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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-06-13 - Orange Coast Pilot7 .. • • error1s s I ree • • ..................................................................................................................... DAILY PILOT 7-lootBoa Constrictor * * * 10' * * * Loose in Huntington THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 13, 197<4 \IOL. ,,, MO, 1M. ' s•CTIONS, 44 r AOll - • • • • • • • • • • • • Egypt Reception Over·whelms Nixon .. lta La9u1aa . . Millions Fire Bomb Hits .. .. Big Silow of-Estee111\ "Co1ne Out, Police Facility ViewTrain i By JACK CllAPPEU, Of IM DllHJ ~H•I 51'H A f!rebotn b was thrown at the Laguna Beach Police Department annex today in the second such arson attack in the Art Colony in live days. The annex which houses t h e department's detective force was not seriously damaged. The ~1olotov cocktail u.wd in the incident hit a brick wall and feli on a concrete loading area. Police U . Al Olson speculated the arsooist was atttrmpting lo hit an open window in the building. The annex also houses the city recreation department. Over the weekend. a small care belonging to .the wife of a .police detective was firebombed doing an estimated $8.000 to $10,000 damage to the interior. Authorities are unsure of motives in the two attacks. although Det. Alex Jimenez has said the torching or his "'ife's cafe may have been in retaliation for past arrests, or investigations be has conducted as a ix>llce offi<:i!r. The firebombing of the police annex took place at about 3: 15 a.m. today. Lt. Olson said a beer bottle filled with gasoline and fused with a tom strip ill t.<rA·el was used as the ~1<Wol.ov cocktail. The person or persOns responsible for the bombing threw the device at the rear ol the .annex, 570 Glenneyre St. There a loading dock used in building's former days as a post office fadlity was hi\ by the flaming OOmb. U. 01900 said the building was soorchcd by the gasolirJe..fed fire, but no Oraage Coast ,, Weather Night and morning low cloudi· ness with hazy afternoon sunshine Friday, according to the weather service. Highs ranging from 66 al the beaches to 76 inland. Lows lf>. real damage "'as done. A Catalina Street resident who.st: tiom~ backed up to the annex reported the fire to the Laguna Beach Fire Department. By HELEN THOMAS I ALEXANDRIA. Egypt (UPll _I ~fillions of Egyptians. traveling b,v \ camel. donkey. oxcart and foot, left their \\'Ork in the fields to honor Presidenl Nixon as a new friend and peacemaker on a campaign·stype\train ride through. the Nile Valley. Nixon described h i m s e I ! as "oveN•helmed" by the massive show of esteem for him and First Lady Pat 1 Nixon. It was "a magnificent reception.'' -.Nixon told newsmen on the train when Boa Con.strictor Slitliering Loose Iii Horisi1i g Aren -• ·, ~asked his reaction to the lhrongs that ,.:..~' · · gathered along the 130 miles of tracks ;~ that carried him and Egyptian Presiden\ Has anyone seen a seven foot boa constrictor lately? ~ Anwar Sadat from Cairo to the • ~ -Mediterranean port of Alexandria. Nixon 's press secretary, Ronald L. ---·-There's one loose in a Htmtingtoo Beach housing tract, but his owners assure their neighbors he is friendly and hannless. "" BELLY DANCER OPENS If you see him, contact the James Kokoris family at ~I Bahama Lane, or phone 963-2884. Don waste your breath calling him because h has no name. "Snakes can't,'bear," explained Mrs. Kokoris. She said some neighbors are alarmed, while others are taking the matter lightly. "We doo't want people to be afraid if they see him," she added. "He's perfectly hannl<ss and wooldn't !MJrt anything." The snake Wall one of five ·pet reptiles the Kolcoris' 300, Jeff, 17, brought with him when the family moved' into the Fashion Shores tract lhree v.·eeks ago. 'I1tis one got loose Ttn.Jrs'day afternoon while Jeff was "sunning" it on the family patio. Mrs. Kokoris, 'Mio said the boa is a U'I T•lipflol• ENTHUSIASTIC CROWDS WITH ARMS OUTRAISED CHEER AT PRESIDENTS NIXON, SADAT Two,L••ders Ride From C1iro to Alex•ndri1 in Open Railroad Car as Egyptians H•il Pair Woman Knocked Arab ·TerroriSts Kill Unconscious In Heisler Park 3 Women, Wound 3 Men muc~liked pet, was fearful someone An IS-year.old Laguna Beach woman b seeing It might kill it. She asked, instead, TEL AVIV (AP) -Three Arab reaction to the Nixon visit to the Ara if they'd telephone the family to pick u was assaulted and rendered unconscious guerrillas wearing long hair and gaudy world." But it sa id the attack was '~-Ing~-~·--~ --·----up. P headbands to look like hippie-style • d fro Leban ·1 One angry neighbor of the family said an attack Wednesday night at Laguna's territory' an not m i?Se soi. today she was concerned about the loose foreign volunteer workers slipped across "That Is hov; every Arab should snake. scenic Heisler Park. the Lebanese border today, and killed receive Nixon, the chief imperialist in the •;tsn·t it illega l to keep a pet like The young woman was struck in the three women and wounded three men in world .'' said spokesman Abul Abbas. that?" she queried. · race wWl: an unknown weapon, Laguna on Israeli farming settlement, officials He said the guerrilla organization was A California Animal Control orficer Beach Police reported. She was taken to said . detennincd ta "ma r every attempt to helped the Kokoris famil y look for the South Coast COmmunity H~pital but They said an off-duty paratrooper beautify the ugly American face" and to snake Thursday night. but officers on refused rood.ical care then!. killed two of the terrorists, and the third negotiate with tsrae l only through bullets NIXON 'S EYES. Story, P1ge 4 Ziegler, estin1ated that 31~ milliori persons saw Nixon during the 31h·hour ride from Cairo to Alexandria's Ras El Tin Palace where lhe Nixons will stay during their overnight sta y. Egyptian security guards gave 11; similar crowd est imate ta Hennann Eilts, U.S. Ambassador to Egypt. Nixon and Sadat rode sid e-by-side on the train's observation platform. Nixon expected cro~·ds but began swinging his head in disbelief as the di1nensions or the crowd and its emotions gripped him. The two presidents used the snail· paced ride to discuss Ce n e v a negotiations to reac"h a permanent peace in the Mideast. They told newsmen they agreed Arab leaders should hold what Sadat called a ''little summit" beforo meeting with Israel. "Before going to a summit conference, a number of leaders representing different paints or view should have bilateral discussions.•· Nixon sald. In response to questions, he said this need not apply to Israel. Everywhere along the train route there ~·ere signs of the changing Egyptian-U .S. relations that had been hostile for nearly twa decades until Secretary o! State Ilenry A. Kissinge r began his peace (See WELCO~IE, Page ZI duty today didn't know if anyone would The woman a DUrSf: wu found blew himself up wittl bis own explosives. and suicide operations. · -.. berreturning to help search· again, --unconscious at' the ~ion of Cliff In Beirut, ·the-Popular Front. for the ~ixon traveled to Alexandria, Egypt i\f .4 N If/ f Ji1f;1 W I~ Mrs .. Kokori~ sai~ the snake is about Orive ·end Myrtle street "'1ere she had Liberation o!. Palestine •. -General tor.@)' ,aod t.be ~}lb~~~·:J;ult ,1 #~-'"~-,».~'1t#· ' nigh! 5&'2. , INSIDE TODA.Y " NewlywecU acl as though Utet1 ore tupicat young ci>uple ;ust slarlf'nO out -but they are not. Bride was born i•1 1953 without !Jrm.s or legs. Story, Page 15. ~ .... M111MI l'Wlllllt M•llOMI ..... ,., ... 17 " • CtultlY It, 12, 16 ,, • .,i. ... ,.... • fpotrh 11.X Ii.ti! Mwlltb •11 T ..... ltl..i n TMlttn l, Wttllltr 4 . ,_.,_ ...... ,,.. Worl4 ,.,_.. 4 Ihm! mchcs m diameler, brown and apparenlly walked-In ~-oondillOn , i~,r•l!O'i!ihfl't ~~:; ~.u.,e ~'.'llilonblilir:.~ to. ' •· rusty red. wilh • square and circular following the .,..uit near Divers C.Ve aliack and ·,;,;d lhe raid ~"'' "our Israel. SHO VTlNG TI TLE pattern on Ila back. It weighs eight ne~rby. It brought the number .of t~rrorist • pounds. . . The assault vk:tlm told officers 8he had vjctims in Israel to 49, lllCluding 31 LONDON. England (AP) -~lichael : She pomted out that boa ronstryct.ors been V1allting along a .,athway in the Wile's Bod y Found children. in two months. Featherstone and his wife, who run a pub Are ''~;-ry slow·movlng and also like lo park at qbout 9:30 p.m. when Me was Scmioffic.ial Leban~ sources in Beirut on the Yorkshire coast. have been judged climb. . he approached by a tall skinny long-haired LOS ANGELES (AP) -A 38-year-old said lsraeh border artlllery pounded a the "'orld's loudest mouths. "We 'r~ sure he's ~!'Y close by," s ,. man in ·his 20s. The man asked If she had machinist was booked Wednesday for sou1h Lebanese village in an apparent Competing Wednesday ln the "Second added, ~bly . within three OOuses. a clgarette Investigation of the murder in the death. reprisal for the raid. World Shouting Championships,'' ~trs. ~1':'· Kokon~id t': 18f11Y~ not too \Vhen sh~ said no, the man grabbed her or his wife, whose nude body was found i'hc village of Ebles Saki, five miles Featherstone let loose a 109.7-decibel yell ·WO~~ed a~t sna ego ng ngry.t.h., ann and struck her In the face wlth an under their south Los Angeles home. north of the Israeli border, came under a to rtl~in the woman's title she won last. wi~~Y e~~~:;., f~;i~;1:i~~~~·~put in known instrument. 1be woman fainted. police said. Judge Payne was arrested at "heavy artillery barrage ~s or ~ldday year. a rat out In the yard with him yestenlay Shortly thereafter, she caim to and his home arter neighbOrs reported seeing find the bombardment continued w,i,thout Her husband was the loudest of the and he wasn't even interested In eating walked a 6hort way bcfc>re again him washing down his bloody automobile, let up well Into the aflemoon, the male competitors with 110 decibels . (Ste BOA, Page ti coUaplSing. ~ authorities said. \ (See TERRORISTS, Page !) ' I . :..j ,, .. • " \,. _t DAILY PILOT San Diego Girl Flies to Prince f'ro1n Page 1 WELCOME ~ •• LOl\1X>N (AP) -The blonde daughter ot an American admiral eznerged today I in 1J1e London press as the latest 1 romantic il1tercst of Europe's nlost r eligible bachelor. Prince Charles, future king of En gland . Miss L.1ura Jo \\'alkins, 20, daughter of Rear Adm. James \Vatkins or San Diego f flew to London at the in\•itation <lf the prince and has caused a 1ninor sensation in British nev.•spapers , eager chroniclers or lhe prince's love life. Charles , 25. a lieutenant in the Royal Navy, met ~liss \Vatkms last A1arch ,,·hen hls .ship, the frigate liA1S J upiter, put in al San Diego on 1 training \'Oyage to the Americas. "My husband was the! official guts I at the party to welrome Prince Charles and hi s ship," the Daily P.lall quoted ~1iss \Vatkins' mot.her as saying in San Diego. "But he couldn't make it and asked If our daughters, Laura Jo and Susan, could go instead, They did. II The pr~. elder son of Queen Elizabeth II, decided to renew the acquaintant'e after he was invited by American ambassador Walter Annenberg to attend a far~'til party tonight rnarkln& the end or Ar··· 1bcrg's five- year stay in Loodon. The prince was asked if he wanted Ul invite anyone special and selected Ptfiss WatkiN, a U.S. embassy spokesman said. Because of a period of' royal mourning over the death ~londay or the Duke or Gloucester, the queen's uncle, Prince Olartes had to cancel his appearance at the amba~dor's party. However, it ••as Ukely he and l\1iss Watkins would meet prlvalely. The mourning continues un til Fri~ evening. Atitopsy Report ''We received a letter from 1.lrs. Annenberg asking her over and, of course, we ~greed ," P.·1rs. Watklns ~·as quoted as saying. "She left at the '"'Hkend and is due back at school at the end of the month. Her falher paid Ille fare." Miss Watkins spent a year in college, Md traveled through Euroµt before settling into a course at a San Diego business school . She plans to become a legal secretary. After their initial meeting Pt1arch l6 at an exclusi\'e yacht club in the Coronado Island area ot San Ditgo, the Mail said, Prince Charles lnvlted li1 iss \Vatklns to lunch before h.ls ship sailed. 1'he paper said they lw ve correspon<lL'<I 1tluce. "It Ill a L'Ontpll!lti sur1>rlse to us that Prince Chnrles is in teres ted In I.aura Jo," ti-1rs. Watkins was quoted ln discounting any reporb of ro1:nance. "We are terribly flattered , but surely he must have lots of Eilglls.h girl friends.'' An American E1nbltssy spokesmun also discounted any 5pe<:ulalion of a buddlng roman<.-e. "She's here as a private guest of ambassador Annenberg," he said. "She's here Ul go to the party, period." miss.iom six mooths ogo that set the stage for Nixon':s five-natim tour. Kissinser, who sitlt'fl his resignati<:Jt threat Tuesday In Austria has 5lBYed in the background so that NixOfl might reap the booors, received a separate bursl or applause when he got off the tram tn Alexandria. IR«:;latcd story Page 41 Al one point along the route. at Kafr el Zayat. one of the thousands oI dllldren "'hO watched Ute tr:iin pass, 7-year-0!d Sahar Mohrunmod, said she had never actua.Uy heard o( Nixon. Asked if she hat.I heard ol the United Slates, she replied, "Yes, they are th e ~·ar people." "No. no, no," her mother Fat'hia hastily corrected. "Now \\'e are friends." One Bullet Hit - At Taota, about hallway between Cairo and Alexandria. trucks with loudspeakers explained to the cro'tt'ds that the United States is now Egypt's fri end and that this is the' reason 'Nixon's plcfures are e\•erywhertt . "\Ve greet ~1r. Nixon with love, apprecialion and r~Uow~Jp," the sound truck told the crowds. ' • • Victim Ill Head And ever)'\1-·ttere were lhc chants or "Nix~ ... Nix-on " tha t so metimes even drowned out the noise of the train. "I've ne\'er seen people so excited and emotional," said a Whi te House official abo!l;rd the train. "This is for a president ~·ro has run into hostile placards in U1e U.S.," referring Ul Nixon's impeachinent troubles over Watergate back home. That's ltly .-.,p? By AR111UR R. VINSEL Of n. Dllr rli.t Sllff A coroner's autopsy Wedn esday revealed a yomig musician shot to death Tuesday night in the home he shared u'ith a Ciosta ~fesa fireman's widow was hit by on1y me bullet. Investigators re tr I e ve d the gun believed to be used in the slaying of Venice Orlando Willis at the ~ and said It had been fired more than once. A bullet bole WU abo fCJUM in a wall of the home <WMn. Jeannine J. May, 45. ol 1383 Sbannoo Lane, when police arrived to investigate. Willis, 22. wbo had lived at the May home for several months, was found lying dead en the dining room noor, v•here be had fallen after being shot in the back of the head. No motive for the slaying has ye t been Officers Subdue Berserk Painter HOUSTON (UPI) -A rommercial painter, dazed after eating mushrooms he found growing beside a road, took off his clothes and ran through a residential neighborhood, threw $1,200 into a bayou and slugged a pursuing policeman with a board, police said. Blossom. an eight-week.old lion cub at Redwood City's h1arine World/ Africa USA , clearl y has doubts about the maned creature holding her. But Blossom and the lion were just getting ready £or Father's Day. Five officer& Wednesday subdued the 23-year-0ld man who was charged with aggravated assault, resisting arrest and disorderly conduct-... The man told officttS be ate the mll!hroom.s because be t h o u g h t they might be hallucinogenic. He Aid be had drawn the money out of a bank and was on his way to California . Mesan Acquitted in IRS Failm·e ·to File Tax Case The man's family told police he had been under psychiatric' treatment more than a year ago. 'Worker' Nabbed At Convention A Costa ].lesa man who does not believe that federal reserve notes are constitutional dollars was acquitted Wednesday of charges that he willfully fail ed to file his 1970 and 1971 federal income lax returns. ln protest to what he considers the unconstitutional Fed eral Reserve Act of 1913, Rodney Schapel filed returns for those years which renected only his income in gold and silver coins. Y.'hich he maintains are the on I y constitutional medium of exchange. The returns, he said. rcnected about $2,300 in coins, and asked the real value of federal rese rve notes so he could pay taxes on his paper receipts. His viewpoint, he said, is based on the 1792 Coinage Act and constitutional previsions for legal tender. The Internal Revnue Service ho'tt•ever. did not see things quite his v.•ay and he was indicted last October on charges of deliberately failing to fil e the re1ums . Jn February, he said , ''the IRS seized my boat and my business and were going • OlAMGICOAST " DAILY PILOT 1 ... °'' ... c:o..i ~Nol,"""'""""' .. ..,.,._ ~l ... ,..,_..._ .. ~llY"'-°'- eor.111 l'l.tbl••~·"O l:on'unv S.0..••• -""" .. . pufll•-"°°...u., 111rttuv~ r ""'"" ..,.. eo .. . "' ..... >I~·-B&Kfl, ......., ....... a. .... !f~,... , .. , van.y Ug'""' e.d .....,,.,S-• •"II Sil" 0.-!Ws.<I ,,,_ C.1>t1>1no .-, -~ ,_.. .artooft " pUlll-s..i.......,.. •nO s,,,.. <ll'tl r,..P'l..,.,..i~-llM33Q Wttl er,su ..... Coot• "'-°'""""""' 1<'019 Cloiu H t~ P,lvdP th.I ...... >It#!!~[-- "'""" ~y-'\30WH 8b.,..,..-i -tut•U»-.,01L.,....,,,., ~8" •tn'°"""'"'-__ ..... r. .. ,,.,~ ... oc:•Aouif•""'I Stl!C-.... 30\ ........ l•C.-~~-- ,, .. ,,._ 111 41642·4121 Cl"tfflttl AtlY"'thJ119 642·56 7t ,._CoMi.i..._hJI'• D'~-09'11(71 4fZ·4420 r..,...~.,.,..°'-~1i:.-.. .,.., .... 540.1220 ~. ,., •. °"""" c.. 'Vlllii""" °""' ,.,,,., ,.,,_ .. _.. '""'••!--··-~­Of ..,....,. .. ,,.."', -.... , lie --•l*."ltl f)et""_"'_.,."""'- ~--' ....... "'t.o.11 ...... C.1 ...... .... .,..,oft., .. .,._ 1100 -""¥ ....... 4 ••oo-,,"'""'"~·--•300....,,.,... to sell them, oo I had lo pay blackmail to keep them from doing so." According to Scbapel's attorney, lhe t.;.S. District Court decision Wednesday "is a pretty significant case." Attorney Mike Christianson of Newport Beach said although "he acknlttedly did not rue, lbe court agreed it was not \villfully to avoid faxes, but to raise the issue. "As far as I know," O!.ristlanson said, "this is the first case In which a perm has known that he had to file and did not, that he has been acquitted of the crim- inal charges." The tax liabilities for the two years, however, are still pending in tax court, Christianson said. "He was doing it not. to avo id the taxes but to raise the issue,'' the attorney said, '·and the point in this case is that It is not a crime to fail to file as a protest." Trio Held for Heroin BM'NING (AP) -Two men and a If. year-0ld boy have been book:ed for investigation of pcmession of heroin for sale, the California High~·ay Patrol sakt \Vedncsday. Authorities said they found 50 oWlces of heroin with a street value of S.300,000 in their automobile after the men were stopped Tuesday night on Interstate 10 for a speeding violation. CHICAGO (UPI) -Pro1t i tution charges have been filed against Ruth Toalson, 33, o! canoga Park, Calif., who came to Olicago to operate among delegates to the consumer electroo.ics convention, poljoe a.aid. Police said Wednesday that MiSll Toalson was arrested in her room at the Conrad Hilton Hotel 1\Jesday after she offered her services to undercover olflcera. A vice di'vision officer said the woman was charging $60 per customer and bad more than $1,000 in her hotel room. "She came here for the convention," the officer said. From Pqe l BOA .•. it" She added her son also has a bull snake, two king snakes and a four fuot- loog South American boa -all harm- les:i p<C.s. 11?e family keeps all the snakes in cages or aquariums, she explained. and rarely takes them out even to "sun." But Jeff was preparing to leave on vacation, she added, and since it was warm Thursday, he decided to take the boa ootside. Up~ Up~ Away • Wliolesale Prices Rise in May WASffiNGTON (AP) -Despite !ailing lann and food prices, widespread increases on a broad range 0£ industrial products pushed wholesale prices up sharply avin in May, the government said to- day. The Labor Deparlment reported that wholesale prices rose a seaso naUy adjusted 1.3 percent last month. about the same as the ra tes in l\1arch and April but not as much as in the December·Fe~ ruary period. Unadjusted, the increase last month was 1.5 percent. Prices !or !arm producls, processed foods and feeds fell 2.2 percent in ~fa.y, the thlrd consecutive monthly decline. Industrial commodities were up 2.7 percent. Consumer £1.nished goods rose six-tenths or I porcent. It seems to promise for ronsumers a continuation or double. digit in!laCion for at least the next few months since higher whole- sale prices usually are quickly refleeted at the retail level. However, the declines in wholesale food pricel'I frequently is not passed on to cons~merl'I In Cull as 1nlddlen1en seek to retain profits . dewloped, but police have statements from acquaintances that pro v i d e information about both the jailed su.spect and victim. A criminal complaint was to be sought this afternoon charging l\lrs. !\lay with murder, as she remained in Orange County Jail in lieu of '251),000 bail. Detectives arrived at the ll>micide . scene in the Halttrest section of Costa ?t!esa after one of Willis' musician" colleagues flagged dov.11 a patrolman. Dooalaen Hendricks, an acquaintance and musical colleague, told police he called the Shannon Lane home tG see if WUlis was coming to work and was told by the tearful Mrs. ?t1ay that she and Venice had an argument. She then repor1edly said she shot him. InvesUgators said Willis y,'as one among a circle of new acquaintances Alrs. May had met shortly before her husband, Fire Department Capt. Larry May, died of leukemia this spring. Funeral arrangements were pending ~y for the young musician, who originally came from Florida, where his fami ly now lives. From Page 1 TERRORISTS •• sources said ... 'The terrorists attacked the little 1.sraeli farming settlemert o{ Shamir below the foothills of the Colan Heights. One of the women tilled in today's raid was a vohuiteer fnm New Zealand, said reaJdentl'I of Shamir, who kept her identity secret until her family was notified. 1be two other victims were from the settlement. The gunmen were armed w it h submahcine guns, grenades, o th e r explosives and Palestinian guerriUa leaflet.a. A spokesman did not disclose detaJls of the leftnets but said they sOOwed the terrorists "came here to murder and that's all -they did not intend to take hostages." The Arab commandos gunned down the women in.side a hooey factory, about 200 yards from the apparent terrorist target - a commwu1l dining hall where .some of the 470 residents and foreign volunteers were ealing breakfast, the spokesman &.aid. The guerTlllas who c I a i m e d responsibility for today's raid demanded the release of 100 Pa1eslinians from Israeli prisons within six hours, but shortly after the demand was delivered to newsmen the guerrilla squad was wiped OU!. Three guerrillas from the same group raided lhe Lvaeli towns of Qiryat Slunonah, several miles west of Shamir. on April J 1 and killed 18 Israelis snd themselves when the govenunent refused their demand for the release of Palestinian prisoners. 2SOOW.COASTHWY. HfWP'OltT llACH P'HOHI 642°7076 Slolen Fo1111lni11 This va luable Roman fountain, earmarked . for N e v.· p o rt Beach's ~1arriott 11otel. is in the hold of an ocean liner bound for Japan. Interpol. the international poUce agency. hopes to head the ship off and reco•er the fountain. A ware- house janitor has been charged with lhe theft. 'Happy Hooker' Mo uie Filling Court fl ouses LOS ANGELES {UP!) -lf it's any comfort to "The lfappy Hooker," her film biograJiiy is packing them in at the courtroom of U.S. District Judge A. Andrew Hauk. -• Nine persons are on Lrial on charges or interstate transportation of an allegedly obscene movie. "The Life And .Times of Xaviera lfollander." The movie is supposedly based on experienc~ !)f Miss 1-lollander,· a fQrmer prostitute who wrole "The Happy Hooker" and other books and is now a columnist for a men's magazine. dispensing advice lo the sexworn. The judge held a screening or the movie Wednesday to determine whether it should be accepted as evktence and shown to the jury. lfe had to in terrupt the afternoon showing, as the court grew progressively more crowded. to order employes not assigned to hls court to go back to their jobs. About 30.000 policemen were turned out for security purposes along !he train route. carrying automatic "·eapons. Helicopters fo1Jowed Nixon's motorcade through the streets of Alexandria. Security measures ar... expected to increase as Nixon continues his joumt'y through the ~1ideast, especia1ly in view o( an Arab guerrilla attack today at the Israeli .settlement of Shamir. Nixon arid his wife will spend the night at Ras el Tin Palace. from where King Farouk went into exile in 1952, before returning to Cairo Friday for a visit to the Pyramids. He will depart Friday for Saudi Arabia and then go to Syria, Israel and Jordan. "Long live Nixon:" shouted the crowd as Nixon left the C:iiro slatiOO: lie responded with smiles, waves and the V sign Nixon is so kno\vn for -arms high over his head. two fingers spreed apart. All along the train .route, workers left the fields to "'alch Lhe train. Wmncn, usually wailing ln !he background because of Moslem custom, were up front . holding up their: children. "I made arrangemcnls for this specia l tri p to pass by this place where I ax.ild see them," said Abdul •lak Ahmed, 36. \\'ho led a string o( fou r can1els to a spot v.·here the train passed. ''I want to go to [t.!ecca .most of all but I \1:ant to be here,. too."'•·· · •• A line of horses tianketed with American and.Egypt:Mm nags was 11trwg out along one section of <track. • "It 's unbelievable," Ziegler said. "~1y God, it's unbelievable." Nixon, ·Who. was given a gold lifetime pass to the railroad said he enjoyed the train trip very much. Of the reception he received he said: "After 25 years or misunderstanding a nd 'Seven y ear s of bitter misunderstand ing, Egyptian-American (riendship has a natural foW'Ki~tion and I we 're building on it." As overwhelming as the size of the crowd, Nixon sitid, was its enthusiasm and respect for Sadat. The reception Egypt has accorded the American leader staggered t h e presidential party. An estimated two million persons swarmed into the streets of Cairo Wednesday to welcome hlin. Nixon, in a t.oast Wednesday night at a dinner Sadat gave for him, said: "I can think of no day that will stay more in our merr1ory,'' ~fate fleld in Death REDWOOD CITY (AP) -A ~year­ old man was booked fOf' inves tigation of the throat-slashing murder of his wife early today, San Mateo County authorities said. Sheriff's inspector Rudy Simpson said Elmer· Tunnisen was booked in connection with the slaying of his wife Elsie, 56, at the apartment building Which he manages here. IH HfWf'otl:Tf'RODUCE VILLMH 160 I HEWP'ORT IL YD. l . COSTAMESA 642-9004 COHVIEHll!HT PA RICING IH IOTH LOCATIONS WINE fecrhns BY POPULAR DEMAND, a repeat of a sellout A ... st •U wiM lo..n _.. •wwt of fttt ,_.... "SOUVIRAIH"-w of c.ifOl'•'s ... ty fftWtd ,.....,.,.._ ht how MOflY.,.. ..,_.. ..._. .W. ,.-oM:w of hk)ll,..,..... llbo ~tt ........ ........,. brwl "Lot A.1Ngot"7 w ... WIHlMAH'S do, .d """ pat tWs IR~ Oft ~ you. T\ert'• ............ yw ...W bow -TW ~ty of INt 1Nrtr bow• ..._. k ........ , ••• ffM pric• k •to! Try M ttlk wffttff!lll Y• .,..'t IN ..... 1l:l1d. For Roasts, Steaks, s rews. Ouck. Ground S1rlo1n Hamburger, veal or Pasla. Try , "LOS AMIGOS" ZINFANDEL For Cheese D1snes. Oltcti;Etn. Crab. Eseargot. Ham, Sea100d or 0me1e11cs. Try ... "LOS AMIGOS" CHENIN BlANS $198 21.Jt ,.,. .... , • Ttmrsday, Jone 13, 1<)74 S OAILV PILOT ~ Officials Trade Charges for Labor Camp Ills By WIWAM SCllREIBER Ot Ille 0.lll' 'Ii.I lllff Top officials of two govmuncnt agcnciee charged with failing to correct alleged inhuman condltions at farm labor camps ln Orange Colmty blamed each ol:htt Wednesday for falling down on the job. Dr. John Philp, dlr«tor of the QOUDty health department and Gordon S. Hill . doputy dlroctor of the Ca.!Uomia Department of Houslng and Community Development, made the corrunents in telephooe lnterviewll. '11le.y were rcactJng l<l criticism by the county Grand Jury and Human Relation s Bank Forecast CommlJlion -revealed thts week -that He said that "If the grand jury accepts also sharply critical of inferior housing, responsible s:ovemmen~ officials are all the Wormatlon as factual, it Is io ror plumbing and overcrowded coodltlons at pas)Hle the bUck rather than solving the a rude ahock." some ot the can\ps -all wtthln the problems. • Hill said the commlulon impected the state's Jwisdlctlon by Jlill 's definition . The oorflmlss.ion, l.n a report to the camps and claimed to have found dirty "C'.eneraJ sanitation and food bundling jury, suld inspections of many of the two living quarters and kitchens and standards are county responsibilities dOzetl county camps revealed unbe-unsanitary food handling techniques, even tholJ&h the report quotes the county llevabte squalor. 1be jurv did Jta: own "none of which is within state as denying thls rtS"""'•lbllity," JIU! in!!pC<tlng. covering about eight ol the Jwisdictloo." oonUnu<d. ~- ca·mps, Und read>cd the same conclu-"Our resporu:lblllty is the adequacy and "l have since talked "'ith coynty health slons. maintenance ot plumbing, eledricat and officials who agreed these problell\6 are ln a lengthy statement phoned from heating facilities, structural and v.1thio their jurlsdirtion." Sacramento, Hill branded the jury and ventilation requirements and oceupancy Or. Philp flatly denil'd that the health oommiss.ioo finding! as "a shotgun factot1," ~lill said. department is the agency respon.-;i ble for approach which m is represents He had no .oomment "'hen tokf that 1he enfordng laws covering labor camp re!!pOl'ISibillty for housing conditions." _human relations commission report \\'as conditions. 6 ~------~----- South Coast Set For Fast Growth The Soulh Orange Coast wilt continl!P. to be the fastest growing sector of Orange Cciunty for the next decade. say economic experts for the Bank of America. Spokesmen for the banking firm said that recent economic studies and projections .show tbe area will make tremendous gains in OOvelopmentt retail sales and employment. In many cases the rates predicted will be double those forecast for other sections o[ Orange County. The data released this week Is part of a regular economic forecast made by the bank for separate sections of the county. The report sepcilically addresses San Clemente, San Juan Capistrano, Capistrano Beach and Dana Point, the coJl'lllunilies referring l<l the San Clemente sector. Broken down into segments, the report makes these observations: -In population, the gains over the past fiye years have averaged abo\lt 7.5 percent a year, well above the,. total county rate of 4.2 percent, The perfonnance compared to the rest of the county will "continue to improve,'' the Upper Division Classes Offered .i\.t Saddlehack This swnmer South Orange County residents can take Cal State Fullerton courses at Sadd1eback College through a pllot program offering upper division classes. specialists say. Addressing forecasts strictly to the Capistrano Valley and San Cleniente areas, the predictions of population for the area by 1985 will be about 9.1,W) pe.rl'IOOs. San J u a n Capistrano Is expected to lead in the boom of population. The forecasters predict that the ooce-tiny village wUI have nearly equale.I the total oopulaUon forecast for San Clemente, traditionally the largest municipality in the area. By 1985 each will have about 36,000 residents. -In the area ol employment, the bank predicts :µmual gains over the next deacde of 8 percent tn new jobs, making it the brightest employJnent forecast of the county. 11lat v.oUld'inake the numtt-r of jobs io the area almost double the figure , 'oday. Manufacturing, it is predlded. will expand through the area, and will be the prime source of the new , jobs. "Seeking escape from the increased urbanization of the county areas to the north, more and more manufacturing firms will be relocating in the less densely populated lower coastal region," the bank spokesmen predict. -Retail sales will follow the population increases. In 1975, the total cash generated in retail sales will be a'txrut $146 mill ion, soaring in 1985 to a projected total of $508 million. -Personal income, as well, is txpected lo increase markedly. Jhe expected county median in 1985 will be an income of $27,077 per family, grow Ing significantly from the 1975 leYel of $16,337. 1be bank forecasters citee a unique featu re of the Soulh Coast area -its relative low density at present -as a means for a better quality of future development. CAPTIVE AUDIENCE Flip Wilson ENTERTAINS BUDDIES .• Richard Pryor Jailhonse .Bo~ks Flip , lnntate Pr)·or J>ut on Slioiv By JERltv BOCK IDS ANGELES (AP) -Deputy Sherif! Geraldine Jones twirled her purple panties on one finger, filing them at Prisoner No. 2140-875 and said, "Put that on your cell wall ." The roof nearly fell in at the Los Angeles (:aunty Men's Jail. Some 300 inmates who packed into the downl<lwn third floor chape.I Wednesday night hooted and whistled. No. 21.w.a75, dressed in prison denim \\'ith t\\·o while patches on his seat, stepped to the microphone on the stage and said, "Thank you brothers. We did this because we love you and respect you. When you get ouk.Please stay out." Backstage, Pryor said, "The hardest part was "'atching other people being mistreated. I was treated with kid gloves · in a way. I C'OUJd tell what would happen if I didn't haYe some status." Besides the jail term, Pryor, 34, was fined $2,500 and placed on three years probation. He also was made to repay back 11 taxes ()n $68.504 the fe<!cral government said he earned in 1967. He pleaded guilty in federal court to the charges of oot filing a tax form for 1967. Asked how Pryor had failed (() pay his taxes. his manager, Ron DeBlafio said, "It wasn't intentional. II "'as a turbulent lime in his life and he was negligent ." "II !here has been any bock-passi"G in lhis affair, it's because they haYen 't done their job," Philp sal din reference to the sui.te agency. "Under the Housing and Community Development Act, that is the enforcing agency _ fcx-all the things the comrTtilUilon ls talking about ," Philp said. "I! the cities and the COWlty want local enf<lttelnent and want to pay for It, then that is a different story entirely." Philp said llill's auempl lo dlYide responsibility was Improper because the law Is specific. "He'd better read his 0"11 act," Philp said. Hinshaw Eyes lm1nigration Scandal Q11iz LOS ANGELES (AP) -Congressman Andrew Hinshaw (R·Newport Beach) says he will ask a 11ot111e panel to probe charges that the Justi« Department s~ppressed evi~ence of corruption among high-level Immigration Service officials. The Orange County Republkan said \Vednesday he will ask the House Government Operations Committee to reopen Operation Clean Sweep . a much· heralded Justice Department investigation ()f Immigration personnel attached to the Southwest regional office in suburban San Pedro. The San Pedro office is the bll8iest 0£ all regional or fices of the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service. It covers IO Western states and is responsible for the entire U.S.·Mex.ican border and INS operatioo in Mexico and Asia. A report of lhe subcommittee on legal and monetary aUairs of which Hinshaw is a member, said the Justi« Department "has swept under the rug eYldence of illegalities on the part of h.igh·leYel immigration pro pie in the Southwest." A Southwest regional office spokesman in San Pedro denied any kind of coverup has taken place. "\Ve have supplied every record that was asked for and made available every J'@mber of the service who "'as asked to t.e'stify. Nobody took the Fifth. Amendment. nobody evaded questiOM," said Bob Seitz, INS public information officer. Support for a renewal of the INS probe come from Sen. John V. Tunney, D- Calif., \vho said he would ask for the probe "if that should appear ne«ssary W'ld appropriate. The report added the panel has received a list of more than 2(1 Immigration ()fficials against \l'hom potentially crin1inal cases have been quietly shelved by the Justice Department. "I have hnd Uus same kind or expe rience "·ith them tthe slate housing agency i before 1111d they cannot buck their responslblli1y under the law," Philp added . llJIJ lldnii!lt>d ihPre ilt anolher state law that allo\\'S IOC'a l jurl!idictions to take on the enforcement power for labor housing snd noted lhal eigh1 Callfomia counties htivc done so. "But the .stn1e canr'ic:>t ass u1nc local jurisdic!Jon. ·· Ifill SC1id. I/ill also 11·r11t into some d{'lf.til aboul his understanding of the situaUon 111 <?ra.nge ~~11y and \1·h.v his agency is lunll t.'<i in 11s capabilities to cure tht· situation. Ire said of the 26 <'amps mentioned 111 rhe hunian relations report, 11 had less !han five resident cmployes ,1,hen ~nspcc_t~. Throretically, the state ha.s no Jurisd1ct1on until there arc more than iiYe resident laborers. Ifill didn't say "'hen the inspections took pla«. There ili a wide variance in employment ()n county farms depending upon seasonal rrop harvesting. lrill said of the remaining 15 camps. 13 \\'ere properly registered with his agency and inspecilons showl'd all but one me! minimum state standards. "This one is being brought up to standards at our insistence," he said. The commission said it inspected 11 camps, of which onlv t"•o were felt w be in ltvable condition. 'u said Jess than half the county camps \verc pro p e r I y registered "'ith tbe state. I-fill said two other camps inspectt'd 1verc below standards but "'ere closed dov.'ll by the farmers for economic reasons. J.le said a legitimate area of concern his agency has been trying to solve 1hm.i~h legislation is the difficulty in e!fechvely enforcing housing laws. He said the first step is to follo1\• "prescribed administrative remedies." If these fail. the state turns to the local district attorney with a complaint. tlill said most of the time an . . . mspcct100 by the district attorney turns up nothing be<'.'ause the operators temporarily vaca.te the camp. "That's the end of our complainl because there is no basis for action " he said. ··Some1imes. the operator ~Yes his emp\oyes right bnck in and we find out about it. So we're forced (() go through the entire process again." lliJJ said some camp operators cited for violations will simply sidestep the law by temporarily reducing the population of the camp lo tour -below the state min imum. Hill said he has a staff of se1•c,1 ins~tors ~ who must check on J ,20J camps throughout the state. He said a ne\\' law pending in lh l' legislature could help out by requirin~ camp operators to obtain a hlgh-pri ccC permit that l\.'Ould pay for his agency's inspection operations. tic said his budget for next year "il! only produce $77.000 in reYenues from camp registrations to cover $225,000 in costs for inspection teams. The eight classes scheduled for the first extension program of Cal State at Saddleback carry run universit~f credit and complement courses oUered in the community college i n s t r u c t i () n a I program .... Coorses slated are anthropology ()r religion. visual thinking, economics of research, American Indian t o d a y , creative motivation in m a r k e t i n g • marketing admlnistratioo, esthetics and political philosophy. They will run fron1 July 8 to August 16. "The lo'l'·er coastal area. unlike its more urbanized neighbors elsewhere in the county, has the opportunity to devise new commWJities where residential. commercial and industrial elements can be plarmed to achieve economic growth and stability, yet still maintain enYiroomental quality." the report states. The prisoner was comedian Richard Pryor. He was due to be released today after serving a lo...day sentence for federal income tax evasion. Geraldine is, of course,. Flip Wilson. He and Pryor put on t"'O 45-minutc performances at the jail, dishing out earthy humor and inside jokes to the pleasure or the inmates. .JJ. J. (}arrell6 SUMMER Offered through the university's Office of Continuing Education. the courses serve as "an outreach effort to better meet lbe educational needs of the Orange County community," according to Cal State spokesmen. O>st for the courses is $2ti per unit. Students may register by maU through fonns available at Saddleback or write the Office of Continuing Education, CSUF, Langsdork Hall, ~"ml M9. Ful· lerton, Ca. 926.14. Additional registration information is available by calling the coordinator of extension services at 8~2611. "We are· very pleased with the cooperation we have received and with the facilities being made available to us at Saddleback," said Alex Sharpe. extension coordinator for Cal Stale Fullerton. "We are particularly impressed with the audio-visual facilities available." Dy ing Boy Due At Disne yland PITI'SBURG (UPI) -Leonard Fuller- ton Jr. will get his llish to see Disney· land before he dies of cancer. Flllerton Jr. will get his wish to see Disneyland before he dies of cancer. Within 24 hours aft.er his plight was made public, the pareiits of the 9-year-<1ld terminally ill boy had his trip arranged. Mrs. Marlene Fullerton, wife of an unemployed truck driver, had driven Leonard here from Caldwell, ldaho, on the way to Disneyland. But the boy needed treatment at Children's Hospital in Oakland, reducing Afrs. Fullerton's funds l<l $100. Then her car broke down. The story was made public Tuesday. and Wednesday ROger Miller. a traYel agent., provided hot'el arrangements and airplane tickets. "I wanted to do a show." Pryor said in an interview later. "People weren't OOthering me. 'I'he cats facing murder raps kept telling me to be cool . l wanted to do something to show m y appreciation. Laughter makes them feel good. TM vlW will last a long, long time.'' "Titis was Richie's idea,'' said Flip. 'Tl's really great. I wanted to help him pull it off." J\1.oote Kaye, Flip's manager, said \Vilson visited Pryor frequ ently during his stay in the jail, and Pryor suggested the show and got approval for it l\1onday. 1''1ip was first on stage. First he told a Polish joke, then a Mexican joke. The inmates - a mixture or whites, blacks, J\Iexican-Americans and Orientals - roared with laughter. The tv.·o sl<lries. like much of the humor , w e r e unprintable. ~}ant Eyed Near San Juan County Planners Ok.ay En viron.1ne11.t l111pact Report By JAN WORTll Of tM IMllf 'Ii.I Sltll About 80 percent of the sand needed to make glass bottles In 1111 of Loe Angeles County may soon he suppl.led throu~h a proposal to reopen exc3vatK>n operations near San Juan Caph1traoo. Owens-lllinols Corporalion, w h I c h leases an 1,100-acro site south or the Ortega High'l''fiY on Rancho Mission Viejo, has submitted an environmental impact report to the Orange County environmental planning department 'l\le~ay the oounly p I a n D i n g commission Judged the ttport adequate. frttlng Owcnt-lllioOls to proceed w1th oppUcaUons for three state pennJta end two county permits. The Owem-JJlinois operation w a 1 halted two yc.1rs llflO when the taliflknla Depnrtmcnt of Fish nnd r.amc tiled them for dumping 1oxlc "'astes Into San Juan Creek, killing a ootictal>le numbf:r of nora and raunu In what Is ooe of the county's few trout fishing spots. The poisonous eictrnetJons, ~· to produce a line grade of sand for glass manufacturing, seeped out during 1972 noods. The company was ordered not tG re- open until n series of siltation ponds were built to settle out the in1purttles. No\Y the eompany proposes to build a dam as well as , t.hc pond:i. The da1n would crcnte n 200-ncre lake for the polsonou.<; \\'atcr and be an additional step to settle out toxics. and store the re-opening the plnnt for a 45-year extrnc-- llon period. The waste water \\'Ould be collected behind the dam for at least 25 years, a county spokesman said. 'llle dam anti other plant facilities, tome of which are nlerady built, arc located in Trampas Canyon nnd for lhe moat part are not visi ble from Ortega tllgh\vay, however the sand mining and visible. ls!lues of traffic nlong OrtegA Highway wert dlscussed by lhe p I a n n I n g commission T u e 1 d a y . OWens-llllno\5 !lpokasmcn said 4f1 k> 50 trucks \\1>t1ld mnke runs from the: site dall y. Larry La"·re-nce. p rcpresenttflive from the city Of San Junn Capistrano. requested that -If the plnn ls approved -traffic controls be improyed at the plnnt entrance. ln their opprova_I of the EIR. planning commissioners ditected county stnff 1ncmhers to begin an overhaul (If thc: co1.111ty's existing sand and l(ra\·cl tone ordinance and «insider making more Rtrict requirements for slope rehnbilita· lion and re·veget.'ltion , "\Ve :ire dubioui; about l h e revcgetalion plans proposed on lhiS site," said Env:lron1nental Senior Planner John A11day. "\Ve 1hink all that wtll grow out thert afterwards will be grass-nnd very little of that." Tht next step!' for the corporallon lnc!tlde going to the state y,•ater qu:ility conlrol board for a pennlt 10 build the dnm and a perm.ii to di$pose-o! waste \\'tiler on the site. An additional permit will be nct'ded rrotn the slatt''S Otp.1rtment or Waler Re9ourcta to Impound water. The counly mu t granl exc11;vnlior and gr:1ding permits. -' .. ' .. PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR OESIGNE\S Op1rt Mon., Thur,. & Fri. E ... 11. -- • 15% to 25 % on selected collection of • SOFAS.• LOVE SEATS •CHA IRS in your choice of fabrics • 2216 HAR!OR ILVO. COSTA ••ESA, CALIF. 6'6.0275 • > J .. • Thmdly, June lJ, 1~74 14 OAJl Y PILOT !----,........ ' .JD.Si • 40 Senators Rush to Kissinger Side • r ~ with Tom arplaine · Lay Postcards On the Table 'Wiretapping· J iistified' -M ansfielil WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen a Io Jeadtn trpl' c:aekC "tV!rf o:Uideoct" in tary " Slate i-,. A. !Gootrce!' said lllday -P>VenJDl<d wtr«appillg is unetimes juotifled il din!<tly relaled to natiooal security. Demxntie Jeader ~fike ?tlaMrield, CA.\tERAS, A C TI 0 N DEPT. -The Pvidence i.J clear today that our Orange eoa.. region bas spoiled the pcture pastcanl people. Our area bas just been too good kl them. As a result. the good city of Costa ~lesa has been left out m lbe cold. l" one ol more than 40 MOaton who signed ' a ren~ ca.llillg Kminger's Etegrity . and veracity abo\•e 1t'pr'08Ch. said: "I ha\·e every confidence in him.'' Yoo want une picture postcards to !iieDd back. east to your favorite Aunt Maude? No problem if you want Laguna Beach. San Cletneflte. Ne"''J>O" Be.adl. or Alllltingtoo Beach. The picture postcard people offer you ample supply. You can get Laguna in full color on a postcard with shots ol Heisler Park, the Festival of Am or the Main Beach sweep of the COMtline as it was before restoratioo. For :<ewpon, the postcanl poople will give you living color ol beaches, beys, tbe Pa\·ilion in Balboa, boats on blue harbor waten and )'OU name it. IN SAN' CLEME~TE Ibey off.,. the beacb am pier or Dowering gardm.s with Spanish-style homes or the We s t e r n Wl:Ute House from the air. Huntington Beach is much likewise on !be posu:anls with lcmg strands of beedl, pier !Urlers. pahn strees and all that rolorlul stuff the pictun! postcanl poople love to peddle. Alas. whet you want to seod borne a rol0< pholograph cant of Co61a Mesa. bone can be found . The postcard maker. ha\•e declared Costa ltfesa a v.·ameland area. 1bis was undencored only tl:tis week when lbe Co61a M,.. Cllamber of Ca<mier<e's Fron< °""" Comlnlttee met · with the brass of a Loog Beach picture postcard outfit. One of the e:reculives spoke plainly, tolling lbe Froot °""" folks that Costa Mesa just doesn't have anythq they could take a picture of. You ba\'e to admit this is Jntty lmulting. rr JUft GOES IO lhM' bow we have spoiled these postcanl people with all oor beadles. bays, boats, ""'"' and sucll. And it is true c.o.sta Mesa doem'l have any of lbe3e things. Despite ID~ yoo've oeen plecty of J*:ture postcards fmn other areas that you just know Costa M<oa could put to -· Take for eump&e the ooes you've probably got up in the attic in an old cardOOard bo:r that Aunt Maude sent to you. The scene m the front shows a street with poltholes, telephone wires. er.ores with false froots and an "Eat at Mom's" sign. t\\.'O stray dogs and a lady lri a funny hat looking in a store window. ON THE REVERSE side, the legend tells you that yoo were looking at a photo of, "~tAIN 'S'T'REET. Cluttsville, U.S.A .. OOUDty ~ for Kratchltt County. p:ip. 34.IXll. elevation 5% feet. noted for its annual com-busking festival ." There are so many torros just like this across the country that you could take the same pictW'e and just dwige a ff"ft' facU oo the re:vene s}de of the postcard. Now m all booe6ty. you know that Costa ~lesa can do better than this. ea.ta ~fesa bas the old E.rumcia adobe. ~e of .fine golf courses. a n outstaoding city bafl (best of all Orange Coast cities), many fine ga.rdem, several nice parts and the Orange Coo.st College and Southern California C o 11 e g e campuses. Okay. Costa )fesa has .!l>!'De lousy places too. Whal city doesn't~ YOU DON'T SEE any pictu re postcan1s of Newport's city dump, tt:nain downtown areas ol Laguna , the San Clemento pier underJ>OSS CJ< the oil sludge ponds of Huntington Beach. Costa Mesa's Front Door committee wg!>t to show that JlO'(<:Onl !inn 'ibe back door and go find an outfil in the Midwest to do the sbootlng. -"--., . -4 . .. ~""Si.ff,.._.. PRESIDENT NIXON FINDS A GOOD WAY TO TOP OFF EVENTFUL DAY I Egypt"& Sadat, Henry Kiuinger Also Enjoy Souhalr z..ki's Performance /, " ' .. Nixon's Eye-s Opened I ~ .. •J From "'irt: Servicts The dancer dMf not ignore the J'res;dents' wives. She kissed Mrs. Nixon oo the cheek and then did the same for Mrs. Sadal ,. • ·' • A j CAIRO -Souhair Zaki. v.·ho calls henelf the "'am· bassadtes.! of love." t~·irled and gyrated in front of President Nil:oo and then turned her attentions to Secre· Lary of State Henry A. Kissinger. Nixon slapped his knee, threw back his head and joined Egypt's top society in laughter Wednesday afte r a state dinner in the plush gardens or Cairo's Koubbeb Palace. Gen. Alexander ~f. lfaig, White House chief of staff. al.so admired the abilities or Souhair and said, "I v.-ould like to see more of that." Al lbe end, Souha!r bM!w kisses to Niml and Sadat and bowed to the WO guesU. µ (: J The President turned to a smiling Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and the two men began to v.·hisper to ooe another. The President and Mrs. Nixoo W!ft guest! ct Sadat at a gala state dinner. Si:r Wndred ttiplomats and their wives gathered fir j'i the party uoder twinltllng colored ll8hts strung in palm ~ and baobab trees.. ~ The menu featured oxtail soup. a nati\"e fish. turkev ' .. Souhair then performed for Kissinger. who has seen bellv dancers before. She ran her fingers through his curiv bro\\'ll hair \\'bile be beamed and appeared quite com Posed. Kissinger, \\'ho had a belly dancer sit on bis. lap dur- ing a previous ~tlddle East trip and later qwpped be v.-a..nted to make the .,,'Orld safe for belly dance.ri. told oev.'!fllefl later, "I bad a marvelous eve.Ding. I saw some old friend!." and rice oriental, a baked okra-and-meat dish. cucumbei-l and yogurt salad. aod ice cream and fresh fruil 1· After the two presidents ei:ch.anged toasts, the master of ceremonies said American singer Pearl Bailey, whom Ni:ron calls rus "ambassador of )ove," bad performed in I Cairo recently and DOW be WU pre9eDtiag Sadat'"' "cbanoellor " _ .. -belly dancer Soohair Zaki. Cultist Oiarged In 'White Magic' Cemetery Antics LONDON <UPI) -A pretty girt dancing naked at midnigr11 over exhumed coffins in a cemetery. A headless body dumped in a parked car. "It is white magic." David Farrant told detectives.. It put him in the prisoner's dock at the Old Bailey, London's famed cemral criminal court. Farrant went oo trial Tuesday on charges of desecrating tombs iD Highgate Cemetery. the North Loodon graveyard wbeTe Karl Man: is buried. '"Ibis is a strange and unusual case,"' Judge Michael Argyle told 1he jury. "Whatever bizarre activities this )·oung man may wish 10 indu4;'e in his private life ... he is not entiUed to damage property or to disturb the dead,'' said pn>Se<Utor Ridlanl Du cann. Farrant was sakl to have styled himself the high priest of the Occult Societ)'. partly dedicated to revealing the future by ccmmunicating with the dead. Testi.mooy saKI he and his groups held monthly meetings in Highgate cunetery "if tbe weather was flne." The proeecuUon charged that the meetings involved breaking into family vaults and stealing bodies from their coffins. On ooe occasim. a young F'rendl girl danced naked at midnight o v e r desecrated coffins and graveyard tomb6, tbe court was told. Judge Delays ,Decision On Ehrlichman's Trial WASl!INGTO:'i -A feder.d jllfge today postponed his decisK>n on whether former White House aide John D. Ehrlictunan ~·ill be lritd along With three other defendants scheduled to go on trial ne:rt week in the Plwnbers case. A l 17-hour closed meeting with the judge and defense and ~on lav.1·ers ended ~ithoot forr . .al agreemMt to an apparent tentative compromise on We:klcsday O\'tt the ~ of executive pri\i.lege. • U.S. District Judgo Gerhard Ge.ell scheduled still another C'losed meeting for Priday morning and said in a statement, ··some sort of an order" will be issued oo Friday. e BBB Return• DialllOlld WASHINGTO~ -Sen. Hubert H. H~y CO.~lim.) bas joined the l~t of ~blic officials returning hreign gifts of valuable jewelry to the government in compliance with a law making such gifts public property. Wdlingloo ""6t columnist Mazine ClJe9iire reported that Hwnphrey Y.'ednesday ga\·e back an cight<arat di.amood worth more than $100.00J that had been given to him by Cmgolese President Jooeph Mobuto In 1968, ~1>eri Humphrey ""' Vice president. • c.....,...c1e Arriee• BOSTON -The SS!' Conarde landEd today at Logan lntemational Airport slightli· ahead et scheOl!e to show ( IN SHORT ... ) Americans the cootrovenial jet bu ''no problems anywhere." The Angfo-Frmdl """""""-~' plane, lbe subject of contrcwmy ~ sal,.y, oolse and economy , was greeted by a couple of lbousand sigbtseen at Logan shortly before 6:30 a.m. PDT. 'lbere were oo environmental demonstrators to be seen in the immediate vicinity. e l•pot1tul..,_t l•ne WASHINGTON -The H"""" Judidaiy Conurtittee's legal staff bu fomd no impeacbable "'""° in Pl-NIIoo's lmpoundment of up ID 111 billion. one of lbe chargu listed wh"1 impeadlm<flt became • possibility in c.ngre.. Last fall . Thunderstorms Hit Plains '!be llalf, in a 9liJ8ge legal brief givon the ammittee and made pub Ii c Wecfneiday, s top p e d short ol -""'l!llq tllat impoundmcrlt be dropped as a possible charge in an article ol impeacbment. But the tbn.isl ia in that direction. e Viet 1'1111" S...,.IN Fro1it Slaslies Throu gli Kwisas, Oklahonta. MAUON•l W141Nlt U t 'f•(I f0tt{.U1 11 7ir.• IS1 .... • "4 30.00 ·~--mowd """'°II -ni... NtOl'a\tl I nd ftOrtNonl 1{11'1.t' I "" conT"""9d to mGYI """I"! ""' Sou!Ma\t. T(ll'11.llCloff knDCll.. down _ .. Ml'/Y d\ttv ~ u... "'_,.. w.d!lftd•Y rtiollf 60 l'f!llft ....,,, "' LllllOOdl.. Tl•ll. Ind '5 m ile ''" ef I'-. Tn.. lnootll« ~"" tO<.ld'IH -"'"°'"" tw'lllW toll(""' -II K\•=..:~1n ~-111m of N"9m -.-Ill I-Ind Mlnnet(llll Into t11e c....tt1l ltocltlft Ind n,. GAU Llkl'$. IK!11!9d ~rl Ind ~n _,,...,. rtCIOl'ffd CIW'f SWTherfl F ._,.., "' .. ,,_ ce1)•r.i """''IC cooo,1 •IWI In Nr1'1 of l!'le t"'tt.i Gutt ~H 11f!H. OwiJ., N.M.. ,_,...., Mlrt'f' lft lrictl d tl!n 1 .. --·_,, _......, _...., ..... lk(;-b, Miu... """ ,. ..... ., • ,.. • .... lrdl In ""' -"'"' -f1rlY "'Cl'"'"" -•!Vf"ft '""°'" f""" U O.O•ll'tt 11 t<!t.olnt• /NM., .. fS 11 ~. C1llt Co1Utel Wealltet' Mooltty Wl'W'!'I ~. u.fll 'flf'llfltt ......... "'""' .rot rr.IO'ftillO ~ ~ I ... -.r...ry It IO 1• kfl(ll1 In lflow> -'Ol:WY .... I',_.,, NIOI\ todlP 10, C01t11I """'°"'-""'" ,.,._ """° ti to '1. 11'111W'd .....,..,.,_ r..,.. '""" !.& '° n. w ..... -•""'• ... SHn, Mon>1, Tide• TMUJtSOAY ~..,Ill lO'i•m. o.i "'°<Of!~ low 11:01 ....... 1.t l'lllOAY f'lnt Noll , J•JI01"'• Jt ,.,,,,,,.... 101411'1'\, ,. I«-,,.... '·'' 1.m. s.t $oK.Cl"ld IQW 11 U 1 m 0 t $1,1'1 rl-J•I\ • "" kit •:ts .. ,... N-. ..f4 I JI ""' SAIGON -North Vietnam and the Viet Cong today end<d a two."1!dt boycott of talks to locate t,tOO Americans missing in action, but negotiations lmm«liately booed do'A-11 over the i5&ue of how many dil>Jom.atic privileges the Comm.mist negotiators were entitled. Saigon amunand apol<esman LI. Col. Le Tnmg Hien said '"Ille Viet °"'II Ind the Nonb. Vit:mamese wanted a signed document that they be COlllidered a diplomatic delegation. 'I'1m is Dl:l09E!R. \l.T})e ha\-e restortd diplomatic pri\ileges to them already.'' AUSTRALIA SAYS NO TO 'THROAT' CANBERRA IUPI) -'lbt fDrn bomf of R<vlew Wednt..i1y unanimously rejected an appeol to permlt lbe American mo'f1e "Deep '111roll" liO be- lhown In Australis. !Ast week, the mm "°""""P board rejected "Deep Throat" on the arounds of Indecency. In It. atncial r!pOri Wedneoday. the rour-nmn rt~ cunmlttee dt!clattd the filzn was hardcore pornography. and n1l«I 1gainll Its diltrfbotlon in Australia. MandM!ld t.ld -"" 1be ..u.tap cootr0'1rersy swirling al:out KZ9singer, who tbnateoed to resign if hi.s name 1''85 nee cleared. was more ''damagq kl bis own mind !ban ~ b In reality." MAJ\'SFIEU> SAID be belM!ved wiretapping "might be necessary for the pUec:tion and sec\rity ol the natioo" in some instances. ~ leoder Hugi> ScoU said "It is """"" to do -is legaJJy permisljble to aeaae lbe mtioo 's Scott oddld that "the """"""'"" that wit....,,.. is toCally tlkgll .,.,. up apDt !be olilOI' ---do ycu prctect natjme! llee:lri)•." Both Mallfield Ind 'ScoU -ID be relft'Tinc to wta~c ill a general ..,.. rad>or Ihm _,tflcaDy to aome allegations that Ki s a Inger wu respausible hr ~ oo 13 fc:nner aides and far newsmen to fnl the 90W'Ce of news ieab in 1571. A llESOWTION cl ~ !0< Kiaeinger was iDCroduced W edrwday by SM. Jamee B. Allen (0.Ala.). Kmne.,., touring In d>o Mlddle East with President Nixon, i... remainOO &iltint since bis ~ news conference kl. Salzburg, A u 1 t r i a • n-lay, ...-he -to resign lriea he was cleared by •·acme Jt9j:Ollihle fonm. '' BtX angry Repuhtic-. 1 h a r p I y -..i lbe llwoe Judiciary Cmunittee. as die nroe r1 aJ~ar>rm that Kissmger <rdered wiretaps on 17 fllt'WSUJttll and govenmeot officials fn::m 1969 drough 1171. KISSINGER DENIED IDier ~ Sepl 7 that be Wtiated the wirdaps. He said he only provided the -" - -bad """""' .. ~""' -that ""' leal<«I to """"'"JJS?· Seno. Bany M. Goldwata> (R·Al'iz. I. Edward Gurney (JI.Fla.), Ind Stnm Thurmoml (R-S.C.), Presidential O:uwJor Dean Burdi. and V i c e Presidu>1 Gerald R Fon! all denotmcal the leaks cl FBI documeata: co the wiretap comtover:sy to s e ve Ta I ...,..,.,._ and lbe ..., " lllem by lbe media. Goldwa..,. -the w~ Pon of .... act " _ .. for qooUig 3eC'et FBI memce 111 o:nradicting !Gaihi..... -He added that natlmel security WU lbt bnp:wia:Jt ts:sue DIX ''Mµidiic'' crrer wbeChts-IOm:q:tt migtlt ba.,·e told a "falseh:md" when testif)ing about IUs role~ in t h e ..U.tappiDp .. bis -l>earicg. BURCH llL\MED ''badt door. tact bilirl&" ..... leaks """ the Ju:tici<>ry Canmittee or ita ltaff as die nrce ol iofonnaDoo ....... Killliq:.,., Fon! -''jln>impeadimen" '"""" of I~ IUd1 ~ rib "ulterior motives." SM. Hubert ll Hm1"•"1 CO.Mm.) said .... .__ -by Presiclmt N--.Id d<Or up 1be mauer toe IC!mtmpr. Ul'IT.._.... StrlrkeH J. Fred Buzhardt, one of Rres- dent Nixon's top lawyers in \Vatergate defense, has suf. fered an apparent heart at- tack and was reported in serious condition today a:t a Washington hospital. Oiemical Ooucl Threatens Town; ()yer 8,000 Flee NORMAN, Okla. !AP) -Officials estimated more than 8.000 persons "we e''acua!ed from their homes at nearby 1lloore today ~'hen a white cloud of chemical gas spread northward from a train derailment in the north edge· of Konnan. About J.000 persons had been evacuated from Norman on \\'edoesday night ~loore. a C'OOlmunity of 2t i00. is just north of Nonnan, which has about 52,000 residents. ,, MORE 111A.'; 125 pentm, most of them law enforcement offK:ers. firemen and other 'irorkers at the wreck, v.·ere treated at hospitals for effects ol lbe gas, pbosph>rus tricbloride. Hospital spokesmen sa~ persons v.·ere admitted. Afost of those affected complained of nausea, burning lungs. v.•atering eyes and. skin irritation. 1be fumes penetrated Ole gas masks of : some of the men working in the area. The gas began spewlng from tanks In ooe of the 3S train cars when the train derailed aboul 6:45 p.m. Wednesday. The leakage intensified about dawn today. and a shift in the wiOOs to the south spread lbe low-lying white cloud t1Df1h. ward fmn the IMlgi«! -.re<bge. EFFECTS OF THE GAS "would be the equi\-alent of breathiJl8 hydrodrlori<: acid," said )foore Msl City lifanager Zach Taylor. "'It blisters the Joo.gs. pimarily, mid extended •lpOOW'e in high concmtraUoos is fatal. 'I 'Ibe Santa Fe train was ~ 76.000 pounds of the chemical, o f f I c i a I s reported. Natimal Guardimm. Civil Defeme and Hea1th Oepe.rtmcnt workers, police and firemen from both cities were summoned to help in the evacuatk:in. Romantic Interest? Prince Charles rtpomdly has invited Laura Jo Watkin!. 20, 1shown in earlJer photo) to London for party. Both \\•i ll now miss event be- cause of suboeqUent d .. th of the prince's great.uncle. The couple met in Coronado in Al•tth when British ship visited San Diego. • > Thul'\day, Junt lJ, 1'174 CAIL V PILOT .l ~~~~~~~~C'---""-'---"' Murderer· Gets Death Penalty • Ill State Ruling SAN BERNARDINO {AP) -The first known person to be scntcuced to the gas chamber wider California '1 new 1lmited dcalh penalty la w Is a 35-year-old transient only recent released (J'On1 priaon. A l1111' Wednesday ruled that Donald Lee Bernard's crin1e flt the law th.flt requires the deeth penalty if c e r t a i n circumM.anoos ore met. One circwnstance is a n1ulUple murder case. Marijuana ·seizu1·e 'IDegal' RIVEl!SIDE !AP) - A Riverside Superior Co u r t jOOge has dismis.scd charges against. two <l!.lco men on the grounds that Bonier Patrol agents ·al Temecula ii-legally seized 50 kiJOS Of Jl'Wrijuana fowxi on the pair I as t December. Tilt: SAME JtJRY a dny earlier had convicted Bernard or two counts of first degree murder for fatally shooting a Victorville urea teen-aged boy and girl in the back of ttie head when he stole their car from a lovt.'!"'s lane. Ben1ard, recently ~leased from a florida prison in a non.murder case. had been traveling with ~er ex- convict recently paroled fron1 Teacliers In Class SAN DIE:GO {AP) The smaller of S a n Diego's two te ache r s' unions staged a one-day strike Wednesday, t h e firs t walkout in the history of the city's p ub li c schools. No disturbances were reported. Organizers said the strikers would r iturn lo thei r c l as s r oo m s Thursday. the last ,day of the school term. Jud_ge E. Scott Dales said '----------' Wednesday his decision was based oo a U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals rulin& that "warrantless searches at fixed checkpoints by the U . S . Border Patrol w i t h o u t p robable cause are unconstitutional." Dales' ruling acq u i ttcd Michael John Camans. 27, and \Vi/liam Gordon Winsett. 29. Defense Attorney Art Lester said the Dales ruling was "a way of saying, "Look, you 've got to follow «.he Constitution, even with crimina ls.·· Dales said he expected the case on which he based his ruling to be headed for the Supreme Court. If it was upheld there, he added, it could have th<' cUect or closing down the Border Patrol st.at.Ions at Temecula, Oceanside and Oak Grove. Coach Given Jail Term SACRAMENTO !UPI) John S. Lehnhardt, former track coach and teacher at \\'ins.ton C ·hu r chi 11 lntennediate School, was sentenced Wednesday to ni ne moolhs in county jaiJ for having lDllawful sex u a I inlert'Ourse with a J4-year-0ld girl. Lehnhardt. 29, also was coovicted of of{ering her marijuana. Superior Court J udge Joseph Babich sus- pended sentencing on the marijuana charge but noted it c a r r i e d a 10-year4:<H ife sentence. BUENA PARK hKh .. 0..-W,.tt.orpf New Mexlco after 15 years in prison ror murder. A third persoo in the party was an Illegal Mcx1cao alien who was given lnununJty and te6Ufied against Bernard. The other ex~ c.oo is due to be tried on double murder c h 11 r g e s Monday. Beni.ard s..1ld nothing after the death verdict but shook lhe hand of his CO!Jrt...appointed aUorncy and gave him and his guard escort smilus. Infraction Fo1~ Pot Use Nixed Aulhor ities said an <Jppcal was uutomallc but t h a t Bernard would be transferred as spon as arrangen1cnts coold be made to San Quefltln Prison, whose apple-green gas chamber has i;:ooc UllU6ed since 1967 /11 1'.:A N Wll J L E, JURY deliberations cx:rU.lnue in a Los Angles Superklr O:n•l on the possible gas chamber fate or another <."Onvicted murderer. • SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A I biU maki.~g possession.and use £,,,,.,..~ or man1uana a s i m p I e f,;.<" "infraction" rather Ulan a ~sible felony offense has ' failed in the Senate Judiciary CorrunH.tce. The measure (SB2157) by Sen. George f\1oscooe (D-San Francisco), was r ejec t e d Wednesday on a 3-a vote, short of the seven votes needed for approval Under the bill, an infraction \\'OUid have carried a maximwn penalty d a $100 fine for possession of less than three ounces. U'I Ttllilbolt l'igl1ts Order KP.F'K radio station manager Will Lewis told federal grand jury in Los Angeles 'Vednesday that he wouJd rather go to jail than turn over origi- nal SLA tape recording. San Jose Ma11 Sought SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -Eugene Joseph \\'esley, 42, a former resident of a San Jose halfway house. is being sought by .authorities in the deaths of a Devore woman and one of her children. Officials said a murder warrant was issue d \Vednesday for \Vesley. who reportedly has a rape-assault record in other states. in the deaths of Patricia] L o u Thompson. 26. and her 3-year- old daughter, Jodi. A third body was found near the others Oll the banks or a wash near ~Irs. Thompson's Southern California home. But authorities said they could nol identify the remains as .that or 11rs. Thompson's son. nine- month-old Roy, wbc> is still listed as missing. · A sheriff's spokesman said the warrant for Wesley was issued after interviews ·.,.:ilh the dead woman's neighbors. 'IJnva ·rur kl'r Wo-JldY~lorW•!liMe In A Foe Id Of Slone/ ""'lud"'ll' l+C•Canll .. H<m Tho e.pliomOI .k•M Ta,,U/lt! .._O. T~t• Why ..... LO«l.'No lMll'•l- Wo.oHI "°" l•¥W•!~ ""'II" "F>elcl OI Slono! l~ynn Anderson Sn1il<' for ~le --1>1S..m..l-Ol"'1'U. ... _l .... _DMlrr' tw.'4li•~ ..... Ol~, .. 111.. ('-.. "-~~-~ , ' CHARUI McCOY ' ! -1"f.,1r11Hw,r•rHS..rll ORANGE Cfff Dr ... Cio_..11 Go,.., 11•4. .... ~ ...........,.._ ~-.... ¥ .... l""r"''""...,,.,t,,...,.,.. -... ,..._cio-_ ,,.. -._, Ronald SUns, 2.'i, ""·as found guilty by a Sanl<t ~1onlca Superior Court Jury o r mun:IC!", assault with intent to commit murder and robbery, stemming f.rcm a holdup of a We5t Los Angeles restaurant. John SulUvan, 58, was shot lo death during the holdup nnd Virginia Mlntoo, 46, th e restaurant manageress, v.'aS seriously wounded. r.apitat" punishment deaths had a holiday Jn California wider court dclcslons where publlc unpopularity retSUlted In le~islation that reinstituted the de<1th penalty in li]lCC ificd circumstanocs. The authof" of the new limited death bill, Sen. George Dcukmejian CR-Long Beach), said afterward only that "we'll just have ,to see what the appellate courts ¥.'ill do \\•ith it." AITER THE conviction, but just before thr st•nh:nce phnse began , ~ Bcm<.1rd '.!! t1Uo111ey, deputy public dt:f('rldcr J<1ck 0. Luoma. h;id told thu JUrl}rs: ''That which I fe,j'trCd n1er.;t has come 10 pass. 111e next step for him is the ga'i chan1bcr. If yoo find any one of the se 'special circunlSta nres' is true, you have scaled his fate. i'his t'Ounty may now ha ve tht> du bious distinction of ha ving •.ht> first case to get to Death How." FIDDLE CONTEST FASHION ISLAND SATURDAY Chula Vista Pair Arrested Enter 11 a.m. in Stage Court on the mall Saturda y, June 15 CHULA VISTA (AP) -Tl'-·o persons face cha rges o f possessing h u n d r e d s of thouS<rnds of dollars' v.·orth of the drug 18.etrile, described by U.S. medical authorities as a quack cure fur canc:er. drug, a misdemeanor violation of the health and safety code, and theft by false pretenses, a felony. Laetrile, derived r r 0 n1 apricot pits, is sold legall y in ri1exican cancer clinics but is considered worthless by health ... ________ ...,. officials in this country. Its sale as a medicine is banned by the st<1te heal th departmenl . Kids Like to A sk A udy ~~~~:t~.~£·I!t~ ... ------BICYCLES-~:~£­~.2~a~il h"!;~· .~=~i 10 s20 s40 C'f~ investigator ' said they were ----- an esl<d after selling 400 SPEEDS fO BELOW NORMAL grams of laetrile to an undercover agent for $1,000 RET All! Tuesday nigh!. • SHIMANO COMPONENTS • FOR DADS -FOR GRADS The investigator said agents went to a house rented by the pair and found boxes full of thousands of German-made laetrile pills, worth as much as several hwidred thousand dollars in street sales. "OME TIME OML Y" 5'£CIAL PROMOTIONAL LOW L.OW l'lllCES s5995 to s799s 3 SPEEDS OHL 1' $44.95! • Lor(Jt Flange-Hubs • Cettfe.r Pul Brakts • Quick Rmaw Brobs . • Scrfelyl ........... • Wl119 Nol I. Quid! Rel<GS< .;.m, • PaddedSadcle• "\Ve have reason to believe they've sold the drug to many terminal cancer \.ictims throughout the state," the investigator said. • LAogcjed """"°' • Sffm & Down Tube Shifters A SAN DIEGO district attorney's spokesman said charges facing the two include po ssessing and selling the Degr ee Gained Kevin Hebson, son of George • Many Alloy Coftl• .... -... ~n.tts • Choice of coion COMrt.11'1 ACCISSOlllS & ft~AHCIMG AY AJU.ILf THURS.-FRl.-SAT.-SUN., JUNE 13-14-15-16 ONLY! Red Baron BICYCLE WORKS t a.111. lo ··~ C. Hebson of Costa Mesa, has received a bachelor's degree in governmen t from Lehigh Unive rsity in Bethlehem, Pa. 1884 PLACENTIA .. lttti St. COST A MESA-645-8370 Columbia Country The Best of Columbia Country & Western Now Specially Priced! Stere o Album s Stereo Tapes 3.47 4.77 Charlie Rich-Very Special Love Sangs Tanya Tucktt'-Wauld You Lay With Me In a Field of Snow Mac Davl1-Stop And Smell The Roses Lynn Andiirson-Smlle For Me Charlie McCoy-The Fa stesl Harp In The Sau th Country/Western LP Specials Hundreds 1 g i To Ch oose ea From • • • Charlie Rich • Brenda l ee • Biii Andarson • Mel Tlllls • Lorett• Lynn • F1ron Young • Dave Dudley • Jerry lee lewis • Samml Smllh • Henson C1rgltl 0,.11 Dolly t:JO to t:JO p.t11. S.Mlef 10 le 1 OfN" 10·9 p.111. O.ily S.Mley 10 f1>' ltOO So. lri•tof•Ho. of Sa. c ... t P111e Opt11 10.t p.111. Deity _.., 10 to 6 . . \ . .. • .. • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE New Goals for Grads The week's commencement flurry along the Orange Coast will set a record of sorts with no fewer than 11 ceremo nies scheduled tonight alone. It's bard to believe that plenty of not·SO·oldUmers can well remember when no com1nunity had more than one high school and the nulnber of June graduations along tl1e coast could be counted on the fingers of one hand. The ever-growing number of graduates is of course a measure of county growth. But the proliferation of candidates for scholarships aud awards at all the cere- monies would see1n to indicate that, in this area at least. quantity has not interfered with quality, For many. this week's events are just stepping stones on the road to still higher education. But lhe in· creasing demand for vocational education at secondary school levels reflects sonie diminishing of the once. cherished theory that every worthy student niust strive for at least one college degree. Many now choose to 1nove directly into the work3· day world, relying on the broad spectrum of adult school opportunities to 'polish off their academic train· ing-but not necessarily with a degree-and this ap- proach to life no longer brings raised eyebrows . \Vhether there's work or more study in the future. the grads have high hopes. which is as it should be. \Ve congratulate them on their achievemetns and wish them well. Transit Planning The California Department of Transportation re· lea.5ed a report last week that generally praised mass • billion on lts proposed system over the next 15 years, not the $2 .1 billion figure now belng used. But OCTD Genera! Manager G. J. Fieldln~ said the state agency has assumed the entire proposed coun- ty system would be heavy, costly rapid rail trains. \Vere that the case, Fielding said, the costs would have been placed as hi gh 3s the state suggests. As It stands. OCTD's plans call for minimum reliance on rapid rail and n1aximum use of 1nuch cheaper n1odes of tran· s it. . The transit district has proven by performance that 1l knows the lay of the land in terms or transit planning. tr there are some rough edges, we think OCTD can iron them out. H orticultural Infla tion The making of a tree may be the exclusive province of the Almighty. but that apparently doesn't 1nean its ' value can escape the tentacles of inflation. ~his was established last week at a rather stormy ~eet1ni; of the San Juan Ca pistrano City Council. dur· ll_lg which. an e1n~arrassed developer agreed to pa.y the .. city t~e 1mpress1ve sum of $20,000 for inadvertently removing a venerable eucalyptus tree from his new housing tract. ~'.eservation of the tree. it seems, had been among cond1tions attached to approval of his project. But a grading operator failed to get the message and knocked down the old eucalyptus. ~ . Furi~us city fathers at first suggested pay1nent of $<>0.000 in damages, )Jul agreed to accept $20.000. a small part of which yr-ill_ go to pay for a new tree, the balance presumably salving bnnsed emotions. ,, ' transit planning by the Orange County Transit District. But one conclusion indicates the state agency may not have done its homework. The report was particular· 1y critical of the district for what the state called short· sighted fiscal planning. It said the district should be planning to spend $3 .6 All of which _probably means that developers should pay more attention to ~try reading, with emphasis on the works of Joyce Kilmer. SENATE MALTS ~lllfMY USf OF ,fNilES 111 CffE~ICN.. WMFAIU EXfflllMENT~ (News Item) Tlie Misuse Of Freudian Theories ( SYDNEY HARRI S ) ll's astonishing. and a little depressing. that more than 50 years after Freud 's exploration of the unconscious mind. the public still misuses and misinterprets some or his most valuable contributions to our self-understanding. \\'hat happens to a theory-~·hether it be Freud's or Einstein's or !\1arx's-is that it b ec om es coarsened and cor· rupted in public use: the ~·ords cease to mean \vhat the y meant to the orig i· nator, and tum into e.n excuse or ratlon· ale for something hr would not have re· cognized as his O\\'n. In Freud"s case it is "repression" that bas suffered the greatcs1 perversion. People with a smattering of ignorance on the subject are still urging others to •·get rid of you r represslons"-by which they me.an throwing off inhibitions and acting in a less conventional manner, usually in the sexual area. YOUNG and gullible \\"on1en arc ofll'n s educed by this false appea l to relinqui sh their natura l modesty or mo rality and abandon themselves • tO \\'hat is euphemistica lly known as "experience." But thi s is nothi ng at all like what Freud , an austerely moral man , had in n1 ind. liis concept of "sexuality" went far deeper than the sexual act per se, involving a sense of identity and relationship. not mere coupling. What Freud clearly meanl b y "repression"' was a childhood memory or experience or trauma which ,,·as too uncomfortable or painful to be retained in the conscious mind. It is pushed back into the unconscious mind by the child. Deat· Cloontv • Gus 1 have lost respect and empathy for Patricia Hearst of the "beau· tiful people" \\'ho expressed her agony over watching the fire con· sume one she loved ... yet could alloy.· her grieving parents to be· lieve she might be in that tragic holocaust. F.11. B. GMm' G111 ctm-•rt MllolftlltM .-, r11oen '"" dt Ml IM<ftllrllr rtti.ct """ vlewl ti I"' -•Pl•-$1:1111 1191ir "' PMvt It GIMmJ' O""' Dt\IY ,ilft. v.·ho then ccas{'s to recognize its presence. BUT, conti nu ing to work undcrgroulld. this painrul 1nen1ory sha pes ( o r miss hapesl many of our · actions and behavior patterns. robbing us of much free \1'ill as adult s. and locking us lnlo inappropriate conduct that is based on a past fantasy rather 1han a present rcalily. It is r.ot until "'C can exhuine this buried n1en1ory (the ''return or the repressed"l and subject it to the daylight scrutiny of the present that "'e ca n rid ourselves of bt!havior patterns that 1nake us repeat our mi stakes in infantil e fashion ! for Lhc unconscious forgels nothing and learns noth ing on its own i. THUS "getting rid of your rcpr~ssions" in lhe fruc Fi'cudian lex\cor1 has lit lle to do ~·ith acting out sexual fantasies or removing ~social inhibitions; people \.\'ithout inhib ltions \.\'Ould be monsters and could scarcely form 11 livable society. Repressions are got rid of by digging them up. holding them to the light, and recognizing them as pipe· dreams of lhe past. Then we arc no longer thei r unconscious capt.Ives. \Ve are "free" to the degree lhat \1·e can rationally control our behavior, not to the degree that we do "'hatcver Y.'C feel like doing. Ca11dor Not lttjttred lt111ocence Kissinger Must Fill • Ill the G~ps \VASHINGTON -Henry A. Kissinger's ne\vest problem is not a small one. It in· volves \\"hether or not he told the ""hole truth when he categotically stated under oath that he had no part in initiating \\'iretaps in 1969-70 on sorne of his aides and ne\\·sn1en in se.arch of evidence of their oomplicity in disclosing sensitive and secret national security information. His testimon y under oath '''as une· quivocal. He s~'Ofe under questioning by Senate Foreign Be-- lations Committee Chairman J. William Fulbright that not a single one of the 17 "·iretaps ilUt!11.>ri·1.l'd by the attorney gl'n· cral 1ra~ iniliated by Kissinger. lie hall supplied some names of those with access to the kind of information in question in ac· cordance \\ilh a general criteria of a previons decision 011' protecting the na· tional security. 1\nd it n1a.v have been. Kissinge r added , tha t the FBI under J. Ect~!lr Hoover may have had a different percrption of ~rho.t 11·as called for. This \\·oul<I not hove been surprising because the FBI based its perceptions on \\'iretap authorizalioms recei\'ed from Attorney c:eneral John :\litchell. SO:\IE"'HERE in here there arc sonic missing gaps. and in all thf> glol":v of his diplomatic successes, Secretnry of Stale Kissinger v.·ifl undoubtedly he compelled to fill them in. The House Judicia r~· CJBl- mitlge h~s heard a diUercnt story than Kissinger told fulbrighl. The committee hii~ bccn inforn1cd by its investigative staff that Ki~inj!cr' in· volve1nent \\'as more direct. And a ncv• revelation of President Nl:rcon's ton· vers.1tions has him saying that Kissinge r ··asked that it be done." So, it is the old sto~·. Denials and in· jured innocence \.\'here con1ple1e cnndor is called for. Kissingj:!r will ha\'c to say n1ore and he may as Welt sa~ i! no11•. ' WHO CAN seriously dooiht that l\is· ~inger "·as angry and per!urbt'd 01•er thr. premature di sclosure or linal negotiatin~ (rucHARD ~o~ positions with the Russians on strategic arms limitation? This information. and more. v•as in the public domain and. \\'here could it have come from ? As the working head of the National Security Council at the time, Kissinger and his top aide , General Alexander ~1 . Haig. would have been fools not to suspect someone In the NSC staff. They could reasonably conclude that such leaks of information were for the purpose or undermining policy lines with \\'hich the leakers disagreed by exposing them to public and congressional op· position. Internal sabotage is nul unknown at these high level is where in· trigue is imbibed '''ith the food ln the \Vhitc House ml'S.S and wills collide over trlnes. ASY\VAY, exac.:tly how "'rong "'as it lo try to run down leaks of information which might seriously embarrass the na· lional security through dul y authorized \\irelaps? Th.at question \1·ould be easier t::> llnS\\"Cr If the wiretaps had produced the evidence sought . But they revealed only such security information as an in· terest in pornographic boolt shops and hints of an cxtramarilal affair. Like so much else in the \Yatergate atn1osphcre. the circuinslances 11p re farcic-.tl. Kissinger"s problctn no"· is 10 just:!~/ ruhlicly what he did to plug the leal.s which \\'ere embarrassing him and the Nixon administrat ion and why he did it. Kissinger is nol so innocent of intrigue that he could not have known what the supplying of names of suspected leakers might lead to. HE AD~IlTS that he did suppl-y na1n e:; and that act alone is irrctrierabh:: \l.'hether or not. he made a "direct" recommendation for this kind of elcc- trcnic survcillanct!. Kissinger was in- volved from that point onward. 3nd 1hcre are also published accounts that he angrily demanded action ( r o m FP.I director Hoover t wl>o seems to have bttn nervous about tne whole business. The sad part of lhls is that Kissing-er ha~ gotten into a prohlem ot a Ume when his success "''as So greed . but he is not alone in that. Nor is he alone in suffering from the lack or complete candor \!.'hen first confronted with suspicions he con · sidered wholly unjustified. President Ni1'- on led the way down that path. Success Can Alf ect Your Health Success is a fWlny thing, as of course is failure too. for the moment let us address ourselves to success. and to a ~pcclfic aspect of it, bow it affects our physical well being. First, as the schoolmen tell us, definition of tern1s. The dictionary says success is "to have accomplished son1e1fj ng planned or att empted ." That's a little help, bul nol n1uch. A !;id 1n:iy plan to .sheave !11 :IO n1il and do ii. He might con~ider him- self a success. hut this com~r \~·uuld 1101 . nny 1norc \!1:..i1. ir he had success- fully managt:"J :o n1urcler s~·vcral hun· dred elderly \\.'Omen. Success as I would drfine it. has precious Jill ie to do with accum ulation. It coosislS. &:-nenrl~· as I can figure . in <!oing '~1ork that is so pleasanl to you that It Is ahl\08t play and in g<?'lting a dCC{'n\ re\vard for IL The re\\'ard is less important than the satisfying u·o"k. (CHARLES McCAB~ TllERE are people ,,·ho believe that this kind of success has a profoWld influence on man 's life, even the life of his cells and tissues. G. Sha\v ca?nc c.lose lo the heart of this matter when he said that ·'Labor is doing what we mus1 : leisure's doing what "'c like." The secret of a long life is living in perpetJal leisure. which is doing al\vays work that ,,.c 1\ish to do, A man \'Ibo subscribes fully to this point of view is Dr. J-laus Selye, of l\1ontreal University, the great expert on \1•hat has been ca11ed the biological stress i;;_vndrome. He holds there is a distinct relationship belween aging, work and stress. railure, 00 claims, "leaves some irreversible chemical scan which :iccumulate to constitute !he signs o( tissue aging." Success. on the other handi oo maUer how intense it is, "leaves you \.\1itb comparatively few such scars. On the contrary. il -proviifes You with ~ exhilarating feeling of youthful stre~gth, even at a very advanced age. "\York y.·ears you out mainly through the frustration or failure. Many of tlic most e1ni nent among the hard workers in almost any field lived a long ure." A~10NG the JX'Ople who seemed to live lives of perpetual leisure Sclye mentions r..B. Sha'v himsel f, as well as \Vinston Churchil l. Pablo Casal~, A I b c r I Sch"'eitzer, llenry Ford . Charles clc c:aullc, Bertrand Russell . Enmon du Valera . Queen Victoria , Titian, Voltaire, Bismarck. J\11chclangC'IO, Picas so, i\lalisse. Rubcno:tci n and Tosca nini. He n1ight have add~I one of my personal heroes, O.\\'. ll:ifmcs .Jr. If your work please~ you. &lye advises. st\ck w1 lh it. Don't go hare lng about aft er OL't!'lide duties. c iv i I responsibi litic!'l and the like. Or, \{ ynu choose to do thesi.: kind or things. don't be holy about it. Kennedy Was Favorite Target of Administration Snoops \\'ASHI NG1'0'.'\ -The real target or the Watergate break-in. it now appears from confidential White Hou s c documents. was Sen. Ted KeMcdy (I). 1'.fass. \. Sources close to President Nixon conflr1n that he rega rded Kennedy as his most dangerous political foe. The President also expected f o rm er Democratic national chairman Larry O'Brien lo manlpu· late the party ma· chinety ln 1972 to be· stow the prcsidentl~I nomination u p o n Krnncdy. Up to the eve nf the Democ;rali" con- vention. ~Ry our s:>Urteei:. !he Preti· dent beJie\·cd Sl'n. George MrGovem !O.S.D.l, \l'OUld step •~Ide at the la~ minute to make 11 ay frit Kennedy, with O'Brien pull ing the strings behind the scenes. NfXON had scarcely setllcd into the ~'hite House in 1969 before he began 3ecking political nmmun illon lo use agab..,t Kennedy and O'Brien. The orde1 s "'ere transmitted through slafr chier It ft~ Jlaldeman. ... A host of colorful supcr·snoopcrs 1\'Crl'.' recruited to ln\'cstiga te Kennedy and O'Brien. ,\n1ong thcn1 were n Runyoncsque ex.New York natfoo\, Anlhony UlaSC\\'icz: n flcshy·flush-factd t'X·Ne111 York detective. Jack Caulfield: the bewigj'.tNI former CIA agent tilld incurable romantic. 1-:. Howard Hunl; :ind a young, pi._'<ianrlc 11ccurily specialist ~·ho kept a red scramblt>r tclephOnf! ln his While !louse desk drnv.·er. Tom Cha rlts Huston. Less than si x ho11r!'i after Kennedy ron off the brid ge 11t Chappaquiddick on J uly 18. 1969. Ca ulfield had a man at the scene searching for evklcntt thal could be used 10 embarrass Kcnnl'd}'. TWO YEARS Inter, JI uni again tried to put together a Chapp.1quiddick scandal that wou1d destroy Kennedy. But the two gumshoes came up wllh little that the press hadn 't already uncovered. The White House crowd apparently wa.9 obscMCd wlt.h the Id ea that Kenntdy had n weakness for wild parllc~ and promlscuOU!i won1cn. Hui rep ea I e d lnveittigalions by aulfleld 11nd Ulasewlcz l:iilrd tu produce aey evidcnc:c. A~ a typical example. C3UUicld kept Kennedy undt!r s1Jr,•e1 nncc durlnil a • (JACK ANDER.SON J 1J1re1·-0ay visi t to Jlonoluh1 OJ.l August 17· 1:1. Hl71. A secrel survcilltf"ncc reporl. 1\l1ich referred to lhc se nator as E~IK. "'as rusht.'<I to Lhe \\'hitc llousc. "E~IK made no public appenr;i nces during his slay in l-lonolulu." reported Caulfield . "Inquiry ascf'rtalned that he occupi1.'<f the private estate ol onl' J. Ontani. located at Diamond !lend !load , Honolulu .•. •·DJSCREl::T inquiry detennincd tha t Kennedy used lhe cstnte solely for sleeping purposes. tnok only ll 1 s brt3kfast meal al thnt location and quielly visited friends at other loct1Uons on the island. "It is known that he played teMlll on AlJ&uSt 18 al the estale or one 1.loyd :'11artin ldentlUed as a l''enlthy llonokilu ~ contractor ... "An f'Xlens.lvt> ~Ur\"e)' or hott lS, discreet cocktail 101mge11 :ind otht'r hldea \\.·ays v•as conducted "'Ith a \'ll'W toward deu~nnlnlng a covert E1'.tK visl l. n :c result s, were ,egali\it' .•. "In conclusioo ... 11 i.S believed that E~IK activity during his stay. ln ,J.:fonolulu was adequately covered, No CV'Klence was deve loped to trld\cate that his condu ct 11.·as improper." YET TllE \VHlte !louse still "'asn't !iatisficd until an investigation hod been completed of Kennedy'! host two 1n1>nths later. In an October 20. 1971 , men10. C.1ulfield v.·ound up the inveslignllon of Kenn1.'<f~ ·s th ree-day ftooolulu visit \\'ilh o report that his fri end Ontani "'as •·a 1nulll-milllonalre D c in o c r a I wllh cxicnslvc real estate and buslne~s holdings in ltawaii , .. SOurC('S advise that Ontanl :iignlftcuntly controls locnl politics in lfooolulu to the extent that he is rcfcrrtd to ns the ·~ta;-o: ~iaker1." The most en100rrassing evidence that the 1un1shoes obW.ined agalnst KeMedY \\'as a picture of him In the company, quite innocenUy. of a female friend in Rome. 'Vhite Hou~ aide Charles Colson promptly pcdd1t.'CI the photo to 11 scandal tnblold. \vith a huge newsstand circulil · Uon. , The \Vhitc !louse docurnents show thAt O'Brien receiv1.<d s\mUar attention from the Sl1CIOpcr MlUad. On August 5} 1970. for cx111nplc, lluldl!m;1.n ordued John Dean lo ln o'l'Stig~t o·~rleo's connection wkh I an international consu!Ung firm called Public ACfairs Analysis. TllE CUMSll0£ WORK was assigned to yow1g tl~ton who found the firm's nclivitles ojnot only legal but prudent. O'Brien's relatiO?l.'Jhip with ·PAA is so minor," added Huston, "that 1 would think it unworthy of further investlgaUo'h." Our White llousc sourcts say that Halde man In Aprll 1972 ordered an • OUMGI COAST DAILY PILOT Rob1rt N. lVtcd, Pttbli!hir Tltomtu Kccuil, £d ltor lJarbara Krtibich EdJtorlol Poat Edilor Thursdny, June 1,3. 1974 inyestlgatlon into the r e I a t I o n s ~ i p between M~vern and Kennedy. The White House still fcarid that O'Brien might be able to stalf!mate the Democratic convention, p e r s u n d e McGovern to withdraw and push Kennedy as the prt!sldf!nllul nominee. lt was to (Ind out more about this suspected plot, our sourcts be:lleve1 that the Watergate burglar'! were ordered to brtak into O'Brien's ofClcc.9 and bug his telephone. T1l4" t'tlltorilll pqe of. the Oitlly PU01 At~ks 10 inform •.nd 1tlmula1c f't'adt-ra: by Pr"Hl'nttna: on !hit pq:e dlvcr8fl comtnl'nta.ry on 1opl'-'S of in- ltttst by syndicttled tolumni1t1 a.nd c1r1oonl.1t5. by provldlna a forun1 fot' ~Adt'rs' vi~ and by prcaenttna thlt n(ly,--gpaptr't oplntoo1 Md ldt'lll on r..Ul'l't!nt loplc8. Thf: cdll orlal oplnioNJ af the Oftily Pilot •Piw•r nn!y in tho r;.li!orial ('l)lumn at rht lnp o( lhe. paar. Opinions "•P~«< ct tiy th~ ool· omnlim •nd cnnoon1i;1.1 anl1 lalltr v. rltf'r11 ru·t 1helr awn nnd nu r.ndol'tt!- n1f'nt ol 111tlr \'W~ 1 by t~ 011.lly P1io1 ).h011ld bt• 1.n/i·n l?d.. c c h c n e n t c ' e, o, le al p " n e e h l• at to ls ,. I ~ • Jury System Costly Refor1n Could Save Time, Money WASl!INCTON -May every judge ln the country see the cartoon. Jt's an old one by Chon Day that shows the foreman ol the jury looking at the robed man on the bench and say_ing, "We find the defendant guilly and recommend that he be sentenced to jury duty." The cartoon 13: reprinted m a new document put out by the L a w Enforcement Assistance Admin istration, ( VON HOFFMAN J The LaW Enforcement data suggests most courts do most of their work on Tuesday&, Wednesdays and Thursdays, thus pcrn1Jtting long weekends which are doubUess not given over to golf, but to juridica) rencctlon and the pur!uit of ob8cure precedents in ancient law books. Typically, however, the same number of jurors are summoned on the slow days as on the busy ones. WHEN You WANT TO MAKE HIS DAY and ~lncc as many as two million of us must serve as juturs ev e r y yee.r. "~ Gulde lo Juror Us· age" is as much of Interest to lay people as to the profess ion· als '!''ho haphazardly. uJurors are forced to wa it in the jury lounge through the entire afternoon even II their chfnce ol being called for a volr .U.:..ll~1lblt,'' 11r1 the roport, whloh 16 tW ~1irlother frequent abuli 11 to caU tn aJl~s. to pick up their check• .on .ibe;latt day of the week, even though ex~ ahow• leis than one-ntth of lhelll (tM,jurW1J wlll be ul<d that doy." .TAKE HIM. run the 111w oourta. "' The a:uide Is a gentle. · ' adjuration to judges, not a study, ..but after reading It you can see 'fhY IO many people who've· gone thrQUlh the jury experience wonder Wb¥ tht)' should b1ve to take thti kind ol ~t. -. FORESTERING Al·-• 1,tt done now In many C0\11111 Tht mlnuacul• JW'Y fe1, th e Inconvenience, the financial loss and the nggra vated fruslration cause many people lo hide from the courts by failing 1.0 register to vote. They will do anything to avoid getting themselves trapped into a month of waiting in the fly-specked rooms wi th the sagging furniture that the courts reserve for Innocent jurors. Yet neither rud e bailirfs nor suffering days in unair-conditioncd rooms. while judges and murderers e q u a 11 y enjoy refrigeration, bother most people as much as the colossal waste of their time. =. I of prospective jurors are • · !ift'at'once because o! the habit ot sta}'tlng'all trials at the same time ol the morning. The worst of it is that thl1 peak load period only lasts for about an hour, but the unwanted jurors who have been assembled are left to sit; the result is that the average juror spoods about 37 percent of his time in the courthouse without doing anything r em 0 t e I y coMccted with the judicial process. Alleroll lhe doys he's mode for you here's your big chance to say !honks. NONE OF TllIS need be. StaUJtics exist which show how many juron are required for va rious kinds or tria11, so that calling W'l!lecessary juror• is unjuStifiable. If judges staggered the ti mes when they began their trials, and if all the out-of·the-sight-of·the-jury arauing about motions and conf'erring and negotiating ·were done in time periods when ·the jury wasn't scheduled to be around . it is estimated that it would result in halving the amount of wasted waiting t_»ne1hat jurors put in. Wi1h our premium whisky. Old Forester. Forestering. It's one of the nice things -¥QU con stil l do~ith your fa the r. TllE LA\V ENFO RCE !\1ENT Ad n1inistralion figures that in a typical court about 25 percent more jurors are called !han arc needed .. Their only func- tion is to come and sit and then go away, oft en :u great expense to themselves. ~vcn fur!hcr juror time could be saved 1f the courts reorganized their wo rk on a rutiona! basis. About the Occult (THE BOOKMAN) From "Apparitions" to "Satanism," (rom "Exorcism" to •'Witchcraft,'' mys- teries v.·hich have intrigued and haunted humanit y since time immemorial are covered in a big, fascinating book: En· t')'Cloptdla of the Unexplained -r.tagic, Occultism and Parapsychology, edited by Hlchard cavendish (~IcGraw • Hill , $17.95). As Prof. J.B. Rhlnc. the founder of pa rapsychology and v.·orld-famous for his experiments in l c I e path y and precognition. notes in his Introduction. "This is a most unusual volume. In it are listed sco res of the strangest topics imaginable, fantastic cla ims about man and his nature and destiny that in the past have been banne d by churches. governments or schools, and hidden from the young al home and In the publi c library. They have been Ignored and scorned bv scientists. Now, however , they are "assembled and conveniently listed with readable articles for the growing number of people who are curious." CONCISE and lively articles, arranged alohabetically and cr01&-referenced . ringe comprehensi vely over experiments in extrasensory perception; the study of drugs and dreams; historical mysticism such as the Cabala, witchcraft alchemy, and the Tarot ; practices like Yoga and the sexual rites or Tantra; ancient doctrines such as reincarnation; the views or believers in curious occult cosmologies: the results , produced by famous mediums, and the t a p e recordings of "spirit voices." VICTOR de KEYSERLING With inflation everything is costing you more. Now's the time to get tough and start 1hinking about yourself. You need every extra penny you can get your hands on. Stop kidding yourself with dreams or capital gains, tax savings end a lot of ideas that could end up costing you money. or more fa guaranteed for 4 to 10 years. You actually eam 7. 79% because we com- pound interest dally. Since Federal regula- tions reQulre substantial penalties if you withdraw funds before the term is cofn6 pleted. you may prefer our 5 ~% account which has no restrictions. The 7 ~% we pay on accounts of $1,000 But, mos1 important, your money ... up ' f 10 $20,000 is insured by a U.S. Govern· ment agency. Now th1t'11aroty. Start minding your own baslness today. Get the mod you can &om what yoa have. ' \ WUll•m M, Kull. Manago' MUTUAL SAVINGS ~~ r , '~ J lfll THE BIG M .. Corona dol Mar: 2867 East Coasl Hlghway/675·501 0 t A Greot s.lection of Shirts and Ties for Father's Doy. S•mmer ~ uf Durobie Pr.ss Dacron CMd Cottoli or C~ oitd l11x..;ous I 00°/o Cottoft. R'f'P Stripe Ties frOM Talrott ore a Wekornt Gift A STERLING GIFT IDEA , For Dad. or Grad. A heavy 1 1/8'' Sterling silver 1n111a1 hangs lrom our most popular sterling kP.Y ri ng. Split 1n ring makes •t easy 10 add or remove keys. Any 1niltat $12 50. CHA RLES H. BA RR \I ('1<l~·ti11 Pl:1111 ~('\11111n llt:a<:h. <.:.11 11. '2\R ~1 :1r1nf' i\V('OUf', llalbo.1 1:.l:ind. C<ill r 'one-stop' shopping a.t i ts :finest! OPEN THURSDAY EVENINGS wad~~ • ·---.v SADDLES ARE BACK LET THE-FELLOWS AT )VESTCLIFF SHOES FIT YOU IN THE NEW, RUGGED TRADITIONAL SADDLES. SEVERAL GqLO~ COMBINATIONS. AVAILABLE. \ $28 ' 1Wl~ERE SHOPPING JS A REAL PLEASURE . 541-11614 Look Your Best For Father- It' s His Day! Wear A New Bill Atkinson or a New P.J. Think WESTCUFf f'U.ZA 17th & l•YIHIE HEWPOIT llEACH Alto Al Tht Mtwporift' lflll • ' • , ,. FATHER'S DAY . AT VETA'S? GIVE YOURSELF A NEW LOOK . TO PLEASE FATHER ON HIS DAY. .. " ... -" ·Veta's · INTIMAT E APPARE L W1t1clilf Pl••••• ,17lh &1r..,;n_. Phone: 642-11 97 Open Thursday Evening HE'D-LIKE YOU TO TELL HIM · Dad'• worlil.c.1il be kind of, well, nuts . and bolts somali me.s. Then1 .. wera .. times when hJ rea.lly wantea; ip Jell you all how mu.ch he _loves Y!!U; 1;>11t. ' . . for some reason, words like th1t·dO'n't 11waya .colne .. sy.1 .thi11k ol'.fttl i h1n11, Dad· wi nt• you .to know·1t th.if.1ie:1r • always want·to iie'iherit "to··iJ1-.01Rf -'--· .'. , r " ' when you need him. Ra-any;'what·he . cares most about, when It comes right down to ft, Is just being a good .man, just being Dad. So when that day comes around, the day tha.y call Father's Day, why don't you really maka It HIS day? If I can speak for ol' Dad,. he'd like you to tell him you love him. Just for being Dad. .. Have you visited our Boy's Dept. lately? If not, it's s mall and in the back of the store, but it's big in the things boys w ear •.. Swim Trunks, Cord Jeans, T Shirts, Rever.se Hawaiian Shirts. Printed T Shirts, Shorts ........ . Attach to garden hose-wa sh cars. campers. wiDdows. W1tb nozzle,. extension, pi nt of suds. P1 4 · VALUET07.'5 NOW 3.99 LIKE FAT.HER LIKE SON ,, BAiii TEii FOR IOYS /./Ul-fP7Y DUHPrY CHILDRE~'S W(AR 1051 lr•iM -Wtlftliff Pm• • • HAVE DAD TRY ON OUR FOOD GIFT PACKS FOR SIZE CHEESE OF THE WEEK BIG BARN CHEDDAR 2 oc OFF PER LB. ·· ~ra&~©rr1 \f~rrrm~. Of OHI O ' . WESTCLIFF PLAZA ~i. 'til '· s.t. 'til '· s-. 'Iii 5 ~641-0972 ~ CHAMPIONSHIP ........ TENNIS . Ol\lftlGf ,BALLS ll1RI OON CAN OF 3 1'' SCHOOLS OUT! SPECIALS BUCKET OF CHICKEN lJehcrous. ready lo eat. 12 s39a pieces complete with polato salad & coleslaw. Serves •or 5. ... ltlG. 14.fl C.il atltod ••• _ .. he•t It wtiitMt fw.,... 64M564 SEAFOOD Dlf'T. WHOPPER OF THE WEEK l~!.:!!!1 .. P $29~ SIZE: 31·35 , ltfG. SJ.St LI. MARKET BASKET WESTCLIFF PU.U 'one-stop' shopping at its finest ! open Thursday evening s 'til 9 Wttiff~-:.. GIFTS FOR DAD FROM WESTCLIFF SHOP NOW DON'T DISCARD THOSE OLD TENNIS SHOES We Repair & Rebottom All Types Of Adidas & Tretoms c-•1Ms- Newport kKh IU4o l"'I So. CN1I Ylllogit Anlhori'I j We!ilcliff Pina 74 foihio11 lu..d ffl Fa~i°" SCJllC" SHOE SERVICE Men's & Women 's Alteration s Westcltff m:ailor~ Custom Shirt s Fine Custom Tail ori ng Y.'eslclilf Plaza • l'\c~·port Bl'al'h -IO'fi O:nly-~1072 ISonto AllGI 17th & Irvine • Newport Beach • 548-0460 Open Sunday . ECONOMY DRY CLEANING I 0 LBS. 3.00 STEAM & CLEAN 10 Lbs . 4.00 TRY IT! MONTGOMERY CLEAHH:S & LAUHDltY WESTCLIFF PLAZA MARINERS LIONS CLUB BOOK SALE ON THE MALL FRI. & SAT .. JUNE 14, 15 llt*FIT FAIRVIEW ILIHD IOY SCOUT TltOOf' • -· ' • For the Record • Jflarringe Lice1ases Dealh Nolle,.,. LAWSO~ Ju•nlt• J. LtWJOr!, •<'~Iden! of llals.i Lant. Fountal~ V•!lev. Cellt S11,,.;,..., l>Y 1>•• l'IP•l>8NI Lu~· L~W•M : <>nf ~iso•r. Ml111 Otnnll: one b•,,.,,er, Rou E:nocl'l1 S•rvlcn FrldtV l&:lO AM Senc!uarv o! Oe"tl!ien, 1,,.!1wood P•rlr. CtmllerY. dlrec!td b" Pfft Femllv Coloolat Fune••I Home al Weumlnl!•r, Ct lll AlllUCKU & SON WESTCUff MOllTUARY 427 E. I 71rt St Costo Me1a 646-4888 -·-IALTZ·BlRGIRON FUNERAL HOME Corana dol Mor Co1ta Me10 -·- 673.9450 646-2424 BILL llOADWAY MOtrTUAIY 110 Broodwoy, (o\10 Me~ b42-'~150 -·-McCOIMICK LAGUNA llAC.it MORTUARY 1795 Loguno Conyan Rd 494Ji141.) -·-MtCORMICK MISSION MORTUARY 28832 Com,~o Cop111rnno So n J11a~ Coa•\l•ano 4Q,S.l776 -·-PACIFIC VllW MEMOR IAL PARK Cemetery C"OPfl J.SOO Pocll•( V11w Qr,,.tt N~wpo•I ll('och, Col.forn•o 644-2700 -·-PllK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNllAL HOME 7801 Bolio A,,... W!11m.111••r 893-351.) -·-SMITHS' MORTUARY 621 Moon Sr H11ttl•1191on S.-ixh 536-6539 "WISTMIHSTll MIMOllAL,All (o,....e•1 Mcttuory ""''" I tlOI llf.!x11 N Wt1•m'!'l\T,.., (aiifo•nc;i ~11 rm • I ruu S!la.1 ,;t+t • ) • Political Notes New OC Airport Facilities I Sen. Cranston Eyes For Fire Disasters Okaye d , Ocean Oil 'Reserve' SANTA ANA -Existing: BRESNAllAN SA ID lhl' emergency fire station racili-current fire st.'ll ion is <lirl·('t.y ties at Orange Count y Airpor t d I fll 1 I d b couldn't hantlle n real crisis, un er t ic g ii. put 1 use Y Ft•dc r<1 I ' /\Vi a I 1 ll II fl't11.llrc1n1·nl 8)' 0. C. HUSTINGS 01 llM 0 11ty Plltl S!UI asked for 11. The measure passed the flouse 403 to 8 and v.•as sent to !he Senate. The plant \\'Ould be built at Yuma , Ariz. Airport Director Hobert Brcs· light plont's taking off frou1 &>fore the Legislature" June nahan has told cowity super-the airport. 20 at a poltuck dlnner planned ORANGE COUNTY visors. There is a d:mgcr that , by the lluntingtoo Beach He won board approval to plane could era.sh into thl' fire Republican \Vomen's Club. take lhe first steps toward station and disable n l l The event is scheduled for building a $300,000 fire station emergency equipn1ent no1v In /ldn11ni:>tn11 Ion or 1111\'lni; <Ill (' 111 CI" gt' 11 t' I facili ty \\'i!hln lhr1~ 1n1nu1i·~ ur a•1y 1J.1rt or th<' :.i .. fl0r1 U.S. Senator Alan Cranston has called a meet ing Frid11y in Santa f\·lonica to d i s c u s s federal plans to open Southern California coastal .,raters to orfshore oil drilling. 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. at the at the facility to supplement u.~. Bresnahan S11id .. THE REPUBL ICAN Central Edison Comnlunit y Center in the stat-Ion that now :serves the The airport direc1or 1old Comniiltec of Orange County ,_H_un_t_in_g_to~n_B_c_ao_h_. __________________ •_ir~po_rt_. _________ s_:u~pe_:rvlsors the airport fire ll f. SA ID Tll E <,:urrcnt l;1c1! illl·s fntl short of <in f<'i\,\ rcconunl·ndnUon that r 1 r i· units be \Vithin two 111i11Ull·:-. ut any .Of>erlltlOnal p<irl ul 11\i • airport. Cranston has invited public officials from Orange and Los An geles Count ies as well as representatives of property and en\;ronn'lental groups to !he meeting. It gets under \\'ay at I Oo.m. in SJJnta Monica City CoUn<ll chambera. Tho public is invited. will honor Californi a Attomey 1 - - - General £\·elle Younger a ta Cranston says he believes all Southern California offshore oil areas should be placed In a naUonal energy reserve. * -{:r -{:r REP. CRAIG Hosmer (R- Loog Beach) voted for a bill authorizing construction of a $150 million desalination plant lo clean up Colorado Ri\'er v•ater destined for ~'fexico. bu t not. \\'ithout some ,i;:rumb!ing. Hosmer said Tuesday the U.S. has no legal obligation lo supply high qualil.v "'ater to ?i.fe xico . ''Th e only requirement is that the "'a!e"r be wet." he said. But Hosmer said he "·ould vote for !he bill an}""·ay becau!le Pre1ldent Nixon had no-host cocktail party Friday in Newport Beach. Younger is running for re-election in November. The party will beg in at 7 p.m. It the l!amN Schae, John900. KeMedy and Carl!IOn law ofrices, ~525 MacArthur Boulevard. 'the public is invited. * * * F 0 R ~l E R Congressman John G. Schmitz, will teach a course on ''The Coo9ervative in American Politics" at UC Irvine this sum.mer. The class \\"ill be examining the conservative n1ovcment in recent American poliUcs. The course is one of several offerings on government and polities during UCI'• first su mmer session June 17 through J.u1y 24. * -(:{ * A~EMBL"i'~fAN Rob e rt Burke (R·Huntiniton Beach) will dl1cu11 "Current1 Issues Federal Funding Cou11tv Studies Plan ~ To Hire Ex-students SANTA ANA -Jobless high school graduates entering !he co!d, cruel \Yorld this ye:ir. might get a hand fro1n Otange County govenment in find !ng jobs. The board of supervisors Wednesday ordered Count.v Adminlmatlve Offlcer 1tobert Thomas to study the possi· bility ol creaUng jobs wilti llOcial revenue illtlring funds. SUPERVISOR DAVID Baker of Garden Grove made the suggestion, noting that there had to be areas in county government that could ma ke use of the "young . cager \.\"Grk force." Thomas said he could report back to the board next week with a list of p<>sl\ible county jobs that could be c1eated. with the federal funds. Biological Awards to UCI Students WILBUR llAS se rved n1 volunteer laboratory tech· nician at the El ~Iodena ,, Rtvn , Sh cffr t Com munity Clinic since 1971. "=;t;; h aot_t.!Nt,. WiMer ol the 1200 Ed war~ _ ~ ~ · n .,..., ' A. i;trio---1\9"1lil!'' "niollo1 r~~ - out.ltMi.Ung gt"idUatt student -Sc'1r•••• •r 't )8'' 'Bori11 8. Gorzalka. A student in psychobiology at Irvine since 1970, he e.spects to complete req uirements for the PhD Ibis summer. Steinhaus Awards, given in memory ol the foonding dean st udent in psychob;ology 111 Of the school, 11\sG 1vere awarded in the amount of SJOO lo Dee Ann fllatthews of Ir· vine. a grndun t.c sludent in 1hl.' department of p:sychobiolog~·: James F. ftfcCui 11lon or Costa ~lcsa. who Is studying in the dtpartment or molecular biology and biochemistry, and Thtddorc V. St. John Gf Yorba Linda, P 1raduate !Student In the department of popul1U0n and envlronmc>ntal hiolu~y. Give Your Wife ..• SECURITY w oth o~ t'ltClrQf\tC QClf001t door~ Sff OUll or~~'f llOOM 324 N. N•wport Blvd, NEWPORT !EACH PHONE 64:1.3766 i\lany of us Lhink of hap- p1nl•!.,i; us Ko l'llJ.'livc pot or. gold al the end or lhe rain· bow, 11.·hen 1n truth it 1s a stale of mind which is wi t h i n the r eac h or eve ryone. Working In an- ticipation of a point lo be re ached can orten bring more satisfa <'lion than the actual rl'a ching or that point . The road 'A'C travel .. the :1r<1u:11nta nees W<' make ;inrl the e:<1perienee 'A'e i.:1111\ along the way ore, for the mo~t P•rt. or our o .... ·n selection , Our happinc~s depends on the cho1ce!t we make. In Olhcr v.·ord~. hap· pln css i s a wu y of tr:i veling. \\'<' hope lhal you 'A'lll look up(ln u~ as your frit>nd in net•d, alw .. y:'.'I av:i ll>'ble to a:-.:-.1st }'OU, nnd alwa)'S v.·ilhn i.: to do wh:itt\'rr """ c:1n 10 help you during d1f. fi<'ull L1mt•s- oS H€FF€R moK.TU.l.f\Y • .,, ~~Jlt1 c '"tr - l-• •I' 14. t ... 4 ·• I) ~ .. _., ll'li'~lt l'i'I '•"'•1•11 1•11.()~£.t.L "I 7 ~BRISTOL TOWN U COUNTRY PLEASANT, PERSONALIZED SHOPPING WITH CONVENIENT. PARKING _ ..... _,~ 7 ~'..:. .. , ~"'~· "lot \\ 1'1 1111 Ill.Al It '""""' ,_ ~ .......... ..,,_ ~ SHOE · -~· ...... lHOl'f'lll ...... _. HUT --.... """"" --.. , ... , . .,,_ SllOI HUT Cll\l_.- SS7-S030 • WIY .... MAlllMC ·- Gourmet Submarine Sandwiches GAMES ADULT GI.GS MAGIC & ART SUPPLIES .... _ .. .......,_ .. ----IM-.:M.lf.9: ._1r-l-,.._H,_..,. Pk.pJJt4 &"ti<fU• ,-----UHIQUI ,AIHIOHI -----, BOB ZOWGHI -557·4623 • ' --.. " ---...... MA.-.CUJlnl ..... SOUTHWEST TROPICAL FISH OO"gft (Ollly'1 ir:.q.11 ,,.i.cton of l>OfXal 0,.,, '°' ,..,,." ,,,.., u .. ,.... ........... ..... Ac~• 556-1994 .... 11111 GIFT SHOP JOl:VALW ·9UAUTY SILlCTIOH • SHYICI 557-9524 • ... · .-' fOR THI ,ARTICUU.R MAH · WI CAaRY THf LATEST IH SH>ITSWEAI MAMY fAMOUS IRAHDS FINE JEWELRY • GIFTS• LIMITED EDITIONS 97~2835 ~OPENING SOON •WES KOHTI. Jl..-Ol'TOMmlST •HAM'S COUllTllY KITCHIN •CENTER MlATS •HADIME'S INTIRIOltS •VAN'S IELCMAH WAffUS & CREPES •HISTOL COFl'll •ALl.lllY LEASING INFORMATION c1n be ob- tained at the admlnl11r1tlon offoces !or the center at 3&10 Brl1101 Strn t. Santa Ana. Suite 11101 . Phone (11.tl J 54&-issa. ""<~· )'( DISCOYM A UHl9UI lrt:~' HAWAIIAN DRESS SH~ ~( POR MIN & WOMEH 1 7'11<~/<tl ' rash Ions 556-4407 . ---------. -' OME MILE NORTH OF SAM DIEGO FREEWAY OM SOUTH BRISTOL STREET AT MacARTHUR A K I N D SOONER OR LAT ER WE 'RE GONNA GETCHA u 'A J'" -:s·· FINE MENS WEAR INTI• CORI , INC. PATHWAY TO THE SUN MlH 'S AHD WOMEN'S ltr.WORTED FASHIONS _. ...... ..,_.nc Oll-...i. MloW.lf\ """°' U CltrWTW.T IOI COii. ..C. HAl'IO --lOMGo OIUloll, ""°Cl!, No<iO. C llll•fl. llOIOl l, ~1111, HA .. O·•"ll \WIAT .. J .... U•ol,Wll, NIH UMIM.\. MICU... ..... , um -I~. SAMTA AMA -SAM JUA.M CA,ISTIAMO 1idd'u. (fnt£rnatio1w.l t!i}al/nia Persi1111 and O riental Rugs 1)~7 787~ ql..f (O"•rrt1· I,_,_, -.,.., l .-.., 1-... 1 1.,. •• r ... 1 ,, 11.~ ...,,,......_,,_, GRAND" OPENING llllSTOL TOWW & COlll'll•'f OfRCI RIGISTIR HOW FOR F•fE TR" TO HAWAII Jalra t-zyde t:R,Ooe CRANCE COUNr'v·s OLDEST 122 Towft & Co .. ~t.y. o..,,. otro•• ,,. • .,, lwUod•'• ....... ,.g~ 'UI l it .... ~.•I It•" Tl\~ I •" SS11o-4lll 1,i.101 To-& c_..., I 111•. H. So .. !11 Co•>I •n• KIMG SIZE FOR BIG & TALL MEM 1664 lllSTOt.. ITOWH .A.HD COUNTRY CEKTH:I SAHTAAHA, 117-lf61, 10.6MOH.& fll.'tRf ALSO: klH~S CUSTOM TAILOR SHOP ...,. .• ..,.w ..... ·1••U•o ..... to_ ...... h ... tu 1Af41AMlllC:Al0 KINGS CMAl6l MASTOCHAlGE ~SEl'fS u DISCOUNT ANO ADVICE 0 HELMUT'S ICE CREAM . 1111111 BEAUTY SUPPLY .Tiw lusll L;1e-1-.1 & SANDWICHES 979-8815 ·N.' TWIN£ ~·., Plant Boutique • ttorbor Shoppl11g C•nltr, (0110 M•1<> • l ri•tol Town ond (O\lnlr')', So11tco Allfl • l1l1tol tilld MotAMht.or (bthlr>d lit 101) WEDDING IMVIT A TIOMS :;~~,~~ 100 for $1095 ·l~I</"" FREE -;·,:...--·· ,....,..,"' • I ·4r • Y'\oo Joi '' •I•!· <'[;I""' ~~ ,.,..,.,, 0.U-2220 SS7•IOIS • c.i.·· ~ITlllQ a.-... • n,....no~ ... 1 1~119 (;.i••- • ll«;ffl""" • P..,.., 11o-. • r~ ... , .... N-~"'" • fltnl~ '°""' ...... """ . Gvo-·• e. -,. "'"" stoneYla're -macrame decorator items plant p1rtie!; 5SM644 "di '"llnfquc." 'Ei/t &-(l l't.i,ftn<f l'oftc ~ rP~'l;J • ' 979 ·6661 DAIL y PILOT J I L. /fl. Boyd QUEENIE By Ph il lnterlondi Sex ·' ood for Elderly" Ru ss .. Say 'N ye t' To Car Rental s It has long been the popular bellef that the fello w who sows .a sizable cro p of wild oats before marriage tends to remain the most !aithful during his matrimonial years. That's wrong says our Love and War man. Recent studies :seem to prove bcyood doubt that those swift blades who were promiscuous before their weddings are more likely to commit adultery thereafter. How long did it take your infant son to discover one of his o .... n feet? On average, that happens al about 28 weeks of age, I'm told. Figure a Braille book will be about :ID times bigge r than the same book prinltd in ink. One out of every five grownups skips brea kfast. CAR RENTAL Q. "Are there 'car rental services in the Soviet Union?" A. Not at last report. The Russians started such a service 13 yet1rs ago, but it folded. Too few cars. Nill enough spurc par!s. And no insurance to cover the renter. A customer y,·ould take out a car, blo w the en gine, be re· quired then not only to pay for the repair, but to pay the daily rental during the repair. This took months some- ti1nes. Fierce si tuation. Q. "Name the big track \1•hcre the last of the clock· wise horse races ran." A. Belmont, 1920. Q. ';Ho\v man y of the reported rape cases end with a conviction?'' A. Only about one in every seven. 1 • .. P.S. You're nol growin2!" She's Stuck at 195 ,- To Wire Mouth Sh1it BltlDGEPORT. Cunn. li\P ~ -Sex after 60? At least twice a week for lonJ:cr, ha1-1· pier and healthier lives, says a leader of a seminar on the sexual behavior of the elderly. "It is completely nonnal for men in their 70s or 80s to he capable of normal plea surable sexual relations, and for their partners to respond equally as .... ·ell ," says 1-felen Parsons, a social worker who leads a series or seminars on the con· cerns of senior citizens. BUT !'ttOST ELDERLY peo- ple repress their instincts because of the 'puritanical at· titude of society which makes the public think that older PE& pie don't have sexual desires ," ~trs. Parsons said. About 90 per.!Olls attended a recent seminar that y,•as advertised throughout lhe C'ily. Many 9e11ior~iliien cl u b s refused to listen to "sueh dirty things," she said. _'..'Jt is terribly wrong what society has done," said Mrs. woman les.s than half his age reinforce guilt older people have t owa rd sex, to.1rs. Parsons said. Sexual inhibitions ln older people are strengthened by other impediments to an ac· tive sex life, she added. Social Security regulalions also dlS('()Urage remarri<i gc be<.luse payments then are adjusted downward. M r' . J>arsoos said many older persons have gotten around those problc1ns by 1101 bother· ing to gt·t married and li\'i116 in "Social Security si n." THERE AREN'T enough A gcri11 trics nurse. '.\lrs. f.lderly men to go around, she Dorothy Saltman . said evt<n pointed out, because men tend palients y,•ho'vc been told 011 to marry women younger than tht:ir doctors to "take it easy" themselves. She said 57 per· can indulge in sex -and ll cent of those over 65 are can help so1ne of then1. .,..·omen and ty,•o--thirds of the --- "'omen are widows. "SEXUAL 1"''TERCOURSEI is good, healthy exercise, com- par<ible to a brisk \valk around the block or climbing a fl ight or stairs. In fact it is quite beneficial. .. i\1rs. Saltman said tttel adrenalin and c ortison e released by the body during s••x oflen eases pain ;1"-0n1 <1rthrilis. "Enjoying sex is evidence that one is llving. It is an af·' fi rrr1ation of liJe ,ind a -denial of death." i\lrs . Parsoos sai d. -------- ,_,!any of those widows never have sex after their husband'! die because they feel gullty about pursuing a man, she said. FASHION UNIFORM SHOP ~ (; v.1 A lack of pri vacy also hampers sexuality, root r s . Parsons said. Nursing home patients can't visit privately with their spouses. And 1nany older couples live with their children or grandchildren and don't have many chances to be alone. PENSION A'NO fc de ra I SALE IN PROGRESS UP TO 50°/o OFF Dresses, Topi. Slacks, Shoes. frtf Unif°"" Orowi11q t+iit MO!ltt\ c-i11 Cllld Si911 Up. 31622 S. Coa't Hwy. 499.JS I 0 South Lo~o .,,~i .. ·' '1' ·: y' Parsons. "Of course. sexual desires and ability for sexual intercourse live in every man<i---::;;•••.:iimm~mmmmmmmmmm_m_ ;.;-.-• .;liiiliiiml.I;:: and woman -regardless of [ their age." ONE ELDERLY wOman blushed daintily and rushed out of the room when she discovered the topic to be discussed was sex. SOUTHEllH CALIFORNIA COMMUNITY ARTISTS NOW THRU FATHER 'S DAY I lf you've ever thrown pine cones into a campfire, you may recall how the heal explodes them. Or almost. Any- hoy,•. it opens them up in a hurry, releasing their seeds. That's why little pine trees spring up so quickly on those black lands bumed over by forest fires. The fire plants the new forest immediately. This is Item No. 1472C in our Ain't Nature Wonderful file. OAKLAND (UPIJ -"i\.1y already has a "sexy" bikini Society's adulation of youth, ambilion ," s ay s 195--pound picked out to keep her dirty-old·men jokes and the 5ou1h (oast 'Plaza Maria "Bubbles" Gray, "is to h usband's eye from snickers that accompany news be a bombshell ." y,•andering. that an elderly man has wed a To reach that end, the 32· ~-----~-------------~~------------------------------~ year-old Navy wife h a s AGE 50 "When a wife reache~ the age of 50, and the man find s her no longer responsive to his advances, what then happens? He goes to other women to satisfy his urges. The only solu tion is to allow the man lo have more than one wife. provided he can maintain all of them." That was the pronouncement of a legislator in the Johore State As· sembly of Malaya. He and his party strove to pass a Jaw the re to permit polygamy. Its justification, that solon con· tended, was based primarily on the widely known ract th<it all women lose their romantic inclinations by age 50. Jn that matter of participant sports, more men nation- "·ide favor swimming than anything e1se. After that comes ~ fishing. Then pool. And camping. So say the surveytakers. I-low do you account for the fact .that t~ vi~egar in Europe is so much mi lder than the vinegar 1n this coun- try? Adclress 111.ail to L. A1. Boyd, P. 0. Bo:r 1875. New- port Beacll, Calif. 92660. Copyrigl1t 1973 L. Al. Boyd decided to fight the battle of the bulge Y.ith a new 1naneuver -having h e r mouth "•ired shut. "~1y husband." said ~f.rs. Gray, "has been looking at too many bikinis." The wife of Yeoman 3-C Arthur Gray said she weighed a svelte 100 pounds when she was n1arried 17 years ago, went to 249 pounds, dieted to 195 and became stuck there. She now limits herself to 800 calories a day in liquid form through a straw and proudly announced this week that she to!'t four pounds since her mouth was clamped shut on Monday. Her goal is to reach 120 poWlds and she says she GER,\f ANS' ANSWER CHRIST LUTHERAN SCHOOL 761J VICTORIA STREET ' COSTA MESA Quality Chfist1an Education Kindergarten 1~u11·D4v1 lhru Grade Eig ht Enrollments Accepted Now BERLIN (UPI ) -The East Berlin De p a r tment of Sanitation announced t h a t tank trucks will spray the city with the scent of spruce and pine when the ten1perature climbs over 70 degrees in an effort ro freshen the air. A.G. Ahlers , Principal 548-6866 Coast&deral has somedling for people Widt big ideas and a litde mon~ With the help of Coast Federal there's no reasoo why everybody, slowly but surely, can't build up a bia savin p account. High Interest Rates. Based on an annuaJ rate of S.2S%,our regular passbook accounts yield S.39% annu:illy. And you can take money out anytime. Certificate accounts return up to7Y.i% a ycar,thehiahestnle allowed by th e aove rnment. Federal regulations require a subslantial interest penalty on all certificate account withdrawals prior to maturity. Our free booklet tells all; ask for one at any Coast office. Fringe Benefits Package. Here are a few befteftts. Free Checki ng Account. Frtt penonlll checkin1 accou nt at a major bank; just keep a mini· mum balance of $2,SOO.OO. Free Sare Deposit Box. With a minimum balance of $2,SOO.OO. Insider's Club. Savcon app liances, fumitu~. jc:wclly, 1lcke11 for shows and games. All It takes is a Sl,000.00 minimum balance. Free TrayeJers Checks. los.idcr's Club members do not pay 11 scnoice charge; 1he same applies to money orderi. Home !mpronnient @ Loans. From carpons 10 lO#';I: ,_.., Saturd ays. We're opt'n Salur· days from 9:00 a.m. to l :00 p.m, (Frida,y1, all offices cxCcpt down• town Los Anscles, ire open unlil 6:00 p.m.) . • • • ffoWtoget dtemOSt out of what •. )VU ~ \"~ for)'Our rnoDeY- , COAST FEOERAL S AVING S • More for)'Ollr money. llnd ..... a.-lli Offkt: 'I 1 luntingtott C1.ntu (71 <4) 897-1047 • t.lld11 l>llkt1 9th .t Hill, 6lJ.1 )$1 Convtnitnt O/ficca Throuabout California Prior to May 13th, Orange County Transit buses went as far south os Laguna. After that you were on your own. Now there's complele ser...-ice throughout Soulhern Orange County. from Lo Habra to Son Clemeni e. 35 minules separates downtown Santa Ana from Leisure World and Laguna Hills Mall. Or go through Laguna Beach to connecl wiih the two dlfferent routes down to San Clemente. And the frequency of buses is lhe some as it is throughout the rest of Orange County. AU existingJoutes throughout Orange COunty have been improved, too. Aboul !he only lhing !hot hosn'I changed is !he quarter lore. And !he free transfe rs. · We'll get you there in style. New buses ldouble the number!. Vinyl bucket seots, package rocks, and air-~ condilioning. Send for yoor detailed, eowto·reod, new ~ bus schedules. Ride OCTD. It'll get you there. ~ ORANGE COUNTY TRANSIT DISTRICT i r------------, fer .~' -.1m~1"c.l'I on b~ »r ~ .•. ct ,1. . ~,.na thi~ coupon !o I I L (,..' -·u. ~ nr " ~ ( ·•'·!··· tJ, ""\I, .... iJl'l\,iAno, CA 92701, l NAM[ ____________ _ /,DDiei'.S.)'-------------- c,1y ________ __.1p ___ _ Service areolsl des.red•--------~ I I I I I I I I ----------OP _j . '\ I • J 2 DAIL V PILOT Thursday, Jun! 13, 1q74 UC Irvine Na~ing 81 to ~onor Society YOUR SUPPORTING GIFT GUARANTEES Eighty~ UC lr\'lne students have been elected to membership In Phi Beta Kappa, national honor society, on the btlsli of academic excellence and breadth of scholarly interest. They are the first students to be elected since formation of lbe Irvine chapter h~t January. Seventy-four of the grou1> are seniors and tl1e other seven are juniors. AJthough election nonna\ly takes place in the senior year, a few outstanding juniors may be chosen. Election made by members to membership Is the r es ident of the chapter, con1posed initially U UCI fa rulty and administration Moored with Phi Beta Kappa n1embership earlier al their own und e rgraduate institutioos. ua students completing their jwtior year who were elected to membership are listed below with their home tov.ns and academic majors: David J. Garibaldi 111. Dov.'ney, polit ical science; i1arc G. Golightly, Torrance. biological sciences: \\'illiam S. Harvie, Downey, physical sciences: Geoffrey Sickler, Huntington Beach , hwnanities; Jonathan S . Slater, La Canada. politic.a l science; Sarah Belle Van fl.tater. Altadena, hlslory: Dutr D. Zwald, Van Nuys, social ecology. Seniors nam e d to members.hip are: Donna Gritz Allen, Tustin, Spanish ; Vicki Sue Anderson, ~1crctd, Spanish ; Judith A. A v ery, San Gab r iel . comparative culture: camilla Rae Brandt. Burbank , English; Jeffrey Br and t , Burbank, English. Kerry B. Brougher. Garden Grove, fine arts;· James B. Bwtker, Palm Spring s, goography: Jane Glor Clark, ~1ission Vie,lo, art history. \Villiam 1... CAie, Nor1hridge, social ecology: Bruce Coopennan, Beverly Hills, history; Larry A. Cox. Laguna U>ng Beach. bl o Io g I ca I DotiglaJ A. ~1arx, Anaheim, Beach, social s cien c es ; sciences: ~11chae1 R. Hopper, me c ban I ca I eng1neerin1: \Villiam E. Crosby III. Irvine, San piego, ~chology. \ViUJam J. Masek, Northridge, information and com Put II!! r ' 11,rargaret s. Hori, Pia· infonnation and co nl put er science; David M. Crouch, San cenlla. blo\ogical sciences; Jill science : Susan J. l\fcCartby, I Diego, in r ~rm at lo n and s. Jackson . Seal Beach, social Newport Beach, comparaUve computer soence. sciences: t.llchael G. Kahn, culture. n 0 ~ YOU MORE INCOME >-zr v "i " Y•• c• .. ,.. _. ..-tMJ ...... I TV •lli•Y ••IMNlllrlel ta ........ whllre CALL Ml. JIM HIND •~pl•t • h1tMOll1t9rl•11 collM tM-ouglJ •••" c .. t co ... •lty H••'''••'• MW "Llwl .. Tnilt ,,..,,.111," Wrtt. M c.tl hf -.ah "*"· 499-1311 Ext. 600 SOUTH COAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL 31172 COOlt H...._.., S.1tftl &..t•••• C.lfforitMI 92177 Jbhn R. Oozier, Whittler \Vestn1instcr, b Io Jog I cal Paul G. McGrew, Irvine, fine arts. history ; Carol L. sciences: Benja mi n C. biological sciences; LaWrencc Dieckmann, Santa •An a. Keppelcr , Huntington Beach, J. Mehlman, t.tonterey Park, biological sciences; David l..A!e physical sciences; Lester J. biological sciences ; Dermis W. Dunlap, Mission Viejo , Lllyfield , Whittler, biological iuchel, Placentia, biological philosophy; Bruce L. Edens, sciences. sciences: Cynthia L. i~ucllci-. Santa Ana. biological sciences Robert Mangum, Pasadena, Placentia, fine ar?'9 and and chemistry; JeaMe A. linguistics; Stephen G. Marks, history : David R. Nel300, Egasse, Costa l\1esa, Spanish. , _Tus~~ti~n:.., _:soo~·.".al~s'..'c~i':e~n~c:_:e~s.:_: __:s~urba~ ... n~k':.. ~SOC!~·a~l_:s".'ci~· e~nc~es=_. -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Richard A. Erickson .1- HW1tington Beacb, btological scien«s: Dale .'i.. Frost, Hacienda Heights, mathematics; Robert C . Students Address UCI Grads Gaines. Dov.ney, biological sciences: Peter R. GetoCf, Van Nuys, social ecology ; Gregg ~1. Gibbons, Whittier, history. Patricia' L. Gross, Garden Grove, psych-Otogy;''James L. Hardeman, Garden Grove, biological sciences; Kenneth D. Hayes, Balboa Island, physics : Gary N. Holland, I llad1e /haek For the fourth ".:OOSCCUtive year students will be the commencement speakers at UC Irvine. l\tarion E. Abbott o r J amaica and Philip Lane of Costa Mesa will represent the graduating class ln t he program in Campus Park at 10:30 a.m. Saturday. They were selected !or the honor by a comm ittee composed of fellow student s. f a c u l I y members and administrators. Mrs. Abbott, \11ho will speak for the 1,497 candidates for undergraduate degrees. \\ill receive a bachelor of arts degree vl'ith a major in comparative culture. She will be graduated "cum laude" because of her academic achievements. Earlier she '>''as av.'arded a D a nforth~ Fellowship for docloral studies in c omparat ive and international education a t Columbia Universi ty, Lane. representing the 290 candidates for a d v a n c e d degrees . will receive a master TO SPEAK Grad Student Lane Administration. Employed by Philco-Ford Corporation in Ne,v port Bea c h os an engineering specialist, h c earlier carnet" a master's ~ degree in mechanical t engineering from use. I UCI Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich. Jr., "·ill prcs1~e at the ceren1ony. Robert L. Johnson , UC vice presi dent for university relation~. '" i I I represent UC President Charles J. Hitch. The graduating c I a s s includes 1.045 candidates for I the baChe)Or or artS degree; 452, bachelor or science; 56, master of arts: 30, 1nastPr of fine arts: 60, master of science: 85, doctor of philosophy. and 59, doctor of medicine. of science degr e e in adrninislration. He is the first part-time student tD be graduated by the U C I Gr a duate School of Briefing Set .Fot· Services The Orange County Sheriff- Coroner Department will hold an emergebcy services display from IO a.m. lllllil 4 p.m. June 26 and 'El at El Toro ~tarine Air Station. The display, held in con- junction with the El Toro pro- vost n1arshal's office, is designed to acquaint Marines and their families with the emergency services the coonty makes available . Urban Planning Duo Feted THI UIU.'S Complete Plumbi!IJ, Heating and Air Conditioning A young Tustin mother of 11\'0 '>''ho earned her BS degree by going t.o college at night and a 26-year-0Jd Costa ~fesan ~ majored in social ecology at UCI hale beeu awarded urban planning odlolanhips by the Irvine Company. ~tary Lyn n Norby and Thomas F.dgar Smith Jr. topped a field of 36 candidates \ r ' ' for the $1.00'.> scholarships, v«hich they will use to help further their graduate studies. ~lrs. Norby is enrolled in USC's graduate program of urban and regional planning; Smith, who receives his BA degree from UC:l Saturday, has been accepted in UCLA's School of Architecture and Urban Design. NEW LOCATION lla.t~All:Y) "Do it Yourself Stores ' 27601 FORIES RD. NO. 2S -"'';;;";;;"IO"Oi~'-""1-• UGUHA HIGUIL Fellew F'"'-t. fllt W•f Wlll.-.i , , .lfYh ·-R O· 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon.-Sat. ::~ 495-0401 I l Slate License C3&-C20.2 I 7657 SIJCtHS Is whit ..... ad\wtllq In the Orange C1l1 Ills primary tldliertlllng medium DAILY PILOT -~ ' \ OUR -LOWEST PRICE ·EVER~ FULL-FEATURE DELUXE CASSETTE RECORDER 95 14-825 Regular 89.95 • Built-in Condenser rp.•••miiiiiiiiiiiiiiimm::::::::s Microphone! 1 / • Total Automatic Shutoff!!.::. • Battery Or AC Oper ation! • Tape Function Pushbuttons. Including Eject! • Digital. Co unter! 25%0FF! • Battery & Record Level .,.,..J.---""'I M eter! REALISTIC ' HIGH ·OUTPUT 60 MINUTE R'cg _ 1 49 • Jacks For Earphon e. External Mike & 12VDC Adapter! •Earphone And AC Cord , BLANK CASSETTES 11 ••• Included' DESK TOP CALCULATOR FOR - - -·• _ __. ----· '\'Ir Exclusive "Adding Mac hine" Mode For Extra Speed And Accuracy In Working Dollar And Cent Problems• • HOME OR OFFICE 63-604 • Adds. Subtracts, Multiplies, Divides! • Large Digits For Greater Visibility! • Full·Floating Or Preset Decimal Switch! • Constant Or Chain Mode Selector Switch / • Dust Cover Included/ ,,.,,( ~"" """ CHARGE IT IASY CREDIT TERMS AYAILAll.I There's only one place you can find them ... Radio Shack 31535.lritlol-s-to- ~ Coai'l. °"" blod Sc.Mi of ~) 1103 Newport""'--C--2701 S. -SI. -S-. -11120 1....-11-F-1• Y*J 1443 W, 17 .. Sl.-S-. ..... (lft '-~ Volley Plo1ol (•~ H-"°IG) • H41 A-A••· -N"°'lottoo -h 114 S. c-. .... -S-Cito• ... 6HI w.,_ ATt. -H..i1ottoo _., IJ024 Nowperl llTd. -T- 30232 c,,.wo Y*J l'kwy. _ .._..... IUH lroo-.i -w.-... '44 N. Paclflc C-Hwy.-L--h •~"' 1 1~ r~., ~.,,,. 1~ !«~• Nc•\l'n.~l'f'o.•I '"Bad in Bed ~ Lati1i Loves --Phooey RO~IE CAP) -f'orcign \ women q~ in a book published here denied nu those talcs about great 1..-itln lovt:n1. Jtallan mc..'fl, they . s a Id Wednesday are poorly suited for the bultle or the sexes. "'Illcy nre like puppies, not mm." sold ;lJl Au s t ria n womm in the book, "ltalscx ," by Italian \l.Tit~r Costanzo Costantini. "IT'S NOT TitUE Uiey ace good lovers," a C h il ea n asserted. "They oo.,ioy only the 'They 111t111 t11nke 11ou pr eg11a 11 t imtnediatel!f t f> prove tl•e•••· sel v•.' conqut!:l and by lhc tin1e they come to the physical act they arc so tired lhnt they can·t do anyUting 1norc." The author said t h e int~rviev.'!'I y,·Uh 20 foreign women. all reliident.s of Italy and a11 admilling to sex with Italian men , were intended to coi:npare their views v.·ith accusations by ltalian \\.'Omen that their Latin partners were inq>t in bed. In aJrcvious survey, over :i half 1,000 married llalian women intervicWed as.,ailed whut their hus~s did or did not do when the Ughts were out. A QUARTER OF them said they had beet1 unCaithful to their husbands. Jialf tl1e faithful ones said t h c y rcn1ained so ooly because they never had the chance to do otherwL,.e. A Brazilian interviewed by Cooslantioi told him : "In Italy Chapin Endlq Heidi Stam ol New York City, who became a pionetr female page in the I-louse oi Rep- resentatives last year, has graduated with honors from Congress-- ional page school. She completes her duties in July. there is a permanent sex u,.1 T"-hele championship. The drean1 of ; _____ _:· the Italian is to die \\hilc .... -------·--·------·--·---------, making love." An Aus1rali an complained: A .H . W£/N£RT I "They must · make y o u pregnant immediatel y 1 o Fine Jewels • Fashion Island prove to Utem...elvcs. their I parents and relatives that they Jst SALE ;ire all great men." EVER! J UPTO 1/2 OFF • 3 automatic pushbutton cycles: Super Wash ; Rinse·Hotd; Short. ;f:ttjt-F.;r:;;-----• 2 full-size revolving spray arms: one for each rack. !,..;;---• Full-time filtering system helps eliminate need for pre-rinsi ng. ti:...,.--• In-the-door silverware basket saves rack space for dishes, en- tire front basket cipens lor easy access. • Automatic rinse conditioner dis- penser witn ''no goeuing'' fill indicator. ::::,_,.,,,!l!i'~~:'.::--• Choice of decorator·styled front. or customize front )'OUfSelf with wood panel. 'Wltir}pOO} quil4ity throughout -including,@ porcelain-enameled tub. CONVENIENT TERMS AVAILABLE LIN-BROOK APPLIANCES FOUNTAIN VALLEY 17200 BROOKHURST ST. PHO~E 963-4585 885.60/15 •. 1.35 /14 " 1.15/14 .. SIU B.25/14 .. NOW ONLY 5.10/13 8 25 15 11151111 ' I · · B.55/14 .• • 4 WHEEL DAUM or 2 WHEEL DISC RELINE •All( & •STALL lMt9tC • POflltGM & DOMISTIC (MOST CAllS) • QUALITY alAlt( LIMING • CNl(lt S,.IMGS & SIALS • ctn:Clt Wtllll Cl'UffDIR • M(ASUlll & IMS,ICT Ol:UMS • Hts,lCT MASTI• CYUNDl• @ :::::~:s~1c~L:•·249s [ _v:o~;, NOW I ~/ ONLY llUI C,tlllllll( 111.l IOI IO Liii '""' • llfi ·~Ill , ... 11~•1 l "l a Jiil ••ul l~•U IOI Ofl SlYf 60'0 & UT & !O.rl.11( •aOI'( IU II .•• 011 Ul••~t< 1111 O-llM 11&~1 l GI ... • , ... I.I I 1111. (&II~ ftt• 1'111\ •11. IOftltl HI• l!O .....,. ........ 11\••otil TUNE-UP SPECIAL * Ttll l11g iu with MOSr CAiii flt(tr.11ic l111ine DOM(SrlC & IOlf/CN A111l,1•r ~ * l11Jt•ll N•• Chom,iofl ~ s,ar\f"l•tt s19ee . ' * '""" •.• ...... • . '' (•11tlt111tr I .,. * l•l111tt & Atlj1ll CTL ~ .,:. . ' C•rlnrttMr '"""" * C•r1 with Alr Col'HI, "•~<;;n"'.-.. ~,.~.,,,,;I otltl'I. ch•rtt I (fl . 2•.11 Thur\day, Ju11t 13, 1974 DAILY PILOT IJ MICHELIN X STEEL BELTED RADIAL TIRES IJS/13 14S/12 5.20112 j-:f$ i --1 I- i 1--. _,, .... ~ ........................ ~····. ·-... ,, , "'···!. :,:J·;~:··,,N'.·~~·.·,"·,,~·.:, -'~" IO• «o. '·'••l!io..ooo •• '" ' ' 0 NO' ' lf• '• ' ... •· ·''. ': ·, ::.·::· · .. :.: ; .... ·_-·--'..' .... "' "','. :~ .. ':. . . ' ·-' FOR YOUR High Speed SPORTS CAR WIDE 70 RADIAL Y® Whitewalls ANY SIZE$ RADIALS 95 ~ .. '"' , ...... """ IH GR7011S JR70/IS HR70 llS HR70/14 ' LA70/IS ' r''" c,,,, l 1nc1fft, Im, .. l uotk, Ch•1i. P•~! .. Mire .. Oodc1. 1lc. BRAND NEW. . . $12 9···~·'.'.·,· 5.20112 5.60112 (13S/12J l145112J •;:·;,;;: '• 145113 155113 155114 165114 155115 165/15 185114 (1751141 $25 ...... ::• ···-~ t ,. " lo• l-• '·'" ... DUNLOP RADIALS B.F. Goodrich Stlvert own f!B£RGl l SS & Pfll YE$T[R BELJtO WH ITf WAtlS "'" """ s2 9 r111\ r11 '" (18 14 (18 '" 111 '" .. . COSTA MESA ,'==-' 3005 HARBOR BLVD. ,~I !corner of Bo9ier ond Harborl j•~1~ 11141 551.aooo .c:;;;; ~~ ' • ' " -DAILY PI LOT Ttiur1dar, Junf ll, 1974 Scou~ing Officials Ousted ~ in 3 States-w ANTED- By Untted Press lnternallonel Bo)' Scouts or America has 3dmilled instatlC\.'S of cheating by scouting officials to llleel ml'mbersh1p qu uis. b u I denit'<I that It was \l'idesprcfld. ~ national office reported ,that the cheating hod . been disco\•ered 1n about 10 areas around the country, and I hat syste111ntic steps had been u1kc11 to root out the practice. Officials dt.'Clincd to nan1e tho areas Wednesday . Jn Detroit. the loca l director of the Boy Scouts said that seven men have left the organization Cor a t I e 8 e d I y lying aboul membership figures. the goal ol '"'O million new n1embers in time for the U.S. bicentennia l in 1976. member.I respmsible were removed." DIAMONDS•GEMSTONES Professional Boy s c o u l organizers have quit or been fired in ~1iclligan. Texas ::il\CI Oklahoma arter being cuughl padding mcj'Tlbership role.o;, scouting o 'f f i c i a I s have acknowledged. MOST SCOUTING au thorities across the l'Oulltry denl1..-d their areas .,.,. l' re involved. Scouling officials !Aid thllt s1nre n1embersbip rolls had nothing to dG \\'\th federal of' 1>rivau~ funds , there was no rnonetary uM>tive in th c cheating. DETROlT AREA director Joseph Wyckoff blamed part o( the padding on pressure from the n a tional headquarters, ¥i'hich set a goal in 1968 during scouting's Boypower '76 program, with \Vyc.kof( said he discovered some Detroit units existed onl y on paper. In Fort W<»1h, Tex., the executive boord of t h e Looghom Council of the Boy Scouts said that men1bership padding had been discuvered, and "Slcp.c; ¥.'ere taken to remove it." The cou DC i I said , "The professional staff IN TULSA, OKLA., lhc Indian Nations &r Scout Council said t~·o field ........... ~ ....... " MW'dlitlt .. 111i...·•· ............ •-,n..i. ~•W... llMI e1Mt. .. C.elv' ••••l1111tlell .,., •--IM W ..... ,.,,.. HiflMO .. ke1 ,_14, c.11 $40.*t U>-t .ay, ......, ICM., -..,,. ditMI, ..t Mr tltr. o-lt ..... ., iltt • .....,... director.s resigned In April • 1 b h ·ar t er ~•dding 1oc•1 1ewe s y Iosep memhership rolls with about 2,000 fid.itjous names. :\~~IOll~m~M~COAST~~PIA~Z~A~·~-~~-~~~c»l~n~A~MUA~~·~'*~-~~~ The national ofriCf' of lhe 8th ANNUAL SOUTHERN CALIF. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES SHOW For only $2.00 admission. Ta!k to key 1nanagen1ent' '. from many differenl Jobbers, Distributor, & rran· chise Co.'s. Investigate their programs. See what is new in the small Business field. SHERATON·ANAHEIM MOTOR HOTEL Ball Road Exit Harbor Blvd. E1il (Santa Ana fwy. So.) (Santa Ana fW'f. No.) Junf l4·16th 1·9 PM Daily 1-6 PM Sunday FREE PARKING RATiiER, THEY said, in n1a11y cases. the scouting organizer, who had over- 1>ledged future me1nbership, 1>aid for the f i c t i Ii o us 1neinberships out •r his O\\'n pocket. The padding incidents were reported ~londay '-"'hen the Chicago Tribune disclosed a secret report by the Boy 'Scouts estimating their true n1embership in the Chicago area at 52.000 against a clairncd membership of 87 .000. THE FAMILY CIRCUS By Bil Kea11e Former council Pre!ident Virgil S. Tilly Jr. said that faking of names ' • w a s accompl ished by sorne over- zealom professionals w h o enrolled fictitious boys to meet Boypower '76 goals set by the national orga1nzat!ion." Other scooting officin1s denied their membership roles "·ere padded. SAID SCOUTING executive Frank Savino of t h e Philadelphia Boy S e-o u t Council: "All you have to do is take a look at our membership drop and you will know that we are clean." SKIN DISEASES & TUMORS ACHE -ALLERGY HAIR TRAHSPLAHTATIOH COSMlnc SUIGUY '°' W~IHlLIS. SCA•s. TAnOOS ~ * * • * * * • * • • * * * • * * * • * * --The South Florida CoUncil said the area·s scout membership rolls are purged of inactive members every spring when troops, post and pack charters must b e renewed. Thissometi mes \\ l' Ul'('l•jJI ult .\l<•r/1('n/ /'l<111 . .; • .\/''''"' 1'! 111 ,,. ,, /:.,,,., \ ''"''" ~",/ * .. .. * * .. .. .. .,, MERCURY SAVINGS • and loan iissoc1at1011 • l'OLLVTION ON JORD AN causes inactive members to be EDWARD B. FRANKEL, M.O., 11 •. ,,.,,,,,,,.,,,,11•i•t"''"' Ame rican Dc-rmotology Clinics' lltio lth Sl'rv1rt• ·ec1 lis 1 f Across from Lakewood Center Orange Cour1ty: JERUSALE~l (AP) -The cam on ts or a ew 5203 Lakewood Boulevard 171112 Beach Boulevard river where Jesus was n1onths. but no cheating is Lakewood• 531-7420 tiuntlngton Beaeti • 540-6105 baptized is in danger of involved, an official !Wd. '"---------------------· becoming an 'open sewer. an Jim Simpson, the director otl · Is raeli member of parliament ~ field service ln the Newl-----------------------cl~sJordan River races that ' (IL ~~.;:~~y'~dd;~ ~~ Nearly Everyone f::ite if govt:rnment . owned paper membership they would , l\'<Jler companies carry out an ~.d.';m-.:;."':recorki~!~.';..,.,w·.~:. Lis" tens to· Lan· ders "STATEMENT SAVINGS "·PRESTIGE Card • • IUEHA PARK M!rcury Savings Bldg, Valley Vof..v at 1.1/KOln ttUNTIHGTON BEACH Mercu1v Savings 61dg . f:l:t•~ger 216eac" TUS\1111 MNCU"t Savings 6ld9 . Irvine B/'td. at tlewoort Ave. .. .. irrigation project involving a "Doesn't your family hove another car?" ....... " ·~ ~ '"""'' dam across the river near the "No, our ccir is on ONLY car." tell." LA HA8RA·FUllEATON Mercury Sav1~s Bldg . Impe rial Hwy. at Harbor CARSON M~rcurv S,;;1ngs 81~9 . A~~ton Blvd ~t SJ~ Diego ffwy. 8lJBY KNOLLS Me1cury Sai1ngs Bld6, l ong Beacn Blvd. at Caison SI. • .. Sea of Galilet. Yt'didia Beeri ,---------------------------------------·-------charged in a debate . • • • He said lhe dam would block fresh water needed lo dilute lhe river's pollution . "Make a BIG HIT with your family ... SAVE money, too ... during our Magnavox sponsored CLEARANCE. Better hurry, quantities are limited !" )~./a~ Deluxe Stereo FM/ AM Radio-Phonograph ... Model 6106 - Spanish styhng Beautilul looking . beau ti!ul sounding - tt)i3 magnilicent Magnavox includes a bu ilt-in 8-Track Tape Player and a built-in Malrix 4-Channel Sound Decoder, p lus an Air-Suspension Syslem with lour speakers. Your choice of three authentic styles. SAVE s 1 oo 00Nows44995 Be sure to see our many Magnavox GRAMD SLAll VALUES, too! COMPLETE WITH REMOTE CONTROL Model 4235 adjusts its own picture to changing room light -auto- matlcally -!or a bright. sharp, c lear picture In any room. in any light. One-builon luning, 100°/o solid·state reliability, plus the advanced Super-Bright"" In-Line Picture Tube ... and the conve- nience of Magna-Matic 21 Remote Control. Change all VHF channels, 8 UHF channels and turn yoursel on or off -from \IOu reasv chair. 14VAllA UNITED STORES .•. .,,,, SALIS oHL'r I . 69'7 WUHfA HUHTIMGTON IE.A.CH 142·SSf6 , SALIS I ~YVIClie:~-,,SOll ••••}' 401 MAIH STREET HUMTlf'IGTOH IE.A.CH Sl6-7561 • Were $5 25 to ,$32 50 Now $} 00 to $3 98 &$. DESK COPY. A l'landboolc. for modern business communiCa0011S: business letters for every occasion. lelephone techniques, introductions and a pragmat~ English handbook section. Wit! prepare today's secretary for dlstingul,hed, efr.icient and compelling business communications. 367 pages. Pal)f'r Bound. Pub. at S.5.50. S.leSl.a Cl. PSYCHOLOGY. Gilmer: .. Who am I? .. "Why don•t I achie~ my potential!" "How can I expertly influence others?" Answers to our search for self-understanding and improvement are the heart of psychology, This first book, for I freshmen. i~ designed for easy reading aod references. 512 pages. Pub. atSI0.00. S.k SZ.'8 COST ACCOUl\i'ING. C.T. Horngren. Knowledge and methods of Cost AccounLi!1' must be clearly understoon for pnifits in lOday'a business .. .il 's all here! 1116 pages. Pub. al SIZ.!IS. S•le a.• _1f. -BUSL''ESS-AND.&QNSUMER AJUTlL . METIC McNelly Adams • Olson. Fifth Edition. Never out of 1tylf ... a Khool te~t emphasizing home and small business financial idtuatlons ... very practical .. .386 pages. Pub. al 15.1111. Sale 11.'8 1t. BASIC PROBl.EM.S OF PHILOSOPtff. BrOflstein, Krikorian, and Weiner. Third Edition. Sflected writings ol mott than 50 of the world'1 greatest philosophers, e.g .. Plato, De5cartes, Spinoza, Sartre on E1hics. Politics. Art. Religion and Science. 676 pages. H•nl ~·Pub. at SI0.95. SaleA.M ll . H EALT H ·scJENCE Jooes/Shainberg/Byer. Shows how to cope with anxieties and ill~ cf everyday life. In order to achieve ph)'lical, mental and aocial well. being ror total health. I amlling -color overlays ol the human body. 706page1.Pub.a1st.4'. Saka.• 15. APPROACHES TO INDIVIDUALIZED WRITING. John50fl &: Wolf. Easily Undei'· ~ood subject material, developed tiy l'X· pertS • • sy&tematic work. pn>gram • A successful self.Jn11truction method. 422 pages. Publ. at M.50 S•le SI.II 7C. F.Lf'.MENTS 011' CALCULUS FOR TECllNICALSTUDENTS. Ltt W. Davia. A powerlul brain tool for the electronics or mechanics hobbyi!ltor t«tvlki-.i. Circuit amdysb, dynamic JMChanica problems can be readily solved by the scrlouii: designer cl high x hool graduate lev'°'. Praclical pl"Oblen11 with ansWi!r. 312pagts. Publ. at 110 oo. S.Jell,f!I 11 7'. f>RISCIPl,f:."I OF OltGAN17.ATION AND Mi\NA(i•~Ml:NT. Decl~ion making, eommunlc1tl11n.. lfader1hip,< lnte r d1:-c:1plinary approach tq the ~ nl' tx@Cutlve acUon.681 pai;ts. Pub. 81 &8.95. ~JeU.tl I It. T1tE PROCESS OP MANA.GF..~'T. Cancepq, bthavklf' &I'd practice. Orpnln- tion, plannln11. det'WGn tnllllrl(l lf:adttshlpe lndcontrol.111 Jl'Blet. l"llb. atSIJ,95. Salet2.tl • 145. COMPtJTERS AND THEIR USES. by Desrnonde. Simplified introduction to the basic concept.sol design. rogramming. aod applica- t ion o digital. data-prO<:eS!ing machines. XIII p<11ges. Pub. atS9.95. SaleSl.N 141. INTRODUCTION TO DATA PROCES- SING. by Crawford. Nwnbl.'f' systems and ronversions. punched card equipment, stored programs, computer components. elementary prvgramming techniq1.1e11, his- tory, etc. 7lh printing. Pub. at Sll.50. S.leSl.N 141. DEVEWPMENT OF THE AMERI· <"AN ECONOMY. Signillcance of today's major economic trends as viewed against !heir causes, origins and developmenl up to the presenL Third Edition. 636 pages. Pl.b. at $9.75. S.le t htl 1411. RHETORIC AND WRITING. by Win· terowd. Theory aod fM'acilce. 371 fucinat· 1ng pages. Elfective cornmunkatioo ill 11.Titlng and speaking:. Pub. al 15.~. Sak St.ft ISi. COLLEGE CHEMISTRY. By Gregg. 7nd Edltlon. 733 pages. Compos.ition, 1t.ruc- lure and chemicaJ behavior of matter. Pub . alSl2.35. Sale Sl.'8 lfl. THE SCIENCE OF PSYl:ttoLOOY. AN INTRODUCTION, by Ray. A systema· tic. logical. step by step study. A penetrat- 'ing analysis. 513pages. Pub. atll.75. SaleSl.N IL1. APPROACHES TO THOUGHT. By Voss. Outstanding writings and research findings by authorities from various areas of psychology. Pub. at 16.9:;. S.lf 11.'8 1'4. ntE PRINCIPLF.S OF l.li;l!: SClt;NCE. By DiUon. College text Jn general biology. Bask prlncipln. Comprehensive appreciation ol the nature of living things. GenfUcs. ~ily, etc. Prolu.sely illustrated. .W> paBes. Pub. at Sl.25. Sale Sl.4f 1'5. SOCIF.TV .. CULTURE. An intnxlue- 111¥1 to SoctolO(l;Y, by Merrill. 634 big pages. Personality and the group, clw, ~auc­ ri.cy, collective behavior and much mott'. Pub. al Sll.95. S.k •1.• JH. GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY. By De- cember. llOO page$. Heseareh, .meuure· ment, Pfrt"fption, behavior, learning, Jntfl· ligence, motivation, ps-ychopsthology, I!~· perimental and IO<:ial psy~ogy. and much !110r'f'. Pub. at SI0.00. Sale ll.N lfl. now TO BE TICE PERSON YOU WANT ro BE. ~-Image psythoiOI)'. by Harth. ~r IC'Mion, sexual ln.df- quacy, lnlfl'kwily, obesity, rrustraUon, smoklnl(, etc. Yoga. hYJ>n0$i.s. ~itaUcii, ~tratiOn. l"l.lb, alts.95. S.le St. .. f , PRINCIPl..£8 OF MANAGEMENT AND oKGANl:tATIONAL BF_.HAVIQR. Ncnrly m P4K1!'· rl chapter• includi118 m•na~· nient. PlnMlnt1. polky. dedslon m1k.l111 :il.llhorlty, rnalivalion, ttl'. 51.h print.Inc. Pub. at lll.7'. SalfJ A• a. GD.1';AAttC11ENISTl\t. By S11baugh. Finl ~ar t'OUl"te. In celltp. •1 pt~ l"l.lb..MA.50. s.JeSl.'8 OPf.S': i\tOS.·FRl • 10 ·9 '.\'f. Jf).fj !"I 'S. I~.:; II. THE POLITICS OF AMERICAN DEMOCRACY. By Irish. Fourth Edilion. Applied the latest research and theory ;. ,i!evelopmenls to an understanding of the '4xcitement and_ importance of politics. Almost mover-sized pagH. Pub. at S9.50. SaleSl.00 I,, PROBABILITY 11fEORY: Wmt AP- PUCA110NS TO ECONOMETRICS AND DEClSION·MAKING. Basic elements ol xt theory, elf~ ol econ>rnetria, business decision. Unique and stimulating text for bolh student and professional. 3SQ paBfS· Pub. at Sl0.50. S.h! 12.M tt. A HISTORY OF CIVILIZATION VOL. I. By Brinton. Complete cover· age of everts from the"first civilita· lions and the ancimt Greeks up until 1715. Extemive cultural and pollll- t•al backgrounds. Revised secoM edition. Profusely illustrated. 672 pagn.Pub.al'9.2S. Salell.11 · 21. A HISTORY OF CIVILl7.ATION VOL. JI. By Brinlon. Extensive -audyo( man!scultural; political and economic: growth frorn 1115 up lo~ nh century. World wars covered in complfte detail. Profusely illus- trated. Revised second edition. 720 palft.Pub.atfll.~. Sale St.SI z~. SPEECH CORRECTION. By Van Riper. Speech de!fds, corrective therapy, and the emotional aspecill cl each are explored. Actual cases illustraling the latest development.• in speech therapy. Pub. at $9.95. Salf Sl.N !I . MARKETING MANAGEMENT: ANALYSIS, PLANNING AND CONTROL. Development of qu.antllallve 1 nd behavk:lr. al tool~. concepl!I, and models designed lo improve marketin(I dttblon making. 633 P~gt'S. loth prinUill. Pub. 11 Sll.$0. Sale St:.Sll :n. PIUNCIPLES OF AMF.RICAN GOV· ERNMEl'li'T. By Slye. Treats all branches ol government. Includes the Constitution <111'.f lheamendmenls. Pub. atS7.SO. Sale St.• .. BUSINESS MAnlEMATICS. Careful expl1natk1M ror percent, equations. basic staUstk:1 and graphs, depreciation over-· he&d, llnancial statement 1naJy1is, profit and 10&&, taxes, inM.W"ance, chfdtbook, J)l.yroll, di9CCIWlls, markup, turnover, In· tcresl annuitiell and amortltatlon. 500 pag~. 5lh printing. Pub. atltl.9'. S.le 11.fll &!, F.XPLOl\ATIONS IN E:LEMEN· • Ti\kV MAnlF.MATICS. Hy Smith, Provocative ll1WJtra1¥Jn •nd prc.sc!n· tatlon ol elementary school "new mAth.'' Number •yslem•. addllkJn. .:iublraction. multlplicaUon. dlvlAlon ratio. ptr ctint. d«'im•I• and inlor· ma111:e-ometry. F:iten~ive xlm;~•rie5 of ~_,ymbob and tcrrm~ Pub. at Sl.95. SllltSI.• •St . C:ALCULl!S WITH i\Ni\LYTIC GEOMl::TRV. By Taylor. Funct1ora of one variable. Thfory. technique and applica- tion. Massive!l:W)over-siit.'<i pa get. Answers to odd numbered ~xercises. Pub. at Sil.~. Sllel2.SI 5'. ftfE UNITED 8Ti\TES: THE IUSTORV OF i\ REPUBLIC. By llofstadter. Complete detailed «Werage o( U.S. history from early settlement to the liixlies. Each period in American history carefully and clearly covered. Many maps and illustrations. Anencycloped.ia in itself. 2nd big edition. 926 pages. S.letz.M 51. MODERN t~NGLISH llA/'fDBOOK. By Gorell. 670 page book for the W writer and the ~asoned professional. Chapters on:· Developing ideas, writing basic sentence structure, parts uf speecl'I and how to use them. punctuaUoo, lots more! Pub. at '5.25. Salel1.a 13. ARTISTS U:S.A.: Buyer'• Giilie '- Contemporary Are. Visual and biographical presentalion of tN! work of living American painle1'5. scul11tors. gra1>hic artist~. Over :.io full.color i!Jus. l'ub. at $25.00. Sale U.18 1711. STATISTICS FOR BUSINESS AND ECONOMICS. By Shao. Techniques of statistics explained simply and completely for the beginner. Included are 111 the fundamentals; mean, median. di!itribution. righ through chl·llqUan> and correlation analysis. Alm«it bl pagt.'S. Pub. at SI0.00. Sale It.Sii 17S. INTRODUC.TION TO MAnl.EMATl- Cl\L PROBl\81LITV Tllf.:ORV. By Eisen. Empha~izn fundamental theor~. with many illustrative examples and exercl~ taken from practical siluations. S.'ill pages. Pub. at Sl3.!l5. Sale sz;t11 115. MANNF.D SPACECRAFT: EN- GINEERING DESIGN ANDOPERATION . ~ill'd bv Pun;er. Hundreds ol photos and illustratiOns. Minion.'!, aerodynamics , slnK.1ure, radiation. lite support, space .suits, pcr.wer systemR, propulsion, landing sySlerns, crew activities, tracking and hundreds of other loplcl. Fascinating, t!nlightenJng. !>'or the laymen and the professional. 500 over·sftcd pages. Pub. al S32.~. SI~ A.'9 llt, 'MIE WORLD SINCE tMe. A c;l,f)ftAI, IU!O'Tt)RV ' By Sauriar-. 1lle expan~lnn of European clvlllta· lion i>rtd Iii etrectt ol' the Confucian, Moslem and non·EurasiOil worlds. OVl'f' 700 pa.eti. Fully UllllU'lted wllb lftlp!I .. pkturu. fl\lb. al~0.15. Salefl.19 in. M&\NlNr. IN CRAFTS. Ry Mattll , l>raetlcal guide to madllling, 11e111ptlng, printmaking. ~rarnlc1, drawing, painting. papN:r-m:iche, weaving, hooking. em• ""'~· balik. kltel, ttuf(eid anirUls, etc. rl'()f lllustratfd. IUI printina Or 2nd f'liil.IM: 11nJS, iwes1.11 BankAmerleard • Master Charge Brentano~ South Coast Plaza Upper Level-New Wing ,, Bristol at San Diego Frwy., Costa Mesa • ' • ThuMday, JllM 13 lq __ 7_4 _______ 0A!LY PILOT 15 Bri1le Has No Arms.,-L~g; ~~--Ba1·ber Accused Vle1v• Cl1a11ge ' SHER~1AN. Tex. {UPI) -Cindy Ann Inman and Jam<'s Lewiil Rice met In high school five ye<lrs ago and fell in love. more roomy than most and have 110 stepis. ClND\' St\10 IF uny h o usekeeping problems Arise, she will OOal wlth CINDY ANll JAMf;S graduated from Sherman Dr. Benjamin Spock High School iin IW7% and · says he on~· e thought In Razor Attack "WE ARE DOING ju~t rill!.'," her husband said. "We can't envision any problems at all adjusting to married Ille." lhcm at the thnc. since she has been dolls were only (or girls but no he believ-SAN JO They were married on June 7 in :1 doubl e-ri ng church ccr('mony. "l don't 11ec any reason to w()l'ry about them in adv<incll." she said. attending Grayson County es a baby doll is suit· . SE !UPI ) -A Jose Louino, 39, was held College and expects to able toy for you ng boy, barber was under arrest here for 1nvesligation of attempted finish next year. if child wants one. charged with slluing the murder. "My anti 'I u e :.hop throat of a friend with a Pollet! said the slashing did \ Theirs is not t1 typicel l~vc story. They flnnly belit>vc they are typical 20- ycar-old nt"wlywcds. But they ure not. James pmhed. his wife's wheelctuiir down th c Cindy has worked cve1·y day to h.:ad a:-J nornu1I a slllrted abou t five years r. ~---------not <Jccur Jn a barber chair but ago," Cindy said. "It was ; straighH?dge rawr. look place when the IY.'O, v.•ho • •We are doing ju•t flue. H'e don't e 11- v l•lon an" problem• at all adjurtlng lo married life.' more or Jess a hobby, and Francis Lampkin, 27, was in had been fr ie nds. got into a it still is. We started going t criticaJ condition Wednesda y quarrel after a drinking bout , CINDY. \\'HOSE curly blonde hair !'alls below her shoulders, v.ears h c r W(..'Clding band on a chain Lhal hangs around her neck. She was born in 1953 without nrms or legs. to neamarke~and I got t i~--------------_:"'~'~'=•llttl='=.,::__f~ro~m::_::the::_.:•:w:n~d~. ____ ___'.t~og~e~1™":::,· _____ ·~ to collecting so much of "\\le'rc living with 1ny p ;1rcn l s until our apa rllnent's ready," Cindy s.1id \Vcdnesday. "II v.'as a garage :i,nd we're turning: il into an apart ment. It \Viii be ready soon no\\'." The apart rnent will look like all othtr npa111nents. cxce11t it will be a bit . . . ' church aisle after they Y.'l..'re ma rried. But Cindy has learned to help herself -she moves around by ii .scooting method she has developed over the years. James works as an apprentice in the electrical contracting busi ness owned by Cindy 's father. And she has turned her hobby of collecting glass il1to a small curio shop next door. ./' lire as possi ble . She has been featured in f>Ublicily lo the Sherman Easter Sea l Center for Crippled Ch i ld r e n and once represented the East1::r · Seal Society in New York. Mrs. Floyd Inman , Cindy's mother. said much of her daughter's healthy outlook on life was due to her being treated like a normal child, including spankings when needed. . _ _.... .. the little glassware that we ran out of a place to store it. We put it in the attic for a time, but the ceiling began to sag. "So we decided I ought to open up the little store and that's what we did." CINDY 'S AUr-iT helps \rith the shop. Cindy and James said they don't want or need any sympathy, and Cindy y,•asn't sure they wanted a ne\vs story. ,. Camera bugs, come in and have a Minolta Sales Repr ese ntative show you the full line of Minolta cameras and accessories. Receive an Of- ficial Minolta SR-T Guide with each purchase . Sal.es Repr ese ntative!> will be in our Buena Park and Orange stor es on Friday, June 14th, from 1 :00 P.M. to 9 P.M. Sa les representatives will be in our Santa Ana and Riverside store s on Satu rday, June 15th, from 10 A.M. to b P.M. Minolta SR-T 101 SSmm f/1.7 lens ".-219.97 or $9.50 a month Features through-the-lens m~lering. Accepts the com plete Minolta lens and accessories system. Including case Minolla SRT-101 58mm 111 .4 lens Reg. 299.97 249.97 or $10.50 o month W/cose Minolta Celtic Lens • 28mm 1/3.5 $79.95 • 35mm 1/2.8 69.95 • 135mm 1/2.8 79.95 • 135mm 1/3.5 69.95 BUEMA PARK ORAMGE Minolta SR-T 102 SOmm 1/1.7 lens 269.97 Reg. 299.97 or 1 T.00 a month Shutter speed and aperature visible through viewfinder. Per· mils multiple exposure effects. Inclu ding case MinoltaSR-T102 SOmm f/1.41ens Reg. 349.97 299.97 or$12 a month W/case. • lh•I •mo~nl frl>•e1tnlt 1n1 monlhlf p1ymeM unn•• 1ne J. C. Penne1 y,.,., P11••n n1 Pion ro1 '"' p~•chllt o! !h<1 '""'·No ~IN.l.NCE CH.I.AG E w+ll b• oncun•O .t the .. ,.,., Blllft<t" ot th• 1ccoun1 In 1n1 '"" b•ll"'9 "'"""'"ftt •nclu01n11 tl\f' p.1ch1t• '' p 11d 1n tu11 111to•t lht nt•I bothng di!• 1ho•n '" thot •lll•m•n• Wntn '""""td, • "'of'tnl, f!N.l.NCC C".l.RGC w•lt b• dfl•"'"""" by 1op1,.nq 1non1n1y o••ood•c ••10(0111•. i.INNU.ll PEACCNl.tGC R.t JE 11 1•,1 on !ho'"" s~oa 1nd 1•. tlNNUl l P(AC[Hl.lGl A.II( 11•.1 on 1n~t oo•t1on o••• 500, 10 1hf Plf••Oul 811fh(f "''"out O.duct1n9 Pl!"'""'' •nO c•e<l•lt , Sole priCes effective 4 days only CHr Dr ... G_.11 Gro•t ll•d. SAMTA AMA ltoch .. or.,..ti.or,. q,.11 Delly f :lO to 91110 P."'· S..11dar 10 to 1 Opt11 I O·f p.M. Dolly Svflday I 0 lo 6 )900 So. lriltol 0No. of So. Co.If Pl111• O~" I Q.J p.m. Dolly Sunday I 0 lo 6 I I w -t f ~~-~ ......... ~, I OFF-·· \ DOZENS OF IDEAS! BOTH USEFUL AND UNUSUAL GIFTS. I 1...~~·- MEN'S FANCY CUFFED FLARES Po!y-coM()ll blends. Double knits. Hal\Clsomely ta110fe!I in assorted st~les. Solid cakll's arid patterns. With belt loops. Mach1nt wastlable. Most are Pl'!manen1 press. S11es, 28-36. VllUf:S TO $1'.DI PER PAil . ' I , , I . ' . '' I MEN'S POLYESTER GOLF SHIRTS Summer cool g1illo~s. Assorted $1l!1d cckn J11tb contrnll~I tolots Oii 4· lillttoll pbdtt arid CllllM. b:- wuhlblf. !Jtlle or no wOllftl. Sitts: S-lil -l -XL ASSORTED 3-PIECE CUFF LINK SETS ~,-~'=~~~~~-~.B l r---------J ~-g~§_l_J~~~ &i G;\ 79C \ ;15~~;;:s 1· MEN'S FAMOUS MAKER LlG lllAIL Vlf.llE 69< I lllll!TU.IU I ~y SOCKS 2.50 RETAIL 111.UE 79< I II 249 495 1 1 MEN'S Body SHIRTS I IM to !fl IElllL VALUES o 0 I L-----------~ FAMOUS MAKER MEN'S BELTS LEATHER -VINYL -FABRIC ~25 .• lltlll "'" OLYMPIC RECORD BOOK Ol'llCIAL rtcord of c~$.b1p ~ and llfl"lt! g~. lrom 1896 -up to !~12. • U.t5 KTAn. VAltl HIBACHI Oi1t•11C!r..e I !~ nv,I C~ll It~~ S!Q'il! Ml:~ WDGd !lose ;ir111 h1nd!es. f1gM "'tltO -.mo:~ ~boo sit·•t1~ otu~ 10~~· Rt!!llMalllt top ~rill ¥>d 1n111!1 ,~~! i"ll· S15.00 lt!All VAi.UC. Ctut sty1in1 jt"( ~l'llllltl' !miolls. E&Ctllent nlues kif ~tilt ~y. W., killds. · HOii' DRY I AM· · MUSICAL DECANTER O'd l1sbioned soortsmtn llold yo111 ~lt 'll'hlle mlllinl ID m~$1C. Cl!o!ct cl Stlltlll l1g1ttS. \ta.M ltTAll VAi.ii( NYLON REINFORCED GARDEN HOSE ! 2~~ 1 -,~- tiiM wti1M 1(11 tisy llandling.'Dllfaldt ~1ngs. Rt1R!orttd ta •1l~1lllld ~1ghef watei po"tSSU!tS. Grtil gift tor DJd. fun !Of Ille tnhte tai1111. 8attt11tt riot incl. ,,,_~CELEBllATE FAINE/IS DAY! PAINT THE TOWN /IEO. 011 WHITE. 011 YELLOW. Oii BLUE , .. *General Paint PAINT SALE* • WEITHER SHIELD ACRYLIC LATEX EXTERIOR HOUSE PAINl. For M & MlllllJ. SlOO R£TllL VALU[ -OR •ACRYLIC INlUIOR Will PAIN! -$4.00 RElAIL VALUE • FAit IRAND -LATEX HOOSE PAIN!-~ 398 I HIGH QUALITY -11.00 RETllL VALUE •FAZE BRAHD INTERIOR I 298 1 w~ LATE! WALL PAINT S&.50 RElllL YILUE ;itL~ • WHEN YOU CARE ENOUGH JO SAVE THE VERY MOST -SHOP WESTMINSTER 14200 Beach Blvd. COSTA MESA 175 E. 17th St. at tffwport ll•d. SANTA AHA Bristol & MacArthur Horlh of S-"' CM1t "9u OPEN WEEKDA VS 9 TO 9-SUNDA Y 10 TO 7 ' -• • r \ i • J6 DAILY PILOT Thursday, Junt 13, 1q74 Donations Boun~e Iif for 01\ANGE -Backyard table tennis buffs. as well as mort- a c c o mplisrn..>d tournament players, arc being sought for the serond Easter Seal Toum· A-Thon, scheduled for Aug. 8. '#!~~~ ~!if,ljl¥,,ln/1,~ ~:.:rwA1~ cj;.-,;..·~I , ~. 1,.,:/ )#r.; . I i'?. • held ·~J ,;_J', ,,.~J.-I "'".&.'"11 ' t .... • :,..21.e ' ACIQllr;iwfJI:., • . itiSiltute" or · Orange COuniY~ ... (RIO), ~j)e!';ited by the local Easter Seal Society. Players arc slotted for l\\'O- hour time s e g ments throughout the four-day event, and choice of time slots are on a first come-first placed basis. Novices, or those persons who play primarily for.run in their home or yard, will be entered in a separate category than professional B and C tournament pla yers. The B and C pla yers y.•ill be categorized according to the Californ ia Table T e nn is Association standings, and \\'ill compete against each other in a special tournament section. TERRY GEER (L EFT}, BUD ESLER SHARE PING PONG BENEFIT PLANS Listening Are Blake Jordan, 4, and Kathy Lennon of Lennon Sisters together in teams of IO. \Vhile pledge any amount for each of throughout Southern California TIIERE IS NO age limit, indh•kiuals are being sought. his Y.'ilts. for the table te nni s and the tournament is open to organized teams also are tournament, will also feature everyone who would like to \\'elcome to enter. Sponsors of ALL PROCEEDS from the three marathon players - play. teams can obtain a two.hOUT tounra-thon go directly to help Terry Geer. manager of Playoffs will take place on ~gmentfora$50donation.To physically handi capped Anaheim's Quality Inn ; Bud Sunday. the 11th. the last day date, approximately half of children and adults in Esler of the Triple AAA of the Toum·A-Thon. Trophies 1he 72 two-hour slots have rehabilitation progra!ns 'and Lighting Company, also in will be awarded to winners at been filled by sponsors. services at RIO. Anaheim : and Dick Walker, Center Just a few words in the right place ..• Daily Pilat Classified Ads Dial the direct line • Swim Classes Slc1,ted .. the Y headquarters, 2300 Univel'ljity Drive, both for mem~ _pnd non-members who pay a alight tee . Clasaet. hi swinunlng run daily over two-week periods. -Aqua\ic Diredor IJnda Sawyer~., says the ' ~ always popular Mommy and Me classes for child ren aged ' sb< mon~ to Lhree years with mother acu.,g as an assistant teacher are ~vailable. ·. FOR THAT SPECIAL FATHER'S DAY GIFT . SCHWINN . BICYCLES SOLD FULLY ASSEMBLED AND ADJUSTED "RIDE IT AWAY TODAY" t ' ~ Jp.'. -,_ ---~,!)I .! . ' '.\. . . rA-.. ·,11 .,. ( HUNTINGTON VALL.EV SCHWINN CYCLE RY PAm AND Sl:IYla FOi ALL IRANOSit 17071 llAlllOUA I Ciot wa..-1 I FOUNTAIN VALLEY 545-0377 the close of play. Individ ual players arc asked The toum-a4hon. besides who is employed at Leisure _P_l•..cl_'e_cs_'_'i_ll _be_g'-r_ot-'1pe_d _10_ find persons \ril".'li.".ng'--t"'o--'d'.'.r::awmg~·~.__IP'_'.1.."a~y'..'e'.'r~s'__.'.'fr:".om".'.__w:_o"lr.".ld-:_ . .'.'.La"lgu~na~H.".iU~s-:_T'.'.be".'y~w.".ill~=========~----------,~-==----------------642-5678 .. Sales and specials to celebrate Dad's big day . I ' ... ~ , . For hip pockets. Includes Kodacolor 1111 o film, Magicube extender and Magicube. (AIOlf) ···.1-,..~ '" ~ ••• 1 .~ .• • . .l : . ' ... YOUR CHOICE BUENA PARK hoch et Or1R9tffMM1M f)peR D•lly t :JO to t :JO "·"" s.Hmy I 0 to 7 I I • ORANGE GAF pock6t outfit. Reg. 22.97 With 3--elemenl f/9.5 lens. Automat!cally protects against double exposure. Includes Magicubes, wrist strap. Polaroid Square Shooter 2 An all·purpose Polaroid. Electric eye exposure control, built-In flash • City Of". ti G•de11 Gro,1 l l•d. o,." I o.t I'""' Doily S..wi9y I 0 to 6 SANTA AMA JtOO So. lrltfol ·Mo. of So. Coe't l'lcn• Opt11 IO·f p.11t.. Dolly SY!ldoy 10 lo 6 I • .. I • • " 1 • • . " " ' ' ... ~··· ~ ., " • • DAILY •ILDT 17 , . ,• DAILY PILOT F11siiiOll1 Olld hoiM "-ilhiftc]s c:owttsy of Wock'1, South Coast l'tne D11ily ritot photo by lkhard ICO!Mer .... . FATH£R'S DAY - I \ -- • NEXT SUNDAY, JUNE 16th IS FATHER'S DAY. YOU'LL DISCOVER A GIFT TO PLEASE HIM IN THIS SECTION ALONG WITH GIFT IDEAS FOR THE BRIDES AND GRADS ON YOUR SPECIAL GIFT LIST. 1\ • ,• - I .. J B OAll y PILOT Thursday, Jullf 13, 1q74 OCC Gets Mini-ambulance flospital Gets Okay Cli11ics S1vo11•1•ed? U.S. In·surance .Ccu·t . Sa~1es Ste11s, Ti1n e for College r ursing Staff IJy Rtl>I\ Nlf.OZlf.l.SK I \ '/ ~ OI ll'lt ,,u~ Plku SttU --I 1 ' ~ Gelling clobbered on the head by a misclirrclrd baseball could aln1os1 he a pleasurable cx1>ericncc at Orange Coos! College. 'It n1ight n1eon a memorable ride to the Student Health Servict center in a cot e mini-ambulan~. chauffeured by a crew of nifty nurses. TltE COSTA iUl!:SA Cfunpus. bCCilUse of its 202-acre C'xpansc, is the first Orange Coun!.v col1PJ'.!C to get it~ O\\ll ambulance and possibly 1he first in the state. 11 \1·as bough1 Uy thr Coagt Con1111u11ity College District \1·hcn nurses. aflcr jo_gging across can1pus to give cardio- puhnonar~· fir s! aid, '>''ere so pooped !hey th"Jught they needed the ox,\'gcn for the1nscl\'es. l\a!e :\lc[)(lnough. studl'llt hr a l l h sr:r1·icc coordina1o r. sa id the 10 hor sr pcnver, 12.3 n1ph electric vehicle \1·as aN\uired largel .1· through the efforts or college Presi dent Hobert i\loore 1vho l\'DS committed ~'o i1nprnl'ing the Jerel of ctunpus emergency care. EQUIPPED '\'ITll its 0\1·11 red light a11d siren and a painrcd-0n red cross. the ambu lance is ahle to rcueh !he scent· ot an accident quickly by rolling righ t across the la1rn. 1t contains its 0\1·11 patient bed and is to eventuall y be ou!filled \1·ith ox.1·gcn. suction . and splints as 11·cll as a big fir st- aid box. .- ~-(~·-. D1Jlly .. llf! Slttf l"Mll For Dying HARTFORD, C-OM. (AP) -Plans for the nation's first home specillcally for the dying have recetved state approval. The state Commission on Ho«pitals and Heallh Care approved this w eek construction of tt'le $2.68 million, 44-bed facility proposed by Hospice, Inc. ot New Haven. The facility will be located in the New Haven suburb of Branford. THE HOSPITAL will be pa.Itemed after similar facilities in England, but v.·ould be the fi111t of its klnd in this country. The plan is supported by a group of doctors, nurses, clergymen and ' community workers. Officials or Hospice sald it is .being designed to provide the dying pallent and ·those cl06e to him with a more home-like environment than is typical of other institutions that care for the terminally ill. lts,services v.ill include counseling on the social and psychological problems that often-afflict the family of a dying person, they said. TllE STATE HOSPITAL commission said construction of the facility must begin l'.ithin one year or the permit will be revoked. The commission also required that: • Plan Gets Study BOSTON (AP) -Any national health insurMce progr.yn covering all or most medical bills would swamp clinics and doctors' offices with an Increased demand for services, according t9 a study by the Rand Corp. The study, \vhlch was published today in the New England Journal of 1.1ediclne, says that hospitals would not have such an increased demand. THE REPORT BY the Santa Monica research Jnstltullon analyzed t w o J>05$lble types of national h e a I t h insurance and applied the conclusions to other possible plans as ·well. Wicks • One plan pr~vlded full aoYcra!iC of all n1edlcal bills:' the other called cf or users to pay -a fl at 2S l)'.'rccnt of their cx1>enscs through co-insurance, with tht: insurunl'C plan covering the rest, Looking at the dollar figUrcs of the sample plans analyzed, the researchers said they used conservatlvr l•sti111ates based on the assumptions ttiat additional demi'.lnd could be satisfied ond· prices would not rise. 41WE ESTIA1ATE lhat the <lollCll' l'OSl for hospital and ambulatory scrvi(·ci; conlblned 111ould be from $8 billion to .~Iii billion for a full.coverage plru1 a!i,d fro rn $3 billion to $7 billion for a 2) pcrccnl co·inurance plan. · '·Jf the prograin intludcd COVl'ragc l"nr other services, such as dentul care 11/ld drugs, we estimate that the in ercasc in total cost would be $20 bllllon to $:10 billion with the full-coverage plan und $10 billion and $20 billion \Vith l h c coinsurance plan." .. National health care pl nns being considered by Congress have r.:al'ricd cost eslin1ates up to $40 billion. WITJI EITllER plan, the rl'SCarchers said, there probably v.·ould be only a small increase in hospital den1and -All state residents be given equal because 90 percent of hospital bills access to the institution regardless of already are covered by health insurance · economic status. and 20 percent of hospital beds arc "\Vc"ve alrcad~· used i1 to pick up students 1vho have inju red their ankles or recei\"ed eye injuries.'' reports i\liss McDonough. ""\\"e hnve a 101 of studen ts getting hit by racket balls. That"s the latest thing.'' OCC PRESIDENT ROBERT MOORE MINI-AMBULANCE 'PATIENT' Nurses Kate McDonough (Driver's Seat) and Diane Kietterle Providt TLC -AH physicians in the state be allowed unoccupied. ' to submit patients for consideration. But only 40 percent of a111hulatory -A qualified physician be in charge of VJ;~. care. like that received at clinics and inju red £e1·ercly in such collisions and hclic\"CS the a1nbulance. 1•:lth l!s ability to gl.'t thl.'re in a hurry, v:ill become a lifcsa1'l.'r. the facility. ,..... physicians' offices, is presen!lp cOVL·rcd of Anaheim. started out life as an in· ..'...Rates be approve~ by the by insu rance. If 'all ambulatory care house factory ambulance and was commission. were covered by a national hcillth plan. modified and outfitted v.•ith canvas side -The hospital submit regular i,inancial 'What did you do aftsr the study -predicts that "the increased covers to protect the patients from the and patient service reports m;ts early the war dsddy}~ demand would far exceed !he CU!'!'cnt OF' i\1.-\JOf.\ COl\."CERS arc auto accidents on OCC parkin g !o,s. i\liss 1.lcDonough · snia students have been The little vehicle, built by Tay!or-Dunn elements. operating days. capacity of the delivery systcn1." 1=-::c...:..:.:c~=--===-~~~~~~.:0.::..::::::'.'....::=...~~~~~==============~::'::=::....:::..::::.=:::.:2=:::.~-- l11for1riu.11t i1i Zebrci Cu.se Flecl C1 istocly SA:'-1 FRAr\CJSCO (A Pl -fro111 deputies before dlll\'n The infonnant in !he 21.'bril ·slayings and his f a ni i l .\· escaped federal p rotecti\·c cus!OO~· for eight days . authori ties have disclosed. Anthony C. Harris. 211. his ll'ife and small child \11trc found Tuesday in Los Angel es after a1stakeout at a relative·s home, -orficials said. They 1rere returned to proteetive custOOy in an undisclosed location. HARRIS, AS EX·CONVICT and former n1ental pati ent. pro\'idcd key testimony for a ,;:rand ~ry indictment of Larry C. Gre en. J . C. Simon. ~tanuel fi.loore and Jessie Cooks for three in a series or random Zebra rnurdcrs of ll"hites by blacks. U.S. Marshal George Tobin said the Harris fainily cscnpcd .Ju11t• :I et a con\·ertcd barracks at Ft. Baker in .\larin Count y. Tobin said his nicn found a ropi• of knotted bedsheets dangling fro1n the Harrises' s~t'Ond-story quarters. IT \\rAs NOT immediately kno11n \\thy the Harrises fled protecti•:c custody. Harris s;1id !he niurders \\err carried ou t by Death 1\ngcls. a fan at ical sect or black sepa rati sts bent on 1nurder and mutilation or \\hites. lie sa id the group issued a wa1Tant for his death. Thirteen persons v:ere killed <ind sc1·en 11'oundcd in the rc1ndo111 Zebra killings in San F'ranrisco \1·hich began last October. The case was namtd Zct:ra nrter !he "Z" radio rrequ1;ncy used by police. The So/id-Stale Time Computer,® no larger than a wristwatch r 12 ! 1 f~ THE FIRST COMPLETELY NEW WAY TO TELL TIME IN 500 YEARS Touch the buuon,,. Pulsar 1eUs you 1he time. No moving parts to wear ou!. No dials, hands, gears, springs, tunin g forks or motors; nothing 10 wind up or run down . Never needs maintenance, oiling or cle.:inin g. Accuracy \Vithin one minute a year. Available in st.iinless steel .it $275. In 14k gold· filled case and brJ.celc t, $375. B. D. HOWES and SON FJNE jt\\1£1.&RS FOR THl&E Ct.'IERATIONS 3412 VIA LIDO NEWPORT BEACH • 175·2731 LOS ANGELES • PASADENA SANTA BARBARA • HONOLULU PHOENIX • SCOITSOALE ' r ~·· • • ' - ·~ Need a Gift For Father's & Brides? ... Try Shopping The AMTIQUES F•aturinq FIM Okt 6ALLOWAVS 410 ll1t St. 67§:2128 lh• IMPORTERS or EUROPEAN ANTIQUF.S F1NE arns & JEWELRY You an cordially invited to broWll Boutique 61S·11-40 WATER CLOSET continuing classes in needlepoint ·3011 Villa Way, 675-2212 ~pe~;oi c.;i., 3009 VILLA WAY 675·1101 f-0< ••C bit~ fll<?'.l f Anl1Ques • Ob1ects cfArl Con!emporary L1grt1ing • Arcrt1!ecTurol Elements Ooen1n9 Soon SEAFOOD MARKET FRESH FISH DAILY EXPERIENCE ~ ~~ Facials Manicu res-Pedicures '815 l •l•Y•l1• 61~·4100 '>1 7 '1'l•M S1,.; ... t l7~·J'240 HARBOR !:1~'E ao·n" ro.n1:Y PAIMTW~~:;,R.IMC. ~ r1 -floor coverings i---= S~~;;~;~~N __ 1 ___ &_d_r_ape-ri•_:,_,._ •• _ •• -1 COOKERY SCHOOL ! '. GOURMET oM CONTEMPORARY ACCESSORIES -425 30th St. -675·6274 I !J~ ~~ ~tudio 1 STAINED. LEADED ANO ETCHEO GLASS. CUSTOM OESIGN, SPECIALIZING IN .~ ,,_.,._,..., RESIDE NTIAL COMMISSIONS. l ,,.,.,.,~ ... --· .. _ __.!_"~''_) 28 13 lAFAYETTE I I -. . r~~~~~ '~@l~ u:t::::Ql T-J ANTIQUES -GIFTS PLANTS -ART CLASS Wedding Dresst·s Custom 1\l<.idc 416-31st 673-1407 CONSIGNMENT LTD -~nore's Ai'IOTIQUI:'.~. AfiT. f'l 11 !\'ITl!ll~: 411 TlllltT' I'll\.-.!' : .. n;1:1·:T 1i:-;.n:1:1u • 'D,111 frrin · &ulptor C.:11110111 ~~11'Cl1·~ (rks~11 J1 nr Art SpctialtLCs 2811 liif>l~llt l ft-.1·p')rt 1~tii.ck Calif. ~~~11 -6 ·rr~1 closnf T\lc11Jn.~ DISCOVER ~ -<o 2~ -=<:!JI ''''"n9• ~, "rr''"1"''"' · 111·li7:·88,)I'.' • • "SURC,lf '( A Mor C>utL fi.IDLESS OESfR.f-8UT wi.fAT T1-i£ MECK lf'5 HOME ~ " ' Findi1ig Ants No Picnic By DICK \\'EST WASHINGTON !UPI ) -Jn 1972, according to toe National Geographic Society, 47 percent of the nation's population, or 74.400,000 people, went on pi c- nics. \Veil and good. But did they all have ,to show up at the Co1nmodore Claus Von frigate Men1orial State Park on the san1e day. I RE~fE~1BER THE day v.·cll because ~he o t h e r 74.3ff9,9!l9 picnickers :t. o t there ahead or me. ll was a beautiful Sunday afternoon. Or it \\'as when my group arrived. By the time l\'e found a place lo spread our hamper, it was late Thursday. And the: deviled . eggs were at a stage where not even exorcism could save them. Although 1972 \\'as :he last year for which picnicking statistics are available, it is plain that the saturation point already has been reached. SO~IE DAYS THE horde of picnickers is so large there aren't enough ants to go around. I learned about the ant s hort.age from Fergus \Vangtree, executive secretary of the National Association of Open Air Gounnets. "No picnic is complete l\·ithoot a few ants crawling around on .the red-checkered tablecloth and scaling the thermos bottle," Wangtree said. "Sad to say. ho1\•ever, the :int colonies in many parks and other outdoor facilities are too small to accommodate , the crowds, especially holidays ~ and 1veekends. ' ~ "S0~1E PICNIC grounds are trying to meet the emergency by Importing unt~. but it takes time to get a colony established." I asked \Vangtrce "'hy ants had suddenly become so scarce. "There is still an abundance of ants of many varieties." he replied. "You can find all lhe harvcste.r ants , ca r penter ants , fire ants and sugar ants you could ask for. "It is only the North American picnic ant that is getting hard to come by. "ALTHOUGH TllE picnic ant population has been grow- ing at a fa irly respectable rate, it has not kept pace 1vith the massi ve gro\vth. of pic- nicking. "Picnic ants presently are spread so thin· that. despite overtime shifts. ttw!y sin,ply can't rill all the den1nnU for their services.'' Vacation In Deatli, TAKASAR I. Jnpan <UPI\ -Yoshito Furuta . 36, wBnted his new bririC' end his two children by his la!e first wife to see their own cowitry. They set out In the car to visit the most famous scenic spots l)f Japa n. taking snapshots alone: the \\·a.v. TI1en they h<'ndcd home to Nogano prefecture, 150 miles north 'Jr Tokyo. The bodies of all four were found in their sedan. Police said the y \vert 11ic1ims of mass i;uicide. by carbon monoxide frd into lhC' c:nr 'by a hose attac~ed to lhe exhaust pipe. Pollce belir,•e t h c. ~· ki lled themsch·es brcausc :if the opOO!lition Of the 22· rcnr-old bridc"s parents to the mnrT'lage. DAILY PILOT JIJ --------------------------------- ' for DAD the GRAD and the new HOMEMAKER SUPER GIFTS ONLY $159 9s • SONY® IJ'@o~~ SUB·MINIATURE BATTERY-OPERATED ACTION·COROER witH Built-In Condenser Micropnone and Automatic Shut·Off The all·new SONY TC -55 tucks away just about anywhere to provide Ille u1!1· mate in carrying and operating con-venience . '0 Only $7995 ~ MR-910 W • Compact -Stereo/FM-AM portable • TV-750 BLACK & WHITE lhis mi$h!y marvel of min1a tur i1allon offers performance Iha! surpasses many larger recorders! 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" We ho"C bud• ow• bv\•rlt\\ Ori \Ot,,. f,C'd, loyal cus•o "1t'•1 Yov mu1t b~ 10!1\f•('d O• wt 'll "'okt •' good _) • 1 20 DAIL V PILOT Reagan's Partisans Back Off • • Sh1d ent s File Suit For P~per LOXG BEACH CAPl -A group of high school students is suing the Long Beach Unified School District on grounds it unconstitutlon~ly blocked distribution or the "Rising Star." an off-campus student ne"'Sp.1\>er. A civil complaict, filed in . . T idee-Didee Wii1ne r 111 Dy-Dee Wash Suit ~ SACRAMENTO (AP) Tldee-Dldee Diaper SerVice prevlliled over Dy-Dee Wash in 11 Sacramento court. and now Tidee·Didee can call itself Di dee-. Tidee. Superior Court Judge 8. Abbott Goldberg ruled this week lhat he didn 't see anything confusing or misleading about Tidel.'·Didce calling itself Didee-1'id('e nnd rejcctOO the suit by filed Dy· Dee Wash. Dy-Dee attom~y tf a n c y Scott Ince objected that Dy· Dee was damaged when Tidee· Dldee started calling ltsrl f Oidee-Tidee. because Dy-Dee custon1ers \vould be confused by Didee-Tidee. Tldee-Dldee attomey Gory Callahan counterOO that "didee" is now part ol t!1c language and not a ~'Ord so1neone can tradcn1ark. SMOKERS IN CRADLE \\'ELLINGTON , New 1.ealand <AP! -Two out of three ctlildrcn in New ZCaland s1noke cigarettes before they are 7 yeers old, a survey by the Cancer Society of New 1.ealand asserted. The five-year s urvey clai n1ed ttlat 80 percent or boys and 50 percent of girls studied \\'ere s mo k i n i:; regularly by the age or "· SACRAMENT 0 Supporters of Gov. Ronald Reagan backed off from an alttmpt to have Reagan's f<rmer appointments $eCl'etary c o n f i ·r me d as director of the Department of C<mumer Affairs. Consideration of the controversial appointn1ent of Patricia Gayman to the post was removed from the agenda o! the Senate R u I e s Committee over the objection of one committee member, Sen. Robcrt Stevens, CR-Los Angeles.) Superior Court this \\'l'l'k. asks ,,_ _____________________________ ., the rourl to order distribution "SHE JS GOING TO serve any~·ay.'' said-Sen. Clare Bc!T)'hill CR-Ceres), "There was no sense in going on with this." Unless the Senate rejects the appointment. Mrs. Gayman may serve as direct.or until Reagan's term 1 runs out next year. even if fonna.l Stna.te confirmation is ~. not granted. "She is the director.'' said C\yde WakhaU, R e a g a n · s press secretary. '•The Governor believe3 she is his. appointee and she should he confirmed." ---· Dow11laill Racer Han gi ng a left turn on a n1edium~ize Huntingt&n Beach 'vave can be a th rill for any surfer, but 'vhen you are pint-sized and your su rfboard is pint-sized. the challenge is even greater because the wave then becomes GIANT.sized. This young surfer rode out the wave without mishap, however. ---------------M R S . GAY!\1AN'S appointment had aUracted ~ opposition from consumer groups, \4'ho claimed she was not qualified to serve in the posL Several representative3 of consumer groups were on ; haOO. Wednesday at t he ., hearing to speak against on her appointment. " Meanwhile, under an '' avalanche ol protest, the rules commit.tee also refused to confirm Reagan's 1R>Ointment of a $37,615-a·year workmen's compensation commissioner. Two Republica'.n members ol the committee failed \\1ednesday to go to the aid of RQbert W. Sigg. 52, who \\'as Reagan's pick to a four-year term on the Workrnen'fi C<>mpensatioo Appeals Board. i, The group offers the final "'.J admimstrative dee~ on ·; e m ploye-employer disputes over "'orkmen 's com pens a· lion. AFT ER LENGTHY t.stimony objecting lo the appointm«lt, committee members declined to offer a motion on Sigg's behalf. But since there was no vote against him, Sigg also will be allowed to remain as an acting commissioner until the end or Reagan's term. The actiro followed p~ts from Senate Democrat11 a gains t''deathbed '' appoiNroents by R e a g a n 1''hich would C8n'Y over into the administration of a new ;,, govern>r. At the same time. huv•ever. the committee approved 14 other Re a g an appointees. .uiase which °"" mmmi U.ee determined w ere . "nonrontroversial." R u I e s committee approval is the first step in the con!innation process. SIGG. FORM~RLY chairman of the U n e m ployment Insurance Appeals Board, was stroflg!y opposed by organized labor and tv.·o Senate Democratic leaders -floor leader George Moscone of San Francisco and caucus chairman Nicholas C. Petris of Oakland. 'Ibey argued Sigg's record was weighted agaln!t workers. The Seersucker ....... . from Gordon of Philadelphia the perfect traditional coat. 44 fashion island , newport center 644·5070 of the February edition of 1he "Rising Star ," banned from citv !iChools by the district. The suit was filed on behalf of JeJTY Neuberger, 18. a \Vil.son High School student who edits the newspaper. and other student.s who attempted to deliver the February edition of the "Rising Star." The school administration said earlier it was following state education guidelines in barring "offensive material" from school grounds. The suit alleges that a school regulation ordering that newspapers be submitted for approval 48 hours before distribution is ''a prior censorship scheme.'' The complaint seeks erasure of suspension for fi\·e students y;ho defied lhe ban and court clarification of sch o o I authority over s t u d e n t behavior in the vicinity of school grounds. c.omntittee<llainnanJames"-----------------------------·---------------1 R. Mills (0-San Diego), said the! objections raised v.•ere more than for any other appointment he had ever seen. You can Charge DAILY "LOT Classified Ado 642·5678 Try Saturday's News Quiz 1 Fun for the Whole Family Great idea for Dad-only $38 .. ,, .. ·' ' ,f. ' I , ' ,, ' t .. . ..-'r, ••• 1' ·., , ,. ' ' ', ; t-'':t i · ·,' -~ ~ ··~·-. : . . ' ) ' ' " . ... ~ ·: . ; : . \ •' The knit shirt suit from Tobias Trend'" When the occasion is casual. Jacket-pants combination in doubteknit Encron"' polyester with distinctive linen-look texture. Bellows pockets, epaulets and side vents for added dash. Flared pants leature belt loops and \vestern top pockets. A great way to look. A great gifl for Dad. Navy. bro\vn or 1a·n. Both pieces 38.00 silverwoods 45 l'ASHION ISLAND• NEWPORT BEACH FROMfashion Island Newport Beach STEREO· SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR I J J • • ' - • , • \ .S laver Sentenced OAKLAND (UPI J ;_ Andrew 0 . Lyons, 34, coovicted in a slaying In whi ch the vlcthn's heart v.'as trnnsplonled. h:is been scntcncOO to one to 15 years ln prison . Superior Judge \Vllllam J, llayes handed down l he sentence Wl'Clnesday on Lyons' conviction for v o I u n I a r y manslaughter. LYQ11s' attprney, John Crulk.mank Jr .• &aid he would appeal. Insisting the judge wus wrong to rule that the heart transplant opern1lon h ad nothing to do with the death of Samool tt1. Allen Jr., 29, Ylho had been shot through the he.'.id by Lyons. Cruikshank sai d the judge "can't legislate whut death is." ,---------------, A.H. WEINERT I 1 I . t I. Fine Jewels • Fashion Isla nd 1st SALE EVER! I '·· .I I .-i.J~UPTO 1/2 OFF 100'• LMki l.l.p 141( a 1ar. WaK.,• WMArrcS.ta ~·~ .. ,.,. Sl~•r .. dd• Dt..eM lra«i6e• Al S0"- .\1 lO-J.. "' 10'7. A1ltor. "'st.,.. Arlt.,.. 1411:, Ill( Yel.GoW rs. l •bk1 A Sa,,wr. Mt•'1Jc•dty EIU11t 4i A...:rioa P'kcn ODjff11 ol An l-41uJt•tlry At 50,. At10"" .. ,,.. ¥lt% •. ""' A.1111.,. I TRULY I I SOME FANTA STIC . I 'Lo L '!-------------~~--~- ve aw H I B ow t egan Ove,·turns F L 'l T 1. Co11 victiQJI or 1 Y o m 111 ti. '!!an you gl \'t us a few quickie progra1n notes 011 AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) _ Liiy To1nlln , wbo I think Is one or lhe fuonlest gals around·.• Because or an old Texas -l\tr. and Airs. A. Arther, RalUn1orc. "parumour law" that ii.llo'A'ed A: The graduate of HO'A'iln ond l\1art1n's "Laugh In" a husband to klll his wife's was born in Kentucky but brought up in Detroit. lier Jover if he caught thein father was a factory hand ··who drank and gurnblcd loo committing adultery. James much." And toted her, even as a little gir l. off to the Dillard Shaw has won a new racetrack with him. \Yhen the (:arry l\1oorc TV sr.riC's in trial on murder charges. ~'hich she performed was canceled in '66, Lily hl>cunlc iJ The Texa s Court of Criminal .secretary. But .she didn't like !he hoUrs or the ro utinl' and checked into \Yayne State Univcrslly as a pre·mcd student Aopeals. in a 3-2 decision Playillg a Greenwich Village night club. the Hiller End, Wednesday, reversed a five-turned out to be the sweet beginning for Lily ShCl was year sentence against Shaw discovered by the ad agencies and filn1ed tumn1ercials £or the Aug. 20, 1971 slaying of for everything from Kellogg 's and Vick's Vapor11h, to All Eugene Hintz. detergent. Some say her ''Edith Ann " character \\iJ~ !he TllE APPEALS COURT funniest since Fanny Brice's "Baby Snooks." ruled that a Ho~ton judge Q: \\'ho 'A'US it who said, speaking ahout Paris. ··;o.:0 1 11 IJe 1t11t11d f11iled to tell the jury that American Is ever held up and robbed at night. The trades· Former special \Vater· convicted Shaw of the n1cn get all his money during th e day"'! -~luan<1 Uuttun , gale prosei:utor Archi- existencc of the "paramour Honolu lu bald Cox \Vilt be speak- Jaw" that since has been A: 'fhc late great "'lt Fr1·d All1'n. Speaking ol Petris, ei· at Stanford Univer- r epealed under a new Texas Fred in that same routilll' obscrvl-d : ··The 1ncn \1 ho [ur-! ~ i t y co nl nienccnlent penal code. exercises Sunday and The appeals court on ~1.arch \ school has a.lrea<1y re- 20 rejcetc<I Shaw's appea t 8"d Glad You Asked That' jected 3.000 requests ruled lhat !he Pa ram o u r because of heavy ticket statute did not apply to the d A d"t · case because Hintz was fu!Ju by Marilyn and Hy Ga rd ner • deman · u 1 oriuin clothed and standing in the kitchen ~·ith Shaw's common-merly sold postcards e1re no\Y busy trying to Jure lourisls law \vifc ~·hen Sha1v kicked into door'A'il,\'S to ch<inge I heir 1\mcrican n1onry." Also. Th u"Sday J~nt 13.' 1C!74 DAILY PILOT 2 f FOR DAO OR GR AD SPACI' AGE llOUID CRYSTAL TfjERMOMETER IN A WORK OF ART Fascinating new conversation piece See !he correct temperature as the color c hanges on d1g 1tal tempe ralure scale ALSO 011 pa1nt1ngs & temole rubb1ngs tor his den or oll1ce_ 20°/o off all 3-0 black & while pictures i now thru Father's Day) Imported 1n111ated crystal ash tray<> HOu1, 930 to 5 30 om S.itu,o.iv 9 .i m to 5 om 1803 Westcllff Onve, Newport Beach 548-3303 I ONCE JN A LIFETIM E BUYS ·., I Sale ends Saturday. June 15 I I A.H. WEINERT ,..,,, .. ;.-.. ·cJ , I 32 FAS III ON ISLAND Sorry No Layaways f ' ~ seats 10.000. open !he apartmCfll door on "The traffic is so b:id. th\'rc ought to be a street c:il/ed the couple. Rue the Day." 1 ' ff BL7 \\'EDNESDAV. the Q: \\'hat \\'as lhe name gi1'cn to Sophia Lore11 '11 second ~ collar n cu court re versed itself and said son? -l\1ike Stern. Pahn Beach, Florida. 1 I . ~:~R: i:~·~~4-:.:_::.::_1 the jury should have been A: Eduardo C:ianmaria Leon Ponti. f or short, thl' asked to decide "what \l'Ou]d news media nicknamed the bambino Eddie or Dodo. lJJ f . I 7tfl SI. ••Z·ll ll any reasonable, sensible man Cosio Mt~• have concluded fronl these Q: \Yby don't Ibey ha\'e an :J"·ard for the horror rHms ~';'1~~11.":;::-;"~. circumstances?" 'A'hicb are so popular today? -Brad 1'\iehols, Cincinnati. • The cou rt referrer! In an A: They already ha ve. In its second year, the Acad- 1885 case that held a husband cmy of Horror Films and Science Fiction Films l y.•ith a I did not have to find his membership of so1ne 200 1>e0plc1 1vil1 stage its annu<il Dumb is ' wife a~tually engaped in horror filn1s of 197:! are: "The Exorcist." "The Folks at lovemaking but onlv i n circumstances that w-o u 1 d Red \\lolf Inn," "The Legl'nd of llc!I House," "Ila~· ~leat.'' .. Schlock ." "Talcs That \\'1tness f\1adncss." .. Tr·r-indicate she commi t ted adultery in order 10 be ror in the \\lax f\1useu m." "Theater of Blood :· ··vi.lull of I Horror" and similar ··lo\·e stones.·· justified in killing her IO\'Cr. Shaw tes tified at his trial Send your (jllCS!llJJI S fo fly c;ard11er. "G lud YH'I ~ !hat he knew Hintz was with Asked That," care of this newspaper, P. 0 . Bot 15f:iU. hL'I wife, lhat he drove bv the Costa iUesa, Calif . 92G26. ~1a rilyn and Hy Gard11el' 11.1il/ apartment and decided to answer as many qtiestious as they can in their co/111llll. demand she come out when he but the voh1me of mail 111ak.es persanal replies 1r}1 -j US",lt. Q u'-"t"o...,&1'., Out. Giz. ... 1:1v ... ..-10" /F 11<.."T1'1e1t',. b11<..~ 'SPec..1 0.~ 1-:. 1-1ow oi.i . A.. •Gs. ~ ~1.,. C.o ... ..-'\=Oii. 0"''-"' .. S<:i.~, \t\~1..IJ't>l l<I~ p., "?.,,it. OF \c:'.~tT ~\..0.C.ll'i>. ~5""~~ C..o .. • I~• ·soft. saw the lighls go off. possible. ~! ''TIIERE \VOULD BE onl y, ~;;~;;~;;~;;~;;:~:::~;;;;;;;;:::i;;;;;;;;;;;;_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; __ -;;-;-;;-;.;-;;-;;-;;-;;._;;;_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;._;;;_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;; one reason fo r the lights to be r1 out, and that is that !hey would be in bed.'' Shaw fl l • ~.Brown, Look wh,ll lhc ~111Jrt ~hot companv ha~ dnnc to th•• l<.ldl('r. Ifs got .i wic~fr·k"ll.. ior. Nnw lhat's rool ,.,nd ~II dortr in )Uh, com/orr.1blt' Try dt11'>b romf1•rt un vo11r ll'rl w1 1h ] lush l'upl'""' · l..1su.ils. ThC'!i<' J.li p·on~ .irt madl." o( l..rinkl~ p.it .. nt ll'alhf'r. \\lh•t more roulJ you •sk for~ s2t .95 _1!p ~ . . testified. The \\'Oman admi!ted she nnd lfintz made Jove shortly before she. sa1\• Shaw drive up: She said Hintz "·as dressed only in his shorts and she had to hurry him to dress . r.·.11ht•r, ·~ Judge \V.A. Morrison. one of the two who dissented from the majori1y decision, sa id the reversal \\'SS unfair to !he Houston tria l judge 'A'ho gave jurors instructio!ls l'l con~ider only the self-defense issue raised by Shaw in h i s S24.95 LARGEST HUSH PUPPY DEA LERS IN ORANGE COUNTY ~l .. SHOE HUT COSTA MESA 2300 HARBOR BLVO. Harbor Shopping Center PHONE 546-6775 SANTA ANA 3648 SO, BR ISTOL Nl!.'KI To T1etsu1y PHONE 557·5030 testimony. 9Trloi8', • ! · lrl.T. E'l'ery Selurd•~ 11111\t DAILY PILOT a gift of jewelry for Father"s Day .... fo r Graduat ion Day fo r Bridal Gifts ....... for Anniversaries 1¥hat better 1vay lo slio1v you r love & "P1Jre cialion tlia'n, wit Ji a lrrsti11g u i.f.t of· J'ine je 1ce l "JJ !' Gen. Black Stu or Opal Siuds. m1ny $ 3 9 des11ns set 1n sohd 14K Gold. ••ne! ••. Blatk S111 S1p9h11e Dro p f1uini1, $75 f1n' Gen. Stu. 1111ny !f\'lts. lJ~ YG .... Austr1h1n f11e Dp1I 010~ £1 111np. $65 l1er1 O?lll s11 1n 1n~que sty le, lJK ...• [)u1t fut 01)11 Rini. 2 tine (tAM1n1 $99 OQl lS tn mocl,rn swirl moun1in1. 14K •••. Diamond 8rid1! Set. floral D's11n $318 1•111 bolds brllli1nt diamond. l'K .•••• 'l"'t 1 .. 1 group ul r1ni:~ J.~~nrl•·d il)'lff & ~•ttt .111 !<~tliftl r.Uvtr •ith 111rq11olr.e hug11 sl!Jrc11ot1 Rffl. Sit ro S?O SPECIAL !8 ·~ I' \.· 0. . . . /'it~n·~ lun1 lnl1Y Rll'fl Rtg. S t~IJ S•le S72 ~Y., r1.nt,. IUnc R~i: S~'> S•le $27 l1i.1rquo+'4' Bt4l f !l'l II ~ <j;'" S•le $47.40 LONG BEACH, 4313 A1 1•n1te Avt. WHITTIE'R, 12918 Ph1lad1lph1.1 S1. SANTA ANA, 2015 N. Mt!" REDONDO BEACH, Sovth B1v Cen1tr TORRANCE, 2••&5 HIWlf\of"nt Blvd. TORRANCE, Otl Amo FW!Cln SalMrl NEwPORT BEACH, Ftihlon l~iid ORANGE, The Miii of 0,1r19t ANAHEIM , ANhfim Pt.1e LOS ANGE: LES, Arco P1111 I ' BRASS Torch Kit . " UL-listed. Gives even flow. safety. Pinpoint !lame. Incl. fuel cyl. TI555 GLUE GUN Flow control dispenses hot. melted glue-bonds in 60 seconds! 203 I • I r;; . ,;,--~ )_~' . ·~\ ,.. ' 1 ,,...,,, lrit HAWK DIAGNOSTI C 1999 TUNE-UP KIT Dwell-tach l ester. remote sla~r , timing light : comJ pression 1es1e"'r. 71 o ~~ ,--' ~~ .._=:.-t I a ~. _ 1:. ',_ 8-GALLON WET or ORV SHOP VACUUM 3695 .~ ... ,;, \Q'-...!)~ Holds 8 gars dry waste or 6 gals we!. Exhaust blower. ""--I~\\ autom shu1off wtien lull In- "' -· eludes 1'• hose. 2 e~ten· ~ srons, accessories. e C~~~~E 19.99 ~J ---- llJ B/oclt & Oecltcr Gifts 101 a man from a man's kind of store - lrom vour local inde· pendent ha rdware merchant with national chain buying power. HARDWARE STORE THE WORLD'S FtNEST CUTLERY . ~ - /! ~--• -, ' POCKET & HUNTING KNIVES , = _·, ·J ftr{•> :_~Z~1 DRAWER _•:-:_:c·, ORGANIZER :·-;:-:_-.'.:.I CABINET ·~ 999 ' 11 ·Pc. Power Has 55 see·thru plastic Point Set 211 drawers in strong s1eel case. (Al 2 SPEE D JIG SAW KIT Full 20" high. 55U H1g h·speed set for alt metal • d'ilhog Gel 10 dntls. 1/1 s--• Pick the speed for the job-low for metals, high for 1-----------1 ~-"" drill stop: stand. LBO 11 wood, compositions. Incl. double-insulated 2.3 amp jig saw. rip fen ce. blades. case. 7519 (BJ 7Y." CIRCULAR SAW Powerful .9-anlp burnout·protected motor develops 1 '!..-hp, 4900 rpm . Sawdust ejec11on chute; accu rate depth and bevel controls. Blade incl. 7301 (CJ Y." VARIA BLE SPEED DRILL KIT Pick the speed for the job; center button locks it on. Double insulated 2.3·amp motor develops .23 max hp. Incl. acces., case. 7015 Kit ~-~ • DUSTLESS SANDER KIT Extra fast. Double insulated 1.5-amp motor. Incl. sa nd - paper. polishing pad, dustless attachmen1. 7405 \ ./ Duel-heat gun wilh light, tips, wrench, flux brush, rosin solder, soldering-aid tool. 8200PK 495 Use lo 1dentilt belonrings and discou1a1e theft. Write~ on metal, wnod. 1l1ss. etc. VSOC -""'" ,,., 11:11 Ft!Ef. HA .. DSOME GIFT WRAP FOR o•o·s PRESEl<T HOURS MOMDA Y·FRIDA Y 9.9 SATURDAY 9·6 SUM DAY I 0•..4.. :!_zj .. . ,,.. I• 2 DAILY PILOT f .MIXED SINGLES [ r I . ,• • ,. . ' ' NANCY NANCY, ARE YOU GOING TO EAT YOUR SALAD WITHOUT DRESSING ? -F"'"''~ s.,s,_,,.,,L L~ TlwrM!.;iy, Ju11t l J. 1974 -by Wm. F. Brow~ and Mel Casson iloOAIU'. liOODNIGHT ? ---- IT'S ONLY seve~ o·ctoc;~ ! \IOU JU;T 60T He.-e ! , .. , ~ ...... / IJ 1 I " by Tom K. Ryan by Emie Bushmiller NO. MA.AM ·"l°M GOING TO DRESS FIRST " " I 6•E'. ... NOBODY ARO UND ... Dr. SMOCK MOON MULLINS ' ! I I • ' J i • ! J • ,.,, , / ANIMAL CRACKERS _,,,, FOR. GOSH SAKG! WHA"'f" HAS S HE: GO"f?.1 by Roger Bradfield ·r-::::::::::::::::::::-1 ·~ 5 1(; .. , *' I GUESS LIFE'S GOT ME ON "HOLD" . NOT>llN' TO DO.,. by George Lemont .. ,,,. ...... ~ .. -~,...c.o--..... by. Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnson t:>oN1T LET IT Go TO YoUI'! ~ A~ HeP,D. by Roger Bollen (o)js!) .---r-W-ll-OOP6--.l""T""---. I'M 51"11.l. WNING ,. Tia'.lOBLE \l.lil THE :i FINER POINTS OF • THE eAMe . TODAY'S CKDSSW~KD PUZZLE PEANUTS THE GIRLS ACROSS •o• "O!tenses 1 Aural 41 Theend recreation 42 Paused areas 44 Botcn 6 Mark made 45 More by use depr.essed 10 Hastened .17 Chinese 14 Corsi dynas~y island 48 Irish 15 Pelvic. coun1y bones 49 Set or 16 Beg instruments 17 Kind or 50 "Wa111n.g race lor tne 15 Cttru5 q obt 01cnaro 2 words 54 Nahves 20 Old 01 Africa Toro nto 57 LeaU11!.e Telegram 1nallus nickname 58 "arg1r>~ 2 1 Sea!olla 59 Costing gas well no1n1ng 22 Bartender 60 Rental 23 Predisposi agreement """ 6 1 Anrioy1ng 25 S1ngularily thing 27 Afrl::use of 62 Nos1 ra· a Crime · damus. 10 Primitive lor one marine 63 Slructu1e arumal ol• J l Sneer society taoric DO WN J2 Decrees 33 Newcome• 1 Wagon to soc1e1y ? To···· lnlormal Pertectlv 36 Egg· 3 fh1e! s shaped ... 37 Edge lnencl along ,. Theater 1ndirectly program 38 Capital OI S Tricky Peru fi "·-·· 39 Censure· Mamer , Slang G.EhOl 40 Penalties he•o ' ' J • ' ~. 7 " " '·!'~' 11 70 I" ' ,, 1 1 ..•. ,' ' "' ,. l7 " " ! JO " J1 ,. ii.I " l9 .. " ~ .. ~ " ,, 1 .. .. ,. " .. .. .. I., Yesterdays Pulzle Solved ' ~ ;. '. • ,1 T I' ~ r ,1 ~· I f l I ' ;. , ' ;. ~ ,, l ' ;, l. I ( I 0 P " r " 1, D ~ " '· r P l :. " ; 'J f ~ T ,, 0 \' t ', r ' ' ' ' . ' ' ' ' n " ~ ; 7•Am~r or 32 QI superior c" Qualily toolbalt 34 Mr.Janni!'1Q!. 1n!ract10f\ 35 F ort1!1ed 8 Intent piece 9 Jonn •••• 37 Se11ing of an Scot event Arctic 38 One who explorer hangs 10 Emerge<J around suadenly 40 Aviator 11 Going 4 1 Amusemen1 onward 43 Slop :2 Aoor 4J Small edges amoun! IJ Co101 45 Aorup1 changer~ decliv11 y 19 Sec101 4 6 K.ukla and valleys Fr anstrierid 2 1 Jazz outl 4 f Greedy 24 Desse11 person 25 Gems 49 ··· ·• caro 2e Mus1ca1 51 Opp1e~s symool 52 Noun ena1no 27 AC!Of ••· .53 River 01 Nove!lo Germany 28 New S1ar 55 ···.ands o• 29 Sem1pe!· meab!e buts memDraries 56 Live JO Too~ a 57 Swimmer ··· s~ana Cnadw1ck I •o " " " "' " ·' ;; " I• . " " ; . •~:" )) ,, " ' JI • '" " m .. ., " ,, ' " f· " ~ " Sec1«tly.Kitten l\ui>ir.dle wished she were a dog. ~ ... JUDGE PARKER · She was aware of t he natuml superiority of a dog.and it bothered he~ by Har old Le Doux liii""""""iiil!\TJ~ ... SA;:;-;;f'S]rl-H-E-A-R-T-H-A-T-J-E-A-N-,,,,.-~~~~~~~~ ~M~E~A~N~W~H~OL~EJZr;N~O'.~··IIHHA;,";,E~A~ CA.LVIN GOT TME I EXPECT MR. PL .... NE ro CATCH! MONE't' SHE GAVE OR1VER BACK WILL YOU GIVE TO ERNIE STRANO! SHORTLY, M ISS HIM THIS NOTE CALVIN! DON'T FOR ME? YOU WANT 9 0 WAIT'? MISS PEACH by Mell° • J<'E t-1 .. Y {.cHOOL.. JllA RION ' . -N f W~ Po o""" ~· DICK TRACY .... .AR'fM~t ", YOIA HAVE ,A. 1f0ili.'Y ,:oJC T'HE. <SOC:ff'TY (0LUMN ? ' YE~, CHIEF, rieer:. IT' 15 .... L' . ' .. "l ~ .. ' - M V F'EE IS $2.0, MA0A.M . l°Ll. SEE '<OU AT TWO. I ''AR'THLIR' SfR'rMM GAVE Ji PARTY IN MI'S HONOIC. AT H17 MO.ME." All':TMIAI" I THAi1~ NOT ENOIAGH, WE Nll!:D A COMPLE.Tt GUE-Si L.l ~T', AL10 .... by Chester Gould .. . ~ .. YOU ACT LIKE VOU DON°T LIKE ME AAV MOR:E, CRYSTAL :" WHINES 8/G BRASS. I -". "Or course, lhe nice thing about taking Shakespeare 11lonif on your vocation is that yo u don't n1ind nol getting to him." DENNIS THE MENACE "IJAD'S GOT HQ\1£WORJ< A6f/N'? IS HE GONNA FLUNK AT 1H~ OFFIC~ ~ • • -·. • .. . • 'Tlu1 t Big' JUJL in case he missed action , dad hears the latest fish story during fa th er.and-son outing at Newport Beach Pier. 1'he weather was good if fishing was not. ,, . . SONY • -" ' :,1 I' ,1'- • I ·.~ ' .. ----- ·:··~- ANAH!IM • • • . - !f Tl't111"1da7, Junt ll , 1~74 DAILY '1LaT 1fjJ I Spi~y Book Stalls Kids like to Ask And"{ r.it-:\V YORK (A1'1 -. in1irnate "''ilh both a fen1ale pUbllcaUon date ha1 been stt ,; f\i&urict~ Girodias has hit Radcliffe OJJtcge sludent at and printinr has not berun. another snag In hlJ atteinpt to the Ritz Hot~! in Paris and"·--'-----"-----"---'----------- "''hh a Pnwlan 1,1•oman in a publish a paperback novel Gcr1nan Inn at Heidelberg. entitled ··Prcslden1 Kis11inger." Girodias, a f'renchman \\hll became famous in Paris for publishing such erotic book$ a11 •1eqry ?\.tiller's "Tropic of 1 Cancer." said that K:ibl•• News Co. refused to distribute the new book Decausc or 111·0 ronuntic passages in\'Olvini:: the hero - a fictional sccrr!arv of State nn1ned lfcnry Ki~singer v•ho l:ttcr become.-. prPsident. GIROOTAS JIAS h c e n ordered by thf' ln1n1igr:l!ion nnd Naturaliza!ion Scrviee to lca\'e the country by June 15. The go.,.ernn1ent says his permission to stay expired mon1hs ago: Girodlas says hr's bcin,li( .harrassed because nf the Dook wh ich he dcscrib<>s <is "political adv en I u re fiction." In 1he pas~agcs. ,.,·hich tot~J lflfi lines. the book's hero is JO llS F. llA\'E)i, hesd of Kuhle Nev.•s, said hi.\ finn refused to dJ strlbute the paperback because ' •th ere were certain parts of the OOok thnt we thought .,1,.cre beet left oia due to the legal advice of our attorney." The attornc~. J erome Pcrles . said he objected lo the passages because '·I don't think you can take sornwne 11ho is not fiction and build fi c!ionalized situations around hln1." AT A NE"'S conference. Girodias said he \.\·ould seek another distributor fol ~'the book, v•hich he wrote in rollaboration "'ith four persons. The book v.:as scheduled for publication June 20 as a $L7S paperback by Girodias' F'ree1ra.v Press. No n e 14' Paramount Sports G11er'Jf~in'J in :Jenn' FATHOS DAY ShCIALSI 25% OFF! l"fl ~ , , o.tyl AU WARM·U' SUllS 2 00 1 ff ow *'"'" 10 0 l•w ,rict~! NEW OU><LOP ~(llO'N AuSfRAlO.\lj TEHHIS IALLS 52.10 t ••::i;" OF :1 \II.UT • <l nJ I>~!\ CUSTOMl " 1 .. -!'I, 111ot~n o! l ""'a 011111 .. 333 E. 17th St .. Coolo Mtio (1~••11.:1 '"~ lnl•'""""""' Ho.;,. o• F1no•t1I ,HOHi '42·UH !.:on . 1,, .. Wed , f•v••, Sat .... F" l ·I :>o• I l•I A SOLID NAME IN SOLID STATE / 'r I ' l; tl i \ l I 'I . " ' • ' i ... _~ - ~~~---=--·-------------~ / 569.95 '! ~ ,!!)·ii\ I l r l1· I ! 1 ; Ii !\ \ • I " I I I SONY 15" COLOR PORTABL E 429.95 A 15 " dia9ortolly meo5u red color portable with the dep&ndoble T rinitron color system. Feolures instant picture and sound; 100% sol id store; one button control fo r AFT, color ond hue. W alnut groin hardwood cabinet. Earphone inclt.1ded. SONY 17" COLOR PORTABL E 499.95 Features special de si gn horizontal line woln11t groin cabinet. 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SPECIAL! 25o/o OFF 524 _ 524 MOT SHOWN •t~TUC ~NII LONG Sl[[Y[ I 74 TIMMIS SWllllR re1.J!g .•.•.• , ••••.• WHITE FRONT OFFER!i ALL THl!i PLU!i THE LOWE!iT Dl!iCOUNT PRICE!i IN ALL THE WE!iT --::::<?.;H~AR-.Gi>.!£-r--, ··~I STORE HOU P.$: M11d1J lhru friday 10·9 S1t1rd1J 10 AM to 1 PM SUldlJ 11 AM to ~ PM COSTA MESA 3088 BRISTOL ST Sa" Dlt90 Frtewoy et lrl1tol I . . ... . . . . ,.. . . . . ., --- • . 11 tODAY •• • • • • . , \ ' \ e. BEA ANDERSON, Edlto• TIM.orMl•Y• Iv,.. It, 1'14 P••• U ,. 'Bachelor fathers usually spend more time with the child than fathers in two-parent homes. Most kids like it .' • \. . ~ • • . -.· . ·: "'-·~ ~ =! ~ . ~ : ... . . :· .. :::: .. :: . .. : :- ·: :-;:. ·-·-· ·-· ·•· '• ·-· ·-.. .. . , ·~, ~· =~ ., <:;: .. '• .. , ••• . '• ... ... !• ... Single Fathers Face New Problems· By ALLISON DEERR ·01 the Daily Pilot Staff "There have always been me n who had to raise their children wilhout a wife , but familie s were clo:.er t~•n. You 'd have grandma to help out or an o!der doughier, or a maiden aunt. "Now. you bump into guys wh o don't hove a rel.s- tiVe within 1,000 miles, ~ave never seen t he inside of a laundromat and whose cooking sknls are nil. ''Then, all of a sudden, you 're it. You r wife is gone .. and all tha t responsibility is yours. I , _ ") didn't realize un~il my ,,.,;fe di ed, q ui ~e hov" much we al! depended on her. Now ail of us are learning to be independent. Don't give rne any credi t. ' I had to be jolted awake. I didn 't kn ow where to-sta rt ." 'I saw myself as a good father , and I still do. But now I'm aware of the kids os people, what they do and say.' Mike McFadden l It's a famil iar story, and the narrator, now remarried. \\'OUid rather re1nain anonymous. "l'd rather people nol kno\~ v.·hat an idiot I v.·as," he laughs, then adds, "really. I thougllt I v.'as a gre.at parent. I \vas. o,rell, a drop-in gue:st in nl.Y children·s lives." Several other men echoed his feel- ings. ''That isn't unusual." snid Lee tlachey, a single father. and a counselor at the Chapman Community Clinic.. flachey is divorced and his 14-year-0ld ··son lives \\ith him in Nev.rport Beach. "l'\•e found having my son \\'ith me is quite enjoyable." he said. mtE SPE,\I "Bachelor fathers usually spend more tin1e \\ith the child than fathers in tv.·o- parent homes. i\Iost kids like it. "Dad nO\\' has li1ne for the child. ill~ son Likes it tecause 1101\· he gets on 111.1· schedule. It. is iniportant for t11e falhel' and childr~n to spend quality tin1c together. "Ten or 15 hours 11·ith the child 1vhen you're doing son1ething else doesn't count as much as fi\·e or six devoted exclusively to him ." Hachey asserted. One mistake single parents, and couples. n1ake is subs!ituting physical caring for love. "\'ou can pull back and let a child do for himself, but still let hin1 k1lO\\' he's cared for." Too m.'.lny bachelo r fat.hers get hung up en the logistics of runn ing the household to the neglect of the child as a person. he feel s. "I ha,·e counseled several single fathers." he said, "and you have to teach the father to let the child do for hi1nself \\·hen he can. i\1arried couples are guilty of this as well . "\Vhy do for him W-oat he can do for himself?" llachey's son gets his 0\\1l c\olhcs ready, buys his awn clothing \•.ith a clothing allo\\•ance (and a little help from D<id'1 and does his 0\\1l laundry. "Our only ntle is that he. has to buy p~·rniancn l press." \Vhen Hactiey isn'l horne. rhe teenage r chooses his 01••n meals and prepares them himself. "He keeps il simple and does a good job." Parents ofien gire hidden tl\C'!'S<ige..;. he said. ''You're 1101 capabl e so 1"11 do it t ~r you. They don't allow the child to do !or himself. then al JB ou1 on his own. the \\'Orld is a big shock." llJDDE~ i\1ESSA<;E.S To:i ortcn . he arldl:d. p:irent~ gt•! hv11 g up on 1vhat p<irenls ~ho11ld l.1c. ··1·;:.tl\1.:r than allo\ving !he1n~l'h1es to be penpl c 11 ho can n1ake mistn kes. showin g th~'if children that it is ok11r tii '.l<l\'l' 1\·caknesscs. to be in1pcrll•tt.'" Th e prob!e1n s arc no diflcrcn1 for !he single parent than for a n1111Tlcd couple. he said. but it mav he inorc dirficulr 10 be a\\'are. to listen "10 the C'hildrcn. Single fathers he's coun~C'led h:n·r difficulty copi11g with daughters. "i\l<in,1· n1en tind it fru.~trating. The~' hn\'1.! trouble \l'ith coping 11 i\h ~ex for lhl·ir daughte rs. Fathers 1l'nd 10 t:e 11101·c na'i\··· about their daught ers." Dating can Le a prob/ctn. Ills 0\\'11 SPll has inforn1ed his dn!es. "you are 100 yo un g for my fati1cr.'" Children. he cxp!:i1ned. dn ntcd 1:1 k11J 11· they are not hei11g displaCl'd. ··1 spend a IC! ol ti1ne 11i1h n1y son. \\'c go on a let of outings. lie chooses \\'hat 11t"ll do. But he 's on his own a greaL dcnl. free to n1ake choices and r feel it has been good for holh of us." lnlcrvie\\'S \1"ith SC\'eral single fathers brought these oflen repeated co1nn1ents: "Single fathl'rs get litt le sy111path.r. .\lo~I p('::p!c assun1e 1vc can hire ~:irneonc to take ca re of the kids an d clean the h~usc. There's rnorc to it than 1hat. Parents are n1ore than caretakt•rs. I: isn't easy to fill the gap th eir mother te11."' "\len can·t h;1ndle chlldre!l. They're cithtT 100 pcnnii;si\·e or too strict." '"I was ad\'ised over and O\·cr again to i::e1 111;irricd again so the kids CQu]d ha\c :• n1othcr. I replied. ·They ha\·e one and the\' ]o\·ed her and so did I." '"\len <>l'l' 1cn·iblc house keepe rs. ffo \\' r ~n1 ,·uu l'Xll1•t \ 1·nildrcn to li\•t• in '' n1c,;;~\ hnu~I'.·· 11;1< :1 r·ons1ant con11nt·n:. ··P;·rsonall1·. ' l·:·lie,·t rleanlint•.<:s bus 111Hhlng to dri. wilh hc11' ll'CIJ ,\·our kids-do in life. And. son1e 110111e11 nrc l'Oltx1n h~u.~ekcei;ers . !tJ:'.I. \\ h:ir gocd is a clra.1 hcuse if the kids never get to "11011' JOU .. ". Dad Happily Accepts the Job Lagunan i\fike 1'1cFadden puts little e1nphasis on housework and laundry. His top priority is attenli<>!1 to his three children. "T need to kno1\· 11·hat they're feeling. \rhat they're up to ... Dh·orced. he and hi s v.ife ha,·e joint custody· of lhe children, \l'ho live \l'ilh ~like. "\\'hen \\'e firsi separated \\'e decided my wife needed a sun1mer vacation fruni the kids. I 11·orkcd all summer to gel in shape to handle the kids full-ti.Jue. "1\ly parents. Nancy's parents. none nf them thought I should have Ll1e kids. but finally I convinced them ." His 11·ife has been quoted. "i\tike is bctler at handling the children lht~n I \\'as." "She couldn 't work v.•ith interruptions and 1 can. at least better than she could. Besides. taking care of the kids isn't 1ny full-tilne job. It was hers. I! taking care of them \\'as all 1 did, unless I ran a profes~ional nursery school. I'd probably go crazy." A freelance \1-riler. "Bachelor Fat herhood - hc"s \\'ritten How to Raise and, Enjo,v \'our Children as a Single Parent" 1\\'alkcr and <.:o .. J'\ev1 York ) just off the presses. BACHELOR FATHER "The main point of the book is that like being a bachelor fathe r:· fl1cFadden said. "At first, the guys l interviev.·ed \\'eren·t happy. Later on, I fow1d !hut n1any ei\joy IL "' The idea for the book. came from a Life ilt:tgazine article t\\'O years ago, ';It 1ras nbout a man 11·hose \\"ife had died and left him \\"ilh three children. ''lie hw1g a horoscope 011 hl-. refriger1ttor that said. '7his IJl<illlh you'll be especially attracti ve to \10- men.'" ~fcFadden beiiei.·es that If he :ind his \life had divorced 11nd the children lhfl1 \\'Ith their mother "I'd probably be bitter about the \li'hole deal. "\\11th the kids i1 would be the phony sltutltion of-visiting them on '''eek ends and taking lhen1 to Disneyland. A 101 or men resent sending ~200 to $300 a nion1 h to a dead horse." lle's been accused of CQmiJ1g on too s1rong, being anti-fe1nale. "Basically, I've sald that I don·i k1101v anyone. maie or fenialc 1\i10 spends eight hours a day doing housell'ork and enjoys it. that I 1rould \l'ant to be around ~·cry n1uch." f'LEXI BLE \\'ORK As a freelancer. his hours are nexib!e. "I work trom home so I can do lhc dishes, then go upstairs and work on a n1agazine article.·· There are distra clions. "It's ha rd to convince someone in r\c1v York that you're talking from a posh business office \1•ilh lhrce children making noise in the baCk f4rvund ... lii:- said. It isn't unusual for hin1 to carry on a telephone conversation \l'ith four·rear- old Toni perched in his lap. He has taken on a lot n1ore responsibility. "J\ty alibi for ere111hing \ras 'I nave 10 \\"Ork.' Thrit's ho\r I avoided children's progran1s. PTA mee tings. parr.nt,trach::r conferences." \\"h ile 'il·orking in adverti$init he often got hotne at 10 or 11 in the c\·ening. "f sav.• mysclr as a good father._ I still do. But. now I'm n1ore 81\'are of the \,;ids as people. a1\·are or the things they do and say. Tiiings they do arc just as in1portant as things I do." He now find s a haniburger 11ith his son Ton1 Rl AicOona ld's ··niuch niore enjoyable lhan a steak and three drinks at.Reuben 's \\Ith a client ever "·as.'' Ht is grttted \\'ilh surprise 11hen ht sho1.,·s up for parent conferences l'"lhcy stlll expect a 1\'oman··l and he In tun1 rcatts adversely to "Dear iltother'' nott5 from kindergarten . "The lack of contact fathers and children h3ve Is ob\·jous "'hen you 1\1"' out tl11H n1ost children. eren v.·hrn they arc teenagers. ha\'e no Idea "'ha l their faLbers do for a living." ~lct~addcn t1lso r('('IS lhCr(' ar(• 1non• :id.,.nnta gcs than d1s:.1dran1ogl'S tlJ being a bachelor f:Hhcr. EASIEH FOR OAJ) "It is c11~icr for !he 111an IQ gr1 bi·lh·r !)iJying job.-. and lo l'hungt' job.~. \Vo1nt·n llr(~ s1111 dl scrimi1u1IC'd riga h1st Oncl' the~· get out or the job n1arkl·L 1\':r ha rd !or thcn1 lo get get back In." Compa red to two.parent situ.1tion:i. ~lcf:idden fet:ls !here 1s no lo~s 10 th!' childrt'n. "!\lost of the time onl)' one parent is H f~Af.L'' ther<'. u n~1\·t1y. r\nd it isn't usuullr the fu1her:· f'atb\'ra relinqu ish rcuring ol 1hc " I children to !heir 11 ives. lhe \\'ives relinqu ish all too n1uch to .the schools. hC added. ll is children. he s.1id. acccp1 his role as prlo1e par cnl •·11s a n1atl<'r of fact. It docs11·1 bothe r !hc1n a bit. They ~ec their 1nothcr. Sh<' hris joint custody :1nrl can St'C' then\ \1hcn she likes. And, she Is ft'ee 10 "'Ork be:r O\.\o'n v.·ay.'' -.. ~\cFadden d()(.•sn'l rule out rc1nnrriaae ''if !he right lady happened to tiOm" nlonR" but hi· v.ijuldn·i c·onsider doing It .• -( '"to jtil·c 1hc kids 11 n1othcr. TI1c y have h·n1 j lc C"01np1111ionshiµ. -.. '"lhcre·s ahl'nys son1con" tvho ·c;ii~ brush their hair.' ... .-. :::.~:. ; .. · ... -• • 6 ,-DAILY PI LOl Th1.1rsdJy, Juot 13, t<r /4 • ' Anne Armstrong: Pressed on Watergate •• By JO OLSON : 'Of lt\t D•llY l'llel 11111 The-current peace 1n<n•cs in thf ~Uddle East arc not m~:Pe! but the unfolding of P~ent Nixon 's g r a n d (~. Town Hall o f Q.cfifbrnia \.\'as told by Anne Amtstrong, coW\sclor to the P~sidWt. f\lrs. Armstrong, .'.l nleniber ot: the Cabinet and the firlll wOlnan ever to hold her title. sWke during a luncheon in Ille Lqs ~geles Hilton llotcl <lll !he ropic The View f rom \\1ishington. tbe. sk irted h<>r particular jo~ • rcsµon sibilitiea to tullt a~ \Vatergatc. President Nlxon's view ()f 1hc problem arid 1he recent :1ccon1pHsh· m.CQlS of Henry Ki.u1nge:-in the-Middle East. For the Presidtnt . ~lrs. Arm st rong p r ovi des leadership in several areas. including the u p co m in g Bicentennial. 1-fer responsibilities include women, youth. H is p an i c . \mcricans. Ne"' Federa!isn1 ~ l,tderal property. -~fie also is a men1ber of the ~t of Living Cot:nci l, Dp mesti c Council and C•mm ission on the <>rjanization of Go\·ernment for I.ho Conduct Polit)•. GRAND OESfGN of Foreign Heavy on tributes to the President, ?\in:. Armstrong said his "grAnd dtslgn " goes b.i ck to 1945 and the end of \Vorld War 11. In the years following the Y•ar. Nixon saw th a t "American foreign poUcy had lost touch "'itb the world" and that "new giants had grown. They were competing with us here and abroao." Also. the \\'orld had rejocted Ameriean dominance. Nixon believed. "There was a new mil i t a r y rea l ity and Communism was no longer a So\riet monolith." Nixon also. she said, sa1v an imosity bell~·een the So11ets and Chinese and a decreasing idealism in America. His plan began vo'lth a scaling down of conunltmenls abroad, v.'ithout abandonment, and the start of dialogues 111lth chieftains abroad. "The res u1ts are unfold ing no\\·," ?1-trs. Armstrong said. ··The structure \\"On't be in place b~· 19i6 but the base cannot be destroyed." President NixoJM(jid not. she asserted . time 'ills :P..losco"· SU ITUnit lo get him Otit Of a \\'atercate ho1 spot. SUfilfilER Afttr \Va!r rgate is O\'er, i\lt-s. Arn1slrong belie\·es !he economy \11111 be the to p is.sue i.n the country. "•lopefully that \\i ll be this sumnu-," she said. Presiden t Nixon dol:'s not "'ant to re-impose controls !wt "·anr s to h11\'e a ::;mall, efficient go\·erning body "'hieh will "calmly talk aboul things "\\'hen they ge t out of order," she revealed. "The President be I i e \" e s productivity is the nnS\\'er to infl ation. In c r "As ed produeti\'ity an d a t i g h t n10netary policy is ~ t!ghl rope to "·alk bot \1·e must ronlirhle to take the path of tight rnont'tary pol ic~·.·· She predicted the President will insiM on b ud get ar y responsibilit.v and "call on Congrt'ss to exhibit fiscal resoonsibilit.v. '' ?1-frs. Armstrong, a Phi Beta Kapp.1 gradua te of Vassar C.Ollege and fonner ne\\·sp..1per reoorter. said she oftl'n is asked how the President looks . GOOD llEALTll "He look!: great and feels gre11L lie is on top of evrry issue and is detcrminl.'J io go fo1 ~·ard," she stressed . \Vatergate takes only to or 15 minutes o( her day. she said, and · this is only to ans\11er a fe\\' qu estions for curious people, The Texas rancher 's \\'ife. v.·ho speaks \vith a slight dra\\'I. described Presidenl Nixon as "an unbigoted man" in answer to a question about alleged leaks by J e v.· is h nlcmbcrs of his staff to the press. ''He never thought or them as Jc"'S but as people," Mrs. Armstron g said. She believes the President .,.,·as u n awar e of the 111rongdoing on \Vatergate. She admitted she does not Presid•ntial Counselor Anne Armstrong offeri advice to women int•rested In politics: start preparing early. _,,/ luid betn hostile rw it h qu~1tlon1 about \\'atcrgatel, she said It's "very b<1slc to Ilk' souOOness ot this coun try thot roporter1 be nblc to ask what they 1\·ant." COOL rr tn 11nswl'r 10 the que stion , ''What 's the best 1vay lo put \Vatergate b<'hind us," she said, "Rcsii;nation would hi~ extremely bad for o 11 r country,_J))j:,J?.reisidenl---will not be Impeached. •te hasn"t commltted an lmpeachablt' offense. \\le should cool lt. Wil t('rgate b where it beloni.:s: ln the court. and Congress." 1\frs. Armst roog said sht will be the (irst to adn1il it if I she is wrong. l LABGE-SIZES •Selection •Service • Courtesy She believes the President t::lla Nor 's was told piece meal sto1'iC'~ about Watergate and the HALF-SIZE SHOP coverup and "suddenly he fULLIRTON didn't know who to trust." 22• 0.-11f!CJffolr Mon ln discusslng food and rood COSTA MISA pricts, she .11aid this countrv 1105 Htwpon ll•d. like the tone of the trall.!Cripts will sell enough v,rhe11 t abroad HUHTltHi TOH 11.t.cH and said, "The President has 14 HU11lllll)fan Ctt1ltr (Sff ARl\1STRONG, Pege ::ii L•GUH HILLS ' never been profane in my A M•LL h1 Uiwrt World presence. He has been lofty ,-----------~\·,..·_---...;;;.;;;;::;;~::.;::..J and inspirational. ....,_,. ''I look at the whole n1an," she added. In ans\\·er to a comment by a re-porter that the tone of her pre-lunch press conference ., • • .. • • :p~ P~tDfAJti~ Missing Persons Reported • ~~ ... ~~ • : To avoid disappointment, prospective .: brides are reminded to have their wedding ·: stories with black and white glossy photo- : graphs to the DAJLY PILOT Women's De- partment one week before the wedding. Pictures received after that time will not • be used . ; For engagement announcements it is • imperative that the story. also accompanied : by a black and white glossy picture, be sub- : n1itted six weeks or more before the wedding date; otherwise it will not be published. • To help fill requirements on both wed- • din~ and engageme nt stories. forms are • ava1il able in all the DAILY PILOT ·bf fices. • Further questions will be answered b'l • People Section staff members at 642-432 . • By EJL\1A BOl\lBECK I work hard at being a good neighbor. That's why vohen I didn't see any activity at the house next door I Immediately called my friend Mayva. "Wbat's with the Barstows?" I asked. "It 's unusually quiet over there." "They moved three years ago," she said. "Oh. She was a sweet person. A size 3, but I forga,·e her for it. So, v.'here are the Chillers? I haven't seen them around for a v.'hlle either. ' "They're on vacation," said P.layva. "So, why didn't they leave the children ~·Ith me?" I asked. "They didn't want to come." "What about their bird ?" "He didn't want to co1ne either. Remember w ha t ha ppened lo lhe last one you bird-sat?" "So he sat under the air- conditioner and died. I didn't tell him to take a bath just be.fore bedtime. I could i:!O over and water their plants.'' "No. she specific-ally s:iid not to Jct you near her plants." "I gather from your tone, J\fay\'a, that she told you about the tomatoes I pi cked and pot on her window sill to ripen only to discover they v.·ere green tomatoc-s to begin with ." "Everythlr1g Is taken care of." said Pttayva . "Fred is cutting the grass and l'm AT WIT'S END chec king the mail." "That ·s the part I love." I said. "Did l tell you tbat last year Nancy got a sex manual in a plain, broY.11 envelope?" "Yes." said Mayva. ''You told everyone except the New 'lork Times." "\'.'ell, if you'll tell me \\'here tho kev is 1'11 \\'ander through the house and see if everyone fl ushed and I'll check for bananas on the drainboard ." "That \1-on 't be necessary." "I kno\\·~" I said. ··1 can watch the he.use and call Crlmestop if nnyonc suspic ious is wandering around.'' "You did that t11·0 years ago \\'hen you had Nancy 's mother arrested for breaking and entering." "That was unfortunate . I was just sorry about our dog attacking her." "Eve1;?'°1ing Is u n d c r control,' said ~1 a y v a . "Besides, they're c oming borne tomorrow." "Perfect,'' I said . "I'll tak~ a bo\\'I ol my \Var Salad and v.-elcome then1 home. Arter all, what are good neighbors for?" "Give me a minute." i;air\ fi•ayva. "I'll thing of son1e· thing .' • •• • Peering Around liere's to Dad! • '4.JnlQue. priced-riont gifl s :galOre 10 celebrate 1"9 men in :tour life! .,. ......... tr.. l.t S ;. ,... "'""" ... .,._ 6.00 _...,..,, ..... : _. "-riltt c..m . -1.00 : ptu' wallets. nail clippers. :=hess se!s, musical ")UQS ~abfna's , \\'INNER of the Rheta Gi!Jctte Youth ArL A1,·ard and a first place blue ribboo in the Panorama '74 Shixvcasc of Student Talents, was Lisa ~Us.el of Fountain Valley High School. Sc<.'Ond and third place honors v1enl lo Allan \\'alker and Bill Tully, both of Edison High. Other w i n n e r s ¥.'ere : • CARDS • GtFf'!.- • tl4t A.._.. A.._ .. ~ : llwl"41• .......... 6 ... 111 Offl !fl-I. &II. 111-5 ffH G<lwr_,. "'.,.,,c..i~c..-• photography, George Loyo, Ed J e nnin;::s and Karen Kingsland, FVHS, first, St!COnd .. . . ·. ,. • " . Send him a ' . : sur rise .· ' . . . ·-. • • • • -.• • • ·' . • , • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • --- t is Father's Day. "MlniGardcn'"' Ter rarium lliually ovallable s1500 • for less than - Sportsman's Decoy Usuall y ava ilable s1l:OO* for less than -.,,- Gifts so different, so un- expected, yet so totally right. And you cnn send them al- most anywhere by wire the FTD way. But do hurry ... Fat her 's Day is J une 16th . Call or visit your nearby FrD Florist today (most occept major credit card s) . "'Your Exira Touch Florist" 1As on lndcpcndl!'nl bu~lnessmari . c/lch f TD Member f'lo rlst sels his own praccs. 1974 Flurbls' Trdnsworld fJeJlvl"ry. J ' . and third . and crafts, PeTllly Sequine, FV~IS, Carol J\1oore and Carol Younghin , Edison, second and third. First place \1·inners \Vere gi ven a check for $30 and for second place a $20 check was presented by the Huntington Btach Art League. Scholastic Federalion. The award is given to students receiving a 3.6 grade point average or higher all four years of high School. J\11ss Sllko~·ski will attend Califom ia Slate University. J,.ong Beach where she will major in accounting or finance. TRAVELING to ~1exico City on a goodwill mission \\"ere me mbers of the Cit.v of liope BELLY DANCE CLASSES V id e o t ape equipme nt is availab le to record studenl progress. You learn quickly' We have excellent facilities an d smal I classes[maximum 7) llGIHHIHG -INTO.MEDIATE-ADVANCED PllOfESSIOHA.L -TEACHER·TRAIHIHG CLASSES ST ART/MG IM JUME Stt OW' l •di C°""'"Y l9)',.tian DonCH'I et tM Or-. Ccir.irlty Fair, Ffidoy, Jwly 12 ol 8 l'.M. CALL NOW: 545·1088 COSTA MESA HONORED during, a Golden Key a.,.,•ards present8tion at Edison High School wa s J<athee Silkov.·skl. daughter of the E. F. Si!kowskis of Huntington Beach. J)iamond Horse Shoe y:ho M'""" t11t u ., .. ,. ., '""14-• ,,tt1u1eM1 hllr D111C• uiw•t f'(• i~<lvfi"t ctll(trll •"' c•b•rtll 1r1"' CNll M ~ttH It'll CIMla. ltftr61 T\' I ....... llld ltlltllrlf <111"1 • presented gi fts of toys and a J.,,_..,,,_..,,,_..,,,.,,,.,...,.,,,.,...,..,,,.,...,.,,,.,...,..,,,.,....,..,,,,....,. ... ,....J donation for l!chools. a hospital -------- She ~'as given the highest a1,1•8.rd in business education and rcctived the Seal Bearer awa rd from the California and vocatoinal training center r-------------------------------, for the underprivileged. PARTY PLEAZERS FLOWER e SHOP 546·9172 301 3 Ha rbor Blvd. COSTA MESA Orange Coast residents are Thomas Wilek, New port Beach : P..1iss P.f aria Primavera, ~ta ~·feso : r.1r. and Mrs. J\l. Keith Gaede and Judge and ?l-1rs. James K. Turner . Laguna Beach. • FLOWERS by DEBRA CALL 645-0093 1601 N._,ert l h"d, 1c.,..,. et 16rti s,_, • l 611 •• MecAntt•r llw4.. Hertle' Vltw C•t.f e 144·416t 4•1 1-.t 17fti ""'"' CesN MH• e 641.11 44 FLORIST • HOURI Mim.•Sat, a1lis}trs ·~~:~· 2640 HARIOll ILVD. COSTA MESA • . . . . . . . . W• H.nff II• M•JW Credit Ca'4• 546-5525 . - '.\ ' Mr. Bill Tnllo: Hair cutter, l)a1r color techn1c1an. oormanant wave speclaUsl and all ·round good guy. 1s now doing his lhtng al the Hair Hunters In Fashion Island, N.B. Try him-he 's lantashc! I 70 Fashion Island Phone 644·2151 • Beauty Treatment si1ter Mary Annette Murphy, Order of 1$t. Benedict, taught mu sic until she1 was hired as registered elec- trologist by a Portland, Ore. beauty salon. Proceeds from her Tuesday- Sa1urbay job go to the work oC her order. From Page 26 • • Ar·mstronQ .. • • I . tu pay for oil wh ich must be i\liami Beach I and admits her imported. Dul "The big cost of \'Olunlet>r v.·ork put her in line food is the services that go for her job. into the p~uct. \Vhat ad\'ice does she have "l can g1\·e good news about · h" rood Th I . bcl . d .. for ,·oung v.·on1en ~'JS 1ng a . c wors 1s iin us. · . She said "energy prices ivill car.c~r 1 u1 gove rnment or stabilize for the resl of this pohtics . ,. year" and that "\Vntergatc ''Starl practicing at school. has not paralyzed thl! gov-she s:iid. "~ou don't have to ernment." have be poh~hcd and have a Mrs. Armstrong, a native oi fire· and· brimstone ~pcech. New Orleans and the mother Evcry~ne h~s som~thmg lo of five children, was named say. It s no big deal. co-chairman of the Republican \\'omen wi shing . more National Committee in 1971. specific in format 1 on on She v.·as the first v.·oman to careers and job openings deliver a keynote address at a should \\•rite to i\I r ~. major national po I i I i ca I Armstrong at The \\'lute con\'ention I August. 19n. in House. Shortage CARSO~ CITY, Nev., (UPI) -\Vomcn hold 39 percent of the johs in Nevada state government bul only {\VO per- cent or them are in top posi· tions, according to a slate survey. The survey release d recently by State Personnel Director James \V ittenberg sho"·cd that 191 v.·omen held supervisory or lop level ad- minis trative jobs. Figured tually hold about 22 percent of the top jobs. Barrett said there \\'ere oni~' abtiut 900 supervisors i n government. \Vhatever the number, there appears to be a shortage of \\'omen in t o p level govern· ment jobs. \Vittenberg said "in the past they did not \\'ant more resp:insibilities with the pressures because they also had to be house"•ives. NO\\' they want the challenges.'' Dl!:AH ANN l.ANDEHS: I nm ~'Qnderlng just huw rt•r lhc- publli.:hcrs v.•ilt let you ~o bo•· fore they dc:cide to throw Y'•ur column ou t of the nC\VSp~pcr-.. 1'1n sick and tired of tryin~ 10 beat my teenagers to !he front porch to sec if you r t'Oluinn is fil for then1 to read. I refer s1><'cifically to so1n<' of the lrni;h you have pri111cd on t\\'O suhjcet~: hon1ose>a:HI· ity and venereal disen~c" first, let me tell you \\'e get tin! morning paper. \Vhcn you described the sy1npto01s of VO, It ruined my breakfast. I don't consider such material appropriate fare for the breakfast table. Furthermore. you put idc3s Into the heads of these kids. Some of the thin gs you prl'l! wou ld not have entered their minds for several years if you hadn't brought then1 up, l\1y I I -yea r-old asked me }'t'Sterd3y. .. \Vhat IS u l¥1nlOS('X11AI?" llow on earlh can you l'Xplain TllAT to a 11\l'(C tl\1 ld '! You have made Hfc difficult for me and I resent ii. Stx education belongs in the ho1ne 11nd not in the newspaper. I hclicvc in giving children intormatlon 11•hen· they lire ready for it, not before. -NU FAN Of' YOURS DEAR NO ~N: Chlldri:n uf all ages descr\'e h o nest answtt!'I to any nd 1tll questiolis. An ll-yea r--0ld v•ht1 asks : •·\Vhat i s a homosexual'!" should~ told il is a person v.-ho prcfl.'rs a member of his (or her I O\l'n sex to those of lhe opposite !lex. No n1ore details are 11ecessary. Are yo u av.·arc lh<tt in ~Jlile of the f:J('t fhal V.C AO\\' ha\'e H cure for VD, there ar~· n•i!· 'lions of untreated peu1'1c ir1 th i11 country v.ho are infe1·tl11~ olhtln' t-\'ery du~··: t:leven Is not too ~·oun~ lor children to knO"' ;ihc111t lbt'St" t·rlppllng dlKea~f's. From lhe l(lUnd Of the letll:r, \'OUr kid,,. need 10 read n1y coh.11nn ht · cause I don'l thin k you tire e1notionolly matur~ or "'ell en ough J11formed to ~Ive lhcn1 str uight nns"·ers. · The next leller mh;ht be of Interest to you; DEA!l A!';:-1 LA!\'DEBS: I believe the most v11luehle service you ha ve perrorrr.ctl in all the years you'\•e been 1vriting is the inform;ition you have given our youth on the syn1ploms and hazards of VD. I am the principal of a school in l\'orth Carolina. \'our column has appea red in our paper for 17 yea rs. and ~'our co\un1n "'as the rirsl in v.·hich they ·ever printed ani•thing abou t VO. "hond.:1y Ju11t 13, ll.'J74 MEMO TO MOM& THE KIDS •.. FATHERS DAY IS THIS SUNDAY! Schroder;, Jf.WRf.RS 213 f.. 17th SI., Cotlo Mtto 1Nexl lo Builder:> Emooroum 64>6142 DAILY PILOT 21 HALF-SIZES HALF-"t1~ HALF- HALF , .. • •selection •service • cour esy 71-1~~1---1 r HALF~SiZE SHOP :_ ZJ40tmpl• towill COSTA. MISA. lllS~·..: HUHTMTOM IU.CM · ............. ~ LAGUHA. MILL.$ MA.LI. , ,, ~.._.w ------- ... .. . - • featuring Monsanto Cadon Nylon UNBELIEVABLE! TIP SHEARED CADDN NYLON FOR LESS THAN $5 A SQUARE YARD! HURRY! COMPARED TO SOME CARPET STORES, EVERYTHING IS SALE PRICED! At Carpet Town, we buy carpeting for our 32 showrooms and our central warehouse, directly from the mills. This entitles us to th e biggest discounts available ... substan· 1ial savings !hat we pass on to you! That's why, in many cases. Carp et Town's everyday prices are lower than other carpet store s' sale prices! Here are just a few examples: NYlON Hl-lD SCULPTURED TONE-ON-TONE. CADON NYLON ONE OF OUR BEST SELLERS AT $6.99 ! NOW Of the more than 150 styles in stOck, this isc)ne of our bf!'st sellers! 100°/. continuous filament Cadon nylon pile. It's durable, long wearing and hides soils and stains. The random sheared swirl , pattern gives any •• , . home a luxury look. 16 double -tone 1weeds. 1 Check this at most stores and you'll usually see it priced at $7.99, $6.99 even $9.99. At $5.BB you'll ~-4-__ ,... ~ ~j want to carpet every room ~~ in the house. . "' ,.. ···~ •• .., .. "' ... CARPET TOWN'S THICK CUT AND LOOP SHAG REDUCED FROM A LOW $7. 99 NOW ONLY If you like an extra thick feel $ 6 underf oot, this long wear-88 ing. sta in resistant, ~OOo/o ~0 vo. nylon pile is perfect! Spe- cial "LOKTUFT" backing prevents unrav- eling, mildew, and shrinkage. Available in 12 double lone colors. .. •. fie asserted that the ! per· cent v.·as not the resull of di scrimination but that v.·omen v.·cre traditionally happy and satisfied in the past to remain ·----------1 in clerical positions. -RUFFELL'S Choose from bright t9'eed com-$2 99 binations in nylon pile.~ith long· so ,o wearing, double jute backing. State Dir ec tor of Administration Howard Bar- rett said, ho\vevcr. that \\'it· tcnberg misi nterpreted the survey. He seid \\·omen ac- R@~~Hllf CREME HAIR LIGHTl!llR We have a special feeling for blondes: I hat's why we like Roux White-and we 1hlnk you will, 100! ns special creme formula wor11s las!, yet conditions as ii Ughtens. And it provides an Ideal base 1or the most Cltllcate color toning. Let us "Iii!" your halr color-It may put a mt ln10 your wholi buUookl UPHOLSTERY wi..11 Yo• W••' Tllo .... 1 f2J H•rtlor llYd. Costci Mua -541·02St BLEACH RETOUCH Rtq 15°' 1300 . I RANllOM SPlASH DYm PlUSH 100°/o continuous filament nylon $799 pile. 13 color combinati'ons. All •0 \Cl lhe newest decorator colors! ~ V!l VITY SHORT SHAG Polyester pile. Tightly twisted 10 $899 retain its good looks. 16 solid colors. · ~o ·~ A WaretoJse Full Ol Carpel lrpE"flfY Storet The Largest Carpet Chain in the West INDOOR-OUTDOOR CARPETING FOR KITCHEN, PA TIO, GAME ROOM, BATH! EVERYDAY LOW PRICE Easy do-it-yourself inst al· Jation. In seven colors al a super low price. 0,,,. IYl,.OolGt TM.L • i UHOAT I l ·S 29 I I SOUTH BRISTOL STREET Just Horth of Soutll Coast P1010 SANT A ANA • PHONE 556-8287 • I 2lJ OA!LV PILlil High School Seniors ~;!,~:.~ach !,~~l!I~ wilh~l~~p~~~dy low ond lhC! high schools in !he F'un(.[ \\'eek. Sociul Science ul!i1nuh•lv bl'COn1c a OlL'tlllM.·r Kcwporl ·f\.·lesa School D!sti·ict Clull. CAA and rtotsn m nnd of the !cS:it profession. is t1electcd as a Zonia Girl~f. Je1sa1n. She was a mernber of She has bee n act!\ c 111 the-year and receives a $50 ~SF' and \l'On the Optimist athletics and eamed honors Sovings Bond. Club Youth Award last .rear. Your Horoscope Tomorrow Capricorn:· Look Homeward FRIDAY JUNE 14 By SYDNEY O~IARR AltJES (?\larch 21·April 19): SCORPIO !Oct. 23-Nov. 21): So1ne around you $ ,. c m reason Is a puzzle. Don't compound error. You do have allies l>chinrl the sce nes. U d ·d-" h · for her achievem<'nls. The The honorees arc selected n eci cu on er 1na1or. t< frOn1 and by those honored ~liss Pall:nblade also mu st daughter ol f\.tr. :111d ~1rs.1 You 1nay feel restricted. Thl:s could be proverbi1d blessing in disguise. Cycle is high , but 1noncy factors oonnech.>d \vith contract, agreement require re\'iew. argumentativl! -for "'hat 1 ;·,;;;;~~:~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~;;; SAGITTAR IUS (Nov. 22· De~. 211: Emotions 1nay be Cdmple:ic : special relatlonshlps are subject to confusion . 01ange is neces..<inry, Sll.ltus during the school year. choose betv.·een UC lr\'ine or Harold \'lalt of Corooa del Iv. f 197 4 J . California State University at f\.far. she is president of her inners or :ire 11n1e 1 Hirata l u .... 1v. .. u;,.i. ..on~ Beach for fu r I her senior class and treasurer of =-~r ~ .J!.!6!J-. studteS~. --------1he Elrslnn!·~. ------. Scnool : J?C't Palnib~11de, C?sta The daughter of the '\'il\iam r.tiss Noli ng. daughter of the l\}~a lligh. Jrnnifer ~\<ill. Paln1blades of Costa f\.·lesa has Peter Nolings of Costa l\tesa. Corona del l\lar, and Kathy mainlained a 4 O grade plans 10 enroll al Orange Noli~g, ~slancia . a\'rrage through~l h i g h Coast College in the fall and -,,c.LA.UR_USJ.April ?O.~l.a)I 201: 11old off on final judg111ent . quo~!H .. JJP.Lsul!lce-~-+--- CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Adjustment in home area is indica1ed. Remodel, rebuild, seek greater hannony with family members. 1'f1ss _Hirata . daugh ter of the school. She is vice president of th en transfer to rithr r liCLA Roy lltratas of Costa l\lesa. her class. council chairman or USC. pl ans lo enter UC lr\"inc this for Girls' League a n d A member of the drill 1ea111 la !] and major in Eng.Jish . secretary of the Student and 1nrn11x>r of !he LXOYI: During her senior }"Car !'!1e Srnatc. Club. she is a v a r !' i 1 ~· ~rved as IN'asurer of the Also undecided on which cheerleader and secretary of Associated Student Body. and college she u·ill attend, ~1 iss the Pep Club. VICTORIA WHITE Pair to Wed In August Victoria Lynn \~'hite and Jan1es Ri chard Soderberg plan 10 marry Au g. 24 in St. Andre\.\"s Pres by t c r i an Chu rch, Ne\vport Beach. :-Oliss \\'hile, dau ghter of r.trs. Charles \\'hit e of Newport ~ch. is a grad uate or Nev.·port Harbor H i g h School and UC Irvine, Her Hance, also a UCI graduate, is the son of the Theodore Soderbergs of Los 1\ngeles. He also is a gradua1e or \\lcstem High School. DTERT 11•R STtf' ~ (,A.i\.'.SS11 • ' J M'ud(A -( ... ufiJR• Jll\ CCl!3LE'""'I UR. S(rl()t.l -BtR'~ARDO .' ·,_[:;-CASUl\l ~ -GiVSSrlOPf'E;''., l(fDS -HANDB ... GS -H051E~Y w~Jd; 5,,.~. f0t (r.ld···•1 1.:c..~ h ~ -G ·1:-'!r:t., -Kt::i' \'. ''Poll -<:,,,n Sao~ ,.,J·>• J • ·; ,.j (H,'")E) i-0-:. (H,~U..~· l (..,,~1<0 D~ &>of.<"•D.lnce w.at llJ o.n"'" 225 E. 17th ST. -COSTA MESA • 6ANo,A\'' •·•<..Al• 1 • 548-2778 BRUSH end BLOWER SCISSOR STYLES HOW TO DO THEM STEP 8Y STEP Anyone can care !or a Brush & Blower hair style. or ou r o\her curl coa)(1ng . tu ss·lr ee. lull lunct1onal SCISSOR STYLES which are as easy 10 do as just stiampoo! Our lamo cUis. li nger lumole cuts. curltng Iron cuts. wash towel dry, bfusn ·n llu11 cuts or simple wash aM wear cuts are SCIS- SORED. all take-care-ol yoursc!I "stylus. Good for any age. any hatr. No teasing , no rollers. no pins. no POLLUTING flAIR SPRAYS. ALSO: HO SET PiRMAMlHT WAVES. YOU MAY NEVER WA.Ml TO SET YOUR HA.II AGAIN. JOSEPH'S SCISSOR STYLING Huntington Beach '~64 HomiHon A•t. 968-3535 Fullerton JOSH....,._tl•;. 879-3863 PATRICIA NICHOLS Rites Set In August ~·lr. and ~lrs. Ro be r t Nichols. Hunitngton Beach ha\·e a nnou nced the engagement of their daughter. Patricia Jean Nichols to 11arold Callen ~lci\lurty. His parents are the E,·erctt Hoffmans of Huntin gt o n Beach. ~1iss Nichols. a graduate or f\.1a rina High School. attends Go lden \Vest College. Her Hance also i;; an al uninus of i\IHS aitend ing G\VC. An Aug. 3 wedding is planned in St. W i 1 fr id · s Episcopal Cbu rch. Huntington Beach. Responsible A responsible c o n s u m e r a\loids ili nerant peddlers \\"hen buying someUiing important. He ~·anl s a telephone nun1bcr, a store address. a place to go lo if something should go \\Tong v.•ith th~ purchase. MESA PRODUCE l'LEMTY WATER-OF l'ARIOMG MELON 5~ 1854 MEWPORT BLVD. ICORHff: llOADWAY AMO HEWP"ORY ILVD.1 OPEN 7 DAYS Phone 642-6025 • . . JUMBO EGGS ' 59.~ I "The freshest "Ond the finest anywhere!" -• .. • • • Cocipo,,, , RUSSET MEDIUM Eapirt Mo11doy t 6/17 POTATOES • ONIONS I 0 lb. Baq ... , SJ49 c 5~. , Wittie..- • J, ..... '" . . ... -. . . CONSTANCE HICKMAN Date Set In August St. Andre\v·s Presbyterian Church Newport Bea<;h, v.·ill be the setting for the Au:~. 2~ \.redding of Constance Jean Hickman and Christopher Richard Bentley . ~1iss Hickman is a graduate of Corona del .l\1ar lligh School and the University of Arizona at Tucson 11,•ith a degree in n1ath and econom ics. She affiliated \\'ith Delta Delta Della. Bentley, son or the J. D. Bentleys of Ne\\'pon Beach, is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and attended U of A \\"here he \\·as a member of Sigma Chi. Coast Couples You could be victim of \Vishful thinking. Face facts as they exis t. Express doubts. even fears -but don't attempt to cover up, to glosi; over essentials. GE~llNI {~fay 21·June 201: Argument centering around financ es. bud get can be constructive -if you control temptation lo hurt one you love. Be mature. Listen and learn. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Accept add ed responsibili1y. F'inish assignme nt , Be rece ptive/ lo\vard one who confides problem. Don ·1 cast first stone. Possible promo tion is rea1ured. LEO 1July23·Aug. 22 f: Your n11tural abilities are rewarded. You are able to s1rike chord of creativity, originality. New contacts are featured. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Defer to wishes of one 1vho has taken invenlory. has good view of financial picture. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ): Progress is made slowly. Impatient associate is sincere but probably misinformed. Nuptials Performed JAHRAUS-THOMAS In a South Laguna garden setting, Susan Anne Thomas and Joseph Richard Jahraus III were married 'vith the Rev. Dallas Turner offici afing. Their parents are ?.1r. and i\l rs. \\'illiam Thomas III anrJ ~lr. and ~!rs. J oseph Richard Jahraus II , all of South Laguna. i\hendants '''ere Jenn ifer and Jeffrey Jahraus. and All Angels Episoopal Churcli. Corona de! itar. The bride, a graduate of Corona del ~lar High School. is the daughter of the A1r. and i\1rs. Alex B. L aba d ie . formerly of Coro11;1 del I1l:ir. Her husband's parents arc the William Highfields of Phoenix. After honeymooning in San Franeisco, the ne1rlv\1·eds \1·i ll make thei r home in. Flagstaff. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feh. 18 ~: Don't be "a \\'ed bv lraditlon. Yoo hil\'l! right ..:... perhaps duty -to revilie, s1rca1nline and sv.·ecp a!!ide debri s. PISCES t f'eb. 19-il"larch 20 ): Cash f\ov.' may he temporarily curtailed. Ultima1cly. this \\'orks to your advantage. He- fuse to be extravagant. ~(tlll'~f/llH ()11r/l/ffJ 1,,.,,.-y_.M ... rlO•- Humorous, serious or creat111e ... there's a card to lit the mood .• plus a line seteclion of reasonably Ptlced 91hst sabfna's • CARDS• GIFTS •o•• AH.t1.t.....,.ii1 ................. il-0111 Oa11y 10-6. Sal. 10..5 Cour1esy Giit Wrap A Sporting preunt1tion Brushed Colton Bush Jacket $59.50 Lightweight Plaid Trousers $25 And Hunfi ng Print Shirl S17 ·• The ne'' ly\reds, graduatesl ----------~~"".""""'""'"'""'"~---~~~-~...,~~~IJ!!''!"'~""""""""""""""""""""""""~ ot Laguna Beach High School. are residents of South Laguna . She is a graduate of UCLA and also studied at UC Santa Barbara. \1:hile he graduated fron1 Califomia \Vest e r n University and attended Ne'"' ~1exico r.1ilitary Institute. HIGHFIELD-LABADIE ~orthem Arizona University st udents, Diana Labadie and Thomas Arment Highfield. "·ere married in St. f\.1ichael Markets For Job~ .. Studied Sen. ~1ervyn Dymally (l). Los Angeles has scheduled ·a summer statewide conference to st udy probl ems fncing 11•omcn college graduates in the job market. The conference, to be conducted by the Legislature's[ Joint Com1nit1ee on Leg3\ Equatit~'. \\"ill hear tC'sti1nony rrom \1·omen \\·ho\·e bee n discriminated agi!ln st on lhe basis or sex. The Stale Pcr~onncl Board has been i n v ited to participate. According Io Dymally, the com mittee hopes members of the Legislature 1v i 11 introduce affirn1:i!f\·e acUon legisla li o n once additional fricts are presented. Dymally noted. "A 11i'on1<111 must ha re a college de gree just to be able to earn as much as a man with sin eighth grade education. Thnt is tragic ... @BRASS R/N(J W11M11't Ap,.r1l ltlw e lloylo e N1r1111• Wl1tt e A114 SHOIS . ....., ..... Cl .... s.41h 11 77 Etsl Co11t Hwy, Co10~• 1111 Mir 671-4740 ,_ . -......... , ( REMODELING STARTS FRIDAY 9.:30 A.M. UP TO ' PANT SUITS from ........ s1999 LONG DRESSES from .. s1999 CAPRIS from ....... $999 ' . .. AND MORE! (Sole 1n progress ot Vio l ido Shop only) 3424 VIA LIDO , NEWPORT BEACH • J r • • fllutJd.ily Junr 13 l ; DAILY PILOr PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBl IC NO'MCB M11i11e (;andldate • Ex-POW Won't Over The Counter NASO Listings for Wednesday, June 12, 1974 St1·ess the Past f' ro1n \\Ire Servlt;et l'ICTtTIOUS •uuNt:SS SU .. IEll:tOll COUltT 01' TM• fllAMa STATIMll<IT STATI 01' C•Lll'OllNIA 1'011 ----."'rM~"/illlo ... 1na " -i,._,,,"'1 ..... =•oMo'"'t--l.ttL.COUJU'.,'l',...01'-...0U.'iG PICTITIOUJ I USINll' NAMI ST4Tl:MINT 1 he Democrntic candidate fur Congress frorn !i1a111e s 2nd 01:ict1 lei !\fark Garth~) :-,pent four years 1n a North Vlelnanlese prison ca mp but does not want his past lo be a (llmpalgn Issue rellcted lo a wanung from The OrganizatlOfl that if he dido I pay Sil milllon ooe of his relatives would be slain the threat was made Sept 25 1973 Ford testified at the U S District Court txtor1on tnal of Otto V Ludaayl 52 1n Delro1t- Atu1M1 AO ,.., • 0 """"' (p A to A I ~t•• B•I .. ~ -1'1 tit 111-. • ----Nt A:ttitr - - llQOl!ltl OEllMA~lif TI "NO "5 NOTICf 01' HIAlllNO Cl' l'•TITION !OC:IATlfi '°°' alrcll St ~ultt 0 "O• PllOIATI 01' WILL ANO JIOll Ntw-1 Bt•cll. C• '16'0 L•n11s Tt:ITAMENTAIY llONO Gerek! J Gt<,..111.til ~J21 SllW:IDll a WAIVIEOI w • ., Irv! ... Ct t1.... 1!11111 Of MAX HllltWITZ DK••~O Tiii• 011l1111u It t..t'1Klfll 0., I J\ ~OTICE IS HEllEBY C.IVEN 11 •• r lridlvlcl\ltl ~.-.THLEEN 0 HUltWITl 1\11 flied Tnt lollowl"9 1M1r1on1 lff 00 n lilii111ii1 •• GOl.OEN M RAOR llEAIJT'I' ~.t.1.01>1 111-9 Ed noer Ave Fo...nt1I" VI l•Y Ci ""' PU1lck 0 Cit ~t :i22$ OO..Olf1 ,n!o All• (ti I ~1Gt Dlifll Lynn Mt rlttl 21,S $0 A first-peopl we-re rerC'fr1ng to me as the former POW he s1ud I believe that s passed and I m gll'ld of II • The IS.year-old son or Grand Ole Opry star Charlie Louvln "11s hstcd in cnt1cal condition 1n Nashville after open heart suri:ery foll owing a motorcycle a<:e1den1 ! 1i:'e1 ~~ "'"' .pr, A"' £ pr """ f ..: Am ri.111 Am Fu 11 Im Gttt A Mcr011 Am Te t• •m WelO Gtrlld J 01/ft\tftt!U 119<tln 1 "91 lion 10< P..-00.t. cf Will tfld Evll'~llCll StMI An1 C• nxi. Tl'l!1 llltM'ltllt wt• lllld wllll IN for 1 .. 111nc:1 Of Lelttrl Ttlltmelllt•1 IO c-•~ Cltrlr. of Orlf\111 C-11 Oft Jutle 11'19 pellllonff llland w1l~ecll rl!e11nc1 ID 10 lt14 l'l'lllCll 11 m-IDf fvr!Mr 1>1rlleul1" '"" Tflll bui.111111 II C-UCllCI Dt I lif'l""ll 111rt111rlll o "•trlc• D Cl.ukt Tfll1 1l•l•mtnl w~• I 11<1 w1tll 114' County Cle ~ ol Ort"'llt COIJl\lf on JUl'lf! 1 HI._ I' MSSS 11111 ll>ot 11-•IMI pl1c• ol Mt 1"'11 11'14! Pullllslwd Or•nv• Co.II O•llv ,. 1<14 Mmt 1111 bfotft .. , IOr J11nt '' ,,,. ,, J-13 1(1 ,, •M July • "'' '°'° 1• t lO • m Ill '"" ((IUrl oom OI Oeptrt -nt No l ot t1ht CO!Kt 1! 100 c ~le (llftl•r Ori-. Wttl fn ll>ot C:lry of 5tn!I P11llll1/'4d 0 •-Cotti JllM ll 70 21 Ind Ju Y ol ' Ctlly '" Ani Ctllt,,.n t 1------·--------- ----.=occccc='°'=---1 011611 J-1 u11 PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUI IUSINISS WILLIAM I SI JOMM NAMI ITATIMINT CovnlY Cit~ Tl'le toUowlf\8 Ptftont tfl 00 "V HURWITt. HURWITJ. AHO RIMIR ~1lneH •• Alllf'Mfl ti Law IRON !0111!) AAT INK 212 Miii SI ut ltl'MI llrt.t NtwPOff lttct'lo Ctlll t'2MO P 0 I N \UJ ltotwrt Eclw1rcl1 Jr 112 3/itll St N9WP61"1 l1tctrl Ctlll1rlllt '26'1 N&WPQl'I ... t ell C11jf t2MO T•t C7UJ '73 Nlt Tittl Ill H11her ,,~ )Mii 51 HtWpet"I AllOtMVI for P.tlU-• ll&ICll Ctllf '16'0 Pull l1llecl Ot•1111t-Co•" 01ny Piiot Tllll bl.I~ ..... 11 COfl<IU<;littl by I Vtntrtl Ju..e 1l 13 19 1'1t 21]5 It ptrlfllf'tl\lp Aot>e I Edw1ro~ Jr Tl! • 1111 ....... enT Wll t It'd Wl111 '"" PUBLIC NOTICE Cou11tv Cle It ot Or•"V~ county in Ju,..lcc=::-====0-::-7-,.,cc=::--oo 10 \tit SUPElllOll COUllT OP TMI STATI OP "usu P uDUl'Mcl 0r""llt Cct!OI f.1 ly P ot Ju"4 ll 20 11 tncl Julv ' 191~ 2ou 10 PUBLIC NOTICE THI STATE 01' CALll'O!llHIA FOlll THI COUNT Y O" OlllANCil No 4 .. 111 NOTICI OP MEAIUNO 0" PITITION llOR l"llOIATI OF WILL ANO POii L.!TTEll5 Tl!ITAMl!flTAllV !IONO SLP 74111 WAIVED! SUPIRIOll COUlllT or TH.a E•l•le of GEOAG!A KN IGHT TELICH Oeu11eo PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUI •us N~SS llAMll! ITATIMENT , .. IOll""'lflV ptlon 11 Ooong bu1l e•• .. PACIFIC LANDSCAPE f/\A NTE HANCE ms ru1t111 Ave No I! Cai ~ Mt•• Calllornla tl611 J•me• J S~1wln1kJ 104S T111!ln Ave No. II Ca111 Mt•• CJI ro nla 926'1 Thi• 111,0llf\IU 11 tonclll';ted DY t n !n cltv!OUll J1m11 J s•1w1111kl Tl'l11 1 tlt-nl was 11.0 w Ill Coun v Cltr• of Or•!IV~ Countv on J1me 10 1tl• '""' p1111!11rieo 0 &"911 CCIII! C1!1v Pltp J1111t-1l 10 11 •nd Jut~ ' 1'11 ,06? 1• PUBLIC NOTICE STATI OP CALIPOl.N A POlt NOTICE 1S HEAEllY GIVEN 111•1 THa COUNTY OP Ol;.ANOI ANTHO", ,,, ''" "'' ''"' .,,,,, 0 1----------------NI A ... ll't '" ..., " NOTICI OF INTENTION TO ENGAGE NOT1c• o~ HEAltlNO OP PITITION ptlll on tot Prob.ti• OI Wiii •rid IOI" IN THI SALE 01' ALCOHOLIC POil P•O•ATI o" WILL ANO PO• ln.U&IKt of Letttr~ Ttstomtnt1rv lo lllt llVIRAGl"S LITTl•I TllTAMIHTAlll'T Ptllll-r !bo<>:I Wtl-1 rlllt•>'l:I to Eitt!t o1 NICKLAU5 MA I. T 1 N wl'lkll 11 medt ror turllle ~rllcul1r1 t l'IO IUNLEIN OecttM!I 11111 IM !lme '"° l>I~• of l'le•rlno rnt NOTICE JS HElllEllY GIVEN 11'111 .amt l'lei llet!" H1 for Jl,llf 2 lt14 II t » Juf\111 1974 TO WHOM IT 1.MV (ON(EAN • m In tl'lt ~O\ir!room of Otparlmtnl Ho aAltAAl.4 6 NN KINOLl!:IN NII I Itel l of u!o COUf1 ., i'IXI Clvlt Ctnlll' ()rive l'lertln 1 ptTlllDll tor P..-11 Of Wiii t lWI .,. I« luut nct Of Lttttrs Ttllimt"11ry to Wt'I n Ille Clrf of Stnlt Ane C1l!IO!'nl1 lr.t ~1111-r rtltrtf\CI ~ wftlcl'I 11 mtcle 011.0 June 10 191' SuDl•cl 10 lnuanct-nt llltl 1lc111w •'II pl «I tor nvrlct i. llffl!Dy OIYI" Illa! "'" unotrll<;Jn«I p _.., ro •e I 1lc<ll\oHc l\tYe!'IOll •I Ille orem ;ci, !MIK• oed I! follow• 111•1' NtNl!Ol I B!•d Cosi. Mu.a Ctl fQ!'nli .._ turtl'ler ot rrlcult 1 111d Hiii 11\t Ume WILLIAM E SI JOHii "'' County c erk t rld pltct of llt•rlf\Q In. tl mt hll bttn CAIL A STUTSMAll JI. Ml for J1111t-i.s 1914 II t JO 1 m 1" Ille NILL. ,Altll51t ANO I Ul.ltlLL courl oem ol 0t111rtm~t No l ol w ld AnorMrt 11 L•W .:ourl 11 100 CIVI< Ctnltf P<lv1 Wiii In UJ S&llflil f'llU.,H 1t'"1 '"' Cllr Of S111lt An• Ctlllor"l• LM A..,.,,. C1ll"'1ol1 ... ,, p., •u•nl !O •11<11 1111~1 Oii IM y..otr1IOne'll (I IPf)lyl"'J 10 Ille Oep1rt ..... n of .t.lc~I< llevtrl!Jf C011tro1 ro luu111e1 of 1n 1 col'lo!I< Deve g" I c•n~ .... llle>e p.tmlMI II lollov<I d On Stll G-r•I IP"tlot c Pr..,. let! CaleG Ju11t ' 1?11 Tel UU) ,,......, WILLIAM I! SI JOHlll AllllMYI flf' P1lllltMr SEOLEY A YOUN('; Publ •ntd Of•no• C1111• Cot Iv P 1cr County Cit k 0 011.~..... .... C , O 11 P!!ot Junt IJ l~I• lJl 1• 'THOMAS H THOllNTON U "'""' ..,.trtgt HS • t 1-..n •••ch a 1v• "' • Ju,.. ll IJ It 1911 ,u11' w ... 1.,.i...1., Ct Nlwlll• tlU) tilt) tn-4ollS PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLI C NOTICE Att-y '6rt P tfllltntr SUPEIUOI. COURT 01" THE SLI" 74JSO ""b lllltO Ortn!Jt Coell Oa Jurw 1' ll n !t1• PUBLIC NOTICE ~ Pl O! 1\Jl 1~ STATE 01' CALIPOltNIA POlt NOTICa TO CllEOlf0111' TME COUNTY OP OllANOI! lTu:T~·i0/c~f~/o"11~fA ~~~ N• A 112t7 NOTtCI: 01' MEAl.INO OP f'l!TITIOH THI! COUNTY 01' ORANQI! --------------1 POI. PllOaATI: OP WILL ANO POlt Ne A l'tMt a lZHJ LETTEllS TfSTAM5NTAllY (aONC E1!1k ol 1.0U I ltOSEN Dece11e<1 NOTICE TO CllEOITOll WAIVEOI N()TICE tS HEREllY GIVEN IO ht SUPElllOI COURT 01' THI: E ! 1 GENEVIEVE H OWEN c1t0IT0•1 cl tn1 ab<IYc ne,.,.,.<1 01<,Mf\ STATE 01' CALIFOINIA l'OR 0t i t e o !Mil tll perooni llavl119 d1lm1 att n11 Intl THI COUllT'V' OF OllANOl N'~;~(0E IS HEAEllY CIVEN lfl.tl 11ld oec.-nt • I requl•t'd lo I If llW'> ,., ... nttt JAMES E OWEN JA II 'le<! lie el" • wllll '"" "*_ ..... VIMICl'le•• Ill ....., on (I E•ll tt ol MYllT1.E I( MILLS 1110 lltfllO" '"' Pr®lle o1''w1 '"" lo< c;I Ille cllf'• g lhe .°"". t11lltltCI (Oll<'I "' lo.11own ti MYRTLE I MILLS Dett•ltd le present tl'lem wllh Ille 11«f!n¥Y HOTJCE 15 HEA:EllY GIVEN lo Ille 11\.Ul"tf or Ltl .... Te11•-"1"ry 10 '';' VOUCl'll'tl lo ... ....a.ti ont'd " '"" L•w '"' lor• ot Ille l bOYI 111....0 cllc~tnl J>f~~~ ...!i.~or ,-::~) ... ~1c";1~7':.: Ollie• ot POLSTON SCHWAl'll II.NO 11111 I ' perton• lllVl"ll di mt llflln.i '"' w of I -""MIL TON UIO Wll~r. llvtl La> "lcl de<:Ntnl i re lt(l!il fll to Ill• lt>em 1~11 1::1 l'l=., :;11,! •Jc: v 1 r;::: ';: , lO Allvett• CtlUot11li toll.a whldl I! 11\e wllll 1111 llKllW"' VOl.ICl!efl In 1111 Oltlce 1 me troom OI ()epall"""I No ~ Of Du•lnt$1 ol llW !incleralq11ecr " ii of "" cltrlt ot llM tbovt 1"11111<1 COll<'I or ; ;; .!io 'to.,C,,""' ., l90 Civic ,.,. .... OflYI m111•1 p&rll!nlntr II !hi esl•ll ot w d IO prl!'Sr "I ,...... wltll tilt ne<e111rr w ••• I" Ille c tv ot ~ .. ,, Ant C1M!ornl1 dl«dlnl wn111n IOU• "'°""'' "'"' '"' vouc11er1 lo lht .,noer~l;fn.0 II 1'141 c.1nce 0 !Id J 10 ltl' first 1111b c•t Oii ot Ill s notice ~f II s . lorflllyl II.I.ANES SCHA11 JOHN • w1'i'.'.LIAM E SI J OHM 01 ell Junt . 1t1• SON l(ENNl!OY & CAAi. 0/<f l H l.1< COllMIY Cler-BETH A Mf:S~ll I( Ar!llur lllvd P 0 llo• Ill!• NIVIPOrl MUIWITl. HUltW Tt AMO ltl!MEll E1ttc11lr ll ol lllt lttC~ C1lllo•nl• t:IUJ ATTN Ally w 11 of tl'le 1bO'le er~tsl 1 sc11111 Jr wlll II 11 Ille Pl•te A""'"''' '1 L•w nlmed oececien o t>u<lntll ol '"' vn<1er1!9n~ I~ •H 4JO Jl"' '""' f'OLSTON SCNWAl.Tt ......... perlllf\111([ lo Ille C>sl~le ol 1t!d ,. 0 ••• ins AHO HAMILTON Cl«lllenl whll n tour nonr,.. •lier Ille Ntw"rl letcll C1lll6"11 fJUI uto Wllihlr1 llvd fl"' l'l/'tl le•llon ,1 Ill. l'lotkl T.. 0 14) ,,~... L•I A"tllft C•llffMll tot .. Ot!.0 Mlf 21. 1911 AMOMllVI lor "•1111-r !fU) IJl.(1111 ROllEltT E Al.LINGHAM Pu1111,11eO 0 •nflt Cot I O•llr Piiot At1or111y1 !Of EllCUlrl• aoml,.ll!rllllf' wl!n 1111 wl I JuMI ii 13 19 19/t 21<9 II PulllltlleCI oranqt coa" o1 ly p ot 1n~l•tcl ol ll>ot 11 • e ol Int JUftl 13, 2!1. 21 and Ju v ' 91• 1le14 •I»"• n1mt0 ore.a•~' PUc~B:L~l~C:;N~OT;'..'.l;C~E~::--1 ----;;;:;;;~;;;;;;;;;:;;;;-•A1tNEI SCHAO JONNSON ~ l(INNIOY .. CAil.iON SUPERIOI. COURT OP THE PUBLIC NOTlCE I Y lm11t J Sctult Jr C 1,0,,1• ''' •• '' MICArlllllf" I t¥• ITATI 01' AL ,. THE COUNTY OP OltANGE p 0 an 1tt1 NO A llOUI MtWP6'1 .... " c111t1r11l1 t11o0 NOTICE 011 NIAtllNG 01" PETITION Tfl (114) "' tttf 1'011 l'llOai'oTI 0,. WILL AllO POii All ...... YI fer A•mlnh trator CTA LITTliltS TESTAMliiHT.:ill"W: I Pllllll•llecl Or•noe cu~• 0111v Pllol E••• t ol ERNEST I( It.I.ATMAN Ill MIY XI Ind June ' u 20 "" , ... '' (ffled SL" 10JS NOTICI TO Cl.«CllTOtlS SUPl!llf'Olll COURT 01' l"'f iiTATI OP CAL l'ORM A FOR TM5 COUNTY 01' OllANGE N• A 1'k1 N(tTIC:E $ HEllEBV G VEN 11111 Esltte ol HARVEY E LA l(ENNETH L HAltTMAN ANP JEAN E Dlcttled "' PUBLIC NOTICE MORRIS hive 1JIH Mte{n. I ~ll!IOI) fc!.t HOTJCLJ.S-'i£RUX GJYE.N !O !t>t --------,,.,ccccc---=:ccc-·IProWff ot WI tn(I tor 1,..,,,..,.c1 ol t eollori ol 114! abOve n•metJ <1eceo1n I haven t campaigned on that nor will I he said And I look at that time as h1storv somt!th1ng to learn from but not to d"ctl on ( PEOPLE J Gartley "ho was a Na\y pilot 111 Vietnam defeated Staie Rep Stewart Smith in Maines Democrallc pnmn1y and will try to unseat Rc11 \Vllllam S Co b c n 111 No\ ember • A decree signed by Adolf Jlltler 1naking hin1 absolute ruler of Germany and a Lenin Jetter denouncmg a n 1 i Sem1tJsm failed to find buyers at an autograph auction 1n New York The l"o document s wc1e part of the collecllon of Harry J Sonn rborn founder and past presrdcnt of f\1cDonald s hamburger restuarant cha1n The J.lmosf 500-piccc collecll<ln brought $314 450 High price for lhc Sotheby Parke Bemt!I auc11on wa s $12 000 for a signed f1 rs1 editi o n of Geo r ge \\as h 1n gton s fare"clt <iddress announcing h 1 s retirement fron1 public hfe u1 179' • A memorial bcnef1l has been sch eduled !iionday in New Yorks Carnegie H<11J to bcgu1 a nationwide campaign to clear the names of ronv1cted spies Juhus and Ethel llnse11 hcrg Entertainers !'etc S,.e .. er !\1al) Travers Ossie Davis Ethott Goold and others are scheduled to appear at the benefit v; h1ch was organized b\ lhc National Comm111ec 10 Reopen the Rosenberg case l\1ichael and R n b e r I f\1eeropol sons or t h e Rosen bergs "ho teach al \\estern New England College are scheduled lo speak • Pacing an cxtort1on1st s death threat Detroit Lions o"ner \\11Jham C Ford quickly got the help of lhe F'BI doubled security at tus hon1c and d~1dcd to C'all a bluff Ford a grandson of Henry Ford described how h e A motorcycle rtdden by Kennelh Lou\ln colhded with a pickup truck police said • 'l'v.o appeals court 1udges dlsqualil1ed themselves from hearing a government appeal of a lov. er court ruling that resulted 10 former Anny Lt \\11111a m lJ Cl'llley Jr being released on bond Altomcys for C a 11 e y convicted of the 1968 murder of 22 Vietnamese villagers 11sked t\\O members of the three Judge panel lo step down because of their nulitary background Judges Elbert Tuttle o{ Atlanta and Thomas Gibbs Gee of Austin T e x disquahfled themselves Tuttle retired from the Army as a bndag1er general and Gee a graduate of the United States l\11l1tat} Academy is a veteran of the Anny Air Corps and the Air force -~-.. , Sl1e'a Addicted To TV soap operas that 1s ~frs Sh irley Binford of Chicago takes late lunch hour every day fro1n dress shop to dash down street to telev1s1on shop where she watches four soapers in a n our -on two TV sets al a time Public Records Marriage Lice11ses SHEPARO DEGllOOT-1(1 k A"ll'>anv 2l Bo.Ill Ytrr•••nno Bev 1.1Qun1 N Que! Incl OeDOr•I> An"t n 521J> ~t111'1ore 0 Ive NtWPOrl BeiCll CLANCYWlllGHT-Wllltm Dolin <I ~ A tMn Line v ne •ncl P1u "' Jo.n lJ •7t Otl'IHI Co on• Oel M1• LEVI ECCLES-Huoo Alel1nc1ro ?o 113' Sllmjl • Pl•<• CM!t Mes• •nd hve•lv A1111 ?l 313' su .... 1 1 Pl•ct COi t Me•• M cNEILL OAll "!'N-Roberl P1!r c~ 10. 1 .. 21 W mbllClon Hun!lnvron ll11<11 •rid Oe110r111 M lclr~ n 1t 1 Elli Plontt .t.ve Fu !•rron W llEAG Ml1.LEA-Roctr C•rol t5 100 C•Ue Co<ltli S1n Clfmtnte Ind ~::C(i,:::~r: • 100 (ii I C~te1 MEZA R.t.MOS-A110n lt t 9 I f Cl'l1nn na Wetlml"ster ~ncl Oolort1 Cl•Y~ n• I~ l11S Sou 11 Fern Anelle m ZWEIG WATKINS--Ger• d SS 12sn GUO.II (';rQVf 81...0 G•rden G ove Ind M~rf l,OlllSe Joi M 1 lh St A~I Cl ffuntl11<1 on fle1cll WILl(OM.MARINO-Edwe d H'-"' v 14 lo.Ill sou111 C1<1or A~r ob S1nr1 An~ 1nd EYllvn olO HllO ln!>orCl>!Jh W11tmln1ter STEWART HANN.t. llOODV Sla"ltf 2• 1211 11tn St Wt1lm .... , I nd Cll1rlene Grice 2J 1721 11111 s Wellm n!!t M EYERETT Sl.M PLE-GH>r~e T1>t1ma• 21 266e7 Veto•• so Min on Vlelo •ml P1melt J""' If 16'11 Velper so Minion Vie o AANOA1.L MESA-H1t1111 L1mo"t 3 "" s-vl ne Orlvt 1.1ou"• ll11cn ~nd l)~~~d f!'.' J~. "s".",~11 lJ ttt Skytln• ECONOMOtf POLISNEA:-SoHrlos Soto• E '' s ••O i.eHc llPt co ona cie ·-~ .. .t.ot•tO A~ IMP At.,,, Myl Al ow H ., .. ..,. ... l \CI Ct• Al G\ LI At ~ttol A"lo T•n ll•l•o Ao ll•l•d w llt~tr Br Iii~ .. ft 81 G"'" L Bt l y M•I Btnll Re Binttt F X:l~uCp &Intl~ l • lltlt p d llfU L•b 81btl Co flit D•m Dlo Mtas B •cl So"t B -~· p., Bloc• ~ BlutCll S BINI Cg Oob £•"• llootll Np B 011co 1 6 nlo\ I" 8'0< I (it er-" A ... ~ But''' Bur"o sr 6u11tr M C•IW! ~­Ctm T111 ""'"°" Ml ~xr,:"11 '-" YIPS c:.t-<il•" 0 CFS (ftll ""~ " Cll•n C:O (Mm Co '" . '"' • So4!t .. ,,, (li"\ Ut n , C It VIA ll , tit ~ M IS C:lt .. (j)lo (lfV If Y c: o .. c ~ Cobe LIO conurn o CoctC Lt Comm Cl C:m ~~1; C:w NIG• C:m•T P CPI• Avro C:PI w I co"" Fcl Cllt PIP Cotllv WI Cod•CP Co..1 n1 Crou C:O Cru1tll It Curr No °""' 11111 0,, I Orq c.. 100 D.ivln Ml [)e( i 01 °"'' b AA Dr!hi "' °''"•• t °''"' Cri Ol1m Hd o • i St Ooc .. 111 Col•~" Oof\t llh Corti\ Gi Do• Jon' Oo~lt OB Dll<o"'n I MUTUAL FUNDS • ' • ' ' ; • '• • I ' ... ~ • • . ,._ " " " ' ' ' ' I N, .. Yo. Fo OllEYl'US GltP •""' fCI u .e uu \Ill• • Ill •• , low f\Q I • •• e• 0 ,, Fd ' SI 10 •1 Jell"'!~ 10" 10 ,, Yoy•g ' 0 '·~ bll tlld t•kell p Eqly Fii J U l •I HM NIHCOCtt: Aei.e1~ f 100 100 0. <• I~ M~luo 01,.t L• 1 )t n 41 8"d Fd 11110 11 Ar¥1rf f I II •Qt F"'"" I\ Q""ltd by O<vt LI 10 00 Grwtll • )S ' 1l Sl!IC Eq ••• I • , .... "IA50 t...: Sp f\Clll t so I 11 s gn• 1 °" Iv Slotrto c; .I 11 11 l d (•" I ti t 1J EYSTO"ll ICUOOlil l'Dl Wtl~tl<H' EfE Mu I 16 ) 16 tu• 8 I j,I 11 •I n! Inv ll ti IJ lo JUftt l ~ • E•Qlt ('; • n I It c .... t Bl It 09 ,, II 81l•n< I) .It ll .I• I. Ast EA'tON • Cus• Ill 1 '' • n Com 160 • 60 Aom c:; .. l•I oi Ol HOWAllO (U\ K •Jl ••• ~oec• 21>12111 Allm tn 1 1• lll BonF4 tH tOI Cult Ill •IO 116~1>11 L~• •11 •Mi Adm Iii Ill 1 8'GWI~ • 01110•1tu>t SI 11 /S lOS•SECUlllfYFOi •Ovse l fl •I 111cmt 1 •• sn C~•t Sl l"IO tll Eoul, l II l •O At1"t Id •I "5PK ~ It ••e c ... r SJ 1 11 ••I nvt.i '" •ll "-•!nl "llJ•11 •1 ~1<l fG _t_.t,!_JD SJC~• S• lllJ •tU••F .ltlt7 o!:!Ulu I 1 u , , Eorr~p -tll• I I~ Af>Ol ~ ) •• 1:19 S!l:t:CTEO ,os-... NOTICI OP MARSHAL I SALE Ltt trJ Tn"mentary la "* pet I Ollt 1 ht! IH per1ot1s na~lll'if cllllms IOilll•I !l>e Ooll•ld e A¥flf Jr Pt nllU VI T 0 retl!'lf\tt to which I m1<1e for llll'llllr ••Id lllCIC!efll i re ,11111 e.:i to 1 t 111en Llnd!ltv Dt!tfl<l1nl NC JI 32S 111rllc11l1rs 1..0 !hat the I me " d pl11<t wllll the ftl<•lll'V v<111<1>t s n 111e oil ct I tv .. 1r1ue of •n e•ec:u11on llsuecl ot1 Of 1>o1a11111 Ille "'mt "'' Dff" 111 tor Jt111t of 111e c er-of tht atJU11e ~"' ueo '°" 1 or Mirch t 1tlol by tne MIH'llc P•I Cou I lS 1tlol 1 t 30 • m 111 1ne couriroom of ro pre,..,.1 111..... wl111 he necena y !H•rDl>r Judltll1 Ol5tr <I County of Oeplrtment No l ol ltld cOU<'I •t 10l v~...,1 10 11'14! unde , g~d 11 tlle L~w Or•lllll Sltle ot CtllfMllll -a C!wlc Cenlt• 0• YI Wtll " -(!IV ol (tftlce or ALAN CUATIS ,,J (!vie c~ e Residents in SLA AC,£ Fa '" •J1E9tl C>t (I) ll Po•• llO J04 .t.m $11 •10 t l<I Ah!lto OllO l0 1SEUunT Jlt ncii S <J ~tl ~ l'O I I) 1 4 . Apfloi fO 1001 OtlE-Q 210 110 n•rG<~ Stt t!l Sp S~•~ !Joi 3•• :!:::c:p,~ :,oo ;,~1 ~:'r1YJ ~·: ?') (;°m£}, !~~; ~~:~~:,';" f !~f1~.11 .. Area Get Checks I 111<11ment tnl<!<'tll' In f1vor of Donlokl I S..nr1 A"" C:1 t~ft Or Wei! SI"'' Ant 111 ,,,. " 91f01 , [Ayres Jr t5 lllOllmt!)I crtlcl tor tl\cl Ctle<I Jv11e S 74 ""1 c~ 11 lllt PIGCO' ot bus MH c• 1k..o aoe!MI T C LlnoliY 11 llld<;J'l'lllll clelllOt WILLIAM 51 J(tH"I ""'°"1lg119cl I" 11! m11Ter1 Ptrtl 1111g IO I snowlll(I , ne1 11~11nct ol UllS :lO Ktulllv County Ct er• 1111 nlite 01 11 d oeceden wltl'll" tou due on H id j110grr11nt on Ille Cllll of llw! NUltWITZ HUllWIT1 AllO lllEMl!lt monlht alter e ! rot oublltlllon C n ~ llS•ll"Ct ol !ild t•tCllllO~ ' llt•t ltY>ed AN-Vt II llW ~ct te llP<lll 1!1 Ille •IOlll title •"" l"ltftSI ot "'0 ··~ IJ)S QI n ... SltHI DI tel June e 19 1• oilCI tvdOrnflll Otll!or In tne pr(ljllrlV In NtwP1rt Inch CtHllr"lo '2Mt WAllREN LA '1:U CDunlf ol Or111;1 Sllll of Ctlllor11li T•I 1114) 611 NH AClmlnlst ator er t oe~c lbfd 11 101 ow1 AllorMYt l•r C•r1111 o"'" e,1t1t of 1~0 1oc.~e 1.0I Ho 24 ot T •cl No 657] ti 11\oWn l'\lbt •llld Or1ng1 .Ol\I Of ly P lot ntmtld dtcecren 011 1 m~p •Kor<l90 11 i\nok 2!1• Ptillfi J-U lJ. lt 191• l1H 13 ALAN CUI.TIS ~1 so !11Clv1ivt of Mitt• ntoUS Mips ------llJ Civic (Hitt Dr Wtll reco c11 of o 11111e counrv C•t tor" ~ PUBLIC NOTICE ''"'' A1" C11uorn11 1i10 1091tlltf' wllll ti) 1n 1ppurt1111nr no,,. IT14) H7"'441 ~~c11111v1 t••tmtnr for lno1•11 .~d Allo•fllY lor Ali ml"l11r110 ·~ I SS lh•OllClll L~I 111 11\!S commonlv HOTIC• 01" IAU OP ltEAL Publllt>ed 0 llnQO Co~1 0 ly p lo ~now" 11 111"5 Otkl 11 Line !rvl11e "ROPI RTY AT rlr.IVATl SALi June Ii :IC 11 .lnd J11l v • !~I• ?I h I• C1lll.,,.nl1 No A I~< ---- Sl•ndolnO 0" tM •ttorai or I~~ coun 511p1 or Court of Ille ~If of CAI lo"'' PIJBL.,.. .. 'OT ICE ty 111 tlll ntmt of Tl'lomJ!I O 1.lnosley lo Int C<111~ty ot Ol'ln 1'-' i, oncl shlrley J L nll!l f llYlb•nd ;i"o n r"' Mal t of lht E1t1 t al --_ _ lie l!I 1o1nt ''"' ·~ w LLIAAt c: MUA:ltA'I' tleCI~ Id I 7)U} NOTICE s HEltEBY GIVEN I"•• Of\ Nolle' Is /\ertiw ply .. lh•I lht Uf\ NOTICI! TO CREOITOllS !uesO•v J!,!ne 2! 1970 ' J 30 0 c oc-de I Onld wl!I .1111 ti o·lvai. 11fe to Ille SUPClll 01 COUIT 01' THI" p M 11 Iron! ol Cour1llOV5t Ort"'lf 11101\t:ll tnct btll OIOC11r llUtllKI IO (Oii JTATI! 01' CALll'OANIA F01t Cou11tr HlrDOr M\/'llclptl Court •1-01 llrm1ll011 o! ''cl 51J!)e lor (cu I on ., THE COUNTY o~ OR ANGIE JtmDOree 11.0flcl C:llv ol Newport llea(ll 11ttr Ille 1111 <11r of Juf\f 1'14 11 tl>ot ol Mo. A n111 Cou111v ct Ortng• SMll ot Cll fy nl• I (f ct Trust R•,I Et". J)lvl11or! CA.Un e,,, e " OONAlO G [ 0 R G E w H 1tlt 11 public 111tl!on ic '"" 11ion1s1 I' X Cut•t"I 1111 l'IDor !itcvr tr Pae lie MVEll:SC<tUGH Cece~ t0 blCIO'r tor ttll'I In l1wllll mon•v ol !ht Nt lon~ ll•n-Jn w 51h S1ree1 ,. 0 NOTIC:E 15 HEREBY GIYEN to lie Unllcd Sltltl t!I "'6 •!Ollt 11111 Incl l o• '153 Terml111I An11111 LC! ,l~lei. crHJllorl OI Ill• 1t)011t "~mfd Cleceoen! lfllt r•t! ot 11!cl ludll"""' 0.DIM In 1he Ct tornlt 900Sl leltpl'IOnt numbf:r 610-11111 1 1 pe "°"' ~•v r>g cit m1 1gt 1111 l~t 1t1ove dl)(tlbed P<OIMrl~ or 10 mucl'I 1)71 LOI A"{ltltl tool) all Ille •I""' !Il le lllcl clt<Hftnt •rt rtqv •td 10 !lit tnem 1""rlof 11 "'°"v !It 111<tt11rv to 1•t 11¥ Ind nte,.11 of .t d ciece•~d •t tl>f I ""' with It'll "'''"~'" YOUCM<S ln 111 o ti<• LOS A\'GEL ES ! /\Pl Residents <tf the 54th Sliecl 3nd Compion \\l'nte 11c1 \\he1c six !!'rronsls \\c1e killed in gunbattlc "ilh (.._ __ s_1_a_1_e __ ) police J::is1 month h 1 1 e 1ccened SI 3R4 fru1n the Cll\ The amount 1 n c I u de d compensation for a "alerbcd punc1ured by gunfire Bill Elkins represcnln1g Nid ntcvllon wllh t ccryfd l"ter~t lrld ol cit• fl ancl tll 11\t rlglll !lllt 1nct 111 ol '"" cler~ of tl'le 1b0vt '"'II HJ COii I or (Gill !erest 111at 1'14! tllill or Slid decet••d ho t lO p lstfll rfltM w " r t >t<t•~•lv _ OtteG MIY ll. ,.,, .Ct111!rl!d bY OPtrltlOll of law 6' O!Mrw'lll YOIKP'>e I IO !ht llfl®'llQ"td I lllf otnce l'lCTITIO ii MAME EMENT loflOWl"'ll P<I )00 II Oo!"IJ Olvllltn H1rbor o~r tht11 or I" addition 10 11111 c• ••Cl of N• •llotlllYI M• ... ~ Ii\ ANO ~ E 11.MEA decttMd " '"" llrnt DI oe11n In il\O ro CATHCAlllT 11101 Awnue o• ... St1F1 l"t M1r11>11I O••nvt Caunl¥ •I IM ctrtl f\ rt•I P<-"V 11\Mtlttl In SY!Tt 110 \..'II Anoe ts C• lorn. ~I ,. ly M~rllfl! L ., ..... n lllNlt !I'll City of car-Clfl M1r Co\H'llv ot wlllcll ,, ll'lfl pltcf o! bYI hell DI Ille I '.\ s IN1ERNAT•0~41. M.l..RKET °'"'" I Ayr1t Jr <tr~"Vf s1111 01 C1nror11f1 01r11cul1r v Utldtr.ltnea In 111 m~ t•J pe '~ 11""' o t"I('; S'l'STEMS 6:Jt Te m not Vl•y IMJl a rttllflllnl S!rell OtlCI fled I I follOWI IO wll tr.t IS'"' of tl kl dt<:ede w 1111~ toll• Col. M•!~ ,, tornl• ..,. 1 HUll!llltl.,. l 1•cft Ct ilt.fflll A ~vDltl)tl\olcl t1!1te fl ~fie! Ill LOI mOI'!"' tl!t "'' llr1I ""b ti! 011 o t~ l Ron~ d E H&rrlmtn lllJ .t.n~"9im Pwllll1llH Ortf\Ve Cc11! C1 Iv ~lot 11' or Trtel No JJSJ In 1111 C Iv cl "o' ct Avf t oiu Mes• C• to nla "''' MIY :lO •ncl J11111' 13 1tl4 lt)S 7, N•Wllotl Bt1cl'I 11 11'1Gwn M • maa 01110 Junt 7 191' Tn \ oui!n'" , conauc1td 11• an n -----eccroed f\ llool 107 P•Otl l lo I 00111 "'ARG•RET ·~EftAL" OvO~ll PUBLlC NOTICE tnclu• ve ol Mllctl11nt0u~ M •P I Adm nh! ~"Ix or tllt t '9tte 01 tnf llontld E '1•, m•" tt(ord• cl Or1no1 COUl'llV C111llorr>l1 •DO.,.. nt'l'ltd oec111e 1 111 1 •I• 1me111 w•1 '11<1 w 111 •~e CoYn ,-0-,-IC-.-c,-0··,llllSONS lNT!Jl•IYIO < t&1ed by I c1rta111 l!ll!tumtn! !~II! to MAGANA ANO CATMCAllT 1v Cle ~ of O 1n91 Coun1y Oii J~~t 10 IN THI I ST ... TI 0' 511ble11• clllittl OClollt:r 1 ,.J. IX llOt Aff11111 •I '"' lllrl l~ II ,,. \91• A•TNllll L P•IKINI et11'1!d by S!itln~ Hon"f$ lllC • LM A ...... , Cflllor~•· '°"' JJ4JSI Nell~• 11 11,,~ • ~•n C1IUor"I• coroor1non 0 u n ~ "g I " Atl1111t11 tor l.clmlt1l1t•11P11 r>utior 1lled Or11101 Cot11t Of •v P l o! I 1 I d ,. ... ,. 1, CotPOrll on • (11!1ornl• (O POr•I on Publ!il!ICI Or.t"'Ot CIMlll Ct ly P 01 June ll 21J ,, 11nd Jutv • 1911 ~J )I to •II perllOflt n ''''' w •· er w•1t Otv1!09me11r Co • C1I torn!• ,,_ •• -'' o-• '"'' ' ltl• ""' 11 cr'ldtlor1 flt!., ko1tU1 ar o.vlttt• I" ·-... "' "" 1----- "'' ,,1,10 of Arthur L. '""''"' Olc•••ed ctrP0'•11°" 1-1ar•!ll'if!011 Olv•lo!lment PUBLIC NOTICt: Wl'IOM 11i1 tddrtu wll1 IOI 1111 Hublr Co • Ctl!lornlt cotll<M'•llOl'I 1"° PUBLIC NOTlCI w..,11111!orcl Ol<ltl\llrnl 1lDMI ltlll '"" $ HUlel CtvllQflmtn" I c,o ti. t '~""n!: -----Sl.P 1•341 l~l•~llllN or "' 1clmlnl1tr11!on 111.... corpnrlllotl '"'' "t;OJ IC VI v trr • ~11)1, NOTICE TO Cl.fOITOftl ~ llllltll lo w E Perkin• by Ille "I I L,ff'ot 1"',","'..!'1'~~1,!ii,'"',, NOTIC I TO ClllDITOl.S SUPEltlOll COUlllT OF THE Dl •• rl-' Courl of Cullf!' C e u" I V Mir~ H Ckl•l\Otlo Ill '"" ''"' D O A •OO ~· .., I I I'll 1 -llatl lflltrell fnd JOl'>fl IUl"l!l101t COU•T P Ttll! 5TATI 01' CALIFO NI °""'*""'I COU•I .. (tmP • t n 1'1-llt$tfltllel Ecl!l!IN~l•J~ r•!btl'ld STA'tlOPCALIPORNl ... f'Olt Ttlf COUNTY 01' ONOI 1urtldltllot1 al 1111 St•rt ti Cklt'*"9 encl ...,,,, •• "' • -11111 n1er•'' II fNI COUNTY 01' OllAMOE N1 A 1'441 1111! lllt 1'1!owlflo !16f"-11 lnftbl~ IO ttninll In cotnmon tl>ottelll rtl•fl•tcl to NI A 1ttU E,, • ._ or GEll:OA R BEltSETH •~• ., ticlcllnt ptrtOf'ltl P'iW161'1f of !I'll NIO It L"'iet " Ntorcllcl Ol<tmbtr lt Ellf!I el EOWARO H P'1fLAN (;ERDJI. ltEGNJI. BEA:5ET!o! tk • ll«:fftnf , .. , II\ IOOk stat ""' 151 of ()lflc11I Dlct•ltd GCITltuOE R BEllSETH •f\CI II G ltOA a1nk ol Amtllt• 1111\ lllri l rlttOI Ao<~OI of Orl"'Ot C-!v Cl loi;nJa HOT CE 5 HEllEll GIVEN 10 ow REGIN.t. llEllSETK OKttlff tll¥ cf 51nt1 Ant Cou"IV of Or•"'lll morl COllll'llOl"h< know!\ I t '6)S Ctl"ldet'I trlttl tor\ ti Int lbo\'I ... """1 llttede"' N(tTl(E IS HEltESY GIVEN IG 11t 11111 !!It """'''tlptl.0 11Mlr•1 to rectlYe Orlwe Corona c111 Mer c 1111or1111 '1UJ. 11111 • 1 PfftOn• htvl<111 t lehl<lt 1oO•l~11 in. crf'd tori ti 1111 1DOv1 Mmtd tttt.ao~r lllt t lld Pt•tontl fl"-IV or collt<I IM ff!'m• tf ltll! ~•Ill 111 liwtyl -¥ ot 1114 Otr.IOtnl t r• rtoulreo II I'll• 11141,., 111~ ii ~non1 111~ flO Cif' mJ ..Ot\f\il ~ c!1lrnt1 t n!I to ,,..,..,. '"'' cotllCtlMI "' lht Unllt4 51iltJ an to11llrlt'llllOI' •1 *"' with'"' nKll\t'T ¥0U<lltlr1 I" IP>e olf!(t tt 11 Otct4tnr llt rtoul•t'd lo 1111 1111.,(, •t<tlVtcl WOffl ""' ftalt Of Ctllfotnll Ito Ttn percent ot •~ llloll '° llt HOttlltcl ti tl'lt t ltlrk of lllt tbOYtl int !llO court DI' wt ~ tl'le ~t.,.rv vo.1e11trt In tllli a• ct ll'lt i.tltl ''"'' Wflll'I 111111r1 lllllffttflllf'I 1111 bid 10 .,....,, lhtm w.1" Ille ntc.,1•rv of,,.. cltr~ t1 !ht •DO.,. enl!Ufd tOUl'"t tr ., •I 1clmlnlslr1tlltfl MYe """ lt1\llcl w l lcls or otlltt., ~ In 11trltl110 '"" wltl VCIUC1't•._ 10 1t1t ufldlf1loll'ICI 11 1111 ot1k 1 1e Ol't'ltnl 1111m .. 111 1111 l'eC:ttU•Y All 1111"-t lltvlltCI Cltlm1 191m.t tlltl DI rKtlvlO t! !I'll ltlevt OlllCt •I •"1' Of hh illtllllVJ &AOlEfON ANO YOUC:l>tt> 111 !I'll -rt ltfttil 1! ll>t l.f\. ll~tcltll1 or '" 1i1ter ... 1 In Mkl f'llllt Incl llll'll tltlf' ll'lt llttl tvbllcltlO<'! ~tee! trld "tTTIEISON 10007 fa1t Fi-r SltHI 01tlc1 ot HOWA'!C E lo\ LLER 1)1 ¥1 .. 1~ .... to obllci le wen .-.rMVAI 11111'1 l!illor• 0111 Of 111t ProYhll"I ot '"' 1 ... lletHIGWt' Ctll!ooll• I01lll "'lll(h II TIMI 1'1" St ''" Prtr•O t•l 1?'" • ~131 "" Cfl ' .... wrrtltfl llO'lltt ol IUC" lllllKllon " Ylttl ... of of!ll't on 1ald P<OCll•IY wfllcll ,...l(e °' tlvllfllU "" 1111 uncflt>IOnte Ill Ill (1 Ill~ Olt(f •f bu MU " Ill• Vndll"• t~ ~ IW'tOfl 11' Jlll'IOfl• llldt!Jl9d Ito ., wUI bf. 1110~11..i '" b!Htn Wiii oovern l'!'Hllllr• "''•"'*flO 10 11\t "'•It tf ••a ttt t ·l ""'"" tterlt n l'l'if lo IM It tlf ot l'!eldlnt Ptl'Mflll 111'-IY o4 ti. lllt Ult d«ftllftl w'lftll" '°"' '"Ofllll\ • lei' lllt ,.10 oecf<lt~1 wll11ln 1.,.. mM!ll' • '"' G«fdll'nl llKh /IOll(e '"'"' Pl • Wfl to O•ltcl Ju ... 10, "'' rlrll 1111\llltll!Oft ol !l!h ngl (f ••t II " pi;~llUI 0" or h. fttl Cf Ille ""''°" tooiflflll "'' Mfltl\11 fU'lll!fl"lf srcuJl:ITY PACIFIC OlllCI JIJM 11 lt1• Ot td June • 1'1• "' Mtl"'I wl\Ol'!I Ille d11m It l'l'MI• Al ll'!t NATIONAL. Alt.NI( STEVEN lTf:iOANJ Jlt '~~ IN.I. C. ALl'OllD •OO•f\'I •• """' aeo .... wlt~lll :JO 01.'l'S Admt"1,1r,,.1or w '""'I II.I.~"'''~ ~Tl!"Pt•!N !oll llllj! A~m ~I •t ~ ' ~t 1fl"f t!rtl OUlllltt len o! 11111 f!CllCt JONIS AND a l:CINA" f•ecuter ot !lltl W I et !l'ot t.tU ~ 01 !fie al!O • OATEO Junt l """ ,NII.IP C JONES ID0\1 N!IMd OKecJ~" ,.~.,,eel ff<~" w IE r•tkl"I '"d Al.Tt!Ult Cl OU'I' Jr IAOllTON AllO l'ETTlllSOH .. OWAllO IE MILi.Eii ,.., Aoml" ,, 110 IHI Wtll fMl"f ll IOOOI • 111 ..... 1n101 111 w lt!I• SI o• .... E-1!1!1> c.I Ltt Alltlltl C•• ..... i. HU• •tttflmofr Ctll!o•lrit MIOl ,.~ fl~d 0 Cll forn;• fllll l l<llflur L r ttll!nt ,1,11_,,, !or rel !IUI ..._1101 11111 4U 1l1' O~"'"a A•mlllhllt!.,.Wl!ll wu1 A11"'.1.ell • ~"•Vt for l••cwltr •ncrl',..r '"' •~111 "111r11• • ,,,., , I ' PuDtl11'>A Or.f"9t ca.~• 0• ~ "' ~I Pu~l111~0 °''°"°~ Co•1 Of v " Q 'ubl llltd 0 l "Ot C0.•1 c• 11 .. ·~,1 ,.11\)!•lltd °'"'"!' c ... r 011~, ,\, ••11 j• I,.,, JUl l•Jun•ll 10 11 ,,..Jiii• O i l..,,, J.,.,,,, 10 ,, tO J!,!IY • 1'• 111 I -· .... ~ ~ .... i\1ayor Ton1 Bradley and representatnes or 1he city attorneys of/lee and the ct!\ 1 ounc1I presented lh<' cl11 Lks \\ erlncsdny God bless his hono1 the m l\01 the c11v a11orncy Councilman Gilbcr1 Lind se\ and all the citv counc1lmen shoulC'd a Jllbrlant Florence Lishe) 1\a\1ng checks totahng $489 she recet\ ed. for her daughter Lizzie Po\vell Bies~ em all • Bm1l, llO•lflgt• UKIAl1 (AP) A lonf' gUllman robbed a bank of SIS 000 and took lhe managc1 hoslage lOr a brief time but "as later arrested p0hce said Police Chief Donn b Sau!sury said \\11tchell E Spanglrr 28 of San f'ranc1S('(l \.\lJS ar re sted north or Jlcnldsburg by Sonori 1 c.:oun! sheriffs dc1>uhes only houis after the holdup \\ ednesday e Co11cirt E•cape• SAN QUENTIN (AP) -\ mule convicted or murder111g his wife 1s mussing from the mRx1mum stt:urlty section of San Quentin P r ison <1ulhorl!les said todav Pnson ort'Jclals said !ht'\ hoped Neil Edward D~rro" 26 of Sacramento had not escaped from the pn~n grournk He v; 11.s diSto\ rrcd m1SStng during a rouune roll call \Vf!dnexlay afternoon e Wlff' Attacked l OS ANGELES !UPI\ -A man maklns 1nd1scnmmate t11tnck5 on a pns~~rby assaul1ed !he pregnant \\!fl' of n Sw1as consular o!hc\111 "edne$da) k\1l1ng her unborn child Thr ''oman \VILS ldV lfJed IJ Juana ~1aegll wile 01 Kurt ~lne"ll St!cretary of Ch tncery In lhc Sv;llJ consul~tc Bit•tlts HOSP TAL Mlf I& 191' .:.3 " C• clv~ •nd I.• "' 1.tf Fowlt 1154 NtwPOrl llvd (otl• MH t llOy M•V 11 Hll "4•nc~ ~"° Wll •m Ort<Jt C •!M>. ~!61 II . ll•lvtrdt L•GU"I Nlflltl bOf N•dl~ L ~ W•Y,,_ 1' '" Hf !1'17 Ttrnl L•o un• Hiii• 1J01 M1y It 1'71 I. no• Lit •no JOllll E• I WI ~ GU " UO Wtrldl ltt ICI LlllllN ltatll Am011• IU l6/l'm6u• ltl l 'lt (l(GllOU" SNAllEMLO Git .. :::: ~:'~i£\~' •u~·gE~~~' •" ~p.:~o 1{;:·:~ ~~7:~ !~:a l'UNDS llOUP P•> <n 11 12 11 ~ F fl F.. l 60 J tl (IPll l I" ISi llllclotD l j/) 1()1 I• Inv IW tU "'•b ti.I /Jll 1-.com II I Jt Opta 9/0 OtO "< C•P I ll tl1 Lf9" l. 111 o.lo ln..-.1111 01 I H C:On1ra I 16 OOM S P•ct FO 1 •~ 1 O'I Sou 111 'IJ (• S!oo~ •I JAfl.ES SMl•llSOM FOS \le•" •II !IJ t'.»11 >91 C:•o o .. oa. 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M -·" "''' $OI LlOll Oft~e O•"t TRU•T nv Gu d ' 1 o JI P n T ~ 1 II VS Cofl' • 11 t 11 A I B 111'1 t1 "v no\ t I) "l0Nll:I PCI SlltC •er-• .. PooM otrl c it I 1' "• "~~ • oc 10 11 Pion f:n • 14 • M.:V"o 1>11 1 ll J Jl levt I! Jun Ind fl llt• Dormlf'I Ou"n Ct"'D • I 11 I 15 NYS'T P.00" Fd \0 oil II 4'.:l .... 11~ o I I J l!llf °""' W1vtrly Pr.-lat' (011\jl Cp • 00 • Jtl COUMiEL fl'IOft II • u ro ....iY•"1 Iott j JI Mt• Judi!" tllCJ l'•fdtrlct. JOHQfl (o<np 90 1 .S• I l() Cta-I I I I.I Pl.ollftll I 'O 'f11\11r... l ll ) .IJ ~Ull er Ito.I lllh SI .. nit "'"~ ~ ~d I I• I JI CiO I I• 1 U 1.li PLI (ltto 10 tt 11 V -"1 C>< • 0 • <I I Cl l l llll C1pt!.11 •H•tl"LI T•n 1•t ' llltr Slt 1,Jr • • t MIV 2S ltH Inv t 00 t IC IN'<' Elf Gft0U" 1"•1CI! IOWE N1"" Mu 10 JI ti ,, .. C• mff '' J '"! 011110 RIC"1ro Moort C111l11 t w 5 • S • O\ Gt~ 5 )6 Ctw!ll 10 tJ O tl •+"'I •Cl I 1' • •t .. I CbnMt " •II t •• O'a NO '1• St\ nc,om t Ml t #ELI.I MOTON °.;.t' "'Ollttont -dtMttbOY (on"r C 1gl111 t11 ~P .J •l•l '<wl!rt 10111011 GIOU.. .,.-"•'~ tlll 11\d WI! '"' llOOlll Woocl E OA l 11 It) M~1U•I 1 lO t Cf2 Nw l'IOr I JI 11 E•Pll>' t Jo 11 11 • 1"01 lllllNCll Or Miu Oft Yltlo. () y 1 '' >.•1 )10<~ 1~ 1' 11 ! !'ro ro • tl ! !V11I r H I u !)Oy t\ ) t) !ie!f<I I 10 J Prov O'I JS MO•q" 9 II 0 I o\1,1,f 10 1t1' dg t 10 t 10 Vlr "'' '!) I t Prowd Gt I II 1 T1u1' • /l l. Alln tM Jlmtl JOHP'< Ml II" )•t(ll DIU.WAlll lnY R11 • I ''l Pr!ill Slit I)\ I ~1,1, 10 ll 011 ODIWM> th t Po!nl 1rl OIOUP IS I l"UTNAM W&f,11 t •t!Ol1 Ml~ " ~II Detttr I to t 1) C..•I~ t J1 I 6(1 f'UNOI W..t""' • J) IOtJ I t!tn lli•f" lo\([ L•V"" rr1nU' SI~ k DI .. I • J4 ' 11 1"(0"' ) ,, ' " Cbnvt • • 51 10 ,, Wlnll\• ' ,, ' u Ul'll HllQO •o LIOlllll H 111111 bPV °' IA 1 1 ·1 I 11 tnl UI ) ti tqw 1• ' » ! W.SI UICI 1 11 1 ~ .Su••n l'I"'' •IWI £0....-0 $w 1"""1 ·~·.·•,•,, \j l Ufl ''" "" lt44'1Jil Otbrt ntl1 N•tll G• •Ill, -1.A9ij"I Nlg~ll 9ifl ~ < J ti I 01 hf'fl ""d It 0) lt t Cr•ll! t 1J 10 11 MKO!ll S 01 I t D It J~Uk ., ~!i!IO .,, 11 lf'l(Om 1 1• ! lttltr ttt •1i ?•me a L•Y I t ftd 'v 0 I.ff e•i.t Ort•t [ ' ' I I I '° G.,tn t 11 It t"W•1 /1 I,,,_., tloY 00o~n m11 S-11~•• I Or 0 ,.,.• "e "' Dolf ' - :JO DAILY PILOT Thursd,,y J1rntt 1.3, 197<1 1'lonep1's lf 01•tl1 No,v's Goocl Ti111e To B11y Colo1· TV By SYL\1IA PORTEJl I f you t.')(pl'Ct !O he in the rnarket soon ror a nc1\' color TV SC~. buy i! n 0 II' . Tradilion:illy. Jun r is :1 bargain n1onth for buring TV and right no1v t;i111ply lxx·ause n1illio11:; or you 11·ho 1\·ill be bU\"t'rs in the fulurc :ire ()ut or )·our hoine3 and out. of the nH1rkcL T\r sc1s are usuall v niarkcd do11·n in price lo lure you back_ But \•ihile n10rc lhan nine out or 10 households 011·n al least one TV sci :ind the informed estiin:ite is 1hn1 lip 10 9 n1illion t'o!or models <:Osting: substanri:illy n1ore th<in ~-1 hil· Ii 0 II 1•:i I I h ;, 1· e brt'n ~'old t1cror1~ 197~ end ~. 11•e are fnr fron1 ;i n11· lion rif pro~ · ::;J;- v.· he n 11 \;... ~ r.o~nes !o se-l "'-' leclin~ o n l' P0 1tT1:1t of these l'Xpcnsivr <1pp lianc1'S 1'.lanv of us are t'Oax£>d into bu~~itg sets at pric('s \l'e cannot afford and on tern1s \l'e should not accept. t.Iany just don't knO\\' \\'h.'.it to look for. :\"!any fall into obvious traps. TODAY. YO U can purchase a superior CQ]or TV \\'ilh a FIRE-BURGLARY ALARM SYSTEMS RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL • ln1totlt'd & Senice<I rairl y large screl!n a n d illlprO\"£.'d fi"alures for under $~00. Bui the l 1nprovcd Jt»Hurc•s ad 1' c r 1 i s e d by n1an ufa<'t ur£>rs c;1n ronfuse .'.IS 11·c1J as l:H."nefi1 ~·oi1. How. then, do ~ou shop "·isclr? -B£.'gin by fnmiliari zing ''our.sell 1rith three basic lernis: solid·stat£' circuitry. in·linc picture tubes und ;1utomntic tuning. Solid·state cirl'Uitr}'. '10\Y available from every domest ic manu facturer. is perhaps the single niost i n1 port ant inno1•a1.ion in color TV, and there's no ren~11n you should settle for anything I cs s . Although son1e makers s!ill havl.' a fe\v sets \\•hich are not. JOO P£>1'C£>nt .solid-stale, the so- cnlled hybrids are being phased out :ind domestic production should b£> 100 P£>rCt'nt solid stale v;ithin the next 1·ear. So ·1 id-stat£> circ111tr1·. no11· step for\1•ard be ca u s c lransistors use far less energy than tubes. produce less heat 11·hile operating, and don't burn out the \\'UY tubes can. • • \ ... UPI Ttlet>llllfo Co11s11111e1· 1•uvs TN·LTNE PICTUR E lubc . .;, Federal Energy Office built into nianv makes or 17• chief John Sawhill said inch and 19-inrh S£'!s arc bcinl! consuiners will bear used by a large percentage of burden of increased 1nllnufactur£>rs whn bt'.'!if'•:e cost if congressional thev arc fuzzv-frPe 1nrJ fidd l" efforts to eliminate oil free. Zenith is no11' !he on!~· depletion allowance too niaker not usinf:: an in-lint' . tube. arguing that it.s highly fo r oil companies suc- refined phosphor dot picture reed. He spoke before ·r 1' ex as Independent gil'es just as good. 1 not better. 3 picture. This decision __ P_r_o_d_u_c_er_s_Tu __ es_d_ay, must be up to you . Auton1atic or one-button ' .i\.ss e11mly Unit Kill s Mi lk BilJ SACRA:\1ENTO (t.:Pl) 111e As s e n1 b I y Agriculture conlnliltee \\:'Is s cut t 1 ~ d leglslaUon ck-signed to IOWl't Call!ornla tnilk I) r i cc s follo11•ing a heated hearing whcr£> consun1er advocate~ chiimed lhcy received shoddy treill.Jncnt. "I a1n over.1•he!nlt'!d by 1he procedure." Jl\lth Vannatta, ch11irwo1nan of the Los Angeles-based Fight 1.nnation Together. told lhe <.'01n1nittee \Vcdnesday, noting t h a t n1cn1bers at one p o i n t abruptly 1£>ft the roon1 wh en the bill 11•as about to be heard . The co1n1nitll'C , i n s I e a d , vote<f 8-0 to strike 1lhc bill and subst.itute it for a study of California's 40·year--0ld 1\1ilk Stabilization Pi.•ogram, 11•hich sets niinhnum 1>rices for fluid mil k at the pro d ucer, "'holesal£> and retail levels. Roy A I pe r , lcgistlative advocate for the Ralph Nader- affilialed California Citizen Action Group, said the b i 11 ( AB3652) by Assemblyn1an Joseph B. Montoya \0-La Puente), a11d Alan Si£>t'Oly tD- Los Angeles l. would have n1eant 101\"er milk priers to t.'OtlSunters by lifting pricl' rc ntrols al the 'vholesale level and setting a low minimu1n for retail milk. Con1mittee ch airman Chahinan John V. Briggs ~R­ Fullcrton), denied that those testifying ln favor of the 1neasure \Vere treated (X>Orly. JO YeH''f E1petien<• ll "•~"" In The Httt>or Ar~• Coll for FN1! E1ritnot~ SEA COAST AL.ARM SYSTEMS Divi•iOll ot 5ea C~•I 81drs. Sg1>ply 1651 Plocentla--Co1fa Mei.a 642·3490 tuning is offered by C\"ery manufacturer. On most sets , it"s a simole control that eliminates th£> need to fiddle 1ri1h a handful of knobs to adjust color for each channel. Brightness. contrsst. color and tint are pre·set. Top Executive Rate Nea1'i11e: $1 Million LIBERTY COIN CO PURVEYORS OF GOLD COI1'S SPEOALlZING IN i\·IEXIC1\iS '>Cl PESOS, 1 AUSTRIAN ll'O CORONr\S, AUSTHIAN DUC,\TS. l.\f.\IEDIATE OELJ\IEHr CASH T~SACTIO!\S ISST:\ST l'NFOR~IATI(11' i l-'·~4jl •ii'>I'> ~) \ DOVER DR. :-O:E\\ l'ORT UE,\Ctl, CA 9~660 941'>; \\llSl·llRE BLVD. UE\'ERL:r HILLS. CA '}1.1~1~ REMEMIEA DAO HE REMEMIHS YOU by TERRY Gil.AMT. R.l"tl. •·Jf you mention the s e technical tern1s lo :i T\' ~al£>sman... says AUrrd rli Scipio. president of the 6~­ ,·r.ar-otd ~1agnavox Co.. <l leading don1estic maker of hoth color and black-and-;vhitc TV. •·he's likely to treat yott like an expert rather than a person \l'hO can b£' talked in!o buvincr an outda1£>d color TV. Th.at ~lone is a protection for you \\'hen you buy. "A NO DON'T forget that your color TV probably will be 11·ith you for a longer period 1han vour new car. You should buv a set that is thorougl1ly and lastingly up-to-dale in the latest technology." Data Sales Jun1p 34,3 Data Technology Olrp. of Sania Ana announced. its final results for the year ended April 27. 111 ith sa les of $17,351.100. an increase or 34 percent over the previous y£>ar's $12.942,000. Net income sho1ved a marked increase to S730,000 or • ·60 cents per sh.are compru·ed v.·i th $117.000 or 10 cents P£>r share reported in the prior year. L ' By ~lIL TON 1'.lOSl\.O\\'ITZ Chro~l<l1 Ft•lllres "\Ve supply 11 percent Of 1hc oil to Japan. \Vhcn yo u liave an economy based on oil. 1rhich costs four times \\'hat it ditl a ye<1r ago. so1n~­ !>oJ~ h:-is to go !here anti really hold the hand of , gove rn-f':L n1ent and~· ··/"" I) i g ind11s-~ tri:1l people. rt gets tri l:le my job." MOSKOWITZ The speaker is Bob R. Dorsey. chairman of Gul f Oil. explaining \\'hat he does as the head honcho of the nation's fourth largest pe t roleum company. Dorsey. who began his career as a chemical enginee r. is \l'el! paid for his efforts. His salary last year \vas SJ00,000 and on top of that he received a bonus of $190,000. ANOTH ER OIL compa"ny' chief, Harry Bridges of Shell Oil, v.'ent to Chicago last fall to take a t1l'O-day course to improve his persona l communications. Explaining "'hy he nttdcd to de» this, Brldgcs said : "I'm not a natural 10 appear on the television set or to be publicly interviewed. But it "·as a job that suddenly had to be done that you C1luldn't in all honesty pass on to somronc else." • Bridges, \l'ho has \\'Orked !or Shell in such places as Ne1v Guinea, India and Ecuador, is also well paid fo r his efforts. His salarv last year was S2-l0,000 a1id on top of that he received a .bonus of Sl25.000. As handso1ne as t h e s e stipends may appear to you. they do not place at the top of the executive compensation scale. Neither Bridges nor Dcirsey ranks among the 15 ( ~IONEYTREE) highest paid corporate executives. according lo the annual survey done by "Business \Vcck." HEADING THIS list 'vas Paul B. Hofhnann. \\' h {) received a to tal of $978.000 - nearl y $1 million -from Johnson & Johnson. the drug and adhesive ba n dage company. This 'vas especia lly neat because Hoffman served only th r ee and one·ha!f months in 1973 before retiring as chairman. Hoffmann 's pay package beat out the $938,000 awarded lo Richard C. Gerstenberg. who is chairman of the nation's 1 a r g cs I industrial in a n u fa c l u re r , General t.Iotors. Let's not forg£>t dear olil Oa<l. Oh sure, v•c koo11· lhere's a Fathers Day just as there's 01 :'t1ot hers Day but soml.'ho111 th!! Jorm<'r never atlraets as mut"h ;1tlcntion :1s the l;iltt•r. People ofl£>n set•n1 to say · · llad doc sn·l like a fuss marlc over hirn ·· nut really 11011• \\.'hen vou tlunk about 1L doesn't ~\'(•ryton(' ,:!low fron1 a little extra rl·cognilinn ·! GM Hil{es Prices TH E TOP-lS roster is highly concentrated by type of business. Seven of the slo ts went. to auto industry £> x e cu tlves rGerstenberg. Ed1va rd Cole and Thomas i\Iurphy of G~1 : tlcnry Ford II and Lee faCQccoo or Ford: 111 Stanclard Move That's what ·we aim 10 ~ive our custnincrs, t•xlra recoi:i· nition. \Vt• rccogni zl.' yo ur nl'ctls u nd go out of O\lr \\"11y to ,.;er,·e vou in v.·hat£>1"er "'Ill' ;)Oss1bl 0e. Prt·tty soon you·it gl""' too (ron1 our extra 1;pl'ciu I profcss1on:il scr\'1rc. Y 1) ll o rt Y o u n IX>CTOH Ci\,'-: PJll)'.\'E t.:s wh1•n vo u tu•t''ll a th•l11·1•rv \\"e will dch1·er prounpdy \\lthout cxlr;1 rhari:c. A ~real rn;iny f)t.'OJ)ll' l't•ly on u~ for 1he1r heal!h nt'l•!Ji; \Ve 11·elcome rt11ut·s1s for dt•!lvc r\' .«~r1lfe :ind t•h<.irJ..lt' al·co\u11s. PARK LIDO l"HARMACY 151 Ho'flil.i Rood free Dtflw"'Y Newporl ltoch642· I 510 DETROIT (UPT ~ -General ~lotors Corp. has lnrreased the price of its 197-1-model cars and trucks an average or $118, or 2.4 percent.. by making previously optional equipm£>nt standard on ntany models. Kcither Gi\1 nor the Cost of Living Council considered the action a price increase since 1hc added charges to custonicrs arc for equipment !h;lt \\'as optionar. Last Munl/1. C.~1 raised the re1ail prices of its cars, options n n d destinnfion charges by $105. Together \\'ith general price increases and the a d d e d cha rg('S for optiona l equipment m:idc stand11r<l, '---------------, REDUCE YOUR SECURITIES COMMISSIONS I UPTO 80°/o I I ..__~_,.."......__ I I Name ..................................................... I Street ••••••.••••.. ,, .•.•• City ......................... . I Zip ........................ Phone .................... , •• I I RUBINS & COMPANY, IMC . I I 2l27 .io-Dr., S'""• ..... Co. 92705 I PHOHEl7141547·167t I I ~NA•-1'•WlCl"""'&ls.ta.l•!""'Oro.oto. .. ' ~~''""'1"""'"1'""""""""'G<:w°[ll;!l•lior> ---------.------ I . . . . ' . I G~1's cars and trucks now carry a prlee tag $M6 higher than t.hcv carried at the end of 1he 1973·mode\ year \Hst summer. Of that figur£>, SJ52 covers options n1adc standard. 1'he new prices become effective 11·Hh cars built on or after next t.ionday. a Gil-t s pokes man said . The equipn1ent being ni ad e standard includes ste£>1 belted radial tires. po"·er steering Hnd r.~1 ·s high energy ignition 11-11':1) system. "\Ve don 't con sider this a price increni;e berause lhrre is added value to the c11sto1ncr." said a (;i\.f spokesnl:in. "The strcl radinl I.ire!'! offer ..:as savings and longer lire 1if£> and !he llEI sys1en1 reduces maintenance requircmenls," Steel heired radial tires "'ill be stanctard on all Oldsmobile Lynn Townsend and John Riccardo of Chrysler). The oil industry captured two (.John Jamieso n of Exxon a n d Rawlcigh \Varner of i\1obil!. Johnson & Johnson took two by its£>1f i Hoffmann's succes· sor. Ri chard Sellar~. earned $678,9681 , l·Iarold S. Gen£>en , architecl of the ITT conglomerate. could do no beft('r than sixth place las1 year with his dr;:nv of $814,29'). A drug company £>xecutivc, \Villiam Laporte of Antericnn llome Products. \\.'as in 12th position with SM0.409. RCA's R.obert Sarnoff earned 5525,000 to na.il down 14th pla ce. And rounding out the list. in 15th pll'!cc. wl'!s c . Peter t.IcColough. chainnl'ln of .Xcro~. who \lo'as p<lid $506,461, or a little less than $10,000 per week. n1od('I!! and the H'EI syste1n ,--;....:7::;n;n;;;p,==:;- \lo'ill be st1:1ndard on nll CutlaS! l A LI Cutlass Supreme, VI s tu • • Cruiser. Drlt:1 38 and Ortta l!R S••1tUpToS IZtMo. YowOwtt._..uUw Roya le series Olt,lsmobiles. M.......,. 1 s c .. s per doy At Pont iac. st('('I lx'l!ed r<ldial tires 1vifl b(' s1andard on J SClll fniftcltcoliMs all n1od£>:ls and po11·cr steering OntyS,4.IOMo.pilrflflOCJf "'ill beoon1c standard <HI the n.T•llfp.._.c......,otc; .. f, l 00 I •H Hll, C~'9 ,,_,. 1..tmans Safari. L 11.x u r .\' IZtltJ7lol Jl4141514tl·l2'" J.cmuns an<l luxury Lemans 1714ltJt·IU4 S<lfnri models. \ . . . ........ FINANCE 2 No-fllult Bill:; Killecl By Panelists • SACRAi\IENTO (UPI) Two rival no-fault autornobile insurance bills have been d£>feated by the S e n a I e Judiciary Conlntittee . One bill (SB2350l by Sen . Grorge t.1oscone ( D -S a n Francisco 1, \1'as r e j e c t c d \Vedn£>sday on a 3-3 vote. shorl of the seven vot£>S nfed('d. 11·/tilc the oth£>r 1582425) by S£>n. Clark L. Bradley (R·San Jose), was turned back on a l~ 4 vote. Two other bills on the highly controversial topic awaited action by the con1mi tt ec. a nlajor hurdle for no-fault proposals in the past. No-fault is a concept where n1ororis1s a re paid r or accident costs by their ov.·n insura n ce companies, rega rdless of \\'ho is at fault in an accident. A key prol'ision of the 1'.1oscone bi ll would have al1011·ed n1otorists to sue without any restrictions, despite the "no-fault" clause. It was sponsored by the State Bar Association. Attorneys, who have a high slake in automobile collision cases, argue that the right to sue should not. be abridged.. The Bradley bill v"ould have allo1ved suits only in cases of severe injury or loss. Unleaded U11ready· For 1975? SOU1'H I.AKE TAHOE (AP) \Vhcn the 1975 model auton1obilcs begin selling in {;atifornin, rhere ntighl not be £>nough unleoded gasoline to rrtect their needs. says the Sltllc Air Re5tl\ll'CCS Boa1·d. Th£> report Sii:id nnlcatll•d g<isolinc would be 1hc h<H'dcst to find in sparsely papulalcd areas. It added that in event of a .c:asollne shortcge \\'hen all 1notorists begin using \1·hat · ever fuel they cun get, 1be 0\1·ncrs of 1975 n1odcl cars "11ou!d bc in dire <;troits." ·ro 1nec1 the n1ore stringent 1975 exhaust e 1n is s i on slnndurds. ntost 1975 model passenge r vehicles ·sold in California 1vill be u s i n g t•:i!alylic emission co n I r o I svste1ns, the repot·t said . To p-ro tect the catalysts fron1 lend poisoning, lh£>sc vehicles nu1st he opera!£>d l'i' i t h unleaded gasoline." it said. Regulations -still bf\ini;? revise<I -of the federal E riv i ronmental l'rotection Af!encv (EPA l 11·ill make ii unla11·ful to put l e .'.Id I! d j?asoline in the cars 1vith catalytic sys!en1s. Kathy Akh1s. t S11ddleback Inter •.. h£'th l II llCIV cJ iv l SI 0 11 "'ithin I he Jrvinc·based llb.ldt!I hoine .11111 corn- n1crcinl 111· t<'rior (lcslgn firnt . Beverly • .• · .. !for n he:-tk, --;\1<TNs- prcsident of ,Saddluback In· lcriori;, l'lnnounced the prrimo· Uon and the formntion ol Ute custon1 rcs.idcnlial division. • The Irvlue Con1pnny has announc('{f three promotions at the land planning firn1. Douglas 1\1. GrrUcr h:1s been nan1ed director of residential develop1nent for th£> fi rm·s ,.1"£>Sidential div ision. Clarenl-e "'Chuck" C. Baker has b£>en appointed division controller of agriculture operations, <:.nd l\trs. Ann.a A. Pick has been pron1oted to manager of property taxes for the Irvine Coin p any's financc departm£>n L Gfe ller reSides in frvine . Baker in Lagunn. Uearh ;111.;l ~1rs. Pic k lives in Corona dl'l Ma.-. On the availability or Ne11·port Beach re si dent unlead£>d gasoline, the EPA Fred R, Hernandei has been regulations \\•ill require large natncd vice pr£>sident and service sWtions to have at chlr: ex<'c11· least one nun1p for unleaded t iv e fin<tn· gnsolin£>. But large stat ion3 eia l <ind ad- romprise only Zl nerc:ent of : ministrative the outlets in low-density officer 0 r population counties. while they U Di v ,.. rs:1i n1akc up 59 pcrcrnt of the Datri Corpo- tota! in medium-sized cities ration. and 71 percent In lar!!e cities. The fi r m The report said 33 California .j g , r 1~ c en t ! v counties are in till? 1011' density~-~ \, mov£>fl it ·s pooulation cate~ory. w'E\N.1.Noi:z co r p o ral<J "Althnuj!h un1£>adcd t11pJ is hPcidquarters from Co s l a reouirE>d be~innin~ Julv I. r.lesa to ne11• facillti1~s in 1914, the mt1jor demand for Newport Beach. such fu('l is not expected l:l Prio r to his appointment. occur until after thr. """' Hernandez 1vas cont1'0ll£>r for models arc available for Data Systems and Installation purcha~. Corp. or Santa Ana. Sttpben Berllner. dlrcctor or sales pro1notlon of Pacific Atutu wl lJft l11 JJu r a n et Co tnpuny has bt.-t'U elected J974 ch<tirn1an or the Life Advertisers Association \\'estern Round Tnbl<'. 1'he Irvine resident has been with Pariflc ritutuu l for 111ore thnn 17 years. • Jun1es I. Cumblntr, a co founder and 1mrtner in the Lo.'! Angeles buil di n g construction firm of Clwtlner aod Gumbiner, has bticn C'lccted to the boa rd or directors of Lion Country Safari, lne. • Appoi.nt1nent of Leo A. Fitz.simon of Orange as vice president in charge o f engin£>ering hus been :inuounced by Co n d o r lnternattonal Corp., S a n Clcntente-based developer. Prior to joining Condor. Fit7-<>imon 1vas vice president or Loma r Corp. of Santa Ana. He is n1arried and the father of fi ve. • Don Bryant has b e e n appointed director of 1esl for V;irlan Data J\tachines of lrvirie. He joined the f!nn as a technician in 1961 and sl'r- \'~d as lead· rn a n, fore- man, and su- pervisor. Since l 9 70 Bryant has bc£>o manag- Harold Crowe , t: en e r a I rnunagcr of South Co a s I Pl<izu's l\1ay Company, has be£>n nan1ed divisional vice president by May Company Californla presid£>nt George Foos. Complete Mid-day Americ~n' Stock List l . . -··-AAllCP Old 6 I A<tlon Ind'! S ' Aoot...O .o~ n s A,g;. Carpn I ' ~t~r;~:p1 ~~ ·9 ! A.rwic~ .70 11 11' Alt><! Waldn ' Al<ol•< _01a ' 1 Alleg~CI> W1 ? A!"9n Ai.is U I Alln Tire bk I ' l\lllher 1.10 S ) Al11< (orp 24 ' Amco lndst ' ,, ''•-'• l~•-\o 8<1--IO '• t 1-16 l'• ... ,,_ ..• ll>o )'; • I 0 ~"-'. s .. -'·• I -'1 e• ,_" 1)'<.-.. )'• :: . AmH~ss wl~ 18 ~·· .•. AmBoltrl .}Cl 4 1 b'• ... ACon1rOI .31 18 1 8'J« '• AmF11 1.0d • I 1~ Aml"I' .lbe • 1 J•, • '• AM.!it~8 .00 I I b ••• AmMl'l•1 WI 4 I ' o • ', A P,1fo I )0 I 10 34'.o • 4• Am 1111 -'°" 1 10 s•.~ '• Am llecGrp JI l '•-'• Arn sa111 '" ' , ,,,., ''" Am lee .Ud 6 l •s:.. ..• AM!C(p .<M 7 11 !O<o-~. 1'ngloC .na 1 1 2 ••• AQullar>e .)0 11 II 2•••-'• AriCLd .Hld 8 17 11'~-lo Armil< En! J b S'• ,, ::~~ fi'~:i j ! I~~: -l ~ A, ....... ,. (p \] 16 Q', •• ,, A'>"ltlOil Ca I 1 l >o • ~' A,11111Svc ,. 6 •·-" ASPl'IO (0q t I 1~, '• ,1.,10<. Food 1 11,.,. " Atalanta .12 ) I 7'•+ lo AlicoMtg wl •• ll 2'•• '• Allllt llld IOI . . 16 U \·, • >;. A119a1 In .11 n J ,?ll<• " Au•l•al Oi! 11 ' I! -'• A"lo l'lad;o ll 1l l'•, •:. A"loSw .IJ H 1 , •• ,,., AVC Corp 6 l6 1'-l\•onOi .9Sd I ! ll'" • I·, AVll c;,i,.pln 18 1 11'--1,, _.,_ i'loldQr M .SO I J l'/o. '~ l;ln(fQtl .61d I I< L • B~ni\!ef LI i •11 6'•->, Banner I .OJ • 1 1 \o B~•bra Lvn I 1 1'• '• B~'""' Eng .. 1 •'• Barnwell In , , 1 •··• '• ~rtell Mod • ~ 1 Bartons C~!I ll 1 1lo-'" Ba•ln f't!1fl 6 11 •'• BaY!<X .()!I . 1 8' 1 • Jo Bell Ind .oa • 1 1 Be"'!S!d ws , 1 11 .-'• Benr11• (p I I l'•-'• B<orq Ent lk . I 111• '• llo!rq Ill .lJd l I ?h o,, llo!rql'll!y W\ •• I .. !·!6 llo!•QO."n e ... ,. 10 1\o-\o 6o!t91'P! I.II .. 1 10 ••• Bern10,.,..! 10 l 7>.-~. Btr•enC 10 I l '" • '·• Be•ttl'f Ent 1l 1 81( P,.~ .18 ~ 11 Q~ •• '• Binney S .60 ~ 1 ''• • Bio ovnornt 10 6 q~,-1, 8iuebifd In I I J • ....... SoOinAp .•O J 10 6 Bollitk C:p 11 1 ''• . Bow V~ll .10 68 IHI 21 >. '• Bowmar 111, 1 1S 10•,. • '• B••d l!dgdn I U ~ • .. B•~d coma! 1• l 1.1•,, •' B•anHI "*!' 111 11\o-'•• Bra~an 19 l &• !/'·• ... Bre~n Co•P 1 ''• Broo~•P .t6 b 1 I =~i~~'.( .~} iii ~ ,~:1:-'• (lrror B ,I) q l ,,,,, '• f1yfldy( l,Olt • • "'• '• 611rndnl 60 ~ 1 lh ''• 611llfl• Av•d1 l l 6'> '• 611tlfS C.•s II 11 l~ • " _,,_ (..lK ~trol 11 11 !0' 1 '• Collltcorn ,. 1 ,,., '• C..100< ,II<) S • 6 Cal Comp!r I • •'• (•!P1Urn 1 1 1 u •. (tmto '"~P • ' •'' • C.1m1>b C111b • 10 \•,-1.,. (•ffll> '" .•O 4 • ll'o-'• Uo\ El G•s JI I ?\o 1·1& ("" H"1'1td J9 74 11 ·1t c11n ,,.,.,.m ' 1 l'• .. (., Ou1dM ¥ I , .. _ '• tdn ~\IP 011 lS I tJ COP""'' <;p J II l '• '• c ... ,.~.,. 10 • i , •• Carnal~ !.Olt I' 2J •I • 'o (a• Pin .$4, I 1 ''"-' '• C••""'LPI 1110 ~S'•-l'• C•'""''t wt . , 10 I"'. h C..•Ht A 1.)0 ( I 7•1 I • \, C.Ol!Cw .tOd ,·.,. 7 ' U l o • .., C•\llflOll '" .,.. •O, .'~',.'>. (.H!ltwd !II 10 Ll••l•Ol'I Ci> 1~ ' e11, '· <. o + Corp 1 1 I« '• (f'llu Cr•i1 11 • '"• I• (' .. ~ "' '~ ~ . (.MnpH .07d 11 U I" C~'''" Ind • • 7 '• (h•IU• \,tO• I 2 21 + W ,,, . "' (\,. '• l'oj • \• J ... ''• ~. ,,,_ 1. a • " " J >, .. . •'· .. . ''• .. •'·-\lo ''· ~·· ... '0'1>-.. 10\· r· . .•... ,, IJI• j I ! I'·•-\~ I>. ... ?q •, • I• 1'! .•. ... '" I ' '•+ '• ,., . '. 1>• '• 1·1~ 1 .. -'·· ". 1•.-'• .u• •• 1 11\• ' ,, II 1o 1q1, -.. , .. •'. (lo . ;,; If' ' I '< lt'. • '·• ,, ... " q1, •.... "' ' .. ' '. '• ... --------·--------------------------- . . •• T1·y Satu.rday's News Quiz We Da1·e You . . . . , ror n, '" lOH~ " the E g ·; or try A VICC or 11 or an dor nt "" ther en for of in,,;rl asa nm '" ead ore SU or 9 '0 "'' nag eer ark ra I s I ha, VICC 311} rge Wednesday's Closing Prices -New York ~ps a1ad Dotctas I , " • t , "' 10\.~ ' ' • t • I ' /\em York 111 1111: c E!\O l?lf MIQUh !II J Wan S 10 ,, ~~~.I.pt SiS Bl Sl.•hV~ IJ>d I\ ~AWi pt 143 10 1 JuiMj ooO )( ~ t.1rMg 1111 1 S t MOhlW~ 01 l 4 0 S1110<\ 11(1~) 711111epM~ 71<1 1nnCLCAm )0 61J8•11111<1.-'0 ~ ~ u AMDual Vt! 6 J U Tt t tlfOITIP , .. 16 VOr!\IWIC 1". 6) IW~ll!\I ,70 6 ) 11 ~~ll(ltr AUO Jtl9C."'"' :iCI lt'tQAJ flllllllr' "l2' we 1a Al ,.. Ja22LKG11 lM S..t1lCo!&A~ ~ l •i1• ConP OI ~ 16 t 1S O'Yrr<O tn • . ~ . U\~-IU. .,_ u -3 ) • >-• I 5 ~lost Active ,,.., ~ "' ",., ""' ..... ""' '"" ~m "'"" York Side• l'ohune NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE ' 1974 s DAILY' PILOT Year's High-Low s Appear EYery Saturday l11vesto1·s Await /': ~ \V YOHK (1\P) -The stock n1a1 kel posted another mode1 ate decline 1n light trading \Vednes day \\:h1Je 111vestors waned for fresh evidence on 1ntlat1on and 111lcrcst rate trends Brokers noted so1ne d1sappo1ntemnt on \Vall Street that no other 1naJor l\c" \'ork bank matched a c1uarter point rcduc:T 1Qn in r he prime rate an nounced bv the ~1r t :'\:lt1nnal C 11 \ B3nk ~rtcla) The Dow Jones 1ndustr1al a\erage of 30 stocks lost 3 52 points to 848 56 I arry \\lachtel at Bache & Co said 1t appeared a good manv 111\estors o:.pent the day on the side , lines \\a111n~ for !he go\ernn1enl s rep o11 on the \\hole sale price index for ~la) and the weekly monev n1arkel figures due 1 hursday from the Fed· eral nese r\e Rank of J\ew 'ork After !he six session rally th1 ough J\londa) \\achtel sa id the market \\as \Ulnerable to son1e degree of profi t taking . -" ". '" , .. •• " " -"-' ,. -" _, ll -" ~ " " "'-" , -. - it t11eri1•n11 JO Mo1t Actft•p • NE W YOlllC UI' J -Tiit 0 ac Vt • oc•1 I ·~ on 1~1 Amt Icon o ~ £, chonat Wod~•d•v ''" , • .. ' "' •• " ~l " '" ' ' _, ' . ' 1\1111•ri1•n1• Sale" • Symbols Trivia? It's a reason to reod the Daily Piiot'• entertainment page every Saturday j . I 32 DAILY PILOT Thursday, Junt 13 1<174 ' .... -· ' ' . .... " • ~ , I 1 • TO NIGHT'S ' , T\' HIGHLIGHT S KHJ b 7:30-"Not as a Stranger.'' Robert ?i11tchum and Olivia de Havilland star in this dra1na { of a man 's struggle to becon1e a doctor. Frank I Sinatra and Broderick Crawford are featured, wi th • Lee l\farvin in a minor role. ' ABC O 8:00 -The Shen -yang Acrobatic I 1'roupe. A cultural exchange progran1 fro1n Chjna ., entertains in U1is special. fil nted at the Kennedy ~ Center for the Perfor1ning Arts in \Vashington. , CBS tJ 9:00 -"\Vho's Afraid of Vi rginia ~· \Voolf1" Edward Albee's 1nasterpiece fathfully re- .r. created on film \l.'ith Elizabeth Taylor and Sandy Dennis giving thei r Oscar perforn1ances. along \Vith "' Ric hard Burton a.nd George Segal. I I TV DAILY LOG Thu rs day l :lO m Mtn '•iffin Sho• CI:l l'h •s/Sporu Evening JUNt 13 9:00 0 t,0. ((l) (f l CBS l llursd1y Mi· wi1: {21/illi) ''Who's Atu id ol Yn· 1ini1 Wool!!" (R) (d1aJ '6&-lh1a beth Taylor, Rithud Bu11on, Gtorit Segal, Sandy Dennis. A lhorouo:hl y ideprellin2 him abour an t mbiUertd tl)U~\e, !hen bitter ~nd b1u1~•n2 we1 bJI bJrbs and hnall y a n1gM ol b~red i.oul~ and dt1trucl»t ~p1111u~I tdOn1bal11m. 0 ,µ lt .i._o m l;ansidt "Once r.:ott lor Joey" IRl i,;h1et lton11de, 101e;h1<1tmg lht unau111onztd dup 1nz ol reco1drni1. attend~ • roe~ grmip·s recording it))1on du11n1 wb1(b the &u1!~1111 os eltttrocu!ed. Jody C1rnt 1ue1t1;. L6J T~t l oltl ~s 6:30 l!_ Dt1lt1'• Choice 0 !t aJ Cli llun1 fu "lhe Gun 6 Ortk Y111 Oy•e m~n" (R) A man. bthtvrng lie 1s LM> Merw Griffin Siio• h1m2 en borrowed lime. jeop1rd11e~ [17 Cfi Ho111's Hutti Caine's Mt 11 well 11 1111 own. An I Zoom! drew Prine and llatheune Woodvrll~ The l'ionttr5 fUf)L V11j1ndo ~-WH I. ~eatt (k) little l11t1I~ · k o111p1n1mt . O ~"'Oo~~, . • bp1nese TVHoij1 7.0 '-:I-! • ~'"" twi , lowll nr ltt Ooll111 • !:JO I Ntwl •J Movie: (2hr) "Go lor l rokt" Notlle de Gill (com) '!II -Van Johru.on, Lant · oum1 N.;~100. ' ll lnMr Spite m Wh1t'1 )lr line! I l ove Lucy II T1\t1 A l hitl n lO:OO 0 Ii}(})@ m Comedyworld Ho1!~ Jackie CoopH, Bai~ari fe!Oon and N1p$ey llu~~ell intioduce tOme. d11ns 11 "ork in !he U.S and Gl?il ll7 fl) I Dre1m ol Je1nnot @ (1mtr1ld1 ~l (!) Or11ntl £D DM 11 l~t f1mil1 (Ill ( lf \JJ) l 1Hlt I Onm• Ttlc·lhwi1t1 Mu1M:1I Thnt SIOOlf! 0 TV SPECIAL! * Sensational Acrobatic Troupe From PEOPLE'S1 REPUBLIC Of CH INA! 0 (i]J ()J CD nmi:l',I;] the Shtn· y1n1 ~C!Obllic yfUU,11ii) ~ tUl1UUI 1.•ch1ni:e pio1111m horn th• Pr11p1e·~ Repubht ol China, this amu1nf l<oupe loured the U.S. 1n 19/3.~ ind thti• stunnmc display cl sk•ll 1n aciobilici 1nd lht co n1u11011 an~ w•~ filmed 1t lhe John r' lltnned~ Cen1tt to1 lhe Performing Arb 1n Wa~h1n;:1on, D.C. I De1lt1'1 Choice lolin1 f111m Ille 01,mp1t G1111ien liJ' Mowie: (C) (2111) "$1\oul loud, loude1 ••• I Dtn'I Undu1t1nd" (com) '66 -/,t11cello Mi~t101ann1, l'"~.~"'h Juewes tit G1l1 ta11v1111 Mu1k1I hplOtM V11lcly St.I" Fri day DAYTIME MOVIES •:OO O (C) "Win11 ot Ch1nte" (d1j) '61 -.hm Bro•in. funtts R1!1trt1 •:JO 0 "M11nifict11I fr11ld" (du) '3~­ llo~d 1iolan, A~1m T1mr1on 11:00 0 "1. Jane Doe" (dra) '48-Vtr~ 11.olilon, Rulh Hus5e~. "l outll ol Dt1lll" (my1) '!>9-l'lilliim t ur.1 David Summer. 12:00 tD (C) "Pleas• l tlitYt Me" (tnml '!.0-0eb11rall Ku 1, Milk Sttvtn~ 1:00 ii~ (C) "Affair With ,, l{i!te(' (d1af '67-S!tphen Youn~. Au~lln Willis 1:00 0 (Cl "I CoMld Go On Si112ing" (mu~) '6l -Ju4~ G11!1nd. Ou~ Bog.01de. Br<tiin . omm N1w1 0 (UJ rl) ([ Stntll ol Sin fran. tllto "fhe Hard Breed" (II) l he deJlh o! a 1odeo 1ider looks Its~ ;ind I~ like an 1ccidenl. Sam Hhort, l.1ne Bradbury, Jim Davis and Aftll tilant01l guts!. D VICTOR AWARDS * TOP CELEBRITIES HONOR TOP ATHLETES Z:IS 11 Mowie: "Tiit Woodfll Horit" (dr1) '!>I-Leo Genn. An111onv Stefl. J;40 O M•v": "Mi"i1e Mon!ilei" {~di) ·~s-Wal!t! Reid. Leis Colhtr. HI! "I liirtei m "Dtported" (dll) ·~1 kit Cbintl!tT . l.brt1 101tn l:OO 'I_; "lilt 11! ttie Dti11" {holl ·4;- Bon~ l(ar lofl. llQ (C) "lu1e1 !Of 1C~li111~ (mys) '6&-Stepllen Youn~. Curt Jurgens. Molly Pet~~. 1:10 O (t) "llun 101 Ille S1111" (dlll '51i -llic~ard W1dm1rk. Trel'Of Howard, fanc Gr!t!. l l) (C) "fwili;:ht 101 l~! Gods"" (dn) '58---lloc~ Hudson. Cyd C~i'· r~$e. Ar1h~r K~nnedy, O (C) "Cash NcC1!i (rom) ·~o- 111me1 Gornu, N~!dlic Wood, Dt1n Jaater. (!].1 (jJ "A T111k in LlbJ•" (1d~) ··2 -W&!ttr II.int. bl 00 (C) "Tht '•d (& H•• le UH It)" {W!r) '66-B•l~fl BtdJ~rd, Julie Som~B. 4:30 (Jf @•I "Thr Jolson Slo'1" Ctincl. (mu~) '46-l1rr1 P"k~ KOCI::, CHASSEL $0 Orangt Oounty"s UJIF ttltvision station. KOCE--TV. has sche:fuJed lhe folJO'A'ing special programs today. Oelaite<f lislings ot Channel 50's programs are carried in !he Onily Pllot"s TV Week e.ach Sunday. Ont !ul>itet tOf l~ll 11\'te~'' "'llgl• l int '1 tilt 1lr. l1Jt KOCI! !l'EC:IAL: lHEY IUILf VIL~GE$ lllll!ltlE !C:) eult~•·I Incl (~l!t'\••li011iU1 d•111 OYl'I' 1119 '"' rurr Of $Cl,,.. ct Ille mt-sl v•1u~;tt •ret """ ;,, lllt "orld: C:1lllor· '"11>'1 1,on m•r.-eo•t'lf,1• l1MI l'OCUS OltAHOa COUNfY: !Cl "Ov1r1H (i(onomlt 01vt/opm1nt Pltn" -Heit Jiio'I c-r wll+ "'""u p11n1 lo trt a!t 1001 fOI' lllt unemploy«I In O••"Vt '""'' t iM Hltl•tTIOdert ltr 11 S111d•t !:)1~1n t :MI l'lllH'1 LIHI: tC) "H~N ~t•ono l~Ol,lld !!If, PrttlOtlKY I t I" Vlll!llf'I fl'. 8KU•r· Jr. wflt eorollt /111(1 fll!iOl'lll 01111 /111•11111/~MI lllteJ l!Olll. !60 ll'llM.J ·-. . . -. «. - PRICES GOOD THRU WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19, 1974 American La' France Fire Extinguisher • 7' • refillable dry themitol extinguisher ... sodium bitorbonote bose • Easy to operote! Just pull handle, hold upright, press lever distharge at base of flame • Be prepared for lire eme rgen <ies ... keep 'lne handy in home , garage, auto, boat. #77SR-SC 688 -~·-~r.--·--· ...... -.. ~· ... -::,:·;;.:~::-s:-:~, -.;:::::-~·. Black & Decker " Finishing Sander • High lipttil •.. 10,000 tr~it1 pe1 mi11ult • I otr1 11111noleri1I rel!l1•ol 111il sm11th li11i1hi1>9 • 01ublt i11u1lotecl. 1740• e 1499 12-0z. Can WD-40 22-Pc. Combo Socket Set • lot!ifOI ruiltd pP•ll and 1litky mr1l11111i1m1 I· 4" '"cl l /I" clti1t i11 compo•I 1111tpl ~or • Chr11mt plo1td 11...l lo1~1d • Stops 1410eok1 i11 hi11ge1 • P1olttl1 mr lal • Mell ie 1r 1tonclord. limi1ed 1upplV1 Turner 7-Pc. Torch Kit • lncl11de1 1..,,1 1ytindu. bu1~r1, tlltmbly, ,1u1 11ueu a1ie1. • Slurdy 1!1t l uor19e 1lle~I, NHftt, 888 . -. 119 988 • 3 •;," Swivel Bench Vise • Ne awy duty madel • 3 •1sr1111 t11e ,., 1wlveh, pipt jaw1. ~Milt.in 011wil • limited ,..,,,r,t 11.1 688 • • 3 Ways Safe Safety Goggles • ltn1 proltfl 0~11in1l Hyinq 1bjt1h • Ctlored ltn1 1lli1ld11qai1111 qlor• • \oh lromr prOlt1h 1q11in11 ruh end ~rviir1 199 Black & Decker " 3/8" Drill l1!r1 t111Niil1, low 11U m1clrl • D1uble 1eclu1ti111 ~111 Mtclfl #7HU 1049 • .. fl'.l!I C 'l ... -.L ... lt[il RA NGES ' ~f~ M agn a vox t)o Black & Decker " Jig Saw • Makt~ 1t1oi9h1, 1ur1ecl 1114 10111 cuh • ff< w11cl , 1'1fl11l 11 plaitir • M1clcl,¥1SO• 1049 .. --.i\ S-Gallon Size Gas Can \ 't' I (~. -,.~ AU metol 11111lrMclion l,_: " ' ..J . ' " Jl " • \11l e. 1on11ni1nt way lo 1l11re qo1 for 11ut1, lrHI 11 power mOWU i ~~~~~J.J,;,. I ,.·-~/ '' ' -.-( 388 Linesman 7 Inch Pliers • Ntl•J i11sul111ct'Mlldlt1 !01 11!c1~ 111otecllon. ce111lerl •'i' • RM~qttl mUled !11th .•. 1rip. 1que11r, twi1I, 1111 wi11 nail1 • D11p l119ecl. ,fl6SI 1 99 \ '" !), 1 . ' . CO~I A Ml $A \• . • 't dorm1 4 lull fun1tlo11' ... 1·pla11:" de1imol 1e1ti,.. • ll~h1wei9ht, eoiy lo vie • Replo1eabl• lrottorie1 ... 11mpleltly poittblt • •·digit. ,fNS.600 2995 , ~A ~IA ANA . .. • • I ". . 33 Battling Halo:s Bury Hatchet; Ro~inson to Sox? Rumors Say Robinson Is Head ed for Beantown FRANK ROBJNSON • ·BOSTON (AP I _;The Boston R<d Sox 11re riding high atop the American League East amid ~rsJ.gtent rumors that veteran slugger Frank Robinson Is headed their way before the trading deadline Saturday. •! "If they ever g~t Robln!IOn ..._and from what I hear they're golng to -the Red SOx will be out in front by 1S gam~s by Aug. 15," Oaklan<tmanager Alvin Dark aald Wednesday night after Boston capped a three-game series sweep with a ~ victory over the A's. General 1!13P.ger Harry Dalton of the California Angels is dangling Robinson, one oi baseball's all-time great sluggers, as trade bait. And ttle Red Sox definitely are interested as they head for Anaheim aod a three-game weekend series with the Angell. "Sure, .l'd like to have Robinson , but $ports in Brief Attack Thwarted; Troj~ns Tumble SAAR-BRUECKEN, \Yest Germ~ny - A Palestinian sluclent has been arresled and charged with planning to a\tack the lsraeli airline: and the stadium in which the World Cup socser championships begin today, officials announced. Willi Noss, a spokes man for the state prosecutor's office, refused ' to give details about the student. He said authorities were investigating whether he had accomplices. Noss said lhe young mafl was arrested near Saarbruecken University after he 'vas suspected ol having "planned disturbances the nature of Whlch are yet unknov.•n." lfe said the student was charged ,'With participation in a criminal associa tion and with planning at tacks on a plane and the office or El Al Airlines. the Israeli Embassy in Bonn and one of the World Cup soccer stadiums. • IJSC Falb OMAHA -Sou ~h er n California's baseball learn im'( lpvinci!;'le ·when it comes to the College··Vi'orld Series. Miami of Fk>rida , finally proved that Wednesday night with a 7-3 come.from- behind victory over the Trojans, who are seeking a rifth straight series title. "They didn 't mak e mistakes. and we did," said Southern Cali£ornia coach Rod UCI Duo at Big A Jeff Malinoff and Gary Wheelock, recently signed draft tjlOitU ol the California Angels, will work out with the American League club Friday night at Anaheim Stadium prior to the game with Boston. ~1alinoff, a first baseman, a nd Wheelock, a right handed pitcher, will drive to Lodi in Northern California to join the Angels' fann club from Salinas Saturday night to make their pro playing debuts with the California League club. • Dedeaux . "They played v.'ell, and deserved to win." Coming from Dedeaux those were str~ words. Not in that he was pra'ISing Miami, but that he was admitting that his team beat itself. Texas. 54-7, battles USC, 47-20, in an el imination game ' tonight followed by Southern Illinois, 49-11, V$. Miami. e Court Uit.i Rent%el LOS ANGELES -The state court of appeals 'bas upheld a lower court marijuana conviction against Los Angeles Rams wide receiver La.nee Rentz:el. - Rentzel. 30, had pleaded guilty to possession of marijuana and v.'as sentenced to 90 days in jan and fined $2,000 but be later ap~Gd. on grounds that authorities used an Improper search warrant when they confiscated the marijuana. e 49er Signs CHICl!G&,~~t''~ draft dloi"" Cliff Pondexter .. of~"Cat State (Long Beach) has signed a multi-year cootract with the Chicago Bulls, the National Bastetball Associalioo club announced ' Wednesday. e''NUL Frcmchlses MONTREAL -Seattle and Denver were awarded National Hockey League franchises Wednesday, conditional on the two cities' ability to provide money and a home for the clubs.. The franchises will cost $6 mlTiion each, with an initial down payment of SlBS,000. A further payment of $750,000 must be made by each.. new. franchise by the time its team is ready to play in the 1976-77 season, ~· e Uockeg SUlap • MONTREAL -The Ne\v York Rangers acquired center D e re k Sanderson from the Boston Bruins Wednesday in exchange for center Walt McKecbnie. Solomon Upsets Nastase; Evert Slams fle!ld1nan PARIS (AP )-lfarold Solom~. imeri· can Davis Cup player who is at his best on clay. today upset defending cham- pion IHe Nastase of Romania . H. 6-4, ().6, 3-6, 6-4, in the quarter-f""'.ali!" of the French Open Tennis Tournament. Top--seeded Chris Evert, playing stead· lly, defeated Julie Heldman, 6-0, 7·5, \Vedncsday for a semifinals berth in the tourney . ~ In the first set the cool 19-year~ld American , who is seeking to add the f'rcnch title to the ltalian championo;hip she won JO days ago, fended off a slashing attack by Miss Heldman, also an American. ln the second set, she overwhelmed 01 Miss Heldman from the baseline. llclga Masthoff of West Germany will meet the favored P.liss Evert in the semifinals, She beat 17·year old Martina Navratilova of Ciechoslovaklll , 7-6, 6--3, In the men's quarter-finals, Manuel Orantes of Spain defeated Patricio Cornejo of Chile, 6-3, 6-3, •t, and Francois Jau££ret of France ousted Hans- Jurgen Polunann of West Germany, 7-6, 6-3, 6-2, setting up an all·European semifinal. not at the expense of some of our young players," Boston manager O a r r e 11 Johnson said, "We'rt' doing pretty well with what we have...and we aren't about to break up a winning ball club." The Angels reportedly have ottered the Red Sox Robinson. However, they want &lugging outfielder Dwight Evans and southpriiw pitcher Rogelio Morel in return. They also v.'ould settle for 21· year-old Jim Rice, a long-ball prospect at Pawtucket Jn the International League. '1While we 'd like to have Robinson and his big bat, we certainly would not be willing to give up young talent such as Evan!!, 1t1oret and Rice," Johnson said. ''Robtnm is38 and the kids we have are just coming into their own." ,, Meanwhile, peace has been reached between Roblnson and manager Bobby Winkles. Now the question Is ho\Y long it 'A'ill la1t on a team which Is losing regularly. Robinson and Winkles met with general manager Harry Dalton for an hour Wednes4ny in Dallon's hotel room. Afterwards Robinson s<iki the tension ''is eased." Winkles said he had been partly at 'ault and was "very happy," and.. Daito... 11·ho had acted as a peacemaker, said the issue w a s "completely solved ... all in the past." Then Robinson v.·ent out and banged a double and single and knocked in tiA·o runs. but the AniJels lost again . 6-4 to Ke\•: York . It was their sixth loss in seveo games and their 12th ln the last 16 and left them in fift h place in i.:.the Western Division 6\.!: games behind nrst place Oakland. None of the participants at the Wednesday meeting • d I s c u s s e d U~I TrtffhoNo THE DODGERS' BILL RUSSELL IS LOW BRIDGED BY MIKE TYSON. Cards Sweep Series, 6·3 ' Dodgers' SuttonBaffled By Mysterious Slump LOS ANGELES (AP) -What's wroog with Don Sulton? It's a question the Los Angeles Dodgers -and Sutton -would like to get answered, and soon, too. The Dodgers' right-hand.er w a s knocked out of Wednesday night's 6-3 loM to the St. Louis Cardinals in the fourth inning. It marked the sixth straight time the $1 14,000 pitcher has failed to post his seventh Victory. It's been a month since he last won a game and in that span his earned run average has sky·rocketed, from 2.65 on May 14, the day he shut out Houston on four hits, to 4.27 today. The loss was the thir:d straight for the Dodgers. matching ~ longest losing streak af the season, ~ It cut a game off their lead in the National League,,. West. They still lead Cincinnati by seven games. St. Louis, with its fU'Sl series sweep in Dodger Stadium in four yea rs, moved into a virtual tie with Philadelphia for first place in the East. "It's going to be a race over there before it's over with," St. Louis manager Red Schoend ienst predicted of the West. "The Dodgers are better but the Reds are still the RMs. They're starting their run a liUle sooner this year, too. Anyway, we've got our hands full In our own division to be worrying about the western Division." L<ls Angeles manager Walter Alston. like everyone elsC, is stumped by Sutton'& sudden lnefiectiveness. "You'll have to ask him ," Alston said Y•hen asked wbat Sutton is doing wrong. But Sutloo was non-commilal after gbsorbing his fifth loss and thlrd in a rO\\'. After he wa s knocked out he immediately went to the Dodger bullpen and threw for another 20 minutes. "I guess he was working on his control or some of his pitches." Alston explained. "At least," Alston added , "we started · hitting the ball a little better." The Dodgers. who stranded 25 runners the first game against St. U>u is., banged out 10 hits. ST. LOUIS LOS ANCELES Bnxk.11 Sl1r!TWll"•. 7b McBrkle. d Slll'lmDnl, c Torre. lb .JCrUt. rf Rttl1, :lb 1y50n. U Cu..,h .p C1rman, p H'r1bo\llV, P Pen.t,P •• r hrbl •• r.11 ..... S 12\L0pes.?b J010 •112Jo•m...,.,pi. 10 10 S I t o R\l\M'll,11 S 2 1 0 4 0 00 Wynn,(I 411 1 '•113G1,....y,tlt •Ot2 • O 1 0 Fer911S011. rf " t 0 0 3t 10 C•y,Jb 4 •010 •llOP1clor...,,lf 30 1t ''l OBLICl<Mr.U 1 000 .otoov .. o..-.e 2oto O O 0 OWCr1wton1,ph o 0 0 t ,o o O o McMullm,llh 1 o o o ..,utrbt<I!, •I 0 0 0 0 Sunon,p 1 O o o Hougll, p I O 0 0 Locy.i"' 1 o o o Brtwer,p 0 O 0 D Molo,pl\ I 0 1 0 lDll ll 37 6 11 6 Tot1!1 ,. l f l St. Liii.ili 6 l02 :1<11 003-6 Lot Ar.gel• 001 000 tr20-l E-McBrl!H. OP-Sf, L0!,111 1. LOB~t. L.Ou!I 1, Lot A"!1el9!. t. 28--McBrkle. G1rvty, B~, Rrlli, WyM. 38-BrDCll. Hlt-TOtrl (S). Curtff (W, , .. ) G~rm11n Hr1t.Dtky PIM CH) ,..,, Brrwer Hl!IP-frv Su!lon 2:)1, A-1'.0!0, IPHR Elt•ISO 1 6 l )J l 2JJ1000 I Ill 1 0 0 0 0 l I•] l 0 0 0 l l 2f] 2 I I I 1 2 1 0003 tSlmrrlOl"•l. WP-Sunon, T- U.S. Open .Ji~ Cuts Down S.nead_ MAMARONECK. N.Y. (AP) -Tho U.S. Open jinx bas slapped old Sam Snead down again -and in a tragtc fashloo1 The 62·year-old Virglnla hll lbllly, one of the gaine's \mmt'>rtalR. turned up with n mysterious rractur~ rib on the eve ol the 74th Open , starting lodo" nl the Winged Foot Club and hnd lt) withdraw. "I don't know how it happened," Snead, 1he old~ mM ever to qual!fy for the event, said arter undergoing tests aL the United 11""1>11111 In nearby Whli.. Plnlns. "My left side start«! ~ me at the Kemper OpSi i1:Cbailotte.r1 couple crf ~-eeks ago, Thea !be: ~ln bcc!me worse in practiC< he!'o bulJ #'t tlllnk anything about It WIUl-llrial pruc<lce round." Snoad pla)'<d n!Qc holet m ~· and then v.·ent 10 ttle10ckei room in pain. Friends look him to the llcispHal. "f was afraid II flnl It mli;ht be ·a heart attact," lie .. 111. "It h1a'I Hke·heU. I cooldo't e\"9 get m.Jlllreater' off." At the boopftat. X·rl)'S ohow<d Sneod had a broken rib on the left side. "The same thing happened about 10 yeaf'.8 ago in California.'' he said, "only lL "'lls on the right side." Snead had boen pla)ing '° well In pr•cllce that Bill C&mpbcU, f.,.,,,.r U.S. Walker Cup eaptain and a close fr iend from Huntington, West Va., so.Id he thooght Sam had a chance to win here. l4J've never played better befora an Open," ..Ud Snead, who WM preparing fo< his 31st Open lesL '1 had practice I • • roundo of 10, n and 10.r Snead hlls won 154 tournaments, Including three Mmen, three American PGA titles and~ BrllWi Open, but the U.S. Open alway.a escaped him. He came within ~ on ttveral occasions and was namer-up five times, )n 1939, he loiO\,al Phlladelphia when he took •n ~ on the final hole. He mls,,ect Worsham 1n 11147, In llH9, he needed ooly par on the final two holes lo win and blow k on !he 7lsl Mle when he tri<d to !"It from of! the gr<eo. • ' parllcutars. , They said onl y that a dialogue ~a~ been achieved and that an cad had been brought to a seR.son or coolness between Robinson and Winkles. "It had been a case or two stubborn guys," Winkles said, "and neither wanting to go to the other to get it straightened out." (;ALl,.ORNIA NEW YOllK Rlvton. ct oa~i.. 1b Stinton. rl Rotllnton, dh ~.11 l(~111. Jb [)ohftty, 111 EtROraoel. t Alomlr. H S..Ms, llh Lllnt1, ~ Tlnftln. p ~y, p Srtm•. II To" II Cllllornt1 N-York H r ~rM 5000Mr&IOJi,ct i 2 2 0 PINlell•. 11 S O 1 I Mure••· rt :i11 2M"".o<!.C • 0 1 I Sud.\l<lt. Cll'> 4 0 1 0 Nt1llr1, lll 4 a I 0 Ctimllllu. lD l O 0 0 Gon111n. 1D llll M1 ..... u 1 o o o o.,....,,111'1 0 0 0 Q Sllnlry, 011 OOOG ODbWn,p C C CGUl>Mllw,11 0 0 0 0 11> r ~rill ) 1 1 , • , 1 1 3 0 I 1 , 0 0 0 • 0 1 ' • 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 • 2 ., a J I I t I 0 0 0 • 0 ' 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 l9t 12 t Ta"ll 3017 5 100 IOC 200 -• 001 '°° Ob-6 BOBBY WINKLES Girls Can Play Sex Barrier Out For Little League . I WILLIMISPORT, Pa. (AP ) -\\romen ha ve broken another sex barrier -Little League baseball. If a gal can play shortstop better than she knits or cooks, there is a place for her in Little League's 9,100 leagues. It all happened Wednesday when Little League Baseball, Inc., announced that because of "the changing social climate" gi rls can play on its tean1s. The announcen1cnt was made by the organization's boa rd and lhe trustees of the Little .League Foundation , headquartered here. t he new policy is ef£ect i v e immediately. The board said it has petitioned the U.S. House Judiciary Committee to introduce appropriate legislation to amend Little League's federal charter under which it ha s operated si nce 1964. The Little League decision should end the numerous actions in American courts seeking to break Little Lea"gue's sex barrier. The Little League decision doesn't mean that all a girl bas to do is show up with a glove and she's on the team . "\Vhether they (girls) play or not 'A'ould depend on managers and coaches of individual teams," Peter J . McGovern's, Little League's chief executive, said. "The girls would have to prove equal competency in baseball skills. physical endowments and other attributes scaled as a basis for team selection." P.1cGovern said it was the unanimous v_iew of the board and lrustceship that acceptance and screening or young girls , , • shollld be adjudged by the local k!ague organization and not by the inte rnational body. ''1'hi.s should be done in good faith and \Vithout prejuice." ~1cGovern said. The Little League cha irman also urged selllement ol local sq uabbles by civil rights or human relations hearings. "Any action in this regard," McGovern said, "should be respooded to with firm conviction and forthright statements that Little League does not discriminate and tuts no feeling of ill will toward any sei, race or creed.'' The Little League began in 1939 in \llilliamsport y;ith three teams and has grown to 9,100 leagues for 2.5 million youngsters in 31 nat ions. It is a private corporation operating under a federal charter. It has steadfastly opposed lhe1 sexual inlegral ion of its baseball program. ; A New Jersey appeals court ruled in 1t1arch that state Little League leams1 must Jet girls play. About a v•eek later, the exeC\ltive board of Little League. Jne., voted to appeal the ruling to lhe New· Jersey Supreme Court. The New Jersey ruling came in lhe case ot l\laeia Pepe. 14. of Hoboken. She v.·as refused a spot in lhe line·up '"'O years ago, and by tbe time of the ruling v.'a.S too old lo compete in the age 8 through 12 competition. Uttle League officials have att acked the female challenge on t1,·o fronts - legality and the safety and psychol ogical needs of childreii. "ff y,-e pennit girls to play "'e are in violation of the la"··" Dr. Creighton Hale,· Little League president. said recently. ln November, 1973, a he<iring exan1iner or tbe New Jersey Civil Rights Division. said, "lhe institU1ion of Lilfle League is as American as hot dog and apple pie. There is no reason why that part of Amsrica should be withheld from girls." ' Based on that decision, Ne"' Jersey became the first st.ate in lhe nation to order Little League basebal 1tean1s to permit girls to play. Later, J\-1artha W. Griffins (0.Mich.l J said she planned to introduce In the House an amendment in the Uttle League charter ca llinp: for !he insertion of the v.·ords "Bnd p:irls" after each , instance in \\'hich the l\'ord "boys" 1 appears in the act. " Such groups as the Na t io nal Organization for \\'ornen (NOWJ and the ,,,... American Civil Lihtrties Onion took the / sex discrimination crusade again& the Liltle League into courts of near\(a I dozen states. Jn New Jersey, nearl y all or the 2. Llttle League teams in the s te I threatened to suspend operaUons rather than include girls on their roster. Some 800 supporters of all-boy teams P.OW'Cd into the New Jersey House of llepresentativcs to k>hby for two bills that would delay integration. Carnahan Stt11ataed UCI Termis Title Hopes Handed Major Setback By HOWARD L. HANDY Of t11r OahJ' Pllet llrtt Sophomore Bob Wright is the lone UC Irvine .singles player to advance to the quarterlin11ls of tJ1c NCAA coUege division tennis championship lournament being played at UCI thls week . As a result, coach fl.1r-oo l\1cNamara's Anteaters are in senous jeopardy of lo.'iing the tea1n title for the first time In five years to the University of San Diego Toros. At conclusion of the scCond day of play, \Vednesday UC I had \Vright remaining in singles and both doubles learns still in ('0!1t~ntion "'ilh only an outside cha.nee of catcJ1ing the ll'adt.!rs who OOld a three- pOOH bulge, IS.IS. The Toros had three singles pla~s and both doubles teams in action lOday. ;,OUr kids just didn't Mve the drive to put them ~•"Y today-:,' McNamara said. ''Thll Ahciws our Inexperience. We Just dldn'l have 11\at knockout pWld1 '° necessary to win In thl! type of a toumamenl "We're not Olli of ll yet but we're just getting by with mouth·to ·mouth resuscitatiOn:.'' Scott Cal'\)llhan, UCl's No. 3 8ttded s.inglM pla1*', WU upset in three sets 1n the third round by Davis Monroe of UC Qavit. •te won the second 5et after forcb)g Ute first to 11 tiebreaker before losing. "L guess I was just too light,·: he aid after the match. "I didn>t-hJt the ball~ y,·ell and that's all !here is to it.'' ! \Vright. the No. 6 seed. \\'ent up against! San Diego's Andrew Rae.~the No. 2 seed. in a crucial match this morning. I "I beat hlm in a dual match. 6-3. 6-4," \\'right .said in recalling an earlierl meeting. "I feel I can beat him any tirneJ we play." With UCI hopes dimming fast following the two rounds of singles p I a y \Vednesday, Carnahan and Glenn Cripe hypoed new life into the sagging fort.u . 11"ith a quick, crisp win over Ulh Ek a Lars Dahlin of Nicholls State, 6-1 , 6-2. 111e Nicholls duo 'A'On the Swedish. jurtior chslmplonship earlier this year. Wright and Eastman, the other UC doublCJ\ duo, likewl9e played nawtesmy Ml "'inning lheir match. 6-3. 6-2. I F'rlday's schedule shows semifinad singles malches ot 9:30 and 11. ~ doubles semis are at 2:30 and 4.• Tlllnl 11-.1 Slwtln I 9oti WriQM !UCU cflf. Kiii Cvnv ISO. ColortOoJ ... 1.~. i Dr..tcl Thc1"'!bu'I (IKll dcf. Ptfe Llmllel1 IC.i Polr -ISLOI W. '1"'-I Ofvlt Monro. \UC D•w!'l Off. k ot! Clt>ltllt., (V<;I} 1~. ·~· .. i. f'hltlp Wl'l!lr (HOrtllwt~I MIJ.1'00.tfll Otl, 01vld £1Jtm1n CUCll /~·,ro:;.,. f lft 'NrlQhl (UCIJ cltf, O.vkl lmon\;?. tNW /l\111CMll t-J. 1"5. Jtm Witt (UC 01vl1) drf. Tllornbufll IUCI) W. 6..s. St<'"41 It .... °"'"''' Gltnfl Crt11t><1rnan1n IUCU °"· tlt•Dallll11 0"::=r.t~~~.~1!Jc2i) drf, Flrt.tll•Bl"CIWn IE•tlrm llUnoh) '4 '"3:. lMm Konll! 1, U. of S•n 01'°° 11 2. UC lrvl111 lS I' C•I f'oly ($In L,ul• Ollllpo) 11 4. ltlt~~ Sol/lllltll ~I Uc "~~~~W!l\1~. ~\~ •· ~r:-'r.11W11:"fl'::, ~ W: Florlo1 l«ll 1 fi, c.),...SfWi. {Niii'.1hrldMl"'i. -· " :J.f DAILY PilO' - South .Cage Conflict: Contreras May Not Start By ROGER CAR~N Of ,.._ 0.HY ~Ii.I 11•11 'There's a connlct in the South All·stars basketball camp-one that may be natural when a run·and·gun sharpshooter finds himself in the middle of an offense predicated on discipline and balance. And in addition there is a keen rivalry that exists when personnel f r o rn Huntington Beach and ~farina basketball camps exist. Hunlington Beach High star Raul Contreras. an All.C IF 4·A selection. may not be in the star1ing lineup Saturday night (8) \\'hen the ninth renewal of the World Soccer Classic Opens In Gern1an y FRA1':hFURT. Germany I AP) Soccer's \\'or!d CUp. labelled by some the gre.atest shO\\' in professional sport. kicked off toda\' amid massive security and a Joi of questions. Reigning champion Brazil f a c e d Yugosla\·ia in the opening match. a potential classic pitting L.1tin skills against European method. The 61.500- seat \Vaid Stadium in the "'oods outside Frankfurt has Jong been sold out. West German police. fearful of terrorist attacks of the kind tha t brought tragedy to the l\.1unich Olympics in 1972, assigned 10.000 men to secu rity and cro"·d control for the 3 8 • m a t c h ... tournament Of these 10,000, some 1.200 ·~ill be 'o\'3tching the tv•o final matches in ~iunich July 6 and 7, when U.S. Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger is expected as the guest of honor at the spectacle "·atched throughout the world by satellite lelecast. The questions over the tournament. apart from security. cover matters of tactics. soccer style, and even the future shape of the competition itself. The competition ls played th.is year under a league system which eliminates the s u d d e n death Jcnocknut-rounds employed in most previous World Cups. This factor could put a premium on cautious, defensive play. And that. the experts fear, would blunt the brilliant goal scoring which was a feature of the 1970 competitioo in Mexico. If that reading is correct, Italy, Uruguay and Argentina may figure high in the final reckoning -even thou gh the bookies currently make West Gennany and Brazil the favorites. Italy, whose own home league breeds brililant defensive players, have not international matches. The Italians were losing finalists in 1970, beaten by Brazil , but in that match had not recovered from their exhausting 4-3 semifinal vic- tory over Wes t Gennany. Brazil , though still clearly one of the world's greatest soccer powers. is a vastly different team from 1970. The great Pele has gone. and with him the almost equally brilliant Gerson and Tostao. Wwld C•• .t • GlllOte "'" Br•zll YI Yuvcal•vl• In Ft•n~lurl Ftlcl•'• J-U Wnl G« .... 11, v1. Chi,, In Bff!lll E&SI Germany VI. Au1t•1U• "' HllTlbur'; b ire "· koll•lld 111 D<wlmv'ld S..lvnllf, J-u 5-., "· $11l119rl1 In Oue1MIC1or1 Urvgu•y Y1. H"r>e'1•Nh in Htnnover 11aly ..... H•lll In MUfl!Ch l"ol•lld ¥$. -'•ftftll,.. In SMlglWT Fla~• 21, Cit'*" O•I..., N Women -HUlll (GG) bell GruDO !Fl 1·S. If.en -Frtleftllnq CF) bl•! Eln9nOll CGG! M . w-·• Ooubitt -Hun1·Klou CGG) tiff! Grlll>b-Fl..,..1119 !GFJ M . Men'• DouOln -Frotnllno-Co• (Fl bt1r E-•K>n· McMlll•n CGGJ , ... MIUCI 00!.lbltl -(IW..f'I...,;,. lF) ~ McMIHe!" Hnolo CGG) 7-1. BUY OR LEASE 1974 VOLVO 142 2 door. (4163521 • BUY OR LEASE NEW 1974 T9YOTA Corolla..(11101sn s23ss s5 JD ,. """"' -+TM..M-.0& VISIT OUR USED CAR HEADQUARTIRS '72 VOLVO 142 2 Door.• &Deed. radlO. heater fuel injectton (786EL T) 5~977 '72TOYOTA Celica dr. 4 speed. Air ·Cond .. mags. wide oval llres. (516ESHI 52177 Orange Cow1ty All -star basketball game gets under "'Ay. And Scott Rankin. a highly regarded Huntington Beach player headed for Orange Coast College in the fall, is not on the squad . South coach Jim Stephens of Marina High has not annOWlced a starting lineup for Saturday's tiff, but what appears to be the first unit in practice does not include Contreras. HWltington Beach coach Elmer Combs refuses comment. ll's a u n i q u e sit uation-but not totally unpredictabl e. Contreras, beaded for San Diego Stale questions Arise in the fall. ls super confide:it that he can start for the Aztees varsity as a freshman-yet he 's having tr o u b I e making -the first team In 5aturday's garne. "I feel like I'm doing everything I'm asked to do," says Contreras, who averaged 23.4 points per game for the Oilers In his senior year. '·My pride is hurting.a little bit at this point,'' adds Contreras. "I'm trying to restrict myself a little bit-the fancy passing and shooting-but I feel like ~·hen I'm In there we're going to score." The South All·stars use a passing game Longer Hurdles Race Greeted With Applause 1'1ews that C.Slifornia high schools \\'ill shift. from the 180.yard to the 33(}.yard lo"· hurdles was greeted with applause al th e recent state track and field championships in Bakersfield. "It ~·as a loog time coming." says Edison Higti's Gordoo Filzel. Now that it's here, ho"·ever, there are certain questions. For example. will it be run in the dual meets? What aboul freshmen and sophomores? Who will lay out the new distance to make sure the difference betwien'burdles is correct? The CIF Southern Sectioo office has provided S<rne answers. The entire state will shift to the 330s, meaning the event will be one contested in every dual meet. It's not an experiment. When queried as to the status of the freshmen and sophomores, who ran 120- yard low hurdles last year, the CIF seemed a little startled by the question. Apparently no decision has been reached but the most popular solution in Strings Beaten Bv Minnesota ,/ LOS ANGELES (AP) -U.. Angeles' Geoff Pi-tasters missed a forehand shot down the middle Wednesday night giving 1ttinnesota a 7..S victory ·in mixed doubles and a 24-23 triumph over Los Angeles in a World Team Tennis match. The victory gave ?o.tinnaota a 11h game lead O\'et Houstoo in the Gulf·Plains section of the Western Divisioo. Los Angeles leads the Pacific sectioo of the Division by a game. Ann Hayden Jooes and Bob Hewitt piled up an 11·5 lead for Minne!lOta in the singles, but Los Angeles fought lxlck to tie the score at 17·17 behind Kathy Harter and Karen Susman in th e women's doubles and Masters and John Alexander in the men's doubles. l vcklltlM 14, s1r1,.1 tJ women -Jantt /Ml bfet fltdondo j'-'/ H Men -Htwlll !Ml bHI -'le•1..0.r LA '"3. WQnM!n's Ocvlllts A -I05 •I MJ•ml 81Nd! Wamell'I Doubln -H•rl.,·S"""9ft (LA) bNI kr'>llla..,._T11mbull IMI ~\. Meft'I Dout>les -Alex...0...~11.,1 (LAJ blll 0.¥1Cl~!lf (Ml M . Ml•ed DouDln -J~lo'fd CM) but Sin1111n-M&5t.,1 CLAI ,.._ ,..........,. X, Ll'ls 17 ~~ c • .!17t1(':.!..tn~1~:r;.r:..~H1 ~1· Won!en'1 Oo'1bMI -Kinll--Alr~ CPI be•I ?legenh11..C~ Klvom1Jt•. CHI U . Mtn's Ooutlln -Cu.4ttl1lan (H) bt<ll Stal!~ MOllrlm (p ) M . Mlrftl ~IK -Sloli..t.nlhany C ~J bt•I ll:1l1!an· Klyom11r1 00 .... A -J,9U •I Honoh.tlu. ··~ n. • .,. .. , Jf Women -Ownon {8-T ) bt•I HutM {l l ... ,. Men -Ottker !B·T) t>e•f C•rmk:fM!el !I I 6-7. w.,.,,...•, DoWIH -i-lt.JfM-S!o¥1 (fl) bt•I 0'Nt111-0~man (8-TJ .._2. Men'• Doubles -Creokrncklllokrtr1m (SJ llt•t £1!~1<"'' l B·Tl 6-3. A -J.o56 &I Buffalo. that office appears to be having the younger runners go 180 yards. "I see no reason why they (frosh-soph competitors) can't handle the longer distance," says Atission Viejo's Bill Crow. "It isn't like they're moving to intennediate heights. Freshmen and sophomores run low hurdles anyway, so why not 330 yards?"' FiU:el agrees and goes one step farther. "I'd rather all age groups ran 440 yards. like they run in college," says FiU:el. "I'm for a11 changes which bring high JdJool clooer to what they run in college. "I paPed around a petition calling for STEVE BRAND a three mile instead of the CUJTent two at the CIF track finals three years ago and got most of the coaches to agree with me. "Yet it was voted do\\'n again this year. Heck, I'm in favor of having the discus, triple jump and even the javelin. They throw it in New Jersey, A1ootana and Oregon." Back to the hurdles, which \\'ill be a reality nut spring. Running 330s for the varsity and 180 lows for frosb..soph cou1d produce a lengthy delay in the meet. Can you imagine the members of the hurdle crew having to carry six hurdles all the way across the track? "Unles.! they run both 330 yards, there's no other way," says Crow. And. rinally, one can expect some problems at certain school s ~·here the tr acks are not resurveyed by pros. "\Ve'll have to hire someone to lay it out,'' says Crow of the markings for where to place the hurdles in the 330 race. "It's all Greek to me. I wouldn't know where to start. Some coaches stilt aren't a~'are ~·e've changed and some will try to lay out the new mark i ngs themselves.'' Changing the hurdles isn 't quite like adding another mile to the distance run s. It'll present problems but you don 't hear complaining from coaches or athletes. Cutting the adjustment from high itjlwl to college and inlernational competition is a step forward. JJase~all Standings A~1ERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE East East w L Pct. GB w L Pct. GB Boston 33 25 .'69 Ph.i\adelphia 32 27 .~2 ~til~·aukee 28 26 .519 3 St. Looi• 30 27 .526 Cleveland 28 27 .518 3 lilontreal 26 26 .500 2~~ Detroit 28 28 .509 311 Cllicago 23 30 .434 6 New York 30 31 .492 .. : New York 23 34 .4<11 8 BaltifTlQre 28 28 .491 . .., Pittsburgh 21 34 .382 9 West "'est Oal<land 32 'l1 .542 Dodgers 42 19 .689 Cincinnati 3.1 24 .5i9 7 Texas 30 28 .500 2 Atlanta 3.1 26 .559 8 Kansas City 28 28 .500 "" Houston 31 30 .500 11 Chicago 26 27 .491 3 San Francisco 30 32 . .f84 12 '1 Angels 26 34 .43.1 6',l: San Diego 25 4{} .38; 19 ~llMesota 23 31 .426 '" w ......... .,.. °'"'" Hew York 6. C1llfornl• 4 w..i.....ci.y•1 Gama Cl'lk•oo 10, S.11 Fr..-.chw 1 At!l nl• 1, H-York O Bi»•Oll S. 0.1<l1ncr l C!nclnn•rl J, Mon!re1I l Detroit I. T~~•• G Phll..s.lpl'll• l , Hovslon O 1(1nw1 Clt'I t, Mllw8ul<" ~. 13 lnn!1191 Sin OI* Jl Pln1=h 1 11111!1T1or• t, MIMHCll J $1. LOUii '-01 A fl l Clt~tlll\CI 10, C~IUqQ 1 ToOIY'I Glmtt Tod&f'I Glm.t Cl'lkll90 llotltll lTI till ., S•~ i<••~elKO CSrv•M ). Mllwa"'t" ISlallln b-tl •I K•~u• City (Splltlor" S->I. •). ' H"' Yorlt (M•llKt S.ll ,, Ar1anll CH1rrll0fl •·JI, O<lly ~~ Kl>tdu\td, Only 0111'\ft KMCluft(I. Frtd•v'I C.llltl F'111.iy'I GI""" Ml"""°'• •' Ci.vt11nd. HOllllflll 11 Chlc190. C~i<f90 11 l 1l•l<n0re. 51, 1.0Ull •I -'lllMI. K•~••• Cftv 11 Dft•oll, 5111 oi.vo ., Mon1rN1. Mn ...... •ee II ,, •••. L<>1 AllQllti ., Hew Yorr Hf'# Yon. •! 0.tl•!'ld. 5111 F•111ClKO II Pl~ 8«110n •I C&lllotnl•. Pl'IU-11111141 11 Clncln1M1!1, •• and man.to-man defense. Contreras played zooe def~ and was the c.bie! ball handler and shooter for the Oilers, \\'ho tied ~larina for the Stlru!let League title. The Norlh lws its gu n s-Af ar k \Vulfemeyer, Jeff Welsham, Matt Porter-but Contreras says he 's oot concerned. "I don't get up for anyone-I just want to pJ.ay my game and help the team \Vin," says the 5-11 Contrerirs, currently packing 175 pounds. One of Co ntreras ' biggest disappointments in his prep career was a one-point lo!! to Katelin Hi gh In the Anaheim Invitational at An ah e Im Convention Center. And the key to that game was Katelln's Jeff Welshans-~·ho is prepping for the clash in the North camp. Welshans, too. ls headed !or San Diego State and Contrerns is happy about thal sltuatlon. "J'm glad Welshnrul is going lo Sa n Diego State." says Contreras. "I feel we'll be really strong.'' The Oilers whiz .says he chose San Diego State because Its far enough away to be away from home-yet close enough to make a return ea.sit)'. And a,, Contreras puts it. "Every lt¥"& is first class." 1 , Contrt>ras will busy himself Iii a sumn1er basketball camp at Huntington Beach High the next few weeks with his high school coach-Elm er Combs. As for his education at San Diego State he'll concentrate in the field of business administration and spanlsh. And with San Diego State the venue for the next four years Saturda y's clash with the North appears to be the last appearance of Contreras in the Orange Coast area. O.H, Piiot ~INIOI 'y IUclM,,. KMtllw MATT PARKER (RIGHTJ WHIPS BALL TO TEAMMATE AS GWC'S BOB BEAL (23) TRIES TO INTERCEPT. South Cagers Top Rustlers; Draw Praise By STEVE BRAND Of lht D•llY ~llol "•II For the first time in three days, Jim Stephens managed a smite, "We played mu ch better:· said the l\.1arina High coach after his club defeated Golden \Vest 152-1« in the third scrimmage in three days in preparation for the North.SOU th All-sta r basketball game Saturday night at Orange Coast College. The South stars had Jost the t\\·o previous scrimmages. '·1 think Golden \Vest had some better players in the game but our kkls final\}' got back on derense and worked more on offense," cootinued Stephens. '·The rie:tt t'o\"O days we'll concentrate on breaking the press, ~·hich I'm certain the North will use, and on hitting the open man more on offense." While Stephens. says. he still isn't certain of his starting lineup for the ninth contest, he's pretty sure one of his own stars, Keith Koeller, will open the game. "Keith will guard Mark Wulfemeyer." said Stephens, referring 10 the North's All-America guard. "He always took the other team's tooghest player and seemed to rise to the occasion." Sinre Koeller matched Tustin High"s A1att Parker for high-point honors Wednesday with 30 in the "'in over Golden West. Stephens "'as asked what ~rrect guarding Wulfemeyer would have on Koeller's shooting. "If Keith has a good night guarding Wulfemeyer." said Stephens, "he'll have a good night scoring." There were several bright spots in the scrimmage where Golden West brought in ex·Rustlers and P e p p e rd i n e University standout Ouis Thompson and Jasl year's leading scorer Taras Young. Parker, after hitting just ~-o of seven in the first of three 20 m.lnute segments, ca me back in the final two with 13 field goals in 18 attempts. Koeller fin is hed with 15 field goals in 2.1 tries while Costa Mesa ~ter John Cummins h.it five for five In the second period en route to a 22-point performance. Fountain Valley'a Dan MaJane had 16 of his 18 points in the first two periods \\•hen the South rolled to a ID0-88 lead and sparkled on defeose as well. Still. Stephens wasn't compl etely sat· isfil'd. "We had too many turnoven aga in," he said of the "l1 limes the South players . tossed the ball away. tlP I G°"'"" WC*I (1441 """ """ 1 0 2 .YA!ii.tftMI_, 1 t 1' t06 J .JCll'WIMl'I 1 016 IJOJOCl••lt 20 4 4 11AllClr...,, lOt 6012111111 ,,, • 0 0 ~&tktf' I O H 11 o n olner I o l• 1D 2 .f~ 206 U 0 JO li:tti:•lbttfY I 0 7 1 0 14 W•ITDll I O ' tO!ILorCI 102 1t I 11:1 C. T"°"-11 C '' 'VOU!'ll 4 0 I 1(11• 1 0 ' • e,., 'I' 81sl'lop 1 • A.P:th()fl • 0 '' Tfl•t1 n I U4 kont 'V ......... • J' St-151 ... •• 11-144 --- - EX.COSTA MESA HIGH STAR JIM SWAIN DRIVES FOR TWO. I I I Anteaters 2nd i11 NCAA Golf l TA.\WA, Fl&.-Jeny Robert.son fired a par 71 to leed UC Irvine into second place in the NCAA college division golf champklnshtps here Wedne9day on th e Southtrn ftorlda University campus gol! COUl'SC. Robertson·~ two-day total or 147 puts him in a Lie 'o\'ith Ron ~illanovlt'h of Indiana University (Pennsylvania I for the lndlvldual lead at the halfway Point· of the 72-hole tounlament. The weather wasn't a factor dur ing the. ' seconcl round as it ~·as on opening day Tuesday. t.;CJ 's Jerry '\\'lsz \\'as one under par for the first nine holes but reu sevtn sbota back on the back side to post ·a 77. UCI trails defending champion Cal Sta te fNor1hrldgr) by eight strok es v.•lth 3G holes to play. HCAA COLl.IGI OOLP Tc...., Korts. I. C•I j,,,. (NCWll'l•lo;t) '°' 2. UC l"'!llt '1• t. Sou!11M1! L01.tt1l1111 t!S 4. Lill (Hf'W Orl&l~\I 47' J, $11_., A.ck ~). ut l•¥1M lnl!!Ylc11MI 5for1t1: s1-lll:Obl'rtW!n "• O«t"11 "°"''' 14. Jffrv wr~; 11. Jot 0..1n:1 1'. G1rv S!nqe• I). 5tev• "*r"°" 11 ~~ ot IDlll'fl•lftfl'lt wlll'I 11r. • .~ v 0 e ' d •. Thu~d_"_'"-"-"·~· ..:'.:.9''-'-------...c.'•..:'::' Y:.._P;.;llc;O_r_.3.,5._ ~4~,.e.~ Meadowlark Golf Title to Glanville PERFECT GIFTS SWEEP BALL WITH LONG IRONS I think that golfers who have trouble meeting the ball square- ly on long.iron shots should re- 'r'iew their thinking about what they are trying to accomplish in their swing. . The goal on these shots should be to "sweep'' the bitll away from the grass (solid line path in Illustrations). Avoid the narrower, more upright swing pattern used on short·iron shots (dashed lines) when you are hitting long irons. Instead, try ·to make the bot4 tom of your clubhead's arc as "flat" as posslbte. The longer your clubhead is moving parallel to th.e ground and at proper height to strike the ball square· ly, the better chance you will have to strike it flush. ',, ,, Edison. (~orona del Mar ; Sl1&re ,,\JI-sports Honor Edison and Corona <lei ~·lar higM tied for the all-sports championshlp for the 1973-74 academic year in the Irvine League. Both schools fin ished \vith 44112 points in the standin$S which are based on finishes 1n varsity sports. The league's overall balance was indicated by the fact th.at seven of the eight schools in the league scored over 30 points. Behind Edison a11d Coron~ de! ,.,1ar in lhe final totals were Los Alamitos (4316). Fountain Valley (42\, COlita Mesa and Santa Ana Valley 134 \~). Estancia 131 u.d and Magnolia (15). e 1' aq11ero• Plau After finishing fourth in the Bakersfield tournament last weekend. Mission V i e j o ' s Vaqueros return home to fa ce the North Hollywood Titans Friday night in a non-league softball tilt. _ - It starts at 7:30. General manager Darold Klein was pleased with his team's play in the 14-team Bakersfield tourney. ' '0 u r pitching was strong. and our long ball hitlinJt" is beginning to co1ne alive," say.'\ Klein, "'ho belted a round-tripper along v.·ith Tim Murray, Jim Knott and Ted Dominguez. The Vaqueros' home fie ld is located at 1t1arguerit.e and Avery parkways in Mission Viejo. Ti ckets arc priced at $1 \Vith everyone under I 8 adn1illed free . ffarriel Glanville defeated A1u1 Williams by one stroke to wln the f\.1eadowJa1•k Cowltry C lu b won1e11 's golf championshJ1) r<.'Ctntly, ln the 14th un nu :il toumnn1ent , J\1rs. c;tanville had a score of 228 for lhn .. -e rounds t-0 MrS . William's %29. Uow net "'loner was Anita Appleton with 22J. In the first nJght . Corinne Richardson captu red low grosi; with 272 while Cuba Curl and Barbara Hankey tied for net honors with 274. Freda SUv~rnu:in was the S('C()nd flight low gross victor V.'it h 284 with Vickv \\lallace the net winner with '229. Poll y Myers won third flight gross wi!h 313 and Fran t:reager Y.'as the net \Vinncr with 234. In a low net event , \Vllliams and Glanville tied for first in A flig ht with 70. Boonie Nuccio "'on B flight with 69 and Alice Geiger was the C winner with 74. Florence Eickhorn woo D honors with 81. Golfer of !he month was Mickey McKlbbon with a 63 low net score. Senrliff It was a cross country event for the y.·omen 's club at Huntington Seacliff Country Club with Ann Lewis and Ginny Lambert tied fo r first in the first flight with 32, followed by Helen Cowden at 33. In the second flight. Liz Brandenburg wa s the winner with 31. Evelyn Rice. Connie Lonergan and Polly Browning tied for the runncrup spot with 32Y~. Third flight honors \Vent to Virginia Stevens and Roberta Andrc"'·s, each with 321h . June Doyle was next with 331h. Ces Ga 1 vin won the fourth night \\ith 31, followed by Bess Peterson and Betty Peterson at 34. , Jtllle Sq11are It was beat the pro day at Fountain Valley Mile Square Golf Course this week :'t'it h Jluth Schonnert the A flight "'inner with 72. A lie resulted for second between Ca rolyn Cramer and \Vanda Gnagy at 74. Ollie Magnuson was the B flight ¥-'inner with 68, followed by Barbara Ducommun at 74 and Pauline Anderson at 75. In C flight. Cecile .Jaeger was the winner \Vith 73. FORD COURIER: THE GUTSY ' LITTLE ECONOMY PICKUP. • J,,enore Tanberg and Loraine Ackerman tied for second at 75. Kay Knopf captured 0 honors with 68. followed by J;lok:e Drov.·n (70 ) and a lie between Jo Woodbury, Jw1e H;uner and Zora Benac at 71. Sy~via Johnson was the E wi1\ner v.•ith 77. In an If tournament, Dorys Nead was the A fli~hl winner wl1h 66, followed by Erlene Angstadt at 67 and Bobbie \\'ebb at 68. Barbara Anderson was the B flight winner with 61. Jean Dalpce finished at 62, follo\ved by Rose Diekmann at 64, Bert Holt at 65 and Peg lien at 68. L orai n e Acke rm an c;1ptured c night 1vith 62, followed by Eleanore Smith (661 and Lois Earl (68). June llamor was the D winner wilh 64, followed by Rose Miller at 65, Jean MV Defeats Dana Hills Nii1e, 4-2 Mission Viejo otruck for three runs in the iifth ining and y.•ent on to a 4-2 American Legion baseball v i ct o r y Tuesday night over host Dana Hills. Mission Viejo's Dave Barron and Tony Ric hardson doubled in the fifth to account for all three rurv;. Dana llills sco red single tallies in the first and seventh thanks to an rbi single from Mitch McComb and a bases- loaded walk to B r u c e \\'arrington. Mnlo11 Vltlo co .. ' ' Oe1>smore. 3b ' ' • 8•1,on. rl ' ' ' Perrv. rf ' • • Rlcn•rd1on, 1l • • ' R-t1s, If "' ' LenQ, cl • ' ' Rommel, 111 ' ' ' T;oylor, 7t).p • ' ' Scnultz, c ' ' • PIBCl\llek. • ' • • F o~. 1b • • • Tc1a11 " O;on1 Hllh !1) • ' .. ' Je•r.,., ·2b ' ' ' • "' • Warringlon, 2b ' • • Mlklos, lb-If ' • • l.lrow111119, u ' • ' ~:~~:~~'\1-~ ' • ' ' ' ' Halloled. p.rf ' • • MQr.H, lb ' • • Sltai1on. lb ' • ' Hynn, ti ' • • Mc Com!>, ,. ' • ' Bethke, rl ' ' ' Martin, rH:I ' ' • Tolals " ' score l>'f 1111111111 ' ' ' . Ml~~lon Vlt lo 010 030 000 -~ 5 O 09111 Hlll1 100 000 100-2 5 1 Courie1 shown wilh optional striping. wh eel covers and mirrors. • • ' ' • • • • • • • ' ' Economical? Yes! But don't th ink Ford's hot· selling Courier isn't ple nty gutsy, too. Courier's extra-husky fr am;;:. for example, leatures box-section side rails anchored by seven crossmembers. The roomy 74.5 in. x 62.2 in. box is all steel, all welded. Upfront, Cou rier rides on an independent suspension with big coi l springs and a stabil izer bar. Re·ar springs are tong, wide ... with s ix leaves. There are . double acting shocks. front and rear. Rugged lrame backbones a solid curb weight ol 2,555 lbs. <I-cylinder 1800-cc. overhead cam engine ha s S main bearings !or 1lgidlty and strength. And Courier is.as comfortable as It Is rugged. A roomy cab 'has ex cellent visibility and lnsu· lalod quiet. Courier's wheelbase is a long 104.3 inches to help smoolh the ride. There's even an optional dress-up package ... slripes, \Vheel covers; mirror, rear step, the works ... for special sports appoaL And you gel all this with an honest payload·nnd·people capacity ol up to 1,400 pounds. See your local Ford Dealer • Ooa1-cy1inder b1akes give you 2 brake cylinders at each wh eel. Snap-<lown bed liner oplion cushions Courier's roomy all·weldod steel box. FORD COURIER FORD OIVIS10N ... • Buchanon at 86, L e n o r e Tanberg at 67 and Theresa Finizza at 59. Joe WOOdbury won F. night with 67 and 7.{)ra Benuc tied wlth Alurion Bartok at 68. It was Martha Brunet the F' flight winner .1t 71 with l.on'alne Spat at 74 . Costa Me1a !\largaret Kumagai finished \\ith a 68 to win top honors on beat the pro day 1at Costa !\lcsa Golf and Country Cluh. . B. J . Sleva and lmoe Van Auker finished wi th 7'l 1vhile Nancy Terpstra and Norine Crady were tied at 73. Eleanor Green and Betty Ziegler finished in another tie at 74 .. 1'1e•a 1' er de It was a ringer tournament ror members <Jf the women's ~olf club at Alesa Vcrd4'! Country Club this week to culminate the past three months of activity. Dare Wells was the A fJight v.i nner in gross l\'ith A-tary Ann Dyer second . Net victor was Virginia Vistica with Cele Brown second. Others in A fllght net included Bernice Johnston, Erny Burckle, Dot !\las, Gl oria Bo"·den <ind Joan Chamberlain. ln B fl ight. Erma Bendet won gross with Arlene Burford second. Kay Farley was the net winner, followed by Betty Polts. Marge \\'ililams, Ellie JUNE SALE! We need you r T1ade 1 Premium prices oa1d. EXCELLENT SELECTION Immediate Delivery NABERS ~ Kl!SOll. Kelly Adanlfi and Phyll is IA'ilSUfc. 1\1ichi Ueinatsu won C fli~ht gros~ 111'ith Mary F<wtht·ruil l second. Detty Gonya v.·as 1hl· net winner. follo"·ed by Dol Joncrs and Mimi Smith. El l\'l911el In a net tournament for 1hc \vomen's club al El Niguel Cowitry Club, Jerri Gin! wa~ the A night winner with 73 . Sue Foley and Betty Splclrnr1r1 tied (or second at 75. "'ith .Jackie \\'atson and BolJbi Bardsley 1ncxt at 76. Agnes Gouin won B fllght honors with 69, follo\ved by a tic belwccn J:lorothy Heacock aud Joyce Hopton at 73 and another standoff at 76 l>etwcen f)oroghy Dorothy Nid::i aniJ Hae Coctu;an. In C Oight. Jo a r•nr~ \Voodward and Peg IIerten tied for first with 74. ·Maude \\'eidman, Lennie Ernstha l. I:>ora Vangsness and Marion Cook tied at 30. Barbara Rourke was the 0 1vinncr with 81. Dorothy Le vy, Dorothy Ekhof( and llelcn Leigh tied at 82. /UlsNinn Viejo In an invitational tournament scored on a l\vo better balls of fourso1nc basis. action \\'as scored in two nights at J\{ission \'icjf) (.;ol f Club this week. In the first flight. the winning team had Virginia Sexton (Arrowhead CC 1 . Dorothy Slawson !Green River CCJ. ItOSC' Sleight (I rvine Coast CC) und J 1;abelle llinstark of the host club scoring a 134. Next nt 135 y.·ere B<Jnnic Douglass (San Clemente\, L1lllu1l l>uneer (Alta Vista CCl . Lucy !\lcDooaltJ (Missiori Viujo) and Lois Ji op c (An-u"hcad CCJ. 1\t 136 v.•erc Fay Cook r,\nahci ml, Jane Fohl (San Clerncntc!, Stella Schaar (San (.;)(·mcntel nnd Frances Lilly 1 San Clcznentc) . Jn the second night. the 1•\n n1ng team of Esther Kneeland I Green Riv c r ), (ill'nd a Guy 1:\lission Viejo J. Let· f.inder (El Niguel) aod .Judv Sc:h:ikel (Shorccliffs CC) had· ;,i 137. A ti e resulted at 138. On one team were Eileen Bradwell 1EJ i\igue!J. Pauline An10\d 1A1ta Vtsta 1. Eileen Beard I S:.in Clemente) and (;ct"(' Coury i i\lission Viejo1 . On the other lean1 "'t?re Joan I-fill (Riverview ), ~1ary Lou Johannes (San Clemente). Louise Reich (San Clemente I and Irene Kennedy ( ~Ussion Viejol. Longest dri ve in the rirst fl ight was by Sue Peck of Shorecliffs CC and for the second flight it was Ce<:e Coury . POOL TABLES ... DADS & GRADS! lOOOsOF PAIRS 1N STOCK INCLUDING ORIGINAL JEANS STRAIGHT LEG CORDS NUVO FLARES ,. ~ THE LARGEST SELECTION IN SO. CALIFORNIA EVERY MODEL AVAILABLE! PLUS: SOLIDS STRIPES HA WAH AN PAINTS COMElt<I lEGISTll fOI O\!l llG DU.WIMG- V A.LUAIU Pl:IUS HOUlS: t:JM DAILY 270 l. 17th., Com Mina, 541-332) In Hillgren SQuare our • • ires at closeout prices $ Final clearance ... they must go now. Save on this 5turd y dependable 4-ply nylon cord ti re (Volkswagen !H e 2 ply)from Good rich. O!iers good !rac11on and skid res151ance. The Goodrich Long Miler is an excellent cho1CC' for light compacts and second family car> For these popular sixes: 7.35-14, 7.75-14, 8.25-14, 7.75·15, 815-15, and 8.25·15, plus Sl.99 lo $2.34 Federal Excise tax·and trade. S12 lor size 7.00x 13 plu; S 1.95 Federal Excise lax and trade. Sl 8 lor Volkswagen tires 5.60-15, 2 ply. plus $1.7 1 Federal Excise lox and trade. Whitewalls all sizes $3 more. heavy duty shocks $ oil Americ.a n cars. 7 eoc.h installed, •egulorly $15.95 l~rs week only .t woy1 to chorge/Revo\v1ng Charge, Amc1iccn f ..:pres.$, 1'tlas!erCho rge. BonkAmeriCCltd -B. F. Goodrieh Store 646-4421 • 2049 HARBOR BLVD. lat bayl COSTA MESA "7.~~;:;-s .... .....,, ..... Men"-"5 •s-.,Moy lt.10.S ·c---....,. .----------.---•LSO AT: ____________ _ I . F. CK>ODRICH STORE 6182 LINCOLN CYPRESS 826·40 I 0 ' I. F. GOODRICH STORE 524 W. LINCOLN AMAHEIM 774.7579 I . F. GOODRICH STORE 200 SO. MAIN ST. SAMTA AMA 547-7155 ' ' ' 36 DAILY PILOT What's Doing Outdoors Thursday, Junt ll, lff74 JIM NIEMIEC . liood salt "·att r fishing Is on tap at most sporlfishing land- m~s along ~them California. Surface act.ion has picked up \\'Ith most of the attention being given to yellowtail at the outer islands and drr San Diego. Close to coast.al kelp bt>ds. bass, bonilo, barracuda and an occasional \Yhite sea bass are being brought lo gaf. Squid is still the best bait to use \\'hen fishing for yello\\1aU and when San Diego pa&rnge rs grt a tank full of squid, boat COW'lts hit the JOO .and O\'er mal'k . \\'ater conditions are good but a little off color. Passengrr loads are increasing \1'ilh the coming or \\'armer ¥i'eather and fishermen are advised to make early reservations for \\'eekend trips, with weekday trips also suggested to confir1n departure limrs \\'hich are changing \\'eekly. Albnrore The first scouting boats are on lMir "·ay oul 10 the det'p Pacific to try and interl'e'pt albacore as they pass on the outside prior IO their norlh"ard S\\-ing around July 1. Both Fish and Ga me and commercial boals are out and ¥i·ord should be coming lnlo So uthern California shortly. It is aa.yone's guess ¥i'h.at klnd of a Jongfin ~·ear "'' are going to ba\·e, but \} the past Is any indication ol the fu ture. the last couple of bad yeurs experienced \\'ere rollo"·cd by better than a\·erage years for sporls botlts. Traditionally the first albie is "·elghed in around the 4th of July, but It is this "·rilt'r's guess that the albacore ¥i'ill be a little slo¥i' in moving in. When they do they \liU he in easy reach of Ne¥i-port llarbor -s portflsblng and private boats. This season l\\'O sportflshers will operate charters out of r\e\l·port Harbor. Both deluxe and fast boats are skippered by seasoned operators ¥i·ho kno¥i' area "'ate.rs like the bat::k of their hands. For more Information on chartering the Liltle Richard phone 64&-6586 and for the !\ta)estic phone 557·5000. Both boats ba\"e open days during tbe prime fishing months of July and August and are a\•ailable for marlin charters, too. Good Bay f'i•hit1g Large spotfin are being caught in good ·numbers by bay anglers fishing \\ith ghost shrimp on changing tides. Other fish are also cooperative for fishermen in skiffs in the bay and outside the jetty. A variety of small fish are being netted at the Pavilion v.·hich offers ro1nplete fishing facilities for young and old. i\'e ar l ... irr1its 'lost lakes in thf high country are rewarding pack·in bikers v.·ltb excellent fishing for native rainbows and break trout. Flitt, cheese and salmon eggs are equally productive in lakes, while st~am fishermen are doing well on Oles and v.·orm.s Dick ~!orris of Los Angeles packed into Laurel Lake and came out y.·ilb a 31 :-pound Golden lro11t. ~forris said that be netted only four goldcns, but added that tbey were all over a pound. Alamitos Racing \ Entries c i.1r, Tr•c• 1'111. , • ._ ""' ,,o P.M. ti 1'•1el1 l'l"I ll1ct. II 1!•1c111 6111, 1111 1M ttll lltct• l'llUT ltACI -)!O y1r(l5, I V"'' !llch . ..,!low1nc1. l'urM 1~ 11"\ A Suri Thlnv Hlk1!1;<d1) ltlcano Grey l ldY fltll~\ Jtl\ u 11 .. L•dY !KnlohtJ·r Fiii 8uttercuo IWt•O) Vivi VIUt CAdtlr) W1na1 Wltcn fP191) Mr. C1~rl 0.Ck (W1!1on) l 1leM A~t~• (Llllf'tmOJ VtlltY ~~l'tf"lllr (Ortyff) ". '" "' '" "' '" "' "' "' SECOND II.I.Cl -1711 y11a1. l v••• Olo> /, ~I). Cl1lmlr19, Pu•w 111(Cl, Ci.lmlf\9 ~·let 51000. Ll• A.m•QO • L•on1m 1?1 Lll!lt ll:ed f lat Otkhtrd1! 1?1 1-11110 JOClv fCre1.,.,.\ HI Elgnin wonc.r Oo\Orrlsl '" ll lltlt Pr<> (l•e11urt l lfl !l~v Wtr Chic CWrlghl\ IU 1.•.r. ArrONtY !Cl•G0.11) 11S TMlll:D llACE -3Sf Vlrdt. ! old!. All-11\CH, P\llM S\'°'1. LA CNrv-r fAaalrl O..tck ~ (Knl9n1 ) .t.l1mito'1 L•mb 1Tre11urt ) Tuff lu~ tW1ra1 Tht Al'\Ul<'>ldor CClfflli.el !\yrn.1"1..Gltl 1Wtlton1 ,..,Qh PoWtr..:I IB•ook.11 'Silen! T•t•!l'?ltnl (Hlrl) "' "' "' '" '" '" "' "' l'OUllTH ltACI! -JSO 11rd1. ] y~lr Qldt. A!IOWAl'>(9. PIKH $2IOO. Mi11 P!g Pig Cl 1nk1I Surorllfd (Sml!f\J E•e•etl Jet CP1g1) V1!ey Flett Btau fllofl~ml Miu A~ll Lov1 (Aa11r! Rel>OI l(&y (HAtlJ Glretul \Tre15urtl "' '" '" "' "' "' '" 'l'll'TH ltACE -3!.C va1d1. 7 year olct1. Allowance. Pur\.f 11600. T~ S&n VeD•l1I V11ltY T1v"" 0 w n fr s .t.11ocl1!lon. S1m'1 01,11 01wft !Cre89t•> J I YI Ra,,. (/.\O!"tlJl Ointv Be L1dY IB1n~1) Al1milot Suun !Ar1!11l ll O(t!l'I F1tn (ClfflHtl SCO'I" F'll'I 111;crw•d1) Ptt<:I To Ruler CH1r1! Mcrl1I LOO:k ICMctOZI) "' "' '" "' '" '" "' "' Siii.TH llACf: -:llO t'¥<11. 3 Yllf old• .. up. Cl1linlng. Pllf"U S2(QI. Cl1lm!ng ~lc:t u:ioo. "' "' "' "' "' "' 1n Tfllra t"'IVI (Myln\ You lllKll You IW•lktrJ Truly Trlt<:I !Llptwlm) l • L• CICklUI CP111tl Rt<:lllY Wlff !M0rrl1I Divlclena"1 Bar lRkMlrdJ! lll1mn O.ncty (Wll111nl Rllft M°"" Run ICrtaOi'I_ 1111\k Of 0rt90fl (l(nlgf\I} Atn ll!:llflllM Wordt1" How (SmUhl >n "' "' SEVENTH ltACI! -MlO y1rds. 3 year ora1 & up. c111m1ng. ""''' n eixr. Cltlmlng price $6500. The Doug!111 Aircraft Co. Ml-me..l CIVIi. Ltt Bir W11Cf\ (Adllrl Tiny W1tcn Bound CLlpMm) Moll llDYll (tl(nlgtul Mell11·1 Charger ~H1rl) "' in Alamitos w.c--..,, J-12, nu Cltlf, Tr~ ,.tll fll•ST ltACIE =-;-50 v•rC11 : YHf oio1. Cl•lml-PurM 51IOO SIKkll 0... (Wilk..-I •. 7'l l.~ ) (I(! HOI ''"" Cutr B•< CCM"tOlll '·'° ~ .0 G~mt C09V IW1hon) S.IO Tf,... -II.JO, All") •Ill -Tlllt'I Go Go, Giiii Go I ti, NIDOYI Eklll'ftl, P•l'I 01My, F1<~1t Fr-:y, Noo ~ti. Uncle lo"Y· \ 5c··e!chtd -$•"Dllft•, J1y1 ll oge. IJ 11!:•1clt -J.lt.clltl Ollt & I-Not St\01 Cutt B1r, l'lld '11 . .0. SfCONt> llACI! -150 Vlldl. 3 ~ter Gldl & UP c1~:-.1~q. Puri• $1'00. Lfot,·'1 0.11 (~Wltl) 11.00 '2G l 70 111rleo Roc:kfl 111;1.u.11 3.oe ? IC! Suto A1 Al (Llpn1m) 3.00 T·m~ -U.11. Alla t•" -SlttPi Cl\lrge, Cllll'l<I Al. Cour~V~O!JI IClp, Top Glln lo¥. No 1<1~1tM1. THIRO RACE -G'.I v11a1 l Vt•r DIC!~ & 110 Cl•l"''"D· ""''' JttCD. Niiiy No•e CLipl\lm! 11.10 .. CD l .llG P111oe·1 llM tRlcl\¥0S) l.tO 1 to l oci llu!er tHartJ S.00 Time -10.C AliO ••n -ll>OIY'I Mao ... Go F1lr Zlf"D lllr, Ari Pippin, Et TOl"O P•rltr. No w:rotc11t1. FOURTH RACE' -ll.C v1rd1. 1 yNr or:11. Allow1nc1. P11rst ,1000. ML Al•milDI l•r tW1!winl L.6d•••go !Aall•l Roval Hy c111cn1rd~l Ti..,.. -11.76. tt.(IO 1.~~ ' lll 1.1111 1.£4 ·~ Al1t1 r1n -ll•bvaoo. Rovoo. S11n1llh><1 N Ftowers. Deep Sea Fisl1 Report l"l,.Tlf ltAC• -400 )"l tol. J ~tlf okb .. -Cl1»Jli.ct l llDWtn(I, ,uo• ""'· five C~kl (L,loftaml •.>O • 40 2.60 Neila Fl Nll lO CACMJr) 'tO J.H Tnv,.,u1 JI! CW1l11Dnl J . .O Tlrnt -20.1>4. Aho r1n -Dtlvln' M.tn. Unclt Rl•!UI, F'our1h MOon, No Kr11Chll. llltTH •Ace -400 Ylfd .. l Ytfr ol<ll. AllOWll'ICI. P Ul"ll l )X.0. Cousin Mick ILIP'l•"'l 1 . .0 1.00 '·'° 'Tll A Copy IAdl lr) ))0 T • .0 Goldtn llD J!ngl11 (W11dl l.tc Time -20.lS. Alia ran -Hol•I Boom. Mvrl'1 (ll1rl)lr, It-I C1uH11 Him, C•IW1 Srno~·n G1I . No KrllC!\411. II IE•1d1 -l.Ctulln Midi I. 1-'Tll A Copy, ,,14 IM.OI. s•VIENTH ltACli -400 yl•CIS. J veer 0161 I. uo. (llu.llloG 1l"w1nc• P11r .. ..... Prl11 Kiii-(A<11itl N1y A"" (P111tl Dvl!Y P1rr !T,.1i.utel Time -io.01. l . .0 T 1111 3.00 J.60 l.'10 ·~ "Ill<" "'" -Ga~ Nu,,..t)f!• Air Cool..S, FDr90"'" l..SY, Mlckiry1 .SU~ F-f, II• S11r• 01• Laay . No o.crl!<hei.. l.IOHTH ltACE -a Ylrd1. ) yt&r olctL Clalmlng. Pur\.f 11600. Jt•nM coon 1w11oon1 11.ao 1.111 ~ • .o Go Nole Go !8•nk•l '·.a 3.to O•ndy 01n1 (C1rCIOl1J 1 . .0 Tlrt1e -O'<l.lS. "Ito r1n -Ell"1 Coml~. IC1ltmtkwi~. Moon LlghllnhtQ, Diii .... \Viv. J~ Frlrlff'. llOIY JOY, EVll'l'tlll lllt 80b. Str1tclle<1 -81rend1"1 Ch1r<>1, Vl•lt Bo, Blonae Joe, Frt)t>O Clll::M Clle rgt. U E•1cl1 -l•JtlMe CIOll & J.h Jf~tt Oc, P3ld 11U.QO. NINTlot ••CE -170 va•Cll. l Vt•• Did~ & \IP c.:~!,.,lng. Purn 11600. Tn1oi:1, 6 ~'~ rAd1lrJ 9.611 s . .io '·'° l(fy !Trt•1ur\I S.10 1.llG F'o~y Ner1c ( !l~nkl) 1.60 Time -<&.6-1. Al)(! r•n -GcU"s L•mll, C11h BtO'Nn, P1pe•1 Cl'llt. Sil~~· D aoy, MDOV tl(lllltn. Scrlld>td -TOii S•df, Ju<1y'1 Man, Mr. PtrlO'W11tv, G•lltnt""'''· LU.SE A '74 610 SEDAN '99"mo. • T1•Jenoo.Ot:.I.. COST A MHA DATSUN 214S HAllOl ILVD., CJit. 1404410 REG " WEBB Crov.·ley is producing good catches of ralnboll·s for salmon egg and cheese soakers, ¥i'hile the same baits a~ good for trophy.sized ralnbo¥i'S in the June Lake loop. Upper Twitt and HOW HAS tlS OWM Bridgeport lakes are kicking out some large browns. EIGHTH RACE -Jsa v1rd1. l v••• BARBER SHOP T~ Cwnt (W1rdl Ple1111•t l1le {P..ge) "' '" "' '" Big Bear is slow on \li'tekends due lo heavy boating pressure, o1d1. c111m1ng. Pu1n '2100. c111mtng B S but during the "'ee k is producing fair catches for botb still fish--:-.::: ~~· ... ,,, 1?1 anqttel e t ., ermen and shore ang~rsusing Zeke's float 'n bait. Blnegil ~;',.;;~:i:1~:~.nl :;: 333 E. 17th Sf. are plentiful for kids using bobbers and meal '1\'orms fished in 011 II•~,_, 1a1n~11 111 Saddleback CO 11 e g e 's COST• ·-s• the d d II b I rted .1 P•owi.• !Mo•rl1l 111 baseball team will be honored - ¥i"tt s an sma ass are a so repo as very acuve oo Feirlnl F••nk ILl111>1m! 11, .th 1.._ .... __ 1 surface plugs and streamer flies. "'" T• rM~1n> 11t WI a dinner at the Red Onion • C°""..mo... C..ttiiMJ. Lake Jlenshaw. Vall and \Vbolford are good for catfish and v1ctorv Ch•n• rwinoi>J 11' in Hwttington Beach ton ight. HOUIS: 7:l0to' '"""""' ...... bluegil . "·itb some bass In the four 10 six·ponnd range being gins at 7 o'clock OIH<I (IPlf"I (TrtllUl'f) 119 1~,~~~~~~~~~::;:;;;:~~~~~~~~;;~-;;;I k d ·1 I •· \\'holl d · ill be' k-.1 NINTM llACE. -lSO v••as. l vurl ta en a1 y c ose to S11vre. or lS st mg stoe cu on a o1as. c111m11111. Pun• uocc. Cl1<mine "gular ba•k .. ;1b cambow trout and Is t<>asldered tops for .... , Od<O ''''" DON'T DISCARD THOSE I. hi · S DI Get H•OPY CW1lsonl 111 ts ng in an ~go. Oroo 0' H-..rnoot1 flt!tlllrdsl ,,,I Tbe San Diego city lakes are rated fair at best, as most of Cr.tm-"" c""''"" t!>m!lh! 11' OLD TENNIS the bass fishlng has tapered off, Anglers are averaging less than i:.;r0;~:ir111~~.~Ti'eisurei ~:: SHOES ! ! one bass per rod, but that oae bass could be a kttper over the L'9h11no K II•• tcreaoe r> 11t l ... .---...-1t1.,._., __ ,_~-.. eight-pound mark If It is caught in any of the open lakes. l\1aking ~1~~=~":tl~~·/ :~ ANTHONY'S SHOE SERVICE up for the slow bass risbing is the good catfish, blutgil and sun-,~";''";;";';'~·~~;6~·~·~·~·~~';';;'~;;;;;;~m~~~·W~•~•~f<~t~1~"~'~'~·~·~·~·~1~1oo~~·~•u~H~1~0H~1~•~LA§N~O~·~c~oo§o~N~•~01§l~MA~~(~I fish action for the kids. Ga Llmlll PhoeM tw11k1r1 119 .lrea Girls Earn Spots Father & Son TABLE TENNIS *NOVICES ONLY! TOURNAMENT* FREE• In Re21'onal Swimfest *oouaLeeuM1NAnoN* io,ooA.M.sAr.JuNe1s1h . .._, SIGN UP AT ANY NEAL'S STORE Several Orange Coast ar~~ residents earned spots in the r cg i on a I Junior Olympics synchronized S\\'imming com· petition to be · held later th is month thnugh top efforts recently at the Southern California Junior Olympic championships at lluntinglon Beach. The top three s"•immers in rach class adva nced to the regional competition J une 22 in Pleasant Hiils 1\ith the ultimate goal a bc rlh in thr national Junior Olympics in August. In the 10 :u1d under age group, Robin \Valier. [.(lri l\Ioore and Kim Hoffman of llunlington Beach qualified in solo events. while Hoffman and l\toore also earned a spot in duet swimming, and the tington Be a ch :\qua belles rinished first on the team level. Kewport Beach r e s i d e n t Sandy Silva and Huntington Beach's Ginny McGilton qualified in solo and duet in the 11·12 age group, v.·hile the Tustin l\teraquas and HUil- tington Be a c h Aquabellea finished first and third in team competition. ~tary Lou Ott of Tustin and Costa l\fesa's Teri Pickett placed t-2 in solos and com· bined for the top duet in the 13-14 age group while the l\1eraquas "·ere the top team in the age group. TennisAmerica at the University of Redlands .-. Lea rn t o play better tennis from the system developed and endorsed by Billie Jean King and Denn is Van de r Meer. EACH CAMP FEATURES: Dinctlon •!Id COllCMlllJ lty JllW Y~ll. Acclcti-d Keod TnRs CMCh et U1th•.nlfy of lf'Clm.d'l Het1oM1f Ronked Tetllli' T.- Hlv,trottd 5hRWwt Hotelil11k, TMC ..... A~ Pff'Wllllli1ed Prodi« '"""Ml -v-..T.,c4 S~t A11olysh, TtM1l1A-rico Unl•tnftr c~ Mslnlc:ton 24-How s.,....1 ... ._""' ....... 4 Two-Week S.Ssi011s- / June 23, July 7, July 21 .. August 4 S395 per Sessi011-Deposit $75.00 For ltsff'•ollofi c.-: Jl111 Yel'detft -11I41 1fZ·Jl44. w Tt""bAINrice l!tc.., 1000 ftwtll C_.,, PtH Atlo, C.f. f4]0), 14151 964-4100. Other TennisAmerlo& JI . Cemos localed 111 SQuaw Valley, Ca11f., l1bby, Montana, Rnd Q1muel•. HaoNau eai "We Have All The Fun " BUY A GIFT FROM "."'" DAD'S ~ SP~~~~NE61:::os HANG OUT! ;l.;. TENNIS . ~ p~A~'~'~~~on al Top Name Tennis Rocke!$ • We hove the finnt lines af Tennis FaP.ions • Tennis Sags -A great Gill ldeo • Dod Special T ensar Metol ROl.ket FISHING Give him that new fly rod he\ been wonting -Or a new reel -A tackle bax full of selected lures -A pair of woder<> -A fi shing vesl is a great gift -Orafimingcop -An electric trolling motor -Or a new fishing license. /"''f' HUNTING ;, <): :'J:!...._ Give him o new i.hotgun like the famous .. .v Weatherby ().,er-Under -How about hunling 1295 GOLF PRO SHOP • Howo~losetof \. ~ Investment CC!.t Oum --..: The new woy to make Golf Clubs for Exira Precision Gilt Ideas ••. Bogs -Carls -Goll Balls -Heod Mins -Goll Sweaters - Gol f Shoei. -8oc kyord Practice Device. jockeh -Clay largel throwers -A new buck knife -A gun cow: -A set cf decoys -New hunting booti. -A le.lei.cope Mght for his rifle -A pc:iir of bin<Xulors -Hunting ponh -A moleskin hunting 1.h1rt -A duck coll -Or a hond wormer. BACK PACKS • Profei.i.ionally i.elected linei. 'T lo moke his lrip o success. Kelly 8oCk Pocks -Down sleepi"Q bogs -T rai1 Boots -Cook stovei. -Cook seti. -Hi Icing shorts -T roil food -Bock pack tents and hunckeds al small godgeli.. SKIERS We have Pork°' -Pants -6obh c'l. ... ~ -Sk11. -Poles -After 1ki boots -And oil ot sole prices -Tok e adv-an toge ~--·o~l :.'us ond \Qve . 24 HR. SPORT PHONE 547·2545 'w ~'.ris~ Tiger Paw 60 and 70 Series Glass-Belts -Raised White Letters from UNIROYAL Only 070-14 E70-14 F70-14 f70-15 G70.14 G70-15 A70-l3 ·95 $2595 $'2895 $'2995 Only F60-14 532., F60· 15 G60· 14 •35u G60-l s H60-14 •37u H60·1 S t6Q.15 •41u l'lon f .E.T. o4 S2.0l lo Sl.'6 o.,....-ng t1n Nie ANY SIZE! 95 •33u 536 .. •39u NO TRADE-IN NEEDED 83 Series Retreads ·~ ·' on Sound Tire Bodies ~ TUBELESS WHITEWALL OR BLACK , I , ~ Jj/ 2FOR 2 5 oo";i3 IMPORT TIRE SPECIALS BLACKWALLS $1 J'S ~ 600-12 600-13 520-13 560-14 Vi' 560-15 I Add $2.75 lor Whllt:walk . i)o Jf t ~e tter WiilJ ~~ecuritp . ANAHEIM 121 N. ~ookllo.u ~1 635· UJQ:JS~NTA ANA 1211 *· wu" ho. 540·864f WESTMINSTER llll Wulnillll" llvll 893·35H-· TUSTIN 1111'. '" s1m1 54'·94!) GARDEN GRDVF 16111 ••-• llid.1 893-Ji!IS NEWPORT BEACH & HAWAIIAN GARDOIS 11111 Can• SL 815-8227 COSTA ftl[SA ll! t llib s1 641-41~1 HUNTINGTON BEACll 19411 BIYd. 511-7571 ClaONA Ill w.A 11r111 . 735-60!0 SANTA ANA Ill 1. llrbOr 81'3700 ~ ClEIEJIIs11 N. D C1miM lt11492·5543 l WATS -Secvrlty Tires~ .':-,,..--, TOCHAIGl iiiiai Credit Pion l!!ll!mfJOPEN DAILY 8-6 •SAT 9.5 Seturitp Tire Stores " r • ' < . ' > , J ' ' . . ~ ·: \ .. f • • .! I ·-................ • • • MAHATMA JI • • Speaks about the • .. knowledge Guru • • • .. Maharaj Ji reveals • .. FRI .. JUNE 14 • • • • 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. • .. MAllMllSUllAl'f • • 20GlDOYll.M.L • • .. \ • AdmisS1on Free • • • .... ············1' " •..---------;-~,~:w:;. • ~owno HlLDOVERI FIRST RUH! l'!lllf-- DIRTY MARY CRAZYLAR __..,..__ Sll'll Mcqul84 .. .. JUNIOR IOHHEll'" DAILY PILOT ;JI_ 'See How They Run' Co-mic Romp WIHHEI. H.Y. DIA.MA CRITICS CllCLI AWAID ,.~ As a freewheeling exercise in shee~ comle farce, with little intellectual quarter asked or given, you have to .i:o a long way to beat Philip King's dated bot <W.ffy bundle I of British balderdash. "See /low They Run." It's an audience show. of the sort that provides a continual chuckle throuab most or Its .•1t:s 1 1884 Newport (0~10 Me \o S46 IS~l NOW SHOWIN&. Intermission Tom Titus rollicking, roller coa.!itcring 111 a country vicarage -and action. And if the playgoer !or this sort of vehicle it1is the mL!ses a line or two (or a few correct tack, since to hold for dozen) In tho process. lill le C\-ery laugh Y.1)uld be to retitle harm Is dooc, for the dial ogue the play '·Sec f-10\1· They isn't all that great anyway. Walk." Director Alex Kvba It Is in this spirit that the puts his players through their Laguna Moulton Community paces briskly, ~hou~ll lhP Playhouse approaches its overall tempo co11ld do ~·1th production or this mad romp even more in the \vay of ---'---~~~~~~~'----~~- DRIVIN' 'EM CRAZY FOR A 4th BIG WEEK AT THEATRES & DRIVE-INS THROUGHOUT SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA l'£1Ell fOIDA 1r111n·n1r11 ·suu1 BEORBE-·11111 DIRTY MAllV 1:11nzv l.llRllV [J?g]@ COLOl'l 11'1' OE lUX(\lll ~ ORANGE COUNTY OJlA.HGE U.A. NEWPORT BEACH lido 7 !.l -67183)0 C.ry Cr-emu / 14 ~ll bil 1 ORAN(;[ FOUNTAIN VAl1fY Orange M0all Cinema 714·637·0340 fountain Valley Cinema 714-839-l SOO ORANGE FOUNTAIN VAllCY S\1dlum Orive·ln =3 714·639.7860 acceleration. KOBA IS blessed \~1th a highl y aipablc ca$1 to t:arry out. the heavy den1ands !he play mnkcs on an nc tor 's stage energ y. tron lc:ally 111 assuming a n1inor r o I c himself, his own lin1ing falh far shorl of the cll8l·rnlilc and slows the puce of t h c porceedings. Top honors. bot h in tlmlng :ind interpretation. go to John i,,oughn1an as an American servlC<'man caught up in a "lel! HOW THl!V I UN" A Com.t<IY l)y Pnlll11 1(1"11• Olt•(!fd DY Al<I• l(GIMI, ll"ld!Xftl by M•ll Gr•"•"'• HI llV a •• ,..,,, •nd T..a "!;.<••· cott11mt1 bY Jeon KcD•, \OUnd a nd Llgnll<>; DY C1rl (llllWIY, pft,llf'I!~ l 11IMllYt lhfOllQh ~11\lfdlYI I! I XI \lhrll J.,n. ,, II , ... LIQU~• llOlll!On P11y110Uw. 606 Lo<1una C1nyGn lln.d, L•Q.m• '"'"' ll•••'VlllOl'I •9•-0l•l THE CAST (pl. Chvt W•nlGn Jonn LOUQhm&n Pen•l<ll» TOOP . Ell111>elh Hullht• Min S>.1110" J<Nnne Wo!cotl ll•v. LloMI TOOP Peler Mt Alli•!tr Id• M1urHn Shrub•o!e 81~~°" ot l.~• ,Ale• t<.obl lltv. Mu"1p.hfe~ C~·•n c,;,., Tiit ln!rud•• Oe•n Huqhf\ ~··11•&nT To,11,~ No.inon Sl<>CIOUI flurry of chicanery. Though he is playing essent iall y the same characicr he has created in coun11ess local c ome d i es , Loughman 's f!ni r 11·ith a line and a n10vcmcnt is, as always. hilarious lo 'tl'atch. uu1hentic accent adds ;1 n1cr• flavor to the role . ~IE~IORABLF. perform· l!nc1•s in the pure comet!.~ •!e· 1:::::::::::=~=~~~:::::~~~~=~~ partmPnt art I u r ll c d 111 r by Joanne \\'olcott. 11~ tl1c old maid and pillar or 1n{? rhurc.:h \Yho s p e n d ~ m11l'h of the show plidlatcd in the c lo set . an d ~1 aurccrl Shrubsole, departing fron1 !hf' deep dran1atie character !>he created In her first two local plays to revel in the role of the coquettish Cockney maid. Dean Hughes is properly n1C'naciog ;i:; the escaped Bu~sian prisonei-no:I Norn1J'1 Stoddart is brashly funnv as a ~·ruff police sergeant. As the Bishop of La x, Cirector Koha has a stately bearing. hut hi" performance is weakened by an uncertain line delh•ery OH BOY• OH BOYi Mr . Hulot i 1 o" o"ofh•r gloriou,ly f11rt1rr;y ~iday-"Dot• di~ Com•dy" ... Jlldith Critl '"PLAYTIME' IS JACQ UES T ATl'S MOST BRILLIANT FILM." ~ l T\\'iCe at the Huntlngton 1 }....) 211d Hll.AlllOUS FEAl'UllE Beach Playhouse. Britisher l "ENTERT~NING MR . SLOAN" Colin Guivcr has convulsed '------------''::===:-::=:-:=---===: audicncPs io the rolP or thi' n1eek Reverend Humphrc.\'. once in "See Ho"' They Run " and aqain in the plav's sequel. "Pools Paradise." Gui\'er also pops up in the Laguna versior1. stealing the second act. as csual. ":ith his com i ca I £1ua1•ering. ,,.HUHDElllOL T AHO LIGHTFOOT .. !RI -"IUSTIHG" '"THE GREAT GATSBY·· tPGI -"40 CA.RATS" S OPEN NIGHTL A 7:00 i ~~~~~~~~~~~~~11~='°="="'=•=;,=y=•l=l•=Y=D=•;=~=-1=>=7=14·962·248! STANTON Stan1on Cinema 714-894·1413 Elizabeth Hughes is fine as the 1· i ca r's ullCO!lvcntional wife. v.·hosc Americanisms raise eycbro11·s around the English country!ide. anrl she keeps the sho1v moving well. Also· impressive is Peter ~1cAJlister a.5 her s I u ff y clergyn1an husband: h i s \\'HILE '·SEE Hov.· They Run" provides an enjoyable evening. there ~·ere two other dra\1'backs in evidence oo opening night. First ~·as the poor proj~t lon of most cast members. even before the laughs came ro I Ii n l i'l secondly. 1he scenes y,·here :in ac1or is struck v.·ith a fist or a poker are badly coordinated and too obviously fei gned. "ILAIING SADDLIS" IJll ' ·' I ' ·' I • ' ; '. '!'Mir l'•-.rll• DISNEY HARACTERS in Pet•on •RING VOUlll CAMl"A ·-... -.:.itlllf.u> ...... ., .• OlD ffU•llll itt..• T ... "MCtl.DIM.I JOUMIY©J • ,,,.... ~" on ...... Oli ...... 2 .. "'lt 1•...-.-h-• POVN•AIN VMlll't'r-t ... v .... "'IOA't"OlllL't"I FREEi OMn.r " ...... ~,,. ,. tM '''•1175 C,.lldrefl •f .,,., l'•lllc °''".,,. ,,..... .... "Ol..O 't"l'LLl'llil" ,,.. .. ..,,, ••~St. $~~·J516 ........... ,,_ ....... •••!•C-SS .. 70Jl 1.~~·'9'· c.,.. ...... ~--41J••t•.S --LAil DITAtl 111 UNlllK VI. MAf'IA " ~1C(WOMIN 11t , Kids Like to t Ask Andy jR;---__ ______, .... ,_"""'"" "HARRY IN YOUR l'OCKET" CO-IOOll ' "HUCK~Y JtHN"' m MANN THEATRES • • ,_,_._ ....-""'" ur CtOCr • ...,,,11,.... 1.tf""" J:>M:IJ.f'.li "fAIOASTIC P'l..UCT" hllr"'" .. Sol/ko-l:IJ.t:IN;UI '"IAZAIUM" "COHIACK" IPGI "IA.IDOr THX-1 IJI "THI LAST Dl'TAll" ""Tllt N•• c ..... H IJll $pte:iltl Pric• 12:30to1:00 p.rn. !111~1S un,& H11lid•y11$1.00 S.A. FAWV (MANCHESTER EX.I G.G. FRWV ICITY DA. EX.) -WALKIMeTAU."" "5TIA W DOGS• tll ""THE SPlllS G~" 99Ktr•ClW.M .... "INI A '"THI LASTDrfAIL" V "Prttty Mefft M II A l•w" Spec:iltl '•le. 12:30 to 2:00 P·"'· l•.otPt Sun.~ Holld•V•I $1 .00 (Jp·nf1,olv1) H1 1'"' UNEQUALLED ADVENTURE FROM WALT DISNEY! A Great Frontier A Great Wilderness Adventure! ~"-,-,.'---,w-,, Adventure! sto11es are ava1lal:lle on Disneyland Records -l WALT DISNEY DOROTHY McGUIR°E ·,.d fESS PARKER -::-OLD ~ 'YEl.J.Elt ~ :~~.~;~~~:-".7-: ,,:;~\;); "4~ '""-\. . * ..... _ ......... /..' ~Alli WALT DISNEY ,.~,. fa~ J;umw TECHNICOLO"' • .............. ~.···~ ~ ...... , """ ·-·:::-.......... -~ .... TOMORROW! At Selected Theatres & Drive-Ins In Your Area• AllAM!lflt Rrooi~"l!I 111-&41& C011A MUI H1rbo1 Cinem1 =2 6'~73 tlU. Brei ~•?l6 fOUllUlll ¥All!l fflllft!l tn V1llt, 0.-Jot·lft 962·241! fUll[ITON fo1 515 4141 FOUNTAIN ¥ALUl fo1m111n ¥1lle1 .:2 819·1 !iOO U NAPA ll Miltr1 !lr1'1f I" 871 1~!1 LON' l!ACN Cr~~! 474·!61~ OllllCl PloU Cot) =2 991-0Bll lO NC IUCll l1it•ood 0.o>T·lo 4l~ 99)! OIANCl O"Olt O"•t In=? ~SS 10.Zl NOUliA LK C1ntmi •I !68·6111 TllSTlll lus!on =I ~4 16% CAISON ~l•IM =l 549·1713 WlSTMINSTl• C•Mml Wtil = l 89l,4493 MAllMAllAN l!ACll ll ""Jn 8500 UN CLllrllNJC Mn1mu 49? 00~ LOS All,(L(S C~n11ntl~ 0'1,t·!n 610~6111 l1USSIOll YIUO C'"'"" V•r1c Sl0·6990 TO••AllCE ROlhnit Hill• JlS."600 tE••11os uA ''""a g14.1019 """ .... ·~/"'l:t·•''11" W>-(o j o>.l;'.)':o • ~RT REDfOOl fllR fRAAOUJ ......... 1111 ~~~'.,l ...... -..... ''''>I , .. ,, .... tllM'!\WllOlll STREISAND a REDFORD TOGETHERI THE WAY WE WERE (PGJ ~IW~~i 'COAST HWY. & MacARTHUR 644-0760 WlO A. IHUllS 011\ Y _, (;JI ·-··"'"'"""' .......... -'"-' .. ,-...... ~ ... . . MUI IHUMOlllOll & UIOHIF-0111 -nftl """' lll C:!\.•' -UTl\TOIOIT l lCM Q\JIC:l - "'™ COfOllWlltt'HlDl l lf-flllCICOIS IOIOfMIT ~tWl\ (R) 1 ~~. S•t S..O'll"'°" f,1 ( JIJ Peter Fonda With a bit of tightening he re and there. "See How They Run .. v.®ld become a solid. "THE STING" tPG 1 ·-"CH .t.RL IE VARRICK" \,GI "DIRTY MARY, CR.A.IT LARJlY" IPGI • 'TUCHEll"UU '"THREE MUSKETEERS" -"'PL.I. Y rt AGAIH, SAM" "Dirty M11ry, Crmy Lorry'" .. ~ '"THE LA ST DETAIL'' IRI v.· e 11 -balanced productioo.1----~~~~a~:n~~ug~ o ;a~~r~~1y~ T1·y Sat111·day's Ne,v s Quiz n:·tg:mu durini;! June at the playhouse. 6-06 Laguna Canyon Road. we Dare y OU Lag•1na Beach. 1 2~!.a• s, .. "'-" • (¥1 ,,.HE SPIKES GANG" IPGI "SOMmMES A. GJlU T HOTIOH" WORLD 1'1.EMIHE! .. A WINTEa·s TALe·· DOROTHY McG UIRE and FESS PARKER Oll:lDVELL•R = T~CHNICOLOR · I 7:)0 ' t :JO EACH EYEMHG-I ~ ..... ,.,,. • .,l\ll••"l1•Do~10 . ..,,,.,.,D ,..._I ~ •• c,.,.,.,._,...,, A "u• H1roco·~ Su•f fl••-r,o,., """'"~" '"'" • ,,,._ ... _ lroM ..... entu1 So~'""" Hem,.one'" •"0 """'" Moro !""n ~"""iln •..-1 •r.e<fl• 10 011 you otl •<>O """ '"" ,.., .. , HOOllOl;I •ctn>C•""""" """"""""" ..;iion A lull en ... ~ 111"' WMA! IHll Fll.M D l'OHS &Ml\l"I UMOllC:O•D YICI C:Ol'l C:A•'T If H .. OI< TOI/IT\' !Ill •utt leoe•m•q """" [.,,.., !'ou!!•r l.<OQ.11•,.,. SHOW AT l:00.9:l0 SAT J OO.•:JM:~•:~l 1:10' SllH l:OO.l:J~;1fl.t:JO .... .. .. i "• •ow•,.o• ··· i : " : :. ...... r.::i.~:~· ....... : MA••<>• ......... ~ ....... .. --............... _.~ 5 TARTS FIUDA Y · • l!j HAJllOfl IHOl'l'INC ClllfTll • • l!OWAADS HARBOR ,~':A 2 HAllOll I LVO. AT WILSON ST. OSTA M[SA 641·057 2 Mii.iS SOUTH Of SAN OIEG O FWY. • • IN MISSION VIEJO ••••••••••••••••••••••• EDWARDS ~ . C.IN.EMA VIEJO I I\ P.l\l AT CHRl~Artl fl ' •• 6J0.6q')Q • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••• ffl(/;fl/ll(i PERFORM AMC ES 1"0 ... IUlJ..WlD·lHUl~~I\ 1\\.t10 SAT ll,OO.J.•~4:l0.6:1~t.JO.I! Ii SUl<I, 1 l·00.1 1 S·• lO.i:IS-•:10 "COLD TURKEY" '\ 9 ·t • ' • ,. .. ' '· ' ,. I • :I ' ' I ; '.I ,, , ' 'I a <-1 " " " d ' 111 " i 1• " <\ " 'I ., _I I ,, ' .I , , - ... .•. •• : ''"--· 'i' . ' ' I t·:' ~ •i .. '-.- :J8 OAILY PILOT -PUBLIC N011CE Thursday, Ju11t 13, 11)74 PUBLIC NOTICE flCTITIOUI •USUU!SS MA/Ill• IT.t.T•Ml!HT l'tCTITIOut •USI Nl!SI T~t follo,.1''9 lllf•Kt>t ••t C19'.,, NAMI ITATl!Ml!NT o .. ~,,_, •" TM toll-11"111 Pt<-i• OOl119 buJlN.t-t AMiRt(a.N llC.VCLE MOTOCIOSS •ll AS\X,1.,TION, 71"0 !11111 Eleni. lw... MILLION. 3001 AHlllll lldf. ), $11111 !>~''· ~111t(ltnll IOI, CO.ti Mtst. C1lllo<nl4 n.2t to~ lttlfllt<.11. l'JKI !1n11 l!letwl, e-. Cll1rlet A. °'1cl'Oll. R«I l••l.,. A11t .• p.,. C•tll~'lll N~ °'· "'-"" lte<;l'I, c1ntor11I• ttt.60 511vt Cn1:10"r, 111• Gt•IGl1, 5lt;i,,.I 'TN, l:lol.IJl"*' ll C-l>Cled Ill' tn Holl, C1UtG>nl1 l!llllvl ~r. Jltr'T'Y lll l' Al\CltfWft, 1) 0 I (h1rle1 A. (;llPfoll •G<~•f.llrr L-. R1oonao a1.c.11. Tiii• 11•1-n! ,..,, lllH wit!! 11111 Cltitoor.11 Counly Cle1k o1 0!'1~ Co1mtr on M1y Tiil• uutlnttt It conc11.cted llY "A 11. 1'7 PUBLIC NOTICE NAMI I TATIMll!NT "'CITIOU1 11./SINISI I TIM lliollowlftt llH-ar• llOl111111>"1•M .. 11: NATIONAl LIQl.lt0Af0111. 1110 Nt-1 l lYd., (OU• Me.w, Clllto<nl• "~' ll:Olltl'I It. tlld ( .. olyl\ I.. ltf(lll, 1;11 l.•hlmonM. 111111 An1, C1lltit11l1 t f!'Oi Tiii• buflllK• 11 CMG<H.llO llV I OIM<ll pe•lntn"lp. c. lllf(ltl Publl•~ Or1~ CHI! June •· I), lO, 11, 1t71 .. ,.. D•llv P iiot. lttS-71 Gttlfftl P1r111erth!p" f)404t 8111) MtlnlKh, Puolf~ Ort!!Ot CotH O~ily ,.1101 .. 1-------------- Prtll<llM M•~ :io, 11nc1 JllM i. ,,, lC. 1t11 19 ... 1. l'UBLIC NOTICI!: l nli ''~Ttn11M w•t ~IK will> tM (f\t;~tv (!ti•-OI 0<•119• Counly Of' Juflt J, 1911 PUBLIC NOT ICE l'ICTITIOUI I USOtl.11 NAMI! ITATl!Ml!llllT followlng l!e'~on 11 <k>lng but!neu PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUllllllESS NAME STATEMENT l'ICTITtOUS I USINESS l'ICTITIOUS IUSINEll Tn1 following ~riOl'lt 1r1 doing 1111.1.ME STATl!MENT NAME STATEMl!NT Du•IMH I i : Tl'ltl loUowlng p<trSll!>I i tf dol~g 1ne loltowlft.g ~-· trt "oing. ASS0C.IA1E0 CONTRACTOR$, 31191 bu•ineH as· bul•neJI 11: Clf'l'li1'0 C11)1•1t1no. C1ol1tr1no flelch, EPM·ZIMMER COMPl\,l'I, 1 1:,.,;1ed HUMAN !IEH ... VIOR ASSOCIATES. <1llforn11 t26l4 ptrtnersl!ip Goi"ll bu<i.>en ii l /.p{E LTO .. Suile 1C1 SOC Cig""y ll"". Dalt Klllbv, :DN2 (•l!t COflt lo, S111 PARK lA HA!IRA, SOC 50ll!n P•lm, l1 NtWPOl'I fleKh. Ct111ornl• t2MO. Ju1n C1p;•l•anc, Cali/or,,ia '1615 H&b<I. Call!ornl1 90611 Qicn1rd E. McC1rtv, Ph.D .. Sii Avt. RuDy F1r~a1, 2'.lr.11 C1lle Reil. Edwln J, Ev1n1, :rJ72 Gltl>ert Drive, t.1 Co111, Sin c1em1n!t. c1urornl• C•l:M•Tr1..., eeacn, Ci1Ulorni1 92~1' 1-iunllngt"" 8e1en, C1ll!orn11 01612 Mololco Marie Myers. ~6711 Cillt JOl!n H. Pelenon, Jr., IS Corlnlnl1n Dori$ t., MtCirly, M,A .. SU •••· l• Ju1nlt1, Cipl1!rano Be1cn, Cali!ornl1 Wal~. t.o.nv Bt1cn. C1!1tornl1 C0it1. San C!tm..,11. c11+torn11 tllin m2' Oon•ld D. MtC1ll1. 11312 Ct•• Tnl1 lluslntss ls conoucled llv 1 general This bu•ine1s 11 cOnd\/Cltd bY I llmltfd HermOit. Yor~ l lnctt. C1l!rornl1 partntr•hlP. 111rtner1¥1lp. David G. MtC•1l1, IJ!ll Ralnbelw, Tnls •'•lunent wa• llll'd wltll the Motoko Marie Myt " \ Garden Grove. Colllornl1 I Cwntf Cltr~ o! Ortnge Counry rn M•v Tl\11 1111emen1 was llltd wi1n tit R•lldat H. Zimmer, 1131 W. l1ml>frt I 21, 197,, Coun1v Cl9!'-ot Or1not (ounlV on June._ !llMl.d, Lt H1llr1. C1tllornl1 f J.40ll 197• T1>l1 bu1lne•• 11 111111111 toocl\/Cltd by 1 I PublislMd Or1nge Cw1t C1lly Piiot, 1':101) Umittd partnf'Sl\lp, I Mav n, JO, tnd JUM 6, ll, 1911 ll!iS·ll PubllJM<t O•a"lte COf1! DtllV Pilot. E<!wln J. Ev•n• ---prniJ:WNm'fr'i::---11~'~"~:.·~·c'o"c'~o:·o"~·c'~"~'-----''"~~·~·I• Tnh Jl~ttment !!Ir<! w!th !l>e County PUBLIC NOTICE Clrrk ol Or1ng1 C1111n1y on MIY 'II, 197•. PUBLlt NOTICE f'J.402J ----~~~~-~----I Pulllis~ Orlllfl C°""t OtllY Piiot. l"ICTITIOUS ausrNIESS NAME ST•TEMIENT l'ICT1T IOUS IUSIWfSS Miy JO, Ind J11111 6, 1l, :Ill. 1911 ltl4·11 TM tollow"'ll ""'"°" 11 Going business WAMI: STATEMl!llllT PUBLIC NOTICE followina ~r.on 11 doing busintts 1 -~~~~~~~~~~-1 as; Tne l' ... IRWIV t.•NCSC ... PE CO., 9'J •S: doing ! T rlnlon W1y. (Ol.!a Mtw, C•htornil SAY-ON CARPET • .;,n.g, Nor1h Euell<! flCTITIOUS IUJIWESS 9'1626 Avtnve. Anll'lef.,,, C.iHornla MAME STATEMENT Wllli1m Richlora flt1ulle1.1. '95 Trl'f\ton Morton. H1rold Ind t.ouli.e, Inc .. 1110 Tl>e lollowlng P'''°"' 111 W1y, COi!I Mtu, C1hlot"11 926'11 E. Holl 9 1..0 .. MOfllClilr, C1llfornl• l>Ulil'>fll 15. l nh ~nt11 II (ontl\l(le<I bv 1n Tiiis 11\tslnen Is conducltG bY • EPM·HUNT COMPANY, ooi ng l individu1I. C1lifornl1 (orpot1tion buslnes as L.Ap{£ PillR"-SANl.1. ,.N,., wnn1m Fl. fleiullt11 Herold S. Goodman, 011 WIST Flrtl Sl•HI, S1n11 Ant. lnlt. $l•le"'ff!t wts 1111a w!ln in. P•e•ldent C11ilornl1 9'1703 I CO\lntv Cllrk ol Or1ngt Countv on Miy lnh '1•t•me"I w11 ,;lfd w\111 tl>e Eawl11 J . Evans. nn G\lbe" Drive, 'II, 1911 County Clerk of Or•not C1111nty on Ju"" 1. Huntlng!on Bttcll. C'1lllor11!1 ' fJIJU 1911 Jotln H. Peterson. Jr., 15 Corlntllliln I Publlsl!ed O••"!lt Co111 Diiiy Pilot, l'lllll Wal~ Long B11ch, C1lllornla M•'I' :»,Ind June'· ll. 10. ltll ,,20-11 SIDNEY w. JONl!S Oontld D. Mc(1H1, 1r.rn (ISi ______________ ,, .. , Wtll $11<1" SlrMI H•""""· 'l"Of'bl Lindt, c .. 11,,..nl1 PUBLIC NOTICE 0..1.rlo, Calrtor11i1 David G. Mct.1111, UIJI Rtlflb0\11, , --------------IT .. : tN-114' G1rdtn Grov" C•l1lornl1 JTATIEMl!Nl QI' A•ANDOfrtMli:NT 01' Put>llsr.ed Oranoe COiSI O•llv Pllol, l nl• bu)i,,..H II being Concl\IC!ed IW • USE QF June 6, JJ, 2(1, 27, lf14 ?Oil-II llmltld 111r1nersnl11. Eawln J. Evins flCTlTIOUS llUSI Nl!SS NAME PUBLIC NOTICE Thll 1r1remenr flltd wllh 1ne Coun!y The tollow1119 pertOf'U 111vt ablndontO '' ~ o c '' , > 1111 11se ol 1n1 11e11t1ou1 bu•inen n1mt: ..-~... ••not 1111n1v on M&r • ' I. CDMPAR , 1116 ,, Coa~I Hwy., CorOt'lll NOTICE QF MARSHAL'S St.I.I l'l4024 ae1 Ml<. Calllo•nla 9261$ lllom•• C1nltl New asslgne<I 11> l(url Publls~ Or1noe Co1st 01Ur Pilot. 1he l'ictl!ious Builnnl Namt reitrred lOlll~. P11lntlll v•. Arthur M, R1.,,bo, May JO, Junt '' IJ, ;o, 197• l9$l·I• IO lbovt wa1 Ille<! In 0•1ngt Coun!v on CMftP'ldant. NO. llS 6&1 A11!11n• 10. 1%6 11' 2391-Feo. 10. 19111. fl~ v1rt111 01 1n 1•tc11tlon lssuld on PUBLIC NOTICE O"n Olvh Terry, lt'lll 1-itmdln Line, A1>rll JS. 1911 bv ll>e Superior Court .• ,I -------------- Hun1 rng1on Bt1tn. C1tltornl1 t11>41 Juclvtmtnl it<1lerr<1: StP•imtlfr lli. 196-1, PICTITIOUS a UUNESS H1rold Ktlth Smhl>. UI Crnc•nl Bey Countr of Oraf19t, Stai. ol C1t!fornl1, Ht.ME STATEMl!NT Cr., Ltguna B1ac:.n. (1litorn/1 914SI uporo • lUOO.,,ent it<11ered ln 1•¥or of ·r11t rotlowlng 111r..on1 lft doing Shiro Aold, IH51 Bu11'1rd. Hun!Jng!on Tnom11 D1n<el New 1~1lgllld Id Kii" llllllllfll ii: BtKn. c1111,,,n11 926•1 TOPI~ •• judg ... en! c...ii!Of Ind IQl!nit UMQUE COll'FUAES. 260ol Avon St .• AOllerl 1Edw1rd SNM_'f.. ~JI J Arlllur M. RamDo "' lu<!g"""'T debtor. N~ B11ct1, (1lifornl1 9'/t.116 Mlnntt<lll, Caill Me11. C1h!ornl1 •h<IW!ng I...,, "'-l1nc1of 15.627.11 KlulllV Tl>lrl!tl II:. D111n11. 20Sl Phll1rop1 T"ls bu1Jness w11 c-lleltd ov • Gue on 1110 h~gment ~ 1111 d•ll Cit lllt Cl., COl!I M111, C111!or11/1 t1'21i 11ener1I pa•!11..-s~l11, lssu1nct 01 '''" t•ttuh.,,., r h1v1 l~vlr<! I.tilt!' w. DlllMI, :IQSJ l"ni!trOPI ct .. H~•old ll:tUl'I Sf'l'lllh upcn 111 ll>e rogM. !Ille and lri•ereSI 01 C01t1 M111, C1!Uornlt 92'26 Sl'llro Ao-i u ld l\lllgmenl dtl)lor 111 !he 11ro"!'rtf _In Tnl~ IJUJlntu h cond\/Clr<I bf in Tnis •1arernent w11 tl1ecl wltn thll !Ile C~nlv of Or1n11t . S11r1 lri C1t1!orn1t. fndlvlduil. I Count• Cit•~ ol Cr1119e CO\lnty on Mly OtKtil>l'<I •1 lo!lowo: t.Hter w. Cll1ne1 11, 1t/I. , Loi l2 lricl 13!1 11 per map rttort° Tnls 1111...,.nt w1s fllecl wUn 1111 1'·1lfl •n B-1S3, p1ge1 3f..'• Ill(!, of MK. Counrv Cttrk ol Or1ng1 C1111ntr on Juno " Pullllt-O<l"'if'I (0...11 Ct!ly P\lot. M•P•• rKOl'GS ol 0.AQI (ounlv 1914 Mav 13. JO. tnd J11o>t 6. I], '"' lM'l-11 C1lllornl1, All No. llt JI '°3 •n<! · l'l1Jr7 co<nmonlv known 11 1t36 SrtcrnDOlt PUBLIC NOTICE RO!ld, Co•'ll '"'"' Calltornlt . PulllJslMd Or1119e (HSI D11tv PllOll. "IOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIYEN !flat on June'· n , 10, 77, lf7' :l(UJ-11 ---~"",,-,-,.,-.,.,-,-,,cc---TutM11r. JU11e 2S. 1914, 11 :!:DO o•cioc~ ,ICTITIOUS BUSINESS P.M. ti Iron! ol C1111rtl'MWll Oflfllle PUBLIC NOTICE llllAME STATl!MENT (1111nlv Ha•l>Or Municipal Courl, 0 01'1-------------- Tne lollowlng 11triOM ''' doing JambOret Ro .. c;r., ol NtwPOt"I lle•tfl. a Ulll busl""H .,, (11\1111¥ ot Cr1f19t, Stale cl (ali!Of'11l1. I SUPIElttQJI COURT 01" THIE LESCOUllE MEOICAL SERVICES, wm 11!1 11 1>11llllc 1uc:l11111 lo 1M n;gnesl STillTE Qf Ct.Lll"Oltfrtlt. !'QR ~Sl llo.pl!ll Rd. 'lo. lOI. NIWl>O•I t>IGder, tor ca•I> in lawtul money ol !he THli COUNTY Of Qll:AWGE Be1c11, Cl. 9'lili0 Unlled s1are1. ill Ille right. 1!11• Ind ND. AIOUt ROblrt E. t.1m1>er1, l:IOI 1<!11g1 Ra .. lnttrtll 01 •aid \udgmenl deblor In Ille JrtQTICE QI" N&.1.lllNG QI' Pl!1'1Tt0N N-l>Orl l111cn, Ct. 9'llili0 abeve de1crlbtd O•OPf"lv, or IO '"11Cll l'OR l"RO!IATE 01" Wit.I. INO FOii Svlvl• I.. t1m!H'rl, IJOl Klng1 Rd .. H>e•t<lf •• mav !le nKeuary lo wn11v LETTERS 0" ADMINISTRATION Ntwpp<! llttcl>, Cl. 01660 ••id ••tCUTlon, wlln accrued !nitres! I nd WITH·THIE·Wll.L ,t,N Nl!X&D 11111 ou1lneu 11 condutlecl by I gene•t! COiis. E1t1te OI ESTHER PEARL MARKHAM, p1•lner11>lp. Dl!K M1v U. lt7' Dece111ea Roller! E. L11 m1>erl Olvlslon· Ha•Dor NOTICE IS HEREBY GIYEN tlltt Tlljl s1atemen1 wa1 tlteo with !hll DON E • RHEA FREOERICll: A. STOLTl lla1 IUld Mreln Couo!V Cltfk ot Or•ngt Coun11 on M1v Mar$hal, Or1nge Countv • oerl!lon !or Probllt cl WUI •1111 tor 21. 1911. llv M1rlene L Brown. Oepury luulnc• ot LtUt<• ol Adf'l'llnl•l~llon fl•2U Norf111n E. ll:litdolPll wllll·ll'ltl·wlU 1nnt!'•td ra J. Ptlrlck Pubh•hfd Or1n-o1 Co.SI Cellv Pi1c1. HJ Gr1n1a1, McC&rroll 11lerenct to whlcn ii maat lor MIV JO, 1nd Ju...,'· 11, ;o, 1'11 19'/I 7• S•" C1tmt11t1, C•lllornl1 '1412 IUrtl'ltlr ~rtlcular1, and tnll Ille time 1nd -~-----~---------I l"l1lnl~U'• ,.11or...,r • 1111ce 01 llearlng Int 11m1 h•• lletn ..,, PUBLIC NOTICE Pubh•!lt<I o-anve C0tst D111v ~1101. 1or June ?J, 1t11, et •:lO '·'", in 11\1 M1V JO, tl'ld June 6, 13. 1"4 l9.6·ll COll'lroorn cf Dto••tment No. l ot said FICTITIOUS IUS1NESS PUBLIC •"OTJCE court, 11 100 Clvl~ (ente• Orl¥t WtSI, In NAME STATl!MENT •• Ult Cltv ol S111!1 Ana. C1lltorn•1, Tl>e foUcwlr.g ptttonl •r• dO•fl!I D1lecl June 3, lf1' businflH 111 l'l(TITIQ\R IUSINEll W11.LIAM I.. SI JOHN, EPM-HUNT COM"illN'I'. • Urni!.a llllAMI! STATIEMl!NT Coun!Y Cle•k P1•tner11·Hp. 1107 EIS! !:hlptnll\ ,,,........ TM lcHowlllg ""''°" r. doing IJUllMH M<l<tlWll, l'!Hlltl .... l'hw:I\ SuTre 20S, O•tll!lf, C1lllornl1 ll'M6 1•: UMI l l T-It-, Slltlll 1M E<!l'l'lll J . E~•ns. :i:rn GllDtrt OrJ..... MARKET BASKET En Orl"llt' County El T ..... CA n u. HU!lt."lt!Ofl Be1c11, C1llforni1 11 76J SOI/th Euclid Aven111, A.lllhtl.,,, Tth 11141 .._,.. JOl>ll H. Pft..-Klft, Jr., 15 Corlmlli1n Cthlornia. AllorlWl't lw: "1111-r W1lk, Lang llt1c11, c a111or11l1 Tne ll:rog1" C11.. an Oflio coroor1Uon. P\111111111<1 0••"111 C011I Dilly Piiot, Oootld D Mcc1111, 11111 Ca11 This tMnlne11 !s c-1.0Cttd tlr • Junt •· I, IJ, ltl• :!Od-1• litfmo11, V.,,be Ll"<11, Ca!•torn11 <o<oor1llon. ---·------- David C.. McC1111, 01)1 Rtlnoow, Tiie Kr®tr Cc. PUBLIC NOTICE G1raen G•OVI. Cllllornl• Gl!<lrlll A. Lfa'llr~. Tnl• 11u1int1• " Dtl"ll conttll(ttd bv 1 S~rell•v ""'•ltd Plr1ncf1hlp. l MI •l~lemenl Wll tiled Wiii\ IM Eawin J . E•lnt Coun!~ Cler~ ol Orang.e Coun!Y on J11..., '· Tllll 1ta11m1nl !Ilea wltl'I thf CQllnl~ 1171, C!1tk o! Orange Count~ on M11 21, 1t1t. Crldfl flllfll\I S.rv!cel, 0•~11111' Counly Dl~hlcn, Plo!ntlt11 v1, Rlcllttd S. Pctble fl401S P110U1/led Otl!llll COIS! Dilly Pllo!. •lld S1ndr1 t.. Prtlllt 1nd 11:1cn1rd Pretlle FUl1t O!IA R"°'t Molal APltl"""·'· Oettnd· Put>lltM<I 01-.1191 COllll Dtll1 PHO!, 11111. No. "6t Jun•'· !l. 10, 11. 1'11 20!.l·I• Jud!lfmtnl D11t: M1y 1, 101•. ""·°' MIV JO, •nd Jun• •• lJ, XI. ltll 194'·11 By vl r!vt ol 1n t•ac:.ullcn lnuld on May PUBLIC NOT ICE PU~IC NOTICE I. 191'. llv !I'll Munklp.i C1111r1, of Soy!h Or11111• (1111nt1 J\ldlcltl Ql1r.lc t. C""nty OI OranQI. St1!1 ol C•lllor11l1. ""°" a 9 11:nt FICTITIOUS IUStlllllESS !\ldQmtnl tn1..-.d In fl"°' ol Cr.all SUPllllOll: COUlllT 01' THE NAMI STt.TrMINT B\ll'MU .ie•vlcts. Or1noe COllf!IY Dl¥111on STATI. 01' CAl.ll'Oll:NIA l'OJI TM lot1owfll!I PttilOll 11 (IOlng bu1l11111 11 lll!lgment crldllOll 1nd 1g•ln11 THI COUllllTV 01' OJlt.NOI! II! Rlchlrll S. Prf'blt •nd Stndrl J, Pttllle I Nt. lll•ltlJ' ANCHOR, lTD., :111 POPPY Avt .. 1r>el Jll(l\t<d Prtbll O!IA Rtt0rl Molt! NOTICE 01' HIAllllHG QI' ritTITIQN COl'ont ~I M••· C111t ... ni1 n61S • Mt btltllCI ot U1t.70 1C1111lly due on I' 0 JI 0 •DIR DI It I C TI H 0 FIOOtr '°• Morin, 327 Plx>llY Avf., 11ld 1""9,.,.n! en tl'le Gt11 al ll'lt IUUt l'l(t CON\lfYAfrtCI 01' lllE ... L .. JIOP r lTT (6'-dtl M••· Ct ll!Of'nlt 9'/')S of llld t•l(l/llon, I n1 .. ltvlld upon •11 TQ COMrLITI D I c II: 0 I. 1111 T 's T"I• llll'tlnt•• h cond11eltd bl' tn ,-,o••lrntnh II l~r delllorl, sl'IOWlng CONTRACT lnd!Vl(N1I !hll rlgM, lllk •lid lnltftll ol 11ia E1t .. I o1 LOUIS RE11'M.AN, Otc11$1d. Rover F. MOt'll\ !\1d9'1"4<11 dllllo<I In tl'le P•OOerly lfl 'Ill NOTICE IS HEll:EIY GIVEN !NI Tl'll1 1t1!1mtnt w11 Iii.., wlln 1111 C-ty of Or1ll9'f, Sltll ot C11ltornl1. EOITH FARRELl •l\d E 1' HE t. COYlllY Clerk of O<lf\flt C-'T Oft MIY U , descrlllld Ii tollowi: JACl(SON. 11 Co-t•l(Ulrk t• 0t l!'tt L~" 1'14. >mn NOllCE IS HEREIY GIVEN 11111 llfl wm of LOUIS RlllMA'll, ~« .. •~I'd. tw,v• Loi JD. Ill«' 10 Pl lrl<I ,,, lilld l>lrl!fl I pe!!Tlon lot Ofdlr Olrt<ll,,,, PUOl!lhe'd 0•t"9~ C..-tt Dtlly Piiot, JlkatO .... In 1-. 75. paatl ii to 16 Conv•Y8l>C• Cit lttll Prapetty ID CD.,,Plti. Ml'( 11. ;ill. Incl JI/flt .. 11. ,.,. 11$.1-1, ll'ICl\111VI ol MIM:•ll•-1'~1.. Olcl<lftll'I COll!rtcl '''"''"' Ill t•clu•lvt II II (Of'NllOfll1 --IS 3'11 PtNO rltl!I •flll oistion 111 Plll'CfWltt ctrl .. n teal PUBLIC NOTICE 61 0-hlobtl, Sin (lt'llln!f , (111io.n11. prll9ffl"I. 1n1..-H lnlo 11¥ 1111 OK..,.,,I In Tl'lllfldl¥, June 11, 1914 ti 10:00 O't*- l'llt 11i.1ltn1 tflll UNION t. AH D PICTITIOUS IUSIHISS A.M. 11 C1111rtl!out1, Mtrll'ltl"I Ollltf. CCW.P ... NT, INC,, 11Ld ltil fio'oClf'l'!Y to~ Nt.Ml STlllTIMIWT JOUl C,_,, Vlllf'f Pttk•IT• C1"1 OI --• ·•• -· ' ·-C ' d lftll"I Nlg\111, C_,tv ol 0.-inot. $t-ot conwy ... ,..,!'IQ ... 1,11,..... 11 "" oun ' Tiii foll(lwtng P1•ion1 "' llelonO Ci llfornla, 1 wm Ml! 11 Pll(ll•c ~uo;tlon 10 Rlv1rlloe. s1111 o! C1lltorll1•. ttftrtnct .,,,unou 1i: 1111 h!tl'llil llldeler, tor call'I In 11w1u1 to wPlicfl II l"!Mlt ,,,,. llH'!Mt jllrflclll•ll. AUlllOll:A c H ... R T IE It s ' 11177 .._, ol !I'll Ulllttcl Sltl11, •11 .... rlOf>I, llWI 11111 thll 1111'\f Ind Dlte:I Ct l'Mllfint IM iMrll!'oolt, Trnllfl, C1Utornl1 ,,,.. tll!t ll'CI lnlff.,I of '°'Id t\ldtf'M"I -l\ll -ft 14'1 IOt J11M1 24. ltJt, II l<..,...!n ~ JOfll't-, 11U1 Shtrbroc*. cklllPrl In 11'11 lllO'o'I .j111;r!b.fll fiot-<f't, •.00 ill.l'l'I ' In tht CDUttrO(lf'l'I Cit l11>1fn. Cthton'l(I 9'll-IO .. !Ill ml/Ch IMrlOI ., l'\ly lit "«OSI•"' 0.petll'!'llfll Na. I OI 11IC1 (Olltl ••• 700 l>t1llf P. S!tO\ld, 219 Wllnvt. N"""'°". lo 1111\h Whl txecvtlon. with 1((11/H ('lwi( c ....... Or!w Wttl, In '"' (ii, ol (allforfll• .,.., ln!Ort.i Intl COSIS i.llftl• A~. C..lhorn11 Jtclt. \lll'ICftlt. 11(57 Stllll l.etllOl'I . Otltd Mly JI, t'11. Ott.,, Junt t. ltli 1'6llfll•1n. Vtll•Y• C•lltoml1 '210I OfwhlOfl: Soulh O•lng.t (1111n'T w, IE, SJ JOHN, TMI lhll•ntH 1, (Ql'ldll(led Dy I 91ner1I DON e Jl.HIA. Counlf Clt<'lt Plfllltr~l\ip. Mt'1"t!. Or•• C-1'( Ht.lST•AD, BAKIR AJllD STIRLIMO 11'.enntt" Jonnton B~ Mtlbt II, Hll/M, .... w. l lKTl'l 11 .. Swill Mt T~ll tl•lfl'fllnl \I/If tiltd wilh 1111 °'""IY l ., Anttlti.. C1Ularnl1 9tt1J Col/nh Cit•• ol 0.•"llt 'eoMr Oft MIY Wit.I.It.lo\ au.NC:MARD Tit: CJISI Ul·IJO 1', 1'1• IOI I . It C1ml111 11:111, If .. 111 AillNllV' .... c 1 .. .:.cytrl~1 ' l'Ull6 1•11 CM ..... ftl .. (I. n'n l>t,1bll111H Orll!fl Co.ti 0.llT 1"1161, Pu&lltne<t Ort"'ll ((lllll O~•ty Pilot, Plllllh'*I OttnQ' COlll 0111'1' Pll~I, J11ne &, J, ,,, I'll 1013 ,. M•V lll 111<1 J11111 '1 l.l. 20. lfl' 1'71-7• Jun1., ll. 10, 1f'4 ?01G 11 ' 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 .... ltfotl ••••••• ~1000.2'99 ... , ---······· 3000 "" ......... ll'lwHJtlllltrt • fWM!c:ktl •• -·-••••• 50QG.S04t AtlnluM"'*"" r-Mf!Cllt, !Mt • ,....,.. • -.•• -50SO-sm Sink•• • ~ 600D-60tt The Blc&est Marketplace on the Or1nce Coast f .. oymtnt I ,,tpOfGfion ••••• 7000.719' ""'chondl11 -. , .•. I000-8099 &a!s &-Mam. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED -ADS Yoo Can Sell It . Find It • Trade It With a Want NJ [642-5678 ] .---------1 General R E 1002 General R.E. 1002 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;';;;;;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 'ERRORS: Advertisers I should check their ids dilly & report errors I mm e d i 1 t e I y. The DAILY Pl LOT assumes ll1b1llty for the first in c o rrect Jn1ertion only. G ,~•~n~or~•~l~R~.E~·~~-'-'1002 CITY CLOSE COUNTRY LIFE * WATERFRONT HOMES * Elegant 4 llR & lge. family rm. or 5 Bit, \Yith 6 baths. Lido No rd. Spectacular vie\v. Pier & float. $275.000 . I..ovely 5 BR ., 5 bu. on prize 60 Ct. waterfront lol, Lido Nord. Pier & float. $375,000. * WAT ERF RONT LOTS °* 40x911 ft. Mag nificent view. $250.000. 30x l05 !<'t., Lido Nord, vie\Y. $165,000 ORANGE COUNTY BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR l\llNl-ltANCll $3'1,000 J>'ULL PH.ICB I 341 Bayside Or., Suite I, N.B. 675-6161 \Yo11' Bring )'Our kids and I General R~E . I002j G.nITTIR.E. 1002 JM.'IS und 1'<11l1C luuk (II lhl" -- one. Just R ff'11• uf tins flrli! I BIG DAUTIFUL hun1l''s Jeaturt:'s urc: buih-; -llJ"' in runge & oven, 5h~ I -BARGAIN! ciu·petli, covered plltiO, urea I fa1nily roon1 urHI huge, huge C Best Beach Buy! lot. All of lhili 11lus nn easy PANORAMI Just eight block11 10 IM'!n<:h to take O\'er GI loan with CANYON VIEW from lhls HUGE family size payn1ents Of $168 ll\Onth. hon1e. Two big s I o 11 e ; WALKER & LEE Corona del l\lar at it's best. 1 firepluce!:I! F'antlly 1-ooni\ ' REAL ESTATE L11rgt• Terrazzo Till'fl En1ry, I Forn1al dining. r our I HUNTINGTON BE.·.·ICl·I Bean1cd royer. Tas1cfully I kingsizt' bed1-oon1s. A I d('oorate<l in neutral tones. 5 •~I ~ ·1• 1 1• o, • 842.44 55 ~·• , Ba h 2 ... ~ ,oNV 1 s a sea . .x:e now. Colossal Size S11f1er Home I 5 Bedrooms Cul-de-sac sll'C'e!. J\la1nmoth entry. Large entertainn1ent al'l'a. Jo'Drrnnl dine. Huge family room. 5 BEDROOr.15. Huge n1aster suite y,•ith I:>x2S balcony. Large patio. 1''nlit tiws. r.fuch n10re. Call 842-2535. OPEN Tit g •IT'S FUN TO EIE MCf' THE REAL ESTATERS SWIM 'N SAIL GREAT FOR KIDS \\'A.LK TO LAl\1'.; HUNTINGTON O\\INER i\IUST 51:'.LL This isn't just a hon1e -but n rJC•ll way of life lor you and your fan1ily. Everything from the shake roof to the huge lot, n-.cans family eomfort in Ill.is 21 t year B•:ul"OOIUS, .1 t S. Call 8-17~10. Flr'l'lllll.Cl'S, Large Family lloo1n, Huge -Huge lot wlth rlrganl Pool and Redwood Deck PLUS Large Garden. Call lTI-1) 6'6-()5,)j. .. -" ., .,._ ... ,, ' \'.\LLE\' RI \I.I' • "' ' .. t • ,. .... ' '.. ' . ' . "' . ... .,, OP£N TIL 9 • IT'S FUN TO BE NICE/ . I . • THE REAL ESTATERS CALIFORN IA RANCH E R NO ON TO VETS Assume 10;0 Loan ANYONE CAN Assu11,1.E VA 5~. '1~ LOAN Beach Home f There are niany t1·ays that 1'~antastic 1C;0 loa.n. \Valk to you can 01vn this beautiful lx'a('h. Beautiful f1001· plan! Ranch Style hon1e. No clO\\"n Formal t'ntry. 1'' or n1 a l VA. Low do"'" FHA or take dining, Large fan1ily room over 1he existing loan 11•ith 11•ith fi1'C'plat"('; is I a nd payn1ents of $136/nio. This kitchen. Jnrge fan1ily size bt'autlful hon1e niusl be sure hcdroo1ns. Cot·t"rcd patio, to be appreciated. J ust beautiful landscaping_ Just listed at $30,9M full priC'c, listC1'1. Don't delay! Ca.JI For furlhcr Information, 96:\-6767. please call. OPEN T!L t • IT'S FUN TO BE N/CEI [,® WALKER & LEE REAL ESTATE Costa !\!cs.a S4S-9491 young beauty. Just listed so THE BLUFFS you'd beu_er. hurry a~d ask IT 11 F. p ARK Ll KE INVEST NOW BUILD LATER! us about hst1ng No. 9531 I I\ T J\1 0 Sp ff ERE \\'ILL w ALKER & LEE ENCHANT YOU. 0 u R \\'ill carry ii self. Income S3GO I per nionth. 66x300 Lot . Sec this beCore it ii> gone~: REAL ESTATE 8~24'155 "BLESSED" BACK BAY The O\.\Tier is praying for 11 I fast sale on this h('avcnly 3 bcilroon1, d~n. fireplact'. 3 bath rownhouse. l\Icditatc in a garrlen SC'tting. P£'Hceful location, near two chur('hes. Don't \\·ail 'or th(' rapture!! $34,9j(), Call now -&iG-7171. OPfN TIL 11 • rT'S FUN 10 BE NICE/ I~ ~I '...._ :.1.i,,.J AVAI LA BLE INVENTORY JS SUBSTANTIAL. 2. 3, 4 & 5 BEDROO!\IS. S 0 i\I E \\"JTll BAY VTE\\'S ,. POOJ~c;. DE:-15. FORl\IA~ Dl:-11'.\'.G & FA i\I I LY ROOi\IS. PRICED FROi\I $4tl,OOO. CALL FOR A PERSONAL RF.VIE\V. HARBOR REALTORS SINCE 1944 67l-4400 ~ 12:)' on Nc\\·port Harbor. 4 BedI"OOnl homf' -n1ove riJl:hl in for good summ<'r fun. Lovely palio and your o"'" boal dock. $135.000. PETE BARRETT -REALTOR- 642-5200 Location and View BALBOA ISLANO Cho ice Barcrest FANTASTIC! . COMMERCIAL I 1725 Sky erk , , , 12 Stores in prime IOC'8.t1on + Exc:cptio1U1.l!y clt"an home of Ne\er befo~ offer_ed -~ou " 2 bd t · I must SL"e 1h1s spactous home spat1011.'1 l'll"l. llll • 3 bt"droon1s, y,·ith large hv. \\•ith a view that is supt'r ahove. Present OY.'l'K'I' \I'll,! & fam. r ms. lead ing to stupendous! Thret.• large lease hack ,?'lC ~l?l'I! fo•:. "i deli,ghlful COYered patio. bech'OOms. three b a 1 h s , ~rs. •"'-\Id.I ht:I~ _ 11 1th Responsible buyer \\'ill AP-faniily room _ a house 10 do flna~t·!~g. Xlnl ln\t.>stmcnl preciate a!ISumable 6'1'i;. your Ol\"n thing ivith _ great poss1b1hty . loan + olher nice features. investn1ent -don't n1iss this C. f, Colesworthy s~~ SHAPIRO CO. ~"-11~!'~ ,~1;;t~OSE NICf• Realto rs 640-0020 Realtors 6-12-761l6/64;,....3t20 • Buy a new '74? Your older THE REAL ESTATERS model car ls in big dC'mand " ~ . . Sell It fa:.1 y,;fh l't ! Daily Pilot Classified Ad 1 '==~=· ======~ 642-5678. $21,000 ror these spacious 2 BC'droon1, 2 bath adult General R.E. 1002 General R .E . 1002 Condo. Sl!f.JO Do<.l'n. 3 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,I Bt"droon1, 2 bath, $23,500 \\ith SIXO, doY.'n. Beauriful park-like grounds. LnU1e & plaster \\'alls. bltns y,·ith D\Y. Pool. 83&-4206 Agenl. CUSTOM BU il T CAPE COO HARBOR VIEW BROAOMOOR One Call Service Fast Credit Approval fqulpmlnt ••••••• • '°°°''°" Ai.ttonioblll• ' tthtr Tron'90f1otlol • , ., f\()G.9099 General R.E. 1002 Generat R.E. 1002 THE "BLUFFS"-$74,9l0 & $78,lOO 'l'he last of the brand l'IC\\' ONE story model s Your choice of a "Linda" or a "Paula". 3 , BR ' each. You'll be glad NE XT year you bought one of these TOD.l\Y! Real choice! 2701 VISTA UM BR OSA Open Daily 1.5 WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO. 21 1 t Si n Jo1qui n Hills NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. Road ,644-4910 General R.E. 1002General R.E. t002 IN CORONA DEL .MAR The UNIQUE Featu res Of This Home Are: It self! Super unique and unreal ~ 4 bedroo1ns with oceru1 views and keys to a privale beal.'h. Exq uisite band crat't1nanship in the paneling, \Yindo\V boxes, stain glass, kitchen tile \\'ork, patio decking and fabric \val! coverings. Presented at $139.500. UN IQUE HOMES Realtors, 67.S.6000 2443 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar G9nerel R.E. 1002 G•neral R.E. 1002 1 ===.::.:....-......;.:::: Costa Mesa I 4 llR Fixer Upper BUY A WARRANTY HOME • I \,.--$29,900 I Good Morn1n9. \\'alk to shopping, school.~ Ay,•ake in beautiful CD!\1 in' pltl'k~ or bikl' lo bc;11•h this cht"l'l"Y 3 bedroont JIUJl:t.'. tn.·r-sh11ded y1111t phi• hon1e. P ll'nty of rooni for a , si.~1>:H'ate large yarll for boa1I seeond unit on rhis R-2 lo1. 01· truilcr slnrnge. Nt•"d'I Jl'll b'O fast at $65.000. Call yru·d \1·ork -paint • T('L 6771-7225. 01rncr le11vin~ sl.n lc. T11k• , •• "''""''''"" ·•Jt \'. \ l ,l,.~\' KL \LI' . .,," ,~, "'"'' '"'"(•~!' •I • ~·~"I /JU•~~· ndvlllltoi::c • ~46-2313, 1 I (iji ·tijiij \f i I Newport Hei9hts , ~l'&r ll;u•OOr fli. As~un1nbl,.. ASSUME $238 PER MONTH BEACH HOME VA loi1n. ln11naculatf' lx•dnn .. J 1 ~ ba, b It n" J\~'iunie paymf'nts u n<l t• r l!rtplac..-e. ney,• cpl, drp~ · $:,1(11. f.:.>1.1•1•11en1 h ,. 11 1• h l)b!r Jl::tr. Lgc y1mt. loc;1lion. 3 hu.i:e f!ln11ly. s_ixe , ~3928 or E ve. 548-2426 hl•clrno111s. Fornu+l d1n1ng I - roorn. L.urge li1•1ng roo1n 11ith stonl' flreplac<', ofl for1nal t"ntry. L:trac clQSeJs, shake roof and b<mt gate. Lachenmyer Realtor Jus1 listed, r11n't Inst~! Call l:=i:=i:=i:=i:=i:=i:=i:=i:=i:=i:=: l[Uick -963-6767. OPEN Tit t • IT'S FUN T'J 8E N/C'l'J '®. . . ., , .. \ . , THE REAL ESTATE RS CHANNELFRONT I DUPLEX PiC'r & flcmt. Xlnt 111(';111011 , 11l'rtlSS rrnn1 N c \\/ 11 n r I Island. 2 Bcirn1s. each u1111. IJOlh \\•llh large. SUtldt"C'k• Qu lel 1'0l'll<'r location Oil WOULD YOU 2.'iXlOO 101. $142,000 BELI EVE Cidl: 673-366.l 979-4190 EIJ{'• 61h 0 /11 Assumable Loan? I I I s.-~c tltis sharp new listing. 3 l:'.i::i~fil~ I '"•Pl""~'~~ .. .,,,., Atijlii&C1 \\"u u·i 1'1~7~~0500• I White Picket Fenc e 3 Br 's -2 Baths ASSU~lE VA 6~': $165, i\10. PAYMENTS You 00.rga.in shoppe.~ had I ·----------1 bc!le.r L'Ome and t11kf' H look COSTA MESA FOUR-PLEX Cull us ahouL t his hard-lo-rind Inv cs t m ('nt oppor!unily in a helter 11'C!ltsldl' lo1~a1ion ba<-king lo u ~olf {'f'IUrse. S6JO/n10 tnromc could be more Joy,·-lo\\' t'at:ant•y on I y $6i,::ffl ;i1 this very nice Cosh1 Mesa home, The T1101lt'rn kitchen and huge lot nl'I' jui>t a fc\\• ol the fenturc•. orfcrcd by this fine hon1c. 1 OFf!'..:RED AT $33.500 WALKER & LEE HEAL !'..:STATf~ 545-9491 Call 6-W-72U ALU'!\IINUr.I POTS n1lrl 11 lil!lc Yincgar. This \\'ill kt>tP in Old Corona, l'i blks 10 b<-ach. 2 Story, 4 BR ea. 11·/ba., fan"t-rm, 2 frpl('!l, 2 11•et -bars, sep laundry/sey,•ing rm. This !{P<'Cial honie offered by O\.\'rler. $152,500. 6f;N.'336. Light & bright corner, 4 bedroom, 21h bath, family roo1n, formal dirung room and wet bar. (;reat home for en tertaining. $118,500. , pan from darkening. Ul!('ful 1 S ~ • r11rt no longer needf'fl ilf'nl: Ocean & Harbor View Lovely San Clt"n1enl<' fan1lly J homt"; lmmal". 3 txlnns., 2 lull baths, bonus room. ss:-i.ooo -GEMMi-- mF Tu~tln A~ .• N.B. REAL TORS 641-4623 5 BR Single Story $45,500 Excellent n>slrlenth1 I locaoon -c Io 11 e to ~1t"Donrl('ll­ Dougl11s. llunlington Bench. All bltnli .. MIOn(' fl~place, lsmlly roorri, play yard, ~ rn.1rhs rind rtt'.'llhly pillntttl inside a!ld. out. Call l\1r. Rl:o11er, ~5-$42 1, $outhCo, ~alton. .for OsWlitd Ad ACTION C.11 A. DAIL 1' PILOT AD·YISOl M2·S611 VIEW-VIEW-VIEW liistoric older 3 bedroom home on the point in Corona de! Mar overlooks jetty, beach. park. Grounds include l\\'O building lots \vhich can be divided. Big appreciation J» tential at $225,000. RACQUET CLUB J EWEL Extra sharp 3 beclroon1. 2 bath home . Qual- ity upgrades. Co ming range. wired for ster- eo. garage doo r opener, etc. Reflects ex· cell ent pride of O\\'nership. $49,500. ENJOY THE VIEW THIS SUMMER Charming Cameo. Shores home with ocean view. 4 bedrooms, formal dining room. spacious poolsize yard and lovely brick patio. $139.500. PRICED TO SE LLll 4 Bedroom. 2lf.i bath, famil y room , cathed- ral ceiling and fireplace in master bedroom . Near pool and Lennis area, overl ooking goU course. $56.956-land Included. SUPER DELUXE OUPLEX $120.000 Buys near new 3 & 2 bedroo1n du- plex. 1\-lodern built-in kitchens. Both with fireplace$. Walk l04 bay and beach. BEAUTIFUL LINDA Elegant country English, warm wood s, deep carpets. formal dining_ 4 bedrooms with bal conys, den. 3 fireP.laces, 2VJ baths. lloat slip, gated community & more ! $230.000. DIAL 644-1766 1 1161 San Joaquin Hiiis Rd., N.B. A COLDWELL BANKER CO. • 1 I~ sell fast with a Daily Pilol ! Classified Ad. 612-fi67S. t 1 General R.E. 1002 ! General R.E. 10021 macnab /Irvine realty ECONOMY+ See this quality, .south of th e hig hway du· plcx inves tm en t in Cdl\1. 2B R unit & lBR unit separated by beautiful landscaped ~arden . Super lg. lot ( 47x 118). Excelfenl income: $93,000. Clint l\1oses 642·8235. 1Z37) CONVENIENT LOCATION 4 bedrooms home near \Vestcliff Center. Panelled family room w /Cir cpl ace_ \Veil landscaped . J.'ool size lot. $54.900. l.ois Egan 644-6200. (Z40J SUPER STARTER-EASTBLUFF Low' low price ot $00,950. :i bedroom in fin e location close to cvervth1ng! Chnrni· Ing country kitch ~n. Jlcl ~n ·1-larll ev 642~8235 (Z47) • IOt Dov'r Df'i.,. 142•12JS .. ' ' 1 J \ • > jGG; •••• ~ .... ~IFRf..]E[.~~-1Roffioi2-0G~.;.; •• ~.~IFRf..i€c.~~1iiii;';;r.;::::;r;;-;;~~-.no.;-:-;:::::-jt;~----~~,.,""'..,...~-,,.,,..,,.~L'~,..,,,,,...--,;--,.--,,..~~~~~,~~~~~~~ ·'~"="l·"··~··_J_o_n•~''~·~'-'-''~~~~~~~_::O~Al~l~Y~PILOT 39 l =:;=:;=-~;;:;;;;:;;:;:;;:;;;;;;;:::;;;::;;;:;;;;:;'.'0;;02 [G•ner•I R.E. 1002 Gen al R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1002 1 Costa Mesa 1024Cost1 Mesa 1024 Dana Point 1026 Huntington Beach 1040 1 OUR BUSI NESS IS HELPING PEOPLE LIVE BETTER \HOME & INCOME! We bave lbe best selection or NEW & USED duplexes U1~t \Ye have eve I' hod! Please call us for d etatls. LUXURY LIVING •. -in 13i.J:! Canyon. Elegant 3 bdrtn. 3 bath home ; t~1s exceptional townhouse is 'located on a qu1e~ cul_ de sac: in a parklike setting. Best buy 111 il1g Canyon! $145.900. DUR 25ni VEAR BAY AND BEACH 675-3000 2407 E_. COAST HWY. CORONA D EL MAR Gen•ral R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1002 Co nee pl l NTERVIE\VING for ten top salespeople. l'vlust be experienced, productive and have coopera tivt: ~ltilude .. Exceptionally gener- o us .con1m1ss1ons split plus terrific profit s haring progra1n. 1'he finest location in New- port Beach, .. 1.he Estate Really Building", corner of Nev,rport Center Dr. & Farallon. ln~ivid.ua l . offices for sales people. For conf1~ent1al interview. call Gordon Har1ey. President 67J..1518 or Bert Reedy Manager 640-1120. ' General-R.E-;---1002General R.E. 1002 * * CAMEO SHORES * * NEW LISTING S"1eering ocean vie\v, exceptionally lge. patio a rea 1d e.al for entertaining. Call for app't. to vie1v. Off~red at $1 14,0~ ~REAT LOAN -----i ;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;====;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;1;;====;;,;,:=:::::;~;;;;;;= GREA HARD TO FIND LIVE NEAR YOUR Molh.,·ln-Law's Suite • TER BUY! IN TOWN LIVING-"1ith real country al-BOAT \\'ith Its O\\'n kitchen & bulh Anx!Qui:; uwne1· h11s uUow('d nlosphc re. C.ood 3 bedroonl home on large J:l unit. 2 HR 2 Im gurden in thh1 ran1bli11i;: ranch st)'I<' u11 to uri.:t• you 10 niaKe 11r1 11• I 1 Condos trorn $31,MO home .. 1 full buth~ & loll~ ol off('r ur1 nu,. adni•able l :>' < ce1> ol. Close lo Ncwpo1't Back Bay. LINGO REAL ESTATE othrr roo1n f(')r ynur ramUy. CORONA DJ·:!~ r-.1 An llu1·llwood floors, double garage, covered 49:i_7,125 499-~ I 11 hi.." 11.n a..'\..'>urnable lo1o1' 1'0tlU£:e, 2 ht!<.h~"10n1~. or)l'n patio with bl t n DUQ. Price only $32,000. __ _ _ interest r111e Joun, .w hurry. h1.:an1 ccillni.;ll, l.luilt-in Vacant, ready for your inspect ion. Call VACANTI 10"0 WILL DO IT ! Eastbluff 1030 539·900· ki1('hen. top conrll1ion. And S46-SS80 /1 Christ iane Realty prtecd now 1u ottly $56,500~ Private but close to everyth ing. £'atio & fire-·--- C-:11!1 today -li7J-s.;;,o, p!cu.:e. Location is a bonus. 2 story 3 bed-6916 Warner ~'1l 9 • ll s f \JN ro DF NICt• COSTA MESA DUPLEX rooin tov.inhouse. $38,500. at Golden West I \.f: ·~~~·1~'tl'1 EACH UNIT ROOMY AND WELL BUILT-714 : 842-7486 ~ I I with 2 bedrooms, private garage a nd fenced GRUBB & ElLIS co. All s.~rubbed Up! ._..._..._.,2~_'3"."'.,5.,92.,·5~5.,68.,..,.,.1 _~\ j . yard. Great location. Close to shoppin11 on -----·····-o REAL TORS 6 And r('udy IQ i.:o. ThL~ $212 Per Mo. BUY A WARRANTY HOME Newport Beach Condo With Jo1v tral'fic streeL Spend a JitUc, lll<lke a lot. 5!""'"'""'~~..,..,..,,....,..,..,..,..,..,,,1,,s-,,1,,oa,,o.., 1!:11.stbJuff rooJ borne 1~ th<' [ CAPE COD JJriced to sell at $38,000. Call 546-5880 for ~ -answer f(•1' 11un1111e1·111ne . . full details. General R.E. 1002 · Coron1 del Mar 1022 entcrt11h1lng. ·I bcdroo1n [ti!' SuiTounth·d hy P 11 rk·l 1 k1' ... ~HERITAGE REALTORS 546-S880 Open Eves. ---'--'-"-"~--.:.::::: I only $7!1.000 hind the l1'~t 01 i:rounds, n111nu11oth 2 1.~v:•l the hoine ;;:oes iiith iti. ..._Co[)<' Corl. all shuU1:1C' I, OCEAN VIEW I Call 675-7225 ..-,:i&f)('rf'd & C'n1·11('ted. L.in:1.: BUY A WARRANTY HOME PRIVATE BEACHES rf'r1.1t11tc hllns. ·rv ru1nµus See !his 1,'1lf!1l'r l01~11tlon 3 l'n1 ,f; si'pariiH• 23~2:t gain•· Boat Slip Gene•ol R.E . 1002-G ---E Thi.'> honu! t'l)v1•rcd 1o1•ith our ;;;;;;;;;;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;•;;n;;e:••:l:R;;;;. ;;;:;· ;;;;;;;;;;;;' 0;;0;,2 GREAT FOR THE KIDS! I randi st)ll• kltt·h1•n 1111/1 ht'fJrou1n, !an1Hy 1• o o 1n ruon1' Assun\i' 6': VA !nun , t~u111c. Highly UPI: adcd. J r111l} $21~ J>o·r 1110 PITJ full f:njt1y lhc plo~·id pool 1)1' use price S.12.~50. Bkr 9t'i2-5Jl1 cxcluslv(' ONE Y EA It Un1vt'r~1ty Park, J!:nd Uni! lhe private be1:1ch . A i;u rwr O\\':'>IEJ-l 1lr·si11_•1"a!t•. !h;i:f' o,n li!'<'cnh•·l~ CIOS<.' to J'oo!, lllq~e Jot. A iruly best buy Gn,.'<'llhl'oOk ~1 bdr)ll., ·I F111111ly Hou1n \lilh Patio, 4 <it $92,500. FR ONT ROW halh s. F:un1ly 1·n1, b11,( gv1111• \\'AIUlANTY . Looking lot * B lb 8 p • * VALUE PLUS? lh!I'{' ll Is! '.l a oa ay1 ropert1es Htii!nXJnu;, 21:: B<1!hs, Ga~ I-----------'----"'-------- Bil , und ii'~ ALL NE\\'. Offc1·1'1t for S79,950. Call S.16-(f~'hl. r •u u~ '"" • • "/! !S" ... '' U> '"'~t \i<\LL~~\' REAIT\ • ti~li<• H<HRPRI~{ .... n I·~ 'IOC~ £lCHAtj(;( <-\} .. PAllT Br1hil<nn.~. 2•~ Balhs, Gns 644.7270 l'<llJl11, fonr1iil thi1ui.;.: rn1 NEWPORT HEIGHTS UuH1 ·1ns. Hri(·k fii~11laces ~ BA y VI EW 1\.,·1 h:11·. 1\'Parly :t~iM :<q 11 FIX ER-UPPER? 1n !\t11~tl·1· l3<-droon1 & Pt.cil i:u:11ih~·s. $6:J,950. bkr 2.--2 Bdrn1 hon1es Livln::: Hoon1. ~.500. Call from t'\ct'Y n11.Jn1 ol !111s Call f.;.tl-Z:-161. 1 Will trade :l Bll .. 2 ba., \\' 'fam. 6"6-0;is:,. 1ir'Qf'l), rl('coralf'rl 2~1 sq r1 _ ~4 000 C.: 1'111., 2 frplcs. X I n t _ 111:!12 illanrlrake '.~~~~~~~~~ CQrK!o. 3 'tr, f;1.nnly rm .. I (h1_111'~ nJ?\'c.s. S~9.J d~\' 1~-<;> !:>, 'all 675-7060 l·leights loc. $49,500. OPEN HOUSJ·:. S!\1'. & SUN. 2/1 ~ 00, spurious kil l'hcn lf,11;_ .. bdinu;, 2 °"11~· llJ>lt . :642-7491 . j I lo:> QP<'!lS to p 1'i\·ati:-f~011lya1'C'a .. 1'C'<1r .l'.1t~i:.1:111 garden-pat lo. \\'nol CHI' rs l'.u1J!.1ns, r! 1 ~ti 11 .1 s. h, 1 . ----------ARTIST/WRITER Oak Sli:lil'cast'. 11111 1~11g I Co1·t·r~'ll pal LO, "s1,~1nklt·r~ COSTA MESA JUST THE SPOT .. RETREAT! ll'all1:mper & Dra11es: fi;int ·~ ~"1~·· s .. ~.9:.0. i>kl· NEW-NEW-NEW For a Large Family NOW · · • secluded ocean S.: hay vlc·\v Garden entry. Open Sa1. ,t· I CiJll 962-5566 _ _ I I hon1e, just above China !'un., 12-:i. 21i17 Vista 3 Bl{, 2 Ba. fqil\·, rmt\1) LIOOI, ** 1t" Ctty of OnJng-r• •• • C II p ·k rrep aceable 2 3-BR 2 Cov". Oi·nad~. SS7.500. 6-10-0610 I Jndscpg. Ji;:e Jo1, r r a r ·I &'1!roon1 s:i:J.900 "JU:!.~ Stf rr 1 ·0 .ege a i · C.~1 · in ba. un1·ts w/ocean vi·ew·, I ' lb h d 2811 OCEAN LANE __ _ _____ acc<'s11. nreve.rythin~. 1'r,r1hl Frunt lu11•n & sprinkk•rs -a nice ne1g l or oo 4 1/2 btk to beach & shop-1 F t · V II 1034 II" !':000 1 'I Un r ' Sll:t,:iOO oun a1n a ey ..... ' . uni t•r Ill~ ' shake 1wr · douhh· l'nlry 1' a1n. rm., $ludy & -$!!9 500 673-7420 ----------OPEN SAT. l-l SM,;.(Y.l. Bv nwn('r 1'47-711.i door~ lo l.u J.!'' h\'111i; 1·111 pool. $46,900 556-8800. ping. ·' · . · New 2 Bedrm Homes I ---1 \1' r 1 111lc -l11u11Jy r 111 1 m I lO°!o Down From $26,950 University Realty ALREADY FINANCED Irvine 1044 11•• 1•plc & 11l'I 11 .. 1 <·0011t1)· I REALTORS I] :WOt E. Cst 1111-y 67:~10 Payn1('nls S227.()() a inunth. I I k!tt l1cn 111 t rnni;:!· & -SUNSET VIEW Assun1e this 71 ~' ... lr1<111. :; OWNER ANXIOUS! 1on1tnuous r·le.1nu1 .. ovi•ni;. 5 Loca l Offr·c e• To Se•ve You t 3 BR Mesa Verde F ,.,1 Dedroon1 hon1c l"On1plct"I" R•· .. 1 , .. 1 11 I "' 01· ..,,, e By Owlll'r. .i !3r, 3 _ . : " .• • .Io:, n pl 1~·{• 1•.,1 u1: on 11n ;, D/\V Ii.: !rash 1.'tJl!lflHl'IOr -I ~:"""""':'~:!"--~~~~--... ~--!!!--$41 ,500 b<t Lusk honlc. Sandiiipei· re<!el'O~·a1cd 1ns1dl' und pr!'•· Tur1lc fl1wk Plan 1, ll'illi brc11kf:isl 1·111 . ·I lrg -----___ , res s 1 onallv landsl'Q""'t · I I · G I R E 1002 If'! I R E 02 -nwuel, 11·ct bar. :l car gar, " · . , :-·, ._.,,~. · easy 111111111. ynrr , \l'lrk li1-·d1w111s . :! full IJalhs -e nera , . ..,enera . . 10 4 BR E astside $47,850 pool sized lot. C1lll 10,. \\ife·s<ner k11_chcn. Family floor<'11 <.itnuni, ;1 IKtrnis .. '2 \\'1\V car(X'ling lhruout •NORTH TU address. $89,950. 6\.1-1395 oz· roon1, t'OZy .11v1ng 1:oon1 "''1th full bltths & '11n1ilv r1 ,1 w1&J lll. rmdding • fenc<'d ' . -STIN•. I EXECUTIVES• ·'~'~~~=~-~-'--------I f1rep!acc .. N_c\\' pal!O. P11Cl-d J::lCt'.. garage doo1· Op!'llf't'. rr:ir yard \\' rnon1 roi· boal 1/.i ar1~· /TIX'Sllg:IOus estate 111 • 3 BR Duplex -1_0 sell Sl'i.9.JO. Call I . .1. N 1 or 1:111urK·1· -850!1 s11 11 1111 -~t. 1.ful:M.'rt'~ \\'oocls of No. OR BIG FAMILY? Eastside $47,950 2 !3.H. l. b~ on lt·2 lot New The Real Estate F air 1t5~s .niany ex ias. 1 ·oii· 011 ) • Ideal {),C, lu(';11in11. :\JOV!-.;, llusun. \\alls of gbiss El,...t:ant i\ll'!'Cdith Gal'd~·n.~. pa1.nt _inside & out. New 839-6133 or 536-2551 I S .950. 1.;p TO Ql!ALIT'l'. ~cpnn11l' !his cnter1111nPrs B bl!in k1l, d!'f1S, crp1, bath & , . l..r)ads of s!)<lce. F:r11t01·111in each Duplex $79,950 r· ' I I S 6 4 · O O I v .. r i11ff.rn111tivn rtill : !7111 11aradi~·' lt'Onl z t'f)\'(•n'I! tll•'ITI <•ll! i\1a1·estic 1'1111'\.'. co10'.~-~t.",_ ':· .... ·,·.~.,1~. .,1024. Assume --70Y..o -L_o_a_ n-:;~L·--i~·,., \\·11,. ,,·l··C·.rli" 11,,. p1ir10~. Ovi>1·look111::.: J11sh I Call For De tails " II" '"""" .,., """' L ., •• Enorn1ous Jiving roon1. 642 1771 a<•('fll l"(ard\•ns ll•f1clin~ lo 1n1 L'~ 1 1 d. · • "' .xJ!<11"a!e orma 11un;.:. I •.'1U1r111(,U.~ ('1·y~t:1I p u o ! , 1 Cuisine kiit·hen. Great f;in~· Huge 2 story, .J Oeflrn1 on I 1.1·iih•rf:ill, dng y;1rll rind a Ontu P amper Yourself o\·ersized c."Orncr 101 \\'i1h x1t c )'flrd 01· trlr OJ' IJoat . !}:; ln this I u x u r _ f ill ('rl 10a\ i.:a!e. .,,._,,,s so1ne TLC. firepJae('. UnheliP\'11lily ex i · Y ,. . Payml'ntsonly$2:)J. PIT!. l~t .\\lrs~('\11 Brink B!di:;. 1~ob 1°P \lil, - - -1~Pullor College Park 0ntul}:;21 CORBIN·MARTIN, INC. ,f ~1~1~,1~ ,~,~~'~'.I ~ REALTORS 644-7662 roorn and 2 firrplacf'~ ~ 21ou ~ 11 sq, rt, Of ~pae1ou~ 11v1n~ - l1kr fl('\\ 1.'Vllditlon !hruou!.' ·I f I il,v l'OOlll ll'llh hugi• s1oiru• I N·--' This fully a11· eondl\l(}r\Crl :; bJ'oad r·o\·e11."d patio for pinh ~21 · ecut ve. horn<'. \\ 111: 1 $42 900 I t:n1vers11v Park. h·vuu• I h \. bdrn1s, 2 baths. R 1 eh , D 55·2 7000 N. h I HH hoinr features linporled jl(Jng, poo · II' 111"1"r. nu cuthedral ~ilin"s & l.'.ll""e 842.7411 Eves: 963-4062 1 ays · 19 ts 1\·uJI l'flvr1·lngs, J us h roul1! l'ntCJ1r1in lhc ll'hn!e " "' ·'100 l view \\'indows. Fa n1 i I y 1·11t'1)('ting. exqui!;ilc lighllni:: l'n1np11ny. :.. s<J. t · 1797 Orange. Costa !\Iesa f I d' c ) ~>.~1~r~~ h<J/1d a kGi~~n~e~·~ L~;\~1;les!nlar~c ~:~~~;~~is.13; ----------~in,zn~r:.~ ~n/~ !~11~1: BRASHEAR I d I ;·1ppoin1nien1 _ :;,1r ... 2.'IJ:t Fireplace. Plenty or roo1111~~-;:;;;R;;E;A;;L;;:r;v;;~· ;·:;:. \\' <ibun !1)1('{' 0 Xlllrai;l' &· OPCN .'IL? • IT'S ~UN TO Bl' NICf+ !or a pool. Only 1 year old. !\JOVJXG NOHTH Ownr1· anxious to nlO\'I.', 0111.1 4 !)(Inn. or 3 plus ril'n h.,1111··1 :n·ai!ab!e i11U11 i vr I'S it .1 . P11rk \Vt•ll nia i 111 i.i inr·dr illsidc & oul: p1'1\'ale /J:ilro~ & l01.·;ition heat· 1mrks, pool~ & tennis t'Ourts. Only $5j,50lJ l ~~;;;:\"i;"'i;"' .. ..,":'l~"')~-"!'~~-!!!~!!!'!''I 0\\'ll<'r bou!.!ht nc1v hotil<' uri I liG -Nrw!h. T;1kl' advan1(11((' t)f •neral R.E . 1002 General R.E. 1002 this ~•tuntion 1oday! Call Jtntst or l'OOk1ng <.1J1pliun<.·~~.1 ~ HARD WORK s.;3~i00 Call ">-10-1720 -~---~ SR:'i,000 ~-~ 11 " · ' Harbor Highlands 1036 1 ""1 E. s,,,,, Cl"rn An·.. 'Al", • SAVES MONEY [TARBELL ) 1--------'- TIME TO ACT!! NEWPORT :I Bedroom s::U.9:10 in co~ta HEIGHTS AREA Mesa. 2 hat'h s-nif.'~I,· OPEN SUN. 1-S I Newport BL Costo Mesa 646-8811 Con1ac1 )0111' H (,a 11 u r •flt f('garding t>.lullipli· Listing-4 Bedroon1 hon1c inB~·1y·ca .?', "1RIOTh~o • I N<•. 265.">2-71 01· l)rin;llrt :O.L S:l9,0!Kl homes. " W~U~~ I Birr!. T·!l·;il1nr.~ ;i( k:::t-8MO S·!~.500. S~:G.:m~ l..011' 1·ash 10 ;1ssun11• ""--II ' CALL 552-7500 •VISION• DEVELOPERS-7.14•; exis!ing loan. P1·ln1e .,.a;i arbor Bl\'d,Cos1al\lesa ~hoy Mariners! R CH llunting1on Beaeh lt"K1l!ion. 00\\'NTO\VN Costa l\fesa.1yes, Ma:·iners Dril·e in AN ERS yn11 '1I lov<' 1hi~ Ooorplan. z .1ed C·l, olde~· house. ~ood Harbor l-lit:hland!> ix th1.• t:Om p]cted -lnrge fenced 456 Cambridge circle yard and eove1't'<I pat!o - . S / E 11ssun1e 71!:',I \.A lo:in or 1 1n1n1~c_. 3 RR.. 2ba., f&1ntly un ves. REALTY s:i.:ioo do1vn. Firlit !i111e 01' r!UH~g rn1 .. 2 frplc~ .. Sll!1· 646-5855 advf.'rtised 64G-n71. ny pttl10: extensive use_ of1~---------G:i i Aci't's. 10 nii. 1 0 Call 8<'.7·6!:ll0 for 111t1re info1·· r;!1tal. Be~t 111r_lat1 on. spot for both SeafarPrs and :1 i·er! hill l'iln1p11ny Doii·ntoii·n San .Jose and in n1ation. Agt. '.'i-.~.ouo._ tinant·lng avail. L'lndlubbcrs! .\ l~di·ooni Uni\'. Park Ce111c1-, ln:ini• 0Pf.N Tll9 • ll'S fUN fO Br NICF' 11·a!l11aper: 1nin'Ore<1 1• I wci1dt'Oh!'s. Near nc11• ki1ch. -du't·t1 ~ro11•th path. Cl<1,,c 10 •---------•'·----------1.1·1lh S5000. do1.1·n. and a super price. SOJ7,;JOO, Golf Course, Rrse1'\oil·s and ~ Call 6iJ.-722J THE REAL ESTATERS applianc('Joi: <'Opper plu1nb-ASSUME LOW + Highway 101. Sprin'.:-h·ll CLASSIFIED __ LOVl::LY .~P:ll·lnus 2 ~1ory ing ~/8\' W~'l.1i<)E'~· INTEREST SAVE REAL TY 67s.s200 CLOSING COSTS! StO('k Danis 11 u <l .1 hOU1\' wil!1 rust i<· \\\.lf~I B <' d 1·0 o 111 " Ho1nt• 1)n HOURS QI.ANT& UAL TT 11av1c1 ex11·riot', ·I tx'fti'OOi-ii. f4wnnil Prup+.'rty. l\lay exehanl.(!'., Advertisers may plac<? 5'15--42SIJ dining, f:1111llv 1ui1111, n/I CLASS SELLc;; -642-567~ CLASS SELLS -642-MTS Super n~·I~ .ra1(' n1ay be I General R .E . 1002 I General RE 1002 ~~su111rd i~1th 101~· cash I t -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·;;;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;11nvci;! n1ent ~ Totnl payn1en1 'I 1• S27fi 1no. full price jus1 Offel'C'il for $2.082,000. C<1ll lhf'ir ads by telephone REAL -PR!::VIE\\'-10 lo 2 ONLY C'leclril' kitl'hcn, hr i r k tHG-0.ij:'J, 8:00 a.111. to 5:30 p.m. -i''l'Way-5 bdnns -huge I fir't_•pl11ce. n,.11· shug (';11'fll'I' $36,:iXl! <.it't'fil beach I lvcation. N1l'c Uu11i!v ~iir Clou us roo •••EE l~"""" o• ~•.., !\londay thru Friday s <·01T1. 101 -N.E. or Gran1 & 1 tlu'Uou1. 3 C;ii· ,gnra_ge. Q111l'1 8 to noon Sa turday E TAJ E B11kcl' at -302f'i ll11rding Huntington Beach 1040 ~~;,ci~rccr. S~.500. Bkl'. \ray. -Just listed, \1·111 go llo1nr. ll ut'l'.V -ii won:l lai;I~ I \'ALLf=Y RE:\ Lr\ ·. A il(OG !NT(Rf>R<S~ AM[Ml(..t.'4 510C~ l•(.HA~<il Cl ''~ON dowrt Call ll-17-£010 no1\, ' . ·---------1o~"" 111' • """" '0 BE "~'' I ' . _ ,,, 1 : 1 Fixer Upper COST135 1&,~~a~FFICE SALES rast •tt $37.ooo. -Quin1ar<1 Price Reduced I 6<12-5678 Heally -&l2·2991 -33J5 $2 400 --SACRIFICE--) -v;a Lloo, N.B. & l81l -1 • $62,500 . NE\VPOP.T BEACl-1 If Y()ll 1111' presently l\1lrborBl.C.!\I. 2 Bdrm.+ Pool illv LaSuJID '''"''''! 3333 N<"vport Blvd. ~'n1plO)'f'd 111 Real Esta!e but REDUCED $l400 " ' •• 6-42-5678 ll'oulr! likr a chant:e for · $22,600 1-011•nh11use. --1 B d 1 n1' , !\!ORI:: u11portunily, contact ... ror fasr sale. 4BR/2BA. , f:in,1ly, fo1iJ1al d111. :!' HUNTINGTON BEACH 11~. \\'e ha\·e all the tools for ~hake roof, cov'd patio, Nr. You can pay .,.'.!((JO n101t• 1111111 b.1rhs. Best loe, tl<'"r l;:l·~ 17875 Beach Blvd. 1·ou '" 11·01·k 11·i1h. If vou are So. Coast Plaza. A buy at this for a new unit Ol' JOU I r1lay areu, 1•:1L.1nl J1111c 1·1. 540-1220 '!led i ('ii l ed lo ·b c in g $41,500. c<1 n buy u1y upgraded unn , Lin1vrr~11y Rlty. 673·bi111 SU('l'f'Ssful. 11·(' need you~ CALL 968·44·11 for $2,00J bclo1v rcplaeen1enl 1 \ltGE 1 · 1 t ~ Lr1 . ,1 . LAGUNA BEACH Jnel'i'll SI' you1· c:irnings with '* C t R Jt cost I " ' .Jgi ' -\< ~. A 11 • ' 1 Only $281900 Sil""~ pnce !,•---------• 3 Brrlt•oon1s. ;{ h:1!h.~. K.I I Ha,,th1"'"" Bcm·h. 11, M;1,, 22:.1 Forrst Av<:. I reS ea Y 2 sdm, 'OrnlO rlt'S. bl Nf'1\' Z Bil, 2 ha, U111\'t•r.~1ty 94 9[66 our 1H . .'f'11!J1·e p1'0gran1. Fo1· . . . d 1 '. 1 fl··. 1-, ira .e 1 1~ark, .~44,!MJ(). Jr1tludcs lunrl, 4 -1 u p1'ivatc, <·on r id <'n f la I 3 BR. +d1n1ng rn1, !11g back groun e\e , 001 P .tn: l 1: 1 Bi· owner 552--0i':t; SA.N CLEi\IENTE ln1rrvicw call now ya1·d w/fruit trees, BBQ ~at'S flf'\\·, Freshly Painter!, ·. . · ' . I beh1•<'en U:OO and :1:00. ,rea, l'OV. pa1io. Only w,_111 tastef_ol_ly panelect and D!'..ANE _ llO~IE, U1n1ve1·~11,1 305 N. El Cam ino Rea d I I P k I 1 I I I) I · 6.\6--0:1;).). $28,!K!O. As~uin. Jo~n. Ask nurrort' 1v1nr. room, push 1 r . ,,•11s1n:..: 1u1 1u1 • 492-4·120 for Guzi, ~952l. agt. \\'ailpapcred dining area. Bit 3 has. 011 ncr 83~(J(J;;(j to pay i Harbor View Homes ; ~:; 1111;~~T;"" to move in1lo> a irllCl'if>t' desig-nc~ Ull'n Z . w R~~t~~~~ hedl'OOlll, di•n ho ni e ·j I Make an almost immediate move. Newport Crest is the exciting townhome community !hat overlooks Newport Harbor and lhe CJCean. Bi!:;, bold spacious homes. Residents' Swim and Tennis Center. Exlerior ma intenance provided. Come - let us show you how you can't afford not lo live at g TO~ From Pacillc Coast Highway and Superior Avenue interseclion. drive up SuP9rior IO Newpor1 Crest entrance. Sale olllce: .#12 Robon Court Open daily 10 A.M. to Sunset. (714) 645-6141. •IC.ll"• tOll••ntlonfl ,,,,:,ntlf\Q ot X Y~~· lo.in, C1111 Pflt l OI Pion J, UJ,QOO, 1¢1'1 dow" NY ..... nt M Jll.$;.00: )60 monthly povlt!~nu 01 ~~•J• lpdr.clc-•I •I'd 1~1'1111)1 M•t1 •"II 1uoc/Mio11 ff~1 ~.JOillo ... 11 JC.JS ... ANNUAL PIEltCENT. AOE JIATIE, Nt"'j)Of\ C'tt1 11 • oro11ct or P1clr.c N. c .. Inc. ~ Aown H. G""l Cotp0••1lon, Gtn.,11 Cont11cto1. • ~ --= Pt>CI Q..0111<1 o•• fllln •"II tlt•81illll II 1111 t••• l)Uf1';~ .. o•l(t O! '"' llOriut !II "''"'" ... 11 bll 10010 .~, 1!/lll!•041 el\1rgt• tor IOI 0'1- fl'!•wllll Of OOl+0/111 ''""" II Ordi!•UO by l!u,of T~• Sfllt1, Pteolic N C , IN). !'lllMI 1 ... IOQht !() (~A~Qt 0"C•l. ll~lnC•~I '"° bu•td1ng pt1n1 Incl 1petotat1~l w1l~ll~I llflotl. c;n,.._•<.-. • fantasl11,;;tlly upg-radrrl and -546-4141- 1.0P quf!lity. drl·o1· 11.1~\!Qll\, . (.Open. Evenings ) .-i !luge ~Ull·Sl"l'C<'nrd h1-ltovet 1 _________ _ night h~t:ted pa!io for I --~-~----- outdoor hvtng. lmn1aculate Th p "bl t.'Ondilion. Quiet C'\ll-de--siit e 0551 e 1ocn11on. S71,,;10. i'\'e. Dream! With Pool , '"'""'""'6"4"0"·"1"1"2"0""'""''", u,v~vo~~11~a~ .~~~~sal' I I strl'l'L 2 S!ory rlP~at1cP. PRl:'l1E F OUNTAIN Gov·T REPO \' ,\ l.L •:: y \0(' a I ion' I :1 Bed1oon1 :.!halh f;tniilv Up~r;ided 1hJ'r,ughuul. l'OC>n1. Norih Cosl;1 ':\lrsu. 2 BOAT ACC!'.;SS Oil ~lcll' Patios. On t• u I ~ de~ s u t• ! <.:or11n1uni!y J-'OOL. GrP!'n· street. Sha~ c;u'[M'I, fL·l·sh belt near .. Jusl l years 1 paint in~itlt'. Lns! ye111·s I rl!'1\'. F.XCF:IJ.ENT 1C'1111s. I pri<"e at S:-10,000. SIOOO .. do\\'ll 0\VNER SAYS HE !\11GHT + closing l'Osts to :in~·onr. JIELP FINANCE. Take Call no\11, bids avuilab!e :11 • nrlvnntag-e -eall 842-2535. Heritage Real Es1ate j OPEN T•L 9 • 1rs fLJN ro Bf. NICE• CALL 54C).ll51 1 I " .. !Li' , THE REAL ESTATERS ~•.§» HERITAGE • • REALTORS JI ......................... I CLASS ~ELLS -1).12-5678 j General R.E. 1002 Gene ra l R.E. 1002 1 ' PRIZE WINNER NORTH COUNIT shal! c;;1.rpelo; & custom e\·P. dial free 5<10-1220 E drapes, Ol'<':-slzed pru1tcy ,,=.E=11=,=o=,-,-,,.~11=0-,,,-,~,=bd~n-n ASTSIDE flxt'r. Perfect area. cuSl"Jln file roun!cr 2 ba. s;),.500, •9~1723 cv .. Jil 'Slai·ler bon1e. 3 Br. den.· " "., • CLASSIFIED tops, shake roof, rl<'a r and 1reeKrnds. I Es dining rm. 1'~ Ba_ Cheery schools, \\·11.lking.cl1stanl·c to l - OEADL N ki!ch<'n. UJt size 5lxl79 Huntini;.on Center, swilll· Laguna Beach 10481 Drad!ine for copy & kl!ls 11·/lots of U'Ce~. There's I is 5:30 11.n1. the day be· room to add. Don't wait call n\ini.: pool l!nd many f!ill'k HIGH I 00' DOWN areas. Nol\' $2000 lJelow 1·0~1 fore publication, cxc<'pt 10 no11·. \V. T. f.tillrr, Realtor, neiv. tP r i 11 c i p :i 1 s only· I ON A HILL r fur Sunday' & ~tonday SI/ " INTE &l2-481l. O Editions y,•hen deadline 2°10 REST olt•usei. CHI! torlny\ 1·rflookn1g lhe 1•i1y of !.11·' is Saturday, l2 noon. C D M $3495 Down 847-3095 ~un11. \1·i1h wide (l(·P••n1 • • • Or assumi> 1he cxisling jl~c; 1·ir11s, 1his well rlnnnl•rl. 10, CLASSIFIED Look nt lhose tcrnis!! The)' loan on th is \'l'ry prrlly :1 $650, DOWN yrs. yuuni: liornt>, h:+~ :t1 REGULATIONS nia.V lie hi.~l!ll'Y soon so don·1 bedroc11n, 2 hu th la111ily hdrms. '2 1~ h;1111~. forn11111 ERilORS: Advertisers hesitutc. If you \\•ant an hon1e. \\'i!h rliuing rflfn11. ~ Bf'<iroon1. p a y n1 r n t s dinin~ I'll!., lgl• living 1111. ;;hould chl'ck l hcir ads ext1·a sharp 2 BR 2 BA hon1<?n.uiker's ki!<·hcn. Sha)! app1'0x St9.'j, plus taxes .~. 11 h-plt·. All on 111·0 111'11 daily & rt•port errors POOL honie Jn CORONA l'ill'JK'ting. drapes. F' u I I insuranec 8: 11111111\l'n:int·e. 111nd~1 ·11ped lols. 1\n :-:ln1 hu ,· immediately. THE Dl::L ~1i\R on a big 60xl00 price $3l950. Call .j.10-1720 E-.:('cllent ~•~rter honH'. HT S67,!'lj(j DAlLY PILOT assumes lo! \1·ith private cominunily [ ) Enclosed palio. Close !1! j mQ· fi: A-_._ liabili!y for the first in-bca('h acf'{'SS. TARBELL SC~lOOls & xhopping:. 0111· 1 ~ ' _'t w~ correct insertion only. Only S69,fi00 It nlllc to ocean. $2·1.0CKl. , _ IIQc»&ll'll:"W Call 644·"11 ~ 1, r , C~\NCELLATIONS: em W\9.lliUBW<!I \Vhcn killing an. ad b(' , _ ! "'•·5671 4'99.1100 sure to makC! a r<?cord I ',' , • Z956 Hal'borBl\·d.CostaMrsa 962-4471(~::)546·8103 OFFERED , •• - 11( the KILL NUi\lBER -Back On Market , . hy builder. lnv<'ly ;:, given you by your ad M I/ d D 1· ht I I 2 b I I taker as receipt of your esa er e e 19 . ,,. r111 .. tit i sunny i<11111•: 1 cancellntion. This kill HORSE PROPERTY By !)1\'ner. Large 4BR. 2BA. T O\\·~HOUSE&-G ldSalc1t;cn1. d1•atnatit· o_•n!ry 111 sh'P·llJl ' Plus bonus roorn. Ne1\· plush Nr. \\a1111•r · o en \\f·~I. liv. 1·n1 ... ~p;tt'. derk, 1·usl.,t1J1 nun1bcr must be pre-Sh:ir·p, ln1nut<·ula lc 2 bedrn1 2 BR 1' I I · I $41 • k I · ('til""'I thtuout. See lo· . . • _w. t'OVt·1·1·< el'rn111u• ti1• \\nrk, : .. ii l. sented by the advertiser hon1c, e>.T<'llcnt S1f11'te.r. ,.. k I 1 1 Th 1 1 1 f 11 App1,.1•ia1r'. ""''"I' m;_irk<'I P.ar ing \1' pa 10 en rl\11\'I'· " 11·~l ltl~' 1n >C'rHill u . in case ot a d!spulc. 1.on~"d for n>alripl· ••1•1·1,, ' 1 d 1 & 1 J f "" prit.•cS39.!!50.979·7320 :st'~u<'t . rsc r.0.111 La.gi11111! for u1'lh1'r; C1\NCELLATION o R S.l"i.000. no1se/1raff1c. Alf 11n1rn1ti"s l i11fornu11i1:n &. n p P · 1 1 Ontu i\IESA Verde Villas, 2 BR. incld + pool . Tenns 11••1111 <l>o11'i"''· 1'1111 I C(lP.HECTION or NE\V d p . . ., .. ,.. AD BEFORE RUNNING: t'Qn °· nv. patio, i.!ood loc. &12·!l:~n tin!U ·I p111, x47.:,2.:x; I • ·l~1-0:~o1 * •. If . d ~11/'21 Pru .. 'Od below n1arket; Coll af! 611n1 . Sllulhcoast P11.r1lil' Corp. r.\•cry c ort 1s ma c to 'Tl for npp't. S2t500 kill or corrl'ct a ne\v ad DAV JD o. CARLSON REPOSSESSIONS EMERALD BAY 'J that has been ordered, · but 1\-e cannot s:uaran-REALTO!t Sl.1-9293 for intorn1a1ion and l01·nfion Th<'l'f' Fire< 1>\\"<'f'P111f: OC"llll IC~ to do so unlit" the ad 5.1&-7542 BY O\VNER, ·I BR. 2 BA, Of thCl'le !'!IA & VA ho~1cs, \h'~'\\'S h'0.",'1 '",~~1.l~t'.s~;:~111~. I d · h near Killybrooke EI em. contuct • ..nif', 111 1 1 • •• . , '" ias appeare in t <' 1 Balboa Peninsula 1007 &hi. A~i;ume v,,\, s•ir/r KASABJAN r:ue~1 rn1 . on 1n1~1n ll\l11~ pa1X'r. loon, full Prlee, S.19,950. l\'vel. & 1 brlrn~s .. l hath~ "" Dli\lE·,\·UNE ADS : LG . ~ Br, den, nr_ Hacqucl s 17-Hi62 for uppl. Real Estate 962·6644 fan11ly 1T11. \l'Uh frpl<•. 011 These ads ar(' strictly Cth., br1y nunp. $97.fiOO -"'-'0='-"''-'"='-----: ---J 101"'" l1•vrl . 1\1'et>~!I to pr1v. cai1h in advantt by me.ii Owt1<'r/Ai;:cn1 H7a-4GOO BY \i·ner. lllesa. de[ "'Inr SHARP & CLEAN Rc•arh, 11•nni!' t'l!'. ,r,, pools. or nt any one of our of· -&!"ea, ·I RR. 2 hfl, frpl c, 3 Bi'<:lrovn1, 2 bn. pnrk·lik•', Slill.000 ~ -ficl's. NO nhonc orders. Costa Mesa 1024 Newly J~lntrd, tn.>1<l. ~!re ynrrl, Tor·noteh ncichbot·-TURNER ASSOC. 1883 MAU I CIRCL E COSTA MESA !)C'ad\inc : 3 p,m. Friday, fOI< •··I" l'I' Ow->· "BR r~~ .~rnSi:·huoJ5 & SlKlpJ)lng. l\OOl:l. Clo~<' !u ~t·hools.shop. 1105 N. Coo~t H11·y., Lt!gunu , c-.1a· 'le<. a ofll"e 12 .,... ' >. "' ' ·' ' .,....,....., • 11ino-. i\11sum1· ln\1' in terl>st ( •I'." 1177 v·• '' " 2BA. hon1c 11·/lri;: lBR. lBA " 1 ,,..._._ 1·he a bove property . won first ~rize noon -all branch of-kili·h<'n. rlln rn1 & !iv mi O\\'NER. Jll<'sa Vtorde. Sharp c''?",11:.· Asking only S36,i:il. 1 -T=H~R~E=E~F~O~R~o=N_~E~ I. .I l I 'rb ' rices. ~ ...... , -11J"I E••"rylh1·1•g !l RR, 1 1~ bu!i. F1:1rn-rn1 . 2 3 lOTS ~re11c11ln ion <.l\Varu a ast urs a ys . ., ... ·~ " .. ,-f 1 I'.' t Pt ' J SCOTT REALlllf · .<.'OnlJlOSC" this ?tK' I . t L . . f II N THE DATLY Pfi.OT r<?· upi:::rar!ed. nc•\rly p.1inted, ."!3.~.n~~~~ ·1n, ony. 5367533 (lu!!'tnnd1n g bulldht,::: ~11''· u tlp e 1st1n g n1ce tLng o le C\\'port strrv<'s the rlihl to clas· :121 Jri.'I', Open houi;c &11 & .,.. <N'' .... v-.,.,.,,, ........_ • I-:.'\r ELLt.:NT 0 c E ,, N Harbor-Costa ~Iesa Board of Renllo1-S. si tr. rdit, censor or re· sun 10.r. Sl-IARP -REPO BE:AU'flfUL VIE\\'. 100 fi. OF ROAll The presentation \VUS made by Julie ~ fus,... ony t•dv11rtlsc1nl'.'nl. SOUTH OF HW-V.-3 I~ Br, 2 Bn . dbl par lo. Just lislt'fi 3 B1'. lj lot, qule1 FRONTAGE. gr11Cled & Sturdevant of the Real E slatcrs-Harbor 1111d tr> t.'.'hnnjle it... r1ttr11 Newly Redecorated S.1,0h.. Al~ beaut. 3 Br. area. $35,950. \Vi Is Realty, n.•:1dy 10 builrl on, Thl:c. Blvd., office~ Prize g iven b~r B;:ink of ,ti; rtoii-ulatiQns "''ithoul :: Bdi·in . hvnlt.'.' \\'ith l't'nt~i $.16K. Wills ftl"11l1y, 5-16o-7739 5-IG-7739. prrn1icr b111Jdin~ i;ill' t~ Ne\\'jJOrt-EscrO\\' Dept. Thi~ IS o \\'('<Jkly prior O()\ico:-. un it. Sti9,!i00. Snhn1!1 ol!cni! PRlillE LOCAT!O~ l\tc~a tlv Q\\'Nl·:n .;1U!l. 313,\, JC offi·rc~J for only, Proj·cct of the i\Iullit)le l.ist!n11 Sr rv!cc. CLASSIFIED I Balboa Ba y Properties Vtrde. Pool Honi<'. 4 Br, i::tr. S~t:t();). l'rin~·\pal~only. S2S.!JOO too forn1aJ Dln-rn1. altaeh<'d Plf· 9r.'h'1'llll \'lwncr y,•111 rnns1d. !••1•111~. 'fhrough dia !ogu~ and exposure to the ~ MAILING ADDRESS * * 640-8484 * * DcntOlc. By o1vn<'r. S73.9j(I, . . ' .\llS~!(>N RI.TY .. 494-07:11 entire 1nembershi1J. lllOl'C dollnr prodUC• P. O .. Box 1~0, -tJNIQUE-Vf EW--1 l!Mn f'lnn1init0 Dr. M~l-120 Outdoor ~prtrtll !Mt l t 11 2 BR ~ dC'n 2 ha , 2 hloek. 10 Ing technique~ bencf1ling lJOlh client and Costa ~tC'sa r, BR-f<1m rn1. rl<'n. pla.1· rn1. 1 f-:AST r .1\1. $12,000 down.;>; 1111~a!~Sc>!lyourt'l'Juipr11{'nl bParh. 01>rn I""'"'· t'IJldl I --~~~o_r ~~-~-;1~!c~c__d_ .. _ _ ____ _ _ __ 92626 .11, ba. nfr(' rluy yd, O\\'IK'r. HR. 2 Bn. S-49,9j0. 6~:>-i'S091 1\·i1h ;i lnw.1,1s! 01\ily Pilot frplc. ('('nlrnl Int at i o 11. ~ --~ ---~-------_-_-._ ________ _,! fi44-0~1i"lf 611-1011 13rf\.nri New. C'l:™ified Ad! &12-SG'i'S. s,-;1,000 by owntr '11l-4 3!lii . .'· ', I •• l ) . , .. ''.f0 DAI LV PILOT Thursday, June ll, 1974 ~-h 1 ~8 1 ~~-10~~~.~C~p=•~•=rn~.-,1~o•n~I C1n=•=•=m=•~~=•=P=•=·=~~~2~~~~~H~.~.=.=,~u~.7~=,=n~b~~~~~R~.~.~.=.~.-u~.7~~,-.Tb~~~~~~-H~o-u-.-,~urn~1-.-m-1-,rw--~irP"-,-~-.-.-~-u-n-1-.-m-.--•A_p_•_rt_m_•_n~1-.~uTn-1ru~r=n~. " , ·SPECTA CULAR !! 2 t n c'(•nikl. 11·/11· 1·1·11ts/ TRIPLEX Gentr1l 3202 Huntington S.ach 3240 Newport BNch 3269 Balboa Peninsula 3807 Huntington Beech 3840 'I \llC'A'-", h'Ocn 11!1t~11l'll-<'f1111~ <l11is d~11~hr pool .'11 lndry ' 'Cluti;11111dln.:: lfQ(loi ,\ ~Ill~-~:! r .. l'll . Cull P•tl't'. <193·8156, NEWPORT ALA RENTALS NE"'· deluxe-, 3 b ll, t BA. hdrin .. 2 l11Hh hon1r n.•;i Ill 01' Li:i1ml1•, ·19.'-·173fl___ Jtl!I ufr Nl'v.'J)()rt Bl\'fl. -WI UfCIAUll Pol UIV'IU SlZ.J tnD. lAIO Ali~una I.a. Nr od (-('lllni.:s, /'111. 11.1110. ;r.oo Sri ~·1 ~1 BR. 311 1J11. on Good rl('('('il!I to Newport _ Be a" hi A d a m • • Vacant _1u11kl'n !lib. ,.u1u1n1•l hll I Ai·n'. 11 /pool .t llorse Cost11 l\lt•!l.:1 -San Dl~u f 838-2!t2l •oCltt!n, a!r-coud. :-.1us1 s«• :11 S'?.!:'';11. $110,!XlO., l!lt'-Ml!l 1'\\y. Central ~t~ location. iil HOUSIS ALL WELCOA1E! Sn.Q:l11, fnm· w ·.oo --011'1lers unit ha.-t 3 bedrooms • J o'u",'1·1. llleM, kida/peti. Car, fpl. ' BUILDING SITES • -~R'\U'.\lB 7r: loan lln n~i'l' • dini~ roon1 -family -----1-~.v. 11 BAL BOA COVES .!Brt 1.'0ndu, I yr ol.d, $25.950. rooou 0.~1d room ' 1 ... , L~ ·~A U!v~I. 3 blk~ to 111::1( h' fhl\' ageni. 673--4132 -... -., -NIWPOH' IAY,C.M. 642•UIJ \,~ oc:ach! Sngl11 /f"o.1m· ~111 last few u1•:i11, $~~ oon ION \\'ATErt O\\'N SLlP'I ~~~~~~~~~~ 'ircp\act& ·Indoor W::Q • 36' REACH Rc-nr:1IM Ba i.:h sir, lllc-11, I Ur $185. Kids ok. l-J1.1!ov to hullcl, ,rr' i.:"111h· O\\'N LAND I J)lLtio eircJed in wrought iron l Hit $120/$145. $1:-.0 J)()QJ, PLENTY ot Rn1 ~ Huae yd, il\li>e. poolstze lot, ·$1!1/lu\ I 0\1':\EHS HEIRS I t: ]~ -2nct 1intio -plus KOra:emu1 CUTIE~ t br dplx: $150. fn1.:d, kldic /1)Ct11 3 Br-Trees! ·ro Sf':TII .r·: E!->1'ATE . MobDe Ji11P I niow! Both oihcr unit~ nre inn Pt!t ok. C&D, hAs gur. Homeflnders * 642-9900 $300. Nlt!e :? Br on 111:.e lot. NEW LUXUl')' 3 bl' apoi C.?I Dbl i llJ', Child/I~!, N. 11111. Bny I Ot.'f'itll v l t> 11• s , $350. 3 lilt, 2 ba. !-'rplc, G11r, Mu.hllevcl, rrplc• S600 CllO Pa!IG, I blk bc9l'h. N. Shore• yrly. ?itr. !)Wina. 83a-1011 S375, 3 .Bft, 2 bn, 1\11 b::-l11s, 1h1y.!l. ~2--2806 evt.'8. frpll'. yrd, Kttr. C.D.l\I. B,\C!lE:J..Olt, $165. l:il & lust. NU.VIEW RENTALS 1 305 1-:. H:1y, No. 3. Cull 67:HOOO or 494-32·18 _2:;1:.:'""::::::97::·o:14:::96:,· ----- SHARP Riviera condo JBR, C11AR?i11NG 1 Br, 1 ba, pool, lntert'Om. Po~s option bct1.m cil, shatc crpt. $1.&i. pur. BKR. 642-M:>l Sgl only. Avl 6/21. 614-0997 Newport Shores 3272 Capistrano Beach 3818 Sl11u·p i;tUl'('(l fr.1t1u1·u1i.: lar~el liiiiiiiiliiiiiiii·ii;iil 2 nR -putin~ -"nclo!led CLOSE 0CC 2 br $160. 1111ti11 n11U rl"'il hrlrk \1nlk, i;tu·agc-11. ;\11 I his !or {)Illy <1-11lcx, isingll'1 ok. AvHll. ST 1;; PS 1 o 0 c ea n I .. 1 ,~r..:li('l't ~irlf' ~·nrtl to.,. a Mobile Home• lll', du11·11 · Just rcd~C'<I. NU Paint! 2 br DIR $2IO. Sngls/F1u1nllle-s. I UNIQUE 3 Br, 2 bn, lrplc, l>E:LUXI·: :1 UR, :.! BA, nil I I Id I N\111' only $72 500 C ii 11 3 Br, ki.;J pet11. Yfltt_. B patio. t'Omm, pool, tennis, 2 blrns, l"l'pls, drp1'. Occ1111 tr111 •·r. l!11n~'11 1~r 11r ll on. 1 1 I lOO ,2 -· ' I' frp\c, nice 11hB.J;, g1t1•a_gc. l'l'IV. cul·dC·••c ,1, 3 •• IV lk l\(•11· l1~1ins;: -only $109,000. or •• • 7.1 ·1100. VJJ;;\V!NH }lgts 2 Br $300. 2 l111, I/yd, gar. Kids/~ts. t~tlr ~ ll to &ach. I Vic1v, $260. 6'1:?-1155. CHILDREN and p•r•nts low• the large, 1paclo ... 1 ap1rt· ment1 •t B•nbury Cro1t. • • Oillcl•l'.'n G &. )'OllJUl:er o sr111e Uc~u~,1'fl pl't? r;chl e C'hlldl\:nB pluy lln!lt e Large 2 & 3 Bil. ap11. • 2 ndult rec. 1·en tel'l 1 • E:usy n<!<'ei;11 to 1n0!l cm· ploy1111,:nt rueas I • Nr. al1oppl11i; & lrwys . • h'Ol'll Sf6J. BANBURY CROSS (Nc111· Beach Ulvd &: \\ltu·ner) 1G761 VIE\V POIN 'J' LA~~E • 84l-6604 • T,·1·111~. l·w-,-1-.0-.-,-10-0--,-,.-,.,-. -. -,-ll-R. IN\'£Stl~IR'l!~I i t"<1r, f•'lll't'd. older iw.·1. :ritOV ~~ TOOay! 2 Br Tl'tl· Call 2219 · Coron• del M•r 3822 ~~~ ~~~~~~ t.l~~~~s6~8:~i,o ~~1~ :;1!1~k.~~1Q~~ =: [9 ' : ~ ~~,\~~.rK~~~~:. s~-t~~"' ~k~~c. si10. ouns, In"'· t•et o:~~ ~~~i*f.r~~:i!i·~~ o:!~ ~ll~~I. ~-J~n~~- SUPER "E" t.S:WOSJ 53l·Tl32 dcnll'.'r. ' ' Ctli\l,ir J br 2 ha S37J. Homefinders * 642-9900 St. !JGS..5728. wcl u..-11·, rr1itc .. tlll hit-Ins: • 1414 M . 'd ON FEE ' I frplc, 3 blk8 ocean,:.! cur. UNDER NEW I orningsi e CUSTOr.1 24x62. L~ Iii'. r111, TOO ?llANY lo Llsl-CHll Us ~ P.tlLE to Beach. 3 BR, 2 lJEACH -POOLS· TENNIS :.!\~ b11. Scenic Pro 11 · NI-:\\', NE\r, NE\\'-Swc1•p1ni.: I f you hrtve n nair for the t:un m1, 2 BH. 2 BA, A PAIR OF FOURS \\'e sei"vlcc all the be11i::h BA. fan1-nu area. SUPER 3 BR + Den, 2 ba, hit-Ins, 67;....5Tl\i MANAGEMENT \"i1'"' or Ut·crui & hills 1lran1ril1e enll u:s nbout this i\toden1 Kit, 0 11• n c r, \\"on'! do inuch in a poker cllie11 & lnln.nd Ortu"U:"e C. SHARP. $385/MO. I.st & i'~rplc. LSE $375. 6•12-.:1.368. BRAND New 2 Br. 2 &, !IUn 'l Bil. Bit-In~. N l' \\' 1 :f , A1r1un1 rnl"', lots or \\'OOr.I 1 I -It' 193 •= $ L D OR S t 1 d 1 1 I c d •-·I ""''"'' "' st>ns11. 1on11 prope1 •Y· s · -.......,. 1o:a1111· but this pair of 1'"0UB. AN L D $ ns + sec. ep. yr ease. s Cl t 3276 de<:k, frplc, bltn oven, n w.e, c et.'Orn r · i::.nc ...... • •· , k class, npcn bf'11n1 N!!l·~. lhl' sounht afrer 4 BR --~-------PL'-'"'f'S ... 1 962-449,j or 5JG....2:>:i7 •n emen • l)•l•••'h", ,,.111 ... •-•. •"''· B1•nt1tiful landist. ·o.p!ni; .. Lrt: •gnurml'I kill·h, :IBH, f:\nlrin. . . " ' .... , . L.ARGE 2 br. nc1\' l'ril1. "'''A• can "" a ot for FEE FREE Call U1 Tcd!ly · • .. .,, .. 1 :!RA, nn for pool. Askini: I-:i.nlily Rooni f, 1 Ian in bltns FA IK'nl rnrr buy• your pkul!i for a St'cure ALA Rentals 642 ... 313 1'"ENCED, 3 BR, 2 Im. bit ins, 3 ZR. crpts/drpg, nr beach, $XJO/~IO. 673~1111 or64•~6274 pl<t,y ;iri·1.1· 11 t•hJld,.; di-c11iin!. ~ 0 II thl' Bluff<: hL~hly U[>l:l':tcled Sl:l 9.~£1 61."~~i:~1: f1n:lUC'l:ll futUl'C. Pcrleell.v ''''· '" 1m1.io \\"•vas BBQ, .... , L .. ~.., •• $~'. OE UXE BR I I I . CloS<" lo sno11plll!i:' & schls. $113,;;....,. "·nc-r 111 ratT.~ 1,,,h ,.ue,•iii·,· u~ o1i,=c~·cc:·O"c...c=;..,,~~= LIVE HERE' ,.. .,.,,.__.., £<>.> .L . 3 +1 en rp c Cl•'lcl , clc~n,~ Ph · -1 TO sui1t'tl fol"{)\\"l\CL'OC<:Upa"'Y • ,,, ...... ~, •• , '''· •• ,, .. ,,::.:;afc 5·.30 • II Ill 2 . ' 1 'I l rcr \\' ·" "· . I "''' · · 1111rinr~. shu!l<'rs, !Op L,'!'fldc FAl\llLY park. 3 BR, 2 llA , " • '*""" "' .,., :\ 1 ! n11, • ba, ~r\' 1:c ~150: if no 11111. 841-1331. •--• d II oo-.r '74 2!b.~' Regal Prll" or inl'estment. $71,500 e1tt'h, 2 br. Irvine $2·10 !<.'!17;3!1.15 S•n Ju1n porcb, 1 ga.r, lse S3G5. ' ~EAN & CITY VI EW ,,tJ'f'C'' an 11'!1 , ring,~. ed. d·!-2500 "'<Ii 7330 ' lo\\ inconu•s thut can easily 2br. C0~1 .. ~..,. --~-------&l4 ~2 ._.... Jl :.1•l1 o.'nlrrl:un !hb ~s your r uce l . . o -· lK' raised 10 $730/mo. 9.,..., .,......, 3 BR, 1~1 ha., blt-i.Jis, crpts, Capistrano 3278 · ..... · NEAR new ,2 & J BR v.·/ Clos£'· in. f"ubulous srlll lt•\\'1 hOJl!('' T Comm• cial Prpty 1600 0 I b 4 br. Bay-dock . $800 1lrps. fenced, r ('('e n t I y $215--Lse, dupl)(, Ul\I pd bllns, nr. shopg, rrwy & • ,f\Bll., tn1rn1·\v11\•c b.1r ·'-O • s~-500 vt.'t" r "ll'r oanf1C'JS1!i leor ??Sold Our r ental list ls shon paio tt'd, $275. mo. lBR. shutters, v.·/w ,, ...... ,1, shaa:, no pct/chi. 6-14-4340 schls. NO PETS. 6'1~3786/' fp1. huge 100' dr<:k. !l.tr11s noy s-i:~+-21i • BLDG., STORAGE YAftD:' log\•thc(:alf 64£:1.;i~~ely. bch·rause we reioindt 1hen1 faster 213-886--0008 or 213-342-4.174 pool rnc. avail. 2 c. g,;_ 2 43.'\~~ trls, 711: retr & rng. .;~1~5--0:o::76tl=.. ----~= ~ore, su19Ha500~ll' '?.r1 2 lan11l,\ ~ 2 Dn !louse, heavy foot M.tm ',,an we can Id new ones! VERY NICE 3 Bedrm, 2 ~1i from Dana Pt Harbor. Costa Mew 3824 Irvine 3844 'Sharing. ll, .... n1 1cru1s. 1rnlflr. Costa Mt'SIJ, Ph· )'OU • L'OU use our tndh8, (•p!s, '~-s, bllns, ]O\"C-Ideal for cpl. $300/mo. ·----- SUM.MER RENT1\LSAVA IL I .l.:..___.:_._ C.16-12-16 or 6-11rli!l61 ~ sl.'rviccs in !lndlng tenM!s ly rl('ighborhood. S260 MO. 83.'i-l881 £)( 2·12 or 638-2271 ---------PARKWOOD *AMERICAN HOME* ' ' Condominiums I-:-----;--call us at 67a-7225 Ask tor Dale 963-4a67 ,=;•ft~5"'pm"'-'. =~~-~- REAL TORS I ~=~==~==~i =f~o~•~•;•l~•==--_!.:l7~00 ':'~~~~~~~:i i Irvine 3244 EX'TRA NICE, 3 BR Condo, NEW New Adult & Family 19-l-7513 <1!11-1001 I• ~ crpts, d(lls, 2 car gar., pcol, Apts. 3 D D\' 01rnrr, Concltl., TusUn, 2 10 UNITS laundry, patio, wtr pd. $235. 1-:1 Hit's Fruin $11S5/n10. Bil-LUXUR\' BR, 2 bl!, l',Oj(} sq IL Nt!ii' * RENTALS* 493-3406 1, 2 & J BEDROOM 111 rani;e, gnrbagc dlsposul, Ltvc in L.:ii,:una·s n.:•ii'b1 & I kitch, b<1th & rpt. Air-<-'Onll , $145,000 Bradford Place -Santa Ana Westminster 3298 dah"'hr, Deluxe shag crpt'g. , nicest 011.11 vnui· i'l ,1 n I TFUL bit-ins, Dish11•asher, }.')'11\, Grorgrous garden setting 3 ~rms., 2 ba'." ( S275 .;.:,o:;;;;;;;;::.:;:_ __ ..:,:::;: Dra,pcrit's . • rondon1iniun1s j;1st a !(!onr ·~ DELIGH l~l,Osecu:J!Y 7~92atc. $30.500.. and 10 sharp units. Best LANDLORDS I ay~ age. 1-2u~v. Park. l~n 2BR, lrg lamrm. 2 Oiilflren Split Lev•I Apts Unf. ~"~""~'~'~"'o",-'"-A"',..'-· _"5_2-'"0900 I thl'Oll' froin the P ;u·ll11 I DELUXE v;r n. :,-lookln(l' piece. on the block. • t rins., . J PK. 1st & ·last 1110 + $50. OCCUPANCY JUNE J Laguna B11ch 3848 oet"an & lK'ar thf' bl·autiftil 1 ASStThtE 5?i'h Fll1\. Doublr Two ill'e unit buildings. "'e Specialize In Newpor. 3v~s:~ 'i!;:~.., Par~~2s move-in le<'. $220. mo. \riciorla Beach. Ea<'h has a DUPLEX gnragc, 2 bdrm, :I hath. Xlnl I Income $1443 per month. Beach e Corona del l\far e Village ill Univ Park Irv 841-fi621 mornings only. Spectacular, New tan1a stic \•ie11· & all thC' location S~.500-545-3857 Grtragrs. 0\\11er is anxious. &. ~a. Our Rental Ser· 3 BR. 21,~ Ba. $.ilXJ/475 Condos Unturn. 3425 FEATURING: Ocean Vu Townhou1e1 crn ('On\•f'n1t•nrl's. Fron! I Lr>r:11!'d ;i stones lhro.w lrof!l I p 1 2000 Pri111l' IOC'ation. Call now vice is t'REE to You? Try Gn-'cn llom-_ 1-.,-..... \\'alk to beach. 2 BR + den $.5.'t,fiOO to SS'l.:iOO. tht' tl('l•an. Owners., unit ncome roper Y 7j2-1700. t'U·Vlew! 3 s&;;:s 2 ba '"" SJ:isim SAN JUAN CAP., Brand Lott Bedrooms • Frplc's • +11·r.t bar. tile imti~. frplc, ·~/. I r"'u',,',~•n"'i,~-~"\~11;~s·1~;~~ Costa Mesa Un"tts INVESTMtNI DMSION NU~VIEW RENTALS Plll'k ii Uni~. Park, Irv. new, View 2 BR, 1 ba. Quiet Ceramic Ule Jdtcher:_. 1.. E.\.-<'\Jstom crpls. d r 11 s. 0 '-'ff " .....,... [ ~ ~ 6i3-4030 or 494-3241! 3 Bdrm, 2 ha, new $400 upper. ~ l\1in. fron1 Dana pt. posed Beani Cl'ilings • En-apphaiict'~. $430 per mo. ~II.I ~·I 11 unif. Full price, just j fantaslic uni1s in exrellent 1 · . "RENTERS~!' 4 Bdnn, z ba, new $425 Harbor, 3 min from S.D. i.:losed Patios e Pool & 1131-1871. RE AL ESTATE $119,."il.IO. 1ut•a, Roon1 10 act~l l more. 1 ''{ou Get All The 1-fou"' ... Th· TclT8.ce, Univ Pk., Irv. FN'Y. cpts, dri>S. D.\V., many 01her Conveniences. 1it' OCEA:'-cN~v=I=E=w~-,~B=R"'*-All 2 bedroon1s 11•1th lots of """ J Bd 2 ba $350/400 v.·uher, dryer. sto r age. Adults only. ll90 Glennl'yr<' St. ""ll New...-81. priva('y. Call for appt. 101. '===="='='='='='= al'allable !or rent In 0 UR rm, • new . Close to .!!hopping. 2 pools. * No pcls. LRG POOL. * " "3 6 "'' ""'! ! -BULLETIN '"PDATED 3 Turtle Rock ..... Irv~ . """ " ""·' S260 lse. 6T;;>dil45 <19'1-9·17:1 r>-l;rv. l 1 Costci Mesci sec. $115,000. Lots for sale 2200 linies/\\'CCk J BR, 2 Ba, F.R. $415/425 No pets. $..: ..... MIMJll'tl or HAY LOFJ APJS. I ~D 646•8811 6 ont> bedroom unlls. nll for I-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;; I H 1. d · * 642 fttM'IA 4 BR, 2 Ba, F.R. $425 CA'-'"1~·~· ~·9~:H~739"-----SPAC. Studio, 1 blk to 1nain 10o/o DOWN _ S79.500. • ome •n •rs •77vv lfarbor View Homes NB * ?<'10VIE Stars J...u.gwia beach, crpt!I, drp, $115. Call i\lo\·e into brand new oi·e:\n RI Dl Sun/Eves. 2 units on on" lot. S~3.800. HALF MOON BAY 132 Cabrlllo, C.r.1. 5 BR., 3 ba., F.R. ' $650 1-lome, Ocel:L.nfront lipcc· 283 AVOCADO ·194-1791, 6\·l-8-178. 1·ie1v mul1i-level hon1e, J 1 Give us a call, \\'e're open Xlnt harbor \"lew lots 2 BR lfse, 0.1'. 2 BR hse, Lido Isle, Newport Beach tacutar.vlew, unfurn. 3 br, COSTA MESA 2 BR 2 bn, spacious, frplt·. lx-a1ncd ccilit1RS, nrw rlrc·k~. f 675·7018 e1·enings and 11'l't'kc11ds. From $2,900 HB. J BR on acreage, ulil 4 Bdrms., 2 ba. $690 2ba, 2000 sq ft , v.'t't bar, 645-0142 sundrck, OCEAN VIJ::W, n~ster sul!e, mitro1'l'd Red Car pc l , Inves1n1ent \Vith Xlnt ternis ! pd, $210, Cl\1. 3 BR, walk to * Sl:ll\11\IER RENT A~ 1it' frplc, sec. guards, $795 mo., l\fon·ThuN 5:30-7:30 pn1 NO PF4S $.100 494-8686 t·losets. drt1n1alic rntry. Dil'ision. 919-2550. Chet Sulisbury 11 bch, si.ngll's/familles, Cdl\1. Un11"erslty Park, Irvine · years lease owner, cvei; 714-Sat-Sun 1().4 pn1 Lido l$le 3856 Red Ca rpet, Rea ltors Sharp, P.O. Box 316, Balboa Island 2 BR, 2 BA Pnnoramic 3 Br., 2 ba., furn. $500 _.:o"4::·:.:76:::7:e,8 ____________ .;.. __ 497-1761 1 Comfortable, DANA POINT 9W62 675-8344 ocean view, Lag Bench. 4 Br, 2i . .i.: ha, furn. $300 2 BR, 1 ba., pallo, bit-in LIDO 1sL~ -Dru•••··1c·c· S Remen1bc r v.·hen Dana Point Kids/-". Agt. F cc. CALL 552-7500 ""'R · · .,. " S 0 'EP. .' DUPLEXE ,_ w•hr/d~ ,.,_ -Irc·g rv nutx1n1um privacy-Sl'C .,,·,, ... ll'<•le•·f-nl JUR. £an "A.LE BY \\'N · •.• , 2 Bd H \\'.'.ltcr vu Jots were cheap' 97• 0 •30 • VISION • " .,,., .... ~. ... ' • ~ •v · !l~. 2 h". OCE •\N' I'! '•'\I'. rm Ome Fabulous Ocenn Vh.'\\'S """°"' pooln club priv. $210. OW' J Bt• Lllil Apts. $2'l5. C -•· A $37"/ I 1' " • "" I 15 7 n10. incl. util, refrig, encl 'onuu. pt . a mo ni: -rrpjc. beamed_. c1.·ilings. '.'. + homely garage apt. 8 New Brautifu l Dupil'xcs 3 BR -1 Ba. large. enclosed Hun!. Beach., 548-1 gar, storage. Adulls, 00 Uti!s. No pets. By owner. blks abO\'I.' \ 1ctor1a . l3i'h Forn1111 rl!ning room, fire-$61,950 lo $73,950 Out of State Prpty. 2600 yard. Prefer 1 yr lease, n-rALTY Dupl•xes Unfurn 3600 pC!ts. No wall'rbeds. 393 61:>-053~. Sli l.~ Call £'I' en 1 n gs I pine-,·, patio & riouble gar-from S.~.300 Do\\·n $:a50/mo. 1st & last mo rent I\~ Hamilton, C!t1. 645-44.IJ !, · ~B~A~Y=oV~IE\=V~M-.-.,~,~be-ac~h-. .J~+-96.~I ··•"<•. q .. ,.,, ,lrcct. ,,·oik co Office Open Daily 1-5 12 !\!ILES trom Sun Valley, requited + $100 refundable a red hiU company DELUXE new 2 Br, 2 Ba. 3 B 2 "· L t I -1 ' " \" k d J" 0 dcpo•ll A"•ilablo about 20 3 BR, 2 BA-$195. r, ""· g v nn v.· .. ., · · .. cc en s """ at Iclaho. 3 Bdrm ho mt", · w Unil', Park Center, Irvine Firep,lace, blt--in~. etc. Yrly. laguna Hills 1050 [ r1~ch$6oL~ Sliops. & bus· 33861 Copper Lantern $30,000. 60X121J lot...-5'18-<llm June '74. Phone 962-8118 Jori!!!!!!!~""'""'""'!!!!!!!!""'!!!!!' N.B." i T;r-4911 Bkr. FA~11LY UNITS. studio, new $32'i lse. Adults. 675-3022 1~~--------1 11 • ' · 496-3-131. A.gt. 6·12-·19(},j info 2 BR eo-•-$235/ ~ --shag, blt lns , private patiO. Mesa Verde 3863 B 3 .... · d 1 1. CALL Real Estate Wntd. 2900 · """ .... mo~ Anartments furnished J R .,.,, air con . 11{' var, Dana Harbor Income l~omcs FREE FREE 2 BR Condos ..•.. $265 Ii $275 r-\\'111lk to schls, shopping. j BUY HO:".IE DIRECT *LANDLORDS* J BR Homes. $JOO, $325, $335 FOR maximum privacy-see Delu."e 2 & :l Ur. Rcn1al ofc, ~.~~~~~ndsx:ru~·a:i~rin~1~:· 1 ~','iti:.~!~~· ~i PVT. PARTY \VM'TS TO •Proressklnal Service • J BR Condos ..... $265 & $275 &.Ibo• lsl•nd 3706 645-7857. mgr. • !JOME ATI-fOSPHERE 1~-~::· ~i:::; 1052 . )i;\~( Duplex near the Sea FR0~1 Pvr PTY ~3$2. H~:;:n~:: ~!;~ ~ =~ ,;~.:.~ ~ ~~~~BayE~n~.'~~3~81~~h ~n":i.~~S: ~~~~ 1::i~1 A:~: M::,;~a~it~\'('. ~10-1:6s . l -•• -----3 Bedroom, 2 bath each. o~ e Rental Service!• * 551•2000 * storage. Adults, no pct s. SPAC Sea Terrace Tou:n· 1,'C1 !\c\11>0rt Rll'd ., N.B. yt'arold. EnclosedgaraRes, Rtntak CoronadelMlr 3222 RANQI REALTY' ~u 1:-GBayfron!, 6/lJ.6/29 No waterbeds , 393 I BR. APT. $145/MO. h0n1e sn~ _~ty 2 Br. 2 Ba. I This Is Luxury! built-ins. Rl'nts arc S2'75 * 55fi..6800 * 9'}}4, l~:t~rA~~e.6/28 to llamilton, CM. 645-4411. Call 848-0631 (rpJ, magn1f1ccn1oc't'an1k·:1, Large l"Xccu!ive 4 bdrm, each. All rented. $71,000. NE\V 3 bdrm., 3 bath home. TUSTIN REALTY 673-3245 3 CH81,ILD2 R8E8N00ndoWE.~~~1poErt Newport Be•ch 3869 dbl ~ar. C?m_PI rer ratl. 11·11hin "·alking dislance to Agent 536-8836 H F · h d Built-ins, dishwasher, frp.I. • 832-5lll * ~ecurlty. S:1!,:l00. 011"ncr. pool & school. Has 3 batbs, ouses urn1s e Block to ocean. &.Iba Penln1ul• 3707 Riviera. Pool, lounge & * 2 WEEKS FREE * 496-0817. fam ily room, chef's kitchen . 1-19usE PLUS nvo Ready now $450 Per Month UNIVERSITY PARK pavilion. Like country club v· d I M 1054 11,1111 self-cleaning oven. Live 1n ne1v 3 BR, 2 B~ General 3102 University Realty 67:H.510 BRAND NEW CONDO'S. YRLY-Furn 1 br. duplex. living! $325. on 1 yr lse. IStG I 85a Lake Forest Extcnsi\'c decking & patio house and rent T1\'0 2 B~. 2 WANTED Frplc, v.·etba.r, prlv patio, Util pd. Downtown Balboa. Wm. Tom lli111ler, 642-4811. ADULT GARDEN Ji Ot.IES r Ji A bl l :u'ea. Tinled \\'ind 0 iv s, BA. apts. Frplc. patios, S150.-Quil't. 1 Br, lo1vc:r Apt. * USED BRICKS * pool, jacuzzi. 2 BR, $325; 3 ~~-i:~/pcts. $l!i0 & up. 2 BR, 2 BA, deluxe separate IRVI NE AREA AT MESA :Sf' ssuma e oa n L 11 I\'~ rn a 1 n t l' nan cl" garages. laundry. $86,!XXI. No. End Laguna 870-4564 BR, $355. 547-6791. unit with dbl gnrage. $200. Movl' in w/dcposit o:-.ly 1 . l R, 2 ha. I yr nei\' hunif' in l:inrl~!'apini::. And rocnn for al s~+·;~. Bui lder 6-IG-il·ll,1. $210 Util pd , 1 Br Rea.r TURTLEROCK-lovely 3 Br, 2 Br. or Un(urn. $200. Adults Xlnt location. No pets. 407 1,BR. $1 90 2 Br. $230 1:ou111ry :>1rlL'. ~JU.~ t<ish 111 .~fJur _ hoal. S7.S,500. C;ill Fourplex Hunt Beach House,. Vrplc, Pool, Laguna Costa Mei• 3224 2 Ba, lg ram rm, tennis & only. Michael Realty, 507 E. llamillon. Call l\lr. 1-lo\\·cy, Day & Ni~ht &-c:urily, Pool, :'7~1 " Vt\ loan. Pt ini.:. ~ h l·t-SoOO. , "e 3 hcdrm oii•ner uni1. S271().-Ulil J>d. Lge 1 Er, 2 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I pool . $425. 6 7 J-12 3 5; Balboa Blvd. 673-6880 .::;li:i~:..,'°"1~60~.-~~~~~-Jacuzzi, H.rr. Bldg. \v/cxer-~~X'.~~f0~~~~ ~}~~-1~;;~ ~~~: Pius 3-2 bedroonis. Bltns. rlccks, lovely view, Laguna MESA VERDE 675-6982. Corona del M.r 3722 a TROPICAi .. POOL l'isc 1111, billiards, color TV. t [ mRBElL J S . 1 NU-VIEW RENTALS L 8 h 3248 2 BR. l~~ bas., spiral Ea. Apt. has dishwasher, :.!·112'.l Dylan Ave, El Tor... r.;,~ 0 ~din~~=c; t;~1~;1~r: 673--1030 or 494-3248 2 4b Bedr.oom + Den •gun• ••c , FURN. BACHELOR, $135 mo. staircase, frplc, patio, yard. 1·r.1.:i;. shag cpt & pvt palio -~~11~~11kc-,.11;~-1~o.5Rl-U:.!ifl, W o l S62950 $90-1 BR House, kids ok. aths, fireplace, $475 per $18.5.-1 Br, nr beach, big lncld u!il. No pets. Water & Gu pd, 543-U68 or deck. Fniist Pio~eer Reelty $1().;...l DR . .l\lob. C.~1. $100 month, gardener included. yard, ChUd/pet v•elcome, 675-67J7 LARGE 2BR, Uppl"r. nl'111 ----'"-~_<_S_5.'i ___ _ l _L_;d~o_ls_l_• _____ 10_5_6 f~llJ ,\rwpuil Cenlr.r Odve 842-4411 Bachelor, walk to beach. 1R8•1Y0 NMcCard11•BlRdHICtoMr $225.-2 BR. 2 ba Apt. Lge LARGE studio, 2 blks 1o Crpl/drps, Ran~c. $170. at ---------- ll B. 2 BR }louse, Cd~l $200 •wpor Y ., deck, beaut view. No. End. ocean. $181: yrly lease, ulil. 787 \V. Wilson, 646-8264 or PENIN. POINT Gracious L iving WALK TO BEACH l'acant. Agt . Fee. 979-8430. 548-7719 $300.-Nict' 3 BR, 2 ba, gar, paid. l Adult only. 675-4174 646-3184 Qlarming ;)(I ft. comrr home. W~STC~I FF :\r.1\· riuplex-:IBR/2BA <'ach. B Ibo 1 1 d 31 '""""""""""""""""""""""""""":'. yacd. Secluded area, CllO-Cost• .. _1• 3n4 ..:::::.c=:,...---~-~ 2 BR. 1 ba, furn. Yrly 1300 4 Bdrnis .. den: viciv!' of '.:! 1201 & 1.'07 Jhghlan<l DR. All deluxe feature~ thruout. a a s an 06 yon. m. DELUXE upper. Desirable CORONA DEL MAR JKl,l.ios rhruoul , $1~9.j()() Pre s en l l )' und er Xlnl 11unlinglon n each 3 BR 2 BA home. Pref. GOOD area-Kids & Pets ok. $350.-Ch'lrming 2 BR, 2 ba, lBR npi,. Spacious lerra_cc 1 2 Br, l ba, unf., yrly $2'73 Waterfront Triplex I {'llfl~ll"U<'tLrin prcst!ze Exl('. location . J36....8821 I 2-3 ~rs or sml. family. 2 Br, $185. i\tove today: -au on-In.,, Oiild/Pet ok. Ambassador Inn ~~l~u1e1 tenant. $150. @ii·uer'!! apt., 2 studio «Pl~, l·u~10111 ltontcs 1n 11·e 1 I Gerald s. Tilomas, Rl'.'altor~ I $ 3 5 0 / r.t 0 /lease. Zl3: LO'ITA Rm! 3 Br + bonus, Vleiv' '\ bdrnis. t•::u·h: lcn~chcllrl 1·~1.1Ult.•h1·d r1c1ghborhood. OLDER, 3-I Space traill'r 429--0288_ kids/pets, dbl gar, yrd, NU-VIEW RENTALS BRANO NEW 2 Bit, Sto,·e, Re f rig .. 11eo.ooo. Lilild cHn b <' bn• ll h1>n1l' .i H.R: 3 tun park in excel. Santa Anu EVER~TIUNG Fuzi:L-Lg 4 br, 673-4030 or 494-3248 $34.SO & Up DiS!iwaMl'r, Private Patio. purchased. I t1all1:-. lor1n11I rlirung, II{. Joe., $lO,OOO C:ish spendab!i:>, Corona del Mar 3122 y~. patio, dbl gar, kids ok. SIMGLE STUDIO APT I Sl65. mo. 962 ~~ · associated 8R OK£RS -R E A LTO~S 102S W l!olboc t.1l l~I ) Ne .• , Beach & Tennis f<tm rms. 1ret bar, sunk.'" s.·",OOO Do., 1'-.r. Sl!l~.~XI. Hom•finders * 642-9900 OCEANFRONT ...,..,-~ r1 \ !'.' !'. l I 0 n t N 2 BR. Couples only. No pets. 21))) .Sq Ft North 1 n-•na SPECIAL WEEKLY RATES . 3 ·2-bt'drm. ap!s .. stt'ps to ~u r .u P 1 • Excr l . l innncin~. Le $350 th COLLEGE PARK_ 3 · · · """5u 2277 HarborBlvd. 1 Brt. Stove, R ef r 1g:·i -~~~-~~~=- c\.erythin1:! S165,000 I .+ 1~:,'.1::_ .t.;1bulous fl'atures. PR INCIPALS ONLY. Ae:t.. Fra~!n, R!t~on , 673-2222 B 2 B t Penthouse. Elegant. $600 C t M 645-4840 Dl~h"•asher, Priv. Patio. PARK NEWPORT ' , . Ba lboa I ff'lc . li-l;>-22'.l~ for appnt. E\·es. 5-16-4i261 r, a, wa er, gar-l\to. Yrly. Avail no w . os a esa. $140. ino. APARTMENTS Costa Mesa 3124 dener paid. $375. 494-0015. 962-8936 f AC'ljaccnt duplcxe!I. \~'utrr <I APT Units on 19,600 sq ft 545-0228 1---~=-'-"""---Bc.chclor l or 2 Bedrooma arien!crl. Sl 10,(lflO Tn SOMERSET MODEL lot • Zoned C-2 NeiviXlt1 ---------Laguna Nigu•I 3252 $30 WEEK & UP NEWLY REDEC 3 Br, 2 Sl\."),000 l'.'ach. J'~ \'!'M. 0!1!. :i lx•droon1, 3 bath, large lot Bll'd., C.l\1. $5<10 mo lncome. E-SIDE l BR. FURN. 1'~RESH Paint-2 br $185. l·L-E-A~S-E_/_o-ptt-o~n~.-C-harm-;ng 3 e Studio & 1 BR Apia. hath Townhse. Poo I · and Townhouses l1tiy one. or all. I & JN11il. SUl.o/.15. C".oocl for c 0 111 m c r c la I w/converted garage. New crpt. Gar. kids ok. e TV & l\.1ald Servi('(' Al'ail. $295/MO. Cnll 6 7 3-<I 2 3 8 'i' '; I!\TERF.ST dc\·elopmcnt. s 6 5 , o o o. $295. Cell 545-0128. QUIET Neifs:hborhood! 2 Br BR Niguel Sea Te .r r e Phone Service -Hid. pool I cc~··~'~'·'-~~----- 1 HAR BOR VIEW 01\'ner-Brokl'I'. &12--0~)flO. lrvc'ne 31 44 appli's, avail novo! t~l\'tlhsc. S350 mo. Pncc. •Children & Pet Sectlon 3 DR, Child ok, no pets, ·•LIDO 'REALTY• Fr. $194.50 Open 9-6 Daily Spa Pools Tennis Acros~ l'l"o1n Fa!l~ion Island at Jamboree on San Joaquu1 Hills Road. l17;'\io l l'lu,,R .. YOUNG Families \\'anted· $:i2.~· NE\VELL ASSOC. 2376 Bl d C' I HOMES CORONA DEL t-.tAR G un~t Sl1.'.>. -'=""'-'-'='"'~------~~ 64~ .. t $17j,, 7:>3 Shalima r, ===~-----REALTY 833-0780 apt bldg. So. of h\1y. 11~ BEAUT. rnmpletely furn 2 Br, yrd, gar. kid ok. Lido Isle 3256 S45'-{)7G5 *673-7300* 1714) 644-1900 'LOWS On hlk!! from bcflch. S185.ooo. hou!IC. Spac. 3 BR. 2~) bas., Homeflnderi *'642-9900.l"..;;;'-;...;.-----..:.C FURN. l BR, w/utll. Over 2 BH, I BA. Encl. gnr, crpts, Prine. only. Call &12-5950 Fa.m-rn1 & Din-rm. 2 40, No pell. $150. mo. drps. pa1io. 175./lno. Isl TIME OFFERED EASTBLUFF "~·'~''"'='·------lrplcs. Aecess to pool. No MESA VERDE BEAtrrIFUL 4BR-lBA1_,Sec=":c';"1y'-'$"35:::·..e543-=533=7__ * 846-7]2!} * New & Spacious 1, 2. & 3 BR, bit-in!!, pool Re<'. ell". ~'r. $185 10 $350. NEW PORT VILLA 15-19 Placcntla Ave., N.B. -$ 9 !IS 50 • J{'ase. $450. 552-9413 3 BR, 2 Ba. $395/mo. home. J'.'rplc, 2 patios, yr, 3 BR. 2 BA fpl game mi Bulldrr'" n11·n h:iy[n)t1l l'l'S!· ;, Bt"t.lmon1, :~ bath, l\lacco • 5 .4 .. r. , Lido Isle 3156 Call S4S-0228 ~~.7092$650. Avail now. fncd d 1 ' 1 ' '$350 ·irC'n°l'l', in1n1:.culntc & cun1-tir.nic. Si7,j()(). 2 2 1ng~r~, l~c8~~t ;t~:: .,_ un . 0~ s4~f:n~~'J'i82. Plt'te In every 1•11st~n1 <11·· Roy McCa rd le Realtor • · -' ··' yr 2 BR. 2 Bi\. Summer or *COLLEGE PARK HOUSE for year lease, 3BR, tall , he..iullfull,Y upnointl'd 111810 Newpor t Blvd., CM O\VNER, 54&-0l\G \t'arlv rental. Al'a11. July. 4 Br, 2 Ba. Water & 2ba, Dina Point 3726 •hflrm ' " l~b11.l1s. + formnl 548-7729 I C•11\ (Zl3l 793--0427 Gard•-•' pd. $395. 714-538-5410 2 BR·~ i11n1n1t 1111 , Cho1cr. Erist end R2 68Xl30 Room for 1nol'f'. • -· .... ~ -WOO Nord lol'alion 111lh ph'r Income. $2700, taxl'S $480. Newport Beach 3169 545-0228. Meu Verde 3263 Utilities l~luded ·flrr 6j tr . boat. $:.185.!XKI BAYCREST Asking $32.000. &12-4603. . 4 BR, 2 BA, garage, fenced 960-1142 or 496-0195 ·I BP. -UEN -POOL 224 Via Lido Nord. yard. No pets. sz>.,;. + $:D'.I. 3 BR, 2 BA, frpl, game "!'· Huntington BMch 3740 l;lowon() lows o rJ jrl. D1n1n~-rm, Fflm·rm. kit chen lt-3, 69X201., 3 Older Unit~ $1500/mo. e."(cept Aug $2000/ returnable deposit. 642-$571 fncd yd, inc lawn, c~. $350 Rcaltou 11 l'<llln~ it r«:1, 3 bas., UlllUy ?n P!"'pcr!~·. C.:\I.. Good mn. Call (213) 934-0920 gr between 9 Ii: 5 un. or $425 tum. 545-3182. FROM $1B-') ml. to beach. J41G \'l;i Lido fii"i-rA°" 1.·111 , ~ (rplcs., $parlous ;':="="=·•~! =m='·="='=7=J7=-=''°=7==.!...'='="='="='=~=454::;7·===== h 326 B E A U T I F U L . . · 1 l'>tESi\ DEL fl;fAR. J BR. 2 Newport Be•c 9 • !._.:" BAY FRONT h:n kynr1! .~. hi~ h1\·l!lng TENNIS, PRIV, PATIO tla\.OOQ Huys a 2 1,,trm. 1 1~•11 ~l 11rincr" ~·hl an;r1. ·-------..,,.--,,.--.,,.-,.-,,-----~~r$305&~.Me~ <'5~·: STF.PS 10 lieflCh F'urn 1 Br. Gardcr1 Apia. Sa una K, ~1 dolt hu1111t', i11n1plct• l:-1 ,1· t'l' !·1ni.J, , SI~:~ Pnn. C. £\' A. f) ""C ~ 64·1-5!l!i6 $165 I<Jd11/pets ok. jncuui, 2 car pr k 'g. f \lft\L ~h t•il . y,•llh no•\\ ~~ l!llnf'I !iolj1-,12AA. o©'\l~ ~~-~ P(,/"s· 38~ ~louse, uUI pd, $210. SINGLES Prcf'd 3 br/2 bll, 846-l32J. 1'1•"!·1 1h1 nJ.! · ;1 :o.l'1n11·atl.! :.> 1 BY OWNER Al!lO 3 BR HB $2lO Rlnglcs fpl , gar, 1 blk hr h. ADULT GARDEN APT lij,: upt Harbor Vie w, Carmel That lnfrigu ;ng Word Game with a Chuckle 1 -11 t\g r •97'9-8430· Nr Dnnn Pt t>.farlna-2 BR J. BR furn . $145/mo. Pool. howaRb Lawson js::.!. I;; 1:1:. 2 h:i. roni-rm. f"tl rncr 14llt.4 "' CU.'t 1, POU.AN nmi es. t. ee. · slngl sty, $215. Kid ok. Nr. Lake. Park. 103:> 12th St, IC Ue! • 3 ,.-..,..--r--..._,,-, Dan• Point 3226 Hom•flnder1 * 642-9900 536-7447 a.It 5 & wknd1. -•(I ,nca OR file tlll; Ji:ft'1'n L :l<\S---5;7.l OReorrorioe lotr"n ol The 341r," Vir Lido 1;7;,...1;,r,z ! _._·dt_6_'1_2_."'1_. -----I !QI.Ir Krombl.d -rd1 be-Et..EGANT New 3 Br, 2 ba, TERRlFlC 3 BR 21h BA MEN, smaU beach hotel, -LIDOS BEST I* POOl. * $.1lld gold 10o., low to IOJm fovr *1mplt WOidt. F'rplc., D/ft, F'/R, patio, Park Lido Townhouse near Rooms $21.:w> week. Apt&. , . • 4hl'nr_r 11anrs oul, will help. r-------~ fed, $350. mo. 96~2194 Hoag, buUt In intercom, $'95/mo. 5J6.-10CJG, Sl>ACIOUS 2 BR. l ~: Ba, 2 level apt. Newly decorated. $170. fl) 631-294J e DELUXE 3 Br, 2 Ba. all hltns, frplc, gar, pool. Adults. $325. 642-ll55. 714-iit12-2357 'Nc~E~IV"'3~Bl[""2 B~A=,7b~l71"-,/~o, D\V, refrig, fplc, all crptd & drpd. Vic\v o( boats passing LRG 2BR, bllins, crpl3, drps, less than 200' "'"·ay ln the nr schls &: shppng $150 mo c ha. n n e l . Elec gar Imm~ occup. 54S-9455 $450 D"· opener, cte. , mo. "'' Dana Poinr 3826 67~;; ~N~E~W-P~O~R~T~C~R~E~ST~ 2 BR CAPE COD apt. NE\V 2 BR, Den, 2~S BA. Roomy patio, dishwasher, Ocean View. Pool. ·rcnnls. u fl g r a d ed d r ps/cptii. $395. 962-1015: li42,..3·1!JO. Chilrlrcn 494-2264 after 5:00. 2 BR, 2 Bf\, rcfrig, bltns. pv1 SUPER 2 BR, APTS. p11tio, pool, C'IC1: gill' opcne1·. .LGr!'11t View. Thompson $28a. 673-j!XJ:':. ' M11nn~cment Corp., 493--0141. 's"a"n"c"1"o"m"o"n"10--~38~7~6 [ Hunllngton Beach 3840 ·----' DELUXt-: 2 Bil., ll!t BA, I FROM ~~' mi. to beach. \\'&lk lo 101111/hcuch. Ocean B J:; A 1J T I F U L ' vie1v, Arlults. •lf!S-0536 t F.LT·:r.~,:-.:1· ll\'1nt:: in !hill .> :air.. Sll,900. Call for rnon> I• W E C R U F I 3 3 Stereo, pool and much more L•gun• lluch 3748 R~~. ;i 1 hn. baylrnn! fl(lfTlf'. inrn. ParifJI" s C' r v i r r 5 . El Toro 2 2 only $365/mo. 644--7211 Aat. I ;:::.~::..;::.:;::;.:.., _ _;:.:...::; -~ll't &·:<lip, drn w/1""('I hnr, I Hl·11Hy. t)l(r.~2;',(J or 831-1514 I' I I I I J r· NE;;t.V 2 sru ,... __ ..... 4 BR, 2 LAKEFRO_ NT. open daily BACH. at Cre&cent Bay, Col.! .";R.tsd~· tu nio11e n i\·•f ---.~~=~==-• . . . . . . "' ....,,...... "5 221 II th • -" TV Ulll ~ \'"·I m . 67l-&i39 . .. • HJ::AC!I 1-JOL:'SE $jl,500 BA bllns cpr11 drp!! 2 C'Rr .-, :i ·ea er .....-i .. Ou " 9 .,... . .. ,. Y -.,., .......,--: 1 1~·11·a<'). Chiu':\C'"r-CAL.I.. I D y S U • I gar'. rec ~nter' w/ j,001, No 23rd & Irvine. <I BR., lam~_& ?>1o. $100, up 494-2508 O\\Nr.R/Bkl'. I !lit, 3 J UA n,1no.,r. info .t-aiipl. li15-S91'1. 1 • " J)l'.'I!!. $325/11-10. 67!>-7250 din. nn .. frpl c. Lease $000 STUDIO, grtat for I penon, ~~~~rs~I~tv, ~k6 NE\V, extra L11:i:.· 2 BJl, 2 1 Gllrdon Apts Sa u n n s DA, l~l. E.'\r'illn~ clfy & 1 J~cuztl, 2 Car pr k · g ; ocean vtc\1'. S:l 10. 496-0GJG . 846--1323. Sa n Juan SHORT WALK TO BEACH Ca pistrano 3878 ('l"!mpt. J'f'rr~eled . \l"/Jl'-.11 I ;1~11~ l)r tT1'1' 32S-3Xt3. I I I' I l ' ) day•·. 962-IOn cve11 & mt"I. Ai:t1 &4.2-9123. $155 Incl. util. \\'nlk to beRch ~a· 101. SI 1~.500. 101 \ 1a ~ Pf 0 10 . R • J ' ./, '.\h'ntonc G7;).S6;).; or r,73.~HJ.>tl I t1TOIC.1·. Loi· t ;'\ ~TO 'i . ---. ,..__..-... ___ .-.. _ _,, "'knd!I. HARBOR VTEW 3BR or 497-15.>.9 Brand new 1, 2 & 3 BR. lmtned. occupy, ()pen for ln.tpectton Snt/Sun lo.ti. N.W. ('Orner \\'firncr & Sims. Dolphln Renlty tZIJ; 37&-3484 ~F:\\I I ~tury duplex cloi;e to l_i.:arh. 2UR. 2131\. famrm, 2 <.: i;1tr. !nc'rl yd. Adl!s only. WQ. 4!\:,...tG42 '"""""""""'7'""=·~ -HA\'. FCf'. Socr1f1(_'(', ·------~ ' VERY NICE 3 BR. 2 BA. 2~den, .l:l'tat ''iCW. N~w. Newport BNch B\' 0\\1NER. Lirio 63 lot 11/ s11 ~1JWJ'I ()\1nl'r. rt4!L.009:i. I 8 u 0 T 0 1 ·i frplc, dbl lllll'aie. Lra $a7J mo. yrly. Pacific 3769 -p&)J,3BR/3BA.llilusl!l('t'IU , . . N 1 .1 nd 1 fenced ,.d. '~per mo. Servlces Realty. 'll.Pflr $14.1,(X)'I. 673-27"..0 Newport He ights 1070 Ii j j j ever '1 10 111 up °' ,.,,~ ··-i. .,.,.,.. &1£>-8%J0/831·151'1 _ _ . . wh11 yO\.I lt'linlr: ;, tlghf, Atao, ""'~" Mesa d •I Mir 1061 '::'.:::::~::'.::'_~never f•il --. Huntington BHch 3240 if.V. ll~mcs, Carmel 3 BR, 2 POOL HOME r I b81., } am-nn, Comm. pool, fW owner. Silvi!' on lhl!I Ac..-;umc jJ);1n on 3 BP .. 2 BA, 1-....,;R.;...;A;...T....,;P....;U;...B_-l ti •l 3 BR Vi\txnt 110011'.', $2'10. $410. mo. +1:ard'nr. Prln. Cofitl"mpornry. rrrlc-<'On11,.1\ !nmtly nn, ~·w rrpl!i & I I I j I' 0 Comolete rile clllllk l• qvottd A!Jo 3 BR"s urU JXI, $2'10, onf)'. 844-4157 3 BR tiomt trilh lg!' l.lv-m1 1h·p~. 20>;·1!1 11/f" pool. On br l1H111j l11 II•• mlllino WOid' Cl\t. kJds/pct• ok. Agt. Fee. "'EST'0:1F'F 38R. 2 !i ba, I.· rrplr , 2 ba1 r11vl"red ,i;p;1i:-lou~ I'll arnl 1 J· $5.'1,900. rov d..,.,1op rom 11•0 No. 3 below. 979--8430. rvrrythlng II(!\\', $ 4 2 5 , pntio. liei1ml'd D1n1n~ al't'n :>P..-1319 <1r !>l.i--O,j2() aft 6 r VEHY ni l'!• 4 BR, 2 B1\, 6-12-084-1 494-9907 Ht!'-tinishcd kitchen . 2 Ci!I' ~''"~''-.,,~----~= 6 PRINf NUM&CtEO l(IT[IS IN d bl I h I l 3 B , f I' .., V' T>ifSE SOUAlfS crpts, rptl, Int, cs w1r, 5 I H, A. • rp ".1.._cpfs, R1l1lltf'. ~lanlcul'l'i'tla'<l>'ll~ lL Snn Clemente 1076 :;:==:;::,;::=:;c==:;::=:;= ~~:::::;::=;:,~. frplc, patio ~·/bbq. $.100. drpj, lnd!cpr. vlev.•. \,XITTlm. i!htubs. \\"11lk If) l!t'hl c,. & ----------., VNK tAMalf lfllfl!S TO !lli'l-6222 • 1Mi(JI ,, tcnn11 crt, 6#-1~1. ~~i;r.·G,~ ~~ 1111~oun1:l::!!' SPACIOUS 2 HR. I ,, BA, nr -=~G~f~l ~·~N~Sw:!.!,E•:._ ___ .J.._J:...... FOR la"'E or opt211)n. bf'null. :\ 5 ~llRI • lkMI, V1h1, AVRll.thi/1, "'" nNI "~' "·I 11 "·•·h. l'•lli !'i Obt Vistn, UH, ran1 n:n, hM, hll n~. \\ la c n\ont fo nion vr """";'""' ;..,.. " '' it c "11 • i11:· ' .SCRAM· LETS Answers In Cl1ssif lr;1tlon 8080 rrpli.:' . .$32a. 842·TJ27, 1~1t-$5:i0. 6"1-l-1174, !lifl-18!1 $~1 ~Yrl. 0111tf'r, 755-<i!U;l ------- ·\ ~/WK UP. l Br. 2 Ba, & &ch. Cnlor TV, maid .tierv, pool. THE MESA. '413 N, 2 BR, 1 ba., mod kitch., """" Nl"A'J)Ort Bl, N.B. 64fr9681 . cfl(a &. drf>5. Front Duplr~ S•nt• An• 3110 BEAUTIFUL ;\pl, \Ya.I king dh1t111n1..-e to NEW 2 BR, 2 BA, king u beach, s175_ s:;7-2.800 surroul'llllni:.~ & t'hcerful. ~.•s: ~kl.n~k:irs:~ $149 2BR 3BR $199 eirp.~d~1~! ~~1;· BACHt::LOR Apt _ pr iv. Spaclo:. iv/pool, carpets, e 2 blk.~ fl'Oni S. C Pl~n entrance. furn. $ll5/rno. drn ~. closed gar. 842-0.'lf!!l.1 • R<'c. r11cll k clubhoulC! "rly 6"•' .,., J BR $1i4'1. Chlldm'! & ""I• • 2 f.· 3 UH-Sorry. no l>UI• ' . '"""' ., ' . · ' ,~ . e 1''R0i\1 $100/MO Son Clomonto 3776 OK. I690l Lynn SI . .Call PA RK PLAi:A 11 1 848~1. OCEAN fT'ont. blurt 1Jpt $.?50. 2 BDRAt.. eloml gar11q-c. Sll.i W_ Stl!Vl"Tu 2 Brt. Adult!. 1:>39 Bu"nn , Chllcf or 11m11ll pet n.k. $lb."1 f Off !\unno1vrr l Vi~ta. 1 -.~1 * ~47-81 49 '* Snntn Ann 515-:1 1211 ' • • r-:--:-:--::--.,..---,.,:=-=--...-----n=":--r-:----=~..,.,,,--,._,.,,--'..,--Thursday, Junt 13, 1974 ""-DAILY PILOT 4f 1_A_,p_l_• _F_u_r_n'-/U_n_l_u_rn.....;3.;.900~ ,~S~u~n•~."~"'~'1~111~AI~;!.,.~J:4200~j}!lnd~u~1t~r~lo~IJR~e~n~to~tC:4~SOO~ Lost & Pound 5300 P•r•on•I• 5350 Gardening ~~ Plaster/Repair 60n Help Wanted, M&F 7100 Help wanted, M&F~7.1 00- • BAL B 0 A J 11 1 " n d INDUSTRIAL CAI.IF, A.NCMAJ. OON'J'l<OI. You cnn •fford a be111uliful *CLEANUPS* PATCJ-1 Pl.AS'rERINC BUSINESS OPPORTUNtrY B \\!ut11rfron1~Avall .July l11t lo C0t.1MERC1AL llu11tingt-0n Heach Shelter home or oUlce ta11tl'fully All type~. J.'N!C f'lltimutcs AVON SAl.ES, Renl c 1 t rrt c I July 1.l!h, S:iOO Jlt'r ·~:k . .J OF'1''1C£ SPACt~ 8521 tA'tlllOll 5'. 536--251J deslgllt'd by top pro(l"li!I, t'CO!\tPI.t-;Tt~ ~AINT. Cull 54~'l5 Sll]i•11n11tn tired of nK11\Cy -~e Bit 2 b11, bl111~. 2 cur icor., for tea11e i11 cho\1.-0 (Buck or HunlliJIC Society) interlo1• deaigllE'.r -0r lhftl •1 MO\V & EOGE Pl bl 6078 A tkt • ,• • l'lllnch in hou,-ro 1Wle1u .'No dock . J>I' Iv , p 1 y, Mhi~lon Vi1•jo 1u·ea. Good ANIMAL ASSIST. LEAGUE unlque plet.-e ot furniture you GOORCE f"19·2015 um ng PRICES ARE GOING UP, 11ghl 1noney here. Cftll .Earl lll--6!'2-12.3fl. frwy ucceu ul Avery AdQption, spayirw & hnve OOen louglna: ror If you GAR£?ENING i;t>ni1t:~'. t•lt·1111-, L.H.. OTIS PLU~181N(; :.; 11 0 UL D N ''l' Y<)UR I Ot:\\'vll, BIG! Vacation Rent•I• 4250 PrkWJl.Y . lle11 l turl1 N11uttrini i11form. ~2.".il3 call me at M8·8636 al&O u1m 11 5pccially, t:p1n11 l11wn IWnlOdcls & RepalrK. \\.'llltt F';V.TU.Y INCOiu·:~ Yvu PACIF'IC BUSINESS $/U.ES Al Onkwood Gerdein Ap;>r\· mon1!l. GAE'AT f!ECRCATI ON sl'lllfJ • n1ing, saurtru:, hti.11111 ciu~. billiard~. h:1nn1~. pro & pro shop, 9olt.drlving 11.ngo, pail~ 1oom,010. t>¥rticipttllon ~ollcited. ANIMALS IMPOUNDED nlodrhi .to1· bullders. r.1y & plan! i't•nuvution & lwttf<'ra, disriosals, fUrn1trcs, ci.n help by <m.rnln" c.'l:tra 6•1:>--11i0 8.°G:ll<ll f"ABULOUS Bay & City 1!31·140t. Chow, Tan, female prlctll will dellJcht )'OU. L~t:lllaLIQn, rrec est, exp dshwashrs. 612-6263 ~11C & nH.111ey as an AV 0 N CAHPENTERS & ?i-lechet1CcK Vi<•w, Lh Playa !J.Votrout * NEW M--1 * W/ll TC?Tier mix. 818, F'. AN old, oll.I man, \\'ho is all l'f'habll'. 963-1012 BIA. Complc1e PlwnbU12 R. E PRES EN 1' ,\ Tl\'E. J\1in 2 yr~ C:'lpt'r., (.'Of1lb1· w:ruund floor, lrti: 21.w, 200 Pacific Bluff Industrial Park Terrier mlx, :ft1• hlnm.le 11lone, \\"Ould like a fru:nd, EUROPEAN card en er, Service. I.Jc:. 272694, .riexlble hour11. ,,I'll l"ain uous l!ll\ployn1ent. •To p condo: sun pallo, pvr, lf.Cl'(»;K now leasing, Lite Ifldustrlal '[:~i!i"~1~/\V,,,fe~:l: to sluu'e Illa I~. lie hi111 u J\Ia10te1111ntc -Lundscaplns. Pool Service 6079 you. lntettsted •• Ca 11 v.•agt·s & bent>tits. J\pply ffro1n1 K1 ona dK1•11 C I u b. unit$. 1300 lo nx> aq. lt. Sulltterr. WhtlUm, r·. boot, a doi;:. a bird & Iii 11?1 Trtt re in ON u 1 . Very __ _ 5'16-1<Wt. I \Villard Boat \Vorks .. ·'1300 uiii un u.rn, 16 g, no pets, 1r:xpand1tblel 1835 Whittier v.·e11.lthy. allho he Jl'IUI ~ ~asonnhlc. 642-S329 eves. I PR 0 f E $S t ON AL Pool ~ Loi:ll.ll Ave, Coi;ta Melia; froni Juno·Oct, STOO nlO, or Ave, COHiii. J\lcK:l Poodle, f;8Y· 1~~~ 1 very bcnlthy, No boo:ee, lit PR • . . , . Ser\'ice & Mrilntcnance. il AB Y S I ~ E R nc1.'fl1•d CAHPENTER, f"inillh', t 0 lea~ w/op!ion to _bu)'. call 642·7(i()cl Terr. m ' T~n r n1a e not good looking, tw:.'t'<i~ u 0 1'/_.;;sJ_ON!'t. Jup,1111 ~ Eftlc:lent & It a Ii ah I c unn1ed . tor ~ u in m ~ r build ilank boal $250 ll\9 & ( Mi~s E:ng!J!>.11, 222-8365 01• kulling oUI~ on premises. Terr. mix, T\ Trina~ 1nate~ Call hinl on the pbonu ~~:ipti C:;1r'.l~nl·r. 2771 J Cust<ini l)ool s e 1. vie e: v~a~alivn. 8 to 5 ~Ion 1hru roQm 1 & boord. R1'!tl 'tld 1 'l'J1-_:l8(11________ Be1:1.gle/Ten'. • n'l9lt" at 6~a-2!!9R 0 _!.leb1rd C1r(.lc, C 1\.1. 64,1-8726 E r1. Must have 0.\1'11 ln1ns. pref' ti. 5'IR-2129• V,\CATION AT J\fAMMOT11 MO. to MO. 750 i;q ft 11paccs, Terr, mix, Bm/Blk, 1" PREGNANT! at>-7072 -• Pre~l'r someonl• 111 Balboa Cundo 11 111t1en, k l 1 c h en, 1120. lnclds nil utils, best· iif.. B~c:.'r~1~r::a e cat• i u ;i ,, l'O n r 1dentIa 1 LANDSCAPE, liOd. soil l'Oi~. Top Soil 6092 r"'..11111. ;1rca. Cull nfttr 6 pu1 CASHIERS & : f ~unpot·c:h, pool, jtt 1..· u;:;: I . C.M. 1°'" 673-1417• J>na, Doxie/Span. Blonde, M. cottru1tling k refer r 11. I . C,leanup, spl'lnkler repair. * i·op SOil. * CO~ll'OST 67;)-0IG\7 HOSTESSES ':l-FUN ACTIVITI ES: Full·llrnt: diroctot. !roo Swndav hr11nch. BBQ'~, h11'{~. por!IEI~ Jn(/ lll(•ICI SEAUTtl'Ul APARTMENTS. Singlu&, 1 & 2 tledroon1~ Furn. & Unrur11, Wilh all 1110 c~11;is. Mooel:> C!pen u:i11y 10 10 7. So fry, no pau;or ch!ldren. ~h·1·1•s 4 to 10 at $20. dny, Lab inlx. Black, fen1• Abortion, adoption & Bxper. &16-4\llJS. •,\!ULCH * RED\VOOD &\BYSI'rTER n1y ho1i1<', Must 00 e.xperlcfll.'.'td • $100. ricr wk. 61·1-1565, I 11 •l Doxie/Terr. BIT. n1al0 keeplnJ,:. EXP. Japariciie. Apt. Bldg.s. Call 5.~30 He'd, 2 blks oft llarhor, I Apply u1 IX'rSOn 9-S Mon·Sat \ Renfils to share 4300 tlnanci1t Ausl. Shep puppi(ls APCAftt--; 6·12-44:{(1 Ho111c!1. Clean U/>. Ff'e(' est. 6098 Collei;t{' t~k tr:..cl, C~I. KENO'S • ' l'oodle mix, B1wn, n11\)4• T I 5450 545-2809 W indow Cleaning 91~7776 I 21 hr Rc~taurant & Lo1fTlke i ~iiiiiiii!iiiiimii;jij Pointer mix, 8/\V, n1al1: rave LANDSCAPE, sod. soil i'Ond. * $1IN$1 llNE \\'ORKERS * BABYSmER needed 111 niy l:'.1161 Tus~i!1 _v:1Jlage \\'fly , Oakwood Garden Apartments Ntwport 8tac~, North 11vine and 16th 645·0550 Renh froin $\)!'> New~ort Beach So11th 16th at Irvine 64Z·8170 f l·::\'!ALE to ~hurt' n(Jw 2 BR . 2 ha !lvnhs<• ln Irvine SUO. I fno. St:1ni furn. Call 832-3019 01' !"~12-:Jtj()G. ON the sand Hunt. Sch. 2 Br. cuudo. $1tun11, pool . $200. Youni:: person. Ca 11 ; 67:!-2963 before 5 PM. STRT. µ1'Qf, n1alc ll('('ks S<1111e. ?J3R. ocvu, Lag, Sch. hinc. 494-tlGl/493-6960 evC'. Garages for Re nt 4350 MINI WAREHOUSES STORAGE Rents f1om $160 No i1ove·ln or Move.out l•iiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• I t"hari;es. From $7.50 per BRAND NEW 1 n1onth. I JlamilI>"' & N•wlaod SI., HB I ALLSPACE VERSAILLES Office ::~~70 4400 ON TIJE LAI<!·: At &uth Coast Plaztt. Pool -, Aeapul!'O 1\quu Bar & Jacuz7.i. Speclacu1111• 8 Acre Lake w/To\\•cl'ing }"ountains · 1,i ~fillion Dollar Clubhouse, Gym, Sauna, Total Se<:url'.v, lmmedi111e O<:cupant•y ADULTS Sorry, No Pctl" Bachelor, I, l & 3 Br's. from $175 per mo. Santa Ana 3700 Plaza Dr. 714-556-0466 •• . . NEW OFFICES IN LAGUNA NIGUEL Only 4lc per sq. ft. I 400 lt. & UP. All ulil incl. ' C:1·pts, drps, 1111'. 11·c1bar. 27!~12 Can1lno C<1pisu'<ino Sun Dit>gu fl'\\'Y lo Alll'l'Y Park11·11y turn uff 831-1600 _B_u_•_in_•_•_•_O~p~po_r __ soo __ s &unoyed n1\x, Tri. n1alc Cleanup. sprinkl{'t repalr. lndu~triid , n:sidenlial horn<' 2 rlays a wk to t'111'(' l\icF dd e 1 1 ~~!1.~mtl N 1 l Collle mix, tri, n1olc · EUROPE Exper. ~. r · ,c e~t. 642.6931 for 1nf11n~ .• !~.B. arl'a, Rele!'. 1 a 1 Jo'rv.1 • P t Distributor Wanted Shep mix, BIB. ll·mull' See it thit summer PROfESSIONAL J APANESJ-: 1 req. 494-:iaal. 'Y· 1 Jo'ull or pi1rt tln1e. Earn S.l50. Doxie mix. BIB, tcn1nlc See it by c:ar CARDl!:NJo:H . :cpt•nduble. 1 j[fi] ~,\sys 11' 1' ER, needed CASIJ1~:1tS w<inted. Gull 1) c::xtrn "''l' v.·cek. 5-7 hl'li of ll'lsh Setter, Red, male -i -• 4 d •· 9 -II S1~lf·.~1:rv1•. 6 d;;ys/~··1', ~ Sl. "-niard, f•o•ale Order any car for dellvery in J.'HEE EST. !163-4974. .,m· ... ,m.,ol f !m. me.~., t1~i; \\'~. ·:::i, ra ...,, your ti!ne. No sclllng. u.: "" I 7 ,.,, "·t ·· & llJ full tin1t:'. S2.25 storilng Company secures outlets. C,\TS ~:\u~ipt>, faetory pt1cc & MO\V & EDGJ:: e."fJ('11 + · __:!___:::i -"'~ .,.. •Pin ~ p~y. Apph1·an1s over 50 $1,008. invcsllnent required. Orange & White, s11r, len1. '1·.~"ll pln~i your ct.riving dependable. Call for pronlpt 1 B~liYSJTTEll wvnt1·1I 1 11·c!t.'<ln1e. 1010 s. El Camino Secured by lnventory. 12 1no 'Vhite wlBlk, rernaJe 11,incrni·y I· REE. You II sec -tn·e l'Sl. John J46-l·l.l6 Job Wanted Male 7025 . 1~1tel1\C'~k. llcf:r<'ni't·s. I R<'al; sc h I If I Gray kitten, fenialc 1 .. urnp1• Uli fe1v traveler~ ' * '1\16-71.).'\ * -"~'--""-~=~~-~--reiiw·i.: aseagrremcn no cVl'I' St'<' JI MO\\.' & BDGE c.'<perl + ~101.1 .. L 1 ,. 1 , ·-_ . Cocktail Waitreis ' sa1i;;ilied. Call Don Harvie, Assorted Kittens & pups · dcil<'ndable c · 11 for pr<.unpt ~ " 111anag,t•r oo 1ng or BAl,YSlliEH. hvc u1, nn. I I!: 1 :H 'G t714i 718-1700. AND OTHERS. 53G-2.ll3 Bu~. Leasl' or• Rent ff'C'e ,.1 J0hn" a.16 .. J446 sn1nll lll' ll1eclitu11 rnotel 10 Uni. ti11n 'I\", Uuu1. lich. 'I ':-.prt;. on Y ., · LOsr Live1· & 'vhlte nulle flny nH1ke. u;. . n111na}!<'. Kl'<'11s l1u!llnc:-1s up. hoy .~ )r~. S46-JG20 e\'es Don Jose Restaurant Affilia1e ·r.i05racturi(f Springer Sp.1.niel. 4 n10~. EURAUTO FINE El.XiE ' J(llvc i\'fere11tes. ~5-11Jl or lKf.13 ~. Ad111ns, 11.B. 3004'/o GR S PR FIT Vic. of Broadway & Sant&. 673-45SO Y::.rd t1l-1intenance Ser\•lc·e 646-~.G~2. I CLE.\i'\'INC i\lan or \V<?ri~an, POSSIBLE Ana, Ci\1. Re~ponds to name 3700 Ncwpo11 Blvd., Bay Lido Cleanups/Hauling. 548-&i25 J b W t d Fm I 7050 BAKERS HELPERS I $100. 1110. gual'antee for~~"' V.'e oHer molds &: trn.ining Eagle. Needs distc-n111C'r Bldg, No. 102. NB MO\V & EDGF. . 1nonthly .!... an e ' a e _ I one hour a day, ~ ht to manufacture flberglasi; shot for bronchitis, !>lease \VJLL Drive your auto 10 maintc,nanc~ yard~ cleanup JAPANESE fem. s!udent Male & Female cleaning lx'forc you· g to boats or cultured marble Call. 1't'1,\'ard. 64:-Hll'16 or N.\·. City. Leaving 6117, ar· & hauling, George. 54~142 tle:-.i~s rni/hoanl. ro __ ,. '·''·'hi work orca1"'i~~· " .. ,'" sinks, locally . .t'or full cle-64o;.__3SS7 I 1 I 1 1 2 117 ......,..,, ~~ ..,---· 1·ivin" 11pprox. 6 / 2 5. General Services 6046 { ut es. sin sa a1·y. ~ -1.' F'ooll-T,·,,,. D«Y Sholl t:iils, ca ll i1r. Lowry, 714· .. ._ Jo'OUND, Eai;tbluff Shof)pin;: R38---085-ll ah 5pm. _<·_vcs EX"''r. Nut Net:cSliftl'Y '178-1700, elf!. 1111.. · f I f 0 lE'PAfR ~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• I Center, bea ut I u , a . RIDE or Rider v.•anted to JI i\!E I ~ 'f\\'O !'iCn Ou' UC! sluden1s . fccliona1c, lc.n1ale m In i C· Cod har . C!lrpcntry, J'lun1h1nt; I cnn b1-• ciu'et:oken; for your A1iply 1n !l('rson e HAMBURGER Shl'ltie dog. Nl'«IR to find L~·ing Ju:ieo l~ . .t!:l~-89~p:s. El1•t tr1eal. l{"a". 549-100.I ~:_.o2 n~ .. thi:-. ~unl nier'. n'1-·f's. FAR WEST SERVICES j 1 "•t. 8 -~.-T. A8.·N,1~1 ., .. ,·p. o\1•ner badly_ Days, eatl HAUJ4 fNC. 111kly Jawn se1v. t,;1.r.l.1.ll _:_ 1671 Reynolds Ave. .,. J'"' '"" .. ... 896-l.~'r.? or 979--7200. Eves, Odd jobs, re:1s. rates~ John, SEi\ll·l'l'l. I{.;\, 11011ld a(·(·(•pt Sa nta Ana CLEANl~G Jncly. ,; 111ghts \\'k, 6Pi\1·2;30Ai\l. Nl'11 ll011 B1•11i.:h offict· bu i I 1! 1 11 g , :-;11:a(ly wcrk It• n·li<lble 11onirt11. Phont' 6+1-0liO:I.. ('l.EAi"INli llt.'l'M111111~l ' to 1 dean tipls, :i day \\'!!ek;e-xp No compctlllon, ind, area I c11ll 640-0710 or 614-6967. ! 557-59'l-1. It, casc·l·oniil. 10 cldeJ"l,\I. Try $101\1 Down ~·QUND .... Bl<•1.1d•• \Ollt'~ or r R -1~ HANDYi\IAN, Honll'S & Af)ls Ni~ honi1-•. R<'[S. exch. Ecrufl.! Oppor. r:n1ploye1· HOLLAND BUSINESS "'hltc \\'l~jlt'l(.'ul . Pol111S, Services and • Conscien1iou.~ cr~ftsnlan Days 51:-i-3!*J:.1 l':l:~~~~~~~~~ I :::;::::::::::~~::;::.1 645-4.170 SA LE.') 540.0608 Poodle mix \1 /i;ilky ill' · · * 646-1-161 * W M&F 7100 I" otht'r. fen1ulc. Youn_g, long Help anted, Bank CLERK TYPIST' pr ... rcrrcd . 846--82-19 • BEAUTY Salon for sale. sort Ouffy hair. c·oll11r, Vic: Add-A-Room 6002 Hauling .. 6051 I 'I/ell established. Good do\vntO\\'n H.B. :i.-":6-2811 . I O A Better Temp. Position Experienced Electronic 111 anufacturtr l""ation for g r owth FOUND -''n"r•g. ••ay PA_LO:-.IBO_ Consl!"Utlion Co. ,$12_ AL A. 0 URGENTLY New Accounts . "" u,. ' 192·· Q I k G d f htl needs '"'l'Uflllt'l typist. 60 I (Xltentinl. 675-3701. fcnla1e cat _ healthy _ 00 ~111<~ '" . uu ity \\:or" rt n o uns1g ~ I Money Wanted 5030 e<illur Park Newport. Tit rs. 1 1-· o 111 11 el I t; v.,e p1·1ces. TRASH & OEBRJ..., , Clerk 11 .p,111. Electl'n· type\\ nt('1" Cla)'t~n &42-92S2 or &IO-S23G n1cn1llc1• liBB 962.J!Kil. Coll!'p:c Slutlenl 548-6'128 NEE OED Cull for ,\ppt. $15.000 for 1 yr. \\'ill assign C\'CS. f AJ?D·ON, Ren10<.l: gl\l' ~'Onv. Gen. Hauling-?t1oving.Trush UNITED Judustt'lfll Hel:111ou:) .. ~ $ff4,000 Isl and pay to~; 1:111d LOST, Dach;.:hund, H. e cl C1istu~ & N.~\11 C51ns1. 2.> yrs Tr~ & ~shr~lt-tri~1 oi· CALIFORNIA BANK 10 poinls. Box 3, Ap pl<' \\'/\\·ht riosi• ,~ pri1,•-;.:. 1..1 yi-sl t•sp. l·ree Esl.045-0202 ren101,·al. Est. ;,1.r-547:J. ASSEMBLY (714) 494--9401 Valley, Calif. 171-1•:.!42-314.J. olcl. "Trinka", G11rfield & Babysitting 6008 LOCAL 1novlng & hauling by 211 Ocean Ave., TELONIC , PRIVATE pal'ly \Vanis 2nd I Bus~1~rrl' H.B. Cflll alt. 5, ·-.... _ student: Larg_c; ttu~~· H.eas. TRAINEES Laguna Beach i'f,'l'.):-[Lh'~~b· \m-;:', T.0.s on rculal hou•,cs. 00.~.l.m BAB\ :SITI'lr\G rny horne, Barry, a.11-12.~ or 539-9-138. (7141 494-6546 INDUSTRIES·, ,Vtl::>' ·. -~ Ulli\Y .! I VNIQU!'.'.-:~ s('~rate ,oU·i·e~~· 1 \l'llh J>l'iv<Hl' lf•n(ler. 556-0:.l'.!J , LOST g<ilden 1· e .t r i (',.I.' r ·, day or nig_ht. Fc_.nce<l yard, H AUL I NG & Y,\HO (l"'llNC NEW"~CEPT• ~'~:· sink fa1-1ls, ~1otagc, M t T I 0--• $035 i frrna1~. Vi(·. Lido lslC' or hot lunl'hE's. 6-12~299. CLEANUP. ODD .JOBS. An Equal Op""t'\unity Laguna Beach '. ADUlT likCSID[ LIVIMC Nl'l\'llOl'l B I,, d NB --Canr~1·y. -· ~.,I!~ to, ')n111~H BABY !'.i1tt1ng~ n1y homl', REAS. RATE .. =··-.w n erun En1ployer • -· I :i;l!ia/i\'10 01· Jess. 446 N. I or , ru5 '""'"S • \ , -· . S .....,., ""II I t • ,~ i sMALil'tTS Atc1,uo iHi-1:::n. . . . LOANS UP TO 90010 r::art1e. 6i~:iJ16 or li~.-7~. I i\la~nolia & li'!rlieltl, H.B. CENBRAL Tlauling. '1'1·ei> Personnel Service • ach I ' ---f 1 t TD L Rm\'ard. . . . -Day~ only, 968-.>913 Tli'." & ~en1~val. F'tel' I , • ~BR e ::R NE\>VPORT BEACH I s oans LOST fe1n~le JJ·1~!.l Sfll<'I'., ·'1 Cl!II:~ _c?rc -~fy _llotnc_ -Esun1ates. 531-3r-13. 17581 Irvine Blvd . . ~~~,~lDi u~ori1Y ~~~'. , I \\';i1rrh·o11! ('},C('Utive offl1·c~: n.1os: 8"1 "?rd .'(: (' l.~1.h 'Sl, l \~ ~l'k1l'.1J's' $20 \\~kl)';. iiesa MOVrNG, }{auling. Exper. I • 115 Tustin 2125 ur:::·Gor Blvd., c .it •2 BR & Den · 1,n .. ,,·/i"t>lc \\'et "ar 1iri" ·, 2 d TD L Cn:.t<t l\lestt, R \\ '1 1 d : \ c1'rie ,uea. C~1 J56--0'20 ReliaU!e. Reasonable. Frt'C j 838-5460 PJJ · 61._9910 I ~ . " u • ' •• n oa ns S"".-6668 Ol' 642-9729 after .) I -. . ! From $175 • $485 1>~111; one 2 1'0001 ~ui1c \Yi th ! 1 ,·;1~1. Business Services 6009 e;;t. 832-7581. Equal Oppor. Employ('f BAH. iiaid <1·an!ed. Apt>!v :u To pi:rforni clci·ical duties in CLERK TYPIST. \'1c"· ot bOats & w111c1· · M · d H I' I · I I I Mesa Verde Eosl & Adams B'!l c 1 , ·Rll 67.~161 Lowest rates Orange Co. LOST male sea l po 111 t I . , . ov1n9 an au 1ng. --A-A----•-2014 Plal·enll<1, Cosla Nesa. sa E'~ .dl'pt. for prpt: ucJ 540 ·1800 -I ,t'\lnl ~, r. • -5 ttl Mt C II . I· Nee Is BOOh'KEE.PING_. ,p.ay1"0ll, $10 & UIJ. * '.l63-64.:i2 ._....,__,,__,,.,.._ Open l1 . 2. SJlt.--ceahsts. l'.Ju:.t Ill' good 1501 WESTC.:LIFF DR. a er g. o. 111i~:H:ny~~~ard ean Che !axe~, typini;._J,atl~~ ~k· . 605 Accounting Clerks to $~68 1ypist 1\·ith clerical aptt11Wc. ~ :--11·:1\'POHT fin11ncial Center 642•2171 S4S-06ll ined H" · 1: :vao ki t 1 en ' keeping Serviees. !H:>-2650. Housecleaning 4 lndus/Mech Engr $13K BANK ~ Co11tac1 Pl"t'si;11nel de 11 t . Lea5ing Office Space Serving !harbor area 24 yrs. :U..116f~ra96'3-'fBZ8. · Carpenter 6015 Dedicated Cleaning Scc'y1Bkkpr to 5900 i111ster _Spc:<:ialties Co., 1640 ... .,,. (.,\LL ON·SITE i\-lANAGER $3.179 2nrl TD. discounted to .. \\"E DO ~vERYTl-llNC * I ~C'Creta ries f\otany! ! lo ss:io PROOF :-.1onrov1:1, Cos!~ :'l!esa .. I ._. i71.11'.612-3111 ('."(t 246. $2100. JQ!;;, int, l 'k n10. J 1'1ALE Irish Sc11cr. approx.1 Jo"ENCES.CATES·STI::PS R r· F :-' ··1' 646.:z1sJ9 Cpl n11~1· \vine cellar $800+', OPERATOR Jo.qua! op1~u1y 1'1nployer '11" -~ yr:; flue. 83.'l-l.JO.'l; 5·16-!1754. yrr ohld "1'1~H1c,dtan L'Ollalr. Top • RAILlNGS·DECKS-ETC. e .s', ~~e, es.. '. I fliAIVA l.J:J<in Proc S!IOO • ' ~ 1)10:51( spat'c available $50 o t c or <trrn . ..aguna a,18-7637 eves. II o t.: ~ r. \\ o R 1', \\nut t'/C Bookkeep<'!' SSOO 1110. \\'l!I provide fw'tlilure Beach. 49-h~77 a ft 6. Da~·s , , , 8A:-.1-2P:0.1. GOOI., 1 exp. Pref. Lc-!!al Sl'''l' 11111 trn to $i;.o UNITED CLERK TYPIST• 2 BR. To1vnnou.~1·. fl'J)I C. I nt $5. tllll. Ans I\' e r in g 1 I~] h'97--0302. ext r...s. GENERAL CARPEN1 RY bcal'll ar~·a $20 up 83:'.l--09-lO f" 11 Cl 1 /\fl t CALIFORNIA BANK 1 .\11 'in11lll'tlia1.c ").ICnin:,:: \Qr an fron1 $2G(l. 1 BR, hu1n $19.:i. I i;ervit.'f' ll\'ailal>lc. 1 18 7 5 Lost and Found I FOUND _ Belgia_ n Sh<'. pherd CUST0:\1 F'lNISll \\'UtU< : , · · · I H' l a nis Jus el' . . in'11\·iclu1ol 11 lj Jllng tkJUs , Pool, tennis, '"Jlll•nt:ntnl Beach Blvd., lftnltlngton . dl Small jobs ok. 89~··1&~ J a n1tor1al 6063 T'..11'" _llcgr~r to S!2',i 2301 So, Main St. 01 .JO 11.11111. , breakfust. Sc11a1"•le fa n1ily Be1u ·J1. Cl2-~321. i rB·err,,~~~e .... ~I whhlCte, ~1,·ieko y. CA Secy Tllle f.sc1'0\\' to SrOC For Al•lll. Cnnl iH.:t · I a """' L><:ll.C · an eep. EXP_ ERT . RPENTRY_ · J ,IN'ITOP.J,\L Firn1 '· e•kln•~ Friday "J}('l'son" Sfi.j() Santa Ana sec~1011. Close. to ~hupv111g * l ~10. f''REli: RENT * Lost & Found 5300 N d n h o ni c C b G l R " ... Carol Smith &-hnc beach. ti4•1--2611 No l"ase rcq. Dix. offi""s, ee s a C\\I · a inets -enerci epair_ 111·11' 31.'t,"JUlllS. t"ree est. G. 0 (::/RCL'\'Pl lo S!iOO .t..1..1 5800 l ~i!i!!!!!!iiiii!ii!!!!!i!ii!iiillll!l!!I " ... ~ 673-1841. Reasonable Rates, &15-199,) 616--1 la7, 54S-7J23 Receptionist:< ,_ s.J:)U (714) 547-9581 I ~ . ildj. Ail'jlOrler Hotel. 55c Sq •. FND: Male \\•hite Frenth Jo'OUND: Ladies Gold v.·alth. C t S · 6016 p t Leg I S S4 ) ,\1·c'O Finu11('\i1I ~'r1i1·C" THE EXCITING ft . int i. .. \/C, full se1'\1ces. Poodle Vi(". Coast H\\)' & Vic :'.8th & Lake St .. N.B. arpe ervice Painting/Papering 6073 \\'~ehou~o;e ~11:;;c 52.751;::.\11 £qua! Opl)ortun l!y' t:qu<il Oppor. 1·:n1plU)l1:r PALM MESA APTS. 2172 DuPont, rm, 8 Fernleaf A\'l'. & Goldenrod 979-1•12'1 days CJr 67.3-8817 p t PllXIG. Of<: S2.50 11r EinployC'r MINUTES 1,0 NP'f. BCH. 8.13-3223 f9 Iii noonl in Cdl\J. &1.l-TIOL JO~IN'S Carpet & Uphols1:,rYf llOl\IARD P~int.ing. llous~ t~ CALL TRJSH HOPKIN:;\ I:::===~~:::~~= COOK, i'Qnv. hoin<'. f/titne. 2 OE.,.1Ct.~ ... ,(11 11 14 eves. Dr1 Sham p oo. !.<wd 1 Apt. tntc1'1or • Exterior. ......, 0 I' 1 P-ri••· ,~ •.. ,.,,.00_ >J in"".-· Bach, l & BR. fronl SlJ7 r ""' """nio, x · LOST Silky Ten·ier. Shon FOUND Sunday, Irish Setter P.ctardRnt.o;;). DegreaSC'l'S .t, Shrub Tri1nn1ing & Hauling. JEHRI \\'Hl1 ,Erit RE BEAUTY '" "' ... ,,,.,~ Atlulls, No Pels. Cl1ll'd , furn. lilil pd. In tail, fem. No collar, Santa vicinity Vicloria/Plac:entia, all rolor brighteners & 10 .i57-9969 aft. 5 I l'C<(d. ApJI~?' '166 f'l-l!fship 1-=-l\fesa Dr ~hop'g c.>ent<'r. 333 E. 17th Ana ~"9-3969 C Ja •1 Call ''" -zi · bl h 1 1. """"'E PERSONNEL OPERATOR Rrl. N.13. :sec Tllr. Miller . ....,_, . SI C!\1 673--0140 675-0707 . .,.. . os .. esa. v'l<J-\iu nunut€! cac or i1·1itt' EXTERIOR ONLY fl\.Vll'I , 642-80\.\. ·-(5 blks fro~~i's.N9~~~;.port Blvd.) 645'--245c1: · • LOST, vie Newport, Afghan for Identification. carpets. Save your n1•Ju(·~ SERYICES•AGENCY .,. """ 6 n10 old n1<1lc dog. Re-LOST Sm. fen1 Cocker, by saving 1ne extra ll'ips. Lit'C'nsed, Insu1'('d, f'ree Esli· E:..[ll't'i1-'IH'C Ni'f'Cs~ai·y I tOOI\ \\'.\i"TED. Fanlili(U' LARGE 1Blt ~·Jose 1 o NE\\' Plush office Bldg, 2 to \\'&rd. 673·lffi3 golden bro, Vic H11niilto11, \\!ill clean li11ing rn1., dining mates. Richard, 979·33."l.J. 488 E. 17111 SL (at Irvine) ('~f To Take over Clil't\\elc 1 11/rlirt. <10 hour 1~t~. C d I •1 I·" I< s":.ri 6 Ri\I suites. Conference · ,.,, & hall I'" Any , , S •t 224 642 1470 l-'rint:1' h••nefils. l.<igunu orona C' "fll' "'ni· · L,iu. Rnl. Xel'OX copier.,.. Near RE\\' ARD: Lost Irish Setter. H.B. Lie #ll735. RE\VARD! 1" . J__J. -1 11~ PROF'. painter, honest \1·ork, UI e • I Btach ·194-!l-I~ . · IR\VIN & IRW lN, Realtors C . S3.'h1640 \\"hite blaze on chest, 6/9, 536-8251 or 962·1.111. $1.50, cou~h $10. Chair $::i. J::i reas. I n 11 c x l., free Montgomery Ward 644-6lll ;0~·~·~·~"1'J."~"~·-:~~i·~;t~O~rijarr~g~e~&~C~a~b~ri~ll~o.~6'6-~'07~259~ POUND large brown dog, yrs exp. IS "'hat t'ount.s nol esti111a re. J-tefs. :J..18-27.39, ~ Beauty Salon COOK-TRAINEE" LRG 1 BR's, pool, nr ~hops, ~XCEL. Joe. deh1xe of e F llie, female. Very young male mixt>d lioulld. ~1;[.l sff~~o[k 111Y5l'lf.1 '°64~2-~39~U~.~=o-=~== AGENCY 7777 Edingeor Ave I Su!ary a<:cortling 10 l':O:ll. adlts/no pets. Util pd. su,i1 e4.5c760 sq,·, 3f!_;. 0,1cJ,7thUtSilts tan1c. Park Nev.(Xlrt & Claim at J.S2 16Th, Costa CARPET CLEANING FIRST CLAS.'5 f;XT.rlNT. SECRETARY Huntington Beach P1'('1er no students. E~., 1884 7'-1onrovia,CM 548--0336 JX • sq · ""''" • Jao•bo-areo. •.•o ""Jl. "!••• PAJ"TING f'APERHANG Call Miss Dina pref'rl .. bill \\'ii! train .. AJl!llY c.~J, 496-8129 eves. " ...... """"""" "........ ·' · ' ' -Ot"tidental Life has 11n inl· 17141 S92·61.ill lll'lwi~cn 2:'30/4:!\0 p :·n\, Room. 4000 F'OUND Se I t s· POUNns-·nuill male pru1. l Oc sq fl. No xtra chg for ING, l'':·ee Ertin1atcs 111ediate o""""in" foi' a sec·i~~~~~~~~~~~ j H h 1 I ·· !'" l :.;:;:;;.;.:.. _____ ..c._ Q"E'JC" SPACE _., ,,,,,·1. : a P · ianie~e ..,.... •-ti1>g or ren10ving f""n 1""" " 11m urger I !1111 C't; <r•J r "" ,..,..., / h·1 boo'"· D p · J T•rri'r'. Black & ,.,•hi1e dog ,.v .... · 979-529<1 1·ctarv \l'/shor!hand abilili'"-s d k f •f Bcst Cclbl location. IR\VIN W \\'le ..;. ana oui ... J\lso,1vinrlo11·s&floor care. . • · ~ Bf-\UTICTAN Aan1s Ci\!. A~· or ur. UJVELY 1001n in quiet & !R'"IN', REALTORS area, 496--0445 eve. 1,v/flea collar & n>d colh~r. Reduced prices for eniply PAINTING&_ Repair. ;i;1 ;.ors .~ a ple!lsant personality 10 . .1 . • 1-lt•gt'JL Costa Mesa h O n1 I' f1,1r " Vic: Garfield & 1.Iagnoliu k I 'J' k '"•ork Jn o11c of lhc nii•est hcensNi, lo assist ov.'ller-I~==-------d I 1 2 . / k 6·14·61Jl. FOUND 1001 box .i:.. tools. apLs. Dutt:h Main\. Setvit'e, \\'Or n11111s 11p guar. :1 e &I--?-o COOK work'g a 11 t. ;i \V • C II & d "· «o ~39 962-~>19.l. ..,,..,.1=8 a<lvaritagc ol n1y exp loca!ions in Ne1vport Bl'Utli. :ra.:ir "'" •70· AIRPORT ARE•\-0·11,·cn a cscriut: . .,...,....,., ' "'" ""' "30 5 • F. i'I SISTANT Short Order Rel1·-• O'tU""'I "' -" Cos! M fOUND: Yng. Bascnji 111ix · :>36-7056 n: to fJl)l, 1•lOn· 11. ease BEAUTY AS 1 ..-; ROOM in mode-111 apt. 1-I.B. 2 spat'e. 45 fl. Full S<'l"lllte. a esa. F vi c. of L&R Crpt Clnrs. HS(' $24.93. . . l1'rn la1·t, f::\'eJyn H11rnillon, for Kelly Trinpleton. need4~l by private Counn·y bch s·-~1ulla n Re11Jty, 3400 Irvine, l"OUND: Blaek Lab, fen1. pup, l'm. d Rm $4. Stm hse S3fl.:J5. Sofa P~())' ·. \\'ill~c:_overing, stale fi l-1-;i(i()(), 6-12-019-t Club, ·10 hrsfw.eek, Apply' in blks lro1n ' i::i. per mo. NB SA"'""'" appl-oxyrold Vic Center~ lndianapolls & Bushar, 11495 G 776--·1-o tu·. ;>.;o. 27J,J]'I. Insur., all E I 0 . I "1·00 Cl b fl Sha1'\' u1il, phone, etc. · · 't\T"'L""" · • · ' H.R. 962-2631 · · . uar. a 1 l,i·pi·s papi)r. 7141842--4.18G. 11un 11por1unlly <'1npoyC"1' BEAlfrY OPERATOR person. ~ 1 u ouse Garage, 5.16-7080 anytin1<'. 2 -.Opi\I suite, ground floor, l9th, CJ.\l, 5'1S--03CIS . LOST, i i ALE G <'rm a n REASOI'. earJ)('t, d~·aJ)C'1·!c:,;. J1 \ p ER HANG ING ,_I Renl space. J·fAIR CH1\LET. Di·., Laguna N i g u e I · FURN, SLEEPJNG Ri\I, 3--IO ~q. ft. Bay Lido Bldg,1Jo'OUND: Black male kitten, 1 lns1a ll your11 or n11ne. '. . •... . ·~1 &14-7J03 496-JI67 uft.l0:30 ' rcstronn1 fncililil's, over 40, N.R. 673·~:-J50. I Vic. <14th & Ba Ibo a . ~~·~'~:ii· ~~~PYA1~~r1~~~ o~ 893·7500. 1_1<111.11111;;. 21 , y1 s . lfa1 bo1 ASSEMBLERS Copy Cun!1'0J S"'· '20 1617 WESTCL-IFF-NB G7a-~10.. . . . .ire,:.,_.!tefs. fu1n. no. 183281. BOAT BUILDERS NEED i·l'liabl" pcrSQn to non-drinkr1·. w. + ~~ · Standarrl St, 557-j148 Ceilings 6018 642-2 ... i6 I . I ll'til'k Snturda •s & Sundays security. 54S-5:tl7 5'15 12002.100 sir 541-;,QJ:.!ILOST:. fen1. puppy, vie LOST:Female Irish SC'tter, 3 ~. 10',,' 01.sc·o uNT * li11n1<'d. openings for BC!at r·ompt1ny has opcn111~s . I c'1· ·11·-•,,,d ·1 '' Ceonte111a\Bank.N.B.Tan, fE E 'Jrll1n11e ass 1'"' R00i\1S S:!(l wk up. 1v1t 1 CO h-h 0 p yrs olcl, on Fri. 5/31. Vic. * \VILLARD p,\!NTlNG * \\iallp<1pcrun~ ,o;,_ Painlin" 111l'chunienl Hssen1bltrs to 01: XJX'!': . 11g111c 11s 11 ·, J)(>rmrlni~nt of lhe. Oa.Uy kilchen: $30, wk up apt. AST ig jay. · no col. Reward. &!4--IO:JG \\'cstsidl', .,C.l\1. Reward. Ne111 Arouslical Ceilings + Fl'f'C Est. Call :-.::6--0;Nli" as~c111ble lll'Ot'<'sslng t>qulp. f'!'S, & F1n1sh. Carpenter~. I Pilot. Hours arc (lexiblf:l:i)il 5"18·9755 or 615-3967 Suitable for .N'~3.",eii1ute, etc. LOST sn1all Bl'ittany Spruiicl 645-2057 rt>pairs. Drywall & 1,1·alJ for the scn1I conductor ~ i.:o. bc.nc~1ts._.Stcx·~ pu_r-! Hf!fH'OXiniately eight hours • 400-9 ::i. near La,truna Nursl:'ry 6·11. F'ND: Labrador puppy , tl'xt. p.afC'h plastering. No. * Wallpaper Hanger * 1ndus!ry. (has~. profit :.ha1111g & p111d I (•ru'h day. No cxperi~nt·e Large sleeping rn1, pri\'. bath &· cntri1nce. En1ployed man. Mesa Verde. 54:>-2822. NICE roon1 for "·orking man. Kit <'hen priv, Rcfrig. ~122~. 6'12-022"7 $100. NE\VPOR1', rurnishcd. pri. entranl~. bath, patio. linens. 642-34:'.S ROOil'IS for r<'nl 1 il blk !o I beach. S25/WK & up. Utll pcl. 2500 St•avicw, Cdtll. ! Guest Home 4150 Business Rental 4450 \Vhite "'/bt"Ol\'n cars . Viccjnil)' of 20th Street and 281038. 642-5775 C. Rcbku 646·2+HI Con!Ul.'I .!in1 Gentry 1ned1cal. Equi:I Oppot'. Ern· llt'l.'C!!sai·v, \\'ill lrain. Apply 600 fl C "' 'J"-~ 494-79:1.':! Sant11 Ar11•, Cosi:i i\'lcsa. Cement/Concrete 6019 INT/EXT PAINTING COROTEK CORP. ployC'r. 1 11! th" J),\11.Y PJL0~,.330 sq. " ·1 • ~ ""'· t'OUND -Black Lab. f''cm. 6'6-".>,··2 All Ot c J . 67. 3··9 App Y ! \\' 8ay St, Costa l'\11'""·-Suituble for Dr's offit:C, 2 ., "'' ·angc 0 -1111 ::i-.J::J 12812 l(nott Stret•I P11s''"'"'•k•r Tl'O\\'IC'l' Oh'. ........ ~. ;iiii~' ;iiiiiiii;;i;ii~-iii;'..,I 1\"/rcd collar. Vicly l!lth SI.. CONCRETE Patios. Patio --~~~~===-o " • J>l'iv. rnis. 646-2130. C.i\I. &12-3-149. LOST: Gold U~iOCBp.a~l m.oney Co\·er~ Quality ,\·ork. Reas. *WALLPAPERING Gardett Crovc 898-1389 JENSEN i\IARINl:i r Industrial Ren1al 4500 clip. \'ii'. · "anncrs Liccn~i:d. 642-8514. No \Vasi(' "Mac" 548-1444 . 23:l Visl·h('I'. Costa 1\-Jesii ----------1 t'OUND: Parakeet, V i C · 1>arkin~ IOI or C.l\f. r adio _ , .. p . d . , I RENT our home In Kona byl"!!!!~!!!!'!'!'!!!!'!"!!!!!!!!!!O! INDUSTRIAL Park 1-luntini;ton tract · shack rewa1'd. &12-81\'i''i'. C~11,ENRI · . a~o, r i\es&: Sc-11 id!e Item~ v.'ith a Daily '\\'Cek or nionth. Phone Boat Repairman I U Hunt.13cach. 968--6051. , 1 k & h. \\II s-epa1rs, sa1v p ·,101 c1~,.e,·1·,"1 '" "12 56781 67" ''44 " 3000 sq. t & P · FOt.:ND: B ac 11· i\e r e1nove. J-Tc:e est. ;'>14 ... ~998 " "·'·' · u> .. .,......, • ~lust be neat & l'l'liponsioilc LAGUNA NIGUEL LOST Black Labn1<:lo. l'~'' ... s1,-11i•, Costa Mesa on k r N-J aleo·f1 .... n1 --' II V ·r, LI '-... " p \TIOS-DRIVE\VA YS·SIDE \\i:Jr e · '-:'c. iv . " nvil(', rt." co ar. 1c •• n F.ldcn Sll"Cct, afl 6 pn1 ',.,.,,_."B'~· \VAL'," SEEK & FIND'' ex""t'. Black1es Boa.t lard, 27992 Can1ino Ca11istrano .. ~. l · "·'"--2280 ,y~.,.-lAA..r. ~ y B d ,~ ..,. rv1ne,~.,nu--645-1156. * '·', 0720 * · east rea .~ Nl'l\'""l1 Heh. 673-G&l4 Sl\n Diego Free"'·ay to u--t....-o ,~ '\''"ry 1~iirkv.·ay TUl'tl OU FOUND: 1-lhnalayan cat. B OAT·SAlL L"Olnm-riggi ng COUNSELOR J111 n1('d. opening in OUl' hcnuiiful vrc rvr a .~Its n11nt1ed, sell mot iv ~·t. c d indi\'idual. Sal;1ry guarantee + t'On1n1 + !lOnus. ~per. PRF.~"cl. Good location. J 'a5on Best Agenc'f 17400 Brookhu1'SI , f . Vly., ._ l"rnutle, Huntington CcnlcJ.·, Jl<~'iS Cenwnt Cor1t1'Rc lC11'. F H E 11 T T A I! '1 \ 1 I II \\' I' C r W II k ,_. r-I 8;11.1600 6/6·. '.·o·o 1418. I) . '. d • I k \1'01' . r.XjlCI'. rcq. UU'll PRrv. rnt. Gentlemen or miiiiiiii;;;i;-==iiiiiiiiiiii I ·~ I 11'1. ) rt\'e'vlly.<.:, · 1 "\\'a s' ,1 41 \ 1 .. f: 11 1• 1 y \ 1, F .\I concl/pay. i\Itiriner Yach1 s lady. Ex. food & TLC. NOW LEASING LOST: Irish setter. female. l'ersonal1 puiios. 554-1725. ' " A 11 ·\ ' fiT.:i-13.q:~ 531-2322, 642-9S62 CriI. Child's pet & best friend. Cf:~1ENT \\'Ork ot all kinds. t, 1 ~ ·\ I!" E 'r I I t. I' I \I I' I K M R R BKKPR 1..;;..1,.d for full tinic Huntington Beach ,, -• .an~ -"'"'' R 1 1 ~· .._..._," Su11('213 ~ COUNTER GllUS For Bakery Summer Rent1ls 4200 {'\i'ah,, .,"'..........,~~ ·ea s 0 n n 1 e · r r c e , T 1 • r>o·~ltion with Ch 1· I~ 1 I an NEW M-l Jo'OUND: 1nRle G c i· man Personals 5350 Estinlafes. Call 6,\'!-3:{25· ' \ " ' f, ' u '1 1' :-" ' L I' 0 T 01·;;anl~ation. i\lu!(t tun·•· NE\VPORT PENN 1 b!k 940S<1.fl.&UP ·"hepherd,lge puppy.\Vht& :..;::..;;:;;.:.:;:_ ___ -'C.;..; CEiTENT & Block \\'1!1'k. \\Ill u 1 \ 11 -..I'\ It I' f. \ B ''I. I' 11 1 f. 1•xp. In Pr1y1'1'.lll, AIR, A/P froni Uuy. 3 BR. ~ntio, !Ian1illon ~ Newland Si. blk. SJC 49.~.-3802. SPIRITUAL READER \Valls, patios, sidr1\•t1lks, ,t· nil t·el1i!~l i·t>~pc1n.~·ihil!1h·i<. Full & Part· Time washer, dryt'r. Avail. 1~t 3 960-1970 ~ , Be 1 OpenlOMfto lOPi\-l etc.Byhr.orjob.64&-6915. h II L \ :--11 I fl I·.' \Ii~. I 1. I· I \I F ll s.·rut l'P~umc & ~uln.ry rl'lJ, 1\pply In P1•1·son ,.· "'k.S in July, .~ h:! 2 in Sept. ----------f OUNO: age, Y 0 u n g Advice on all n1attcrg. 60 10 PO Bo:< "4IU Costa tile SNACK SHOP 71,,1.~-i 01, S33-77St or I-----=-=--fe1~1ale; bn\Jn & "'h\. Dana 312 N. El Cwnino Rf'n1 Contractor 11 1, 11,1 I' l' T q , 11 ~ ~ T "" 11 H \ f( ll l l · ~ · · • 1 :-.:i.1 ~ ~-J)(' I >J J 1~ I Penni, blnck 1.-ollar 49&-<ll'ql.,._ -San Cl•mente, ,-,,. ~pl. ~ I ('a. :!t'..'6~1fi , BAKERY .. 213-64:-1-296'.t NE\\.' BL ' 1 • • '""' sq 1 --, GER\\'ICK ,t; Son Bldg. \I -; ;'\ 1 \ I' \ \t :-. 1' H II I·, " 1 I. I' \I f. iiOOKK1<:F:PEH, 1iart Hn1c 1 $176. :blOO ::;q, ft . $.'GS. 2'20·3 LOST: Bl't>Wtl Burmese cat. ciiJI 492-90'.34 4. -9136 Contr, Add, remod, St. He 'JI-'' ,,. C If CdM SUf\IM ER Rl'11tul 011 OCl'fltl ph. front ot!J~. <:rpls, lrg Vi(·. l'\farigold & Seavicw, VASECTOMY 1 I. I'.\ \ I I• I' 1 I·. W \ '\ ,, 1 II I' 'I I. I fo1·C'PAoff\Cf'. EXJ>Client't'd "~"' r~. 011~1 wy, front, Ne1,\1J0rt Heu.t h 2 BR rear tlooi·~. Anahehn & Cdi\f., Rl'\\lard 673--0120 Contldcntlul Information ~l~it\~.4 3 21 . 67~1, ' pf\'fl'iTt'd. S·l7-Slll t:11ual Oppor. t:1nplo.Yt"i house conlplct<.'ly :;irn.1slp; Tt'rn1inal \\'ay. C.~1. Da)'s LO~I: Blaek Lahradot·, ('()unsellng &: t'C'feiTl'IL S \\' 11 l~ ~ F K Hf' It C r T \ 0 " l 1• 11 HOOKKf..:F.PJo:I{, 4 hr..i ll\'r O ER GIRL* 8. dish 1v&!llt, :1\'U Ju Y · 64&-503.1 01. evl's ~1. ,,,,1-. ··zEK.E". Re\1,·ard. APCARE. 1,, ..• ,.,,. , N"n· JACK Tau~::ine, P a 1 i o s. , 1 d•.v. 111 u!ll hC' •·0<'lfl 1yp1~1. *C UNT Aug, 673-9 106. " " '1 " 1 add u B-1 269071 A ~ " I\ 11 1. u 1 \\' H o •\ i, '' ·r 11 ' 11 '"' 1 · lt o L .,; AS t o F' FI CE 646-19'13 Prorlt Agency., 642-4436. ~e1,"'11~~"-eo: fHta10.1. Call h<'t11·n 10 &. t2. &l.f..7:!61 i1c•1ntl'(. \I ivth l'xj,:,. "~rki~ \V, Npt Bch-Sununcr ron•al5. 3 BR. 2 BR. 1 BR. fl'Onl $150 lo $27:> per \\·k. • 114' 884-ts."'iS S.5 J;.,m: 1111) IT"..--0831 /\ft 5 p NEWPORT Bf~Achf'·noNT. l BR. 2 ha, xl11t view·, Roomy, sips 9. 642-3251, 54s-t757 Nl',\Y tklU"f' 2 & '.\ Br. Ot-eantron• Balboa Pe.nln. l\fr. !'v.•ing, 835 ·1011 day.~. 842--2!!06.._ (!_V{'8. • \V, NEWPbM':" 1 blk l)('{'an, pool. Sips 8. Xtr1111. f:;.z prkg. ln1n1ac. Rl'l\S. Call 962-6201 01· \Htt-1 1:i9. Any flny 111 1ne »EST l:h\Y lO n1n ttn ad! Dun't rl4'1uy .•. \v\l'"JJOUS"' ~-fl '" f Bl k Lab '' ' II I I, I I ,\ t ti \\ I. I q ll \\ ~. ii \ \\' BOYS & GIRLS 1'<iryin11:, ~'l')' 11 "" · " ' u:. · ·"" ~""" sq. · Jo'N..,; crn ac · *PALM/CARD Rf.ADER • . . •1•nd1t1ous 1n bc11111. Sc11ch lot li0x3'n. Pa.rt fenced $(,00. VI<:. 19th, CM AD/REDUCTION D r aperies 6027 \ t. \ '· T 11 I \ 1 fl \\' L I. t1 II \ \\ I· 1 Nn..vSp<iJk:r C;1n·1t1·~. _ l\hn. I ;u·i·iL EA~T H L Uj' t" Av11il. Ot·t. 18551.agwv.1 Can-642-9.J.r.). 108.11 Beach Bl., Stanton. INST'A Ll.ER 1111~ fabric In age 10. Lido Isle, Bal?oa C'Ct::ANEltS. 2ll7 i:!fl.9 t yon, Laguna Beath 658-0869 LOST SamoYt'd. v.-hitl' mall', 527..J.406 ht1nhi·8,,.. "' (.'O~t + J(}',. :.; 1· 11 I I .. H \ \\ Ii \ \ .. \1 n I \ 11 It Pcnl11:o1\ila & Bi1lho11 Point. I Bliin 01', ,.;.u. ,\pj'l!y s lo.3. NE\V i\1·1 1400-2800 sq ft "Snow", Vic. 3 Arch Bay BE"~ "fASSAGE JN N.B. gooora1ot-, "":l-T;:""' Pete, I I " II I II \I I, I< ,, 1· \' " Contuct !\lr, Boc':stro111 ut I S.l+-0932 • III \ I k R d """ ,.,,_,_. ~' " '"" "" '1W I\ \I. II 11 · , " I'. f i r " the i)i\11.Y PILOT 01· tflll I ""~"°'--------shup o ces. 'm11 pr g. e\\•ar -.;1!l'"tnil0 :WOO Jn.;ll(' Ave .. Suite 1038, Electric•! 6032 00.4321 & leave applil!lllion. COUPl.1': 10 n'l:tni'\ge t\C\\' 20S 3 pita.st! pv.,er, trash f"ND ~rn. hrown fenl. dog. Ol)C-n M. cloS<!d Thurs. Call _ 1n,1111ni<111,: 1 i.~ h .. !J.." !\)•"•'• i..1,11 \l.:1+•11 •N""i' 1>u""'1, bid~. in COl!lll l\f"~" Good !ICIV, xlnt Ide ru· SO (N·· Vic, Hamillon & Maple, CM Alm, 551...,....>39 ELECTRICIA;'l • Ucen!lt' b•\~"'~•tl, Ill' •I""''' v1 Jioron•llt 10 1m. pu1il~. I 111J e"'h HltAl\E & Align n1 E' n I Stllary & Ai>t. No childmit.or 646-l2S2. 64~1688. LIFE or DEATH: Let our No. 233108. Small job!!, h•~'1'""..m'""11 b"''11~•·•1ru~1' CE•" ~~r-.-11e",· 1Sa~~J'. + 6t'~SQ22· pets. ~&-3117 - rit-1 SPACE COSTA i\tESA FOUND tri~h 5ellcr w/taloo bable11 live. For allernutlvcs maint &: I'E'pairs. 548.-520.1. ANADA \IA FMI !'>Cll \\'Hl!AT ' ,., ,4 ._.,as , u o .,.:rv1t•l'. , -• CROSSROADS , l""" rt t.0GA.'l ST ,, ON all LlF~ IJ,\ TTllJ< ON IOS "''llOLt>' WttEAT L..,._, ~q. · No. 1-""l'malc vlc Santa Ana. to ABOh.TI C: ·i:. Gardening 6045 CASSFROLI~ f'll\U'~lt'ICJ.:lt 1\-llll t RESTAURANT - Ov.ner &l&-1Z2 6.l-1-2228 5'12-S560. LINE 5-U..0022. 24 hrl. .ou•t,SI\ J<Yt t~l'A CL I 10c PER SQ. FT. J•"OUND: in1all tun fen1ale DRIVING to N.l '. area Junr EUROPEAN GARDt::NER. 'fomonow:.'•4t•ktnfookfiy Yau con narge e \\'AITRESSF:S , ,. 3600 11q, ft. '1001 Hl~h. NB youns: dog nt SJ post office 28, :,--oung man v.'RnL"I ndeor. t .. 'lndst'aping -\\'Pl' ~1•1'\·lct c,., ,-, -,,,7,1-,,-,,-,,-,-,,-.~,,,o-,,,~,,,-,.-,,-,-1,~-,7,J-,.J-c"-, .• 7,,-.,.7>.-.\-.,.l -,,,~d~ .. 7h-,,u~>.~,. DAILY PILOT e HOSTES..~t:s ,' Baun\gArrtn~·r. 5~1·5032 6111. ~93-&467 pref fc-male. 64f>-l •I07 '''a!IOn11hle. 6'124 119. n111n h~r-: 1hn•n11h 7 ..c11,J !•!J >'.~nt~ lur \':idi. n1:1l.:u1ll "h"""'' Cla ssified Ads • BUSBOYS IlF.NT n~·M·l. 1200--Slf UP. JOE Gh1dliCy -11rt1Cll' rou1m 1 RIOIJ\RD A. CR 0 VE . 'tARDf<_;N Se'hiil·e l'lr:tn up~. 11;11;,l•I ... 10 "S•·"" ,\ fin<l -St:i1 l di·~r.1111 ~~ud"dtt. At!Jn•" , .Apply In l)Cl'llOn, 180.:iO lil'l!N'lk· f'rcm $170 w/ Qfc . ~3 ph. Sat. In ~Nut Shop C.l\I. CALl. YOUH ~!STER IN v1t1nllng, lof'lg rrnov"tio11,i_~"~'~"~"~'~"~"~"~'-"i~1~h~"~"~'"~'2l'~•I~"~··~· ---------·!-.===6=4:2:•:5:6:7:8===-" hurst u1 Tnlit.•1·1, Founialn R.11. ~lulll!r.R,£. 67J..7039. 673-~ !..AKE ARR0\\-111-:AO. fre<-est, Exper. fl63...10il l Vnlley, C111ll. • - f • • I -IJ! OAILY PIL01 l1111r,d.i1 J11~e l l , 1'174 , -~lp Want;a:-M&F-7iOO Help Wioted~M&F-7100 Help Wented, MiF 7100Help W a nted, M&F 1100 Help W a nted, M&F 7l00 Help Wanted, M&F 7100 Help WantOd, MlF 7100 H<lp WentOd;-M&F 7100 Heip Wented, M&F 7100 ·-. ' -Delivery-Sunday Only ' " : , . ·OF DAILY PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE-SALES ! •. QUIRES THE USE OP A LAJIGE STA· ; • TION WAGON on \I AN. CONTACT MR. ; : tn;NTON WILLIAMS. 330 WEST SAY : STRE~"1'. COSTA MESA. TF.LEPHONE : •• 642-4321 FOH APPOINTMENT. J . HERBERT HALL JEWELRY CO. • MANAGER TRAINEES Openin9 Soon In Westminster Mall Full & p /tlm• PRODUCTION TYPIST IBM SELECTRIC Experience Not N11ded $125 M inimum to $2400 Monthly GuarantMd Intcrvle\1•\ng NOi\' for ~I· lions in Or;111ge Co. t.lu!lt he Ca eer opportunities available for fine je\\'-O\'er 21. bondabh• k In ii:ool ' An Equa l Opportunity Employer ti elry store sales personnel . Positions also phyi 1t·u1 ,,_nid. 1111'-e car .~ Hel o Winted, M&F, 110oHe1pwanie"C:tM&F 7100 1. nvDilable for office perso nnel. Contact ~1r. ll'ltrph•lnt.'. ti? tu Tic. To..· '---It rank ~ooney. 32 l<"'ashion Square, Santa l\li1t'kt'I nrru·est you or ·1rlt'- Need to type 70 \l'Ords per minute accurately, slO\Ve r typist need not apply. 1\lso needed! Part-time Proof Reader Experienced only Co1n1nission If Quall[ied. Cotnpany vehicle, repeal business, weekly & monlhJy bonuses. Daytime work. No eves. Local meat whol&- S61er. , ~;,. GIRL F RIOAY Ana, 54 ·8332. pho11e our nrfl("CM ... 0 REGl...,.NAL <71·1' 835-7~11 SECRETARY T i.;; " I "" '"'"'""'~" ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Apply in Person Mr. Martin, 1213) 77~8543 FACT JS EVERYONE EATS MEAT ! ' SALES MANAG .. R 1 TIC TOC SYSTEMS 330 WEST BAY ST, COSTA MESA ·L gil'I office in NC\.\'l>Ort l~<l(\b. llusy ma.na-Help W1nted, M&F 7100 11 Help Wanted, M&F 7100 F.1iut1I Oppor. En1plo.Y•'r ask for Paul \Vard. Help W1ntttd, M&F 7100! Help W1n*f, M&F 71~ get needs smart girl to a_ssL~~ in office OJ>,er- ·ntion \\•hich n1anages 1:> salesn1en selling GRAVEYARD Shill. 4 nltc• · . Lagi•I Sec'y Train.. MANAGER TRAINEE :7.':::''iii°~~"ii':'i!!'i'i:'ii>::"'i:~:"i:~:i:~~~~~I---------I sur~ical instrun1en1~ in '1.7 \Vestern States. a wt't'k , Jack In 1i1e Box, Fn1· Newport Center Llnv Outstanding oppor. to slnrt II Help Wan.Jed, M&F 7100 Help W•nted, M&F 7100 RESTAURANT I Heavy travel sc hedule nccessitat~s. rell~ble 120.\ Rakrr St. C~t orncc. Extr·.t. shnrp pcrsoil i·:ux•er '1·/tl1l<: l't.l. 1.tu!lt ~ie NUB.SES J\itl11 & 01ilf'dy, 7. IF YOU LIKE PEOPLE ,..,lice c.ovcraae & teJcphoue cxped1t1ng. 1yn. GROOMER·DOGS v.·/lOp skills; 1 Yr s:cnern <'lCa.llt'U\ buslnC'!t.'I 1 'Y Pc,· 3. Esper. pref. Int ervw• WE'D LIKE YOU WAITERS I.I/. ,. r e,cper, n:11 d. Age 21·35. Rttfifi1 rnl!iCll & i:row h rl.lon-Fri )l.f('sn VPrde Conv. '.iog. filin g, sin1plc .bookkeephl~. So_n1c die-All Breeds,exp.r only. Send re:sun1c to George D. npiltlr. Able i.; ~locnlc ;1 GGt C S Ci'tt 'foi:on"ldrr11,ca.n.-t•rwlththc t.tlion-spee<l not 1n1portant. Prev1~us as· Ne\1'{lOrT. s a. n ta Ana. RDberts, 610 N cw Po r I 1\'ilhin So. Calli. Call Betty osp. f'ntcr 1· , . · \\'orlrls Finest n.ral Estn!r CAPTAINS sociation \l'ith accounting or purchasing de-f..!2-552'1. Center Dr, Su.ill"' 1530.1 Cutlcl', a)0....6().'}5, Cooi;tal !>il8~. Cor!lfW!ny. Yo\• sup11,ty thtl for Newport Beach's llC\\'t-~t h I I I ·c t l 'th math or Go o rn I N' G N, l l" 11 a I Nc11•port ~nch, Ca 92660. Pt•rsonnrl J\gl'ncy, 2 7 9 O NUJl.."-E Aldt's f/tin1e, 11er·rn <lt!sn'l' and \o\'i.' ll funush lltf' 1 1 1 • · 1)art1ncnts l:l p u , on1pc en \l'I l~por1'C'r & who I ca a I e LITE llousek1'Cplns:, l'Olll'gc llRrbor Blvd Cl\l positions. E.\'.~ pn•r'rJ. no! tt11inlng. Togclhl"'r, we' 11 ceo• "'1' n 111 ~'.~rte Jo n.•nch calculator 1n1portanl. Applicant must be ' n<'l't'~s 111, .. 1y 466 :fl"""hip •an• _,, 11 • 0 0 / m 0 nt nen1a .,,.;tab. Must DlstributOL' lll"'Cdll )'oung or HI Sehl girl, refs., O\l.'11 MANAGER .... .. _.. ' J~ " h I •-···'k J·" SECRETARY t.1 ust bo z\bfe lo type &o 111'.p.m. &take sh at 100 11•.p.n1. t'ront ortlcc poslUon. !ltin lm un1 3 yoar11 l'XJ)(•rlence. Send reaurne to Cl:assWed a.d 0(). 46 C"lil Deily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa 11.lesa, Cullt. 9'J626 '~ill" pern1anenl 11osit1on. $550 to SOOO/ 1 9 Hd NB (<.."Otnm!i>sionl {Ask about avl.' l!ro ('Jigiui.... no~1· <..<ugt• r-. f"-ai::gres.~h·e college man for lran11p .. l\on thru F'ri to Pllrt linic rvr11. 1-lolldny .· ·' -.. ... our liccnSC' training ln tren c h Continental 1)10. to start depending on abilities. Vaca-nianaxeincnt trainee in 12 .. $30. wk, Balboa apt, Roller Rink. 175 N. \\'ay· NUl~ES AIDES. E..XPER. progrRnl for non·llcense Culsl~, Wlm>a&Servlce. Be ----~~---- Qo11 & insurance benefits. Telephone 714:-Sales. Collections !: all ~S-2·179 field orange Cit J>rer d. All shlf1s. Beverly l){'OplC'l For r u rt h c r of high calil~r. rciidy !() SECRETARY titl-tl27. phases of importing busl· Loan Officer Trne , .. 'N ·,G>'ll ,,·,. 'n. ·'! "'""' t\1111101·. 21•152 Viu Bstrada, 111fo•ma1ion ''''"""oil Ja•k "vrk ttnd intl'rrstt'd in Bcnutilul modem bank In nes.s. No ex ..... ricnt.'t" rl<'~ll· . 1 • ~ 1 ~ 1 "' "' • 1 ~11•u11n Htlls. • """' ... dy ·" 1 1 ,. JI J'k · 'elp Wanted, M&F 7100 Help Wanted, M&F 7100 ,... Outs1andlng oppor. to br¢n a \\"01nan ur L"Ouple. Apt .,.1 ~i;i;;"iii;;;iiiiii ... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Ayers at 5'6-'J4!ll. ~lea yenr Brt''tnd high In-ouct1 oca K>n. You 1 e " "' sary. Tl'"d\·el not requi.l"ed. L"flrt'er In the financial field. util + saltlry. 4!16-!~ I' l'01nc. For Interview, please lot of JJUblic conlllct thu> ELECTRONIC Asseniblcr, Salary start at $55(1 + many ' Bllnk!ng or finance exlJ('r. Ocean View dial 673-(t..l()(} 1~i1dd be the ldenl posltkln C $''>~· • lrlnge benefits. Gren! op. l•"lpl•>I .• 1 .. ,1 be '''ble & l\IGi\IT Tme, route S.'1les t"O. lot• yuu. l\Jhllll llli\'C .......,, ():_.& O!Jl'I'\ l\lgr _,.. !::.'Ip fl("'. Sn1I con1pany W I ,-.. .. t.• 23 ., c s h I D' t . t ·-. I 0111 r.•"" portunlly for the rl.L:"hl per· ........... '"'·, ...... SI""' ... ~. ., uturc. Age ... . 11r nee. c 00 IS r1c Walker & Lee typing & sh 15kJILs. Call Rlti1 c;.,.,.a C'C lo ~·u ph.•1tsant sw~roundillJl:S in ... ....... IUt.'U .... W<NU ., R' I I 8<6-" r- r'I k T · I 1 s,;oo ~111. Call t.lr. Thornas. CUii Jean llro\\·ti, 5-IQ..605.1, l ;i";i'~·iii'~'~";i"~'~·oii ... "ii"ii"ii· iiii•• John!IQn, 54().6055, Co1.1s1<1I '"'f'Pr yp1s o -Nl'wporl Belich. Apply nt ~ C I p I A DELIVERY MAN 111.1.l 11 , ... ,. RESTAURANT J'orso1111('I Agency, 2790 SC~.to 'rrl". to S'OO Nt•11i·port Marine, lOsrn .. Jpnl, oastn ersoiuJC gcncy, l\tANUFACTUfUNG I d C 1.£--:S~ corp RE $SOCJ ;.,o7 Superior, 548-26ZZ. GRO\VJNG young Irvine Co. 2700 1!1u-tx1r Blvd, CJ\1 $609 Per Month REAL ESTATE :1nrbor B v • t.1 Sr'c.""'n' PR SOOO I seeks i nd Iv id u a 1 w/ p D A Pirk up & dclh·er supplies, MANAGER DISHWASHERS *Sec'ys, Bookkeepers Ra~ · · lo $.~ hr EXE~. SECT~' thA d\\~'/1 ~·~ 1nei·hnnicl\J l\ptitudc for MACHINISTS ••• , n111il & t.>quipn1ent. 6 t.to•s and LC'gals Sf.1·y1Kctl'pl, lcgnl to S6i:i assi) ·· Olll' 0 e ·o 1 11,Jrk ln n1anufucturing dept. re<.~nt cl1·ivl ng cx!)('r. & FASHION ISLAND, JANITOR Liz fil•iinlc r's Agency ..: ........... rll..., S<tlcs SG50 1 !argC'sl ii·inl'rlcs ha!i. nn Exµeric11ce \V/ plastics, UTILITY MAN/ valicl Calif. operato1-s \le. NEWPORT BEACH .. . 1 4020 Blrc·h SI. ·suite IOI ..,,... ...... •J • 11111nC'd. opcnlng for 1111 ll · In! I'd s ll · · 1 E \\1th 1'>.l•l'r1r11('C J\1ut u1'('I • ·Call Jt>ann1e SfACO E.\CT. St.•cly _ Adnlin. 11( 1cs1vcs or pa pre • inn prec1s1on Pa 1· s • GARDEN R I ~h1Jor tranrhise, t.lui>l Ix-111;· , , . . · : . Nc11i•l)()rl Dench 833-8190 or Juc1ie StC'lll<'l' iL;;slstatit for a suct·essful Advance potl'nliul. Call &Jc g(•ncral prolo & sn1all $609 P er Month gix>ssiv~. kno11i•Jl'dgabl" 1111c1 1'.ni,:llsh sperunng. S•e:idy Dial A Job IJ3.08SS NEWPORT }Ot111~ executive. l\Iust have tor Appl., 556-4170 bt\.\.11 8·:i quantity runs. Sn11lll shop. DRIVER PcrfurmgcneralgardL>flinr;& inrlusrr!nus. 1-~ully Mlll ff<'d Joh w1A1h•1"'a"'1't'o'sY 1'n'" ,',1f-ls~'1 No Charne To You n.. I A pn1 Day shift . Good "·orking office. 11.ll benrfil.~. chnll1·nr.:· nH'n, n , .i:. • ~ -~ rwrsonnt gency 1 c . .;N•llent typing & S/H .~~·====~~-~ condlllons. {.:roundsket'ping. 1 yr exper. i""' OP""rtunity. R<plies T;\URJ\NT, 501 30Ui Srr1~1 • Estahlishcd 1965 .8•• Dover Dr., N.S. 1 1 sk•IJM. \\'ork "'ith mlnin1um HAIRDRESSERS' Opening; rc11uired ·~ "" u ll ~. NB ~0200 ~ I r 1al 1" at r 1 Per manent F /time · contiden1ial 11nd onlv. b)' o;i x>a ·-~n., · · "',,.. SECRETARIES 121 642-3870 super\ i~ion 3.nd hH\·e exce . or one en'""" oper o a STACOSWITCH • 11·ork h:. tory & rc:ts. Please the successful South Laguna I Position Aiipl!cations must bc lilC'd inail. \Yrilc Classified ud . 1 1 P/timc. H.1'5 flexible. Mu•t phone for intcrviev.•, or Golden Touch Coil!ures · 1139 &kl'I' St., Costa A1eSll \Viii be rrsponslbli:' ror a Prrsor~I c 0 mm j 11 s ion No. 131, D11ily Pilot, P.O. RE'I'll{ED or Semi retired be able to 11i'Ork on own. D!':UCA.TESSEN Girl, mus! applv in J>f'!'roll lo 49!}-3335 1 549-3041 vurlely of duti~s including OUice, 79i2 \Varner Ave. Box 1560, Co.sta Alesa, Callr. ~an for golf rllnj.:'~· Day or Mature. Phone personality a hr' owr 18, tor part 1in1e u IT. E \'INTNERS l"C [ · 1 • · k & H . "· h saJ26 ntght. Apply F a1rgrounds niust !MJ2-t.ll8 ·i-; 0 . ' ' , •• · ltELPER to assist us w/aur Equal Oppor. Employer nIB1n enanc.-e · pie ·Up unllnglon oi:ac on 01· _,,"7.,.-,,.,-,==--=--,==-1 Golf Range, 100 i;~air Dr, .:.;::::::~· ~· =,,:=e,,..~~~-.,..·Ork, Set' Tl'rry, lfl·Tirne 2(Mn BU!i111t'ss Center Dr. pre-school, Split ah it t _ 1 delivery. t\lust have t·Jean before 4PM, June 171h. WALKER & LEE ~-, 'l-". SECRETARY/Girl 1-~riday, l"klil·atesscn 49j East 17th d · · 'Cl Eq al o E k> '-~• " ... _. Si"i,Cl\i irv:.:.· f~~la~ ~t:f· J.Opm. Cal 1 ---,M""'A-.C"H°"l"N°"l"S"T"S~-; riving rct.'Ol . u ppQr. mp yt>r GROWS AGAIN RN 11 -7 11.~2~~~il:tu:iY:·a1~~ DELIVER'\·, Afternoon auto EX. SECY $700 111\NDYMt\N, pa.rt tlnic l Top Pl.lY. for skilled gencrol l Paul ~f~~taf~~:;.ociatc1i 2 OFFICE GIRLS l\1on & Tues Nigh1s. 18811 ~'<lnian. Neat & accurate. routt' for lhe Registet• t-·t'C Pnid1Also Fee Johs work, apt co_ mplex, Costa I inach. uusts.. "."'' k no~\' 2940 Randolph ;\\'C, Ct.I NEEDED I ADAi\IS -11.tAGNOLIA _.Florida SI, H.B. 8.11-l>I5. $2.00 per hr. &12-8009. KC\\'JX)rt. Cm;ta l\Yesa ;1rca. . i\ &U-J&I punch press setup & cl1t• · O "' "' J Ci-: N F. A ft S [' ·· ?>~,be over 18. Call !tick, Sh s:>, type 6;>. \\'ork i lesa J. • • • .......,,, 556-7075 R.ud\o trlephone dispatch co•, IPLE-JON SALES SEC RI-.: TA It\' . Lli::hl 5'J0-3(0) [or VJP's in plush ore. JllGll School. College or J'l.'p:Hr. Costa t.lesa. 642 • ......,... l\tusl be :l5, able lo drive a ·' bookkeeping. Heal Estate ~tNTAL CHAIRSIOE WESTCLI FF .summer school girl for _11.IACHINIST McDONALD'S Apply in Person \\'e \l.·ilJ lie opening our Ue\v SPORTSWEAR I cle\-eloprnent cu 1n Pan Y. Pl'rsonnel Agency t'hildcare&n1iscwork.Big Production ot" rracer Ja1ffu F II Tl G _, . YELLOW CAB CO. olll-· ,1 11,,, ,;..,.,.""' 01 -•~i;.6~1~77~"==~===-I u · n1e cne..... ?-Jain· 186 E 1611, C 1 ,1 --~ ~ .... ,.... -fi'.lark It Center I Canyon area, &W--On7 operator. 1 1 enan1..'I"'. Rcsponsibillties; · , OS a "esfl J\.1n~no\ia & Adntns In lhc No\1" ~n1cr\'iC\\•lng to fill a SECURITY GUARD si~ gal 1v/tborough know· ICdge of chairside assisting. ~)tntastlc 11·ork hours. 4 chfys· a 1\t.'l"'k. Intelligence alqrig w/abillty. Sympethc· t~~ .Qalure lo deal w1 patients 1651 E. Edinger, S.A. Pll.l't or lull tune. lst &/or I Floors, v.·alls, windows & UPTICAL l<'nsc cleaner. \"t'l'.Y near fu ture. \\'e rccl lull·tinie nttd lor a sales 1'-/lhnc. Contact Mr. F~ord 542-8836 HOSTESS 2nd shill. I general maintenance. \Ve Sonic optical exPt'l·ienco:: Cha! this orfiC'I' will be lh<' person in our campus & Sf>c'ul'hy Supl"'fVl.sor EX p ER I 1'."'NCED Telex 3 Days, 2 nites. 11.IC'nls. j 7141 540-5206 offer good pay, insurance, ·pret'd. ti42-5-116 Ulll1natC' in a total Real n1cns sportJJwcar section of 1 Ba lboa Bay Club Operator . w I so ni e insuranc.'I"'. Perm. job. Good MAIDS paid v~cations, security. Part-Ticm~o-J_o_b __ I f.st!ltc service center. \Ve our IJ.eautltul store in Fash· l'.!11 \V. Coiu~t Hwy~ i;ecrC'tarial skills. Must be benefits. Apply in person. F/tirne ,.;., P/ti.nll.' Apply. m, person, 3 111 l F"i""•'bl" , .. "'"· Ho,pi'lal>'ly ha\"e in1n1t'dia lr opcnlngs ion lslund. ~,1 E~IRED 1 9-11 AM H bo Bl d C t.1 ""' ... "' ,, hoU1 rQr llcenSt..'<l 1U1lc•s t:E1 I ft~· n111 e. on personable & enthusiastic, wooct' y's Wharf • See Personae! Manager .. ~r 1 1 0 ' · O!!Elo 1 csn. I 11os1css &•rvk't' need s ..,,.....1110 0,. ,-opl• who ... 0 .. 1d Con1e in & ask for out· S.S. v.·h•.) v.·ants p11rt tinll' "' . . . , 100 % FREE to assisl in foot b a 11 Balboa Bay Club µt(Ua PflOI'. mp oycr ,.,,1•11;.,nnl, 1,. 0 .. , ",, lo ,~,,. ' .... .. u k M 1 k 1ni· II 0000190 ~18 II' N -"l d "B ... -.."" .. • like I" 1,"k• ,.,,,,,,ntn·,'" of Ille store 1nnnagcr. wor . us now pa 1ng operations. ca ~ ....., · ewpo., uv .. " 1121 \V.CoastH\\"',NB MECHANIC WANTED ,, .• J-n•" '''" ,,,0 ,·110,_ "o" "" • ~ 1 •-1 nd 1 to J '"'-"' " ~ ... \\"11lkr-r & Lcr 1i<'t>11Mc' :uu "" ia Y ypc, Clll'Cl H 0 U S E K EE PER I 64~133. ivill nl'td " i..:iu· ,".(_ /\[!ply in Prrson fol" & rnaintt1 ln luxury .. I:;.: 556•1100 FABRIC CUTTER No c.xper. nrea. Ask 5-10-3684. necess. Irvine for Patricia, CHRISTIAN Ll I MAID WANTED " 1ruini11g program. For DESMONDS · ' ve n' J •'1EDICAL Ba•k 0 fr,· ...• rype"Titer. Call Jol7-3&iJ::1 for 1 i (>O\\"t'r boat. 833.-9300. Ask \V/own. car. for elderly 1 ". .... .... ~ _ . 1 fu11hct n1onnati(ln pleflsc ior Jiin. •"l•'vo lady, •g• open, Don ~uixo!c r.fofe • assistant for urology office. 1nte1v1c1v a.pp · ri1ll .Jac'k :\~'l'L's at M:>-9-191. .;;i, ...... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•I .. ... 2100 Nc11'Port Blvd., C,,,1. I ,.. 1· d salary open, refs, off Sat til2-2tiiO i\ usz oc x·ray cer111c · l'AltT lin1c. eve. & wknds. NEWPORT 1 ~:AAMES Bureau .. ·Qt ,Employment Agency ·., Z706 liarbor Blvd. noon Ul 6pn1 Sun, Balboa &H-8722. I\>lalUI'C', I'i.'liable \l."ilh PBX I ,.---.. •JI!!---, I Factory Island, 897~ for inter· t.IAID \\'A!l.'i'ED. Please ~1EDICAL . E:;:pcrienced exp. prerrd. \Viii tra111. 1 Wal~ker I! Lee •3 Fashion Island SHIPPING CLERK "iey,·. last hou.sekeeprr lefl apply in person SEACLlF.F l)ack offi<.'t" girl lo r Superior Ans"·ering Servi('{'. I , tr Equnl Oppor. £n111Joyer due to dea!h in her fa1nily. l\·IOTEL 1661 S. Coast H'>l.'Y pediatrician. ~-ID-1650 ~'1~5-o-=7"='='=~~-~~-c ~r•l 11T.1.T1 I OPERATOR SR. KEYPUNCH n~ded for large mail order HSKPR/OULD CARE _ .. 4~94-489"--'"7.'C:--;;;--==,..----P:\RT Tll\11:.:; Eves & Sa1.1.;;;;;.o;:;~:ii~~iiii;;ii.o;01 SALES Con1pany. No exper. nee. Universliy Park. Ir 11 in e MAID ""·anted. I·---------· Jnsidc. ideal for studen1s . Real Estate Brokers Nationally knov.11 food co. [ :t Y1:s exfK''" on 0'191059_. \\·111 !\lust he v.·illing to v.·ork Lite hsewrk, ironing, dinner PART TIME MEN & WOMEN Guaranteed "'ages. Garden seeks recent college gnd trtun on new t~b 4o:J key ; _Dental Assistant onv::~~~1.e C~~:ayspaii~ prep. & care for 1 yr old. Call 6T;,-346.1. Immediate Openings In Grove. _6J&-88iJ3 . who ill ambitious $t sales I ve1tfler. 2nd Shift. SD.i.le· 207 Costa t.lc~n PeriQ<lof • • nlist n('('ds ~~per. benefits. Apphcatlons laken 1:30-7;~ p.ni. ~ days + 2 MAID \VAi'l"TED. ®hr v.•eek. Schools & Johll In tntclll· PAflT Tune Legal Seeretary. C..'hrislii.1na Compruiies needs orle 11 m 0 oo 1 . ~ta0rt S180 ";';. ~~.1 Control Dala -/,l 1 m C' a~~t. ... -ra.v 8-l, J\;lon·Frl. Sat. per mo. Must have top Fringe benefits. Over lS. gem.'£', Clerical, Slock Con· expd, Ne11i·port Center aggres,.;h·e selling manager C.t ona ray ................. Cf'J.'tificate m1'd. Expandf'fl STARCREST refs&. own trans. Mr. Catt, Laguna Beach 494-9458 lrol, Food Service & 100•5 640--0800 IOI' thcil' nc.·1~· Jluntington Coost11\ Penonnel Agency, _ ~ulit?S oppor. H.B. area. ~43 \t1kdays. ltlAILROOl\f, young man. t.lorc. Paid \Vhile Training. PART time olfice lli'Ork, 5 to Bea('h Really oUlce. 2790 llarbor Blvd, CM C ti (iI~1 962-f.671 . OF CALIF. HOUSEKEEPER Perm. only. Open, classify Fret? Lodging, .r.1e111s, Uni· 10 pm \Ved lhru Sun. Ca.II C.ill : 0. Strehlo11· SALESl\1AN -I nside. 0fP0f3 00 d DENTAL ASST JIG:l Red Hill, Costa l\lesa, 2 "" .. s nor \\>eek. Own & distribute mail. Handle forms. Books, Aicdical & liT.l-9131. 714: 846-0041 213: 592·28Hi background in chemistry COl11t'I' nf Red Hill & LSDJ ·-ma•'ll•>• -uip Exp" d . . airsidc. Ch A 11 en i:: in i;: Paulari~ transp. H. B. area. Nev.• · ~... · · · Dental + $326 Per t.'10. PARAMEDIC 11. h ~ s 1 v es or pa1n1 ~n. Salary open. home, a\ I conveniences. pret'd. Growing finani;ial Quick. ,~dvanc.en1ent. GI, Bill Part Tlnie. To do niobile life P.ral Estate Sulesn1nn. v.•hy desirable. VC.l'Satilc position Newport Center, 644-2-t)j ..,,....,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,I 962-44..18 orgnnization. Xln't \l.'Orkjg ~ Tu1Uou Prud Whl_lc Scrv_: insurnncc exams. No sell· not v."flrk in the hot!est area, 1v/xlnt adv an cc men I ::t l'ACl"ORY lraitl('es, no C'xp ·"'""°"'===-,..--,.,. <.'Olld.S & t'O. benefits. App Y ing .. Artny Opportwntlcs, 9·J .1"g. -.~u """' l·lunlingron Beach. Fountain potential in an Irvine EDkEp.~dr.~mRp•~l?'r bPT11101N,10STg. pee. Apply in person. 32972 JIOUSEKEEPER. live in. 500 Newport Center Dr. daily. " "''°'""'"" Vallc;Y?_Lct us1rllin you. manu!. L'O. w/xlnt benefits. ... v ... " Calle Perfecto. SJC No Spanish speaking ok. 2 N.B. Suite 600. Costa Mesa 645•1163 Call Phil Mc Namce 963-1567 Salacy in proportion to ~rel. yng. mature 11i•o111an, phone calls please. child. 13 & 9. Re[S., $200. PBX OPERATOR Villa_t::c Real Esta!~ 11.hllity & expc.r. 556-4170 (/arden Grove, 5::1-1--0109 F'F' .1 ALE mo. 846-.~177 MAINTENANCE ---------I Answering scrv. cxpc.r. Jo'Ull ··· , age open,"°="""°'==~,..,-,-,,-, RECEPT-CLERICAL SALESinwatcr1.."0nd.ltionlng, Df;NTAL ASSISTANT · handy 11ith fi1,'Ures, likes HOUSEKEEPERS f/timc t.1USICIAN i:ir group want~d ~hp~ll~~~·n"t~~Y6:I40r· Good telephone pcr110nality J\.len or won1cn. Need car, ~irside-non .s1noker, x· C'asy ofc 11i'Ork. 5 or.6 hrs pern1 position. Conv honw. MECHANIC ror cocktail loun!,'l'; also • u • ' · and abi!iry 10 type at least no exper. needed. Earn $100 roy Ile rcq'd. Ne"·vo11 per wk. Earn about Sl5. \l.'k. Call ?.tr. t.1 iller or l\l.S. P/Time Cocktail v.·aitress. • • 65 \\'P~i. Duties involved, to $300 per v.•k. \Vork s·n Beach. 64.J...9211. Delicious, free meals f2J. Urban. 642-&'.14·1. 810 \V. 19th St, CM. 646-2823. PBX An1wer1n9 Service phOne order processing, Orange Co. cu LL J GAN DENTAL AS&!. l'hair5ide. DICK CHURCH'S HSEKPR; over 40, P.T .. stay NEED helper to Jive-in all shirts, so~e weekends. invoicing & i n v c n t 0 r y \\'ATER CONDITJONlNG, t/'Jme in NewpoM Cenlel'. REST. I or 2 wks prr mo. Lite Days "·eekends w/clderly lady. full & pa.rt lime. 54-0·1962 control. Exc(•I. starting 831-9363 or 49j..(i()3(1 X:.ray lie req'd. Call betwn 8 tGlocia) 2698 Nc11i·port Bh•cl. invalid cart'. ti75-7363 Lile cooking, pleasant 11i•ork.•~---------salary_ rommensurate w.ilh SA LES Sccre'G""/Re«pl. .11 'I eo..· .,..,.. "...,,. E."""r. in maintenance & 1• I" 1 ~, "on·r 11• \1'1\J'""V'NV t:.1\1. 5';1~.-4501 fl 0 u•=m•ES Pl•ylv•nRr> •-Car desirable. expc:-. ('<.' + nnge. rvtne Must 1.,.,... 60 w.p.m. Some .:>Ln1 w ......,... repain of automatic screw Pl::P.SONNEI.. Se cl PO '~ DEJ\'TAL ASST, chairside, FE'.\IALE beer t('nder. Dana Toy Co. needs party·plan machines & spindles as v.·ell 1 __ _:•:....61::::>~'7~>~1_,•:....__ IF YOU ARE area. • 11 .resume, · · sh m:fd. Salary nego. v.·/ cliieer:tul. X·Ray li<:t!nse Point. Ask for Dave: supervisors. Free I.raining & as general maintenance. NEED person for Sat.. Sun, Oox 442'2, Jivinc, Ca 926&1 Rbili ty & appearance. \Ve req~d. N.B. &14-9211. •193-7388 or 496-9023 supplies. Call or write +~me mornings. * PEOPLE RECEPTIONl!IT are a young Jr\'inc nianuf. DE.'\/TAL Asst. ehllin;idc, Fl:\ISll 1 cu· Dorothy Colter, P.O. Box Personal ln!crvic'>l.'S otil)'· No Paci[ic Fish & Selllood ORIENTED for lron1 lobby n1ortgage Co. w/xlnl bcncllts. Ask fo1· '~. N k ~.I · carpen er. a uict 20-12· Anaheim. 95&-0152 Phn••• C"ii". Monday lhru l -~~-""~c~~1~~~-o '-.,,.=~-V 1 banking firm. Pt ca s a n I June, 5.16-4170. X·•'<>.r· onsmo er. ,-,.•Cr· rnakcr lor display con1pany. =.,.,-,·~~~---~-... " ., ttt.,.-""" * AN ACHIE ER ably under 30. 6-ll·OOll. Ab J t· 1 0 take on I JfOUSE Cleaning, part lime. Fritlny 8-11Al\T & 2·SP:0.1 NEW FACTORY * ACCOUNTING su~u.nrling & \I.' or _k in.': SALESMAN, drftperies & DENTAL A°'ST. s-·•'alily •e•-n>ibilitiC',. Advanced Ideal for Student. Nev.•vort SHUR-LOK CORP 1 t•on~1!1•1ns. ~ite lyping & shades, neat, :-tggrcssil'C. .,. ,~~ • ..-Branch outleti; just <'pell m; BACKGROUND cl•nt•al rfoti-Pll"'a•anl .. / · ,\ll'rchandising. 2921 S, area. 640-U>5 1300 E . Normandy Pl . ...n. "' (."uston1 Shade & Drapery n{f; expcr. pref'cl. f time. in area needs the fOllf\11i~inb: * SALES ORIENTED JlhonP vn1ce ....... Nr Orange C'alf 6-14-0083. KLison, Santa Ana. Santa Ana ~!~mt 1""ne $185 \1•k . . 25 Cotir,ry airf10rt.~rca. C~o~' 3535 E. Coast H11i•y, DENTAL Assistant Par 1 FISH MARKET INVENTORY 11 Block No. of l\1cFadden. Scrvmen Cl) s:i hr A Ne\i·,ddlf~1~10". 1°1 0,"'01,;i THE MF.AIR.~ Comp. ~~,~~~~-~-- ! k G ••Je•n1r11 O-n ycaro inancni 1111 · · ......,., · · S ALE SG IRL l1 c 11cr t!PJif• eXJ)d, & >:·ray lie. Clrrk, full time, will train. 1!i b oc \V, of rand) ..,., 1n 1 """'" l\.f1chclsnn Dr, Irvine · , Jll'<'f. ·s.14-2485 S2.65 hr. to start. Over 21 Equal Orpor. Employcl' i\ll benefits, ciir«"r positiuns. ~C~~~;~~~~S.a~:s"~~: 714-.q3.1-83«) s port~wcar, experienced. yrs old. Call bctwn 10 Ai.\1 & CONTROL CLERK • -494-1064 nicdintc need for a place· RECEPTIONIST, 1-~ R 0 NT Call Jackie 6 4 2-2 4 4 4 ,1 Pl\1 1-~riday ~\i\1. Ask for MAINTENANCE MAN n1ent assls1unt. Salary $8400. OFt"ICE APPEARANCE. hetwecn 9 am&. l pm. l)CJl 673--0108 J\1anuf. exper. teq'd. Jn post· Semi retired prefd. Lite NEWPORT CENTER per year up. CONSOLE S WITCll SA.LES pcrllOn. Exper. in .C:Al.S to help v.·/e.'lpand bus. ing of C8rde.'! control sys. janitorial & gen'l repair Please Cn!l For A.pp\. BOARD, GOOD TYPIST. rctnil gift SIOl'C a mus1. Full, p/l. Top $$. -Car, l:ms. Also, t'f'Sl)(lnslble for v.'Ork. ~lust be in good Ale ta Frederick NEAR ORANC:E COUNTY J)nys. eves & V.'knds. Buggs PholW.'. t\'lr. Lyons 846-llii. d.'.lily tin1c cards & cos! con· hl'ahh. fHS·lfi08 hetwn 5P~·I Gorgrous ortlee /JCroi>s frotn 17141 835-4103 AlP.PORT, CALL AFTER lnlcrn11!lonal, 2043 Wcstclifl (D C I lrol. & 7:30Pi\I fnt" n10rc info & o. Counly's niost :,;lnniorous 7:00 P.i\L OR SAT/SUN Dr., Newport Beach. ·DESIGNER P:C: BOARD LAYOUT Co111n1unlcntlons Dcvelop1nent Division 3519 W. Warner Ave. Santa /\nu 54G-28:l> Equ9.l Oppor. Employer SERVICE station arlcnclanL._. Full & part tin1c. Salary + l"Omm. Some exper. necess, Chucks Mollilc Sc r v I cc , 24085 EIToro Rd, Laguna Hills, 830-47j(I, SERVICE Stalion Saie1man, exp'd pre(. day & evening shifts open, Apply SMU Station, 17th & Irvine • Newport Beach SERVICE Statiun i s l a n d manager. l\1ust be exper'd. full time: dayll. Arco 19th & Newport. Cos1a t.1esa.. SERVICE Station J.I e I p \Vante<I. Full & Port Time . Apply in Person, 300 E .. i7th SL, Costa !\lesa. SERVICE Sia. A t tend. p/time. E."l:per. Avail 3PA1 daily. Apply 2590 Newport Blvd, C.11.1. SERVICE Sta. attendant full & p/tiine. Union Oil 1645 Ada1ns, C.J\ .. I.. SERVJCE Sta. Atlendanl, fu!J & p/tin1e. 900 E. Coast Hwy, N.B. +; _ range ounty * GARDENER * 11[1poin1mcnr. shopping 1nall. Sccrr1ury 10 Or Send H.eNunle To 171 -11 l\7l-699.ll SALESLADY exp'd 1 n ,, Contact Evelyn !01· ln1ervw .~~ .................. ._ I P.O. Box ll)Jf.. \V ', . ' 1· i\l 1 1 I SHAMPOO Ll1rl Must be \\o'nced an experienced, IOP· 1 Be vo·;r O\\"n boss! Part or Paul Dosiei· Assoclatc!I VIP. TOP SSS for thl' r ig II Ol'i<ni;c. ca 92668 IF YOU LIKE PEOPLE OOl ltl s aripare 1, us ic licensed. Al!IO 1nanicurlsL ...,..,... Designer In high f/l•'m". y, .. , 0\1."" are.. 5.,7075 J\tANAGE!\1ENT TRAINEES 2111. Personul1ly l~ 1nost1..,..,..,..,...,.., ......... ~ able 10 y,•ork $Cit11e Sundays. C' II I F" h' •i---" " " " -l" WE LIKE YOU ,\l•"lY in l'V'l'!lCJn, Smarl Set. 67°=n~f~~~. a r as ions. ~nl:i:~y DIP an<I clls<"rccl l!igh Income. Guaranteed impo_r1 nnt QI\ this key PIZZi\ r.t~\N \VANTED, no 1• •-,,....,"" •·.wcu1t layouts, \Ve arc a Cus!oniers. Earn Now. Pay International Corp. pos1t1on. t'Xp. nee. ri.H or part lime. To consider a career 11i•i1h a 424 S. Coaal ""''Y· Laguna <l y.n amic, nrowino, '··t"'r. JJ\b/ITORS, par1 li1nc lcad~r in, Real . E.statesEAt.ISTRESS net'Clcd by SHIPPINQ CLERK ... " ""'... ... • r. hr ·gh1 s Needs 100"' FREE Apply Ti~. 30242 Ct'Olli'll , d ,,.. P/tim' 13 hr E '"'" ~ccessfu] <."On1n,1ny \\•101 a 5"7187 or s••31•.t l'\'~nings, ;i S per nt • /Q , La lierytCe, OU prov1 t' rn: snil 111akcr. Prefer C..'l"''r. e. • xper. ""'Y ,~ ---d ~ -k 0 . g ' "· & W Valley P :11i•)-. gon" I • 111 Id >"· ,~ Call ••"'•72 ~II. stnble dC'algn section. ays ,...r w-."" · pen in s 111 1TICM omen c ei.1~ • ...: \\"e w prov · e ,,.. but will train. Ye8r rou11r1 ....... ,,., &'\lary i·ommensura1e \\·i1h Npt Bc:h, Laguna Beach, For Ni~ucl. training. Together \\e ivill ~mployment. Company paid SHOP helper. Sanding exper. ecrierieJ'ICf'. rxccllen{ frln!,'<' I GARDEN HEl.PI-.:R Santa Ana. Xlnt opportunily INSIDE SALES 556· 1100 PLANT SALES. Summer get you together v.•hl'rc r~ berk'fl1s. 16881 Hale, lrv1nc. heJp[uJ. Will train. 1\dvanced lierwfiti;. Send resume to'. 1 645-5855 for permanent part lln'ir \\·ork for 2 tt'arhcrit, jOin our \~"tlnl . lo go. Call I h1I ;,;17-.1073. Apply bef. 4pm, Merchandising, igi1 s. KU· , "'·; employment. Apply Rl 17182 Miles staff, Nursery Plants. GehrhM-o, ~Ip-. r 7 l : J An Equal Oppty employer. llOll Sa 1 An : ·cin!llilllcd Ad no. I~ GAR111ENT cutter for lli'et Armstrong Ave. Santa Ana and AAMES Bureau 546-3-129 8.18-6'l"i6. Spcc1a.I program . . n a a. • -<" o Drtlty Piiot I suit mat1urac1urer. Prefer btwn 4 Pi\f & 6 Pt.t. PH: rnr un!irC'nsed appllc&nlll. St.CltETARY SKIPPER to 11Bil Columbia ; P.O. Box 1560 exp·d or \l.'lll 1rr.ln. $2.50 hr. S.K>-7813. PHOTOGRAPHY Of E 1 11 PRINTER u 1 .,.-cused also needed. GIRL FRIDAY :w· sloop. Newport to ·,~ta l\lt'Sa, Ca 92626 ;, 1l:1y 11·k. Appl y!! am ro 12 JANITRESS, pr..r1 1 i n1 e 111P oynicnt J::'.l'lll'Y /lceurnte typing. ~1011 rhru Honolulu, A.S.A.P. 525-2008 2i06 lla1·hor Blvd. F' !"" In • 00 12 2· ~ •1\.n Equall Opportunll} noon. 825 \V. 18th St, <'.'Asta evenings, 5 hrs per night, 5 I n .• : . .., ::i: • • ;, Jl('r Si\1ALL GROW ING Company : •. En1pto)'1'r I r.·lesa. flays per 11i•r.ck. opening~ In POSITIONS Suire 207 Co~!a i\lc!ln hr. Allk for B c v C' r l Y . 1 \n Costa t.1esn ncerls career Np! Beneh "' Santi\ /\nit 1 .......... ---.......... Ex!X'rlen{.'Cd ;\pollo press Walker & Lee 96:\-4;1·\G oriented pcrso~ lo take over Df:SJGNER / DRAF1'S:'ll1\N GENERAL ~1rca .' Xlnt opportunity !or I NEWPORT CENTER operulor. •••l 11,.,1 s E c RF.; TAR y r 0 1·1 cxpa.ntling 11.crounts payable J! •. Vent. ,I( Air oond. Duh l, LABORERS permanent pArl Ii me Id LAW OFFICE BAUM A1lvc11!slng p1'l)(luc1lo1i 1n~r. dept. and to ns.,ume other -I .. " "191 1 em~1n.,...1cn1. Apply al lilil2 .\\'r opcrale in lhc \\'Or s Pa"' 1im"' >CCl'Cta~. \c"al \V}o_;"ftE: PART 01-~ YOUlt i\tusl be fa!ll, ac(·11r11lc re Int cd resnnnsiblllttes . • ,...y or & /\SllQl'. ~ lrn111°<I. AS". i""rn°n1.•. ·rop •-,.. ,,,~ •t & ''''''' , .. , .. ,,,, •' " •J .. •·u·run•· ~ " ·'"" " Annstrong Avr. San!R Ann . .,..:~ •vv exp or r.xceutivc secrelat'y -====~"~=~-1 1yplst. M. Cl11Yton. 1600 W. Outstnnctlng r.o11'1pany • DISHWASHER SSS. Long or short tcmi. bnvn 4 PM & 6 Pl\1. Ph: ret..'lilt•r~. ' 1-• kill H fl RECEPTIONIST Coa11t M11N, N.B. ri42·!1'.!62. hl'nrfits. Call ?.1•ry or J\'t a1. Clean, Jtcllablc. Alust C':11l :\-1().-14~1(}. MQ-7813 • Our e11stomCrs ron1c ro us \\' 11""" 8 · s. ours C.'1· FOLDER ·~ n t · ·:x;....n:120 "'-·.··'-od",. <I" p e ''•I' b I< N"." •• \'F.R A "".E AT TE~JPO I II I II I fa.. iblr, call PAI. &J()..1800 Hnndlc front desk greeting SI::: CR":TAR"i', Exeeutive, "1111, .~ ' .,, .... w ·• .. ,., r•·· JANITORIAL. f',rl/f11ll lln''· n IClll' re a Ql'!L; n ''· 11 'f·' I STOCK ROOM \torkl'r. Wlll train. 1 , Ei11f'O Tt"lllJ)(lrary Jielp 0.,.rr 10,000 JIL'oiilr 11~ our Nc\\~pa1icr Corrte1~ vs tol'$. 1• uuerr1lc !,vp ll!l'· c·u~tomr.r s I' r v I c e ,f.. ( Surr & Sirloin rrvine 11rea. Expt'rte.n<·erl iwrvlC't" every l\'ttk. BOYS & GIRLS OPERATOR This Jni<i!lon c1t.11 11•11d lo innrkcting. 70 \V p i'-1 ' SUPERVISOR • ~:i930 \V. C~t ll""Y,NB GIRL FRIDAY adult-' only. Cool1 pnyin11:· • We nCCl'I hlghty motivalrrl 10 yrs & Older promotion to flCCOunlini.::. 11'&nserib1ions, Tustin Co. l\ta1urr. pcl'!IOn cnpablc .ol 1 I Jmn1l'd. openiniz !or sharp position avnll for l'Xprr. pho11>1:r11phrti; & sales rep.~. DAILY PILOT t.tuJ,tud haf.~ focc; inath l!.12-l2J2 I nssun1ln11: 11to:::ktni;::. rcCC!IV· ; _ DOG GROOi\IF:ll. :o.elr itlar tini;: Individual wl1h proJl[('. 979-39'.l.1 I · \\'e. RUnr11nlct $9100 ~lary Experienced folder opcrt'ltor. ~~nplo;~r "t~YI Snll~ ~ f'l~I · SF:C!ll:.l'Al{Y. I u I l rir uii; & 1001 control dullcis. \Prof.. 3 to 4 do• per 1~-k 11hlllly to handle hook~. JOLLY ROGEH. 1• x P • per year + com1n. • I .-1fHi()5j Coo i ' j 11/hnu·. l'h·ni;o~ Cull, L.H. f.111.cGl'C',iror \'11('hf Corp. 1 962-Sm) phO!l(' .t· olHef' or nlPldly ex· hN'akf11st t"OOk & d1nn1•r • Ynu hnvc 1he. opportunl!y to Has Routel Open Permanent position ~~ ·y · 1700 ~~~1 r:i~7'~~ Otis P 1 u 111 b In i:, Gl:9 16.1L Placenlla, C.l\t. ' ! pa.nd1ng oom11.1ny. f\lust hr "'IOk Good l~l\1. Gooxt e~u·n o1t'r $1•1.IXXJ per Y~"r Dana Po1'nt with. emplo.yoe,b•n. •fits ' Cl\1 'K • n r " . ,r,~r~,.!..~nl \\lny, No 2.i, <.:.:-.1 ~'TO<:K GIRL. Sl11r1 .$2 hr. I bl • •· , Oprior1un11)•. Apply in e11M1ly I bl d I ~ • nea. Pf!MIOM e • ,. .. v ~. av1 1 a e 1mmt 1ate y RECEPTIONIST · Htiliws nunrterly. !-/lime. ' ELECTRONIC •nod ,-·"'!Is "II IV l"lh Jl>erson l\tr. lfo11i·e WO '. • \\"e. orrt•r 1~m"any ~kl SE:CR~ RY ,, ·• • .. . ...... y _. · • · 1 "" ,... ' for steady relieble G d 1 T 1 . .,,.,11 . r Iii 1in1r Hnl fl1·xihle. No eicptr : TECHNICIAN I ~.'· Sullc 3-A, ~ta l\ 1 es<i S· Co.'1~ ~i~·~p~~;;;I· . ht~~th, ~,~!~nl !;.;~i~~ng. 11 Capistrano Beach worker . • c~;rie~~ ~n!~:~. lrvfn~ :~~~=~: ~l r ~ r ~~km ~o~ ~e~ ~t~~cn'.rll~~-6 ?:ni;e~ , I GIRtl 10 dl~rribute Oycors in On.la f'rrtry ope r Ator. pmf~donal career ~j Apply in Pf'.n!on ~mplex. Call at u r I a I · ROd or Paul for Kppnl , cbe::::,lwn:::.:.~'~"'---~---I ;' oc. new trae ... Sal. only. ~ txper. ""1~101• ~'"~,ly ,,,s;;·1(!'."' ~j San Jua11 Capistrano ' """110 ,, .. ""' .. ' I Telephone Sales Jofn us & gr'O\Y v.·/us. You 12.50 hr. IOc a ml., Ovtr 18 ,' a~ optn, C'iood h'i~ct Amt'rlt-a for 8 Jl(!l"SOnal MARTEC RECEPT1BKKPR for New· Sl::CRETARY wibookkCC!p\OJil . n~ to know how lo Tn:nthlt & have car. bent'( ts.. Conl1LCt l\! ',":...:.. i111crvlr\v CALL Mr. Lowder REPRODUCTIONS port ~ach olflt't ()( n~llon~I k typing exp nee. Full t!me, ! Cost• Mesa A re• :-.loot 1iyitemi U!llng rC'llly 53frl69S RI f hards on. F:mpll'C CPA l1m1. Call 622·1071. IOI No. nay.Ide IJ r • 1 ~ toilet 511Ut' lllN:le. A 01\B or PE:l'ROLEUJ\;f lnsurn.ntt Co. 83S--6766· I . 492-4420 INC STJCKY DRAWERS can be Nt'wport Bt!ach &l-1--0126 Work From :ih;tn111nical tlSl'i~mbly .rt-:LL.Y 11ptill('tJ lo . th1· LEGAL SEC'Y I Our Futur e Growth NUR..~ING~ l.VN Rclirf fl)r Pl • A mlldf' erudcr 10 Clpen by Sf'.fRE'J'AR"i' snr k I''" Your Home JlO\\'lnlt;;'<' desirable, rhrcads of fingemail polish 7 Yrs min t'•qM?r. llrBI')' & Potentlel D1pends 1 rim ,(. nlh• shi t!. lt,1\1 <"hRrt::i' 1577 a centie venue 1t11plylni;t c11odlr wruc or ~I' !'C\ll!\•t< typlni;:, lttiuN 9-3, I 96n1R-c01 IT'<>EloKSouC•hO••R"'p' • 11hd glue bolllt11 ~·Ill keep probflre. P.I .. Dom. & ch·ll ON YOU fQr dlly ... G-IZ·3."«i. Newport Be 1ch, on rlrnv.,•r n.iMrnc. \-\hr Nr-wp•irt Rench. 646-<12<16 Top Commissions lh" lid• from '""km' e Try De•lrr to nrccpl C l'f I sloN' StJme1h1n1t )'OU ~,on·1 -----._ 7• 11 fJ11tiY J'ilot C1A'istf1~1 Ad re 11 pon llIb111 f r .f'.ootl 1 1 ~-ru;;t~ AIDE.~ a 1 or n a t'Vf'T u11r• Sc-11 It with " SECRETARY I ~~I ! __ l : J2812N1011S11't!t't I to buy. 8ell or rl'lll tlenetltll. 'J'o mo. Nt"WJ>Ort (714) 833·8752 ("\flf'r. J!l'tl. Top \l'aJ(("5/An t:11u1•I 01111or.·1-;1n11J(l}f'f llnlly Piiot nn!'11lflrd Aft. t'/111mC'. ain1uti.•. Sonlt' ofc 1 ~·1I iclll' henl$ W1th ft Dnllv C~rden Gto\cc sg&..JJ89 , _,._m_•_lh_l~n•~·------• Ccnh:r, ~~-8181 '"'""""""""""""""""""'...!c"~'i-;~:i:~OO:~$.'------C.ill &l:.'-00i8. •'XIX'_'·-"-'""-.sJI, ~21JI 1:«1-SRiJ Pflrrt ("! .• ~irlNI ud. 011-$6~ • " ' " .. . . Tl111rsday J~nt lJ I , , DAILY PILOT '«J Help Wented, M&F'Y100 Help W1nttd, M&F 7100 Help Wanted, M&F 7100 Cats 1035 Furniture iaso Misctllentous 8680'"1~M"'1""sc-."'w""'".-nt-ed~-...:.;BOl;;;l:::T~V;-R1dfo1 HTFJ Sl.""""8091 eoats, Sen - TEW.ER, mll!il hlt\'C bank 'nlltEE BLUE P 0 INT lNTt.:1\1011. O@lllgn r lrm • l.AllCE rURNJTUHJo~ • 1 IY£ ~ ~10"'-" more CIUlh ~'TF.REO 1ipe11.kers, 3 way 12•1', 6hp Evinrude, hH.d , cxpt•rli!n~. Cont1'c1 ritacy Typt11 WESTSAIL CORP SIA~1ESE KITrENS. $15 MCrttlcln,g qualll}' furn. **AUCTION** then i.in pty1 (or used 15" wharledalei. SI i g h 1 galley, n1MJ1y xtru. Sllp &l<'S or Krlsi! Knowlton SKILLED TYPIST HAS OPE NINGS eACl-1 •• .,.8495 * rtom model houte,. l'le\lf'r *FRIDAY 7 ·30PM* Or1('nl11l rugs. Tcy us. Shah repaU' needed. Ust $100 ~a. 1111aU. S3.COO. or offrr. 4!K.-m'1 l'll:I. 37 or 40. Leri,oe boa t bu.llc.k!r necdl: .,..o-tit-fore ullll!d, I o rm ii I IAad."I &: k d 0j 'N Shah 557-1212, cv!'~ Will ~II $90. both or offer. 67l-4zt5 aft 6 P~t Security J>uclflc Bank J~tioo Rv&llable lmmedi· /C-llCV"nlers 111REE red Pt!rtlan klttr-n!I ill'rlt11i:e din ie'I, II chain, new & ~ r~n. ,tj;~~~ I ;.\;-,..,,'"J070 ..!:!!:3578 af1. 6P~1 KITE 29, F'lhfoll;la. roclng Laguna Stach Main atc.\y to entl!'r dllta on video l <Abinet Makt>:rs fur 11.'lle. ~. "A·lth & tci. tabl11 &: bullet 11do cabinet. IJquldlltion, t.11inkruph·ics &, TRAD.I:: in )'our old books for DOK ORO ER 9 O 2 O v Kloop 12· noiut 1111Jlfr. All TO\\' THUCK DRIVER displt1y tcrmlna.I in newt• /Electrlclasu& j 11.-lthool fl'IPt'l"I ~~ Rel.al.I price SZiOO • Wiii &ell rr'f~x. lnc·Jdln~ B.iby 1·11....;h. Sum B. Jonl.i, Hook· Automtttlc reverM-I a p ••I liclli pd. $700. or ofru . Mutt Ovt·r 21, l'Xp, top w~gcs -t-ptt&,ler 8l'COWlUng c lflce. l t."'nl,:lllt fnlJlllllcl"ll Dogs l040 for SIDI. Ethan Allen roll Grand Piano & wt.-dthng 111.·IJcr: :.'00 S. Ola Vh1ta : ret.'Dnter. SZ00. caJJ GT~. i;oll IH&-7381 1 comm. Ap11ly A.C. Aulo Mwn be la1t ttnc.I uccumte /Plumbrni ~tit.'llk,i~h&!Ss:, ~1f1 U:\i iown, R/R furn, Lilt furn , Sbn Clt•n1rntl'. R.C.A. Stereo c 0 n 101 e ,F, '~R~Ie-so'°"N~"Zl-""'.'--G-•-11•-Y-.-he-,-d·,1 1 ~~j~"'~1~1~t·~c~~le Carnion cl::icl\il.o du:~:rn',..1~~~~ {o~7~~;nan0;~::~nt>xp /ua • PUPPY WORLD e for s~. dDyi:' 61()..8150, ~~~~"· ~:U-' l!!':llflJ( I \\'A!':T : 0 .y·li1.:tt "'cider AM/rri,1 , w/8 _ lrnck. $t50. sleeJ?! 4. $45()0. 1 1 "'orking hours poiutible for Cl'l.'nted opc1nlngB for t•ttrl'i!r \V«.tch dOWI • c;erman Shep-cvL .. &ID-1567 MASTER~'AUCTION and 1or1·h "'llh tonks. 6-12--5400 I ti1".....t889 aller 6 pm "• ~W Truck 0[;ter, exp pre f, ti0n1e evenlmc nnd/or 'A'Cf'k· 111Jndccr poopl~. A1111ly -~ow. Jlerd1t, Chlhullhwui, T Jn Y l{ING sz Bf:D. S~. 1-l•·reulon 833-96~ 6·1l;...sG86 , 842·8600· , TV poNu blc 19·· bl"'· b'\"intl i Boals, Slips/ Ooclcs 90)0 I ,::1:'/h .. t st:it~.~'7~~11~ end \\'Ork scbcdule In the 1~ Plfit>t:ntiu Avt-.. u 1 ~.~'.11·,~~~18&!~e~. A~~ Sofa-bed, $115. s_panl:oh Tb! 'Opt>n 9 10 5 CI05N.'.1 un Mu11cal ln1trum ts 8081 coNncJ Jpnclu1~s7 ..!~and SIO, ' ""''''K 1 I! k Ch , 1 1 "' fu1 urc. Goo" p{l,Y 11nd dx-""'"' ._. "" & 4 chrs. $17..1. s Drwr ' -1er " ri,1 ;}.] -,,,.,}. 1..1VL n ne 11nne o Jrvtno, Newport Beach (.>('lll'nt working' condilion# WJN S500 KIUt lCnl ill'itnl , c·nn Eskhno. Hu!':klets, l>\ll:!':, l)resser. $125., 'Tl &:ubv. SCRAM LE rs E l. 1.; CT R I c p In n 0 .I iiiiiii;;i r ~lurcus St. N.B. for (IO\\'<'-r 1ind benefits. t~um s 0111 ~unimcr. Full. 1lXJ MIXt:D PUPS! Srud Tttnk, Hawaiian l;ack·1iack, • \\'urllt!:.r:1~r. N ~ w . ·1~11.= ]~ t..'1111 or S&ll \\'/~l!A (lil. TRAINEES / ~Un M Le l &1'V!cl" ri,fo.;,t Brc,.-cd~. Open $70. 5'16;-0181 att. 6 p.m. \ 1n ode I . i\lnNhutt 8·12'' lol11~ tC n1nst. $2.40 per IL 64z.-5.1UQ ~:f~~~= ~~r to~on111~~ldl~ Aflrly to A1n;. Gr1..oenman l~'.11' re · r. v 1 :1;~· ~;:-7· PuJ>ll, AKC, G•ra ge Sate 8055 ANSWERS ·~~~~k~-ca'...inel. 002·6120. MlriMEquipmeftt jl ~~~~D : Slip fnr 18' ca~in ~~i1~~-ln~c1.'.!rp. t~•l•o~x1:.~. ,;~ 330 \~~I-~ ~t.p, /!,~TM... WJIO D~tv~A ~A':?RK? Ch;i,,mp Jtock, Thenderln GIAN'I' Moving Sale! J."'rl· Curfew -Ou)lky -Doubl -1 SHURE P.~-· brand lit'\\. General 9010 9m..&150 or &!0--0008 ' ·-"j !!!!,,.!!!!~!!!!'!!!!m ... o.!M,;,, CHOOSE ycur hours, work line, 7 wk •, reuonable, Sut-Sun. June 14-16, 9·5. Ab1·unt -TO DUCK 1 SillO. I • ;~~~rn u~~l ~:;1'!w1~1& for yourscU, be your own IW24Sl8 S rREE sofa. JteaHOnabte Never 1all to ~tund op for ~\18-2.6&1 ?.1ARIN E,_ Insruran1:~? ~111• •SUP for 25' Fl1~rg1Us ~m,1eyiu'tl . Oppor, to •niln • T UTOR WANTED • bou. Men or women. C11n ST. BERNARD , ·6 wk1 furniture, queen bed, 5 pc. v.·hut you think is rl.CChL AlJOO P ianos & Organs 8090 qlJOtcs .,,_ apprua :..us, c11.1 : Sa 1 I boat , r.ta n hH.y 011 5hifl ol your <·lioice w/ Er!illsh &: AlAth, Male for be 11Jghl1y handlcappt'<I. AKC dinette, lwi1ps, 11w1ng set. never fall TO DUCK. Chuck Avery, Anderson & • Ne"'P?r1. 6r~ """"'KIH.rtln<•wuui·,• 30 ,1,,u boy entering Ill Sehl. J u..ly Neat . Clean Appearanoo 1 842_96415 J\lillC. glru;11.,.,'H.J'(', l ays , ffilGIDAIKF. IS t'"U 11 • PIANOS Anderson Nev.1)0rt Beach, H,\VE Balboa I~land dock ~""" "' " J lst to Mid AUi.'lllt Newport Vts tired A""" 25 to 70 picture!I et · 1014 O· k Sl • · · 610-0350 I ,.,, · .' proba tionary J)l'rlod. OJ. De 2 3-467 Tci '• re ' •'fr>~ ' p 0 0 D LE pups V ·' c., '1 ' White w/mlnl frt-ezer fn • ORGANS \\ 1 exchO.flf!e use for HQbic ••n'd helllth insuruncc. Refs ach, I -Suppletnent your hw..'OmC. • . . I A''C • . IC. ()( Vk:toria & J\fonrovia use Excel $100 Dra~s 4 I 2 8, L U H RS Cu !it. 16 use . 675-8171. ~ Drive a c.11.ll 6 htll or mare 11 n11n ·s 1 v e r n ·l't!g. G G · SALE n u I k · •. ' · r-' ' f SPORTFISHER DI es 1 j vcrUled. UNION OIL StatiOn -~. day. Apply In ""rson, Cl{ lines Shots 7 wk1 $200 ,\JtA I:: ; ·~ • 00 • puncl11. antltjue satin, each ' Rentals r $5 ·~ ' . e Boats Speed & Slci 90IO Apply SAA1-3PA1 •"--= h r-~1.-0;11 ' · · I l"g for hldden treasure'? 55'x9-1", 2 panels Orange I 1'ully equip. 1 • C•llf lnjecvtion exp, man, permanent. Days. YellO\v Cri Co., 186 E. 16th GOLDEN Retriever 5 wks It's hiding in my garaae at shc."t'r. ea. 39":it?;8"·_4 panels,, ' •. * 641·1225, 6 pm ... 16' Herv.·ard Sid Boot. l~ HP ' Molding Company 393 E. 17th St., CM. SI., Costa MCl!a. old AKC 3 niai 2 m~ Jo1ower St., C.?\f, S&.t. mt"sh, tot~I 413 wide x ~··. Open N1ght1 t1f 9 Boats, Merine Eq. 9030 1 ~lercuiy. Immaculate. $2.:AlO 9 'erlgg~. (."'olftn Mesa \\'OMAN to live in & care fot f · 1 646lio2 es, 1 & S_un. rn>~ 8 am lo 6 pm. Db!e strunles& st<!<'! sink, Sat: 'til 5:30, Sun. 12-5 . 49.t-3:,13183G-l!l54 • o EL Iv ER y, Ui)holgtery elderly invalid lady. room, ema es. An1n1ues, ,cwelry, clothing, swivel fau ttt, small apt *Pi• . & G e d * RADARS, 16 m1. Bendix, • (J hlk. S. of Baker !'hop needs man for pick up board ,l',i: !illlary. 8-12~ or r.lALTESE purples: 6 11·eck.~. fu f'niture. et('. elec v.·atrr heater. 5t$.3&18 Baldwi no~bl ~Ink 1rln 115\IAC only. S700 See 1n 1972 Gle.nL'Oe Je1 Skl BOiU oU lledhilll & delivery, 18 yrs & over, 536-2862 aft 7pm. t•or J>Ct ot 11how. /_ .C. Call GNl.AGE "'n ]e Jo'ri Sat SUn or 551-1955. Fl h" · K • •1 Kc. • .. •11' operation. ,\L.SQ L'i mi .. "'tr!. hke nNr blue mf'41 • TRAINEES <1•r.1~ C M S hfl .. P m CA.• ""A1 -' ' , ' • sc er -awa -im RC'A I r & . I , flakt' Sl500 968-6236 "'"' · "" .. · WOMENS Specialty hop · ., · · Q't't•W'f Sonte anUque furn ., HID~A-BED sofa SI ~. • Knabe. M~ on & llllIT''·,. oomp e e aperauona · VARIOUS job opening!!, little Sltles Clerk wanted. Exper. AFGHAN, AKC, Sliver Blue includ~ CflJft iron bed Chall' $10. Bookeasc, "'00(1 t.fw;Sl'tt • Sahmer . Stein-\ihen J'e~\'l-rl.JJOO. 1 background in verlfy1ng Over 30. F/tlme. 89$-5941 Brindle, sweet, gentle fen1. fran1e & Oak dres~er, other $15. End tables S3 eacb. way· -Storey & Clark . \Vin· a-IS-:!635 I Ii credit i!i helpful. Al.9o 1 WOODWORKERS 12 hlos. 53S-3334 Orangl' misc \1eo1s . 2412 Holiday Y~th, bet.I SlO. Chair S5. tl'r . \Vrulltzer . Yamaha CllEV. 21l3, trailer, 1nisc. Tr..,..utic. .... Will lruin d{'pendal>le J>C!Ojllt' opening for 6 e c r e tar y, Manufacturer of musical AKC Silky T('lTi~ pops. Rd, NB 64z..oo!ll D1~h"8:shrr SIO. Rug, 9xl2, New Spinets u· , ....... $595 hoat equlp. ri,1ake offcr! ~ ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~i-ii~I to he1.-ome phlstlc lnJect on Con1;1ct Mrs. Otte, 436-9731 · d 1 i\I· I I r ·! . ANCJ' Q E · 'I S.15, Night stands $3 each. u d f $9.'> * tHi-5220 * j • 111 1 M 1 1 -"=""""-~~~~:.::;"' instruments nee s c x p •• r a e, c w.m n. 1nC"s. s 1ots, J U d)opp1ngo u ock. Child's dresser $lO. Desk $3 se ro1.1:' , .. ......... _ · , . , . ::~~: 1~gs~~~toe~~h:e i;J~~t . ~ WAITRESSES workcni & tralness for_ "'ood t 830-~. Single hrass headboard, Papf.'rbacks ~. Child's toy~ Pio.ye~ ,. ..••••••.• $89~ T ft A ILER, Am l'l'lCTl.ry Campers, Sale/ ne<.'<!siuiry. Opt~nin!.~ on 2nd Must be experienced and shop, f I n Is hi n gs, & GERMAN Shepherd pups. 6 Other items. 21961 Whisler, up 10 $5. 551-8944 137 Grands .•••....... $395 tandc~1, 6,2!X!_ lh cap. 20-25 1 Rent 9120 21 years of age or older. ~mbly. D~y & Swing \vks old, beau1 . marked, El Toro, Bct0$s St. George Yorkto"11 LanC'. C.M . *ORGANS* boot, 72, $6%. 494-0615. _.::;:::.:;. _____ :..;.::.; 11 hlfl, $:?.29 ru start. Raise In Apply In Pl!'r'SOn 9-6 Mon-Sat 11h1tls. Call 54:>-7255. purebreds. $25. ea. 962-8292. Church Baldwin· Conn· Hammond· Boats, Power 9040 19 • 0 LUXllRIOUS \\'-. I fiO dny.s. KENO'S \VEEJ{END gar~c sale. I BUT!! Kawai Kimball Lowrey ' 1 • ""'"ay. APPLY * Orange Coast Plnstics * 850 W1°KI l8U1 SI .. Co.sta ~lc38, Calll. I 2·1 ''' ,-., .... _"! • lo""go \Vork Steady On Tcmpornru AF'GHA.llJ, Blonde fern., 2 yrs P<o-t 10 ·p., lorn1l"a Rod0e~ • Thon1~s -· : : '73 18 ''-' RIVl"RA ("-"-ll' cabover camper \\I' '"' ......... "" ..,, . ., old. pure bred, Rcn11. lO .. ~~ " ~ C'.oad, used lumiture &: f " • -un ·~ "" ~a ..... y n1any extra.,! on 1968 ~" J5TG1 Tuslln Village Way Jobil 1'hl!1 g~od home 963-49T'J "'al nut tablcs, plan I s, 11 pphances or ,vi ii sell for you · aha • Wurlltzcr. look-a-hkeJ 188 i\1 er c. '\ T Pi k u holds 61 h Tustl" SUMMER -cha.in, clothes 30332 Grande MASTERS AUCTION Optigan ••• _ ............. $1!.0 crul.ser IO. 30 hrs, 50 1nph, Totai c11nitp, bas ~h,d McFadden offramp, Npt I : YORK IE PUPPIES. beautiful Vtsta, Lag. Niguel 646-1686 833-9625 LoY.'l'_('Y Spn~er ....... , $195 !ull . canvas, Ice ~hcs1s ' extremely good ca.re. $Z500. Frwy I males. Very reasonable, GARAGE Sale· Canieras or \Vurhlzt'r Spinet, ?le\\' •• $~99 1ncld1ng trlr. $4900. Pri. Pty . 644-6I01 ,.-- WAITRESSES \\'e Need All O crical & ! M6-4TI8 tools lots or eiegant junk' ~t 6 ~~ s::iday, * WIN FREE * (KG9n6l Aft 6. &15-2969. j • . HOSTESS/CASHIER lnduslrial Skills Free To You SOCS Me~ith Gardens. IOlBi 83.~ '. 5' • ..-3')50. 5'l8-6349 ORGAN LESSONS '68 GLAS PAR . 14 ' lO~z CABOVER-Camper, JOE VOLT _ Crai!C't Dr, H.B. 9 to 2 Fri, ** *** 1WO PIECE L . w/cano_Jly. Fish & Ski. 55 j a, Ton Trk only, S&l J>U _wk, SKILLED TYPIST r nr rninl"'(."'l'.ln1pu1er in nl·1vs· Mus.t he well groomed & Instant P ersonnel BEAUTlFUL, lo.Vlllg, H11U 1 Sat. Su n S HAPED OATMEAL • FULLERTON MUSIC ftp Chrys.. trlr, e I e c 2 "'k min. 642-1497. . paper accow1tino:: ofhre. \\'ill I rehahlc, Ex_per .• helpful 1.iajor Medical Plsn Shephard &r Collie 4 months , PUSH mov.·er-67 Mustang SHADED SOFA. A10DERN I 181.91 Euclid, Pountaln Valley starter. r.tust Sl'll. $14.50. l PERHIS Valley eoamp!r, fill enter on.Jer11, post clilih. etc. Surf & S1rlo1n New Available old female. De~perately lr . ., a;; al drum ti QUALITY DESIGN. EAClf 557-4836 97'9-1389 j all sml PUS (6' bedl AakUJa on It. vld.o dis11lay lenninaJ. 5930 \V. Coast Hwy, NB Temparary Servi~ I needs good home with yard. ca~nsin-;ts. gckithing, s-m~: ~ECTJON IS OVER SIX 122 N. Harbor, Fullerton CABIN CRUISER, ~r2", nev.·' $2$/offer. &15-8589. . \\.ill also perforin other WAITRESSES 3848 Campus Or' Su~~;',, ~06141 6'103-8UL7'16T I AKC S . ~'17-116.1, 10AAf-5Pt.I. ~ COLONN0\\.10ANDN -!Noo 871· 1805 ~ l\I rad io/ I e leJ>h?ne. I Motorcycles/ clerical dullc11. Thill inlcrest· Experienced. a pp I y In Newport Beach ..,...,..... A ma e pringer · .,.......,, fiberglass compass trailer S 9 Ing position avnilahle im-pt>N!On: w IN EM AN s Spaniel. guard or hunt. 96J. 2'111 Aflner, CM. Clothing, OR BEST OFFER. sips 2 i~ cabin. ·Boat r~ cooter1 150 mctllu tely. Good working CELLARS, 2500 w, Coast \Ve have a complete package 4TI7 alts. prv pty. Interview power mower, plctu~cs, 6t2-1000 WE'RE DIFF~RENT: CataJ"'a. S2900 64.'>-l40l - conditions nntt comp11.ny Jiwy. N.B. ol employee benefils. \Ve nee. FREE. plants, misc. Thurs-Sat . ._. * * * * s E A R S Hegardless or the Fanto.s11c , · '70 llD Sportster, EIErf.1 hen .. , Call &t2~1 ... puy top wages. All office & , June 13-15. AVOCADO COLDSPO Prices" I.hat one reads 20 CHRIS Craft lnboant Lap s1a11, .11lnl rond., low":n«I t .i !':. r .. ,. WAIT RC SS industrial skills arc neeclcd. 7 \\'K ~u_p, ~" Shep/Col~Je, EVERYTHING from A 1., C u 8 1 Jo"' T 18·2 about, the fact is that St r a~ e fib I!' r g I a s .!i, lrmded "'/ehron1e, $1'7$. 0.j) m or apply 10 r.Jrs, C~n-Dinner house erper. pref'd. Equal Oppor. Employer loves children, to fru_n1ly, I z, maving, must sell. lolv REFRIGEJTOR 0 T ~Vi; compt>tllion keeps prices \\'lndshild, top, ne....· uphols, Triumph. Set up !or dirt 1111~1111 ,_1rs. Grcenmnn J\1ust be 21. 843 W. 19th St, 546-1934, 646-2806 art 5.30 low prices. Sat&. Sun l0-5. YEARS OLD ANO IN EX· abou~ Uie same wherever nev.• crpl. \:ery clean. lo anly. Runs perfect, Utra For Apii't. 64.2·432l Costa Met;1.1. YOUNG MAN wanted for FLU ~'FY » Persian Klttens. 457 Seaward Road. CdM. c E LL.ENT CONDITION. you shop. We; lose very few hrs, 2 cvrs, $5?"JO. 673-5!;>1 parts. $4511. 673-45&5. .1• DAILY PILOT \VAITRESS WANTED small company, mfg gift· 2 Sable, 1 Blk, w/Whlle GARAGE SALE, Thurs. thru $240 sales by being undersold. 40' Navy Conver. New 4.53 DK\V &pd, plastic t~ &: Colonial KitchC'fl. 512 W. 19th, wiuoe. 645-3621 mittens. 962-1067/645-34U ~1060 \Ve're different because our GMC dll'!ICI. Asking $1000. fendr-rs. koni 11hoc kJ1 CM. 548-0:*Xi KTITENS, 8 wks. 2 Black Swi. 707 St. James Rd., snles1nen listen hard l.o Take best ofter this "'eek-Bassani low pip!!', alloy 330 \\'. Bny St., Costa J\1esa w/Blue eyes, 1 Tabby. Nr 1-larbor Hl, N.B. MOVING must sell. 8' sofa. \\'h«.~ . you say, they're end. At Oceanside. Marina, rims, • misc. paIU, $450, , \VANTED. responsible1• de-1 11~1 S46-8SS4 alt 6 PJ\1 YARD SALE, Fri. 6/14, Sat . Trip dresser & nite stand, 4 sensitive to what you rea.lly sli p B-l7, 17141 685--6570 .548--0430:::,,::,::~'=~~=~~-I 1----------1 pendable housekeeper sitter. lllrc:hlndlN ·· 6/15. 9-5. Lots of misc. 953 drawer chC'St, book case.(lg want & they have the , . . ;-: · TYPIST CLERK Xlnt hrs, pay. N.B. WestclUf _ PUPPIES, Free to good Senate SI. C.M. wall unit). Se v.• i n g in\•entory to make the LATE 71 Skipjack. 24·, FIB, I 73 SUZUKI 400 MJI.. i>allas 675-4930 day/eve &. wkend homes. Mixed Labs. MOVING sale Sat/Sun 94 machine. 513 A 14th St. H.B. perfect match between lo hrs. Very sharp. Hold. Bake~ racln&: frame, over l ~·~·l>-,..56~79 ... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SOOS 962-31ZJ PM. 317 Ramona \Vay, 536--0762. Organ & Organist, Piano & tank & many extras. $8500. .S•IOO 1n extras, asking $75(1. To 1\'0rk 111 pun·hnsing & 'or Antiques KITIENS; Free to good Costa l\tesa. MOVING. Lklnel Train 'Set, Pianist. U you are thinking Pvt pty. <714) 673-{):j24 ' Call W. 642-9352, 545-5294 produc1 ion <ootrol dept. WATER SAFETY Orange Co. Antiques homes, long hair, Cray. GARAGE 5_, L' 1 & S 1 partially completed 3 level ~bout a 1 k e Yb aa rd 'Tl Skipjack 20' Open '74 HUSKY lZi. ~~ qld. Mnnuf. l'Xpt'l'. h<'lpful. \\'ide AIDE 962-3122 d oue, rr. · a· la,yout + 2 complete Lionel instrument, g,\'C us a try. Cruiser. 225 OMC, 135 hrs. Ridden twice . ...,.., $1251. I I I . Hundreds of Ii n I l q u c s . 50!JI~ Marguerilc & 502 Trains $300. Sears washer •-\Ve. thi~k you ll agree that Clean w/m .. nu ex tr as . Emergency aale SllOO. Beit variety or generu o c < ut1cs. Ocean View stained glllll&, annaires & LAB PUPPIES, 6 \\'ks old. Larkspur. CdAt . 9 AP.I dryer, 4 yrs aid, .11lnt cond. v.·e re d1ilercnL $6500 (114167)::'7122 oiler. 536-6829. Contael Evl·lvn for [nt rr.'" 1 aid, aid 78 records. 838 E. ..f~, to~0gd, u~~7'4·7 I Horus 8060 $250. 833-1714 ~ COAST l'tiUSIC · · •13 TRIUMPH Bonneville P;iul Dosiei: i\1il'()('lrtlr-i1 I S 'h I D•1stri'c:t 1st. St. Santa Ana. Open 7 "'" ,.,..., ,,...,_,, Newport at Harbor, C.P.1. '73 SKIPJACK F·B. be.ii 750 C: 00 day• 9 to 8 dally. ~~E I •-'~ ki" CABINETS for Kitchen &. 646--0ZTJ tank, full cover, 5 actual ·Lo mi's. Top cond. Prto-556-7o75 .., .......... • ong , ....... ._...., ttens. 1 AQHA Geldings. 1 out of Bath Brookhw-st at Talbert, FV h~. like nev.., 56.cril'ice, ed to sell SIJOO Unn. 5t&--$2.83 Per Hour NEWES!' ANTIQUE STORE Male & :female. Negra Chick by Parker Bar, Unlinished 'Prefinished 963-6733 $7,295, 979-1-tTh 5082. ": in Huntington Beach. 645-5847 son o[ Three Bars • ~')TS on Counter To-also '73 ATC 10 Hond•. • --· "·" TYPIST Immedlalf! opening Individual w1good skills, 70 w.p.n1. for an typing Jo'or Appl. Contact Carol Smith 644-5800 A\·co Financial &>n·iee Equal Op por. t:n1ployer TYPIST I P/llme pcWtion. T r a In handicapped children ln liWimmlng skills. Valid Red Cross lifesaving c a rd required. Applications must be filM Personnel Cammi s s I on Office, 7912 \Varner Ave, Huntington Beach on or hero"-' ·1P?i1. June 18th. Equal Oppor. Employer WELDERS ARC General Shop \Vith paid medical. vacatlon "BRICK &. BRASS" F · 8050 t .. ~ '10 BOSTON WHALER. 13'. " .....,_ .,...,, urn1ture 3/5/74. The other oul o HARDEN ENTERRISES OU S FREE •• h Ev' d X1n ~-' 75 mi. Extra hers &: jump 301 Sib Street. Wed. -Sun. Freda Bell by Chip Dee 815 w. l8!h St. c.r.I. c 0 NT IN u .... p \MJ e. t co...... seat. $340. flnn. Call aft 11-5. Specialist in Oak Summer Warehouse Reed. 6 yrs an 6/7/74. Both 642-2842 ORGAN CLASSES FOR $111.6. Aft.6, 673-37tM Jo'urniture, 536-8667. Clearance in Bosa.I, Call 4!14-1416. OLD round oak table 4B" ADULTS. Every Tue8day 30' CUSTOr.t Cabin Cruiser. Spm, 646-0097. TWIN bedroom set. Dressina ,..__ " Q 7:30pm. Start ~ week. $7(00 Vfl.lue. $41'.XK) cash or '7B 250 ENDURO, i100., lDJ '"" vv .... r 600 Sets Beauty Rest , BEAUT. i,~ TB, 7ll oarter diam. A-1 cond $225. Sears Tom Dieterich tn charge. trade +. Priv. Pty. 968-592'1. n1L. Lk nev.· : table w/mirror, ben ch• ?ifattresses &. Box Springs. 1 SoJTel w/ 1.laxen mane & dbl oven eJec range, like Coast Afusic Costa Mesa. ,0, CENTURY BAY , • h 53!>0952 chest of dl'llwers, matt. &.1 Give away priced at $19.95 1 tail. 16 hands, g a od new, coppertone, $1.5 O. Newport Blvd. at Harbor . ...,. ...... unc · box springs. Dark ~'OOd. I set. Dealers \Vclcome. • conformation. ex:pcr. rider. 499-1221 eves, morning, &;.2-2851 $2200. '69 1-IONDA, 350. new top $125. 847-9473. 646-8686 or ~9625 $400. 644-0969. anly 6<14--0'in. 642-6878 end, lron1 & scat.' · Co M 54lHl708 or 645-4011 _ SOLID Cherry drop-leaf din. sta esa W~ED: Healthy horse, TIRES -Delta 10/60 x 15 HAMa,tOND R-124, \\1th 2 25' otRJS T/S, sips 5, head, tbl, Circa 1850. liand carved ***** TWO PIECE L gentle. Will give good home oU-road tires, rated rot lone Cab11 & Amps, Rhythm ga1. Bought larger boat. ·72 1-IONDA, Cl..350, sq, pedestal, claw feet. S HAPED OAT a,f EAL & care an lge. priv ranch, highway use. 2 used ones, &: Peres. A really big sound. $4600. 556-1649/979-0085 gd cond. $525. Rape edge. 673-2134. SHADED SOFA. l\10DERi'i, Sa.nla Barbara . 675--4623 $10 each, one new one $25. Like new cand. All for 22' OWENS, fully equip!. Aft. 6, call 673-3794 CHINESE RUG a pprox. 70" QUALITY DESIGN. EAC~! I BEAUT. 4 yr old chestnut 6'5.1345 $2700. Prlv Ply. Tenns PO>A·er. Best offer! 327 w. 'Tl VESPA Motorsoootei-, x!M". Lrg. Kelim. Pi n k ~~~ONLC~G ov:o s:~ i;eldinit. ~ii quarter, 1.~ rn. NEW wooden Pane 1fa 1 d Avail .. 60-1530 Mr. Eby for Wilson, Sp. 5, Ot v.·/i;ide Car, good cond, ~' =~t~ 4~652bar. Jndla~ GOOD CONDITION. $200.00 s:ioo-~2127 aft 6pm or acco~lan door to fit 11' X 8' appointment . '12 SKJPJACK ar Open 22i or bcsJ: otter. 645-1878 Great chnnce to s!ar1 11 career in lhe field or Escrow. Salary to $415. Equal Oppor. Employer. Call Betty Cutler, 5-KHi055, CM.stnl PcrilOnncl Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd, 0.1 & holidays. 3100 \V. O!ntral, PAINT & VARNISH Removal OR BEST OFFER \\kcnds. ?pcn1~. Never out of box. P r.IVATE PARTY \VANTS Ol\1C SIS trailer $100 'TI HUSQUVARNA 250. Xful 642-lOSO REG 'D. Appa.Jossa gelding. : pnce. 962-5814 TO BUY PIANO FOR xlnt, '$7350. 0494-1901 ' ' cont!~ Extras! $650. Santa Ana ijjiijjiiijjii' I Antique Furniture oor Specialty. 557-:mG 4 POSTER ,,. bed, Circa 18 40 . Intere s t i n g background, $251l. 842-2806. T\VIN beds, complete. Brass leoQB.rd. Exper. rider. PH: LIKE 11c1v side by side CASH.* 547-9445 * 32· CLASSIC ~an .. Xlnt Call m-l8ti6. headbootds, mattress & box 586-1833 aft 5. ?>1ake ofr. rchig., & gold carpeting. cond. Balb:ie. P.foonng indd. '72 250 CZ. Xlnt condiUoil. springs. Good condition. Household Goods 8065 Used hide-av.·~-S?fa, Call NEW Hammond Phoenix. Try $550'.). 673-$70. 1.-tany extru. See ro · .... \..----=-==-~""""-=--: "': ~ 'f#~q#~ rt ~ .... r A COtM:NIENT SHOPl'ING ANO , -.::;1 SEWING CU!OE '0 R THE . CAL ON TH£ CO. ...... .&.."· ---....!!!!!! 1!1l1!21.Yli For an ad fn ' C1ll Mary Beth Wom•n·• "Vtorld 642·$678 ..... 330 International Designer Pattern .. .( ' .. .. .. . _ ... ~· / I\~, j v ... . ... l I '--• ' I I I ~ I Y3132 y ' : I Sew Speedy I I / I • I i I I ·~ ' / I I Thi' Sew SJ)l"(!dy IS the ptrrect wrap·:iround skirt.. Jl h:1.'t :1 s h11Jl'.>d wa111tbilnd lhAI buckl~s la .the sulc. A hRndy pocket Is stitched on lhe nght s1,de. F;11)r1<'s: novelly cotton, linen. !lynlheUcs. denim. ''·3\:IZ ls cut in r.Us~es Sir.es S·IS. To order; send fattern number. size. name, 1ddrn1 and tip. •rtre St .SO 3rd cla.u , ror l&t class slnd ~ (« urh pau rrn ordered. NF.W SPRINO·SUMMER SUPPL.E~1ENT -All Nrw Oeslans: $1 .00. A bonus coupon worth SI.OD toward lhe purrhase or any Spadna patt.etn In thl!I neW$paper Is Included in each book. Send orders tn Sp;idea, Bol N, Milford, N.J . 08IM3-Dept.. CX-1.S. Appliances 8010 FREIGHT OAr.IAGE SALE, ncv.• l{ol Point Re!rigcrators \\'ashers, Dr y e r s & Dishwas her s, New Warranty, Credit, B or A, 3623 \V. \Varner. Santa Ana, near llarbor. 979-29'21. *-****11:.SE ARS AVOCADO COLtisPOT 18.2 CUBIC FOOT REFRIGER· ATOR CT\VO YEARS OLD AND IN EXCELLENT CON· DITION. $240.00 642-1000 TOP of the Line GE Elect wusher & dryer, used only 8 mo., Must sell, $250 or best offer. 641r8863 aft a:30 G E Rcfrip:, 21 cu It, 2 dr. $150. GE Dlshwusher, port· 11.blc. $100, all like new 552-1111 AVOCADO Norge 18 lb 10c)•c-le \\'asher, S 6 5 , 1..:enn1ore gas dryer, S45, guar & del, 546-8612 DELUXE 39" Gaffer & Sanler.t Stove. Gr i 11, separ11 te broiler. llml'!r, $50. 642-8811 or 645-6>1::.S 1'wo door refrigerators. gd. 1\·k. conrl. 9131 ~lade.line, Hunt. Bch. 962-4616 RCA \\'hirl1JOOI "'a.'ihcr &- elec. dryer, $2!'>. each. X1nt warki11g cond. 64~5160 Rent Washers/Dryers $2. \Vk. Full mnlnt . .. 6.19-1202 • S90., 36.. square Walnut 11 fter 6 pm. 645-0205. $100. & take over pymls of Boats Rent/Ch•r 9050 appreciate. 673--0211. cocner table $2S.Lgeo·.-1amp, 2 Diamond ladie.!I Gru~n AQUARIU~1, 20 ga.I. incl 1 $49. mo. 558-8ffi3 alt 6 • ' 'TI \'Al\1AHA 125. Xlnt cood. Gold & O~ .$25. Cail watch. Nl!'w nice for grad. pump & filter. $15. HA.l\1?>10NO LlOO, w/Leslie, 42' NE\V Chr1s-Craft Aius 56 t ,. 7 !!:.,... $300. ·_ 673--2595 CdAi Sac. $50 .. 847-6319. 645-8088 or 645-8089 moo. Immacu!citc. NO SKIPPER IF -.>:>"" KINGSIZE bed. xtra firm, l ivestock 8075 '73 K2 Four Com!J('tition skis. 898--2588 YOU'RE QUALi Fi ED new. incl. mattress, box hardly used. size 185. $75. NEW, small o~gan. Prl\•a te Fly·Bridge Sport Fisherman. l\1ust sell 1910 650 BSA extra clean GT":>-4450 springs & !rame. $165. FOR sale honies and ponies. Call Joan 673-2593 party, Sale pnce $100. Call Plush. FuU electron!cs, foll l\\'Drth $ 3 5 0 l . Qoecnsize Need lovfng care. Also UNUSUAL LIQ U o R 5-15-1977 galley, shower, elc. For 'fill 250 BULTACO. Very good $145. Inc. delivery. Usually shet>p & goats. 84&-3700 aft BO'ITLE COLLECTION! PIANO. Goorx Steck spinet. charter by day or week. corid. E.TIRAS. $350. Ca'll · home 832-2488. I 4:30PM. cnll 531--0483 anytime Beautiful walnut finish, fine Fish, cruise, cocktail, etc. c"""o.::.~3855=~•;"~Y~ll~m="~"""""~·~~I MAHOGANY br set, dbl box Miscellaneous 8080 QUEEN BED, 2 mo's old. tane. $490. 4!5-1165 :ry~· 962-2301 Sunday 1968 HONDA 300. GoOtJ . 11pr\ngs & matt, met Cnn, condition. Make oiler. . _·· ' complete. Book case bd/bd, BEAUTrJo""UL size 40 suits ~~~~;;i~~Tbl. w/4 Sporting Goods 8094 FATHER'S DAY sPECJAL 642-5700 " 2 nlte stands, 9 dr dres a n d s P 0 rt 11 c 0 a t s , 6 new boats Crom :20-24 n. to 1974 SPORTSTER XL lOIDJ w/mirror. $9':1. 838-1157. traditional, seldom worn, i\10DERN Din rm set 1apc I NE\V full sel of Pro r&ent by Aday! _from $3.lcla day Must 11ell. $2500. PIANO. French Prov . ('OS{ $80 • S150. only $50. , 1 • · · ·up. so exec. iarter fi45..2149aft5 canopy bt'd set, cabinet bed. each 963-3012 deck, rugs. runps, comp. .i;:ollelubs & new bag. $90. cruise parties. Call 1 ---=-=-=--=~--• . ' . aquarium. 646-SJTI, Call M:>-7977 675-8866 lfONDA 1972, 175. Otienlal bar I stools I di· BEAUT. 9x!42 shag rug. Ml II 1 M ' I C Excellent cond., $450. nctte I desk. Sewing mach. Yellows & b r 0 w n s. see aneous IOIO 1 1scel aneous 8080 allf. Leisure Boat Club 894-9990 6T:r4361 alt 3 pm. Purchnsed Bullock.!!. P aid EXPLORE ISLANDS SHHHI FURNITURE $300. I yr aid, Sac. SlOO. Sail on beautiful 57' Ketch. AT WHOLESALE t 8-16-2230. E.'"cel rates; days or "Awks . TE~lo~fr Charlie's4J;6a;ing Post AU (JI ON ~~:5~ ci~d-9~3~; T\VIN bed s, brass \VE BUY, \VE SELL Bo I S 'I 9060 hcadsteads, box spring& &. Antiques, Metil.ls, Junk a s, a1 mattresses. Good cond. $40. NEW china dl<•'*s <Tl pcsl & Estate Liquidations COLU?\IBIA 24. good cond. "6~\'J.-~~1061~~-~----I "Int'! sllvcrplale sU~rware Completely equip, Call Ann, SECTIONAL, ~ p cs., 1108. pcsl in cH$"'oo· ":.!~~ S1 000 00 ~1 olc. Or ~I Blue/Cray brocade. Like gcttmgs at ea. 1 . ~' 0 ~·M"""~'~· ==~~--- ncv.t. W/casters, $ 9 5. ANSWERPHONE MATE, I I 23' ENGLISH Calan1aran. ~11-21}57 $1 00. Bass Guitar Amp. comfortable family cruising. \VASHER. antq sew mA.cb . Paintings. nite s t a n d s , recliner. velvet arm chr, cot tbl 752-lln. \\'ANTED -4" USED BRICKS * 870-4564 $350. 25 hp Aux. 5 Sails, Roller. 898-2688 I • Reef main, Lk ncv.~. 675-5109 worth of magnificent jewe ry; expen11ve 100 GAL. tank on trailer, watche&, fine American, Eurr.•n and Or1· Wlo~.E£>o: .~~. sailboat ZJ' compreS90r, hose, rpraye.r, I I . d b' t • rt t I '" " ~ used ror asphalt ~nler $150. enta urn1lure an o 1ec I a , cry1 I , 493-5195 after 5 548-6.105 or 548-4541 porcelain, bronzes, s ilver, e tc. l;·===~~=~~- SUAtMER SPECIAL M . di I I · I d fl VENTURI-: 2-Z Pap--top 30% oft Steani car 0 e 1 os t lmpre1s1ve IP ay o 1ewe ry an ne C'8bin. Ea"" ternis & •t.OVESEAT & sof:t custom t I S th C l'f ' ., Cleaning. f"ree estimate, 1r n ou ern a I o rn1a. Jrnmi:diatc delivery 4~ made e very gd qual. n<'ver M6-5l4.5 fOlr.l ·73 HONDA Xi.,2SO. Clean, reliable, must sell. Best oiler, alt 6 pm 54G-t?92 1913 HONDA. CB, Hooker tuned em&.o.91. Showroom c.'Ond., best offtt 545-39!M. '70 ari,nv, IJOtt, lo m.!leate, gd cond. Sl200. ' 8J0..4i71 ' '71 HUSKY 400 CROSS hantly e\'l'r Wied. 675-55fi8' Motor Home•, S•le/Rent 9160 '74 Pac:e Arrow 24 Ft Motor Hom• • Gencretor, Air Cond. IMMEDIATE DELIVEJlY • CREVIEJl BMW u$Cd , u1n1ally hm. 968-7910. 1-'"'-==-------M erchandise consigned for sale from bank· CM-lPER cquip111t>nt to hulld , • VENTURE 2-22 Spacious ln. Butane tank, stove, ruptcy courts, custom seizures, private es-cabin-sleeps 6 Low dov.'11 ~ 1 fool drl~c f'rlgidairc. 2 NE\\' loveseats, Hercu.lon, \Vhlte. SOO. green/yellow/otnnge. $125 2C6 \\'eat 1st Streel Santa. Ana 83>3171 1.0SED SUNDAYS Phooe 6'10-SiS:S. ~ch. 968-U!T~ A • ••15 7 PC VIRTUE dinette se1. ::.:.:•~c~lt~on::;_ ____ _;-= Ycllov.• w/wnlnut ncvantar * Col. R.F. Byerly * & ASSOClATF..S D!vt'.rsl!lN1 Auctlollf'{'~ l..t\'lO, TUH.QUOISE, AUTO'S & ETC. r.;ATl<)N\VIUE: LIC"n'l;f>{I, Bonded & Insured 111C"mber of Nallona l Aucllo~.CCMI A!l!IOC, ( 610 S. Broodwa,y, S.A. tOj). $50. 968-9490 alt 2:30 LAZYBOY recliner & Trash compnetor, both like new. 962-S33i. OLIVE ~n V('lVe l hldeabed. qUC('n~l:t.e, llood cond. $50. 5'1~1290. ANTIQUE BAR. ROOi\1 BAR 10' long, 8' wide, brus foot rail, 962-'207'6 $8-28,(19 . 8.15-2'.?28 TIFFANY style lamps. Rtd, Camer•1 & Equip. 8030 >~llow, blue-grttn 11:lasa, S.'\.l eat'"h. 67~4. .l\11NOL T A SRT·IQI },.7, ~-I \\°OOD DTNING R 0 0 M :m mn1 1clc[Jholo. Vlvita.r TABLE, 6 CHAJRS, $8j, ftutoflal\h, Incl. ea!IC!S. $325. .<~9~1-1.::::JGI~>.'-------- 1 552-8.1flG - Adi Olli 642-!i67S refr1~. sink, \1•ater tank. $75. t1te1, out-of-p awn, etc. ren(.fy for vac'aUon .i!J6..82!io I t'Qmplr-te. 67J...Gm (Di r.) P OOLTABLE Jo'ACTORY! Auction sales every Ji'r-i. and Sat. 8:00 pm . VENTURE 2--24 Demo. t.Iany Save on tablt'1\, lnmps, cue11, Inspection and private sales: Noon 'lil 10 :00 Extra.it. & Real $AVINGS. Plt1:hi nkoll! 5-11.:\138. P .M. Closed Tues. and \Ved . Open Sun 5-8 496--8290 IDlr.) EVEREST Jennings \\'heel P.l\1. 2J}. CAT., 10· beam, ~Lkln. Chair. x1nt oond , $6$. Ca.II Very fast, Exc:-el cond., 968-~I. Ttr ........... U.INfktrf, Mitt.I' (hlftt er Mf'W\I/ Cll9CM. 6'6-3861 Of' 5-ff>--21}5'1 ?\fAPLE din1n'I' Ml $40. Jloll)'\\'OOd bbccl. fratn('I $3 & .$7. 642-S666 VACUUM. 2 !lpd. Uprij:hl llke n<>w n>. Old CBk dln. !Ahl"' $15. 6'12-..'"J666 We bll)' far c:ash or sell an c:am- mission -whole estates ar 5in9le items. NEW llnbic 12. U!ed lw(~. m11st sell. Ask'g $725. ot Be!!! offer. 642"8020 1970 ISLANDER 2'7'. lB eng, New pRlnt. Comp. equipl>l."d. $9975. firm. &46-5632. h'ITE 916 for sale, mci,ng e VACATION e AT YOUR OWN PACE • , , Oloose froni So. Ca.IU. "Largtsl Selectkm." • (0\'er 40 l\1inls & ?\l.lf:s). OALr.s MOTOR HOME RENTALS Redhill :: $$n Juan, Tustin (714) 8.18-mOO FOR RENT, 2'' Rtvcon, fht!! Ralls Royce ol Molarhomd. Call 962-aJU ·' EXERCISE BJCYCl~E Nr-~" $30 642-2'.Wi DELUXE "An1crlcana" ency itct. Ikauliful cond, make Oflt'r. Call Joe 5-t!H>M.1. Desert Galleries West, Inc:. 2542 W. Coast Highway Newport Beach, Califo rnia rts:glng. IJoal C'O\'"et', Xlnt \VANTEO: l\1otor Homl'. 21: ron!'I. ~/C)fiPr 67'5-$63 ot le~. fully St'if~ntaine< . !'TAN 1.1JLLER RACING Prl. Pty. 642-0870 SABOT, fully rtggf'(t. hardly Traliert, T ravel 9170 GR0\\1 tUeh with C11ln Lewmgc. Pro l e c t f!d! ,:,.-;.~ . 645-2200 4 u~·tl. $.l.'iO. ~~ ___ ..;. ______ , 22' CATALINA Sloop outbnf _..,gull, r!inghy, etc. \Vitti moorlna-. Best offer 6'/'j.-1113 m' ARC.HAI-.,. Gelnxy 6 Tl'nt tratlct , fully cqulp'd, A-1 rond. 493-9510 alt 4 E • /, DAI LY PILOT Thursday, June 13, lCJ74 4uto Ser. & P;.:.-,~,,~94c'OO""""""'T'r-ue,..-s---'-'---.-..54"0"1 A"_ u"'•'°'ti·n·H••ley 9709 Flit 9ns P-;rsche ;...;;:.;.... ____ _ 9750 foyol• t7'5 viii•• 9)'fa \ C~o¥rolot 9920 Mu slong 99n JRES -l'lt>lla JO liO x 1;, 'off-roi1ri llfl•ir, rf\INI !or hlt:hW3\0 \l!CI.'. i LJM.'(I Of"IC'S fur ·SM) r11c-=h. ()r)('...ie"• one ST.>. 6~13<5 1900 AU!oi,.IN lle3.ll'y. rehll lmn1 1967 II. A11lrk JI, eng. & ru1111ing gi>ar npprox 10.0CKI 111111',. llArtl top, '10 rORO VAN. \\'indo\\' \'l\n, l<inorn.u & new !!Oft top, 6 rylind('r. 3 11peed ll"ll ns· l\l ich1'lin lll't$, $I 5 0 0 , mh1.~ion, htattr. (2808ST ) .. 1=<7'92".J8""'-"-· ------,;,;;,; $1099. BMW 9712 EXPERT Foreign Citr RC'pitLrs 64!'>-1440 I THEODORE ROBINS 1;;.;. _____ _ f~~~~~~~~ FORD ORANGE COUNTY 'S :~, A11toslorSlll I~ I 2000~:~~~~'.vd. OLDEST 1:~1i-iiiiiiiiiijiimll!!Jm~ &lZ-0010 or t ... 1(}-S2ll I I CONTRACTOR AClling good & ettlques & Cla1sic 9520 us;'<! 1rucks. '6.1 Chevy, '6-1 Chevy '63 Gi\1C. All "·ith !LL or lr1ulc 1923 Model T M'rviC~ body. ~st oUe.r. rOadster. 2S9 Stulk'bnkf•r 1-'ord 1 ~ T. fully cquip'd, has · eng. Hi·perfc11T11. Ne<'ds u ·pipe rack. $2800. &31-l·KIO 1974 BMW's '!h-Oe 1...01-k. $1500 <lr bcst,,ofr. a T c 963-J752 or 11 , 62'J.:;ru.f all '72 CHEV. " · aniper in stock ready for immediate Special. . All extra&. PJ_S-delivery. Excellent savings , 5e111. PIB. All"· Ar.1-Fi\1 rad_lO. on' remaining 1973 models. fttc Vehicles 9530 Lo11• mi. Gd. lu'es. l\l1n1 SALES.SERVICE LEASING rond. First $2650 takes it! OVERSEAS DELIVERY ;::SPECIAL SALE &1>-16!'1 ROY CARVER Inc. '::· HI BACK 'i3 TOYOTA Hi!UZ P/U. ROLl.S ROYCE • Bi\t\V : :;-: Bucket Seats ln~lied, s1dt' n1 I r ro r ~. 234 E 17th st . .,,..-.:' \Vhttr. 10,000 h1l SZ!lSO. ,..._ 't · e •~ "" ~RV0!1i -\/ans -l\llr ·19-1-7986~ =="~"'C''i"'~~=~~~~ l todles. Custoin luxury S: 1969 DATSUN P.U. :'\1nl LEASING ~ty. Comp!. \\'1Pedestal. cond. !\tags, lge lires. nc1\' SPECIALIST'S FIAT "70, 850 Spyder . $13JO/bt>tt offer. Call Diane nt 52'&-7775 tier 5 01· &I0-7620 aft 6pn1. 9727 '72 ilONDA Cpe., Good cond .• 18.000 ml., .t(l f.1PC, Sl.250. g.m..1811 Day or night. Jaguar 9730 ,:, $149.95 motor, clutch, alter., $1800. Ser\'ice durlng lease period lGood only thru June lll !"ii7-8692 is important. Crevier BM\V '71 KARMAN GHIA .; ONLY AT ·73 EL CA?.flNO. PS/PB, \\'as awarded the Bl\1\V ExceUc.nt C0ndition. NC\.\' 1 Stop Service Center (7141 551-1781 \\.]J J.. BUY YOUR RECR.E· 0ATlONAL VEHICLE PAID 1i'OR OR NOT. CALL US FOR BES., PRICE. OPEN J\OAD, J:UNTING :'ON JIBACll, 188Cl Beach Blvd., 842-:!504. • e ir, Stockland ihell. Xlnt ~nice Awll.td by lfoffman tires & paint. &&a-3731 or rond., $3200. 493-0040 or Motors. We are 1tedicatcd 96,l-OSS3 495-0036 10 gi\•e you r,ood service on ~'--"=-----.9.,738"' '57 FORD .$' T 396 V-8 3 your ne\" Bl\1\V. See us cMc:;•::•;:d;:•c_ _____ _ ' ' · ' , before you lease any 81\-fW. sJK'cd aulo, 6 ply. hre~. 8 Lame shipn1ent of '14 81\1\V's ~ x~nt cond. ST50. hnn. just arrived. r-.1os1 niode\s 71 Mazda RX-2 96~ 170.>. a\·;..iluble for in1mcdiatc de· Rotary Sedan '69 ~~ TON Chev. PU. Apply Jivei-v 4 spf!('d, air conditioning, at 858 \V. 18th, Costa J\Iesa. CREVIER BMW 1\'sw tires. radio,_ heat~r·I 642-8·171. 208 \V. 1st St., S.A. 835-3171 I clock. rnetalllc paint \\'Ith "73 DATSUN P.U., \VhJs ·~ .11 BAVARIA ,\uto. trans., black intrrior & ve1-y IO\I' I rnags. ?.lust~ se!l, $289.i 01 air, only $22,000 miles & like miles. (315DMS1 best offer. 556-4Sl·I. ne11« !\31-2010 Dir. Only $1795 '5.1 OIE\'Y TRUCK Capri 9715 B J SUPER Quick Corvnir San· GOOD SHAPE. $400 1---------. . =1Per1~':'~. ~~~e~b-a:: 1 ,,.69.,CH=E·~v'°';;;-·;,,.~"""";'.'o·,,., -;::;;;,:-, 06-;:::cyl SJ,... AMMIYaUIY SPORTSCAR _nm="~""'=·-,,,.....,=~·~·~"~'=-t stk. 8' bed. gd tires. XJnt SNC1AL CENTER Inc. BOATS-TRAILERS cond. 546-5057 aft 4pin. 2833 Harbor Blvd., c.r.f. RV STORAGE V 9570 'Tl CAPRI. .. rtlo, he.to., 4 -4491 ans speed. air 1..'0nditioning. {031· 24 Hour Security 1965 JEF.P Step van. Like EOil. S25-t9. ·n l\lAZDA Rotary cpc. '69 l'ORSCHE 911T rblt 4!Jlk. P.flehellrui, l\ot11'~ AM/1''?\I $..\.lll. ln\11\JlC, 49-l-lliGG Renault 9755 '68 RENAULT 10, auto1natlc, Xlnt cond. Gets 35 tv!PG In city. S400. 497-2880 Sub•ru 9712 TOP DOLLAR , FOR SPORTCARS Bill MAXEY TOYOTA 11111 l•D<~lhcl i41 8\\~ HU,,,TINGTOHIUol.CH '74 TOYOTA Best Deal Anywhere! LEASE OR BUY All Modolsl .,Pw.L.W -TOYOTA. '70 VOLVO STATION WAGON IZCE 311! tin.'& 9955 ATLAS '72 1-'ord LTD, 4 dr, xlnt L'Ol"ld .. auto trans, air, P"'J' Chrysler/Plymouth str. Original oy,•ner. Priced I/ Open Dally & Sun. 'tll JO PM to sell $1700, Pvt ply. 2929 Harbor Blvd., & In & Out Servic• iK"iv. $500. THEODORE ROBINS 30,000 milcsSHARP 11199 Monthly R.at~s 556-7050 FORD 2060 Harbor Blvd. Propane Stntiotl '65 al.EVY Van. V-8. Runs 2060 Harbor Bl\Od. l\lerle {dlr.) 645-57()() Costa Mesa. ·-~ 53"1 At•llBWY 673-4961 _ Costa P.tcsa 19611 FORD Fairlanc. 2 dr. xlnt condt. 1 owner, low n1ile11ge. $851). or make offer. 641)-.1728 546-1934 ·COMPLETE RV good. ?t1ags, $1400 or make Costa i\1esa. '73 ?.IAZDA R.X2, 2dr. ll.tn:l l 642·0010 or 540-8211 offer. Cali 5.19-5479. 6-12-0010 or 5-10-8211 1 rni. a/c am/fm stereo. --'-'-'----- SERVICE & REPAIR ,65 DODGE, A·l Cooo. ,73 CAPRI '2y>•/24,000 warnmty. Lug [ '71 TOYOTA 1973 VW CA?.tFER, pop top. Xlnt cond. Days: 644-4223/ Eves & Sun: 548-6541. ASk for Mr. Shoemaker. , >.. SPICIAL '73 CFIEVY NOVA. 4 Dool-. Radio, heater, autom11Hc. air conditioning, 1260GIV). $2550. '69 PLY?t10Unt VIP 4 tlr. scd. All pwr, xln1 rubber, cruise-a-matlc, 57,000, P/\V $975. 548-2318 CENTER-STORE Very clean. !\.lake offer. rck. $2795. 4~23-ti. CORONA B111•n 6-10, call 673-2'271 V-6, 4 Si-~~d. Radio. 1835CQSl 71 Mazda RX·2 •J•J·\ll 1Jl.,\\j1) ·n FORD. E100. Custoin $2999 Rotary Sedan "iO \\'Esrt>HAI..IA CAMPER Good crihdltiol'I", $2,00J '70 LTD Wagon, lo mileage, a/c, p/s, p/disc brks, lug rack, new tires, $1850, 842-8051 I l I I 1 'll c'"· Mu•t "" to"•"""'· CREVIER BMW - -·-·-- --·-· • -&'st otrer. 675-4267 4 speed. air conditioning, San!a J\na ft"l\"Y at Sand Canyon E.-.:lt (714 ) 551-1871 Air Conditioning SPECIAL Coleman Mach 2 12000 BTU Reg. $.'N? + Jns1all. NOW ONLY $379 INSTALLED l~~j\lj~~;,~!1) I Stop Se.rvice Center Santa J\na FN-y. at Sand Canyon Off-ramp -CITY OF IRVINE (7141 551-1871 4 Wheel Drives 9550 '73 TOYOTA U.NDCRUISER Solt Top (850HOE) 53799 Bill MAXEY TOYOTA 1&111 l•D<•Bl•d. 147 ISSS MUNTING.lOM l fA CH :?M \\lc··t t~t Street 11·s11· lires, radio, heatet". '73 DODGE VAN/CAJ\IPER. Stinra Ana clock, metallic paint \1i !h , Al'.1/Fl\I. 4 new tires, 24,000 83S-3171 black interior & very 1011' ! ini. 3 spd trans, V-8. $4500. niiles. i315DMSl 552-l788. '73 CAPRI. 86, • '""· 0 I $1895 '71 OODGE van. % ton. Ul"· $3200. n Y mileage, reblt eng. asking 673-2-162 aft Jpm B. J. moo. Aft "30, S<&-0085. Dotson 9nO SPORTSCAR 'iO f'ORD Super Van/Camp-t---------°' 3 Sp 6 cyl. 18 mpg Lo mt'• CENTER Inc. ~~;:;:;~LA:;9o i'61;&t a M::::~::'· c :~40 Largest Selection In Orange County Coupe DeVilJe-; -Sedan De- Villes -E! Dorado!! • Cor.· vert.ibles. AliO n1any other &elect Cnd.:llac Trade-ins. ~&J TOP DOLLAR PAID IMMEDIATELY FOR AU.. fOREIGN CARS Call or come in to see us. NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \\'.Coast Hwy., N.B. 642-9405 TOP CASI! for clean used cars and lrucks Howard Chevrolet ?>lacA11hur and J nmhorce Ne·wpor1 Beach 8J3....-05.J5 WE BUY USED CARS AND TRUCKS '69 DATSUN WAGON 4 Spd .• Radio, {YAY931) 5 1299 Bill MAXEY TOYOTA 18&&• •~ ... ~ ...... ••! ·~~~ HUNTING 10N It ACM 71 Datsun 510 2 door 1'°it"t' blue 1\·ith 1natchin~ 1 \rinyl intC'rior. ,1 spt.'Cd, & clean. (3093.XX' $1395 : .:::.:.:=:-::.=::..~"=!, -.-~ZlfflAISOllHl.C.1. '4S·Mit~ ' ·-' Slnl A-SAIY Sl'ICIAI. '74 P.:ERCEDES 450 SE Ex· ecutlve Car · one only (Ser- ial No. otn41J ru11y equip- ped, $226.76 mo lease for 36 mos OEL + T&L. \Vhy , lease 4 yrs from others - \\tlen you pay no n1ore for a 3 yr lease with us. Jim Slemons Imports 1301 Quail Ne1vport Beach. 833-9300 ENTER FRoM MacARTHUR OVER 35 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY House of Imports 52:1-7250 i\IB ·73 280 SE, 4.5 metallic pa.int, mint cond, sacifice, 581-1149. MG 9742 WE BUY: OUT OF ST A TE, FINANCED, & LEASED CALL NOW! 17141 540-4491 8. J. Sport Cars 2133 Htrbor ll•d., Co•I• Mfla , 01tt lftt. IOllftl of ftlf S• Dlt90 ,.,...w•y F ia t '72 Fiat 124 Spider 5 Sp«'d Tran11. Ai\l1rl\t 18191-:Pfo~l $2999 CREVIER BMW :zos \V1:~1 1,.r su~t Sanla Ana 835-3171 4Door. 4 spae<t lransmisslon, 5.'12-5623 radio, hei:1ter. 1912DLI) E _, "" THEODORE ROBINS FORD '72 DUSTER 6 cyl, \VS\\', PIS, R&H, 1;!-!J~111J1., 9000 mi. $2325. Art 5, 536-2&18 $1677 '72 V.W. Bus. Xe= '°'~" low ml., new tires &: many extras. $3,150. 83:H375 2060 Har bor Blvd. ; '72 FORD LTD Wagon .. run factory equip. I rre I u d . AJ\.1/1',J\1 Stereo & Electric Pontiac 9965 1'\ L • '61 VW, gd "'"""' - W, tm\4 '73 VW Qinvert., yellow idnt TOYOTA "'"" Make oU.,., 00.- Costa ?.1esa. 642-0010 or ~0..8211 70 NOVA trail' brk. 831-20-10 Dir. '74 GRAND Al\l. b1"011•n/tnn, air, sterro, (·ruise conl.1'01 1973 FORD 2 dr LTD, xlnt elc. 5,000 n1i. Ofc (il41 concl, auto, air coud. Stereo' 64.t-8400 ext 269 or honie 32,000 n1i. $2750. 556--0046 lTI4) 673-0613 '68 vw, $835. OICJ.3010 ~5. 493-7188 1966 Harbor, C.i\t 646-9303 eves i:: wknds An economical 6 cylinder, 2 door c."Oupe wilh standard transmission. Xlnt. mileage & clean. (llJFTGl '70 GALAXIE 500, 57000 mi. 1 "''670..0..:TE=o>'CIPO:E.0.ST=-~~~,,-g-. ~A~o-!o., $UOO. or ofter. PIS, 326 eng. S600 or orrer. ·rivw9..,..Bm. Tan & White, xlnt' concl. $1395 557-5176 554-127'1 29000 ml. 831-1639 • ft...t a "66 BUS, Runs Good r U $650 or bst olr. 842-4824 '64 FORD $250 Thunderbird 646-21122 9970 '74 TORINO Brougham, 4 dr, $1550. 586-3627 . 53rd AMMY•SAIY SPECIAi. '72 TOYOTA CORONACPE. Auto. Trans., Blue (316ESE) lllLL MAXEY TOYOTA 16881 l •a<\Bl•d 1141 ·~·.~ Hll"'TING TOI" If AC!• LEASE A BRAND NE\V '74 TOY OT A 1200 Corolla Sedan for only $61.26 r. :r mo. 36 n1os. open end lease. BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 611'GCt. Bl•d. 84 7-8 S!>S HUHTIMGTOH BEACH '69 VW Faslha.ck. Excellent condition. $1395. Private Party. Call 979-6434. '&I BUG. R.eblt engine, xblt condition. Call 5.52-9388. '73 SUPER BUG. Af.1/FM Stereo, Sunroof. $2450. caJIS43-8469, Volvo 9772 '74 VOl~O Best Deal Anywhere! LEASE OR BUY OVER.<:iEAS DELIVERY SPECIALISTS ~t.u.L.W W VOLVO 1966 Harlxlr, C.l\f. '73 CAPRICE ES'TATE Wagon Full factory equlp includ. air & roof rack. FORD Gala."<ie 500 -1964. Radio & air. 513 A 14th. St. H. B. ili-0762. Beautiful! 832-:lm Dir. Lincoln '69 CHEV Impala 2-dr. rad10, I "'.,.-'--LIN'"-'CO-LN_Co_o_t._l_Cl_a_"_''-' air/cond, power, gd cond. ,65 I Under 50,000 ml. below Blue 2-Chev., '64 & -. Best o · Book. 644-4146 a fter 6 pm. fers, 327 \V , \Vilson, Sp.5, 9945 '11 T·BIRO. Radio, healer, autonialie, P .S., P.8., JO\\' IOY.' miles. f992DP.1A) S27"a3 THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 Harbor Bl\'tl. • Costa :l\1eSR. CM '66 CHEVEU..E Malibu SS, I ~t97::;,3c.,.LIN='co=LN7'"":;:To:::,::,.,,,...,c:::ou=pe. I '72 _'f-BIRD, Mini co11ct, low auto 396. air, full power, full power \\•ith sJ)f'cial m1., Ai\l/fl1 slem> tnpe. incl Pf\V, 68,tn:1··ramily mi. x:tras. Ulw miles. 644-0427 ~ull ~I', Landau. lop, l~hr 642-0010 or 54()....8211 Pri. Pty. S695. 714-644-029'2. M • k 9947 mt Mich. X rarhals. disc '65 IMPALA. Low mileage, •ver1c brkf;, SJ,750. 5:12-8478 AM/F?-1. $600 or make 1972 MAVERICK. P.fUST FQR~?.Si\LE, 19TI T-Bird, offer. 644-5800 ext 571. Aft SELL-BEST OFFER! loaded, 50,!XX) miles, ntlnt tipm, 67X>293. Call 556-1 747. cond. 546-7770 1 1972 CHEVY Suburban %. T. 9950 V 9974' fully equip. Very good cond. Mercury • ega Xlnt vacation vehicle. $3200. --1 4~ •72 l\tERCURY M a r q u i s '72 VEGA Sta. \\'agon . '?O GIEVY Caprice 2 dr. Air Brougham. Full p 0 we r, Aulo. tr~ns. new li~ ·~ dy• 897-5615· eves 16.816 m1le1> $a195 cond, p/disc b ra k es· ~~DD. • ' (774 EKTJ Bob !dlr.l645-5700 steering & \\'indo\\-s, radio & ... ~ heater. $1400. 846-3293. '72 :l\IBRCURY Monte go '64 CHEVELLE Malibu Sia . MXB, brown vinyl lop, gold, Wag., E."i:ccl cond .• PS/PB, auto, air, xlnt. cheap $2,000. '69 VOLVO 141, gd cond. Air, Good tires. $550. 5.36-3104 645-2482 or 645-2686 ele. SllOO. or best offer. '72 .CORONA 4 ~r, auto, 968--0184 evt.>S & wknds. "67 E l Camino, Gd. Oincl. •72 f.lERC M · C l radio, 101\' ml, orig owner, ,73 . \"'AGON A F Gas saver. 283 engine, auto, · arquis ~ ony 1971 VEGA Hatchback, 4 spd, IO\\• mileage. R&I{, side m1dgs, $1T:XI. 497-:mG aft 4. "72 HATCHBACK, A f C, AM/FM, 4 spd. radial tires, x:lnt cond. $1599. 8:\3--0700 $1!f.i0. Cd?.ol, 6T:Mi675 14J ·T • m-m fl\\'l' s!eering 494-5924 Prk, 9 JlllSS w_agon._ any , • stereo, factory air, auto ..!'..O:...=:'"-""-''-'-=::O= extras. Low mi.. Priced to Sell Idle items with a Dally Classlliecl Ad! Call 642-5678 Fiat •9725 71 TO\OT/I, i\1ark II. auto, transmission. $4795. 544-8222. Pilot Cla.s11ficd ad. 642-56711 1 sell. (7141 831-1218 ~~==I, excel. cond. Fiat 9725 Fiat 9725 Fjat 9n5 '71 TOYOTA Corona Mark II 4spd, good cond, nev,• tires. $129:> or best offer 4:14-8796 '72TOYOTA CELICA Cpe, 4 Spd. Factory Atr Cond. Blue. Vinyl Top, Mag Wheels, AMI FM Stereo Mul11plex (056KEMJ 52699 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA •11e1•••<~•l ·d 8•1 8\\\ Hl NfU•1c;.fOO tfACH CAt•tCOt.,. ere u ... J•>1 1t •{ •. •. ~3•-l7~· •116 17 • AQ\IA•tll, JUST ARRIVE~MMEDIATE DELIVERY We have a Large Selection of New FIATS and Late Model SPORT CARS '74 FIAT 124 Sedln -~-~i~-~~-~~ '74 FIAT 124 Sport Car '74 FIAT .£); .. C\ _ ,!~o 74 FIAT 124 Sport Spider The most modem Sports & Foreign Car Service Dept. In So, Calif. CUSTOM PAINTING & BODY SHOP Ollr faclllty ii equipped with the la-ellCtronlc 1utomotlve equipment Open Daily 7:30 am to 5:00 pm. Open Thursday 7:30 am to 9:00 pm. San (;Je1nenie l;apisirano VOL. 67, NO. 164, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES EDITION I • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN IA Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1974 TEN CENTS Group Flays New Zoning f or~~san Juan· Creek By WIUJAM SCllREIB~R OI' lt!e'Dllll., Pllel SI ... Orange · County supervisors acted quickly \YL'dncsday to apply a new layer or restrictive Oood plain zoning to scenic San Juan Creek in the south county. The action came despite protests from 111cmbers or the Capistrano Va 11 c .v llon:emcn's Association that the :roning \l'on't t-e tougn enough to prevent development of the scenic creek and its immediate surroundings. The so-called "FP·2" zone supervisors approved for the creek overlays existing zootng, which is primarily agricultural The FP·2 zone allows development in the critical flood area but only with a cooclitional use permit and hearing process. The aame zone has been laid over other scenic south oounty streams, including Aliso Creek, in an effort to bead off developers intent on building to the water line. una No Atataouneenaeiat Mediator Busy In Capo District A state mediator charged with seekirig a solution to the standoff between teachers and trustees in the Capistrano Uniried School District scurrit'd betweeri the tv.·o bargaining groups until 3 a.m. today. Bul if anythiog was settled, neither Three Arab Guerrillas Sla,y Trio TEL AVJV (AP) -Three Arab guerrillas wearing long hair and gaudy headbands to look like hippie-style foreign volunleer workers slipped across the Lebanese border today, and killed three women and wounded three men in an Israeli fanning settlement, officials said. (United Press lntemati:xial said there "·ere four terrorists). They said an off.duty paratrooper killed two of the terrorists, and the third blew himself up with his own explosives .. In Beirut, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine -General Command claimed responsibility for the attack and said the raid was "our reaction to the Nixon visit to the Arab world." But it said the attack wa s launched Crom "some base \Yithin Israeli territory" and not from Le banese soil. "That is how every Arab should receive Nixon, the chief imperialist in the world," said spokesman Abu! Abbas. He said the guerrilla organization was dctennined to "mar every attempt to beautify the ugly American face" and to (See TERRORISTS, !'age 2) Nixon's Western Agent Promoted , To Bureau in SF The Secret Service agent who for the past five years had been charged with leading security at the Western White House this week nssumed a major new post in the protective agency -heading up the San ,.,ranclsco field office. Kenneth Iacovoru. who came to San Clemente as the chief resident agent at the Presidential compound when it first was developed, will head a bureau in San 1'~rancisco made up or more than 300 agents whose duties include Investigating treasury "Violations and other mat1ers related ro currency and firearms. Despite moving from the major post in San Clemente, Iacovoni, 43, still declines to discws speciOcs of tus job at the Presidential compound. EarUer during his tour at San Clemente, however, the native or Lansing, Mich .. was a frequent speaker before civic groups. The agent also frt!<jue:ntly assumed the role of a tour guide for guests at conferences which arc held periodicJlly nt Ule Presidential estate. 1bose tours, however, ~'ere ocdercd stopped several months after the Watergate breakl.n. Group:t which used the comJ)OUnd for confer~s after tllf order were able to view the facilities at the Presidential office complot but not the Nixon estate. I side will discuss it in public. District spoke!lmen said the state mediator arriv~ at district headquarters at 6 p.m. after' a full day of work in other labor disputes and settled into a new round of negotiations. Dlstrlct Director of AdministraUve Services Joseph Wimer said the work was in1enae unlll tbe groups decided to .adjourn in the predawn hours. Members of the Capistrano UnUied Educalor9 As!Kx:iation planned to take another formal vote this afternoon to detennine if a repeat version of last Tuesday's walkout should be launched. The 5 p.m. session was one originally set to take place early today but postponed. About half the membership of the CUEA was not on hand Tuesday to take over classes at schools in lhe dislrict. (See MEDIATOR, Page 2t Councilmen Feel Clemente May Be Lighted Too Well . By PAMELA HALLAN 01 TM 0.111' Piiot fl11f Members of the San Juan Capislrano City Council. meeting for a budget study session Wednesday. hinted they might conduct studies to see if the city is too well lighted . "I think we have ex~ssive lighting, and in some places we should have no lig'bt at all," said Councilman Doug Nash. "What about the crime rate?" asked Councilman John Sweeney. "I think that's a cop out," answered Nash. Nash pointed out that during the energy crisis it was found that standards for lighilng public buildings were being used that had been developed 15 •years ago. One benchmark, he said, was that a building was well lit if a Xerox copy could be read in a hallway. He added that many hallways were subsequenty darkened because such a benchmark was absurd. "We see lights where there is no rationale for them," said Nash. He suggested putting In light standards, If (See LIGllTING, Page !) Court Denies R einecke Bid WASllJNGTON CUPI\ -The U.S. Court of Appeals has turned down California Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke's request that hi:s trial on perjury charges be moved to !he West Coast. Reinecke's appca.I, whlch was denied Wednesday, was from a ruling by U.S. Di.strk-t Judge Barrington Parker. Reinecke's Washington lawyers Indicated they woukl not CAf'T)' the apptal to th< U.S. SuP"""• Court. The Republican official has ~ indicted Oil charges that hf! lied before the Senate J u d I c I a r y Committee about con~lon!I hi!: had wllh fonncr Attorney General John Mltcbcll. In the case of San Juan Creek, the new overlay zone covers about 17 miles of the waterway from· · the bqundary o f Cleveland National Forest near San Juan Hot Springs to the OCi!an near Dana Harbor. Jt doesn't cover the stretch of creek !hat nms through the 'city of San Juan Capistrano, which is con!>idering an even tighter wning restriclion. It also excludes a short stretch or creek along Ortega High·way about five • miles inland from the city that is currently being mined for sand and gravel. Carl Nelson of the county planning department said the gravel v.·orks arc considered a legal non-conforming use . The chief protests over the FP·2 zoning errort came from horseman's association president Joe Cumia. He told supervisors most of the area's II stables are on leased land in the flood plain area. ''The FP·2 zoning doesn't prohibit • development of the creek," Cumia said. ·'With the FP·2 zoning, the ov.•ners of the land will sell to developers. the land will be developed right do\vn to the creekbed and the stables v.·ill be out." CumiJ also questioned \\'ho would determine the restriction s on de\'elopinent when builders t'Ome for their conditional use permits. Cumia said horsemen represent a large percentage of the Capistrano Valley population. One member of his group es timated there arc at least 2,000 horsc.s in the area. Supervisors "·ere lold by the horsemen that the ·coun1y should consider the san1e zoning being studied ,by San Juan Capistrano -a sq-called ''FBI'' zone that would outlaw any type or development in the flood plain area. But board members v.•ere told by Nelson th.at the F'P·I zone "'ould probably amount to inverse condemnation of !See· ZONING, Page ~) o ice ire om e ' Uil'I Tti..ltolt ENTHUSIASTIC CROWDS WITH ARMS OUTRAISED CHEER AT PRESIDENTS NIXON, SADAT Two Leaders Ride From Cairo to Alexandria in Open Ra ilroad Car as Egyptians Hail Pair Arabs Turn Out for Nixon .~illions Clieer President on Train to Alexandria By HELEN THOMAS ALEXANDRIA, Egypt (UPI) Millions Of-Egyptiails, travc.ling by camel. donkey, oxcart and foot. left their work in the fields to honor President Nixon as a new friend and peacemaker on a campaign-stype train ride through the Nile Valley. Nixon ·described hi n1 s e If as "overwhelmed" by !he massive show of esteem for tiim and First Lady Pat Nixon. It was "a magnificent reception.'' Nixon told newsmen on the train when asked his reaction to the throngs that gathered ·along the 130 miles of tracks that carried him and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat from Cairo lo the Mediterranean port of Alexandria. Fro••• Los Atageles Nixon 's press secretary, Ronald L. Ziegler, estimated that 31h mHllon persons saw Nixon during the 3 ~·hour ride from Cairo to Alexandria's Ras El 1'1n Palace where the Nixons will stay during their overnight stay. Egyptian security guards gave a similar crowd estim3tc lo Hermann --·---- BELLY DANCER OPENS NIXON'S EYES. Story, Page 4 Eilts, U.S. Ambassador to Egypt. Nixon and Sadat rode side-by-side on the lrain's observation platform. Nixon expected crowds but began swinging his head in disbelief as the dimensions of the crowd and its emotions gripped him. The ,two presidents used the snail- paced ride to discuss Ge n e v a Panel Okays New Trains For San Diego 's Amtrak A stale legislative measure aimed adding two new traiM each .... ·ay on the Amtrak run between-San Diego and l...(IS Angeles has passed .a key committee in Sacramento. The Senate Public Utilities and Corporations Committee h.as approved a bill introduced by Sen. James P.iills fO- San Diego) calling for the State Department of TrAMportation to conduct a study to determine the feasibility of lhe addition of the new passenger trains. Mills told tile committee. at .sessions llm week that Lile COtTldor is the n1ost popular one for rnll passengers In Callfornla and the addition or two new trains each way would be balled by the public, Amtrak presently runs si1 trains I\ day between the two ma jor cammunitles and I recently restored p<mse.ngcr rail service to the once abandoned depo'l in San Juan Capistrano. Besides the order of a sl&te feasibility study, Mills' Senate Bill ~7 ,_·ould order the Department or Transportation lo develop a multi-county agreement to rt>quest Amtr<ik to add the additional lf11iM. The state's role in the Amtrak service is relatively minor, because lhe federally controlled . system is regulatea by officials in tti.e nation's capital. Ma jor Change, often even have to be apProved by Congress, spokesmen for Amtrak have said. Now tbat they ht\'C cleared the !ienatc. co1nmlttec, bolh elf!ments In the Mills lcglslailon will go on to the full Senate for a rlnnl vote. negotiations to reach a permanent peace in the Mideast. They told newsmen they agreed Arab leaders should hold what Sadat called a "little swnmit" before meeting with Jsrael. "Before going to a summit conference, a number of leaders representing different points of vie\\' should have bilateral discussions," Ni xon said. l.n response to questions, he said this need not apply to Israel. Everywhere along the train route there were signs -0f the changing Egyptian·U.S. relations that had been hostile for nearly two dt'Cades until Secretary ol State Henry A. Kissinger began his peace missions six mooths ago that set the stage for Nixon 's five-nation tour. Kissinger, who since hls resignation threat Tuesday in Austria has stayed in the background so that Nixon might reap the honors, rece ived a separate burst of appl aust! when he got off the lrain in Alexandria. (Related story Page 4J At ooc point along the route, at Kafr el Zayat. ooe of UlC thousands of children who watched the train pass, 7-year-0ld Sahar i\:Johammad, said she had never actually heard ol Nixon. Askt'd If she bad heard of the United States. she replied, "Yes, they are the war people." "No, no, no ." her mother F'at 'hia hastily corrected. "Now we are friends." At Tantli. about halfway between Cairo and Alexandria. trucks with loudspeakers explained to the crowds that the United States is now Egyp("s friend and that th is i~ the reason Nixon·s pictures are everywhere. •·we gre<!t ~fr. Nixon with lo\'e. appreciation and fe.llow!ilip," the sound truck told the crowds. And everywhere were the cha nts of "Nix~ ... Nix-on" thal ~metimes even dro.,.,•ned out the noise or the train. "I've nt'!ver sefn people sO excited and emotional." said a White House ofricial aboard th e train. "This is for a president who has run Into hostile placards in the U.S .. " referring to Nixon's impeschment troubles over Ylatergate back home. About 30,000 policemen were turnl'd out • (Ste \\'El..COMt:, J'"ge ZI \ J Am1exHit In Second Such Attacl\: By JACK CHAPPELL 01 Hie 0.111 Pit.I ll•lf A firebomb v.·as thrown at the Laguna Beach Police Depart.meat annex today in the second such arson attack in the Art Colony in five days. The annex which houses t h c department's detective force ~'as no~ seriously damaged. The l\to1otov cocktail used in the incident hit a brick wall and fell on a concrete loading area. Police U . Al 01.soo speculated the arsonist "''as attempt.i,g to hit an open window in the building. . The annex also houses the city recreation department. Over the weekend, a. small cafe belonging to the wife or a police detective was firebombed doing an estimated $8,000 lo $10,000 damage to the interior. Authorities are unsure of motives in the two attacks. although Del. Alex Jimenez has said the torching or his wife 's ca.le may have been in retaliation for past arrests, or investigations he has conducted as a police officer. The firebornbmg of the police annex took place at about 3: 15 a.m. today. Lt. Olson sakl a beer bottle fiUed with gasoline and fused with a tom strip of t.ov,.el was used as the l\1olotov cocktail. The person or persons respoosible for the bombing threw the de-vice at the rear of the annex, 570 Glenneyre St. There a loading dock used in building 's former days as a post office facility was hit by the flaming bomb. U . Olson said the building was scorched by the gasoline-fed fire, but no real damage was done. A Catalina Street resKlait whose home backed up to the. annex: l"f!ported the fire to the Laguna Beach Fire Department. Wife's Body Found LOS ANGELES (AP) - A 38-year-old machinist V.'<!S booked Wednesday for investigation of the mW"der in the death of his wife, whose nude body was found under their south Los Angeles home, police said. Judge Payne was aJTested at his home arter neighbors reported seeing him washing dov.-1l his bloody automobile, authorities said. Orange C.ut Weather Night and morning kl\Y cloudi· ness with hazy afternoon sunshine Friday, according to lhe weather service. Highs ranging from 66 at the beaches to 76 inland. Lows t~ night 56-62. INSIDE TOD/\}' Newlyweds act lis though the11 are typical uoun a coup.Le just slarttng ont -b1tt tlltll are tiof. Bride was born itt 1953 without !lrms or legs. StorJI, Page JS. - LM.a.'f'll II C1t11tn11t S, 1t CltH.lllH .... t.MkJ H tro1-n1 u Deri' Mttktt 11 l:dlftrltl '"' •. , Cnh!T111-I 11 l"t-1'·11 HT Glrfntt 11 H•rt-H r '"" 1.tlttkn J1 MtM' 'trN • \ I ~'"' 1' "'"'llwol l'll!Mh It Nliilfl.t ~ t :>r.t11tt• C•nt'I IL 11. t• ''"'It Ptrlw M ~l"fll JI.JI llwc• ,,_.,_.... -.Jt , .. ..,1,i.11 It rrt.11tn n Wttlftt• 4 Ntmt1t'i Newt U<9 Nt•I• N-• 4 . ' • l \ One of Avco Tr acts Get s By CANDACE PEARSON OI "" D•ll., ,.1101 Stall A U:ls Angeles Superior Coort judge has said he <A1ill exe.n1pt only oiie of Avco Comn1unlty Developers' two Laguna Niguel tracls fl'Qm coastal cornnli!sion jurisdiction. Judge David Eagleson issued a ''n1emorandum of intended decision,'' not yet a formal ruling, oo tracts 7885 and 71711. The judge said he plans to rule that Avco has a right to finish V.'Ork on tract 7885 v.·ithout gettillg a permit from the coastal commissions created b y Proposition 20. But the judge said that tract 7479, an' oceanside parcel above Salt Creek Beach, doesn't quali(y for an exemption from the new Jaw pas.wd in November, 1972, The "intended" ruling, expected lo be made final in about a month, Ls sure to inspire further court appeals. The State Attorney Generars office had argued that Avco should get permits lo continue work on both tracts. Judge Eagle90n's decision stemmed from a lawsuit filed by Avco which claimed that it had a "vested right" to complete both tracts without coastal approval. Tract 7885 is only partially \Vithin the coastal commission jurisdiction, which runs 1,000 yards inland from the mean hlgh tide line. On the 27...acre portion within the coastal zone inland of Pacific Coast ffjghway at Crov;TI Valley Parkway, Avco plans 390 condomini ums and 10 holes of an 18 hole golf course. J udge Eagleson said the golf course is a major part of the tract, which will total 2.000 un its. and that Avco had obtained a grading permit. for it. The judge said in this case a grading permit was equivalent to a building , pennit and added that he felt the rest of the project had been planned arowid the course and should be exempted.'' Don Januta. who argued the case for the attorney general's office, said today he disagrees with that part of the judge's intended ruling. Judge Eagleson also said that Avco hadn't received the necessary fina l government approvals of its plans for tract 7479 before the coastal act was passed. Avco's plans for tract 7479, which Hes oceanside of Pacific Coast Highway ~ar Crown Valley Parkway, have changed se\'eral times. Originally planned fo r 1,690 units, the tract now ls proposed to include 900 c;ondominiums on 41 acres, along with some public parkland. "Our basic argwnent on bot h tracts was tha t the government approvals which were issued to Avco don't go beyond subdivision and grading of the land." Januta said. "They never got any building permits or put any structures on the land. "'Ibey (Avro) wanted approval for structures never approved by any other governmental agency," Januta con- tended, calling that ··a nove! theory." Januta wouldn't say whether the judge's action on tract 7885 would be appealed. He said that decision is up to the State Coastal Zone Conservation Commission. Raymood Peloso, Avco gen era I manager, couldn't be reached for comment on what his company's next legal step might be. While arguing the exemptions In the courts, Avco has been proceeding through the commissions on its permit requests. The South C.oast regional commission June 3 approv~ a construction pennit for tract 7885 but turned down a permit req uested for Avco's oceanside plans. Environmental groups have since appea led the permit approval of tract 7885 to the state coastal commission. Avco's claim for $29 million in damages because the state allegedly denied it the right to use its land wasn't involved in lhis lawsuit. It was fi led as a claim against the state. 01.t.MIH co4· sc l11J!flQ!tiIJ .,,.. °""" (;or,JI o..iv Pll(ll, .... ~ -• ~ i.....cl 1'-N-1·""-. 19 °""""""' 0y "'9 ~ (.(olSI Pull#"''"~~ ~I·---P<Jl>I°'"'""· "°O!>OaY !llrOUg~ '"Ill~. loo Coct. ~ M-. N"'llQtl kK~. -•11910" 9t<M:~ ll'nVolllfY. l•ll""I 8rC."-IM.-.J~ I"" $tfl a.-tltO/~" ~" Cle><-A ...._ _.. ""~"'" ,, llUlll-s..t"""""'-s ..... °"'fl· '"'" or·~•1>11I -~ p11.., ~ M 330 w..-0.,$!-•. Colll ~Ct~.,,.,,... ~Zfi .... Robw!N. Weed --- Ootm. H. loo\ Ridod P. Ndll /ou,.1.rw ~f'O EOl!Oll S• Clii:it"• 0Hk1 JDS Nc:t*I ei c~ Reot Otlwotfktt . <:qi;111.1 ... ).J)Wftl Illy SI'"' N.,_i fHIC!l. .\W N-1 0oult'\latd ~""'-Oii e.wo uer! a..c~ BOu....,. U,Uftl ileaocto•f?1,Qtl!li A- T•kph-17141142·4321 Cle1•lfl1d A"""9itiftt 142·$11t s... c1.-. J.11 o. ,.,.,,.....&: Tile,._. 4f2·44JO ~~t 1914 ()""" <:obt """""'"""' °""" ,.,_. lftl """'l•IO'-"'''""~-OIWINl!w •• ~ ... -..,.. ..., .. ~ ... y 119 ~ .. ~~ '"~ol_..,. __ ~-11>n1 -• ...., ., C,,.• "'"'-C...frOI'-'~ "AA(llM")ft lit'~''"' ll oo •••o•"!\ty. Ill' ,,.., h«J"""""" .,..,..'*'"""""''"'OD"'°"',,,..' ~\ , Th11rsday, Junt lJ , l'J74 Up, Up, Away W liolescrle Prices Rise in May · WASHINGTON (AP) -Despite !ailing !arm and food prices. widespread increases on a broad range o! industrial products pushed wholesale prices up sharply again in May, the government shid to- day. I The Labor Oepart1nent reported that wholesale prices rose a sensonalJy adjusted 1.3 percent last 1nonth, about the sa111e as the rates in l\1arch and April but not as much as in the Oeceinber·Fe~ ruary period. Unadj usted, the inc rease la.st montb was l.S percent. Prices !or far1n products. processecl foods and feeds fell 2.2 percent in !\lay. lhe third consecutive monthly decline. Industrial commodities were up 2.7 percenL 1CQnsumer finished goods rose six-tenths of 1 percent. It seen1s to promise for consumers a continuation of double- digit inflation !or at least the next few months since hi gher whole- sale prices usually are quickJy reflected at the retail level. liowever, the declines in wholesale food price$ freq uently is not passed on to consumers in ful l as middlemen seek to retain profits. • Ro111a11tie Interest .. San Diego Girl Fli~s To Joi11 P1·i11ce Charles LONDON (AP) -The blonde daughter of an American admiral emerged today in the London press as the latest ro mantic interest of Europe's mosf eligible bachelor, Prince Charles, future king of England. Miss Laura Jo Watkins. 20, daughter of Rear Adm. J ames ".Va!kins of San Diego flew to London at the invitation of the prince and has caused ~ minor sensation in British newspapers, eager chroniclers of the prince's love life. Charles, 25, a lieulenant in the Roya l Navy, met Miss Watkins last March when his ship, the frigate HMS Jupiter, put in at san Diego on a training voyage to the Americas. "My husband was the official guest at the party to welcome Prince Charles and his ship," the Daily Mail quoted Miss \Vatkins' mother as saying in San Diego. "But he couldn't make it and asked if our daugh ters, Laura Jo and Susan, could go instead. They. did." The prince, elder son of Queen Elizabeth II, decided to renew the acquaintance alter he was invited by 1\merican ambassador Walter Anncnberg to attend a farewell party tonight marking the end of An··-·1berg's five- year stay in London. The prince was asked if he wanted to invite anyooe special and selected Miss Watkins, a U.S. From Page l UGHTING ... !hey might someday be needed, but not lighting them until lhat time. "We can look at lights and see if they are providing a service. and if not, turn them off," said Public Work Director BiU A.1urpby , "Sometimes we get lighting bills and pay them and don't know what we're paying for." He explained that the city is charged for the nwnber of streetlights, even if they're not functioning, because the city is charged for maintaining the pole as well as the energy in some parts of the city, ~rge Madsen, city engineer, said he didn't know if the elimination of some lights woulc.1 really be a savings because a person wolld have to spend time accounling for each light. He also brought up the crime and safety factor. "The subdivision ordinan ce specifies slandards for lighting," said Madsen. "It would be interesting to see the relationship between lighting, crime and accidents .'' Nash said he is not suggesting that lights be turned off at key intersections, but only where, after study, they are deemed unnecessary. During previous meetings, members of the city council have discussed reducing the number of street lights required in a subdivision l'IS a means of providing a "rural atmosphere." A formal study has oo t yet been authorized. From Page 1 MEDIATOR. • • Instead , the absentees devoted the day to picketing. phon e campaigns and othe r means or informing the public or their di"8tisfactioo with the district's last public o£fer of an eight percent increase in v.·ages. Wimer said Joday that any change whlch may have emerged from the mediation process early today would not be ratified until Monday ,1rhen trustees have scheduled a regular action meeting. Nearly two weeks ago trustees agreed to take a v<Ae at this next sess ion on the final eight percent offer. Te.acher representatives cried foul and accused the board of circumventing official negotiations. 1be mediator, repe~ting caurornia Conciliatory Services, was not identified by district aides this morning. "The guy literally worked bis tall off, because h~ had to move from one room to the other all night long," Wimer said. 'Mte arbitrator, brought In at the request of trustees and with the accord of the teacher groups, was saddled with the talk or determining If there was any latitude left in the disputes. Board members sitting as a eo1nmittee spent the night in one offlc:t, while members of I.he fonnal bargnln/ng tt'!ams from both sides sat In another. "111e mediator waJ Ulerally the 10- between," Wimer snld. embassy spokesman said. Because of a period ol royal mourning over the deat h Monday or the Duke of Gloucester, the queen's uncle, Prince Charles had to cancel his appearance at the ambassador's party. However, it was likely he and Miss \Vatkins V.'ould meet priva tely. The mourning continues until Friday evening. "We received a letter from T\frs. Annenberg asking her over and, of course, we agreed ," "trs. Watkins was quoted as saying. "She left at the weekend and is due back at school at the end of the month. Her father paid the fa re." Miss Watkins spent a year in college, and traveled through Europe before settling into a O'.l4.l.?'Se at a San Diego business school. She plans to beoome a legal secretary, After their initial meeting March 16 at an exclusive yacht club in the C.oronado Island area of San Diego, the T\1ail said, Prince Charles invited Miss Watkins tc lunch before his ship sailed. The paper said they have corresponded since. "Jt is a complete surprise to us that Prince Charles is interested in Laura Jo," Mrs. Watkins was quoted in discounting any reports of romance. "\Ve are terribly flattered, but surely he must have lots of English girl friends.'' An American Embassy spokesman also discounted any speculation of a budding romance. "She's here as a private guest of ambassador Annenberg," he said. "She's here to go to the party, period.'' From Page l ZONING ..• priVate land by the county. Most of the land in the new nood zone is owned by Rancho Mission Viejo (the O'Neill properties) and the county llsel! (Starr-Viejo Regional Park). Supervisor Ralph Clark told the horsemen the.FP·2 zone makes it clear that hearings 'viii take place before any developing is approved or denied . "Development is simply not pennitted without the bearing," Clark said. "Th.is overlay zooe maintains the status quo that now exists." Nelson said the only permitted uses in the Oood zone consist ol agricultw-e (with the exception of orchards), grazing, flood control chaMels, game preserves, roads and bridges. tfe said the idea of impo.sing the new zone is to force prospective developers to take the flood potential ol the creek into account and make extensive design provisions for it. After the meeting, Supervisor Ralph Diedrich was questioned about the application of the new zone to future sand and gravel excavation in the Starr- Viejo Park, a concept he strongly favors . Normally, the county isn't subject to its own planning and zooing restrictions but Diedrich said in the case of gravel mining, it would be a different story. "We would be the landowners but Ute gravel rights v;ould be leased OUI," he said. "That Jessee would have to go through the entire hearing process." The gravel deposits Diedrich is interested in exploiting lie within the San Juan Creek bed on park Jand across Ortega Highway fro1n the main park area. San Clen1ente Sa fety Group Sets Seminar F'ive members of the San Clemente. Public Safety Employes Association will launch what may become a monthly series of public information seminars on · the role ot police 1n the community nesxt Wednesday at the Com munity Clu bhouse. Association spokesman Ardon saunders said lhe session has been called to tamltlarlzc tOO general public with the basic !unctions"of the depart.ment and to allow open question-and·ans~·er !ICSSions wi th citizens. No admls,.,fon llo111 be charged and citizens at the 1 p.m. event will have a chan~ to view slides and films which Ulustrate th<' role of law enforcement Sporooring mem~n of the event ~re rank·and-fi le members of the police department who >A'ill atll'od a nd participate on their off-duly time+ saunders snid. ,, CofCChief Backs City Beaµty Plan I . Tile presidttnt of San Clemente's Chan1ber of Con1merce quietly agreed this \veek u•ith the impressions of Planning Colnntissioncr !\!\!\ J\1organ that the downto\m area C'Ould stand sonic major neW beautificntion efforts. Dr. Robert Beasley told f c 11 o w chamber directors Tuesday lhut he intended to :igret u·ith the planning commissioner who drew the ire of many downto"·n businessmen for his shar11 criticism of the appearances of the city's business section in general. J\1organ's comments coming at the end of a wearisome session of t h c commission spurred critics to demand his removal by cit.Y council men. The cootroversy since has waned. But Beasley said the obv:ious problems in the commercial sections of the city are s!ill alive. "I tend to agree thl'lt the nrea could stand some major changes and that the overall impression of the c i t y commerica\ area is not as good as it coul d be," he said. "To cite an example;• Dr. Densley said. "the city several years ago \\'Cnt to great expense to install palm trees in wells along the sidewalks of El Camino Real. Ever si nce some businessmen nearby ha ve allowed the wells to fiU with trash and weeds. many of them never lifting a hand to c.lean them up. "fn other cases. they allow the sidewalks to deteriorate and ln a lot of areas you'll find a good stretch and then a bad one," he added. Beasley conceded that M o r g a n · s comments ca used some rufOed feathers, but the commissioner's impressions were on the whole corroborated by fact. The chamber official's comments came at the tail end of a co"mmittee report from Director William Eaton, whose Environmental C.ommittee · of t h e chamber plans to launch a major facelift campaign at the city's -pier entrance. Eaton told fellow dU'ectors that his group recen tly received promises from Mayor Thomas O'Kcefe and City Manager , Kenneth Carr of city e q u ipment , materials aod even live plan!s for a project whi ch would rely strictly on volunteer labor. Eaton said that much could be done in the way of interim improvements of the pier entance while an application for state approvals is pending for a total redevelopment of the portal. State permission is' needed before the city could fill the tunnel entrance and replace it with safety gates and a crossing directly over the Santa Fe tracks. "The place always seems to have trash lining the fences , paint that is chipping and areas that just need a strong cleaning and beautifying," Ea too said. · The group soon will launch a formal proposal for volunteers to come forth in the conununity for a concentrated cleanup effort. Specific details of the project should probably be worked out and publicly announced within a few weeks, Eaton said. In the meantime. city officials still are waiting for the California Public Utilities Commission to schedule public hearings OQ the proposal to completely redo the entrance. Applications were sent months ago for a hearing, but thus far the agency in charge or i:njects whe re raih1·ays are involved has yet to respond. i\'late Held in Death REDWOOD CITY (A P) -A 53-year· old man was booked for investigation of the throat-slashing murder of his wi fe early today. San Mateo C o u n t. Y authorities sakl. Sheriff's inspector Rudy Si mpson said Elmer: Tunnisen was booked in connection with the slaying of his wife Elsie, 56, at the apartment building which he manages here. 500 W. COAST HWY. HEWN>IT IEACH l'HOHE 642-7076 S¥ ole11 f 'o1111 ta i rt l .. ; UPI Ttle~hO!O This valuable Roman fo untain. earmarked for Newport Beach's f..Iarriott Hotel. is in the hold o! an ocean liner bound for Japan. Interpol, the international police agency. hopes to hea d the ship off and recover the fountain. 1\ ware- house janitor has been charged with the I.heft. '1-lap[JY Ho oker' Movie Filling ·; Court I-lou ses LOS ANGELES (UPI) -lf It's any comfort to "The Happy I-looker," her film biography is packing then1 in :it the courtroom of U.S. District Judge A. Andre11• •lauk. Nine persons are· on trial on charges of interstate transportation of an allegedly obscene movie, "The Life And Times of Xaviera Hollander." The movie is supposedly based on experiences of l\1iss l~oUandcr. a form er prosti tute who wrote "The H~py Hooker"' and other books and is now a columnist for a men's magazlnc, dispensing advice to the sexwom. The judge held a screening or the movie Wednesday to detenn ine whether ii should be accepted as evidence and shov;n to the jury. He had to interrupt the afternoon showing. as the court grew progressively more crowded, to order employcs not assigned to his coun to go back to their jobs. Clemente Set s Filni Festival Stud ents at San Clemente High School \viii sponsor a special screening of six professionally produced underwater film s Friday evening in the Triton Little ~ter. Besides the undcrwat~r film festiavl. the schedule includes displa,ys of diving gear starting al 6 p.m. (the filn1s begin at 7:30) and a raffle of new diving gear. Tickets at $1.50 per person are available at South OJast area diving shops as well as the door at the evening production. Films will include works of George Greene, Bill McDonald, Jack J\clcKenney, Luis Nackos, Dr. Jim Rakowski and Larry 'Ibompson. All are professional filmmakers, spokesmen for the fund· raising event said. -·- • I ' F rom Page 1 WELCOME ... fur $CCW'itY purposes along the train route . carrying automatic wca1x:ins. Jlellcopter:1 fol.lowed Nlx<N1's n1ototcac.le throug11 the streets or Alexandrk1. Security measures ar cxpectC(l to lncrtase as Nixon continues hia )OOmey through the Mideast. especially 111 view or an Arab guerrilla attuck today lll the lsr3ell sclUcrn1.'f1t of Shamir. NiJ1on 11.nd his wife vdll spend the night at Ras el Tin Palace, from where King F'urouk v;·cnt into CJ1ilc in 1952. tx>fore rcturnlng to Cairo Friday for a visit to lhe Pyramids. lie~ \vill ~l!'pUrl Friday for Saudi Arahia and then go to Syri.a, Is.r<1cl and Jordan. "LOug live Niron!" t1ho11tc<l the crov;·d as Nixon left ,'lthc Cairo stalion. lfe responded witl:t):nil es, waves and the V sign Nixon is~ known for -arms hlgh ·over his head, two flf"lgCl'S sp1·cad uµ<1rt. All along th e ttain route. wo1·kcrs left !he fitlds to w<ilch the b·ain. ~wn~n, usually woltiJ18-iu the bocxground ll\.>eause of T\foelen1 custorn, u·erc up rroot, holding up their children. "I n1ade arrangements for this ispcciul trip to pass by this place where l L'OUld sec them," said Abdul Hak Ahlned, 36, \VhO led a string Of four camels to a Spot \vhere the 1.rllln passed. "l want to go to l\'lecca n1ost of all but I want to be here, too." A line of horses tiankcted with An1erican and Egyptian flags u'as struns: out along one section of track. "It's unbeliev11blc." .Ziegler said. "My God, H's unbelievable." Nixon, wh-0 was given a gold li!eUme pass to the railroad said he enjoyed the train trip very 1nuch. or the reception he received he said: ·'After 25 years -or · miSunderst8ndiilg i1nd seve n years or bi tter rnisunderstanding, Egyptian-American friendship has a natural frnmdation and we're building on it.'' As overwhelming as the size of the cro wd, Nixon said, was its enthusias1n and respeet for Sadat. The reception Egypt has accorded the American leader staggered t h e pr<'Sidential party. An estimated two million persons swarn1ed into the sttccts of Gairo Wednesday to welccme him. Nixon, in a toast Wednesday night at a dinner Sadat gave. for him, said : "I can think or no day that will stay n10re in our 1ncnlQr)'." From Page I TERRORI STS • • negotiate with Israel only through bullets and suicide operations . Nixon traveled to Alexandria, Egypt today. and the Arab com mando assault came three days before his visit to Israel. It brought Ute number of terrorist vietims' in Israel to 49, including 31 children, in two months. Sem iofficial LebanE'Jle sources in ~irut said l!o·aeli border artillery pounded a south Lebanese vil lage in an apparent reprisal for the raid. The village of Eblcs Saki, five miles north of the Israeli border. came under <1 ··heavy .artillery barrage as of midday and the bombardment continued without let up well into the afternoon," the sources said ... The te rrorists attacked the little Israeli fa rming settlement of Shamir beltiw the foothills of the Golan Heights. One of the women killed in today's raid was a volunteer from New Zealand, said residents of Sha.mir, who kept her identity secret until her family was notified. The two other victims were fro1n the settlement. The gunmen were armed w i t h submahcine gwis, grenades, o t h e r explosives and Palestinian guerrilla leaOcts. A spokesn1an did not disclOSe details of the lea.nets but said they showed the terrorists "came here to murder and that's all -they did not intend to take hostages." The Arab commando..'5 gunned down the women inside a honey factory, about 200 yards from the ~pparent terrorist target -a communal dining hall where some of the 470 residents and foreign volunteers v.•crc eating breakfast, the SJXJkesman l)aid . IN HfWP'ORTP'RODUCE VILLI.GE 160 I NEWPORT ILVD. COSTA MESA 642·9004 CONYIENEHT rARIUHG IH I OTH LOCATIONS c.., ... E1r lre• W•d., JU~I lt WINE features BY POPULAR DEMAND, a repeat of a sellout AfMolt •H wi1trt lo•...., w. O'Wwt of tfM. ,.._ "SOUVlltAIH"_,. of Ctiliforfllirl1• .,.aty ........ •ln+Mn- W how ••ny .e _.... fflet ffMs ~tr of Mt',..,.... .... ~' wi... _.., onoffltr br•sd "Lo• .tJ:sit!K"? We at WtHEMAH 'S do. Ml "°"" pa• Hsi• ifl'fom4rtkle °" .. y-. ""'"'• ,. ............ .ew 'I" .,_.. bow -Tht ..... ty of ttlfs linMf' •l'Owtt brMd It _.,....., •• , Hit ptic.t 1.s •sol Try It tt.lt Wttktl!d! Yo. WOft't "'di••p ..... cl • ' I For Aoa sl$, S1c11k5, Slows. Duck. Ground S1rlo1n Hamourgcr. VC316r P~111la1 Try •. , 'lOS AM(Gos·· ZINFANDEl For Cheese 01!.hes. Chlcll.(ln. Crab. E&eargot. Ham. Seafood or Omelf!ttes. Try ·10s AMJGos·· CHENIN BLANS • $198 21.lt,... c ... I ' I • I ' l • \ ' .. • • r ' ,. .. v .-... -' . • • ,f • • "" " . : . . 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Id 111 II' fl " ..... •r'•'K•v .... ~ID or ' • ~-~' I " 1• t•o·•~I Olllrlll\lllon "rtl ~ ,.,,..,. fH...0 ( .. ti " .. '" 111, o• '" of • ••oc-•s R ,,_ ,, •• e"~'~n,•r1..., tW ~I~' 1' !Qrtl~ •••nlP'Q\ ' 1 ·~~ o.tr• ~'"'~, ,,. ....... w•r''"'" ,_ ,_ ' ~( ~.. "'"' lj\IJe •1 "'•O •' ~"""""'It-• , ...... -- • l . . . . . . . . . ~ . . .. . . . . . . .. . . . . ... . . . . ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' .... :J2 DAIL V PILOT ' TONI GHT'S 1'\7 1-IIGHLI GHT S Kt!J O 7:30 -" ol as a Stranger." Robel'l ~1ilc hun1 and Olivia de lavillancl star in this dran1a of '" inan 's struggle t becon1c a doctor. Frank Sln;i lra and Broderick ·a.wford arc f~aturcd. \\•l lh Lee ~'lurvl rl in a 1ninor ·ole. ABC' O 8:00 -1' e Shen · yang .\crob<1Hc 'J'roupc. A cultural CX('h nge progratn fro111 ('hina cnt('l'\ains in this sperinL fi11ncd at 'the Kennedy (\~utcr for !he Perforn1ing Arts in \Vashington. CRS t) !1:00 -··\Vho's .!-\fraid of \'irginia \roolr~·· F:du•ard 1\!IJec's n1astcrpicce fathfutly rc- ('rea1cd on rilnl \\'illi Elizabeth 1·a~lor ancl San<l ,v !Jenni-; gi\'ing their Oscar performances. al ong u•ith IUthard Burton :i nd Geor ge Segal. TV DAILY LOG Thur sday Evening JUN£ 13 &00 000 a rn EV ffiNe•J \3 10 17 l ll 6 t.;to.._a )Ne .. 1 O 8110•n1;i 6 llOJ:ill'J Htrof' Q Btvtily 1111!~11!1~1 m M•111on; lmpo1>1~le @ Mod Squi~ Ul [I Pob1t Conul11 16 Mo,.e. (2h•) "lon1ah1 w, Sino;'" jm.'I t.J -\,, d ll.,•11 A'<O• 8 • _h 'I ffi HOdi:tl"!dl:t l~d~r {!l Spttd Ritt• & JO 111 Dt1lri'$ Ch~•c• 0 Oitk V;in Ot~• 10 Mt!• Crilhn S~o"' 17 J Ho2•n'1 HtrHI ~Zoom! !ht P1ontt" V111•ndo ff) l•lllt R1sc1l1 1 00 0 l OO EDCDNr1u 0 Bo'll lm2 lor Dolli•! 6 Mov1r: (2ht) "Co lo• 81okt" (l''ml ~J l'.rn J1 ~101011 l~llf 7·JO O Orso" Wtllts Grr11 M,11e1it1. lR1 · C:•Pld•O RG;tr1 · A dt ama abvut • 1t!ormrd 1t• P'•dlt .. no l.ttom~; • t ~ ''~ v en1•~ootd 1n 1 .. t~ ot S:JO m Meiw C11lhn Siio• CE> Ht •s/St1ot11 9:00 f) ( 20 ~· ) 8 CBS lhu11d11 M11- v11: (21/:hr) "Who'! A!rlld ot vu. 2lni1 Woolll" (RJ {di~) '66-l hld t e!h IJ)IO!. RH:hard Bunon. Geo11:e Set~I. ~anay Oennis. A thurn11£hly 1!1pre111n~ him about an t mb•lttrtd r1,uple 1he•1 b1tte1 ~nd brui~1n~ •t• 1 ,1 b"1bs and hn•ll1 d n1~)1! ~I t.•rd 10"'~ ~nd de>tru.:t •• e >il"•lu~I c ·nn•I'• •~m 0 13 6 10 m l:on11dr 'Ontt t:c•e lo< J~tJ {Ill ,;.1.et hon1.de, 11 ,,,t·~~""l the unatothcroud dJP '"' tJ rdOJd·n~~ • .J!!ends o r·1t~ ~""0 s 1etord1ng ~t!~•on dunn: "'"''h tne g~•1>"11 II tltt!IOCU!fd I .a1 Carne ~u·~t1 . 111 Thr 8old Ont1 O 17 13 CD 11.une fb "Th~ Gun 1•1·.i (R~ A man, bthtY•O~ ht " 1 .. ng on bouo-..rd timt 1topara.1P• c~.ne s htt •• ,,,,11 01 h•1 ~"" A, d'<"' f>une and Killht1me l'lood"'·'• I olt)l m W1r l Pt1ct !kl Atomp1n'"'' hplnt1t TV Hou1 9:30 m Ht '"i No~ht dt C1I• 011m1 JIJ:OO 0 1J t1 '10 ED Comed1w o1ld Pioil> J~'~'f i.:uop;r, ll•rba1a /eldon ~nd r~.p;e; Ru>>til 1nt1<·duce con-,c <'l•ans at woi ll '"the U S and G1tdl Sr.I Jon om mNe•i 0 IJ l C[' Slrttb ot Sin f!JO· ~1~to ··1ne H.rp !ll't~ (II) fl•• d~d!h rf d rode~ r1~t1 tuc•S leh ond It~! l••e ~n iitcod•~! S•m !ll1ot1 Lane 81adbu11. Jim Davi} and Ar'll Hlanlon ,ueit 0 VICTOR AWARDS * TOP CELEBRITIES HONOR TOP ATHLETES 11\"'•IT!d•I and te11"1 0 6 16 lht ~ido1 A.w1uh !ht l Ho11n'' Huot1 Smolht11. Brn1ner;, C1tt\J ly'><ln ind §Ht,. Putt 11 R11hl Dtbb•t Rtyncld1 itt 1mont lilt Help lhJ Nt1e,ht1<11 ct.tlm!lti prt?.tohnt Int a .. 11d\ 0111t '1 Culs \Iii hono11112 in!rrna:ion;;I a1hle\e1 a Conttnlr1tlon CE P111i.e the lord Club O M1ll••n $ Movie: (2hr) "Nol 11 • s11ani:tr'' (dr11 5~-•ran• s1na 10:1omsi11 t o1br tr a, llo~tr1 M1khum. Ql.,1a ~t Ho"I l1 C11Hl1d Crill l•nd · Loi 0111 ftl1tt1 110 Wild K1ni:dom m lh1! Cul 11:00 3 '10 UJ ll f_6 H""'" 111 J To lt11 tht Tru!h 0 0 m ED CD Ht•1 ,lJ 6) Wild World ol Anim1!1 0 Bt!.I o! Croutho ED •cuon Ch1c 1no • 1_6 "1gM C1llt1J ( 10 a ) J1mm1 Oe1n Sho,. 0 Movie; (C) "Revrn;t h My Dti-m Jon11h1n Win1tr1 Sho,. linr'' Od•\ '7l -Chn; Rob101on ffi Tht Proltc\ori {h~o lnR1,1m_ £D lht Ghoul C1n1 m Ho21n'1 Ht10'' @ Tht Untouch1bl'\ 8:00 O 1111 8 l a T~e w1non$ "lht 11 l ~utt file A~J'""'"R 1111 Tnt children pool 16 !ht S1int 1ne11 ·~1;nfl lo bu y r.r1ndmd a most £D Joyce Chen's Chin• unu\u~I fill, lu! chan~.; !hen m.nd1 A~tn 1hey •tall1t ti .. oyld onlr •• 11 :15 ED C1nem1 ]4 oterl.-!t htr tnc•e.sm~ bod ~umm. 0 • Q ll 6 10 ffi r11p W1l~n Show ll:l 0 I Ht1n '1".' 1111 f p ,.eltomt~ Htlen Rt~d, 0 13 6 10 ....,;. JohnnJ C11!on RtGd to" 3nd loan li•v~1\ 0 f11_c~u1td f!1tltr1 O Mowlt: (CJ (i'h1) "fhe Vi-1n1 6 lw1l12M Zone Quttn" t~dvJ '61 -Car•I J l)(,n 0 17 3 CD Die~ Cnetl Show Mun1y, Ue>na\d Hou1t< n Jtb ~tuut Ma;:rudei 1~ D1tk ' OJt\1 puts!. 0 TV SPECIAL! * Sensalional Acrobatic Troupe' from PEOPLE 'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA! 0 17 J CD IJ!IT:§) Tht Shtn• ~•ni: Actob111c Troupe (ftl A t1111.,1.1 ••ch~n<-e piog1~m 11cm~lh• P·~rlt ~ ~•P'Jtii•~ o1 Cnorn, th<\ ~mM<n !•••UP" tour•d !he lJ \ m 1913. ~no tt>~11 1l11nn•r.P, ~.1p'.Jv nl ~1, I 10 ,1r1~t11:1c; and lh• c~n1unn~ ~rl) w~1 111med a1 111r loho I li~nn~~I lrnltl IN lht P<1lorm1n 1: t.1 f, W.<lh•ORICO. D c m Oeiltr's Ctio1cr Bouna from '"' Ol1mllll Corrion '16 Movie: (Cl {2hr) "Shou1 l oud. louder . I Don't Undt1~\1nd" (com) '66 r,1 4rt~llri t.'.:llr•··~""' Raqutl \.',e •h ffiNov• ~ Jutwt i dt Gil• Cl!i>inl Mu~Ki( l1111nt1t V"lfl)' Sito• Friday DAYTIME MOV !£S 9 00 O (C) "W•nE~ ol Ch1nce" 10· ,,) ' 1 -Jim Bm .. n. Fr 1n~e~ k,1.,··v 9.JO O "Magnohtenl f11ud" 1111• I ~ • Uoyd r;,,1~n. ~1 ,m lam.rot! II 00 0 °'1. b n' Ottt'0 (dt~) '4lj V• / 11 . .-v11n. 11·1111 111;,01 "l iiuth o! Ot1th" (~1y<I '~'.J-V,Hlr.,m I " 0oY>d ~U1'1nt1 f ll 00 m IC) "P1e11t 8ehfvt M1'0 (I\. 11) '50-neboi•tl 1'iP11. M.uk ~leven' 1.00 26 (CJ "A!IJil With A Koller" (dr11 ·fi1-~1~ph!n ~nun~. A u,T•~ W :i,, ]·00 0 IC) "I Could Go On S1n~•ni'0 (•:t~\l {) !uC1 C.JllJn~. 0,1• 1:1 .,..i~. m ,IJhtd Hok hcoi:k Prt1tnll (19 8 ) Tht P1ontto 12:00 0 ( 19 "I J a CBS l1tt Mov1t: {C) "lo All MJ f11tnd~ on Sho1•" 1Gr4l "72-81.I Cos~, m4i~ & :.o~nd• O Mow1t: '0 Tht ll1llt11 ~rt Chai· ltn~td'0 (dra! "65-k<thdrd H •1111''" ~"·'i •n~·r~on 6 01. htnt ll1s1o rl1 m Movie: (C) "!ht P"son l !ht Outla•" l"e1\ Sl-~n10uny Oe•lt1 51.nny lulls Mane Wmd.,,-,1 @ W•nderlu1t l:OO r3 0 0 13 6 Nt•1 O 10 Tomorr G• 2:00 m Al1·H1gM Sho•: (C) "l 1tnl'1 l1s! C111," (CJ "Good Sam" 2:1~ O Movie: "fht Wooden Horse·• Cor•l ·~1-lto G'nn. An1hony Slt'I J 40 O Mo•ie: "Mini~ Monster•• he• lo) <,£-\',·lie· ll<~d. 11)11 Collier. Har 11 l a~1,. ID 0'Dt110rltd'0 /dr~I ~I Jell ( .~d •1. !.' .. 11a lor~n l 00 8 "l3Je or the Dt1d .. (ho1 ) ·4~ ll I'~ ~,!1 .!I 10 (C) .. T111tt to1 ~1ll1n1" (my~I ·~1•ph•R Youoa. CY1t Jurgens. ~·u '1 Pt!.,~ l :lO O (C) "Hun to• 1hf Sun" (dr~! ''>6 ri .• ~~r~ v .. ~m,.; ho•nr Ho""'"'· I ,, r.r~•• l (CJ "lN1hfM 101 lhr CrH!\°' l•f! 1) ~8-Ml'l(I. UJ~1on. Cyd Ch1• r • A1•ru1 l'.•nned; 0 (Cl "Cnh MtCi ll" lt~m) ·r.0- 1.•m,, Corner 1~.11d1" w~od, Oe•n l.ol'>'."I 117 fl "A T1nk 1n L1hy1'0 ('d~! '47 -W~lt•r II.in~ I'll '6 (C) "Tht Pld ll How to U~t nr· <~om) "66-e1 ... n lltttrord, i~i.c I "''""'~·~ 4 :JO ! '10 8 l "lht Joi) on Story" Cnritl ll'lu>) 46-1111) l'~l •I KOt'I::, CllA.\~l::L ~ ()range Ccunty's l'llF trlevision station. KOCl-:·T\'. ha~ scht:juled the folto1,11ng .special programs 1od:iy . D..:1111 t('d l1~1111gs of Channel scr) prograins are ea rned in the Dtuly l'ilol's TV \\'eek t!ach Sund11y. J, .. l(OCE SPECIAP. SEMO::I TEI AT SEA /CJ C"I~·· I ~ 1.1 • 1 ov<:ll'd to 11tw••• <•<~ lltSS v~••O•W-C1m.,.,,. 1,. t• • "' '"· ~ ~It•• tHm f" tllt (~ID"•~ ( ' 1"91 '-Wljf'!tf (fm""'' A'I' ' •:• \llSTE lllOGi:i llS NEtGHIOI · HOOO tCI •·ll Et.ECTllC COMPANY !Cl ''" S5.51'~E STllEET !ti .,ti' OMNllUS M ICIJ 111'1 {y!~"· Slo"" -Wiii dl~tll'l ,,,. ~111·" Of IM dtf! 11\1114M I• l•~<n <l~·I 111>11'"'~'11! I .JO UNDltG•OU"IO l'lLM !Cl I c11r!l)V1 flfli'J'IOmtn.n t • 1t.t """' 'lra..•na t•!m m0'1·•,., "' -lrQ,.., fl!mn•f"-1• IO fl1111wtrr to ~.,. di•~(· '''° OllANCC (.OUNJY ll lVll W !() '"' Inv• o! t~I ll•r•1.,·.q v ,11 br o•• •vui•(! •··• "" "' • ' ,. ,~ "( OI 1n• A!• 'JC '(Q[E !P~(IAL: TM ev l\UILt YILP.-.GI"~ MF:llf. lCI ~ ,.1··, • t<"'• :•• eltrrn•!t ,-:~>'I ~,.... ,..~ Iv I r11•t 01 •(Im( ~· •~ .... ' ~. 'ti .. ~1 t•!~•· ;., 1~• 1•.-_d, C·''OI ~·~·· 1.~n "'"' ···• r I oc FOCUS ORANGE cou·111, !Cl Ovu•I! ll< ,.,,.,., 0 ~ 1·~.,. • Pl•"" -t~osl J·m , '®'' ..,,,, -~· "' •. ,...... ! ' ' t~r tM U'lft!'~k>Y~d I" Q•~"'9• ~l)llfl!~ t :Jll MOtt·modt 11tot I! ~·'!!·~ f -~1 .. ,,. FIRING LINE ,,, ll ~ lt~no s~w1a ,.,. P111•~•nr¥ n W•l!lf"' ~ ffv••I 1 J ill fltr! .. jr,fe> "•'''''"" M•d lnUf'<tt.~" ol Q~l• tia"" UO Min I • PRICES GOOD THRU WEDNESDAY , JUNE 19, 1974 American La' France Fire Extinguisher • 2' • refillable dry chemical extinguis her ... sodium bicarbonate base • Easy to operate! Just pull handle, hold upright, press lever di s<harge at base of flame • Be prepared fo r fire emergencies ... keep '>ne handy in home, garage, auto, boat . #275R-5C 1" \.• 688 Black &. Decker ' Finishing Sander Hl•!t lPtt d ... 10,000 or.ill ptr minult • (1lr• loll 111alt1iol remowol ond •moolh li11i1hi"') Dowlllt in11la!td. -1404 e 1499 Hamelite ' XL2 Chain Saw li9!tlwtigh1 J•, lbs. -with 11·· bo• 111cl 1!tain • Aulomotic chain 1ilinq Two trigg111 .•. one 101 bigjtbl, tot for 1m1ll 0 (ompltlt wirh 11i11y Clit. il'X·l? 12995 12-0z. Can WD-40 22-Pc. Combo Socket Set lo11rn11u1ttd po11I ond 1ti1ky muhani1m1 Stop11~u10~1 in llinq11 P10!1ch mtlol 119 • ("and J I"' d1iwt in <ompo~I mttol bo1 • Chromt plated and lo111ed Mthic tr ilandord. limiled 1uppl¥! 988 • Mc:irg nc:irv-o• Father's Day ,~~~ Speeials! Black&. Decker • 3/8 " Drill • (11r1:11apo1i1y. lo w 111.I mod el 01ulil1 rtdYdion g101• • M1del 11'1104 1049 ~z..:::__ /'' ---...J~= I, I " I I ' l:\.rt=: I ' If>. ..... ' ~ S-Gallon Size Gas Can • ,\II mttol con1l•wclion • Sole , 1onvtni1nl war It •tore 1101 !er 1ul•, boot •r pol"t l mowtrl 388 Black &. 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' • \ ........ ~-.·~~ \ ·~··~·· \~--/ Pocket Calculator Pr rl1:11m1 4 full lunc lio"' .. 1-plo(• dt1imol 11trin9 • lighlwtiqhl, t o1y ID ll\t • R~ploitvble lrollt•it1 ... 1ampl,tely pinloblt • i ·4i9il. NHS.fttO 2995 ' -· \A ~IA ANA D ., • ·~ .. - Laguna Be':'eh ED ITION T oday's Final N.Y. Stocks \vol. 67, Nt164, 4 SECTI!. «PAGES ~ TEN CENTS ' " \ (' 31h Million-Honor Nixon on Egypt ~rain Ride By HELEN mOMAS ALEXANDRIA, Egypt (UPI) ~1illions of Egyptians, traveling by camel, donkey. oxcart and foot, left their work li1 the fields lo honor President Nixon as a new friend and peacemaker on a campaigner-style train ride through 11\e Nile ·Vallcy. Nixon described h i m s e 1 r as 11overwhelmed" by the massi\le show of esteem fOf him and First Lady Pat Nixon. Hit i•• Face It was "a magnificent reception," Nixon Wld newsmen on the train when asked bis reaction to the throngs that gathered along the 130 miles of tracks that carried him and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat from Cairo to the Mediterranean port of Alexandria. Nixon's press secretary, Ronald L. Ziegler, estimated that 3i,s m illion persons saw Nixon during the 3Y.t-hour ride from Cairo to Alexandria's Ras El Tin Palace where the Nixons will stay Man Attacks Laguna Nurse An 18-yea-r-old Laguna Beach woman was assaulled and rendered unconscious after refusing her assailant a cigarette in an attack Wednesday night at Lag1ma's scenic Heisler Park. The )'OWlg woman was struck in the fac.e \Vlth an unknown weapon, LagWla Beach Police reported. She was taken to South Coast Community Hospital but refused medical ca.re there. The woman, a rwr11e, was fowid unconscious at Ule intersection of Cliff Drive and A1yrt.le Stttet where she bad apparently walked in a dazed cpndjtion following the assault near Divers Cove nearby. 'nle assault victim told officers she had· been walking along a pathway in the park at about 9:30 p.m. when she was approached by a tall skinny long-haired Judge Sa ys He'll Exempt Onl y One Tract by Avco By CANDACE PEARSON DI IN o.u, l"ilol St1tf A Los Angeles Superior Court judge has said he will exempt only one of AvC-O Community Developers' two Laguna Niguel tracts Crom coast.al commission jurisdiction. Judge @avid Eagleson issued a "memorandum of intended decision," not yet ~ formal ruling, on tracts 7885 and 7479. The judge said he plans to rule that Avco hfls a right to finish work on tract 7885 wi thout getting a permit from the coastal commissions created b y Proposition 20. But the judge said that tract 7479, an oceanside parcel aOOve Salt Creek Beach, doesn 't qualify for ari exemption froru the new law passed in November, 1972. The "intended" ruling, expected to be (See AVCO, Page%) man in his 20s. The man asked if she had a cigarette. \Vhen she said no, the man grabbed her arm and struck her in the face with an ink:nown instrument. The ~·oman fainted. Shortly thereafter , she came to and walked a short way before again collapsing. Three Arab Guerrillas Slay Trio TEL AVIV (AP ) -Three Arab guerrillas wearing long hair and gaudy headband~. look like hippie-style foreign v.ol teer workers slipped across the Le nese border today, and killed three women nnd wounded three men in an Israeli farming settlement, officials said. (United Press Internatl'lnal said there ·were four terrorists). They said an off-duty paratrooper killed t"·o of lhe terrorists. and the third blew him.sell up with his own explosives. ln Beirut, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine -General Command claimed responsibility for the attack and said the raid was "our reacl.io~to lhe Nixon visi t to the Arab world.' But it said the attack was launched from "some base \Yithin.Jsraeli territory" and not from Lebanese soil. .. TI1at is how every Arab should reeeive Nixon, the chief impe rialist in the world." sa id spokesman Ahul Abbas. He said the guerri lla organization was determined to .. mar eve ry attempt to beautify the ugly American face " and to negotiate with Israel only through bullets and suicide operations. Nixon traveled to Alexandria, Egypt today, and the Arab commando assa ult came three days before his visit to Israel. It brought the number of terrorist (See TERRORISTS, rage %) Laguna Beach. Approves Air Quality Fi1idings Tho Laguna Bench City Council \Vednesday approved n require d air quality finding which wHI pennit funding or !he $26 million Aliso Water l\langemenl Agency (A\VMA), but tied its approval to stiff environmental qualifications. The councll's acUon may have an lmpoct on the capability of the AWMA syiitem to expand in the f u t u re 10 accommodate populations above 157,000 pEnOns In ;in areA now octupled by 77 ,000 per90ns. A WMA Is a group of agencies retponSible for waste water treatment d.ispo~at Jn the area from the City of 1rvtnc to l.aguna Niguel, incl uding t.quna Be:ndl and South Laguna. Ptans call for a region:d treatment plant Jn the Alsio Creek area with sewage collcct,on Hnes running to the member agencies. ft would also utilize plants now In e~lstence in El Toro Laguna Hills aud in lhc Lagw1a Niguel w:iter agencies. The project has been criticized by environmentalists who claim providing the sewage treatment capacity ror a large population will enrourage ldnd development. AWA1A hopes for some $19 million in the capital rosts to be defr11yed by federal and st.ate water quality funds. The City of Laguna Beach has received approval oln concept for B7 percent granl fund ing ror its share estimated lo be about $2.6 rnlllion. The city is also under orders to close down it! sewage treatment plant and OCt"an outfall between llelsler Park and l\1aln Beach Park. To r~ive the grant.,, lhe council 'o\'aS required to find elthtr that the project would not odvenely inOuence the 11ir qu11\ity of lhe A\\IMA area, or that, I! It cou1d adversely innucnce the!: air. tile council would take stcpg limiting land use and transpor1atlon wllhin l!s aren. , ThC! council chose t11c lotter statement (See FINDING, Page Z) / during their overnight stay. Egyptian security guards gave a similar croy,·d estimate to HennaM ---------BELLY DANCER OPENS NIXON'S EYES. Story, ~'9Jl 4 Eilts, U.S. Ambassador to Egypt. Nixon and Sadal rode side-by-side on the !rain's observation platform. Nixon expected crowds but began swinging his head in disbelief as the dimensions of the croy,·d and its emotions gripped him. The tv.·o presidents used the snail- paced ride to discuss Ge n ~a \' a negotiations to rea'ch a permanent peace in the ~fideast. They told nev.•smen 'lhey agreed Arab leaders should hold what Sadat called a "little swrunit" before meeting with lsrael. , "Before going to a summit conference, a number of leaders representing different points of view should have bilateral discussions," Nixon said. • In response to questlOOs, he said this need not apply to Israel. Everyv.·here along the train route there were signs of the changing Egyptian-U.S. relati()llS thal had been hostile for nearly two decades until Secretary of State Henry J\. Kissinger began hts peace miss.ions six months ago that set the stage for Nixon's fi'V?-nat.ion lOor. Kissinger. who since his resignation threat Tuesday in Austria has stayed in the background so that Nixon might reap the honors . received a separate burst of ap()lause v.·hen he got off 1he train in Alexandria . !Related story Page 41 At one point along the route. al Kafr el 7..ayat. one of the thou.sands of children y.·bo watched the train p.'l.SS, 7-year-old Sahar ,\·loha1nm11d . said she had never actually heard Of f'iixon. AskOO if she had heard of the Un itCd States. she replied , "Yes, they are the v.•ar people." "No, no. no." her mother Fat'hia (See WELC0~1E, P .. ge t) ' ire om e ' ---·---·--- ... 01UIJ Pil~I 51111 PllOIO VILLAGE FAIR IN LAGUNA BEACH TURNED OUT TO BE 10 INCHES TOO HIGH Elevation Error Caused Split Vote on Bo ard of Adjustment But Wil l Be Allowed Village Fair Height OK'd Panel Grants Varian ce on 30-foot Ordina nce A $4 million commercial complex with a history of height ordinaoce troubles will be allowed at its South Coast lfighway location in Laguna Beach despite a mistake that.raised the roof 10 inches. Developers of Village Fair. being built at the J JOO block of the highway , came before the Board of j djustment in Laguna Beach Tuesday night to seek a variance for exceeding the 30-foot height ordinance. All buildings in town are subject lo a 36-foot maximum height ordinance, but each zone also has its individual hei~ht allowan ce. Vill.!fge Fair is in the C.l (light commercial) zone, with a 30-foot maximum. After one and one-half hours of heated debate. board members split 3 lo 2 in allowing the variance, with Lu Murphine and Carol Skendarian casting the negative votes. ~1rs. ~furpbine said she and !\1rs. Skcndarian opposed the variance because they felt the height ordinance is a sensitive issue in town and shouldn't be tampered with. "A lot of people worked hard on the ordinance, and personall)!, J intend to Court Denies R einec ke Bi<l WASHINGTON !UPI\ -The U.S. Court or Appeals has tw-ned down California Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke's request that his trial on perjury charges be moved to the Wtsl Coast. Reinccke's appeal, which was denied \Vednesday, ~·as from a ruling by U.S. District Judjle Barrington Parker. Rcinecke's \\'a.sttlngton lawyers indicated they v;ould not carry the appeal to the U.S. Supr<!JTle Court. The Republican orflclal has been Indicted on charges th3t he lied before the Senate J u d i ct a r y Committee about convemttions he had with former Attorney General John 1fitchcll. al~·ays stay within it. It's just not open to variance.'' ~1rs. Murphine explained. She said that even though the IO-inch mistake was an "honest mistake". the real questions is -"How much \viii the next mistake be, 18 inches? two feet?" 'The other three board members. i\lichael Schley, Peter Weisbrod an d Robert ~1ac.Lean . decided not l-0 penalize the developers for the mistake. i\1rs. Murphine said the others felt it wasn't a precedent-setting case anrl !h:it each instance n1ust be treated on its 01vn n1erits. ~ "They decided that in this case. it was only 10 inches higher and only part of the fronl building," l\1rs. i\1urphinc said. Archi tect Ronald Goldberg to ld the OOard that it v.·ould cost 530,000 to alter the building to fit \Yilhin the height ordinance. The height discrepancy was discovered by Senior Laguna Beach Bui lding Official $80,000 Priee Jim Winters, \\'ho inspected !he building in ~fay. I The contractor was told several times to check the height of the buildings, \Vinter said. "As the construction progressed. I demanded a special inspection , and @at's 1\•hen I discovered it y,·as one foot above the allowed 30-foot limit.'' \Vinler said. The contractor was told to stop work on that part of the, building, and a ~ivil enginee r was called in to inspect the height. It was found at that tin1e to be 10 inches too high. The project has had a history of height problems, stemmi ng back to January. 1973. when the develope r. Village Fair Ventures. applied for a height variance to permit a pitched roor. At that time. the city council turned do\.\·n the request lo ·exceed !he height by 18 inches, and the developer was ordered lo slay within the limit. The planning (Sec HEIGHT, Pege 2) County Acquires Parcel For So11tl1 La gu11a Parl{ The first local par~ for South Lagunans. at the romer of CaUllina and i\1onterey Streets. was purchased this \\•eek by Orange County. The acqllisition of the 20.000 square foo~ parcel coM $80.000 and was approved by lhe Orangt County Board of Supcrvl3ors. Supervi30r Ron Caspers, representing the South l...ogi.m area. lobblcd for the purchase. The funds Wl'f'e ta.ken out of thfl envlronmenlill enhancement funds of tM counly. South Laguna is uninoorpor~led. Resldenl.S of South Laguna are planning to make the park a cumniunity effort, ontt the purchase clears wunl}' red tape -probably in two month:i. Lorelle t.ong. of the Soult. t..1guna Civic Assoclalion, said the citizens' group plans to call on loca l residents for labor, talent and design of the park. Landscape arehitccis, p I an n c rs . gardeners and others will follow through in developing ;uxl maintaining the park, while the funds needed will come from tht> county's Uarbors. Beadles and Parks l)cp4irtment, ~irs. Long said. "South L.'lf!Una Is filled with these kinds of people. so thPy'll be no problem 1naklng this a community proj~t." she suld. The a~uisitlon wa s based on the facl 1tm1 there are no other loca l parks in tov.·n, ond lhe aclloo was placed under the county's ''deficiency park" i:irogram. ~·!rs. l..on~ sald a local parks cornmiUce sprang up and publ1clz00 and supported tl:lc neOO for parks In the area. 1 Am1exHit h1 Seco11cl Sucl1 Attacl{ By JACK CHAPP ELL 01 OM Olll, Pllol Srtff A fi re bomb was thrOl"'tl at the Laguna Beach. Police Depar:ment annex today in lhe second such arson auack in the Art Colony in fh•e days. The annex v.·hich houses th e department's detective force v.·as not seriously damaged. The ~tolotov cocktail used in the in<:ident hit a brick wall and fell on a concrete loading area. Police Lt. Al Olson speculated the arsonist 'o\·as atte1npting to hit an open windov.· in the building. ~ The annex also houses the city recreation department. Over the V.'e€kcnd, a small c.afe belonging to the wife of a police detective _,., was firrbombed doing an estimated sa.ooo to $10.000 dan1age to the Interior. Authorities are unsure of motives in the tv.'O attacks, although Det. Alex J imenez has said the torclting of his wife's cafc may have been in retaliatioo for past arrests, or investigations he has conducted as a police officer. The firebombing of the police annex took place at about 3:15 a.m. toda y. Lt. Olson said a beer bottle filled "'ilh gasoline and fused with a tom strip o( towel '~as used as the l\1olotov cocktail. The person or persons responsible for the bombing threw the device at the rear of the annex. 570 Glenneyre SL There a loading dock used in building's former days as a post office facilit y was hit by the flaming bomb. Lt. O!son said the building was scorched by the gasoline-fed fire, but no real dan1age was done. A Gatalina Street resident whose home backe<i up to the annex reported \he fire lo the l....'l.guna Beach r~ire Department. 'Viie's Body Pound LOS ANGELES (AP\ -A 38-year-old machinist was booked Wednesday for ino,restigation of the murder in the death of his ~·ife, whose nude body was found under their south Los Angeles home, police said. Judge Payne was arrested at his home after neighbors reported seeing him wash.ing down his bloody automobile, authori ties said. Orange Coast We ather Night and morning IOI'•' cloudi- ness with hazy afternoon sunshine Friday, according to the \\'eather service. Highs ranging from 66 at the beaches to 76 inland. 1 Uiv.·s to-- night 56-62. INSIDE TOD/\ Y Newly1veds oct a.t thnugl1 !Irey are ty pical {10101!7 cou ple just srarrtug ou t -but f11tj/ Off' 11ul. Bnde was born nl 195,1 w1 rho11t :irms or legs . Story, Page 15. L, M. k~f 11 t•lllerMI S, 1' C.lfolllt<ll •-U C•mlt1 tl trou•nll n Clf•lh Nlfi<lt 1t 1.fl!etlll P11t .. , E~ltrlllll!'lll"I J1 Fl"•"Clll tf·JI H~ G1rdntr 21 "'"'~'" tt lft" Llllllt" J1 M0"1' TrH • I ....... ,, ll ~ulu•I Ful'Cl1 tf HMilftt l Nt'lfl ' )r1ntt , ... ""' ''· u, u lyl.,il Ptfltt • 11'(1111 114' ,hi<. M9<0.tll •>1 l 11t¥11lt" Jt n•••'•" J1 Wtllhtr ' 4 "'"''"'' IN•ll U·ll Norld Hrw• ' ' -. ~· . . .. 1 \ .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . . -. .. .. . . . . . • • • • • • • • -• 1' . . ' -.... ~ ... --. . . ' 2 u.:.!L t 1-ILOI LB lll11rSrt11y J1inr 13 1'>74 '01ved $900,000' Paper Reports Knowland-Deht LOS ANGELES (A Pl -l~ublishcr :uul fonner U.S. ~u. \\lillian1 F. KllQ\1·!:1nd \\·lls insolvent .,.,,hen ht• tonUlllttC'd suicide. w ·in g b::inks 1nore 1hlln SOO!l.llOO that v.•as coining due shortly, 11'k~ LOs Angeles Times reported today. ~fO!t of the loans have sinrt 'lx'l·n repaid, the newspaper said docwnen1s filed in Al ameda County Suix1rior Court shov•ed. The Kno,1·land family rould no1 ht• inunedlately re11chcd for co1nmen1 on the story. But c:ourt officials confinned the Times story. The Oakland Tribune · 1li5tler. a prominent Republican v.•ho r a n unsuccessfully for governor . shot hims<'lf to death at his Northern California vaca- tion home Feb. 23. Among the court documents .... as an From Page 1 L'\'3\U.'ltion by lhf' UC'Counting firnl of O'l\c<'le and Lal:.uuH! csti1111.11ing that l\no1\land'~ t'Slilh' ~1a1'Ch 15 hnd assets (If $611.428.28 and lii11Jilitirs of $1.312.333. Paul ~lanolis. l\nowl.-i nd's closr friend and executor of 1hi' t•stnh!, said the estate was !nsoh 1'111 . ''Tht' crrd11ors' tl.'.lin1s filed to dah' !>ho.,.,-. lo :.01l1L' 1'X\1>n!. !ht• n1anncr in 11·tul·h 1.tie :s:lid Ann l>ic ksoo Kno1\·land contribu1rd 10 !he u1~olt·t·n<.·y:· ,\lanolis snid in a statrn1ent filed .,.,ith the court .\l:iy 28. ~tanolis told thr Times KnO\\·\and·s financi:it condition had oothing to do v.i th t'hc Ttibw1e. He s:iid Kno.,.,'land o'tl'J'H.'d only ":tround 10 perct>nt" of the ne1\·spnper . .,.,·hlrh i~ run .by a family· t'ootrol\cd corporn!ion. I \ From Page J WELCOME .•. .. hastily corrected, ''Now we are friends." At Tanta, about h111fway be(ween Cairo und Alexandria, lrucb v.'it h loudspea ker~ explaJned to the crowds th~t the United Stateo ii .... Eil'i>t'• friend ~ lllll lh~ II thre rtafion Nhron's plcturta are everywhere. "We greet Mr. Ntxon with love, appreclaUon and lellowlllblp," Ule sound truck told the crowd,. And everywhere were the chant. of "Nix-00. •.. Nlx·orf' U1at sometimes tven drowned out the noise oC U1c train. "I've never seen people 80 excited and emotional," said a White HOUie olfldAI aboard the train. "This la for a prcstdct1t who haa run Into h06tile pll1.cnrdll in the U.S .. " referring to Nixon's iJnpt.'UChment I.roubles over Watergate back ho1ne. About 30,000 policerncn were turned out ror security J>W1XlleS aloog the Ira.In route, carrying automatJc weapoM. Helicopters followed Nixon's motorcade through the street! of Alexandria. Security measures ar expected to increase as Nixon continues his/ lcoomey th.rough the Mldeut, especially n vtew ot an Arab guenilla attack today at the Israeli settlement of Shamir. The attorncv for Ann D i ck so n Kno.,.,·b1nd. KnO.,.,·rand·s second .,.,.lfe. said he didn't belie'e the es1a1e was Insolvent. saying he thought it was an attempt to deprive his client of \\hat sh(' considers a fair Jiving allo"·anre . l\trs. h'.n owland "'as a 38-year-old L.1~ \'('gas dil'or cee. fortnl'r :ictress and model 11·hcn she married Kno\\'land 1n l\Iay 1972 after he \\·:is divorced from his 11ife of 45 yea rs, ~Jelen. ENTHUSIASTIC CROWDS WITH ARMS OUTRAISED CHEER AT PRESIDENTS NIXON , SADAT Two Leaders Ride From Cairo lo Alexandri1 in Open Railroad Cir 11 Egyptians Hall Pair Nixon and hi.! wife will spend the night 11.t Ras el Tin .Palace, from where King ~ arouk V«ent into exile in 1952 before returning to Cairo Friday for a' visit to t.he ~yramids. lie '.\'ill depart Friday lor S:luch Arabia and then go to Syria, Jnet and Jordan. made final in about a monlh. is sure to inspire rurther court appeal s. The State Attorney Gen eral's office had argued that Avco should get permits to continue "'ork on both tracts. Judge Eagleson 's decision stemmed frorr. a lav.·suit filed by Avco \vhich claimed that it had a •·vest ed right" to complete both tracts \\'ilhout l'oastal approval. Tract 7685 is. only partially •.vithin the coastal commission jurisd iction, ,1·hlch runs 1.000 yard! inland from the 1nean high tide line. On the 27·acre portion \\'ithin the eoastal zone inland of Pacific Const Highv.•ay at Crown Valley Parkwa.v. Avco plans 390 condominium! and 10 holes of an 18 tlOle golf course. Judge Eagleson said the golf course is a major part of the tract. "'hich will total 2,000 units. and that Avco had obtained a grading permit for it. . The judge said in this case a ~d~ng penn it was equivalent to a ~u1ld1ng pennit and added that he felt the rest of the project had been plaMed around the course and should be exempted.·· Don Januta . who argued the case for the attorney gene ral's orfice. said today he disagrees with that part of the judge's intended rul ing. Judge Eagleson al!IO said that Avco badn•t received the necessary final government apprO\'als of its plans for tract 7479 before the coastal act "'as passed . Avoo's plans for tract 14i9. which lies oceanside ol Pacl!ic Coast ~lighwa)' near Crown Valley Parkway, have changed se\'era\ times. Originally planned for 1.690 units, the tract cow Is proposed to include 900 condominiums on 41 acres, along y,•i th some public parkland. "Our basic argument on both tracts was that· the government approvals which v;ere Issued to Avco don ·t go beyond subdivision and grading of the land," Januta said. "They never got any building permits or put any structures on the Janet From Page 1 FINDING ... as did the Orange Counly Board or Supervisor!!, y,·hich also was required to pass on the project. But, the Laguna Beach City Council went further . It asked the federal Environmental Protection Agency to do a special study on the air quality of the area . It rurther asked that the state require. as a cooditlon of the grants. a scaling of the project lo a population of 157.000 rather than hi ghe r numbers put forward by A W~1A and other agencies. It also asked that the stale require as a condition of the grants lhat the Iola\ sewage treatment capacity of the AWMA area not ~ increased bc}Ond that population until 1995. The council '! action was unanimous and _came foll o"'lng a three and a ha\( hoor public hearing. ' · OR.t.MMCO.t.ST " DAILY PILOT Tiie 0'1"90 ColM Otll, 1'11111 ,..,~ -~ ot - t "ied ~ N•!"t'"'""' "llUfll"""" Ill !1>e 0.- c.o..i.t f'ulll• ... •"11""'""'"'"' Sf!~Ull .... ~-OPO ~--· ~Q .. 041 1"'°"'1" '"""' ~)' c.,.,. Mosl N-1! llol'~ """""'Qla<I Oo.i;~/Fc;u~ to•" 11•1\w, La@V"' 9'or1<~ ,..,..,..15.oo"1.11.-, 01'11 &ft 0....."11/~pt .looo~ C:.11''111"0 A ••"OJI f~ 1d~oOn '• '""'°''~ S..P•""•l'l I'll! ~~ dl>'t IN! P""'l"P·" '"'°"'""'Ii fll·•"' '' .. ~ W~I 6t1 S•rtel. Cu'1~~·-.C.••l0"''" t~blo f.:f'\'V!f!NW,._j ,, ... -.,,.,~ .. ,..... n-~~(..,l.oy ... ,e1P•1 .. 001'!1.....,Qoor1i11<111.'~- I I ""10• "" MU"O"W>e M1"9111~ln.t<:' Charr.H L"'' ~ .. !.o>d!o' Na~ "'"'' .1...i ~1"'11 '°''"" l..,... .. IKh Offlct 222 IV'P'J """,..., MoilinQ~°'i:PO lloit..66.~2o!il OthtrOHktt CoQol•"'·-»iw..otit~s.,., ""'--' lffcft »J3 ~-liovlo•Old ...,.,.,.O"lhtcl'l lfl1$1\t-'°""'••'1' ... CieiM~ie. xie-r.c. ... ,.,11 ... . Tdep!IOM 17141,4.Z-4311 · Clft.m.4 ~NIMJ 64J·l671 L.efilH h1tell ..t.• o,,...t-«: T ......... 4t .. t466 ~. 1tlt Ct•• C...:11 """'"IWIO C- ...... ~ ........ l!llftft ~""'''111 .... "1111.~ ... """ Ill' ..,...,,_~ ""'"'~ ""'¥ *"" .. °""'',;fl( ""'"Olll "*!el ---ol "'11¥'"1~' n.'111r B«o<>d t i.M -It" 1*'911 ""'' lo'•\a C.1<b O'HI ~folll'°""'llt!•,.. JOO •N; D• .... tl l(OO~;f!lltdll'Y_.,.,!_,"' llD""'''"'I¥ 1 Kno\\·Jand filed for a dissolution or marriage to the second ~lrs. Knowland in February 1973. but Le\1'is \\'. Boies. her attornev. said \\"ednesday 1he1· had reconciir<I and 11·cre ··hnppiiy n1arried. ·· ~!rs. J\1\01\•lnnd asked for support paymt>nts of S6.500 a month after his Ceat h. Knov;land a"·arded her Si.000 a mon1h in the ,1·ill but on ~larch 18. the roun increased it to SI.250 a month. In a statement to the court, Ulrs. Krlo.,.,,land said ... At no time during my conversations \\'It h my husband and prior If? hls dea1h did he indicate any financ ial distress or insolvency of any kind or nature ... " l\1anolis. in his statement flied wlth the court, replied, "The fact is that the said \\!illiam F'. Knowland has told me on • many occasions that he has tokt his wife . Ann Dickson Knowland. that he was not an Onassis or Hughes and could not afford that which she was spencUng." Among the claims filed against the estate . was one by Irene Sargent, an exclusive Oakland dress shop. for '4.687.89. Rites Scheduled For Lagunan Robert N. Bo\\·en Visitation and graveside services will be held for Laguna Beach re!lident Roben N. Bowen ~ died Saturday at South Coast Community Hospital. He '""·as 80. Visitation y,·IJI be held from 6 to 9 l6night at Sheffer Lagwia Beech Chapel. Graveside services will be at 11 a.m. Friday at El Toro Cemetery. to.Ir. Bowen. a self.employed carpenter. had been a resident of Orange County County for 50 years. lie y,·as born In J\orth Carolina. Survivors are his v.·ife. Eara E. Bov,·en of the family home ; three brothers. James Bo\\·en and Rev. C.F. Bov.·en ol Xorth Carolina and 0.E. Bo"·en of \"irginia: two sisters. Lema B. Bowen of Virginia and l\1rs. Lcorie C. Stone. uf ~orth Carolina. Allen Vernon of the First Christian , Church in San Clemente will officiate at the services. Arrangements are directed by Shclfer :..tortuary. 'Worker' Nabbed At Convention Cll lCAGO IUPI) -Pr o~ tit u t lo n charges have been flied aga inst Ruth Toalson, 33, of CanogA Park. Calif .. who came to Chicago to operate among delegates to the con su1ner electronics convention, pollce gaid. Police said Vi1ednesday !hat r.1iss Toalson was arrested in her room nt the Conrad Hil lon 1-folel Tue!da y aHer she offered her service!'! to undtrcover office r,:. 1\ vice rli\'islon oHtccr sa id the Y.i'lman Vias cha rgi ng S60 per customer and had murt: than ~1 ,000 in her h()tel rooni "'She ciime here for the convention ," the officer said. Bo)· Suff ~ring Fr o111 Bleeding "!\'011; Sai,f Ale rt Doctors a1 South (:Qast Community Hospital continued today lo \\'alch and care for 9-year~ld Brian Fen\\·ick of Laguna Beach following "'hat appeared to be complications from a tonsillectomy performed· at another medical facility three .,.,·eeks ago. Laguna Beach Police officers called by the boy·s parenl.'i found the child bleeding from the throat early Wednesday morning. The child y,·as rushed to South Coast Conununity Hospital and when admitted, was said to have been in serious coodilion. Doctors operated on the c h I J d Wednesday to stop the bleeding. .. He l8 alert and talking, but we still have to cons ider him in serious condition ... Dr. Kent Combs said today. "\\'e're taking care of this boy as a result of cooiplications from a ton..slllectomy performed a! a different hMpital.'' Dr. Combs said. "This was performed in another city and we're handling the complications of someone else," he said. Ena E. Reynolds Of Laguna Beach Succumbs at 65 Graveside fune ral services 1rere held today for Ena E. Reynolds, a Laguna Beach resident for 29 year!. ].lrs. Reynolds died Tuesday at South Coast Community Hospltat. She v.as 65. A charter member of the I\'eighborhood Congregational Church. ~trs. Reynolds y,·as also a member of the Eastel'l! Star chapter of Grand Junction. Colo. Visilation had been held at Sheffer Chapel in Laguna Beach \\ledne.sday. Burial v.'as at lngle.,.,.ood Park. Rev. John Reynolds of the Congregational church officiated. ' Survivors are her hu!band, Ted He}11o!ds: IY.'O sons . Floyd Parson.ci and Jack Parsons both of l.a guna Beach; a hnrthrr . Leonard Tuttle of Laguna Niguel: aunt Ruth Fo.,.,·eJI of Laguna Bt:ach; and si x gra ndchildren. The family suggests m em or i a 1 contribut ions to the donor's favorite charities. CoLu-l Building I-lit TALLAHASSEF.. Fla. !UPI 1 -Five shots were fired into the front door of the !!site Supreme Court buildin g Tuesday night and thf\ al!acker left behind lettered tapes attributing the acts to the Symbionese Liberation Anny (SLA /, f'O!i l'e rcpor\CcJ \\1C'dnesdav. Justice Ben O'ertnn was y,·orking alone in his well·lit 11pst:iirs officl' about 10:30 p.m. when he hea rd· r~e shots. spaced at two intervals of obQut rive minu tes apa rt. Up, Up, Away lf1holes fll e Prices Rise in Jl1.ay . WASlllNGTON (AP) -Despite falling farm und food prires. widespread 1~crcascs on ~ broad range nf industrial products pushed wholesaJc prices up sharply agaln In A1 ay. the government said to- day. 1'he Labor Department reported thnt wholesale prices rose a scaso~ally adjusted 1.3 percent last n1onth. ahout the sa me as the rates 1n ~~arch and April but not as tnuch as in the December·Feb- ruary penoct. Unadjusted. the increase Ja,;t month was 1.5 percent. Prl~es for farm products. proce~sed foods and reeds tell 2.2 percent 1n J\Ta.l, the third ronsecut1ve monthlv decline lndustr~a commodities were up 2.7 pc f.ce nt. Co.nsumer finished goods rose s ix.tenth s of I percent. . I~ seei:ns to promise for consun1cr:\ a rnntinuatl on of double· di git 11~n at1on for nt least the next '""' mont hs i;ln('e higher whole-~ale pr1t:es usually arc c/ulckly rct.leC'led at the retail level . J1owever. the declines In wholesa c food pr11:es frequcntlv i.c; not passed on to consumer~ ln full as mldcllc1nen seek to rl"l ain 1)roflts. ' • ' • Ronaa11tic Interest Sa11 Diego Gir~ Flies . To Joir~ P11·in1ce Cl1a1·les LONDON (AP ) -The blonde daughter of an American admiral emerged today in the L<Jndon press as the latest romantic Interest of Europe's most eligible bachelor, Prince Charles, future king of England. · Miss Laura Jo Watkins, 20, daughter of Rear Adm. James Vfatklns of San Diego flew to l.()ndon at the invitation of the princt and has caused t , minor sensation in British newspapers, eager chroniclers of the prince's Jove life. (Picture, Page 4. ~ Charles, 25. a lieutenant in the Royal Navy, met Mis! Watkins last March y,·hen h'ls ship, the frigate ID.fS Jupiter. put in at San Otego on a training voyage to lhe Americas. "l\fy husband was the official guest at the party to welcome Prince Charles and his ship.'' the Dally Mail quoted Mi ss Watkins' mother as saylng In San Diego. "But he couldn't make it and asked if our daughters, Laura Jo and Susan, could go lnstead. They did." The prince, elder son of Queen Elizabeth II, decided to retiew the acquaintance afeer he was invited by American ambassador Walter Annenberg to attend a farev.·ell party tonight marking the end of Ar .. iberg's five. year stay in London. The prin ce y:as asked If 'he wanted to invite anyone From Page J HEIGHT ... commission had denied the reque st earlier. The contractor may begin work again on the roof after the 20-day appeal period is closed. The complex. v.·hich will include 6.1 shops and two restaurants, is scheduled to open July 12 . Nurse Strike Talks SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -Negottators report some progress ln bargaining talks aimed at 3eltling a nurses' strike in Its .!leventh day at 42 Northern California hospilals and clinics. Talks recessed at 3 a.m. today and are scheduled to resume th is afternoon. special and selected l\1iss \\'atkins , a li.S. embassy spokesman said. Because of a period of royal mouming over the death l\fondey of !he Duke or Gloucester, the queen's uncle, Prince Charles had to cancel his appearance at the ambassado r's pa rty. However, it was likely be and Miss Watkins would meet privately. The mournin g continues until Friday evening. "We received a letter from to.trs. Annenberg asking her over and. of course, we agreed ," to.frs. Watkins Y!'as quoted as saying. "She left at the weekend and Is due back at school at the end of the month. Her father paid the fare." Miss Watkins spent a year In college, and traveled through Europe settling into a course at a San Dieg business school. She plans to become a legal secretary. After their initial meeting ~larch 16 at an excl usive yacht club in the CoMJlado Island area or San Diego. the to.1ail said Prince Charles Invited Miss Watkins lunch before his ship sailed. The pA r said they have corre!ponded since. "lt is a complete surprise to us at Prince Charles is interested in Jo," Mrs. Watkins was quot discounting any reports 0( ro · . "We are terribly flattered, but su he must have lots of English girl Irie !." An American Embassy spokesman also discounted any speculation of a buddJng romance. "She's here as a private guest of ambassador Annenberg," he said. "She's here to go to the party, period." JUA N, WIFE WIN SHOUTING TITLE LONOON, England (AP ) -1'-Uchael Feather!tone and his wife, who run a pub m the Yorkshire coast, have been judged the world 's loudest mouths. Competing Wednesday in the. "Second World Shouting Champlonshlpe," Mrs. Featherstone let IOO!e a J00.7-decibel yell to retain the woman.'a 1Utle she won last year. lier husband was the loudest of the male rompe(itors with 110 decibels. "l..onc live Nixon!" shouted the crowd as Nixon left the Cairo staUon. He rc.'ISponded with smi1ee, wives and the V sign Nixon is so known for -arms high over his head, two flngen spread apart. All along the train route, workers lefl the fieldl to watch the train. Women . usually waiting in the background because of ~1oslem custom , were up front. holding up their children. "I made an-angements for thi! special trip to pass by th1..s place where J oould see them,'' ~Id Abdul Hak Alvned, 38, \vho led 8 Slring of four camels to a Spot where the train passed. "I want to go to Mecca most or all b!A I want to be here too." ' A line of hor!ee blRnlteted with American and Egyptian flags was strung out along one section of track. "H's unbelievable," Ziegler said. "A1y God, it 's unbelievable." Nixon, who was glvoo a gold lifetime pa!.1 to the railroad aa.ld he enjoyed the train trip very much. Of the t'e(.'eption he received he said: ··Alter 25 ye.a.rs of misunderstanding and seven years of bitte r mlsunderstanding, Egyptlan-Americ.an friendship has a natural fowdation aOO we're building on it." A!. overwhelming as the size of UK! crowd, Nixon said, waS its enthusiasm and r _.i for Sad;it. The reception l!:gypt bu aec«ded the American leader staggered t h e presidential party. An e11timated two million penori1 swann~ lnto the streets of Cairo We<ileeday to welcome him . Nixon, in a toast Wednesday night at a dinner Sadat ga .. ·e for him, said : "I can thinJc of no day thal will !tay more in our memory ." From Page J TERRORISTS •• victims in Israel to 49, Including 31 children, in two mon ths. Semiofficial Lebaneee souroes in Beirut said Israeli border artillery pounded a south Lebanese village in an apparent reprisal for the ral~. The village of Ebles Saki, five miles north of the Israeli border, came under a .. heavy artillery ban-age a! of midday and the bombardment continued without let up well Into the afternoon," the sources said ... The terrorists attacked the little Israeli rarming settlement of Shamir ~low the foothills of the Golan tleights. One of the women killed ln today 's rald was a volwiteer from New Zealand, said residents of Shamir , who kept her identity secret until her fa mily was notified. The two other vict.im.s were from the aettlement. ~I~ WINEMEN'S ~~.~iii:'.·-:;::;..-CELLARS 2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS ZSOO W. COAST HWY. HIWPORT llACH PHOHl642-7076 ~-· ~ IH MfWPOl:T Pl:ODUCI Yll.UGE 160 I MIWPORT ILYD. ' , __ __,.,_ COSTA MllA 64J·t004 1~~ HllRIW N.t.TIOHJ.1 tJ. KOSHER I . ' ,~~: ~..,~ALA$:.9 ~ !~l SJ7, ... 9 11;; 2.tt lb. 6. ~.~ ~I rJ NOW ~ Ll111lt l k Mt. ~1 l hltlt J ... tb. ~ 'Wltlil C...,-f .',. ~~ With c...-1: ', BUFF{T~CATERING SERVICE~~ ~ ,...,/ ~ Assortment of 60 pet•hr nl'ldw1cties ~ •' _;!k A ~. ne1ttv 1rr1 ng8d. cont1st1ng ol rare -·~· --~,.. roa!ll bee !. roasl breas1 01 111rkev. , ·HOW ·' WfDGE FINCifR SANDWICH PARTY TRAY boole<! """ '"" '" """' S110m1 CON'llEHEHT PARklNCi IM IOTH LOC.t.TIOMS WINE features BY POPULAR DEMAND, a repeat of a sellaut AIMost ell wiM '°""" _. .,...,.. of tW ._... "SOUYERAIM"_....., of C91ifonii•'• .... ., ~ •llflllln. W kw M"f .,.. • ..,.,.. thot ffM• ,,..-c:tr 9f Mtfli ,..,... .. ~·· wlM ~ wther IN ........ "Les AfMpt'? Wt .t - WIHIMAH'S •• cwMf ..ow r-t• HM1 inf91...._ M te ,_. l'Mt-t'• •••"""9 ~ .. JM Mor.W bow -n. .,.tty of tMI _ .. ,'"' kn•wn btanc1 I• ............. tlllt "1ce ft •w. Try It tMt wtff•ttd! YCMI WCNl't !.t cH,.,,.._._ For Ro1sts. Ste;iks. Sltwt.. Due". Oround SirlOtn H11mburoer. veal or Pasta. Try , •• "LOS AMIGOS" ZJNFANDEL For Ctteese D1snes. Ch1ci(en. Crab. Esc1rgo1. Ham. SesloOd or Ome!et1e1. Try _., "LOS AMIGOS" CHENIN BLAHS , . $198 21.Jt ,...c .. $198 21.Jt,... UM • • Saddlebaek EDITION • Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 67, NO. 164, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES TEN CENTS S~ddlebacl{ Teacher·s Talk September Strike By JAN WORTH GI m. 0•11~ l"lltl 5t•lf A September strike by teachers or lhe Saddleback Valley Unified School District appears to be on the horizon ofter representatives of the scven-1ncmbcr nCgoliating team broke orr p a y negotiations with the district \Vedncsday night. The team members said they wil l seek an outside mediator to resume talKs Sept. 3. Jim Wehan. spokesman for the CerUried Employcs Council (CF.C ~ said !he tean1 broke off I a I ks ,. Ji IA, -apparently for the summer-because th ey could not gel the board of trustees to agree to a contit;igency clause whicll could bOost snlarics 15 percent. The board of trustees consistently has otrerOO a salary raise for the district's f100 teachers of about 8.6 percent. following an emergency g e n e r a I rnccling or the SVEA membership Tuesday. the teache rs voted not to strik e during the remainder of the school year, .,.,.hich ends today. But they authorized the CEC to mail out ballots this summer on whether or not to strike next September-possibly on tl•lll~ PHDI Sl11! PhOlt MISSION VIEJO HIGH SCHOOL CLASS OF '74 COMMENCES Lirgest Class in MVHS History Graduated 636 Wednesday Viejo Stzident Speaker: 'Tired of False Values' "I for one :un tired-tired uf restrictions and rules. tired of a false emphasis on material success. and tired of being told we 're the future .'' That was the emphatic message of student speaker Melanie Johnson to her peers a!I the Mission Viejo High School class of 1974 was graduating 636 strong \Vednesda y night in the high school sladium. Clad in crimson caps and gowns. the class members marched to their sca ts to the t rad it ion a 1 ;,Pomp and Circumstance'' played by the Mission Viejo fligh School band . Obviously ebullient, the s l u dent s cheered for everything from the flag Or&11ge Coast Weather Night and morning low cloudi· ness with hazy afternoon sunshine Friday. accord ing to the weal.her service. J:llghs ranging from 66 :.ll the beaches to 76 inl and. Lows lo- oight 51Hi2. INSIDE TODAY " Newlywed& act os lhoti gh. th eu ~plcol 1101010 co11-ple jvst starti-11g out -bitt they are not . Bride was born i-n 1953 w/1/tout 12rms or legs. Storv, Paoe 15. L. M. -.,. " ... \llVll "~"'' " CtllJtntl1 . " M1!1•11•I M.,rn • Clilulflttl .... ::lorlll'f• "m"' " C01111IY It. It, 11 C:"'HMnl n Fer tilt 111..:'1'41 " 0t•ll1 Mtlltn .. ''tvl1 P1rltr • fd!l.,111 ,_ •• '"''" .... ffttltft1"""'"'l " llM• M"hlt ~ --.. , f clt'f"IU.11 " Ht 0•~ " Tlltlll" " "'"' ... -• Wt1"'9r • "ollttl Llllff" " Nt!Mfl't ,,.,..,_ "IS·1' Mt-'l .... • Wlrlf M... t ..... " salute to a v.·clcome speech by Gerald Barnes, student body president. Saddleback Valley Superintendent of Schools William Zogg praised the students ror achieving under constant pressure to get above the average. "Nothing but the best will be good enough £or you,'' he said. Not only is the class of 1974 the largest in Mission Viejo High School history, but it had more straight-A and hear-straight A students than ever be.fore. Four students shared top honors for a 4.0 av e.rage !straight A's): Katherine Hunting, David Pattc.r~n. James Powers. and Rebecca Taylor . Six others had 3.9 averages. !\1ission Viejo principal Donald Ames com mended the students for putting up with four years of crowded conditions. The high school was on double sessions l\\'D of the last rour years. The other t\.\·o years, GOO to 800 more students than the high school was built for crowded its hJllwa ys. Saddleback Trustee Dennis Smith ::icknowlcdged the hooor achievements or lhf! class of '74, including about $60,000 In scholarships and awa rds Crom universities and ei\i'lc groups. "The rc<il ynlue of these ls to you and your / nation. And the most importflnt nward or all is a new beginning. Rtspcct yourself and stand tall," he said. Preceding lhe speech by Miss Johnson. another student speaker. Joanne Dames, told her fello1v graduate.s, "Life is <:Qmpetilion and success goes only to the ones who go out a.nd win. There Is sUcccss in everything we do, bul there is no rev.·ard to 1he loser." "The key is in our minds," M1ss Johnson said. "fre1! thinking is the key ' .. to progress. /\ specitil gift v.•as presented to !\tarll)'I\ Bow r. senior class ad viser. "Ht!rc is an Appreciation , fl loken, from lhe rowdy class ot 1974," said Lynda Sue !\1c~:flllcn, senior class prtsldcnt. the first day of school -if a satisfactory agreement was not made. A weary Dr. Richard Welte, the, board representative in the meet-and-confer process. expressed 1'dismay and utter disbelief" that the teachers would not .accept the board's offer: • He accused the teachefs o r "prostituting" the ni!gotiations process. "I'm not anti-teacher, because I'm a teacher myself," Wel te said. "But the board would be right if they charged the CEC v.•ith not being resilient in the negotiations process. The whole process of meet-and-confer y.·as lost. "What I'm sorry to see is a climate that is now developing, a perspective or confrontation," he said today. "It's counter-productive, it destroys m any positive lhings." Wehan described the final fecling between the two sides as "amiable" despite the lack or an agreement. "We appreciate all Dr. Welte has done and we felt he had worked hard to help us. We're just sorry we couldn't get to- gether," \Vehan said. Following a recent series of t a I k s, the SVEA came down to 8.67 percent from their original 15 perctnt request but then last week demanded that In addition to the basic raise lr.achcrs be given a crack at whatever unanticipated funds may develop from adjustments of state legislation. When teachers asked for th a t provision, the board refused and talks abruptly ended, The teacher asked for outside mediation and the board agreed . Teachers also askt'd that they be provided additional fringe benefits from a $70,000 district fund . The board \\'Ould commit no more than $35,000 from the fund. Vince ~1C'Cullough, presid~,l of the board of tru stees. said '·\Ve truly negotiated , .. \\"e've coin e a long dis· ta nee and rm sorry that negotiations broke dov.·n. ' "We've been very careful to keep good faith. and when they asked for mediation, \\"e agreed . We went beyond what we had to. \Vhat else can y.·e do?" He said if a September strike develops the board will make e.very effort to keep school open. Arab Triuinph for Nixon • Millions Cheer President Along Railroad Rozite Ry llELEN THOI\IAS ALEXANDR IA, Egypt (UPI ) Millions of Egyptians, traveling by camel, donkey, oxcart and foot, left their \\'Ork in the fields to honor President Nixon as a new friend and peacemaker on a campaign-style train ride ttlrough the Nile Valley_ Nixon described h i ms e If as "overwhelmed" by the massive show of esteem for him and First Lady Pat Nixon. It v.'as "a magnificent reception ," Nixon told newsmen on the train ~'hen asked his react ion to the throngs that gathered along the 130 miles of tracks Three Arab Guerrillas Slay Trio TEL AVIV (APJ -Three Arab guerrillas wearing long hair and gaudy headbands to look like hippie-style foreign volunteer workers slipped across the Lebanese border today, and killed three women and wounded three men In an Israeli farming settlement, officials said. (Unjted Press Intemat:'>Tial said there were four terrorists). They said an off-duty paratrooper killed two of the terrorists. and the third blew himself up with his own explosives. In Beirut, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine -General Command claimed responsibili ty for the attack and said the raid was "our reaction to the Nixon visit lo the Arab world ." But it said the attack was launched from "some base within Israeli territoryr• and not from Lebanese soil. "That is how every Arab should receive Nixon, the chief imperialist in the ~·orld," said spokesman Abu! Abbas. He sajd the guerrilla organization was determined to "mar every attempt to beautify the ugly American face" and to negotiate with Israel only through bullets and suicide operations. Nixon traveled to Alexandria, Egypt today, and the Arab commando assault came three days before his visit to Israel. It brought the number of terrorist victims in Israel to 49, including 31 children, in two months. Semiofficial Lebanese sources in Beirut said Israeli border artillery pounded a south Lebanese village in an opparent reprisal for the raid. The village of Ebles Saki, five miles north or the Israeli border, cami under a "heavy artillery barrage as of midday and the bombardment continued without let up well into the aitemoon," 1he sources said ... The terrorists attacked the little Israeli farming settlement of Shamir below the foothills of the Golan Heights. that carried hlm and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat from Cairo to the Mediterranean port of Alexandria. Nixon's press secretary, Ronald L. Ziegler, estimated that 3'rii: million BELLY DANCER OPENS NIXO_N'S EY~S. Story, P•ge 4 persons saw Nixon during the 31h·hour ride from Cairo lo Alexandria's Ras El Tin Palace where !he Nixons will stay during their overnight stay. Egyptian security guards gave a similar crowd estimate to Hennann Eilts, U.S. Ambassador to Egypt. Court Denies Reiliecke Bid WASffiNGTON fUPIJ -Tit< U.S. Court cf Appeals has turned down California Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke 's request that his trial on perjury charges be moved to the West Coast. Reinecke's appeal, which \!.'as denied Wednesday, was from a ruling by U.S. District Judge Barrington Parker. Reinecke's \\'ashington lawyers indicated they would not carry the appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. The Republican official has been indicted on charges lhat he lied before the Senate J u d i c i a r y Committee about conversatiflns he had with former Attorney General John Mitchell. Sen. Kno ·wland' s Debt $900,000 Before Suicide LOS ANGELES (AP) -Publisher and former U.S. Sen . \Villiam F. Knowla nd \Vas said to be insolvent when he com· milted suicide, oWing banks more than $900,000 that was coming due shorlly, the Las Angeles Times reported today. Most of the loans ha ve since been repaid, the newspaper said documents filed in Alameda County Superior Court shov.•ed. The Knowland family could not. be immediately reached for comment on the story. But court officials oon!inncd the Times story. The oakland Tribune Jlisher, a prominen t Republican who r a n unsuccessfully for governor, shot himself to death at his Northern California vaca- tion home Feb. 23. Among the court documents was an evaluation by the accounting finn of (See KNO\\'LA ND, Page 2) Ni xon and Sadat rode side-by-sid e on the train's observation platform. Nixon expected crowds but began swinging his head in disbelief as the dimensions of the crowd and Its emotions gripped him. The two presidents used the snail· paced ride ID discuss G e n e v a negotiations to reach a permanent peace in the Mideast. They told newsmen they agreed Arab leaders should hold what Sadat ca lled a "little summit" before meeting with Israel. "Before going to a summit conference, a number of leaders representing different points of view should have bilateral discussions," Nixon said. Construction In response to questions , he said tins need not apply to Israel. Everywhere along the train route there ~'ere signs of the changing Egyptian-U.S. relations that had been hostile fDr nearly two decades until Sec retary of State Jfenry A. Kissinger began his peace n1ission.s six months ago that set the st:i ge for Nixon's five-nation lour. Kissinger. who since his resignation !hreat Tuesday in Austria ha s stayed in the ba ckground so that Nixon might reap lhe honors. received a separate burst of applause whfn he got off 1he train in (See WELCOl\1E, J' .. ge 21 Irvine District Studies • Time Lag in Scl1ool Work The Jrvine Unified School Dislrict Board of Educa tion has directed its administrators to seek V.'BYS to ensure !hat the district would be able to provide schools for students from n e w developments "'hen the homes were occupied. A City or Irvine report, received by the boa rd Wednesday, detailed three possible ways for the district to circumvent a time lag problem it faces in not being able to have schools ready when the students arrive. The report, aired at an Irvine City Council meeting Tuesday. discusses ttie impact of residential growth on school financing. Key problems faced in the district. it says, are building expenditures, timing and meeting operating expenses. The district faces a time lag problem under the present way funds for new school buildings are allocated by the state. New resident ial developments can be bu ilt and occupied Y.'ilh in si~ month.'i of the lime the final subdivision tract map is filed . Schools. because of a 1 e n gt h y procedure of state approvals. require 24 to 30 months from the time the tract map Is filed to be read y for the students generated by the development. The city report suggests three 'vays the problem of overcrov.·ding ex:isting schools while new schools are being built ca n be overcome. It suggests land use restrictions, cooperative agreements with developers aod possible changes in state legislation as remedies to the time lag . Developers, it says, could provide temporary classrooms. These could be portable buildings. houses, or industrial buildings which could be used witil per· manent schools could be built. Another possibility. it says, is state legislation changing the way ncv.· schools are financed and built. This could be by (See 11!\IE LAG, Page ZI * 1.; * 'i-'r * * District Growth Plnns Not Su.pported by Mayor By GEORGI:: LEJDAL Of r11t Olllf l"lltl 51•11 Irvine 1.fayor Gabrielle Pryor said today she is not convinced the city needs to slow development to give school di strict officials more time to plan and build schools. A city law which would give the city such authority if it is included. in the Woodbridge Village zoning document was sent to Irvine Unified School District trustees \l.'ednesday night for comment. !\1rs. Pryor said she isn't concerned that !he lruslt~es received the document \Vith little fanfare . "I don 't think \Ve are in the same position we were In 1wo yea rs ago," the mayor said. \\'hen the city was formed. school districts serving the area. had too many children and not enough schools. Laguna Station Bo111bed Since then. residents have approved a $50 million bond iss ue and a S44 million Ruthorit y to draw on stale school building funds. "Instant " schools :ind openings or permanent stru ctures have eased the clas.'iroom short age. Police Facilit y's Brick Wall Foils Arson Atternpt By JACK CIIAPPELL Of "" Dtll"I' f'lltt '"" A fire bomb was throw:t al the Laguna Be:ich Police Department annex today In the second suclt arson attack in the Art Colony in five days . The annex which houses t h e department's detective fortt was not l'efiously damaged. The Molotov cocktail used In the Incident hit a brick wall and fell on a concrete loading area. Police U . Al Olson speculated the arsonist WB5 attempting to hit an open window in the building. • • . - The annex also houses the city recreation department. Over the weekend. a small eale belonging to the wife of a pollce detective was firebombed doing a.n estimated $8.000 to Sl0.000 damage to the Interior. Authorities are W1l!lure o( motives ln the two attacks, allhough Del. Alex Jimenez has --said the torching of his wife's cafe may have been in retaliation for pa~t arrests, or inveslisatlons he has conducted as a police officer. nae fire.bombing of the police annex took pl.ace at about 3:15 a.m. today. -, -· -. ' . . Lt. Olson said a beer bottl e flllt.1'.l with gtisoline and fu.~ with a torn strip of towe l was 1~ as the ~lolotov cocktail. The person or persorui: responsible fo r Uie bombing threw the device at the rear of the annex, 570 Glenneyre St There a mading dock used In build!ng·s former days as a poi.c;t office facility was hit by the naming bomb. U . Olson said the bui1ding was scorched by the gasoline·fed fire, but no re.al damage WliS done. A Catalina Street resident whose home backed up lo the annex reported the: fire lo the Laguna Beach t-lre Ocpartmmt. "Unless the 5Chool district cries {or help, I can't see that we y.•ill hnve :_. r.ecd for a phasing progra1n .'' f\-1rs. Pryor said. She described the proposed ordinance as being "highlr tenuous legislat ion" which might subject the t'ily to suit by developers. • " The lnw suggests tht city may re:fuse: pe rmission to build homei if it can be shown the development wlll O\•erburden schools by being co1nplctf'd ahead of completion of new schools to serve the area. As counci\n1en Tuesday re:viewed a wning ror homes ff,lr 27 ,000 new residents, Mrs . Pryor indicated she (Ste SLOW, Pa&e t J . . ~ -. . . . . . .. ~ . . . • ,! DA IL V PILOT IS CdM Teocla•~•· Cnse Pupil Cites Sex • Ill Orgy I Ry T0~1 BARLE\' or 1111 0111, "'llol s11u A Corona drl i\lar tligh School sludt'll! tcstifi«I today that he }oincd suspend1~<1 teacher Al11n Jay Schwallx> and anolhrr man o year ago in a sex encounter ut tlll' home of a \Vestminster "·oman knov.·n only to him as ''Kay". Thr IG-yrar-old stucl(·nt. f i rs t prosecution \l'Itncss in !hr Harbor i\tunicipa\ Court 1norals trial o f Schwalbe. 42. of 2860 Alta Vista Drive. Ne\l'porl Beach. said he and his lhree companions strippt'd shortly a fl e r arriving at lhe hoine and then engaged in sexual int rrcourse. The y,•iln<'ss s.1id he was originally hired bv Scli\l.'albc 10 y,·ork QJl apartmenis n1anagCd by the social stud ies instn1ctor on Pepper Tree Lane in Costa '.\lesa and that sexual acts occu rred betwt'en the in an a vacant apartment there abc ut a rear ago. · The witness t~tified that Sch..,valbe displayed pornographic movies in the aparln1ent and that sex acts took place af1er he (the ...... ·itnessl bt!can1c aroused by t.hc filn1. Defense attorne~· J an1cs J ackman todav described Sch"·a lbc to the jury as a "fine honest cit izen and a dedicated teacher' who has always been ck.~ply in\rolved in rommunily affairs." Jackman told the jury that last yi.'ar SchYl'albc sa,·cd the life of a child he fou~i1 at 1he bottom or a S\\·immin~ pool and that he is "'idely known in lhr Harbor Area for his v.·ork 9.ith gifted ctuldren and his service to music e>rganizations. Jackman told the Jury that Schv.•albe is the father of fi"e YOilllS children. an1ong From Pagel KNOWLAND • • • O'Keefe and Lalanne es umati ng that KJlO"·land·s estate .\'larch 15 had asse ts of $641,428.28 and liabilities of Sl ,312.~. Paul f\fanolis. Kno"'laru:f s close frien d and executor of the estate. said !be estate v.•as insolvent. "'The creditors' claims filed to date sho'"" to some extent. the manner in which the said Ann Dickson Kno"·land rontributed to the insol\·ency1." Manolis said in a statemen t filed \\'ilh the court \\1ay 28. ?o.\anolis told the Times «.nO\\'land's financial coodition had nothing to do "-ith the Tribune. H.e said Know\and owned only "around JO percent" of the nev.·spaper, which is run by a family- controlled corpora tion. The attorney for Ann Di c ks o n Knowl and. Knowland's second \\•ifc. said he didn't believe the estate was insolvent. saying he thought it v.·as an att empt lo deprive his client of "'hat she considers a fa ir living allov.'ance. J\.trs. Knowland Y.'as a JS-year-old Las as divorqe, former actress and model when she married Knowland in May 1972 after he was divorced from his "i fe of 45 years. Helen. Knowland filed for a dissolution of marriage to the second !\!rs. Knowland in February 1973. but Lewis \V. Boies. ~r attoml'y. said Wednesday they had reconciled and \rere "happi ly married.'' P..l rs . Knowland asked for support payments of $6.f>OO a month after his death. Kno"·land awarded her $1.000 a 1nonth in lhe "ill but on ~-larch 18. the coon. increa sed it to $1.250 a month. In a statement to the court , 1\111=. Knov.•land said, "At no time during my conversations \vith my hus band and prior to bis dea th did he indicate any financial distress or insolvency of any kind or nature ... " f\.Ianolis. in his stateme111 filed with thl' court, replied. ''The fact is thttt the sald \Vitliam F. Knowlarid has told me on many occasions that he has told his \\~fc. Arm Dickson Knowland , th<lt he v.'ns not an Onassis or /lughes and could not afford that "'hich she \Vas spend ing." Among the clal rns filed against !he estate "'as one by Irene Sargent, an eitclusi \·e Oakland dress shop. for $4,687.89. OlANGf COAST IS DAILY PILOT ,,.. °"•"" Cor..1 Dt.r'I P>lcol ..... ~ *f>C> If"""" i. .......... "'---. """"'"""' trt .... 0.l "QO Col<! 1'111>111"""1 "-"" a-,,.~..,~.,...,..,. -··-· !Ion.soy !"""""" f ~(l.O~ II.>< C.0"' II-. ,..,""l'O" Ill-,..." °"J~•"ll'Qft S..o;ft/F(N<>o '"'" V.tle1 U g"''" {lo.ocJ'o +"""" ~· 1M ::;... 0.-.•l:S..• ., ... C..flo\111..,, • ""II'" ·~ """""' .. P.<bl .. -5.1,.,,,,..,. ...... s..~. """"-T"" pn!ll:•r>OI ~ ... •"II I""''" '1 »OW.I• 1>iySl1ee!.Co .. •l.'IM1 Cl<,1<110 .. 9'6'8 ""'°"'' t J \l/ .. ..,f "···--l'vbf, . ...;. b:JP r ,,1~y YtQf "'n~-U-ll "'•~~• l~ll;C'(l•' ·~· l rOl"'l' A M.1:J °"' ,,._"OE~eQI Cra!r.H.lOO\ ~ fudP lhl A"'tl.,.'I~ [&.I .... otficH Or••"'~ l.Yl.,...,,..,c:., ..... ., .... ,,,,a..., .. .u.1• ............ 1\, ,.,.,, L•;""' &o_,~ ;n<(lo'•·•• A•~,,.. ........ ~110'0 8'>_,, !liT~ a.. .. ~~'''""" S.•C-"t• lD!l t..,.. .. c,c...,,..,f,_ Ttkph-17141642-4J21 Cleulflecl A4•-ni~"9 642·5671 S.. CJ......te i.U Dtp..-tlM"t.: Tf'I.,._. 4•2·4420 0urw>9N. 1114, ~ tol~ l'IM•.l'lol'1 eo.... ,.,.,., N~.,..•~llOno"i """'""'"11'1" """<i''I'""""' Ill .c!"°'•'1-~I r""""' ~~I '-" '"""'110C•~ '"""""t"""._1""""''''"'ol ~'O'"• ,.....,. !';«-LIO'. "°""91' !"111•1 Co<of1 ,..._, (,.hb 19'.o l'lo;-lf'l""·"~~ ... J~llCnlO'I•~•; O;,..ol II 00 INo'l'M~, ,.,,, Ill'/ .,...1111!-» l.oO"""'"'' ' County 1hen1 l\\'O sets of ll\'ins . and thot he once dn.>11· l.500 votes as i'I write-in l"8ndida1e for ll1l• Cost[I !\lcsa Citv Cou11c1I. fK-1>Uty L>is1 r1ct A110111t•y Ca r I .\rn1b11.1st told th .. , 111.'\\'IY Conned jury tortay that he "'ill also pu t the \1•1tness' brotbcr on the stand lo support the 17 1nisdeffit'anor co unts filed ii. g a i n s t SehY.'8.lbe. The li.'.'.lcher is charged in those nlleg:ilions 11 ith Sl'XUally annoying and n1oll'Sting both IS.year-Old studen!s and contributing to their delinquency. Arbrust told the jury in hi., opening statc1ncn l that the broth er of today 's 11"!tness ioimi\arly l'ngaged in \'arious i;.exua l acts \l'ilh Sch\\'albe \vhile "'orking at the teacher's apartment house. On one occasion. the prosecutor clain1rd, Srh\valbe took one of the brothers to the home or an identified Santa Ana n1ale dwarf "'here several sex acts were comn1itted. Sch1.,.albe. employed by the Newport· !\1esa tlnified School District tor the past 12 years. has been suspended by di.strict officia ls pending !he out tome of the current trial. Judge Rob(<11 C. Todd has csWnated that the trial \\'ill t.a ke 10 days. Thirty-One pros pective jurors '"'ere eliminated in t"·o days of jury selection before the final panel of scvea men and f1\'C 11·on1en \\'SS S\\'Om in by Judge Todd. Irvine Scl1ools Expand S~1m1ner Skills Program The Irv ine Unified School District will have an expanded summer ~chool progra m this year. featuring special programs aimed at sharpening basic ski tis. The district expects sum mer school enrollment to be up 45 percent from last year and two elementary schools. Culverdale and Greentree, ~:i ll hold summer sessions for the first time. Diagnos tic and prescriptive learning centers for all grades '"'ill be held during July at University Park, College Park and Turtle Rock eletnentary schools. Three sessions will be held eoch day from 8:15 to 10:15 a.m., 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and l lO 2 p.m. The centers are designed to determine what learning di fficulties students ha ve and "'hat ac1ivities may be used to increa se skills in reading, writing. mattl.ema!ics and language. Another learning lab will be held Aug. 5 from 5 to 9 p.m. for grades one through siit at C:Ollege Park, CUlve rdale, El Toro Marine. Greentree and TurUe Rock &hools. A special perfonning arts program ll.'ill be added to summer school classes at University High School. and Rancho San Joaquin tntennediale School will have a summer school program ror 7th and 8th graders. ~· · From Page I TIME LAG ... requiring developers to ded icate school sites to the district. rather than the district buying them. Other changes rould include the developer adv ancing planning funds for ncv.· schools to the distrlct, or changing the sequ ence of events needed for state approval of building funds. Thi-building funds are now allocat.ed on a basis of historica l ex pansion of the number of students, rather than on projected growth. The other avenue e:<plored in he report is regulating land use to •·phase. dcvclopn1ent based on the timely availability of adequate educalional facilities." Through use of a formu la "'hi ch could bl' added to the cit y zoning code. developmen t ""Ould be restricted to that \\·hich v.·ould increase studen ts by a constant percentage each year. · Tius \\·ay. the district could co nlinue t:> build schools based on the historical rate of increase. District opera ting expenses ar e jeopardized. the report says, ! t rl!sidential dc\'elopment signillcanUy out· strips commercial development. The break-even point for district taxes presently, is ~.000 per house. If the l'alue of homes drops much brlow thal. on the average. the district "·ill face a fi n:i nclng pinch. The report sugg('slC'd iln ad1tition to the zoning code v.·hich would help insure :i sufllcicnt tax bast. The board instructed its staff to continue working \\'ith the cily 10 hl'!p smooth the tr~nsitlon as the di strict's rcs1dc11tial areas develap. :French Progran1 Told PARIS I API -l>re.!ident Valery Cisca rd d'Estang unveiled an aus1erily proi;:ram \Vednesday night to comba t inflallon and Improve the balAnl'e of p.a)rments Uefil'lt cau.st!d by hl~her oil prices. The president 1n a telecast snid the Nntional Assembly \\'OUld be askf.'CI to approve a tax hike on higher lnco1nes, Increased 1ntcreSl. tQhlS for 11avlngs <1ccounrs, a one-time-only Increase in company taxes, a $200 mill ion t:ul In govcrmn1cnt spending for 1974 and higher gasoline prices. ' . . ' . U,.I Ttlltlllolt . . ~ . lrvii1e Eyes Re sidential Rezoning Resldenlin l nn.on.ings provkling new homes for more than 6,7IJl;t people ore to 1 be considered tomglit by Irvine plaooing comnlissioncrs. Con1missioners wlU review the 64·.ncrc Ornngetree and the ~acre Pondtrosa· Irvine planned communities during their meeling set for 7:30 in city hall , 4201 Ca mpus Drive . Orangelree is a 976-un it. a d u I l community development being proposed hy the Presley Cornpany on land near El Toro ?i.tarine Corps Air Station. Presl ey seeks approval ol an average 15 Wlils per acre density. Ponderosa·Jrvine is a revised family development plamed to offer 1,150 to 1.550 hotTieft at densities from 5 to 18 uni.ts per acre. 'lbe property forms the northern tip of the cily abOve Irvine Boulevard. ENTHUSIASTIC CROWDS WITH ARMS OUTRAISED CHEER AT PRESIDENTS NIXON, SAOAT Two Leaders Ride From Cairo to Alexandria in O~n Railroad Car as Egyptians Hail Pair The larger Pooderosa project Is the first rezoning request filed by developers who participated in the city's planning effort which produced the North Irvine Specific Land Use Plan (NISLUPJ and accompanying t'flVirorunental i m p a c t statement Fro1n Pagel WELCOME .•. Alexandria. (Related story Page 4) .!\! one point along the route. at Kafr cl Zayat. one of the thousands of child ren "'ho y.•atched the train pas.s. 7-year-0ld Sahar ~1ohamn1ad , said she had never actuaUy heard oi Nixon. Asked if she bad heard of the United $tates. she replied, "Yes, they are the \\·ar people.'' "No. no, no," her mother Fat'h.i.a has tily corrected. "Now we are friends ." At Tanta . about halfway between Cairo and Alexandria, trucks with loudspeakers explai ned to the crowds that the United Sta tes is no"· Egypt's !rieod and that this is the reaS011 Nixon's pictures arc e\'erywhc.re. "\'le greet Mr. Niiton with love. appreciation and fellov.•mip," the sound truck told the crowds. And everywhere ~·ere the dlants of "Nix-Oil ... Nix-0n" that sometimes even dro wned out the noise of the train . "I've nev er seen people so excited and emotional ." said a White House official aboard the train. "This is for a president who has run into hostile placards in the U.S .. " referring to Nixon 's impeachment troubles over Wate rgate back home. About 30,000 policemen were turned out for security purposes along the train route, carrying automatic weapons. Helicopters followed Nixon's motorcade through the streets of Ale xandria. Security measures ar expected to increase as Nixon con tinues his journey through the Midenst, especially in view of an Arab guerrllla attack today at the Israeli .se tllement of Shamir. Nixon and his wife will spend the night at Ras el Tin Palace, from where King Farouk \\·ent into exile in 1952, before returning lo Cairo Friday for a visit to the Pyramids. He will depart Friday for Saudi Arabia and then go to Syria, Israel and Jordan. ·'Long live Nixon!" shouted the crm•:d as Nixon left ttre C3iro stat.ion. He responded with smiles, waves and the V sign Ni:<on is so known for -arms high ove r his head, t"'O fingers spread apart. All along the train route. workers left the fields to watch the train. Wom en. usually "'aiting in the background because of ~1oslem custom, were up front. holding up their children . "I made arrangements for this special trip to pass by this place where I could see them," said Abdul Hak Ahmed, 36, \\'ho Jed a string of four camels to a spot where the train passed. "I \Vant to go to ~·lecca most of all but I y,·ant to be here, too,'' A line of horses blanketed \V ith American and Egypt ian flags \\'SS strun~ out along one section of track. "'Ifs unbelievable." Ziegler said. "~1y God, it's unbelievable." Niiton, Ylho was given a gold lifetime pass to the railroad said he enjoyed the train trip very much. Of the reception he received he said: "After 25 years of misunderstand ing <in d seve n ye a rs of bit t er misunderstanding, Egyptian-American friendship has a natural founda tion and y.·e're building on it." Irvine Football Leag ues Forming :Fol' Y ouug Boys "°Ys from 8 tn 13 are invited to sign up for Jun ior All-Am erican Foo l b a I J A!>.1;1x:iu1ion season play :H Irv ine locati ons from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, SiJ,:nups "·ill be held :it the No rth lrvlne Athtl·lic 1-"aciht)'. tfarvard at \Valnut AYenucs and near 1hc sv.·imming PoOI or l'niv1·rsily High School, Culver at Carnp11s Dri\·c. A I rt'glstration fee C('Vers the com or medtcal cii;amlnallons and insurance for the season . Parenu should accompany their sons to rcg1stc.r them, association pr1•sidf'nt Wl\llam Eg;u1 of Cniversity Park $Uggcslcd. Tryout.Ii for the fi\c crt\ lt•ams will bcg111 Aug. 5 with Jwguc plBy 5t't lo open Sc•pt. 14. Vor further in formation abo ut the pro~tnrn cull athlelic director Chuck Bradbury or Walnut Village at 651-t445. • Ro111antic ltaterest Sa11 Diego Gn·l Flies To JoiI1 P~·i11 ce Cl1arles LONDON (AP) -The blonde daughter of an American admiral emerged today in lhe London press as the latest romantic interest of Europe's most eligible bachelor, Prince Charles, future king of England. Miss Laura Jo Watkins, 20, daughter of Rear Adm . James Wa tkins of San Diego flew lo London at the invitation of the prlnce and has ca.used < minor sensation in British ne"·spapers, eager chroniclers of the prince 's love life. (Picture. Page 4.) Charles, 25. a lieutenant in the Royal Navy , met Miss Watkins last ~larch Y:hen his ship, the frigate· HMS Jupiter, put in at San Diego on a training voyage to the Americas. "~1y husband was the official guest at the party to y,·etcome Prince Charles and hi s ship," the Daily Mail quoted ~fiss \\'atki ns' molher as saying in San Diego. "But he couldn't make it and asked if our daughters, Laura Jo and Susan, could go instead . They did." The prince, elder son of Queen Elizabeth JI , decided to renew the acquaintance after he was invited by American ambassador Walter Annenberg Fron• Page 1 SLOW ... y,·ould not support inclusion of the "phasing'' program in the Woodbridge zoning ordinance. She praised the legal research effort by the city attorney's office, but added. "I don't think we should spend any more time or money pursuing phasing if the sdlOOI district doesn't believe it will be ne«led." "lf at some time in the future the school district tells us there is a substantial problem which p h a s i n g residential development might solve. then we will be ready to go ahead and put phasing into our general plan zoning ordinances," she said. Mrs. Pryor dismissed the need for phasing to allow com mer c ial development to Catch up , saying "it isn't fair lo tell a developer he can't build houses just because he isn't successful finding a supennarket dlain willing to open a market" lo attend a farewell party tonight marking the end of AI · tberg 's five- year stay in London. The prince was asked if he wanted to invite anyone special and selected Mis! \Vatkins, a U.S. embassy spokesman said. Because of a period of royal mourning over the death 111onday of the Duke of Gloucester, the queen's uncle,• Prtnce Charles had to cancel his appearance at the ambassador's party. However, It was li kely he and Miss Watkins would meet privately. The mourning continues until Friday evening. "\\'e receh·ed a letter from Mrs. Annenberg asking her over and, of course, we agreed," ~fr!. Walk.i ns was quoted as saying. "She left at the weekend and Is due back at school at the end of the month . Her father paid the fare.'' Miss Watkim spent a year In college, and traveled through Europe before settling into a course at a San Diego business school. She plans to become a legal secretary, After their initial meeting March 16 at an eitcluslve yacht club in the Coronado lsland area of San Diego, the Mail said, Prince Charles invited Miss Watkins tc lunch before his ship sailed. The paper said they have corresponded since. "It is a complete surprise to us that Prince Charles is interested ln Laura Jo," ~1rs. Watk ins was quoted in discounting any reports of romance. "We are terribly flattered, but surely he must have lots of English girl fr iends." An American Embassy spokesman al so discounted any speculation of a budding rom ance. "She's here as a private guest or ambassador Annenberg," he said. "She's here to go to the party, period." Police Ch ief Serious UNION CITY (AP ) -Police Chief William H. Cann was still in critical but stable condition loday , afte r he was gunned down Tuesday night by a sniper while attending a community meeting to discuss alleged police brutality. No arrests have been made in the case. Ponderosa Homes is seeking approval of the planned cunmunity zone on land currenUy zoned for agricu1tural use. O ty Planning Director William R. Uvingstone advises ptanning commjssloners no new envirmmental report is needed since the proposed development nmtche6 the land uses spelled out in the NJ SLUP document. Planning commis s ioners have recommended city council approval of the NISLUP document and its EIS, Livingstone said. Councilmen this week indicated they might want U> change the land uses suggested for the southernmost portions ol the 2,711-acre area. That means final adoption or the north Irvine plan may be delayed. Ponderosa is one of the developers waiting for approval for development plans for north Irvine s.ince the city was incorporated in 1971. City general plan efforts and earlier attempta at an accept.able north Irvine precise plan were the cause of the delays. Orangetree is not a:>Midered to be a part ol the NISLUP plaming area. However, when the RI n k e r Development Company attempted to obtain residential zoning for the property lying south of ~1oultoo P a r k w a y councilmen denied tbe wning request. Among reasons cited for the denial were the excessive noise frun jets' using El Toro MCAS, lbe lack of sdlOQ..lis to serve the children the earlier pro}ect would have generated and other factors suggesting the development of. the site would be prematlll'4!. Raise Approved For Non-teaching Irvine Employes Irvine Unified School D i s t r i c l non-teaching ' employes will receive a raise and a higher level of fringe benefits under a new lontract approved by the board of education Wednesday. The contract for the 1974-75 scllool year includes an eight percent raise for non -teaching employes in pay categories up to range 39. Those employes in pay ranges above 39. including supel'\'isors and !lame techni cians, will receive a six percent raise. The package. ~·h.ich would cost the district an arlditional $90,000 over the cnr· rent cltissified salaries, also includes the sa1ne medical and dental plan for de- pendents the teachers hav, John Rajcic. assistant superintendent, sa id. The medical plan would cost about $100 per empklye per year, he said. '7J:d WlXEMEH·s ~~~.i.::· -~-·-CELLARS 2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS 2500W.COASTHWY. Hl WPOWT IEACH PHONE 642·7076 ~-·-~ IH HfWPOn PROOUCI YlUAGE 1601 HIWPOITILYlt. 1-.. -...---COSTA MESA 642·f004 '~~ , .. W'~~Pe~ CHEESE KOSHER L a ' SMOKE OUICI 8 DOMESTIC SWISS . j ~ • TYIO rLAIM OI j "' MONTEREY JACK f. .. '1'. ,,, '& $ 79 $ 79 M ~Si lb. sr.J . v~ Now 1 i::. Now I~ r; LIMit J .._ ' . ) ~\ l !Mff J ... Lh1dt J ... COHYrlHIMf ,Al•IMG IM IOTH LOCi.TIOttS • \;1 SALAMI ,.. ·' ......... ' BRICK ·~ WltttC..-.i />' 'L W1U.C.... 1:1"., WlthC....-i ~BUF'F'E~r'"""'c-A"-re'i1NG' SERVI' CE~~~··· s~~. -~~L..:~~~~~~=-:==-:a ' 60 A.. -L.,., •• , •• ,. ...... $; (,~: )<:;. ... _\ Assortmenl 0 oot1fo 5,a,,..w1c .. .,,s s7so " ,f(_l'"-"i , · /. ~-neaTly afranged. consis11ng of rare ,...1 • ,, ... lchtt.. ~~ • -··---~ ~ ,,_ rOflSI beef, roMI breasl ol lurkoy, :; WEDGE FINGER SANDWICH PARTY TRAY bO•led t1am anct au t>eet sa1am1. 1 14 11 ,... ... , WINE f~atures BY POPULAR DEMAND, a rep~at of a sellout Altno1I eff wlM lo•tn _... owwt of HM! _,_ "SOUVllllAIH"~ of Catifontf•'• ..,ity ""'9dtcf ,.......,,,_ luf how .. eny .... OW .... thof tftlt pr.-tr of "'911 ,.,... .. IO proc11M:11 wine .... wthtr ~-"Loi A1Np1''1' W• et WIHIMAH'S do. ft now ,.si Hiit lnf011 w.+foR on to r- TlMt'•'I to•"""t .It• Y°' thoukl Dow -TM ... ty of tW•~ ..,..., know" Woftcf h owttl .... , •• tt.t ,nu i1 alto! Try ff tW1 •n•1.d! Y• W'Ofl"t IN clit .. paiRtM. t For Roasts, SlcakS.. Srews. Duck. Ground $1r1e>1n Hamburg<1r. veal Of Pasta, Try ••. "LOS AMIGOS" ZINFANDR For Cnocse Dtshe's. Ctucken. Crab, Escaroot. Ham. Seafood or omc1011es. Try . "LOS AMIGOS" CHENIN &ANS ' • • $198 Jl.l' ptl'UM $198 Jl,l• ,.,. ... VOL. Huntington Beaeh Fountain ·Valley 67" N0,1 164, 4 SECTIONS , 44 PAGES •• ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOR' IA I Today's Final N.Y. Stocks THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1974 TEN CENTS Official·s Trade Charges for Labor Camp Ills By WILIJAM SCHREIBER Of ,... Deltf .... ., ltftf Top officials or two government agencies charged with falling to correct alleged inhuman condili011!1 at farm labor camps in Orange County blamed each other Wednesday for falling down on the 'job. Dr. John Philp, director of the county health department and Gordon S. Hill, deputy director of the California Department of Housing and ·eommunity Development, made the commenlS in ·telephone interviews. • They were reacting to criliclsm by the county Grand Jury and ~Iuman Relations Commission -revealed this week -that responsible government officials are passing the buck ratl\er than solving the problems. The CQmmission, in a report to the jury. said inspections of many of the two dozen county camps revea led unbe- Ucvable squalor. The jurv did its ov.:n 1nspecting. covering about eight or the camps, and reached the same conclu- sions. In a lengthy statement phoned fron1 Sacramento, Hill branded the jury and commission findings as "a shotgun approach which misrepresents responsibility for housing condition$." He said that "if the grand jury accepts all the information as factual , it is in for a rude shock." Hill said the commission inspected the camps and claimed to have found dirty livinB" quarters and kitchens a n d unsanitary food handling techniques, "none of which is v.·ithin s t a t e jurisdiction." ,;Ol.Jr responsibility is the adequacy and maintenance of plumbing, electrical and heating facilities. structural a n d ventilation requirements and occupancy factors," Hill said. lie had no comment when told that the human relations commission report v.·as also sharply critical of inferior housing. · plumbing and overcrowded coodiLions al some of lhe camps -all v.•ithin the state·s jurisdiction by Hill"s definition. "General sanitation and food handling standards are county responsibilitirs even thoogh the report quotes the rounty as denying this responsibility," Hl!l continued. ';I have since talked V.'ith countv health offlcials who agreed these problems arc within their jurisdiction." Egypt Reception Overwhelms Valley Strike Teacliers ~1<ty Take It Up 1lfter Sumnier By KA TllY CLA NCY Of Ille D.lllr 'not $l1t1 Teacher representatives in I he FoWll.ain Valley School District have decided lo put of£ any strike action until SeJll=ber. At a meeting Wednesday, about 100 of the district's f)3(l teachers agreed to continue negotiating, but to reconsider a strike in September if a satisfactory contract isn 't reached. ~leanY.·hlle, teachers in the Huntington Beach City School District planned to picket during a negotiating meeting at 7 o'clock tonigh.t If an agreement isn't reached, teachers may consider a strike vote, but teacher spokesmen said it was unlikely teachers would strike Friday, the last day of school. The FoWltain Valley School District reopened contract talks this week after a mooth-long impasse called by the school board last month. Judie Lowman , president of the Snake on Loose Pet Boa Gone in Hrintingwn Has anyone seen a seven-foot boa constrictor lately"! There's one loose in a Muntington Beach housing tract, but his owners asSW'e their neighbors he is friendly and harmless. 1r you see him. contact the James Kokoris family at 21601 Bahama Lane, or phone 963-2884. Don't waste your breath calling him becau5'C he has no name. "Snakes can't hear," explained ~1rs. Kokoris. She said some neighbors are alanned. Y.'hile others are taking the matter lightly. "We don't want people to be afraid if they see him." she added . "He's perfectly harmless and wouldn't hurt anything." The snake y.·as one of five pet reptiles the Kokoris' son, Jeff. 17, brought \.\'ilh him \\'hen the family moved into the Fashion Shores tract three v.·eeks ago. This one got loose Thursday afternoon while Jeff was "sunning" it on the family patio. 1-frs. Kokoris, \Vho said the boa is a mu~Jiked pet , was fearful someone seeinl;L-might kill it. She a~ked. in~tea~. if they'd telephone the family to pick 1t "P· One angry neighbor of the family said today she was concerned at.>ut the loose snake. "Isn't it illegal to keep a pet like that?" she queried. A C8lifomia Animal Control officer helped the Kokoris family look for the snake Thursday night . but officers on (See BOA, Page %) F ou11tain Valley Alone Approves Tax Override By CANDACE PEARSON Of lllti ~ilr l"llot St•ft The 52,square-mile Huntington Beach Union High School District covers part or all of seven communities in v.·est Orange County. Voters in only one of those cities - Fowitain VaUey -gave majority approval to the high school district's ta~ override on the June 4 ballot. The mea sure, which needed a simple majo rity yes vote to pass, was defeated with 26,536 total yes votes and 31,261 no votes. The least support for the financing effort came from \\lestminster, where slightly more than one-third of the total voters were arfinnmtive. The results by citi~ are: -Fountain Valley : 4.254. yes; 3.413, no. -Garden Grove : 219, yes : 4i0, oo. -Huntington Beach: 15,114, yes; (See VALLEY, Page ZJ F'ountain Valley Education Association , told teachers \\lednescla y that· the board · agreed this .week to offer teachers a 2.6 pereffit pay increase. Teachers were asking for I0.4_percent and 83 percent of any new funds which come into the district next year. Earlier, teachers had asked for a 13 percent raise, while the board ollered no increase except for the percent raise teachers receive for completing an !See SntlKE, Page ZI 9% lnc1·ease For District • En1ployes OKd Administrators and classified employes in the lluntington Beach Union }ligh School District have been granted a nine percent salary increase. Trustees approved the across the-board raise for the 13D administrators and 4~4 classified personnel without the controversy surrounding the recenl teachers' pay settlement. Admiriistrators inc I u de principals , counselors and district supervisors. 'Classified. employes include clerks, office v;orkers. custodians. audio-visua l aides and other non-teaching personnel. Teachers, represented by the District F,ducators Association (DEA), recently v;on a six percent across-the-board raise plus a one-lime cost-of-living increase not to exceed three percent. Teachers staged a one-da y walk out. when negotiations with the dist rict stalled. Following an all-night bargaining session, the DEA and the district tentatively agreed lo the 6-3 split. But administrators and classified employes' cont racts approved by ihc board Tuesday didn't include the C.'051-of- living provision. Trustees also ratified the teachers' settlement, an action applaudOO by DEA members Bruce Johnson and C.B. Wright. The nine percent increase for teachers. administrators and classified \\'orkers v.•ill cost the district $1.85 million. a district of£icial said today. The teachers'. package . including libra rians and nurses, will rost $1.22 million of the total. Classified salary increases will cost $411 ,238, the official said, with ad.ministrat()rs' tab at $216.418. The defeated attempt to boost the district's tax rate of $2.82 per $100 assessed valuaLion by 17.8 cents failed in Garden Grove, Huntington B e a c h • Midway City, Seal Beach, Sunset Beach and Westminster. Plantaitag, ParJ¢s, Rect•eation j ~ );.t._i ... • ... ,r· "' . I. ni · .. I. ,. I D•lllY l"ilot sr1t1 l"llOtt HUNTINGTON LAKE WILL BE RECREATION ORIENTED Portion of Huntington Beach's Central Park to Open Part of Huntingto11 Park To Be Dedicated Saturday Huntington Beach will officially open and dedicate 167 acres of its new central park al 10 a.m. Sa lurday, near the north shore of HWltingfon Lake. A full day of speeches. music, entertainment and park tours is planned to celebrate the opening of the $6.6 million park project. The ceremony begins at George J\fcCracken (former mayor) Meadows v.•hich can be reached from Edwards Street, on the northern edge of the lake. City Parks Director Nonn Worthy wlll give the key speech at 10 :30 a.m., recalling the history or the park develop1nent and outlining f u t u r e e~pansion of ii. Parks commissioners will also speak, explaining the names and purposes of va rious sections of the park. The }iuntington Beach Con1munily Concert Band v.•ill give perforn1ances before and after the speeches. Shortly after noon, the California Aerial Circus Parachule Team. will drop from the sky over Huntington Lake. Entertainment and bus tours y.•ill be held from noon to 3 p.m.. both al Huntington · Lake and Talbert Lake. on the easl side of Golden \Vest Street. Featured on a portable stage at Talbert Lake will be Canyon, a rock band: lhe Senior Citizens' "Singing Good Times··: and the Huntington Beach Exchange Club talent show. Perfonning on stage near Huntington Lake \\•ill be the Music 1\1.an Band. Voicesl of lfuntington Valley and th·c •lunt ing ton Beach Folk J\lusic Festiva l. The aOOentee ballots in the June 4 primary election al.so came in almost two to one against the issue. Proposition H. • The figures fron1 the Orange County Registrar of Voters were re.leased by school administrators '(uesday night. Voters in Fountain Valley supported the propo6Cd rate increase with a 4.254 yes vote. A total of 3,413 voters cast no 43 Seek Valley Positions All perfonnances are free. During the arternoon, ilieree will be a Nev.'J)Ort 12- inctcr scale model sui lbo:i1. race on Jlunlington Lake. \Vorthy said the park will be open, starting Saturday, though fences will remain up for some lime in areas where the ci ty wants to protect n e "' IAndscaping, giving small bushes and trees a chance 10 grow. ballots in that city. • The override WM designed to raise $14.5 million to build one more school in the overcrowded high school district. lted Ballet Goes On IA>NDON (UPI) -The Soviet Union'11 Rolshol Ballet danced "Swan Lake'' unperturbed Wedn esday night despite repeated attempts by p r o -J e w i s h demonstrators to d i ~ r u p t the performance nt the Coliseum '!'healer. D e..-monstralor s and counter· demonstrators chanted and w a v e d banners outsldl! demanding Hbcrntion of • Jewish prisont!rs ln the Soviet Union iit'ld for and aga inst cniigrallon to lsracl. A total or 43 people. including the seven incumbents. have applied for jobs on the Fountain Valley planning and parks and recreation commissions. The terms of office of three planning commissioners and one alternate and three parks commissioners rW'I out Juile 30. Fow1taln Valley cit y councllmtn will interview some of the 11ppllcants from 2 p.m. to 5::W p.m. Saturday at City llall. TtKl first Interview session took pince. Tuesday and councilmen expect to continue their dcl[l>eratlons ~tooday. The Incumbents on the plannlng con1mlsislon arc Mldha J\tichael Capizzi. chtllrman: James Dick. June Boykin and Alan Powell, altlof-nat4! . The parks crunmlssloncrs involved 1tre Geo'rge Crosby. Chris Schneider and ~1arsha Richards. The-political appQintments, which we;-e recently criticized by tv.·o resident s as not renecling the business community, run for four yea rs. Chamber or Commerce President fred Roberson urged the council to consider local merchants for the Posi tions, v.•hich will take eJftct Jul y L Vaughn Conolly. a r cs id en t y.·ho frequents the council sessions, attacked the planning commission as "bad for business" ·and askt!d the council to "make a clean sweep" of th e incumben ts. The council didn't comment publ icly on either statement. A total of 16 people have npplled to be on the planning Ct'lmmisslon, Fifteen applicants \\'ant to SCr\'C on the parks p'ancl. Another 12 pet'lple ha\'e applied ror appointments to both commissions. Not all the planning incumben ts have served the full four years bccau~ they were appointed to fill vacancies when other members stepped down. CaplZll and f..trs. Boyktn, who rectnlly lost n bid for election to lht council , were appointed in 1971. Dick has been on the commission sinct 1966. a rull tv.·o tem1s. Both commi.53fons serve as advisory p.11ne t11 16 the council. ~!embers arc paid $15 per meeting. Tht planning commis.!ion can lead the v.·aj tn rulings on industrial and busincs..~ construction and oo sign ordinances, allhough it! recommendations 1nu~t he ocled on by tho. council. Central Parit covers both sides of C.ulden West Sttl!Ct. oear Talbert Avenue . The tv.·o lakes are its biggest features. though it also has a number of large tree groves, a hilly area. a nature center noel a smaller lake. The new central Ubra ry. still under construction, sits on a hill at Talbert Avenue, overlooking Talbert Lake. \Yhlle 167 acres have been developed, lhe city still owra another 83 acres to be deve loped in the near future!, and may exptind the central park beyond U\.'ll , The park v.·as bul\t from a combination or federal grants. and portions of the $6 nlilllon park bonds Huntington Beach voters approved in 1969. Dr. Philp flail)' dented that the health department is the agency responsible for enforcing laws rovcr1ng labor cam p conditions. "If there has been an~· buck-Wissing in this affa ir, it's because lhe.v ha,•en't done their job." Philp sai din reference to the state agency. "Under the Housing and Con1munity Development Act, that is the enforcing agency f<Jr all the things the commission (Ste CHARGES, Page 2) Nixon Millio11s Come Out, By llELEN THO~tAS ALEXANDR IA. Egypt !UPI ) 1\lillions of Egyptians. ti;ave ling by came l. donkey , oxcart and root. left their v.·ork in the fields 10 honor President Nixon as a ne1v friend and peacemaker on a campaign-style train ride tnrough the Nile Valley. Nixon described h i m s e I f as ''overwhelmed" by the massil'c show or esteem for him and f''irst Lady Pal Nixon . It wa s "a magnificent reception," Nixon told newsmen on lhe train v.·hen asked his reaction to the throngs that gathered along the \30 miles or tracks that carried him and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat from Cairo lo the Mediterranean port of Alexandria. Nixon 's press se<!retary, Ronald L . Ziegler, eslimated that 31~ million BELLY DANCER OPENS NIXON'S EYES. Story, Page 4 persons sav.' Nixon during the 3v.t-hour ride from Cairo to Alexandria 's Ras El Tin Palace where the Nixons will stay duf\ng their overnight sta y. Egyptian security guards gave a simila r crowd estimate to Hennann Eilts, U.S. Ambassador to Egypt. Nixon and Sadat rode side-by·side on !he train's observation platform . Nixon expected crowds but began sv.•inging his head in disbelief as the dimensions of the crowd and its emotions gripped him . The two presidents used the snail~ paced ride to discuss G e n e v a (See \\'ELC0~1 E, rugc ZJ 800 Graduating At Golden West 1\'fore than 800 students ,,·ill receive th ei r AA deg rees Friday night duri ng graduation ccrcn1onies ar Golden \\'t•:.t College in Huntington Beach. The ceremony sla rr.~ at 6·30 p.n1 . and 11•ill be held for the firs! lirne in tht schexil's new outdoor amphitheater on thl east side of the campus. near Golhard SlfCfl. Assemblyman Jdnn Vasconcellos ( [). Campbell ,, chairman of the Asscmbl3 \Vays and ~teans Educ at i Oli Subcommittee. v.·ill be the keynote speak· er. Dr. n. Dudley Boyce. president ol Golden \Vt!st. will present the eighth graduaLion class at the school. Orange Coast Weather Night and morning Jow cloudi- ness '''ith hazv afternoon sunshine Friday. according to the v.·calher servi ce. Highs ranging from 66 at the beaches to 76 inland. Lows to- night 56-62. INSIDE TODA\' Newlywed• act as tl1ou0h tl1ty :tre typical 110111111 couple j11st srarth1g 011t -b11t tlieu are 11or. Bride was born 111 1953 l<"itlto1'E '''"·~ or legs. Stor11, l'aae IS. L, M. lo'l'd II Cilllemt• J, 1' CllWlltil •-u C.rnla 11 CroH"'' n 0.11~ NtliC•t II ad11tr1.i ,..,, •·' E11ttrt1l11,,_1 II F/111111~ H•ll N'I' G•rdntr 11 Wm'~ lt l,1111 Lflldlr1 11 MtMIJ T',.t JO .,....,Its H ""'ulUll ..-u""\ ti Nlli9n1! NIM I ·~" '"""" It, u. u Ftr Ille llHtA l't ~Jtvl• ,.,,,., ,. 5110r1' Jl-M l!Mk Mlrkt!I Jl•Jl r11t~l1'911 H Tlot•ttn 1' WMNf C Ntmtll'I flltWt H-21 Ntrld NIWI f ! DAILY PILOT H Tl11·ee A1~ab TEL AVIV !APl -111rce Arab guerrillas \\'earin11: long hnir and gaudy headbands to look like hippic-styll' IOrl'ign volunteer \\'Orkcrs slipJX'd arross the Lelxlncsc herder today. and killed 1 hrce \\'Omen and wounded three men in an Israeli farming settlement, officials said. 1United Press lntemat:.,.nal said thrrc u·crc four lcrrorisls). They said <1n off-outy paratrOOJX'r killed l\\'O of lhe 1errorists, and !he third blew himSt'lf up "'ilh his own explosives. In Beirut. lhe Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine -General Commund rl:iiznM resp(lnsibilily for the attack and said the raid was "our reaction to the t\ixon \'isit to the Arab u·orld.'' But it said the altack \\'as lau11ched from .. some base ~·ilhin Israeli territory·• And not from L<-ban"!le soil. ··That is ho1v C\'erv Ar ab should receive Nixon. the chief imperialist in the y,·orld ." said spokesman Abul Abbas. Ile said the gu(•rrilla organization \\":JS dc1ern1ir}.l.'d to ··rnar C'\"try atten1pt to beautify the ugly Anlerican face" and to negotiate 11·ith Israel only through bullets and suicide operations. Nixon traveled to Alexandria , Egypt today, and the Arab commando assault came three days before his visit to Jsrael. It brought the nwnbcr of terrorist \"ictims in Israel 10 -19, including 31 children. in t\\·o months. Semiofficial Lebanese sources in Beirut said Israeli border artillery pounded a south Lebanese 1·illage in a1;1 app.:u"fr.'. reprisal for the raid. . . The village of Ebles Saki . fi1·e mil<;'$ norlh of the Isra eli border. came under .i ··heavy artillery barragc> as of n·i~C.1:. and 1he bombardment COO!!O•Jt'd \\'.::"\x.1: lei up "'·ell into the .l!tl'rn\)X).. :.:'.'.<:' sources said .. The terrorists attJc~ed the Uttle !5t:k';. farming scttleme!ll. o{ Shan!!!" ~!ow t.'k' foothills of the Golan Heights. One of the \\'Omen killed in tociay':i r1!d "·as a 1·olunteer from ~€""' Zealand. sa!d residents of Shamir. "'·ho kept her identitv secret until her family "·as notified. The 1~1·0 other victims \\·ere from the settlement. The gunmen ~ .. ere armed 14' i i h sub mahcinc guns. grenades, o l h e r explosives and Palestinian guerrilla leanets. A spokesman did not . disclose details or the leaflets but said they sho\\·ed the terrorists •·came here to murder and that's all ....: they did not intend to take hostages." The Arab commandos gunned doy.·n the women \nsi.de a honey factory. about 2.00 yards from the apparent terrorist target - a communal dining hall where some of the 470 residents and foreign volunteers "·ere earing breakfast, the spokesman ~id. The guerrillas who c I a i m e d responsibility for today's raid demanded the release of 100 Palestinians from Israeli erisons \\'ithin six hours, but shortly afte r the demand was delivered to newsmen the guerrilla squad Y!'as wiped out. Three guerrillas from the same group raided the li;racli towns of Qiryat Shmonah, several miles y,•est of Shamir. on April 11 and killed 18 Israelis and themselves "''hen the government refu.sed their demand for the release of Palestinian prisoners. Radiation 01eck Set on Fligl1ts WASHINGTON (AP) -A union of night attendant s and the Atotnic Energy Co1nmission announced today that 100 ste wardesses will sta rt wejlring radiation badges on nights carrying radioact ive cargo. The badges are designed to determine ho\\' much radiation the crew and passengers are receiving. The announcement rame on the second day of hearings by the Senate Commerce Committee on the transportation or radioactive isotopes and hazardous cargo such as acids and explosive gases. 01.t.MGlCOAST >18 DAILY PILOT '""°'•"7"C<>.i••o.....r.~ "'~""'tn"aH01-i.-o~N~ .. p'"'' •ll>Jto'•....,,..,., ... a.._ <....nt p,,.,..,,,,g ~ ... s..-··· ..,~.,,.. ... r~""'""~ '·' I~ l"'<MI" ""''' ''' (Ml• ,,.. ... '-'•"r>O'f floo..c:• H'""'""""' 8"0<.f"'F'"m- l•Pn ll•''<'i L••l"' 0 f~ .• ' '"'% S.-•1i.!,.c-•roe! S.n t~ '"""'"'• !,,, Jo"n C.p.>ol•.t.., A .,"II,. t~I "'1" f.n '' f)ul ... I""" ~olu•dt" """ S.,• <Ml" '"•"''"'""'I"""'' ""'II I'•"'., ol 3:tCJ ~· llf•Sl•""I C..~°'M""' l..l<k'"'' Q~;>lo i.,.i-.-,,, N \\,..I P•to•l»llt •M l"ul>l•I- ,, •• ? (.,., "·~t r1~>"-"I'•' •"l l.~"'w"' \''" t')i:• !1. ,,. , A '-' ,1 "'-'./'"O(~ ..... (r-.Yk· H L 1-.1r r:(Jll "' ,., ..,..,...,,'WI Lc!•O"'. !~Cl"'' w,. TOro"'OfPC:""'"'["' - H1tftli1t9'00t heel! OW.ct '" .... r~ .. ~.,.., M:i 1t11 ~., '-j~8 Othtt-Otfi~t1 U'/'l>'"•llof .~~·.,.,.••,-.,. {· .. , .... ""'' '""• ' -*'I• ••IJ..,..t '"I "· ~-..rt• • ... , ~0.-"lt .a<!>•·, .. ',...,. ..... " ... TrftiWto-1714164l·4l21 C .. 11lfiHAcf-totrilti 642·$671 i.o.., "-llff" o ..... c...,..,, .,.,_,.,.., 140.12l0 ~I l•/t (>-C....1 l\;OI~''"" r_,,.., r•~• 1"°Ml••O!Go..,. -•·•"'" ... ,.. .... 1-•1.., , t ..,,..,, ........ nlo -.. II '°"' I"' '""' ., .,oj ·~--.:·•• ...,,_,,.,,,,,,,,, .. ~~- ~9flCll tlt\t 116-1-IM>~ 11 C.,..t• ... ~M. t.fj,.., ""' .S..'-"'"'m'""" ~· c-...,.., '11JO"°°'"''"Y. 11'1'""""' U c.),.,....,,,lt"' 1to'y-!"Mh•..,I J(IO_...,. Thursday, June 13, 197~ Loses Ro1u1d Federal appeals court in New Orleans todav overruled de- <:ision permitting forn1cr Anny Lt. \Villiam Calley to be free on bond while he appeals l\ly Lai 1nassacre conviction. Lawyer said appeal v•ould be fiJed. but Calley now fac·es in1- prisonment. Frot11 Page l STRIKE ... .;di.:..";\.~ )':"'.l: 0: N'nl ":"- \l~ :......··"-::::..i....-s::i.:..i tc'Jchers and the X..i..-i..:. ~· -y;,;.,Ttl.'\! ..11J agrttmt>nt on fi\"e ~""C-o"::·~ ~ ~ ""'-'E'lt. and the-,· "'':"!"': _i.;c~ccc"!'·.c.,: ~ \-.m.,.r ~S. t-L' :f "~ .r. :::< ~'-u:-.i..."' p.l('bge snu ;x I"\.'( ~ .:!.."'""-~~ !'=<:'!"! . ~ JJS :'-""."C 1' ~~t'tt 00 ~,_-.."t:J.."'(! ~v. ~~ ~:.:.-::. ~'::oo.:1.l 1l"3cl:it"r l-~. £¥NI'"!".! ::it:'!'.idilt! cc fi'ing '=~ .I ~ :-:i.~ 2:1: CU.."'!"X"-lhun <!<~~!lt.- li ;e&.:~ .WC. ~< lx.i!'d bJ¥e DOC .'."':'<A-!:ee m ~meu ~r w~y. :te ~"\l:i: ~tll m ....... ~'t talb am call m [lo:-Ja.i:::~ ~. a $aota Barbara Coon<y ~fu.ii. .J~. to bear !J.CtS :.. cc:.., bod:! S:des 3Dd mUe rerommen:!.atiuls ro the sd>Qol board. Te-acher-s agreed \\'emesday not to meet "1th Rowe. because they don"t believe a sd>ool administrator could sen·e as ··a neutral third party." Huntingtoo Beadl City teachers are asking for a 10 percent pay increase. equal to tre rise ill the cost of living over the past year. and a denta1 inrurance plan. The board's latest offer was an 1.3 percent boost without dental insurance. but trustees indicated they v.ookl "make further concessions" at a negotiating sessioo tmiight. From Pagel BOA ... duty loday didn't know if anyone V:·ould be returning to help search again. li1rs. Kokoris said the snake is about three inches in diameter, brO\li'rl and rusty red. with a square and circular pattern on its back. It weighs eigflt pounds. She pointed out thal boa constrictors are "vefy slo\\·-moving and also like to climb." "We're sure he's \'ery close by," she added, "probably v.ithin three houses." l\1rs. Kokoris said the family Is not too 11·orried about the snake going hungry. "They can go for three or four months v:ithout eating," she explalhed . "We put a rat out in the yard with him yesterday and he wasn't even interested in eating it. .. She added ht'r son also ha s a bull snake. tv.·o king snakes and a four foot· long South American boa -all harm· less pets. TI1c family keeps all the snakes in cages or aquariums, she explained, and rarely takes them out e\'en lo "sun." But Jeff "''as preparing to leave on vacation. she added, and since it \\'a5 1\·arm Thursday, he decided to take the boa outside. YMCA Day Camp Starb; Mo11dav J TI1C' first \\"f"f'k nf the ilunting1on Reach-Fountain Valley YMCA's sun1n1('r day camp starts ~fonday at Lake Park in Huntington Beach, aiid there is still ti.n1c to rnroll more yoll1lgsters ages six 10 JO. The re gistration fee is $22 fo r each one \\'et>k session. Day camp last! from 9 11.m. to "3:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. Camp activi!ies inelurte arts and <;rafts . games. recreation, special trips 10 such places as Lion Country Safari and Kootrs Berry Farm. and other projects. ~·or registration infonnation phone the Y~tCA at 84?·9622. From Pagel \'ALLEY • • • 15.782. no. -~tidway City : 255, y{'s; 692, no . -Seal Beach: 3.014. yes ; 4.187, no. -Sunf\:el Beach : 137, yes: 187, no. -\Yctitminster: 3,107. }'e!I ; 5,813, no. -Absentee ; 436, yes; 717, no. High school t1f(icials had proposed to build the ne w campus 11.l Golden \\lrst Street nnd \Varner Avenue, on a site '"In the Oceon VlC\\·-HunUnston Dtnch aren of the district· • , Mesa Ma11 In Tax Case A Costa l\tesa n1an who d()('S not belleve that federal reserve notes 11rc <.'(Institutional dollars "·as acqui tted \Vednesday of charges !hat be \\'Ulf\Jlly failed to file his 19i0 and 1971 feder1.11 income tax returns. In protest to \1ila1 he C'OOsidcrs the uncons1i1utiona\ Fl'dt•r11l ReSt>n'e Art or 1913. Rodney &ha~\ filed relurns fo( those years \\'hirh refle<'le,:t on!)' his income in gold and silver coins. "''hich ht' maintains are the on I y cons1i1udooat medium of exchange. The returns, he said, reOec-tt'd about $2.SOO in coins. and asked tht N'lll v1tlul' of federal reser•e notes so ~ l"l..'IUkl p..1y taxes on his paper ttce.ipts. His viell'rioin t. ht> said. is ba.Sf'd oo 1ht· 1792 Coinage Act and roru.iitt.1U..."'Ml pre.visions for legal lender. 'The Internal Revnue &on·~ 00\t't\t'<'. did not see things quite his "~· ~ h\• \l'as indicted lasl 0..'tobt>r oo l·t' .. lf).'\'$ l'i. dl'liberately failing to filt• tht n"t~::'n."'- ln February, hr s:iid. ··1!'k• IRS ~-N my boat and my business ui.j 'll""ttt p: + to sell them. so I had to par b!>..'b:l.1.!! ;.• keep thein from doing oo. .. According to Schape.l'll !it~ t:art L.S. District Cour1 decis.i~"ll \\-~) ·'is a pretl~· significant C'3St"." Attorney ~Jlke Christian.scf'l l'-f ~"'·~-r. Beach said although "he .Wrn~~ -!t.: no< file. the coon agrt't'd i! w-a.s no." 11·illfully to a\"oid t.ues, but to r&t.Sit ~ issue. " . .\star as I know," Christiaruoo. ss~ ··this is tbe firSI rase In which a per'9.YI hall koo~n that be had to file and dxi 001. tbai be bas been acquin«I ol the aim- ina! d>ar!les ... The tax liabilities for the t\\·o years. howe\·er. are still pending in tax court. Christianson said. "He "·as doll;lg it oot to a1·oid the taxes but to raise the issue." the attorney said. "and the point in this case is lhat It is not a crime to fail l-0 fJ.ie as a protest." From Pagel CHARGES ... is talking alx>ut." Philp said. "If the cities and the county \\-ant local enfon:ement and want to pay for ii, then that is a different story entirely." Philp said Hill's attempt to divide responsibility was J.mproper because the law is specific. "He'd better ?WI bis own act," Pl!ilp said. ''I have bad this same kind of experience with them (the st.ate housing 3.gency) before and they camot buck their respoosibili ty under the la~,'' Philp added. •HU admitted there is another state law that allows local jurisd.ic:tioos to take on the enforcement po'.l·er for labor housing and noted that eight Californla counties ha\·e done so. "But the state cannot assume local jurisdiction,'' Hill said. Ifill also went into some detail about hi!I understanding of the situation in Orange County and \\'hy his agency is limited in its capabilities to cure the si tuation. He said of the 26 camps mentioned in the human relations report. II had less than fi\'e resident employes "'hen inspected. Theoretically, the state has no jurisdiction uritil there are more than five resident laborers. Hill didn't say "·hen the inspection~ took place. There is a wide variant.'t' in employment on county· farm!I depending upon seasonal crop harvesting. Hill said of the remaining 15 camps, 13 were p~rly registered with his agency aad inspectTons sho"'·ed all but one met minimum st.ate standards. "This one is being brought up to standards at our insistence," he said. The commission said It Inspected 11 camps. Of v"hich only t"·n \\-·ere felt to be in livable condition. II said less than hair the county camps "·ere pro p e r I y registered with the state. Hill said tv.·o ather camps inspected were belnw standards but "'ere closed down by the farmers for economic reasons. lie said a legitimate area of concern his agency has been trying to solve through legislation is the difficul1y in effectively rnforcing housing laY.·s. He said the first step is to follow "prescribed administrative remrdies." If these fail. the st.al<' turns to the local district a11omey with a complaint. Hill said mnst or the time. an in~Hon by the district attorney turns up nothing because the operat(Jl's temporarily \'acate the camp.' "That's the end of our complaint because there is no ba sis for action,'' he said . "Sometimes, the operator 1110\/es hl'> employN: right back in and \\"C find out ahout It. So v.·e're forced to go !hrough !he entire prbcess again ." I Hill Mid some cAmp operators cited for violations .... 111 simply sidestep the l11 y,· by tempararily reducing the population 1 of the camp to four -below the stalt! minimum. lllll said ht has a staff of St!\'cn inspttt.on who must cheek on 1,200 camp.<1 throughout the slate. J-!e uid 11 new law pending tn the ltgi!ll!lture could help out by requiring ca mp_ operatnrii to oblaln 11 hlgh·pri<'td penn1t that "'ould pay for hi.1 agency ·11 inspection aperalions. lie Mid his budJ{et for next year "·Ill onl y produce $77.000 in re\'enues from carnp registrations LO cover $225,000 in C!>JIJts for inspection teams. . . . ~ . -.... ... Uf'I Tt ..... lt ENTHUSIASTIC CROWOS WITH ARMS OUTRAISED CHEER AT PRESIDENTS NIXON, SADAT Two l••dtrs Rid. From C•iro to Alexandria in Open Railroad Cir as Egyptians Hall Pair Fro1K Page l '°'.ELCO:\lE FOR NIXON IN EGYPT • • • "f"~':-... 1~~v-. :.• "'l'l.1 .. :"! :t 1 .:tnt'nt p.>art' :"" :"'t '"°"''-~· ~\ : .... 1 l"W\\"Srnt'll tnty 8~'(\! \-J:-• ..i.xn-s...-X11,;ld t\1ld \\'hat :·-Jo: .-~.IN ..i .::!t"' ~i.:.:~un1f· bt'h.1rt rn«' .:+ "'::?' l~ .. c' · St-\\,""t' . ,, 1,l .\ :;:;::-u::.Jt nWt'f't'I~"'\'. .! nu.~r \"< ·\"'"~ ~'llt!..>tg 1i'Jit"""'f'f"11 !\.'\,~ ,'( \l~ sb..'!Uld hJ.\t> ~.:!°o:l~:-.1: ~3.:.L~'°'~!-"\,'\,""(: .· . In n-~--.. .... ~ ;,, '< :·a-ru. ~ s.;00 ;~ <k""'t""\i ~l ~;'":'\.~ ~(' ~:'o:"M'' E; ~'ht~l" s.k"\.'"li, I~ t.-a1;, ro.nto lhtt\• w-en> sign.<i of i.~ c:U..,.,.'"Ul.o; ~-pum-l· S.. relaUOt:l.'i" t.1\:11 h:.d ~ ht~Ut for tk'\1.!'!y )"''O dl'C'adt'.S U.'1U! S£-cr-e~ oi $u!c.' Henri· . .\. Kissinjitr bt-ga.."I his pNI~ missions six months ago tha1 5"'t !ht> stage for :\ixon ·s fi1·e-nat.100 tour. Kissinger. "'"ho since his resignlition threat Tuesday in Austria bas stayed in the background so that Nixon might reap the honors. received a separate burst of applause "'hen he got off the train in Alexandria . <Related story Page 41 At one point along the route, at Kafr el Zaya!. one of the lhouMnds ·ot children "'ho watched the train ~. 7-year-0ld Sahar ~iohammad. said she had never actually"heard o( Nixon. Asked if she had heard of the United States, she replied, "Yes, they are the war people." "No, no, no," her mother Fat'hia hastily corrected. "Now we are friends." At Tant.a, aOOut halfway between Cairo and Alexandria, trucks with loudspeakers explained to I.he crowds that the United States is now Egypt's friend and that this is the reason Nixon's pictures are everywhere. Beach Land Buy For Park Okayed The Orange County Harbors Beaches and Parks Com mission has approved a request by Seal Beach officials for the purchase of the railroad right-Of-way near the beach for a park. Seal Beach officials had a s k e d permission to switch $5(1,000 in revenue sharing money from a development fund to an acquisition fund. A similar request by liuntington Beach officials was returned to the city for revie w. liuntington Beach Officials had asked that $225,000 of their revenue sharing, which was earmarked for recreational activities, be used instead to reimburse their acquisition fun d. The fund had already financed the purchase of 17 .2 acre!I of land adjacent to Huntington Central Park. '"\\"e grt"et ~lr. Nix:ll \\"ilh love, al>Pf"Ciation and fello"'&'trlp, '• tile sound tnK·k !Old !he ('f'O""dS . A.nd e\"et)'\\"h•-re Y."l're 1he chants or "Xix-«1 ... Nix-on" that sometimes e1·('tl dro"'ned 001 the noise of the train. ··J\·t.> ne\'l'f' .seen people so excited and !"moliona\." said a \llhite House official aboard !he train. '·This is for a presidffit 1o1 ilo has run into h06tile placards in the r S.," reft>rring lo Nixon's in1peaclunent troubles over Watergate bark home. About 30.000 policemen we-re turned out for security purposes aloog the train route. carryins automatic weapons. Heliropters follO\\'ed Nixoo's motorcade tllrough the streets of Alexandria. Security measures ar expected to iOCT'l"ase as Nixon continues his journey through the ~1idenst, especially in view of an Arab guerrilla attack today at the Israeli settlement of Shamir. Nixoo and his "i fe will spend the night at Ras el Tin Palace. from where King Farouk went into exile in 1952. before returning to Cairo Friday for a visit to the Pyramids. He will depart Friday for Saudi Arabia and then go t.o Syria , Israel and Jordan. "Long live Nixon!'' shouted the crowd as Nixon left the Cairo station. He responded with smiles, waves and the V sign Nis:on is so known for -anns high over his head, two fingers spread apart. All along the train route, workers left the fields to watch the train. Women. usually \\'aiting in the background because of Moslem custom, w'ere up Court Denies Rei1iecke Bid WASHI NGTON IUPll -The U.S. Court of Appeals has turned down California Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke's request that his trial oo perjury chargt'S be mo\'ed to the West Coast. Reinecke's appeal, which \\'3S denied \Vednesday, was from a ruling by U.S. District Judge Barrington Parker. Reinecke's \Vashington lawyers indicated they \\'OU!d not carry the appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. The Republican official has been indicted on chaigcs tlu1t he lied before the Senate J o d i c i a r y Committee about conversations he had with former Attorney General John Mitchell. front. holding up their children. "I made arrangements for thb special trip to pass by this plal'e where I oould see them.,;,:. said AbduJ llak Ahmed, 36, \\'ho led a string of four camels to a spot "'"here the train passed. "I want to go to ~Tecca. most of all but I want to be here too." I A _line of horses ~ankcted with American and Egyptian fl ags was strung out along one .section of track. ··it·~ .unbelievable,'' Ziegler sa.id. """'ly GOO, 1t s unbelievable." Nixon, "·ho was given a gold lifetime pa~ to.~ railroad said he enjoyed the tram tnp very much. Of the reception he received he said: "After 25 years of misunderstanding and seven yea r s o f bitter misunderstanding, Egyptian·American friendship has a natural fowx:la tion and we're bi.lildlng on it." As overwhelming as the size of the crowd, Nixon said, was its enthU5iasm and respect for Sadat. The reception Egypt has acccrded the American le.ader staggered t h e presidential party. An estimated two million persons swanned into the streeu of Calro Wednesday to welcome bfm. Nixoo, in a toast Wecklesday night at a dinner Sadat gave for him, said: "I can Utink of no day that will stay more In our memory.'' Entries Sought In Fatlier-so11 Basketball 1l1eet 'The Huntington Beach recreation department is looking £or more entries Jn its annual father and son basketball tournament scheduled for thls Friday and Saturday. \.. Entry forms are available at The recreation center. 17th Street and Orange Avenue. and must be submitted by s p.m .. Thursday. The eatry fee is $2 per fatber-m team. There will be competition in five age brackets.-beginning with sons in the third and fourth grades, Residents, or sons attending a local school, are eligible to en ter. Games will be played Friday evening starting at 6:30 and during the day, Saturday, beginning at 9:30 a.m. at tfunti ngton Beach High School. Fnr fu rther information phone Bob Thrall at 536-548'. "di WJfi=r.l\jft~'S 2500 w. COAST HWY. 2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS HEWf'OltT IEACH PHOHE 6-42-7076 ~ ·-~ IN HEWPOIT ,RODUCE VILLAGI 1601 HEWP'ORTILYD. , ....... _.,.,._, COSTA MESA 642·9004 \®:!!~~~~:.~ ,~~~~~:~~ ·~~ it( KOSHER L $ SMOH DUl!l fj .~ DOMESTIC SWISS 8 ~} SALAMI •:, .·. ":~.~~:·~~· ·~. ~·~ MONT1E:1~KJACK ·l ~ 2.98 lb. '::.' ~,} . .. !) .. CONYllHIKT PAlllNQ. IH IOTH LOCATIONS ~ RHJ s249 ;i1 HOW SJ?!i ~ HOW SJ?! ,. Ll111lt l ... ~ LHl!if l ... LJ111Jt 3 ... &.eu;~€~lr~i1NG~~i~1~~ . w;,. c-: ............... '.. ~·. {o~"""i/ ~ A&l'iOrlmont of 60 petite MnOwiCl'w>!I SJ50 llO , _:-.:~ ... ~'i\O ··.,, k-..A ~1-"':. nPRlly arr~nOf.!d consisting 01 r,1r" ---.... · -·-·~ r03$1 t>&et. roa:.I breast ot turkey ,_ pttit1' ••itd•lellH. ... '14" ..... WEDGE FINGER SANDWICH PARTY TRAY "°''"" "'m ""'all oeeo ""m' WINE features BY POPULAR DEMAND, a repeat of a sellout Almo•I ell wl• ~•tn _... ow_.. of the MlllM "SOUVERAIH"-ont of C ... fonilo't ... ., lllhldtd •W..1. lut ho"' rn•ny _.. owOl"t tkt thl1 ~..,. of Wgt. ,.,,.... .t1a producit• wlttt "'*" MOtMr brond 00Los A""9o1"7 W1 •I Wlf'4EMAM'S do, Oftd MW ,..s tt.lt ............. Oft .. ,... Tkr•'• somitttMft9 f'IN Y'"'....., l!Mw -nit .-ltr of this ft1Hr llnown bnMd is ...tsf_... • , , Hw ·price Is tilM! Try It thh wee,t'MI! Ya. wo.'f bo dl1.,offlhd. For Roasts. Steak&. Stows. Duck. Ground $1r!o1n H1mourger . vea1 Of Pasta. Try . "LOS AMIGOS" ZINFANOEL For Cheesf'l Dishes, Ch1c~E1n. Crab, Escargol. Ham. Soalood or Omelel!C$, Try "LOS AMIGOS" CHENIN BLANS • SI'' 11.Jf ,...c .. $198 21.Jf,., c .. . I l l I I l I ' l I I I ' • I • • Laguna Police Station . FireJl~nibCd • • Wholesale Prices Rise in May Pap~r Says J(nJ;land ' WASHINGTON (AP) -Despite falling farm and food prices, widespread lncrea,es on a broad range of industrial prod ucts pushed wholesale prices up sharply again in May, the government said t~ day, The Labor Department reported that wholesale prices rose a seasonaUy adjusted l·.S percent last month, about the same as the rates in March aDd April but not as much as in the December-Feb- ruary period. Unadjusted, the increase last month was 1.5 percent. Had Debts LOS ANCE:LF.S (AP) -Publisher and former U.S. Sen. William F'. Kno"·\aod was sald to be insolvent \I/hen he com- milted suicide, owing banks more than $900,CMXI that was coming due shortly, the Los Angeles Times reported today. Prices for farm products, processed foods and feeds Cell 2.2 percent in ~ta.y, the third con6ecutive monthly decline. Industrial commodities were up 2. 7 percent. Consumer finished goods rose six-tenths of 1 percent. It seems .to promise for consumers a continuation of double- digit Inflation for at least the next few months since higher whole- sale price& usually are quickly reflected.at the retail level. However,._ the declines in ""wholesale food prices fre quently is not passed on to consumers in full as middlemen seek to retain profi ts. i\1ost of the loans have since been repaid. the newspaper said documents filed in Alameda County Superior Court sho .... ·ed. Rottaantie Interest The. Knowland family could not be immediately reached for comment on the story. But court officials confirmed the Times story. The Oakland Tribune publisher, ~ prominent Republican who r a n unsuccessrully tor governor. shot himself tn death at his Northern California vaca- tion home Feb. 23. Sa11 Diego Girl Flies To Joii1 P1·i11ce Cl1arles Among the cou rt documents was an cvalualion by the accounting firm of O'Keefe and Lalaru1e estimating that Knov•land's estate March 15 had assets of S641,428.28 and liabilities or Sl,312.333. Paul Manolis. Knowland's close friend and executor of the estate, said the estare \\'as insofVent LONDON (AP) -The blonde daughter of an American admiral emerged today in the London press; as the latest romantic interest of Europe's most eligible bachelor, Prince Charles, future king of England . Miss Laura Jo Watkins , 2Q, daughter of Rear AdJn. James Watkins of San Diego flew to London at the invitation of the prince and has caused r-minor sensation in British newspapers, eager chroniclers of the prince's love life. (Picture. Page 4. I Charles, 25. a lieutenant in the Royal Navy, met Miss Watkins last March when his ship, the frigate HMS Jupiter, put in at San Diego on a training voyage lo the Americas. "My husband was the official guest at the party to welcome Prince'Charles and his ship," the Daily !\tail quoted Miss Watkins' mother as saying In San Diego. "But he couldn't make it and asked if our daughters, Laura Jo and Susan, could go instead. They did ." The prince, elder son of Queen Elizabeth II, decided to renew the acquaintance after he was invited by American ambassador Walter Anne.nberg to attend a farewell party tonight marking the end of Ar-1berg 's five- year stay in London. The prince ~·as asked ii he wi:lnled lo invite anyone special and stlected Miss Watkins. a U.S. e1nbassy spokesman said. Because of a period of royal mourning over the death Monday of the Duke of Gloucester. the queen's uncle. Prince Olarles had to cancel his appearance at the ambassador's party. However, ii \Vas likely he and ritiss Watkins would met:t privately. The mourning continues until Friday evening. ·•we received a letter from ~1rs. Annenberg asking her over and, of course, we agreed," Mrs. Watkins was quoted as saying. "She left at the "'eek d and is due back at school at the Reactor Sets Off 'False Alarm' At San Onofre Utlllty officials today reported a false alann in a major monitoring component at the San Ooofre Nuclear Generating Station 'Vednesday, but after a two-hour slowdown, the problem was repaired. A monitoring device. they said , signaled that one of the reactor control rods had dropped within the reactor, and crews immediately slowed the reactor down to about half its peak power to check the reported malfunction. But the staff determint'd that it y;as the monitor which had failed , not the rod. and checks with the identical monitors charged with noting the _ same defect showed no problems within the reactor, spokesmen said . Despite the lack or a major problem, the utility was still required to notify the Atomic Energy Commission of the occurrence. end of the month. I-fer father paid the rare." '·- Miss Walkins spent a year in college. and traveled through Europe before settling into a course at a San Dtego business school. She plans to become a legal secretary. After their initial meeting March 16 at an exclusive yacht club in the Coronado Island area of San Diego, the Mail said, Prince Charles invited Miss Walkins tc lunch before his ship sailed. 1'he paper said they have corresponded since. "It iS a complete surprise to us that Prince Char les is inlerested in Laura Jo." ~1rs. Watkins was quoted in discounting any reports of romei.nce. "We are terribly flattered , but sur~Jy he must have lots of English girl friends." An American Embassy spokesman also discounted any speculation of a budding romance . "She 's he re as a private guest of ambassador Annenberg," he said. "She's here to go to the party, period." Hinsha \V Seekin~ ~ Immig.ratio11 Service Probe LOS ANGELES (APJ -Congressman Andrew Hinshaw (!~-Newport Bea~h) says he Will ask a tlol.llle panel to probe charges that the Justice Department suppressed evidence of corruption among high-level Immigration Service officials. The Orange County Republican said Wednesday he \viii ask the House Government Operations Committee to •reopen Operation Clean Sweep, a much- h er a I de d Ju s tice Department investigation of Immigration personnel attached to the Southwest regional office in suburban San Pedro. The San Pedro office is the bu.<iiest of all regional 0 f r i c es or the l 1 .s. Immigration and Naturali7.ation Service. It covers 10 Western states and is responsible for the enlire U.S.-Mexican border and INS operation in Me:dco and Asia. A report or the subcommittee on legal and monetary affairs or \1•hich Hinsh..11v is a member, said the Justice l)epartmrnt "The creditors' claims filed to dale sho"'. to some extent, the manner in which the said Ann Dickson Know\and contributed to the insolvency,'• Manolis said in a statement filed with the court l\1ay 28. ri1anolis told the Time! Knowl3J1d'!l financial condition had nothing to do "i th the TribWle. He said Know\apd owned only "around 10 percent" of the newspaper, which is run by a family- controlled corporation . The attorney for Ann Di.ck son Knowland, Kno"•land's second wife. said he didn't believe the estate was insolvent, saying he thought it was an attempt to deprive his client of what she considers a fair living allowance. Mrs. Knowland was a 38-year-old Las Vegas divorcee, fonner actress and model when she married Knowland in May 1972 after he was divorced from his wife of 45 years. Helen. Know\and filed for a dissolution of marriage to the second ri1rs. KnO\\'\and in February 1973. but Lewis \\'. Boies, her attorney. said Wednesda y they had reconciled and were "happily married.'' Mrs. Knowland asked for suppor1 pa)'1nCflts of $6.500 a month after his death. Knowland awarded her $1,000 a 1nonth in the will but on l\1arch 18, the court increased it to Sl,250 a month. In a statement to the rourt, l\1rs. KOO\\'land said, "At no time during my conversations with my husband and'°"rior 10· his death did he indicate any financial distress or insolvency of any kind or nature ... " ri1anolis. in his statement filed with the court, replied, "The fact is that the said \\'il liam F. Knov.•!and has told me oo many occasions that he has told his wife. Ann Dickson Knowland, that he ~·as not an Onassis or Hughes and could not afford that \vhich she was spending." Among the claims filed against the estate was one by Irene Sargent, an exclusive Oakland dress shop. lor $4,687.89. ' 'Happ y· Hooker' i)f o'vic Filling Court II ouscs "has swept under the ru g evidence or LOS ANGELES <UPI) -If it's nny illegalities on the part of hi gh-level comrort to "The Happy Hooker," lier immigration people in the Southwest'' film biography is packing-them in l!t 1!1c A Southwest regional office spokesman courtroom of U.S. District Judge A. in San Pedro denied any kind of coverup /Andrew Hauk. ~as taken place. "\Ve have supptiecY Nine persons are on trial on charges of every record that was asked for and interstate transportation of an allegedly made available every member of the obscene movie, "The Life And Tin1es or service who was asked to testify. Nobody Xaviera Hollander." took the Fifth Amendment. nobody The movie is supposedly based on evaded questions.," said Bob Seitz, INS experiences of Miss Hollander. a former public information officer. prostitute who wrote "The Happy Support for a renewal of the INS probe Hooker" and other books and is no\v a came from Sen. John V. Tunney , D-columnist for a men 's magazine. Calif.. who said he would ask for 1he dispensing advice to the sex .... ·orn. probe "if that should appear necessary The judge held a screening or the aJ\d appropriate. movie Wednesday to detcnnine whether • 'The report added the panel has it should be accepted as evidence and received a list of more than 20 sho\vn to the jury. He had to interrupt Immigration officials against whonJ_ the afteQJoon sho .... •ing, as the court grev• potentially crimina l cai;cs have been progressively more crowded , to order quietly shelved by the J u s l I c c employes not assigned to his court to go Department. back to their jobs. Mothers Hit Ja~kpot Tivo Sets of Quadruplets Born T-ivo Days in Ro-iv POMONA (AP) -Connie Stru,. and Cecilia i\1onlt:mayor have hil a multiple birth jackpot, d@llvertng two ,set! of quadruplets 20 miles ap..irt Within 28 hours. Mrs. Struve gave birth to two sons and two daughtcni Wednesday, 28 hours after quadruplet girls wero delivered to Mrs. flfoutemnyor In Paramount. about 20 1niles away. Qu.<Jds ocrur nboul once in every half million birth!. but "quads two days in a ro,v, OOlh In Southern C81lforniFt , the odds of th11t happt'.nlng must be fant..istic.'' flfrs. Struve said \VQ<fnesdav., 'Ibc 28-year-o\d elemcntnry school tea cher said she didn't know that ~!rs. ?-.fontcmayor, 27, "had given birth to quadruplets until after her four special deliverie! arrived. A 3-i>oond. 3-ouncc boy arrived at 6:27 a.m.. a" 2-pound, 1-<lW'lce girl ~·as delivered al 6:44 a..m .. a 3-pound boy wns born at 6 :~ n.m. and a 3-pound, J- ounce girl was dcliverOO Al. 6:56 a.m. 1'he boys will be Kevin and Todd; 1hc girls, Krh~tinll and Tonya. A 11pokesmon for Pomona Valley Qmimunlty Hospital said thr~ of the Struve babies were In rolr condliton and ooe \VtlS In poor to fn ir condition, 'Th<'Y v.·erc bom t\vo m0nth~ prcn1aturely. The ~lont.emayor quads were born two weeks prematurtly. All v.·erc in good a>ndition, "I feel great, but my h~bAnd Is kind or in $h0Ck.'' i\1.rs. Struve said. "Up lo veslercday "'C t.xpccttd tv.•IN and tht-n 'my X·rays showed that tht:rc "'tre four. \Ve were really surprised." i\ln. Struve and her husband , Rl hard. 32. a JW\k>r high .school leacher, ore ;i.lso the parents of a 2.'l-monli1-old son Scotl . A! for furlber :u:ldltions, she said1 "\Ve were surprised and happy \l.'\th lh<!se. eut I really think rive ls plent~." ~ CAPTIVE AUDIENCE Flip Wilson ENTERTAINS BUDDIES Richard Pryor Jailhouse Ro~ks Fli-JJ , Jnniate Pr;yo r Put on .Sho1v By JERRY BUCK LOS ANGELES (AP) -Deputy Sheriff Geraldine Jones t"'irled her purple panties on one finger. flung them at Prisoner No. 2140·875 and said, "Put that on your cell wall.'' The roof nearly rel! in at the Los Angeles Cowitr ri1en's Jail . Some 300 inmates who j"Jacked into the downtown third floor chapel \Vednesday night hooted and Whistled. No. 2140-875, dressed in prison denim with two white patches on his seat. stepped to the microphone on the stage and said, "Thank you brothers. 'Ve did this because we love you and respect you. When you get out , please stay out.'' The prisoner was comedian Richard Pryor. He \\'as due to be released today ufter serving a IO-day sentence for federal income tax evasion. Geraldine is, of course, Flip \Vilson . lie and Pryor put on two 45-minute performances at the jail, dishing out earthy humor and inside iokes to the pleasure of the inmates. ·'t wanted lO do a show," Pryor said in an interview later. "People weren 't bothering me. The cats facing . murder raps kept telling me to be cool. I \\•anted to do somelhing to show m y appreciation. Laughter 1nakes them feel • good. ThP \•ibes "·ill last a long, long lime." "This \\'as Richi(''s idea:· said Flip. 'It's really great. I wanted to help him pull it off.,. l\lonte Ka~1e, F'lip's manager. said \\'ilson visi ted Pryor frequently during his stay in the jail. and Pryor suggested the show and got approval for it ~·londay. Flip v.•,:is first on stage. First he told a Polish joke, then a Mexican joke. The inmates -a mix1ure of "'hites, blacks. l\1exican-Americans and Orientals - roared ~'ilh laughter. The l"'O stories. like much of the humor, were unprintable. Backstage. Pryor said, ··:rhe hardest part .... ·as \l'atching other people being mistreated ~ I was treated \\'ith kid gloves in a v.·ay. I could tell "'hat v:ould happen if I didn 't have some status.·• Besides the jail tenn. Pryor , 34. "·as fined $2,500 and placed on three years probation. l1e also was made to repay back taxes on $68.504 the federal government said be earned in 1967. He pleaded guilty in fed eral court lo the charges of not filing a tax fonn for 1967. Asked how Pryor had failed to pay his taxes. his manager. Ron DeBlafio said. ''It "'asn't intentional. It was a turbulent lime in his life and he was neg/lgent .'' 211d \A1·son T1·y hi Days Fo1· City By JACK CHAPP ELL 01 ~ 0111, ,.1 ... 51111 A fi re bomb was thro1~':1 at the Laguna Beach Police Department annex today in the second such arson attack in the Art Colony in fi \'c days. The annex v.•hich houses t h e departmen1's d~tec!ive. rorL'C 1,1·as not seriously da magt'd. The 'lololov cockt!.lil used in ltlt.' incident hil a bric k \\'all and fell OJI a concrete loading area. Police LL Al Olson specu lated the arsonist was attempting lo hit an open windO\V in !hf' building. The annex also houses lhc city recreation dcpartmenl. Over the \\'CCkend. ;} small c<ift· belonging to the wife of a 1ihlice detective \\'as firebomlx.'CI doing an estin1atcd 58.000 to SI0,000 damage to the interior. Authorities are unsure of motives in !he tl\'O atiacks. although Del. Alex Jin1encz ha$ said the torching of his \\'if e's cafe 1nay ha\'C been in retaliation for past arrests. or investigations he has conducted as a police officer. The firebombing of the police annex took place at about 3:15 a.m. today. Lt . Olson said a beer bottle filled with gasoline and fused "'ith a torn strip of lO\\'Cl was used as lhe l\lolotov cocktail. The person or persons responsible for the boinbing threw the device at the rear of the annex, 570 Gle1u1eyre Si. There a loading dock used in building's former day s as a post office facility was hit by the flaming bomb. Lt. Olson sai d lhe building was scorched by the gasoline-fed fire, but no real damage was done. A Catalina Street resident whose home backed up to the anricx reported the fire. 10 the Laguna Beach Fire Department J'Iate Held in Death RED\\1000 CITY iAPl -A 53-year- old man was booked for investig~ti-011 of the tlu'oat-slashing murder of his wile early today, San Mateo Co u n l y c:i authorities said. Sheriff's ins)>eclor Rudy Simpson said Elmer Tunnisen v.·as booked in connection v.•ith the slaying of his \\·ife Elsie. 56. at !he apartment building which h(' 1nanages here. .JI.. J. (}arrel/J SUMMER 4 • 15 o/o to 25 % on selected collection of • SOFAS • LOVE SEATS •CHAIRS in your choice of fabrics • 1(flur /a1'flMll" di.'311mfr 11·11/ bt· flf'1il1)!_1 lo n.Ur!or 11011 H.J .G~Rl\ElT fURNITURE PROFESSIONA L INTERIOR OESIGNH; Ope,, Mol'I., i~11rs, & Fri, Ev11. 271• HARBOR 6LVO. COSTA µESA, CALIF. 646·0275 646·0275 • • • • Thursday, Junt 13, 1'174 40 Senators Rush to Kissinge~ Side I I ~- Lay Postcards I On the Table CA~fERAS, A c T r 0 N DEPT. -The evidence is clear today that our Orange ' · Coast regK>rt has spoiled the picture postcard people. Our area has just been too goOO to them. As a result. the good city of Costa l\lesa has been left out in lbe cold. You want some picture postcards to send back east to your favorite Aunt P.laude? No problem If you want Laguna Beach, San Clemente, Newport Beach, or fiuntington Bench. The picture postcard people offer you arpplc supply. You can got Laguna in full ('()]Or on a postcard \Yil.h shots of Heisler Park. the Festival of Arts or the !\fain Beach sweep of the coastline as it was before restoration. For Ne\\'port, the postcard people ~'ill give you living color of beaches. bays,~ the Pavilion in Balboa. boats on blue harbor waters and you name It. IN SAN CLEMENTE they offer the beach and pier or flowering gardens with Spanis~style homes or the W e s t e r n \\'hite House from the air. Huntington Beach is much likewise on the postcards with long straods ol beach, pier surfers. palm sb'tts and all that colorful stuff the picture postcard people love_ to peddle. Al3s. when you want to send home a color photograph card of Costa l\lesa, hone can be found. The postcard makers have declared Costa Mesa a wasteland aroa . ~ ,.~-. . ~ 0.111;,ilol ll•ff ... a. •• PRESIDENT NIXON FINDS A GODO WAY TO TOP OFF EVENTFUL DAY I ,. Egypt'.1 Sadat, Henry Kissinger Also Enjoy Souh1ir Zaki's Perfonn1nce 1 Nixon"s Eyes Opened ~ . • • ! From Wire Services ,, ' CAffiO -Souhair Zaki, who calls herself the "am· ., bassadress of love," twirled and gyrated in Cront of < President Nixoo and then turned -her attentions to Secre- ;,1 tary of State He·nry A. Kissinger:" The dancer did not igoore the Presidents' wives. She kissed :P.1rs. Niioo oo the cheek and I.hen did the same for Mrs. Sadat. Gen. Alexander A1. R:aig, White House chief of staff, also admired the abilities of Souhair and said, "I would Uke to see more or that.'' At the end, Souhalr blew kisses to Ni1on and Sadat and bowed to the 600 guests. This was underscored only th.is week \\'hen the Costa Mesa Chamber of cOmmerce's Front Door Committee met with the brass of a Long Beach picture J)06tcard outfit. One of the execulives spoke plainly, telling the Front Door ( .~ folk.s that Costa l\lesa just doesn't have anything they could take a picture of. · J Nixon slapped his knee, threw back his head and · joined Egypt's top society in laughter Wednesday after a =! state dinner in the plush gardens of Cairo's Koubbeh Q Palace. The President ttll'lled to a smiling Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and the two men began to whiS"per tD one another. . ! Souhair then performed for Kissinger, who has seen beny dancers before. She ran her fingers through his curly brown hair while he beamed and appeared quite composed. Kissinger, who had a belly dancer sit on his lap dur· ing a previous :P.tiddle East trip and later quipped he ., ... anted to make the world safe for belly dancers, told newsmen later, "J had a marvelous evening. I saw some old friends.'' The President and Mrs.' Nixon l'Vere guests of Sadat at a gala state dinner. • Six hundred diplomat! and tbeir wives gathered for the party wider twinkling colored lights strung In palm and baobab trees. The menu featured oxtail soup. a native f15h, turkey and rice orierital, a baked okra-and-meat dish. cucumber and yogurt salad, and ice cream and fresh fruit After the ~'O presidents exchanged toasts, the master or ceremonies said American singer Pearl Bailey wbom Nixoo calls his "ambassador of love," had perforined in Cairo ~tly and now he was presenting Sadat's "chancellor ol love" -belly dancer Souhair 7.aki. You have to admit th is is pretty Insulting. IT JUS"J' GO~ to show how we have spoiled these postcard people with all our beaches, bays, boats, surfers and such. And it is true Cos'ta ~1esa doesn't have any of these things. Despite this, you've seen plenty of picture postcanls from other area! that yoo just koow Coola Mesa -d put to shame. Take for example the ones ~·ve probably gof up in the attic in an old cardboard OOx that AWlt Maude sent to you. The scene oo the front shows a street \Yith poltholes. telephone wires, stores ~·ith false fronts and an "Eat at Mom's" sign. two stray dogs and a lady ln a fW'IOy hat looking in a store window.~ ON THE REVERSE side, the legend f.ells you that you "''ere looking at a photo of. "~1AIN STREET, GluttsviTie, U.S.A., county seat for Kratchitt County. pop. 34.<XX>, ele,·ation 52 feet. noted for its annual com-husking festival." There are so many towns just like this across the COWltry that you could take the same picture and just change a few facts on the reverse side of the postcard . .Now in all honesty. you know that Costa ~tesa can do better than this. Costa ?i.1esa ha s the old Estancia adobe. oouple of fine golf courses. an outstanding city hall (best of all Orange Coast cities), many fine gardens, several nice parks and the Orange CoaM College end Southern California Co 11 e g e campuses. Okay, Cos\8 Mesa has some lousy places too. What city doesn't? ~1 YOU OON'T SEE any picture p:1stcards or Newport's city dump, certain downtown areas of Laguna . the San Clemente pier underpas! or the oil sludge ponds of Huntington Beach. Cotta Mesa's Front. Door coijUnittee ought to show that postcard !inn the back door and go find an ootflt in the ~tidv•est to do the shooting. ' Cultist Charged In 'White Magic' Cemetery Antics LONDON CUP!) - A pretty girl dancing naked at midnight over exhumed coffins in a cemetery. A hea dless body dumped in a parked car. "It is white magic.'" David Farrant told detectives. It put him in the prisoner's dock at the Old Bailey, London's tamed central criminal court. Farrant ~·ent on trial Tuesday on charges of desecrating tombs In llighgate Cemetery, the North London graveyard v.•here Karl ltlarx is buried. "This i! a strange and unusual ca!le;" Judge ~lichael Argyle tcJld the jury. "\\'hatever bizarre activities this young man may wish to indul{;e in bis private life .•. he is not entitled to damage property or to disturb the dead," said prosecutor Richard Du Cann. Farrant was said to have styled himself the high priest of the Occult Society, partly dedicated to revealing the future by commWiicating with the dead. Testimony said he and his grou~ held monthly meetings in Highgate cemetery ,;if the weather was fine." The prosecution charged that the meetings involved breaking into family vaults and stealing bodies from their coffins. On one occasion. a young French girl danced naked at midnight o v e r desecrated coffins and graveyard tombs, the court was told. Judge Delays 1 Deciswn On Ehrlichman's Trial WASllINGTON -A federal judge today postponed his decision on whether former White House aide John D. Ehrlicbman will be tried along with three other defendants scheduled to go on trial next week in the Plumbers case. A 1 lfrhour closed meeting with the judge and defense and prosecution la"'yers ended without fon.;.al agreement to an apparent tentative compromise on Wemesday over the issue of executive privilege. U.S. District Judge Gerhard Gesell scheduled still another closed meeting for Friday morning and said in a statement, "some sort of an order" will be issued on Friday. e RHB Returns Diamond WASIUNGTON -Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (0.MiM.) has joined the list of public officials returning foreign gifUl of valuable jewelry t.o the government in compliance with a Jaw making such gilts publie property. Washington Post columnist Mallle Cheshire reported that Humphrey Wednesday gave back an eight-carat di.amood worth more than $100,IXX> that had been given to him by Coogolese President Joseph Mob.Ito in 1968, when Humphrey was vice president. e Concorlle Arrities BOSTON -The SS!' Conconle landed today at Logan International Airport slightly ahead of schOCule to show ( IN SHORT .•• ) American.$ the controversial jet has "no problems anywhere." The Anglo-Fnmd! ~ plane, the subject of cmtroversy cooceming safety, noise and economy, was greeted by a couple or thousand sighUleers at Logan shortly before 6:30 a.m. PDT. There \\'ere no environmental demonstratcn tD be seen in the immediate vicinity. e lmpoundment Issue WASHINGTON -The House Judiciary c.ommtttee's legal staff has found ' no impeachable otfense in Pn!stdent Nixon's impoundmmt of up to $18 billkn, one of the charges listed when impeachment became a possibility in Calgress last fall. Thunderstorms Hit Plains The stall, in a 91-page lepl brief given the committee and made pub Ii c Wednesday, st<>pped short of fllOOllltnendlllg lftat lmpcundment he dropped as a possible charge in an article ol tmpeachment. But the thrust is in that direcUon. e Viet Talb Snarled ' Front Slashes Througli Kansas, OkJahoma ll\unclertlOnTll mo....d ttll'OuQ/I IOUttllfn "'•b111k1 '™' ttorthem K1n~1 '"" (Oll1lnutd IO moYI taw11d 1111 $0\o!Mltf. TarttNon tnock«t ~ .-11 t\jol'f'I' d111V "°""" 11"11 lllllOGl'll Wt'dnffdflr. nroht 60 rn!ln wnt of Lubboekt Tn••· ..,,,., iU P!'tllft ••ti of Hot>bt, t•. •f!OOll!tf' r.«rttr toverM'd dOwn AflOtner tw1tlw IOIJCl'ltd CIOW1'I It l(t•rttev. Ntti, T~ dt'e<'lti...d P1r11 ol u11Wtt JOU!ft low• 1tt0 Min~• 11110 f1>t cettlr1I Rot~Q 6"1! IM G ... 1t l•~.,. llOl1twd ·~· •nd ~'°°'*"" -.-. ~ -Soulhffn Floricll, -r tlM C9"1r•I A,llattlic CO.Oii •fld ltt Pl'H of "'-ce•U••I G\11! C!Ntl ti•~. (/(Wl .. H.M., r~ M•rl't' .., lndl of 'lln In -IJ•.flw• 0¥11f1119h1 ptliod •fld MC(Of'lb, Miu .. hMI -1'1' • t\jolf M lndt In !!It IWl'M llFM ~ E•rtv "'°"nlno MIPl--•hlr., •-" !""" A.I M0rttt 11 HIDllOM , Mlttfl., l'9 ts •i N-lts. Cllll. Coastal Weather Mollly WMll' tod"f. UOlll V911•111• w1ttek n!Vllt afld tnon!lllO lle\ln --l"'J WT' .. rly 10 to 1• i!'IOl1 Ir! ,,,.,.. -~I' Mid Frldrf, Hl9h todff 70. (Ohl•! """""'•""" ......... ,, "" "· '"'and ""'"''"'"'-··-"'°"" S. tu 71, WI'°"' M1'11Pftr•llll't ... Sun, /lfoon. Tide. TI4U1'10AY liecolld 111011 . S;OS ,, m.. '·' Stconcl I°"' , . 12;01 p.m. I,, 111'104Y , •• ,, 1110!\ ' • l:lO '·"'· 3.0 Fl"I IQW . ,,,,, IO:d 1.11t. I,, "9c:Ofld 111111\ 1: .. p.m, .JO kcottd low "'-" •.m, o.t Sun l'ltott J ;fl •·"'· &t11 t its '·'"· M00tt Ml• 1::17 p,m, SAIGON -North Vleinam and tile Viet Cong today ocded a tw<>-wtek boyt:ott of talks to locote 1,100 Americans missing in act.ion, Wt negotiations Immediately bogged down OVel' the issue of OOw many diplomatic privileges the Communist negotiators were entiUed. Saigon command spokesman Lt. Col. Le Truog llit'fl said "1be VJet eon, and the North Vietnamese wanted a signed document that they be ronSi.dered a diplomatic delegation. 1bls is OOllle:OSe. Whe have reste<ed diplomatle prlvlleges to tMm aJready." AUSTRALIA SAYS NO TO 'THROAT' CANBERRA (UP[) -The film boml of Review Wedn~sdoy unanimously rejected an appeal lo pennJI the Amorkan lMVie "Deep Throal" kl he shown In Australia. L.,t week. the lllm eert90rshlp board rejected "Deep Throat." on the grounds of ind~ncy, In Its official report Wednesday, the four·mnn rtvlcw committee declared the film was hardcore pornography, and ruled against lt!J dlstrlbutk:lfl In Australia. 'Wiretapping· ]1istified' -Mansfield WASIDNGTON (UPI) -S e n a I e leoden expr-1( "eveey OOll/tdence" In Secretary of Slat. li<tty A. Kiaolng.,. said today thll pvernmont wlrel&PS>in8 is -Justified l! directly .. 1- .. natiCINll IOCUrity. Democratic leader Mike Mansfield. ooe of more than ~ .-.,. who signed a reroludoo colllog KiMingor'a Integrity and veracity above reproach, said: "J have every oonf~ in him." Mansfield lold repaners the wiretap c:mtroversy swirling about KiaJJneer who threatmed to rslgn if tm name ~ •• not cleared, W3S more "damaging in his own mind than it is in reality." MANSFIELD SAID he believed wiretapping ''might be neces&1ry for the protectioo and security of the nation" m some ~ances. Republican leader Hugh Scott said "it is proper In do -is le€ally ~ble to secure the nation's secrets.'. Scott addEd that "the """'1nption that 1''iretappq: is totally illegal rune up agMiot the ---how do)"" protect natJonal aearily." Bot!> Mlmslield and Soltt """11ed lo he rel~ to wiretapping in a genEral sense rather Chan 8f)eCifically to some allegatioos that K I s s i n g e r waa 1tspl4Erible for wiretaps ·en 13 tmner aidee and br ntWSll1«l lo fuxl the aource d. news leaks m 1571. A RESOWTION of ouwort le< Kiss._ was lml'odOO!d Wednesday by Sen. Jmnee R Allen CO.Ala.). Kis.sing..-. touring In the Middle East with President Nlxcn , bu remained silent since h1s emotmdlarged news conference in Salzburg, A u s .t r i a , Tueo<lay, when he tllrealencd to resign unless he Wall cleared by "some respomlble funsn." Blt angry Republicans s h a r p 1 y attacked the Home Judiciary Committee, as the souroe of allegatlom that Kissinger ordered wiretaps 00 17 newsmen and government officials from 1969 tm>ugh 1971. . KISSINGER DENIED mder oa111 Sept. 7 that he initiated the wiretaps. He said he only provided the names d. persons \\'ho had access to classified information thal was leaked to newspapers. Sens. Barry M. Goldwal<r (R·Aril. l. Edward Gurney (R·Fla.), end Strom ThurmoM (R· S.C.), Presidential Counselor Dean Burch and V i c e President Gerald R. Fon! all denomocd the leaks of FBI document. m tile ~"iretap controversy to s e v e r a I newspapers and the "" of them by the media. Goldwater accused Ille WaC)ingloo Ptist ol. "an act of ~" for q~ secret FBI memoo ao oontndictlng Kiablg«'1 "°""""· He added lhat natk .. d 9'Clll1ty ,... the important Issue not ''nitpicOlg" over whether Kissklger might have told a "faMebood'' when le!Ufying _. hkl role in t h e wiretapplngs at hill oonllrmation hearing. BURCH BLAMED "back do<r, back biting" ..... leeks from the Judidary Ccmmitt.ee Qr' it! ttalf M the 80trCe of lnlonnall<n ag81ll Kiloinger. F<rd acaJM!d "~t" forces of leaking ouch lolonnalion wUh "uUierioc moUves." Sen. Hub<rt H. H..,.,.ney (0.Mim.) saJd an unequivocal declaration by Pm;ldent NI,.., would clear up tile matter for Klesloger. Stricken J. Fred Buzhardt. one of P.res· dent Nixon's top lawyers in 'Vatergate defense, has suf. fered an apparent heart al· tack and was reported in serious condition today at a \Vashington hospital. Chemical Cloud Tl1reatens Town; 0Yer 8,000 Flee NORMAN, Okla . (AP) -OC!ic!als estimated more than 8,000 peroons were evacuated from thfW home! at nearby Atoore f.O;day .when a white clood or chemical· gas . spread northward from a train derailment in the north edge of Norman. About 1.000 persons had b e e n evacuated from Norman oo Wednesday night. ~foore, a community of 24.700, is just north or Norman, which bas about 52,000 residents. P!IORE 11IAN 1%5 pcrscm, most of them law enforcement officers, ttremen and other workers at the wreck, were treat.d at ho.<pital1 !or elfects d tile gas, phospborus·trlcltlorlde, Hospital spokesmen 11kl four per&oos were admitted. Most of those affected complained of nausea, burning lungs. watering eyes and skin irritation. The fumes penetrated the gas masks of some of the men working in tbe area. The gaa began spewing from tanks 1n ; one ~f tbe 35 train can when the train 1 derailed al>Qul 6' 45 p.m. Wedneoday, The leakage intensilled aboul dawn today , and a shift in the winds to the south spread the low-lying whit. cloud !IOrth- ward from the tangled wn!Cllage. EFFECl'S OF TIIE GAS "would he the equivalent of breathing llydroddoric ecid," said Atoore Asst. City Manager Zacb Taylor. "It blisters tm lungs, primarily. and extended .._.,. in high conoentraUons is fatal ." The Santa Fe train was carrytog 76,000 pounds of the chemical , o f f l c I a I s ~ Natk>nal Guardsnen, Civil Defense and Health Department workc~. police and firemen from bolh cities were summoned to help In the evacuation . 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Ronaantic Interest? Prince Charles reportedly has Invited Laura Jo Watldn s. 20 , (•hown in earlier photo} to London for party. Both will now miss event be- cattS<l ol subsequent death of the ~rince•s great-uncle. The couple met In Coronado in March when Bnllsh ship visited San Diego. 1 ! I I I I -p • Today's Final VOL. 67, NO. 16'1, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1974 N TEN CENTS Official·s Trad~ Charges for Labor Camp Ills By WILUA~I SCllREIBER Of lfW D.lllr 'li.t Sl•ff Top officials of l"-'O govemmerit agencies charged with failing to correct alleged inhuman conditions at Cann 1abor c~mps i,rl Orange County blamed each olher Wednesday for falling down on the job. Dr. Jotu\ Philp. director of the county heaJth depa rtment and Gordon S. Hill. deputy director of the California Department of Housing and Community Egypt Cost Disp11te Development, made the comments in telephone interviews. They were reacting to criticism by the county Grand Jury and Human Re lations Commission - revealed this week -that respons!blc governm ent officials are passing the biJck rather than solving the problems. The commission, in a report to the jury, said Inspections of many of the two dozen cou nty camps revealed unbe· licvable squalor. The jurv did its o"·n inspecting, covering about eight of !he camps, and reached the same conclu- sions. In a lengthy statement phoned from Sacramento, Hill branded the jury and commission findings as "a shotgun approach which mi sre pr ese n ts responsibility for housing conditions." lie said that "if the grand jury accepts all the information as factual. it is in for a rude shock." liill said the con1mission inspc<"ted the camps and claimed to have found dirty living quarters and kitchens and • unsanitary food ban4ling techniques, •·none of whi ch is ·within s t a t e jurisdiction." , "Out responsibility is the adequacy and inainterlance oC plumbing, electrlcaJ and heating facilities. structural a n d ventilation requirements and occupancy factors,'" Hill said. He had no comment v"hen told that the human relations commission report was also sharply critJcal of infcnor housing, plumbing and overcrowded conditions at some or the camps -all within the state's jurisdiction by Hill's definition. "General sanitation and food handling standards are county respons ibilities even though the report quotes the county as denying this responsibility ," Hill continued. •·J have sinei! talked '.''ilh county health officials "'ho agreed these problems arc within their jurisdiction." ••• Reception Overwhelms ' -. Buy Hits a Snag Coast Park Land By JACKIE JM1AN Of till 0.llY ,!lot Sl11f An attempt by Newport Beach officials to purdiase up to 21 acres of sta te-owned property for parks has run Into a snag. City Manage r Robert L. \Vynn said the city hopes to purchase eight p'arcels of fonner freeway right~f·wav land for about $4.5 million, the price the state originally paid bet.ween 10 and IS years ago. However, an opinion by California Attorney General Evelle Younger , given late last week, said the state can't seJI JaDd at Its original cost if its current appraised value is considerably higher. ••Nevertheless, his opinion isn't set in Balboa Island Fisherman Still Lost Off Coast U.S. Coast Guard officials said tOday there are no new clues in the disappearance or a Balboa lsland fisherman whose empty boat was found Tuesday night off Laguna Beach. The Coast Guard Wednesday morning called off the se arch for retired dentist Alex E. Okrand , 64, of 217 Onyx Avenue. A Coast Guard helicopter and cutter. the Point Divide, had searched until 11 p.m. Tuesday night and Crom 6 to 9:30 a.m. Wednesday morning. Okrand's empty 18-foot Inbo a rd motorboat was spotted by the helicopter three miles off Laguna Beach about 8 p.m. Tuesday night. an hour and a half after Okrand's wife reported him missing. She reported he had gone fishing alone about noon and that she became concerned when be was not home by dinnertime. When the boat was recovered , C.Oast Guardsmen noted there were bloodstains on the seat and an cpen first aid kit on the engine cover. "The amoilll t of blood was so little that we don't feel it could have been a critical wound," Sgl. Robert Reid of the Orange C.Ounly Sheriff's Office sa id today. "Our crime lab is checking it lo be sure it's Okrand's blood but we don't feel it has any bearing on tb c search," Reid said. "There's no indication of foul play." Qkrand.'s daughter, Mrs. Sue Reilly. said Wednesday he had on~ suffered a minor heart attack but was not believed to have a 3erious hea rt condition. Sniitli Cited For Conte 1npt SAN DIEGO APl -C. Arnholt Smith, a longtime frie nd of President Nixon 8nd once a major linancial figure in S o u t h e r n Callfomi8. was sentenced today to Rn Indefinite term in JnU on seven counts or contempt or court. Smith. 75, was grai'ited a st_,, howl'.lver. until Tuesday. Superior Court Judge P a u 1 Eugene Ovtrton said: "Fnther's Day Is Sunday, and I have a fctling for fathers and grandfathers." Overton ordt>rtd Smith "incar- cerated until such time as you are willing to apptar In lhis court 10 answer the seven qu~sllons oskcd ... In an exlorilon ctisc. concrete," Wynn said. "Conditions of sale could change his opinion. I'm optimistic." One factoi._ which might influence Vounger's opmibn, according to Wynn, is I.hat !he state Depa rtment of Transportation (CALTRANS) has sold enough dirt from the properties to earn back its original investment. "Also, we could put a condition on the sale that the property would be ·returned to the state if needed for highway purposes," Wynn said. "The mayor wants to meet with the city council to decide what to do next." \Yynn said. "\Ve may need to have the propcrt.9 appraised as the first step." The properties in question are tWO parcels in the old Pacific Electric right· of-way in West Newport, a piece adjacent to Semcniuk Slough in West Newport, the Cagney property north of the Coast Highway and "'-est of tbe Arches, a site on Cliff Drive, two city building lots on King's Road, and property on Fifth Avenue in Corona de! Mar. They were originally purchased by the state as part of the corridor for the then- proposed Pacific Coast Freeway. The city has been trying to buy the properties si nce 1972, when the freeway was abandoned. A bill, AB 431. to permit the purchase of the land at CQst by Newport Beach 'vas signed by Governor Reagan in January. It was sponsored b y Assemblyman Robert Badham ( R - Newport Beach), Because of delays in passing and signing the bill, the city was given only until March 1975 to make the purchases. City officials protesled it was not enough (See PARK LAND, Page 2) Newport Cand.idates Slate Fashion Show A fashion show featuring the five Miss Newport Beach finalists will take place Saturday at 11 :30 a.m. in the Carousel Room at the Newporter lnn. Tickets to the lunch and fashion .show sponsored by the Newport Harbor Jaycees are $7 and are available at the Newport llarbor Chamber of Commerce offic:e . Tickels also will be available at the door. The. public is invited. ~Illy PHO! Sl•ff PllolO AS FAMILIES WATCH FROM STANDS, HARBOR HIGH GRADS FILE INTO STADIUM CJass of 74 Graduatfti Applauding and Cheering as it Goes Mesan Acquitted i11 IRS Failu1~e to File Tax Case A Costa t.1esa man 1vho does not believe that federal reserve notes are constitutional dollars "'as acquitted \Vednesday o! charges that he willfully failed to file his 1970 and 1971 federnl income tax returns. In protest to what he ·considers the unconstitutional Fede ral Reserve Act of 1913, Rodney Schapel filed retu rns for tho.se years which renected only his lnCQme in gold and silver coins. which he maintains are the on I y t"Onstitutional medium or exchange. The returns, he said, renected about $2,300 in coins, and asked the real value of federal reserve no tes so he could pay taxes on his paper receipts. His viewpoint, he said. is based on the 1792 Coinage Ac t and constitutional pre.visions fo r legal tender. The Internal Rcvnue Service ho\\•cver. did no t see things quite his '"ay and he ""as indicted last October on r.harges or dcllberately failing to file the returns. In Febru3ry, he said. "the IRS seized my boat and my business and we re going to sell them, so I had to pay blackmail to keep them from doing so." According to Schapel's attorney, the U.S. District Court decision \Vednesday •;is a pretty significant case." Attorney ~1ike Christianson of Ne wport Beach said although "he admittedly did oot file, the court agreed it was not willfully to avoid taxes, but to raise the issue. "As far as I know," Christianson said, "this is the first case in vthich a person has known that he had to fi le and did not, tha t he has been acquitted of the crim- inal charges." The tax liabilities for the two yea rs, however, are still pending in tax court, ChristiaflS(ln said. '"He was doing it not to avoid the taxes but to raise the issue," the attorney said, "and the point in this case is that it is not a crime to fail to file as a protest." New.port Harbor Higli's Grculs Lauded bv Peers . •' The menihers of Newport Harbor 11igh School's 44th graduating class heard Principa l Charles Godshall tell them \Vednesday they'll be remembered for a special "unique characlcr." But it appeared the unabashed Class or '74 al ready knew that. A breeze blew across Davidson Field and the sun sparkled above as the senior Sailors confidently waved and tipped their caps as they marched onto the stadium grounds. And they repeatedly punctuated the exercises "'ith shrill yells and applause and a couple of firecrackers whenever anybody sai d anything nice about them. Their attitude and appreciation for 1hemselveS V.'3s expressed by senior George Norris \Yhen he delivered the invocation. He asked God to treat them with CdM Firm Facing Charges equality wheUier they become "President of the United States or just president of a corporation." Dr. Godshall said their boldness was expressed in other ways, as well. He said the members or U1e Class or '74 had an "obvious respect for their parents." $1 llfillion Golcl, Silve r Orders Not Filled A Corona de\ f\1nr precious metals exchange may faec criminal charges by the California De p artme n t or Corporations for failing to fill up to $1 million ln gold and silver orders, it was learned today. The state has ordered the Gold and Sliver Bulllon Exdlange, Inc., 2445 East Coast llighway, to dltconllnue operations unless ft can make deliveries within seven days, MOls Crenshaw, president o( the exchange, alleged today the finn can't fill its orden because It has been defrauded by a Denver supply company. CreMhaw also charged that both tht state lllJCDcy and the FBI have refust'd to a~l~t his company m recouping its los!C". "The Department or CorporatiOns refused lo help u., v"hen v.·e protested that "'e "'ere the victims of a deliberate con game by a silver supplier,'1 Crensha1v charged . ;'Now they're charging us with n<t having made our dcliverk?s in less than a week,'' he saki. lie said similar efforts to obtain FBI assistance went unheeded. Bu1 Stanley Jezman. counsel ror the Department or Corporations. said that he has oo-record or any col1'eS'J)an<1cnce fmm any member of the firm. lie ockno\\•ledgcd the fraud again&t the Corona del ~far finn may have taken place, but said "thls is the kind ot thing Uiat our law is fnttndcd to prevent." lie explained that the (':<change Is alJe@'.edly In viola on of the 1973 0111fomia Commodities Act wbich is ' J aimed at preventing t'!xchnng~ fro1n using customers' money to rmance gold nnd silver purchases. Crenshaw conceded thal he has not written the state agency but has filed his fraud charJ!:es with Iezman, personally, over the telephone. IC2:Man \\UJld not make a comment on that contention by Crenshaw. Crenshaw SRld his firm 's troubles began when the finn realized lhat a large amount of silver ordered from 100 Denver suppller ''would not be delivereO tor fraud ulent r asons." Crenshaw said the Denver Dlslricl Attorney's ofnct hall since r~ocsted and reccl\•ed a Grand Jur)' indictment again.st an official ol Applied Chtmlcals , Inc., a Denver, Colo., co1npnny which (Ste BULLI ON. l'lgt ll 1 He cited the large number of students who in this year's yearbook stated the people they admi re most "are their mom and dad ." Godshall drew loud applause when he reminded lhe class that their boys' sports teams had qualified for the CIF' playoffs in 11 of the 12 sports in which they compettd . l\1rs. Alar1on C. Br:rRt>SOn, vice pre!l'ident of the Newpot1·~fesa school board, told the ch1ss that confidence and c.-ourage will help them . She pointed out that society Is full uf experts \\'ho can find mistakes , but what societ y n~ Jg experts who cnn m3ke th ings work. Four .~ltld('lHs sptak('rs. Nancy Bohl5, Todd Johnson, t yndon Dick~y and Julie l~olcomb eA<;h presented t h e I r interprt?toUons ot lheir "W11klng." • Or. Philp natly denied that !he health department is !he agency responsible for enforcing laws covering labor camp c.ooditions. "U there has been any buck-passing in this affair, it's because they haven't done their job," Philp said in reference to the state agency. "Under the }lousing and Community Development Act . that is the enforcing agency for all the things the commission ~See CllARGES, Page Z\ Nixon Millio11s Come Out, View Trai11 By llELEN THO~IAS ALEXANDRIA. Egypt I UPI I ~lillions of Egyptians, travel ing by camel, donk ey. oxcart and foot. left their "''ork In the fields to honor President Nixon as a new friend and peacemaker on a campaign-style train ride tti rough the Nile Vallev. Nixon deScribed hi 1n s e 1 r as "overwhelmed" by the massi"e show of esteem for him and First Lady Pat Nixon. ll wa!I "a magnificent reception.'' Nixon to\d ne\\'Smen on the train when asked his reaction to the throngs that gathered along the 130 miles of tracks tha t ca rried him and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat from Cairo lo the Afediterranean port of Alexandria. Nixon's press secretary, Ronald L. Ziegler. estimated that 31? million BELLY DANCER OPENS NIXON 'S EYES. Story, Page 4 persons saw Nixon during the 3\.:-hour ride from Cairo to Alexandria's Ras El Tin Palace where the Nixons will stay du ring their O\'ernight stay. Egyptian security guards gave a similar crowd estimate to Hermann Eilts, U.S. Ambassador to Egypt. Nixon and Sadat rode side-by-side on the !rain's observation platform. Nixon expected crowds but began swinging his head in disbelief as the dimensions of the cro'.''d and its emotions gripped him. The tll.'O presidents used the snail- paccd ride to discuss G e n e v a negotiations to reach a pcnnanent peace in the ~1 ideast. They told newsmen they agreed Arab leaders should hold what Sadat called a ''little summit'' before meeting "'ith Israel. "Before going lo a summit conference, a number of leaders representing different points or view should have bilateral di scussions."' NixGn said. l.n response to questions, he said this need not apply to Israel. Everywhere along the train roote there "·ere signs of the changing Egyptian-U.S. relations that had been ho.<>tile for nearly t"·o decades until Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger began his peace missions ~ix: months ago that set the stage for Nixon's five-natiOJI tour. Kissinger, '.''ho since his resignation threat Tuesday in Austria has stayed in th e background so that Nixon might reai> the honors , received a separate burst of applause "'hen he got off the train in (See WE1£0i\IE, r .. ge Zl Orange Coast Weather Night and morning IOI\' cloudi- ness .,, .. ith hazy afternoon sunshine Friday. according to the \\·cathcr scrvi~. Highs rang ing from 66 at the beaches to 76 inland, i..o'.''S !tr night 56-fi:?. - INSIDE TODAY 1Ve1ctuWeds act as tho11g1t rllr!' :ire [JJpiCtll you11g co11ple just srarth1g out -but the y arc 11ul. Bride 1vas born lt1 1953 1vi!l1out :irm& or legs. Story, Poge 15. l. M. lloyd II c1nt.rRl1 1. tt Cllu!llH ,.,... ~ ..... ,,, t2 CNH""'"' ft OMlll H9fl(tt It 11:•11or111 ""• .. , Enltf111-I l7 "n1n"' tt·SI "y 01nlM< 11 "ortK.... H .. ft~ t.1nlllel"t 21 Mt,,., Trtt ,JO ~-·" l1 ~Ulllfl l'unllt U Nlllllfll\ NtWI 4 Oflfttt C-1'1 It, !t. U "*" , .... llf(tl'll tt t•l¥11 P•r"r 30 '""" 11.U ;i.o Mlrklll •>1 ltt ... klOR n ™•fff• J7 w•11Mr • NlmM'I -I 1J.1t Nori~ New• 4 \ • ~AILY PILOT H - UPI TeltPhOtt Stole•• f'f11111toi11 This valu able Roman fou ntain. earmarked for N e w port Beach's l\1arriolt J.lotel. is in the hold of an ocean liner bound for Japan. Interpol the international poUce agency. hopes to head the ship oli and recover the fountain. A ware- house janitor has been charged with the theft. From Page 1 CHARGES ... is talking about:' Philp said. "If the clties and the coun!y "·ant local enforcement and \\'ant to pay for it, then that is a different story entirely." Philp said Hill's attempt to divide responsibility \1•as Improper because the Jaw is specific . "He'd better n>ad his own act." Philp said. "I havt had this same kind of experience ~ith them (the state housing agency) before and they camot buck their respomil:tility under the law," Philp added. Hlll admilted there is another state law that allov.•s local jurisdictions to take on the enforcement power tor labor housing and noted that eigli. California counties have done so. ··But the state cannot assume Jocal jurisdiction," Hill said. Hill aJ~ went into some detail about his understanding of the situation in Orange County and why his agency is limited in its capabilities to cure the situation. He said of the 26 camps mentioned in the human relations report, 11 had less than five resident empJoyes when inspected. Theoretically, the state has no jurisdiction until there are more than five resident laborers. Hill didn't say v.·hen the inspectionf took place. There is a wide variance in employment on county farms depending upon seasonal crop harvesting. Hill said of the remaining 15 camps , 13 \Vere property registered \\'ith his agency and inspections showed all but one met minil'l"M.lm state standards. "This one is being brought up to standards at our insistence," he said . The commission said it inspected 1 I camps. of which only two were felt to be in livable condition. It said Jess than half the county camps were pr op e r 1 y registered with the state. Hill said two other ca mps inspected were below standards but were clOiSed down by the farmers for economic reasons. He said a legitimate area of concern his agency hes been trying to solve through legislation is the difficulty in effectively enforcing housing laws. ORAHGi COAST N DAILY PILOT 1,,. Or-i::o.11 °"" -""'" -.. -II . ...,,,.. ....,,....p, ..... ,.l>Jbl<....., 11¥1""'0.- C....•I l'vl>lo·.•·'19 ecwro..., s-----p~~-. .,..,...~.. 1 ... , ' r n111v b Co.It ~ .... "'•"P"'t 8<>1<• "•··"""'°" 6"0<Nf ou•• !>•~ v.n ... l_O'lu•• .. ..,, 1-1~ •"'1 !;.,. 0..-••~ ·-..k>.., C..1>\l••'IO A ''"'1'~ <~ "'"..,,. •I 1kl61<>-S.11,.ua-.s arid s.,,,.._ °"" , ... "'"''"'" ..,.,.,.,'>Q "'""' .. 1! l:JO w ... B.o.str ... lCo•l• ... -C:.T<Yn•• t,6"6 Pobt-.tN. w,.,.tj Pre,......,._P\oO'•I,... (~, H lM. ll:o<tod P Nol ,.~ .. , .... 1 ....... Q<"9[0MM l ~ ..... !(. 1 Nl"PJ"I 5t'otl' Ct!, l dll"" Mt •,-i ~ech Offkt ll•t ~~~ o\l~Adt .. P'.J8'>•181\'1160J O~Offict1 f'eot•"'""' ).'WJW."Qov!;•,_ ~··a.""~ m1~"­"""'',."" n..-•1111' 11o .... n..,.,.._.,, ;,..~(."'"'""'' :l.J!l"l(>rtft O~•- ,.,._.171416 4l·41ll Ch•sifl..4 Ad~trilM!ig 64l-S6 71 ~ 1111 O'•"'ll" (lo)olll "IJtO,\,...... ,_ fW'ry ""'-ot--·•t ·""'~~ ....... ·1 .. II' -1-~ ........... , ~ "'(!l'OO\IC"' M!--!.t! .... -olt<)l!l"•q"I °""• ~c11.-_.p·-.1eo.i • ..._ C.•""· ,..:, ~"IM>Otllll'<-l)OO"'O"lltll, "''""' 11 OOlllOlll"''·lll•l~~-•Mf!llAI 1300 -lf\ly ,. Thursday, June lJ }q/i; A•itopsy Re1101•t One Bullet Hit Victim in Head By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI .... OINY Plllt Slllf A coroocr's autopsy W e d n e s d a y revealed a young musician shot to death Tuesday night in the home he shared \\'ith a Costa J\1csa fireman 's \Vidow \\'as hit by only one bullet. Investigators r e t r I e v e d the gun believed to be used in the slaying of Venice Orlando \Villis at !he scene and Three Arab Guerrillas Slay Trio TEL AVIV !AP) -Throe Arab guerrillas .,.,•earing long hai r and gaudy headbands to look like hippie-style foreign vo lunteer \l'Orkers slipped arross lhe Lebanese border today, and killed three Y.'omen and v•ounded three men in an Israeli fanning settlement. officials said. ! United Press lnternal''nal said tbere v1ere four ierrorists). They said an off.auly -paratrooper killed two of the terrorists. and the third bJey;• himself up with his 0\1.11 explosives. In Beirut, the Popular Front tor the Liberation of Palestine -General Command claimed responsibility for the attack and said the raid was "our reaction to the Nixon visit to the Arab '~'orld." But it said the attack was launched !tom "some base within Israeli territory" and not from Lebanese soil. "That is · how every Arab should receive Nixon, the chief imperialist in the l\·orld," said spokesman Abul Abbas. He said the guerrilla organization was determined to "mar every attempt to beautify the ugly American face " and to negotiate with Israel only through bullets and suicide operations. Nixon traveled to Alexandria, Egypt today, and the Arab commando assault came three days before his visit to Israel. It brought the nwnber ol terrorist victims in Israel to 49, including 31 children. in two month.'!. Semiolficial Lebanese sources in Beirut said Israeli border artillery pounded a south Lebanese village ·in an apparent reprisal for the raid. .. From Pflfle 1 BULLION ... Crenshaw said llM California affiliates. He said his company is preparing a $30 million civil suit against A p p I i e d Chemicals. Crenshaw said his exchange is now closed while auditors pore over the boo~:s attempting to pinpoint the losses. He said be is drafting a 26-pe.ge statement to tbe company's creditor$ q;Plaining the predicament "\Ve ·re primarily interested i n pursuing the recovery of the metals from the Denver group so \\'e can get them to the people "'"ho made the purchases," Crenshaw said. Crenshaw declined to disclose where he lives bu t said any customers trying to contact him should write to P.O. Box 236 in South l.agun.a. 'Porno Movies' said it bad been Cired n1ore than once. A bullet hole was also found tn a wall or the home of Mrs. Jeannine J. May, 45, of 1383 Shannon Lane, when police l'!rrlved to investigate. \\'illis, 22. ~·ho had. lived at the ?i1ay home tor several months. was found lying dead on the dining room floor, v.tiere he had fallen after being shot in the back of the head . No moti\'e for the slaying bas yet been de\'eloped, but police have statements from acquaintances th.at prov Ide information about both the jailed slSpect and victim. A aim.in.al complaint was to be sought this afternoon charging Mrs. May with murder, as she remained in Orange County Jail in neu of $'l50,000 ball . Detectives arrived at the homicide scene in the Halecrest section of Costa !i.1esa after one of Willis' musician colleagues flagged down a patrolman. DonaJsen Hendricks, an acquaintance and musical colleague. told {>?lice he called the Shannon Lane home to see if \Vilfis v.'aS coming to v.·ork and was told by the tearful 1.1rs. !i.1ay that she and Venice had an argument. She then reportedly said she shot him. Investigators said Willis was one an1ong a ci rcle of new acquaintances ~!rs. !i.1ay had met shortly before her husband, Fire Department Capt. Larry J\lay, died of leukemia Ibis spring. Funeral arrangements were pending t.oday_ for the young musician. who originally came from Florida, where his family now lives. The body was taken to Bell Broadway ~1ortuary, a:.sta Mesa, where <lifidaJs \Vere making funeral arrangements for a Florida burial today. Mesan Cleared In Fiberglass S""·indling Case A Costa Mesan named with five other defendants in an Orange O>tmty Grand Jury Indictment based on allegations tha t they swindled investors in a fraudulent fiberglass boat business in Newport Beach has been cleared of all ~es. Superior c.ourt Judie Robert A. Banyard dismissed charges ol grand theft and conspiracy filed against Lyle Swafford, 47, of 485 Costa Mesa St., Costa Mesa. Judge Banyard's action came just five days after three of Swaffonl's five co- defend.ama were clep_red of all charges by a Superior Court J ury, Swafford had asked for a separate trial. Acquitted after a brief j u r y deliberation were: William Smock, also known as A.J. Scarborough, 45, of Anaheim; Keith Sterling Carlson, 42 . of Santa Ana and John Robert Ford, 48, of Tustin. The prosecution bad earlier dropped identica l charges again& John Fremian, t I. of Lakev.·ood and Henry Leroy O'Brien, 40, of Brea. Police Chief Serious t.:NION CITY (AP ) -Police Chier \Villiam H. cann ~'as sti ll in critical but stable condition today, after he ·was gunned down Tuesday night by a sniper while attending a community meeting to discuss alleged police brutality. No arrests have been made in the case. Stude11t Cites Sex Orgy In CdM Teacl1er's Trial By TO~f BARLEY Of .... 0.ll'f Pllef Slttf A Corona del !i.1ar }ligh School student testified today that he joined suspended teacher Alan Jay Schwalbe and another man :i year ago in a sex encounter at the home of a Westminster \•;om<in known only to him as "Kay". The 16-year-o!d studcrtt. f I r s t prosecution Ylitness in the Harbor ~lunicipal Court morals trinl of Schwalhe. 42, of 2860 Alta VistR Drivr. Newport Beach. said he and his three <Xlmpanions stripped shortly a f t c r arriving at lhc home and then engaged in sexual intercourse. The .,.,.itncss said he YiilS originally hin!d by Schwalbe to work on apartments managed by the social 5tudies instructor on Pepper Tree Lane ln Ca;t.a ri.1esa and rhat sexual acls occurred between the1n an a vacant apartment lhere about a year ago. The witness te5Ufied that Schwalbe displayed pornographic movies in lhe apartment and that sex act.s took place after ht! (the witnc5S) became arou.sl'd by the film . Defense attorney James Jackman today described Schwalbt lo the jury as a "rine, hone'!l cillztn :iind a dedicated teacher who has always been deeply invo/\•cd In community affair.i." Jackman told the jury tJ1at last year SC'hwalbe sa''cd the life of a child ~ found at the bottom of a S\vhnn1in!( pool und thal he ls widely known in the llarbor Area for h i~ ~·ork with gifted • children and his service to music organizations. Jackman told the jury that Schwalbe is the father of five young children, among !hem two sets of twins. and that he once dre..-.· 1,500 votes as a write-in candidate for lhe Costa J\1esa City CouncU. Dcp1..11y District Attorney Ca r I Annbrust told the newly formed jury tod11y lhat he will also put the witness' brother on the stand to support the 17 misdemeanor ooW'lts filed a g a inst Sch\\•all:te. The teacher is charged in tho.sc allc,c:atlons with sexually aMOying and molt•!>ling both l6-year-<1ld students and contributing to their delinquency. Arbrust told the jury in his <>penlng sl:i1ement thal the brother of lodti y's v.'ilnt;>ss ~imilarly engaged in various i;e~u<il acts with Schwalbe 14'hile working at the teacher's apartment hot.R. On one occasion, the prosecutor claimed. Schwalbe took ont of the brothers to the home of an Identified Santa AM male dw arf where several sex acts wtre committed. Schwalbt. employed by the Newport· ~lesn Unified School District for the pas! 12 years, has bee n suspended by district officials pending the outcome ot_ the eurrent tti11I. JudRe Robert C. Todd has estimated thnl the trial \\'ill take 10.day1. Thirty-(lflf ~pectivt jurors were ellmiMted in I.WO dAys of jury selection before the final panel or seven men and nve women was sworn In by Judge Todd. I ' \IPI Tl_..... ENTHUSIASTIC CROWD~ WITH ARMS OUTRAISED CHEER AT PRESIDENTS NIXON, SADAT TWo Leaders Ride From Cairo to Al•xandri1 in Open Railroad Ca r as Egyptians H•il Pair Calley Ordered Bacl, to Jail, From Pagel WELCOME TO NIXON • • • A "\vaits Appeal NE\V ORLEANS, La. tAP) -Fonner Army U . William L. Calley Jr. was ordered back into custody today by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The court ordered him held until the federal court in Columbus, Ga. decides his appeal of his conviction of murdering 22 Vietnamese at l\1y l.ai. The court said the Anny should decide wbere Calley, 36, should be imprisoned. Calley had been held under house arrest at Ft. Benning. Ga., for three years since his 1971 conviction and the Army said it wanted to move him to the stockade at Ft_ Leavenworth, Kan. The Geo?-gia court forbade that move - and released Calley on $ I , 0 0 O recognizance: bond in February. The appellate court said a prisoner such as Calley should be granted bail "only when the petitioner has raised substantial constitutional claims upon which he has a high probability of success, and also when extraordinary or exceptional circumstances exist." The court said that would be deterioration of Calley's heallh or the possibility I.hat his sentence would expire before the appeal could be completed. The cae went to the appeaJ court when government attorneys argued that it was unprecedented to have a mili~ary prisoner granted bail . Court Denies Reih.ecke Bid Y.'ASH INGTON {U PI)· -The U.S. Court of Appeals has turned down California Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke's request that his trial on perjury cfiai-gcs be moved to the We!t Coast. Re inecke's appeaJ, which was denied \Vednesday. was from a ruling by U.S. District Judge Barrington Parker. Reinecke's Washington lawyers indicated they would not carry the appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. The Republican offlciaJ ha6 been indicted on charges that he lied before !he Senate J u d i c i a r y Committee about conversations he had with former Attorney General John Mitchell. Alexandria. (Related story Pa ge 4) ~ At one point along the route. at Kafr el Zayat. ooe of the thousands of chi ldren \\'ho watched I.he train pas.~. 7-year~ld Sahar MOOammad. said she had never actually heard of Nixon. Asked if she had heard of the United States, she replied, "Yes, they are the ~·ar people.'' "No, no. no," her mother Fat'hia hastily corrected. ''Now we are friends." At Tan.ta, about halrv.·ay between Cai ro a'nd Alexand ria, trucks v.•ith loudspeakers explained to the crowc!S th at the United States is nov.· Egypt's friend and that th is is the reason Nixon's pictures are e\'erywhcre. "\Ve greet Mr. Nix::m y;•ith Jove . appreciation and fell owstiip," the sound truek told the crowds. And everywhere ..-.·ere the chants; or "Nix-on •.• Nix-on " that sometimes even drowned out the noise of the train. "I've never seen people so excited and emotional," said a White House official aboard the b-ain. "This is fo r a president who has run into hostile placards in the U.S .. " referring to Nixon's impeachment troubles over Watergate back home. About 30,000 policemen were turned out for security purposes along the train route, carrying autopuitic wea?flS. HeliCO)Xcrs followed Nixoo's' motGrellde through the streets of Alexandriµ. Security measun!s ar expected !.o increase as Nixon continues his joufuey through · the Mideast, especially in view of an Arab guerrilla attack today at the Israeli setUement of Shamir. Nl xori and his wife will spend the night at Ras el Tin Palace, from where King Farouk went Into exile in 1952, before returning to Cairo Friday fur a visit to the Pyramids. He wlll depart Friday for saudi Arabia and then go to Syria, ISrael and Jordan. "Long live Nixon!" shouted the crowd as Nixon left the Cairo station. He responded with smiles, waves and the V sign Nixon is so known for -arms high over his bead. two fingers spread apart. AH along the train route, workers left the fields to watch the tr"1n. Women. usually waiting in the background because ol Moslem custom, were up front, holding up their children. "I made arrangements for this special trip to pass by this place where I could see them," said Abdul flak Ahmed, 36. who led a string of four camels to a spot where the traln passed. "I want to go to Mecca most of all but I want to be here, too." A tine of horses blanketed with American and Egyptian flags was strun~ out along one section of track. "It's unbelievable," Ziegler said. ''l\ly God. it's unbelievable." Nixon, who was given a gold lifetime pass to t!}e railroad said he enjoyed lhe train trip very much. Of the reception be received he said: ''After 2S years ol miltnlentanding an d seve n yea r s o f b itt er misunderstanding, Egyptian-American friendship has a natural fOlbiatJon and we're building on ii." As overn•helmmg as the size ot the crowd , Nixon said, was its enthusiasm and respect for Sadat. The reception Egypt has accorded the American leader staggered t h e presidential party. An estimated two million· persons swanned into the streets ot Cairo Wednesd ay to v.·e.lcome him. Nixon. in a toast \Vednesday night at a dinner Sadat gave for him, said: "I can th.ink of no day that will sliy more in our memory.'' From Pagel PARKLAND .. • • time to raise lhe money. They also pointed out that they had agreed to wait unlfl a transportat1oo study by the Orange County Road Department makes sure the parcels In question are not needed for blgbway expansion. The study may take up to two more years to complete. An amendmqit to extend the deadline until J uly, 19'1'6 passed the Assembly Ways and Means Committee Wednesday morning. Meanwhile CALTRANS. which has not been eager to sell the property at the origi nal cost, asked Younger for hls opinion on the legality of the sale: Five Newport Students Cited Five students at Newport Harbor IDgh School have received service a"'ards from their school. Stacy Cochran, who was named top 12th grade girt. was also n.;med top four- ycar girl along with Janice Wol fe. Ken Newbery was named top 12th grade boy. Awards for top-nfnth grade boy and girl went to David Fletcher and AM Detsch. Their na mes were inadvertently left off an earlier story on Newport Harbor High School Awards NighL ~ WIHEMEN~S ~CELLARS :ZSOOW.COASTHWY. 2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS NEWPORT IEACH PHONE 6~2·7076 !Ntfli.-, .. _ ~-·-~ IH HlWPOIT PllODUCf Yil.l.AGI 1601 NIWpaQITILVD. COSTA MESA 642·f004 COHYllHIHT PARICIMG IH IOTH LOCATIONS • WINE f~atures BY POPULAR DEMAND, a repeat of a sellout All'llOlf oil wMt. lo•trl _.. ow_.. of tt. ,...... "SOUVERAIH"-oM of ColforMo's ... fy ~ ·~ lvt Ito• mony .-. 'ow an Htot tMt J'f'Odltttr' *4 Mp ,...,... mo JH'odvc:•t wlr1t Uftdtr OMtNr br•d "Los A""'8s"7 W• .t WtHEMAH'S do. and fKI W ,_,, fflit iitfonMtkMI °" to fC11L TIMr.'s •••"""'1 .... yo.i ,._... bow -Tltt ..-itr of tMs i.s~ knowfl brand ft ...tit...., ... tt.t pr1,. It 111.o! Try it ™' Wttkend! v .. WOft'I bt dl••p•lttltd. For Roasts. Steak.a. Slews. Duck. Gr Jvnd S1r1otn Hamburger. Voal or Pasta. Try •.. "LOS AMIGOS" ZINFANOEL For Cheese Dishes. Ch1C~an. Crab. E&c1r901. Ham. seafOOO 0< Omelettei . l ry . "LOS AMIGOS" CHENIN BLANS t I • VOL. 67, NO. 164, 4 SECTIONS, f4 PAGES • • • -• 1 • . • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . . THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1974 r Today's Final N.Y. Stocks c TEN CENTS ' Of ficial ·s Trade Charges for Labor Camp Ills By WIWAM SCHREIBER Of tM O.llr Pllll Iliff Top officials of tv.'O government eocies charged with failing to correct al ed Inhuman conditions at lann labor cam in Ora11ge County blamed each other ednesday for fallirg down on the job. Dr. John Philp, director of the county health department and Gordon S. Hill, deputy di rector of U.e California Department of Housing and Community Development, made the comments in telephone interviews. They were reacting to criticism by the county Grand Jury and Human Relations Commission -revealed this week -that responsible government officials . are passing the buck rather than solving the problems. • The commission, in a report to the jury, said inspectioos of many of the two dozen county camps revealed unbe- lievable squalor. The jurv did Its ov.•n inspecting, covering about tight of the camps, and reached the same conclu- sions. In a lengthy statement phoned from Sacramento, Hill branded lhe jury and commission . findings .as ··a shotgun approach which misrepresents responsibility for housing conditions." He said that "if the grand jury accepts all the information as factual , it is in for a rude shock." Hill said the commission inspected the ca1nps and claimed to have found dirty Uving quarters and kitchens and unsanitary rood handling techniques. "none of whlch is ll'ithin s ta t e jurisdiction.'' "Our responsibility is the adequacy and maintenance of plumbing , electrical and heating facilities, stn.Jctural a n d ventilation requirements and occupancy factors," Hill said. He had no comment when told that the human relation! commission report was also sharply crilital or inferior housing, plumbing and o\·ercrov1ded conditions at some or the camps -all Y:ithin the state's jurisdiction by Hill's definition. "General sanitation and food handling standards are coun ty responsibilities even though the report quotes the county as denying this responsibility," 1-1111 continued. "I have since talked vdth county health officials who agreed these probletn.s are within their jurisdiction." Egypt Reception Overwhelms ' * * * * * * * * * Arabs l(ill 3 Women • Ter1·orists Strikelsraeli Settler11ent TEL AVIV (AP) -Three Arab guerrillas wearing long hair and gaudy headbands to look like hippie-style foreign volunteer workers slipped across the Lebanese border today, and killed three \\'Offien and wounded three men in an Israeli farmlng seltlement, officials said. {United Press Jnternat :~nal sa/h ftlere were four terrorists). They said an off.-0.uty paratrooper killed l\\'O of the terrorists, and the third blew himself up ll'ith h.is own explosives. ln Beirut, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine -General Command claimed responsibility for the attack and said the raid was "our reaction to the Nixon visit to the Arab world." But It said the attack was launched from "some base tvithin Jsraeli territory" and not from Lebanese soil. "That is how every Arab should Mesan Acquitted After Failure to File Tax Data A Costa Mesa man who does not believe that federal reserve notes are constitutional dollars was acquitted Wednesday of charges that he will fully failed to file his 1970 and 1971 fede ral income tax returns. ln protest to what he considers the unconstitutional Federal Reserve Act of 1913, Rodney Schapcl filed returns for those yea rs which reflected only his income in gold and silver coins. which he maintains are the on I y c0nslitutiooal medium of exchange. The returns, he said, reflected about $2,300 tn coins, and asked the real value of federal reserve notes so he could pay taxes on his paper receipts. His viewpoint, he said. is based on the 1792 Coinage Act and constitutional pre, visions for legal tender. The Internal Revnue Service ho,vevcr , did not see things quite his \\'BY and he was ind icted last October on charges or deliberately failing to file the returns. Jn February, he said, "the IRS seized my boat and my business and were going to sell them, so l had to pay blackmail to keep them fro m doing so." According to Scha'Jtel's attorney, the U.S. District Court decision \Vednesday "is a pretty significant case." Attorney Mike Christian!Orl of Newport Beach said although "he admittedly did not file, the court agreed it was not willfully to avoid taxes, but to raise the issue. ~ "As far as I know," Christianson said. "this is the first case in which a person has known that he had lo file and did not, that he has been acquitted of the cri1n- inal charges." The tax liabilities for the two years, however, are still pending in tax court, Christianson said. "He was doing it not to avoid the taxes but to raise the issue," the attorney said, "and the point In this case is that it is not a crime to fail to rile as a protest." Retail Clerks Vote to .i-\.cccpt Wage .t\.greement LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Retail clerks in 10 Southern California C01.D1.ties have voted overwhelmingly to accept a new wage agreement. averting a strike again.st major market chains, the retail clerks union announced ,today. Under the tenns of the agreement, which is retroactive to April 1 and continues to July 27. 1975, journeymen clerks will receive a 35 cents an hour pay hike retroactive to April I and an additional 15 cents effective June 2. In addition, they will receive cost~r­ living increases or between 10 and 12 cent.s beginning Nov. 4. Journeymen previously earned $4.8625 hourly. Voting on the contract between the union and lhe food employers council began June 3 and continued through today. Preliminary results indicated the contract was accepted by 14,455 to 2,207. 2,207. The agreement covers employes at major market chains in the counties or • Los Angeles, Orange, San Diego, Imperial, Riverside, San Bernardino, Ventura, Santa' Ba rbara, Kem and San Luis Obispo. receive r..1ixon, the chief imperialist in the world," said spokesman Abul Abbas. He said the guerrilla organization was determined to •·mar every attempt to beautify the ugly American face" and to ne~j.iate with Israel only through bullets and suicide operations. Nixon traveled to Alexandria, Egypt today, and the Arab commando assault came three days before his visit to !See TERRORISTS , rage %) Autopsy Shows Victim Killed By One Bullet By ARTHUR ft. VINSEL Of lh• O.llr Piiot S!•ff A coroner's autopsy \V e d n e s d a y re\•ealed a young musician shot to death Tuesday night in the home he shared with a Costa Mesa fireman·s widow was hit by only one bullet. Investigators r e t r i e v e d the gun believed to be used in the slaying of Venice Orlando \\'illis at the scene and said it had been fired more than once. A bullet hole was also found in a wall of the home ol !\1rs. Jeannine J. May. 45, of 1383 Shannon Lane, when police arrived to investigate. \Vill is. 22, v.·bo had lived at the Ma y home for several months, was round lying dead on the dining room floor, where he had fallen after being shot in the back or the head. No motive for the slaying has yet been developed, but police have statements from acquaintances that p r o v i d e information aOOut both the jailed suspect and victim. A criminal complaint was to be sought this afternoon charging ~trs. !\1ay \Vilh murder, as she remained in Orange County Jail in lieu of $250.000 bail. Detectives arrived at the homicide scene in the Halecrest section of Costa Mesa after one of \Villis' musician colleagues nagged down a patrolman. Donalsen Hendricks, an acquaintance (See AUTOPSY! Page %) lled Ballet Goes On LONDON (UPI) -The Soviet Un.ion's Bolshoi Ballet danced "Swan Lake" unperturbed \Vednesday night despile repeated attempts by p r o • J e w i s h demomlrators to d i s r u p t the pcrfonnance at the Coliseum Theater. Demonst rator s and counter· demonstrators chanted and ,.. a v e d banners outside demanding liberation of Jewish prisoners in the Soviet Union and for and against emigration to Israel. Big .Juttf~ Acce1•te1I o.mr PllOI 51111 Piie!• VALEDICTORIAN JODI PALMBLADE HEADS FOR SPEAKERS STAND Mesa High Grads Get Diplomas at OCC 's l11Bard Stadium Mesa Higl1 's Grads Tol{l To Achieve 'Happiness' Buoyed by lofty thoughts and encouraging \1·ords. 454 Costa ~iesa Hi gh School seniors. each carrying :1 diploma under his arm . marched into the \rorld Wedne!lday nii:ht. As they filed in double row!i out of LcBard Stadium. many waved and smiled at friends and family sittin~ clbo1v- to-elbow in the packed grandstand area. During I.he evening under the flood lights nobody pressured them to succeed ·and to immediately solve the world ·s problems. Nobody bugged them about future responsibil ities. '·The successful n1an is not necessaril y the m11n money or prestige, but ihc ..........--man who is happy," Salutntorian Steve Sharp told. them. That theme "'as picked up by ke~note speaker Chet Atlas. a former Costa ~'lesa teacher. ~·ho encouraged them to strive for personal rather than public success. Nobody has to be a 1vinncr in other men's eyes. \Vhat is really important is that they be winne rs in lhei r own eyes by finding satisfaction with their personal lives, Atlas told members of lhe Class or 1974. He said he hoped they \\'ould plot their adult courses lo "live not necessarily spectacular lives. but rich, re\varding Hvrs." One pe rson \\'ho already h!ls achie\'Cd success \\'as Valedic!orin n .Jo d i P11lmblade. a winner of numerou!i scholarships and a"•ards. who ne\'er got a grade lo"·er than an "A" In her four S1nitli Cited For Conte in pt SAN DIEGO AP) -C. Arnholt Smith, a longtime ft1end of President Nixon and once a major rtnancial figure in S o u t h e r n California, was senttnced today to an lnM:finJte tenn In jail on seven c:ounta ol contempt or court. Rummage Pickup Slated yea rs at Costa ~tesa High School. .. !\liss Palmblade attributed much of her success lo her happy homelife and stressed that in order for younger people 10 succeed they mus.t have good homes. (See ~!€SA JIJGl l, Page Z) Smith, 75, wes granted a stay, however, until T\lcsday. SUperlor Court Judge Pa u I EuglM\<!:. Overton said: "rather's Day Is Sunday, and t have a feeling for fathers and grandfathers.'• Overton order-00 S!nilh "incar- cerated until such lhne as you are willing to appeBr in · this court to answer 100 seven qu~stfons asked." in an extortion case. Another special rummag~ pickup has been &ehedulcd Monday morning for Costa ~itsans who are on the ~iondny trash pickup schedule. This is an "anythlns goes" pickup which gives resklentll the opportunity to clear thtlr homes and yards of Junk not normally picked up by lhe trash men. llcre is the way it works: If your pickup day ls '-1onday. put yo ur rummage out along ·with th!! other trash by 7:30 e,m. 1\ truck "'ill follow the trush 1rock anJ make the pltkup. ()on'I put anything out on the curb v.·hich lll'O men canoot easl.ly handle. Large tree limbs. tree trunks. shrubs and garden debris wln not be picked up. Street Superintendent Bill Ander!IOfl has also issued a ban agajnst liquids. espcdally paint and motor oil. He s..itd lhe lids came off several cont.nine~ during the last pickup. The. last s.peclal pickup. held June 7, wa!I pronounced a "huge succc5.5" by !\1rs. ~1nureen DiDomcnlco. chairman or lhe Costa ~1e$!1 Beaut i fi cation Committee under who!'c sponsorship the pickups arc carried out. ~ Some 13 truckloads of junk ranging from old rdrlgera!O" to cast ofl toys 1 SD u s pee l Arrested \\.'ere hauled to the dump. 11 ' !\ionday's p\ckll(> Is scheduled for soufh\vest eo.m ~1esa. an older a~a or SEOUL (UPI\ -The SMul district 1he city, and additional mllnpo~·dr ..is prosecutor'!! office arrestro an American be.Ing mustered lo handle lhe gretl~r' Ci\'il civilian todBy on charges of loads expcctl'd. possessing an estimated $10.000 worth of Not lnvo\vt.'d In the special pickup are the hal\uclnalory drug LSD. Pros~ulo!:_ unlnCQrpiOratc<l county areas. 1'hC p~-pYol'fK;rp:Kytt=Sl'lld_~rdorrT. Hn11genson will be confined strictly t1'.l the city limits· of ~·lonterC>y. Ca hr. wns 11 r r est. c d of ~ta Mesa. Wedne!lday In possession or 1.200 tnblcts t'uturt ~la\ pickup dnte!i will be of lho drug, which ls nopulnr among announced. American servicemen In South Korea. • ,. Dr. Philp flatly denied that rtKt health department is the agency rrspc)nsible for enforcing la\.\'S OO\'tring labor camp conditions. "If there has been any buck·passing in this· affair, it's becauseihey hiven 't dont· their job." Pbilp said in reference to the state agency. ·'Under the Housing and Community Development Act, lhar is the enforcing agency for all lhe things the commission ~See CHARGES, Page ZJ Millions Come Out, View Trai11 BULLETI N ALEXANDRIA, Egypt (API -Pres- ident Nixon announ ced this afternoon that Presid ent An~·ar Sadat of E1ypt accepted an in\·itation lo visit the United States before the end of th is year. By HELEN TH0)1AS 1\LEXANDRIA. Egypt (UPI I f\.-1illions of Egy ptians. traveling by camel. donkt:y , oxcart_and foot. left their work in the field s to honor President Nixon as a new £riend and peacemaker on a campaign-style train rlde through , the Nile Valley. Nixon described him s e I f a~ "overwhelmed" by the n1assive sho"' of esteem for tiim and First Lady Pat Nixon. It was "a magnificenl reception." Nixon told newsmen on the train when aSked his reaction lo the throngs that gathered along the 130 miles of tracks that carried him and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat from Cairo to the Mediterranean port or Alexandria . Nixon's press secretary, Ronald L. Ziegler, estimated that 3111: million ---·· .. BELLY DANCER OPENS NIXON'S EYES. Story, Page 4 persons saw Nixon during the 3112-hour ride from Cairo to Alexandria 's Ras E:I Tin Palace where the Nixons "'ill stay during their overnight stay. Egyptian security guards gave n zji;nilar crowd estimate to Hermann Eilts, U.S. Ambassador to Egypt. Nixon and Sadat rode side-by-side on the !rain's observation platfonn. Nixon expected crowds but began swinging his head in disbelief as the dimensions of the crowd and its emotions gripped him . The two presidents used the snail- paced ride to discuss Geneva negotiations to reach a permanent peace in the 1;!ideast. They told newsmen they awed Arab leaders should hold what Sadat called a '•little surnmit" before meeting \vith Israel. "Before going to a surnmit conference, a number of leaders representing different points of view should have bilateral discussions," Nixon said. In response to questions. he said this need not apply to Israel. E\·eryw here along the train rou te there "'ere signs of the changi ng Egypt ian-U.S, relations that had been hostile for nearly l\\'O decades until Secretary ol Slate llenry A. Kissinger began his peace missions six months ago that set lhc (See \VELCO~IE, r .. ge Z) Orange Coast Weather Night and mornin g low cloudi· ness with hazy afternoon sunshine Friday. according to th!! \\t•athcr ser\'ice. 4iighs ranging from 66 al lhc beaches to 76 inland. Lows to- oight SS.62. INSIDll TODAY Ne wtuio1ds act as tho11gl1 tlleu ore typical yo1111g cn11p/e 1u:;t sforth1g OUI -b!IL they Qr(' llOL Bridr was born In 1953 lf1thout :irms or legs. S1ory. Page 15. l-. M, l e,. C11tl0rftl1 Clln!t!M C.11'110 CNH ... nl Ottlft ""'''' 1Edllerl1I '•tt r~i.rt»iftllttftt Flft•- N' 01n1ftltl' Hort~Oltl ''"' l..1ft6en Montr Tr" ""'""" 11 'l\~11111 Fyltlh T' f, H N1ti.to•t Ht'" 4 •~t O••ft•t 11 COlll'lt 10, I!. I' n '" ,,,. •w11• 11. n 10 S•lvl1 "9rltr Jf .. , iP1rll l1 -M t1 !Ifft Mll'lllett •11 -29.,, Ttlt•llloft Jt !l fl'lelllrl J1 N w11llllr 4 71 No"'•"'' """'' U-'9 1' ""''" ...... t '"" .. 2 OAlL. V PILOT c --- Coiirt Denies Reinecke Bi<! WASHIN GTON Wl'll -The U.S. Court of Appe'11s has tumt>d down CaJlfornia Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke1s rea11ost that hi!'! trlal on perjury charges be movt'<i lo 1hc WC!st Coast Reinecke's apJ)('al. v.•hich was denied \Vedncsday. v.·as from a ruling by U.S. Oistrlct J udge Barringlon Parker. Rei neckC'·s \\1~1sh ington ln,vy<>rs indicated they y;ould not carr'' the appeal lo the U.S. Supren1(' cOw1. The Republican official has been indicted on charges lhat he lied be.fo"t' the Senate J u ct i c i a r y C.Om1nitlee alx>ul conversations he had v.·ith former Attorney Genera l J ohn l\"litchell. From Page J '°''ELCOME ... stage for Nixon·s five-nation tour. Kissinger, who since hi s resignation threat Tuesday in Austria has Slaved in the background so that Nixon migh.t reap the honors. received a Sl'pa rate burst of appl ause "'hen he got ()ff the train in Alexandria. (Related story Page 4 1 At one point along the route, at Kafr cl Zayat, one of the thousands of children who watched the train pass. 7-year-Old Sahar Mohammad. said she had never actually heard of Nixon. Asked if she had heard of the United States. she rfplicd. "Yes, they arc the war people." "No, no. no," her mother Fafhia hastily corrected. "Now ·we are friends.·· At Tanta, about halfway between Cairo and Alexandria, trucks v.ith loudspeakers explained to the crowd.'! that the United States is now Egypt's friend and that this is the reason Nixofl·s pictures are everywhere. "We greet !'\Jr. Niicon 11·ith lovr, appreci ation and fellow~1ip,'' the sound truck told the crowds. And everywhere were the diants of "Nix"°° ... Nix-on " that sometimes even drow11ed out the noise of the train. "I've never seen peo ple so eiccited and en1otional." said a White House ()fficial .aboard tbe train. "This is for a president ~·ho has run into host.lie placards in the U.S .. " referring to Nixon 's impeachment troubles O'Ver Watergate back home. About 30,000 policemen were turned out for security putp05es along the train route, carryi~ automatic \\'eapons. Helicopters fol.lowed Nixon 's motorcade through the streels of Alexandria. Security measures ar expected lo IDCT'eMe as Nis:on continues his joumey through the h-11deast, especially in view o{ an Arab guerrilla attack today at the Israeli settlement. ol Shamir. Nixon and hi!! wife will spend the night at Ras el Tin Palace. from where King Fa.rook went into exile in 1952, before r~ to Cairo Friday for a visit to the Pyramids. He will depart Friday for Saudi Arabia and then go to Syria, lsrae! and Jordan. •·1...ong live Nixon!" shouted the crowd 31 Nixon left the Cairo station. He respanded with smites, waves and the V sign Nixon is &0 known for -anns hlgh over his head, two fingers spread apart All aloog the train route, '-"'Orkers left the fields to watch the train. Women , usually waiting in !he background because ol Moslem custom , were up front, holding up their children. "I made atTangementa for this special trip to pasa by thi.$ place where I could see them," sa.id Abdul Hak Ahmed. 36. who led a string of four cameiJ to a spot \\'here the train passed. "I want to go to ~tecce. m~t of all but I want to be here. too." A line of horses blanketed with American and Egyptian flags was strung out along one section of track. l'rom Page J TERRORISTS •• Israel. It brought the nun1ber of terrorist . victims in Israe l to 49, including 31 children, in two months . Semiofficial Lebancu sources in Beirut said Israeli border artillery pounded a south Lebanese village in an apparent reprisal for the raid. OlAH61COAlT t "' DAILY PILOT t ... °'11"9t ('..0 .. 1 °""',.,.,. .... ~ ..... ~ .. ti)"'!> Oo'*1N l'ftw••"'-"~~tr.~O<•..,. Cool.I """""'"Q C-0. s.r.. .. 1. ""~-.,. !Mllo!,,._, l.!o""-~ '~" '""'' lo< C•.1<•• "'-•a. "l"wl>t'll St'ot• '"""'"'II"" e,..,._. • .,,,. I•"" Yo"'" ~f'IV"" 6•t.I' • ...,.,,,,.,~,,._, lo\d ~•" Oilm~~i11<;.,. ""''~ C.ito•"•M A ''"":.-'"9'""" ~''"'" " ~ ~ .. ,,.0•{\ •M ~'I" a1 ... lh~ Pf""'°"' o.m .... ...., ,.... ,, "•'~JO w. ·• e •• Sir ..... Co;»!I ....... l;.o'"'ll"·' ~.'!·~~ ~MW,."1 ''•-nl...Ull')obl • .., 1.,..~ I< ( .... 1." II~ P..OS.'!1 •"'~~ "'<"IOI' ~.!( .... ,, ~- T~~,._ ~ .. ,,.._-""' lo'o~E6110r Qo-1.,.H l~ ~ ·"7dP ~.b1 ·~ ... ·••lo'""'°O"l'l l~•(jt Ccrtf9Mf.Motfi(e J.~~w bjo...,. ~""")~· .. ) b "'°°' ~2t;') °"" °""" --!ltf:I' )J,1)-....... ,.,,, ~-... 111•..,• 1n•.,,~· •...-.. ... ~ .. ....,.,,,. e. .... '·~·~o~ .... ~e'~''· '"' (_,,-..... ;ioci,_., .... ...,11 •• °""""' •tr• 0.•"'30 ""'"'' ,,_,."O Cooo -1..o-.a•oo-•..,..!...___,,.'* f/f ~1 ""''~~I 1>11 ,._ .... ..i .. mw _..,,,..,..,_ol"'f!r•o"'"",_ ~ci ... POll~flltWlll C:.0,••lo'• .. °"''"' ""ttiltii!•~ .. 6-IJf~•JOl'l-11'1\" ~; ... ~ ••OD"""""""r ... ~11"""°""""'-"oc......, 1 CdM Fi.t·111 Orde1·ecl To Clo se Up A Corona de\ ~Jar precious n1etaUi ('Xc~ngc may face crin1inal charges by the C.:ilifoml:i D c pa rt me n t of Cor\)t)l·atlons for fulling to fill up to $1 rnJllioo in gold and silver orders, it \\'as Jean1C"d loday. The ~tnte ti.'.J.s ordered the Gold and Silver Bullion Jo:xchangc, Inc .. 2445 East Coast Hig hY.'ay. to discontinue operations unless ii can make deliveries v>'ithin sevro days. ~'!ills Crenshaw. president of the exchange, alleged today .the firm can't fill its orders because it has been defrauded by a Denver supply oompeny. Crenshaw also chai:ged that both the state agency and the f'BI have refused to assist his a:>mpany in r~ping its losses. ·•The Department of Qrporations refused to help us when we protested that wc \\'ere the victims of a deliberate. <'On ga1ne by a ~diver suppli er," Crcnsha,.,. charged. "No"'· the.v're ch;irging us wit h not ha\'ing made our delivcrit.'ii in less than a 11 eek,'' he .said. He said similar ef forts to obt ain FBI assistance "'·ent unheeded. Bui Stanley lC'zn1a n. counsel for 1he Dcpart1nent ()f Corporations, said !hat he has no record of any correspondence from any n1ember or the finn. He acknowledged the fraud against the Corona de! h1ar firm may have taken place, but said "this is the kind of thing that our law is intended to prevent." He explained that the exchange is allegedly in violaUon of the 1973 California Commodities Act which is aimed at preventing exchanges from using customers' money to finance gold and silver purchases. Crenshaw conceded that he has not "'·ritten the state agency but has flied his fra ud charges v.•lth Jezman, personally, over the telephone. lezrnan v:ould not make a comment on that cootenlion by Crenshaw. Crenshaw said his firm's troubles began when the firm realized that a large amount of silver ordered from the Denver supplier "would not be delivered for fraudulent reasons." Crenshaw sald lhe Denver District Attorney's office has since requested and received a Grand · Jury indictment against an official of Applied Chemicals, Inc., a Denver, C.Oio., company which Crenshaw said has California affiliates. TONIGHT COSTA MESA WATER DISTRICT - Regular meeting, 77 Fair Drive. 7:30 p.m. "HOUSE OF BLUE LEAVES"-<;outh Coast Repenory Theater, through Sunday, 8 p.m. FRIDAY, JUNE 11 EXCEPTIONAL C H I LOR EN 'S DANCE -Dept. of Leisure Services spon,c;ors dance for all exception!,\l children and young adults of Orange' County. Community Recreation Centei:. Fairgrounds, 7·9 p.m. lnfonnalion: 556- 5300. MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY RACING -Fai rgrounds. 8:15 p.m. 'Por1ao Movies' . • I ~r ·~(· : . • • OtHly Plltt Sl•lf l'Mh AS FAMILIES WATCH FROM STANDS, HARBOR HIGH GRADS FILE INTO STADIUM Cla11 of '74 Graduates, Applauding and Chffring as It Ga.s NetVJJO rt Harbor 1-ligh's Grods Laucle<l by Peers The members or Newport Harbor High School's 441h graduating class hea rd Principal Charles Godshall tell them Wednesday they'll be remembered for a special "unique charact~r." But it appeared the unabashed Class of '74 already knew that A breeze blew across Davidson Fi eld and the SWl sparkled above as the senior Sailors confidently waved and tipped their caps as they marched onto the Froua Page J l\1ESA HIGH. • • l\tld\1·ay throu gh the handing out or di plomas, a male slreaker appeared at ttie other side of the stadium. He dashed to the north curve and. after pitching a bundle of clothing ove r a cha in-link fence, promp tly climbed af!.e r It and disappeared into the night. After laking a break for a good laugh , Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustees Donald Smallwood, Orville Amburgey, and Thomas Casey got right back to the business of handshaking ancl congratulating all the graduating seniors. Mesan Cleared stadium grounds. J F•h J And they repeatedly punctuated the Il I erg 3SS exercises with shrill yells and applause and a cou~le of f~ecr~ckers wbtnever Swindling Case anybody said anything nice aboot them. / Their attitude and appreciation for A Costa Mesan named with five other themselves was expressed by senior defendants in an Orange County Grand George NotTis when he delivered the Jury indictment based on allegations that Invocation. they swindled investors in a fraudulent He asked God to treat them with fiberRlas.s boat bu!liness in Newport Beach has been cleared 0( all charges. equality whether they become "President Superior Court Judge Robert A. of the United St.ates or just president of a Banyard dismissC!d charges of grand corporation." theft and conspiracy filed aga inst Lyle Dr. Godshall said their boldness was Swafford. 47, of 485 Costa Mesa St .. expressed in ether ways,_ as well. Costa Mesa. He said the members of the Class of Judge Banyard 's action caine just five '74 had an ''obvious respect foe I.heir days after three of Swafford's five co- pareots." defendants \Vere cleared of all charges He cited the large number of students by a Superior Court jury, Swafford had who in this year's yearbook stated the asked for a separate trial. people they admire most "are their mom Acquitted after a brief jury and dad." deliberation were: Wllliam Smock, also Godshall drew loud applause when he . ~as A.J . Scarborough.1 45, of reminded the class that their boys' sports Anaheim: Reith Sterling C&rlson, 42, of teams had qualified for the CIF' playoffs Santa Ana and John Robert Ford, 48, of in 11 of the 12 sports In whlch they Tustin. competed. The prosecution had earlier dropped. Mrs. f.1arion C. Bergeson, vice identical charges against Jotm Freeman, president of the Newport-Mesa school 41 , of Lakewood and Henry Leroy board. told the class that confidence and O'Brien, 40, of Brea. courage will help them. She pointed out that society is full of experta who can find mistakes, but what society needs is experts who can make things work. Four students speakers, Nancy Bobls, Todd Johnson, Lyndon Dicfl:ey and Julie Holcomb each presented t h e i r interpretations of their "\Vaking." • FromPfl!lel ;\UTOPSY ... and musical colleague. told police he called the Shanrv:>n Lane home to see if Willis "''as coming to work and was told by" the tearful Mrs. ,.-lay that she and Vcnioe had an argument. ----- Balbolt Island Fisherman Still Lost Off Coast U.S. Coast Guard officials said today there are no new clues in the disappearance of a Balboa Island fisherman whose empty boat was found Tuesday night off Laguna Beach. The Coast Guard Wednesday morning called off the search for retired dentist Alex E. Okrand. 64. of 217 Onyx Avenue. A Coast Guard helicopter anf:( cut ter. the Point Divide, had searched .unt il II p.m. Tuesday night and from 6 to 9:30 a.m. Wednesday morning. Okrand's empty JS-foot Inboard motorboat was !!potted by the helicopter three mllet off Laguna Beach about 8 p.m. Tuesday night, an hour and a half after Okrand 's vi'ife reported him missing. She reported he had gooe fishiog alone about noon and that she became concerned when he was not home by dinnertime. When the boat was recovered, Coast Guardsmen noted there were blood!tains on the stat and an open first aid kit on th e engine cover. "The amount of blood was IO liWe that we don't feel it could have been a critical wound," Sgt. Robert Reid of the Orange C.Ounty Sheriff's Offtce sa id lcxlay. "Our crime lab Is checking it to be sure it's Okrand's blood but we don't feel it has any bearing on the search," Reid said. "There's no indication of foul play." Ok.rand 's daughter, 1'-trs. Sue Reilly, said Wednesday he bad once llllf!ered a minor heart attack but was not believed to have a serloWI heart coodltion. Fi:ve Newport Students Cited Five students at Newport Harbor High School ha ve received service awards from their school. Stacy Cochran, ""'ho was named top 11.lh grade girl, was also nu.med top four- year girl along with Janice Wolfe, Ken Newbery was named top 12th grade boy. Awards for top ninth grade boy and girl went to David Fletcher and Ann Detsch. Lt. Calley Returnefl T.o Custod)' N£W ORLEANS, La. (AP) -Former Army Lt. Wllliam L. Calley Jr. wns ordered ba<'k into custody tod;iy by !he 5th U.S. ClrCuit C.Ourt of Appeals. The court ordered hlru held until the fedcrnl court in Columl>us. Ga. dt'Cides his appeal of his conviction of mu rdering 22 Vietnamese at l\1y Lai. The c:ourt s.ild lhe Army should decide where C8lley, 36, should be imprisoned. Calley had been held under house arrest at Fl. Benning, Ga., for thrc<' years since his 1971 conviction and the Army said it. wanted io move him lo the stockade a1 Ft Leavenworth, Kan. Tbe Georgia court forbade that move and released Calley on $ l , O o o r~ bond In February. The appeUate court said a prisoner such as Calley should be granted ba il "only when the peti1ioner has raised substantial conslituUonal claims upon whlch he has a l;iigh probability of success. and also when exlraordlnary or exceptiona l circumstances exist.'' The court said thal would bl' deterioration of Ca lley's hralth or the possibility that hij sentence would e.xpirc before the appeal could be completed. The cae wcnl to the appeal court when govemment..attorneys argued that it was unprecedented to have a military prisoner granted bail. J. Huston Gordon. Ca lley's chief coun5el, has said the case would be appealed to. the U.S. Supreme C.Ourt. Calley has spent one night in prtson since his conviction. The remainder of his nearly thret years io cus1ody has been served in his officet'a quarters at Fl. Benning. Fro1n Page J CHARGES " .. . is talking about," Phllp said. "If th e cities and the county "'"ant local enforcement and want to pay tor it, then that is a different story entirely." Philp said Hill's attempt to divide responsibility was Improper because tho law is specific. "He'd bett,er read his own act," Philp said. "f have had thls same kind of experience with them (the state housini;; agency) before &nd they cannot buck. their responsibility under the law," Philp added. Hill admitted there i! anottler 1tate. la1v that allows local jurudlctlons to take on the enforcement power for labor housing and noted that eight Califo rnia COUllties have done 80. "But the state cannot as1ume local jur\sdiction, '' Hill said. Hill aloo went into some detail about his understanding of the situation in Orange County and why his agency is limited in its capabilities to cure tbe situation. He said or the 26 camps mentioned in the human relations report, 11 had less than five resident employes when inspC!Cted. Theoretically, the it.ate baa no jurisdiction Wltil there are more than five resident laborers. Hill didn't say when the in!lpedlon." took place. There Is a wide variance in employment on county farms depending upon sea!OIUll crop harvesting. Hill said of the remaining 15 camps, 13 were properly registered with hi!! agency and inspections showed all but one me1 minimum state standards. "Thi< -is being-brollglll up to standards at our insistence,'' he said . The commission said It ln!{>eeted 11 camps. of which only two were felt to be in livable l'ODdition. It said less than half the county camps were prop e r t y · registered with the state. Stude11t Cites Sex Orgy She then reportedly said she shot him. fnvestlgators said Willi s w;u one among a circle of' RC\\' acquaintances f.-trs. May had met shortly before her husband, Fire Department Gapt. Larry May. died of leukemia this spring. Their names were Inadvertently left' oft an earlier story on Newport Harbor High School Awards Night. Hill said two other camps inspected were below standards but were closed down by the farmers for economic reasons . 111 CdM Teache1·'s T1·ial By TOM BARLEY ot fflt ~'" l"llel '"" A Corona de! ~1ar High School 11tudent testified today that he joinOO ~uspendcd 1eacher Alan Jay Sch"'albe and another ma n a year ago in a sex encounter al the home o( a \Vcslminster 'A·oman known only to him as "Kay". The 16·ycar-old student. f i rs t prosecution 'A'Ltness in the Harbo1· ~lunicipal Court 111ora l11 trial of Sch"·albc. 42. of 2860 Alta Vista-Drive. Ncv:por1 Beach. said he and his three companions stripped shortly ar t c r arriving at the home and !hen engaged in sexual intercoorse. The "-"i tness said he ""a.s ()riginally hired by Schwalbe to work on apartments m!'na ged by the !iOcial studies Instructor on Pepper Tree Lane In Co«ta ~1e.sa and that sexual eels occurred bet\veen the1n an a va cant apartment there 11bout a year ago. The "A'ltMss tesli rtoo that Sdlwa.Jtx: di:o;played pornographic mo \•ies in the apartment and that sex act.s took plril'C after he (the v.•ltll<'S!I 1recame aroused by the film. DefenM! attonrey .Jame:-Jackman today described Schwalbe lo the fury :is 11 "fine, honest clti~n end a dcdlcutrcl tt<icher who ha, always been dN>ply inv~ in comn1unl1y <i!fairl!," Jackman told the jury lhat Inst yl'ur Schwalbe saved. tJte \Jfc of a child he. found at lhe botlom of a swhnmln:l pool ant! that he Is widely known 1n the llarbor Arca !or his .,..·ork with gifOOd children and his service to music organ izations. Jackm an !old the jury that Schwalbe is the father of five young children. amoni;: the m two sets of tvl\ns. and that he once drew 1,500 votes as a write-in candidate for the Costa f.otesa City Colmc!I. Deputy District Attorney C a r I Ar1nbrust tol~ the nc\\'\y fonned jury loc111y that he will also put the witness' brother on the $land to support t.he 17 n1isde meanor counts filed a g a l n !I t 5<..-hw;1lbc. The teacher is charged in those allcRalions with sexually annoying and 111olcs!ing both l6-year-0ld students and C:.'Ql1tributlng to their delinquency. Arbrust !old the jw'Y in his ope'ning sta1emcnt ttiat the brother or tochiy's 1vltness :::imilarl :-i engaged in various sexual ;icts 'A'i th Schwal be \\'hlle 'A·orking at the tcacher's apartment house. On ooe occasion, the prosecutor claimed, Schwa lbe took one of tht brothers to the home of an idrnl if1ed Sant..'I Ana mal<' dwarf where st-Yeral se1. acts were COO'lmitted. Scl\wnlbe. employed by the Ne '1'1-port- f\1e~:i Unifif'd School District for the palit 12 years, has been ~uspended by district officials ptnding the outcome of the eurrenl trial. JtKf~c Robert r . Todd hA~ C5tlmatcd thot the trll•l "''ill take JO dayii. Thirty-one prospective juror! "·ere ~llminal~d In t.'11-·o dnys of j11ry se\eetion heforc the final J><incl (If Mven men and fh·t· 'vomtn Y:us s .... ·om tn hy Juds;l' 1'odd. 2500 W. COAST HWY. NEWPORT IUCH PHOHl 64Z·7076 I~,.,,~, .. , HIHIW HATIOMAL : ' c HEESE ·. KOSHER SMOKI ..... f. ' , TYIO Pl.A.IN ·o. L·' SALAMI ,.., ; ,.,.,.... ·'<: ~ ;Si lb. s21! i ~ HOW SJ!! IH Hlwrotn'l'IODUCI VII.UGI • 1601 HIWPOttTILYD. COSTA MESA 642·f004 CHEESE DOMESTIC SWISS MONTEREY JACK B~ICK , HOW SJ?! ·~ COM'flEHEMT PA.l•tH• IH IOTH LOCATIONS 'f' .... ,... i L ........ ~;iirur~llN~ SERi~ei7°~'ill':~~~~· ~'.~!.__~~!S!!!~~L--,---.., ~ '!:"o/ )c:i=~ As.s<>flment ot 60 petite sandwic:heS $ L•rt• ••t•rhllHlf •f ~_M~ .;;J...p ~1-• neatl y arr anged, consisting ol rare J50 -IJO MNwk""' -• · --~ roast beef, roast breasl ol turkev. ~ WEDGE FINGER SANDWICH PARTY TRAY 'lx>»oo "'m ""' att beel salam•. '14"'".., WINE features BY POPULAR DEMAND, a ~peat of a sellout •••• •• ...... t.lffrt .., ...... ., .... .... "SOUYllAIM"--of Cal-'s .... .., -,-.. ht llow W1911'f ..... _.. th9t tMt ~tr ef ~ ,..,.... .. prodilc•• wine _... wtMr •aid "lot A"""""? Wt .. WlHIMAM'S .. -MW ,. .. _ ..... lltf• •1'-.... ,_. n.trf'• to••Hll\it elw .,_ ..... bow -TM .-lty of tllb IHMt lllMWfl ...... 11 o.t1l111•r:t ....... '"'' 11 4ltN! Try " Miit •HlltllCll Y• WCNl't IN 4l11f,lldil& For ~oasis. Steaks. Srews. Duck. Ground S11101n Hamburger . Veal or Pilla. Try ..• ""LOS AMIGOS" ZJNfAHDEL FOt Cheese OtsbeS, cn1e~en. Crab, E&e:'lf901. H<1n'I. $ealood or Omelettes. Try .• "LOS AMIGOS" CHEMIN BIANS s1•• z1.1t,-..... I 1 ~ I I I