookhurst St, Fountain Valley WORK IN NATIONWIDE l.lcen.<;ed, Bonded & Insured i\.1eMber of National FASHION A~~ri~:ro:dS:CY. S.A. ISLAND ~~ ~.: NEVER A FEE -... WANTED, Siamese Sealpolnt fem, unreg'd to breed w/like male for pick of litter. 646-<1169 '' -r;,yr.;;---iiiir;-;:;;;;:;:;------;rn.:.no:::ir.::::::'.".:~--;:r.r-,oo-,.,,-;~-c----i""""T""'"""'-..,. . .,..-.-==-:-,,,--------,,,.,,,..,,... ______ Monday, June 10. iq14 1 ~_r_e_e_T_0_0_• ___ 8G_4_S Hors11 I060 Mi1cth•MOUl IOIO _s.._t_•_· _P_ow_•_r__ 90ii1 Auto Ser. & Pat"I• 9400 1 _V_1_n_• ______ ,5';_7.;o1_c;.;•;:;P_rt'------"9""715 oyota OAIL V P!LOT 27 9933 BEAtrrl}"Ul., lovinr:. 1-111\f J\QllA Celdbu,::s. 1 007':r1·sc--R-A_M __ L_E_T_S_ 15' BERTRAM '61 Special ~phnrd Ir CoUle >I rnot1th• N1,,-ara Chlclt by Parker Bar, '• T'Wtn U'.l M'"-J/O. 1 way .Id '"niol" ••-· . I llQn of Thl\.'tl !Jon , 5 .,.... on ~... Sale "'" ~· l-J'C~rirni1~11 J•• rad Io , lath o'" e 1 er, ~ OOnie whh yanl. ~!~!· J;;~ ~hcC1ii:U\,:~ ANSWERS directional ranae !lnde.r. ff I BACK lk'«I. 6 YN on 6/7174. Doth outrlae.,., ball 1111tk, w11ter ::i M01'11i:JU.J.!.~ kiUl"nN nd. I Do!lal ..... 11 4" temp. gttuge, 11u10. flN! " hon1I!. 8 1vk11 old. 2 tmJ11, n · • '-" ..-t-l•llti. TroUJ;h -'f')'pcd -PAnic -exuna~-J-lc11>d &. '"'lley. Xlnt Bucket Seats :i I ~ Obl,•ln -HOP ON "'u . nn1 c.:. G1vy1br11 ligcn1, _M_l_•_ce_l_l•_n~eou;,;;;~•;__._:108()::.;;;:1 f\\'O tleu11 11tar1ed ot1t for rdnd, $13,000. 816·1GtH ! F 5'16-539'l u walk. On.> llOOn iire<l, '7:1 18 ~· RIVU·:RA <SeaRay or RVs-Vans-Mtr. F'R-t~ ·ro GD HOM F.:, 18 nio BARTLETT tunu'tl 10 the uihcr, and look.a-llkf'I 188 ~1 a r c. Hm1. Custom lu xury & old Spri1wer Spa11Jel & FLOOR COVERING "kcd, "Shill we llOP ON cnilser 10. 30 hrs, 00 1nph, ~f.!'~~" adlt 0011le c at , 711 W, 19th St., c.M. a'-""'""'-'',,'.,..===.--!~..1 1 canvu, Ice che1t1 quality. Compl. w/ ~ Pr r aonal!zcd lnltalla!lon, BARTLETT mo.:ld ng trlr. Moo:l. Pr!.. Pty Pedosl•I. COCKL"H s """llll • ·-Old, Nuno B-... c p. t IKGrfl6) Aft 6, G4a.-2969. llo ·-· ,,... •uhu, ar FLOOR COVERING ~~J99;.,'~au~~h~ge1~~1ocn: ~xu~ntood. Over ~ }Tl. 7 .. W. ltth St., C.M. ~oou>~~N J~~n:orE~~~ $149e95 '"'"" ifREE ESTIMATES Quality cu11tom floor matlc 70 ~al bit-In i"•· 8' KtrrEN~ ti wka old. Male. Call &t&--1+12 cov~rln&'. F'ecturtng Natco, j &u111, 2 hunks, full CO\'l'.r Big CYl'"-\Vhltc w/bcaut. Amutrong & Coni;oleum. J wl trlr. Xlnt shnpe. 6'1;).5881 m11rklngs. F\tnky. 61~2:H2 KAHEN'& BILL JltfORitJSEY GunrA,)tCf'd lnsl11ilallon &: '7:t SKIP Jack 20. Open \JNIQU1'~ kUtcll!I, ~!nnx & '1 ,..,ltrl"f' nre .YOU'!' If you see 11erform.an1,,'CI, Ov~r 30 yl'!I. t'NWr, IO\\' h~. Sale/part- {Good only thru June 14) ONLY AT '10 FORD VAN. \\'lndow van. '72 CAPRI. Radio, heater, 4 ft 1..-yllndt:r, 3 sl)Cf'd tran'I· 'P...'td. air co11d ltkin!n1. {031· mlllll ion, liealt-:r. (180JJST). tX>!). $2549. m>9. ' THEODOR E ROBINS THEODORE ROB INS FORD FORD <!060 llurbor Blvu. 2060 llBtbor Blvd. Costa r.1~i;11. O.ta l\.1esa. 6'12·0010 or ;,.t0.8211 &U-0010 or 54().8211 LEAVING tor Hawa~J nitu;t _D_o_i._u_n ______ ,_no"' !tl!ll my va.n, '61 FOrtb Vu n, 11tw '65 cna.. nrw t ire~. m11.a:1. tape dt.ck, totally Culltoml:ted, 20 i\I P G . 494~3521B Charlie '12 DATSUN PICKUP. Radio, 'GS DODGE, ,\.I Cond. ht'11ter, 4 rpeed transmis- \'1•1)' cle11n. l\takf' oller. ~ion. 188958). $2199. Htwn 6-Jo, <'WI 673-ml THEODORE ROBINS Autos W•nted 9590 FORD ~~~~· c,!~~t.crs. 615--tSBtJ. ~·~~~1 P~~':n ~i1n~11k ~ic:1~; lf'R£E ESTIMATES ;"'~4~~~~,:c~f~"~·~'-'_"7·a-·:_'_"_""_"· • J •1!1·\\j ,j 1.1 .\11] ,1411.2178 Of anyone knows ctill t;'lfi-1442 3/l=' Cu.ion• Cab'" .'O' I '1'111\·r . .....,,. 11 1 "Id S~fOKEY {:ftJ._;y KJ1TENS "'°'·re \l't can contact Koren "' " CADIL .£VI.Ill 1ir 11>1 ' n 1 ' ' frC'e to ROOfl hon1l'. &; Ulll ire would apprccluto I BUY!! CUSTOM Cabin Cruii;et'. 1 Stop Service Center LACS 0>:;111 Ml"i;a, 641·000:{ yo11r ht'l/1-lhlln)( )'OU} Good, used tumiturtl I: $7000 Value. $4000 cash or ( 714) 551 ·1781 Larg•st Sel1ctlon &12-0010 or :~10-8211 2 AOORABU: CATS, spayed appllance:c ~r wl\1 '"11 lor YoU trad~ +. Prlv, Pty, 968-S921'. In Or•nga County WILL. BUY YOUR !em., very lrirndly. 1 or PO'T'TED Plant&-Pr\v. t'OI· MASTERS AUCTION 27' FANTASY twin 1:-6 O~fCs '69 V\\' <'nglnc llor dllJ'IC Coupe DeVUleo: • Sedan De-DATSUN, TOYOTA both. 612.-.7768 noon to 5 Ice. J lrg. Rapheu5 Paints. 6461616 or l3~9'1S f"/B, 1/s radio, on lrlr. f'ly buggyl? Betit oHl'r OVt'r $215 Vllle'I • E' Dorado!! • eo1.. OR VOLKSWAQEN Furniture 8G50 Summer Werthouse Clearance e>wr 600 s.~111 Rt>auly Rt'sl l\1attreKs<!li &_ Boit Springi.. Gl\.'l' 1tw11.y priced at $19.9.i set. Dealers \\'clco n1t'. 2 Bottlr Palm Bucal'nla, l .,. eqpd. Won't last. 8 16-~8 494-1740 vertl.bleii. AlllO n1any other PAID FOR OR Nar. \\'ILL \Vinds"·rpt Pine. 20'' box. S3~~t S ~~my54~9 LATE '71 SldpJar k, 24', FIB, aelect CndJ\ac Trade-in&. PAY TOP DOLLAR. CALL Box bl1ncllni; 1n11.chine, hvy •• -' -Jo hrs. Very sharp. Hotel. 1 ~ KEN1' AU.EN, 540-lH42. duty, wi!h ba11d & cllpi. M llC Wanted 8081 lllnk I.: mony rxtrai;. $8500. AutosforSol1 n. '71 DATSUN In> Jo·asthack. Cull 5'19.1G88 ' J>vt ply. 1714} 67" "~24 .-r ->v.o Gold, 4 i;pccd, radio le ~Uflf'BOARD & \VET SUIT, WISli TO purchase Ne\\'· GRAND BANKS 32. 1972 clean. C413CXLJ 831-1375 HillJ: :;ill'aU01\'lail, no dings, port Beach AthletiC' C!ufi !\TINT CONDITION! Lo\$ of Rec: V1hiclas 9530 1 ,;'~D~lr~.1"==~=~--- $10. S<>a Suit. Lci11&,iohn. membershJp. 67H386 Exttas-$34,9."iO. 83.l--3640. TOP DOLLAR PAID ·71 DATSUN _2.10::: Dk gm., '74 TOYOTA Best Deol Anywhere! LEASE OR BUY All Model JI ~w.LWli& -TOYOTA I 'ti~ ('OUGAlt l:'il, air. P\\r, 1•1•ry clean 6.1,000 rnl.. nrw ruhh"r $1400. &12-l'.HI! Dodge 9flJ '7/l DODGE: Swlru:cr. 6 r.y!. HiJJOO ml. Like 111'\\'. Se.• I" r'll·lir\'e? 2370 Orlilt\J:e, Of. :i.1r r.1 --------Ford 9940 IJNAt•ll9WY SPICIAL l96G Harbor, C.l\t, &lti-!:iin3 '71 LTU BROUGHA~l. B.odlo, h('ater, nlr c.'Ond., fl01••rr i;teerlni.: -hrekef' -111lndOl'·s -~t1:1l1t. 19770~· I, $2·17~. THE ODORE ROBINS '71T<JYOTA?-th:ll.ll:id lfl ,I FORD hentcr, I i.pee<I lriu1sn11"· ~O ftas'hr:tr J\h·d ~ion. alr 1·<indlliolnini;c. ta.'ll· ()')st;1 \!r~11 , (;\\"X1. S1 ~75. I ~2-f(HO or ;,10.~z11 THEODORE ROBINS l!liO FORD n ,1n..:he1'0, 1 FORD (•\\'TI<'I'. air 1•!)11d. radio. ~ 119thor Blvd. lw11t•·r, $1.)."i(l, J \ O ~ 7:::: 7 , Co~ll:I l\lei$8 . ~l-ffi77 642-0010 or 540-82\1 .70 LTD'-,-,-,-"°-,-.-10-m-n-,-,-.,,, LEAS£ A BRAND N~:\1.' '7'1 1 k/r, '(!/S. p/d!S(· !>lit~. Juz TOYOTA 1200 Corolla Sedtln r1lck. nr111 lirei;, $t&i0, !or only $61.26 r:o~r mo. 3G 84~:il 111o.11. 01.ien end lease. , .• 12~,~.,~,.~<1-1.r=o-. -,-d~,-.,~1,-11 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 •~ot ll Bl•d. 84711\\'io HUMT tMGTOH8E.t.CH cond. AU!O lrans, air. f>\l't' Sir. Orl~M.I 011·nrr. $1900. 613--1961 646-8886 or R.13-962;; c:c..~ta ATes.1 llC"'· sz.l. Both tor -160.·DfcF &E · IOl5 AIR COND 1 A.l\tJF:\f J~evcll.i !\laster Trumpet, lk • um. qu,p. Bolts, Rent/Char. 9050 , IMMEDIATELY au 0· ' stereo & 1972 I.TD. all 11"·r ,t;, air., F:xcrl t'Ond, Oilf' 0¥.'?ler. SliOO. 6-36-1309/96?.-6601 I 110 H I tnags. 1174COPJ 831-1375 ll{'W, I\' cal>C, . 1J1nan c ~ ~ f'OR ALL FOREIGN CARS (Dlr ) .. ~.,:..,~~~-..:==.=..:c.... Ski Boots, all plastic, brand DESKS S~ Up, Exec. swvl 42' NE\I.' Oiris-Cr11ft SPECIAL CAU or come 1n 10 ace us. , · . 11_ P.l~K 2 ata "·ag, au10, '7t. F'ORD Gran Till'i1l0 !\111. KING SZ BED, $Th. 1-l('rculon Sofa-bed, Sl75. Spani1>h Tlil A 4 chrs .. $175. 9 Dno.or Dresser. $125., '71 Scuha Tank, llawaiiun hack-pack, $70. 5'!6--0181 art. 6 p.n1. PIANO. French Pt' o v • canopy bed sel, rabinet bl'<!. Otiental bar I i;tool1> / di- nette './ desk. Sewing n1nc:h. €75-4367 all 3 pm. SHHHI FURNITURE AT WHOLESALE! TE~IS. TOO! 194-lO'lO S' SOFA A 2 chairs, xlnt quality 9mo old, like new, $300 for all. 642-9404 an 5 WANTED IK'll', :;1, 10~~. $50. ot beet chrs. $1:>/Zi, Secy chn NO SKIPPER IF 73 DATSUN 610 C(J('. lune. air. ong ownr.t. Take l>elo11 \\gn. P/!'o, p/li, 111r, ol'ig. olfcr Af1 6 615-0341 $8124 Pierce 861 \V. 19th YOU 'RE QUALIFIED :1uto., A.\1/fi\-1. only 13,000 _.,book. 960-1705 I u~·ncr. 551--&i:!-I. o~xl>RATo~·s lltfl~tak&-C;M. 64~3408• Fly-Brid11;e Sport Fishernian. Coleman Mach 2 ~~l:'i tS92HQVJ 831-1375 ·11 LTD \\'aJ::on. 10 pa~:1 .. ttir. Sh~·r natural Linen P1ano1 & Orgen1 8090 Plush. Full electronlcs, full lZ,OOO BTU · Volkswagen 9770 I PIS. ra~~ 1~dl~! lire?!. draperle1, 4 p&nel.s, each ralJey, shower, etc. For '73 2-IDZ. su,·e1'. uir, mags, Clean. SI.50. 5.>2-d 20. !t;i" wide by 96" tong. 150 • PIANOS charter by day or "·eek. Reg. $379 + Install. blk vinyl top. lmrnac, und MUST SELL ! 1 •66 CUSTO.\I JOO. Gd fires. yds t.a,n nylon HI-Lil Ahag Flsh. cruise, cocktail, etc. NOW ONLY 3100 W. Coest Hwy .. N.B. priced 15150. 979-1320 1972 V\V Spr. Biie. YI"·· Gd. t150. rrpt. Super buy! 642-• ORGANS &6-2200, 962-2301 Sund~ $397 I t 11 d 642-9405 1974 DATSUN 610 \Vagnn, lire~. 30.000 ~i. ;\tech. e:otc.1 546-."S·l~I ?25J/:\4&-4\m Rentals fr $5 only. ns a e TOP CASH for clean used fully equipped, still under $2095. M6-5t85 aft. 4:30. CAB!Nt.."TS lot Kitchen & -EXPLORE ISLANDS cars and lrucks orig "'an1y. 8:11-00>7 1973 V\V CA.\1PER, pop 1011. I Mustang 9952 Bath sln ~on beautiful 57' Ketch. • Howard Chevrolet '73 DATS!JN 610. Seel. 7.CK'IO Xlnt ei]nd, Day!: S44--42'll1 1 Unfini~hed Prefinlshed Op.n Nights 'til 9 EKcel rates: days or \\'erk11. J '\!l· \lj .j l .1l .11 j I) ml Jlt1Lnt cond $3 000 Eves & Sun : 5#-ti541. Ask 'G7 ~J liST,\J\G, ExcC'!. f'Qncl., Counter Tops also Sat : 'til 5 :30, Sun. 12-5 Rest'n>atlons req"d. Box 316, ' ., '1 1\ r ?>lacArthur and Jamboree rU:~. M6-5277 .• ' for ~Ir. Shoenlakt'i'. I\{'"' auto rrans. PS, ~mall J-IAf!DEN ENTERRISES *Pla noi & Grinds* BalDoa Isle, ea. 92662 or Ne"·port Bcai:;h .7 • . '67 V\\', ve"' cle" ... , R•bl l i \.:-s. _ air-l't>nd. Best oflcr . • I W J8th Sl c.~· __ ,, ~ !!?_~,. 833--0555 l DATSUN PU . 38,000 m1, ·J .... ~ I 6i3-6 IJ a · · .... Bal~~-~ Cable . Ch•·ck·n·ng ·==~"~"~""'"!'=~-~~' 1 l Stop Servic.e Center.. Nev.· 1· s1s-':"ll <ogln£', x1n·1 cond. •»'-".Call --·-·~· -------G4~2SiZ -~r -Kawai -Ki~baU Boats, San 9060 Santa 1\na J-'r.11}', at Sand 'WE• euv··useo -cARS ~D9.IJ'!,'I, IJ. ~ 643--0119 "°""" 11966 FORD ;\fU,.;fAl"G 4 spd. OLD round oak table 48" -Knabe. Ma:on & Hafl''*'l . canyon ANO TRUCKS 1970 DATSUN 1600 Roadste1· '68 \'\\', $835. 540-3010 8-5 2S9 V-8, ale, xlnt rond, new diam. A-1 oond $225. Sean MUUf'lt • Sohmer -Stein-RANGER 33, Time for Off-ramp -CITY OF IRVINE Come in for a free a ppraisal good · cond. Radials i. 493-7188 ' paint, make ofr, 893-87:>2 dbl oven elec J'8Jlit, like way· Storey & Clark -Win· crul1lng, time for r acing, 714/551 -1871 to GROTH' CHEVROLET, var)Ous covers. 642-0837. eves & \vknds '68 ?-!UST ANG Conv. Top new, coppertone, $150. ter -Wrull ... ar -y ---•a thl• ~-1 -&dy prl-d ._ 18211 Beach Blvd Hu"I 0 -h cond;tJon 11200 4~1221 mJ '"' .,,.,...,, uua '" • ""' "' -., " ' '""" '69 DATSUN 510 '69 V\V Bug. Blue, 4 &peed, ' ..,.~ ~~"i * USED BRICKS k 8lMSG< I &44--05~1, mo nit New Spinet. 1r •••••• ., $595 sell. 644-5662 aft 5 * 8'17·6087 549-3331 MUST SELL! $850 air (315CRP J 8 3 1-13 7 5 V'tU"'.nL- i>LOVESEAT Ir IOfa cua:tom ony . Uaed from ............ S95 tNT'L 14' sailboat &. trlr WE BUY * 900-2618 * IDlt.I '12 ~I USTANG Mach 1, xlnt cond. i\tany extra11. P.,1t. pt)' 536-0785. Aft 5, 536·3706 made • vtl'Y Rd qua!, never Charif•'• Tredlnti Post Players " ......... , S895 Good cond. P.1ust sell. S750. BOATS-IMPORTED AUTOS -=.66~=B~U~S-, ~R~u-n-•~G~ood~ U.~. u•ually hm, -o -10. <194-1629 Grands " • .......... $395 OUcr. hfartner Yacht 1 BEST PRICES PAID! Hond 9727 ~ _,, \\'E BUY, WE SELL ~RGANS* 61'>-139.1 TRAILERS • 5650 or b" otc. 8'2-482< • ROOMS f Furn.it .I: n AI Dean Lewis Imports • o ure Antiquf's, ~ltlalll, Junk &;NLI ·Conn · Hammond· 20' B-UON 'Cat'. Mint ~ Hubor C M 646-930C •n HONDA. 18.000 mi. Tape '69 V'!JV F11.111back. Excellent Oldsmobile 9951 ~2i)~s, P.1ust .11e1 1. FURN. Rad/saw Alereo Kawai · Kimball · Lowrey -cond., $1450. w/trlr &-RV STORAGE - ' ·• · de c k . A l\f IF AT radio, t'Ondlfion. $1395. Private I cc.,:,;,c.;.:;:;;.;;;;_ ___ ...;= j!!e.::::0:::._....,..---=..-1 comp. &: other misc. ltemi. Rodgers • Thomas -·: .lm-trapeze. 645-3861 Oaya JUNK Cars needed. Free tow radials. Top shape. Party. Call 979-&434.. Sale• • Sr.-\1\Ct' G•rage S•la IOSS 847-8187 8131 La Palma ah~ -Wurlitzer. 12• DART Sailboat with ialls, away. Cash for t 1 t I e · aeruionahlc. PH: 673-&'.185 1970 V\\'. Xlnt cond. Nell• OLDSMOBILE R- , __ ,_ •1.e. ?!gan ···,::~·-···-·-·· $150 1974 Lie S300 24 Hour Security ~f:i:_d~e:~-~'16~n~~ Call paint GMC TRUCKS GARAGE SALE; U. llJVI<" SUl!IMER SPECIAL . 'C_eY Spun.a ........ $195 PhOne 6·73-~ & I & 0 Se • 21~ c= 1541 cve1 Jaguar 9730 008-5921 HONDA CARS Ing ror hidden treasure? ' t c I Wurbtze:r Spinal, nf!W •• S499 n ut rv1Ce .>-..>;>0-,-cc;---"''--'-~= NI s It'!! hiding in my garage at lY.c of Steam a .r P' * WIN FREE * 1970 ISLANDER 27'. m eng, M ILi R t CASH FOR 197'l XJ6 Jaguar , blue, lo ,V_ol_v_• _____ _;9-'7~7.;;2 i U VERSITY OLD 87 •-S CM •-1 Cle8Jllng Free estunate !\'cw ""int. Co'np. ,,,.,uip.......i. on n y a es ·1 h s·<oo • · l \i Fru¥t-'t'r. I.. . . """. ~76 · • ORGAN LESSONS .. M -.. I""' Pro St t' YOUR CAR mr es, gTl'Hit s ape, 1 . 2850 Hulm Blvd. l I ' . ' ' ' ' ' I l ' ' ' ! ' I I I I ,, ' ,, t !, & Sun. lrom 8 ani to 6 pm. 19975. llnn. 646-5632. pane • ion 546-7070 call 497-!$79 Antiques, jewrlry, clothing, TURQ. Necklace si:io .. Olds FULLERTON MUSIC WANTED Complete RV --,A°"UT"o"'s"'."'c'•'~SH~P"A"'10""--l'·"12.-J"A"aiiuf.A.,;R:-xv-,iis0-1;;;,,;;:!/y '74 VOLVO Co1ta ?-tesa 540-96«1 p fumilure, etC'. ' Trumpet, like new Sl50. Slat 18191 l.:u.clid, Fountain Valley 14' JIOBIE wltre.ller. Call Running or not. \\'recked loaded, l owner & only Hors•• 8060 t>e1,nch,.,A!°l!,d78 wood, Make 557-4836 £213) 682-1628 alt Spm. Servt"ce & Repot"r ok. 842-3126 2-1.000 mil~. 831-2CHO Dir. 0 t r. QTr-v.,J 122 N. Ho tbo•, Fullerton · Bo•t• s--.1 & Ski 90IO AUTOS IMPORTED Karmann Ghia 9735 SAC. Flashy Quarter ma.re. POOLTABLE FACTORY! 871-1805 ' ....-Center-Store ~25 \Vllh or \\'\thout tacit. Save on tables, lamps, cues, SJH,1o.i or~. Pichlnkos! 541-333R. WE'RE DIFFERENT 17~~· Deep V, 140 H.P. 6 ryl Don't give up the ship' AQUARIU?.1, 20 gal. incl 1 Rea:~~ss ot rlie "'Fantastic t!~ily'~t.~~& }l~h. ~~~ • J 'i!i•\\j J 11, l ,\j 1) "U!t" it In classified, Ship pump&. tuter. $15. Prices lhat one . reads . bl 1 ! 'l 'l 1\'J 1 Sho ~rnlts! &12-5678. 045-&lBS or 64.i··W about. !he fact is ~hat cpl & aeats. Engine re-t 0 re · competition keeps pnces YI'-Fantastic cond., $2T':;J. i1lT1U17<TffU7vT4TTTTffi Rbout tl1e same v;herever 646-3176 ------------N----~ Santa Ana F rwy. at Sand Canyon exit. General 9701 '71 KARMAN GHIA ----------Excellent condilion. Ne1v ABARTH; Hl60 Zagato !ires & ;;a.int. 645-3731 or l\1onza. F'ia1 eng. Xlnt cond. "!l68-0&6"'-""J'---~~-~ S900. 84&-,!illl \'\\'·KARMANN GH IA 19t>S. Audi 9707 r11rlials, n1:1.gs, radio, recent Best Deal Anywhere! LEASE OR BUY OVERSEAS DELIVI::.P.Y SPECIALISTS J>w.1.Wli4 • YOlYO sales by being undersold. llil 1714) 551-1871 ----------1 valves & brak<'s. ).:/nl ul\X'h. '72 AUDI 1001.S Auto. trllnll., cond. $l200. 6r.l--.1tllfi sunroof. & fmmaL"l.llate in & Mercedes Benz 9740 l'l66 llarbor, C.:\t. 646·'1lCl3 . out. 831-:»W Dir. ,74 'IERCEDES ·~SE E>-VOLVO '69. 164. , 4 dr scd. 4 * 1 72 AUDI lOOl..S 4 dr " ......, spd .. R&H. Clean, E.l(lras. C•m-r1, Siiia/ • • auto ecu1ive car . ooe only !Ser-$2.050. 494-9837 r--trans, air. lm stereo, very · I N o 7 I full · Pinto 9957 I- Urd~VllSMY . SPICIAL '7.1 . P!i;TO \\"AGONS. 2000 F:nginc, radio, hcatel', au!o.- mlltic, lugg<1J(c Tuck. \213- JESL l.o11• us .. _ $2590. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 200IJ I !arbor Bl\'d. C.osta !\lcSfl. 612-0010 or ;,.w.8211 We're different bl'cause our ulesmen lleten hard to wt'w.il you say, they're sensitive to what you really \\'&I'll & they have lhc invPntory lo make the perfect match b et we en Organ & Organist, Piano fl, Pianist. 11 you are thinklng R•nt 9120 "'Ill. BUY YOUR RECRE-clean, SJ89J, ~7124 ia o. 1 14 1 y equi11-Gener•I 9901 _;.::,.;;._ ____ ..:.;.;;;I ATIONAL VEHICLE PAID -==~='-'-'""-=--I ped, $226.76 mo lease for I--------..;_;· I 10\S CABOVER-Camper, for l''OR-OR NOT. CALL US Au~tin-ttea1ey 9709 3ti mos OEL + T&L. \Vhy ~l uRI Sell! '59 Lln ('o ln '73 PINTO Squire \\'ng. Lo. 1nl .. xlnt cond. Jltlu!ll !ltt to appr. 4 sjld rrans, 1uper tire!'. $2600. 675-4617 all e 1vkday.~. For an Id In C1ll Muy lleth Sun-Salional! \Vhlp u11 11111 ....,., llt'I for , 1'lr11tl<."' •II tlnuhl" l'rOl'h~I~ ,\~:\\'' cw .... ln·I dbhun·l,.·><11 / f'tl r•l"'b''"' 1•IU~ o<hnrt>< fir UflUbh• 1trand "'"t•'•<l (r.•·<I 1-n1- to11. IJllf' :i ~1,. .. i.,,;. 1 ·~11 .w11. j 1163~ Mt~s~·M' ~!'"'~ ~ (~ lu\; ),J fl ~l .11: l. i l !il inrl, • 1S CENTS rnr 1111rh p11Htr11. • Add 2S ~n•.s for t•C'h p11ttttn for fir~l ·tl•~~ m11U :ind 1pvcl1I ll 1 ndll11g ; <1thtrwl a e thlrd~l115~ dtllvny will t11kt lhrM wetk~ or mott. Send to Ali te BrO<ltlt, 105. the D1i1y Pl.lot, NHd1tt'f'aft. Dept,. Box 18:1. Old Chelaea ~aUon. N- York. N.Y. 1001 L PrintN•me, Addr1111 , Zip, P1tt1ra N\lt11be.r. -N•wl 1'0 moll papul•r *' 111:111 tn o•r 1t14 N1e1111.cr11'l C.tat.,1 All tral1t! 'l'KRl!P! n.. dMllfl.I lo•hlt . .---1'f N@wl law+ Kn it BoDk - hu Dulo Tl111111'a11 .. n1 $13 !'!"ew! N11~1e,Mnt Book $1.00 New! Flewtr CtGC,.tt 8k $1.00 Halrph,Crochtt l ocik ..... t1.00 ln11111t CNtll1l 8Mlt .. ~ t1.00 111111111 M1cr11t1I loelt '"''l'"° lr11t.1111t MOM)' BMlt '"" ... 1.00 C9191pl1t1 Olf\ loolt ·-·---St.GO 0tl'llPl•\a Al1h1n1 •14 ~· $1.00 1i ~''" Aft114111 •1t ~"" SOf ... lcl,1t011llU.•I .. -·$flt MUMV!ft Q11llt loolt #2 ·-~ II Oullt."f.,.TH11 .-.... &Of' ... k •' tt Jiffy "ut1 --&o. Woman'• ~orld '42·5671, oxt. JJO about a keyboard Instrument, give us a try. \\le think you'll agree that we're different. OOAST Jlt1USIC Newport at 11arbor, C.~I. 64&-0271 Brookhurst RI Tolbert, FV 't Ton Trkonly, $60 pe r wk, FOR BES~ PRICE. OPEN ----------lease 4 yn> frotn others -1 -:las~liJ '64 & '65 Che\'I'Olet. 2 \vk min. 6-12-1497. ROAD, I~ u NT ING ;: o N 1960 AUSTIN Healey, reblt when you pay no more fol' Best Ofrer! Trailertown, 327 8' CAt.1PER, like new, dbl BEACH, 188tl Beech Bl\·d.. from 1967 Ji. Atark fl, eng. 8 3 yr len!lc "'11h WJ. \\'. \\'1Json, Sp. 5, CAf. sink, oven, sleeps 6. Comer 842-'.?5itH.. & running gear approx Jim Slemons AMC 9905 jacb. 548--3180 aft 5Pft1 J0.000 mil('s. Hard top, .;. _______ .;.....;..: Trucks 9560 tonneau & nc1v soft top, Imports '73 Gremlin 13,0CKl ml. air, radials, great shape $2450 49-l--0508 ALASKAN CA!.lPER. 10' Mic)lelin tires. $1 50 0. 1301 Quail Cood condlUon ~-...-A<Vl3878 h * 548-9547 * ,rd AMMVaSAaY BMW 9712 833-9300 '71 PINTO Runabout . Yellow, 4 spPed, radio, alr. (119DIDJ 831.-1375 IDlrl. '72 PINTO. Bro~·n, auto., radio \\'/stereo ta p e , IU)iETBl 831-137:5 (Dir.I '73 PINTO. 4 spd, 25 ~tPG, t ~take offer? I ;;;;;;;;;;;963--0:::;;;;'";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, I PERRIS Valley camper, fits I• all sml PUs (6' bed) Ask- ing $350, 645-8589 5• 1-. ---SNCLAi ENTER F'ROt.1 ~1acARTHUR '71 FORD 1; TON PIO\UP. OVER ll.A~IBLER '69 Ambassador. 4 Dr, E:(L"tl. cond. Loitdcd. very clean 5-15-4436 t-493-9188 '72 PINTO RUNABOUT, Green 4 spee<l. ai r , t530GIL i 8."ll-1l75 (Dir.) 9411 10.1a 12Y,.22Y.. '"' 11f.,.; .... 111' ... "T'- TI1e Wiest dt&w In 11\e \Vtst- • •• a Dally Pllol aaulfitd M . C.11 64:1-6618. CO NTIN UOUS FREE ORGAN CLASSES FOR ADULTS. Every Tuesday 'i:30pm. Start any week. Tom Dieterich ln charge. Coast Music Costa Mesa. Newport Blvd. at Harbor, &;2-2851 P:'.'".IVATE PARTY \\'ANTS TO BUY PIANO z~oR CASH. * 547-944:> * Sporting Good• SKI RACKS, roof & tl'unk type. Fits most curs, $15. ea. &G-4852 Motorcycle1/ Scoot•r• V8 enb-ine, rarlio, healer, aunt. Of:W:I roe 35 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY 9150 auto rn at I c transmission. BAVARIAN 182".!'!7JI. S2399. -T-H"'E'-0"-D"-OF:R:E:R"'O"'B~l-N-S I M; 0. ~ w1 '70 HD Sportster, Elect. • slnrt, xlnt cond., low ml, 2000 1111rbot• Blvd. loadcrl \v/chrome. $1795. 6j{l C(lsta Jltl<'sa. Triumph. Set up for d!rl 6-l2-0010 or 5-IG-8211 ottly. Rum perfect, e.xtra '54 FORD F-100 PU House of Imports SlJ.7250 ~"""::;.:'~·~~·~·~.673-4""'~"'=·~·~~-1 1968 KA\\'ASAl:I dirt bike. V-R 3 speerl, huekcl M.>ats. 23&c Model F71Af, Factory Dual lanks, ctu'Ome rinu;. Racer ne11r nc\v, man y $-150 f irm. extras .$28.5. or best offer. Ask For Tom fir ~f\..2932 fir 646-9076 BUY or LEASE NOW! 'fr6 f'.1ERCEDES TilS. Ori;::. paint . Xlnl cond . Beal lhc price hll.:reage ?11 e ch an i <'a I I y sound & surcharge w/<'lcct. sunroof, 4 !;JXJ. R s. XLl\'T SELECTION OJ;' H. Best offl't. Call S.10-1-138 '73 250 ENDURO, Si'OO., 1200 ml., Lk new NEW 1974 BMWs aft $pm. CONTRACT'OR selling good 1..:0:.:,C~~~=~-~= used trucks. '63 Chevy, '&l at pre-revah.1atcd p1·ices ·5.'l ?-IERCEDES Benz l!IOSL ~ Chrcy, 'OJ GA!C. All irllh Restoration. llT, new paint. TV, R1dlo, HIFI St. 8091 '72 VESPA P..lotorsoooter, SE1\'NHETSER open 8 l r w/slde car, iood cond, $450 headphones S25. Sht'r'\\·ood or best offer. S4~1878 service hody. Best olfel'. \?Sb: I ~ire~. eng, .clutch, CIC. S32JO. f ord 1v T. full y cquip'd, has .. --41 LJJt'U ="~l"'='~·l~·":c:_°'~c~•~· -~==~ pipe rack. $2800. R."11-1400 ~ 'S-:>-230 ~L. ~1int, A,\t/FAI S 1969 DATSUN P ,U. Xlnt .._... trk. Michelin. S~.000. ~ 968-8701 eves, cond. ~'lags, lgc rirc!I, nc111 Buick 9910 '12 BUICK Riviera. Sllvl'r 11•/ black \'inyl roof . I.ondt!d t Lo~1• mi I c 11 g c. Private party. $ :l , I j 0 . PH:64-l-6987. '72 SKYLARK CONVE:RT- JliLE WJ 81t C'Ond. Xlnt t'Ond. fi.\5.())62 or &l.>3-157. Cadillac 9915 '73 EL D O RADO \\1 /EXTRAS! t.UNT CON DITION! $6900. Csi!l 811-3&10 1960 CONVERTIBLE. $195. P.e11dy lo !ravel. 201~1 Her- hor Ii<\ l.n., llunt R.-h '67 Coupc DeVille. ti.II', A:\f t F~1 radio. Cd cond & lirrs. $79.1. 546--8849 Chevrolet mo Plymouth 9960 ATLAS ChryJler/Plymouth Open Da.ily & Sun. 'tit 10 PM 2929 Harbor Bl\'d,, Costa l>1tM 546-1934 'i'l PLYi\IOUTI-1 Sait-mi'e Sia, \Vag. PIS. Po11·cr dilfe hrakes, po..,,·cr rear 1\·111dow. J-'~ct. nJ1". Ne11· <iuto. r1·J1r1, Beaullful car. Askl!li $18.iO. !161H9il afl . 4P~1 'i3 DUSTER, 3-!ipd, S.Cyl, E:<'IS 21 mpg., \'('l'Y clean. 14,j()() miles. Only driven by wife to \\'Ork. S2H15. Priv~tf riany. 5.11-:'iWI. 130 rms ~'Rll FJ\I stereo 1970 08'118 250 St a I e t t o receiver 1nodel 8 9 O O A, n1otorcycle just tuned & 1\'/wa\nul case $275. Pr. ren(ty ltl go. 536--0967 C.S.~f. sludio nwnilor spkrs '69 ~ BULTACO. \Irey gooii 12" ....oofror. 5" midrange, cond. EXTRAS. $350. Coll 21i:" h\·eeler. ported full 546--3855 anytime eves. frequency response, walnut ntotor. clu!ch, allcr., SISOO. '.N•IO'l ~1nrguertte P11.rkway ·7: l\lB 280 SEL 4.:1. l.011• j.':ii--8692 Alis.i;ion Viejo n1ilc11.gc. l:Jm"""· i'lllt·hrli111'. ---------- 'j ? FORD ~4 T, 396 V·8, 3 USF; AVERY P\\1Y EXIT. $998;)/0ri;::. 011·11cr. 6~·1-0867 '69 PLY~tOliTH VIP I dr. ~t>1I. All p11;·r, ~Int ruhhcr, 1-rulst"-.1-n1aric, 5i,OOO, P/W $975. 5"1~-2318 speed auto, 6 ply tires, S' 8Jl-2040 • <19.'>·49'19 Por1che 9750 cabinets $250 pr. Pioneer J968 HONDA 300. Good Pl.rl2D profegsionol lurntbl condi tion. Make offer. bed. xlnt cond. $Ta0. firm. OR NGE C TY S ~li05. A OUN ' '64 PORSOIE. Interior xlnl. ·73 DATSUN P.U. Olive, 4 OLDEST n~· r11dial tires. xtn1s. Ncls w/Empire 66PEX cartridge &i2-5700 1peed. step bumpe r , cng. or v.·ill option v.·/rrblt mirrors, & only LS,000 & '62 Supt'.'t 90. CU!'TO~IS BY $125. All equip. 11 still under Motor Hom•s, fact. \\'arr. All jusl bought in Jan. of 1974. All prices 1 __ s_o_le-'/_R_e_n_t ___ 9_160_ miles. 831-1375 Dir. ,_ ALI. 15.'"iO Sl1pc1-lor, C.l\-1. 1m CHEV . t.u11 P /U. '61 PORSCHE Super 90 are C08f., 645-2342. COLOR 'IV Console, Spanit1h, 9 mo. old. Seo to apfl'l'C .. $310. 641>-IJ09/963-600 '762 • VACATION • Dlsized .,.,·hla & H~. Xlnt C'llbru!e1 S.1.000. C R.11 536-li:/6 or Sli-~17 AT YOUR OWN PACE .. , cond. $1500. 846-8173 Choose fron1 So. Call!. "69 '.4 TON Chev. PU. Apply 1974 BMW's Subaru "1 ~-e!tt Se1cclion." I 000 \V lSlh Co I 'f .!------·---....., !'; a ......, • • 5 a ·~ esa.1 tn stock ready fot" tmmediate (Over 40 Minis It 1'-1.H.'ll), 642-8471 . , delivery. Excellent gavtn11:1 TOP DOLLAR DALLS ·73 DATSUN P.U .. \Vhls & on nnnalning 1973 model!!. FOR MOTOR HOME '""" Mu•! .,11, 1289» orl SAi.BS.SERVICE LEA•ING SPORTCARS RENTALS be1t offer. 5564614. OVERSEAS DELIVERY Redhill :'.!'San Joan, Tu.,ln ·so CHEVY !I r Plclrup, 6 ROY CARVER. Inc. ~~~17"1~41-IJS.OOOO=~o,,,,,-""" I cyl, n!blt eng ~ trana. ROLLS ROYCE B!\t\V A11 model•&; ytar'!I SEE US FIRST! '72 Pat'!! Arrow ;24', l300 ml. 536-8357. 234 E. 17th St. • Roof aJr .le kiorare. Vent 9570 Colla Me111 • MS--44" generator, a1ereo. Xlnt mnd $8MKl call M&-8487 '73 DODGE VAN/CAMPER. SPi~~lt~;T'S I J1tt1.&111111.n.,tM. l4l·• \ IlENT th' best! '73 A~llF?>I. 4 nC"' tll'Cfl, 2~,000 ExC!CUtlvt. 25', all xtn1. ml. 3 apd tre.ns. V.S. $(5()(). ~'1~;epo~l~~~.g ~~r ~~~,T~o~y~o~t~•;.. ____ ...;.97~6::5 Free ml., 979--9056 5 to 8 P~I SSZ..1788. 1· '66 DO.DOE V•n, windows, wu Awlrdcd the B~tW '69 TOYOTA 1200. Radle.la Tr•llers, Travel tl70 1 Stl'\'lee Aw,ard by Hottman ,..___, --'li'·n. -p•, ·~. c ean body. lnL New engimo, l\t " -.i ~.. .......,.,. ... v .. u au ""'"' • ~ 8000 ml. $1200. 497-1947 or 1 oton. 8 art (t.,..,\Clltn.o 499-2360 eve .. (213) J90.3461 '71 GOLDEN Nugrtl trlr. 4 •• 2 -..... IO 1lve )-OU toad sorvlce on ext. 582 dayo. 32'. Jdeal:. for beach or ;roi-4"~ '"""\'t. Your new Bi\IW. See u11 ---=------mountain retrel'lt. Sell-cont. * 1972 CHEVY 20 VA.~ before )'Ou Je11~e ~ny Br.-1\V. '69 TO_YOTA Corona. _Good Caa or rlect. refrla. Air Pt'lced rlght -no ttaaonablc LtlllfO •hlpmont of '74 BM\V's condluon. $1000. Ong1nal cond. Riviera l!Old. $4195. c•~l~t•~r~ro-""tu~.,~·~·~•~91rS24:'.:::::::.'--Jufi't an·h•e<I. i\to8t mod~I• owner. Call 67":>-8197 C714l GU-U75 day!!, (21 3) '13 DODGE Van, 100. custom av-.llable for imn1cdlate de-'73 TOYOTA Coml\a Sta . 88&-3959 aft 7pm. ew:rythlnr. See 10 apprec., llvl!ry. \Var. Lu1111ae r11ck. 18.000 '72 PRO\VLER z·, , e 1 r C&ll Steve, 60-S769 CREVIER BMW ml. $2600 494-3339 contalnM, xlnt co nd , '67 OODGE Van, cus!Omlttd. n \V, 111 SI .. S.A. S35-3tn ·n TOYOTA, ~11rk 11, 11u10, xtr1111, ~. MS-OSJO. Low mileage. BeS1 oUcr. ·71 8:0.1\\', whllt 2002, 4 p;pd alr"-<'Ond, excel. ('0 n d · Sullering a storage ctt1IS'!' 1,;646-21;::.:::.:"'-----~ 48,00> ml. New Kon\ 10ok1. ~58::;1c,-M09:::::;:._ ____ ~ '7J CllEVV NOVA. 1 Door. Rlldlo, h<'<!lt>r, au1 om11 ric, 11lr (.'Onditlonlng. 1?60GIVL $2550. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 Harbor BlviJ. I Ponti•c 9965 1!16:> PONTIAC Tempest. 4 sr.ct, rcc('nl. valve job. SIOO. 642--760 1 '67 TE:\IPEST "'ag. ,\uto., p,s, 326 eng. S600 or offer. !Jj.1-1277 C'll~1 3 11,1.-.~~. 1 thunderbird 642-IXJIO or :i~G-ll21 t 9'10 l9i7 ~EV\' Suburban ~, T. 5•~ "••••y lully equip. Vrl')I good r·on ri. • .-. AtN.. - Xlnl vocation "'rhiclt>. 53100. SPICIAL ~·-C'i~°"'""'""'.,.,._,,,-=· I '71 T-ll lltU. Radio, heater, '66 HEV1~Ll.E t\fulibu ss. HUtton111!1<:. 1'.1'., P.B .. '°"' 11uto ~-11ir. full power, IO\I' rnil1'll. ~99201\lA l S2'W3 Incl PIW. 68,000 family ml.' THEODORE ROBINS ?r!. Pry. $695. ilf..644-0292.:.... FORD Ch ryal1r "2S 2060 Harbor flll'd . Costa i'llc.~11. &12-0010 or 540-8211 '72 TO\\'N &. Co untry Chrysler \\'g. 31,000 ml. air ('(Ind, plwinfiow~. pff!efll, am/fm•.,ler'\"O, In xlnt cond. prv. ply. 64+<)231, Cougar n3l '73 COUGAR XR7. Al\I Fl\!, auton1ntlr, pt'\\tr JllM'rillJ, vl n)'I roof. !a30GXD1. S317S. THEODORE ROB INS FORD 2060 llarhor 81\'d. 01i«IA i\It•11. 642-0010 (If' S.1().)1:211 "12 T-BIRD. l\lint cond., low nil.. Ar..111''~1 Jtel"f'O !ape, Jo"\lll pwr, L!tnd11u top, llhr inL l\Uch. X redh1l1. disc brk11, $3.750. MZ-i418 '67 ~ DOOR. ntw hraJ.;e11, new trans, price $.Sj(l, Call 54S-4i'42. Veg• 997• '72, HATCH HACK. A IC , Al!l/F~I. I ~pt!. rudial 1irei, xlnt 1-onrl. Sl:'i99. Sll-OTilO - BiJy a nc1v 'Tf~ \'our old~r n1odel c-nr i' In big dr.ma.nd , . • Sell it ra~I .,.,.llli • OaUy Piiot Claulfled Adi 642-J678. --------- Sf'U ~on11:er rtt!eded Ire.mi Th(! f1u1tts1 ctn&\.\' In the "rest. XA1" r11dlal. A~I , rlltf radio. '71 TOYOTA Corona l\tark U 'l\1lh a Otllly Pilot Oa11lfled • , • ll 011 11.Y t>tlot Clas!llfled: $3300 nr offr. 12!).1769 or 411od, good cond, new t!tt!I, .Adi 64VA78. Ad, Call 64l-667!1. I 4!M·~7P 11 fl ;; p.m. JU!l.'i or lltst offer 491..A798 I • I DAILY PILOT : , We will pay · top cash for your · used car or truck,· . paid for or riot! When you trade with us for a new Chevy, or lease, you can receive cash llack if your old one Is worth more ·than the 11ecessary first payment! CASH for vacation or other needs! Wonderful CASH! WE NEED USED CARS AND TRUCKS AND WILL PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR tHEM! . I 1·1 •• . . ' ... . . ' UllUSUALL Y LARGE INVENTORY OF , SPARiLilc; .NEW 1974 CHEvYS . ' . ON SALE NoW -MOST Al· .. THE OLD PRICES! All DISCOuNTEDI NEW '74 VEGA COUPE! Only $2799 NOW! EZI glass. sidl mouldings. air cond., 4-speed !rans:, white wall tires. radio, dlx. bumpers and guards. b/u 111es. No. 341857/3195 • NEW '74 MALIBU CLASSIC COUPE! EZI glass. air, dlK. belts, remote rearview mirro<. vanity viSO<, VB eng., aulo trans .• tilt wheel. PQwer steering. wheet covers. white wall hres, clock. radio, H.D. coohng, e11:tenor decor, power brakes. · NEW '74 MONTE CARLO! EZI glass, air cond .. auto. !rans.. VB eng., while wan tires, radio, b/u lites. power steering, power brakes. ... Only s 11984 MO. o. ~ .. " uedf .. ci. .......... tor -•74.,,...... en. ..... 411441/1045 .... ...., .....,.. ...... NEW '74 BEL AIR 4•DOOR S.EDAH! Ell, glass. air. remole rearview mirror. VS eng., auto. trans .. ~~eel covers. H.O. cooling, power stl*!nng and brakes, bu htes. 15237213128 ~ Only s93so r.io. BIG LUV STOCK! ' ACT NOW WHILE SELECTION IS GOOD! NEW '74 NOVA COUPE! • Only $3199 ~OW! EZI glass, auto. trans .. power steering, wheel covers, white wall tires, radt0, H.O. cooling, b/u lites. No. 203693/3221 . NEW '74 KAMMBACK WAGON! Only $3199 NOW! . EZt glass. "4·si>eed trans .. air cond., radio. dlK bumpers, d1K. guards, b/u Jiles. No. 341801 /3193 · NEW '74 MONTE CARLO! Only $38'19 NOW! Power steering and bfakes. swino-out buckel seats, EZI glass, V.S eng .. radio. b/u lites. No. 426181/2S..9 NEW '74 BLAZER! I Only $ 4899 NOW! VB eng., aux. seat. 4'"5P89d. 30-gallon gas tank. power steering, radio. H.D. stabilizer bar and brakes. fuel lank shleld p!ate, H.D. OOO(ing, QaUQe!I, auxiliary lop. spoke wheels and on/off road Gates tires. 143144/2992 " • NEW "74 MALIBU COUPE! Only $3899 NOW! EZI glass, dlx. belts. O/E guards. air concl .• VS eng., au10. trans .• pawer steenng, wheel co-.iers, while wall !ires. fadiO, H.D. cooling, exleriOf decor. b/u hies. No. 45082"4/3126 NEW '74 CAMARO SPORT COUPE! EZI glass. $l)Ort mirrors. console. POwer brakes. auto. trans., power sleering, radio, H.O.cool1ng, b/u htes. No. 204385/3238 Only $ 88 OO Mo. NEW '74 BEAUVILLE SPORT VAN! EZ I glass. Slainless mirrors. HD. lrl /rear shocks front srabillzer bar; W . eng .. aulo. lrans .• power steering,' wheel covers, radio, H.D. COOiing. while wall l1res. etc. Only S J 41 71 MO. 833-0555 ~ OPEN SUNDAY H CHEVROL;ET Newport Beach -rom Dtpl. °""'Set. ......... Dove and Quail Sts. NEWPORT . BE.A CH Near MacArthur, Jamboree and Bristol Half-mile South of Orange County Airport • • • 833-0555 • r ' • . • . ·' {. I ~I " •• l"'i· .. . . . . ' . . . 'I " . • • • • • • • .. .. ' . ... ~ " 1 t ' • " • ' , ' ' ' I 1 ) ' ·: • ~ ' ' i • ! l I , • • San Clemente Capistrano \ VOL. 67, NO. 161, 2 SECTlbNS, 28 PAGES -. ' E'DIT I O N " . Today's F inal N.Y. Stoeks MONDAY, JUNE 10, 1974 TEN CENTS Heroin Frona Mesic@ to lJ.S. on llpswing WASHINGTON CAP~-!..•,.After mt years of decline, heroin traffic Ullo Ille United States iJ r!Ported on the ~·. wltb Mexico replacing Europe al the primary aource and ccndult for the narcotic. Federal drog enforc:em<nt officials BllY the heroin iJ being refmed ·from poppy plantJ grown in western Melico. then shipped across the border. At the same time , there ls growing trade in marijuana from loog-estalSliabed . . e PresUlent Draws Line . On Tapes WASIUNGTON (UPI) -Preoident Nixon today reaSl!erted his claim to be the sole judge of what evidence should be 5Utf"endered in the Ellsberg break-in case, despite warnings from a federal judge that he may be risking conttmpt. Throuah his-chief defense attorney, James I>. St. Clair, Nlxon told U.S. District Judge Gezi>lrd A. Gelell that the materials IOUgbt by former White House aide John D. Ehrlicbman are "properly the subject ol ~ve prlvllqe" Md ~~the Prealdent alGne can decide whether to surrender them.-" The action WU the, -ljme lodaJ Nlson Invoiced uecutlff pr!~ In refusing to tum over re q ·U e • t e d documents. He previously sent a letter to Ille Hoose Judlclary CoJIUllltlee saying he would not comply with a committoe subpoena foc 4S Wbll< -tapes and documents. c;...,u. 11u t!lrealened to dlsmlsl the conspiracy 111 d i c t m e n t against Ebrlichman ff the documents were not produced for ru. defense. Lui -1<. Gesell said that Nixon's reluctance to allow Ebrlichman full accel! to hill White Howle files "borders on obstruction" of justice. Gesell was expected to act either later today or Tuesday on a motion by Ebrlidunan's~attomey to begin contempt J>roceectlngs. "Surely . • . what clearly is 1 valid fonnal claim or priviaege by the (S.. CONTEMPT, l'llge Z) First National Dips Le1ul Rare f o JJih Percent NEIV YORK (AP) -First National Bank of Cl:llcago, the nation 's 20th largest bank, aMounced today it was reducing its prime lending rate from 11.1 percent to the 11\i percent prevailing at most major banks. Early last week, the bank reduced ita prime from l~ percent. A few smaller banks dropped to 11 v, or 11 percent. The reductions were the first since early Mardi. in the ·prime rate, which is charged a bank's biggest and best corporate CW1tomers. A sustained decline In the rate can signal cbangea ID conswner interest rates, alt.bough the two are not direct1y linked, First National ol Chicago'• rate cut, which takes effect Tuesday, seemed io be in line with the June 3 prediction of its presklent, Chauncey E. Schmidt, that "the upward push on short-t.enn rates appears to have subsided." Marine 'Takes ' Cab to B ase A thief who apparently waa a Marine deaperate to return to Camp Pendleton before bil leave expired rate Sunday simply cooldni mist the temptation of u empty cab parked •l a San Clemente cuf'Mlde with Its motor nmnin&. .,wtiUe cabJ>!e Chlrles Dalley sat lnsldt .a nstauran~nearby, ~pplng a "'P of tea, iie Marine decided to tat& the lnltl•tive. Dalley emercect from his break ID !ind bis taxi , ..... Soon after the ctb owners rDtd • atokn car report with -I police, MPs al the '-._ltd finding the cab .•bandooed. ' •, • t IOlrCtS in Melioo, IHd.lni to an intensified antiamuggJing campaign along thel.~-- But aome olfi<:ia!J llCknowleclge that elfo!U by Ille U.S. government to cope with the illicit aeUvUy have been impeded to some extent by bureaucratic ~ling among agencies w I t h JUmdictiOll over certain u;ect.s of nar- cotics. control. ~ peripheral Issue in Utis continuing f,eud baa been the quanUty of drugs • ' readi!ng Ille United States from foreign sources. The dispute apparently stemJ in part from friction between the drug enforcement agencies. The Customs Service, which bas been concentrating its border drug interdiction efforts chiefly against the Mexican marijuana trade, contends that heroin traffic from that country is negligi~. Although heroin remains priority No. I because of the danger it.poses, customs official~. said synthetic drugs are their • biggest w«ry al the moment. However, the Drug En f or c ement Administration, a year-old J u s t i c e Department agency with which Customs has frequently clashed over enforcement policy, "Jays ttiat Mexico has become the soutt'e of as much as 50 percent ·or the heroin reaching the United States. · This is a dramatic change from the peak years of heroin traffic, ~969-72, when up to 80 percent of the narcotic reaching U.S. shores 'came from or lhrough Europe and only about JS percent from Mexico. Mexican heroin is easily identified by its brown cok>r, as opposed to the more refined white product from European laOOratorles. But officials say there is no difference in lhe potency. John R. Bartels Jr., diret.1or of the drug agency. said in an interview that the brown heroin, once conrined almost entirely to Che West Coast. recently has been turning up in Eastern cities as well. • ·1n a1ns o . ice Year•long Free::e? San Juan Seeks To Curb Growth 'ily PAMELA HALLAN Of "" 0.llY ~.... • .... San Juan Capistrano, once known as that sleepy village where swallows outnumbered people, is the fast.est growing city ln ca.Jlforuia. Statistics released by ' the eaurornla Department of Finance aod Population's Research Unit note that !rem Jan. 1, I9'13 4tguna Office:r'li Small Cafe Hit , .. By Firebomher A -n ale owned by·• l.a11JR8 Beach police detective and his wife was flreboiiibed Saturday and an ealimattd 15,$00.clamage dooe to·tlle ~- Det. AIH Jlmmel said lodayllf did not tn0w ~ the -ell; WU la retrilJotlon for his. potice wwk, or "if IOlltebociy was just looldng for: -. to totch ... : . 1.asuna Beach Ftre Manhll Jim Priiuon said be and police officials would . be Investigating tbe' matter. Authorities are klptin1 for a man in his early 2t'l ,wl&Jl lclta~llluod hair wf!o •as seen runnin& · trim · the scene of the bombing at about 2 a,m. Saturday. Presson said dimage to Ille Penguin Cate;. ~I •S. Coast ffigb•.••Y, conalsted mostly Of llDOlie, water and -dam-age. He said further lnvestigali90 of the scene ii needed before aulhorltles will be able to tell bether a" brick or some other object was used to first smash the window in the front of the cafe 90 the fire bomb coold be tossed In, or whether Ille firebomb was thrown through the Window. ]>olice and Preuon seemed to agree that a 1'Molotov O>cktail" a bottle filled with gasoline, was ·used in the torching of the cafe. Jimenez said he bad driven past the cafe about a half hour before the incident and' all appeared to be nornial. f He said be couldn't think of anyone who mil!JI be IDw!ved or . ""1led to get bOcl: at blm for ru. pollce work, but the aatu"' ol the businea Is sud! thal a lot of eoemiel can be made. 'Tarzan' Recovering to Jan. 1, f974 the Mission city grew from approximately 6,000 persom to 9,925, a 38.8 percent increase. City fathers, however, are nol proud of the whopping jump. The council voted last week lo plat'e a freeze on all new building and ioning applications, a ban which might last a year. The purpose of the moratorium, which councilmen lii.e to call 1 "deferral period" is to &ive the city's Planning ataft • "I>n,llil!!l-.!Jl!lil "bile San Jll§ll adopts a new lllnittal plan for ill 11~ -lllile ...... n>o..,; *1t·ll afm1!1C for Ill! ultimate p0pulalloq ol 41,8DI. .c.n.ntly, only 23 percent of the city is developed. The old plan called for an ultimate population of 15,000, but ~y residents believed ,that figure was eoo high and elected three new counollmen this spring who pledged to adhere to tbe lower figure. Althoqgh tbe percentage rate of growth wa.a exceedingly high, City Manager Donald G. Wekfnar points out that the figure is deceiving. "We had a small population base to stan witb." be said. "~ you add any population growth it represents a rerauvely high pereentage." The impact was nevertheles s significa]]t because the city's services, staff, and programs were geared to a much smaller population, he pointed out. The fastest growing city nume rically, according to the state report, was San Diego which grew by 15,900 people. But San Diego already had a population o{ 740,000 JO the percentage wasn't as great. "Percentages don't demand services," said Weidner. "People do." He added that even though tl)e numerical addition to San Juan's population was relatively low, it created problems in several areas, particularly traffic. The city coWJcil recently closed development along the Ortega Highway, a wloding road that leads from the city to Elsinore in Riverside County, because councilmen believe the state highway will soon reach its capacity and the highway will no longer be silfe. Two tracts were recently denied and the developers told to reapply when the state widens the road to four lanes. Although several actions taken by the council will ultimately slow growth in the famous town, growth will probably continue to spiral upward for the next two years. City Planner David J. Smith recently told the oouncil that 1,998 [rame homes have ben approved r 0 r construction, homes that have not yet been built. They won'l be affected by the buikling ban. Dfit'r ,li.t sti ff Phi,_ DRIVER RESCUED BY HUMAN CHAIN OF FIREMEN, POLICE Car Plunged TOO Feet Over Laguna's Crescent Bay Point Youth Survives Tumble Down Steep Laguna Cliff By JACK CHAPPELL Of !hi DlllY Plkl! 11111 A ZO.year-old man survived the 100-foot phmge or his car from the sheer cliffs of Laguna Beach's Crescent Bay Point today. John P. Wagoner, address unknown , was re)eased from South C o a s t Community Hospital following treatment for cuts and scratches received in the 3:30 a.m. mishap. Laguna Beach Police said Wagoner had been outside the car when il started rolling toward the cliff. Wagoner either attempted to halt the onrushing car with his body or attempted to get in it and apply the brakes just before the vehicle toppled into the ocea n below, police said. He apparently was dragged by the c8r for about 40 feet down the cliff before breaking loose. Laguna Beach firemen and Police Officer Don Abshier fonned a human chain to retrieve the man, in shock and bleeding from a small projection on the cliff. BRnltiEPORT; Conn. (AP)--Oarence "Buster" Crabbe, a fonner otympic swimmer who portrayed "Tarzan" and .. Flaab Gordon" in films, was reported resting comfortably at St. Vincent Hospira! here with a virus. South Coast Sands Sho w It L<; the second time recently that an auto has plunged over the steep cliffs . Previously, a foreign car was driven over the oceanfront cliff Jn what police believe was an attempted suicide. The vehicle was an object of curiosity today for tldepool explorers w h o examined its smashed and crumpled frame. Irvine Coach ·Goes to UCLA UC Irvine .-boll c:oadi Gary Adorns hu resigned lo tab over the reiM at UCLA. Adams, 1 UCLA graduate who played ror the Bruins baoeball team. ln!Uattd the b • 1 e b a 11 . P"'lram at UC Irvine and coached the Anteaters to two ~Ive NC AA co11ea:e d lvlalon championships. ~ His .-recent team compiled • 44-4 record In capturing the Utle. See sports, Par• II, for details. , Record June Attendance Sunny lkiel and tolerable water temperatures over the weekend lured record crowds to South Coast beaches. and despite a d'fn:tling liege or )ellyflsll· and a rough surf. most of the visitors enjoyed It San Clemente. lifeguards who 1 e ten1t.ory spans tnttJ county strsnds, sa id that the 40,000 per90n! who went to the aeasoo~ at eounty-coo.troltcd bellchea set a record for the teCOlld weekend in June. Usually, JUPe ati~ are overcast and btaches nearly., d,..rted, bat th e ttadlnp ~ii put Satw'day and Sunday '. • • reached Into the high 70s. San Clemente city beaches had about 28,000 persons In attendance during Uie two days. ~s avenged about 20 each of the days, and rwl.fl treat.'Tlent for jtll,yfish stlnp amounted 10 15 a day . tJ!eguards Mid lhe invasion of the slimy, stihifn1 creatures teems to be ebbing along the South Coast. Ufeguard1 in th~ Los Angeles area , however, tenned lhe lnvaskm at their ~ over the weekend the worst in memory. Wreckers were to attempt to remove the hulk today. The car has an Arizona license plate . Following Wagoner's release from the hospital, police had no further cootad with the man. P lane Cra.~h Probed CUCUTA, Colombia ( UP I ) Colombian civil l\vtation authorities searched widely scatter~ wreckage today for clues to tht cause or the crash of a four~nginc Viscount passenaer liner that slammed Into a mounUlin known as Las CUchillas 1'le Knives ), kllllnK all 43 persons aboard, I ' He said this is one indicator used by his agency to determine the source ot the drug, and "the fact that they 're not getting very mu~h heroin along the OOrder doesn·t mean it isn't coming in." The heroin situation is assessed by a variety of indicators such as seizures, quality of the drug, street prices. whieh give some clues to availability, and the number of deaths from overdose. Deprived of some of its functioM when (See HEROIN, Page %) $ UIZ Oemente Study Set For Monday By JOHN VALTERZA DI IM Dll1Y ~llOf lllff The city-ordered "audit and review" of the San Clemente police department - complete with solicited criliques from the community -will be launched next 1.ionday at a cost of $7,500. So said former Los Angeles Police Chief Thomas Reddin today as he and City Manager Kenneth Carr explained in detail the type of examination which will be launched on orders of the city council. Carr emphasized that the reasons for ordering the review were to MSeSS completely the administrative effec-- tiveness of tbe department and to sort out reasoos for internal problenu and find suggestioos for improvement. ''Let me emphasize that there itJ no indication whatsoever of any legal impropriety on behalf of anyone in the police department," Carr said. He characterized the sit uation as an intern al one directly related to administration within the force. Carr conceded that the impe tus for the council decision to hire Reddin 's finn came after members of the departrnenl brought forth grievances on an individual basis. Initially. Carr said, he and Public Safety Director Clifford 1.1urray had settled on an official review of the department by a team serving the state's Peace Standards and T r a i n i n g organization, but that a backlog of )such requests meant a two-year waiting period. Instead, the council settled on Reddin'.s consulting firm made up of veteran administrators in the field 11s well as individuals with lengthy credentials in teaching of police science at the university level. One of those special ists, Jack Halstead, will launch the project next Monday by conducting a week of i nd ivid ual inte rviews of every member of the department. Reddin stressed that the technique of the audit and review will be a simple fact.finding function and will not follow at all the patterns of the itnemal-affairs division of major police departments. "We will not come down as a group or inquisitors. Let me emphasize that," he said. Reddin added lhat his group essentially \\ill function very much as journalists. "A person in an interview will be (See SAN CLEMENTE, Page it Orange Weather Night and morning low clouds and local fog with hazy sunshine in the afternoon Tuesday. A little cooler days. Highs at the beaches in the upper 60s rsing to·the mid· 70s inland. Lows mostly in the 50s. INSIDE TODA..Y Go-go guys perform 1n scanty nylon bikini briefs be for c women-only audiences tn a Southern Ill inois 11ight spot. Chicks ogle "dudes" who are paid $10 an hour in thi.r reiierst chouuinitm. Stort1. Poot 7. At Y-S-k• I .... If... 11 L, M, '9J' I C•lllff'ff11 J Cl•Uffl.MI h -21 Ctll'lln If C1'9tl.,.l"I 1t Dtlth Nellefl • IE•ittrnil ~... ' Clll•rtll_.n Jt l'UllMI 1•11 M«M<-IJ """ ..... ""'" 14 J \ ~z~o_._,,_'~''_Lo_1~~~"~~~~~~M~ond:::::~~·~J~UM::....:10~,~1~97~4 Col!ege of JtJedit,-itae Hospital Status Backed by Group Directors of the 1,200-membtr Orange County Medical A.s.soclauon have ap- proved a J't'SOlutloo urrtng "preservation of dle UC Irvlne · Caflfomia College o( Medicine." 'Tile ~utlon made public loday CQl'\Cludes ' the dtpa.rture of UCl.CCM from Orange County would represcat a significant loss to tht county and would not be ln the be9t intere.sl of its citizen· ry." 1be OC'MA board acOon comes at a time wtlen negotlatiom between UCI and the Orange CoWlty supervbors are at a critical point. Failure to re a ch agreement before the st.ate budget is made final at the end of Ule month may mean delay or loss of ue bond monies earmark«! to improve Orange County Medical Center (OCMC). Further, addlllonal bond· funds to construct a 200-bed campus teaching hOspital and a nearby medical sciences lab and classroom building are being held up pe.ndlng agreement on long-term control of the county's hospital for the poor. ,. Without the agreement or finn indication there will soon be an agreement, chancet are good the state bond money will be spent elsewhere, sources in Sacramen,to have said. suitable faclllty for both teaching and patient care. The mtdicaJ SS!JOC!ation last yenr supported use or OCMC u the sole UCl· CCM teaching hospital. But legislators had other Ideas on how I<> spend. the bond moneys t& improve medical educatlon opportunities in Orange county. A joint legisltnive study committee recommended some of the bond funds be spent upgrading QC"tl.1C and the· rest be spent to build a core campus teaching hospital. Until t~ money Is sptnt, however. there is no assurance It need coine to Orange County. Aides to .Assemblyman WUlle Brown (0-San Francisco) recall that thtrt are a number of other locations for a potential new mediCal school which do not require state spending ror costly hospital facilities. Brown's committee on hospital siting studied needs ror additional funds to begin J>06\ graduate medical educatloa at Dr. Martin Luther K1ng liospital in \VaUs. 'Not My Frog' Joey Koza's frog is special to him, and he's not anx ious to donate his pet to the University of Michigan for research. Scientists at the uni· versity are hoping to obtain the rare albino frog to observe ils bodily functions through the transparent &kin. . l'reMP1141el SAN CLEMENT 'AUDIT' • • • auarantetd absoluto anonymlty if he wlahes. If he chooscs to-1pe1lc {OT the record. he can do so, If he chooaes' to 1>&Y nolhlng, then thJlt la bis privilege as wf'll," Reddin said. ln the area of community contact, Reddin and carr said !hat comments by ,.nyone In San Cltll\,ente with infornHlfion related to tlcpart1nent erflcien1...-y -3)()d or bad -would be welcome to brlng 'the data forth 1n wrltln¥. and sc:'ldlnff it to civic center marked 'confidential. Ca rr said a post office bo" Is being rented to receive !he data, P.O. Box 3068, and resldenta are welcome to meill In the comments. Reddin unde~red the I n h e r e n t mlsimpression that hi s firm and its 1peclallsts <.'01nc into a depnnn1ent strictly wllh the intent or flndlng oot what is wrong In a department. ' ''Immediately when a project like 1h.is Is suggested, the impression Is that all we wUI do is come ln and determine negative' aspects of a. department's efficiency. "We exPf.(t ln our final report not only to determine whal needs Improving in a department, but also What is good in the department," be said. The e.ptlre consultant p r o j e c t , according to terms of the city contract. ls expected to end July 8 with a formal written report on the findings of Reddin's team. carr predicted that elements of the report relating to SPf.(lfic individuals - prlmarll)' where problems are cited • •ould ttmaln ronrldenUal as are all ite1ns, related to lndivlduat personnel. H~dcled, however, thJlt he and """1(11 mlgh release !Ome clements of the repo relnlOO to the de~rtmcnt's ef!I· clen in general. Tra itionally, councllrn¥ d I s c u s s hiring, !Iring ond 01her asped! relat\, to Individual persoMel In cxecutlve se~~on, although official votes must take place In public session. Neihter Carr nor Reddin would dlsctw: speclrlc permnel issues 1t today's briefing. ThrousMut the pa11t sever1I weeks, while clly coun cilmen held an abundance o( such secret personnel sessions. lntensa dlscussions arose teltlling lo Murray and Assistant Chief of Police Stanley f¥1atc.hc.tl, and during one such aeulon It was reported that the council wa~ con.~idenng ofrering Murray an early retirtment rrom the top post ht has held for the past 14 ycnrs ln the city. P..fW'ray, however, has Insisted that ht h.a.s no such plans, nor dOes h.e plan tQ resign. Ttius fnr, he said, he has not been 1asked to discuss anythin~ wlth the city council. Curr today said that discussions about the entire issue have laken place bf.tweea Murray and himself. Reddin said one of the first acU0ties or his project will be to explain the evalua Uon to Murray personally. Nixon Refuses to Give O>unty supervisors have said they'll evict the UCI-CC~t from lhe county hospital as of July I, lf1~ unless an agreement ls reached. OCMC ls UCI's primary source of patients for doctor training. With renovation estimated· at costing upwards or 19 million, the hospital mighl be a Others on Bro\\1\'s committee are seeking state n10ney for a medical college at Fresno or hosoital fund ing which would more directly benefit the medically indigent The action by the 0Cfl-1A in support of UCI..CCM is significant because it suggesu an end of the fraementation or medkaJ interests which was evident in bearings before Brown's committee last year. Retail Food Co st Decline T t p l A . apes o ane -gain Parki1ig Problem Solution See n At Calafia Area State park! officials and lhe city of San Clemente appear close to an inttrirri 90llltion for a long-stending parking problem at the Calafia Beach in Oemente State Park. Oty aiunctlmen ~tly gave inlUal approval to a deal ottered by the state which "'OUld reopen vacant fields at the edge of Cala!ia to beach perking. Fr.e parking had been offered ther< for years Wt the clty several rnonth5 ago cemented-in a curb break and thus made it lmpoulble ror cars to use the Jotr near the beach. Tbe official J'eQ!Oll for the move, said City Engineer Phil Peter, is a code f0<bidding parking on unimproved loll, along with cooeerns about safety problems arising from uncontrolled parldnc. City Manager Kenneth Carr told councilmen he aod a regional parks Officia..I had worked out a deal whereby the parks service would assure cont.rolled pa.rkhlg on the dirt lots and not charge pettons foe the privilege. Councilmen came close to swift approval o( the idea, until City Enginetr Phil Peter warned the panel that a city sewer line runs only a foot beneath the surface on one of lhe lot& and that a protective ~ering should be imtalled before bt.a'vy use. carr then was told to cite the single cmdition to the state officials and report back at the oxmctl'a next sessioo. Sena tor Files Suit LJNCOLN, Neb. (UPI) - A Nebraska cattleman, State Sen. Loran Schmit, filed a $1.5 billion suit todsy against two of the· natioo's largest supermarket chains, charging them ~1th conspiracy to fix me.at prices. The antitrust, class-action suit wa.!l !iUed in U.S. District Court against the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co., Inc., known as A&P Stores, and Safeway Stores. ot ..... COAST DAILY PILOT Tiie or.,.. Cc"'~ Jlll(!f, --.. -...... w.._.._, .. ~..,~0.-.. CoMI "'°"'"""" '-"" ~ _.,,... .... Plllti ........ Nol'dioy ttwoutll ,fllltY. '°' C:0,.-. -,...,,_. --· ......, .... °" &o.,../f_ lo"' V.i ....... LltU,,. 9Mcll.~~ -8fl' ~~••/Sen ........ c.._ .. ,.. ........ ,. '"'°""'~~It~ Sii..,,_ -Si,j~ 0.1'• The rin<"C"'°l~1f'il ,,-....i" .i ).)OWN .,.,. ,....,, GoM• MloM. c.1 ........ 12Wt. S.C ......... Offkt X6~tl ~A.eol' o••"''"'" C:-•Wie'-.U0-1•1y ""'" ~kKl'll»_......._. Mvl't<~lkl"l'"'act\ 11'1~~1Cll ~ l •111111.,. ~1t, -I! • ..._ T...,...,.1714144J-4 JZI C*llfie4 Ut-~ 44J-S6,I s.c: .......... o.,. ......... T...,.._4tJ044JO ~ •• , .. ~ c..i ~too-­-NO,,_.,,_.......,_~ .. -or OC••m1•u,,.,.u -.,.., "" ~ ~-... -el_..._ ~ ciHI _,. OIO! ti Oot.11 "'--CM• .... S..ew>~'°"""'~ t)00_.,,,.11( ...... !•co-11 .... ~---•.lCfl_.,,,., I • Blown aides observed Orange Q:l4.llty appeared to be so divtded on the issues of medical care for the p:x>r, the costs of medical education and the responsibilities for providing bolb that it was likely ~ commiuee mighl be convinced to spend the money elsewhere. Of 30 Cents a~Week Told 'I1'e OCMA directors point out the association supported the move of C0.1 to the Irvine campus In 1968. Self Defense Classes Set In San Juan fl.In. Marcella Muller, a San Juan Capistrano resident and member of the Orange County Sheriffs Office, will display techniques of self defen.w for members of the San Clemente-Caplstrano Bay Branch ol the American Aasc=lation of Univenity Women June 15. 'Tile luncheoo irogram wUI be part of a meeting honoring outgoing offieen and board members or the group, plus the installatl® of officers for the coming year. 'Tile new president of the group to be installed at the 11!30 a.m. session al the San Clemente Comnuml.ty Clubhouse ls Mrs. Robe.rt Howell. Others on the slate are Mn. James Thorpe. program chairman; Mrs. Colin Chisolm, treasurer; Mrs. C. Kenley 1'1ays, secretary, and Mrs. Ro y Schwaegler, corresponding secretary. All women who are graduates of accredit.eel ·colleges or universitlea are welcome to the lwtebeon. Newport Terror WASIDNGTON (AP) -A dip in retail food prices in April meant a family or four saved 30 cents a week during the month if it scrimped on meat and served loy,.·er--cost Hems, a c c o r d I n g t.o government figures ~leased today. The Agriculture Department said a low-cost menu for a four·member family, lncludlng two sdlool children. -$43.10 per week in April, down 0.7 percent from $43.70 in 1.tarth. But it was up 18 percent or $6.70 per week from April 1'73. Officials said it waa the first decline in the family food indicator since October. More amuect families, as the monthly series has shown In the past. enjoyed a slightly better break relatively wllh food budgeis. A moderate<Ost menu that cost $M.10 a week in March was IO oents or I.I percent less expensive in April. The April menu, Mwever, was up 15 percent or f7.20 from a year earlier. ' The department's plan for liberal eating cost $66.10 per week 1n April , down eo cenll or 1.2 percent from March. But It was $8 or 14 ptrcent more expensive than in April last year. Home ecmomists say the varloul meal plans are computed on the basis of food quantities consumed. by family groups and prevailing retail prices. The low-o::ist plan relates to families with yearly Incomes of $4,000 to $8,000; the moderate 18.000 to 110,000 ; and the liberal $10, and over. One basic difference is that lower. income meals under the USDA food plans contain culs of lesa-expensive meat, more weals, bread, potatoes, dry beans, Mesa Girl, ·12, Raped After l(idnap at Pier A Sunday morning fishing expedition to Nev•port Pier turned into an ordeal of pain and terror for a Costa l\1esa girl , 12. who i,;,·as kkinaped at gwipoint and raped by her captor. The victim, confronted and abducted in the area of 28th Street and Balboa Boulevard, was driven to a hilly area near Orange where the assault occurred. She Wa.!l abandoned in the rural area and sought help at a residence where occupants called police to report th e kidnap and rape. Newport Beach Detective Sa m Amburgey said the girl's ordeal began only a few minutes after she and her brothers i,;,·ere dropped off by their mother to go fishing. Daylight was just breaking when the youngsters were let out or the family car about 5 a.m., and Ule young girl started toward the Mcfadden Square area and Newport Pier with her tackle. She did not wail for her brothers and went alone while they lagged behind, police said. Tht girl told investigators at that point a man in his early 20s pulled up in a light brown or beige four-wheel d r I v e recreational vehicle and offered her a ride. She refu.ed, she said. Investigators were told the kidnaper . then brandished a pistol and ordered the frightened girl to get into the vehicle, ~!ch lhen headed inland to tht orange area. The \'ictim described her assailant as being about five feet. nine inches ta\I, of medium build, with shoulder length light brown hair and wearing faded denim pants and a dark blue jacket. poultry and fish. The figures are compiled by the department's Agricultural R esearch Service and published each month in Food and Home Notes by the USDA Office of Communication. A fourth meal budget is called the economy plan, a bare-bones meal guide used for computing tbe go\lernment's food stamp allocations. It was $34.70 in April, only 10 cents lower than in March. It was, however, up 18 percent or $5.4tl mor. than April 1973. From Page l HEROIN ... the dnlg a~ was created in President Nixon's genera] overhaul of drug cnloroement systeffil a year ago, the CU9lomll Service has since concentrated most of lls eflort.s in the lnterdictiol'I of marijuana from Met.ico. This has paid off In a near doubling of the nwnber of individual marijuana seizures in 10 months. Customs agents seized more than 85 tons of marijuana between Octobe!" and March and 25 tons in the March-April period Bl.one when the f\-texlcan harvest was in full swing, official reports show. In the same period, there were 8.33 pounds of heroin seized by customs agents at all U.S. borders, of which 5.83 pounds came frOm MexJco. Becall5e of its lhee.r bulk, marijuana mt.ISf. be smuggled across in trucks, cars, airplanes or on foot or horseback in isolated areas along the border. The smaller and more easily concealed packages of heroin, however, normally are brought through a regular port of entry. Partly responsible for the shift to Mexico as a major heroin source, has been the success of federal authorities in breaking up established connections that brought it in from Europe, the P..liddle East and Asia, officials say. Under cooperative agreements the Drug Enforcement Administration has agents of Its own in about 40 countries and those st.ationed in Mexico frequently accompany poliec and troops' on forays into the rugged moontains where the heroin and marijuana are produced. Bartels says that while t he international heroin traffic always has been oontrolled by the 1.1afla, the Mexican ooMection has been 1.1ntil reeently a less organized system. But there are signs that "these guys are now 3tarting to get organized," he said. Russia Signs P act LISBON !UP!) -Portugal and the Soviet Union established diplomatic relations effective immediately Sunday nnd agreed to exchange arnbassadors, both governments said In a joint communique released slmult<Jneou~ly in Lisbon and Moscow. Happy Birthday, Donald Disney's Duck Cele bra tes His 40th An niversary ANAllEIM -Donald llutk joined Jbe over 39 sen ration SUnday with his .oth birthday, but to millions of hi! fans. there Is no generation gap. Oon1"1d, the animated duck In a sailor outfit, is s1lll thtlr hero . Donald. who bec•mt one of fllmland'1 most ira9Cibly charming and dur1ble characters following bts debut In 1934, has managed to fuss and quack his way through more than a hundred Walt Dlsney carloons and feature films. \Yith hiJ lhroaty, barely understand· able voice, Donald's first appearance <>R • ' a scene was tn a bil part tn "Wise Little Hens." rt'lcased June 9, 1934. Thou1h his role was mlni9CUle., moviegoers thought he waa the st3r and began dc>mandtng more pictures. That started 11 boom which made Donald one of three famous creations or tht Disney studios and spawned tht birth o( an entire duck ramlly. includln& Donald's uncle, Scrooge f..f c Duck, Profesaor Ludwig Von Drake, nephe"·s Huey, Dewey and Louie, Gladstone Gandt.r. Grandma Duck and Cousin Gus. Donild·a first starring role "'es In I ... "Don Donald" In 1937, a cartoon which lnlrOdueed hl1 l'8dlng lady, "Daisy," Some 127 canoons and featun: films followed, ~·ith Donald gaining a rtput1tion 1lon1 with Disney's other ramous characters, f..11ckey Mouse and Goo/y. Donald's animated ca.reer ended in 1991 when Walt Disney StudiOIJ began concentrating on live-action mov1ei, hut the lovable duck still continues hiJ escapades in comic magazines ind newspaper comic &trips. .. . WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pruidenl Ni'ion refused again today to comply wilh a House Judiciary Committee subpoena for 45 White House tapes and documents, saying there would be no end to the impeachment pa:iel's request "unless a line were drawn somewhere." He added: "Since it is clear the committee will not draw such a line, I have done so." The President's response lo the subpoena, issued May 30 on a 37· I vote by the committee, had been expeeted in view of Nixon's statement May 22 -in turning down an earlier subpoE.na -that he would not comply with any further .demands. Nixon's reply, Jn a letter to Judiciary NIXON LEAVES ON MIDEAST PEACE JOURNEY, P1go 4 Chairman Peter W. Rodino Jr .. (0-N.J.). was made known at l'ilC White House shortly after the President departed oo his Middle East trip and jwt after the 7 a.m. PDT deadline set by the committee for surrender or the materials. Nixon said if he yielded to !he committee demands, it would sim ply lead to further requests for tapes. "Once embarked on a process or continually demanding additlonaJ tapes whenever those the commitlee already has failed to tum up evidence of guilt, there would be no end unless a line were drawn aomewbere by someone," Nixon said. The subpoena was tt-committee's fourth and It was issued along with a lelter in which committee members warned Nixon that bis refusal to comply with their request was "a grave matter" and that they would feel free to draw "adverse inferences" as weJJ as ulti· m.ately roomunend hia impeachment as a result. The subpoena requested malerials covering the period from Nov. 15, 1972 to June 4, 1913. In his letter to Rod ino, Nixon Anaheim Youth Kill ed in Dese11 From Wire Services A youti from Anaheim was killed St.In· day on Superior Dry Lake north or Barstow, when his three.wheeled land sailer vehicle overturned. Clifford A. Young, 17, was hurled from the speeding rig when a gust of wind \Uted k momentarily, lher. it fell over onto him, investigaton said. San Bernardino County Coroner's Of4 fice spokesman said today Young's body was taken to a Barstow mortuary i,;,11.ere an autopsy was scheduled. 'Ttie victim was on a desert outing wiftl his ramily and a group of friends when the land-sailing accident OCCIJrred. maintained }he committee would be \\TOng to draw any inferences from his actions and he was merely exercising his proper powers by claiming excecutlve privilege in refusing to tum over subpoenaed materials. "From lhe start of these proceedings, I have tried to cooperate as far as I reasonably oould in order to avert a constitutional confrontation," Nixon aald. "But I am determined to do nothing v•hich, by tbe precedence it set. wou\d render the executive branch henceforth and fore ver more subserlient to the legislative branch. and wwld thereby destroy the constitutional balance," Nixon said. Tbe President prevlously refused to tum over 42 tapea subpoenaed by the commiUee. Instead, he made public O[l April 30 voluminous While Hou:te transcripts of Watergate conversaUons 0: 32 of the tapes. Officials said tapes either did not exist for the other conversations subpoenaed or were not available. The bulk of the committee's subpoena dealt with recording of cooversaUons between Nixon and former a.Ides R R. Haldeman, John D. Ehrlichman. Charles W. Colson, John W. Dean Ill and Gorden Strachan. Most of the tapes and other matertal involved also are 80Ught by special Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworaltl, who succes..'lfully argued fc;; a U.S. Supreme Court review of the President's policy in resisting subpoenas. FromP1141el CO NTEMPT .•. President concerning n o t es of confidential presidential conversation• cannot afford a basis for either a charge or contempt of court or obstruction of justice on the part or the President, as public media have inerpreted your honor's statements in open court to mean," St Clair wrote Gesell. The letter war delivered to the court more than three hours after Nixon left for a nine-day !rip to the ti.1iddle East. Ehrlichman and tour men tire sched- uled to go on trial next t.fonday on charges of conspiring to violate the civil rights of Daniel Ellsberg"s psychiatrist by raiding his office Sept 3, 1971 in search or Ellsberg's records. And in a third action today invoking executive privilege, Nixon moved to block Watergate p1"'06eCUtol'1 Crom obtaining a portion of a Sept. 15, 1972 tape deaJing with alleged Whitt Hoose attempts to use the Internal Revenue Se1'1Jice for po1itical purpo.ses. Nixon told U.S. District Judge Jotm J. Sirica that he believes the conversation is covered by executive privilege and thus should not be submitted to a grand jwy that is investigating the allegatlona. DONALD DUCK CELEBRATES 40TH BIRTHDAY Di1n•y Sr1r Shown With 'Vole•• Cl•r•n<• N11h .1 I • Today's Cloaing Prices /VettJ l'erfc Jll llfott Arll1'e ... . NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE • Year's High-Low s Appear Eves·y Saturday Mru~ket Continues To Pusl1 Upward NF \V \ORK IUPI J -Stocks ,::ained steadily titonday on the New York Stock F.xchangc alter p1 of~l1.akJng lessen er! T1 ad1n!; was n1oderatc The Dow Jones 1ntlust11al a\era~c gained 5 95 point~ to 859 67 Advances were nearly eight to-five ahead of decli nes of the more than I 759 stocks traded Closing volun1e tola led roughly 13 200 000 ~hare~ compared \v1th 19 020 000 exchanged Friday I he 1>ow gained a record 51 55 points last week "fuch of the ma1 ket s strength ca1ne on grow ing confidence that interest rates have reached their peak and are 1ead) fo1 a genuine downturn Stocks on the An1er1can F.xchange gau1ed 1n light trading ... ' • Monday, Ju11t 10, )q74 Boston Plans Sin Zone ~Ir Pll .. Stiff ""'i. , Visit• 6irb State Estancia High School student Linda \Volfe, 16, will represent the Harbor Area at Girls State June 2S..July 3 in Squaw Valley. ~-f is s Wolle, 1730 Centella Place, Newport Beach. is sponsored by the American Legion Auxi· liary 4_55. Orchestra Officers Installed New band and orcheslra officers for Newport Harbor High School have b e e a installed and ~ificates of appreciation _presented to 22 seniors. In addition, drum major Sam J\,1ello received a scholarship from I.he Coast Music Company. Newly e I e ct e d orchestra officers are Jan Kliewer, BOSl'ON (AP ) -The city that OJlCi! made "bannl-d In Boston" a household phrase Is zoning a district that will be -the exclusive domain of pomo shops, sex films and girlie sho"'S. The two-block·long strip in downtown Boston will be zoned as an "adult entertaining district" by a planning agency that hopes this will keep the sex business from spreading lo other parts of the city. "WE FEEL AS if the whole matter of the obscenity thing may be slightly out of prOJX>rfion." said R a I p h ~1emolo. a spokesman for the Boston RedP"elopmen t Authority. "By al\o \\'ing it in one arl'a. Sale Prices Honored Through Wed .. June 12 we hope to contain it. lf il's ·exclusively there, people can avoid It, And if it's your rancy, you can go there." The new district wlll be in a place called the Combat 1.one -an area already domJnaled by X·raled theaters, stripper bars and adult book stores. TI·IF. AGENCY PLANS to build two parks in the area, start shuttle bus service and help owners fix up storefronl!. The facelift should improve !he area's sleazy image, 1'1emolo said. \\'hat goes on inside the bars and theaters will be between the owners and the police. Anything that is legal v.·ill be v.·elcomed. Neighborhood groups i n residential parts of lhe city president ; Pat D u n c a n , _..,.-.,.-,;-0::\i\:----secretary; and Ken Telloian, _.. librarian. Installed as band ofriccrs were Jeff Fier. president; Linda Franklin. vice- president; Kathy Alderfer, secretary ; Roberta Capalbo, librarian; Lyle Haskell and Doug Mader, managers, and Susan England, u n i f o rm officer. Cerlificates of appreciation were presented by Richard A. England, director of instrumental music, to Valerie Miller, Stacy Cochran. Kim Kay, Jul ie Searles, Tin a Cherry, Karen Boyde, Carol Collins, Sheree Moritz. Joyce J\,tcVay, Jennie Smart, ,Scott Fier, Susan England, Robert Pelletier, Karen Bradford, Robert Schmidt, Co n n i e Bradford and Linda Hart. 23 Music Students Honored . ' Twenty -thr e e young ~----­ musicians have received spe- cial recognition 31 the an- nu31 a w a r d s night of the Fountain Valley Schoo I District Batxl. Special awards went to Christi A1umbaugh f r o m McDowell School, who won the outslanding bandsman award: Jackie mavin, Founlain VaBey School, most musical growth trophy; Robert Littreell, Fu Ito n School, most honor points trophy and partial scholarship to Arrowbear Music Camp at Am>wbear Lake, donaled by Coast Music Service o f Fountain Valley. Two olher sludents received trophies for earning a high nUmber of honor points, Alex Licudine of llarper School and Jeanne Braasch fr>1m Tamura Schoof. Seventeen other students received perfect attendance trophies for allending all rehearsals and concerts. The band includes musicians from all 17 Fountain Valley Schools and is under the direction of Marlowe Earle, district director of music education. ANIMAlogic~""""" . . , .. ······· -··· -• "INFLA.TIOM HA~ 60NE TO f}1E 6UG:'S ? .. Stoinle~s Steel BAR SINK & FAUCET "Build Your Own Wrf Bar!" • Nickel plated stoinless steel REG. '79.9& sell-1imming sink. '2498 • Hand polished 1im & bowl ed911 -sound dampener uniit'Hool -deep bowl. Sink & fwcet Full Size Flot~ GROUND COYER ''For A Car~I of Colorful Gazonzias!'' • P1evidt s telor ond (0¥1r lor porkways, Hower Md1, hillsidti, • fest growing ond eosy lo <011 for. REG. '5.99 s4•9 had been worried a b o u t plamed urban renewal for the Combat 7.one. Tbey were afraid this would drive the stores and bars into their areas. THE OO~IBAT ZONE blossomed as a location for these sto res and theaters when an earlier urban renewal project i·eplaced the o I d Scollay Sc:iuare secllon wilh a complex of governme nt buildings. "If you go in and have wholesale redevelopment , you have to relocate businesses," Memolo said. "Now where the hell do you put somebody \\'ilh an X·rated book store! ~Do "'-e· say, ·we have a nice Jillie spot for you on Newbury Street,"' a fa1blonable shopping arta? Sex Is ber-e IO llay, and the city ls better ort to put It In one place rather thah try to stamp it out, !ifemolo aaid. , "It's part ol the urban fabric," he said. New Judge SACRAMENTO (AP) • Ollle ~· Marie-Victorle of Sen Francisco was appointed by Gov. Ronald Reagan to the MWliclpal ·Court bench in San Francisco. She replaces Judge Claude Perasso. who was elevated to lhe Superior Court bench. WE QUOTE1 PRICES O ·VER THE PHONE ••• AMYTIM CHICK THISI SUPU SALi SNC:IAL5-.... ~ .., .... . O.•tt.-· ,.J S!ffiE Antiperspirant.602 ................ $1 .29 $1 .u9 79 LYSOLSPAAYDisinfectant.14oz ...... , ... 1.49 1.35 I.It VASELINE .... oz Jar ...... " .............. 49c 42' ll 0-';TIPS, #170 ........ , ............... , ..... 1.09 89' S 2100 E, Coast Highway at Fernleaf, C.orona del Mar U-N· 5 Gallon Siie DWARF CITRUS • Grow your own f1uit ... these would leve to be planted in a half bo11el. • Your 'hoi1e: lemon or lime, healthy & hordy trees.,.. REG. '5.99 5 4!1! ~1·1' k'I.. ·1; : : 1_ • 4ft.x8F1. ~ ~~!~~,~~ 1i.,., ,....,. ,.•iuh. • 4 h. I. h, I 1/1°' fW1k -1e1, ,. ,.;.!. REG. 'l.99 " -- Truckload Sole! SOLID OAK BARRElS "Rugged, Rustic & Funky -You 'll Find I OO 's of Creative Uses!"' • Honest-to-goodness old whis~•Y barrels, ruggedly constructed of solid oa•. • Plant in 'em, sit on them, use them as table bases, handcrdt your own fun~y furniture. • You'll want several of these hard-to-fi nd ba rrels. HAU BARRELS 11"' 25" REG. '14.95 WHOU IARR!LS 35" '25" REG. '74 .9S 2 Yi Gol. Fomily·~ze f ' ~ ' PICNIC -~ JUG ~:\J 1, I "Insula ted for Hof I - or Cold Liquids!" I . • leokproel spigot and cop. • Wide -th for easy filling I~ and ,i.oning. I • Brightly ''lored hig h density I . polyethylene. ·~ \ ' ' REG. '5.99 J; ! . ' ; s399 ~ .) ~lllli1iillll~11ll New Glomorene ' DRAIN OPENER "You've Sern II On T. V.!" • Goes te wOl'k'" d-,ged drains in seceMs. • Sole, 1osy lo'" oerosol -pleosont pine S(enl. REG. '2.29 $199 • . • .• • , I " ' I 1 1 7 • • • • ' L~giiqp Bea~h Today's Final N.Y. StoekS Er;>IT ION · • VO~. 61, NO. 16 1, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES TEN CENTS Heroin Frona Mex~c@ to IJ.S. on lfpswing WAS!JINGTON (AP) -Alter 1-:0 years of decline, heroin trafric into the United States is reported on the upswing, with Me.xico replacing Europe as the primary source and conduit for the narcoUc. Federal drug enforcement ofl1cia1s say the heroin ls being refln'ed from poppy plant! grown in western Mexico, then shipped across the border. At the same time, there is growing trade ·ln marijuana from Jong:establlsbed soureta In A-fexlco, leading to an lntensUled antismuuling campaign along tlfe 1,400-mile border. But tome officials acknowledge that elforts by the U.S. government to cope with the illicit aj:Uvity have been impeded to some extent by bureaucratic wrangling amone agencies w i t h jurisdiction over certain ar..~s cf nar-- cotlcs ccnlrol. . A peripheral issue In tJUs continuing feud ha.I been the quantity of drugs • ................... DRIVER RESCUED JIY HUMAN CHAIN OF FIREMEN, POLICE c,. Rlu"ll"CI lOO·FNI O..r Laguno's C-Boy Point Youth Survives Tumble By JACK CHAPPELL was released from SOulh Co a i t oi 111e o.i1v Pllft s"'" Community lfospitai following treatment A 20-year-old man ~ived the 100-foot _ for cuts .and scratches received in the plunge of his car from the sheer cliffs or 3:30 a.m. mishap. La Be ch' c t Ba p . t Laguna Beach Police said Wagoner had guna a ii rescen Y om been outside the car when it started today. rolling toward the cliff. John P. Wagoner, address unknown, Wagoner either attempted to halt the Plane Cr ash Probed CUCUTA, Colombia (UP I) Colombian civil avlalkln authorities searehed widely scattered wreckage today (or clues to the cause or the crash af a four~gine Viscount passenger liner that slammed into a mountain known as Las Cuchillas The Knives), Killing al1 43 persons aboard. ' Oraage (:Gast Weatller Night and morning low clouds and local fog ,vith hazy sunshine ln the afternoon Tuesday. A litUe cool<r days. Highs al the beaches Irr-the upper 60s rsing to the mi:f. 70s inland. Lows mostJy in the 50s, · . --- INSIDE TODAY Gr>-go au11s perform in scanty nylon bikini ·briefs before women~lu audiences itt a Southenl IUinoi1 Tlight 1pot. Chicks ogle "dudes" who art paid $10 an ho·ur fft this reverse Chouuinitm. Story, Page 1. "' .,. ~k• 1 ,...,... 11 INtflt 11 .Mtlll' Trn ,. L. M, .. ,, I Mo'lftll ,. Cl1tf9nli. J H1ll11MI ..... ' Cll..itltil tt·• ~ c:_," I CMlla ,. ,.,.,.. hftef ti c'""""" " ,_... , ... , 0.•111 ,...._ ' , .. Mt111fft 1•11 1.;1~ '"' I T9l1'fl1'&11 ' 1f lflfttfM~ • 4f11MI'" • PlllMQ t•n WMfMr I ...,._.,. •• ._.. "'-\)-ft AMI ~ \4 W_,. "'"°' I J onrushing car with his body or attempted to get in it and apply the brakes just before the vehicle toppled into the ocean below, polioe said. He apparently Was dragged by-the car for about 40 feet down the cliff before breaking loose. Laguna Beach firemen and Police Officer Don Abshier formed a human chain to retrieve the man, in shock and bleeding from a small projection on the cliff. It is the second time recenUy that an auto has plunged over the steep cliffs. Previously, a foreign car was driven over the oceanfront cliff in what police believe was an attempted suicide. The. vehicle was an object of Olliosity today for tldepool explorerJ w ho examtned its smashed and crumpled frame. Wreckers were to attempt. to remove the hulk tOday. 1be car bas an Arizona liceMe plate. Follow\ng Wagoner's releue from the ho!Pital, poli<t had no lurther contact with the man. 'Divorce' Topic Of Lecture Series ''Divorce: An Opportunity tor a New Beginning," is the ·topic of a three:part lecture series begiMing at 7:3& p.m. Tuesday al st. Mary's Epi3copal Olurdl, 428 Park Avenue, Laguna Beach. The -series wtll continue oo two subseq-1'ueod>y nlgllll. It la taught by 11e.. Rd>ert L. ComcUaOn, rector o( St. M a r y ' s Episcopal Olurdl and by Rob<rl W. Renoull, licensed marriage, family and child counselor. '. .......... reaching the United States from foreign biggest worry at the moment. sources. The dispute apparently &!!!ms in However, the Drug E n f o r c e m e n t part from friction between the drug Administration, a year-old J u st i c e enforcement &gfmcies. Department agency with which Customs The OJstorns Service, which bu been ha,.frequently clashed over enforcement concentrating Its border drug interdiction policy, says that Mexico ha! become the efforta: chiefly agaiM the Yextcan _ IOW'ce or as much as so percent or the marijuana trade, contends that berotil heroin reaching the United State!. traffic from that country Ls negligible. nus ls a dramatic change from .lhe Although heroin remains priority No. 1 peak 1ear1 of heroin · tr&ffic, 1969-72, because of the danger It poses, customs when up to 80 percent of the narcotic officials said syntheUc drugs are their reaching U.S. shores came from or .. through Europe and only about IS percent from ~1exioo. Mexican heroln ls easily identified by its brown color, as opposed to the more refined while product from European laboratories. But cfficials say there is no differeoce in the potency. John R. Bartels Jr., director of the drug agenCy, said in an intenriew that the brown heroin , ooce confined almost entirely to the West Coast, recently has been turning up in Eastern cities as ~·ell. Ile said this is one indicator used by his agency to determine the Source Ol the drug, and "the fact that they're not getting very much heroin along the border doesn't mean it isn't coming in." The heroin situation is assessed by a variety of indicators such as seizures, quality -0f the drug, street prlces, which give some clues to availability, and the number of deatM from overdose. Deprived of some of its functions when (See HEROIN, Page Z) Policema.n's Small Cafe Firebombed Laguna • Ill Trustees Turn .Back To Budget By RILARY KA YE Of h Otlly P'IJet Stiff Laguna Beach Unified School District trustees will again be examining the 1974 75 school budget Tooiday night, bul this !Imo Uley'D '"°~ for IM,lllt·to pay Jl>e 1.T percent t.•<!\tn' wary 1Dcrease settled over the w-..1 • ,,,. aiarY -· Ii bot olfieJal U>tll iii board members ,We their approval Tuetday nlghl, but ii -agreed to by truslees Jane Boyd and Michael Sagar, both involved in the negotiations. Included ill the 9.1 percent !egin is a two percent raise retroactive to April I, an a three percent hi ke for tt?f.75, both lncr.ases already approved by the board in March. Teechen will also receive a 1.5 percent hike if the.re is an ending balance exceeding $300.000 in the 1973-74 budget. or U legislation is p assed lo bring add.Won.al revenue into the district. The new settlement involves a decision by the district to spend 4.68 percent more than it originally intended. or ~.000. 1be weekend negotlatioo sessions followed a ohe-<tay &trike oo May 30 by """' than hall the hiib school t.ad>ers. Several days of picketing Jut week followed the strike, involving more ·than 100 teachers from all five district schools. District official! woukl not divulge exacUy where the extra salary money will oome rrom, b.ut said every education.al service at every school in the (See BUDGET, P11e II Jelly fish Hit Beach Visitors Bright, sunny days brought nearly 40,000 people to the btacb in Laguna during a weekend marred on1y by hordes of stinging jellyfish in the surf. Lifeguards treated 20 persons f<lr stings during the two days, and said others were probably stung but did not seek medical aid. Going Too Far~ Burn This Memo Before Readi.ng WASHINGTON (UPI) -The White House penchant for secrecy once went a little too far, according to the Senate Watergate com- mittee staff report on efforts to politicize the executive branch. One memo, said the report, was headed: "Burn Before Read· ing." Scribbled in the margin was the word "Always," by Frederic V. Malek, a \Vhite House aide to whom the memo was addressed. Malek, named .by the staff as the chief architect of the re- sponsiveness program," said in his basic memo in 1972 that "written communications would be kept to a minimum -to avoid adverse publicity." 'E~eeutive Privifeu.e' . ~ Nixon Insists He's Sole Judge for Ellsherg Dat '" WASIUNGTON (UPI) -President Nixon today reasserted his claim to be the sole judge <lf what evidenct should be surrendered in the EUsberg break·in case, despite warnings from a federal judge that be may be risking contempt. Throuih his dlleJ defense attorney, James D. st. Clai r, Nixon told U.S. District JuQe Gerhard A. Gesell that the • materials sought by fonner White House aide John D. Ehrlichmari are "properly the subject ol executive privilege" and thus the President alone can decide whetlier to surrender tbem. The action was the second time today Nixon Invoked executive privilege in refusing to tum over r e q u es t e d document!. He previously sent a letter to the House Judiciary C<lmmittee saying he would not comply with a committee subpoena for 45 White House tapes and documents. Gesell has threatened to dismiss the conspiracy i n d i c t m e n t against Ehrliclunan if the documents were not produced for his defense. Last week, Gesell said that Nixon's reluttanoe to allow Ehrlichman full access to his White House files "borders on obstruction" of justice. Gesell was expected to act eilher later today or Tuesday on a moticn by Ehrlichman's attcmey tc begin ccntempt proceedings. mean," St Clair wrrlte Gesell. The letter was delivered to the court more than three hours after Nixon left for a nine-day trip to the Middle East. Ehrlichman and four men are sched· uled to go on trial next Aionday on charges of C<lnspiring lo violate the civil rights of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist by raiding his office Sept. 3, 1971 in search of Ellsberg's records. And in a third action today invoking executive privilege, Nixon moved to block Watergate prosecutors f r om obtaining a portion <lf a Sept. 15, 1972 tape dealing with alleged While House attempts lo use the Internal Revenue Service for political purJ>0.5eS. Nixon told U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica that he believes the (.'()nversation is covered by executive privilege and thus should not be submitted to a grand jury that is investigating the allegations. Boy Shot to Death CARSON (UPI) - A 17·year-0ld Compton youth was shot to death Saturday night when be and other youths aUetnpled lo crash a party, sheriff's deputies said. Michael Day was shot outside a home where as many as 150 youths were attending the party. Probe Set In $5,500 'Torching' A small cafe owned by a Lagi.ma Beach police detective and his wife v.•as firebombed Saturday and ·an estimated $5,500 damage done to the business. Det. Alex Jimenez said t<"<layhe did not know if the attack v.-as in retribution for his police work, or ''if somebody was just looking for 90mething to torch." Laguna Beach Fire ~1arshal Jim Presson said he and police officials would be investigating the matter. Authorities are looking for a man in his early !ll's with Jong blood hair who was seen running from the scene of the bombing at abou t 2 a.m. Saturday. Presson said damage to the Penguin care, 981 s. Coast High .. ay, oonsisted mostly of smoke, water and soot dam· age. He said further investigation of the scene is needed before aulhoritiet v.ill be able to tell hether a brick or some <lther object was used to first smash the window in the front or !he cafe so the fire bomb C<luld be tossed in, or whether the !See FIREBOMB, Page 2) Chief of College Weds Prof essqr ROHNERT PARK (AP) -Dr. Marjorie Downing, president-designate of Soooma State College, has married an English professor from Cal State Fullerton. a Sonoma State spokeswoman said today. Dr. Downing and Dr. M. John Wagner were wed Thursday at Dr. Downing's home in Claremont, she said. A fonner English professor at Scripps College, Dr. Downing was appointed president of Sonoma State two weeks ago to become the first female president or a public fcur-year California co 11 e g e. Her appointment becomes effective July I. The wedding was witnessed by Dr. Downing's sons Francis, 18, a n d Nich<llas. 15; and by Dr. Wagner's daughter Margaret , 17. Dr. Wagner plans tentatively to ccntinue teaching at Fullerton, she said. With no early morning fog to cloud the coastline, close to 20,000 beachgoers turned out each day in what llfeguards termed "a pretty heavy turnout" for this time of year. "Surely ... what clearly is a valid fonnal claim of privilege by the President concerning n o t e s -0f oonfldentlal presidential oonversations cannot afford a basi~ fer either a charge of contempt or court or obstruction of justice on the part of the President, as public media have inerpreted your honor's statements in cpen court to Professional Firenien Surf was two to three feet and lifeguards made three minor rtscues of swtmmers in trouble. Spikers Sought For Tournament Registration Is open for the Laguna Beech Recreation Department's Main Beach Part Dedication Day Volleyball Tournament. Deadllnt for registration is June 19. • . The tournamtnt ls open to all resl~li within the Laguna B<ach UniOed School DisUcL Eatf'y fwml are 1v1ilab4e. from Rod Quick at ~ recrtaUon department, 570 Glenneyre St., L8gun1•Beach. TWo divblona will be offered for ' experlenctd and nontxperitnced pl1yera. 'lilt toumameo! >rill he l>eld oo the new Main Btaclt Park courts at 9 a.m. dedk.tllon day, J..,. $1, RociOntlon lie b $1. ' ... Irvine Coach Goes to UCLA . uc Irvine baseball coach Gary Adams has resigned to take over the rtlns at UCLA. Adami", ·1 UCLA. graduate v.·ho ~ !or the Brulnt baseball toani. lpllilted the b a se b a t I proinim at UC lrvlnc and coac~ tit An1ealen to two successive NCAA college division dlamplonslltps. His OlOll r<e<Ot team """Pilod a 44-8 reqini In caplurlllK the title. See oports, Page 16, for details. I At Top of World Seen It appeared today that the embattled Top of the World fire station will cootinue to be manned by professional Laguna Beach fire fighters and nol reduced to "YO\unteer·· status. . C\ty !\1anager Al 'nleal said actions combinfng police • 11nd fire r a d I o communications would save the city an esUrnated $27 ,000 annually and about $13,000 this upcoming fiscal year. Some of that savings may offset an esUma.ted $68.000 needed for Top of the World stati-0n m11nning. he said. A pullout of !he professional force at the Top of the \Vorld station has been a recommendt'd way ot ooptng with an 8.6 percent outback In the lire departmtnt's projected 1974-71 budfet. 'lbe action was strongly opposed by ttsldeots ol the bJlltop comm111ity. ' Response time fnim fire u n 11 s stationed downtown and at the Agate Street station was estimated to be.five to six minutes. . The Top of the World station rolled up response normally withln two mlnutell ol. an alann . In deliberations Saturday, the Laguna Beach City Council appeared to assure that the Top of the World statkm would. remain staffed as it Is now, Theal said, A changeover to combined poUce-Ore C<lmmunications will enable the city to cut fire department positiOOI ~ three men required as 24-hour dispatchers. In tum, the Poltce Department dVillln force will be boosted by two clerk·typilb. The difference between the perlOIDll salaries wUl amount to a sutnCIDtlll savings, 1'1tal said. • • 2 DAil V PILOT LB From Page I HEROIN ... the drug agpncy v.·as crt'atcd In President NWln's general overhaul or drug eoloreement sy11tems a year ago, the Customa Service has since conct.ntrated most of !Ls efforts in the intrrdicUon of marijuana from ~1exico. This has paid off in n near doubling or the number or lndividuul marijuana seizures in 10 nlonlhs. Custonls agents seized more than JJ5 tons or marijuana belween October and Atarch and 25 tons In the March·April period alone when the ~texican harvest was in ful l swing, official reports show. In· the same period. lhcri' \~rre 8.33 pounds of heroin s..·17.c'<l by Cusloms agents at all U.S. borders, of v.·hich 5.83 pounds came from ~1ex ico. Bc<:ause of its sheer bulk, mari juana must be s1nuggled across in trucks. cars . airplanes or on foot or horseback in isolated areas along the border. The smaller and more easily concealed packages of heroin. hov.·e..,er, normally are brought through a regular port of entry. Partly responsible for the shift lo Jl.lexico as a major heroin source. has been the success of federal authorities in breaking up es1ablish<-d connections that brought it in from .Eurvpc, the Jl.lidd!e E::ist and Asia, officials say. Under cooperativl' agreements the Drug Enforcement Administration has agents of its ov.·n in about 40 countries :ind Lhose stationed in Mexico frequently accompany police and troops on forays into the ru gged 1nountains v.•herc th<:- heroin and 1narijuana are produced. Bartels says that v:hile the international heroin traffi c ahvays has been controlled by 1he i\lafia, the i\lexican connection has been until recently a less organized system. But !here are signs that "these guys are nov.· starting to get organized," he said. Panel Sought For Laguna l1npact St11dy The city of Laguna Beach is searching for five citizens to review t he environmental impact of proposed projecl..s. The city council appro..,ed the new committee one month ago, but so far there has been only one applicant. The Environmental Review Committee will examine project descriptions, and ~·ilh their own knowledge of the particular site and the city, members ~·ill decide whether or not an environmental impact report (EIR) is necessary. If an EIR is written -by an outside consulting firm - il will be brought to 1he committee for furthe r review. The committee will then decide on its adequacy and v.·ill make a recommendation to the city council. Any interested citizen \li'ill be considered for the committee, but persons involved with social and environmental issues are preferred. Expertise, or interest, in the physical sciences such as geology and hydrology, transportation, air and water quality, economics and sociology would be the most beneficial to the committee. The members v;ould meet as often ~ needed, in the beginning stages about two or three times a month. At the present time, the planning staff of the city is doing the reviev.· work. Those interested should apply at city hall. Party Revelers Slay Complainer SAN JOSE IUPI) -Raymond C. !\otcVea, ~7. was annoyed by a boisterous party going on ill a neighbor's house about 2 a.m. and went o\·er to complain. ~tcVea was surrounded Sunday by a group of the partygoers and v.•hen they left, McVea was on the ground, se•;erely beaten. He died later from a skull fracture. Police 'A·ere seeking his assailants. ORAHGE COAST LS DAILY PILOT t""l>•"'l"~!t~.....,, .... -.... ~ l ·~' ··-•••• , ..,_ . .,,...., .. -' ... l l• ··-o-.. ..,. f'<·'P,, ...... ~~l•O<'fl.,t~, "'N'''~•J•o!)<IO .. fl I' 1t• '"''1 V'>n~ov '",on~ I "<l-4• V (M\o M..-.. N•-a._,~ ,....,.,,.(>II 0._,•lfOl.f"' •1 • V• "'' lO?'•~• llo>ot!< lo<>-l~T:>«O ,,,., ,, ''·-ft···~ Jo.Ill• c... ............. "<'II" '"" o.,_~ o1•1..,~ ,. f'"'' '""'1 ·..,.,..,,.,.. ....., ~" ,...,. !••o•·ft·o.,r-"· ·~~'"•'"' .. 1.Jt>w .. ;1 "" ..... ,to.,.~ ..... t.o"''"'" •/tl:OO, .·,t;,....1 ; \'/,... I "~-•"31't,.c;.f"' llY-"'O'o •1J.1rc~ MMlloll"G LC·'"' Oo'•1H Loe. ' """dP Noll """'"'u_,.,...(O·~ L.,... .. .uiOffkt 212 ~r_.,.., "·""-" ~ Ado-.:i. P 0. 8oo ~ 91~1 .,_ Oflktt cw•M ... 1!0-1a,..,s""' ,.~-·''au' ~)J ... _ """'4-v•ftl -·-"fl&0\8'>~ ,,.,, .. ~~......., ""'~..... •l(lo'!•(JC. ...... 11 .. T•~l11 41642·4l21 Cl•s•l1itll All•tnl.i.i, 642·5611 Lat--......... o., ........ ,.,.: ltJe,.._ 4t4-t466 eoo,n.i... ,,,. °''""" ~ ~"""'"' t.<ro ,.,,. *'~'"'"-.• ,, .... ,.,,., ~'""'"'~""' "' -,.,..,.,..,. tw..,, ,..,, ~ -·1.:M """"DIAlPI(• .. ~"""""""'(.(,(lyr•~-­ :io.--UOU tlO'!O'l" I*'! Ill Cb..!• M .... C.ol•!(f-r"' '*-•t1'.q11'1.,~1t•tM'l"'liOO""l~'"'' .,._,, tt (Xl-h1t,"'"''°"_"'"'_5)0CI _, Monda7, June 10, l'l7 4 'Not /Hy Frog' Joey Koza's frog is special to him, and he's not anxious to donate his pet to the University of Aiichigan for research. Scientists at the uni- versity are hopi ng to obtain the rare albino frog to observe its bodily functions through the transparent skin. Mesa Girl, 12, Raped After Kidnap at Pier A SUJlday morning fishing expedition to Nev.-port Pier turned into an ordeal of pain and terror for a Costa i\·lesa girl. 12. "'ho-~·as kidnaped at gunpoint and raped by her captor. The victim, confronted and .abducted in the area of 28th Street and Balboa Bou1evard, was driven to a hilly area near Orange where the assault occurred. She was abandoned in the rural area and sought help at a residence where occupants called police to report the kidnap and rape. Newport Beach Detective S a m Amburgey said the girl's ordeal began only a few minutes after she and ber brothers were dropped off by their First National Dips Le1ul Rate To JJlh Percent NE\V YORK (AP) -First National Bank of Chicago, the nation's 20th largest bank, announced today lt v.·as reducing its prime lending rate £rom 11.6 percent to the 111,lz percent prevailing at most major banks. Early last \vcek, the bank reduced its prime from l~ percent. A few small er banks dropped to 11 111 or 11 percent. The reductions were the firsl since- early ~iarch in the prime rate, which is charged a bank's biggest and best corporate C1.1Stomers. A sust.ained decline in the rate can signal changes In consumer interest rates, although the L\\'O are not directly linked. First National of Chicago's rate cut. \\'hi ch takes effect Tuesday, seemed lo be in line with the June 3 prediction of its president. Chauncey E. Schmidt, that "the upward push on short·t.erm rates appears to have subsided." Fire Hazard Areas Closed -Laguna Beach fire Chief Charley Kuhn has o rdered all uninhabited brush\ands within the city of Laguna Beach closed to publlc entry because or the "extreme fire hazard which now exists." The chief's action is effective June 15 and \Vil\ remain in effect until an adequate rainfall has reduct'<:! the chance ot fire. "Extremely hazardous area within this closure wilt be posted prohibiting entry by unauthorized persons. Smoking. open fi res. use of motorcycles and motor vehicles and illegal dumping areas are among the prohibited uses," Kuhn said. motbe.r to go fishing. Daylight was just breaking when the youngsters were let out of the family car about 5 a.n1., and the young girt started to~·ard the P.1cFadden Square area and Newport Pier with her tackle. She did not wa it for her brothers and went alone while they lagged behind, police said. The girl told investigators at that point a man in his early 20s pulled up in a light brown or beige four-wheel d r i v e recreational vehicle and offered her a ride. She re£used, she said. investigators were told the kidnaper then brandished a pistol and ordered the frightened girl to get into tbe vehicle, which then beaded inland lo the Orange area. 'Fhe victim described her assailant as being about five feet, nine inches tall. of medium build , 'A'ith shoulder length light brown hair and wearing faded denim pants and a dark blue jacket. Laguna History Week Announced Laguna Beach Afayor-Roy Holm has proclaimed the week of J\llle 16 through June 23 as "Laguna Beach Historical Week," commemorating the arrival 98 years ago of pioneers Nate and Will Brooks In the area which came to be Laguna Beacn. The proclamation issued by the ma)'Or notes that Nate Brooks homesteaded an area which includes the property now known as Main Beach Park, and his house was located about at the site of the old lifeguard tower (Related picture, Page 10). The Main Beach Park will be dedicated June 22. flistorical displays, lectures and events wil l be held during the week and at the dedication. From Page 1 FIREBOMB. •• firebomb v.·as thrown through the window. Police and Presson seemed to agree that a "~folotov Cocktail" a bottle filled v.·ilh gasoline, was used in the torching of !he cafe. Jimenez said he had driven past the cafe about a half hour before the incident and all appeared to be normal. He said he couldn't think of anyone v.'ho might be involved or wanted to get back at him for h.is police work , but the nature of the business is sudl that a lot of enemies can be made. • College of Medlclne Hospital Status Backed by Group Directors or Ute 1,200-member Orange evict the UCI.CCM from the county Coun ty Medical AssociaUOn have ap-hospital as of July I, 1975 unless an proved a retolution urging "preservation agree1nent ls reached. of the UC lrvtne ·California CoUege 'of OC~1C Is UCl's primary source of ~1edlclne." patients for doctor !raining. With The resolution made public today renovation estimated nl costing upwards concludes "the departure of UCJ-CCM of f9 million. !he ho$pltal might be a from Orange County would rtpre$ent a suitable !aclllly for bolh teaching and significant loss to the county and would patient care. not be In the best interest ol its clllien-The medical association last year ry," supported use of OCP.1C as the sole UCI-The OCA-!A board action comes at a CClt1 teaching ho!pltal. time when negollaUons between UCI and the Orange County supervisors are at a But legisJators hod other ideils on how to spend the bond moneys to :mprove critical point. Failure to re a c b medical education opportun!Ues In agreement before the state budget is Orange County. made final at the end of the month may A joint 1~· lative study committee meari delay or Joss of UC bond monies earmarked to Improve dranRe County recommend some of the bond funds .be A1edical Center (OCMC). spent upgrading OC,.fC and the rest be F'urther, additional bond funds to · spen~ to build a core campus teaching construct a 200-bed campUs teaching ·hospital. · . hospital and a nearby medical sciences Until the money is .spent, however, lab and classroom building are being there ls no aS&urance 11 need come to held up pending agreement on long-term Or~e County. . control of the county's hospital for the Aides to Assemblyman W1llle Brown poor ([).San Francisco) recall that the.re are a wllhout the agreement or finn number ol other locations for a potentfal indication there will soon be an new medical ~hool which do not req~1re agreement, chances are good the state sta~e spending for costly hosp1t.al bond money wilt be spent elsewhere, facili ties: . . , sources in Sacramento have said. Br_own s ccrnmlttee on . hosp ital s1t1ng County supervisors have said they'll st~ed needs for addlbonal funds to begin post graduate medical education at Crescent Bay Park Projects 'Open Space' A park at Crescent Bay Point would create open space along the north Laguna Beach coastline, most of which ~ "already developed behind pri v at e gates," the state coastal commission was told recently. Jeanette ~1errilees and Helen Pines. representing Friends of Cr£.;cent Bay Polnt, appeared at the commission's hearing on the statewide marine element in Inglewood. The element -the first nine parts or the coastal master plan -includes a remmmendatlon that a par": be estab- lished on the acenic point. Crescent Bay Point overlook! tidepoots in the Laguna Beach marine preserve and Seal Rock, which features a tramient community ol sea lions. "We think the entire blufftop should be preserved," Mrs. Menilees told the state commWlon. She Wd the Trust for Public Land! has an opUon to purdlse three of the nine lots on the point. Bills in the legislature 'WOUld provide funds to buy two lots and a combination of city and county revenue sharing funds may buy the third. Laguna Beach city ofllclals have said they'll match the Orange County turds, if they're made available. Mn. Merrilees said cltizem are trying to save parl ol the area because the coastline is almost completeJy built oul with housing, mucb of it in private walled commun!Ues. The trusl's option will run. out in four months, lttrs. Pines said later, indicating fWld·ralslng efforts have to be stepped up. Commlsslori Cbainnan Melvin Lane said specific land me polides -like the designation of Crescent Bay Point -wiU be left up to the regional coa.stal commissions as long as they conform to state philosophies. The South Coast region initially suggested the Point park site. Russian Dancer Panov 'Has Visa' MOSCOW !UPI} -Jewish ballet dancer Valery S. Panov said today he and his pregnant wife have been promised ex.it visas on Wednesday and they plan to leave the Soviet Union Friday morning. Panov, wllo has waged a tw~year fight to emigrate, had been advised by Soviet authorities Saturday that he and his blonde ballerina wife Galina would be given exit visas today. But in a telephone call from Leningrad, Panov to Id newsmen that !he granting ol the visa had been delayed by necessary paperwork . Panov, 35, former star of the Kirov Ballet C.Ompany of Leningrad, said he was confident lhere would be no further hitches in his departure. Dr. Martin Luther King Hospital in Watts. Others on Brown's committee are seeking state money for a medical college at Fresno or ,ht>spital funding which would more directly benefit the medically indigent. The action by the OCMA in support of UCl.CCM ls significant because it suggests an end of the fragmentation of medical interests which was evident in hearings before Brown's committee laat year. Brown aides observed Orange County appeared to be so divided on the Issues of medical care for the poor, the costs or medi ca l education and the responsl.bilities for providing. both that it was ' likely the committee might be convinced to spend the money elsewhere. Tbe OCMA directors point out the association supported the move of CCM to the Irvine campus in 1968. Snakebite Serum Rushed to Woman OREGON CITY, Ore. (UPI) -Stal< police rushed the entire supply of snakebite senm in Oregon a n d W8'bington to' a hospital here today to aid a woman in crlUeal eoodltioo who was bitten by her pet copperhead snake. 'The woman, Mary Esther Har, 23, was taken to Willamette Valley Hospital about 11 p.m. Sunday after she was bitten by the coppe rhead she kept as a pet aloog with two rattlesnakes. Oregon State Police officer Walt Frank rushed two deliveries or six vials of serum to the hospital from Seattle, Wash., and Hood River, Ore. Anahei1n Youth Killed in Desert From Wire Servlce1 A yooh from Anaheim was killed Sun- day oo. Superior Dry Lake north or Barstow, when his -three-wheeled land sailer vehicle overturned. Clifford A. Young, 17, was hu rled rrom the speeding rig \I/hen a gust or wind lifted it momentarily, ther. it fell over 'onto h.im, invt\stlgators said. San Bernardino County Coroner's Of· lice spokesman said today Young's body was taken to a Barstow mortuary 'Nhere an au~ was scheduled. The victim was on a desert outing wittJ his famJly and a group of friends when the land-sailing accident occurred. Russia Signs Pact LISBON (UPI) -Portugal and the Soviet Union established diplomatic relations effecth•e immedia tely Sunday and agreed lo exchange ambassadors, both governments said In a joint communique released simultJ:tneously in Lisbon and Moscow. Fro"' Pqe I BUDGET •.• district will be affected. "This will affect everythin& from clan siie to transportation," Supt. Don Wood!niton. •IPl•lned. "That;1 t h e painful part." Woodington sa id the board members generally "wanted to be fair with the teachers,'' und realized Ule five percent previously Qfftred wu "hardly enough lo keep them llbrea.st of inflation." "We also so.w that the teachers were very much united and adamunt In their poslllon," Woodington 1ald. Jerry Ji~alr, director of the district's continuation school and head or the teaeherJJ' strike committee. s11ld the teachers were ··very pleased" with the settlement. Teachers asked for an eight perctnt hike. not counting the 2 percent retroactive raise. They actually got 7.7 percent. Fair said the tearhers were pleased it was an acro5s·the-board increase, the first time the money h;un't been "plugged into areas tile board wanted." "\Ve reallze now that through unity, we have a stronger voice In the educational system in Laguna. There'• a list of other items we plan to t.alk tO the board aboul during the summer conccrnirig education in the district," Fair saJd. "Salaries were only the first step," be added. Thurston School Jf agicians Set Sliow on Tuesday Slx young magicians, members of the Thurston Intennedlate School Presto Club, will present their best tricks al 4 p.m. Tuesday in the Laguna Beach Library. The Presto Club Is a group of advanced magic students at Thunton under the direction of science teAclier Art Fisher. The cl ub held audltioru1 and the six best were chosen to perfonn at the library. including Robert Gillespie, M a r k Laidlaw, Russ Harvey, Scott Haven, Victor Rollinger and Tom Merchant. The magicians will each receive a magic book, compliments of the Friends of the Library, the Laguna Beach City Council and the PTA at Thurston. School Officials Seek to Protect TOW Fire Station Laguna Beach Unified School trustees voiced concern over the proposal to eliminate the Top of the. Workl fire station recently and asked Superinten· dent Donald Woodington to write a letter to the city council explaining their views. Trustee Jane Boyd ~aid that since Top of the World Elementary School would be affected, she felt the school district should speak up against the budget cut. If proposed sWeeplng budget cuts for 1974-75 by the city council, are made, the Laguna Beach Fire Department has said It 'A'OUld have to eliminate the TOW station to make ends meet. The fire departmenl announced earlier this week that it is now seeking applicants for a. volunteer firefighting unit at Top of the World. Seminar Slated On . .\Jcoholism An alcoholic awareness seminar will be presented by the Laguna Beach Jaycees at 7:30 p.m. June 18, at the Laguna Beach High SCbool auditorium, 625 Park Ave., Laguna Beach. Speakers include Tony Sovern, mtmber of the Orange County Alcoholic Council executive committee; Muri.cl Zink, chief therapist at South Coast Community Hospital ; Don Magruder, McDonnell Douglas Employe Assistance administra- tor; and an Alcoholics Anonymous speak- er. In addition, a film entitled "Chalk Talk'' on the development of alcoboUsm will be shown. Further infonnaUon about the program is available from Dave Outtenhofer of the Jaycees, 494-9781. Happy Birthday" Donald Dis_ney's Duck Celebrates His 40th Anniversary ANAHEl~I -Don.a.Id Duck joined the over 39 generation Sunday v.1th his 4-0th birthday. but lo millions of his fans, there is no genen1tion gap. Donald, !he animaled duck 1n a sailor outfit , is stlll th<!ir hero. Donald. v.·ho became one of filmlaod '!! most Irascibly charming and durable characters following hi s debut in 1934, has managed to fuss and quack his way through more than a hundred Walt Dhmey cartoon!> and fetiture films. \\'!th his thro.'lty, barely lln•lcrstand· able volcc1 Donald's first appcflr3nce on J ' 11 scene was in a bll part In "Wise Wttle liens," released June 9, 1934. Though his role wa1 mini.scule, moviegoers thought he was the star and began dcm.tndlng more plcturt1. That started a boom which made Donald one of three famous ereatlOnJ of the Disney studios and spalll'l"led the blrth of an entire duck famlly, Including Donald's uncle, Scrooge Mc Duck , Pro(essor Ludwig Von Drake, nephews iluey, Dewer and Louie, Oladst.one GAnder, OrandmJ Duck and COuAln Gus. Donald's first starring role was In • ... "Don Dontld" In lll7, a c.ortoon which Introduced his leading lady, "Daisy." Some 127 tartoons and reatW'f! flhna ronowed. with Donald gtlnlng a reputaUon alon1 with Disney's other faMOUJ charaet.e:n, Mickey ?tiouse and Goory. Donald'• animated career ended ln 19&1 when Wall Dlsney Studios b e I a n concenlrtlling on Uve-1ctlon movies, but the lovable duck still contlnut1 bis escapades Jn eomlc magazines and newspaper comic atrfps. .. DONALD DUCK CEL~BRATES 40TH BIRTHDAY Ol1nty Star Shown With 'Voice' Clarenct Na1h s s .Saddlehaek T oday's F inal EDITION N.Y. S~k8 ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 10, 1974 TEN CENT~ Heroin Frain Mexico to .l!.S. on l!pswinfi WASHlilGTON (AP) -After two years or tfecline, heroin traffic into the Unli.d Slttes ls repori.d on tho upswing, wlth Mexico replacing Europe u the primary IOUl'Ce and conduJt for the nar.cotlc. · Federal drug enforcement officials say the heroin ls being refined from poppy P,lanta grown .in We!tem Mexico, lh<n '!hipped across the border. At the same ilme, ther.e la growing trade in '!""iuana from long-<Stablished OC Medical Group Backs UCI Project Directors of the 1,200-member Orange C.ounty Medical Association have ap- proved a resolution urging "preservation of the UC lrvine • California College of Medicine." The resolution made public today concludes "the departure of UCI-CCM - fro m Orana:e County would represent a significant loss to the county and would not be in the best Interest ol its citizen.. ry." The OCMA board action comes at a lime when negotiations between UCI and the Orange County supervisors are at a critical point. Failure to re a c h agreement be.fore the state budget ls made final at the end of the mooth may mean delay or loss of UC bond monies eannarked. to improve Oranite County Medical Center (CX:MC). Further, additional bond funds to construct a 200-bed campus teaching hospital and a nearby medical sciences lab and Classroom building are being held up pen<Ung agreement on long-term control ol tlie coun ty'• hoopital !or the poor. Withou t the agreement or firm Indication there will soon...-he an agreement. chances are good the state bond money will be spent elsewhere, aources in Sacramento have said. Comity supervisors have said they11 evict the-1JCI-O:M from the county hospital as of July 1, 1975 unless an agreement is reached. CX:MC ii UCI's primary source of patients for doctor training. With rmovation estimated at costing upwards of $9 million, the oo_,pital might be a suitable facility for both teaching and pati~t care. The medical association last year supported use of OCMC as the sole UCI- C0.1 teaching h>spital. But legis1ators had other ideas on how to spend the bond moneys to improve medical education opportunities i n Orange Q>unty. A joint legislative study committee recommended some of the bond funds be spent upgrading OCMC and the rest be spent to build a core campus teaching hospital. • Until the money is spent, however. there is no assurance it need come to Orange County. Aides te Assemblyman Willie Brown (l).San Francisco) recall that there are a number of O,ther locations for a potential new medical school which do not require state spending for costly hospital facilities. Brown's committee on hospital siting studied needs for additional funds to begin post graduate medical education at Dr. Martin Luther King Hospital in Walts. Others on Brown's rommittee arc seeking state money for a medical college at ,Fresno or Msoital funding v.·hich would more directly benefit the (See HOSPITAL, Page I) Orpge Weatller Night and morning low clouds and local fog with baiy mmbine in the afternoon Tuesday. A little cooler days. Highs at the beaches in the upper 60s rsing to the mkS- '10s Inland. Lows mostly in the 505. INSIDE TODAY Go-go guvs perform in sconty nylon bikini briefs before wonw:n-onlt1 audit"nees in a Southern llLinoi.3 tiight 1pot. Chicks ogLe "dudes" wli-0 are paid $10 all hour in thf.s reverse cl1atwi11Um,. Stor11, Pooe 7. "' Ywr krtk• a ... ,.... tt L. M. ..... I C.•llltnlit • c:~ n·• """" .. c: ....... ,,. lt °""' Htlltft t E.illtritl ,.ff I iE111er1a1-• • •1 .. -. 1•11 "--u """ "'....,.. 14 MIU••• 1t ,.,,_,. r.... • ....... " M•lltMI...... 4 °"-c:_,., • .,..,., ""'• ,, '""' 1 .. 1, 1t1tt1 Mtl'tl:.tt t•n Ttlt¥hltll 1lt ,..,.,,_ . Wtlltltr t W.,,..11"1 Mtwt l)oll Wwlll Mtw1 4 80\l'CeS ln Mex1oo, leading to an intensified aatiamuqling campaign along the 1,400-mlle border. But 10me officials acknowledge that efforts by the U.S. government to cope with the illicit acUvlty have been impeded to some extent by bureaucratic wrangling among agew.:ies w1 t'h jurlldi<lion over certain a.t:,}ectS of nar- cotics control. A peripheral Issue in this continuing feud has been tho quantity of drup reaching the United States from foreign source!. The dispute apparently stems in part from friction between the drug enforcement agencies. The Customs Service, which has been concentrating its border drug interdiction efforts chiefly against the Mexican marijuana trade, contends that heroin traffic from that country is negligible. Although heroin remains priority No. ·1 became of the danger It posest customs officials said synthetic drugs are their ' • • °""' ..., ... lttft ,,._ DRIVER RESCUED· BY HUMAN CHAIN OF FIREMEN, POLI CE Car Plunged 100 F"t Owr L1gun•'s Crescent Bay Point Youth Survives Tumble Down Steep Laguna Oiff By JACK CHAPPEIL 01 "" O.lly Pllel stiff A 26-year-old man survived the 100-foot plunge of his car from the sheer cWfs of Laguna Beach's Crescent Bay Point today. , John P. Wagoner, address Wlknown, was released from South C o a g t Community Hospita1 following treatment . for cuts and scratches received in tbe 3:30 a.m. mishap'. Cyclist Cliarged In Cliff. Deat h MEXICAht, Mexiq;> (AP) -f\texican authmities say Ray Hawthorne of Reno, Nev., has been charged with first-degree murder ln the death of a l~year~ld. woman companton who fell to her death from a cliff. Police said Hawthorne, 23, a motorcycle stmt driver and racer, is being held in Mexicali municipal jail for arraignment today in the death of Pamela Stocke. ?ttrs. stocke, a fonner casino employe from Reno, WU killed Tuesday When she fell from an 1,lm-foot cliff near the village of La Rumorosa, striking her' head on a ledge 55 teet belo•, police sakl. Irv i11,e Pair 4tli In Auto Tests University High School seniors Randy DeLapp and Ed Poirier recently placed fourth among 70 teams competing in the 26th annual Qu·y,ler Plymouth Trouble- shooting ccmtest at Fullerton College. Auto ahop instructor Nick Misservllle said Uni High laced oompetltlon from schools ln five 10Uthem California· COWltl .... Stud~ta comple~Titten examJ and were given an hour a half to find and correct. defect.a ln tes auios. • • Laguna Beach Police said Wagoner had been outside the car when it started rolling toward the cliff. Wagoner either attempted to halt the onrushing car with his body or attempted to get in it and apply the brakes just before the vehicle toppled into the ocean below, police said. He apparently was dragged by the car for about 4-0 feet down the cliff before breaking loose. Laguna Beach fll'emen and Police Officer Don Abshier formed a hwnan chain to retrieve the man, in shock and bleeding from a small pr"ojection on the cliff. It i.i; the second time recently that an auto has plunged over the steep cliffs. Previously, a foreign car was driven over the oceanfront cliff in what police believe was an attempted suicide. The vehicle was an object of curiosity today for lidepool explorers w h o examined its smashed and crwnpled frame . Wreckers were to attempt to remove the hulk today. The car has an Arizona I~ plate. Following Wagoner's release from the hospital, police had no further contact with the man. Ir vine Coac li Goes to VCLA UC Irvlnc baseban coach Gary Adams has resigned to take over the re.ins at UCLA . Adams, a UCLA graduate "''ho played for the Bruins baseball team, initiated the b a s e b a 11 program at UC J'rvine and coached the Anteaters to two suceess.tve NCAA co lltge d ivision championships. His mod recent team compiled a 4U record In eapturing the title. See sporu, Page 16, !or dctalb. bJigest worry at the moment. However, the Drug Enforcement Administration, a year-old J u s t i c e Department agency with which Customs has frequently clashed over enforcement policy, says that Mexico bas become the source of as much as 50 pe.rcent of the beroln reaching the United States. This is a dramatic change from the peak years of heroin traffic, 1969-72, when up to 80 percent ol the narcotic reaching U.S. shores crame from or through Europe and ooly about 15 percent from Mexico. Mexican heroin is easily identified by its brown color, as opposed to the more refined' white product from European laboratories. But officials say there is no difference in the potency. John R. Bartels Jr., direetor of the drug agent)'. said in an interview that the brown heroin, once confined almoot entirely to the West Coast, recently has been turning up in Eastern cities as well. }fe said this is one indicator used by his agency to determine the source ol the drug, and "the fat:t that they're not getting very much heroin along the border doesn 't mean it isn't coming in." The heroin situation is assessed by a variety of indicators such as seizures, quality of the drug , street prices, which give some clues to availability, and the number of deaths from overdose. Deprived of 90me of its functkm when (See HEROIN, Page %) Nixon Draws Line Won't Surrender Ehrlichman Data W ~SHINGTON !UP() • -President Nixon today reauerted his clalm to be the sole judg~o{ what evidence should be surrendered in the EUsberg break-in case, despite warnings from a federal judge that he may be risking contempt. Through his chief defense attorney, JameS l>. St. Clair, Nixon told U.S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell that the materials sought by former White House aide John D. Ehrlichman are "properly the subject of executive privilege" and thus lhe President alone can decide whether to surrender them. The action was the second time today Nixon invoked executive privUege in refusing to tum over r ~qu es t e d documents. He previously sent a letter to the House Judiciary Committee saying ffiWDGets $'-1.2 Million Sewage Grunt 'Ibe Irvine Ranch Water District (IRWD) has bem awarded state and federal grants totaling $.f.% million to build a frrst of Jts kind sewage treatment pipeline. &,tale Sen. Dennis E. · Carpenter (R· Newport Beach) and Assemblyman Robert Badham ffi·Newport Beach) ann0ta1ced the grants combination for the $4.8 million Rattlesnake Land Outfall project. The IRWD project Involve s construction of a 9.5-mile pipeline from a locaUoo near UC Irvine and San Diego Creek northeast to Rattlesnake Canyon. The 36-incb single line will be pressurized to carry a mixture of sewage. oxygen, water and activated sludge to the reservoir site. At the pipe's end water treated by the chemical reaction within the pipe Is easily separated from organic wastes which may be used for soil improvement. The Wllque treabnent process was created by the IRWD with hopes the system would save costs of construction of a major downstream s e w a g e treatment plant and a second pipeline to return reclaimed water to a reservoir. Instead of paying for two pipes -one to carry sewage to the plant for treatm·ent and the other to return the water to a point from which ft can be distributed for reuse -IRWD will buy (See GRANT, Page Z) he would not l'Omply with a committee subpoena for 45 \l.'hite House tapes and documents. Gesell has threatened to di smiss the conspiracy i n d i c t m e n t against Ehrlichman if the documen ts were not pl'Qduced for his defense. Last week, Gesell said that Nixon's reluctance to allow Ehrlichman full access to his White House files "borders on obstruction" of justice. Gesell was expected to act either later today or Tuesday on a motion by Ehrlichman's attorney 10 begin Cilntempt proceedings. "Surely . . . what clearly is a valid Jonna! claim of privilege by the President concerning n o t e s of confidential presidential conversations 01llY Piiot Sl11! '"''' N elll Eagle Steve Smith, 15, a member of Irvine Boy Scout Troop 607, has received his Eagle Scout badge in Court of Honor cere- mony. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Dave Smith, 18941 Ra cine Drive, Irvine, he organized and directed fellow scouts in groundskeeping and erosion prevention project at Turtle Rock Elementary School for community service project re- quired to reach Eagle level. caMOt afford a basis for either a charge of contempt of Cilurt or obstruction of justice on the part of the-President, as public media have inerpreted your honor's statements in open court to me.an." St Clair wrote Gesell. The letter y,•as delivered to the court more than three hours after Nixon left for a nine-day trip to the A-fiddle East. Ehrlich111an and four men are sched· uled to (:o "on trial nert lt1onday on charges of conspiring to violate the civil rights of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist by raiding his o[fice Sept 3, 19?1 in search of Ellsberg's record!. And in a third action tOOay invoking executive privilege, Nixon moved to block Watergate prosecutors ·f rom {See CONTEJ\!PT, Page Z) Mesa Girl's Fishing Trip Ends in Rape A SUnday morning fishing expedition to Newport Pier turned into an ordeal of pain and terror for a Cosla Mesa girl, 12, who was kidnaped at gunpoint and raped by her captor. The victim, confronted and abducted in the area of 28th Street and Balboa .Boulevard, was driven to a billy area near Orange where the assault occurred. She was abandoned in the rural area and sought help at a resM!ence where occupants called police to report the kidnap and rape. • Newport Beach Detective · S a m Amburgey said the girl's ordeal began only a few minutes after she and her brothers were dropped off by their mother to go fishing. Daylight was just breaking when the youngsters \li'ere let out of the family car about 5 a.n1 .. and the y.oung girl started toward the r.1cFadden Square area aod Newport Pie.r with her tackle. She did not wait for her brothers and \vent alone while they lagged behlnd, police said . R esults of Saddleback The girl told investigators at that point a man in his early 20s pulled up in a light brown or beige four-wheel d r i v e recreation.al vehicle and o[fered her a rid e. She refused , she said. Investigators were told the kidnaper then brandished a pistol and ordered the frightened girl to get into the vehicle, which then headed inland to the Orange area. Residents Query Bared More than 98 pertent of the Sadd1eback Valley residents who ansYr-ered a recent survey agree that a desirable goal of land planning in the community is to maintain the present mix of rural areas and developed areas interspersed with open space. About 500 replies, or five percent ol the 8,000 surveys sent. y,·ere returned to the UC Irvine Extension office. UCI and the Sa.ddleback Area Coo r d i n a t i n g Council iSACC) co-sponsored the study. Though the percentage of response was not Is great as the survey team had hoped. for, Extension coordinator Ada 1'-1ae Hardeman said the respon.~s re- ceived are still helpful and will be used to complement the final version of a policy plan for development ot the Sad- dlflwlck area . The question drawtng the greatest range of opinion asked respondent.s' attl{Ulks about maintaining a ba1a.ntt of housi)jg types -mixing multl·famlly dwellings , such as &partments, along with single-famlly detached houses. 'Mtirt)'·five percent sakl tbey cl.iugreed with such a housing balanct, preferring all 1ingl<Mamily types ol development, • •• --· while 63 percent agreed with policies· encouraging a mix of housing types. Offering . houses for a mixture of (See SURVEY, Page Z) The victim described her a~ilant as being about five feet, nine inches tall, of medium build. with shoulder leng1h light brown hair and wearing faded denim pants and a dark blue jacket. Going Too Far~ Bur1i This ~1efto Before Readhig WASHINGTON (UPI) -The White House penchant for secrecy once went a little too rar, according to the Senate Watergate com· mittee staff report on efforts to politicize the executive branch. One memo, said the report, was headed: "Burn Before Read· . " ing. • 'Al " b Fr d · Scribbled in the margin was the word ' ways. y e enc V Malek a \Vhite House aide to whom the memo was addressed. · P..1ale'k named· by the staff as the chief architect of the re--sponslvene~s program ," said in his basic. ~emo in 1972 th~t 1'writteo communications would be kept to a m1rumum -to avoid adverse publicity." I l ' - 2 DAILY PILOT IS Mond.tJ, J11nt 10. 1974 Happy Birthday~ Donald Disney's Duck Celebrates His 40tli Anniversary . ~NAHEI~1 -Donald Duck Joilll'<i the a scene \VIS Jn a bH part in "Wise UtUe "~ Dona1d'1 1n 1J, 1 ~ ~blch over 39 generation Sunday "'ith his 401h Hens," releasro June 9, 1934. introduced his leadlng lady, \Daisy." birthday, but to mlllions of his fans. Though his role was mlnlscule, Some 127 cartoons and !O.ture flhm tl~re Is no gen~ration .gap. ~nal.d, t~e moviegoers thc!ught he \\'~S the star and followed with Donald goinlng a anunated dut'k 1n a sailor outfit, 1s still began dcn1and1ng n1ore pi ctures. ' 1 1 h Di Jh their hero. That started a boom "'hich made reputatJon 8 ong w I sney's o er Dooald., who became one o( !Umland's Dona.Id one of th ree famous creations of famous characters, f!Uckey Mouse m:I most irascibly charming and durable the Dlsnev studios and spa wned the birth Goofy, characters following his debut in 1934, or an eiltire duck familv, Including Donald's animated career ended in tMl ha.s managed to fuss and quack his \\'<lY Donald's uncle. Scrooge ·Mc Duck , when \Vall Disney Studios b egan through more than a hundred \\'All Professor Ludwig \1on Drake, nephews concentrating on Jive-action movies but Disney csrtoons and feature filnls. Huey, Dewey and Louie, Gladstone the lovable duck ltUl contlnue1' hit \Vith his throaty, barely understand· lland<'r. 9ra~dma Duck and Cousin Gus. escapades in comic mqazlnet and able voice, Donald 's first appcar&n ce on Donalds flr~t starring role was In newspaper comic strips. Lagu11a Officer's Small Cafe Hit By Firehomher A small cafe 01111ed by a Laguna Beach police detecti ve and hi s v.i fe \.ras firctiombed Saturday and an estimated. $5.500 damage done tt'l the business. Det. Alex Jimenez said tl'(l.ay tie d!d not know if the attack wa!! in retribution for his poli ce v.·ork. or '•if somebody 1,vas ju.st looking for son1ething to torch." . Laguna Beach Fire !\tarshal Jim Presson said he and po\iee off icials \.l"ould be investigating the i:nauer. . Authorities are looking for a man in hls earlv :?lrs voi1h long blond ha ir Yiho v.·as seeri nmning from the scene of the bombing at about 2 a.m. Saturday. Presson said damage to the Penguin Cafe. 981 S. Coast Hlgh•.ay, consisted mostly of smoke, v.·ater and soot dam· age . He said furt~r investigation of the scene is needed before authorities v.ill be able to !ell hether a brick or oome other object v.·as used to fir.it smash ~he \Vindov.· in the front of the cafe so the fire bomb could be tossed in, or whether the firebomb v.·as thrown through the window. Police and PreS!!On !terned to agree that a "~1olotov Cocktail" a bottle filled with gasoline , was used in the torching Of the cafe. DONALD DUCK CELEBRATES 40TH BIRTHDAY Disney Sti r Shown With 'Voice' Cl1rence N11h F r o m Pagel SU RVE Y ... income levels proved another rontrovef'!ial point, according to Mrs. Hardeman . Students Finisli H ealtli Prog rani Jn, Coast Project A total of 175 atudents received . UCI Stude11t ' . To Teacher Ratio Drop s Tcachlpg loads of UC Irvloe facul ty v.•ill be less burdensome next year than Jhey have been ll1nce UC blldgela b<gun b<lng cut. Dr. Hazurd Adams, vice chancellor for academic attain, told faculty recently a total of 6f new faculty Polltions are included In the 1974-71 budget. That means UCl's student to faculty ratio will drop to· 18.S to 1. That 11 a ••significant drop rrom the 'JJJ.1 stl.identl for each faculty member emplO)'ed dwing the currtnt year. Partially because UCI ta one of the newest UC campuses and ha1 enjoyed a popularity· with atudenta not marehed by budgeJary larges,., the rtud<nl·f•culty . ratio has been am oog the highest ln the nine-campus system. Next year, Adams aald that will change. The year alter, wwnlng 14 temporary and eight additional faculty positions remain nl the 1975-78 budget, the ratio will drop even more to 18 to l. 1. Another budget bonus for faculty 11 addltioo of 25 run time graduate assistantship positions meaning SO or more graduate students may b e employed part tlme. With a total of 131 such full Ume positions In the budget, UCl's teachJng assistants to students ratlo will drop from one for each 60 students to one for each 51. By comparlJon here Is one teachinjf 8.Slistanl !or every 40 students enrolled al UCLA, Adam1 said. "U we had UCLA'• ratio, we wouldn't be nJding our (academic supplies) au~ port budget lo the tune ol •:·i,ooo each rear and we could run programs ol similar quality,1o Adams contended. OveraU, wUess legillators or Governor R,.gan drartlcally cut the UC blldget., UCI expects a total campus operating budget ol '38,W,751 lor nest year. Adams oak! the '3 million ina'ea!e over th.ii year'• spending allocaUom: ;nc1uc1es a '500.000 Increase In the !Judie! for 1Upplles and IUV!cet which aupport the teedllng role ol the unlvenlly. Jimenez said he bad driven past the cafe about a half hour before the Incident and all appeared to be nonnal. He said he couldn't think of anyone v.'l"IO mi ght be Involved or wan ted tt'l get back at him for hls police work, but the nature of the business is sucb that a lot of enemies can be made. Thirty percent of those surveyed disal{fetd that residential development should include a balance of Income levels. Sixty-seven percent agreed with that goal. The questionnaire v.·as based on a policy plan for the Saddleback area adopted by Jhe Orange ·eoun1y Planning Commlnion as a guide tor future development. certificates of completion recently for thei r participation in seven health ~ training courses of the Co a s t 1 i n e It hae been ahortagea ol the llO<l!led "1upport budgeia" which have been moat severely pinched ln recent years, along with a scarcity ot new flCUJty positions From Page l HEROIN ..• The plan, calling for strict architectural design, landscaping and sign controls, was developed by a 32-- member study team oonducted jointly by . the UCI extension and the coordinating cOtl!lcll. the drug agency was created in President According to Ward T h o m p s o n , Nixon's general overhaul of drug president of the eotmell, the enforcement system!! a yea r ago, the questlonnalre respon!le!! i n d I ca t e Customs Service has since concentrated generally broad sup?>rt !or the policies most of its efforts in the Interdiction of of the plan. marijuana from Mexico. More than 90 percent agree t.hat 'Ibis ha s paid off in a near doubling of development should be Hmlted, or In the number of individual marijuana some cases prohibited in areas with .seizures in 10 months. customs agents spetjal ecological values. seized more than 85 tons of marijuana Nihtty percent agreed that ma jor between Cktober and March and 25 tons watel't'OUrses such as Aliso Creek should in the March-April period alone when the receive special attention to maximize Mex ican harvest was In full swing. open space and recreation potentials and official reports show . that agriculture shou1d remain a In the same period , there · were 8.33 permanent land use in the Saddlebe.ck pounds of heroin seized by Customs area . agents at all U.S. borders. of which 5 83 RC<.'Ommendations to discourage tax pounds ca me from Mt!xico. asses!lment Policies which. increase Because or its sheer bulk, marijuana development preS!!ures on vacant land must be smuggled across In trucks. cars, receiv ed the endorsetnenl of 80 percent airplanes or on foot or horseback in ----orttie respondents. isolated areas along the border. 1'he "We are gratified !hat. nearly two. sma ller and more easily concealed third8 of those responding to date have packages of heroin. however. normally agreed totally with the recommendations are brought through a regular port of of the study team,'' Thompson said. entry. A final report on the policy plan, Partly responsible for the shift to including the reaponscs of the 1urvey, Mexico as a major heroin source. has \viii be produced within a month , he said. been the succeS!! of federal authorities in brea king up estab lished connections that brought it in from Europe, the ri.1iddle E..ist and Asia, officials say. Under cooperative agreements the Drug Enforcemen t Administration has agents of it!! own in about 4{l countri es and those stationed in P..texlco rrequC'ntly accompany police and troops on fora ys Into the rugged mountains where the heroin and marijuana are produced. OllAMGI COAST " F ro11t Page l HOSPITAL ... medically Indigent. The action by the OCJ\1A In support of UCI.CC~1 is significant because it suggests an end of the fragmentation of medical interests w.bich was evldeilt in hearings before Bro'!vn's committee last year. . Regional Oc:cupatlonal Program (CROP). The students have completed either one or two semesters in on-the-}ob training at five area hospitals. They came from five school districts which cooperate in the CROP program: Hyntington Beach Union HI1h School, Irvine, Newport-Mesa, Saddlebeck Valley and Tu!!tin Unified. CerUficates were pretented by the five instructors of the allied health program : Victoria Bolander. Marlene Overbeck, Nan Hannon, Wilma Fogarty and Lillian Runge. The evening irogram, at the Tale of the Whale Restaurant In Newport Beach, was planned by the studtnts who presented a series of sklta related to their courses. CROP student Mike Abbott was the master of ceremonies. In Its thin! year, the CROP allied health program conal1tl of six weekJ in the classroom followed by a tenn on various hospital wards. ·' The hospital phase Involves four da~ a ''week on Ule v.·ards and one day in the classroom. Each student la rotated from one unlt to another within thelr hoapital. Each student spends three hours a day in the program, which Is incorporated into the student's regular elass schedule. Fifty percent of this year's graduates have obtained jobs as a rC!ult of their training, CROP spokesmen said. Participating hospitals Include Hoag, ltuntington lnt ercommunlty, Mission Comminlty, Tustin COmmunity, and Costa fl.1esa Memorial. Some 500 students, parents: •. holpltal and scOOol adminis trators attended the banquet. The occupation program of(ers 13 other courses in other fields. !\.fore information may be obtained by callini Carol Speaker at 847·2634 or the CR.OP office 1t 979-1955. DAILY PILOT Brown ai des observed Orange County appeared to be so divided on !he issues of t to meet increa&Jna: enrollmtnt.1. Hospital Board For Saddleback Taps Directors Four new directors were elected rectnUy lo the 5addleblck Community HooplW boanl ol dlreelors. They m Randall Boyd, lrvlne J. Duhn, John Sickenberger and John Tattam. They replace retiring directon V.P. "Baker, Ray Denham, Arthur .Gruse and G. Richard Winder. Boyd , an attorney, lives in Laguna Hills Leisure World where he retired after 49 yean wtlh Security Flrs:t National Bank in Los Angeles. He Is a former director o( the Golden Rain Foundation to which all ~isurc World resident• belong. J>uhn, of El Toro, ta president of MacDougall Mortuaries, Inc. and 8eneral manager of fi.tacDougall F a m i 1 y Mortuary tn S&ota Ana. He has been actlve in community activities including El Toro Little ~ague and the Seddle- back Kiwanis Club. Sickenberger, an account.Ant, retired from the U.S. Electrical Motor!, Inc., In 1966 and moved to Leisure World . iie ls director and past pre!ldent of ~tldnlght Mlssi.on of U>s Angeles and chainnan of the, flnanoo committee of the Mason.le Grartd Lodge of California. He has been active in the Golden Rain Foundation and was prewldent of the Second Laguna Hills Mutual in 1970-71. The fourth new member, Tattam, \1 a native o! Australia and Jives ln ~"111ton Viejo" Alter servlng In the Royal Au.strallan Air Force during World War ll, Tattam joined a trucking finn and helped develop It lnlo the largest In Australia. f ... 0..llV9 CclOI 0..tv Pio(!! '"''~"""""' 11 etl'll" to""" 1 ... N-..-"""''"'-t1Y ,,.. Ot1"111\ eo.11 .....,..11, .. "I ~ 8-.i• .... 1- .,. ,...,-. '-lol'llar 1~ Fnder, kif CO.I• ... -. N~ Ii.IC!\ """''"""" 91~­ I"'" \101~. l<OO'J'lll .... "'"'""'-• •1111 SP> °""""19/&en ~ Cll>otlfl"'l A ""Oi• ~(>Ill! ..,,,., • ·-141d s.i-... ,,.. "'"' 4JYI T"" 0<'1"1:'1ltl fl\ol!lo\1'1.,,Q l!'l r.I ~ 11 >XI WIV 611 Sl1eel. Coll• "'"""' °'"""""' '1?61& med;cal core !or the poor. the costs ol Iron St...,n .. .nfa me dical education a nd the v• ..._. \ Mission Viejo Hot Chili responsibilities for provid ing both that it v.•as likely the committee might be convinced to spend the money elsewhere. The OCMA directors point out the association supported the mov" of C0.1 tt'l the Irvine campus Jn 1968. ' ' Jo1JP..(..,i~ \'!Ot ..... ~at'<llr....11~~ riv.o.Kt~ ·-· Thoma. ~ Mu-ri!-rOJ ....._ .. ~~Ct Off!"' C.0.11 "!...,.:!JO Wt>.i &Ir S1- "5t"1W! h i.Cf' »» ~"fltll'I lo\lt•.ttd ~Kll~l ll4WI '11, ............... -1n,,ie<"1 ~Itel' • rt!lf~hec~ ~.,~ ~Cl9!119"!t ~~llC1111oM1'ffl , ... ~-17141642·4)21 Cle•tlf1tt1Ad•trlfMlt642·1671 S... CIMltflh Al Ot,.-l+Mnlk TtltpNN 4fl·44to C«; .... tM. 1114 °""" ~ l'lj~ Cllof>. Pon / No"ll"" 'tot-."'""'"'-"ll•CtJ.i,..""' f1' ., ....... ml! .... ,..,...,,, ..... , Do ""'°'°"- W'ltNA1!111KoM_,,......,..,~,,,,- ~t .. •11!1'11110fPo~••Cnil•,,.... ('.t!,ir.. ..... !NllllC.f411>0~ tiyCMt.., 1)00 """"""''• oy ...i• 14 00 IPO'l1111r.~~~.., °"'""'"""' 1·1·oir-ft1, • F rotn P agel GRANT ... the single large main. The use or lhc "pressure pipe treatment" process and a comparatively JUgh aJUtude "land outfall" reservoir is an alttmatlve to ocean dumping of treated v.'astes. Th' state share or the Rattlesnake Land Outfsll grantl Is 12.5 percent or S603 .750. The lcder•I arant amounts to S3.t22.500 leaving another $603,750 to be paid by IRWD. Russ ia Signs Pact LIS DON I UPI ) -PorJua•I Ind the Soviet Uni(Jn established diplomatic rt.>lations effe ctive immediately Sunday and agreed to exchange ambassador•. bolh govcmmen ls said in a joint commun lriu(' 1tleased slm11lh1neously In Lisbon and ~fOS<.'Ow. I. Maratho~ Set Saturday 'Mlere's a 11earch going on in ?tllasion Viejo for people who rate blah on thei Natlorutl Jnte!tln11 t Fortitude rhdex. 8C<Onllng lO) M1as1on Vl•Jo ()impony offlc1111. An Iron 8tomt1.ch 11 11 prerequisite for a ~hlll-eatlng contest scheduled Saturday at tilt ~fission Vle:jo Equestrian Center. The chill manithon Is one of many f'vents of the ~farlboro Chuckwegon and \Vestem Extubit, n flvt-tralltr caravan which visits ?\1lelon Viejo onct a year for an old-West ctlebratlon. ProspecUve chili e&ten m1y bej!n slrntng yp al noon for lhe e""'1t, which will b< held lrom 1 :30 Jo l :!O p.m. A m Mvings bond 1oes to the winner. Anyme over 18 may enter, Company 1pokeemen 811d. The caravnn reature1 a complC!UJ kiichcn-on·whcels, one of tv.'O gmulne chockwagons still In use ln the United State!i. Range cook Elmer "Teddy" Beer, 57, wtll dcmon !itrale century~\d recipes lnelud!ng Son ol 1 Gun Stew, Sounlough Blscuita, and Sunday Cobbler, In addition, the MArlboro caravan lncludet a cowboy musewn w i t h palnllna:s and tcUlpture from the Buffa lo Bill Hlstor1col C.nter in Cody, Wyo. The exhibit features \\'Orks such as Chartet M. Russell's "The LAtl of the 5,000" Olaf Wleahont's 11Mountain Com>I," and Fr<drle Remlnl,100 '• bronze, 1'Coming Through ~ Rye. ' Relles of Or•nge C01m1y hlstorr wt ll be on display as well from tbe Bowers M\l.Mum in sani. An•. In keeping wtth the "wlld west" navor ol Jhe doy, the tlllf of the equeotrlon cente r has schtduled a d11y of old· fuhioned county fair ccunpcilllion and skill evcnta on horseback • The e\'eTJt.s begin al 11 a.m. and admisskm i5 free. spoktsmtn said. f 'Not My Frog' Joey Koza's Crag ls special to bJm , and he's not anxious to donate his pet to the University of Michigan for research. Scientists at the uni- versity are hoping to obtain the rare albino frog to observe Its bodily (unctions through the transparent skin. Nixon Refuses to Give Tapes to Panel-Again WASHINGTON !UPI) -Pn!sldent Nixon refused egain today to comply with a House Judiciary Committee •ubpoena for 45 White House tapes and documents, saying there would be no end to the lmpe1clunent panel's request "unless a line were drawn somewhere." Ht added: "Since lt ll clear the committee win not draw such a line, 1 have done so.'' The President's rtsponse to the subpoena, lllUed May 30 on a 37·1 vote by the committee, had b<en expected In view of Nixon's statement May 22 -In turning down an earlier subpoalA -that he would · not comply with any further demand1. Nl100'1 reply, 1n a Jetter to Judiciary NIXON LEAVES ON MIDEAST PEACI JOURNEY, P1ge 4 Chairman Peler W. Rodino Jr .. ID-N.J .J, was made known at the Whlte House shortly after the President departed on hll Middle Eaat trip Ind just after the 7 a.m. POT deadline set by the committee for surrender of the materlal1. Nixon said lf he yielded to the committee demands, It would simply lead to further requesta tor tape!!. "Once embarked on a proccu of continually demanding additional tapes \\'henever thooe the committee already has failed to tum up evidence of guilt, there would be no end unle!ls a line were drawn somewhere by someone," Nixon said. The subpoena was tr oommittee·s fourth and it was issued along with a letter in which committee members warned Nixon that his refusal to comply ·with their request was "a grave matter" and that they would fee l free to draw "adverse inferences" as well as ulti· mately recommend his Impeachment as a result. '111.e subpoena reque!!1.ed materials covering the period from Nov. IS, 1972 to June 4, 1973. In his leller to Rodino. Nlxon maiutalned the committee would be wrong to draw any lnferences from his actions and he was merely exercising his proper powers by claiming excecutlve privilege in refusing to tum over subpoenaed ma terials. "From the st.art of these proceedings, I have tried to cooperate as far as I FromPqel CONTEMPT. • • obtaining ~ portion of a Sept. 15. 1972 tape deallng with alleged White House attempta to use the Internal Revet1ue Service for po11tlcal purposea. Ni xon told U.S. District Judge John J. Slr1ca th.11t he believes the cot1vertatlot1 Is cove red by executive privilege and thus should not be submitted to a grand jury that lJ lnveatigating the allegatlOM~ Library Sla tes Story Prog ram The h-1isslon Viejo branch of the OrAnge Cout1ty Library has opened regi stration for the summer story hour program due to begin June 19 and continue each Wednesday through the $rummer. 1 Children 4 and older are cll&ible or the summer program, and regl.ltrationt must be made ln perM>n. Eich atory will be rtad twice, at 10 :30 a.m. and J:SO p,m, each Wt!dl'ltsd1y. A 1ummer reading program, on the thtme "Tlme!rrelt." begins June 17 with a balloon launching. Children are· atked 10 brlna their own balloon with the library fumishlng the helium. Th• child wnosc balloon travtls farthest will win I.I prize at the "End of the Trek" par1y Aug. 30. reasonably could In order to avert a constitutional confrontation,'' Nixon said. "But t am detennlned to do nothing wh ich, by the precedence it set. would render U1e executive branch henceforth and forever more subserlient to the legislatl\•e branch, and would thereby destroy the con!tltutlonal balance," Nixon said. The Preaident previously refused to tum over 42 tapes subpaenaed by the committee. Instead, he made public on April 30 voluminous White House transcripts of Watergate converaatlons of 32 of the ts.pea. Offlclala said tapes either did not exJst for the other conversations !lubpoenaed or were not available. The bulk of the committee's subpoena dealt with r~rding or conversaUons' between Nixon and Conner aide• H. R. Haldeman, John D. Ebrllchman, Charles W. C.Olson, J ohn W. Dean III and Gorden Slrachan. Molt of the tapes and otber material involved also are sought by special Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworlkl, who successfully argued f<.: a U.S. Supreme Court review of the President's policy in re!!lsting subpoenas. Irvine Ma11 Gets 30 Da ys For ~Kickback' An Irvine man who pleaded no conte!t to charges that he accepted klcltbackl from firms anxious tO obtain oontr1cts wit h his employer has been sentenced to 120 days in Orange County Jail Superior Court Judg e James Turner ordered the jall term tor former Volt Rubber Company traffic manager Jame• Campbell 56, of 4281 E1cudero Drive, and further oJldered the defendant to make restitution not exceeding $200,000. McQuaid, Volt's traffic manager for four years. waa arrested last October after a checlt of the firm's records revealed his acceptance of a number of illegal payments. ... _ In vesligatt'lrs said most of the $200,000 in kickbacks came from northern Callromla firms anxious to participate In Volt substantlnl freighting buslne:ss. Anah eim Youth Kill ed in Desert From Wire Services A yout from Anaheim was killed Sun- day on Superior Dry Lake north of Barstow, when his three·wheeled land saller vehicle overturned, (,1Jtford A. Young. 17, wus hurlt!d from the ·1petdlng rig v.'bcn a gust of wind Urted It momentarily, the1 it fell ewer onto him. Investigators said. San Bernardino CoUJ1ty coroner's Of. rice spokesman 11ald today Young's body was taken to fl Barstow m<1-tu1ry where an au tt'lpsy was scheduled. The victim was on a de1crt outing with hi!; family and a group of frltnds when the land-salllng accident occurred. Bake Sale Schedul ed By Hospital Auxiliary A bake sale to help raise money tor the scholarship tund of the M I 1 1 I o n Com1nunity Hospital auxiliary 111 &et for IO a.m. to 4 p.m. Tue1d1y and Wedne,.d:iy in lhe hospital lobby. Thi! year's schol•rshlp fund provide~ $S.$00 In financial aid to high school s!udMll planning careers In medicine. • I I 1 I ' Huntington Bea~h Fountain ·Valley VOL. 67, NO. 161, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES -# ORANGE COUNTY', CALIFORNIA MONDAY , JUNE 10, 1974 Today's Flaal N.Y. Steeb TEN CENTS Defeated Tax Override May Get Bae}{ on Ballot By TERRY COVILLE ot tN Dfll't' ,lltf llett There is a strong chance trustees of the Huntington Beach Union High School District will put their defeated tai: override Wue back on the ballot in November. Glen Dysinger , a11si1tant superintendent for plaming a n d management, says if they don't, the district will have to wait two years before it can try again. In Tuesday's election, the voters ttU'oed down a 17.8-cent tax increase 31.261 (SU per<enll to 26,536. The $11.S million it would have raised was intended for a new high achool campus in central Huntingtoo Beach. A tax override requires only a simple voter majority for approval, but under state law, IChool districts can only place it on a primary or national ballot when it is meant to finance school construction. • Without a tu override, the district must seek approval for a bond issue which requires tw(;third! voter support. Dysinger said the key factor which may determine the district's outlook toward a repeat effort on the November ballot is whether that ballot wUI also carry the question of school unificaUon. He feels the controversial unification issue -which now has the six local districts involved split in their positions -seriously hurt the tax override. The state Board of Education will Teachers 01( Contract Ocean f 'iew Ratifies; Others Still Haggling By KATIIY CLANCY Of Jiit D•lly ,li.t :ll1!1 Teachers in Huntington Beach's Ocean View School District have ratified a new contract and negotiations continued tod•Y in the Huntington Be•cb City and Fountain Valley School Districts. All of the 325 teachers attending a Friday meeting voted for ratification, a spokesman for Ocean View teachers said today. The oew contract gives tbe district's 568 teachers an eight percent ~ fucrease, extra pay for after·school sports. There aJso will be • stucly ol class Parents' Suit Over Plavan s~hool Looms Parents of 91 children in the Westmont 7 housing development have threatened to file suit Tuesday against the Fountain Valley Board of Trustees to keep their children attending Plavan School. Trustees in March voted 3 to 2 to move children from the subdivision into Nieblas School to relieve overcrowding at Plavan, a year·around school serving handicapped a n d non·handicapped children. Trustees Fred Voss and Karen Ackley opposed the decision. In their petition, parents contend the board could have taken children from other tracts instead. They claim the move will fo rce their children to cross busy Bushard Street, that it is unfair because they were tbe first to attend the school and because their homes are directly behind the school. Named as plaintiff In the petition, which was presented to Fountain Valley trustees Thursday, was Kit Wright, 9708 Mariposa Ave., acting as guardian for ber son, Robert James, a Plavan student. In the suit, which parents will file Tuesday in Orange County Superior Court, parents ask that the decisions to remove Westmont 7 students from Plavan be reviewed and that the (5« PLAVAN, Page!) Oraage Weather Night and morning low clouds and local fog with hazy sunshine in the arternoon Tuesday. A little cooler days. Highs at the beaches In the upper 60s rsing to the mkl· 70s inland. Lows mostly in fhe 50s. INSWE TODAY Go-go guys perform tn •canty n11lon btkini brief• before women-onl11 audieneea in a Southtm ntinoil tllght !pot. Chicks OQlt "dude•" who are paid $10 an hour in Otl.s reverse chauvinism. St0'1/, Paoe 7. Al Y-ltrvlu J IHll!lf II L. M ... .,,. f c1u._.. t Clltllfl.. U•11 ""'"' .. c,..,....,.. '' °""' ... llctt ' t:.i...,.. ,_ ' •llfff11f-' • ~·~ 1•11 --" ... u....n. 14 M1llM1r It ~1 Tow ,. .. _ " ....... 1 ~ • 0r...,. c .. ""' • 1'11'1• f'tftef" ,, '""' , .. ,, Sttdl Meni.ett 1•11 T~tM• • ""'"" . ···~ . ~· ,., .. 1)-11 WW1111 '""' • ' size under the agreement reached early Thursday. In Fountain Valley, negotiations were to reopen today after a month·long impasse declared by the board ot trustees. Teachers will meet Wednesda y afternoon to review the progress of those talks and discuss a possible strike before the close or school Friday. Fountain Valley teachers have asked for a 13 percent pay raise, smaller classes, improved benefits and a greater voice ·tn ·curriculum devek>pment. The school district bas offered DO raise other than lhe· au..,..., 4.t percent Irvine Cooch Goes to UCLA UC Irvine baseball coad;l Gary Adams bas resigned to take over the reins at UCLA. Adams, a UCLA graduate who_ played for the Bruins baseball team, initiated the b a s e b a 11 program at UC Irvine and coached the Anteaters to two SUCCi!SSiVe NCA A college d ivision championships. His ~t recent team compiled a 44-8 record in capturing the title. See sports, Page 16, for details. Prices of Food Take First Drop Since October WASHINGTON (AP) - A dip in retail food prices in April meant a family of four saved 30 cents a week during the month if it scrimped on meat and served lo'o\"-er-COSt items, a c c o r d i n g to government figures released today. The Agriculture Department said a low"<.'Osl menu for a four·member family, including two llchool children. -143.40 per week in April , down 0.7 percent)rom $43.70 ln March. But it was up J8 percent or $6.70 per week from April 1973. Officials said it was the first decline in the family rood indicator since October. More affluent families, as the monthJy series has shown in the past. enjoyed a slightly better break relatively with rood budgets. A moderate-cost menu tbat cost $55.10 (See PWCES, Page 2) • average raise teachers will receive for completing an additional year of service. Huntington Beach City teachers were meeting late this afternoon to discuss whether to continue picketing or what other action to take in protest to stalls in conll"act talks. A negotiating session was set for 7 p.m. A spokesman for the teachers said a strike might be possible but "would be highly improbable." Huntington Beach City teachers want a pay raise equal to the cost of living, while the district bas offered three plans giv ing raises ors.~ to eight percent with vuyto& frinae· -tt. Nixon Refuses To Recognire Tape Subpoena WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon refused again today to comply with a House Judiciary Committee subpoena for 45 White House tapes and documents, saying there would be no end to the impeachment panel's request .,unless a line were drawn somewhere." He added : "Since it is clear the committee will not draw such a line, I have done so." The President's response to the subpoena, issued l\fay 30 oo a 37·1 vote NIXON LEAVES ON MIDEAST PEACE JOURNEY, P•ge 4 by the committee, had been expected in view of Nixorl.'s statement May Z2 -in turning doYIR an earlier subpocna -that he would not comply with any further demands. Nixon's reply, in a letter to Judiciary Chainnan Peter W. Rodino Jr .• (0.N.J.), W'8.!J made knovm at the White House shortly after the President departed on his Middle East trip and just after the 7 a.m. PDT deadline set by the committee for surrender of the materials. Nixon said if he yielded lo the committee demands, it would simply lead to further requests for tapes. "~ embarked on a process or continually demanding additional tapes whenever t~ the committee already has failed to tum up evidence of guilt, there would be no eod unless a line were (See REFUSE.S, Page %) Driver Dragged by Car . In lluntington Hit-run A Wllminglon man suffered cu!S, bruises and a "bad blt.t: on the sbQulder" Sut\day when he was dragged 200 yards by a car involved In a hit·and·run colli3ion. Huntington Beach police said Einar Lnr.ion, S7, was trying to exchange information with the driver of anothtr car alter thclr vehicles were ln\'olved In a minor accident at I: 1$ p.m. at Pacific coast lllghway ond tllh Strctl Pollet said liaNon followtd the other car, a 1961 Cadlll11<, tq 710 lllh SI.. and be was trying to set Identification from the driver when the driver toolc off .. quickly dragging Larson aloog. Lar!IOO held on to the open car door. seat and roof, police sakl, while the driver kicked , bit and hit him. After going 200 yards, police said, Larson managed to shift the gear into neutral , and a woman and baby passenger in the car fled. Larson was knocked from the ca r, polk:e said. The' Gadlllac wes found abandoned a ftw hou rs later near PtfcFadden Avtnue and Golden West Street, police re ported. Lal'"IQll was treatc:d at Pacifica llMpltal and released. police said. decide during its July IG-11 meeting if unification will be placed before the voters in November. If that happens, Dysinger believes another tax override would probably be defeated. High scbool trustees could make their decision as late as Aug. 9. "81 · win, lose or draw, in September we open with more than 19,000 studenu," he adds, pointing out that the ta.~ override can't solve the immediate overcrowded cam· pus situation in any case·. an The district txpects to have nearly 20,000 students enroll l'M:xl fall at five campuses originally built to house ahoul 15,000. \\'ill there be any dramatic solutions such as Immediate douhle sessions or a full all year school plan? Dysinger says no. "There won't be any single, dramatic result. Over the years Yte have decided not to use the dramatic single panacea . We will expand all of our alternatives. I( o.il, "11111 Sl1H f',_ID STUDENTS BUILD BIKE TRAIL IN HUNTINGTON. BEACH With a Lot of Coopera tion, a Trail Becomes a Bridge Helping Ha11d Mesans Support Bike Trail An industrtat arts class from Costa Mesa's Estancia High has g Ive n Huntington Beach a helping hand. building a bicyc le trail linking _LeBard Park with the Santa Ana River. The trail covers 190 feet with a mixture of recycled pla stic bottles and standard cement. It will help young bicyclists reach the river trail across a bare patch of ground that was of1en a mud puddle. About 20 Estancia youn gsters have actually spent the past four months v.'orking on plaas and actual development of the trail, accord ing to Bob Schureman, an instructor in plastics technology. "We used this as a demonstration of another way to use scrap material," says Schureman. "But It also became a very educational experiment in cement and engineering." A drafting student was borrowed from another class to design the lrail. Two math majors surveyed the field and an English major wrot e the project proposal for submi!Sion to county engineers. Rauch Fire Spreads SOLEDAD <UPI) -A fire that started as a ranch control bum ea.st oi here spread to more than 3,200 aicres today, edging furthtt Into the ruged Pinnacles NaUon& Monument. The o r i g In a I 1,m.acre ranck burn broke from Its boundaries 10 mJle! e1st of here SUnday when high winda fanned !he arta. • ' . The trail became a community effort, v.•it h the students from L e B a r d Elementary School and Edison High in Huntington Beach collecting plastic bottles for recycling. Schure.man says more than 11 ,000 bottles (1.000 pounds ) were collected and ground in to small bits for use as a base to the trail, under the cement layer. The Huntington Beach Environmental Council chipped in $500 and the ?>.1eredith Gardens Homeowners Association added $300 to help pay lhe cost of materials and some necessary labor. A private contractor, Kordick and Son, graded the trail area and moved in some dirt fill at a sharply red ue«I cost. Margaret Carlberg, who coordinated the project for the citf's environmental council and · for t.fie Santa Ana River Greenbelt Committee, said help was also rea.ived from the Huntington Beach publle works department, lhe Orange County flood Control District, the city Recreation Department, the county Sanitation District and So uth e.,r n California Ed ison. "- The trail crosses tht: jurisdiction of several agencies, making It perhaps orie of the widest joint ventures for Its small site. The Iota! cost was under $800, for a job Schu rem11.n estimates could have cost ~.ooo. "One of the th ings our society lacks Is peaple giving themselves for others:· said Schurcman, noting all the cooperation among 1gcncies, and the volunteer effort put out by his O\l'O studenui:. -• turns out that many solutions a re excellent for some students, but the \'.'Orst possible thing for others." One proposal, mentioned riefiy by District Superin tendent Jack Roper and Trustee Ralph Bauer, could cause .shock waves if adopted. It involves shifting the district's S.000 freShmen back : the local elementary school!. \Vh.ile such a move would have a· tremendous, immediate impact on the (Su OVERRIDE, Page %) ' Intensive Search Set For Pair A Huntington Beach man and a friend were believed lost at sea today and are the object of an intensive U.S. Coast Guard search. John Sheehy, 47, of 8191 Kenington Drive and Dennl'§ Kaiser of-3Santa Ana were reported missing on bo8.rd Sheehy's 34·foot converted Navy launch late Sunday night. Sheehy's wife told authorities, "the men are always home for dinner." She said she wasn't even aware they were going out on the boat tmtil she received a call late Sunday from Mrs. Kaiser. Mrs. Sheehy said her husband had just installed new fuel tanks on the unnamed boat and apparently went to sea to test them. The obviously shaken Mrs. Sheehy said she is afraid "lhey just might be out there and not getting any fuel." She said she reported them missing after calling friends to ~k the mooring which is located off Lido Isle. Crowds on Beach ReClch 100,,000 For Huntington \Varm temperatures and clear skies brought more than 100,000 persons to the sho res of Huntington Beach over the weekend . Lifeguards at Huntington State Beach estimated 30,000 on the beach Sunday and 20,000 Saturda y. They said "several hundred" were treated for jellyfish stings. 1 Huntington Beach city lifeguards, who said the crowd was about 20,000 Saturday and 33,000 Sunday, said only about 35 slings were reported, but suggested many ~who were stung may not have sought first aid from a lifeguard. Lifeguards reported 40 w e e k e n d rescues at city and state beaches, but oo major incidents. The weather both da ys was sunny with temperatures of 75 degrees on Saturday and 70 on Sunday. \Yater temperature v.·as 68 degrees. Auto Kills Boy; Driver i\.rrcsted WlLMl NGTON (UPI) -Police have arrested a teenager on suspicion or manslaughter in the death of a 4-year--old hit·and-run accident victim after the youth v:as brought back to the scene o(_ the accident by his fa ther. The dead child, Victor Mendosa, was struck and kUled by an auto as h·e was riding his toy car in a street near his home. The driver of the vehicle fleet A short time aner the accident, Art 1..ucero. 18. was brought to the scene by his father after the youth reportedly told him he was responsi ble for lhc accklenl 'Tarzan' Recovering BRIDGEPORT. Coon. (APl.'..clo....,. ··Buster" Crabbe, a former Qbmplc swimmer who portrayed "Tanan" tnd "Flash Gordon'' In films. was reported resting comfortably at St. ViDceat llospltal here wilh a Virus. I f . • DAILY PILOT MondQ, Junt 10, 1974 $31.4 M i llion· Huntington Weighing Budget A public hearing on the proposed $31.4 million 1974-75 Huntington Beach budgf't b scbedu1ed for 7:SO tonight in city hall . Councilmen ha\'e already spenl one full day revit'A'lng the budget v.• i t h deparllnent beads during a recent Long Beach retreat. The proposed budget Is $2.5 million in the red, even though City Admlni~tr<ttor Da\'e Rovdands calls It a "bare bones. ,·Jrtually no gro.,.,·th" docu1ncnt. Ro.,.,•lands proposes to add less than a dozen people in 1974-75 to the more than 800 city employes. He also proposes no Court Rules 011 Funding For S chools \\'ASllJNGTOX (L'Pll -Sidestepping lhe church-state issue. the U.S. Supreme Court ruled today that federally funded sc-nires to educationally d e p r i v e d parochial school ch i I d r e n must be comparable but not necessarily identical to those in public schools. The court's &-1 decision said further that C<ingress intended to confine acceptable programs to those not barred bv state Jaw. ·in an opinion by Justice Harry A. Blackn1un. the oourt refused to rule specifically on Y.'hether the I 9 .s 5 Elementary and Secondary Educa~1on Act requires assignment of publicly employed teachers to chu~ scb::>ols during school hours and -1f JI does -.,.,·he~ the Jav.' \"iolates the Constitution 's ban on '"an establishment of religion... . . Justice \\'illiam 0. Douglas, ln his dissent. said the coon should decide that if the terms of the la1,1· pc.>mlit federal aid 10 church schools. it is unconstitutional. The case was appealed to the high court bv h-1issouri education officials. after the 8th U.S. Circuit C.ourt of Appeals held !hat the same pro~ams . must be afforded disadvantaged children in both public and parochial ~ls. _ Missouri said state law forbids sending public school teachers into private schools. Parents of children attending religious schools sought restoration of $13 millioo in federal funds allegedly misapplied in Kansas Citv schools from 1966 to 1969. Their s t ·a t i s t i c s showed vast discrepancies ~·een amounts spent per child in public and privtate schools, Blackmun said the mere faa that public school children are provided on- tht>-premises instroctioo ·'does not necessarily create an obligation to make identical proYisioo for pri\'ate school children ." "C.00gress expressly recognized that difierent and unique problems and needs might make it appropriate to utilize difrerent programs in the p r i v a t e schools." be said. · The main point. he said, is that the programs be "comparable," as federal Jaw requites. "The alternatives are numerous." he added . but "providing nothing to fill the gap" i3 not amoag tbem. Douglas said "the plain truth is" that as construed up to now "the act is unconstitutiooal to the e1tent it supports &eetarian sctiools, .,.,.hether directly or through its students.'' lie said the court should say so v.itbout lurther delay. From Pqe I PLAVA N ... boundaries be redrawn not to e1clude that subdivision . Sharon Stirling, 16811 ~1adrone Circle, said 30 of the 41 families in the subdivision have contributed funds to bring the suit, and the other families have belped with neighborhood fund raising. The parents estimated about $3,000 would be raised to pay for court and legal fees. '• OlAftOI: COAST "' DAILY PILOT l"I! 0<•-Go.•J o.<i, P.W ....-~ '""'t~ "~ Do...., .......... p, ..... --°' .... °'-w " """"'~·"'! ~n· r~ ... _.,... ... """",...., 1Jo~1 .. lr•"'-'l~ ,,.,.., 100 W1• ........ """"'°" S.iKll -"'GI"" IM«"''-t.>• ~-, l-0~"" 9"1:• 1 ... -..~.,._. - 5"' a.-n•• :>•n .>.oo• t'.op"''...., A ....,. _........ <I<!•~ " D>J<•"""'1 .... .,. ,.,, .... , .s., ... e. .... ,.,.,~·ot1••1""0."'"'l"'""'""':tlll w ... e.1 ~to•r (.(.,,.,,..,. c.i,,_.,... i:6~11 P t.-.. rJ v.,., l ~ .•• .,. ••• ..,,1>,Jt.., .... W'I ~ f ,..,I V..."···-·-c.. ............. G4. l.._" l.loTf..lwe . ._... ...... OoieaH l~""' P·-.1dP.Nal ,. .... 1a ... ........,......t.,..~ ll/lf'o/(o...r" ...... o. ..... ~l"""' .... t1 ........ ~ OHk.t 118/~a.,,..~~ Mo'""9 A<n~Po,g..,.. m ~™II l ..,.....&<>.c• ,,,, ........... . """""'-Jlci ""'··~ ..... . ""''"l."O'I°"• "))1ll._-q15 ..,~ ... ~ :Mn~ Xl'l-IJC..,,.-••ol T...,.._ 17141641·4lJ I Climff'IMA~641·i671 ,. • ..... -0. • .,.0J.I"".~ ...... f.4°"1120 °'°""""' .• ,. ~ eo.i """"''" .. '-,..,v Nol-,·--···-...,.... .. ,.,._ ._. ......... , ............ I;"!~ --·~61~0·• .. ko<tf<IU• ~· r"""-11 ~'• .,....,. C..•"°' i..,. $11M'-Ir,...,,..., •l OD _,. t t , ""'' •·oo-·~ ,.,,,,,.,....,.,""""""'''"Y'"" ... '""i • • • major ntw programs.. but blame& the high COSt O( government M the opening Lhis year of the new city hall. and the pending opening o{ a cen1ral library and central park. Councilmen have been presented a list of potential methods for raising the revenue to cover the predicted S2.5 million deficit. Though Rowlands V.'On't comment on ll, and cduncilmen have not staled !heir position. the most likely ME'\li' ~urce o( revenue could be a real estate transfer ..... City Finance Director Ben Arguello Ellsberg Case told councilmen that a one percent real estate transfer ta.1. couJd raise perhaps f.3.5 mill ion. The tn1 is applied to the sale or any residential, conunel'('ial or indW1trlal land In the city. COWlcllmcn would not ha\•e to impose a full one percent. They have the option of setting any figure they want. If adopted, Huntington Beach ..... -ould be the first Orange: County city to use It. Other potential revenues sources, "'ilh estimated amounts they could raise, ln\•olvt: -Raising the per barrel oil tax from Nixon May Face Contempt Rap \\'ASHINGTON (UPI) -President Ni1on today reasserted his claim to be the sole judge of what el'ideoce should be surrendered in the Ellsberg break-in case. despite ~·amings rrom a federal judge that he may be risking contempt. Through his chief defense attorney, James D. St. Clair. Nixon told t.:.S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell that the material! sought by rormer White Hou.se aide John D. Ehrlichman are "properly the subject of e1ecuth•e privilege" and 1hus the President a1one can decide v.'hether to surrender them . The action was the second time today Nixon invoked ezecutive privilege in refusing to turn over re q u e s t e d documents. He previously sent a letter to the House Judiciary C<immittee saying he would not comply y.·ith a committee subpoena for 45 \\'h.ite House tapes and documents. Gesell bas threatened to dismiss the conspiracy i n d i c t m e n t against Ebrlichman if the documents were not produced ror his defense. Last week, Gesell said that Nixon's reluctance to allow Ehrlidunan full access to his White House files "borders on obstruction" of justice. Gesell was expected to act either later today or Tuesday on a motion by Ebrlichman's attorney to begin contempt proceeding• "Surtly .•• what clearly is a valid ronnal claim of privilege by the President concerning n o t e s of confidential presidential conversations cao:oot afford a basis for either a charge of contempt of court or obstruction of justice on the part of the Pres.ident, as public media have inerpreted your honor's statements in open court to mean," St Clair wrote Gesell. The letter was delivered to the court more than three hours after Ni1on left for a nine-day trip to the ~tiddle East. Ehrlichman and rour men are sched· uled to go on trial next ~fonday on charges of conspiring to violate the civil Ul'ITt_.... . WEIGHS CONTEMPT DECISION Judge Gorhord GoMll rig~ of Daniel Ellsberg·s psychiatrist by raiding his office Sept. 3, 1971 in search of Ellsberg 's records. And in a third action today invoking executive privilege, Nixon moved to block \llatergate prosecutors f ro m obtaining a portion of a Sept. 15, 1972 tape dealing with alleged White House attempts to use the lnternal Revenue Service for political purposes. Ni1on told U.S. Distrid J udge John J. Sirica that he believes the cooversation is covered by executive privilege and thlLS should not be submitted to a grand jury that is investigating the allegations. Mesa Girl, 12, Raped After Km nap at Pier A Sunday morning fishing expedition to Nev.']Xlrt Pier turned into an ordeal of pain and terror for a C.OSla ?.fesa girl. 12. .,.,.ho v.·as kidnaped al gunpoint and raped by her captor. The victim. confronted and abducted in the area of 28th Street and Balboa Boulevard. was driven to a hilly area near Orange v.·here the assault OC<.'llrred. She .,.,·as abandoned in the rural area and sought help al a residence where Summer College Signups Slated Registration for summer claSMS at Golden West College will begin at 3 p.m. Tuesday. The Slimmer session offering more than 100 day and evening courses, 10 of them new. begins June 17 and runs through August 9. New courses include crimt and justice. history of rock music, general chemistry, human sexuality, human r e I a t I o n s supervision and Jaw for the 70's. To be eligible for summer seS3ion, a s1udent must be at· least ta years old. a high scl>ool graduate or haYt: complcl.td the 11th grade and have a permit from his high !dlool. CHP BUS A FO (]L OF EX HAUST LAW SACRAMEN1'0 (UPll -A dulrtor Lu• ca.m'ing about 30 California Highway Patrol employcs on a gambllng junket from Sacramento to Nevada ran into trooble. Bob Fahs, a patrol Information officer '~1ho v.·aa on 1he junket, said• fellow CHP officer stopped lhe bus near Pl1cervllle and the driver was Riven a citation for e~cesslve e-xh.iust cmfsslon. • . occupants called police to report the kidnap and rape. Ne wport Beach Detective S a m Amburgey said the girl's ordeal began only a few minutes after she and her brothers \\'ere dropped off by their mother to go fishing. Daylight was just breaking when the youngsters were let out of the ramily car about 5 a.m., and the young girl started toward the '-1cFaddeo Square area and Newport Pier with her tackle. She did not wait for her brothers and .,.,·ent alone wh ile they lagged behind, police said. The girl told investigators at that point a man in his early 20s pulled up in a light bn:w.n or beige four·wbeel d r I v e recreational vehicle and ofrere.d her a ride . Surfing Group, Sierra Club Set Ocean Session A day.Jong Ocesn Recrc.allon and Conservation Conference to ~ss beach acttss, coastal developmeiit and pubUc use righta is scheduled June 1$ at Los Angeles ' Airport ~farina Hotel. , Sponsored join Uy by the U.S. Surfing Association end lhe Sierra Club, the public Is Invited to attend the series or panel discussioos and hearings on !he mattetll. The 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. prescntatiOn will cover a variety or topics and lssue.s C\U"f"tntly under study rnd awaiting recommendl'ltlons before the CAiifornia Coastal Commission. Spokesman Nancy Pearlman u.ld com pllt:d results and findings of the ~an Recrtation Md Conservation Conference will be forwatdcd to the: Coa~tal Co1nmlsslon. 'I four ctnts to eight ccnts, brlaging in an additional $800,000. -Imposing a $2.50 monthly charge for trash collectloo, raising JI ,005,000. -Charging a monthly SI sewer service fee, adding $426,000 to the city treasury. -Raising !he utility ta1 to six cents, bringing in another $414,000. -Jncrea!lng propt'rty taxes by three cents (to $1.65 per $100 assessed valuation ), raising another $141.000. Councilmen are also raced ~·ith three issues lnvo\\•lng pollce. paramedics and library service which may boost the deficit picture. Fire Chief Ra y Picard has asked !hem to add a second paramedics unit to the city -a rough CO!\ of $102,ooet. During their rev iew of the budget, councilmen indicated support for the idea and Rowlands admits "it's an effective program ... dramatic and with a lot or se1 appeal ." • Police Chief Earle R-Obitallle also wants to hire 30 more policemen. The budget leaves no room ror any additional officers. Rowlands Is opposed to increasing the police force no~·. saying ''\lle'\'e added 66 in three years ove r there. That's $800,000 right there." But councilmen indicated they might consider Robitail le"s request anyway. And some t'OUllcllmen took e sharp look at the cost or operating libraries and offered the opinion that two branch libraries might be closed, or at least reduced to less oper.11ing slaff and hours. State law does not require a public hearing on the bod.get, but councilmen have designated ?<.Jonday's session as lhe time for members of the public to have their say on tbe city's financlal outlook. From Pqe I REFUSES ... drawn somewbe~ by someone," Nixon said. The subpoena was tr committee's fourth and it was issued along with a letter In wh1ch committee membe rs warned Nixon that his refusal to comply v.•ith their request was "a grave matter" and that they would reel free to draw "adverse inferences" as v•ell as ulti· mately recommend bis impeachment as a resu1t. The subpoena requested materials covering the period from Nov. 15, 1972 to June 4. 1973 . ln his letter to Rodino , Nixon maintained the committee v.·ou1d be wrong to draw any inferences from his actions and he was merely e1ercising his proper powers by claiming excecutive privilege in refusing to tum over subpoeMed materials. "From the start ot these proceedings; I have tried to cooperate as rer as I reasonably could in order to avert a constitutional confrontation." Ni1on said. "But I am determined to do nothing which, by the precedence it set. would render the e1ecutive branch henceforth and forever more sub!er"li.ent to the legislative branch, and would thereby destroy the cons1itutional balance," Ni1on said. The Presklent previously refused to tum over 42 tapes subpoenaed by the committee. Instead, he made public on April 30 voluminowl White House transcripts of Watergate COOYersations of 32 of the tapes. Officials said tapes either did not exist for the other conversations subpoenaed or were not available. The bulk of the committee's subpoena dealt with recording of conversations between Nixon and former aides H. R. Haldeman, John D. Ehrlichman. Charles W. Colson, John W. Dean Ill and Gorden Strachan. Most of the tapes and other material involved also are sought by special Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski, who successfully argued f(.: a U.S. Supreme Court review of the President's policy in resisting subJX>enaS. Booster Chili ~Iects The Huntlng1on Beach High School Athletic Booster Club will meet at 7:30 p.m., Tuesday, in the school's faculty dining room to elect officers for the 1974- 75 school year. All interested parenls are invited. DONALD DUCK CELEBRATES ~TH BIRTHDAY Di1My St•r Shown With 'Voice' Ct.rence N11h Donald _Duck Celebrates 40tl1 Birtl1day in Films ANAliEl~l -Donald Duck joined the over 39 generation Swlday with his 40th birthday, but to millions of his fans . there is no generation gap. Donald, the animated duck in a sailor outfit. is still their hero. Donald . ~·ho became one of filmland's most irascibly charming and durable characters following his debut in 1934, has managed to fuss and quack his way through more than a hundred Walt Disney cartoons and feature films. With his throaty, barely understand· able vOice, Donald's first appeara~ .'>n a scene was in a bit part in "\\.'ise Little Hens ," released June 9. 193~. Though his role was miniscule. moviegoers thought he \\•as the star and began demanding more pictures. That started a boom which made First National Cuts Lend Rate To 111/2 Percent NEW YORK (AP) -First National Bank of Olicago, the nation's 20th largest bank. announced today lt was reducing ils prime lending rate Crom 11.6 percent lo the 11'1: percent prevailing at most major banks. Early -last week , the bank reduced its prime from 11% percent. A few smaller banks dropped to IJI/~ or It perctnt. The reduct\o!':ls v.•ere the first since early ~farch In the prime rate, which is charged a ban k's biggest end best corporate customers. A sustained deellne Jn the rate can signal changes in consumer Interest rates, although the two are not directly linked. First National of Chicago's rate cut, whicb takes effect Tuesday, seemed to be in line "'ith the June 3 prediction of its president, Chawicey E. Schmidt, that "the upward push on short-term rates appean to have subsided.'' Anaheim Y outl1 Killed in Desert From \fire Seniees A youb from Anaheim was killed Sun· da y on Superior Dry Lake north of Barsto¥:, when his threc·wheelcd lend sailer vehicle overturned. Clifford A. Young, 17, was hurled from the speeding rig when a gust of wind lifted it momentarily, the! it fell over onto him, investigators said. San Bernardino County C<ironer's Of. fice spokesman said today Young's body was taken to a Barstow mo'1uary where an autopsy was scheduled. nie victim was on a desert outing with his family and a group of friends when the land-sailing accident occurred. Donald one or t.hree famous creations of the Disney studios and spawned the birth or an entire duck family. including Donald's un cle, Scrooge Pi-1 c Ou ck . Professor Ludwig Von Drake, nephews Huey. Dewey and Louie, Gladstone Gander, Grandma Duck and Cousin Gus. Donald's first starring role was in "Don Donald" in 1937, a cartoon which introduced his leading lady, "Daisy."' Some 127 cartoons and feature films follo~·ed, with Donald gaining a reputation along v.·ith Disney's other ramous characters, ritickey ?<.louse and Goofy. Donald's animated career ended in 1961 when Walt Disney Studios began concent ra1ing on live-action movies, but the lovable duck still continues hli escapades in comic magazines and ne\\'Spaper oomic strips. From Page· I OVERRIDE. • • high schools, Dysinger considers IL the least likely pcissibility. •·Personally, r "'ooldn't consider It a serious possibility," he says. •·it W"OUld be \'ery difficult to accomplish on a 5,()00. student basis ~ilh as comprehensive a 9th grade program as we now olrer." He points out that tv.-o of the larger elementary districu, Fountain Valley and Ocean View, don't have junior high,,. so they lack the lab and shop facilities oC the other"' schools. And there is the problem of getting the elementar; districts to go along with ii, even i( the high school district pays the cost. Other act.ions , already under study for September, ~'hich Dysinger feels are realistic solutions include ( -Expand the school day even further. Edison High. the most crowded campus. now has a JO-period da!' and will almost certainly expand to an II-period day (7 a.m. to 5 p.m.) in September. An average student attends about si1 periods a day. -Add more relocatable dassroorns. Edison has none now. but will have si1 to eight next year. FOlDllain Valley High, with 33. will probably remain the same. -Expand lite voluntary night sc!tool which now serves about 300 student&. -Further expand summer school so some seniors can graduate early, and eventually fit it into a voluntary all year school system. -Use some or the district's nearly $& million reserve funds to build science labs, industrial arts shops and offices as the core of a new campus which ..... ·ould then use most or the dll!itrict's 57 relocatable classrooms for the remainder of the campus. Over the ne1t few v."etks, district officials will be facing all oC these questions and deeiding how lo squeeui 20,000 into 15,000. From Page I PRICES ... Belgian Given Long Term In Try to Poison 'Rival' a week in ?<.ian:h was 60 cents or J. I percent less expensive in April. The April menu. however. was up 15 percent or $7.20 from a year earlier. The department's plt1n for liber11l eating cost $66.10 per week in April, down &Cl centa or 1.2 percent from March. But it was $3 or 14 p«ccnt more cxpensl\'e than in April last yc;i_r. Home e<.'Ol'IOmist!I say the varlOUI me.al plans are compu1r·1 on the ba8ls of food QUMtities consutned by family group.! and prevailing retail prices. BRUSSELS !UPI) -A :z&.year-old Belgian pharmacy studt:nt. apologized to his rival In love for trying t.o poison him with enough Belladonna to klll 15 men. His Intended vict.lm acctpt.ed the apologl~. but the jur didn 't. It sentcnctd the student Pol Brou.irt, to 10 }"ears in jail wllh hard labor even though the pro500.1Uon asked for only a thl"ff- ytar sentence. "I want to aPologlze for all the suffering I caul'led you," Brouart told his rival. Jeal)-Ptern LaP,,.ille, when La- P8ille testified. "It was slllv of mt." The hsndsome. dartl:·halred t.aPaille nodded and i;ald, "f accept your apology.·• "And please apologize to Therese '' \\'t:ll," Brouart added .. ''Okay ," said LaPatlle. Brouart and There!C Vandermolen met In 1971 and dated for three weeks. He gave her a gold necklace and told his family , "We're almost engaged." , . But the lively Therese said she found him 01 "boring as raln" and sent him a letter explaining she couldn't accept his proposal. Therese then met and fell in love with Le Pa.Ille. On Feb. 14, 1973 LllPanle received a lelter containing a wttite Powder. "This Is a new produd to prevent colds" It 1ald. "It'• a real vitamin bomb. We'd 'like your opinion on 1ts 'fflcitncy." LaPaille. used to rtctlving test medication from drug companles. poured the po\\der In a glaM of waler and drank it. Doctors said he drank about 750 milligrams of Belladonna and 5 O mlll iRr11ms Is enough to kill a man. But before collapsing with a wildly beating he8rt and lrembllng limbs. l..aPailfe C8lled for help and had his stomach pumped In time. Aft.er LaPallle rccovert'd, he married T'hertse. The day Brouarl'1 trial ~gan, she gave blrlh lo a so1t The Jow-cotit plan relates lo famUics with yearly incomes of $4.000 to 18,000 : the moderate $8,000 lo $10,000; and the liberal SIO. and over. One basic difference is that klwer- income meals under the USDA food plans contain cuts of leu-ex~nslve meat , more cereals, brtad. Potatoes, dry beans, poultry and fi.!h. The flgutff 11re compiled by lhe deparl:mCflt'I Agr\cultur11I R t s e a r c h Service nnd published each month In f"ood and llome Note11 by the USDA Office of communication . A fourth meal budget ls called lhe economy plan, a bare-bOnes meal guide used for computing the govemment1:1 food s1amp allocations. It wall $34.70 ln1 April. only 10 centa lower than In March. It wall, hOwcver. up 18 percent <K" f.\.fi more 1han April 1973. , I I I I I At Your Service A Suaday, Wednesday and Frid1y Feature Of lbe OaUy PJlot Cot a problem? TJ1m Pat Dunn . Pat S101 e Self·•11tflcle11t? DEAH. PAT: What is the current statu! of California's own oil and natural gas production? Is there any chance of the state becoming self sufficient In fuel? R.T., Corona del l\tar Latest Depa rtment of ConservaUon figures show a decline ln oU and'Dataral gas production daring 1m. 0 11 production was down 311 mWlon barrels, 3 percent under the 197! figure and nalu ral gas production fell 10 perf:Cnt, from 54.2.8 billion cubic feet in 197! to 487 cu bic feet Inst year. These figures Include production from state tidelands. New oil and gas wells drilled in 1973 also declined from 1,341 to 1,291. California's po tential offshore oil reserves, accordin g to Division of OU and Ga s e1tlamtt1, are about 23.I billion barrels, with potential onshore reserves of about 1.7 mllllon barrels. fuel self-snfliclency Io o k 1 doubtful, especially since Calllomla leads tbe nation's automobil e popul1tion ind Is one of the top energy consuming states. Paintings Admired DEAR PAT: I want to surprise ·my husband with a Jack Kay oil painting for his birthday. Kay's work features boats and harbor scenes in a very impressive style. We sa\v his paintings at the Ninth Wave Restaurant in Huntington Har6our, \\'hich now has gone out ol business.~ The receptionist there told me J could buy his paintings at the Laguna Niguel gallery, but there is no such establishment. All my other leads have conic to a dead end too. so I'm asking you to find out whe re I can purchase a Kay painting. L.M .• Huntington Beach. Jack Kay's paintings can be leased or purchased at Fine Arts Rentals, %43%1 La llermosa, Laguna Niguel. Several of the paintings you saw at the restaurant are IPow available plus some others. ll you prefer to commission Kay, a Montana resident, to do another painting for you, 'this ca n be arranged. Contact gallery owner Jack Veltman at 831-0222 for further information. Cherk l'nRishe• DEAR PAT: I think I've got a problem! On Feb. 12 I sent a $10.85 check to the American Song Festival in Hollywood to order an entry kit containing a blank cassette, songwriter 's handbook and an official entry blank. I've written to festival president. 1.falcolm Klein, three times and he asked for verification of my entry fee, which I provided. I'm still waiting for the entry kit. A.C., Laguna Beach An American Song Fe 1t lv a1 representative wi ll contact you by ltlepbone to request another copy or your cancelled check. No record can be found of prtor commwllcatlon from you. The casseHe will be malled Immediately, but any song entry yoa may have 1ent Is ineligible for com petition prior to verification of payment. Last year's contest run by a dilferent promoter, folded 'prior to lhe scbednled final contest. This year'& effort has some backed op entries, but A.S.F. claims It Is trying lo correct any c o m p I a I n t s received. American Song Festival can be contacted by writing to P.O. Box 57, Jlollywood, Ca llfornla i 900%8, or by phoning %13-937-8460. • Ame ricn' l ... ost DEAR PAT: How can a company advertise books it can't see m to deliver? T've been getting the run.around from Literary Guild since January. when 1 ordered "America," by Alistair Cooke. \Vhat's going on? R.G .. Balboa Haul Skelly. Literary Ga 11 d '9 customer service supervisor, says the reprlnting of "America" ha s bttn completed, the book Is in stock and yo ur copy Ill being mailed Immediately. She uys the demand for the book was not accurately estimated and the U!e of phtographs In the book tompllcatPd and delayed the printin g process. Literary Guild sells ''club editions," which often are specially printed and may have dif- ferent paper, binding, margins or ~ype si!e than books sold at retail. Broke Ref1111d DEAR PAT : Last year I purchnsed a power brake conversion unit for my 1970 Chevrolet from J.C. Whitney. While I \\'as driving about 50 miles an hour. the compltny three tlmcs foh the $16, but accident, but the £allure left me stranded and repairs cost $16. A bonded brake repair shop told me that the linkage rod supplied in the kit was two inches too ~hort and the lnstal\11tion instructions did not correctly show the method of adjusting the push-rod and brake pedal floor clearance. 1 have wrltttn the company three tigmcs for the $16, but I'm still wa iting. . J.F., lrvlne. The Chicago auto parts mall-order firm Is processing your rtfund. lts pn1ldenl, nJV. \Var$bawsky, uys the brake unit I~ made by Btndlx Corp., that It Is ute and lbcre bas been no other report 1ucb as yours. Instructions are being checked for adequacy. althoui;b \Vhllney's buylnR office spokesman, Charles Waterfield. believes tho\ the unit wa1 lntta11td Incorrectly. Monday, Junt 10, 1~74 H DAILY ·PILOT ,J Mexieo Deroin Traffie lnereases WASHINGTON (APl -After two years of decline, heroin traffic Into the United Statt1 is reported on the. upswing , with Mexico replacing Europe as the primary IOW'Ce and conduit for the narcot\c. · F'edml drug enforcement officials say the heroin Is being refined from poppy plants grown in western Mexico, then lhlpped across the border. At the same time, there ls growing trade in marijuana from long~stabll!hed sources in Mulco, leading to an lntenslfled antismuggU.ng campaign along the 1,fOO.rnlle border. But some officials acknowledge. that efforts by the U.S. government to cope wilh the illicit activity have been Impeded to some extent by bureaucratic wrangling among age1Y.:Jea with jurisdiction over certain at.H:Cts of nar· coUcs control. · A peripheral Lssue In this ~tlnulng feud has been the quantity \of drugs reaching the United States from ford~ sources. The dispute apparently stems m part from friction between the drug enforcement agencies. The Custoins Servlct, which has been concentrating ils border drug interdiction efforts chiefly against the Mexican marijuana trade, contends that heroin traffic from that country Is negligible. Although heroin remains priority No. I College of Medieitae Hospital Status Backed by Group Directors (lf the l,200·member Orange County 1'1edical Association have aJr proved a resolution urging "pieservation of the UC lrvinc • California College or Medicine." The resolution made public tod<iy concludes "the departure of UCI.CCM from Orange Collllty would represent a significant loss to the county and would not be in the best interest of its citizen- ry." The OCMA board action comes at a $5;5tJO Fire Guts Small Lciguna Cafe A small care owned by a Laguna Beach police detective and his wife was fire-bombed Saturday and an estimated $5,500 damage done to the business. Det. Alex Jimene1 said tOOay tie did not know ii the attack was in retribu1.ibn for his polic:e work, or "if somebody \•;as just looking for something to torch." Laguna Beach Fire Marshal J im Presson said he and police officials .,.,·ould be investigating the matter. Authorities are looking for a man in his early 20's with long blond hair who was seen running from the scene of the bombing at about 2 a.m. Saturday. Presson said damage to the Penguin caJe, 981 S. O:>ast High,.;ay, consisted mostly of smoke, water and soot dam- age. He said further investigation or the scene is needed before authorities will be able to tell whether a brick or some otber object was used to first smash t_he window in the front of the-a.le so the fire bomb could be tosse<I in, or'Wfiether the firebomb was thrown through the window. Pollce and Presson seemed , t6 agree that a "Molotov Cocktail" a bottle filied with gasoline, was used in the torching of the cafe. Jimenez said he had driven past the cafe about a half hour before the incident and all appeared to be normal. He said he couldn't think of anyone who migh t be involved or wanted to get back at him for his police work, but the nature of the business is sucb that a lot of enemies can be made. Armed Robbery Gets Mari11c 5-vear Term " One of two Camp Pendleton Marines \\'ho kicked and pistol \\n:pped a Cap- istrano Beach store owner after taking $1,000 at gunpoint last Jan. Tl has been sent to state prison £or not less than five years. Orange County Superior Court Judge James Turner ordered the maximum armed robbery term for Gecrgc Wayne Green, 24, and a ot.e-ye.· ·· county jail tenn for co-defendant Marine Steven Roy Ellis, 18, on the identical conviction. Both men were arrested by sheriffs officers after they held up a store at 26891 Camino de Estrella, Capistrano Beach, pocketed more than Sl.000 in takings and then kicked nnd pis1ol whipped owner Berkley Clare Burch. Judge Turner dismissed r e I a t e d burglary charges against both ~1arines. time when negotiations between UCI and the Orange County supervisors are at a critical point. Failure to r e a c·h agreement before the state budget is made fmal at the end of the mooth may mean delay or loss of UC bond monies eannarked to improve Orange County Medical Center (OCMC). Further, additional bond funds to construct a 200-bed campus teaching hospital and a nearby medical sciencts lab and classroom building are being held up pending agreement on 1ong-t.erm control of the county's hospital for the poor. Wilhout the agreement or ti.rm indication there will soon be an agreement, chances are good the state bond money will be spent elsewhere, sources in Sacramento have said. County supervisors have said they'll evict the UCI..CCM from the county hospital as of July I, 1975 unless an agreement is reached. OCMC is UCI's primary source of patients for doctor training. \Vith renovation estimated at costing upwards of $9 million, the hospital might be a suitable facility for both teaching and patient care. The medical association last year supported use of OCMC as the sole UC!· CCM teaching hospital. But legislators had other ldeas on how to spend the bond moneys to ;mprove medical education opportunities i n Orange County. A joiu.t legislative study committee recommended some of the bond funds be spent upgrading ocr..1c and the rest be spent to build a core campus teaching hospital. Until the money i.s spent. however, there is no assurance it need come to Orange County. Aides to Assemblyman Wi llie Brown (D-San Francisco) recall that there are a number of other locations for a potential new medical school which do not require state spending for costly hospital facilities. Brown·s commitlee on hosPital siting studied needs for additional funds to begin post graduate medical education at Dr. Martin Luther King llospital In Walls. Others <ln Brown's committee arc seeking state money for a medical college at Fresno 0: Mspital f~ing " which v.·ould more directly benefit the medically indigent. The action by the OC?.fA in support of UCI~M is significant because It suggests an end of the fragmentation of medical interests which was evident in hearings be[ore Brown's committee last year. Brown aides observed Orange County appeared to be so divided on the issues of medical care for the poor, the costs of medical education and the responsibilities for providing both that it was likely the committee niight be convinced to spend the money elsewhere. The OCMA directors point out the association supported the move of ccr.1 to the Irvine campus in 1968. . Today he is direct. writer o f commercial accounts for Employers· Insurance of Wausau, .,.,-orking in the Santa Ana offic:e. lie also is a board member of the Lung Association of C>range County. Bo y Shot to Death CARSON (UPI) -A 17·year-<lld Compton youth was shot to death Saturday night when he and other youths attempted to crash a party, sheriff's deputies said. Michael Day was shot oulside a home where as many as 150 youths were attending the pa rty. Going Too Far? Burn This Merno Before Reading WA~HINGTON (UPI) -The While Hou se penchant !or secrecy once went a little too far, according to the Senate \Vatergate com- mittee staff report on efforts to politicize the executive branch. One memo, said the report., was headed: "Burn Before Read- ~· . Scribbled in the margin was the word "Always, by Frederic V. Malek, a \Vhite House aide to whom the ,memo ~as addressed. ?i-1alek named by the staff as the chief architect of the re-sponsivene~s program," said In hi s baslc '"!1emo in 1972 th~t "written communications would be kept to a minimum -to avotd adverse publicity ." I btcause of the danger it J>OSCS, customs officials said synlhttic drugs are their biggest worry at lhe moment. llowever, the Drug Ent or cement Administration, a year<ild J u s t I c e Ot!partmenl agency with which Customs has frequently clashed over enforcement Policy, says that Mexico has becomt!I the source of as much as 50 percent of the heroin reaching the United States. This Is a dramatic change from the peak years <>f heroin traffic, 1969-72. when up 10 80 percent of the narcotic reaching U.S. shores came from or through Europe and only about 15 percent from ~1exico. ----- ti1exiCan heroin is easily Identified by its bro.,.,·n color, as opposed to the more refined white product from European Jaboratorits. But offlclalJ say there is no difference in the potency. John R. Bartels Jr., dlreetor of the drug agency, said In an interview that the brown heroin, once confined almost entirely to the West Coast, recently has been turning up in Eastern cities as v.·ell . He said this is one indicator used by his agency to deWrmine the source of the drug . and "lhe fact that they're not getting very much heroin along the border doe5n't mean it isn 't coming in." The heroin situatiqn is assessed by a Ul'I Ttl..tltlt VINNIE TORO, LOUISE HEATH IN GREAT KISSOFF They Logged 96 Hours in Earlier Smoochathon Great Kissoff Five Couples Smooch for Record CHICAGO (UPI) -Despite pregnancy and a possible case of food poisoning, the grand national ki.ssoff contest coatinued smoothly as couples shot for world 's record and a \\'est Coast cruise~. Fi\'e of the original couples still had their lips glued togelher early today , breaking apart for a mere five minutes each hour. "\\'e·vc had il," Jeff and Peggy Uhlek of Chicago .said when they dropped out of the contest late Sunday. Contest officials disqualified the team from Charlotte, N.C.. when Jeff and Sherri A1oore fell asleep after more than 30 hours or kissing. One Detroit couple. Andy and Janice Bartnicki, had to drop out four hours after the contest began Saturday. because ~1ri;. Bartnick.i felt t h e kick.ings of their unborn baby. The male member of the Seattle team fell ill and "'as taken away by am bulance to be treated for possible food poisoning. Contestants from New York and Atlanta gave up during the day Sunday. Two couples from Detroit -including the Pannlckis -share the world record of JOO houri; set in local competition, but several of the veteran couples are expected to surpass that easily by lale Wednesday afternoon. ' variety of indieitors such as ae.lJures, quality of the drug, street prices, which give some clues to availability, and the number of deaths from overdoS.e. Deprived or Some of its functlool when the drug agency was created in Preisldent Nixon's general overhaul of dru& enforcement systems a year ago, the Customs Service has since concentrated most of ils efforts in the interdictkKJ of marijuana from Mexico. _ This has paid off in a near doubling of the number of individual marijuana ·seizures in 10 months. Customs agents Rized more than 85 tons of marijuana between October and March and 25 tons in the Atarch·April period alone when the r.texican harvest was in full S"'ing, official re pons show. In the same period. there were 8.33 pounds of heroin seized by Customs agc.:nts at all U.S. borders, of which S.83 pounds ca me from Mexico. Because of its sheer bulk, marijuana must be smu_ggled across in trucks, cars, airplanes or on foot or horseback in isolated areas along the border. 1be smaller and more easily concealed. packages of heroin, ho.wever. normally are brought through a regular port oI entry. Partly responsible for the shift to 1'.Iexico as a major heroin soorce, has been the success of federal authorities in breaking up established connections that brought it in from Europe, the Middle East and Asia, officials say. Under cooperative agreemenls the Drug Enforcement Administration has agents of its own in about 40 countries and those stationed in Mexico frequently accompany police and troops on forays into the rugged mountain s where the heroin and marijuana are produced. Laguna Girl C1iarged in Leary Plot ~Iultiplc criminal charges have been filed against an Emerald Bay woman and her alleged accomplice in a $20,000 extortion plot for the return of stolen memoirs and manuscripts of imprisoned psychedelic drug guru Dr. Timothy Leary. . The pair v.•ere arrested Thursday night "'hen police staked out a San Francisco motel . Robin Vierte\, 21, whose last listed address was 522 Emerald Bay, a wealthy Laguna Beach enclave, and Ch a r I e s Dewald, 36, of San Francisco were named in C<lmplaints issued Friday. They arc charged with burglary, possession of stolen property and exlortion as a result or the incident at the Mill Valley home of Joanna Leary. UCI Teacher Load to Drop Teaching loads of UC Irvine faculty will be less burdensome next year than they have been si nce UC budgets began being cut. Dr. Hazard Adams, vice chancellor for academic affairs, told faculty recently a total or 64 new faculty positions arc included in the 1974-75 bud get. That means UCl's student to faculty ratio will drop to 18.J to 1. That is a significant drop from the 20.7 students for each fa culty member employed during the current year. Partially because UCI is one ol the newest UC campuses and has enjoyed a popularity with students not matched by budgetary largesse. the student-raculty ratio has been among the highe st in the nine·campus systen1. ' Next year. Adams said that will ch~nge. The year after. assuming 14 temporary and eight additional faculty positions remain in the 1975-76 bu<iget. the ratio wi ll drop even more to 18 to I. Another budget bonus for faculty is addition of 25 full time graduate assistantship positions meaning 50 or more graduate students may b e employed part time. \Vitfi a total of 131 such fult time positiOllS in the budget, UCI 's tea ching assistants to students ratio will drop from one for each 60 students to one for each 51. By comparison here is one teaching assistant for every 40 students enrolled at UCLA, Adams said. I J , ··1r we had UCLA's ratio. we v.·ouldn't be raiding our (academic supplies) su~ port budget to the tune of $. · ),000 each year and \\·c could run programs of similar quality," Adams contended. Overall, unless leg islators or Governor Reagan drastically cut the UC budget, UC! expects a total campus operating budget of 538.555,757 for next year. Adams said the $3 million increase O\'er this year's spending allocations includes a $500,000 increase in the budget for supplies and services which support the teaching role of the university. It has bee.n shortages of the so-called "support budgets" which have been most severely pinched in recent years. along with a scarcity of new faculty positions to meet inC'reasing enrollments. - I Fo• that Soec1al Occasion , , Judy Sha fran is wearing the ··perlect long dress* ot brown checked gingham by Florence Eiseman Judy 1s a student a1 Harbour View School and the daughter or Mr and Mrs. Allen Sha lran of Huntington Harbou r THE RED BALLOON LTD. TOWN •COU .. TllY °'"""' ff"!'~)llt l"'IJNf•N(; TON M.UtBOuA ll U1iM&-lt60 ; J OAILV PILOT Monday, J11nt 10, l'J ., Nixon Departs on Mideast Peace Trip W eather111e11, ~Use Yoi1r Toes VPCOAST. [)(}\\'~COAST: Shor I· -;;1imC'rs her£' 1n our cuaslal rrgion often \\·ondrr hon· it 1~ 11·r ran ha\'e .1 beautitul 11·et>kend like t/us last one and end up M\•ing ir all to oursel\·es. \\1cll . i!'s really quite sin1ple. i 'ou can attribule it to the 11·rathrr for('rasters. You take Saturday. for exan1plc. i'ou 11rrn·1 goini; to get too n1any June Saturdays nlong thi s bt·st of all possible coasts \1•hich are any nicer than the one just pas!. Beautiful. ,. Drspitl' the ncar·perfect conditions for beach·going. lifl't;unrd estimators suggest on!\· abour 140.000 folks sho11·ed up along the. shorrlinr. One lifeguard spoke sman suggested lhe ~carcitv of l>ea<'h bodies could be attribuied to ··erroneous WC'alher !'forecasts.·• ' 1:'\DEEO, HE \\'AS being very polite. \\'ha! hl' 1neant ~·as the predictions .. ""·ere clea r off. \\'rong. Dead "-'rong. f\J ist aken and not v.·orth a hoot or holler. \\'hal the \\'ea1her people said Friday 11·as that here along the coastline. -i:.sa1urday u·as going to be filled "'ith ch1ll,y airs. clouds and driuling skies. Faced \\·ith a forec3.st like that. even I ~·ou ld stay av.·ay from the beaches. "' \\llal Saturday turned out to be was blue skies. balmy breezes and a brilliant swi 11·hich pumped the temperatures up into lhl' 80s. WASHINGTON (UPI I -Exp""'lng ho~ 1hat ht1 is starling on "a new journey for peace," President Nixon lefl today for a lour or live Pi1iddle East natioos. "We believe this I.rip, like Ole other journeys we have taken, will contribute 10 that lasting peace v.·hit.il we as Americans are so deeply dedicated," Nixon said in brief speech as he and l\.1rs. Nixoo left the \Vhile House on lhc 15,000.. ntile, nine day trip. • Nixon thanked a large group of foreign diplomats and government officials for roming to see them off and said uwe hope and belltve this "A111 be another journey for peace.'' THE PRESIDENT likened hl.s trip to historic 1972 vi.sits to mainland Chtna and the Soviet Union. Tho5c were the fiDt · trips to either Communist capital by a silting Anterican president and he nott'd that he would be the first president to visit four of the countries on his ~1 ideast agenda. "Both of lhose journeys v.·ere ones that had a profound impact not only on tJlC re-laUons ot the nations Involved but also on building a structure of peace for the "'hole world . "This lrip "'ill take us to a part of the world that has known nothing but w&r over lhc past SO to 40 years. And as "'e go to fi\'e nations -(our that have OC\'er been vlslled by an American President before -·we realize that one trip Is not going to solve differences that are very deep, that go back in some cases, many years. and in som cases''centuries. 1·DUT \VE i\L.SQ re a I i z e that a bcgiruri.ng must be made." Referring to cease·fire agreements that Secretary of St.ate l{enry A. Kls.dnger -"'ho accompanied bl m on Lile trip -negoUnt.cd between Lsrlel and Egypt and between Israel and Syria, Nixon sald: "A beginning b.~ Veen madt toward a dlfJerent relation an\:t a better relation between the natiooa In that area. We have been proud to ploy • Po<I Jn that beginning." f!Js Jrtp, !ho President said, 11111 "provide an opportunity to reafflnn our support for these initiatives tha t have been undertaken, to explore we.y1 that we can have new And better relatlont betv.-een the United States and eedl nation ln the area ... and a1s6 explorfi "'ays in "1Uch those natl01'119 in the area may have better relations with each other and build toward the PtnnAnent 4nd lastlng and just and equitable peace -tr that n\I ot them. "'C know, cer1a.inly that we ~ant.·• want and BEFORE llEADING for Clliro 011 Wednesda)r, the President and his party will stop off for two nigtlts in the Austrian city of Salzburg. This will give hhn time to get accustomed to jet lag. There Is a seven·hol1r time differential be tween Washington and the 1.1\ddl~ East. stops on his schedule. He fl ies to the Egyptian capital for a lavlsh welcome Wednesday morning following a tlu'ee-hoo r. 4~mJnute flight from Salzburg. From Cairo, he will go. in order, to Jldduh. Saudi A r ab I a ; Damascus, Syrta: Tel Aviv, Israel, and Amman. Jordan. before returning to Washington -after an overnight stop in the Azores -a week frorn Wednesday. fi.· Palestine Issue Urged at Summit IJy Tb e AssOelattd Preis Syrian sourcCA called for the Geneva peace conference today to deal only with. restoring Palestinian rights and com· pteting Israeli wilhdrawal from occupied territories "'1Jcn the session reswnes. JN DArt1ASCUS, A highly reliable Syrian source Mid Damascus is actively trying to bring about "at least ooe" Arab minisummit in the very near future for lhe adoption or a joint stand calling_ on tile Geneva conference to take up the question of Palestinian right s and Israeli withdrawal. l\fEAN\VIULE, JSRAEL accused Syria of "brutal torture" of IJlraeli prisoners and said it wlll protest to the United Nations. Syria countered with charges that Israe l mistreated Arab prisoners. Each government denied the o t h e r • s accusations . Tile Israeli government Wiued an official statement Sunday expressing "indignation and revulsion'' al reports from returning POWs that they were regularly beaten "ilh rubber truncheoM ruia-tiUiilea Wilh etectric lights. The prisoners said they were given poor food and medical treatment. Some pr~soners said they could not publicly reveal the worst of the tortures. "It is with utmost gravity that the government views this conduct Which violates every international precept," the Israeli statement said. Xov• some of our coastal folks, \\:ho like lo k~p the place prrtty much to the hometo\rners, ~·ould react by saying, 1 "\\"onderful. \\'e shou ld ha\'e \\'rong forecasts like that all tt1e time and \\·e'll keep the beaches fron1 g e t t i n g O\'ercro11·dcd ... " LINCOLN VILLAGE TRAILER COURT NEARLY DEMOLISHED BY KANSAS TORNADO Fi ve Victims Found in Empor ia Facility Rubble After Saturd•y Evening Twister The source did not reveal where this one or more mlnisummits ~"Ould be held, or who woukt attend them. It w;u; sunniscd, however. that Syria. Egypt and Jordan, \\'ho will att end the Geneva conference, would want to meet to coord inate their policies following the signing of the disengagement agreement between Syria and 1srael. Despite the exchange of atrocity charges. an Israeli military spokesman said disengagmcnt of forces on the Golan }(eights was proceeding according to schedule . SORR\', BlJT THAT'S not so good. You baYe to remember that c<Jastal folks plan .; ahead on the "'·eather forecasts too. Like the chap "·ho reads that grim Friday forecast for Saturday and groans w\!h disgust •: "\\.on·t be anv beach ~·ea ther tomorro\\'. 'tarthi.·· he ad\ises the liitl e woman. So he goes ahead and mo,·es a!\ the living room furniture and ~tarts the painting job he "'·t.Jl finish in the allegea gloom of the June Saturday. Thus he a"'·akens Saturday morn to .-that brilliant sunshine. But it's 100 late. • Jle's already stud: ~·ith the palllting job. :'llA'\"BE IT Jt:ST pro\'eS you siJOuld."l't lock vour life in around ~·eat.her forecaSts. Some have called forecastiog a science . or maybe an an, or pos-sib!y and blend of "'·itcbcraft. \\'e ll, rn tell you ~-hat it is. It's guessing, that's "'ilat. \\·eather people get paid to guess with barometers. gauges. scales and three little scoops that spin around on a pole and look imp ressive. Others, like ~liddle Son , predict the size of surf by ho"'' his big toe feels and the atmospheric conditions on whether his long hair fliEs out like an electri.lied ca! or lies flat and lim p. CO,tE TO Tlil~"K of it. he probably has a belier guessing 3\'erage than all those official people ~·ith I he instruments . TAKE YO UR PICK RO:\lE ~UPI! -The steady increase in Italian food prices is bad enough. Bul today the Nalional Coope ratives Associa· tion had more bad news : A 10 pcre'"nt increase in lhe price of toothpicks. 3 Midco11ti11e11tal States Cite T'viste1· Deatl1 Toll B~' l . aittd Pn-u lntmiatiorsal inos.e "'-ho l!ve in the COODtr• ·s midsecuoo known as ""Tornado .we:-;" are hardened veteorans of weathe!" catastrophes b1Jt Red O'oss \'O:untttr Peggy Glen ~t t.ite ·.reeker.d 111:.i :ears i.1 her e~·es. "I(s bard to bel1e~·e "·ha! r·,e SE'en :· she saJd "'"bile operating one of four disaster re:ief centers set up in Tulsa . Okla. ''PEO PLE ARE coming in ~JtMut ::ir.y homes. I stopped at a neighbor's on my way here and v.·here four houses had stood . there "''as nothing there but \·acant lots." It was a \\'eekend of kille r tornadoes. torrential rains and flash floods in portions of Kansa s. Oklahol}Ul and Arkansas. As the last \'estig es of the "·eather system moved peace f u 11 y eastward Sunday. the official death coun t stood at 23. hundreds were left homeless and property damage was expected to exceed $55 million It began Saturday night "-'ith a tornado ripping the roof of a croo,1·ded nursing home at Drumright. Okla .. and cutting a mi!e·long. three·block v.'ide swath through the community of 3,000. But the \·io!ent '~·eather quickly spread to other sections of the state and to Kansas. At Emporia. Kan .. a tomado cut a mile·long path through the tO\\ll'l . destroying all but five of a 103-unit trailer park and v.Tecking 22 businesses it. a s;hoppmg center. FiYt of the city'.s \'lC'tims were found in tbe rubble of !be mobile bcma Th1! sixth b:dl· iQ;S fOUild i!J an .apartmeot near the £ho?pmg renter. "h looted I.me an explosion. a big grren exploskin ... Liz v.·nson. 14. said of the tornado w!ticb swept b)' her home. BY THE mn: the stonn 5)'51em reached Arkansas, the twisters had died oot but a deluge in the form of more than .a foot or rain sent creeks and ri\'ers over their banks and into homes. Tv.·o persons dro"-Tied in El Dorado, Ark .. Saturday when their car stalled on ctt.y streets and "'as swept away. Tv.·o \'OUths ?.'ere killed Sunday n ea r )tagnolia. Ark .. "''hen raging waters StA'e pt a"'·ay the gravel embankment under a culvert. Farther \\'est at Guthrie. Okla., a creek S'A'elled bv almost five inches of rain dro\'e abOut 100 families from their homes Sunday. City officials said the small to .. rn "-'as cut in t"'·o by the raging "'·aters. State officials said ti could have been much "·orse in Oklahoma had tornado ~·amings not gone out as early as they did. ''The v.·eather over Oklahoma Saturday \\·as very similar to the weather over the mid"'·est several months ago during the killer tornadoes." Red Cross Director Joe CWlningham said. "Thal is why 11·e activated a little earlier." U.S. Midsection Calming Go l f Bal l-size d Hail Pelts Texus; Tenness ee Soaks Te111perat 11res Al1>1"~ A11•n!a l!O'l!Ofl l!u11alo (l\arlol!e (l\lca90 (ind~n•11 (!tvtllind Daill~ Denvt• D&!roit Honolulu Kan•o• Clh La1 Yt!lll Loul1vlll1 Miami MllWfllkt'9 M~lnNP!llls New Orltanl N-YO!'"- Low Ptp, 87 ,. " M " m II 7? '' 10 .... 8• 69 17 11 81 ,, 11 , , 86 '' 66 '' 11 l-6 ,in .... 81 1~ .71 .. " II 6J ,;J 61 ~· 1.0S " " 17 7• !1Lll!J~!!1ll . 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A l\et!lft ..,l'l-V dut t0 -w~ IQ<Jed bV 1111 Alr Pollvll9" C01'111'91 Ol1!rkl for lour t r111 In LOl Al'I09!., C::oun!y, TM A,.(0 ..,vised lhfl <N•a•tn 1n11 "''°"' wrt11 fftOlrr•~ 1Hmen11 cu,ltU tt'lllr 1ct l t1.ll ••• n11tel11tv ll\Otl ll~fflll It! Ille l!••I Sin Ft•ftfnclO. $1~ 0.0.ltl lrtd "- Welitul vAtltV1. II WI' ...,.,,....,.,, cooltr •IOllO !ht CHI! wltl! -nlOhl •l'IO moNllf\O IC>W cloudl glvl"'J w•v to ll•1y ivnshl.,. bf f!'lt •"••-· Thtrt wm net bl mvt~ t~•not Tuti.11•t1. t•IOhl Tut1d•~ wrn Ill In '"' 7" Whllt IOflltM'I i<Hr\ wru Otot lo 1119 '°'· llohl •nd Yt rl•b'-wlnd1 wftlpped 1111 11\rftl and fw•·lool wt...s ''°"' Point Concft!llor! lo the Mt~I'"' bofdt•. (].S. Summary Tt.undtr1tl)l'm• dlmlttlslltd over !tit neliot'l's midWC!IO!'I '°'"V •II•• lt\.llll>Q •reas from lower M!clll11an ID the DttP So<l11'1 wi!h 1'favv ralnt, gu•tv wll'lds arid hall. o.,,.1no me nlgllt, t..n the 1111 of golf baits pe!led u.._, Tt•. In t tl•-hour ()lrlod. Jack~. T~"· •Ktlvrtd W9!t over "" lMh 111 rtin 1nd 1bout I 1111:11 ltll tt Monroe, U . S<:>n"e llOOdll!Q •ccOt!'IMnltd tl'lt s!orm• In Mlulu !DDI tnd wtst"n ·-· A few rtin shOwe<'s 11~rrtd In tl'lt Otkolas. Mln-11, W11CO!'lsln '"° M81nt. Biii mot! o!' Ille !lluft(l1r1lorm activity wn iUtoe!tffd wllh • co!d Iran! stri1t11!nq from tl>t -Grttl la~e• ID Te•11 wf!ICll moved tlawly H11Wtrd. 1•11-winds wifed bot!\ theed '"" bclilnd t1'f ''°"'· un1MM1Mbtv cool 11r (ftnled m!Kft of ll'lf Pl•ln•, Wiier& te<nC1tnturn ell~ 1n111 1111 IOI n !tr sou11'1 1s Oltltl\or'M. '" the 0n:o Y•llcv. l'lclwtYr!', e...,.nkl!ll ..,,.._,fVr11 .. m1lnee In !111 ''" Cnn•lal WPolhf!r MoltlY """fl'I' tootv. l l•h: t1"11t111 Wlfldt ,,.,..,, tflCI '"'"'fl!O f!Ov•• ~ Co<nl1'9 "'"' t0 '°"""""'"' t " 11 kl'IOh lft tli.rrooons lodrt tnd T"'"°''· HIOfl lod.ty Ill Ille '°'-to.nit! tt- !Wrtlvrn ''"" from ff to 6'. In 11nc1 ~·•tvrtt ,...,. from ~ 1o Ml, Wttor '9mptrf!VJI Q. Sun, /llooK, Tide . MOMOAY 71SO p.m. 'I lVllDAY Finl hi(lh l!O "·"'· <.O Jl!"I IOw 1,21 t.m. G ' Second hlfh S,.,. p,rn. • o Sf(oncl low ';71 p,m. 1 • 5'1" ,i,t, S:'1 • "'· Sets I Q.o 11 rn, M°""' rlM~ ll:S1 p.m, k!I lO:SO t.m. ) Glou ces ter Duke Succ uu 1bs <1 t 7 4- At Cou nt ry· Horne L01'l>OX ~AP I -The duke of Gloucester. last survi,·ing child Of King George r and WX'le of Queen Elizabeth II. d1ed 1oday after a long illne6s. He was 7~ . Buckingham Palace announced that the duke died in his sleep at Barnwell t.tanor. his country home in Northamp!onshire. The 72·\'ear-old duchess ""'as at Barnwell ~·hen ht died. ( I N SHORT ... ) e Vitarnha Spot WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. William Proxmire. D.·Wis., a physical·fitness buff, today blasted the s 0. cat red Recommended Daily Allowance (RDA) of vitamins and minerals as a "capricious, WlSCientific and illogical standard." In a prepared Senate speech, Proxmire said ''The Food and Nutrition Board of the National Research Council. .. is influenced. dominated and financed in part by the food industry. It represents one of the most scandalous conflicts of inter:st in the federal government." e 1nrnotes Copture.i CHATTAHOOCHEE, Fla. (UP I) -The last of five escaped inmates from the sta te mental OOspital was flushed from a pine thicket and wounded in a brief gWlbattle with Sheriff's deputies today. l"our other escapees from the Chattahoochee State Mental Hospital "-"ere recaptured without incident earlier today. e Fre.,.,h Firing PARIS !UPI) -President Valery Giscard D'Estaing told his cabinet today he fired a ncwly·appointed minister because his criticism of France nuclear tests in the atmosphere was "inexact." The president. embroiled in a front· page govenunent cri.sis a scant two "·eeks after he took office, dismissed Mini ster of Ref~m1 Jean-Jacques Servan· Schreiber late Sunday. It is expected the minisummit will take place later this month after the end of Nixon's f\.fiddle East tour. It is a!M: expected that Arab leaders hosting Ni xon \1•ill endeavor to convin~ him to openly adopt the basic Arab premise tha t there can be no ·pcace ~·ithout complete Israeli "-'ithdra"''al and restoration of Palestinian rights. • ' ~ ! ,\: ..... ~·-...,i, -.~.............,~ SHOWN EARLIER THIS YEAR Miss Cornell, 81 • THE STATE RADIO said Israeli troops were establishing new antitank defen.ses west of the Golan capital of Quneitra and buJldozing a high embankment between the Syrian cily and nearby Israeli settlement!. ---------··--- RAVEN HAIRED ACTRESS Katharine Cornell in 1938 Lady of Stage Katliarine Corn ell Succ urnb s at 81 VINEYARD HAVEN, Mass. (UPI) - Katharine Cornell. First Lady of the American stage for more than three decades, died Sunday at the age of 81. The star succumbed to pneumonia at her sum mer home on the re.sort Island of Martha's Vineyard, Mass., where she had vacationed since child hood. "SllE FLEW UP rrom New York 10 days ago. She appeared to be in good health. But she was quite !rail and weak," said a close friend, ri.·trs. Phyllis f\..1eras, managing editor of the Vineyard Gazette. Drama critics from George Bernard Shaw downwards exhausted t h e i r superlatives in seeking to dcrine Miss Cornell's art. A Shavian eulogy described her as "a gorgeous dark lady from the cradle of the human race." Friends of Nixon Lobby The actress developed a mild early interest in the theater because her father, a physician, partly owned and partly managed a theater in Buffalo, N. Y., where f\.fiss Cornell grew up. But it "'as a glimpsC or the immortal Maude Adams In "Peter Pan" that persuaded the future Star to switch her ambitions from nursing to acting . Against Impeach Moves WASHINGTON (AP) -f\.fore than 1,000 persons who claim President Nixon i~ being ' treated unfairly are going directly to Capitol Hiii to try to stop the in1peachment proceedings. Members of the Committ~ for ralrness to the Presidency planned to meet with lndlvldual l~ouse and Senate membl!:rs today to present thelr case in support or the President Their lobbying cffo1 t.s "·ere 10 follow a pr;iycr breakfast. ' Al a luncheon meeting SUnday, Nixon told the group , "With your support 1 shall do nothing tMt will weaken this offlct. "You came from the heart o( America snd you have: touched our hearts." Appearing with his wife and l"-1> daughters, Nixon reiterated lhal he would not leave: office unlll January 1977. Tllen. Nixon s11lri, It will be "with our helds held high." "A strong American president Is e~ntinl if we ~re to, have peace In the world ," 5ald the President before dep..'lrllng for the Mlddle East. ' I SHE BEGAN scoring hCr great triumphs shortly after her marriage in 1922 to one of the country's prtmier dlrttton. Guthrie ~·tCJintlc. Aflcr ri.1cClinlic's death in 1961. she made no further stage appearances. J\liss Cornell's forte was the creation of character, and she rescued many a weU; play by her stunning lnttrpretatlons that held audiences Spellbound. She had dark -b~own hair, high cheek bones ijlat gave her a slightly Orlenu11 look. pro1nlnent eyebr0\\'8, nnd an extranrdinarlly mobile fare that permith.-d her lo expres$ a V<ide range of emotions wllh daizling facility. ' I j 1 I • I . Orang~ C~!!i Today's Final N.Y. St.eeks ' ~:-'OL 67, NO. 161, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • MONDAY, JUNE 10, 1974 N TEN .CENTS Line Drawn On Tapes By Nix~n . WASHINGTON (UPI) -'President NllOll Hfuaed again 14day to comply wtth a House Judlclary Committee subpoena for 45 White House tapes and documents. saying there would be no end to t11o lmpeechment panel's nqutSI "unlel!ls a Une were drawn somewhere." lie added: "Since it is clear the committee will not draw such a line, I have done so." The President's response to the subpoena, Issued May 30 on a 37-1 vote 'NIXON LEAV!S ON MIDEAST PEACE JOURNEY, P•go 4 by the committee, had been expected in vtew of Nixon's statement May 22 -in twning down an earlier subpoena -that he would not comply with any further demands. •.Nixon's reply, In a Jetter to Judiciary O\ainnan Peter W. Rodino J r., (0..N.J .), was made known at the White House shortly after the President departed on his Middle East trip lind just after the 7 a.fn. PDT deadline set by the committee fqr surrender of the materia1s. Nil:on said if he yielded to the committee demands, it would simply leall to further requests ror tapes. "Once embarked on a process of continually demanding additional tapes whenever those the committee already ha.a failed to tum up evidence of guilt, there would be no end unless a line were drawn somewhere by someone," Nixon said. The subp!)ena was ti" committee's , fourth and it was Wiled along with a Jetter in which committee members warned Nixon that his refusal to comply with lbeir request was "a grave matter" and tbat they would feel free to draw 0 tdverte tnfcreoces'' as well u u1ti- .mately recommend his bn~wltflt as a result. '!be M1bpoeoa req-..s ma~ls <overing the period from Nov. 1$, lm to JU.e 4, 1973. ln hi.1 letter to Rodino, Nixon (See'REFUSES, Pap I) * * * Nixon Refuses To Surrender Trial Evidence W ~SIUNGTON (UPI) -Pmident Nixon today reasserted h1s claim to be the sole judge of what evidence should be surrendered in the Ellsberg break-in we, despite warnings from a federal pdge that he may be risking conten1pt. Through his chief defense attorney, James D. St. Clair, Nixon told U.S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell that the materials sought by fonner White House a.Ide John D. Ehrlichman are "properly the subje<:t of executive privil ege" and thUs the President alone can decide wl)ether to surrender them. 'The action was the second time today Nixon invoked executive privilege in refusing to turn over r e q u e s t e d dQcuments. He previously sent a letter to thi House Judiciary Committee saying he would not complr with a committee subpoena for 45 White House tapes and documents. GeRll has threatened to dismiss the cmspiracy i n d I c t m e n t against Ebrllchman if lhe documents were not produced for his defense. Last week, Gesell said that Nixon's reluctance to allow Ehrlichman full access to his White House files "borders on obstruction" of ~Ice. \1esell was expected to act either later today or Tuesday on a molion by EFlichman's attorney to begin CODtempt pri)ceedlogs. .''Surely ••• what clearly is a valid fonnal claim of privilege by the Presldent concerning n o t e s of (See CONTEMPT, Pa1e %) Irvine Coach. Goes to UCLA UC Irvine baseball coach Gary Adams bas resigned to take over the reins at UCLA. Adorm, a UCLA gradu:ile "'ho played for lhe 8rulns bascblill team, initiated the: b a 1 eba11 pro1ram at UC Irvine and c:oac~ the Anteateni to two successive NCAA college divis i on championships. Hlt moat ttttnt team pomplled a t« ""'°"" In caoturinJI the tltlo. See 1ports, Paie 18, lor details. 11 • • Dtlly Pl"' ..... lly RklltNll KMllW SUN, SEA AND SAND MAKE FOR BIG CORONA CROWDS Along the Orange Coast, W•ather for P•ople and Jellyfish Jellyfish Bug Swimmers As High Winds Rock Boats Jellyfish barasaed Newpoit Beach ••1•• en thil wutmd and high winds ~ Upped over a dozen sailboflts in M<wPirt-. ollldals lll<l loday. weiuani Lt. Logan Lockabey, said he attrtbutes about 50 first akl cases each day to jellyfish sting~ Jellyfish have been a problem all spring, Loctabey said, and could continue through the summer. No tnjuries were reported In the sailboat capsizlngs. according to Orange County Harbor Patrol officials. Despite the winds and jellyfish, 95,000 boachgom enjoyed the 66 degree weather and 67 degree water, Lockabey said. Lockabey estimated 30,000 people visited the ·beaches Saturday and 65,IXX> Sunday. 1"1be weather's been so lousy the last few weeks, I think at first people didn't realize bow pretty it would be," he •Id. " He said there were about ts rescues each day, 00. lerious. It was also a busy weekend !or the bari>o< patrol, which reported four boat collisions in addition to the capsized sailboats. Sergeant Ralph Huffman of the harbor patrol said no injuries were reported In the collisions. He estimated total boat damage at about $700 and attributed the accidents to winds gusting up to 25 miles per hour and pilot error. Huffman said one boat, a 31 foot cabin cruiser, was reported sinking four miles outside the . harbor, but was towed in safely by the U.S. Coast Guard cutter Point Divide. He said the boat1 "The Windfall," owned by Lloyd Aubert of Newport Beach, was able to plug its leak ooce inside the harbor and, after pumping. motored into its slip oo its own po"·er. Police, Firemen Irked ' By Restaurant Traffic The overwhelming success of a complex of three restaurants on the Emkay development near Orange County Airport continues to be a collective pain for Newpdrt Beach police, fire officials and planners. cars are parked anywhere and everywhere and fire Olief Leo Love said today it, would be impossible for fire trucks to get into the parking lot that serves El Torito, Blackbeard's and Harry's Bar and Grin. "We would have to hand lay the lines," Chief Love said. regulations but still have yet to act to revise them. They a·re Tecommending looser hotel parking restrictions saying they think that many hotel guests will also use hotel restaurants and those restaurants won't need as much parking as would other restaurants. . Darnell has submitted a series of other recommendations to co u n c i I m e n involving lilting of parking restrictions in other areas of the Emkay development "1lile construction is under way at many business buildings. He is also asking that the restaurants and the developer provide additional property for restaurant parking nearby. Boat Fee Boos·t? Newport Eyes Raising Monthly Cost By L. PETER KRIEG Of tll9 o.llY Plltl 1..n Nell-'J)Orl Beach councilmen a r e considering a hefty increase in the mooring fee iD Newport Harbor, a move that would put an end tO one oC the biggest nautical bargains around. The boat owners who use the 715 moor- ings ove!" dty tidelands pay only an in- spect.ion fee of $1.20 per foot per year. Orange County, meanwhile, charges the same $1.20 inspection fee . but also Coast Guard Seeks Lost Co~nty Pair . ~ A Huntington Beech man and a friend were believed lost at sea today and are the object oC an intensive U.S. Coast Guard search. John Sheehy, 47, of 8191 Kenington Drive and Dennis Kaiser of Santa Ana were reported missing on board Sheehy's 34-foot converted Navy launch late Sunday night. Sheehy's wife told authorities, "the men are always home for dinner." She said she wasn't even aware they were going out on the boat until she received a call late Swda:y from ~1rs. Kaiser. ?i1rs. Sheehy said her husband bad just installed new fuel tanks on the Ullnamed boat and appa.renUy went to sea t9 test them. The obviously shaken Mrs. Sheehy said she is afraid "they ju.st might be out there and Dot getting any fuel." She said •)le r<port<d tbem mi>Sing after <tlllnf'lriaala to chedt1be mooring which is located off Lido Isle. $17.3 Million Newport Budget Hearing Reset City ~tanager Robert L. Wynn said today that tonight's previously scheduled public hearing on the proposed $17.3 million Newport Beach budget will be postponed until June 24. "We have not yet settled our sa1ary negotiations with the po Ike departmoot," Wynn said, explaining that the pay raises will have to be added to the document. "If there is no setUement by June 24, I'll re«llTUTlend that the city council adopt the budget and make a supplemootal appropriation when the oontract is approved," Wynn said. The city administration am the police declared an impasse in negotiatioM last week and were meeting today with a state mediator in an effort to resolvr percent boost while the city has offered differences. Pt>Uce reportedly are asking for an 11.5 eight percent. Contracts with fireme.n and office workers have already been approved. The council will meet tonight at 7:30 iD city halt Ranch Fire Spreads SOLEDAD (UPI) - A fire that started as a ranch control bum east of here spread to more than 3,200 acres today, edging further into the rugged Pinnacles National 1.1onument. The o r i g i n a I l ,UIO-acre ranch burn broke from its boundarh!s 10 miles east of here Sunday when high winds fanned the area. charges $6 per r.:ot 'ach year !or rental Ol the handful of moorin gs ove r county tidelands. The $1.20 city fee goes to the oounty, which performs annuaJ mooring inspec- tions. aty councilmen see a h'althy profit by charging the rootal fee them· selV!s. Councilmen made it plain they are not considering reinst i tuting the controversial tidelands use fees they once charged for private piers. Newport Terror City ~fanager Robert L. Wynn says the city could get more than $125,IXX> a year, however, by charging the $6 per foot use fee for moored boats. Wynn explained that the inspection fee colle.cted by the Oamge County Harbors, Beadles and Parks Department for moorings o,ver city tidelands is retained by the county to cover their costs of administering the offshore mooring fSee BOAT FEES, Page t) Mesa Girl, 12; Raped After Kidnap at Pier A Sunday morning fishing expedition to Newport Pier turned into an ordeal of pain and terror for a Costa Mesa girl, 12, who was kldnaped at gunpoint and raped by her captor. Purported SLA Letter Claims Patricia Dead LOS ANGELES (AP ) - A Hollywood radio station received a letter toda y from a group identifying Jtself as a Symbiooese Liberation Army desert force declaring that Patricia Hears\ is dead. -'nie letter promised documentation and pb:Kographs y."OOld arrive separately, but a ~1 for KHJ said the atation bad not received any such ntaterlals. FBI •"'115 took the letter but refuaed to comment on whether they thought the dorument was authentic. Several other letters bearing the SL.A symbol have been declared hoaxes by the FBI. There was nothing in the letter, headed "Medical Communique," giving a cause or time or death. Although it bore a hand-drawn seven- headed cobra, the letter did not close with the customary "Death to the fascist insect ... " phrase which has concluded previous confirmed SLA documents. WOMAN DENIES 'TIPPING POLICE' ABOUT SLA, P•go 5 Bearing a Victorville postmark, it was signed by "Colonel De" of the "F'ahiza Desert Force" and "Captain Cha" of the "Enero Medical Detachment." Victorville is in San Bernardino County, \\'hich adjoins Los Angeles County. "To all units and forces : subject, death of a valiant soldier," the letter began. "Our beloved Tania (Miss Hearst's SLA name ) is dead. She was interred with full military honors. Fight on and avenge her noble memory with every resource at your disposal." The Jetter also declared that each member woold destroy 1,000 perms. Meanwhile, In Palo Alto, state Atty. Gen. Evelle Younger said today that Patricia Hearst and her Symbionese Wberati6n Army comrades are "fanatics acting out a revolutionary fantasy ." Younger also said he was "completely convinced" that Miss Hearst and Emily and Bill Harris would be apprehended ''sooner or later." In a speech before the California Sheriff's Association, Younger again defended Los Angeles police actions in the ~1ay 17 shootout in which six SLA members died . "The police prevented death or serious lnjury of innocent people," sa~, Younger. The victim. confronted and abducted in the area of 28th Street and Balboa Boulevard, was driven to a hilly area near Orange where the assault occurred. She· was abandoned in the rural area and sought help at a residence where occupants called police to report the kidnap and rape. Newport Beach Detective Sam Amburgey said the girl's ordeal began only a few minutes after she and her brothers were dropped off by their mothei: to go fishing . Daylight was just breaking when the youngsters were let out of the family car about $ a.m., and the young girt started toward the McFadden Square area and Newport Pier with her tackle. She did oot wait for her brothers and Y;ent alone while they lagged behind, police saML The girl told investigators at that point a man in bis early .20s pulled up in a light brown or beige four-wheel d r I v e recreational vehicle and offered her a ride. Sile refused, she said. Investigators were told the kJdnaper then brandished a pistol and ordered the frightened girl to get into tbe vehicle, which then beaded inland to the Orange area. The victim described her assailant as being a~t five feet, nine ioch es tall, of medium build, with shouJder length light brown hair and wearing faded denim pants and a dark blue jacket. First National Cuts Lend Rate To JJ Ih Percent NE\V YORK (AP) -First National Bank of Chicago. the nation's 20th larges: bank, announced today it was reducing its prime lending rate from 11.6 percent to the 11 1'2 percent prevail ing al most major banks. Earlf last week, the bank reduced its prime from 11 ~~ percent. A few smaller banks dropped to 11v, or 11 percent The reductions were the first since early ?\-larch in the prime rate, which is charged a bank's biggest and best corporate customers. A sustained decline in the rate can signal changes ln conswner interest rates. although the two are not directly linked. Oraage Coast Weather City planners say they soon will do something about rewriting the restaurant parking standards but at the same tim e • they have recommended that the: city COWlCiJ ease up on parking requirements for hotels, Councilmen will consider t h a t propoul-as it would apply to the new Sheraton lfotel in Emkay -tonight. First Since October Night and morning low cloud1 aOO local fog with hazy sunshine in the afternoon Tuesday. A little cooler days. Highs at the beaches in the upper ,60s rsing to the mid· 70s inland. Lows mostly 1n lhc 50s. The problem Is not only the congestion within the parking lots, where cars park in the aisles and everywhere else they can, there is also a major spillover onto the city streets. Valets were setting up stations at the cul de sac In front of the restaur8nt1 unto city ofOclalJ ordered them out, according to traffic engineer Bill E. Darnell. Pollet °'ie! B. James Glavas said that p1trol division Capt. Donald Oyaa1 wants to meet wllh Darnell to conttnue to review the problem. Glavas Is recommending that more street parking be allowed in the area. obvious testimooy to the Inadequacy or the present parking code that requires one perlting 5pace for each allowable restaurant patron. City Plannhlg commWlonm have voiced concern over the lack of Food Prices Drop Slightly WASHINGTON (AP) -A dip In retail food prices in April meant a family or four saved 30 «Qts a week during the month if it scrimped on meat and served lo.,,·er<ost Items, a c co r d i n g to government figures released 1oday. The Agriculture Department said a \ow-cost menu ror a four-member family, including two school children. <ost $4.1.10 per week in April, down 0.7 percent from $43.70 In March. But ii ... as up ta percent or $6.70 per week from April 19'73. Officials said It was lbe first decline in the lamlly food Indicator since October. More aflluent lamllies, u the monthly series has' shown in lhe past, enjoyed a slightly better break relatively with food budgeta. A moderate-<.'OSt menu that cost $55.10 a week In March was 60 cents or 1.1 percent less expensive in April. 1be April menu, however, was up 1$ percent or $7.20 from • year earliet:. The department's plan for liberal eatlnc C08l '68.10 pe.r week in April, mn 80 ceotl or 1.2 percent from March. But It was $8 or 14 percent more expensive tha n in April last ytat. Home economist.I SI)' the various meal plans .... computed ... the basil or rood quantities """"'1ted by fanilly groupe onc1 provaJllng .. tau prlct0. • I , The low-cost plan relates to families with yearly Incomes of $4 .IXX> kl $8.000: the moderate $8,000 to $10,000; and the liberal $10, and over. One basic difference is that lov.·er- lncome meals under the USDA food plans (.'Ofltain cuts of les.tt~pensive meat~ more cereals, bread, potatoes, dry oeans. poultry and fish. The figur@! are compiled by the department's Agrlcullural R esea r c h Service '-nd publi'shed each month in Food and lfome Nntes by tbt USDA 9fiict of Communication. A fourth meal budget is called the !S.. PRICES, Pagt I) INSIDE TODAY Go-go guys perform in scantu 1111/011 bikini briefs b t f o r e women-011ly audicr1ce1 hi a Southern lllinoi! night spot. Chicks ogle ''dudts" who are paid $10 on ltour in tlti1 reverse chauvi11ism. St-0ry, Page 7, At 'I'-Stnrkt I .. lllll't II L.M ... .,. I c.u..,.,... s Cl•Nlfl" )1.)l ~fl ,. CFl'll-Nll lf OM!h Nttlett t Ellflffl.ll ..... 6 • ...,,llftmttll 111 P1!ll!Oh 1•11 ...,._._ IS AM L•llOtrt It • I Mlllllit~ 11 ,,._, ,,.. . -.. ,.., ............. OrllflM C-IY t lrh11 P..tw It '""" , .. ,, ltldi Mfttltt• 1•11 Ttlt'lltlNI • TllMI-a WMll'Hor 4 --~ HfWI \).IS W"'111 NIWI I ; ' • • J. DAil\' PllOT Just •e- l :/. ~ ' .. ,,. . •· ·:.~~ with ·~~··., Tom "' 11rphine ~W eathern1e11, ,:Use Your Toes UPCOAST, 00\\lf\;COAST: Shor I· ~iimers here in our coastal region often wonder how it is \\'e can have a beautiful y,·eekend like this last one and end up having ii all to ourselves. \Veil. it's really quite sitnple. You can attribute ii lo !he weather forecasicrs. You take Saturday. for example. You • a rt-n 't going lo get too many June Saturdays along this best. of all possible coasts \Vhich are any nicer than the one jw;l pa st. Beautiful. ,: Despite the nea r-perfect conditions for '}?each-going, lifeguard estimators suggest only about 140,000 folks shOY.'Cd up along the shoreline. A One lifeguard spokesman suggested the scarcity of beach bodies could be attributed to ·•erroneous w eathe r t.forecasts.'' 11'\DEED, llE '\\'AS being very polite. \Vhat he 1neant v.•as the predictions :\4·t>re clear off. \Vrong. Dead wrong. Aiistaken and not v.·orth a hoot or holler. \Vbat the weather people said Friday u•as that here along the coastline, ~turday v.·as going to be filled v.·ith chilly airs .... clouds and drizibn& skies, Faced with a fo recast like that. even.I .. u·ould stay a"•ay from the beaches. 'C. \\'hat Saturday turned out to be was blue skies, balmy breezes and a brilliant sun v.·hich pun1ped !he temperatures up t in1o the 80s. No1\· some of our coastal folks, \\-·ho like to keep 1.he pl3ce pretty much to the hometown ers, would react by saying , t ·"\Vonderfu l. \Ve should have wrong forecasts like that all the lime and we'll keep the beaches fron1 ge tting , 01·ercrowded ... ·• SORRY, BUT THAT'S not so good. You have to remember that cdastal folks plan .;_ahead on the Yleather forecasts too. Like · the chap who reads that grim Friday forecast for Saturday and groans with disg ust. ~ "\Von·t be any beach weather tomorrov.·. Martha," he advises the little u·oman. So he goes ahead and moves all the living room furniture and starts the painting job he will finish in the alleged gloom of the June Saturday. Thus he awakens Saturday mom to "' that brilliant sunshine. But it's too late. J1c's already stuck with the painting job. i\IAYBE IT JUST proves you shouldn·t lock your life in around \Veather forecasts. Some have called forecasting a science, or maybe an art, or possibly and blend of v.·itchcra{t. Well, I'll tell you what it is. It's guessing, lhat's what. \Veathcr people get paid to guess with barometers. gauges. scales and three liUle scoops that spin arowid on a pole and look impressive. Others, like T\1iddle Son, predict the siie of surf by how his big toe feel s and the atmospheric conditions on whether his long hai r flies out like an electrified cat or lies flat and limp. C0~1 E 'fO TH11'1\ of it, he prtlbably has a better guessing a\•erage than all those off'icial people v.·ith the instruments. TAKE YOU R PICK TlO~IE (UPI) -The steadv increase in Italian food prices is bad 'enough. But today tl1e Na1ional Cooperatives Associa- tion had more bad o.ev1s: A 10 percent increase in 1he price of toothpicks. Monda)'f' Junt 10, 1':1 "' Nixon Departs on Mideast Peace Trip \\1ASHINGTON (UPll -Expressing hope that he Is starting on .. a new journey for peace.'' Prt'sldent Nixon left. today for a lour or five ~tkld.le ~st nations. "We believe th!J trip, like the other journeys we have taken. will oontribute 10 that lasting peace whid\ u·e as Americans are so deeply dedicated ," Nixon said Jn brief speech as he and Mrs. Nixon left the \Vhite llouse on the l~,000- mile, nine day tri p. Nixon thanked a large group of foreign diplomats and go\•emment officials for coming to see 1hem off and said ••we hope and believe this \\ill be another joun1ey for peace." THE PREStDE?\'T likened hi.s trip t.o historic 1972 v\slts to mainland China and the Soviet Union. Those were the first trips to either Communist capital by a sitting American president and he noted that he would be lhe first president to visit four of the countries on his ~1ideast agenda. "Both or lb06e journeys \\'ert ones that had a profound impact not only on the relations or the nations involved but also on building a structure of peace for the whole v.·orld. "This trip \\'Ill take u.s to a -part o! the world that has known nothing but war over lhe past 30 tu 40 years. And as we go to (j\·e nations -four that have ne\'tr been >1lsited by an American President before -u·e realize that one trip is not going to solve diffcrcncts that are very deep. that go bac k In some cases, many years. and in so111 cnse:s centuries. "BUT \VE Al.W re a Ii z e that a beginning must be made." Refcning to cease·fire agreements thal Secretary of State Henry A. LINCOLN VILLAGE TRAILER COURT NEARLY DEMOLISHED BY KANSAS TORNADO Five Victims Found in Emporia Facility Rubble After Saturday Evening Twister 3 Midco11ti11ental States Cite Twiste1· Death Toll By United Press International 'Those "·ho live in the country·s mid.section known as "Tornado Alley" are hardened veterans of weather catastrophes but Red cross volunt eer Peggy Glen spent the \\'eekend \vith tears in her eyes. "It's hard to believe v.·hat I've seen.'' she said while operating one of four disaster relief centers set up in Tulsa , Okla. "PEOPLE ARE coming in \\'ilhout any homes. I stopped at a neighbor's on my v.·ay here and where four houses had stood, there was nothing there but vacant lots." It was a v.•eekend of killer tornadoes. torrential rains and flash floods in portioOs of Kansas. OklaholJla and Arkansas. As the last \'estiges of lhe weather system moved p e a c e f u 11 y eastward Sunday, lhe ofricial death count stood at 2.1 . hundreds v.·ere left homeless and property damage was expected to exceed $55 million It began Saturday night with a tornado ripping the roof or a crowdt'd nursing home at Drum right. Okla .. and culling a mile-long. three-block \ride s w a t h through lhe communily of 3.000. But the violent weather qui ckl y spread to other sections of the state and to Kansas. Al Emporia, Kan .. a tornado cut a mile--long path through the to\'111. destroying all bul five of a 103-unit trailer park and 1vrecking 22 businesses in a shopping center. Five of the city's victims were found in the rubble or the ·mobil e homes. The sixth body u•as found in an apartment near the sho pping center. ''IL Jookcd like an explosion. a big green explosion," Liz Y..'i\son, 14, said of the tornado which swept by her home. BY 11lE TIME the storm sy~lem reached Arkansas, the twisters had died out but a deluge in ~form of more than a foot of rain sent creeks and rivers over their banks and into homes. T.,ro persons drownl'd in El Dorado, Ark .• Saturdav when their car stalled on city streets aiid was swept away. T\\.·o youths were killed Sunday n ear ~1agnolia, Ark.. when raging waters swept a.,.,•ay the gravel embankment under a culvert. Farther \11est at Guthrie. Okla., a creek s .... ·elled bv almost fi\'e inches of rain dro\'e abOut JOO families from their homes Sunday. City officials sa id the small tO\\'Il was cut in tl'i'O by the raging \\'ate rs. State officials said tt could have been much v.•orse in Oklahoma had tornado v.•arnings not gone out as early as 1hey did, ''The v.•eather over Oklahoma Saturday .. ras very similar to the weather over the midv•est several months ago during the killer tomadoes." Red Cross Director Joe Cunningham said. "That is u·hy v.·c activated a little earlier." Gloucester Dnke Succuntbs at 7 4 At Country Honie LONDON (AP) -The duke of Gloucester. last surviving child of King George V and uncle of Queen Elizabeth II. di ed today after a Jong illness. He was 11. Buckingham Palace announced that the duke died in his steep at Barnv.·e!J Manor, his country home in Northamp!onshire. The 72-yea r-<>ld duchess was at Barnwell 1vhen he died. (..__I_N_S_H_OR_T_ •• _. __,) e v1tamh1 Spat WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. William Proxmi re. D.-Wis.. a. physical-fitness buff, today blaR.ted the s o • c a 1 I e d Recommended Daily Allowance (RDA ) of vitamins and minerals as a .. capricious, unscientific and illogical standard." In a prepared Senate speech, Proxmire said .. The Food and Nutrition Board of the National Research Council. .. is innuencccl. dominated and financed in part by the food industry. lt repre.5ents one of the most scandalous conflicts of interest in the federal government." e Inmates Capt11red Kissinger -who accompanled him on the trip -negollalcd btt\\'etn lsrael and Egypt and bet.,.,·een Israel and Syria, Nixon 3aid: ''A beglnnlng ha.' been made toward a different relation 11.nd • better relation be~~n the MtiooJ In lbat area. We have been proud to pluy a part in thnl be · ·ng." · ~I.rip, the President said, will •iprovlde an oworturutr,·to reaffirm our support for these lnlt aUvcs that have betn uMertaken, to explore ways that we can have new and better relations bet\\-een the United States and each nation in the area ••. and &186 explore waya in 't\'bich those nations in the area may have better relations with ea.ch other aM build toward tile ~nent and lasting and just and equitable peace that all of tht'm, we know, ctrta.inly that v.·e v.·ant. '' wanl and B~fo."Ot\t: llEADING {or Cairo on Wednesday, the President and his party will stop ort for tv.·o nights In the Austrian city of Saliburs. Thls will give • him time to get accuston1cd to Jct Ing. There ls a seven-hour time dlffercntial between Washington ond the ?i.tlddle F.a.st stops on his schedule. He Die! to the Egyptian capital for a lavish welcome Wednesda y morning foltowing a three-hour, 45-mlnute nig~t from Salzburg. From Cairo, he will go, m order, to Jiddah. Saudi A r a b I 11 : Damascus, Syria; Tel Aviv. Israel, and Amman. Jordan, before returning to Washington -after an overnight stop in the Azores -a week fro1n \Vednesday. *** -(:("f.,· Palestine Issue Urged at Sumiµit By The As~la\td Press S>Tian· sources called for the Cerieva peace confe rence today to deal only with restoring Palestinian rights and com· pleting Israeli withdrawal from occupied territori es when the session reswnes. IN DA!'t1ASCUS, A highly reliable Syrian SOur<:i! said Damascus is actively trying Lo bring about "at least one" Arab minisummit in the very near future for the adoption of a joint stand calling on the Geneva conference to take up the question or Palestinian rights and Israeli withdrawal. The source did not reveal where this one or more min isummit.s v.·ould be held , or who would attend them. It was sunnised. however. that Syria . Egypt and Jordan, who will attend the Geneva conference, would \vant to meet to coordinate their policies following the signing or the disengagement agreement between Syria and Israel. It is expected the minisummit v.•il\ take place later this month after the end of Nixon's Middle East tour. Jt is also expected that Arab leaders hosting Nixon \\'ill endeavor to convince him to openly adopt the basic Arab premi se that there can be no 'peace without complete Israeli v.•ithdra"·al and restoration of Palestinian rights. SHOWN EARLIER THIS YEAR Miss Cornell, BT !\fEANWIULE, ISRAEL accused Syria of "brutal torture" of ltiraeli prisoners and said it will prolest to the Unit.eel Nations. Syria countered with charges that Israel mistreated Arab prisoners. Each government denied the o l h e r ' s accusalions. The Israeli govenunent Luued an official statement Sunday expressing "indignation and revulsion" at reports from returning PO\Vs that they were regularly beaten v.ith rubber truncheons and burned with electric lights. The prisoners said they were given poor food and medical treatment. Some pr'8oners said they could not publicly reveal the worst of the tortures. "It is with utmost gravity that the government views this conduct. wtiich violates every international precept," the Israeli state1ncnt said . Despite the exchange or atrocit y charges, an Israeli military spokesman said disengagment of forces on the Golan ![eights was proceeding according to schedule. THE STATE RADIO said Israeli troops were establishing new anlitank defense )! west of the Golan capital of Quneitra and bulldozing a high embankment between the Syrian city ;snd nearby Israeli settlement!i RAVEN HAIRED ACTRESS Katharine Cornell in 1938 Lady of Stage U.S. Midsection Calming CllATIAHOOCHEE, Fla. (UPI) -The last of five escaped inmates from the slate mental ho.spital was flushed from a pine lhicket and wounded in a brief gunbattle with Sheriff's deputies today. rour other escapees from th e Chattahoochee State Mental Hospital i.1•ere recaptured without incid ent earlier today. Katharine Cornell Succurnbs at 81 weak ," said a close friend , J\irs. Phyllis Meras, managing editor of the Vineyard Gazette. • Golf Ball-sized Hail Pelts Texas; Tennessee Soak.~ Ternperaurres Hl•ll ,_ Alb111't " .. At11..,11 " • eosoon " • 80Jl!ll10 " n c111rlol!e .. ,. Cll!t•!IO .. .. Cl11cln111tl .. .. Cltvelrrld " n 0All•• " " Ofnv~r " " Oetro<I .. " 11onolulY .. " 1C1ns1s cnv " " Lii VfQ~S .. .. LOUll'tll!t " ,. Mleml .. " MllwlYkH " " Mnl11111poll1 • " N..,. 0r1ean1 " n Norw York " " l •Lll!J~l!•lJ DfLIVERY SfRVICE Dellie~ ol lhe o.,~ P1lol ,, .. .. •• .n ·" 1.0$ ' .WA•M Ml.WOflLltilll• ~; MIAIAI llGIND to !!\le 30s. Lioht erd 't1rl1blt wind• wn;l>l>td 1111 lh•~ end IOV•·IOol ..... ., 1 ..... 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O\'ftniolll tfrM!trtt\lrfl nmtlntd lft the .... e French Firing PARIS (U P1 ) -President Valery Giscard D'Estaing told his cabinet today he fired a newly-appointed minister because his criticism of France nuclear tests in the atmosphere was "inexact." The president. embroiled in a front· page government cri.sis a scant t°"·o v.•eeks after he took office, dismissed Ministe r of Reform Jean-Jacques Servan· Schreiber late Sunday. VlNEYARD HAVEN, ~fass. (UPI) - Katharine C',omell. First Lady of the American stage for more than thr ee decades, died Sunday at the age of 81. The star succumbed to pneumonia at her summer home on the resort Island or l\1artha's Vineyard, ~1ass., where she had vacationed since childhood • "SllE FLEW UP from New York 10 days ago. She appeared to be in good health. But she was quite frail and Friends of Nixon Lobby Against Impeach Moves Drama critics from George Bern.'.lrd Shaw dovmwards exhausted t h e i r superlatives in seeking to define f\.liss Cornell 's art. A Shavian eulogy described her as "a gorgeous dark lady from the cradle of the human race." The actress developed a mild early interest in the theater because her fath er, a physician, partly owned and partly managed a theater in Buffalo, ,N. Y., v.•hcre Miss Cornell grew up. But it was a glimpse of the immortal 1.iaude Adams in "Peter Pan" that persuaded the future Star to switch her ambitions from nursing to .nctlng. is guaranteed ...,fr'ilrr: • .,.. ... Mt ,. ... ti' 5'll , . ._ UI '911 rw t• d ._ lnlCM It )'II. "'1 Jrt U!itt llllli 1:31 ,,... fJf\ ,,,., ..,,141, 10ioc ... u eo rga,1,1N l./·.~-.. Js111ow ,.,.,..,., ... . .. ~~lt(Jw'tt~ !LOW Coastal Wf'afher WASllINGTON (AP) -Pi·fore than 1,000 persons who claim Prtsidc.nt Nixon is being treated unfairly are going dlrcclly to Capitol Hill to try to stop the Impeachment prqfcedings. At a luncheon meeting Sunday, Nixon told the group. "With your support I shall do nothing thet will weaken this offlct. ,;You came from the heart ot America and you have touched our hearts." SHE BEGAN scoring hCr ~eat triumphs shortly after her marriage in 1922 to one of the country's premier directon. Guthrie } 'cCllnllc. After McC\lntlc's death In 1961. she made no turthc.r stage appearances. ,. _.., 11111 WIJ. n fl' • ltt rttflft "' Uft ~ ' IJI. ~!•U,. • I 111 Sliltf, ell Jiii I C"9 II k Wt11;bl ti ,.. C* •1 !M:ll M~ 11 I.& 1ei!!Olll'es Int Ot .. t Ceulrly AIH~ .••• , 642•4J2J ..,._.st 1111111rni1., It~ "' 1111-• . . . . .. .. ltO· IZlO Siii ~ Cl.11\11111 &tin. $111 illl Cl!il1fMJ, OKI ,111!1. so.Ill lJttN, 11111111 N11wcl 4!2-4420 .02 "'1111 l\elY sv"1lllnt llvt rtinallltd tool ·" •I-Int coesl Hlf fll TUH61y wtll bl 1" ll'lt 11p111r 1°' I~ IDwJ, 11111~1 Wiii bl In Ille IOW IOlo "' 11>t Lot A""'n .r••· ti nt11m 41c1\ll-v ctve 1o llnOCI .,.., ,,wt!I bY '"' ... ,, Pouvnen c.cin1r• Olslrlct fOr lour ••••• In Len Anot f1 County. The AftCO 9dv!Jed !Nit dllldr*'I •rid Pft)Oi'll with ••w!•r·~ 111 ....... 11 tvrt1lt /!Wit .t CllV)I •1 . 9\0«IAllV !flow I vlnq If! 1114! £111 &1n ,itrll•l'lltO, Sin G.orltl 11111 P-Wt1111.11 v1!11ys, 11 ..... -.m.1 tool*" 11fll"lll !tit '°'" .,.1111 '°"" n/0111 •I'll IT!MPllP'IO l#W ""'°"" g!vlflO w•v lo Nill' '""''hliw ~., 1f1e 1n•rno011. Tl\tff wltt ~' be l"l'lutl! fl'l•l!Ot T1191<11v li!qfl l 1<19UllV will oe 11 lllt 101 Wl'lllt ton+gl'll'I '°"" "lilt droo MoSlly WMY IOOf)'. !Joh: wttillll• wtnd1 ~"'' ,1111 "'°""'"" houri bl· 'O!'Pll"O "'"' lo ...,.,,,,._, • lo 11 ~O'IOll '" '""-' '°"'" •ncl l\lftd,fl't. Hloh lod•r In Int 60I. C...tel It~ P".tll'l'f1 ''lllfe fr-ff lo "' I•· 1•1111 19n\p9r11'\1rft flltlll from • lo ... W1lw rtmper•tvrt tl Sun, Jtlooti, Tide. MOMOAY _ ... ,:JO 11.m. 11 Till!fOAY l'lnl hltl'I 1;13 1 m. 1 0 fl'ltll low ·~" ··'"' 0) SfCll'ld hlOI! i:•t p.m. t 0 $tc0fld low 1~n p.m. 1.• Svn r1.--J:t1 •"" Sfll 8 QA p.m. MOO!\ llHi !l;loJ (I.I'll ... ,, Ill.~ I m, Members of the committee for t'almtM lo the Presidency planned 10 mctt 14-'llh Individual !louse and Senate members today to present their case In support of the President. Their lobbying cffOl ts a prayer breakfast. were to follow Appearing wl1 h his wife and t\liO dttughters, Nixon reiterated that he would not leave office unUI January 1977. 1',en, Nixon SAld, i_L wlll be ·'.,.,·ith our hcil.ds held high." "A ttrong American president Is cs5t nth1l U we arc to hAve peact In the world," snld th~ Pre~\dcnt before departing for the t.tlddJe East. f.fiss Cornell's forte was the creation or characle.r,.and she rtscucd many a v.·e.ak play by her stuM ing Interpretations that held audiences spellbound. She had dark bklwn hair, high chttk bones lb.it ga>1c her a slightly Oriental look. prominent eyebrO\\'S. and an extraordin11rily mobile race l ha t pcrmltterl her to express o "'Ide range ot c1notlons v.•lth dnu.Jlng fn cillty. I I II I l 1. I 'f I I I. ( I • • Orange C~!!t Today's Final a N.Y. Stoeks ·VOL. 67, NO. 161, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN IA MONDAY, JUNE 10, 1974 N TEN .CENTS Line Drawn On Tapes By Nix':Jn WASHINGTON (UPll -• President Nl""1 relullOd ag~ln today to comply wtth a House Judiciary COmmlttee subpoena for 45 White House tapes and documents, saylng there would be no end to the lmpileclun'!'I panel's req~ "unless a line were drawn somewhere . .,, He added: "Since it is clear the ~ommlttce will not draw such a line, I have done so." The Presklent's response to the subpoena , Jssued May 30 on a 37·1 vote NIXON LEAVES ON MIDEAST PEACE JOURNEY, Pago 4 by the committee, hid been expected in View of Nixon's statement May 22 -in turnJng down an earlier subpoeia -that he would not comply with any further demands . . Nixon's reply, tn a letter to Judiciary O\ainnan Peter W. Rodino Jr., (D-N.J.), was made .koown at tbe White House abortly after the President departed on his Middle East trip and just. after the 7 a.fn. PDT deadline set by the committee., ft'.'I' surrender of the materials. Nixon said if he ylelded to the committee demands, It would simply leali to further requests for tapes. "Once embarked on a process of continually demanding additional tapes whenever those the committee already ba1 failed to turn up evidence of guilt, there would be no end unless a line were drawn somewhere by someone," Nixon said. 'Ibe subpoena was tt-committee's fourth and It was issued along with a letter in which committee members warned Nlxoo that hill refusal to comply with tbetr request was "a grave matter" and that they would feel free to dra\9 •11dvene lnferenctS'' as well u ulti· .mately reoommend bis !mpeo<hment IS a result. 'Jbe M1bpoen1 reqaeotod malerials, divering lhe period lr<m Nov. 1~ 1972 to Jilne 4. 1973. In bis letter to Rodino, Nixon (See REFUSES, Pap I) * * * Nixon, Refuses To Surrender Trial Evidence WASIUNGTON (UPI) -President Nixon today reasserted his claim to be lhe '°le jodge of what evidence should be slirrendered in the Ellsberg break·in ca&e. despite waminp from a federal judge that he may be risking conlentpt. Through his chief defense attorney, James D. St. Clair, Nixon told U.S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell that the materials sought by fonner White House aide John D. Ehrlichrnan are "properly fhe subject of executive privilege" and thus the President alone can decide wl}ether to surrender them. 'The actioil was the second time today Nrxon invpked executive privilege in refUsing to turn over r e q u e s t e d dOcuments. He previOU51.y sent a letter to thi House Judiciary Committee saying he wouJd not comply with a committee subpoena for 45 White House tapes and documents. Gesell has threatened to dismiss the cmspiracy I n d t c t m e n t against Ebrllchman If the documents were not produced for his defense. Last week, Gesell said that Nixon's reluctance to ailow EhrUchman full access to his White HOUse files "borders on obstruction" of ~Ice. 'tesell was expected to act either later tod&.y er Tuesday on a motion by Eflrlichman's attorney to begin cootempt prix;eedings. -!'Surely ••• what clearly ls 11 valid (onnal claim or privilege by lhe Pttsident concerning n o t es of (See CONTEMPT, Pace%) Irvine Coach Goes to UCLA UC Irvin< bo .. bon coach Gary . Adams has resigned to take over the reins at UCLA. Adonis, a UCLA _..iraduate "'ho played for lhe.AJruins ba9eball team, Initiated tht b a s e b a 11 JM"Olram al UC Irvine and coached lhe Anteaten to two surotMlve NCAA college division Chlmplons!ilps. 1111 moot ,...,.,,t team complied a ff-I reconf In capturln.o the tltle. S.. sports, Paga 11, for detail~ O.lly l"lltt l"llett It)' a1<1MoN ~ SUN, SEA AND SAND MAKE FOR BIG CORONA CROWDS Along tM Orainge C011t, W•1ther for People i nd Jellyfi1h Jellyfish Bug Swimmers As High Winds Rocle Boats Jellyfish bansoed Newport Bell<h ,..,.,.... thll -ond lllgh windt ~ tipped over a dozen sallboJits in Newi*t-. --loday. Lifeguanl u. Logan Locbbey, said he attributes about 50 first ai:I cases each day to jellyfish stings Jellyf~h have been a problem all spring, Lod:abey said, and could con tinue through the summer. No Injuries were reported In the sailboat capsiilngs, according to Orange County Harbor Patrol officials. Despite the winds and jellyfish, 95.000 beadlgoers enjoyed the 66 degree l\'eatber and 67 degree water, Lockabey said. Lockabey estimated 30,000 people visited the ·beaches Saturoay and 65,000 Sunday. ..,.he weather's been so lousy the last few weeks, I think at nrst people didn't realize how pretty it would be/' he atd. A- He said there were about 15 rescues each day, noqe lerious. It w'iu a1sO a busy weekend for the harbor patrol, whk.'h reported four boat collisions in addition to the capsized sailboats. Sergeant Ralph Huffman of the harbor patrol said no injuries were reported in the collisions. He estimated total boat damage at about $700 and attributed the accidents to winds gusting up to 25 miles per hour and pilot error. Huffman said ooe boat, a 31 foot cabin cruiser, was reported sinking four miles outside the harbor, but was lowed in safely by the U.S. Coast Guard cutter Point Divide. He said the boat, "The Windfall," owned by Lloyd Aubert of Newport Bead!:, ~as able to plug its leak once inside ·the harbor and, after pumping, motored into its slip on its own power. Police, Firemen Irked . By Restaurant Traffic The cverwhelming success or a complex of three restaurants on the Emkay development near Orange County Airport continues to be a collective pain for Newpdrt Beach police, fire officials and planners. Cars are parked anywhere and everywhere and fire Cltief Leo Love said tcday it would be impossible for .fire trucks to get into the parking lot .that serves El Torlto, Blackbeard's and Harry's Bar and Grill. "We would have to band lay the lines," Chief Love said. regulations but still have yet to act to revise them. They a·re recommending looser hotel parking restrictions saying they think that many hotel guests will also use hotel restaurants and those restaurants won't need as much parking as would other restaurants. . Darnell has submitted a series of other recommendations to c o u n c i I m e n involving lil'ling of parking restrictions in other areas of the Emkay deve lopment while construction is under way at many business buildings. He is also asking that the restaurants and the developer provide additional property for restaurant parking nearby. Boat Fee Boost? Newport Eyes Raising Monthl y Cost By L. PETER KRJEG i Of tJle Deltf 1"1111 Sltff Newport Beach councilmen a r e considering a hefty increase in the mooring fee in NeWpc:irt Harbor, a move that would put an end to one of the biggest nautical bargains around. 1be boat owners who use the 715 ITIQ(H'o ings over city tidelaods pay on1y an in. .sped.ion fee of $1.20 per foot per year. Orange County, meanwhile, charges the same $1.20 inspection fee , but also Coast Guard Seeks Lost County Pair -A Huntington Beach man and a friend were believed lost at sea today and are the object of an inlenstve U.S. Coast Guard search. John Sheehy, 47, of 8191 Kenington Drive and Dennis Kaiser of Santa Ana were reported missing on board Sheehy's 3f·foot converted Navy launch late Sunday night. Sheehy's "'i!e told authorities, "the men are always home for dinner." She said . she wasn't even aware they were gcing out on the boat until she received a call late Sunday from ~fr.!I. Kaiser. rt1rs. Sheehy said her husband had jWJt installed new fuel tanks oa the unnamed boat and apparently went to sea t9 test them . The obviously shaken Mrs. Sheehy said she is afraid "they jun might be out there and Dot getting any fuel." She; said she rtported them missing aft.,.·eaJllDI -"'diedt lbe moormc which is located off Lido Isle. $17.3 Million Newport Budget Hearing Reset City ~tanager Robert L. Wynn said today that tonight's previously scheduled public hearing on the proposed $17.3 1111llion Newport Beach budget will be postponed lDltil June 24. "We have not yet settled our saJary negotiations with the police dtpartment." Wynn said, ei:plain.ing that ¥f>af raises will have to be added to the (R)cument. "If there ls no settlement by June 24, I'll recommend that the city ,council adopt the budget and make a supplemental appropriaUoo when the cootract is approved ," Wynn said. The city administration and the police declared an impasse in negotiations last week and were meeting today with a state mediator in an effort to resolvt percent boost while the city bas offerOO differences. Po.llce reportedly are asking for an 11.5 eight percent. Contracts with firemen and office workers have already been approved. The council will meet tonight at 7:30 in city hall. Ranch Fire Spreads SOLEDAD (UPI) - A fire that started as a ranch control bum east of here spread to more than 3,200 acres today, edging further into the rugged Pinnacles National ~1onument. The o r i g in a I l,1J>O.acre ranch bum broke from its boundarits 10 miles east of here Sunday when high winds fanned the area. charges $6 per f;ot each yea r for rental cl the handful of moorings over county tidelands. The $1.20 city fee goes to the county. whtch performs annuaJ mooring inspec. lions. Cly councilmen see a healthy · profit by charging the rental fee !hem· selves. Councilmen made it plain they are not considering re i n s titutin g the controversial tid elands use fei!s they once charged for private piers. Newport Terror City ~tanager Robert L. Wynn says the city could get .more than $125,000 a year, hawever, by charging the $6 per foot use fee for moored boats. Wynn explained that the inspection fee collected by the Oamge County Harbors, Beaches and Parks Department for moorings over city tidelands is retained by the county to cover their costs of administering the offshore mooring fSee BOAT FEES, Page %J Mesa Girl , 12, Raped After Kidnap at Pier A Sunday morning fishlng expedition to Newport Pier turned into an ordeal of pain and terror for a Costa ~lesa girl, 12, who was kidnaped at gunpoint and raped by her captor. Purported SLA Letter Claims Patricia Dead LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Hollywood radio station recei\•ed a letter today from a group identifying itself as a Symbionese 'LIDeration Army desert force declaring that PatTicia Hearst is dead. - ~ letter promised documentation and pboc.ographs would arrive separately, but a spotmoan for KW said the sta.Uoo had not received any such materials. FBI agmt.s took the Jetter but refll5ed to comment on whether they thought the document was authentic. Several other letters bearing the SL.A symbol have been declared hoaxes by the FBl. There was nothing in the letter, headed "Medical Communique," giving a cause or time of death. Although it bore a hand"(lrawn seven. headed cobra, the letter did not close with the customary "Death to the fascist insect .•. " phrase which has concluded previous confirmed SLA documents. WOMAN DENIES 'TIPPING POLICE' ABOUT SLA, Pago S Bearing a Victorville postmark. it was signed by "Colonel De" or the "Fahiza Desert Force" and "Captain Cha" of the "Enero ~fedical Detachment." Victorville is in San Bernardino County, v.1lich adjoins Los Angeles County. "To all units and forces: subject, dealh of a valiant soldier," the letter began. "Our beloved Tania (1'1iss Hearst's SL.A name) is dead. She was interred with lull military honors. Fight on and avenge her noble memory with every resource at your disposal." The letter also declared that each member would destroy 1,000 persons. Meanwhile, In Palo Alto, state Atty. Gen. Evelle Younger said today that Patricia Hearst and her Symbionese LlberatiOn Anny comrades are "fanatics acting out a re vol utionary fantasy ." Younger also said he was "completely convinced" that Miss Hearst and Emily and Bill Harris v.·ouJd be apprehended "sooner or later." In a speech before the California Sheriff's Association, Younger again defended Los Angeles police actions in the Afay 17 shoolout in which six SLA members died. "The police prevented death or serious injury of innocent people," said Younger. The victim. confronted and abducted in the area of 28th Street and Balboa Boulevard, was driven to a hilly area near Orange where the assault occurred. She was abandoned in the rural area and sought help at a re.sidence where occupants called police to report the kidnap and rape. Newport Beach Detective S a m Amburgey said the girl's ordeal began only a few minutes after she and her brothers were dropped off by their mother to go fishing . Daylight was just breaking when the youngsters were let out of the family car about S a.m., and the young girt started toward the McFadden Square area and Newport Pier with her tackle. She dMi not wail for her brothers and went alone• while they lagged behind, police said. The girl tokl investigators at that point a man in his early 20s pulled up in a light brown or beige four·wheel d r iv e recres.tional vehicle and offered her a ride. She refused, she said. Investigators were told the kidnaper !hen brandished a pistol and ordered the frightened girl to get into the vehicle, which then headed inland to the Orange area. The \'lctim described her assailant a.. being about five feet, nine inches tall, cf medium build, with shoulder length light brown hair and wearing faded denim pants and a dark blue jacket. First Natio1ml Cuts Lend Rate To JJih Perce1it NEW YORK (AP) -First National Bank of Chicago, !he na tion's 20th largest bank, announced today :t was reducing its prime lending rate from 11 .6 percent to the 11 1.7 percent prevailing at most major banks. Early last week, the bank reduced its prime from 1 1~~ percent. A few smaller banks dropped to 11 v, or 11 percent. The reductions were the first since early 1'1arch in lhe prime rate, which is charged a bank's biggest and best corporate customer!. A sustained decline in the rate can signal changes in consumer interest rates, although the two are not directly linked. Orange C.ut City planners say they soon will do something about rewriting the restaurant parking standards but at the same time , tbef have recommended that the city council ease up on parking requirements for hotels. · Councilmen will consider t h a t First Since October Weather Night and morning low clouds and loca l fog with hazy sunshine in the afternoon Tuesday. A little cooler da ys. liighs at the beaches in the upper 60s rsing to the mid· 70s inland. Lows mostly in lhe 50s. proposal-as it would apply to the new Sheraton Hotel lh Emkay -tonight. The problem Is not onty the congestion within the parking lot1. where cars park in the alales and everywhere else they can, there Is a190 a major spillover ooto the city streets. Valets were setting up stations at the cul de sac ln front of the restaurants W'ltil city o(flclals ordered them out, according to traffic ensJ.neer Bill E. Darnell. Pollot Oilcf'B. James Olavas sskl that patrol dfvlsioo Capt. Donald Oyaas wants to meet with Darnell to continue to review the ~em. Glavas ll recommending that more strttt parking be allowed In the aroa. obYlous testimony to tho lnsdoquacy of the Pf'SCl'I park.Ing code that r<qU!rea one parking gpaco for each allowable restaurant patron. City PllMinl commlslloners have voiced concern over the Jack of .. Food Prices Drop. Slightly WASHINGTON (AP) - A dip in retail food prices in April meant a family cf four saved 30 cents a \\'eek during the month if it scrimped on meat and serv!d lower-cost Items , a c co r d i n g to government figures released today. The Agriculture Dcpartmeni said a k>w-cost menu for a four·member family, Including i,.. ochool children, cost $43.40 per "'·eek in April, down 0.7 percent frOm $43.70 in March. But it wu up II percent or 16.10 j)tl' wetk from April 1173. Ofllclals said It was the first decllno In the family food indicator since October. Moto amuent lamill,., u the moruhJy series has shown In the past, enjoyed a slightly better break relativel y with food budgets. A moderale-cost menu that cost $55.10 a wee.k In Afarch was 60 ttnts or 1.1 percent leS.!1 expensive in April. The April menu. however. was up 15 percent or f1 .20 from a year earUer. The depertmcnt'1 plan for liberal eating cost '68.10 per ~·eek in April, mn I.I (.'tl)tl or lJ percent from March. But It was '8 or 14 percenL more expensive than tn April last year. tlome eaonomlsta say the various meal plans are computed "" lhe basis of food quanttlles COllSlll1led bf lamlly groups ...i 11tt\'8111n1 mail pricoo. f The low-co.!lt plan rf!lates to families with yearly Incomes of $4,000 to $8,000; the moderate $8,000 to $10,000; and the liberal SIO. and over . One basic difference is that lO\\'er· Income meals under the USDA food plans contain CUl!I of lf!ss-expensi ve meat.. more cereals, bread, PoUltoes, dry beans, poullry and fish. The flgure.!I are compiled by lhe deptirtment's Agrk:ul tu ral R es e a r c h Service and published each month in Food and Jfome Notes by the USDA Office of Communleiition. A fourth mf!al budget Is ca lled the !S.. PRICES, Page !) • I INSIDE TODAY Go-go guy.!I perform it~ soontu nylon bikini britf.!1 be f o Te won1tn-only audience! fn a Soulhen~ Illinois night spo£. Chicks ogle ''dudes" who are paid $10 01t liour bt this .,.everae chauvinism. Story, Page 7. Al ,...., knlc1 J ... ,."" 11 l.. M, .. ~. I C1lt""'I• t . cu.a..1"" n·n CIMl<• 1t c,."""' 1t 0.•I~ Nttkl.I ' l'•li.rtfl ,... • E!lft'1»!11~111 2t ''"lllU U·ll --" AllA LfMtrt If I M•llli91f It ,.,,_,.., T'" • Mrtit. " ' N•lllMf..... t Ot•llM ,_,, • 1'1¥1• .. .,,., ,, SPlftl 1 .. 11 ·~ ~""' 1141 , •• ..,,1.... • TPIHl.rt. • W111Mr t W-..'1 ...... IJ.li W11N """ t • _2 DAILY PILOT • ~ondir, June 10. lQ74 • Pilot Logbook Unplanned Connnm1it y Di sorganized hut Happ y By JACKIE HYMAN Of Jiit Olllr Pl"91 si.11 1 v.'Ould like to spc.1Jt on beholf of unplanned communities. Thr.y're othtrwlS<! known as messy, di~rganiicd t"yesores -usua lly full of messy. disorganized, huppy people. Take SMta Ana llelghts, where J live. IT'S COUNTY terrltoey, just south of tht'I Orang" Cowlly Airport. Maybe ifs been left undisturbed so king because the airplane noise n\akes expensive housing infeasible. Anyv.·ay, 1 re~lly began to appreciate the area v.·hen I Y.'ent lo vote. The place \\'here J voted \\'as a horse farm. Right there. sandwiched In betwmi the airport, the Santa Ana Country Club and the Back Bay was an area that. from one angle, seemed to slretch for miles, lull of v.·eeds and frolicking horses. AS I DROVE aYt·ay, I looked at the other houses and saw many another horse. poking Its nose from a backyard corral. It seems !hose houses v.·ere built during_ World War ll and have lots big t'nough to put chicken farms in. Some of ttiem may even ba,·e the chlckens, for all I know. The lots are fiercely irregular in shape. The houses range from v.:obbly and peeling to hlgh camp Ytith fake marble statues in front. One house even has a fountain that never has water in it (but it does have an ugly nude statue). TllE GREAT individualists of Santa Ana Heights have so far resisted all attempts to swallow them up into Newport Beach CJr Costa litesa. Our reaSCJn is that a non·status address means we pay lower rents. Of course it 's true that v.•e don 't have the correct amount of open spact. As a result, the residents swarm into the streets on their bicycles and son1e- times even talk to their neighbors instead of recreating in isolated splendor. Another misfortune of being W'lplanned is th.at we ended up with straight streets, not like those mazes they put in places Like Eastbluff and J\.1esa Verde. I'VE CONCLUDED th.at maybe \\1hen people are left to their own devices, they build communities that look ugly oo maps and aerial photos but arc adapted to the way people really live. Sometimes 1 think the various city planners drive through Santa Ana H<!ights and cry fro m sheer frustration. Bul those of us who live there like it that way. Condominium Code Ordinance Restricts Apartment Conversion The right of Newport Beach apartment owners to convert their buildings into condominiums may be severly restricted by a propooed planning onlinance. A draft of the ordinance, presented to planning commissioners recently, calls for all converted condominiums to be brought up lo code. CommunJty Development n i r e c t o r Richa rd V. Hogan pointed out that such a requirement may force some owners to install such expensive sprinkler systems that condominium conversion Ylill not be feasible. The proposal has already raised a furor over one proposed conversion. City councilmen tonight will decide whether to continue to d e l a y consideration of a requested conversion of a 3&-W'lit apartment on Rutland Road in Westcliff pending adoption of the standards. The building owner, Wilshire Equities Inc.. is threatening a lawsuit if the council wails any longer. Hogan said the city colDl.cil requested that planning commissioners prepare the ordinance to assure proper maintenance and insurance on c o n v e r t e d condominiums. Commis.sioners presented s e v e r a I objections to the draft of the ordinance. Chairman William Ag~ painted out that because of the age of some apartment bulldings, It might b e unreasonable to require them to be brought oup to code. He suggested instead that separate minimum standards for c o n v e r t e d condominiums be set up .!JO that ov.11ers of older buildings would not be faced with W'lreasonable requirements. Commis.sioner Jackie Heather said that renters should be protected against di3plaet:menl She suggested a study to OIAMICOAST N DAILY PILOT ,,,. 0<""91 ceot1 o.,,."""" .... 1~ _,., .. _. ti-""'"•••·"-"-Df!NO.-.. ~ "'-ot.I .. ......, t:oooc>o..., ~ ...... "' ..... _ ... ""'"'''....., "'<>tl.14W Wit< , I notv, 11!11" Gol<o ....... Ho,.·Po"I S..:" ,._ ... ,...GIO ~flfl'- 1>•" v"'"'• l•auoio llMcl> .,.,_~ • .,.,, s.... (.1•"'•"19/S... ,,.,.,, c.~ ........ ""'O"' ,.._... Mtt'Oll .. -·-&ot"'1M ..... ...., &o.+ ""'" '"""'~ff-·~ DOI"!""' ).)Owni 6•rS1•...,,.C61i."'-.c..~-•nn ll:oberl N w .. ,1 ""-"""""~ ...... J<x~~.C"'1tiv Vott,.,tor--~ ..... Ml.I~ ~H.U-11:.:.t.cwdP *.if "'•-"°""91"0lOlffn. l r~·~Kr•.::1 f.it•rO'I 1t .. ,. Ci!r to.io- ('~ ,.,. °""""' c.or.1 f\le> ...... ~ ""'"W ~ ... ;o<J _ ........ 1_.., __ _,.,. OI ..,...,_""' -"9t M -...t!IOUllD«1'1-f//I""""""- ~ t!PI POOI09'" Jlol O .. °""" -Qin"°"' " I $otW.MlllO!li'O 1'J' WM' ll 00 '"Cl"! .... llt ...... J•OO-N,.lftj~ltrr-•-1)00_.,,.., i determine v.itether or not there is a shortage CJf rental units in Newport Beach. The most serious CJbjectioo to the ordinance was raised by commissioner James Parker. He questioned the legality of the commission's regulating condominium conversion. "All that happens when an apartment building is converted into a condomlnJum is that It changes the form of ownership," Parker said. "There Is no change In use." "It v.·ould be the same thing if. when a man mllITied and changed the title on his house into his wife's name along with his own, we required him lo bring the house up to code," Parker said. Agee asked Hogan to prepare a detailed list of all aspects o f condominium conversion, Including buyer protection, sound insulation. fire department standards, parklng codes, maintenance and insurance. He said the commission will discuss th~ details along with Parker's objections at a later study session. Two Mesan s Get 9 Months In County Jail Tv.i> Costa li-tesans who admitted selling marijuana and amphetamines to undercover officers ai a Newport Beach restaurant have been sentenced to nine months each in Orange County Jall. Superior Court Judge James Turner ordered the jail .terms for Robert Lee Millere Jr., 22, of 184 E. 21st St. and Salvatore Anthony Arrigo, 38. of 2338 C.Omell Dri ve, after accepting their pleas or guilty. Both men ""·ere ordered to servt three years probation after release from the county jail. Miller and Arrigo v.·ere arrested last Nov. 16 after selling drugs to underrover offictrs. Pollet said the arrest closed a long investigation of drug trafficking centered on a numbtr of Newport restaurants. Van de11 Noort To Vie'v Futtu·e Or. Stanlev Vim den N~oon of th! UC lrvioe l\iedlcnl School . v.·it\ nddrestt a· tov.'tl meeling or the 1\eY.1>0rt llarbor Chamber of C-Ommerce June 19 e:t 7:30 1.m. at lhe Balboa Bay Club. Dr. Van den Noort will discuAA the ru1ure of the medlcnl school. \\'hlch Is now located at Orange COunty l\lcdlco l C<nter. There is a possibility the school will be moved out of Orange Coumy un\e11 the county and lhe unillerslty can reach aveenient on tht: ulllmate conlnll of Oran gt County A.1edlcal Center. OCl\tC Is now the county's hotlpit.111 for tht poor and Uct'1 major doctor lrsfning racillty. UCJ wants to build an auxiliary 250-bed teaching hospital on cilmpus. ,, ........... 1 REF USES .. . maiatalntd the committee "''OUld be wrang to draw any infer~! from hl1 acbons and he was merely e1trclstng hia i:iroper power1 by claiming e:11:cecullve prtvlltge la musing to tum over aibpoenatd m1terla11. "Prom tile aUrt of tll.,. procetdln11, I bave tried to cooperatt 11 far as I rtasonably could tn order to avert a consUtutional confrontation,'' Nixon said. "But I an1 determined to do nothing which, by the prt('td.E>nee it set. would l'l'ndt.r the executive branch henceforth and forever more 3uMer·.rient to the legislative branch. and v.·ould thereby delitroy the constitutional balance," Nixon said. The President previously re!uSC!d to tum over •2 tapes subpoenaed hy the con11nittee. Instead. he mad<! public on April 30 voluminous \\'bite House transcripts of \Vatergate conversalioris of 32 ol the tapes. Otficlals said Lapes either did not exist for the other conversations subpoenaed or v.•ere not available. n1e bulk or the committee's subpoena dealt Yt'itb recording of conversaUons belv.·een Ni.xon and former aides H. R. lfaldeman, John D. Ebrtichman, Charles W. Colson, John W. Dean Ill and Gorden Strachan. • Most of the tapes and other material involved also are sought by SJ>:eCla\ Watergate prMeCUtor Leon Ja¥i·orski, wtio successfully argued f,_. a U.S. Supreme Court review of the President's policy in resisting subpoenas. Fron• J>llffe l CONTEMPT. • • confidential presidential conversations cannot afford a basis for either a charge of contempt of court CJr obstruction or justice oh the part of the President, as publi c media have inerpreted your honor's statements in open court to mean,lLSt Clair wrote Gesell. The letter was delivered to the court more than three hours after Nixon Jen for a nine-day trip to the P.1.Jdclle East. Ehrlichman and four men are sched· uled to go on trial next Monday on charges of conspiring to violate the civil rights of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist by raiding his orfice Sept. 3, 1911 in search of Ellsberg's records. And in a third action today invoking executive privilege, Nixon moved to block Watergate p1'06ecutors from obtaining a portion of a Sept. 15, 1972 tape dealing with alleged White House attempt,, to use the Internal• Revenue Service fCJr political purposes. Nixoo kild U.S. District. Judge John J. Slrica that he believes the conversation is covered by executive privilege and thus should not be submitted to a grand jw-y that is investigating the allegations. Students Finisli 11 ealtli Prograni Jn Coast Project A total of 175 studenl.a received certificates or completion recently for their participation in seven health I raining courses CJf the Coast I i n e Regional Occupational Program (CROPL The st.udents have completed either one or two semesters in on·lhe-job training at [Ive atta hospitals. They came from five school districts which cooperate in the CROP program: Hwitington Beach Union High School, Irvine, Newport-Mesa, Saddleback Valley and Tustin Unified. Ce.rt.lficates were presented by the five instructors CJf the allied health program : Victoria Bolander, ~1arlene Overbeck, Nan Hannon, Wilma Fogarty and Lillian Runge. The evening program. at t.he Tale of the Whale Restaurant in Newport Beach. was planned by the students who presented a series of skits related to their courses. CROP student J\1ike Abbott y,·as the master of ceremonies. In its t.hlrd year, the CROP allied health program consists of six weeks in the classroom followed by a term on various hospital wards. The hospital phase involves four days a week on the wards and one day in the classroom. Each student Is rotated from one unit to another within their hospital. Each student spends three hours a day in the program, which is incorporated into the student's regular class schedule. Fifty J)ercent of this year's graduates have obtained jobs as a result of their training, CROP spakesmen said. Participating hospita1s include Hoag, Huntington Jntercommunlty, li-11.sslon Community, Tustin Community and C-Osta litesa lttemoriaL ' Some 500 students, parents:, hospital snd school administrators attended th<! banquet. The occupation program offers 13 olher courses in other fields. ~lore informatlon may be obtained by calling Carol Speaker at 8•7·26.14 or lhe CROP office at 979-1955. N e·w Classes Set \\'omen's liberation and changing new eourses are proposed for Ne~'JlOrt Beach and Costa ~leaa schools ntlU year. Among the tiUes . listed are "To Be a \\1oman" (~tcNally School). "'Homemaking for tht Single Girl ," !Cost.a Alesa High), "~leniage and 1-todcrn Life Study" (Corona de\ 1't1r High), Ind "Th< Futurt A> H~lory" (E5tancia High). Tht II.st wu pmtnted tCJ school trusttts Wtdne!lday for di8Ctlssion and will come up at a future meeting ror action. One of lhe most unusual cl1sses. "Homemaking for the Slnglt Cir!,'' is 1lml'd 11 making studtntl aware U\llt 1hey have a choice of life 1tyles •nd •hould P"P"rt a<oordlngly, 1 ch o o I officials 8'1id. •• CHP B US AFOUL OF EXH AUST LAW . SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A charter Lus canyln1 about 30 California IUgbway Patrol employes on a aambllng junket from Sacramento to tfevada ran into trouble. Bob FW, • patrol tnformatlon offiCf'r who wu on the junket, said a fellow CllP o!flctr stopped I.he bus near Placerville and the drlvtr was given a citation for ext..~Slve exhaust enlissloo. Court Rules On Fundin g For Sclwols .. YlASJilNGTON (U PI) -Sidestepping the church-state Issue, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled today that federally funded services to educationally . deprived · parochial school c b 11 d re n must be comparable but not necessarily identical lo those in public schools. The court's 8·1 decision said turther that C.Ongress Intended to confine acceptable programs to those not barred by state law. In an opinion by Justice Harry A. Blackmon, the court refused to rule S'pe(ifically on whether the I 9 6 5 Elementary and Secondary Education Act requires assignment of publicly employed teachers to church schools during school hours and -if it does - whether the law violates t h e Constitution's ban on "an establishment of religion." JUJtice Wllllam 0. Douglas .. in his dissent, said the court should decide that if the tenns of the law permit federal aid to church schools, it is unconstitutional. The case was appealed to the high oourt by Missouri education officiah1, after the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals held tbat the same programs must be afforded disadvantaged children in both public and parochial schools. Mls90uri Sil.id state law forbids sending public school teachers into private schools. Parents of chlldren attending religious schools sought restoration of $13 million in federal funds allegedly n:Usapplied in Kansas City sc:bools from 1966 to 1969. Their statistics showed vast discrepancies between amounts spent per child in public and privtate schools. Blackmon said the mere fact 1hat public school children are provided on- the-premises: instruction "does n o t necessarily create an obllgation to make identical provision for private school children.'' ''Congress expressly recognized that different and W'lique problems and needs might make it appropriate to utilize dif!ereot programs in the p r i v a t e schools," he said. The main point, he said, is lhat the programs be <(comparable," as federal law requires. "The alternallves are numerous." he added, but "providing nothing to fill the gap" is not among them. Douglas saJd "the plain truth is" that as coostrued up to now "the 8ct is WlCOl'IStitution.al to tbe e:xtent it supports sectarian schools, whether directly or through its students." He said the court should say so v.iiliout further delay. Chief of College Wed s Professor ROHNERT PARK (AP\ -Dr. 1'-larjorle Downing, president~esignate or Sonoma State College, has married an English professor Crom cal State Fullerton, a Soooma State spokeswoman said today. Or. Downing and Dr. ri.t . John Wagner v.·ere wed Thursday at Or. Downing's home in Claremont, she said. A former English professor at Scripps College, Or. Downing was appointed president of Sonoma State two weeks ago to become the fin;t female president of a public rour-year califomia co 11 e g e. Her appointment becomes effective July 1. The wedding was witnessed by Dr. Downlng's sons Francis, 18. and NichCJlas, 15: and by Dr. Wagner's daughter P.targaret, 17. Dr. Wagner plans tentatively to continue teaching at Fullerton, she said. / From Pagel PRICES ... economy plan, a bare·bonts meal guide used for computing the govemm<!nt's food stamp allocations. It was $3-4.70 ln April, only 10 cent.s lov.·er than in March. Tl was. however. up 18 percent or $5.40 more than Apri l 1973. Belgian BRUSSELS (UPI\ -A 26-year .. ld Belgian pharmacy 11.udent apoloiited to his rtval In love for trying to poison him wllh tnoUgh Belladonna to kit! 15 men. · Ills int.ended victim ac«ptcd the apologies. but the jur didn't. It sentenced the student Pol Brouart. to 10 yN.ra in !all with hard labor even though the proeecutlon 11:1;ked ror only a three· year AenlMet. "J want to apolog iie for all the 51.1fferlng l caUJed you," Brouart told his rival, J~an-Plerre La.P "l.ilJe, wht'n La· Plllle lt"stiflcd. ''ft was slllv of me." The hand«1me. dark·hairtd LaPaJlle nodd~ and 1ald, "I accept your 11pology." • Donald 40 Disney Duck Celebrating ANAHEIM -Donald Duck joined the O\'er 39 generaUon Sunday with his 40th birthday, but lo millionJ ()f his fans, there Is no generation gap. Dooald, tbe animated duck in a sailor outfit, is still their hero. Dooald, Yt'ho became one or fllmland '1 most irascibly charming and durable characters followlng hi! debut in 19M, has managed to fuss and qu11.ck his way lhrough more than a hundred Walt Dlmey cartoons and ftature films. '\rtth his throaty, barely undcr~tand· able volct, Donald's nrst appear8n« l)n a scene was in a blt part In ''"'i&e Utile Hens." relea$ed June 9. 1931. Though his role was miniscule, nioviegoers thought 00 was the star and began demanding JOOre pictures. Thal &tarted a boom which made Donald ooe of three famous creations of the Disney studios and spavmed the birth of an entire duck family. Including Uonald'1 uncle, ~rooge M c D u c k , Professor Ludwig Von Drake, nephews lfuey. Dewty and l.-0ule, Gladstone Gander, Grandma Duck and Cousin CUI. Donald's first fitnrring role was In ··0oo Oooald" in 1937, a cartoon whlch inlroduced his leading lady, "Daisy." Some 127 car1oon11 and feature fllms followc<I, with Donuld gaining a repuUttion along wllh Disney's other fanl()uS characters, 1i11ckey J\.tou1e and Goofy. Donald's animated career ended 11'11961 \vhcn Walt Disney Studios b e K 1 n concentraling on live-action movieS', but the lovable duck still contlnuts hl1 tscapades In comJc maa:ar.lnes and newspaper oomic strips. Youth Survives Tumble DoW1!._ Steep Laguna Cliff By JACK CHAPPELL I Of llN Dllllr Pllel 11111 A 20-year-o\d man survived the 100-foot plunge of his car from the sheer cliffs of IRWD Gets $~t.2 Million .. Sewage Grant The Irvine Ranch Water District (IRWD) has been awarded state and federal grants totaling $4.2 million · to build a first of Its kind sewage treatment pipeline. State Sen. O<!nnls E. Carpenter (R· Newport Beach) and Assemblyman Robert Badham (R·Newport Beachl announced the grants combination for the $-4.8 million Rattlesnake Land outfall project . The TRWD project involves constructkln of a 9.f>.mile pipeline from a locallon near UC Irvine and San Diego Creek northeast to Rattlesnake Canyon. The 36-lnch slllgle llne will be pressurized to carry a mixture of sewag .. oxygen, water and activated sludge to the reservoir site. At the pipe's end water treated by the chemic.al reaction within the pipe is easily separated from organic wastes whJch may be used for soil improvement. The unique treatment process was created by the IRWO with hopes the system would save costs of construction of a major downst ream s e w a g e treatment plant and a second pipeline to return reclaimed water to a reservoir. Instead of paying for two pipes -one to carry sewage to the plant for treatment and the other to return the water to a point from which it can be distributed for reuse -IRWD will buy the single large main. The use of the "pressure pipe treatment" proCess and a comparatively high altitude "land outfall" reservoir is an alternative to ocean dumping of treated wastes. The state share of the Rattlesnake Land Outfall grants is 12.5 percent or $603.750. The federal grant amoW'lts to $3.622.500 leaving another $603,750 to be paid by IRWD. Fron• Page l BOAT FEES . •• system. Wynn did PCJint out, however, that !he county is being sued over its tidelands use fees in an action that may indlrectly affect the mooring fees. The suit was brought In Dec., 1971 by Bernard N. "Bud" Desenberg of Newport Beach, a retired newspaper publlsber. who claims slate law says single-family twlmeowners on the bay sllouldn 't pay r ... Deputy County C-Ounset John Pov.·eJI said Friday the case ls still pending and a lrial likely won't take place until at least this fall . J\layor Donald A. P.1clnnis had asked \l.')'M to prepare the report on potenUal revenut from a mooring tee, polnttng out that boat ov.11ers are currently getting a very good deal. But recalling the controversy over th<! city's old fees instltutlld and then canrelled for piers, he streMcd that the fee be Iabled a mooring rent.al fee, rather than a tideland use fee. Prisoner "And please apot oglr.e to Tbe.rese as well," Brouart added. "Okay," said La.Paille. Brouart and ThereSfl Vandermottn mtt in 1971 and dated for thrtt w~ks. lie gave her a gold necklace and told his family, "We're almMt engaQed." But the lively Thtrtlfl sakl she found him as "boring as rain" ind tent him a lett~ erplaln!ng she couldn't accept his proposal. Therese then met and fr.II in love with La Paille. On Feb. ·14, 1973 LaPa llle received a letter containing 1 ¥i11lte pol';'ttcr. "ThiJ Is a new product to prevent •• Laguna Beach's Crescent Bay Poinl today. John P. Wagoner, address W'lknown , was released from South C o a 3 l Comnlunity Jlospital following treatment for cuts and scratches received in tht 3:30 a.m. mishap. Laguna Beach Police said Wagoner had been out.side the car when It started rolling toward the cliff. Wagoner either attempted to halt the onrushing car with hJa body or attempted to get in it and apply the brakes just befoie the vehlcle toppled inlo the ocean below, police said. He apparently v.·as dragged by the car fo r about .o feet down tbe cllff before breaking loose. Laguna Beach firemen and Police Of'(icer Don Abshier formed a hwnan chain to retrieve the man, In shock and bleeding from a small projection on the cliff. It ~ the second tlme recently that an 11uto has plunged over the steep cliffs. Previously, a foreign car was driven over the oceanfront cliff In what police believe was an attempted suicide. The vehicl<! was an object of cur10lrity today for lidepool explorers w h o examined its smashed and crumpled frame. Wreckers were to attempt to remove the hulk today. · The car has an Arizona licerwe plate. Following Wagoner's release from the hospital, police had no further contact with the man . Windo\v Smash Ends J:Iorseplay; Y outl1, 19, Hurt A youth who smashed his elbow through a plate glass window ·at a Nev.'})Ort Beach apartment Satun1ay night. causing a severe upper arm laceration, was being rele.Med from Hoag r..temorial Hospital today. Richard \Vllson, 19, of An!belm, was admili<d !or surgery alter being rac<d lo the hospital in a palice car as a fireman rode along applying a tourniquet to hi.! ann. lnvestigaklrs who arrived at 701 in E. Balboa Blvd., in response to a meclical aid call 881d they found WU.On bleeding so badly there was no time to wait for an ambulance. Nwnerous stitches were required to close the deep wound, which pclloe \\'ere told resulted from horseplay between lhe victim and a friend. Anaheim Youth Killed in Desert From \\'Ire Strvlce1 A routi from Anaheim was ldlled Sun- day on Superior Ory Lake north of Barstow, v.'hcn his: three-wheeled land sailtr vehicle overturned. Clifford A. Young, t7, was hurled from the speeding rig wtlen a gust of wind lifted It momentarily, the!-it fell over onto him. lnvestlgato~ tl8id. San Bernardino County C-Orooer's Of. flee spokesman said today Young's ~Y v.•as taken to a Barst<iw mortuary wtiere an aulOJ>Sy was scheduled. The victim was on a desert outing wtlfl his family and a group of friends when the land-sailing accident oocuned. 'Sorry~ colds," It aid. '11t's a real vitamin bomb.. We'd Ilka your opinion on Its c:ffici(!ney." LaPaille, used to recelvlng test medlci:it!Ofl from drug companies. pourOO lhe poy,•der tn 1 glass of water and drank It. Doctors said he drank aboUl 750 milligrams of BelladOMa and $ o mllligr1ms Is enough to kill a man. But before collapsing with a wildly beating heart and trembl1n1 limb&, LaPaille called for help and had his stomach pumptd In time. Alt.er LIP•Ule recovered, he married 'MKirtsc. The dny Brouart's trial bf1an, she save birth to a Min. • ·0rande Coast , e EDITION Today's F inal N.Y. Stocks 67, NO. 161, 2 'SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 10, 1974 c TEN CENTS Few Changes Seen Council Studies Budget Dlllr Plllt. Iliff 'l'lfM STUDENTS BUI LD BIKE TRAIL IN HUNTINGTON BEACH With a Lot of Cooper1tion, 1 Trall Becomn 1 Bridge • Helping Hand Mesans Su pport Bike Trail By TERRY OOVJlLE Of tfM' 0.111' P'li.t Se.ff ArJ lnd.ustrlal arts class from Cost.a 1.{esa's .Estancia High bas given • 1""'1ington Beach a helping hand, Hmling a bicycle trail link.Ing LeBard l'lri: with the Santa Ana River. "{tie trail cover.! J90 feet with a m~t.ure of rrecycled plastic bottles and standard cenent. It will help young bicyclists relch the river trail across a bare patch • Qf_ground that was often a mud p>ddle. ~bout 1Jl Estancia youngsters have a<1tually spent Ute past four months ..-.·Oriting on plans and actual development of the trail. according to Bob Schureman, an instnictor in plastics technology. "We used this as a demonstration of another way to use scrap material," says Schureman. "But it also became a very educaUonal experiment in cement and engineering." A drafting at~ent was borrowed from another class to design the trail. Two math majors surveyed the field and an English major wrote the project proposal for 1Ubmission to county enginetrs. Tbe trail became a community effort, with the students from L e B a rd FJeinentary School and Edison High in HUntin gton Beach collecting plastic bottles for recycling. ' Schureman says more than 11,000 bO(tJes (1,000 pounds) were collected and ground into small bits for use as a base to the. trail, under tbe cement layer. ~ Huntington Beach Environmental Council chlpped in $500 and the Meredith Gardens Homeowners Association added $300 t.o help pay the cost of materials and 8Qll1e necessary labor. Greenbelt Committee, said help was also received from the Huntington Beach public works department, the Orange County Flood Control Di.strict, 'the city RecreatiC11 Department, the county Sanitation District and Sou t h e r n Califomie. Edi30n. 1be trail crosses tbe jurisdiction of several agencies, making It perhaps ooe of the widest joint ventures for its small size. 1be total co.st was under $800, for a job Schureman estbnates could have cost $4,000. "One of the things our society lacks Is people giving themselves for others,'' said Schure.man, noting all t h e cooperation among agencies, and the volunteer effort put out by his own students. First Nati on<.d Cuts Lend Rate To 11 1h Percen t NEW YORK (AP) -F~st NaUorud Bank of aucago, the nation's 20th largest bank, announced today it was reducing its prime lending rate from 11.6 percent to the 11 ~ percent prevailing at most major banks. Early last week, the bank reduced its prime from JI ¥• percent: A few smaller banks dropped to llf• or 11 flercent. The reductions were the first since early March ln the prime rate, which is charged a bank's biggest and best corporate customers. A sustained decline in the rate can signal changes in coruiumer interest rates, although the two are not direct1y linked. Costa :r..tesa city councilmen will take a critical look ' at their $17.4 million preliminary budget in sludy session tonight. Early indications are lhat the 5:30 p.m, meeting in the fifth floor cit hall oonference room will produce few major manges, if anY. in the 41 :..page Z% pound document drafted by C I t y Manager Fred SorsabaJ. "Tbere might be a few additions here and a few subtractions there but Nixon Refuses To Recognize Tape Subpoena WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixoo refused again today · to comply with a House Judiciary Committee subpoena for 45 White House tapes and documents, saying there would be no end to the impeachment pa."1el's request "unless a line were dravm somewhere." He added: "Since it is clear the committee will not draw such a line, I have done so." The President's response to the subpoena, issued May 30 on a 37·1 vote NIXON LEAVES ON MIDEAST PEACE JOURNEY , P•go 4 by the committee,· had been expected in view of NlJ:on's statement May 22 -in turning down an t.¥lier subpooia -that he ><oukl not comply With any further demands. Nb:on's reply, lo a letter to Judiciary Oiairman Peter W. Rodino Jr., (0.N.J.), was made known at tbe White House shortly after the President departed oo his l\tiddle East trip and jum after the 7 a.m. PDT deadline set by the committee for surrender of the materials. Nixon said if be yielded to the committee demands, it would simply lead to further .....,.sts lo< tapes. "Once em1>¥ted on a process cf continually demanding additiooal tapes whenever those the committee already has failed to tum up evklence of guilt, there would be no end unless a line were drawn somewhere by someone," Nixon said. The subpoena was fr committee's fourth and it was issued along with a letter in which committee members warned Nixon that his refusal to oomply with their request was "a grave matter" anQ..that they would feel free to draw "adverse inferences" as well as ulti- mately reoommend his impeachment as a result. The subpoena requested materials covering the period from Nov. 15, 1972 to June 4, 1973. In bis letter to Rodino, Nixon maintained the committee woukl be wrong to draw any inferences from his actions and be was merely exercising his proper powers by claiming excecutive privilege in refusing to turn over subpoenaed materials. "From the start of these proceedings, r have tried to cooperate a! far as I reasonably could in order to avert a constitutional cuifi"Ontation," Nixon said. "But I am detennined to do nothing which, by the precedence It !et, would render the executive branch henceforth and forever more subserlient to the legislative branch, and would thereby destroy the constitutional balance," Nixon said. A prtvite contractor, Kordick and Son. g19ded the trail area and moved in IOlhe dirt fill at a sharply reduced cost. F i rst Since October basically I doubt if there will be any substantial· changes," Councilman Alvin Pinkley predicted. After tonight 's refinement, the bod,-..t \\ill be brought back to the Uy Council for public hearing and adoption al the June 17 meeting. Much of the council's attentim will be focused on budget entries for a new paramedics unit aod a police motorcycle patrol squad. The budget calli (Of: the appnipriatioo Doggone ol. $18,955 for the si x new firemen joining the Mobile lnlensive Care (Paramedic) Divisk:tl. 'lYaining of the ·men Is not expected to take place until April of 197~ but Sorsabal saki he is pushing for an earlier starting date. Also budgeted are $20,000 for the acquisition ot a fully-equipped paramedics., van. The vehicle is to be paid for out of fWKls provided through the federal Revenue Sharing program. Shame Girl llurt Clias ing Pet in Car Dogs have been~known to chase cars, but Costa Mesa police investigating the collision of a sma.11 auto and a parked pickup truck Sunday found it was a case ol the car dming a ci>g. Gall F. Robera, 19, ol :165 Lourdes Lane, sustained minor injuries when her import station wagoo crashed into the rear of the larger vehicle parked on 19th Street near Tustin Avenue. lnvestigaton were told she. had been starting and stopping repeatedly in a futile-effort to corral -and catch~her large- brown dog. Damage to Miss Roberts' car was major, while only moderate damage was caused to the parked pickup truck owned by Fontana vi!itor Viva Barnes. Miss Rnbei'U, wbo declined medical treatment for bruises and a cut forehead, was cited for allegedly malting an unsafe turning movement. No mention was made of what hap- pened to her dog on the police report. Parochial School Grants Must Mirror Public Fund \llASHlNGTON (UPI) -Sidestepping the cbiJrd>ji,t<! .,., the U.S. S.wen!< Court ruled today that federany funded services to educa.Uooally de pr J v e d parocb1aJ ichooJ ch i I d r e n must be comparable but not neoossarily ldentlcaJ to those in public schools. The COW"l's 8-1 decision said further that Congress inlalded to CXlOfine acceptable programs to those not barred by state law. In an opinion by Justice Harry A. Blackmun, the court refused to ru1e ,.,.cilicalJy on whether the 1 9 6 5 Elementary and Secoodary Education Act requires assignment of publicly employed teachers to church sch>ols during school hours and -if it does - whether the law violates t h e Constitution's ban on "an establishment of religion." Justice William O. Douglas, in his dissent. said the court should decide that if the tenns of the law permit federal aid to church schools, it Is unconstitutional. The case was appealed to .the high oourt by ~Ussouri educatk:tl officials, after the 8th U.S. Circuit Coort of 500 Grad uate At Me sa Hi gli Nearly 500 seniors will be graduated Wednesday night when -COsta Mesa High School .stages Its 12th aMual c ommencement exercises in Orange Coast College's Le.Bard Stadium. The 7:30 p.m. ceremony will be attended by Donald E. Smallwood, Tom Casey and Orville Amburgey, all Newport-Mesa Unilfed School District trustees. Jodi Palmblade i8 valedictorian for the Class ol 1974. Stephen Sharp is salutatorian. Appeals held Ulat the same programs must be afforded disadvaq1'ged children in both pUbliC and parochial schools. Missouri said slate law f'Orb.ids sending public .tbool teachers into private schools. Parents of children attending religious schools sought restoration of $13 million tn federal funds allegedly misapplied in Kansas City schools from 1966 to 1969. 1beir statistics showed vast discrepancies between amounts spent per child in public and privtate schools. Blaclanun said the mere fact that public school children are provided on· the-premises instruction _ "does no t necessarily create an obligation to make Identical provislon for private school childreil." "Congress expressly recognized that different and unique problems and needs mlght make it appropriate to utilize different programs in the p r i v a t e schools," he. said. The main point, be said, is that the programs be "comparable,'' as federal law requires. '"l'he alternatives are numerou s," he added, but "providing nothing to fill the gap" is not among them. Douglas said "the plain truth is " that as construed up to now "the act is unconstitutional to the extent it supports sectarian schools, whether directly or through its students." He said the court sOOuld say so without further delay. Two Countians Aboard Missing Vessel Htlll~ed A Huntington Beach man and a friend were believed lost at sea today and are the object of an intensive U.S. C.oast Gilani search. Jolut Sheehy, 47. of 8191 Kenington Drive and Dennis Kaiser of Santa Ana were reported missing on board Sbeeh y's 34-foot converted Navy launch late Sunday night. Sheehy's wife told authorities, "the men are always borne for dinner." Matgaret Carlberg. who coordinated th6' project for the city's environmental coancll and for the Santa Ana River Irvi ne Coach .Food Prices Drop Slightly She said she wasn't even aware they "·ere going out on the boat until she received a call late Sunday Crom Mrs. Kaiser. ~trs. Sheehy said her husband had just installed new fuel tanks pn the unnamed boat and apparently went to sea to test them . • Goes to UCLA • uc Irvine baseball coach Gary Adams has resigned to take over 'the reins al UCLA. Adams, a UCLA graduate "'ho played for the Bruins baseball team , lniliat.ed the ha 11 e b a 11 · program lit UC Irvine and coached '-· the Anteaters to two suCU!ISIVe NCAA col l ege division champk>nships. His mos{ rectnt team compiled a • 44-1 record in capturing the title. • See sports. Page 18, for dctalla. •• WASHINGTON (AP) -A dip in retail food prices in April meant a family of four saved 30 cents a "-eek during the month If it scrimped on meat and ~rved lowel'-008! Items, a c co rd I n g to government rigures released today. The Agriculture Department said a low-cost menu ror a four-member family. Includ ing t ..... 'O achoot children, cost $43.40 per week In April. down 0.7 perecnt from $-13.70 in ~1arch. But it wa s up 13 perct:nt or $6.70 per W(!tk from Aprll 1973. O!C!clals said lt was the nrst decline In the family food Indicator since October. More 1muent families, as the moalhly series has shown In the past, enjoyed a sllghUy better brw nolatlvely with food budgets. A moderate-co8t menu that cost $55.10 a week In March was 60 ctnt~ or t.I percent Jess expenetve in April. The April menu. however, was up 15 percent or $7.20 from a yelU' "rller. The department's plan for liberal catlng cost $66,10 per week in April. down IO cenll or 1.2 percent Crom ~fareh. But it tA·as $8 or 14 percent more expeml\•e than In April last year. Home economlsta aay the va~s meal plans are computed on the bNlt of food quantities """""'ed by family ll'OUPI and prevailin& mall prices. The low~ plan relates .to families with yearly lnoomt• ol 14.000 to 18,000; the moderate 18.000 to lt0.000; and the lil>efal .110, and over. One basic difference is that lower· Income mu~ under the USDA food plans contain ~s of less~xpensive nieat, more cereals, bread, potatoes, dry beans. poultry and fish. The figures are compiled by tbe department's Agricultural R cs car ch SCl'\ltce and published each month ln Food and Home Note• by the USDA Olllce ol CommuniclltiOn. The obviously shaken Mrs. Sheehy said she iJ afraid "they just might be out there and not getting any fuel." She said she reported them missing after caning friends to check the mooring which Is located olf Lido Isle. 'Tarzan' Recovcriu« 0 BRIDGEPORT, Coon. (APl--Cloren<t "Bustc.r" Crabbe!. a former Olympic swimmer who portrayed "Tan.an" and "Flash Gordon" in films. was reported. restln@; comfortably at St. Vincent lloepital here with a virus. Though the paramedics unit is in the budget, Costa l-.1esa city officials are still undecided oo some. aspects of the city's future"emergency service program. Unresolved are whether the unit will ultimalely be staffed by f i re m e n p;u:awedics or other types of technicians and what training programs will be required of them. The motorcycle patrol squad, also a six-man unit, carries a b u d g e t (See BUDGET, Page II Mes a Girl's Fishing Trip -Ends in Rape A Sunday morning fishing expedition to Newport Pier turned into an ordeal of pain ·and terror for a Costa Mesa girl, 12., who was kidnaped at gunpoint and raped by her captor. The victim . confronted and alx1ucted in the area of 28th Street and Balboa Boulevard, was driven to a hilly area near Orange where the assault occurred. Sbe was abandoned in the rural area and sought help at a residence where occupants called police to report the kidnap and rape. Newport Beach Detective S a m Amburgey said the girl's ordeal began only a few minutes after she and her brothers were dropped off by their mother to go fishing. Daylight 1,1.·as just breaking when tbe youngsters were let out of the family car about 5 a.m .. and the young girl 1tarted toward Ule ~1cFadden Square area and Newport Pier with her tack1e. She did not wait for her brothers and went alone while they lagged behind, police taid. The girl told investigators at that point a man in his early 20s pulled up in a light brovm or beige four-wheel d r i v e recreational vehicle and offered her a ride. . She refused, she said. Investigators were told the kldnaper then brandished a pistol and ordered the frightened girl to get into the vehicle, which then headed inland to the Orange area. The victim described her assailant as being about five feet, nine inches tall , of medium build, with shoulder length light brown hair and wearing faded denim pants and a dark blue jacket. Auto Kills Boy; Driver ;\n·csted WJLMINGTON (UPI) -Police have arrested a teenager on suspicion of manslaughter in the death of a 4-year-<>ld hit-and-run accident victim arter the youth was brought back to the scene of the accident by his father. The dead child, Victor Mend osa, was struck and killed by an auto as he was riding his tcy ca r in a street near his home. The driver of the vehicle fled: A short tUne after the accident, Art Lucero. 18, was brought to the scene by his father after the youth reportedly told ' h1m he was responsible for the aceident. Or ange • Weather Night and morning low clouds and local fog with hazy sunshine in the afternoon Tuesday. A little cooler days. Highs al the beaches In the upper 00s rsing to the mk1- 70s inland. Lows mostly in the 50s. INSIDE TODA.Y Go-go guus perform in scancu nylon bikini brief• b e f o r e women-only audieJJt'es in a Southem Illinois night .spot. 'Cltlck1 ogle "dudes" who are paid $10 an ho1tr i1t this retllrse cl1auvhd.sm. Story, Page 1. Al 'I'-S.,..lc, l 111!1"" 11 \., M, .. ,. I (1111""11 I CllUlllM tt·H Ctfl'>k1 It '"""""' lt Dt<llll Nlll~I t •lllffllll , .,,., • e"ttr11h1nMn1 1t 1'111111<1 1•11 --" AM\.~I 14 M1llWR ,,,,_, ,.,.. MtWlt!i " .. ~ N1tlt!IM ,._. Or1119t C-IY t ,.,.,,,.. '""'"' " ~ '"'' 11.ctt M111ltn 1 .. lt Tell'l'lllfll lt ,.....,," . Wtlltltr ~ W-11"1 HNI 1•11 ~ ........ • • I DAILY PILOT c Monday, J1.1nt 10. 1974 Piiot Logbook Unpla1111ed Community 1 Diso1·ga11ized hut Happy --·-- Bl, !!~~'YE M1.Z!~.~ I "'Ould like to spea k on behalf or unplnnned communities. 'l'hey'rc other,,ise kno"-11 as mes.sy, disorgllnized eyesores -usually full of tnessy, disorganized, happy people. Take Santa Ana lleighls, "'here l live. IT'S COUNT\' terri tor~r, just south of the Orange Cow1ly Airport. Maybe it's been left undis1urbcd so long because the airplane -:· noise makes ex:penslve housing infeasible. Anyway, l re.ally began to appreciate the area y,·hen t went to vote. The place v.·here I \'Oted v.•tts a horse farm. Right there, sandwiched in between the airport, the Sa nta Ana CoWitry Club and the Back Bay \ras an area th at, from one angle. seemed to slretch for miles, full of \l'eecls and frolicking horses. AS I DROVE away, I looked' at the other houses and "t:AA~ saw many another horse Poking its nose from a backyard corr111. It seems those houses were built during World War II and have lots big enough to put chicken farms in .. Some of them may even have the chickens, for all I know. The lots are fiercely irregular in shape. The houses range from V.'Obbly and peeling to high camp \\11th fake marble statues in front. One house even ~las a fountain that never has water in it (but it does have an ugly nude statue). THE GREAT individualists of Santa Ana Reighl8 have so far resisted all atte111pt.s to s""·allow tbem up into Newport Beach or Costa Mesa. Our reason is that a non-status address means we pay IO\\'er rents. Of course it 's true that v.·e don't have the correct amount of open space. As a result, the residents swarm into the streets on their bicycles and some- times e\'en talk to their neighbors instead of recreating in isolated splendor. Another misfortune of being unplanned is that we ended up with straight streets, not like those mazes they put in places like Eastbluff and !'.lesa Verde. I'VE CONCLUDED that maybe when people are left to their own devices, they build communities that look ugly' on maps and aerial photos but are adapted to the way people really live. Sometimes 1 think the various city planners drive through Santa Ana -Heights-and·cry trom·sheer frustration. But"those of us who live there like it that way. Belgian Give11 Long Term In Try to Poiso11 'Rival' BRUSSELS (UPI) -A 2~year-old Belgian pharmacy student apologized to his rival in love for trying to poison him 'vith enough Belladonna t-0 kill 15 men. His Intended victim accepted the apologies, but the jur:· didn't. It sentenced the student Pol Brouart. to I() years in jail with hard labor even though the prosecution asked for only a three· year sentenCe. "I want 'to apologize for alt the suffering l caused you," Brouart told his rival. Jean-Pierre LaP.iille, when La- Paille testified. "It was silly of me." The handsome. dark-haired LaPaille nodded and said, "I accept your apology." "And please apologize to 'Illerese as \veil .'' Brouart added. ''Okay/' said LaPaille. Brouart and Therese Vandermoten met in 1971 and dated for three weeks. He ·gave her a gold necklace and told his family, "We're almost engaged." But the lively Therese said she found him as "boring as rain'' and sent him a letter explaining she couldn't accept his proposal. Therese then met and fell in love with La Paille. TONIGHT COSTA MtSA PL ANN I NG COMMISSION -Regular m .. llng, City Hall, 8,:JO ~.m. UCI LECTURES "Ile~dentlal lncomc Property, Apar1JTK'nt }louses." Room 100 Social Science Itall, 7 p.m. "Transactional Analysis in Everyday Llle," H.oom 178 Humanities llaU, 7 p.m. TUESDAY JUNE ti SENIOR CITIZENS CL U B - Cbmmunhy Recreation Center, 11 a.m.- 3 p.m. "BEHIND THE HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T. Broy,11 l~turer, OCC Forum, 7:30 p.m. UCI LECTURES -"Mentally Retaded, Treatment and Tl'aining,'' ~1ultipurpase Room., Rehabilitation Bldg., Fairview State Hospital, 7 p.m. Reported SLA Letter Says: 'Patty Dead' LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Hollywood radio statica received a letter today trom a group identifying itself as a Symbionese Uberatlon Army desert force declaring that Patricia Hearst is dead. The letter promised documentation and photographs would arrive separately, but a-spokesman for KHJ-said the station had not received any such materials. FBI agents took tht letter but refused to comment on whether they thought the document was aut.hentlc. Several other letters bear:lng the St.A symbol have been declared hoaxes by the FBI. There was noth!ng In the letter, headed "Medical Communlque," giving a cause or time of death. Although It bore a hand-drawn seven- headed cobra, the Jetter did not close with the customary "Death to the fascist insect , .. " phrase which has concluded previous confinned SLA docwnents. WOMAN DENIES 'TIPPING POLICE' ABOUT SLA, Page 5 Bearing a Victonrille postmark. it \\'as signed by "Colonel De" of the "Fah!ia Desert FOT'Ce" and "Captain Cha" of the "Enero Medical Detachment.'' Victorville is in San Bernardino County, whi ch adjoins Los Anileles County. "To all units and fortts: subject, death or a valiant soldier," the Jetter began. "Our beloved Tania (Miss Hearst's SL.A name) ls dead. She was inteTTed with full military honors. Fight on and avenge her noble memory with every resource at your disposal .'' The letter also declared that each member would destroy 1.000 persons. Meanwhile, In Palo Alto, state Atty. Traf fie Board In Mesa Urging More Policemen The Costa Mesa Traffic Commission has appealed to the city council for six additional traffic patrolmen to help cut speeding in residential areas. On Feb. 14. 1973 LaPaille received a letter containing a wtiite pov:der. "Thi1 Is a new product to prevent colds," it said. "It's a real vitamin bomb. We'd like yoor opinion on its efficiency," • Gen. Evelle Younger said today that Patricia Hearst and her Symblonese Liberation Army comrades are "fanatlcs acting out a revolutionary fantasy." The request came about after a lengthy meeting in which a group o f homeowners, led by Mrs. Darrilyn Oliver. were turned down on a request that a 25-mile-an-hour speed limit sign be posted at the entrance to their street. The residents complained or speeding on Yukon Avenue, a residential street that opens onto Paularino Avenue . A . city study of such areas, traflic engineer Jim Anderson said Friday, indicates that such postings do nothing to slow motorists. The only thing thnt works. he said. is increasing police patrols of the affected area. "\Ve admit that lhere is a speeding problem in our residential areas," Anderson sakt, "but posting signs will not help." The group requested that speed limit signs be posted at the entrance of all residential areas. Such a pastlng, he said, \\'OU!d cost $50,000. ·• OIAMM COAST CM DAILY PILOT l"f 0<"'91' C:<»o\1 °'"'"' ,,, ... """ _ ... - 1>""'1 '"" ~-~..,, .... -··~ ll'f 1 .... °"""9e w .. Puf>t ... ft•"Q ~ s.p. •••• ""~"'"' "'* PllO">ft'"~ lo+0~4t'I' fN'Oo#' t ~-1o:1t C.00,!1 !,I-... """'°" BP-, --e.t1 E\oo••l>lf<Vl- 1.1•" .......... ~-S.K't . ....,..,S.0<11-.:• '"" ~·~ C-1/S,.. ....... Cl~··...:. " t<"OI .. •NoOI'~ .,i,,.,... • l>Jtlfl>-S#!uOoV" -~ ... ~. a•1• ffte IY'nt'l'>I' 1)111>!••""'0 i<•fli "' .. ww~" e.,si,...., ea. .. "'-· "'""" ..... lh"tH. h::\ P. c~ .. v YQ , ... -...:t O.-.ilo!•- c.-t. M.M Offk• )JGW~&o.~ .... t.'toloiq AQooe.,'14 11.:l !o· ~ 9Zb1b Ott.Offk•• ,.~ .. llf>"'ll••'/'~~~·""'""' Jo)i.<~· ,...,. "'""" ,..._ ) ..... ,"910" ... ,.,.. ,,..,,~..,. '°'"'"...., S... ei<o.......i. .»!I "WI"(. :.""""' RNI T.ttl'f'l-17141 64J·4)J I Cl•ltlflt4 A.d....+ttilMj 64l·Sl71 '-'°"' ,,,. o.-c. .. "~""'"' c.i-..,., ,,0 _,11.,.....,11111o1r11-... (!<".,,,.,_ "' •""""' ... "'""'' -... ~ f)O ~.,, """"""' ...... ,,. ol~~ s--t$M_'9"_il'I OWI°"'" ... (•••l<I'· ""'..,_.,._e,r_t.JDO-.i• .. lff,..• 1•00~ .,,,~1--IMI-•,,.........,.,~,, • LaPaille, used to receiving test medication rrom drug companies. pauttd the powder in a glass of water and drank It. Doctors said he drank about 750 milligrams of Belladonna and 5 o milligrams is enough to kill a man. But before collapsing with a \Yildly beating heart and trembling limbs, LaPaille called for help and had his stomach pumped in time. After LaPaille recovered. he married Therese. The day Brouart's tr ial began, she gave birth to a son. From Pqe I BUDGET ... appropriation <lf $4S.840 for salaries and equipmenL tt is interesting from the standpoint that motorcycles have never been tried in Costa Mesa lraffic enforcement even though traffic on major thoroughfares Is heavy. Despite some arguments in favor of motorcycles, councilmen last year red penciled a similar appropriation. However, Pinkley who last yerar led the movement to eliminate the cycles for safety reasons, this year Is prepared to do a turnabout . Plnkley said today he still isn't terribly ehchitnted with n'IOtorcycle.s but he has come to the conclusion that the traffl~ enforcement advant.agcs oul"'eigb the safety disadvantages. "I've done quite a bit of Investigation on this motorcycle situation and rm going to recommend for them ,'' he said. Burglar Cleans Mesa Car Lot A burglar broke into a Costa lttes.i . auto agency over the wttkend. gathered up a.,sorted lool Including the key to a. 1969 sedan. loaded the Car and made his get1t"-'llY by ioomlng through a scc urlty chain across the driveway. Ralph S. Jones of 1Universal Auto Sail's. 2026 llarbor Blvd,, tolrl Offh .. -er Sle \'e Shulman the loss included a television stt. two radios. a stereo and A camera. He said the intruder also pried open a .t0fl drink ma chine, laking the change Inside and 72 bottles of cold 1IOda for the re.id . Jone., diSCO\'C?red the Jl,000 burglary :ind auto lhefL Sunday. • ~I Younger also said he was "completely convince<!" that Miss Hearst and Emily and Bill Harris would be apprehended "sooner or later." Planners Weigh Pre-school Plea In Costa Mesa Members of the Costa ~1esa Planning Commis.sion will consider a request tonight to allow the reopening of Carden· 4 pre-school which was shut down a year ago because of neighborhood pressure. The school was ordered to discontinue classes a year ago when the city council revoked a zone exception permit held by Dr. and Mrs. Wallace Remsen. City Planner Dick Dahill said his staff has recommended denial on the Remen5en5' request for a new variance pennlt. Planning Commissioners will rule on the request when they meet at 6:30 p.m. in city cOMcil chambers. Previous complaints have centered on allegations that the facility at 250 W. Wilson St. gener&tes so much noise that lt disturbs lhe tranquility of. the neighborbocxf. New York Rites Held for Mesan Clara Hoff elder A funeral serv~ has been held ln New York for former COSta Mcsan ~frs. Clara •1offelder, \\'ho died June 2 in Santa Barbara where sl\e moved a year ago. A 20-year Costa Mesa resident until leavlnR last year, titra. Hoffeldtr Uved at 1811 Fullerton Ave., according to friends and was known all ovtr town u a baby· sitter. She wa11 79 at the time of her death, but wa11 still employed in santa Barbara c.aring for two elderly ladles who needed a$Sist.ance to get along. Friends said Mrs. lloffelder still visited Costa tl.lesa every few weelts and was looking forward to a trip to her native Gtnnafly, where she traveled about every three years. · Her sole immediate adult survivor. a son f'red , arranged for burial near her late husband in Ntiw Rochelle, N:f .. where ritts wcrt bcld las\ "'eek. l .. Ellsberg Cue Nixon May Face Contempt Rap WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon today reasserted his claim to be tOO sole Judge of whit evidence 11hould be surrendered ln the Ellaberg break-in case, despite .,.,.arnings from a federal judge that he may be risking contempt. Thrtugh his chief defense sttomey, James 0 . St. Clair, Nixon told U.S. District Judge Gtirhard A, Gesell that the material& sought by former White •touse aide John D. Ehrllclunan are "properly the subject of execullvc privilege" and thus the President alone can decide v.•hether to surrender them. The action · \Yas the second ti1ne today Nixon invoked executive privilege in refualng to tum over r e q u e s t e d documents. He previously aenl a letter to the House Judiciary C.Ommittee saying he would not comply with a committee subpoena for 45 White I-louse tapes and documents. Gesell has threatened to dismiss the conspiracy i n d l c t m e n t against Ehrllchman if the documents were not produced for his defense, Last week, Gesell said that Nixon's reluctance to allow Ehrlichman full access to his White House files "borders on obstruction" of justice. Gesell was expected to act either later today or Tuesday on a motion by Ehrlichman's attorney to begin contempt proctedings. "Surely •.. what flearly is a va lid fonnal claim of privilege by the President concerning n o t e s of confidential presidential conversations Surfing Group, Sierra Club Set Ocean Session ' A day.Jong Ocean Recreation and CoMervatlon Conference to discuss beach access, coastal development and public use rights is scheduled June IS at Los Angeles' Airport Marina Hotel. Sponsored jolnlly by the U.S. Surfing Association and the Sierra Club, the public is invited to attend the series of panel discussions and hearings on the matters. The 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. presentation \\•il1 cover a variety or topics and issues currently under study r.nd awaiting recommendations before the California Coastal Commission. Spokesman Nancy Pearlman said compiled resulta and findings or the Ocean Recreation and Conservation Conference will be forwarded to the Coastal Commission. Polisli Sausage Eati1ig Champ F eelilig Great BALTIMORE (UPI) -Joe Deckret probably won't be eating Polish sausage for a while. Saturday. Deckret. 54, 235 pounds. b«ame the record-breaking winner of · Polock Johnny's seventh annual Polish sausage eating extravaganza by downing 21 aausages in one how-. The old reoord of 17 was set tv.-o years ago. After an initial muffled burp. the new champion anno\lllced "I feel great." "They were dam good sausages." he said. "bot tonight I think I'll switch to steak ror dinner." Oeckret came rrom behind in the final minutes or the contest to edge 2J.-year-0ld lOS·pound Suzie Ha"·es. Miss Hawes, the only v."Oman In the contest, gobbled 18 sausages before giving up. "I just got sick," she said. "l couldn't go on -no way." Deckret won $100 and a four-foot trophy. cannot afford a btt!lis for eithtir a charge of contempt of court or obstruction of justice on the part of the Pre1ldent, as public media have lnerprettd your honor's statements tn, open court to mean," St Clair wrote Gesell. The letter '4'1S dellVtnd to the court more than thrt6 boun after Nlxon left !or a nine-day trip to the Middle East . Ehrlichman and four men are tched· uled to go on trial next ~londay on charges of conaplrlng: to vlolate the civil rights of Daniel Ellsberg'1 psychiatrist by rlldlng his office Sept. a, 1971 ln search of Ellsberg's rccordt. And ln a third act.Ion today Invoking executive privilege, Nixon moved to block Watergate prosecutors from obtaini ng a portion of a Sept. 15, 1972 tape deallng with alleged White flouae attempt.a to use the' Internal Revenue Service for palltlcal purpo8CS. Nixon told U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica that he believes the conversation la covered by executive privilege and thus should not be submit1ed to a grand jury that Is lnvesUgaung the allegatloru. Highway Patrol Cl1ief to Speak ..\t .. Mesa Dinner Is the 6S mile per hour spet!d limit really safer? • · · c.osta Mesans will find out June 27 from a man who ought t o know-Commissioner Walter Pudinsld of lhe California Highway Patrol. Pudlnskl will be the guest speaker at the 21st anniversary celebration of COsta Mesa's Incorporation at the Mesa Verde Country Club. Dinner begins at 7 p.m .• followed by a program at 8 p.m. A social hour will precede the affair at s p.m. The state's number one Highv:ay Patrolman recently has a d v o c a t e d restoring the pre-energy crisis 65 mph speed limit because he considers the 55 mph limit unenforceable. This year's Costa ~Jesa birthday party salutes the city's automobile dealers in recognition of their economic impact and their contributions to gro"'th and involvement in community affairs. Reservations for the $9.50 per person diruier tickets may be placed through the Costa !'.1csa Chamber of Commer Ct'. 646- ilf>J6. ' Two Mesans Get 9 Months In County Jail i'w'O Costa Mesans who admlUed selling marijuana and amphetamines to undercover officers at a Newport Beach restaurant have been sentenced to nine months each in Orange County Jail. Superior Court Judge James Turner ordered the jail terms for Robert Lee Millere Jr., 2Z, of 184 E. 21st St. and Salvatore Anthony Arrigo, 36. of 2338 Cornell Drive, after accepting their pleas of guilty. Bot h men ·were ordered to serve three years probation after release from the count y jail. ~filler and Arrigo were arrested last Nov. 1& after selling drugs to undercover officers. Police said the arrest closed a Joog investigation of drug trafficking centered on a number of Newport restaurants. Mesan Winner Of Sweden Trip Rollh19 lla11data11d Jay Viloria, 11 , Costa Mesa, dazzled judges of lhe Boys Club skateboard contest with his up.. side down riding skill Satur+ day to win one of five grand prize categories. Viloria. 286 E. 23rd St., was awarded a bellyboard and a set of swim fins . More than 150 boys com~ peted al lhe IJpper Bay branch for prizes donated by local merchants. Windo'v Smash - .' Ends Horseplay; Youth, 19, Hurt ~ youth v.·ho smashe<t his elbow through a plate glass window at a Newport Beach apartment Saturday nlght, causing a severe upper aMn laceration. was being released from Hoag Memorial Hospital today. Richard Wilson, 19, of Anaheim, was adm itted for surgery after being raced to the hospital in a police car as a fireman rode along applying a tourniquet to his ann. Investigators who arrived at 7011,~ E. Balboa Blvd., in response to a medical aid call said they found Wilson bleeding so badly there was no time to wait for an ambulance. Numerous stitches were required to close the deep wotmd, which 1J0lice were told resulted from horseplay between the vlctitn and a friend . Chief of College Weds Professor ROHNERT PARK (AP) -Dr. 1'.1nrjorie Downing, president-designa~ of Sonoma State College, has married an English professor from Cal State Fullerton. a Sonoma State spokeswoman said today. Or. Downing and Dr. M. John Wagner j \ ( CHP BUS AFOUL OF EX HAUST LAW Scott Endsley, !lOn of ?\.1r. and Mrs. Clifford Endsley of 2734 San Juan Lane, Costa Mesa. has been selected to represent UC Irvine as a student at the University or L1Jr1d, Sweden. were wed Thursday at Dr. Downing's 'r home tn Claremont. she said. I A ronner t:nglish professor at Scripps College. Dr. Downing v.•as appointed president of Sonoma State two weeks ago to become SACRA?tfENTO (UPI)-A charter Lus carrying about 30 California Highway P1trol employes on a gambling junket from Sacramento to Ne.,,ada ran into trouble. Bob Fahs, a patrol information officer who was on the junket, said a fellow CHP officer stopped the bus near Placerville and the dri ver was given a citation for excessive exhaust emission. The former Costa Mesa High School student body president is a sophomore at UCI where he Is an honor student and member of the tenn is team. Endsley is majoring In Political science and plans a law career. The y~r of study In Europe is offered by the UC Education Abroad progranl. the first female presid ent of a public four-year California co 11 e g e. Her appointment becomes effective July l . The wedding was witnessed by Dr. Downing's sons Franci11 , 18, and Nicholas, IS ; and by Dr. Wagner's daughter Margaret, 17. Dr. Wagner plans tentatively to continue teaching at Fullerton, she said. Happy Birthday~ Donald Disn ey's Duck Celebrates llis 40t1i Anniversary ANAHEIM -Donald Duck joined the over 39 generation Sunday with his 40th blrthc!Ay, but to mllllon~ of his fans, tbere is no generallon gap. Donald, the animated duck In a sailor outtll. Is still their hero. Donald, who bttame one of tilmlnnd 's most irascibly charming and durablt chitrae1ers followlng hls debut In 1934. has managed to Cuss and quack his "·ay through, more than a hundred Wall Disney cartoons and feature films. \Vlth his throaty, barely understand· able. voice, Donald 's first appcartlnct. on a sctne wns In a bit part in "Wise Little Hrns," relea!ied June 9. 1934. Though his role was mlnlscul c, moviegoer! thought he was the star and began demanding more picturet. That started a boom 'R'hich m11de Donald one of thrte famous creations of the Disne y stud ios and spawned the birth of an t'ntlre duck family , including OonaJd 's uncle, Scrooge ~1 c Du c k , Profc850r Ludwig Von Drake. nepheY.'S 11uey. Dewey and Louie. Gladstone Gander. Grandma Duck and Cousin Gu~. Donald's firs t sf:irring rote wa~ in r, "Don Donald'' in 1937, a c..1rtoon which Jr11rod11ced hl!i leading 111dy. "Daisy:· Some 127 cartoons and reature. fli nts followed. wllh Donald aa1n1na • reputation along \\·ith Disney's other famous chtiracters, ~11ckey ti1ousc and Goofy. Donald'• animated career ended In 1961 "'hen Wall Disney Studios be g an roncenlra1lng on live-action movies, bul the lovu ble duck stil l continue s h!1 e5capades in comic magatines and newspaper comic slrlps. ' ' •, • \. J { I