HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-06-12 - Orange Coast Pilot•
"i.Alcohol #Aeling ~ Charfled
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Gunmen Dold Up Sou.th Vietna111ese
Fained Restaurant Liberate An. Lo~
In Lag·nna Bea~h In Bitter ~ight
~rews
MOND AY AFTERNOON, JUNE 12, 1972
\IOL. "' NO. 1'4. I I ECTIO"S. M PAHi
Coast · Police He .licopters
Chase 'Stunt' Airplane
A hair-ralaile Jeri.ti oC 1a'Oba~ie stun ta
includ.ini one power dlve to rooftep Jevel•
over foW' oiange Collt ciUe! led to the
arm! ol a pilot pursued by tll!O pC>lille
helicopter• early tod1y.
RiChard B. Loom.ls, 14, of Arcadia, w~ ,
taken Into custody at Orange County
Alrpafl 1bortly altor mldnlght lklll( wlihl
cne of hil lhree puaenger11.
Loami.a wu arrested by crewmen or
the Cosio Mesa pC>llce helicopter Eagle 11
and booked Into JaU .on. ausplcloo or
vlolaUng section 21@.5 or the Publlo
UtiUtlts !Ade.
O!!lcers Rlndy Null and David Brooks
cbargtd Loomia IUldtr the PUC Code
with operalilll a ~ wblle under the in-
fluence of an lntoskant.
!ncldenlo were dl<d over Newport
. Beach, l!unllngtm. Beach, Cosio Mala
and Irvine. -1 •
-One.pas~nger., Tom "P· D'AJCelo, 13,+0f
113'h Turquoile Ave.:Batboa ll1"1d1 was
.aOO arruted 01llllllpldoll <I being dnmk
ln public .. ' ' ' . ·lrrnsllgaliln•who·nld they con!i""led
a batl'il\l'm, jug ot wine. !rom the cockpit
of the~white Casno aircraft in-
vomd 11.·the aerlil· ucapade alleged all
loot occupants W been drinking.
Only Loomit, wbcrhad no pilot's license
la hll -poaeuion. and _o• Angelo had ap-
parenU, consumed ~gll to warr<mt
the1r atl'Ull, """"'11111 to lnvesUgatlng orncers. ·
Ollicen Brooks and Null "Id they !lrst
1pot1el) the plbe. lly.iJIC erratically In the
area of. the Sl!lla Ana !\Iver, bet-n
lS.0 JIUZllNG, ..... II
n
Rapid City
Death Toll
Passes 200
~
RAPID CITY. S.D. (UP!) -Search
crews using dogs worked through the
night to uncover bodies from I.he muddy
ruins of the nation's worst flood In !15
years.
Authorities said today more than 200
were known dead from the flood Friday
night and Saturday caused when a rain-
swoll en dam burst and cascaded billions
of gallons of water into Ra pid City and
other communities in South Dakota's
Black Hills.
Pat Dixon, coordinating disaster In·
formation, said there may have been
duplications in the death count.
"We know it's over 200,'' he said. "It
could be 29 over or 30 over. No one knows
right now."
Sen. George McGovern (D-S.D.), said it
was "a scene of incredible destruction
and devutatioo." The pres I d ent i a I
hopeful fiew from·Wasbington Sunday to
tour the fioodlands by heliCopter.
Don Barnette, Rapid City's ~year-0ld
mayor, said, "[ would estimate a com·
bined death total I)( 300 for the whole
tragedy."
Gov. Richard Kneip said, "We have in
ncess of 200 deaths and there's a long
way to go·yet. It's believed many bodies
are below the mud and the mire. That
part is bad."
Search crews concentrated on a
virtually devastated five-.block wide area
·along ·Rapid creek, the stream which cw through the dty.
lt turned suddenly Jnto a swollen, rag·
Ing kJller when Canyon Lake Dam burst
under the pressure of a foot ot rain late
Friday nliiht, senc11ng· a four.foot wall of
water thunderinc down from the bil!J.
Tbe fiood caused an estimated $100
mllllon damage , desbvying !00 houses
and leaving thouaands of persons
-•!en .
Authorities first said aboot l,!00
~ were unaccounted for, bot later ~ 'tliey could not make an atcurate
C-on the number missing. ·
LitUe had been determinOd about what .
happened In man bolal<d commu~u..1
In the hllls . -particularly to the . bun-I
dreda, perhaps tho\>Nnd• ot tourlsta
believed to have 1-1 camping In the
ar<a <1-by Mt. Ruabmore.
The Aarlculture Department announced
In Washington Sunday that the Oood atM
was el"1ble !or emergency lree lood
stamps. Repruentatlvts of almost every
!eden! a&enc'y that could be Involved
met lo make recovery and a!sslstance
plan!.
Rapid City water supplies were cur·
taUed for fear of cootamlnatlon and
llloo.t"LOOOING, r.,.11
Quints Do Well
Bor1i to V .S. Pair in Fra n.kfurt
FRANKFURT (AP)-The quintuplets born to Mr. and Mrs. Harry C. Bean,
an American couple living here, were doing well today, a Frankfurt Uni·
versity Hospital spokesman said.
The quintuplets -four girls and a boy -were bom Saturday about one
month premature. ·
Mrs. Be.an conceived after an intensified hormone treatment at the hos--
pital, the spokesman said.
The quints were placed in incubators follo\\'ing delivery, and will remain
under special care until they reach 511.. pounds, he added. The heaviest oC the
five is the boy who weighs 3.85 poWlds.
Bean. 44, came to Germany 13 years ago from West Hartford. Conn. He
is an engineer with the American Forces Network, an affiliate of the Armed
Forces Radio and Television Network in Western Europe.
White Hou se Restau1'ant
lnLagunaHeldUpbyTwo
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of ffl• D•llJ r 1 .. t St•tt
Two men, one brandishing a snub-nosed
revolver, held up Laguna Beach's famous
White House restaurant shortly after 8
a.m. today, laking at least $3 ,500 in
weekend receipts.
Kory Saruwatarl, operator of the
res taurant, at 330 S. Coast Highway, his
wife Gladys and Dan Mikels, an employe,
were tied and' left unhanned as the two
men left the establishment.
Saruwatari said he wa s working behind
the restauriint bar w'hen he looked up and
saw a man with a gun facing him.
The gunman, described as of medium
heigh t, with a slender bu ild and dark
hair, ordered him to call the other
employes out.
Dan Mikels, working in the men's rest
room stepped out and faced the gunmaw.
Heav il y Armecl
Trio Soug ht
SAN JOSE (AP) -Police set up
roadbk>cks In west San Jose today
Jn 1 search for three heavily anned
men who bad held six persons al
. gunpoint in a s u bu rban
iupennarket.
Police said the hostages. five
store empl oye.s and a truck driver,
e1eaped unharmed.
The bandits forced the ir way into
the Shopwell Supermarket about 1
a.m.
Officers had not determined 1r
> they took any monty .
•
"What a thing to happen, and I've got
only three more days left," Saruwatari
said, e:rplaining that on Wednesday, he
would end his lease Of the Laguna
restaurant which he has operated since
1967. The business was established in
1918.
After taking all the money from the or.
lice, the gunman and his accomplice
went to the bar area and collected more
money there.
Mrs. Saruwatarl and Mikels were then
freed from the locked storeroom and,
with Sa ruwatlrl, tied to the pedestals of
the restaurant tables.
" 'I'm so rry I have to tie you up like
this,' the guy said to me," Mrs.
Saruwatarl said. She still had welts on
her wrists where her bonds been tighten-
ed.
"[just stood there. waiting for someone
to say something and this guy stuck bis
gun in my stomach and &old me "move
over th ere,' " Mikels recounted following
the robbery.
Mrs. Saruwatarl, working In the kitdr
en, was ca\Jtd out into the restaurant
area and then she and Afikels, were
Jocked i• a storeroom .
The gunman then forced Saruwatarl h>
the office and made him open the safe.
The other man scooped up the money.
bundling it up In his shirt which he had
untucked from hill trousers.
"The guy holdin~ the gun seemed
agitated, he kept saying 'hurry up1 don't
bother with the che cks or the small
sturr. • " Saruwatnri snid.
"He didn't tie me very well ." Mikels
said. 11e said that he had worked hl:ii "-'B Y
free. but v;as wa iting for the man to
leave before getting up.
"I couldn't see th<'m. but once Kory
(See WHITE IJOUSE, Page %1
00
Communists
On the Run
At A11 Loe
SAIGON !UPI) -South Vietname..w
armored columns and truckloads of sup--
pl ies broke through today to An Loe and
all but lirted the siege of the prov incia l
ca pital 60 miles north of Saigon -the
fourth major town to be liberated since
the Comtnunist offensive began on March
30.
A few snipers remained j n the town and
Highway 13 from Saigon was not con·
sidered "safe."
But most of the North Vietnamese et·
tackers were reported to ·have withdrawn
to Cambodia and the remaining 7th and
9th Communist Divisions were described
as "decimated" or so badly cut up they
lost their combat effectiveness.
Many North Vietnamese attackers
were killed by massive B52 strikes aod
by fighter-bombers.
The emphasis on the air war today was
North Vietnam where BS2s struck for the
fifth consecutive day while fighter·
bombers bitting the IJanoi-Halpbong
areas played havoc with North Vletnam '1
war transportation.
The Saigon command ln reporting 288
(See VlETNAM, Pap I )
er .. ,. Cr Ba
WeaC.-
Now you C&D-wub the car. The
weatherlady .. more sunahine on
the borbon lot" ~ -and
thereafter. lllchi <il""'IO exp<cted at
the beaches, rl.ilag to IS Inland.
Lows In the IO'a,
I NS IDE TGDA Y
Orange County air official.!,
plagued b~ Je t llOUt problcm.s
at lhe countv airport, MVf Uirir
e11es on mUitary balt1 41 a pot--
sibte soh,ticm-lo the: critical
quution of where Co put mor.
airports. See atorv, Pagt 20.
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Monl'.1.ty, J unt 11 1 _ ! DAILY PILC1 ----
Court Rt1li1t9
'Clubs Get Okay
To Ban Negroes
\\IASHlNGTO N (AP l -Th\' ~up~·en1e
Court today uphe ld the right {)f pr1val<!
clubs to ex.elude Negorc s as guests.
The 6 to 3 decision was delivered by
freahman Justice William H. Hehllqu1st.
It went againat a black brought as a
guest lo the Moose Lodge in J1arr1sb11rg,
Pa .
The black. Leroy In•is. the majority
leader-of the Pennsylvania House,. <:on-
tended that because the club held a hqunr
li cense from the stale it could not ex.luae
blac_9..M me mbers or as gue sts.
~~y·s decision dealt directly wit h the
...--f)'.clusi on of bl<lc ks as guests -and not
with th('i r exclusion as membf.•rs. llchn-
. I . ,.,
Court Grants
Aid to All
Facing Jail
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme
court today granted all defendants who
face a possible jail tern1 the right to be
represented by a la\vyer. .
The 7 to 2 decision delivered by Justice
William 0 . Douglas, guarantees a
lawyer's help to millions of poor people
who are prosecuted for petty offe nses and
misdemeanors.
Less than half the slales supply free
lawyers to defendan ts in all trial~ that
could lead to a jail term. The historic rul-
ing, an expans ion of past Si1~h Amend·
ment decisions. "'ill necessarily change
trial practices in those states._
Chief Justice Warren E. Burger. who
went a1ong. said be was confident the
legal profession would meet the "large
new burdens" placed upon it.
Justices Lewis F. Powell and William
H. Rehnquist. the cou rt's freshman mem-
bers, objected to the swee? of . the
decision although they did not dissent 1n a
technical sense. They said the court
should ha ve ruled there is a right to a
lawyer on ly when "necessa ry to assure a
fair trial."
Jn 1963 a case known as Gideon V.
Wainwright laid the principle that a man
on trial for "serious offenses" has the
right to a lawyer and that if he caonot af-
ford one the state must supply counsel.
Until then. the Sixth Amendment had
been interpreted as necessitating lawyers
only in capita l offenses - when there
was 1 chance or a death sentence.
Subsequently, the court granted the
right to a free la"'ter when the jail term
could be six months or more.
Today's decision wipes out the distinc·
tion between felonies and misdemeanors
for petty offenses so far as this right is
concerned. Untess a defendant knowingly
and intell igently waives a lawyer's he lp,
he cannot be sent to prison "for any of·
fense, whether classified as petty, misde-
meanor or felony, unless he was
represented by counsel at his trial,"
Douglas wrote.
Frotn Page J
FLOOD ...
some residents took lo robbing motel
!Wlmming pools of \Va ler. .
Free typhoid shots were given !1\
anyone who asked in hopes o[ heading off
!he danger of epidemic.
More than 4,000 townspe<iple and Na·
tional Guardsmen pulled more than 50
bodies from the rubble Sunday.
Rescuers said they found bodies all
1along the Rapid (,'reek course -in
1 basements of homes which had been
swept away, beneath piles of rubble, in
rears. One victim's body was draped in a ......
The flood was the nation's '"-'Orst since
'1937. whe n the Mississippi and Ohio
"}livers too k 2.'">0 lives.
OIANli COAST ST •
DAILY PILOT •
• •
qu ist ~aid lrv1s could not c·l1<1 IJC J\ge the
1.o<lt:e ·s 11ll·white n1crnber~h 1p 1Mi. y
bec11u.se he had ricvtr appllt.:d fu r
1nen\bersh1p, bl.lt had only been brought
lo the clu b as a guest.
Rehnquist s31d the c·lub'.~ refu sal lo
serve Negores does not riolate the 14th
Amendment t>v en though !he fl.loose
Lodge gets HS liqLJOr license through the
state.
"Since state-furnished srr\ i1·rs include
su ch necessities of life ;is 1·lectricity,
watrr, an d ixilice and fire protec1ion,
such a holding would utterly rmascul<1le
!ht-distintllun IJt'.tl\'(·t·n private HS
di stinguished from state condu ct,'' he
said.
Chief Justice \Varrrn E. Burger and
Just ices Harry A. BJ ackm un and Le1,·1s
1' ... Powell , the lhree other Nixon .111.
1ninistration appointees . lined up \'.1111
1{.ehnquist, a (ormcr assistant attornl:'y
general. J ustices }'oile r Stcv.';Jrt ;111U
Byron R. White also were in the ma-
jority.
Dissen ting were J ustices \VHlian1 fl.
Douglas, Willian1 J. Brennan .!r .; ;ind
Thurgood J\1arshall, the <.>Qurt's only
Negro mem ber.
Brennan said J)ennsylvania's liquor
regulati ons plain1y intertwined the state
with the operation of the lodge's bar in a
significant way and lent the state's
authority "to the sordid business of racial
discrim ination.''
The ruling reverses a three-judge
federal court in Harrisburg wh ich held in
1970 that the Moose Lodge could not keep
both its liquor license and its racia lly ex·
elusive policy.
The lodge is across the street from the
Pennsylvania State Capitol. Irvis. an
Allegheny county Democrat, had been
brought to it for cUnner and drinks by a
white membc'r.
'fhe Constitution that governs all J\1oose
lodges pro vides that membe rship "be
composed of male persons of the
Caucasian or white races abo ve the age
of 21 years, and not married to som£'onc
othe r than the Caucasian or white race.
Fro1n Page l
BUZZING ...
Costa A-Jesa and Huntington Beach.
They charged that Loomis, a uti!ily
con1pany employe, went into a steep
power dive and only pulled ou t 100 feet
abov e ground level.
Giving chase. they we re joined by the
Newport Beach police helicopter and
claimed they saw Loomis go into a steep
climb over UC Irvine before nearly stal·
Jin g.
The plane then made a sharp, 100.
degree turn and headed bac k over
Newport Beach, at times zoomi ng as !ow
as 500 feet over residential areas.
Shepherd ing the zig-zagging plane back
loy,.·ard Orange County Airport, arresting
offi cers in the helicopte r said Loom is
b.:1 rely n1 issed crashing into a 40-foot
gl ide .'llope indicator tower while landing.
He was stopped at mid fiel d by airixirt
security officers who ordered the flier to
taxi toward the tower building, where he
\va.~ lo met'! invcstignling officers.
l'olicr said Looinis' plane finally hal!ed
fi nly one fO(lt fr~he huild ing and near·
ly collided \1·Ji:b/ lwo ron•s of p.1rked
;:iircraft as the \ven 1·ing Ccssn<1 pulled up ti> a halt.
The suspect was held in lie u of $250 bail
th is mo rning, 11·lJllc polire fnr11·arded :i
report of !he incidrnt 1n \he F'eder;i!
Aviat ion Ad1nini slrat1on for possi ble ad·
ditiona l lega l action.
LBJ Spurns Invite
WASHINGTON (AP) -Former Presi·
dent Lyndon B. Johnson will not attend
the Democratic National Convention in
~liami Beach next month. "I ha ve invited
him to attend the conven tion and
participalr in !lie convention :i nd he has
declined. He has advised me that he will
not be pre!lent at the c*"ention.''
Democra tic National Chai rman Lawrence
1'~. O"Brien said Sunday.
·~:: -
:.£' " -
•
UPI felepl\oto
Evcl Knievel, the motorcyc·J c daredevil, hoped lt \\IOUld be the other
\\·ay around Sun day \vhen he a.greed to. Ju mp ~ver 13 ca~s a~ Al·
lanta's Lake,vood Park. fJut a m1scalculat1 on durin g a practice JUmp
thr day before brought hun a con1pre~s!on. fracture of the back and
injuries to both han ds. Undaun ted . by 1nJur1es, he sho\ve d up any\vay
on Sund ay and did three 60 mph ··wh eelies."
Ousted General Admits
U nnuthorized Strikes
WASHI NGTON (AP) -An ousted U.S.
commander in Vietn am confirmed to
congressmen today that he ordered
possibly unaut horized air strikes against
the North Vietnamese for the safety or
his pilots "and at the same ti me trying to
sto p the buildu p'' that led to the incursion
into South Vietnam.
But retired Air Fo rce Lt. Gen. John D.
I~avelle said he. ordered the strikes halted
f\.1arch IO when he learned three reports
of the strikes had been falsified, and
there appeared to be no way lo continue
the m without filing false reports.
Gen. John D. Ryan, Air Force chief of
staff, told the subcommittee he fired
From Page l
VIETNAM ...
strikes in North Vietnam during the 24
hours ending at 5 p.m. Sunday also
reported th at F4 Phantoms from the car·
rler Coral Sea shot down two MlG 17s
Sunday 25 mile s south o~ Hanoi with
missiles and without suffermg any losses
themselves.
U.S. planes using "smart bombs" guid·
ed by laser beams and television have
knocked out scores of r ailway bridges
leadi ng from China to the Hanoi area.
And in doing so they left abo~t (iO()
heavily laden railcars stranded in the
open like sitting ducks.
r..1anv of tho se have been prime targets
and the U.S. Command reported that 60
cars \vcre hit during the la.st 24 hours:
Pilots on bo mb ing raids aga1ns~
rail road cars 60 ni lles northenst of Hanoi
near the C h i n a borde r caused l~ge
secondary explosions Yo'ilh a bright
nrange fir eball 500 yards in diameter -a
sure slgn lhat ammunition exploded_..
U.S. 7ih FJ('et shi ps also have Joined
the bom ha rdn1c nt of North Vietnam,
shelling the coastal road and canal
ne!lvork.
The command said the destroyer USS
Bau sell. y,·hile shelling the Than Hoa
region 80 miles southwest of }lanoi _. was
hit by shrapnel on J une 10 and slightly
damaged. No injuries were reported.
Air losses were mounting. The U.S.
command said one American was killed
and six missing in four separate air
crashes today and Sunday, including two
men losl in the north. An F4 Phantom
'"-'as shot down by a missile bul the two-
man crew parachu ted into the South
China Sea and were rescued.
Lavelle as commander of the 7th Air
Force in Indochina when he learned o(
what he said were 28 unauthorized air
strikes into North Vietnam involving 147
planes.
Lavelle said he thoug ht there 1vcre less
than 20 such n1issions.
Lave.lie said his pilots sa1v and
photographed massive bul!dups of North
Vietnamese planes , tanks, a rtillery and
supplies near the Demilitarized Zone and
said lhat \l'hen he reques ted permission
to strike them he did not receive it but
neither did he receive a denial.
Lavelle said he could unde rstand
Ryan 's viewixiint from \Vashington that
''J had exceeded my authority.''
But he added : "At that lime as the
commander on the spot concerned with
the safety of the crews and at the same
time trying to stop the buildup that was
going on , I felt that these were justiflable
acti ons ."
Lavelle said that be judged that under
the rules prohibiting all but "protective
reaction" air st rikes into No rth Vietnam
in line wi th the 1968 bombi ng halt he had
the authority as the commander on the
spot to order the air strikes.
Dew nations
Re11ew Fears
TRANG BANG, Vietnam (U I'l)
-The controlled ex plosio n of cap-
tured hand grenades thundered
through thls village today, touchi ng
off new panic among residents still
shocked from las t week's a c-
cidental napalm b om b in g that
killed a child and fi ve soldiers and
"-'Ounded eig ht other persons.
Crowds in the market place ran
for cover and one wom.!ln scream-
ed. "They're doing it again."
Today·s e:rp losion was only a
cache of captured grenades being
carefully detonated.
Red Chinese
Cite U.S.
Air Strikes
1'0 KY O (AP) -·Communist Chtna said
today U.S. air strikes in North Vietnan1
near the Chinese border threaten 1\s
Seturity.
It charged that ·'these frenzied acts of
1ggression" nre not only "new war
crimes" against North Vietnam but also
"'grave provocations " against China.
A f'orc:ign f\.1inistry statement, in Pe·
king said, "The Chinese government and
people express their resolute support" lor
a North Vietn a1nese statement is!ue<l
Saturday condemning the Unit f'd States
for further dispatching many plan!'" fl)r
r aids against th1' Jlnno1 :-. 11 tJ 11 1 11 ~ •
}/aiphong and otht>r :1n·:1\
Tht' statcn1l'nl 1\:1.-; L1 •• ~d, .1 ,1 \1\ 11•··
king's /\:e1v Chula 1\:0 •1'" 1\gt'111 1
Last y,·eck. U.S. Alf 1:orce Jl'ls swept to
\Vithin 20 n11lr-~ of <'1111111 <ind 1~·ret·ke<l a
big No rlh V1t'lnaftl1'$t• 1•a1lrond n1arshal·
ling yard · and hig)]1\•ay bridge (lnly 41.1
seconds flying tin1e from the Chfna-Vtet-
nam border.
The raids \\·ere re ported the <·loscst to
the bo rd er since the 1965·68 bornUing
can1paign aga inst North Vietnan1.
China said the United Stales "sho uld
know that the heroic peoples of Viet11:11n
and the other Indochinese countries are
by no means alone in their struggle.
Jt di d not elaborate on this point.
"For over a month. U.S. imperialism in
deriance of the strong condemnation and
opposition of the people throughout the
world, had continued to e.'lcalate its war
against the Democratic Republic of Viet-
nam,'' the statement added.
"It not only has mined and blockaded
the ports of Northern Vietnam and daily
sent ou t large numbers of airplanes and
warships to make frantic raids on many
cities. villages and coastal centers. but
has steadily expanded the sphere of
bombing up to areas close to the Sino.
Vietnamese borders, threatening the
security of China .
"These frenzied acts of agres.s ion on
the part of U.S. imperialism are ne1v war
crimes committed against the Viel·
namese people. and at the same time
grave provocations against the Chinese
people."
Th e statement reiterated Peking's
''resoJute" SUpJ'.l()rt or the Vietnamese and
other Indochinese peoples until complete
victory."
Marine Stabbed;
Suspect Held
In Santa Ana
A young El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta·
ti on enlisted man died Sunday morning
a fter being stabbed through the heart at
a Santa Ana apartment and falling out a
second story window.
His alleged slayer was arrested shortly
afterward on suspicion of murder.
Rudolph B. Tamayo, 47, of 322 W. Third
St., was questioned by police combing the
a rea around 200 N. Broadway after they
found bloodstains on his clothing.
He is suspected of fatally stabbing
Andrew H. Nelson, 18, whose body wa s
found about 5 a.m. by a passerby in an
alley behind the North Broadway ad·
dress.
Investigators claim Nelson was visiting
Tamayo·s apartment ~·hen a quarrel
started, leading to the fa tal stabbing.
Coroner's deputies said death was due
to the hea rt wound. It was not determin-
ed whethe r the Marine would have been
seriously injured in falling out the win-
dow.
Minuteman Launched
VANDENBERG Affi FORCE BASE
(AP ) - A Minute-man ID Intercon.
tinental Ballistic MiuUe was Jaunched
down the \Vestem Test Range over Uie
Pacific Ocean Sunday, the Air Force
said. No other details were disclosed.
"""" to Sclwol?
Su1nmer's fun is over and it's
back to sc hool time in Austra·
lia for lovely Robin Evans, 17.
She has the figures (38-24-35)
to add new dimensi ons to math.
-or an y other subject, !or
that matter.
Fron• Page l
WHITEHOUSE ..
called out lo me and said, 'hO\Y are you
Danny?'
"One of the men called back, •what was
that?'" l\1ikels said.
Shortly afterward, Saruwatarl jumped
up and ran to the telephone and called
polic e.
All three victims agreed lhat lhe man
\\'ilh the gun was lhe boss. The other
man, described as about 5 foot, 10 inches
tall y,·ilh a fair complexion and light hair,
just did as he was told, they said.
"I wasn't .sc:ared at all; they were just
no t the type to be scared of," Mrt.
Saruwatari said.
Detectives believe the bandits entered
through the rear restaurant door opening
on Ramona Avenue.
Construction workers cin the new
Laguna Beach County Library im-
mediately behind the resa turant we.re
questioned by officers, but apparently the
gunman and his accomplice left un-
noticed.
Police believe the robbers were
familiar wlth the layout of the restaurant
and with the areas money was normally
kept.
,;He seemed to know just where to go,''
Saruwatari said.
The $3,500 loss ls not covered by in-
surance as the companies re<juire their
clients to be protected by alarms, and the
Whit e House "''as not.
The Saruwataris \\·ere planning on a
trip to Japan afte r he left the business on
Wednesday.
Mikels, 24, is a graduate student at Cal
State Fullerton and son of Jackie Mikels,
restaurant bookkeeper who opens the
restaurant every day but Monday.
The White ~louse restaurant i •
Laguna's oldrst having been founded in
1918 by a couple named Bird .
A sign proclaiming, "Eat with tM
Birds," used to adorn the front of the
eatery known up and down the coast.
Selling Out Overstock
ONE CARAT DIAMONDS s479 Only With
This Ad
\! Tl>t Onngf (Ohf DAILY PILOT, wltl'I '#tll(l'I
h combll'ltd lh• W-Pr-. h siublllhlld b't'
lkf Or•n'lf CMlf PuOl!.Vllrm COtftpll'l'f. ,....,
'~" ~.tlof\1 41"" PVblbl'I~ Mond•r 111rlHl!ll'I
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HUt1!1nglCH1 8e•c~fFoun!1l11 V1lley, l•tvn•
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S•n Jw•n C•Pb lr•no. A •Intl• r9910ft1I
tdl!iofl Ii publil,.... $111VfUY' and SvndlVL
T~t. p1lncl1>1I Plltlllsl'l!nv pllnl II 11 JlC,.Wt.11
l 1y Slrett, Cosi. Ma.t, C1Ulom!1, rHU.
Ireland Street Fighting
TRUMP
FULL SIZE
CLASSICAL
OUT OF PAWN
WATCHES
YACHTSMAN
BINOCULARS CAMERAS
RoD1rf N. Weed
PrnlClent 1flll Pu!ll\Vltf
J 1tlc R. C111J1y
Vjct P!tsicltnl •l'ICI a.ntr11 MIM;t r
Tho1t1•• k11vil
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Takes Live s of Five More
BELFAST (UP!) -One of Northern
lreland's worst weekends or violence took
at least five lives in street battles in
which Protestanls battled R o m an
Catholics and the Britis h Army fought
bolh in attempts to restore order.
Thert were new bombings today and
terror in the streets.
A British soldier wounded In a 12-hour
gun battle in Northern Belfast Sundily
died today.
He was tlle 17th Britllh soldier killed In
nearly three years of strike betwee n
Protestants and minority Ro m a n
Ca tholics,
The vi olence has taken 376 Uv~ 12 in
the past six days.
The htavies1 battle of the weekend w11s
In North Belfast where the fighting lasted
al1 Sunday afternoon and night,
liundreds of men, women and chUdrt n
st reamed out o! the area today and took
refuge in west and east Belfast. The
British army evacuated to famlliea Sun·
day.
Three gunbattles broke out In the hours
after midnight when the Illegal lclsh
Republlcan Army mounted an intensive
attnck against sandbagged army posts in
Londonderry, fu-ing 200 rounda of high
vt.loclty rifle Ure and he a v y
machlneguns. There were no cuuaJtles ln
this Jnc.ldent.
It was the last major battle ot \he
weekend which saw the worst fighting
since last August.
By midmorning, the batU., ... med to
have given way to the Isolated bombings
whlch have become a way of life in
northern Ireland.
The strife began nearly lhrtt yean ago
between militant factions of the Prates·
cant majority and Roman Catholics pro-
lesllng a lack ol clvtl rights and I.he~
housing and job opportunities.
GUITARS
Over 100
Popultr Br•ndt
To Choote From
BUSHNELL bJO
WATERPROOf,SHOCK·
PROOF, DUST PROOF
THEY
FLOAT
-·-... OTL
f 1.4MM wll~ <IN
'-""-., .....
WllflUM
2000
TO CHOOSE
FROM $1'!.
COSTA Mr!~~.1 .~,!!~~! & LOAN !!!!!l.
1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE ~7741 iiii
DOW"ifTOWN COSTA MW-·--.._... & ..... .,
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cause
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:show
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summ
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chair
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f..1an
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being
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5 DAILV PILOT 0
Veterans' Unit Concerned Over Firewo1~I{s Ban
Last wttk's ci!y council actlOn forbid-
ding tbe sales of fireworks to customers
under 18 years old -followed by t~
threat of an all-out ban next yr.ar -drew
<:oncerned response today from the
leadtr of the Veterans' Fireworks Corn-
mittee in San Ch•ment".
Walt Liebig, conceded to be the founder
of the professional fireworks programs
Crom the city pier, said that the move by
councilmen, if it remains effective, could
deal a crippling blow to lhe vel.e.raM' ef·
Truth in Sale
Policy Pushed
For Adoption
A trtllh in selling policy has been
devclop"'d hy the Ca pistraoo Uni fied
School Di1'tt1('t's grovi'lh committee -a
lXllicy that 11s 1nen1brrs hope cities and
the county of Orange will soon aoclpt.
The policy is in the form of a resolution
'vhich will be forwarded lo the cities of
:-ian Clemente and San Juan Capistrano
and the Orange County Planning Depart-
ment for adoption hy them.
The resolution points out that the sale
or homes in subdivisions frequently
results in overcrowded schools, that
homebuyers are concerned about thi.s but
:ire unfamiliar "''lth the area and usually
don'! kno1v 11•here to get information
::iboul schools .
··Rapid population cun result in
overcrowded schools and related prob-
l(·ms that prospectl11e homebuyers
should be appraised of before they
purc hase a home," relates the policy.
If the resolulion is passed developers
\1·ould be required to prominently displ11y
1naps of school district attendance 2ones,
distribute factual information about the
schools to each prospective homebuyer
and factua!Jy answer questlon.s about the
schools.
The Capistrano Unified School District
\\'ou ld have the responsibility of providing
the information upon the request of the
developer and developers would provide
the school district by the 10th of each
month the ages of children of famUles
buying homes to assist the district in
educational plaMlng.
Venice Art Show
Boasts Exhibits
That Disappear
VENICE, Italy (UPI) -ln its best
days. the Venice film fe stival rarely
caused as much controversy, outrage of
noise as tije 36th Venice Biennial are
show which enters Its second day toady.
The show's two most polemical exhibits
proved to be its least enduring.
Pigeons ate most of the first.
The .second was replaced after a sneak
preview stunned art critics, infuriated
half of Italy and bewildered the other
half.
A Belgian art group called ;'Mass \\t ov-
tng" released a hoard of 12,000 cabbage
hutterllies in the ~ that they would
daintily wing their way around Venice all
summer.
At the end of the first day or the shov;,
most had vanished, and the plgeoM in St.
1'.tark's Square looked particularly \.•:ell·
fed.
President Giovanni Leone toured the
sho"'' Saturday. One empty room \\'BS
Jocked.
Inside \\'AS a lonely chair in a C1lmer.
Artist Gino de Dominici!'! hnd sat Paolo
Tlosa, a men!ally retarded man. in the
chair and presented him as an "art
"-'Ork."
Many critics ho\vled. and a group of
artists. writers and critic1 sent an open
letter to many neW!papers condemning
De Dominici for "reduclng a human
being to being an object."
Rosa was briefly replaced by a little girl
before lhe exhibit folded.
Oen1ente Judge
To 'Hit Books'
Orange County Superior Court Judie
F rank Domenichlni of San Clemente pa
"back to school" for a month starting
June 18 foNowln g acceptance of his en·
rol!mt:ot for a four-w~k course conduc-
ted by the Natiooal CoUege of the State
Judiciary.
Judge Domenicblnl will attend the
University or Nevada at Reno to 1tudy
new developments In evJdence. clvtl,
family and criminal law plu.s advanced
conceptl in court management and ad·
mlnist.ratlon. .
He Is one of a number of judges rece1v·
Ing the additional legal education under
the: American Bir Allociatlon's Section ot
J udicial Admlnlatratlon.
Girls in Minis
Whistle at Meri
PJIJl,ADELPHIA (UPI) -Mlnlsklrt.d
sccret11rles have turned the tables on the
men during the lunch hour downtown,
and gathered on a busy street comer to
ogle at them.
The girl• said they were ind of havlni
men whistle at them as lbey vralktd
down the 1tree:t.s.
The men seemed pleased to be the ob-
icrt of whistles and an occasional cat
c111I.
forts in the city.
"It sounds so simple to pass fl rult! lhat
restricts the age of purthasers," l.itblg
said today, "but even that could cut the
income from the nrework!I sales: in h11lf
this year:·
And an :ill.out ban wou ld literally kill
the free fireworks shows which ]fl.St year
drew 60,000 onlookers to local beaches.
The sale of home.-use fireworks -a
local tradition in San Clemente. for many
years -is in lhls city a complex matter
w blch tran1cends 1irnple prollta for a
Wt@:le group.
The lradllional eily policy has stated
that the veteraJlS' groups in the city ·are
the prtferred ones allowed to sell the
items each Independence day.
That policy was diluted two yeari ago
and the J unlor All Am<rtcan Football
League. won city nods as well.
Olher groupi, however, have. failed .
Last Wednesday, local Jaycees were
turned down.
Early tut Y"r Ibo YM'CA Indian
Gulcl<s llUffered Ille same fate.
1be rtjttUOlUI came amid aies of
favorltam to veterans' gJ'OUPI at the
expeme of other rd-w · organh.a-
ri.1any groups rej in Si:n emente
tions aJso in need o . ;}
have taken booths in county , where
the stands grow in number each year.
Liebig, thi.s year's Citizen of the. Year,
h.a.s fought every attempt at a ban or
heavy restriction o~ the fireworks at the
~ii ltvtl.
"Thero It a lot to h," he said.
''Ocean.side ha.s a whopper of a free
show each ye.Ir. but we have somethtng
unique in San Clemente.
•·f>eople wlll drlve by Oceans:lde and
lluntington Beach just to con1e here
bcc<1ouse they know they and their kids
can buy fireworks, take them down to the
beach. have a good day 1wlmmlng, eat
there, shoot off lhelr own firewwks and
then watch ours," the committee
spokesman uid.
He added th1t thl! ytsr's stiff ban on
youth5 purchasing the ltenu wUJ hurt in·
come gttatly, be<:ause young person:.
form 50 percent of the total sales.
"They'll ju.st go over Into the county
and buy them, then out-of·tOY.'n groups
will take lhe pror:ts.
Selling fireworks i.s a s u r e • f i r e
moneymaker for any service group.
The average gross Income. Liebig said.
from one VFW stand in San Clemf'nte 1s
$6,000 or more. Sponsors gain $2.000.
The city reaps !ales tax revenue fron1
the gross sum.
Selling the same amou nt \n the counly,
he emphasized, means thet Orange Coun·
ty \Vii i take tax revenue once enjoyed by
San Clen1ente .
Liebig also stre!'ised that to say 1he pro-
fits from firt"\\'orks pay for the pi er
fireworks sho\.'o'S 1s ··oversimplifying it."
He said Ibo bulk ol funds lO Pl1 tile
15,000 annual c<>ol! for !he Jll'l)l-1
effort come from private contrlbutlc:m:
and the re.st comes from prolitl •l tho
stands.
"It 's a cause-and-effect relatlonship,"
he said.
"If you ban fireworka, people will be
<'ontent to go to Oceamlde and Hun-
tington Beach because we won'l allow
borne fire"'·orlu on th~ beach any more.
"And the local families wbo want them
\\ill go to the dozens ol county stands.
huy \\'hat thty want . then ccme home and
fire the111 off any\\·ay.
.. It dor~n·t 1nake g00<I sense to chase
:di the business out of San Clementt into
\ht" l'OUn!)' "
l.1cb1g and a large group of local .sup-
porters of the existing arrangement.s with
fire\lorks -private and professional -
plan lo make their point clear to the city
l'OUnc-il in coming days and the panel's
nex.t formal meetini;l. on June 21. y,•ill
probably be the scene of a major debat11
on the lat('st measurr" laken by the coon·
c·11 10 curb the fireworks 1n !he city.
·•we hnve to win our point if the pier
progr<im 1s to stay 111 ~An Clemente.
"It's surh a ntar\'rlous lhlng for people
to ~t't' <ind be a part of that !he city
\\'Ouldn't be the s11me v•\tho ut it," Liebig
s<aid
Friend Teases He11ry
Big Bunny l(issinger
All Talk But No S1ww?
the palms of pun.led admirers.
DAll.Y 'ILOT $111t l'llOlo
KENNY SEEMS TO ENJOY GAME OF MONOPOLY WITH HIS BROTHERS AND SISTER
Thomp50n Children Are From left Woyne, 13; Suzanne, 9; Kenny, 10; and David, 11
WASHINGTON (AP) -'\'hen lt comes
to women, Henry Kissinger l.s all talk and
no show, according to Secretary of Com-
merce Peter G. ,leler!'lon.
"All this womanizing Image of your;o; I~
a hollow shell. There is an enormous gap
between your rhetoric and performance,''
Peterson has told Kissinger, whose image
Is that of the playboy of the Nixon ad-
minlstratlon, the Big Burmy o f
Pennsylvania Avenue.
"But It was useless," he added. "Henry
was all those things. and I was just Pete
Peterson, feet of clay, now a gray, lowly
Cabinet official. So 1 devised a different
strategy. I decided lhat, if I couldn't be
J lenry Klssinger, nobody would. J wculd
attack him, pull him down." Special School Lagging Kissinger has changed a lot since he
was a "portly" professor at Harvard,
Peterson aald, but noted that he's no dif·
ferent than many other government ol·
flcials, ju.st more successful.
Need for Retarded Children Facility Emphasized A soft-spoken father of five , Peterson
recently been poking fun at Kissinger,
who is a good friend.
"Why ahould Henry be immune?'' he
asked. "Henry. after all. js on the take.
And he is taking wtuit he like.s be!t -
women." By PAA1ELA JIALLAN
Of th• 01!1y 1'1111 $1•"
~1rs. Kathleen Grubbs waited fi ve
years for her daughter to call her "mom·
m y."
J anin~ S, is a retarded child -one of
the 61 children in the San Joaquin
Elementary School District who will oc-
cupy the new trainable mentally retarded
facility in Mission Viejo.
lf it ever gets built.
The construction plans, stalled by
school board politics, is far off schedule..
And Greeley School -more tha11. an
hour's bus ride away -won't be
available after August.
"Greeley doesn't have much or a pro--
gram," said f\.trs . Diane Thompson,
referring to the county facility in Orange.
"San Joaquin has a rare opportunity to
develop a very fine program." she added,
TMR children will never be "normal."
But they can be taught to take care of
lhem.selvts. clean, garden. make beds,
moW lawns. work on factory assembly
lines -many things that were never
dreamed possible only a few years ago.
Some can be taught to read.
"The important thing is to begin ear·
ly," said Mrs. Grubbs, \Vho lives in El
Toro.
The mothers are bewildered by the
board machinations thot ha ve he!cf up the
construction program,
"This is the cheapest school they can
get because the state pays for most of
the building and everything else after
that.'' said Mrs. Grubbs. All trainable
mentall retarded programs .are prej-
ud iced.
"We're beginning to believe some
board members are prejudiced. Perhaps
they think TMR kids should still be locked
in dark closets," said Mrs. Thompson.
TMR children tend to be docile and
quiet. Most are not as physically healthy
as other children, but this is being cor·
reeled through the use of athletic pro--
grams in school.
"'They are really a joy to have
around," said Mr!. Grubbs. ''They bring
a great deal of love and tenderness into a
Iamily."
Mrs. Grubbs didn't always feel that
way.
"When they told me, 20 minutes after
Janine was born. that she would be
retarded, I thought it was the end of the
world," she said.
"I kept saying, God, why cfid this hap-
pen to me?"
But adjustments are made and ac-
ceptance finally come.s.
'"I11en you become the opposite," said
l-.1rs. Grubhs.
"TMR children appreciate everything,••
said Mrs. Thomp!!loo. "They're so glad to
see you when they get home from school.
They're easily pleased and absolutely
thrilled over the smallest things -like
eating ice cream.'•
"They give so much. We could learn
front them," added M£s, Grubbs.
Both mothers, who have o l h er
"normal" ch.lldren, have found their
TMR children are accepted by the
neighbors and cause no problems.
And both mothers are looking forward
to the day the new facility opens its
doors. It has been designed with
housekeeping areas, kltcheoettes, and
gardens to teach basic homemaking skills
and will have a basketball court and
other outdoor equipment in addition to
classroom areas.
"We have high hopes for our son, Kena
ny," said Mrs. Thompson. ''\Ve believe
TMR children can grow up to be useful
citizeJl!I.
"And not just spend the rest or their
lives in sheltered worhhops stringing
Joint Oceanography Study
Proposed to Capo Council
San Juan Capl!trano city counc ilmen
Tuesday wfli be Hked to parllcJpeto Jn 8
joint oceanographic atudy with 1ever1J
other agenclet1o det•rmlne Ibo best site
for a future ocean ouUall.
Tbe study would be financed tllrouah
the South Eut Area ReclamatJon
AutborttY (SERR.() tnd Ibo Ali'° Water
Mana1ement • A&ency. San J u a n
C.plstr.&. Is • ml!riiber or Serr• •nd the
estimated c<llt of tho city for the 143,000
study Is 19,110, according to olflclals.
The purpoM of tltl study. would be lo
detennlne if one or more oce11n outJaU.
are needed along the South CQ,st and to
find the best location for those outfalls.
Accontrn1 to public works dlre<:tor T. J.
Meadows, Jr tile dty or SERRA doe•
not choose to parti cipalP,: In
ttte work, the Atlso agency i... made up
of •ltnclet In the Laguna ueach and
South Laguna area, mlgbl choose lo build
the outfall too far n«th for SEllllA to
COftveniently make use of tt.
••we then would be forced to
partlclpate in the construction for future
needs .and then would have to construct
lint!! ' and pump to thi.s locotlon, ''
Meadows told the council In a letter.
The Regional Water QuaUty Control
Board in San Diego has to!.d ofrlcials: in
thb area Ullt only one new outfall will be
allowed along the South Coast of Orange
County.
Other iterm facing councilmen at t..belr
7 p.m. meeting at City Hall include :
-An appeal from Ibo Consolidated
Rock Company o[ a Plannlni;t Com-
mission dttlslon to not renew the com·
pany'.s use permit. In effect, the decision
would force the C1lmpany to relocate its
oper1Uon, alJq:ed to be too noisy for city
location, out of the community by tht end
of the year.
-A proposed ordinance changing· the
beginning hour o( curfew for minors from
the present 9:30 p.m . to 10 p.m. Ac·
cording to pub1Jc aafety director Joo
McKeown, thJ1 would bring the city into
conformity wtth n o 11 h b o r I n g com·
munities.
-A report from the city attorney
staUng tltlt Ibo proposed clly acquisition
ol tho old taUl'Old depot as 111 hl1lorlcal
mr>nument could be done by eminent do--
main, if necessary.
beads," added Mrs. Grubbs.
"They are perfectly capable of filling
msny different jobs that other people find
boring. They're very good at doing things
that are tedious and repetitious."
"f think <lUr children can, if educated
properly, become seJf.supporting and not
have to be on welfare rolls,'' said 11rs.
Thompson.
But they need an education first .
And they can't get the "best'' wilhout a
school.
Kisslnger, In tum , has chided Peterson.
"What you don't understand Is that
power Js the ultimate aphrodisiac," the
presidential adviser told Peterson.
Peterson admJt.s that he'.s more than a
little envious of KJJslner's apparent .suc·
ceu with memben of the oppoalte au.
In a speech at the Preu Club here
rttenUy, PeterJOn said when he first
came to Wuhlngton he dreamed of being
the "lnternaUonal trouble-shooter, circl-
ing the globe on secret ml.!!lons, daz.tling
heads of state, leaving 1Uver bullet.s in
Seldom cen you give what he
needs and what he wants. Flor-
shelm Shoes are ideal. They
delight the first day and all
through months and years of
pleasure In the look and feel of
quality. Size Is no problem. Just
use a gift·boxed Florshelm Gift
Certificate. Makes It real easy I
fFt,J,,;,, <JJi'~-f'• -·-----------· ... -•
Vanishes by Degrees
SYDNEY (AP) -An adverlltement
for 1 sparkling albltur In three 1110-
cesslve issues of an Auatrllian medic.II
pubJlcatJon Showed: first, I prol1J Sir!,
top!•"· beside 1 water!all; !lien the girl
in a bikini beside the waterfall, then jusb
the waterfall -no girl.
2,_,5
lloclc-Brown
31,'5
llec.k-lrown
We Corry Sl1•1 to 14
W;dth1 from AA to EEE
54 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT CENTER • 644-4223
UM Ywr Matter Cha'1• • l•nk.Am4rlur4
• Htm~lll Ch1rtt
The Thing s
One Learns •..
BACHELORJTIS DEPT. -Ah yes . thr.
litlle~~oman has fled lo a vacation in
beautlf'UI Muico and 5() far during h£>r
11horl _¥sence I ha ve enjoyed a learning
experience. For example. I have learned ;
-You cannot make up for not watering
the plants for several days by watering
them;.J!eaviJ)r 311 at once. The water runs
straiSbJ: through the pot s. You still ha\·e
dry plants but Jots of water every place
else.
-1\,ls possible to overdo chicken. You
can make a ail. Sanders golden brown
tum into a study in black in Just the
amount of time you took to hunt up a
couple of new ice cubes .
-WllEN YOU TOSS away l h e
charcoal·colored chicken. make sure you
have tassed it all the way away.
Otherwise the cat!! will find Jt. Cats are
good in finding chicken , charcoal-colored
or othcrwi!le.
\\'hen cats find chicken, they strew the
piects across the living room rug.
-It is uncomfortable to walk across
the living room rug in your bare feet in
ciuest of the morning papers when said
rug has been strewn with chicken pieces.
Jt is also not good for your early morning
disposition .
-The dishwasher is really a recycling
machine and must be run run bore. day
and night, or you will never keep up with
dish consumption. The demand for
dishware always exceeds the supply.
-DO NOT GET trapped into loading
and starting the dishwallher without
checking every room in the house. ~You
y,·ill find three glasaes: and a cookie plate
under daug hter's bed. Dirty spoon ih the
bathroom. CUp that held milkshake
between two books in i!on's room. CBt
dish inside dog cUsh pushed under
v.•astebasket.
-In addition to causing you to run
dishwasher with only a partial load, fin-
ding all these things after di shwasher has
been started is ali~,bad for your disposj..
ti on, like the earne? "'chlcl(en pieces . on
living room rug.
Monday, June 12, lq12
Farm Truck
Hits Pickup
Killing 12
ALEXANDRIA, La . (AP ) -A tractor-
trailer truck loaded with wheat smashed
into the back of a pickup truck carrying
14 persons on a :swimming out ing, killing
12 and ctlllca!Jy Injuring another.
Tht big truck hit the slow-moving
pickup Sunday as it was preparing to
make a turn from U.S. 165 about 20 miles
~uth of here to a road leading to the
Shady Nook 15wimming hole , State Police
r epnrted.
The truck climbed on the bed of the
pickup, powering jt 275 feet and pounding
it into a pine tree with such a thrust that
the cab was crunched into about a two.
foot area, officen said.
Eleven victims were aged l to Ill. The
12th was identified as the pickup driver,
JG-year-old Martha 1.1aeux of Wood\l.'Orth.
All but one victim \l.'as f rom
V.'oodworlh, a small community near
A!rxandria. The other was fr om New·
Orleans.
The tractor-trailer driver, ident ified as
24-year-old Gus Wiley of Devill£', La , was
hospitalized in shock.
Satte Trooper Robert J. Rigby said that
no charges had been filed in the case.
Most of tbe victims were related.
The side or the JO.foot van on the large
truck broke, spilling v.·heat on the ground.
Rigby said bodies of three victims "'ere
round under the wheat.
Beatings, Death
Probed in Vegas
'Cheating Ring'
LAS VEGAS. Nev. (UPI) -Casino
\\'Orkers may have been terrorized by
beatings and murders into cooperating
with a ring of gambling cheats that has
bilked casinos of at leal!t $300,000 using a
clever ''hollow chip stack."
"We are trying to identify the people
lnvoJved, to find out who organized the
ring and how they recruit 11ome or the
participants," Phil Hannifin, chairman of
the Nevada Gaming Control Board, said
Sunday.
Some sources sai d that the ring had
siphoned off as much .as $3 million from
the gambling tables, and that as rrumy as
150 casino worker• may be invoJved.
HantUUn said thit !'as an ~8Meralion,
that about 15-30 persons were involved . In
the past month the ring has viclimized at
least hall a dozen casinas, defrauding
them of $300,000 to $400,000, Hannifin
said.
•
Ul'I TtlePllot.
Deatli Vigil
Mr. and 1i-1rs. Emil Bearshield wait in a Behrens morgue to identify
a missing friend Sunday. A flash flood struck Rapid City, South Da-
kota this weekend, killing more than 200 persons. Hundreds are
still missing.
Candidate Sees l(e~nedy
As Choice of De1nocrat,s
\VASJnNGTON <UPI) -II Sen. George falls yet seen in the market.
S. A!cGovern fail s to \.\'in a first ballot Speculators scrambling to grab profits
victory at !he Democratic National 'have now cut back the metal 's price by C,onventlnn next month he wiU be den ied
the presidential nomination . says Rep. $8 an ounce since it peaked at $67 last
\Vilbur D. ~!ills. The party then may turn Thursday.
to Sen. Edvfard M. Kennedy. ·The rush to sell put dea lers off to a
Mills. influential chairman of the ·House hectic start as the slide wiped out all the
_ W~y~ -~~ Coinmit~i~~e~. · .b!Q>t.ice gains built ~ stnce b start of ·at",.. *" · ·Ir r . ) · -·• ' 't1i!Slno'rith and !oiiOw'ea' stz.eabJf. ta11S I l N SHORT I ·rhursday and F'Jday alter·the $67 peak
. • • • started to temµt sellers to ta'ke prof.its.
_ So~ operators CQUld·see a rprofit t)f up to
~ percent over a perjod or a few mon~hs.
WaM..,,ton Flood
I
Snowpack Melts;
300 Flee Homes
SEA'ITLE, Wash. (UPI) -Flood
waters rose today along the Okanogan
River of Northeast Washington where
more than 300 persons were forced from
the1r homes last week.· '
Waters were expected to crest at %2 .3
feet late tonight, only .2 feet less than the
previous 6ood crest that caU!ed nearly
$1$ million damage to a stretch of towns
and orchard!.
Four pel'30llS were rnWing, mean"·hile.
along Northcentral Washington 's Entiat
River, v.·here flash flood ripped <lo\\·n
Preston <;reek Saturday.
Civil Defense director Jack Harrington
* * -(::{ Red Cross Funds
Nearly Depleted
Due to Flooding
WASHINGTON (UPIJ -Due lo recent
disasters in several states including the
flood in Rapid City, S.D., the American
Red Cross is under Considerable financial
strain, according to a top Red Cross of-
ficial.
Robert Shea. Red Cross vice president
for disaster relief, announced Sunday the
Red Cross is initiating a nationwide cam-
paign to rai.se $5 million to help disaster
vi cti ms.
Shea said a critical financial situation
has developed within the Red Cross
because of its assistance to flood victims
in Texas. Kentucky, \Vashington. \Vest
Virginia and South Dakota , as we!! as
victims of numerous tornadoes.
'"\\'e ask the American public to rf!·
spond to our campaign by donating funds
for disaster relief to their local ch<1pter of
the An)erican Red Cross.'' Shea said in a
statement released from the Red Cross
headquarters.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Dtlivtry of the Daily Pilot
'Is gu aranteed
Monday·Frkl•Y< II vou do nof have your
P•J><t• by 5.30 p rn, call ond your co'y wol l
bt b•OU!ljhl lo \'(lu, Call• •r• !a~tn unlil
];:JO p.m.
Saturday •nd Sunday1 U you ao 11<>! •tct lv•
your copv bV 9 •.n>. Sa!urdav, or I a m.
Suf'lddy, c•ll •nd • <OOV .... rn b!l b(OUl)hl 10
'l'VV: Calll •re 1e~en wi!ll 10 •.m. ~· Telephones
Moll Or•n!lt Co univ Areas ........ U2·4l11
N9rft\~I Hunl~!on 8etcll .... w .. im!n:sTer ................. ••nll
S.n CIMMn1•, Ctplst.-.no BtKt.,
S.n J11en C1pl11rano, 0..n• Point,
SOllltl Ugunt, Ll11U11• NlglHI .• 4n.4(2t
said the Entiat was blacj( with mud today
as it ate away bank.!, and began washing
into previously untouched houses and ap-
ple orchards.
He said chances were slim of 1indinf
Ste\'t Laughery, 52, and his wife, Betty,
49. of Moses Creek, and an unidentified
n 1uplt· \.\'hose cabins v.·ere swept into the
~~nt1n1.
Tl'.enly-one persons were evacuated by
l1l'licop1t·r Su nday from the Cottonwood
carn1.1111g area o[ the Entiat. Chelan Coun-
ty Sheriff's deputy Larry llivley said the
scene v:as "pretty n1uch of a mess."
"People are trying lo sandbag and dike
around their houses. but from what l
sa\V, their efforts were pretty futile.'' he
reported. "Water was still cooling in
;iround the bags and into the home. area."
The new threat to the Okunogan Valley
\vas lessened by repair work to dikes
done su1ce the last flood crest. the Army
Corps of Engineers said Sunday. 1'11e
Corps said it didn't think any further
evacuation would be necessary.
The Ok.anogan area was declared a
disaster area aSturday by }lresideJJt Nix-
on after the fast melting snowpack of the
Cascade Mountains caused extensh·e
flood dan1age lo homes and businesses.
Woodstock-style
Wallace 'Party'
Held iii Florirla
LAKELAND. Fla. (AP) -A pair o!
donk eys draped in bright c11mpaign ban-
ners competed with country and \Vestern
!'tars for the atlenLion of George \Vall.ace
fllns Sundav at ''\Vallace's \Voodstock .''
Tha day·i:ing fund raising jamboree for
the wounded Alalia.ma governor was the
lvork of Dewey Smith . v.•bo admits he got '
the idea from "the liberals,"
Smith was Polk County campaign
coordinator for \Vallace 's sur.cessful bid
in F'lorida's March 14 Democratic
presldcn!ial primary, \\'al!ace 1vas sbot
bv a \\•ould-be assassin in ,.taryland last
nlonth and is stitl in the hospital there..
"\\'t11ching television about six. week~
ago I got the idea." said Smith. "Barbra 1 StreisaOO and some oC the other big naine t
sho1\· business people \Vere putting on a
shindig for George McGovern.
"If the liberals can do it. we can. too .''
he grinned. "And here it is -'\\'allace'1
\\'oodstock.' "
-ANOTHER WASHING machine is
located in lhe laundry room. This one is
for clothes. You do not have to watch the
washing machine very closely. Watch the
dryer, however . .S,. fftst to get .to the·
dryer. Otherwise. you will not havt any
T-shirts. Your sohs will have all the T-
shirts. They will suggest it was only your
imagination that you had any T-shirts In
the wash. You will then notice during the
coming days that they have plenty of
clean ones and you seem to be wearing
something that was used to clean off the
car engine.
"The Murphy case turned us on to it.''
said Chief Deputy Sheriff !UY '.Gliboer,
referring · to the death of Robert Lee
Murphy. \Vho was shot in a brawl with a
casino executive last month. One of the
"hollO\V chip cups" used by the ring \.\'as
found in Murphy's home after his death.
a •. Qe.mocratic. pre!idential·:,candidatc,
made · tbe· assessment Stlnday .. The
Arkansas Democrat also said that jf the
convention were to draft Kennedy. he
would consider accepting the vice
presidential nomination. FORD, CHEVY, PLYMOUTH OWNERS
-Mop the kitchen floor regularly. lf you
d() not. it becomes sticky. This doesn 'l
really injurr your bare. feel but only
means you have to wash them some.
Later. however, beach sand gets mixed in
with the kitchen floor stickies. This turns
the floor into sandpaper. This indeed is
not good for your bare feet. Better mop
II.
ACTUAU.V, THE life of a bachelor
v.·ith three kids is real bliss. You just
ha\·e to ketp on your toes and continue
the Jeamlng experience.
Only one thing really continues to '"'or-
ry you :
\\/hat will you learn tomorrow?
Appeal Turned Down
\VASlf!NGTON (AP) -The Supreme
Court today unanimously turned down an
appeal by John Patler from his con-
viction in the 1967 sniper slaying of
George Lincoln Rockwell, commander of
the American Nazi Party. Patter, 33, was
eentenced to 20 years in prison. The ap-
peal centered mosUy en the identification
of him first from ·a new spaper
photograph and later In the hallway of a
police station.
An unusual number of assault and
strong-a rm incidents have occurred since
then, with many of the vJctirrus being
casino or hotel workers. Several have
mysteriously disappeared , and a rash of
killings broke out the y,·eek ailer ?-.lurphy
was slain.
lt'lcks
Talk that Hubert HumphnJY
is two faced. is ridiculous!
e "lore "lnssarres?
NEW YORK (1\P) -JA Newsweek
magazine co1Tespondent J'Eports a "stag·
gering number" of Vietnamese civili.ans
were killed by U.S. forces lo a pacifica·
tlon program ln 'l9681bat "made the My
J,al massacre look trifling by co1n-
parison. ··
Kevin P. Buckley reported in this
week's issue of Newsweek: tha t one of·
fi cial estimated 5,000 eivilians died in the
six-month-Jong operation rode-named
··sµredy Express." which y,·as carried out
in the l\fekong Delta .
Fair Skies • Ill East, West
)0.00
29,7)
lOWtll 11•t1tA.1\ll:tl79,J] ..
PRE-4th .SAi E
•Tubll9u WJW!-an
Plk•l Pl.,.l1.1~lo
'2.46 '-'· Ea. l•~ ,,., n,., ~"'9
... Jil ..
$14.95• was $221Kl
8.25-14 & 15 $22.00• wat $30.00/$31.00
8.5!>-14 . . . m.oo• wa $32.50
•
General Jet•
4-PLY
NYLON CORD
•Tough Duragen•Tread
Rubber
• Famous Dual Tread
Design
.
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•
31 Anested
1 S ho t in Me"lee
In Santa Paula
! 1onday, Jtiflf 12, l 912 DAILV PIL!r. If
Tunney Joins Delegation
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Ralph Ochoa of Loo Angeles, senator from c.Jifomla ha s
De.!ptte strong opposition from . leader of a Chicano delegate done little to support the farm
Muican-American delegates, caut'us, at the Democrats' workers movement led by
Sen. John V. 'l\lnney will have session, said f\i ex i c a n -Cesar Chavf'z.
a . sea t on . lbe . G.alifornia American delegates opposed Bul Tunney drew su pport
Brown Jr., a Vietnam war
critic who narrowly Jost Mi
Tunney in the 19'/ll prlmarn
state AM<mblyman W t 11 1 e
Brown of San Francisco.. and
Seo. Alan Cramilon. SANTA PAULA (AP) - A
man was shot and wounded by
a law or!icer amid sporadic
gunfire as gangs of youths
hurled rock! through windows
in th.is Ventura Coun ty com~
munity, 30 miles northwest or
Los Angeles, authorities said
today,
today, a hospil.al spokesman delegation to lhe Democratic Tunney becau15e the junior from former Rep. George
said. National Convention. •---'-------'----------'----'------------
Thirty-one 'P t rs on s in-
clud ing 15 adults, were' ar-
rested Sunday night and book·
ed for investigation of misde-
n;ieanor charges of fail ing lo
disperse and m a I i c i o us
mischief, officials said .
rt1ayor Allan Teague ordered
a 10:30 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew .
Order was restored about 21 ~
hours after small groups of
youths began breaking v»in-
clows along the main street
Police Chief Ray Tull said. '
Mora was shot once in the left h1p with 8 .3&-or ,6-He was elected Sunday to fill
caliber pistol, Tull said. one of 33 open positions on the
''\Ve have a report that he 271-member slate pl edged to
shot at office rs first," Tull Sen. ~rge McGovern. win-
said, adding that the shooting ner in Tuesday's winner-take-
was under investigation. ~e all California p r i mar y .
said he did not know the name McGovern had_ recommended
of the officer who shot Mora. Tunney .for a delegation seat.
Two other police officers in M e a nwhlle, Republicans.
a patrol car reported Coming meeting in the same hotel.
under fire, but no other iJl.. chose 9' delegates to the GOP
juries were reported, Tull con v ent io n. Bul the
said. Re:PlJ blican · meeting was
Tull said the window-break-closed to newsmen with re--
ing started about g p.m. with .sults announced later by Gov .
15 to 29 persons. At the park Ronald Reagan, e I e ct e d
no more Uwn 100 persons were chairman of the slate pleged
involved in the disturbance, he to President Nixon.
said. Edward ~1ills of Laguna
Police in Santa Paula, which Ul'I T•...,"-'9 Beach, Re a g a n 's finan cial
has a population of about Fi11gergUH chaim1an in 1970, was named
25.000, were reinfor.ced by law to succeed Thomas Ree<! of
officers from nearby com-\Vhat may be the world 's sn1allesl revolver, manu-San Rafael as national GOP
munities, the state high\vay f t d b Cl E t · committeeman. ac ure y ancy n erpr1ses of Anahein1. actually "O · h pa trol and Ventura County urs \vas a meeting I at shoots-using the what may be the \Vorld 's smallest 'l • Id be th · 1 d sheriff's deput ies, Tun said. ove wou e singe wor Three persons were arrested cartridges, (look closely at the man's thumb), natur-to describe," Reagan told
Saturday night arter intru ders ally. It fires six times \V ithout reloading and is newsmen. "Everyone g 0 t
t la e ]Jro;ul\vay
l-f~nlin~lc ~ Bta<li
192-llJ I -f ,t, 1tJ
THIS WEEK ONLY!
hrlnl( In y our .old plaoto-
l(raph to be eopletl by ex•
perl~ at a pr I ee wortla
walling Ior.
COl'Y
SALi; 3.66
Reg. 8.00
" fin e 5x7 r1p roduc.Jlon of any
picture In good condition
n csloralion prices are sale-priced too.
Ori ~inal returned unharmde.
1fos t or those arrested we re
J\lexican-American, p o 1 i c e
said. A series of disturbances
occurred in the town in April
after complaints by Mexican-
Americans or alleged police
harassment and early closing
or parks. But police speculated
tha t the-latest disorder was
sparked by a disrupted wed-
ding.
disrupted a wedding party at harmless if held three feet from its "victim." along real fine."
the Santa Paula 'Boys Club, -----------------------.:_--------'---------------------------------
About 30 persons in groups
of two or three. broke at least
15 windows in the downtown
area. throwing rocks through
windows of a bank , museum,
elementary school and other
buildings , Tull said. Four win-
dows also were shattered at a
shopping center l ~~ miles \\'est
of downtown. officials said.
The wounded man, identified
as Gilbert Mora. 22, 'vas
reported in stable cond ition
foUo"'ing surgery at Ventura
County General Hospital early
and Tull said that incident
possibly touched off Sunday
night's disturbance.
The community had been
relatively free of such in-
cidents since the last of a
series of similar disturbances
last Apri l, officials said.
Mexican-A mericans in the
com munity have complained
of alleged ti arassment by
police and early closing of
parks. but Tull said he felt
Sunday night 's disturbance
had nothi ng to do '"'ilh those
grievances.
Nix to N•tdes
33 Arr ested at Malibu
1\-fALJBU (U PI) -T'"'enty men. five \VOmen and three
children \Vere arrested or warned dur ing the weekend for
being nude on Malibu Beach.
The arrests Saturday and Sunday \\'ere in the Point
Dume-Pirate's Cove area, a favori te of nudists. Sheriff's
de puties said they made sweeps rounding up nudes when
residents complained.
The children were released in custody of their mother.
Three women and two men were held on charges of creat-
ing a public nuisance.
F'ive nudis ts v.•ere arrested for possession of marijuana.
Fifteen put on clothing and were not arrested.
Whittier Evangeli sts
Make Most of Accidents
SWEETWATER,. Tex. (AP)
-F'ive carloads of California
collegians bound for a e-011.~
gress of evangelism in Dallas
made the most of a near
trai edy on the highQ.•ay near
here Sunday.
Three or the students from
Whittier College suffer ed in-
juries· serious enough to put
them in a Sweet,va ter hospital
as their vehicle and a big cat-
tle truck collided -and sent
livestock fleeing p e 11 m e 11
across the countryside.
The crash al.!lt'.I laicl the big
truck on its side across both
halves of Interstate 20 just
east of Sweetwater, blocking
all traflic.
The unhurt collegians in four
other vehicles set a b o u t
witnessing for Christ, as one
ex.presaed it.
After seeing that help was
on the way for the injured,
others In Ute Wblttler party
handed out literature about
Cbrill and t.ilked to · the
asseinbted crow.d· about Him
-the prac\ice tor. wltlch they
said ,they were en_ route to
DJ}las . 'lbere. they plan lo •l·
tend· Explo ii. a · week of
e v an g e HSttc confere'nces.
semln'ars and ratfies expected
to draw 100:000 young people.
·Later .at Sweet'!later'.1 West
Sid• Baptist Church where the
ui:iinjured students attended.an
eVenin( service, the visitors
sfid membets~qC. ~ group
were .. 'at pe.aCe" desptfe the .. . --.-~
accident.
At a hospital where the in-
jured were taken, some or the
collegians huddled in the foyer
and prayed.
Rick Yorty of Euphrates,
N.Y., one of the Whittier par-
ty, suffered serious pelvic in-
juries and numerous cuts. He
\vas told that he would be
unable to fin ish the trip to
Dallas. which had been
planned for months, Yorty
commented only "Praise the
Lord."
AJso taken to the hospital
for treatment were Cathy Ber-
ris of Mon terey, who suffered
a conc ussion, and C a t h y
Collard of Whittier, who suf·
fered arm and leg injuries.
After being quartered in
Sweetwater homes overnight,
others in the . cafayan we~ ,
resuming their trip 'to Dallas
today.
Rare Brown
Pelicans
Sighted
' . . SAN JOSE (AP) -Between
150 and 300 Cattlomla. brown
pelicans -.feared threatened
with eitlnctlon by· DD'r --
h<Ve been sighted nesting oft
the Ventura Coast.
Dr. J, Gordon Edwards,: II
San Joae Stile \Jnlvmlty p • p1 _ leaaor, said Saturday ho~ Stones .·· wy theob9ervatio111 6!'1Uo,iic1~
air on Santa ~""' Jalalid.--He. · · · also cl~ oeeinc· 1111'.'abul> '. To 36,:0lJO d•nct" 01 the big' w -on South Coronado Ialancl' llJlilll
. ol San Diego. LOS ANGE!,ES (AP) EdwardJ aald he does not
},!>out 311,llllO rock-music lan11 believe charges· that · Ht• fllted the Forum to dance, clap, cheer and yell to music pelllclde DDT wu m paidible
-vlded by Mick Jagger, the !or aoltenllll tbe ptllean llhoUI ... d ... and rtnder1ng them unhald>-BrltiJb sl:'tfi •ta.r, .an ~ able Ulce lbOIO found after . ~P;.:l:.t lorinli;!::,· the ~~ta B~ .oll ,opill ln
two Sunday concerts ftM the ;;:=========;;I ta1 .. 1. ., lllo· ~· two-
month, SI-city American lour
-th• Ont Juch tour for them
In m.r. tlliul two yMn.
Blind· alnger Stevie Wonder,
not mentioned in the concer1a'
advertising, also appeared.
THE BEST
Readership p -o l l 1 .prove
:"Peanuta'' ,fit OM • of ~
world'• mOst popular eamtc
1~ R .. 4 It dally In the D Y PILOT. .
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It • ~ • "' ' ' .. ~ .. ,.
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"Everyman needs one retreat frommediocritl' ..
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Jim Siemens Im ports, Inc. 120 w. Warner Avmue, Santa Ana, Califo rnia 92707 Phone': 714-546'4114
' '
l
DAILY PJ.LO'J' EDITORIAL PAGE
Freeway
Announrement by the ltVine Com pany last ~~ri~ay
of Jls full support for efforts to kill the proposed Pac1f1<.·
Coast l!'reeway route through Newport Beach under·
:-rores once again what a tangled, frustrating mess the
)J1'oblen1 of traffic handling along the cout baa become.
'f'hc co1np.:in y's decision to su ppcrt deletion of th~
route through Ney.·port Beach, Irvme Company ~reSJ·
dent \Vil li.a nt A1a so n declared, was based on a desire to
('lcar a"·ay ·•a cloud hanging over meaningful land use
planning in NC\\·porl Beach."
\Vhde tJ~l en sibly affecting only Newport Beach.
Ill <" ··1c1'_., ... ta!'t all over again" thinking reflected in the
<in11ollltCen1cnt <·ertainly rai ses major questions for La· ~una Beach ;ind Hunt ingto n Beach and, of course, ha s
ilnplications all along the coast and for the inland areas
planning north-south freeways.
1 luntington Beach and Laguna Beach have based
111u1·1J of their long-range city planning on the adopted
route (>f the coastal free\\'ay . and its rough timetable for
• 011strurt1on.
\\"helher rhe Irvin e announcement wilt make any
real d ifference in the l ,egislature's approach to pend~ng
1 'o ast FrC'c\vay legisl ation is hard to assess. One pending
hi!! \Vould delete th e freeway route only through Long
l!carh. Another would delete it only in Newport Beach.
A third \Vould \Vipe out the entire route, end to _end.
.!\ fourlh bill would put a three-year moratorium o~
all further planning and proceedings on the route until
a ne\v study was made.
\\'hat is clear is that for a long time to come, the
l'atific ('oast Highway is going to have to bear the bur-
cten as best it can. . fo~or most communities along the route there 1s nn
•·good '' traffic solution along Coast High\vay -only
''leas t bad." Both short-range and long-range solulion5
'Progress' ls
A Relatively
New Concept
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
It is only a lit tle more than 150 years -
a mere fly-speck in time -that the word
"progress" h:is had ~ts .Prt~nt meanin~
nf •·moving forward' 1n history. Until
then. n1ost cultures and civilizations had
looked back"1ard to a ''Golden age" rrom
\\'hich mankind had fallen.
r.1odern people regard the pa:st (when
lhcv do) with curioslt)', lndU fere.nce or
miid con\\"mpL It is hard for them to
hclicve 1hat their
forehra rs held the
p;ist in veneration.
or that !he idea or
''progrrss" in bu·
n1:in affairs is a rel·
<1t h1e[y rt'("Cnt one.
I thought of this
\\'hen n1y older
f;O ll. 11•ho is taking a
Shakespeare course
for the lirsl time, asked me why
Shakespeare set so many of his plays in
ancient and classic._! times, instead of
dealing with tile Elizabethan era he lived
in and kne"· best.
~hakespeare borrowed so heavily from
!'nurces :;uch as Plutarch because he and
his l.'.Onlc·n1r.oraries felt a respect for
Hon1a11 ch·11tzation that "'e today can
h.:irely l'\11np rchend. For one thing, the
whulc st·hnuh ng of hla lime was based on
H1l· !'>{'n'nl1f1c and technotogic1I ac-
rornrhshn1l'nts of cla&"lical civilization -
ir1 \:vtu11~· and zoology , in medicine and
111;i 1u•n1:d 1c,, 1n architecture and
, n Hl•'l rin)!. in logic and Jaw and rhetoric
l11Hl ;..(<.1h'tr<1!L.
/,\ llJS UOUK , "Shakespeare's Use of
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Why can't we eilher have larger
voting booths or smaller ballots?
-W.P.
Tlllt '""'" rtnfch "'"'"" 'fitWI, .... .-r1ty INN tf ffM _.,.Hr. StlMI'
Y'tW ... ....,,.. N 0 1-Y O.n. ~llY P'lltl.
Learning," Virgil K. Whitaker reminds us
that: "Any Elizabethan with even a
grammar achoo! education knew that
Romarus of the better class had more
comfortable homes than he could ever
hope to have, could travel on paved roads
instead of mud, could undertake more
elaborate engineering ventures, had a
better chance ol aurvivlng illnea or even
fairly difftcalt IW'gery, and ao on."
The art, the literature and the
phi losophy of the Romans were superior
to those of Shakespeare's day In London.
Indeed. until merely a century and a half
ago. Western Europe could feel superl?r
to Rome only in the possession of Chris-
tianity, printing, navlgatlon (the com·
pass), and gunpowder.
WHITAKER THEN makes the point
that not only Shakespeare and his con-
temporaries but even our own great·
great-grandfathers were closer to Cicero
culturally than they are to us. They
looked backward; modern technology has
given us the materialistic pride lo look
"forward" -and progress to us mea.ns
growing bigger, which we confuse wllh
growing better.
London in Shakespeare's day was ~s
much a "hick town·• compared to ancient
Rome. as , say, Chicago in 1840 com.pared
to Paris or Vienna . Shnkespe~re did not
just "look back" upon Caesar and
Brutus; he looked up to t h em .
"Progress," in his doy, still meant •·a
visit of state.''
Mes sage to Protesters
'l'o lhr l·:il 1l11r :
1\f' 1h1· v.;1r in Vietnam is being e:ir-
(';il:1r l"d hv J 'rcsidenl Ni xon. the people oC
1\n1erif·:1 an• sfcing a revival of fhe pro-
l c~I l:1k111g pli!ce. So1ne of these protests
takt' !ht· lnrrn 11! peaceful demonstra·
t1ons. :-.on1c :is vkl!ent demonstrations,
and snn11' 1n 1111• fnrm of individual violent
actions such :is the bombing of the Ptn-
lagon . i\I ~· li·!!rr is directed at any would4
be pr11t1·s\Pr.
TllE ltll~JIT TO pet ition and to
pc:iccfully protc~t were carefully made
part of :in Attu'rican·s r ights by our foun-
ding lathers It JS guaranleed that your
or my OfHn1on m11y be voiced without
harass ment fron1 any type of governmen-
tal bOdy. 8ut "'htn thr step Is taken from
peaceful protest to ,·io\tnt protest. you
overstep the bounrt, of your rights as an
Am eri can .
1'1ost of the people In this country are
not bla ck. not ~uu11 ;; and not liberal. But
the righf of lhCS(' nnrl other minority opi~
njoris 10 be heard 1s guarantetd.
JF' O~F: CJIOOSES to transgres!i the
law or the majority by u.slng vkllence in
protest to satisfy hlmself, you will find
one thing out ; the ma jority will rulr, with
or withwt minority right&, and if need be
they will use force to do IL
So. It l• importnnt not to abuse the
right to protest to the point thal lhe ma~
jo-rlty giets fed up with the v\olmce .and
snuffs out all rights to protest •nd
dlmot. Jt would be a shame.
LEONARD T. JOJINSON
A"•ocer: AdeertC.e
To u.. Editor:
S..!1 •esl._ I olso fouod • ~iny.
"
.MAILBOX
Letters from readers are welcome.
Nonrnilly writer.t should conve11 tllelr
mtssages tn 300 word.J or le.ts. The
right io condense letters to fit space
or eliminate libel i.t reserved. All ltt.
ttr.t must lncludt siqnature.J and mail·
ing addre.t.J, but names may be watli·
held on rtque1t l/ 1uffid~n t reason
is appare11t. Pottr11 will not be pub-
liJhed.
delenselw 1'\lten, as did your render A.
Johnson (rtfailbox. June 6). Having two
dogs. birds and fish {indoor and outdoor
typeJ, 1 knew J could not give this kitten
~ permanent home, nor could I turn It
back into the streets because J was too
bu.'y to care.
I kept the kitten locked safely in the
i:tarll.ge with a warm place to sleep, food
and waltr until I was able to adverllse
for her in the DAILY PILOT and locate a
new borne.
IT TOOK f'JVE DAYS lo !ind. family
for her to love. but It was worth all the
inconvenience for the seJ!-saUsfaction
received.
Otbtrs can't be called ••cruel'' and
•inhumant" while en1111nf In the ,..,.
1ct1. Everybody wants to care and be ln-
\lolved, 11 Iona: as it doe1n.'t disturb their
routints. RELEN EVERS
Hit Again
\"Ill require painful decisions in each coastal rommunitr.
n1ore traffic <;apJclly on existi ng roads, ·or more roads
tc1ty , county or state •. or most likely some combinations
or both.
Less Secrecy--Grad ually
'J'h e LegislJture has refused again. for the fourth
time in fou r year.s, tu extend .s late anti-secrecy la"':I
to co ver il.s o\.,·n activ ities.
While the Ralph 1'.t. Bro'''" Act and other anti-
secrcey Jaws require sorne state agencies and commis-
sions. and all county and city government to conduct the
public's business in public, the Legislature continues
to flo ut this basic princi ple of good government where
its own governance is concerned.
T"'C> other artions this year have served to soften
the effects of the lurndown, hov,.ever. In one, the Leg·
1slature adopted :in open conln1 ittee 1nccting policy and
det'ided to record and announce votes in co n11nittcc:i,
\vhere tl1e fate of some bills is decided.
ff the full l .egislalure ;ipproves th e amendn1ent, it
\\·ou!d be :;ubmittcd at the polls for volers approval.
California's Legislature has Jong ranked high
a1nong legislalures across the natioa for its efficient
organization of legislative business. But its members
have, until recently. insisted on being able to hide be·
hin d rlosed c!oor!'. '!'h is has too often meant hoodwink-
in,i! C'onslituents by tal king one \ray and voting in secret
an(1lhcr.
.. ~;;;::,...,,._..
'!'hat altitude appcnr~ to be c!y1 ni:: out no\V . There
has l>l'cn great Hllprovemcnl in t!Jr pa~t year and n1orc
scc1n.~ likely to torne. 'WHY DIDN'T 50MfS0PY P~ES'C~l~E ACUPUNCTURE .IN -11ME ?'
Strategic Ar111s Limitatio1i Ag1·ee11ie1its
Vital 'Interpretations' Are Awaited
\VASHJ NG'fON -Keep your eyes
focused on those stil l-secret "jo-
terpretalions'' of the key provisions of
the U.S.-Soviet :itra-
legic arms liinila·
tion agreements.
'Illose "interprcta.
tions" are the crux
of these fateful
pacts.
They spell out in
detail -what is sli!I
very much in the
dark -what the two
nations are to have in actual number cf
major nuclear Y»eaporlS ( land b a s e d
ICBMs. missile-firing submarines, sut>-
roarine-launched ballistic m i s s i I es,
"heavy" ICBf\fs).
That ts, presumably that·s ~·hat the
•·interpretations" do.
Whether they actually do that remains
to be seen -when they ar~ pub lished.
That is supposed to be done when the '"'o
agreements are sent to Congre ss for
deliberation and ratification. Backstage
word is that disclosure of the "in-
terpretations " was held up at the request
or the Kremlin.
THERE JS NO official explanation why
the Russians asked that.
Singularly, despite the crucial im-
portance of these "interpretations" in
revealing exactly "'hat is in these nuclear
arms limit alion agreements. very little
has been said i.bout them by directly
concerned Congressional leaders.
From their public and private co m·
ments. they appear to have accepted
without question the Pre s id e n t' s
assurance lh,1t there is absOlutely no
rea:-on to have any doubts about the ac·
cords; that U.S. superiority, or even pari·
ty, in these catastrophic armaments is in
no way weak ened or impaired.
Only Sen. Henry Jackson. D-Wnsh., a
ranking member of the Armed Services
Committee. has forthrightly challenL•;d
th at complaisant attitude. A recognized
(ROBERT S.ALLEN)
specialist in strategic weapons, he has
raised specific issues.
PARTICULARLY, he has voiced two
grave concerns:
{1} Defense Secretary Laird's sudden
cancellation of a theoretical study of the
application of laser technology-to ballistic::
missile defense ; (2) the equally unex-
plained lag in divulging the "in-
terpretations.'' Says J ackson:
"Nothing in the egreements as they
tiave been published calls for this can-
cellation. 'Vas this done undfr a private
understanding wit'h the Russians? l am
trying to keep an open mind, but I want
the facts and the American pecple want
them. Let's get all the facts out on the
table so we will know exactly what is
v.·hat and where we stand. This is not a
minor matter. At Stake is our country'!
defeMe and security."
PRESUrttABLV, the all-important
"interpretation.!" will be fully explored
by the Senate and House Armed Services
and foreign affairs committees in their
hearings on these agreements.
Also. presumably, these hearings will
be public!
Sen. Jackson Intends to demand still
another precaution to ensure a thorough
alring of the accords and especially the
still-secret "interpretations."
He will ask that every member or the
Joint Chiefs of Staff lbe summoned for
questioning, and that they be required to
do so under oath -so they can speak:
freely and not feel under duress to voice
only official view.
A few yea rs ago, Congress passed a
law expressly for this purpo8e, and
Jackson .proposes to invoke it.
On the basis of what has so far betn
made known about the pacts, it is evident
the principal controversi<>s will crnl<>r
around two questions. ll) v.·hether the
agreements do or do not .. freeze " th e
stra tegic anns balance between the U.S.
and Rus!ia : (2 ) ""'he ther the U.S. does or
does not wind up inrerior in both numb<'rs
and fire power Jn these life-and-dealh
weapons.
GRAPIDCA LLY lllustrath•e of the
nature of these ev{'ntful disputes is ho1v
many missi!c firing submarines e:Jch
country will have .
According lo the Adm lnistration, I',.
U.S. will have 41 , <u1d Russia 42. Uut
Sens. Jackson and Jrunes Buckle y, lnd .-
N.Y., vigorou sly deny that. Jackson
emphatically contends the Sovi et co -d
have as m:Jny as &t He argues that
figure is deri ved .. by adding 22 Soviet G·
Class subm.:1rines to th e 62 Y-Class su b-
marines they are permitted to construct
und er the agreement."
Similarly , the Administration's calcula·
ticn gives Russia a n1aximum of 313
"heavy" I C B t.f s t intercontinental
balllstic missi les), each carrying a
warhead of 25 to 50 megatons (a megat on
is the equi\'alent of one millioa tons of
TNT). Again Jackson forcefully argues,
11 lf they simply ~l lRV their 313 'heavy'
missiles with one of the ir ~·flltV options .
that would give th cn1 6.260 compared lo
our 5,700.
"TI:IAT IS JUST the 313 So1•iet 'hea1·y1
missiles. In addition, they could have
1,100 land and 950 sea-based miss iles, all
MIRVed."
Significantly, under the agreeme nt as
published , the U.S. is not pcnnltlcd to
deploy any "heavy" JCB~fs. This stark
reality is no! a matter of conjecture; it's
a plain statement of fact.
That's why Jackson says sardonically·
"From what \.\'e so far know about
these agreen1ents, the so-called 'lreezing'
of the stralegic anns balance appears to
be wholly on the American side while
most of the warming up is on the Russian
side. We don't even get parlty, The Soviet
i.:t•ls suµcnorit \'. .1 11d r!1~·rt· 1-: no d1:111.1J of
it in both nurnbcrs und in the payload of
those numbers.
"STl\fPL'' PUT, th(· ngreemen ls Ci"e
the Russians more <Jf cvcr.vthing; n1ore
'heavy' ICB!lls, n1or~ hght ICB~1s, more
submarine-launched missiles. more sub-
1narines, n1ore. payloads . even more ABi\t
radars. Jn no area covered by the
agreements is the United States permit·
tcd to n1aintaJn par ity v. ilh the Soviet."
That i:; the sh.ire or the mom<>ntous
b:tl!lc to coznc li\'er 1hesc historic:
tre:.it1rs.
There n•11! be much torrid rhetoric and
vehement wrangling. Also there will be
an oddly curio us a!ignrnent -with
leading doves and Vietna m opponents
supporting the President in his fight for
Con~ressional approval of lhe pacts.
i\lany of these clements may be unha p-
P. about that. they have uo altcmative.
AS CAHPfNG Crt lTICS and clangorous
denouncers of arn1ed connicts and mul!t·
billion doll:ir 1ni!itary appropr iations,
lhcse pol1t1cos (·an't very \.\'Cl! denounce
the J\toscow agreements because 4'lf
laying themselves open to tbe charge of
being \\•armongers. Su regardless of v.·hat
nlisgivings they m:ly privately have, they
hare to sv•allow them and side wit h the
Preside nt.
This will be gall :1n(l "·ormwood to
Senalor i\lcGovern. the Democratic front -
runner. and nthcr partisnn n1ilitants. But
they have no choice -due to their own
dovish cxlrem1sm. As ihe aid saying
i::oes, "they are hoist by their O"'n
petard'' -part icula rl y ~1cGovern who i~
advocating \.\'hat amounts to virtual
unilateral disarmaml'nt hv slashing some
$l2 billlon from defense ·funds .
Add endum: Tha t recent mysteriou :oJ
Pen tagon bombi ng l 1n a fourth floo r
women's lavat'lry 1 ....,·as an tnside. Job.
That is the still-unannounced conclusion
of invest1galors. ·rhey have tmcovered
certain clues, but beyond that DOUiilli
can be said.
The Great Debate Changes Opinions
The first nationally-televised debates in
the multi-million-dollar c a m p a 1 g n
between S e. n a I o r s McGovern and
Humphrey have been waged ~ that bet-
ter·ln lonned voters could more intelli~
gently make up their minds.
No two voters
tuned in more eager-
ly than l\lr. and Mrs.
Wilfred Wobley cf
Chula Vista, Calif.
Mr. Woblty, a ded-
icated citizen, hadn't
slept weU for three
\veek.s. Night after
night, he would toes
and !um. muttering
to himself.
"ShouJd T vote for an honest,
courageous and ex~rlenced leader Uke
Senator Humphrey? Or should I ca!lt my
ballot for a bold, innovating, intriguini;
candidate like Senator McG<Jvem? Oh,
how I wLo;h I could mnke up my mind !"
f\fennwhile, Mrs. Wobley was getting
fr4'lwn wrinkles. "Gm!h.'' as she frown-
ingly lold her bridge club, "I do like fvtr.
( ART HOPPE J
Humphrey. He's as familiar u an old
shoe. But , don't you just }ove Mr.
McGovern's wavy hair and Joni
sldeburn:i:? He's JO fuclnatlng looking.
Oh, how I wish I could make up my
mlndl"
BEING DEMOCRATS, both nodded
comfortably as the two candidates open-
ed the debates with blam al tl>e Jle.
publican administration.
Rut thtn Mr. Humpbrty leapt to the at·
taclt on Mr. McGovern'• positlonl on
Vietnam, Israel, unrmptt corn-
pt'!nsatlon, l11bor laws and fare, calling
him, among other things, nnaUstlc,"
''oontrRdlctory" and ''inconsistent.''
Mr. Wobley scratched hl! n ose
thoughtfully. ''I ctrtainly wouldn't want a
)>resident who was ulU'ealtsUc, con-
B11 George ---------•
Dear Grorge :
F'or years J have been an avid
reader of your column flnd enjoyed
It greatly. Jlowever, Is Sideway1
Thinking so:nelhlng that really
worb, or is thiJ 1 put~n like moll
el'eryl hlng else you w r I t e ~
Recently YOO :laid s Ide w' y I
Thinklng was a method of pro-
duclng results whlc:h turn out to be
absolutely opposlle of what you
SEEM to be doing . Can you ~Ive Rn
example! A BIT CONFUSED
D<ar A Bil : v ... throueh two Cf 1111 moat
prominent students now getting ti:·
actly the same resulta. McGovern
:ind Wallace.
tradictory and inconsiatent," he said .
"I don't like that yellow shirt Mr. Hum·
phrey'a wearing," said Mrs. WObley.
equally thoughtfully. "t never have
trwited men who wore yellow shirts."
But Mr. McGovern counterattacked,
quoting Mr. Humphrey as calllnj Vlel-
J\am the nation's "greatest adventure and
a wonderful one It is" and implying he
wasn't the man to "prevent future
catastrophies of that kind.''
"•'JIEA VEN DELIVER US from a
Prealdent who'd get us into another Viet-
nam," groaned Mr. Wobley.
"Just look al lhal pilHlrlped sull on
that J\fr. McGovern," iJ&bed Mr1.
Wobley. "I wonder II the Mafia 11 back-
log him?"
Mr. llumphrey next 1cctiled Mr.
McGovern of proposing a welfare pro-
gram that would brankrupl tbe coW.tzy
and dr9Stlc defense cUll tbol would leave
the mtlon naked before ttlt enemies. He
then talked about 1111 own minor reforms
ol the old welfare mea .>ct 1J10ke 1n old
cold war temu er the Soviet threat.
Mr. Wobloy just shook bis held. Mrs.
Wobley snid !he hldn't realized Mr.
1-fumphrey's eyes were lhal close togeth-
er or that Mr. 1'-TcGovern'a sideburns
wert that Joog. "Do you thbtk he smokea:
marijuana?" she a.sted.
Ml\. McGOVERN cloled by •ll'lnf the
people were "tired ol bacl!-rooin iltaJ1
(and) politics 11s u~ual" and Who wanted
••another re-run" of lhe: drury 1968 cam-
p<Jgo!
.f\tr. Humphrey slruck back by implying
h.J opponent was Inexperienced. full of
half -bakl'd promises and Jacked the
credibility of a drunken leprechaun.
J\lr. Wobley snapped ofr the set, ~ent to be<! and tos;;ed and turned all night, mut-
termg to himself, "Should I \IOf.e for .i
tired old windbag of a party hack who
hasn't an idea in his he.ad! Or should 1 cDst my ballot for a starry-eyed dreamer
who may lead us all tG disaster'> Oh -Wit
1 wish I cou ld make up my mind.!" '
As for Mrs. Wobley, lihe's taken up
Ouija.
ORANOI COAST
DAILY PILOT
l!obcrl N. We«!, P•bli.1her
Thcm4.i Koe.II, £cUJ4r
Albart W. Batts
Editorial Page Editor
'l'ht! rdltoti11l f*i:e ar the Dll.l1y Plfot JtC'Cka lO lnfr)rm and sttmu-
late rtll~ by pr est"ntlng thl• ne<A'lf>".per'• (lflln\on" •nd com
"ienmry on topic.: tlf lnlertAt and j JtT1 cant'(', by Pf'OV\dlns:: a fOf'\lrn
Clt" lh~ Upl'eqJon of our l'ftdenf d=~ndpo(br f~~ttnc the nta of lnfomied ob. ~~ daJ"~ •J>Oktsmtn on topl.ca
Monday, June 12, 1072
•
"'
y
Re1ults Secret
Committee Makes
Disorders Report
By MARV K. SHELL
C•l'l'-1 H_, SWYIC•
SACRAMENTO -Th e
Senate's subco1nmltteie on civil
disorder, headed by Stale Sen.
Dennis Carpenter of Newport
Beach and created last year
as a substitute (or the Senate
fact-finding subcommiltee on
un-American activities, has
filed its first report , but the
results have not been made
public.
The document. filed vdth the
Senate Rules Committee, ls
not yet Jn print and therefore
unavilable for public perusal.
Observers here are anxious
to see if the committee will be
as effective as the fact-finding
committee Jn identifying un-
American activities in the
state.
under lock and key.
AS A RESULT, the new sub--
co mmittee has been forced lo
devote most of its first year in
developing background in-
formation. ,.,.,,,._,
Serving on the su b--
committee with Carpenler are
Sens. Arlen Gregorio ( D-San
Mateo ). John Harmer (R·
Glendale ) and James Q.
\V edworth ([).Hawthorne).
Areas selected for initia1
study were:
-Rioting in the strtets.
-Campus riots {which ha11e
averaged two a week for the
last six years).
-Anonymous attacks, such
as bombings, bomb threats,
skyjack ings.
-Unwarranted attacks on
Jaw enforcement officers.
-Prison riots.
Some findings were difficult
Housittg Sought
Shari \Vhitehead of 11iami Coalition Conventi6n dis-
cusses problems she says demonstrators are having
in obtaining places to stay in Aliami Beach during
the Republican and Democratic conventions. \\!ith
her are Stew Albert fcenter) of Youth International
Party (Yippic) and Alton J<'oss of Vietnam Veterans
Against the War. They esti1nate 100,000 den1onstra·
tors \Vou1d be on h and .
to translate, Carpenter said.--------------------
There was some disagreement
Monday, Junt 12, 1972 DAILY PILOT 7
Purina Will Feed Humans
P et Food Firni to En11>lwsize Ntitritiomil Diets
LOS ANGELES (AP) -vegetable protein! surh as something that ls going to be atttmpt to develop larger and
Ralston-Purina Co. plans to soybean extracts and milk ex-needed, something that is more frequent crops.
. trarls in hun1an food. About des~ralely shori 1·n the \\'Orld R ] t h ]so t ed the place more emphaslS on pro-r-a s on as a en er
$18 1n1llio11 has elthrr been today.'' he added, venle-food m8'"et nd vlding humans with a balanced eon "'"...-.. , a l;fi"nf t"lf° Alloca ted for thi !! Dean cited the use Df hot diversified into restaurant and
diet Md is counting on its area , be said . water from nuclear power drive-in chains, including the
78 years experience al feeding plants lo provide breeding Jac-k-in-the--BolC drive-ins in
animals as an asset most ll AL ST 0 N-PURINA rl"-grounds for shrimp farming as Califor nia.
firms can't claim. S(«JIT hfrs are "'orking on an example of the research. "All parts of the busine5s
R. Jlal Dean , the St. L-Ouis ··very exciting combinations·• will bf-growing," Dean ,.;aid,
firm's chalnnan and chief ex-of soyix'ans nnd other prcxl-JIE SAID A SPEC l AL "but it's probably in the cards
uct s. he said. Purina feed vdll be given to that Y:e will grow faster in
ecutive, said here Ralston· pr 0 du c Ing the shrimp y,•h1ll' researchers areas other than agriculture ."
Purina plans to put increasing,--.iliiii~pii""ilioiiliiitiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiljmrilliiiiijiir••••••••f-emphasis on hwnan diets dur-1
ing the next five years.
Such a mo ve, he said. would
profit the company as .... ·ell as
the public.
DEAN, IN LOS ASCLES
(I) introduce a line or natural
health foods, said n1any nutri-
tional hun1an foods are n1adc
fron1 cereal ,::rains and
Jtalslon-Purina has been se-
lecting .and processing grains
since !894.
PHARMAC.Y
WE QUOTE PRICES
OVER THE PHONE •.• ANYTIME
-CHE.CIC THfS[ SUPER SAlf SPECIALS-s.1199 Ill!. I Otlr 11"· ~"''
TYLENOL A n,el9e"t T.ble11, 100"1 •••••••••• , ••• 11 85 $1.''t
KERI LOTION. 11 1 0 1. ··············•·•·•····· 12 .~S $1 7'1
PE-PTO 61S MOL. 8 01. ·········•·•····•······. 1 1 09 t•c
VASELIN E, ! 0 1 ••••••.•...••..•.•.••. , . , •••• t.9r-51/r I .... "'" $1.89
$1.49
69c
49c ONE SKEPTICAL legislator
is Sen. •1. L. ''Bill''
Richardson CR-Arcadia). y,·ho
fiercely defended the un-
American act Iv i t le s sulr
committee. \Vhen the Senate
Rules Committee killed the old
sub-committee with a 2·2 vote,
creating in II& stead the sub-
as to causes of the various
disruptions, but much of the
public disorder could be
traced to the Vietnam war, he
41 Attain College Degrees
"Animals. "'hich customari-
ly have scientifically prepar{'d
food put in front of them. cat
better than you and I do." he
said. "This health food line is I
a transition stage. \re hope,
2700 E. Coast Hi~hwav. at Fernleaf. Corona del Mar -said. F t Q Co t El TMo: Greoa swen~on. for the total populace to or y-one range a s L "1un1 H;111: M1c111t! c 1<N. understand more a b o u t
committee. Richard son AS EXPLAINED BY
charged, "Instead of meeting Carpenter. the work of the
the problem head-on the new subcommittee must be related
subcommittee would sirnply to legislation. One measure in·
gum it to death." troduced this session grew out
students attending Chapman Tu1un: H••rl1on erend. M"in• cum balanced d•·ets and ealUJ. g." L•u~. OouDl•s CrtloMon, F lo•d
College received master and ~:~'1!~~/':::d"L'!'j,,:_~urtt.~~1c111'1 Dean said his company's
Carpenter, a former FBI of the work of the committee.
b '·I deg...,....S dUfJ• g COm Fount1ln V•ltev; 8f\ICI Ntum1nn. h · · h ( acuc or ....... n -Lonci EM•th: cirol 611,,,iock. Pitrld• emp as1s is on researc o
m.ncement exercises recently. Bc\ld. RoMrt J. G•et>el, Hou~ Goll•s discover new ways to use ~·~'.'.'...O'"~"~'~v~.,~~'··~~-~--'----~--'-~~~-= Those receiving Master of -
Arts Degrees are: agent. a cc e pt e d the Jt would conform state law to
chairmanship of the sub-federal requirements on wire-cost• Mn11 O•I• Hmrv •nd 01Yld ·1 h ] V1uoh1n. commJ tee somew at re UC· tapping. 5,.1 ee1c11: 0on11d c;1br1e1 •nd
tarrtly. l~e says he stil! su p-Public hearings, one avenue BriK• T11e11ner. po rts the concept Of the old h Id Oan• Point: Robert Br1d•h1w. used often by t e o tin· Un·Amer1·can act1.vi11·es cnn1-L1oun1 611th' Paul Go1111. Arnerican activities sub· , • 0 •• ,., mitlee. This subcommittee Hun!lnaion '''"' in... o in, committee to c 0 11 e c t in-El Toro: Dtnnl1 Miiier. regularly exposed the names formation. \\/ere not conducted 1110,e rec~lvlno 1:11the1or o! ,.,,11 1nd
of individuals and organiza-h $c•~nces Dl'orte1 '''' this year by I e new coin· Huni.no1cn Bftch : Arl'IOI" otie. lions active in violent protest miite('. Ho'll-'Cller, Carpenter Moh•mm~ OAooci. 0ouo111 Ottn. Johh
mo11ements. says they are not niled out for Lawson •nd F••ntlt MullAllv. At the insistence Of Senate 6elbo1 hl•nd: Cr•IQ Scudder, the future. Ltcun• l:lt•ch: O•nltll • Jt<1li.or. •<'Id President Pro Tern ·James C h bl " . · Elle.., Tur~r. 1'.·liils (0.San Diego), the files ·· crtainly t e pu JC IS Ill-NewDOrt Bt1c11 : C•rcl e u rch ,
······· .. -AMPLf PARKING IN lllfAll
Houn -9;30. 6:00 Dau., 644-7575
Of the Old Subcommittee. terested. Citizens are nervous Mich•~ KUrov. 01vld Mccunoc~. eon
e . s1~ron. Oevr1 S!O<M, Ptrrlcl• Ttt-r e presenting in11csligations about the SC(Urity of society," rtu. M1r1111 Tom• •nd P•1r1c11 wc11.
h ·d Coron• dtl M•r: Miry Thltotemelr. spanning nearly 30 years, are t e senator sat . 1rv1n1: G•r~ Mc0on11d. ~.:...-~~~================
FATHERS DAY SALE
power.
•
Hel8'1 .... gruteot 11!11• aafWly dfttce
you CM get your handl on. Eapeclllty
when you don, know what'a lurklng out·
aide In the dart<. Wl"' Genie In hind, )'OU
never have to get out of your car to get
Into your garage. Never have to worry ex
be wary aga in. Genie keepa you and
your property safe and protected-
automaucallyl --"T,.. G•"llO Door Pfckor-0-f"
-Ille -, .• tumo on Ille fight
du 11 lhe -... locb up llgllt
SA VE $24.00!!
WE WILL GIVE YOU A
SECOND TRANSMITTER
A "M1111t'' For
2 Car P..mlll" r
FOR ONLY s1
INSTALLATION ASSURED BY FATHERS DAVI
SEA. COAST BUILDERS SUPPLY
VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
1'51 PLACENTIA -COSTA
0
MESA -PHONE '42.-J490 -... • .. • ~ 'I • • ... ~--· • -.. • •I. W ·
Conserving energy is vital.
The demand for electricity
in Southern California
doubled in the past eight
yea rs. Whether we like
it or not, it wi ll double
again in the years ahead.
Unless Edison is permitted
to build additional power
plants and transmission
lines, it may become
necessary to blackout
blocks of customers on a
rotational basis within
two or three years.
Yet permits nece ssary to
build any new major
plants have been delayed
or block ed for the past
four years.
That's an im1nediate
problem. We're working
hard to resolve it.
The long-range problem
requires finding more ways
to conserve energy and
to use our nation's total
energy resources wisely.
That involves all of us.
In Edison's fossil-fuel ed
plants, for exa mple, we're
now able to produce 30%
more electricity from a
unit of fuel than in 1948.
That helps.
Demand for eleclr icity here keeps rising every year.
Needed new sources of power musl be built. Olher·
wise, blackouls may occur wilh in two 01 three years.
At the San Onofre Nuclear Power Plant, fuel pellels
which contain ur1nlum are used instead of burning
foss il fuels. This helps conserve oil and n11ural g1s.
By using higher-voltage
transmission lines, we're
also able to deliver
electricity more efficiently.
To find other energy-
saving techniques, \ve 're
in vesting millions
researching Geothermal
Power, Fuel Cells, Fast
Breeder Nu clear Reactors
and other adva nced
generating methods.
We're working with
industrial and commercial
customers to con serve
electricity in oflices and
factories. Heat from
lights, for in stan ce. can be
recycled and used for
heating systems.
Perhaps you can conserv e
energy, too. Have you
considered ways to make
every kilowatt co unt at
home? We'll be happy to
send you a li st of practical
suggestions.
Write:
Conservation , Edison,'-
P. 0. Box 800, Rosemead,
California 91770.
3 DAIL V PILOT Monday, Junt 12, 19/2
·• • Experbnent.al Work 2 Do gs Soo n Equal 4,372
Record
Welfare Society
B1 CANDACE PEAJ\SON
ot .. Dellr ,... •• .,.
'-
The lllllllh<r equals lhe ooun-
ty'• current human PQpulalion.
reporta also will ~ taken. or more tnlormaUon on clinic
programs, call 530-7781 ·
Dissolutimas
Of J-larriage
£•1ttN Ml, ll
tiown, ~••• O. •"" 11urt!11 E.
Mue•r, Aon•IO ll>Ofl'lll •nn M1r,hll '·~ 81llt'11eer, fl lal'>(fle V11m1 1rld Lew>'
fltll>Ofl
M1rlln, "llct Jo 1nd •111"""1v ~lcll•tl
a~"""'•"· •~,.,, c. 1r.o oun•ld •• ll•1i.o. JOl!n I' ll'ld ROY(I R , llr•O~v. M••-.e • ...., Ro<>trr o
MCMlllOl'I, ClfOI """"I"° AOMrt R,
Oono••1'. Pe!P• w <no Ooen~ E ()'~II. Ron1kl H_ and J11(l'l!I! "'"" Scnr1K k, Do•efn• E-and ,..,,.11n E_
Sclltlt r. J11t.lnt F _ "nd Rfct.a•d J
N1w1on. Co;ne!i• 1n11 JQl\n T~om~\
11moOOI'\, l )ndl Y. Ind JDM M1d11•i 1mlf~. H.OOlnt M Mid w 111., v
Morrt1. "''""" J. ;, 1 "<1 vir.,in1• i\, H•b<'•m1n. ~•mutl tnd Ga•• Lyt1'1
Ol1rrip11n, Jtn!ce M.lne and N1C.110!a1 G.a•ee
Avdin, Rot>lrl A. al!CI Ola"" L. """""'°""' J1me1 IC. •ncl Barbi••""· tiu!cnens, C11olllll' f dlTll and ROCX'rt (ll••lt •
Gran!, LG<JI• Jo1eoll Incl Lo•el!a Terela Gr~en, NOtr>ll Lei 1no JamtJ Let
1Nr0f'l1k l, Sllnt<)ll A. and Cll~slet L
V•ll•"•• Pitt~ •• A. a<>d Hnrt110 E.
l!nl•tM Mlt 1'
Hordlnv, A/ta 8•v•nelr• """ 1t"V Rodgrr
$yndt'll81cd, Lind" Ree tnd Rob•r! c11 ... 1,.
M;101trri, JO••"" F. •rid Snlrl•v L
Oovbllh, Rnodl' A. •rid Bun~ra Nor!on
H••es. RoDert Jol>nwr1 and v1-.~n
lren"
Mvrr•. MICll••I R. Ind S1ndt1 J_
C"ntd8, P•hv Ann 1nd Rr11ln8ld J,
Brown, Jo Jo 8n<I ""•thvr "braham
~ L01Jtner, LG<J Ann •rid Harmon F _
(app" M1lvon L.,. 1nd Joye& A• l•ne
Morrne, Donn& K . Mid LooT1
Brown. Glor!1 I, ano Millon L.
$h••me~, Josepn J. 1 110 Pttsv Jo
H•w11,11, s .. nc1ra AMI ""o Jerold B.
T•llm8n, Jovce I. al'>d /1t1nur L
flalle•. Ve•I F 11n(I Mtr!hl l -
Hlll, Joan M· and J1mes O., Jr.
Z•IMl<>t!, Vlcv M , arid Robett (_
Crawto•d, l nom•s C. and E•rl L.
C1lkln1, M11rlorl1 G. •nd R!d18rd Looi1
Mu!Mln. Jllll'I lvnlll' •nd P1tr1,11. ,_
1"11111/'1, Sunn J, and L" W. Nonn1n, John Wlll!am and Ros•
H8n1on, Vicki• Lov and Roti.rl GeM
Sims, Le1h •.arid Or11nl1 R.
Bro·;/n, Sharon 1(1y and Oou111as Ptul
W1lrori, JOhn Fr1nc:l1 and K1ren •1.1t
Co11on, Beverlv •nn 1nd (111v Oscar
Anaerson, Ktltl\ K. and P1vla L,
leeotr. M1'ry L. Ind RICherd E.
Gooch, "''elma R. and Brian M.
Bl9;er, J8nrt I. and Leon R.
May Join Project GARDEN >GROVE -A
female <!<>I clvtac birth In ..,.
year to 'four ·puppies, two cl
t4em femaler,,can result bJ a
rilathematical progression of
~ operaton ""9t IO ...
teed their current t a.p-to 5
p.m. wwklng hoors·lo U:bour
emergency servict.
The clinic is supported by
private contributions from
llumane Society members.
It la OUerlng a humane
education program to schools,
clubs and youth groups. who
Clinic spokesmen plan ag,...-
open house sometlme tb1'S ·
month. The socltty's ofllc.,
were formerly in Huntington
Beach. SA!\l'fA ANA -About 30,000
V.'t:lral'l' rt•ciplerll! In 3 :i
California count it s
including Orange County
will be required to regi!lter for
\\' o r k under experimental
projects reapproved by the
federal government.
The new work' regulation!!
and proj ects officially went in·
to effect last Tuesday, but
Orange County welfare of·
fici als sai d they have received
no in~tructions on how to in1·
plement them.
''At this ooint. it is ex -
trerne!.v cotifusing," s a i d
Joyce Burns, v o ca t I on a I
service coordinator for the
County Welfare Departn1ent.
"We have received no direc·
lives or chan~es of policy
rrom the state Department 11(
Social Welfare."
She expects the prog ram.
which also includes up to
20,000 welfare recipients in
Ne w York . lo becon1e active in
July.
The projects would require
all able-bodied recipients, in·
eluding sii:ig le mothers with no
children under six·years.old,
to register for regular jobs.
job training programs or for
Three Men
Make Pleas
Of Guilty
unpaid community ser\•lce . btrtht. which In seven yeat1
Jvr.,~ -would total 4,372 dogs -mOl'l
The latter would be for up lo of them unwanted.
80 hour5 a month only. F',gures a.re even higher for
The projtt'ls, delayed by a cat.S-
federal court suit last spri ng, Sc> Says the Ca 11 r or n la
will reportedly cost a n branch or the Humane Society
estimated $4.5 mjJJjon in the of the Urjted States, which
first 'r'ear, in addition to just opened an Emergency
normal welfare payments and Animal Care Center and Birth
additiona l slate spending. Control Clinic here.
The state lfuman ReS(Jurces Society officials hope their
Depart1nent will act as a cen· non-profit services will help
tra! C'learing house for jobs KITTY AWAITS HELP stem the tide o( animal
and will assign the recipients Humane Society Guest overpoputalion in 0 r a n g e
to work in PEP (PubUc -------'----County.
Employment Program), PEP They offer spaying and
Welfare, WIN (Work incentive former· UCI neutering of cats and dogs at Program) and CWEP (Com· about half the cost of a
munity Work Exp er i enc e regular veterinarian .
Program ). D F Owners need no t show proof
Most of those jobs are in ean 3Ce8 of financial need. but. said
Cal! and <logs must be six
months old before the cllok's
staH -veterinarian will-,,erloh:n
sterilizations. AU a o f m a I s
must also have a prellmlDary
ei:amlnation before surgery is
scheduled in order to check
lmmunizatlonl and general
health.
Reports of..suspected cnielty
to animals can be made a1 t:he
clinic.
The society also wttt offer a
"pet adoption service" for
people who can't keep their
pets, but don't want to send
them to the pound and for
those looking ror pets.
Lost and found animal
Newport Beach
Man Graduates public service agencies. cHnic Director Burt ~!orris,
The PEP Welfare 3 n d Th £ R "They aren't supposed to Henry M. Kanegae. of 1801 e t ap come here if they can afford Buttonshell l,ane, Newport CWEP are not yet U-1 effect in regular ser vices ;:it goi ng Beach, has graduated with an
Orange County. rates." M D deg r th Med·c I It is hoped . Mrs. Burn said, SANTA ANA Robert -· ree rom e 1 a
that many of the participants Edward Sharpe, until recently Located at 12911 H:istcr St., CoHege of \\' i·on:-;111.
can request Speikers o r' -----,...,--.-,_--, .. -,-.,----
literature. Robinson hopes to
b.sve a classroon1 at the
Haster Street facility in the
future.
More Security W"ath
FALSE TEETH
"This Is needed in Orange At Any Time
County," Morris emphasized. Afraid falae teeth will drop at thti 1'1! the people in Orange Coun· ,_.roni 11m.7 A de11t\ln'Mlheliff m11 ty want to see it go they'll h~lp. FASTEETB• Powder riv• denturea • lonrer, tinner, 11teaditr lend support -physi caJ[y, h11ld. Whybe&nbarrMMd?Formore
financially and mentally-1l's l ·~~~tit( and comfort, use FA S .. •-·m th .ng" ' 1 t.ETt Denture Adhtst'lt Powder. a 1.cc:1 I · IJ.,nturtie tli1t flt are lll'l!Wtial to For medical appointments heal~h. See 1our dentiat r•rularl(.
eventually will be absor bed m. the converted house is still un· Kaneg;1e 11<!s honored for an assistant dean of students d · l I the best prnJer t and essay June 14th thru the 18th, bout11PMco10 PM to the regular 1·ob market. ergo1ng remote 1ng. at UC Irvine, has been ''IV . 1 · 1. . \Vritten on co m 1n u n i t y Latt day Swtday,June 18th. 12 oooa io 6 PU A man placed in the ex· e re no in compe ition Ord d t · O · h l · h ·1 medicine and received the Ben i•11t• M•11lc• Cl•I• Atttl ll•f'I••· ... ,,. ateeet a "--~ perimental job programs who ere o appear in range wit ve erinary osp1 als," Da"-o-Prtno ••• ~ .... 11..., • ......,,....._ _ __. __ 12~-c S
•1 ·
1
· d l~a~n~d~E~U~a~W~a~n~er~~~~l~e>~n;o:n:adl~~~~-·~~~~~~~~~~~~·~·~~~~-~~~~~~~~ has been receiving welfare ounty 'uperior Court Tuesday n orris cau 1one .
because or unem ployment will lo answer to grand theft As lhe first su<:h clinic in
have his aid cut completely. charges. Orange County, he added,
A single working parent Sharpe, 43, Los Angeles. is "\\le're in competition 'vith the
placed in a job will have his or accused of pocketing $1,050 death chambel', trying to keep
her aid reduced depending on during his administration of anim als from being born that
the salary. the school's loans·to-students shouldn 't be born in the first
Approval of the program program. place."
tvas held up when a U.S. District a t torn e y ' s in· The Humane Soc I et y
District Court judge ruled vcstigators said th ey were estimates that 10.000 puppies
March 13 that the federal called in to the case after UCI and kittens are born every
government had violated an officials uncovered the first of hour in the U.S.
agreement that it allow !he two charges filed against The clinic's cruelty in·
National \V e If are R i g h t s Sharpe. They spotted a second vestigalor, Bill Robinson, ad·
Award of $100.
Enroll
Now
Fall
Semester
HtGt~lHAl lON fEt
ONLY
ALL·DAY CLASSES
Kindergarten thru 8th Grade
•Teaching the 4 R's with phonics
• DDor-to-Daor Bus Service
•Before and After School Care
•Reasonable Tu ition
HAWTHORNE
CHRISTIAN
SCHOOLS
Man11um. Jin• •nd Richard K.
Pta?ne•. Ma•Q•rN 11no Milton
Errierion, How•rd 8 . tnd Su••n R.
8urn1. Elt•nor L. ~no G•b•it • R.
V•rt81, Con>utlo and VkTor Humbrtto
Bonar, Llrld~ 'I, 11na Lawrff\CI R,
Sll!elOs, Wl!ll•m A. •nd Linda G.
Marcial, C11•men fnd Mike $,
SANTA ANA -Orange Organ iza!ion to review the a l leg e d misappropriation ded that ther.e are at least I.4
Coasl residents accused on ar· plans at least 30 da ys before shortly after Sharpe resigned million dogs and cats born in $10
IN FOUNTAIN VALL£Y
l68JS Broo-hu"I 51•~"
17141 962-3312
Keep your childr11n
in good hands.
Ask about our DIV Camp
and Summer School. rest wi th a Fu llerton man of 1 __ or_r_ic_ia_l_•c_t_io_n_. _______ h_is'-'po-"'st~. ---------~O~ra=n~g~e'-C=o=u~n~t·~'....:'-'="~y--'y~ea:::.r~. :_;
selling nearly $500,000 worth of
Gold, M.lrlhe Jrene •nd MortM Samu.I
Wrl11nt, Claudia N. •nd Kennell> A.
Grant, Bennie end M1c1>a•I "'-·
unregistered stock h a v e
pleaded guilty to lesser
charges In Otange C-Ounty Su· Dovie, Lvnde Leo and Wllllem Jostllh
MounToln, Sl>trrv F. arid John M.
Sntnk, BNlv J, and Irving
Burns, Ronni~ R..:nord and Lino• Lu
C411rt~. P1 .;(il!a C. and Joe Aubin
Avan, Rot>trl J•mt• and Valerl1
Wes1enbo•11er, Jlltln MefCVi Ind
Mar!la•tt l .
Enltrld MIV 1t
•1nworrn. Orlo•e• eno 01nlll ""· Sno;!. Jank e J~v and DY•rln ~ W1lne
Call, R-r!a ""n and Gerold Oe1n
Pele•!, Pav1Jne L and Norris J _
Maddtn, Thomas Jowi>ll and J11cquellne
Morrv
Death Notke•
fl URCHFU!LO F"r•nk Edwin 8urcl>lil(d, 115 L••~1pur
Ave., Coron• del M•r. 0ft!e ol <le811\, June lC. nn, Survived bv wn. Ft•nk O.
lkt•chlleld, or Corona del M•r; d8Uthte•. Mr1. 81ttv •nn S1nc11<o1, Torrance; lwo
tirand1on1, Warrrn 0. and C.•rv Robftl ~rn:/>11: •r•nddftughler Sl\1ron Ellrabt!I!, 111 ct Tll<'f8n~e. Servlcn, Wedn11d1v, lO:lll A.M . P1dflc Vl1w C~~<>ll. lnrtrmtnl. Paclllr. Vlow Mtmerlll P1rk. Farrillv IU!ltflh T~t11• W!llllnt 10 ;';'1':!.~e "',~mf ;!•' H~~"r'i''~"~~P';,/'11~:,fc°i:"~
C8nct r Sotillv. P1citk View Mor1v•r~, Director•. DERN Ro~e Oer11, 11'0 White Sa lh Orlvt , Corona Oel M•'-Oat,. 01 ae1m, June 10, 1'12-Survlve<I bv wn. Or R8Vtt10'1d J_ ~rn, Coro~& del M8•J •~d five 11r•~d<.hildr~·1. Ro•ary, Tcnlg,.,I, Mond~~. f PM. Ba!!t
Corona dot M•r (l'l•<>tl. RetiUll'm M111 , Tu~•d~v, 9 AM. Ou• L•dY Dul'f'n of Anacl' (e!~ollt Cnurc~. ln1ermtn1. ,,._,,c~n11on CemtlftV, El Toro 80!!1· Bergeron Funerel Home, Carone dtl Ma•,
Director>.
llALTZ BERGERON
FUNERAL HOME
Corona del l\'lar 673-9450
Costa 1\lrsa 646-2.U• • BELL BRC)AD\VA\'
!\101tTUARV
J 10 Broadway. Costa !\ksa
LI ~3133 • !\1cCOR.i\fJCK LAGUNA
BEACll 1.10RTUARV
17,i Laguna Canyoa Rd.
494·941~ • PACIFIC VlE\~
!\f.E~10RlAL PARK
Ccn1ctery !\fortuary
Chapel
3500 Paciric View Drive
Newport Reach. Callfornla
644-2700 • PEEK F AMILV
COLON IAL FUNERAL
HO~IE
"'801 Bolsa Avt .
\Vestminster 893-3525
•
perior Court.
Judge \Vil\lam Murray ac·
cepted guilty pleas on charges
of conspiracy from Donald
Maurice Douglass, 41, of 10412
Teal Circle, Fountain Valley,
Lilyan Seifert, 57. of 1420
North Wood Road. Seal Beach
and Donald Ray Tugwell, 44,
J;-ullcrton.
The trio '~as indicted by the
Orange County Grand Jury
Aug . 12 following allegations
that they violated slate codes
by selling unreg is t e red
American Mobile Telephone
and Tape ~k, muaJl:of it in
Orange Coun\y. ..,,.,,
All three will be eentenced
Aug. 31. They will flee possi-
ble state prison terms of up to
IO year s.
Saddle Club
Sets Show
0 1i June 18
It 's !in1f' to saddle up 1
p'1rtner !
The Mesa Boots and Saddle
Club. Inc. ·1-11i(I present its an-
nual Junio r Western Sho1-1·
Sunday al lhl' Orange County
F'a irgrounds.
'fhere \viii be lt categories
of cornpelil1on. both i n
horsemansh ip and for show
horses. during the l'lli-<lay
evrnt at the arena.
The sho1v, a part of the 197'2
Oran ge Count~' Fair. is e:\'-
pcc!ed to dra1-1• belween 50 to
JOO con!eslants. according to
tiirs. Evelyn Tibbets, one of
the organizers.
A special (eature or the
sho\v, which begins at 9 a.m.,
will be a performance of the
Apple Valley Dancing Hooves.
a group of horsemen who have
trained their horses to dance
to music,
Admission is free.
THE BEST
SMITHS' MORTUARY
6'l7 !\lain SI.
lluntfngton Beach
5.16-6539
R~adersWp po 111 pro~ "Peanuts" it one ot the world's most popular comic
strips. Read It dally 1n the
DJ}ILY PILOT . .-
We're not just,builcling a building. ·
' l ..
We're builfllnr_
a financial fanlily.
A lot of peoplo, watchi~g our new
bui lding going up on Newport Center
Drive in Newport, hove commenled,
Very impressive looking ... but what arr
they going to do in there oil day?"
Well, for one thing, we'll be writing o
lot of checks. Lost year, for instance,
Pacific Mutuo I po id its pol icyowners and
their beneficiaries more than $175
million in benefits. This money helps
people pay doctors' and hospital bills.
funeral expenses, and fox obligations.
II replaces income Josi through retire-
ment, sickness or disoblemenl. ft helps
kids go to college. Pays food, clothing
and housing expenses for surviving
dependents.And helps people cope with
financial emergencies in. other w<IfS·
Because, firs t and foremost, we're a
life and health insurance company; our
ca reer agents sif down wi1h Individuals,
families and businesses and help them
pion for their financial securily. Notion-
olly, we're ranked 32nd in assets out of
the 1,800 ond some insurorn:e com-
panies people have to choose from, Our
customers currenlly own neorly $6
billion worth of life insurance.
Pacific Mutual is licensed to sell its
insu rance products in 49 stoles, the
District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. And
our customers ore se rved locally by
more thon o hundred individual and
group insurance, claims and mortgage
loon off ices lhroughout the Un ited States.
The assets of Pacific Mutual life lnsur-
orn:e Company exceed $1 billion. So
mony of lhe 800 people working in our
new bu ilding will be walching over the
investment of hundreds of millions of
dollars. Strength and safely ore the
most important criteria when we select
the investments that will stand behind
our customers' insurance policies. They
might be investments in nevvcommercia!
or housing construction. Or utility and
industrial bonds that help create new
services for people, like a water syslem
in Florido or o telephone nelwork in
Illinois.
But these days Pacific Mutual is more
!hon on insurance company. It's a fam ily
of financial companies all related to a
single purpose: providing financial
services for individuals, families and
business.
®
REDEVCO, ll1C.
As its nome suggests, this is our real
estate development company. fts role is
to capitalize on short-term development
opportunities. Redevco purchases and
resells improved properties.
®
PACIAC LA KE PARK
DEVELOPmEnT COITlPAflY
This company builds and owns oporf-
ment complexes which offer great
places to live. like lake Pork Apor1ment$
in Ui Mesa, noor Son Difgo. 254 on:fil.
tecturolly interesting apartment horn.is
ore set amid toll pines, meandering
walkways and ponds s1ocked wj!h fish.
/lv:Jre proiects along these lines ore
planned.
®
PACIFIC consULTinG
CORPORATIOfl
PCC provides sophisficoled marketing
services to agents oil over the country.
II concentrates on aeotive financial
planning for individuals and businesses
and Jorge estates. Often combining
extensive research with computer
analysis, PCC provides un ique solutions
lo complex financial planning problems.
®
PACIAC EOUfTY
SALES corm>Any
A company of registered represenlotives
licensed lo offer mutual funds. /Mny
ore life insurance agents too, ond these
men hove o portfolio of products to
meet the financial needs of individual$,
families and business.
®
PACIAC ffiUTUAL
ste ol03FM
the sounds of the harbor
~dS¥-~-· youve never heard it so ·good
'"
u ..
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supe
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C;:t:
of a
the "
Ba
artlcl
Jour1
\\lh
nursi
ar' ·
cen:e
But
man
ar;
Th
Is sti
the s
"T
clinic
or a
ST
"T
of a t
Yet
you
Thi
and f
On
tor's
would
cian
round
In
now
lions.
ten b
her f
ily
Mrs
this e
physi
and
Tod
1 nur
tient'
She
Is wi
do ii
CHE
Che
couri
und ·
things
aci
Nurses
. "
v . '
,
Equipment, as the machines
bein g demonstrated by this nurse,
helps but good critical care
really depends on the nurse.
Pulse Quickens
In Critical Duty
Future Shock? -"We're prepared for
it,'' says Mrs. Donna Zschoche.
As assistant director or nurses in
charge of critical care units as well as
supervisor of training for the
Cardiopuln1onary Training Center at
Orange County l\1edical Center and presi-
dent of the American Association of
C:-a:cal Care Nurses, she seems encugh
of an nuthority to say they have reached
the "ultimate" in critical care nursing.
Back in 1968, she began thinking <lf an
article finally published ln the Ameri can
Journal of Nursing in November, 1969.
\\'hat she and Lillian Brown, director of
nursing at OCMC, wrote about in the
ar' ·e was already in progress at the
cen,er.
But it did cause a commotion among
many in the field who replied with
artunie ntative letters.
The article, which l\1rs. Zschoche said
Is still true tod ay , explained the role of
the special care nurse.
"To some, sbe may appear to be a
clinical specialist, a physician's assistant
or a su pemurse.
STAFF N\lllSE
"To us, she is a staff nurse, ll. graduate
of a two-, three-or four-year progra m."
Yet, Mrs. Zschoche admitted, "I guess
you could call her a new breed-''
'This nurse mak es a nursing diagnosis
and follows it with lmmediate action.
Once, she served only to follow the doc-
tor's orders. If she tlad a question, she
wouJd chart it and maybe call the physi·
cian or wait for him to make his daily
round. Judgmenls were not in her realm.
In th is state, the professional nurse
now is legally respoosible for ber ac--
Uoru:. Even if she follows an order writ-
ten by a physician, if lt ns wrong; it is
her fauJt. "The physician l!n't necessar·
ily God," Mrs. Zscboche.polnt.d oul
~1rs. Zschoche explained, however, that
this expanded role Is dependent on the
physicia~ as well as the hospital policy
and the nurse's training.
Today, a doctor might leave orden for
a nurse to maintain the pH of the pa·
tlent'1· arterial blood at a Cfltaln level.
She must be able to detennlne whether ll
Is withln'hlJ prescribed llmtl lll"f what to
do H it l#ti'I. • • 1 . . . . . . '
CHEM)STllY lllQUIJl£D 1
Oiemlstcy .was oot tJways a ,ttqUlr~
course for nursei. Yet. ndw Re ·must
undentand tile algnllcance of ouch
thlngs AA resplntory and mttabollc
acldosi5 lllld alkalosl11. She must bt able
to monitor substances in the patient's
blood and understand chemical actions
going on in the blood.
The nurses' article said, "The im·
}Xlrtant consideration is that this nurse
has the ability to recognize such critical
physiological changes; .she does not wai t
for the physician to visit the ~t to
review the laboratory fmdings.
"She identifies changes in these
laboratory analyses and either cotTect.s
Graduates <lf the two-and-three-year
ordered, or notifies the physician."
The good critical care nurse, Mrs.
Zschoche said, 1'doesn"t want to play doc·
tor •.. She wants to be a good nurse."
She feels the nurse is the ideal person
to do these things because the patient is
in need immediately and the nurse is the
onl y one at the bedside 24 hours each
day.
This, she said, resul ls in "speedier pa·
tient care, a reduction in his stay and a
reduced mortality rate."
1'-fedicine is "over-extended. They can't
do it all," she said. Ntnblg assistants,
vocational nurses and paramedics now di>
things which only nurse1 were once
thought capable of doing.
TEAM EFFORT
"NoOOdy's alone 1n this game. We 're all
a team.''
The critical care nurse, she said,
serves as "the paUent 's advocate and
sees that everything ls dooe which need1
to be done."
The critical care nurse will take the
time to listen to a patient and his family
and understand his problems. lf the pa·
tient, for example, has lost the. will to
live, she said, "lt becomes our
respo0sibllity to http lbem'lo want to
(live)." '
Good ctiUcal care nurliog doeln't r<IY
on all the modem equipment now found
in hospital unill. Equipment, Mrs.
Z!chocbe said, only serves to enhance the
care and make it easier.
A good critlcal care nurse, !Or ei:·
ample, sbou1d he able to core for a
person who bas a hurl attack at
Anaheim stadJmii: .
M(s. ~<.tarted U ·I , head ......
on a.medical floor In the center., Having
1-t placed® charge of opening the fir.I
t'Ol"Oll8l'f ,care. unlt, the. had to train
-aod•111en o!M,. i.. this new kind "'care.
(S.. NEW DIJTIES, Pare 111
Career
Some nurse! woul d like to cli mb a
••Jadder" toward their etlucatlonal goals.
The top rungs would be labeled con-
tinuing educa,tion. And u tblJ tiUe in-
dicates, there may he no top· to !he lad·
der.
Al the world procresses, medicine pro-
gresses. dtmandjne: , that nurses con-
tinually know'more,
A new state law, which will be effective
in 197$, sa)'I nurses must have "proof of
compt\eoee•• to be licensed every two,
years.
"A lot ofrDUl'leS right now feel very
threatened about thl! new law but they
r~Uy ~dn't .at alt ," said Rosalxn
ff'!C~f, ~Ive , clirector of tbe otllna'e O>lihti" Nuriel Asooclatlon.
Otheriwrses, howo vcr. feet the leglsta.
tlon wlll tie bcnoflcial to the profession.
.. You Just can't Jtarn all you need to
lnow In any basic course." explained
Olive Rees, coordinator or nunlog at
'
Goals
Golden West College.
As in many other fie lds. a nurse's
education is out or date almost before she
walks .out tbe schoo l doors.
Unlike other fleldl, however, this could
really be the difference between life and
deoth.
Ahhough a comniittee is s t 111
fonnu\ating criteria for the new .Jegisla-
tion. lt ii believed that continuing educa-
tion classes or, as an alternative, aR ex·
~nation, wt.II be decided upon.
Cmtinulng educatkm is synonymous
with adult education. Credit from . such
courte1. which could be offered over an
t:ittlre, 1m1ester or as a seminar or a .,._end · -ktliop. cannot be applled
tqward an -.aca~c degree.
Such counes would be flexible. often
designed qulckJy to remain fluent with
the trendt.
Goldtn West's Evening college h.'ls
hem oUerlnr' such cou,...,,, in<ludlTig a
SIOrlts by LAURIE KASPER
Of n. DtllY , .... '1ttl
Nurse Naocy ls changing.
Normally referred to as ••she," the
nurse might octually be a •·he."
f\lore and more men a~ entering the
fi t'ld, chspelling the illusion that it is for
\\'Onicn on.ly.
Uut then. the wo men in white can C'laim
some blarne for shirt s in their profession.
Some fen1ale nurses a re taking over a
portion of ,,·ha! normally has been con·
sidered the mnlt! doctor's role.
And the results. they say, "·111 be "brt·
tcr ht'3hh c:trl' for p<'Ople "
ActuaH~·. rhe nurst"s roll" in the
medic:il fJl'ld has b£'t'n chanr;::ing ror sorn(•
yt>ars.
Bul nurses , and lht' pullh<' iu gt•nernl. is
more a\\arc of 11 1101~" ··r;1,•1'1'th1ng 1s ;u»
l't'll'r:lled.'" t•\p!a111t•(I 011~.. n 1· I''.
roord1natnr of t111r-.u n: ·11 (;nldrn \\~ 1
Collt"gt·. ··11 ·., u1 1111• ,. 1·h 11h.1!" li;q1
j>t'n.Ilg Ill ;ill 111 lllll 11 I\
!l1'!U l"l' )'12 1 I" 'I
et! tu t.tht · ,! IJl1'" 1 I '' 11'\
SOllll' lllH"Sl'~ Ill!\\ ~1..1 ,. lu •t •ll11l' t l11111·~d
SJ:k.'l'1.:d1sts 1H' -.p1'11.il • :1n· 1n11·~1 ·s. \\'Jt h
extra :1!-,1d1'1111t lo.l! l.grntuul au rt
SJJ\.'1.'1;d1/L'd 'I.di'. !ho'\ hil\t' l<ikt'll Otl ;1d·
dt•l1r1 ·~po11~d11!1trt·'1111hl' hur11 . llt'nn;1!al,
l"Or un:\I\ t·:111• 11111"1-.111• 1;1r1· .ind oth1·r
.. crinc:1l r:irl' · 11111\'
111 111:111~ hL"IHl.ib. th1·y arr :dl(J11t•d to
r,·;il11.tll' p:1111·111s. 1nakt• 1te<:is1ons and
ta';l' npprupi·•..,11• :11·111111. ln thr p:ist. tht•y
merely follo11 l'd thl' doctors' orders.
Thrse ('h~1ng1·s ha\·f' "kind of upg raded
evl'rybody Hl ;1 v,ay," :-;aid N;:101n1 P:1y11e.
Coordinato r or \)\(' ("1)Jl!Ulllil1[:: '.\iurs1nj.(
Education progranl being pl:i11n1•ci nt
c C\
The doctor cnn no\1' give 1nore of his
ti111°c to the seriously ill pa !ie nt because
the nurse ix·rf onns so111c of t11s Jnore
minor funclion::..
The llN (Hegistcrrd Nurse) t·:in krep
c.\oser tabs on the pa tie111 's tota l cart'
sin<:e no'v "she is .s11pposed to plan 1hc
care of patients b\l t not nt·ct·ssarily l::lrry
it ou t."
l\·luch of tht• bcds1d1· t•arP is being done
by the LV N (L1e1·nsrd \'nv:ition:il Nur.se 1,
nursing assista111 and 1Jnr;1prolrss1onal.
"A lot of nurses feel \IC have relin-
~ .... J... . 1-~ •••
n
quisbed our role to the LVN," Mrs.
Payne said.
But she and other active professional!
find the ei:panded role of nursing -the
nurse practitioner - a more exciting
route to follow .
Federal health progralTl! are em·
pbasizing nurse practitioner!, RN s "'ho
basically replace the doctor as the
"primary caretaker," according to Mrs •
Edna Popi el, assistant dea n of the &hool
of Nursing at the University of Colorado,
"'hich began the first compre hensive pro--
grams for both cont inuing education and
nurse practitioners.
lil'r Sl'hool already has gradua ted morl'!
lh<.111 JOO nurst'S in its ped1atrir, maternal
and ;1dult nurse pracut1oner courses.
The pr:11·t11ivner differs from the nur.sl'!
hv $f't•111g rt·~ular p:it icnts She decides
\rlil'lht•r .-.ht• ean hand le !heir care.
~lit' ~11 , . ._ thr physu 'al rx:.inllnation~.
t,'\t.r, h1 ~1ur 11'!!, c.:our1st•I..; and 1·ari'.s both
1 1110· 11 "111e:illy 1ll pa!Jt'nt \1ho rn1gh l
~ .. '1" hi,llh IJJ011d pr11ssurt' nr :'111
1•ruhlen1 or thi· patit•rtt 111th a
1'11 l'r· .iil1·111 as .1 1·o ld
I I I II II ~!h• IS Ill a rural arc11, liol\CVer,
~111· l 1 •.1111s contael \\"Ith a physician. ff
~lu· r;111'1 hand le the p:ilil'nt's care, she
ri·ft'r" 111111 to the doctor or. if nredcd, a
Sf'l\'l"l;\l1st.
llE1'TJ<:ll CARE
Bt•Ht·r hralth care at a lesser cost is
thP attn and advantage of th is program .
Its l.'fl<'f'IS u•ould be fell in the con1·
mun11y
A nurse praclitioner \\·ou ld be more
available to give medical attent ion t<>
rura l communities, minority grou ps and
the elderly.
Thr~· rnight also help to reduce a pa-
lit•nt 's hospital stay .
Lila J\laplcs, assistnnt coordinator In
charge of all ied health admin istration for
the Regional Medical Program. said
so me people in the medical field are look·
Ing for \vard to the da y \.rhcn onl y the
··very, very sick" 1vill be , found in
hospita ls.
Perso ns having minor surgery, for ex-
an1 µle an appendecto1ny, 1na y only have
to stay in the hospital for one day. The
diagnostic workup for the su rge ry would
br done before they g£'1 to the hospital.
After surgery. they could be moved to a
t'en!er set up for subacute t:ire .
(See NUltsES, Page IO)
Mo1M11r, Ju.,. 11, 1m ..... f
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Today, in California,
this nurse is re sponsible
for her actions even if
she followed doctors orden.
Diagnosed
refresher course for women who have
left the profession for awhile, perhaps to
raise a child,
UCI PROGRA~I
UC!, "'ith the help or an advisory Cilm·
mittee of nurses and nursing educators in
Orange County and Long Beach, I! cur·
rently in the planning stages for a con.
tinuing education program.
f\1rs. Naomi Payne. coordinator. said
they arc considering courses which deal
'''Ith death and dying, lntensJve care,
cardiac care, drug abuse, venereal
disease, mental health, leadership, eom-
munication and some specl(lc diseases.
Most schools of nuning are packed . At
California Stnte College at Long Beach, it
WM one o{ the Cirsl departments to close
ad n1isslons for this semest&-.
Men are' relurhing from Vietnam Nv·
Ing served as medical corpsmen and
wanting to become registered nurses.
Young high sc hool graduates are still Bl·
tracted lnto the c/\reer. And many people
wlth a bachelor '• dearee in another field,
as sociology or psychology, have beet
unable lo find the job they wanted and so
are also applying to nuraing BChools.
Many nurses, however, are unhappy
with the educational system.
''We've had • very frqmented edu-
ratlonal •)'Siem In Dlll'llng," explllned
Lila Maple!, whose informal ttUe with
the Regional Medical Program Is nunJng
coordinator.
NO SPECIALIZATION
Graduates from two-. three-. fou~ and
five-year programt au get the: sa me
license as a Registered Nut1e. Having
had no specialiJ.atlon, they each end up
doing the same thing.
If a student leaves school in the mlddlt
or the program, her time bu probebl1
betn wasted. Even 11 she should decide to
return to school, she would find that pro-
gram and requirements vary amc+a the
schools . ·!
Graduat~ of the two-a.nd-th~year
programs would also find ll diff.~t to
get a bachelors degree.
(S« GOAlll, Pare JI)
DAIL V PILOT
Bed la m's Reward a 'S leep er'
DEAi\ ANN LANDERS ' May I reply to
UW! woman who has no gunt bed and on--.
ly Joye seat. ln the Uvlng room to mate
sure nobody sleeps, overnight in bef"
home?
J mwt say the old sourpua1 .is mining
a lot. One ol the hawtest week.a of my
life was when I had fi,l:ht house gutrtl
ptus my own family of five. dent stated rather casualty, .. There art
72 kids in our clus and the ttachtt has: a
bard time controlling them."
Wake up, America! Where in the
blankety-blank-blank is your tu dollar
going? Why does a teacher have 12
student.s in her class? Twe!Ye--yu.r-<1lds
deserve a better deal than that.
want less money sprnt on the mUjlary ,
the space progranu, foreign ald and
beautification and more apeot on educa·
Uon for «r chlldren. Let them know that
if they doo't vote the way you want them
to, they won't get reel«ted. -MAD
DEAR MAD: Bnvt! R.lgltt oa! Cbetn!
'J'huW for wrlUDc!
From Page 9
' . .Goals .,
" J/a\ 1ng graduated from •
three-year school, It took Mra.
Maples an additional flv
years to obtain a master"'
degree.
''Basically we fee.I ell ~
1ne~s has to :stop, 1 j
J\l r~. ~lap!cs. an ectiv&t
n1embcr of the California
'Nurses Association, said. i.
. 1· I J The assoc1a 10n a v o r c
We slept oo the floor, on army cots and
Jn a hammock on the porch. We ate in
shifts and it was 8httr bedlam. But what
a wonderful time we had! It was a party,
around the clock , with everyone pitchin,g
in. The •e was filled wilh laughter.
There wasn't a single complaint.
That woma n \1dth no extra bed will
never ha\'e such wonderful fun -or such
memories. J 'II het her well organized liie
is deadly dull and I can imagine what her
friends and relalive:i think -Of her. -
OPEN-f!EARTED IN PLAINFIELD.
When the school referendum lhow1 up
on the ballot do you vote yes or do you
vote no and gripe about taxe.s? Has the
money already been appropriated and is
Jt being misused or diverted? Make it
your busines,, to find out.
DEAR ANN LANDEM: t·m a If..year·
old girl who doetn't know wtJat to do
about her seven-year-old lil!lter. There's
going to be a talent contest 90011 and she
want3 to be in it. 'lbil would be great if
she bad talent The poor kid thinks oho
can sing.
When I was in tlie fourth gra~ I ..., ......... ,.
legislation ~·hich w o u Id;
deve lop -a pattern all schools
1n the stale would adhere to. thought I could sing, too. I remember JANIS CARTER
DEAR OPEN: You maU it 1ouad u.y
-but not aJI gue1t1 can be put on the
floor, or In a hammock, or counted on to
pik'b Jn. I Uve childhood memories of
slttplng on the floor when ow-bouH wa1
filled with company and tt was great fun
-ror u11 kids. But It wall'. my deer mother
who did all the work.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: When I n:ad
that Jetter from the seventh grader who
complained lbeeause his teacher .ate pop--
corn while she talked over the amplifying
system (the crunclling drove the kids
crazy), I knew I had to write. The stu·
Sotne of our school buildings should be
condemned and rebuilt. Too many
claurooma have 20-year--old textbooks,
Inadequate supplies and old, beat-up
audio-visual sids.
Thousands o( teachers have been laid
off and are collecting unemployment
compensation or taking clerking or office
jobs. Wh y? Because the Boards of
Edu<:alion can't pay them? What goes on
in YOUR communily? Learn the facts.
Then complain to lhe mayor or the city
manager. the board of education and the
city council.
Next, Jet you r congressman and
senators in lVashington know that you
getting up in a school assembly and n:iak·
ing a big fool of my.self. J don 't want Jt to
happen to my sister.
She's been rehearsing for the past week
and Jt's pretty gross. Mom says to leave
her alone -that some people have to
learn t.be hard way. J hate to see her suf·
fer like I did. Please, Ann how can I help
her? - BIG SISTER
DEAR SIS: Leave her aJone. Some peo-
ple have to learn the hard way.
Don't flunk your chemistry test. Lo\'e
is more than one .set or glands calling to
another. lf you have trouble making a
distinction you need Ann's booklet. ''Love
or Sex and How to Tell the Difference."
Send a long, self-addressed. stamped
envelope with your request and 35 cents
in coin to the DAILY PILOT.
Fro m Pag e 9
• • .Nurses
Lagunans
Will Wed
From Page 9
e • New Duties •
September
Rites Set
.l\1r. and fi.lrs. S. f l ;111t•1 1
i\'llssion Viejo h<n t· :1111:11ur1• 1,d
the engagement (lf t h r 1 r
daughter, Ja1us C:ar\l'J" t~~
David Curtis Smith, son of \lr
and fi.trs. Curtis E. Sn11th of
lluntington Beach.
A Se.pt. 8 .,.,·edding is l.wH1f!
planned in the Los Angeles
The basic philosophy of thi~
p;.ittern, explained J\1iss Rees,
1;,ould be to "make it as feasi·
ble as possi ble for every
grnduatr to continue."
\\'1 th this "ladder" concept,
;"l person could go to school for
;i \l'ilr and be eligible for the
l1 !·i·n!>ed v1>eational nurse's
l··•t i\fter \~ork1ng a year or
"• :-Ill' l'ould easily return
I· :1 11 u I 11 •' r year lo t>e.
, ,, , ,.., rrg1s1rred nurs e,
~Ii· 11H ii'l 1tu1n ("On1inuc on in·
In ii 1,:n·hpl()rS progran1 and
1)11·11 ·1 rn:"lers if she ,.,.anted.
T!11• l1«11.·1·E'r, "·ould mean
:i m.'.lJ••r IJl't·rhaul of the cur-
rr11 t pni!!rJms.
Temple, Church or Jt•Suslp;,;-~-...;~-..;---..
Christ of Latter-day Saints. BEA UTY
The bride·to·be is a graduate I S
of ~1ission Viejo High School T p
by Ruth !ry 111!
The Eyes Ha ve It
l\1uch of the care, however,
could be done in a clinic or
even the home by the nurse In August Through a •·gradual evolu-a "bottomless pit." The
courses have to be changed
each quarter to include ne1v
techniques and findings. There
alse> is a waiting list -0! people
wishing to take the course.
and attended Sad d I eba ck
College. Her !iance is a
graduate of Marina High
School and attended Brigham
You ng University and Golden
At your ME•L£ NORMAN
COSMETIC STU DIO I" CMtti
Since leaving the White House, I .. uci John son Nu·
gent has t aken office in her own right as vice presi·
dent or Volunteers for Vision. who seek to discover
visual disadvantages in children. Here she sits in
as honorary chairman of the rllinois College of Op·
tometry's centennial celebration.
practitioner. l ion" throughout the country,
Sludies have sho'>"'fl that pa-coronary care grew into
tients actually prefer the care critical care.
of the nurse. Mrs. Popiel said Mr. and Mrs. Mark Dwyer OCMC opened its training
this is probably because the of J..aguna Beach have an-center under a grant from the
\\'est College.
M110, w• lllf1'• IO lftOl't'f MW
and Lr•tlth19 products! We 11ow
how• MIR.I.COL hi two stn.,
PLUS a brond MW 'YIM. lt'1
coll•d CR EAMY MIRA.COL.
palicnt feels the nurse is nounced the engagement of Orange County Heart Associa-Come h• and try th•"'·
"someone having the lime to their daughter, Diane Dwyer lion in 1965. Their program isl:r.:s~~:::~:;:S~~S~~S~~S~~S~:all With slimmer beach o11d pool take care of them.'' unique because it is supported
Anothe-r benefit of the pro-to William Holmes Murray, by the local essociation and all time hH•, who wonh. to worry "
gram, she noted, is that "the son of Mrs, Bert W. lien. their instructors are volun-Want To Solve Your Decorating P roblems? obout their hair. W• ho•• th.-
nurse going through this pro-drickson, Laguna Beach, and teers. N EED HELP? new CA.PLESS ELURA WIGS,
gram has far more job Sidney H. Murray, Palmetto, Nurses are eligible for the COME TO you c.011 .,.,. cook 11 tkl'I, fto
satisfaction than the nurse in interndllp program of 80 hours Maggi Cobb'i worrln about th• FRlllES·I
Your Horos cope
Li.bra Attracts a hospital doing as the doctor Fla. of clinical experience in the INTE RIOR DECO RATING Ir's "tor• for h youn•lf' Mo"·
said or fighting tht system." The couple plan an Aug. 12 intensive care, pediatric in-CLASSROOM ,JO!lta Flb~.
The shortage of doctors. wedding in St. Catherine's tensive care, cardiac care, 5 2·HOUR WEEKLY
economic preeures and in-Catholic Church, Laguna shock unit. burn unit. neonatal SESSIONS WE APPLY
INDIVIDUAL E't'ELASHlS
IY APPOINTMENT JUESDAY
JUNE 13
.By SYDNEY O~IARR
creased public knowledge and Beach. unit, respiratory unit end the $29 95
ti.lainlain wail·and·sce posture. expectancy have been cited as Miss Dwyer is a graduate of hermodialysis unit, after com-•
VIRGO (Aug. 2J·Sept. 22 1: helpin,ll: to bring about these pleting three 12-week courses. 1n1rt1e1i.cr.rv ,.,~.
h Laguna Beach High School, at-H •t I II th D•y or Evening Friends press for fa vors, c anges. osp1 a s a over e coun-
R•111•111l>.r w• oho carry
"FACE'UP"'
de c i .s i 0 0 5 , commitments. And. J\trs. Popiel said, "I'm tended San Diego St at e try send their nurses and doc· "'JJ'ltt.4. ~~ ~ 2'/~~ ~
J·'inancia/ setup is not stable. sure the women·s liberation University and will graduate tors to the center for the ad-(/(J ..----,/_ MERL[ NORMAN
Know it and base actions ac-has helped WI a lot." this month from the Unlverlll· dltional training· J\1r.s.
cordingly. Promises are made She believes it has In-ty of California, Riverside. Z!lchochesaid probablya cou-420 -Jlst St.
)
I
Libra of.Jen surprises by
being a fighter as well as a
lover. The Libra na!ive seek:s
balance. justice, peace, but
seems always to be involved in
cases which require a fighting
:spirit. Libra is physically at·
lracted to Aquarius, makl's
money with Scorpio, travels
with Gemini, can n1arry Aries,
exchanges views with Sagit·
tarius, gets a career boost
with Cancer. Some famous
persons born under J.,ibra in-
clude Brigitte Bardot. Ed
Sullivan, GeorJ,?e C. Scott and
Barbara \\'alters.
in haste. KE'y is to be responsi-rluenced nurses to stand up pie thoosand have gone Ne wport Beach PHONE 673 -J 722 COSMETIC STUDIO ble, cautious and conservative. and say, ".Yes, I can do these Murray, a Laguna H 1 g h through the program already. Newport l ••ch l
thing!.'' graduatt, attend! UCR. Even so, 8he de3Crlbed it as (on Lido Penlniul•) 271 f . 17tft St., C01to M,.. • l~IBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 22 ): Make Reierv.a tions Now -Classes are Limited ~
Career. ambitions get a boost. r=================================~~~§:'.~§~~§~~§~~§~~~~~g~~==··:':••:•:•M:::•:":·:":':'=:;~
ARIES (f\1arch 21·April 19):
\\'hat was settled 110\~' is ruf·
fied . What ·was de!ern1ined,
now is subject to chanf::l'.
Family members disagrrl'.
Your best course no\11 i<: nne
""'hieh fe at tires flexibility.
J~augh al .\'OUT O\V!l foi bJrs.
TAURUS (April 20·J\lay 20 \:
Avoid '"speeding ·• in !raffir.
Tak(' special care <lround
machinerv. Sp('eial prec.·:1111ion
now could ~;:ivc liTnc. n1onry.
(;uord hl'nlth ;:incl slef'r <·lr:ir
of h.'.lltlrs \1·1 th rlt!1Jd1 hors,
relaiives. Saginarian is 111-
\"0l\"ed.
GEMINI IJ\iay 21-Junr 20~:
Conser\•e 3SSC'!S Be
analytical Take noth1ni:r for
granted. f'ind reasons ""•hr "
VirgG individual could play
kev role. One 11•ho has ch;ingc
of .heart actually is rloing you
n favor. Kno11• it and rcspon<I
accord ingly.
CANCf~H ( Junr 21 . .Julv 221:
You receive publicity which
can he lransfo nned in to solid
recogni tion. Aries is very
much in picture. One who ap-
pears to oppose you is merely
testing, bluffing.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21)'
New attitude is necessary in
dealing \t:ith those at a
distancr. Be sure of legal
rights. Get green light fron1
~~:::::..~::::::::::=:::::::::::::.;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::~~=::::::::::::::::;::;::x:::m:;.;.;=:=.::::;:;=.::t.:¥:
!) DAILY 10·10, SUN. 10.7 f
i'.i MON.-TUES.·WED. r
@: ONLY! ~ •... . . .:;zz:::;;~~w..,;xx-;:::::-":=.:~.~I~~~~-
one\vhopullsfinancial DllUBIE DISl:llU IS strings. J\lessagc \\"ill be •
SAGTTIARJUS tNov. 22-
~. 21 ) · Frlenrl.~ ;ind n1oncy
~.:~ii~:dne!::' is in picluce. · ~~
n1ay not niix. l-1akc up your •-------------------------------------.:------------------------------..1 own rn1nd -<ind take l!n1e in t1 '
thung i!. Aquarian is in pir· ~ ~
tur('. Accent is on financi<it I r ~11
11rospccls. policie:-;, lrgacie.s. ~. t
llun t'h pay!-1 dividend s. ~i f'
Su q>nsr i.~ fr:i!ur1•d. k I
C:\PR lCOR N !Ore. 22·.lan
J!l 1 Lir !0\1. Play \1·aiting ~
gan1c. \\'£'Iler of confusion j,
c!omin<i les. Put puzzle pieces l o~ethcr. Leave details to ~II
others. Tnk<' ovf'rall \•iew. · • 11 A'fale, parlner ma.v act in
pugnacious manner. Hold your •/
fire. Don 'I compou{Ld error.
,
1
I '
r ..
Tlome. fa mily relationships -
these tend lo d o 1n i n a tr .
Discussion concerning resi·
dencc is high li1;:ht ed. Taurus
and Libra could p!ny 11romin-
ent rolls. Be ready for chang-
es. 1\·lainlain sen.~e of hun1or.
AQ UARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
181: \Vhat you "'ant is not im-
1ncdiatrly available. lfo\\'ever.
vou need not sett le for second
hPst. Steady pace \\"ins \\'dY
;ind gains objective. Another
"Aquarian is in picture. \\lork
procedures are subject lo
,, • • ' . ,
LEO !.July 2.lAug . 22 1:
Nothing is sci. cslabli ~hl'cl or
fixed . Necessary no1v for you
1o be uwarr. flexible ~ud \1•111·
ing to cha nge . Piscr!I is in plr·
lure. l\'hat occur~ is apt to
happen behind the scenes.
change.
PISCES (Feb~ 19-March 20) • i1
nothing oceurs )Jalfway -all ~
lhe wav or nothing. Applle~ I I
1?specially to e 111 o t i o n ;i I
rC'SJXlnSeS. Don •t play ~amcs.
Relations ,.,.ilh opposite sex
are intensified. Be anrilytirnl. "
lJon't rush. (:ive logic equr1! "1
linie v.'ith implse.
Become a Beaut ician No w
and SAYE •••
with our
JUNE ENROLLMENT
Sl'ECIAL OFPER
15°/o OFF
ENROLLM&NT COST
DURING MONTH
OF JUNE
PHONE 646-9311 e 646-2919
LADIES
BULKY KNIT SWEATERS
REG . 4.18·
SALE
3&&
Size S.M·L. Kmart's finest quality bulky knit sweat·
ers. Some bolled , others with pockets. Asst. colors.
LADIES
POLYESTER
PANTS
REG. 7.96
SALE
5ss
Summer fashion polyester flared
legs pants. Many colors and
styles lo choose from .
>
LADIES
CULLOTIES AND
SHIFTS
REG. l.ll-l.57
SALE
211
Be cool In Kmart fashion cullotle
dresses and shifts. 100% wash-
able prints, perma·press. Size 10
lhru 18.
GIRL'S
SHORT SETS
I
REG . l.96
SALE 300
Girls s hort sets in asst. styles
colors and materials just Jn ume
for easy summer wearing. SI~'-6x, 7 thru 14.
L1d e1 Body Shirts
Rog. l .96 .. , ....... Sale $3.00
'
' '
'
;
I
.'
1
'
)
GIRARDS COLLEGE OF BEAUTY COST A ME SA HUNTING T 0 N BE A CH , fhMH ttte Mllt4 'nlfftrel
• .
:
'
14! E. 19TH ST. • COSTA M ESA 2200 HARIOR ILVD. (Cor11er of Wiison) 19101 MAGNOLIA !Corner of Gorflelcll ' ~~~~~~~~~~·(b="4=1._,...__,......,.,...o::m: __ ._. ____ .... __ ,,,.,.. .... __. ............... -...._..,..._ ____ __,._,....___.j
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r.1ondat. Junr 12, 1972
-·
MRS . NETRO MRS. HAYES MRS. NANKIN MRS . ARLEDGE MRS. DIEHL MRS. JENSEN MRS, CARRICO MRS . REEHL
Wedding Marches Playing for June Brides
NETRO-WHARTON
Our [...;1d_v QucC'n ul Ani.:cls
Catholic Cl1u rch, N t' \V JJ or t
Bt'ach was t he .set ting for the
\vedding linking Ann Christine
\Vharton of Ne\.l'port Ueach
and Ens. Willi.1111 Jtoberl
Netro of Canton. Oh io.
'l'he Rev. \~'il!ia1n PO\\'ers
directed the vo1~· exchange for
the daughter of Mr . and ~lrs.
.Ja n1e.s Frank \Vharton of
!\e1vport Beach and the son of
~Ir. and lVlrs . Robert Joseph
Netro of Canton.
Mrs. Thomas Kaufman \~:as
the matron of honor :
bridesmaids were the ?o.1isscs
Regina Klein, Robert Gwillim.
Susa n Deaver and EI J en
Michaels. Best man 11·as t-.1ark
Netro, and ushers were Jef-
frey \Vharton, llichard Davis,
Ali Moeu.I and Jay O'Hare.
The bride is a graduate of
Corona de! Mar Hig h School
and attended the University of
OTERY
A111 STEP -5EllNA1100
-KIMEL EDWARDS
-GER5ERICH -
f'F FL YE llS -U.S. KEOS
Dion<~ Wfar br Oan.~111
".ft!>f1lo o .. nc~ Shon eorr.ctln h••• !or Chlldtfll
Southern California. Jler hus·
band is a grad uate of fo.1on·
lerey Jligh School and USC
\l'h£>rc he was a rnernber of
Chl Ph i, Phi Beta Kappa and a
graduate of NROTC.
HA YES,CA TES
j\larried in SL Andrev."s
Presbyterian Church, Ney,·port
Brath were Dinah Cates and
Jl1chard Hayes, both of Corona
dcl ti.1ar.
'fhe Rev. Dr. Char le s
Dierenfield performed the
rites for the daughter of Opie
Cates of Moffett, Okla. and the
late ~!rs. Cates and the son of
t-.1r. and Mrs. Jess Jlayes of
Selrna.
i\.latron of honor was fl lrs.
Gerald So re n s en . and
bridesmaids 1verc flI r s .
l·/01vard Spradlin and fll iss
Denise Jjndsey. Harold Ha yes
se rved as best man and ushers
'"'ere Ken D-Oyle, Spradlin,
Gerald Sorensen and Roy Mor·
ris. FJ0111er girl was Lisa
SGrensen and ring bearer \11<1s
Steven Spradlin. . .
Following a H a "' a 1 1 an
llAUTIFUL SOfT Ll•S
Th"""'h .,..ci.I I .. •••Int m1tho'
l ~tN., .. 6 Wffktl -IU.
7 NATIONS COIFFURES
225 L 17th St. I 300 Wn l Coastv H~m 'lew1><1•! Beac~
Cost• Mno -541·2771 '42·0144 !.....;.;;..;.....;.... __ ._J
honeymoon. Lhe m.'"-'lvweds
1vill reside in Corona del -Mar.
1'hc bride attended Orange
Coast College .and Oklaho1na
Sta te University. Her husband
is a graduate of Fresno Stale
Universi ty \\•here he affiliated
\\•ith Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
NAN KIN-SAWYER
Sandra Joan Sawyer and Dr.
S. J . Nankin, both of Newport
Beach "'ere married in Throop
1'.1ernorlal Church, Pasadena
with the Re v, Dr. Hannon
Cehr officiating .
Their parents are Mrs. Jess
Lee of Laguna Beach and Mr.
and A-1rs . Jack Nankin o! New
llaven, Conn.
The bride earned a BS at
Frcsoo State University \\'here
she pledged Kappa Alpha
1'he l.J and was president of the
J .. ittle Sisters of Minerva.
Her husband received his
BA Crom Yale University and
his MD from Tufts University.
!·le "'as a lieutenant com-
mander in the Navy and now
is a resident ph ysician in
opthalmology at the Orange
County Medical Center.
. The new!y"•eds "'iii reside
111 Villa Park.
ARLEDGE-NELSON
Keith Arledge c I a J med
Deborah Nelson as his bride
during ceremonies perfonned
by the Rev. Harold I·!. Coble in
th e First Baptisl Church of
!11ichvay Clty.
The bride. daughter or J\.1r.
and Mrs. Clarence Nelson of
Fountain Valley, was attended
by the Misses Vicky Net.son,
maid or hooor; Connie Arledge
and Michele Slauffer,
Bolh the bride ;1 n cJ
br idegroom .are grodu ah•s 1)r
fountain Valley lfigh School.
Sl1e also is a graduate of tnP
Southern California College of
t.1edital and Dental Assista11t s
and he is a senior at .the
Oklahoma Baptist University
1vhere he ls affiliated Y.'ith
Kappa Kappa Phi.
DIEHL-KINZER
Donna Arleen Kinzer and
Elmer Carl Diehl exchanged
vows before the Rev. \Vilbur
E. Allen in the Lutheran
Church of the Master, Corona
del Mar.
The bride is the daughter or
Mr. and Mrs. Henry George
Kinzer of Santa Ana and her
hu9band is the son of ?o.1rs.
Cecelia Diehl of Ki ngsburg.
r-..frs. Robe rt Babson \Yas the
matron of honor, and
bridesmaids were Miss JoAnn
Egan, Miss Debra Hanson and
Mrs. Robert Fulcher. Best
rnan was Robert C!ery and
ushers were Barry Kinzer.
Mel ~Territt and Fulcher.
1'he bride is a graduate of
Corona de! Mar •ligh School. a
beauty college and t he
California Profes s i o n a I
Medical College. Her husband
was educated in Warren. Ohio
and attended ReedJey College.
He ~rved in the Navy . The
newlyweds "'ill reside in Santa
Ana .
JENSEN-STROMBERG
Santa ~!oniea will be the
home of Peter Jensen and his
bride, lhe former Gay I e
Stromberg who were married
in SL Michael'.s and All Angels
Church, Corona del .\lilr. Th:"!
Hev . Dal'id Crump off iciated.
P<1rents of the 11e1vl y\ved s
arC' i\1r. ;ind i\1rs. C. i\1.
St romberg Jr. of Ne1\'port
Beach and Dr. and ~·trs.
<.:hris ten Jensen of r~argo,
N.D.
Anending the bride 11·ere the
r-.Jisses i\largaret L o r e n z ,
Lanette Blatk nnd Cheryl
Rau th. and ser\'ing l h e
bride groom "'ere Eric Jensen,
Jim Paris and Trevor Black.
The bride is a graduate of
the Queen o! Angels School of
Nursing. Her husband earned
a BA in English at Dartmouth
College and an MFA from
UCLA.
CARRICO-KANEUBBE
1~etty Kaneubbe became the
bride of David L. Carrico dur·
Ing ceren1onits performed by
her un cle, the Rev. Vietor
Knneubbc of Farmington,
N.M. in the University Baptist
c·hurch, Costa Mesa.
Parents or the bridal couple
are f.1r. and fl.lrs. S. L.
Kaneu bbc and the Rev . and
~!rs . \Vi\lis Carrico, all of
Costa l\1esa.
Attending the bride \\'Cre
Miss Jeri Davis and . the
Mmes. Ronald Tibbitt s ,
Ronald Adams and Larry
Turner. Dan Carrico was the
best man ; ushers were Tim
Ca rrico. r.-lark Swenson and
Larry Turner, and ring bearer
\\'as Mark Carrico.
The bride is a gadu ate o!
Costa Mesa High School. Her
husband is a graduate of the
Christian Academy (lf Japan
and :1lso nllended lJ i n l a
College . The y \\ill re side 111
Cost11 ~·lesa.
REEHL-SEARS
SL Joachin1's C ;it h o I i 1:
Church , Costa ~1 cs:t "'as !hC'
setting !or the nuptials l1nk111!-(
Lynn l\1arie Sears and l\11eh;!t·l
lt Reeh!.
The Rev. Donald l\rehs
directed the vow exchang1· !or
the daughter of 1\-lr. :ind \Ir.,
l~obert C. Sears of Ne" 1>0r1
Beach and the :-;on of i\1 r.~.
G"'endolyn Reeh! of Santa A11a
and the late l\1 r. Cecil Rech!.
l\1aid of honor \\•as i\liss
Leigh Sears and bridesmaids
were the l\1isses C i n t.l c
Dolphin, Sandy Holstein and
Carol Caldwell. Stephen Hayes
was the best mon and ushers
were Tom Schauppner. Dennis
Stephenson. Dustin Elford and
Mark Sears.
· 1'he bride is a graduate of
Corona del Mar liigh School
an d th e Californ i;i
Professional College of l)l'n1al
altt'nda nl. <Hid brrdc:i11111HI'
11cr l· ,\lar~r Srn1lh, l':itt i
/1n1'.lock an<t Jean l t1~gs. 11('.'1
111:111 11";1., L:11"1'\" S1 1111 h .i1:d
ushrrs 11·f'rc Lh.u1 , (,1 r1: .11Hi
!'at S1n1th.
The bride is a ~radui-itc of
1iosc1nr:id High Sctmol and
lier husband is a gradu;l\e 11f
Nt'" port I larb1.lr High S1·h1M1I
They \1 ill rrs1de 1n Cost:i
'.\lt·:-.i
STUBBS-OTIS
l"l'ndi Ous :ind Paul S.
Stubbs wer1· n1arried during
l'erernonies conducted on the
UCI tampus. Their parents
are :'-.1r . and ?-.1rs. Charlts K.
Otis of Hu n!ington Beat h .:ind
l\lr. and ~1rs. Kenneth I.
Stubbs of Sierra '.\ladrc.
l\\iss Kell y Ol is 1\•:ts n1aid of
honor, and bridesmaids "'ere
r-.1rs. Ja1nes For ney, ?o.1 lss
Ct1rol Oti~ and Miss Charle sie
Bcsorl'. Forney \\'as the best
n1a11, and usher.<; \\•ere Ed
Anha l and i\l t1n Stu bb.{
The bride Jth:ndl·d !11';.111..;r
Coast ;ind t:l!ldL'll \\'u~L 1. .. 1.
lt•ges. <111d hL·r !111 ... 1;;111.! ·1
graduate of i'asadc1111 ~, 1·
Col legf'. alt('11<l s l.t ·1 'J ht'
'"ill residr in l'o.'il:1 \lc:-.a
DAL Y-STRAUBEL
P.larriagt• \u1rs \\t're ('\
i·han!!ed h\' \"1,·tt111,1 \":i'1
[)ytkt• St rauh1.•I :1rKI Lrf:r,u1t.l
1\r1hur IJa l,\ 111 l::n1ernhl Ll:iy.
'l'he cerr111011y "as 1·1J1l·
ducted by thr llev. J)r. Phil lfl
Gregory. llonor attendan1~
were r-.1rs. \Varren Emory Ten
Eyck and Theodore Crane.
The bride. formerly "r
Pasadena, was g rad u a t "d
f1'0m the \Vest ridge School
there and the Katherine Gibbs
School. Boston .
~!er husband, son of Mrs.
LeC:rand Daly and the lalc
Mr. Daly, graduated rron1
Vermont Ar;1dCmy and Stan-
ford University.
Assistants. Her husband alsoJ;::========-=========--=---'---'"-', is a graduate of CdMJI S :ind
nov.' is studying at California
State University at Long
Beach. .
SMITH-BARNARD
Jl.1esa Verde U n 11 e cl
l\'lethodist Church, Cos ta r.·1t.·sa
was the setting for the n1ar·
riage of Joan Barnard and
George Smith. The Jlev
Lothair Green oHiciated.
Parents of the bridal couple
arc fl1r. and r-.1rs. Thomas
Barnard and Mrs. Eve lyn
Smith, all of Costa Mesa.
Beth Sanford was the honor
~,iiG-:i:
SHOES
LITTLE·
SHOES
COMrLETE
SH OE & LUGGAGE
REPA IR ..,
RESTYLING ..
Robinson 's Shoe Repd ir
MANNING'S
COLLECTORS SHOP
Newport & Costa M111
673-0471
AUTHENTIQUES
Newport & Cost• Mesa
bridesmaids, and Patric i al------------------------------------'======================= Arledge, flower girl.
Hel,,., Lo~e\I
M111l11urt•. doll1
Jtwtl•V lo Sil v•r
"~ .... t r.:1 Ari IOCI
Ari Lovf~!
511llgf• & 11uckl..,
Cl~<I W•r. Wt lla
Fftr!IO Sturt. "le .. , , .
•r>d Htlt~ toDt
67J..o471
Pam just rolled in with
•nother van choc k full of
Americana from the Illi-
nois River Val11y. Como
buy •ncl see!
Her husband is the son of
J\.Ir. and Mrs. Chesler Arledge
ot Fountain Vall ey. Stanley
Arledge was the best man ;
Duane Diffic. Roger Ram·
melfanger and Larry \Valker,
ushers, and Kenneth Mount,
ring bearer.
SUMMER COTTONS
all machin<' \1·ru;hnblf'
Alsorted widths Jb" to '45" wido
\•alues from $1.19
to ~1 .39-Savc up
to Slc a yd.
HOMESPUN
SPORTSWEAR FABRIC
36" TERRY CLOTH SOLIDS
heavy quality, thir..ty t.'Ol long
Va lu es to $1.3 9 ycl . Savo o40C yd.
1;ood colors
100% cotlon
mach. ,\·ash
"BREEZEWAY" SPORT PRINTS
Reg. $1.69 yd. Sove 41 o yd.
rayon/silk
44"/45" wide ZI
y•.
S.•" c.-t ,. ... -l ri•tol •• s." c;,,, Fwy. H..., Pkn -17th et 1,1,tol
Cntti M .. -141-1116 s-t. AM -14J-llll
~Ir M .. I -0Ta119tHrorpo •11crl H•rbor lnM PM COtlltW -Lt Poli.it •t Slt11lo11
hllem• -11'-JJJ4 ..... rm -UMIJI
G_.. G,...,._ 12111 l roo •:luntt lrt0J1I to Ve11'1I -110.1141
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7 fashion island, newport center 644-5070
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J% DAILY PJLol
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
I cmr SLEEP NIGHTS
J .. A .,
MUTI AND JEFF
MUTT, MIC LSW, OllR..
CHINESE LAUNDRYMAN
GAVE ME MIS PARROT! HE
COMES l='ROM CHINA. AND
'SPEAKS CHINESE-
FIGMENTS
A i"~\OfNT OI"
lvOI t.4/'llOlll
i)..WIO$VlfW,
~1,1,ll!O C>IW1'o.
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DO 'iOll NII! 1'0
llE JI. S'IOOI. PIGEOll ?'
~,~ITWU. I R.o~<l MAI""' -"""" .... -.
By Al Smith
•
«E
~AID,
"NO
C~1NESE
COOKIES!"
By Dale Hale
GASOLINE ALLEY
SALLY BANANAS
al'leNTiON.WRLO
aNDQl/. You Fat.KS
OUT -THeRe!!
GORDO
MOON MULLINS .--------7-" 1>oesN'T
'THEIR PURSUIT
GET Mo~oro...ious,
MUCCIN;:5_:'>::;:;~:.)~
•
LeT'S FACE,
IT, Ff:t.L.AS··
SEX IS
HERE" TO
STAY!
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,, ·• < ~ .f ~ I
i(Af I
' lJ
. By Gus Arriola
By Ferd Jahnsen
' ·~
;;f\,,_.../!:s---:1
Cl-IE"CK
LIORARY
BOOKS IN HERE
NANCY
WEIG~T.
AME> ' '
FORTUNE
"'
YOU ARE
GOING TO
GROW TALLER
VERY SOON
I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by ~ A. POWER)
ACROSS
l Austrian -
S-H•I
9 lti~ts 111 mce
1~ Encoi.ntrr by
tli~•
15 Ont In d~bl
l• G.irdtn .,,_,
17 Lfr19trlt
19 Placr Jn row: Vu.
20 Flat
21 C1llrd on
i.ir~ptttrdly:
'"""' Z3 Souidtd.
"'" 25 Trldrs
lb L!9hl~lgh!
mrlal : Abbr .
21 Fl owrr
lr•tll'rs
32 Mtmbfl" of
boy's group
With llvr llll!'llt
~s: 2words
l7 llloltlff of
·~ ... JI In pos.uss lon
" ,,,_
.Cl Wr1rlrlg
lpplttl
42 Modify
45 lrllrl1 or
n"'5 s!arlrs
48 Lower In
quality
50 Pltcl!tr
51 Split bflwttfl
two parts
S.t TtUln
58 Rrtl ntale
doc:llllll!nt:
2 wcwds
62 Warn
t.3 G1rclan
lhratrr
b4 Flying
machlrit: Var.
"6 Smallest In
magnitude
67 Boil
6 B B I lH' "PfllC II
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fl9~r
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DOWN
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direction
3 8fcyclr part
4 ConSIStlll!iJ of
Slits 5 Cut d1M11
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ld111lrttlol'I
7 Sign of ""'°" B "Wrn -"
9 Hit With h.,d
10 Piano's
relative
11 Barrlfl
12 Sf"Ofl'-A...,
13 Actress
Ama -
18 Spools for
winding taPt"
22 SemlllQuid
'"" 24 Tibuhr~
27 A ltlosl'"'
29 Fr«! tilt tllty JO l lld .,i111aJ's
h-
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sliiJt
32 F1fse
l3 Hillra!ltt
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lh0Ylt$
35 E•Jy
il'lhabilant of
Colorldo
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' 40 Stock 111arkrl
li!llll'rS
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all s!drs
44 Caisrs to abatr
46 ~rm<Vlzr i11
conclsr lorm
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lraHlng a l!nr
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acllvist
52 Largr ".1"'11""
llJOllS 111eaJ
53 Pw ol J.1 w
SS Avalllblt ror
s!'tVlcr
56 Ir. Kovacs
57 l ets rt stW
.58 bpmsrd
•Ith words
.5' Conctptlori
&O Rip
61 Three: Grrman
65 Admit
by Ernie Bus/immer AN IMAL CRACKERS ...----------, _____ ._____ ff)
'· '{,,[) ·· .. * .... ' . * *-....'.//
PEANUTS
JUDGE PARKER
I AM
APPALLED
'TH.tr 400
\IJCO.D A'SK
ME THA'T'/
\
By Charles M. Schulz
By Harold Le DoUJC
I DON'T KNOW
WHAT YOU MEAN
BY REALISM IN
ACTING, MR.
8 0 RGSON!
WE'RE WATC.HING A MOVIE,
BE.VE.RL'i ! THE ACTORS AND
ACT RESSES WERE GIVEN
SCRIPTS! THE SCRIPTS TOLD
THEM EXAClY WHAl lHEY
WER~ SUPPOSED TO DO
ANO SAY! DO 'IOU
UNDERSTAND THAT?
ALL RIGHT ... NOW SUPPOSE WE
DIDN'T HAVE A SCRIPT AND I
SAID TO YOU. 'GO OVER TO THE
M .A.N SEATED IN THE NEXT
CAR, THROW YOUR ARMS
AROUND HIM AN D KISS HIM,
TELL HIM SOMETHING •••
AN'YTHING' •••. r:8'""-;:~
'·
MISS PEACH
.
'
(.£Ll'f Scl#OOL
PfiOILt'~
CL.INI<._
Hitt C:1f<iS
' w1TH PRoBtffl!S l "''r H Boyf
: 2::~ii~'ll~~~>-=~
PERKINS
MY 80YF-'1END A'l.WAYS
SAYS DUM& THINGS, AND
'l Ol'TEN Fl~D M~ELF
THCIN&,M/M·TO S(<UT uP.
'l KNOW ' /TIS-"UPE AND :t: HATE Nl'ISEL.F F'6tt 1T:
.\VMAT S/.IQJU:> :t: 007
'
FOi( THIS 'ANSWEJ( TO
,-MAT QU!i.!ITION, W!! 1llitN ,.o ou" i:es1DENT BOY,
WHO I~ e1trei;t A&L.E TO
ANSWiJ( i'.T' THAN,,_....-,_-
Wi G>r1(L.S .•
By Mel
~ y
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e j~
f
0;,0 '0 jf
m
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By Roger Bollen
ro1 WHO ARE. Yoo
GOliJG ro voreo.FOR?
THE GIRLS
"But don '& you think lt'1 loo soon l.o remove our glrdl~
U we eel that wild at the start of ov vacation, what wm
we be like at l\.tartha's Vineyard?''
DENNIS THE MENACE
l'""':"n"---::
'SURE , Wf GOT A Wi\SllElt 1J llO'liE .
1\1/T MY M'.:111 ON\ l)tK Wlnl IT •
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TONIGHT'S
TV IIlGHLlGIITS
" ABC 0 8~00 -"Hollywood Dream Factory . .,
All_ about the Hollywood that used to be -set
against the sound of the auctioneer's gavet as it il falls over the unused trappinRS of Hollywood's
most exotic era.
t . N~C 0 8:3~"Th~ Six Wives of J.lenry VIII.0
tJ Tbts highly .aC1::la!~ed six-part series is repeated by ~ KNB C. To~1ght , . Catherine of Aragon" with Ann-
ette Cr osbie. Keith Michell won an Emmy for his
J portrayal -of JGng Henry.
. K~ET ED 8:00 -"Peter Grimes." Benjamin
1 Britton s modern opera classic of a fi shennan ~ doomed by pride and ambition.
II . . CBS 11 10:00-Sonny and Cher. George Burns
1, J~1ns the J:Wnos for an hour of fun, along with
singer David Clayton-Thomas.
KHJ 0 11:00 -"Violet Road.'' Brian Keith
and Dick Foran star in this 1958 drama.
•
Monday
Eve ning
JU NE 12
';00 @ tlir Hews Je1fY Dunphy
(:fl BIU HuddJ Reper!
Q @) ID M1jor le11ue B1stb1rr1 (conl'd from Sf>M) Dt1ro1t T11er1 a1
•1innt,0!1 l>111ns.
0 Tht Bil Y1!le1
0 Mews Benli. Sthubtck
O (j) Wild Wild West m Tb• fllnbtonu m 01nicl Boon•
(I.,) Mfl ~IJhCMJst ol the 30'1
t11l HodrrPldgt Lodi•
@II HoUcltre J(
Ot M1rbtny RFD
a:J Pt111unt1 Ustrd Ale~ Jacinto
CD N1w1 Jim Hawt tio1nt
(il Tllr• Stoottt
1:30 D MIWll: (C) (tO) "A Shllfr In
T•rnr" (mys) '66 -John Neville,
Donald Houston,· Jahn Fr1ser. An·
lllon7 Q111yle. When Jtdl !he Ripper
t1.1rorilt1 the Wllile-cl\lpel 11e1 ol
London, Sherlock Holmes and Dr
Watson 11e crlltd upon lo sol~e !hr
use.
:Tl CIS News Walter Cronk1l1 m The flyin1 N1111
ED Jore• CMn Coob ''[u RollsM
~CrMll .km
tI:) Pltf'I• hlkill
(f) HuCsMp Etllot Mintz
Keith Mithell, 1n £mmy fDI' his ptr•
lormance 11 Kina Henry. Ctch p!aJ
will locus on one of HtnfY Vlll's
1<w1ves 11 the central ti111re. Toni1hl's
seamefll has Kin t Henry m111yinr
C1lhe11M of Ar11on when ht 1s-
~11mts the thro1111 at !ht 11e ol 18..
Their 18 ye1rs of marriage ire fol·
lowed in this 90 minu1e prestnl•·
lion. o\nnellt C1osbit pla~ Catherin•
o1 o\ragon. m Merv C1ilfin Show m Molie: "Um brtl11s 11 Chtf•
bG11r1"
9:00 0 (fJ Htll'S l11cy {R) Rohtrt Cum.
mini! 1uests rs 1 daulina: and
charmina: but unprincipled wolf who
1ims lo 1dd Lucy to his !isl ot con·
(!uests.
6 forum loxint fll (I) Ci) a) ABC MolKlry MD'lie:
(2hr) "C11r11 ti tllll fir~ (hor) '65-
81i1n Donle'f1, Carole Cr1y, Ceor11t
Biker, Mleh1el Grah1m . A thillin1
!ala of weird Wtntific ftPtriments
de1lin1 with teleporttlion tnd !ht
fourth dimension ,
Ml Mcmt: (Cl (211r) '1oy firer"
(com) '56-h:lf Chandler, L1r<11nt
Drye, nm Howy, m Dn1net . al Do-Re-Mi
~The Yir&ini111
C!)Kml•
!:JO O 00 Doris Dir (R) 0ofls ucitecll1
org_1nizts 1 wrpr ist b1by 1howe1 to1
An&ie, not 1tili1ing th1t Maie 1•
e1pectin11 litte1 cl pup~ tor hei SL
1:00 fl CIS Nf'n W1lle1 Cron~ite Bern1111l 1tld Mii a t-~,. nf he1 own.
fl) ABC Nm Smith, Re1!.0nfl fJ IE N•• O Movie: (2hr) "lnlent ft Kill• €I'l Afttl\u111
(dra) '59 -R1ch1rd Todd, Bets~ ffi Rldn& FrM tll1l.l)'wttcl PHk
Dr1ke, Warren Stevens. lied1ert tom. IO:OD fJ CIJ Sonnf 1111! Chtt COllllllJ
11) Tnftll tr f:outqll!nct1 Hovr (RI "°'le Burn! ind D1V1d
([) Dra1111t Cl1yton-Thorn1s 1uert.
0 Wlltl'1 Mr U111? 0 I lflC!A I Which War. Americ1?
WI Love LLIC)' (Rl The 1111 Whitney Youn1 Jr. is !ht
(9 I Dre111 ol Minnie locus ol lhis film th1t de1ls wHh the
£D H1th1ro1• civil rights leader's i<lt1s on racial
@II Una Plt11rla 111 ti Camint p1ejudiu , poverty, the overall cues·
Ci9' Fil•: "Tiiis WollUIR h O•nru-tio11 of civil wrong i nd what each of
oin" us must do to htlp steer the ri&ht
a!) Rtw. RIJ l"iu1r10 course fol America.
Om Nm 7:30 fl SUnd Up t nd CMe1 Delli Rte st fJ Couftdl Dtblll Jae~ Roui~e
1uesls. rn Tt Ttll tlM Trvlll m Sll1ri "Adwlltort ~-1 Oru11 ol Jt1nMI m 1tf11C1H1 "'11"'* e uuwo11 $ Mllflt: C1tl'1 ·A aen m Lt LlyMd• • .. , ... ,
101 Muro" (dra) '45--Jehn Hodlak, 10:30 0 C~ PW.u'1 Ttlk·bcli
Gent Tit1ncy, Wi11i1m Btnd11. CD 1111 ~ Si9 m Ho1111'1 Hero.1 011 MasterpllCt ~· .. m (J) Ora[Mt ED Fl111 04Juet Man of Arin (R)
l'ls1 In tht Spotllthl A 1934 documentary b~ Robtr1 n1.
£ID Cit)'w1tclMn A visit to the city ht rt, about • small fi~1n1 isl1nd off
run F1irl1J Senior Citizens Cenltr Ifi e CNS! of Ireland.
CiE> Mfr"lltt V1\de1 SllOW . fl) l• Srt111it1
ffi llldr 500 Hli11U1ht1 ~ M!wit: (C) "'The lot10111 of tht
ffi Movit: "11'1 Lol't 1'111 After" lottle .
(com) '37 -lnlie Howa rd, Bette ffi Cone111dl Culpabll
Davis, OJivl1 D1 H1~1ll1nd. 11:00 0 00 @II Mtw1 O ®l m Me..n
1:00 O CIJ CwnH11okt '1he rloosf ' {R) O Cood News Demoi Sh~k:· . .:n
l :SO
Ch111dtr 1cto1 Tom S~enitt plays• C!J M1rsti1I Dillo11
man who return! to Dodge City after 0 ffi (!) News
ll )'firs to sttllt 1 score and takt O Movit: "'f10lent Ro.!" (dra) '~
his ven11t1nce. -Bfi1n Keith. Dick Foran.
0 ®I £0 Nn1 m Truth tr Con1tq11tnc .. 0 (I) [!J Ci) Monday Mith! Spt· (!) Ol'tid F"st Siio•
cill "Hol!rwood Drttm F1ctory" (RJ (ijl a.' lut
Pro111m 1bout lht Holl,wood th11 (f) Huibhop {R)
used ll ll~l .•11lnst !ht _sound 11:30 B 00 CBS Lall Movit : (C} "I lovt
ol ll)t 1ud1<1n1er s 11v1I 1s 11 l1l!s Mtlvi•• (mus) '53--0onald O'C<ln·
over lh1 untrWd tnppi np of Holl1· "°' Debbie Reyl'IOlds
wood's most tlollc era. o ' ~ID Jitlrllnt C,flOfl Gtorrt m Tht Math.,..111·1.n Carlin, David Cassidy, S1r1 V1u1tlln
Q) Plfl'I lib• ~ l ll!SI. fD (I)} Sptdal ti tilt Wet• Ptle1 0 llobtrt K. 0omt11 Show Otwtd
C1i~11" (21/ztlf) (II) Bc~j1ml11 ~Ill Hirris guuts.
lon S modtm OPltl tlaSSlt Of I f1Sh· 0 Ci)(!) Q) Didi Cnftt _
trman doomt4 br pride and tmbl· m y1 Tftl lllr Trvtll
;·La hco&W• lZ:OO m Movie: "JCnJ Wlh:" (eom) '56-
(S lstlcion ttntral Joan Bennett, Gary Merrill.
lZ:JO O M•: "Tiit SM! Ktl!HI." (dra)
'51-GtM Enns. Slevt Brodlt.
O The Six Wives of * Henry VIII. Superb
Dramatic Series,
Starri n1 Emmy-Award·
Wlnntr Keith Michell
fD Collfltl7 Mak Tl11t
t<O @ ODCIJ®l ""'
D Dl:IUT n1 Sir Wlw:t tf Xln1
....., 1111 ~ea111tr111t et AralOfl"
P•rt I KNiC prtstnts 11t11 or Ille
s~ p\1p In this lllahly accl1lmMI
BBC Slfits wtlith "'n tor its ltar,
Tuesday
DAYTIME MOVIES
t:aom (C) "'.Sl!ltl. ft" (wtS) r5t' -
Ralldolph Soott. .llnlct c.w.
t:JO D ""'""' c.ntlWll" fnlft) 1t-Ann Sheridan, Rkhtrd Carla
10:00 CJ) "IJMlf tile Ci11" (dr1) '51 -
Richard Conti, Alltlrey Totter.
,,,,.o-~--1"'1
'f! -La ....... "Oofllo -"'·" ,, .. u..,.,s.--(14W)"' _..,,-~,-·
)f.
1:301J Mwlr. "Cma If tlMi Undelt"
(hor) '59-(ric 'FJtmln1. K1thl1111
""""· ''" IJ """' (Cl """' "'I" I"") '51-Rona!d Re111n, Rhol'ld1 Flem·
ln1. .,,.0 ....
m __ ..,_.1••>
'b5 -QllJ ~ Kl9 KM\.
uo o--..,.. (mp) '53 -
TOllJ WrlCht, a.rtim h)'ton.
l<O (l) __ .......... 1
. (4rl) ·~ii lOflA, Antl'IOny
Ptr\1111. • a ICl ., _ _,. <"'> 'M-
"" Cll1fldler, RhciM. fl1mfna.
4:0l 8.,,. CfM(" {com) 'Sl-8e111
flt1rtl11, Jeny lewis. G ICJ .,,. -.......,,.
(-) ,. -..... _ "" "'-UO (J)-.11111 ....
DAILY 1"11..0T Sl•tf l"IM,.
Best Two Out of Three?
1\13.n Levy (top) gives Walter Dudek an impromptu \\'resthng lessen as John
J)h iUips ··referees" in a scene from th e Irvine Commun ity Theater comedy
"You Can't Take It \V ith You ." The revival continues for two more \Veekends,
},ridays and Saturdays, in the UCI Humanities 1-laJI Playhouse.
Musicia11s
Auditioning
For 'Lady'
Orchestra auditions for !he
S:Jnt<i Ana College theater arts
department prod uction of •·;-i1y
l-'air Lady" will be conducted
tonight rrom 7 to 9 o'clock.
The auditions are open to all
college and advanced hig h
school students.
SAC Band Oirrctor Ben
Glover. y,·ho "'ill direct the
auditio ns. announced that two
units of college credit will be
available to those v.·ho are ac·
cepted for the performance
and \\'ho complete t h e
rehe:irsa l schedule.
Rehearsals will be held from
7 to 10 p.ni. Tuesdays and
Thursdays from J une 19 to Ju·
ly 30. Further information on
the audition and rehearsal
schedules can be obtained by
calling 547·9561, ext. 243.
. \LL\,\
-~~'.!]
EDWARDS CINEMA
H1rbclr •I Ad•m• -(1•11 Meu
S~UOl
MOnd~y ·Frid•~ ):00 pm
Suurday t .00 pm S1111<1ay
l :OOpm,J,OOpm l:OOpm,J:OOpm
5;00 ~. 7:00 pm J;Oll pm, 7:00 pm
P:OOpm,ll:OOpm t ;OOpm
'Mctn of ·La Mancha'
Really Fro1ri Lo1ido11
\Vhen John \Vood be<'<Hl1<'S
the ·'~Ian of La Mancha " F'ri·
clay in F'utlerton Civic Light
Opera's production, one might
detect a slight British accent.
It's real. Wood recalls that
\1·hen he "'as a small bov his
n1other worked backstaie at
the Old Vic Theater when Sir
Law rence Olivier and Vivian
Leigh performed there. During
the London Blitz, he was one
of the many c hild ren
evacuated to the country.
After serving t\vo years with
the Royal Air Force, he
studied at the Portsmouth
College -0f art and then went
on to London Polytechnic lo
concentrate on drama.
fie later emigrated t o
Canada with his wife. former
British actress. June Ram sey,
y,·here he stayed for eight
The tall , an gu lar
Englishman fits v.·ell \nto the
part of Don Qu ixote as he did
into the role or Professor
Htnry Higgins in the Do"·ney
Community Theater's prn-
duction of ''rt.-1 y Fair Lady"
last year. He has remained
active in theater and recently
appeared -in Long Beach Civic
Light Opera's "Man of La
11fancha" as Carrasco.
Plummer Auditorium in
Pullerton, Chapman at Lemon
Street will house "Man or La
Mancha," FCLO's second pro-
duction or its prerhiere season·
There will be s e ven
performances. June 16. 17, 23.
24, 30 and July I at 8:30 p.m.
with a matinee on Sunday,
J une 25 at 2:30 p.m. For
tickets call 879-1732.
years before coming t o
Southern Cali fomia. l•l·...._fihlii@J!f
Ab o Ployl!HJ
"LOVING ••
Witt! Geor99 S.,ol •
(.,a Morie Soho
SMadcrJ M.riMe J :OG P.M,
OR.3'8350
Charlton Heston
"SKYJACKED"
ALSO IPG)
Sean Connery
"THE ANDERSON
TAPES"
lee Marvin
"MONTE WALSH"
ALSO Ill
Alex Cord
Samantha Eggar
"THE DEAD ARE
ALIVE"
Jcrn• Fonda ,,
"KLUTE "
Ph11
'.'SUMMER OF. '42"
C•ll Theatre
Far Stcanll IOTH COLOR
IOTH (RJ
-~~.....__ • "POSSBSION OF
JOIL DILANn""
'"
TV Weekend
Sports, Music Reign
By CYNTllIA LOWI\ Y
NEW YORK !AP\ -Sport•
farui and music lover~ got
most of the programming
breaks over lhe weekend on
lelevision.
There was baseball. golf and
horse racing, among other
sports. And there was Sunday
night's ren1arkable "Portrai t
of Slravinsky" on the public
broadcasting stations l o r
another crowd .
The hour progran1 "'as f1h11·
eel si x and se\'ell years ago
when the c-ornposer, \\'ho died
last year. "'as 83 and 84. It
was done 111 cinema verlle
style, most or the time 1\·11h
the people involved seemingly
unaware or camer;i_ And
seemed to have been handled
casually. Jn some segments
'Fiddler'
the compostr was talking in
bis BeverJy Hills home about
everything_ from the Picasso
caricature of himseU as a
yonger man to a long anecdote
about Jean Cocteau's three at·
tempts to write a libretto for
Stravinsky's music .. He spoke
-0f music "'ith the enthusiasm
of a boy. Jn another he was
working vdth Pierre Boulez
correct ing an error Boulez had
fou~ In one piece of printed
ITIUS IC.
A "'ise. amuser\ 11ld mnn.
Igor Stravinsky l\'as seen
rehearsing an or c h c "I r a .
discussing a b;il!et . an!'11·rr111i:;
questions of an 1nter1·1('11 er
Of!\'fl !ht• lighlln;.! 11 ,ts p.1t'll'
the sound 11 as fuz1..1 and, rn n~t
difficult, th t'
shots of Previn, his wife and
their !wins at their coun1ry
home outside London . Previ1•
bh11necl the television ser1t'~.
··Pryton Place " -"a plcr.e nf
unspe::ikuble 11-0nsense -·· fl•r
1uak111g it so dlfficult for hun
and his wift• lo achieve .1
private life bei.:au~c 1n three
years on the series. J\lia h~nl
beconit' :;o 1ve!I kno11·n .
f\l11~t ir11crcst1ng portiu11,
ho1\ l'\ l'l" ~hu\\ ell Previn , 1
~1;11·k ~ :iud sneaker" f""
lilll Ull,.! ,, rch1·;ir ';11 or 11 1•·
sl11rt-slr1·1 ed u11 hc.,1 t .1
\.' TIMHAS
AP<T Neiv Cl1t1111 p
NE\V \'CHI!\ f!'l'l 1
"Fiddler Oil tlh· lit I ·•
the nu1s1c:1! ;ii.M.1lll ;i Hll'·
si;in Jrw 11hn prr1 .11i~
despite !hr 11orhl"• h• t
t•fforts to 11(•:-ir 1>1••1 ~! •1111
p!·rvailrd 111 :11H1!IH·1 .,., .. ,,
Saturday b.1· hrt·11r11111· !! "
longesl runn111).! ~b .. 11 1111
Broad•.va~·
\ 1,., '•I
I 111~1l'.1ih
r ... 111111· •111 l ' '~ • AATTLIESNAM,[,
'iTAILEY 111• :11·lt ••,.;,11Jt1 • :\l1a !';urn11 ,
•·11 ! 'H'i liH \1111tl'• ;•,, ul
I· ,I l•ll 1111'1. I I 'I p1.111!;•l ;11\d
( 111 11pt1~1·r 11r l!11ll11 1101•d 111111
~··•I I'' llho lt'l't'll!I\ \l,l;'i g111•1J
1 .!11•·1 "J,,·1~· \1 .11 1 011·r.tcl
1• 11h th1· l.011<11111 S11n phony
11.1h1··f1.l 11,. 11.1!\ des1·rihed
It \ 11 .1 1 r r ;1!ur intrr1·1e~·er
1:11·!ia1d ll 1 in b ! , .. h 1· as
r.nt:laud s L1·onJrcl · Rern·
'
By un orric1.1l 1 uu111 lh1'
curtain fell fnr !hi' :l.?:"'51h
time on "FiddlC'r" S:ltur·
day night. one more !un,..
than "Lifr \viUJ F:i1hrr ''
in th<' 19-tlls.
Slt'lll." 1~~~~~~~~~~~~· Thrrr 1\rrr some r11!rre!'ting
"Fiddlrr" alrractv hold ~
!he record for the longr~t
running music<il. ha\'in.c;
surpassrd '·Hc!lu. IXil!v''
last year.
But "Fiddler .. 1n~\· 1141f.
be much lon_grr ror !llf•
Great Wh ite \V.1_\'. Vnrict~1 •
the weekly sho1v business
newspaper \vh lch alrc;idv
has chronicled :i !100 ner·
cent-olus profit ror "F'irl·
d!rr," reports the shn\1'
has been losing monc1 ir1
recent months ;ind rnay
close soon.
Hu,~ian~ fl ail
I>ianisl CliJ111rn
!\H)SCO\V (1\P) -!'vlo~cow
n111sie lnvcrs t re a t e d
An1erican pianist Van Cliburn
In "lengthy applause and
shov.'ers of spring flowers''
Fr1d.'.ly night at the close of his
f:1rcv.·e!J concert. the official
11c11·s agency 1'ass rl'porled.
("!ihurn s<iid '"fh~nk \'Ott for
<'ll·:·yt1u11g" se\"l'ral 11;11r~ in
Hu~s1an. Tass noted . li e 1•as
co1npleting an eight-concert
tou r in Leningrad and i\1oscow .
OPENING TONIGHT
THE SHOW -BIZ SENSATION
SINGER -GUITARIST
JOHN
McCORMICK
Direct From
Las Vegas And
Palm Springs
SAN CLi:MENTE INN
125 AVENIDA ESPLANDIAN
SAN CLEMENTE 492-6103
---CINEUDME !D ;; ..
... &~.=::c-.I"".:3:"":1U
---.l· ... $ fAD/UM " I :11
... .-:r;;;-rr.ir:::JI' ..::~
---' -r.: .. _ $FAD/UM 'l :,;
.. .-:r. ""• •l ·-=-
---I I> $1AUIUM ·J ... ·-.... ---- -.. $f4UIUM d .. ---..• .. --
"'WAil ••TWEEN MEN • WOMIENN S11rr111t
J'clr Ltmmo11
•N "SKIN GAME"
E•clUllVt Or'"'' co .... ty ••,t rvH Stal lifl99ttnw"1
Ntml"•tMI llr I Ac•drmy Aw·•nh t
"l'IDDLIE• OH THIE ROOF"
"Ul..ENT llUNNINO"' • "ANDROMEDA STllAIN"'
Ttm Smottl•,..
"01ET TD ICNOW YOVll llA••IT"
& "OMEGA MAN"
"'TH• LI.ST 1'1CTVlll INOW'" • "'TH• ANOl!llSOH TAf'ES'"
"'TH• HIGHT COMEllS'"
"SOLOllEll •LUE"
& "'TH• Wll..0 •UNCH''
"BRAVO. BRANDO'S 'GODFATHER' ..
"•
"Tiil TUl'l.fiRIT IWl.Y IATIS"lllll, 111 COlllDICIAl
llElllCll fal. DIE Of TllllOIT lllVTAl AID 101111
CllWOllCLU Df A•HICll llfl EIOI DHIHED wriHll
THE LlllTS· IF PDPUUR HHRTlll•EIT ."
-Vincent C.nby New York Times
'"THI IDDflTllH' 111 SPlCTICIUR •8'1t Oil Of Tiii
FlllHT 111uru INllll ffll IAIEI"
... IT TO kNOW ·vou· l..t.••IT"
COi")
RI NBC-TV
11EDWARDS
THEATRES
WORLD PRIMllRE .
MIOCLMUIClff• ......
-,,,.:~~*"" ...
l•4 --'" 0~881( l!~lNOlOS.JA.MES C.A.l!Nt"
"MOW SWiil IT IS .. (P'
• • •••CH •LV<I'. Al Cr.A.I• • • ••T co••• """"'· • -.,••o •WY. •ot"l' 1t•o• • HUH"1-T0H •&•C
"A VE RY rLINNY f llM"
VINC£NT CA.MBY
N£W YO!! It TIMlS
~···· WOOl)Y :=. .-.!.lllj -
..... -v .. ,,._
••IJL4l' 11· 4.c..A IN. "'"-WO BIG A TIRACTION
JAMES COBURN
HJ]"' . KERB ,., ... ""~'"''"" --_ ................. . ._ "'"' ,_._,,,..,..,, !l'G!
... • • COA&T KWY. Ar MACAllTHl,llt •L...0
MEWPORT BEACH * 644•076
DAILY -121.JO.'.JtJ0.7 & 10 P.M.
·---.,._.,. Jll:· ,,;::· 11•--
M.rl.111 -....
!:1i1m1
,lfllfillll
=~CALL
FOR
-SECOND
FEATURE
fl--AllD 11---~. .... 101'1 fill '"TM• l.lllNb O~
"FRENCH
CONNI:~ nON"
..---1110 ·sm1N• T•a•n-"'SUCH •OOD FRllNDS" NIOOlll CMAAt.•Y"
J :/ DAil Y PllOf
LEGAL NOTICE
l'ICtrnou• I Ul!Hltt
MAM.: STATIMllfl
Hoe 1011ow1111 ""''...,.. !1 09!,.. bvtlfl••' u .
Y'IST'< SUlt,.LU,, liOJ W, l"ft I!,
C•i. _..., Co1l rtn1
H~ H-•'"' ~ W lfl!'I $t , l,alt
-·· C1!1t "''' T.1'11 l111'lt>tt 11 0--1,,, 10,..11<••• I>• '"'
lnctl ........ I
Ntl'>CY l<OWt •<I
ll'lh ll•llm..,, 111..:1 w!*' '"" Coun11 c..-~ °' o •• ,... '°"""' Oii. J~,... 1, itn. I Y •wtrlw J M~•· 0.P~!~ Ce<Jf\f~ , ... ,_
f'UUJ
"'~bl•~hetl Ort,,_, C.,.11 Otli• P llO" J""' i , u. n. 1•. nn !•ll·11
LEGAL NOTICE --------f'l(TITIOVI t.Ulll<llSS
HAMC llATIMIHf '"'* IOHow\.,. ""''°"'~ •« <1g,n11 b<,o,,,,. .. •t !
FVl.l.(IRC LE. l lQCJlt S•• "•" (:.,.
Cl•, lr•I,,. t1"4
O•Yld k>IOMOfl, l~l 1 ••<11 D•
L••~n• l!el"'· H~Q/\ \/, J llrffn.-<1, lll! ll•IOll SI•
~'"" Monie• i::o .... ••d r SolOMO~. l J~! So. C<tt!cn
AY~ .. lttdll /ldi,
Jn11 llY•IMU It llt•n• (QlldVC:!ff lit I
l iml!..:1 P•rltWrtllip,
Dt•!G Solomun
1 1110 0!1!•mtnl ll•oa W•lll I~• Co .. nlv
<:lt r" <11 O••nO. C:oYn!t "'' JiJfl• ) 19/J "• &•••riv J, MIKl~Oll 0.1>11ry (ovn•y (.!••"· "0 111
,.~111,..,Nl Or~ne• Cu t i 01llY l"llot JIJn'
•• ,,, )f , ll, 1111 l<S0-11
LEGAL NOTICE
l"l(TITIOVi IVSll«ISS
HAMI ITAT•MIWT
Tti. foliowlnt porlOl'I ll O<lln; blnlMll
·~; NEW"'O"l llEi>.CH ltlOING (LUI . mn A(.KI• sr .• ~'"" ..,,,, 11••"""· All(• M. Fl,,dl•r, 1'l5 Porl l lth<iP ,.1 .. N.,...._, 1 .. c11.
T"!' 111111"41<1 It btiM c;Otldutlt'd llf • L!Mll.0 Plr'IMrJI\(~
Alk • M. Fl11dltY
Tnl• 11•11,.,.nt rllMI Wllh 1'M County
f'1<rt <II Or1M1 CouMY 1111~ June ), 191'
llv lltvt rl1 J, ~ddo~ 0.011rv (Otjn!Y
(l<!r'\c.
" 11\U Pullli111..i Dr1no• co''' O•llr Pilot,
J11n1 s. n, 1,, )f, ''n t~•S·n
LEGAL NOTICE
LIOAL HOfl(I
NOTICE IS HEltl!'IV GIVEN tt11t the
toiitw11111 lt"11•"' round or , .... ~ ,.,_.,.
111v1 bten M id lw ""' Police 0.P•""'"''
el tN CUy (If '°''' MIU '"' • potrlOd In 1u•ll ol' n!"'ty il'Ol d•vo:
OM blll9 blCYCll NOTICE IS FU"THEI: GIVEN 1111! II
.... -·-··· 11\d Pl'<l'/11 1111 -!'ltrllllf llf tM pr-rty wllhln ••~en
IJJ dlYI tellowlrtt tM 1111bllc111on llf 1~11
H<l'llc1, thl tlllt th1r110 tl\111 •tll In
'"' tlndlr, II ""'' be-· 1r In the Cllr of COii• ,,..., •• In wnlth CIM 11\1 P•OPtr!y
1111•11 be Mild •I 11-Ullllc 1\Ktlon 11 t tlmt
lnCI dtll JO bl IR!'IO\ll'O(l'd.
DATl!'D: JUN 12, ltn.
II, E , NETH
Clll•f crf l"oll«
,.ubll!Md Or•~ Coan D11tr Pilot.
J-17, ltr:t 1'fl·1J
LEGAL NOTICE
s -·-Ba~ Start lfloney's Worth
In Newport
Con.sl.nldk>n soon will 'larl
on 'fhe Bank of t;.;;iltforr11;1
building, a a;i1-1>1ory off1c-t·
compl~.1. located w I t h 1 n
Ntwport Place, the $ 2 0 O
million planned communlly lur
bo!iness located ntar Ora11,t(t'
C'...ounty Airport.
Compar.e Benefits
Of Health Groups
Tht structure is one of
!!t verel Nt"•11port Place 0Hic1·
facilities . It is suited to :ii
typt:t of use. ranging fron1 thl'
single occupant proft~S 1(1nnl
flrn1 lo mulll-butldin{: cor-
porate headquarters organtla
IJ(JflS.
A full service Bank uf
Callfornia branch will initiall v
oc·cupy abOut 8000 sq. r1. of 11.e
1-tround. floor space. Featur1n.~
drive.up banking, the branc h
v.•iJI be the second Orange
County location for the b:ink
Also schedul~ !o oc:cu py a
portion or the fa cility is the
Sou t he r n CalJforn ia head
quarter~ for J ohns(ul 11nd
Mape Construcl1on Co mpnn y
and Mape lndustne~. the
building ov.ner:i1.
'Dredging '
Gear Eyed
•
At Meet
By Sl'LVIA PORTER
1'he. 11 ~10 -the medical
grou1) offering )'OU a wide
ra nge or health services in
rclurn /or a flat annual tee -
is dcri1utely the trend today.
flozens are already in (lper:i-
1l•1n. m.iny n'lOre nre in rhe-
p!;-1nn111g or rievelopmt·nt
:il<.Ji(t'S
Ltt's :>ay, t11erelore. that a
lt)('o) medital grou p. hospir~d .
university or other or~aniza
lu)n IS Si'I·
ting up :ut
1'1MO. Or tht'
Blue Cr06s
plan to
\Vhlch y 0 U
.subscribe is
offering 11n
H 1\.1 0 · IYIX'
pl a n 3S .-in
f'Oll TEll ii J l l"fll<iltVf'
In your r1·~u/Jtr coverage.
Costs and coverages vary all
'JI t•r the pJ.1ce -but ctists
i::i si!y l.'illl run S400 to $60<1 or
rnnr1· ;.i year for a rani ily.
Should y{HJ Join an JI~fO under
l/11•.Si· cir'• u111st~111ccs" 11011• t·an
vo11 t.l'J! 11·hc!her or not it is a
h.1rg;11n f!n ' i.uu~ llerc's your
guid('
Hrnd 11 11!1 utnlost tearP all
l!ic. literature on the pl ;in,
\vhnt"s rover<'d .1nd not, ho1v
Jong the covera~e lasts for,
say. hosp i r al i z at I on,
psycho!herapy.
• Chet k the n1 on l h 1 y
premllims :ind the extra costs
yo u'll be required to pay for
11011·in1:lud.ed items, deduct·
ibles. etc. Often excluded or
included only at extra cost :ire
blood, dentn[ cnre, eyeglasses
;ind hearing aids, maternity
ca re. psythotherapy, out.of.
hos p;tal drugs. t' o s m e t i c
~urger}'.
• Con1parc these totals "'ith
tbc ainounts you·ve been
payi ng in health Insurance
premiums, doctor bills, out-0£-
pocket cash, costs of services
not covered or only partially
CQvered in your present in-
:lurance.
• F"ind out the arrangemenl<;
ror choo$ing a phy&k:lan. C11n
you krtp your own or must
you choose one employed by
the plan~ If the latter. whal
happens if you don't like the
physician? How do you
swi tch? Will the physician al ·
tend to you on a C<Jntinu1ng
basis?
0 investigate the provisions
for prescription drugs outside
lhf' hospital. ~s the plan
('Over these or offer a \v:iy )011
can S.'.l\'e 1-1•hen you bu1·')
!Some Jf~IC)s ho ve ·their oWn
pharmacies). And what about
prosthe!J<:s and appliances"!
° Check other subscribe rs'
opinions. If they 11rc already u1
a plan, 11rf• thf'y :o;;1tisfied ll'i\h
the n1ed1c:il ;1th·nt1on '1
-Find uut \l'h~it /lour-: li ill
111\.fO !lcrvic~s arc av ;idablc
<ind if there i!-: a procedure rvr
<.'are in f'Ven111g:; ;111fl O\ l'l"
\1 ,·i·kc.nds.
Ask \\ ht'lbf·r the oul •
patlrnt S:C'r\'l cr :; :ind faclll t 1P~
.\OU u:-.c 11111~! -physiC'1ans' 11(-
fice.s. Ii.JU f.'Jcd1!1cs. pharn1.icy
-<ire 11ndf'r' :1 single roof. Is
J ll1s rcw)[ convenien t for your
family ''
" J\lake sure preventive care
srrvices are stressed -earlv
dis ease detect ion viii
diagnositic screening, periodic
physic a l checkups. air
propriate immunization.
• lnvestig&te what hospit al
accommodations are provided
-ward. private, semipri vate?
Are such extras as special du-
ty nursing and private room
included if your physici~n
thinks they are essential?
0 Are there age limits in
lhe plan -such as age 65 or
v.·hen a son or daughter
reaches age J9 ? Or marries'!
\Vha t medicaJ facilities
are included in the hospital to
which you would go -such as
coronary care. r a d i a t i o n
therapy? What exclusion s. if
any, are there for health han-
dicaps?
FINANCE
l\futuals
Not Doing
Too Well
li.\' JOHN CUNNIFF
... ,. aw1l11tn Anlly•I
NE\V l "ORK -l\Jutual fun d
s;1Jes h:t \'e been ofL Hed~n1p
! 1on:, l1;;1·l· been hig/1 , Th;it
11tcnn:> problems for th is Sjll
h1J110n 1rHlustry. but. ln the
11p11uun of :;ornr fund ('Xl't;u-
11 ves. you \Veren 'l supposl'<l to
:,;1y SO,
One fu 11d r11.1nage1nent l'Otll·
P<llly. in fact. sen t record·
players lo ne\\"S offices so th al
it could direct it.s own bullish
rnessage directly lo the ear of
\vrilers and interpreters tJ (
fund statistics.
THE DECLINE JN sales
and rlse in redemptions ,~·as
lemporary and t ot a I l y
foreseeable. it was claimed. ll
didn't represent a trend, even
though it persisted month
after month. \\lhy eve r y
busine,.;s has its ups :ind
downs.
But something unusual \l'.'.lS
occurring. Last year, for the
first time si nce reC<lrds \l'Cre
kept, there \1·ere months in
\1'hich redemptions excf'e<lrd
sales. And off and on , 1t ha~
been continuing.
In April 1972 sales dropped
to $405 million from $547
million <l year ea r I i c r .
Rede1nptions not only rose
rrorn $393 million to S655
rnillion but. as can be noted,
greatly exceeded sales.
111 High Gear No\\', none othe.f than the
president of the Investment
Con1pany Institute, 1•· hi c h
represents funds owning 00
percen~ of assets, <.'<lncedes
there are problems. at least in
regard to sales.
'C usto1nizing' Cars
Dangerous Practice?
Finance
Briefs •
eTuna Catch
SAN DIEGO The
American Tuna.boat Aasocia·
lion is etpeetlng a record
catch of yel.lowfin tuna by the
U.S. fleet this year.
1'he American fleet so fnr
this year ha! landed 126,7S4
tons of the premJum tuna
species. according to Edward
Silva. executive vice pre.!ldt'nl
of the tunaboat association.
e FAA Contract
WASH INGTON T ), e
F ~de r a JA vl at ion
Ad ministration i.l \Y a rd <' d
l\1c:f)onnell Douglas C or p.,
Long Beach, a $2.321.400 con-
tract to develop new 1nethods
;~nd equipment to increase the
capaci ty -Of airports.
111 announcing the contract
aw.ard, Secretary of 1 1ransportii1ion John A. Volpe
said: "Unless v.·e devt'lop ne\v l
;1ppro.1('hes to a1r 1XX"t pkin·
nin,g and ne\V 1nethods for
i1nproving airport utilization.
we \1·111 find oursel ves hard·
pre~sed to acconunodate the
projected demand for :ur
lransportation sc-rvice.<: in !lie
late 1970s and beyond .''
e Ta/1oe Srdf'
CINCINNATI -The 'fahoc·
Sierra Development Co., Jnc.,
near Lake Tahoe. Nev., has
been wld for a b o u t $8
million, the \Varner Nation:il
Corp .• of Cincinnati has an·
nounced.
Purchaser was Donald P.
Steinn1eyer of Incline Vil!.'.lge .,
Nev.
l\Iarvin \Varner , president of 1
\Varner National. .said the land
development did not con-
lribute proflts to the Cin·
cinnati financial company as
expected. The firm has begun
a poliry of reducing its land
inventory, \Varner said.
Tahoe-Sierra inc 1 u de di'
undeveloped land, completed
condiminiun1s, a raquct club,
hotel and restaurant.
e Litlo11 llfove
JACKSON, ~1iss -Lltt(1n
Industries \l'ill locate it.~[
engineering department :it
Pascagoula Miss., state of.)
ficials here sar.
The major office fac ili!v v.·ill
house about 1,000 engineer·
ing personnel, Gov. Bill \Yallcrf
said Friday.
The h<lme offices or Litton
Tndustries are in Beverly
Hills.
Uy CA RL CARSTENSEN
A (:enera l Motors
:-1uton1otive safety engineer
has warned against ca r
•·customizing'' practices and
jnstallation of certain ac·
cessories or novelty 1lf'rns that
alter vehicles from their •·as
built" condition.
resulted, he said.
Basing his study on cases
from Gfl.f files and others fro1n
various University research
ins!Jtutes, Nelson said, "There
is no real way nf estimating
~01v many of these ov,:ner-
modifirations and other vchi -
<:lc changes cause accidents.
1'herefore. this is a clinical
review of what can happen,
rather than a statistical study.
"\Ve must be acting a!·
rirmatively to turn the table,"
Robert L. Augenblick told a
recent me<!ting of the Cana-
dian Mutual Funds Associa-
tion. Sales have been sluggish
for rnore than a year. he said.
Redemptions have climbed.
e llfGllJ Bonds /1
CU LVER CITY -!\lctro·
Gold"'Yn·~1aycr Inc. will sell[
$50 million in bonds to help
fin ance construction of its j
BROKERAGE firms \1'hi cJ1 2.000-room casino.hotel in Las
promoted a n d distributed Vegas. Nev .. the Grand Hotel,
ronds hav(' dropped out or says MG!\! President James
business, victims -0f a bear T. Aubrey Jr.
market, he said. allhough The bonds, due in 1992. lvill
many were victims a lso or be secured by a first trust
their O\vn management in-deed on the hotel property,
competence. Aubrey said.
Moreover. other financial The company will soon file a
products arc co m pet in g registration statement \Vi t h
strongly for the same dollar. the Securities and Exchange
Augenblick said. Real estate Commission, he said.
FAME-LESS
FACES
Q I ...
Nl\TliAN MIUfR
HElEN B. SHAfff~
~ . ~ ~.FJ;
(.:...,.) ' ~·' -·. .
Think ,You Don't
Know Them?
"In many cases. these prac-
tices are offsetting the safet y
design improvements made by
t h e manufacturers." ac·
cording to Wilton D. Nelson.
senior project engineer in
GM's Safety Research and
Ocveloprnent Laborat ory.
FOR EXAMPLE, his reporl
pointed out that the potential
benefit of eneri:?y absorbing:
~leering columns ts bring:
null ified by people \\'ho allai::h
l:ichometcrs, traile r brake
('ontrols. or even stereo tapr
tlrc:ks to them. These simplP
:itt11chments ha ve interfcrrd
\1'1l h the normal compression
of the steering column under
t•ollision impac!s. and in·
1,;reas~d chest injuries have
--(::; --(::; {:/
Robi11 s Sets
"'However," he added, "the
case studies in this report con-
firm t h at 'do-it·yourself'
aJ terations and the addition or
certain accessory items are
contributing factors in injuries
to ca r occupants.''
Among other changes ~nd ad·
dit ions known to have caused
accidents and injuries, a11d
v.·hit'h Nelson listed arc:
Allerntion of suspension
i:ir.orne!ry for "drnester ap·
Pfarance" -0 ften raJ~1 n i::: rear
end cno11 gh lo expose I.lie fuel
tank :ind being q u i l c
vul n<'r:1ble to rear end col·
lision.
' Steering lvheels other than
lho se designed for the car
purchose d for "sports car
look " have resulted in several
instances or failure.
So called "spinner knob ''
docs not improve handlin~
abilitv but act.u;illv makrs
handling more difficUJt durin,g
cornerinl!: as the d r i v er
unintentional!.\• o v e r·sleers.
Also, in a collision. the spinner
knob has proven to be 11n ad·
ditional danger force with im·
pact.
investment trusts, for ex-• h ..
amp!e, are now growing at a Ho r urder
rate that resembles the early CHULA VISTA, -Rohr
days of the mutual fund in-Jndustries Inc. announced it [
dustry. has received an -0rder for up
And there is the record. to 200 engine pods and 200
Many mutual funds do offer struts for 747 superjets from
an attractive and profitable the Boeing Co., of Seattle.
package. They provide pro· \Vash,
fessional manage n1 en t. Rohr has been supplying
diversification, convenience Boeing with 747 engine pods
and performance-or profits. and st.ruts since 1966. Terms
Others, as the record clearly of the new con tract were not
dcn1onstrates, offer an inferior .11nnounced but Rohr President
product. The •·professional'' F~?nk ~· l\.fc~Creery termed :~
management is Jacking in a multi-m1l11on dollar order.
~·isdom. the "diversification" e D11e Proees1
offers little protection. the LOS ANGELES -The West
"convenience" is tan g Jed Coast c -0 mm 0 di t y Ex.-
records, the . "~;formance change has reinstated three abs~n~ or negative. . suspended trading members
You prob'ab'y don 't recognize a si ngle name or
face in this group and yet, if you 're one of the
DAILY P'.L?T'S_very well informe d editoriol pogo
readers, 1t is this talented team of writers which
helps you keep informed. They write tho Editori.
al Re seorch Report s. Though the ir own names
don't appeor on the articles which ore published
under th e Editorial Research Reports head ing,
th ese are the real pros - diggers who go alter
~II the . badround l~cts which put today's fop
issues mlo perspective -without thought of
seeking the lame that goes with the name when
you 're a national columnist.
Celebration
For 'No. 51'
It's nol often these day5
with changing growth and
population patterns that you
find a businessman who has
O\vned and acted as "top
management" of his own
business in the same area ror
over 50 years.
Well. Theodore Robins ls one
of the few. He apparently
round the right combination in
the Harbor area 51 years ngo.
June is anniversary month
for Theodore Robins Ford and
you'll stlll find Theo beind the
boss's desk every morning.
He's al!JO put together a 60-
day aMiversary celebration
which will be clima1ed with
the awarding of 51 prizes, one
of which \Yill be a '72 f'into
lo11dcd with groceries. Also, if
you purch;ised a Pinto during
the sale and end up the winner
you have the option or taking
the Grand Prize or being re-
imbursed in full for your
purchase. regardless of the
model 11nd equipment.
11le &bins name h a s
become synonymous w i l h
Ford in the Harbor art!a and
wit h good r~aso~
Congratulallon~
OT II E R COLLISJON in-
juries were reported .as a
result of drivers carryini!
returnable glass bottles in the
back seat with children -
rather than ln lhe trunk, and
an unsecured mot o r e y c I e
being carrled on the rear floor
of a multi.purpose van·type
vehicle.
Potential hazards also noted
were "bolt on" brackets
normaUy used to attach equip-
ment : magnetically attached
compasses and trays on top or
the instrument nunel ; hanjlin!{
trinkets on inside nar vie\v
mirrors.
Desides alert.in~ I.he public
lo the dan~ers of lh<'se prac.
tices and the result~ or t'rrt11in
car "custom.bing'', Nt'lson
stressed the importance or
owners seeing that their
vehicles are kept In safe.
operRllng condition.
"Ir additional gains are to
be made in injury reduction.''
Ntlson concluded. "strong t m-
phasls must be ph1 ced on the
tole of the driver-owner."
M11!1ons crf Americans '1?w ,\·ho had sued. claiming that 1 a~e a\vare of the vast quality lhey h3d not been given fair
diffe1·eocds an1ong the more hearings,
than 600 funds of.fertd for Superior Court Judge Robert
purchase. and ;eah~ .. that. A. Wenke issued a preliminary
JU.St as 1n buying ind ividual injunction ba r r j n g the st~ks. money ca n be lost as suspens.ions. The exchange
easily as found. .ag reed to delay hearings on
JN A SENSE, the situation
seems to be one in which both
an industry and its customers
have experienced lhe pa.ins or
growing up.
Funds now are firmly
established In the long range
financia l planning of millions
of Americans, but the glam-0r
days of easy sales and ex·
poclation of easy money may
be part of the past.
customers realize that there
Is no magic route to wealth.
And only a very few·funda now
a ttempt to propogate the no-
tion that ordinary people can
make tlig, quick profits simply
by sitting b:ick and watching
their rund shares r Is e.
Moderation 11nd patience Js
more common now among
buyer nod seller.
As the older fund managers
with long experience and a
steady b u t unspectacular
track record have long tried to
impress on the public and
their colleagues, money is
made through hard work and
patience rather than dreams.
the matter until the case
comes to trial.
The three membcn, Donald
J. Mackenzie, H. Mort Mor·
rison and Jerome 0. Goosen,
had C<>ntended ln the suit that
they were denied due process. e DCJO Trarufer
ATLANTA. Ga -Delta Air
Lines has announced it has
transferred to United Air
Lines it! rights to buy five
McDonnell-Doug!" DCIO jutn·
bo jeUiners.
However, .the agreerMnt,
which must be approved by
the Civil Aeronautics Board,
provides I.hat on delivery to
United, the Planes will be
leased to Della for periods of
about 2~ years.
Officials at Lo c k heed ,
Aircraft Corp. McDonnell's
chief commercial rival. Mid ln
Burbank, that they liked the
United ~Della decision because
it meant Delta plans to slAnd
by Ill decision lo purch ... 24
LIOll Tr!Stars from Lockheed.
The LIOll is dtst&ntd to com·
pele 1'11h Iha DC!O.
•
They're Your
INt=ORMERS -·
Yes, they could be your "informers." It's f11turos
like Editorial Research Reports which mote tho
DAILY PILOT much more than just tho most
important hometown newspaper available t
residents along the Orengo Coast. Tho DAIL;
PILOT is the total pat~ago. It makes whatever
happens in tho world "focal nows" and de/Ivers
ii daily right to your home. Let this team of dodi.
coled "informers" help you hep informed, RHd
Editorial ResHrch Reports on the editorial page
:--and ell the other informative 1µ..,ial fe1furos
'" other parts of tho r.>t
DAILY PILOT
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THE
ARE COMING AGAIN'!
July S Through 8-South Coast Plaza
• • . ,,
• )1
CORNERS
•
'I ,'I , I
'V I ,, 1es , 1
,' I , I
,,' I will build :
, I , I
, I
, , 'a Garbenstangle . -•
# I , I
,, I
• • , , or launch a search for : Build Your Garbenstangel Quick and E,nter ,,' :
, , ' one I can put into shape for :
It in the Build a Better Garbenstangel ,,'6~b·t· :
,' ex 1 1 ion at the rallye . 1 , I
Contest and . International Rallye ,,,;:D::s:E i ,
,' CITY ZIP PHONE I , ~"~' :
,'Promotion M•nager. DAILY PILOT, P.O. 8011: 1$8 0 , Cott• Mete , C1ll f, 9212& I .
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l • 0.Ul Y PILOT Monday, J11nt 11, )972
By Phil lnterlandl
"And now for ;,i lit!Je 11un1bt·r l \\rule nl)$C'lf, \\hith
qu.ile by accident has my phone nun1b~c in 11 ... '
L. M. Boyd
Old lnclia11 Chief
~~
TUESDAY' &
WEDNESDAY
ONLY!
. ------=-
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SUBMARINE SANDWICHES
3 FOR 97' ' .,
'
ALL THE
SPAGHETTI
YOU CAN EAT
With meat sauce and parm ..
san cheese, crisp coleslaw,
roll & butter.
c
DAILY 10-10, SUNDAY 10-7
l ·
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• f• l COCONUT BON BONS l 2/1.00 t' Had Sex Appeal
Those scientists 1,1,•ho make a study of liquor troubles
say the human body is least able to cope with alcohol at
noon , best able around 8 o'clock in the evening. A drink at
lunch, they aver, kicks a lot harder than a dlnnertime nip.
Remember lhat.
Chucked full of assorted luncheon meats, lettuce &
dressing. One's a meal.
Delicious l lb. fll'Ckage (Jf C'oconut
hon bons. A real treat for thr \\·hole
family.
..,. ____ -~-~· --·--..--· .
ATLANTIC CITY'S boardwalk was not so named be-
leap.
cause it was made of boards. Started
out as Boardman's \Valk , the brain·
child of a railroad conductor named
Alexander Boardman, Time shortened
It.
FACT THE law in North Carolina
requires twin beds in motels to be
at least two feet ap~rt was rcpcrted.
What wasn 't reported is this legal dis-
tance is generally referred to by a!-
to rneys thereabouts now as the lover's
QUERIES -Q. "Who said, 'Bachelors' wives and old
maids' children are ah'>·ays perfect'?"
A. Th.at was Nicholas Chamfort. the Frenchman. lfe
also said, "A woman is like your shadow -follow her,
she flies: fly from her. she follo'"''s."
Q. "JVST ·about all a woman doctor's patients are
likewise women, right?"
1 LB. HOLLAND HAM
2 DAY5
ONLY
TOOTSIE ROLL-Flavor Rolls • '
1' ~~G~~:.!RONSTONE i' 57 ,
.•i 2 DAYS 844 1
l.kan. bonl'll'ss cookrd lm-I 8 Jovely pa( lerns in crack· · ·
CHARGE IT!
30-QT. PICNIC CHEST
88'
A. Nowhere near aJJ. Three out of 10 are men . Aver·
age.
r-1 ServiCt>-tor 4. Choos(' fi·om ! 1 ty
l"'rled canned ham. Buy a•d ovoo ,._,,,, •• , ;,.,,... Assorted flavor Tootsie Rolls m orange, lemon , cherry, ~·viii
JV 1' .. ~ " • u u r ' ~ keep food hot or cold. Poly-foam chrst fcaturt's plasllc: ~l'vcra l nnd charge it. 1 ston('. ,.,. chocolate and vanilla. [] cushion ride handle and li d \vh ich can dou ble 8 s a i;erving tray,
SEX APPEAL, that was the characteristic common
to most American Indian chiefs. Not courage, neccss;iri/y,
Nor physical strength. Nor brains, even. The historians
who make !his fascinaling claims try to prove it v:ith the
contention that most of said chiefs were selected by the
women of their tribes, not the men.
GOLD -Maybe you didn"t know your hair. if any,
contains gold. Just 430 part! per billion, to be exact.
HOW MUCH can a working wife actually expect to
clear after taxes. transportation, extra dresses, lun ches,
so on? Just about 4-0 percent of her paycheck. that's all.
MORE TIIAN half the souls who walk into small Joan
companies to apply for quick cash get turned down, the sta-
tistics sho\\·.
A1\'Y YOUNG lady \\'ho wants to inspire her gentle-
man friend to propose matrimony might consider this. The
experts on color psychology contend she ought to wear
something red. if the old boy is particularly shy, but some-
thing white. if she's especially aggressive.
AM ASKED to name the country's first circus .. That
was Rickert's. probably, In Philadelphia. In 1792. Or so it
states in the record book at hand. Wasn't that the outfit
wherea t a trapeze artist lntrN!uced tights by putting on a
performance in his rrd fla nnel underwea ~ after hi s uniform
failed to show up from the cleaners~ Believe so.
Adclress 111nil !ll L. ft!. Boyd. P.O. Box 1875. Nc1v--
port Beac/1, Calif. 92660.
Burly Ex-Navyman
Joins Meter Maids
SAN DJEGO (AP) -The unaccustomed to seeing a
newest meter maid in town male meter maid.
complained a man swung back
a fist In anger when a ticket
was pinned on his car.
".He would have been wear-
ing that scooter if he hit me.''
said George Allen, referring to
his police traffic scooter.
A 6-Cool·-4, 210-pound retired
Navy man, he has joined San
Diego's all-girt force of meter
maids because it wai too con-
finJ~ inside as a cily police
cllipatdier.
In July, more men are ex-
pe<"ted to be hired and then
everybody will be known es a
parking control officer.
2nd Tribe
Due Sl1are
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
The Yurek lndians should
share equally with the Hoopas
-.......
TUBEROUS BEGONIA
2.3'
B<'nullful l>f'i.:nnlas for ha11J;-
i111..;" IJa.<;kt'I. rose form. Onu-
h!t·~ nr1d .~ingles. Com(' in as·
Sfll'tl'd colors.
,,
f ,,
ENVELOPES
28'
Rox or 100 ct. r nvelOJ')fll!.
3.-.,.. x 6\~" size. Shop and
save!
I ~ ' •
REDWOOD HANGING LOG PLANTER
LH.JJ -J/x7
Di1ro11nt Prirt
I·
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MARVEL THE MUSTANG
$5.00
Push-Pu!I drive: ~Inrvl'l i;-allop!J \\'ilhout
motor or batlery. Shop and save at thii
lo""' Kmar t price.
• " ~ NOW!
KO~
REDWOOD
STAIN
,_
MEN'S HARNESS BOOTS
AEG. 7.•7 $4071
10" bro\\"n vinyl b(l(lts \\if.h sidf' ziprwr
and bu cklrd harnt'~o; rffrc;t for ;i ddl'd
.~ly!C'. SUJW'l'·r11mfort11hl1' lo \1·l'nr. Styl-
ish belo1v narrd i;lacks. 7·1 2'.
2 DAYS 1.99 ONLY
Allen and th~ se\'en girls
hand out $2 citations for cars
ptrked at expired meters and
$4 tickets for overtime park·
in the $1 mJIUon-a-year This beautiful redwood han&ing plinter will add charm A highly peneb'attnr wood
revenue from timber-cutting and beauty to any patio. Buy scver11I It this pfice. stain with natural redWood
Kodok't -s.-I fllM g;.., )'Ou brighto., u..._ -.
cobful ho.e .avift than ....., btiforel Su,,., I hos1 50 %
-ore picture oreo thon regvlor '"'"' fllnl. Thw.'s no ttw.od. Int. no flip-over •. Super I comet in fadory·looded Kodopat
movie <jiNl(kfuti ..... load instantly-let yau shoot a full 50
-.i --•lol'f'lnv, in(.
While the girls wear a skirt
and blouse: on the job, he's
allowed to work in his slacks, wlllte ahlrt aod tie.
on ~he 12-square-mile Hoopa I
Valley Indian Reservation. ai::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::;;;;:;;;;;;=::;;===="":"":' ========:::;;:::::::;:::::::::;::::::::::::::::::;;~ U.S. Court or Claims trial
commissioner has ruted. ~E.~~:~1~.!tr1~:~ USE .YOUR Kmart Charge or Bankamericard ' Lou.be Szymcak, supervising
.._, maid, said a special ll-ui:r.:~ parking control officer tlU ,Sven Allen because "we
o.thlnk meter maid suited
..
":t. euits him, says
cept for the oc-
tcalls and aarcastie
II t e "hello '*'-n pa1sersb f
aod~ou~ectt<>re~ew by~•:/-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..;;;;..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ seven-memb« c o u r t of
claims. PATIO HOURS: NOW OPEN 10 to 10 DAl~Y. 10 to 7 SUNDAY
Willi-am Wunsch, attorney
for the Yureks, said that since
1958 ebout Sl4 million hal'! been
paid to 1.200 Hoapa. and that
3,300 Yurek Indians shotilil be
enllllcd to share equally Ill !he
timber-cutting revenue.
.. . -·-.
2200 HARBOR BLVD . ~i~::~,0~~ COSTA MESA
Harbor
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Mond ay, Junt 12, 1972 D,\Jl V PILOT f7
Brohamer,
Tribe Next
Dodgers Test Cards After 7-5 Sethac~
For Angels
BOSTON (API -BUI Ltt still doesn't
like relief pitching.
"It 's a bummer," he says. "The
starter• make all the dough."
But whether he likes it or not, Lee
seerru stuck for a while riJ hl where he is
as the man the Boston Red Sox COi.Ult on
to protect a lead in the late innings.
~1anager Eddie Kasko called him In to
protect a one-run lead in the seYenth
J"M I)
J•m• h Junt !J
)UM 16
Angell Slate
a n C•mft Ml ICM,C tilt)
Ano•l1 v1. Clevel•nd
A1.gt l1 •• (lf •t ltl'ld
A"9•l1 .r Cltv•ltnd
A1>9tl1 v1, 0.lrolt
1·15 11 n'I. ,,,;pm
1 s~ 11 m.
I 'I /> m
against the California Angels on Sundiiy
and Lee couldn't have been much better
He retired all eight men he faced as the
Red Sox dropped the Angels 8-4 , giving
them the series two games to one after
v.·inning 6-5 on Friday night and losing
Saturday 7-3.
The Angels return to action Tuesday
night, hosting the Cleveland Indians 1n
the fi rst of a three-game series at
Anaheim Stadium.
Ex-Huntington Beach High star Jack
Brohamer will be in the starting lineup at
second base for the Indians .
Lee. who is considered jll3t a bit of an
oddball ("I'm the first to admit I might
be a little bit crazy,") picked up his third
save of the year in protecting Sonny
Siebert's sixth vic tory against two
defeats. But still he was not completely
happy.
"J think they should have a salary pool
taken from what starters get paid," the
left-hander said, apparently in jest.
"Then, every time a reliever saves a
game, he gets a certain percentage of the
pool."
Siebert glared over from the trainer·s
table. but Lee continued; undaunted.
"Pitchers are discriminated against,"
he said, going off on another tack.
"Especially relief pitchers. They wouldn't
let me take balling practice. Then I get
ll fl with the bases loaded and strike out.
Maybe if 1 had had 10 or 15 swings before
the game, I mlght have fouled one Off or
something.''
Lee, who complained about being a
short relief man after Sparky Lyle was
traded to the Yankees earlier this year,
had troubles his first fe w times out.
··At the beginning of the season I "'as
overconfiderit," said Lee. "t thought the
hitters "'ere behind me . They "'eren't. I
Jearned righ! then."
In the mean"·hiie, Lee "·ill have to be
content with his Jot as a reliever Kasko,
v.·ho on Friday lost right-handed reliever
Ken Tatum because of a sciatis n er v e
problem. has no intentions of mak~ Lee
a starter.
"As far as I'm concerned," Kasko said,
11 J'd rather use him every other day our
of the bull pen. That's ll'h<'Te I think he
has the most value to us."
C•Utornl• 14) •01!0t1 Cl)
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Alome,, ?b S l 1 (I H1r1111r, cf l 0 0 I
8er<y, ct 1 o o o A1111,1clo, S\ • 1 I I
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Rost,p OOO O L1t,p 1 000
SP!"'Ctr, pf! I 0 1 1
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Bert.er, p o O O O
R .Cll!r~. p O O O O l(o,..;o,ph 11100
Tot•I• l• <I 10 4 Tot•I• )J • 11 I c1111orni. Ult JaO fWOO -•
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E -N, lllv1n. OP -8011on 1. L08 -(IU· tornla I, Soilori 10. 28 -Sl-1, 5,,.ncl!f, GrlH!n,
JB -A'. Smtltl. HR -Fis-!SI SB -Griffin.
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L" 2·1/l o o o o 1 ~·~• -Le. !ll. WP -Ill. lly111. Timi -3:52,
"11tr>dnnc1 -ll.121.
By GLENN WHJTE
Of .. Deltr ,.. Meft
ST. LOUIS -Nine days of warf&re on
the road open tonight f« the Loa Angelts
Dodgers after they dropped a 7-5 duel to
Pittsburgh's Pirates Sunday afternoon
before an LA cro"·d a! over 50,000 ( ill,846
paid).
They take oo the St. Looi! Cardinals
tonight, thro~ Bill Singer (3-6) against
Reggie Cleveland of the Redbirds.
Manager Walter Alston's Dodgers have
honed a nifty 1~ record away from
home thus far in 1972 and they face three
tough foes on this trek -St. Louis,
Chicago. Pittsburgh.
Sunday's show was just that -a sh<HV.
There were two inside-the-park home
Spahn's Advice .
1-l elped Brewer
Develop Pitch
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The sight of
Jin1 Bre1-1·er an1bling in fron1 the Los
AngP.les bullpen must be depressi ng for
veteran National League batters who
breathed a sigh of relief when \Varren
Spahn retired.
Brewer was trying to hang onto a ma·
jor league job in 1964 when Spahn held up
his left hand on the other side of the
bullpen fence one day and demonstrated
.how he held his screwball.
"He didn't say a word, just showed me
through the fen ce how he put his thumb
on the side of the ball instead of un-
derneath," Brewer, 34, recalled here
before the Dodgers left to open a road
trip in St. Louis tonight. "It helped me
push the pitch through. I'd been working
on it on my own, but after that it came to
me a lot quicker."
The screwball. thrown by a left-hander
like Brewer. breaks down and away from
a right-hand hiller. The pi tch has been
around for at least 70 years -Christy
Mathewson wa s throwing it just after
the turn of the ce ntury -but no one has
ever fi gured out how to hit it.
"A right-hander looks for a breaking
ball coming in to him," Brewer explained
in a mild Oklahoma drawl. "You can·t
get set for one coming in and one going
away at the same time. It works against
left-handers. too. I've talked to our O\\'n
hitters about other screwball pitchers like
Tug McGra\v of the Mets and they say
they know th ey're going to get it but it
doesn't help.
"lt"s the pitch that kept me in the big
leagues. A hitter who has a ten<iency to
go to the opposite field, like Dick Groat
when he was playing, might have more
suc~ss with it . But J don 't think there's
any one guy now who hits it any better
than anyone else,"
The 6--foot-I, JOO-pounder who became a
relief pitcher \•:ilh the Chicago Cubs in
1963 because "I do'n"t think they thought r
was the starter they wanted," may be
basebaU 's mos t consistent bullpen man.
Others have had better single .'leasons in
the last four years, but few can match
Brewer's 2.53 earned-run average and 78
saves in 226 games since 1968.
Dodger manager Walter Alston. whole
relief aces have included Clem Labine.
Larry Sherry. Ron Perranosk.i and Phil
Regan, says, "I've never seen a better
one than Brewer.
"He's an easygoing country boy who
likes to hunt crows and shoot skeet. but
don't get carried away with that image.
lie takes his losses mighty hard. Regan
\vas that way too. 'The good ones are
quite a bit alike. They're mostly cool
killers."
Hulme Captures Victory
In Can-am Opening Race
MOSPORT PARK, Ont. (AP ) -Den is
Hulme came from behind Sunday to win
the Can-Am road roaclng season opener
In a Gull-McLaren Team car, but not
v.i thout a backward look at A1ark
Donohue'.11 new Porsche.
11ulme, who has taken $91 ,845 from the
1erles in five years, trailed teammate
Pete Revson by 2\i miles and appeared
to be relegated to a second place finish
with only two laps to go.
But Revson, who was subbing in this
race for the ailing Jackie Stewart, didn't
make it to the flag .. 'l'be engine 1ailed
because of excess vll:P"aUona ·I n his
McLaren with two lape to eo. openiile the
gate for Hulme, who was fighting off a
headlong challenge by Donohue.
• until the latter'11 engine broke.
Hulme's winning margin was $1.7
seconds.
Hulme drove the 80 laps -197 m.ilfs -
in 1 hour. 46 minutes, 4-0 seconds. HI!
average speed was a record 110.655 miles
per hour. Dan Gurney's two-year-old
mark was 110.214 mph.
Revson was credited with third place.
while Milt Minter captured fourth and
Peter Gregg fifth , both in Porsche.!!.
Neither carried the exotic n e w
turbocharger Donohue used.
"t lucked out on this one,'' said Hulme
who now has won 21 Can-Am•event.s since
joining the late Bruce McLaren's team in
1967.
"Revson had It won. but Donohue ha d
the fMtest car. He'll win 30me races
before the season is over."
runs by the Dodgtts as Manny fifota
oullegged a shot down tht lhlrd ba!t hne
and then \Villie Davis outhustled a
screaming grounder down the first base
line. Later Bill Buckner sent a shot over
JI/I'll u
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Dodgers Slate
Ah o • .,.. .. ..,"'' l .... I
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the right field fence . The Dodger$ also
had a pair cf double.s.
But it "'asn't enough as the 1971 .... ·or!d
champions racked up three Dodgers
hurlers for Il hits -including a ho1ner
and two doublet. The big blow for the
Ptratts was Roberto Clemente's !Yn>run
circuit shot Y.'ith t ""'0 out in the seventh
inning.
Therr hadn't been an inside-the·park
bome run at Dodger st.a.dlwn since .\lay
28. 1966 and there had never been tv.·o
before on the same af1ernooo.
Veteran Red Patterson, vice president
of ihe Dodgers. says he's never heard of
such a feat in the three decades he's been
associated v.·ith pro baseball.
Record books fail to list anything under
the C'ategory of inside-the-park homers.
1'he Dodgers threatened to tie it in th£'
ninth when they scored once and had th1!
tying runs at second ind third with two
out. Pitcher Dave Giusti ran the count to
3--0 on Buckner, th< Dodgen' ltadlng blt-
'" Buckner already had a . homer and
aingle. But he hit the ,_..pitch-to U:nter
for the final out.
··Buckner had a better chance at 3--0 to
hit the ball than J im LeCebvre coming up
the.re even ,'' said Alston. '"And he
couldn 't have hit the ball any bette.r."
Oliver wa s JUSt in front of the center fie ld
\\1all "·hen he made the catch.
Earlier. Clemente had broken a .f-4 tie
"'tth h i s homer that h a n de d
re!Lcver Pete ~tikkclseo, 1-2, the defellt.
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1 lJ An11>0a"~' -1().1<6
UCI's Adams Loses Player, Bonnier, Last
Of Old Guard,
Killed in Crash But Saves His Own Life
By JIOWARO L. HAN DY
0! flit Diii' l'llGI Sl•lf
RAPID CITY. So. Dakota -UC
Irvine's baseball coach, Gary Adan1s,
spent long flo urs on the road to his sun1-
1ner destination in this grief-stricken city
mull ing over the loss of a player to the
professional ranks.
Adams delayed his departure for Rapid
City by a full day to find out about a
junior college player he was planning to
use this summer.
· The player, Danny Meyers. signed .a
professional baseball contract instead
and Ad ams left to drive alone to South
Dakota. This is his third year as field
manager of the Rapid City entry in the
Basin League for college players.
The delay of 24 hours found Adams in
Wyoming instead of Rapid City when the
fl ash Ooods hit Friday night, killin g hun-
dreds of people and inundating most of
the city including the baseball park that
is adjacent to swollen Rapid Creek.
The park was in a direct path of the
flood waters from the broken earthen
dam in the Black Hills that caused most
of the damage, estimated at over $100
million.
Except for the signing delay, Adams
and Meyers might have been caught in
the flood 's peak tide, working at the field
where they hoped to spend the summer.
Both could have been swept to their
death .
"It is unbelievable." Adam s said by
telephone from Rapid City Sunday fol\o l'i'-
ing his arri\•al late Saturday
"The whole tOl\'n is in a shambles and
they are on the baseball field right now
looking for more bodies,'' :he relayed.
"I really don't know what will happen
as fa r as our team in the Basin League is
concerned. I guess it really doesn't n1;it-
Out by a Step
GARY ADAMS .,
ler in the face of all this.
"Only the light standards and the
bl.eachers are stil l standing. The water
ripped away the playing field and the out-
field fence .
"t haven't been able to contact Floyd
F ltzgerald or Jim Quinn since I arrived. I
can only hope they are al! right."'
Fitzgerald is the general manager or
the Rapid Cily team and is believed to
live in the foothBJs where less da1nage
"'as done.
Qu inn is not as fortunate. lits home 1s
(or wa s) down in the basin. lie is the
league treasurtr.
Two members of the UCJ baseball
team were set to play for Adams in
Rapid City th is s ummer. Jeff !\1alinoff, a
fi rsl basen)~1n , ;1nrl (;11ry \\'he('IO<·k. a
pitcher.
They \Ye1'1• <ln'.'1ng through lug1'lhl'r
and got a~ far us l lut Springs. S-Ou!lt
Dako!:1 before t~:1ng stoppt.'d short of
their goal.
Onl y those 1vith valid rra son.~ arc no1v
allowed lo enter the Rapid City area and
baseball isn ·t one or those r('asons rijih~
now. Both players ha\·e called home to
contirn1 th eir \\'hereabouts and physical
well-being.
Not knowing about thC' future or
fielding a tea1n in J{ap1d City or some
other com1nu111ty tlus sunHner. Adan1s is
contemplating use of a voluntary work
party to get the fi eld in shape.
"I know baseball is the fan.hest thing
from these IX'opl(''s n1inds right 1101\'. But
ll could help tu rclicvr the tensions that
will nlounL as the ho! sun11ner wears on.
"IL would ~ivr lhi)Sf' lt'ft here H rhonce
fO FOr).\<!t thei r troubles for tl fe\I' hOttl"S
\\'alching a ball gan1e but I 'in noL surt>
how many v.111 be interested or if \\'C a re
even able to field a tearn ." 1\dains
renects.
Adams took some drinking watt'r into
town Wi th him and is stil] using this su ~
ply. The city's li nter i.~ ronlamlnaled.
however. and ty11hoid sllors 11re being
given to all residC'nls
For loss of a ·ball player, Gary Adams
may have savecl his oy.•n l1fl'. Prac11ct·
was to start lod:iy in Hap1d CHy . 1'ht•
Basin League opcnl'r is stheduled Oil
Wednesday.
But the great ha11d aboVf' has \\'r1llen 11
contract for many who 11'ould have
followed the team this swnmer as fans -
and that C-Ontract is the most binding of
all lo the hwnan race.
AUanla's Mike Lum Oeft) can 't quite make tt to first
base in time to 5tretch his infield bouncer into a
base hit as Phild elphia's-Tommy Hutton touches th e
bag. Ph iladelphla notched a 3·1 win over !he vi si ting
Br aves Sunday.
LE ~-1ANS, Fr11nce (AP) -The l rt'e~
near the "Indianapolis Bend" on the ~
fl lans 24-hour auto raC'e circuit arc
shr;ired off near the ground !or so yards.
The scylhe was 1!1e hurtling yellow Lola
sports <.'ar of \'C'!l'l"<1n Swedish driver
J(1akln1 Bonnier, who died instantly 1n the
"·reek age.
An instant's error in trying to pass a
~lower car ended a 24-vear career at the.
heights of auto raring and cast a pall
O\'t'r the victory, eigh t hours later. of his
old teammate, Graham Hill , in the
classic race Sunday.
Bonnier. founder and only president or
the Grand Prix Or1\•ers Association and
ll'ad('r of the campaign for increased
.snfrty on circuits and in cars. Wa.'l killed
on a stretch" or road specially widened
and lined with barriers just for this race
-but on a section yet to be improved. lt
\1;is Honnier's 13th tirne here.
A 1nl.'rn ber of a S"'cdish publishing
ra1nily, he was, \\'llh Hill , the last of t)e
old guard drivers 11·ho raC'ccl against such
111c11 :is Juan-:\lanul•l Fflngio, Alberro
Astari . Mike Co!lius and the 1\farquis de
Portago.
And Bonnier \Vas .!!tlll driving and
c:iµa ble. of "leading a top race 1\ke Le
i\tans. as he dld earlv Saturdav. He had
1von 11 four-hour r11r.e here last March and
held thl' track record. tfil\ and Bonnier
'verc close friends from thei r days
lul:!,t'!her in tlie Uriti sh ltacing l\totora
11•an1 111 1960.
The i\latra tean1 kt>pl the ne\1's of Bon-
llll'r'~ death frotn l lill and J1 is French
ll•a111mate, Henri Pescarolo, until after
thl'Y brought their Matra-Simca 670
across the line for the first French vic-
tory here since Louis Rosier won in a
Ta lbot in 1950.
It was a "horrible shock'' and "sad
that my first win here in 10 attempts
~hould be in these circumstances," l lill
said.
For f<.fatra, wh ich placed 1-2 with the
11ill-Pescarolo car and that of F'rance's
Francois Cevert with flowden Ganley or
New Zealand , it was the culmlnatlon of
seven years of effort to take the classic
at an uncounted cost wh ich irteludtd the
best part ol an $8 million subsidy from
the French government to promote
French race car!.
Before the race, it was being said that
a Matra victory would be d iminished b.Y
the absence of the world champion Fer·
r ari sports cars.
After the finish. Pescarolo said "I dGn't
think Ferrari's absence changed things
m uch . If they didn't come here, it was
because they didn't think they could
run .''
The future of the race, described by the
(lrganizers as being a "transitional''
event this yea r, remains a s cloudy al
e ver. It no longer 11!tract11 many of the
major teams which cannot afrord to
design a special car for the event , 11s
?11atra did this year.
Pneumonia
Won 't Keep
Trevino Down
EL PASO, Tex. (A P) -It appoa"
thaf even viral pneumonia won't ~ able
to keep down lrrepttssible Lee Trevino
for long.
The Merry Mexican of the falrwa)'I
vows he's going to leave Prov~
HO!pltal here in time to reach Pebble
Beach for Wednesday'• llarl ol U.. U.S.
Open golf tournament.
Nursing supervisor .Jane Beland tGld
('allers late Sunday nieht, "He'• d oJ n C
very well and 1te1111 to bo Im"'°""". HO
still hopes to get out ~y."
Mr1. Beland added, i..,..ver, llllt 1!if
wam't sure hla doctor ,...Id let tJW
defending U.S. Open champion clepotf
quite that soon. ..
indianapolls tiOO •inner Donohue, mak·
tng a brilliant return lt the series in a
new twtn-tlll'bocharged lrM Por!Cbe,
obviously had the .fastest car amonc tht
18 starter•.
He roared Into the lead from hit: pole
po.sition start and wu widening bis
margin over both Re.VIOn and Hulme
when R tlk:enl part broke in one of the
turbochargen.
Bane Whiffs 17; Baffles Sooners, 1-0 'l'revlno entered the boopl•al Sat.,.,
•nd Dr. Robert May laid he wu bWtJlo4 by whal the phyaiclan dolcribed 11 .. _
ly stages of viral pnetlJnCXtJa and lnfoetotl
sinuses." Dr. May Aid he neverthel•
expected 'l'revlno lo be up and llOUlld bJ
Wednesday.
He !Mt th~ l•P' to Rev10T1 and two to
llulme while. his crew flied the trouble -
an tntake Vlllve that stcD::k ont of the
turbochargm -but when he got back
Into actlon he began wortdng on a com~
back that had the crowd of lO,llOll ftu.
ding.
He roared by llolme lo cut the N.,.
7,ealander'a mar1ln to one lap then
otr .. ked by RevllOll lo gt! within atriklng
distance of the leader. ~· later
cau1hl Hlllnt< apln.to. IJO! lllmiitll bl tho
same lap but be couldn't reach Re vson
OMAllA (AP) -TO)><anked Arizona
State and del~ing hyo-Jime cham pion
Soolhem C.fllomla bltttle ttlllght In the
first 1kinnilb for CoUeglaite baseball
supremacy In the West. '
Arizona State rode the three-hit, record
17 Strikeout pitching of Westminster 's
Ed Bane put Oklahoma t.0, while South-
ern Cal nipped acrippy Coonectk:ut, M ,
in JI IMinl!I Sunday ni ght in second
round play ol the 26th annual Col lege
World Series.
'\'be two perennial coUtll•te powm
arc tht only unbeaten teams left In the
dou ble-elimination tournament that will
bl!! pared lo four teams arter today'• play ,
"Sout)lcm California bao not looked like
the betfclub up hen," said Arizon11 Statt
coach Jim Brock after h1I team ran Ifs
record to ft.4 and turned In Its 22nd
shutout d the senm.
''We lhous ht of savi ng Bane for
Soul~ C.J, but we decided nol to look
abet~" 1cont1nued Brock. "\Ve thought
Okla hon)a would be tough -and th<y
were."
ConnoCticul (!M) playt Tex., (38-8 )
and "temple (3%-14) tangle." w 11 h
Oklahoma r3S.161 In Josen' bracket
games with the defeated teams dropping
out of the tournament. ·
Bane, a 20-year-old sophomore, allowed
just three singles and faMed every man
In the Oklahoma order at least once.
''Thal WRR the best effort of the year -
11nd thllt covers a lot of ground," said
Broc k of'Bane, who ran hls record to 14--0
and pushed his strikeout mark to 210 in
138,2 Innings.
"I tried to keep my curve. ball across
tht plate and 1tay ahead of the hitters -
11nd 11 worked,'' said Bane. who mruck
out at least one man In every Inning.
The old mark of 16 strikeouts was set
in 1960 by J im Ward of Arizona and
equalled by Larry Hankhammer of
• Southern Cal In 1961 and Arlzona State's
Gary Gentry , now of the New York Mets,
In 1967.
Dane's masterful performance bested
Ok lahoma's Gary Weese. who allowed
julit eight hits and struck out se,·en.
Arliona State got \Lt run In the ~1xth on
GatY At well'• lead-off double and a one·
out single by Rick Valley.
Complaining of what he then described
as an attack of nu, Trevino flew born.
Friday from Pblladelphia, whore bl PYO
up plan! for a final tuneup for the U.1.
Open in the Phlladelpbta Goll au.i.o.
Tht doctor examined him and ordel'4
Lee to the hospital at once.
'rrevino conceded that he mJsht be '1a
little weak when I get out ol here:: tiut
53id he wtt!I using springs and w~&hts fits
his legs ttnd exerclsina in lt\e bospitai.
"If the doctors can clear my chest.~
lungR, I will have lht strength tt pla,y."
he promised
•
•
Mond.11)', Junt 12 1972
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GOLF WINNER J.C. SNEAD GETS HUGGED BY HIS WIFE .
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100 a rte11
K I( 'V"'ll~Oll
K 1C n;mphol1
!lo"•'
Jj,,
•l,S ' ~' '" 1 OJ I
jll!) Frtt
100 6&<1<.
Bnwma11
(•d~
(~'1•
€to~~
(&Ce
(&d•
l!towmt"
l'c"••1
<•d•
!i.O ...
•·oo o
16.1
1 O• l
100 Free
IM F•ee
100 f3•t k 100 Bree1r
A.•Mt
Wtr•en
Doe<burg
1·00.1
1 O• 6
3 12 '
'""~'"" fOO Frff Rol~v l . I 11
Wins Philly Class~ 100 Mtd
!Oii Frff
700 lndo
W F•tl
Olvlro
Costa /llesa
Whl1t~tr
Ml1loltk
Whll1k1r
l!etg
C.•mmo11
Whitt kt•
'\>lorron
YolJ1oltk
Y1rwood
1 ll 1
I !O 9
1 oa o
S11ead No Longer Playing 100 Fly
100 F. '"" <00 F•te
100 B1c•
100 Br•o•!
" ' " ' .. ' • Ol \
'" I 01 2
In U11cle Sam 's Shadow 100 Frei' Rol•v
'°" M~ 200 Frtt
200 lndo
10 r rtt
100 r Iv
Edison
J 19 A
1 ~o 1
l·~T
19!.
1'11
1912
1911
1111
Tt IT
1911
IOI?
1011
19'1
19 'I
PHILADELPHIA IAP 1 -J.C. Snead
gets a little testy when you brin~ up the
fa ct that he 's the nephew of Vf'teran golf-
in g great Sam Sne;id.
The sub1ec! r;1n1e up ag;iln S ~ n d a v
Rfter .J. C v.·on !he $'.lO,OC)I fir~I pr1;.e 1r1
the $150,000 Philadelphia Coif Class1t·
Someone asker! J.(: ir hf' f P 11 ta•
pla.ved in lhe shadow of t:n1 ·lf' S<1n1 , v.·h•1
won every major gol f title but the U S.
0 pPn .
"I don'I t•are \\'ha! thr y say,'' J. C.
snapped . "I wo n. r heat evrrybody v>'ho
was here ."
That he did Snt'::id shot an Ull!iflCl'-
tacular fourth rou nd pttr Jfi-.16-72 nvcr
the 6.708-yard \Vh1lt'marsh Valley Coun-
try Club for a 72 hiile total of si x under
pa r 282. I-l e beat Chi Chi Hodngue1. by
on£' slrnke. Snead had round.~ of 70-71-69-
72, and Rodriguez 7 l-68-7G-7~ for a 28.1.
Dic k Rhyan. ll.'ho had qua li fied for only
four tourname nts th is ve ar, finished 1n a
!IC for third \\'i!h ,Jinl jan1ison, leader o(
th r first two rou nd s. Each had 285. with
Rhyan shooting a two under par 70 and
J;unlcson a one nver 73 in the f inal round.
'l'hrn carne 1969 champion Oave l lill 11t
26 Hubert (;rel'n. llornero B lanca~ and
Rl)'l .\'lurph,1· HI 287 : Arl \Vall and l.ay
A ·('w('r at 288, and ·ronv J11rkli n and Jer-
r\' H£';ird at 2!10 Drff'nd1ng champion
T11111 \\'r 1.~kopf f1n1~h1·rl l11·d f11r lfi lh at.
29:! whllr <;ar.v l'l:iy('1· 1\·as gr-0upt•d al
z<i:1. 11rd for 2:lrd .
.I (' adn1ittf'd 1!1at his unrle Sain ha s
hrl1\(·•t him Mn s1dt'rahl\' \1'1!h his gamr
and tha l !h('v play a lot !rii;f't!H;r. Hr lrll'.~
!ri r l;11 1hf" ~an1"' Sam·s 11<1.1, ~rl on lhP
~r r1•11 Ill !1111 <t11d 1110 pull It J'i oh\'10\1~.
ho111'11•1 , tliar .I(" 1~ :1 l111lr t1rf"rl of lhf"l
l"ll 1:1111 ll!'p)lt'W rl'it'l"t'll('4'
!1 h1·1ng S;1n1's nrphrw do~·.~n ·1 help in
S'i l,tt" .1.~ 111ak1n~ rnnncy is coneerned.'"
hr 110!1'11 '"Tli1·1· d1111·1 rnll 11vrr hC'rau~r
n1 1'.11111· I~ Snt•:1d .,
Th(• 311-1·e11r-old J.C. st nrll'rl his HLhlctic
r :i· 1•1 r ;1~ a ba~rbnl l pla.1rr 1n the
\\";1 111111:1011 Srn;itnr.~ filrrn systrn1 . flu!
01 1<1 ;1flt1· 11•' h·1d a .1JA b;1tt111~ ;i1'tra~e
In ;i dnL1blc A LC'a.l(ue and ~'ilS demoted
111 r·l:i.~s •\
ll r rrr;i!l1·d liP w:i!> ti 1111ng _4()(] :il
S!:itP.~1·1lle 1n :>.orth (;t1rnl111a and the
Sen;11nrs rrlr;i~~·d thrC'r: ou tfielders Ill
R:ilr1gh 1n lhe rl('XI 1!ass1f1cat1on. He
11 :1.~11·1 ["lrtHll•llrd. 'l'h:it l\Oured him on
ba~ebalJ.
J, C l ur11rd gnlf prn 111 1964. and joined
th!' P1; . .1i lour in 1968 Hr. h;is eamed
some ~16.'i.OOJ. tn!'luding tht first pr11.e
Sunday a1 \\"h11c1narsh . He ~·on rwo
lnurnamrnts l.1,r \'r;ir and this w11s his
firr;t virtury uf 1!172. As :i mcmbl?r of the
U.S. llydrr Cup \e:nn hr w:i s unl)('a!rn in
f our mRttht.~ 11g;i1n~L Engl <ind last year.
SnPad was a little unhappy ""ilh the
finish of the Ph1IAd('lph1a Classic. •le
W(nl to the 18th 172nd holei lrading by a
1troke and took 11 bo.i:cy five 11fter hilting
l . 13 ~
his tee shot 1n fl hunkrr, !'hipping short or
the green, gelling on in three and tv:o
pu tting. lOO r •••
•OO r•e•
100 8•(•
tOO B••••!
ih t l """ Go,.:ion
Bukolr
Yo~ Go•don
Wu" To•
l!udrl~
'" '" '" ~1 1
• , 1 I
, "' " '~· J ll 0
Hndriguez only had In r;ir thr fin:il hn!c
tu forei' :1 .~11ddr11 dralli pl11.1·off. 'l'hf' 3&-
vr>.;,r-ol d Ch i Chi hit his s1't ond shot ov('r
ihc i; r l' en into the gallery, ho\l'f•V('r ,
rhipprd bat'k :11ul took !11(} pulls for a
hogey llii1l t'u~L l11r11 11 shot 111 \hr $:10.11011
Hl!I F•t • Rtl•v
1(111 M•rl
JOO r r•~
]!:'() I ndo
10 F re•
OLVl"O
1:1 l)o rt1do
Lnu<1•ro1cl<
Ml!lor
"'•td
(l~ff•y
~n!l•v
1 j) J
I II 1
1 '1 1
'" "II\ h:1il lo h11gt·.v tll1· l.1SI hole ll'hrlh1'r
i!".~ for firs! or srl"ond pl11cr." J.C_ !'iaid.
'"It Jr;:1vf's a bnd llls!e in ynu r n1ou!h. You
ask yoursrlf 'did I chok e?' I almost feel
like Chi Ctu gave me the tournamen t,''
100 Fly
lllO Frot
AOO Frtt
100 l!trk
!(Ill l!re11!
100 Fret R~l1v
f!ond
1,.1..,.1
l~rl<lt
\o\111••
'" " . ' 01 1
' 00. I 01 t
] Jl •
Sports in Brief
It's Becoming a Habit
-l(ilkinney Traded
SAN DIEGO -On every m11jor league
baseball players' bubble gum card there
i!> 11. fJUPs tion at the top and thP ans"·er ;it
the bonor11.
On i\l1k(' Kil k1nnt')"s. rhc qucs11on this
,\Car Is, "Hnw many pitchers ha1·e pllched
f1ir four tea ms 1n one se<ison'.'"
l"he nnswrr on his card is. "T11·0 -
\\'illis Hudlin in 1940 11nrl T('rl Gr11y 1n
!955 .. ,
f\01v you can c.dd the n:inir l\ilkenn~·
Sund11y rhc 27-yf'11r-0ld left-hnnrler "'a~
:o-rnt by the San Diego Padres tn
ClcrcJa nd for infif'lder Fred Slanley.
'"T his is so iron ic I can 't bfol 1cve it,"
s:ild Kil kenney, pulling h i~ bubble gum
card from his duffle bag. The youngster
Seagren Vaults
18-0 at UCI
\\'orlrl pQle v11u!t en-re cord holder Bob
~cagren cleared 18 feel for the th ird time
th is season -second bC'~t 101 111 in his tnrv
-by win ning the Southern Pacif ic AA U
evrn t at l.it.-lrvi ne Sund av.
Sragrcn. "'ho fail('d to ·niakr 17·0 Fri·
d;i~· night al th(' Von~ c;111ss1l" 111 Lo.~
Allt:f'l('s. n1;1d1' 18-0 h1 v.-·1 11 lhr t>vrnl /'Ind
thrn n1 iSf<('(j U11·1'r 1Hlll'S ;it IR·.'i, ~Ii~
1\"1H'ld 111;1rk. wh1l'h he ~h :ire~ 11·1!h
!"1rrden's Kjl'll i sa ks.~on at 18-4 14, was set
la~I rnonth 111 t-:J Pnso,
Thrt'r !1lttn11~ Frenc·h nlhletrs all 11on
evrn ts at the n1eel but all three were a id-
ed by excessive winds.
.Jt1('ques Pani won the long jun1p 'A"ilh fl
le11p of 26--317, hurd ler C.uy Clrut took the
120.yard high hu rdle rvent in 13.3 and
floger Bambuck won the 100 in 9.5.
was sold by Detroit to Oakland on May
IO. traded by the Athletics to San Diego
~ix rlayi; later. He pitched four innings for
the Padres before Sunday 's dea l. ,,.,
HA!\1BLR(;. Germ<iny Manuel
Orantes of Spain beat Adria no Panarta of
Jlaly 6·3. 9·8. 6-0 Su nde y to win the men's
!>1ngles !11lc ar the German tenn is cham-
pionships.
Helga !\fasrhoff of \Vest (;ermany took
the \1·omen's cro"·n by defeating Linda
Turro of the !vletairie, La ., 6-J, 3·6, 8·6. ,,.,
BEHLfN Rut h Fuchs of East
c;erm11ny established a world record Sun-
day by tossing the javelin 213 feet 5 1,~ in-
ches lo bftter the 205-8 ~ mark achieved
by Poland"s E"'a Gryz iecka earlier in the
da y.
The offici11I East Berlin news agency,
AON, said Miss Fuchs rea,hed the record
during her second try at an East
Germany vs. Bulgaria athletic meet in
Potsd am. ,,.,
SL'ITON, Mass . Kathy Ahern, a
pretry 2.1-year-old blonde, who turned pro
at the tender sige of 17, after win ning
everything within amateur grasp in Tex-
as. pul !ogelhC'r a flock of birdies Sunda y
in "·1nning rhe $50.000 Eve LPGA c;olf
Cha1np1onship hy n "·hopping six stroke~. ,,.,
CA ~fRRTDGE J UNCTION. Mlch .
David Pearson foughl off stiff challenges
frorn Ric h11rd Petty and Bobby All ison
niidway through the Motor Stale 400 el
fll il·higan ln!ernal ional Speedway Sun·
day, !hen pulled away in the last 100
miles fo csipture lbe $83,000 NASCAR
race.
It 1\'ll.S the thrP<'·ti me national cham·
pion's 1hird triomph on the NASCAR Na-
11onal Association for Stock Car Aufo
Rac ing grand national circuit this year
:ind "·as good for $1J.OOO plus 111p and
qualify ing mon ey. ,,.,
TORONTO -Alberto Rivadeneira, a
24·ycar~!d Sout h Amer ican pro. sink a
12-root birdie putt on the stcond 11udden-
dea th hole Sunday to wtn t.he $18,000
Onft1rio Open f!nlf tournam ent.
He beat Qinsidlan amatrur Gar
H11mllton Jr,, who bid tied the Bir·
ranquilla . Colombia. pro 11 213 after the
5-4 holes of regulation play.
100 Bre~1t
'00 Free f;l ~l•y '"' ll11ntl11gto11 B e a c lo
l'OO Med Rtl1y
2()(1 Fr~•
XIII ln~o
J,() F<e8
!00 <'IV
100 Free
,00 "'" 100 B~c ~
IOtJ Bree)!
•00 Free Rel ay
)(II) ""td. RelfV
700 F "' 100 !~O<> 10 Fret
Olvlng
100 Fly
lllO Frtt
<OO Fre~
100 Bae~
II)() Bre~•• ioo >'rte llel•v
Evans
£ V•'>l
£v~n•
E v~n<
Ev1111
Even•
Ev•nl Ev•"•
K e nnedy
R cnang
R (htng
NO<•
l.lnlo•
E •~!w
Dunnwo..,11
R (~eng
11 C~&no
B•u'>er
1 '' I 1 ·'8 2 , . !7 )
n.1
'" S1.l
).!1 0
"' l Ol 1
J •OI
1 •! \
':!l 0 2 ,08,J
lJ.!
" ' " ' • 01 l
' 00 • I 01 8
' ". L a91111a B ea .. 11
iQ/l 1,1ed Roley
/M Frot
700 ln1~
:\II ~ , ••
10'! ~ly
100 Fr~~
•M Fr ..
10~ B~<~
!00 Br•b•I
100 <'rt~ Rel~y
?'YI I.I"~ Rel•Y
?M F•to
100 lno11
~ ••et
100 'ly
100 Fret
'00 FrN
100 a.,~
100 6 re11t
11)(1 F't• f;leley
200 Med. 11.tlay
XlO F rte
100 lndo
so frtt
Olvlng
100 Fly
!OO Free
•OO Free
100 6aclt:
100 8rt1<I
•00 fret 'ltley
( IA>~·· SrmMOn•
C Were
La Habra
I C~"'~•on
U"'be,~er
\tlel Gilt>erl s c.,.,,,°"
~ Ce me•on
D&vl•
.J (•meron
Umi..rger
Wolf
La Quinta
•o»
·~ Oe•mond
'"'' ·~ D11mood
OM>
Feinberg
601•
1 <l 1
' 19. 1 ,, 1
:J I
I ~·
\1.0
• l• 1
1 01 I
1 100
l jJ;
t .. ~
' •1 I
1 01 I
n .1
'" " ' ...
]•It'
'" 1 OS 6
l :ll.7
' •.l.f , ;50.1
l :5'.1
"' J3.J
~' 4•00 0
.11.4
1_()j J
3 11.4
Los A lami tos
l'flO Mtd R•l•V
700 Fret
100 Ind~ ro ••et
Oivlng
100 Fl~
100 FrH
•00 "'"e
100 6•r~
100 !•ea•1
100 fro• 1<e1•v
WillO'>
w;tso11
W!11on
Bvlltr
Jo"n~n
Wilson
'" Wil10"
Moo•t
1·04
'.!<I.I
2 ~•a
?l 0
'" '" J :.M.J
1:00.0
1 .Ot,J
3.31,
1017 ion
!917
1'61
1'69
t•~· 1110
lt77
)911 un nn
1•17 ,,,,
1911
1912
1911
1tn
1911 nn
'"' l•n
""
"" "" lt/2
1911 itn 1•n 1,n
1'17 ••n 1111 un
100 ''" lltl1v
100 M•<t R•iay
100 "'•• 10ll ln~o
10 F te•
D>v>ng
tOO Fly
100 Fret
<00 F ret
100 Beck
100 Brea•!
IO!l Fret Rtlay
Paclflrn
1-<0 .... 11
w11co~
Heve1
He111!n
Batlt:ltV
(!rel Be•nv"!
.J Howell
I-low t i!
IC eek
Howt l!
I 411
1," ' 1 07.t
U.I
51.!
'" "' 4:2;.!
1 01 ~
1 01 G
! •1 I
Ro11eho A lt1111lto•
20D Med Ii.elev
l'O!I "••e 1M lndo
10 "''" 100 Fly
100 "'"' •00 I' •ee
100 !•ck
11]{1 B•e.,11
100 Free Rel•v
~hll
Mt ll
Ol 1on
Ht ll
Ol!On
M&ll
1-<111
11011
ll ,8
"' ". "' '" "' ' )9 1
"' , M'
' w'
St1ddle baek
ion Mtd Rel1y
100 Fr•8
100 rnoo
~o •'et !00 Fly
11)(1 F rte
•00 F re~ 100 e.,,~
!Oil Bro11l
100 frtt Rel•v
"<•~~
"'••well
Goron•r
~Mtn~i<
Ma<al1
Kane
"-'lt"'-"!'il
.lllen
, 00 ' l ~I 1
1 11 &
'" '" " ' . ~.
I 0' 1
1 1J.f
' ·~ 1
Snn Clemente
11l!i Med Reily
100 F rtt
1(JO Ind()
Ill I'''' OTvi"G
100 Fly
100 fre1
400 ~roe
lOO B•cil
100 tl•e•\I
<00 F•H l!el•V
ICllK~
l!~"lro
~o"nger
Svl!on
Vlelnjno
So"ng!•
I! S"'l111tr
ll1.,1ro
O:lng
I II J
1.J1 ' , 1S .
'"
'" '" I 04 !
I 01 1
' 01.)
111 e1 l :io.1
'~·
.Santa Ana V alle y
1()(1 Med llelt~
100 Fr•e
?00 111<10
lO Fret
II)() Fly
100 ,,, ••
•00 F rtl
11)11 '"'k
100 B•ta•I
•OO Fret R!lay
100 Mtd Rtlt v
100 F rot
100 l~d()
10 Fret
Olvon~
II)() FIV
!I'!!! r •t •
<00 ~ ·ee
100 Bock
100 !·~·~' •00 F •!e Rtley
Hofm1nn
C:floloo.nka
(t'1!wrll
Hol,.,1nn
(1rdwtH
Cl>olOden~a
s~e•••
<~olodeni<'l
St111tlago
H1~lt
1-'i~lt
H l~11
B•tnd
l-lldl•
Midi~
Hld!o
D J"r1e5
B ,/onet
1 .11 l
1·00.l
l 1.1 1
'" ' O! .\ '" ' 10.0
I 013
> M >
l jJ l
''tl ,
'"' l DJ )
'"
'" '" i l6 I
"' I n1 6
l 16 l
ltla
"" 1969
1911
1'"10
1911 ,,,,
"" "" 196,
"" 0 69
1•11
!flt
!171
1911
"~ 1•11
!Oii
1910
Ill)
I Oil
1911
Baseball S landings
A1\fERICAN LEAGUE
Detrol l
Balt imore
Cleveland
Boston
New York
Milwaukee
Oak land
Chicago
Minnesota
Angel11
Kansas City
Texas
East Dlvlslnn
W L
26 21
25 22
22 2J
lj} 24
20 28
16 29
West Division
33 14
30 18
26 19
23 27
21 27
20 30
S1111d•¥'1 •1111lti
(n't•~~ ~-I. Mllw~u~t• l ·l
P.01!cn I •"t•I• '
,V1nne1-01t J, (l1vf l1n!I l
K1n•t• (>!>1 1. NfW Ye•~ 0
B~l!•mor• 1. Tt,•s 1
Or!•olt J, Oe~ltnd 1
TldaY'• 0•Mt t
Pct.
.553
.532
.41\i
. .455
r .417
.356
.702
.!25
.578
.460
.438
.400
GB
I
3
4'1
6'1
9
3\1
6
II 'I
12\1
14 1.S.
O•rtl)i"f U1llfl(ra I I) 1• Ml~~flOlt ll'er ..... 4-61
Mllwev•~• (P&r!<ln' .. 1l •! Tt~11 (Brt1bo!-. .c.•1
B111!m~•e !Ocb-wn 6·61 t i Ot ltlt"d (l lvt O.Jf Onl~ tlmt1 .U.edvltd
TMtdlY'I 01~1
BA!tlma•~ '' o.•11nd, 1111111 Cltvt ltnd 11 At1tt lt, 11111'1
oeiroit 11 M+nne1n1•. 11111"1
Mllwtvkee ,r Tt•e•, n!oM
<~lrflto et roew Yor•. ~toM
1<.tn1t1 Cl!v I! ll0t•o11, 11l9M
•
NATIONAL LEAGUE
New Yor k
Pittsburgh
Chicago
St. Louis
flfonlrea l
Philadelphia
Cincinnati
Oodger1
Houston
Atlanta
San Diego
East Division
W L Pct.
33 17 .66!1
32 17 .853
27 21 .563
?2 29 .4:11
20 28 .117
20 30 .400
Weit Divisio n
31 19
31 21
29 22
2J 26
San F'ranci.!ro
17 34
I! 39
.620
.596
569
.469
333
.316
S11,.&.1"1 1t11111i.
JthlltdtlDI! .. J, AH1nt, I
Clncln111•I 11. MoM•tll I
HnvllCt'> ;, Ntw Var~ ' s~n OIHl1 •, $! ~aul1 J, le lnnl"t•
,.l!l1b\Wtll 7, DntltlN l
C~leeon ... 1, .1•n F r111t.IKD ll>l
TW.r'1 O•IMt
GB
'I
5
1111
12
1.1
I
2'1
7\1
14U,
!!\I
Mtw Yark {C.l'nlry 3-0 11 .t.llt MI (Ml'°*"l'O ,_51
McnlrH ! ($'°""min J.Jl 1t Hnutlo!I (lilfuH 1-S!
~n !Sln,,tr J.•f 11 $t, LOUii (Clt vt!l "'lt
,S.$J, t '·'"·
011tr ••"'•~ 1tl!tdulH
TvNt Y't ·-S.ft ,,...,er.co 11 l'ltt1eu,.11, 11l1hl
Stn Olton '' C1'1ctff
Otic111n el $1. Louis, nl1M
Ntw Ycrk 11 All1nta, nle~t
Jl1'11M t lollla ti (ln(l.,~tll, f, fWl·nle/\t
Mon!rtl l ~• Hov11ori, nlel!t
DE~N LE-WIS
1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
Strvlct ind P1rt1 for All lmporttd C1r1
Modern Body Shop for All C1rs
646-9303
Ora nge Cnunty's Largest and Most Modern Toyota and Vol vo Deller
OVIJtl !AI DI LIVI RY ll'!CIALISTI
•
.Sotianna
?00 MIM! ll.1111
)00 F•ff 200 1noo
~ F•el
IOI) FIV
100 F r11
j(IO F•ee
100 •• ,.
100 !rtl •l a Fr11 Rtl•~
XI& "''" ll:tlty
")Oil F '"' 200 lndo
lo(! ~'" O•vl111
100 Flv 100 ,,, ••
IOI! F •e•
!00 !t(~
100 &•••••
IOI! Frtt 'lt l1,
100 Mllf! lt•lav
200 Frtt
100 lnM
!O ~•tt
Olvlno
100 Fly
1~ Fr••
•00 F •ti
100 Btclo
100 6•11••
.00 F•tt lt !llv
J"""•IOll
B Mor11n
J(ll\l\l!Ol'I
Jot>nll.,.,
(_ Morg1n
I! Mor91n
J~Mn•lon
II Mototn
.Servlte
Yelt on
F•t wley
Frt wlty
euc•io~
l/tl1ra1
F ••wltV
Mellin
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DEAN LEWIS
1972 TOYOTA CARINA
BIG ANNIVERSARY
SPECIALS !!
'72 TOYOTA COROUA
$1966
$264 DOWN
PULL
PRICE
oo ... $48.86 MONTH
'12 VOLVO
2 DOOl JIDAN
P:ULL -,.,c.
00
$3550
$295 DOWN
$92.86 "' MONTH
hf-"'",_.,,..,.,., ptlc• S471Jt.21. ht·
•f9dl.. m I IS$. I ,......., t.r 41
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12 .••• ,.. Z-1 4JlJ44J51Jl7
ATTENTION
VOLVO OWNERS
Annlv1rs1ry Specf1 l I
All CONDmONtN• $425 POI OHLY
INSTALL EDll
1•11'
ltlll
1Qll9 1••• ,,~.
1911
!911l ,.,,
1969
19111
1~10
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1910
. 1918
!Ill
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1010
1911 .,,,1
197~
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SPORTS
AJa111ito s
Racing
E11tries
Enl"•• to• TonogM
FIRST RAC:E •Ila Y••d• ~ v•••
.,101 ClfJMlno "u••• '1000. (lt1mo111 ~~f:~~.~·~ f0°1:~l,_,1 1~ JunP r1>,.n<101 lw St••ul\l 111 Am.Ile• fJ Sd ~ IV/ Mol'•"l>~<tl) 111
D~I lie< t.n RM 00 (~•<lol•I I'" ,.,.., Oellonteo 111 .6n~ .. ) 111
Vi!o1on' J~w•I U Wal><>nl IH ~t1•ni1" lt>•e ? (J Wttd) !1 0 Slee~ 68• IC r'~•nPt J 10'
Arvo E'""'\\ (T l•cin•Mf '" SECOHO RACE BO ver<:h ) vea• "I<!•· Cliumono. l'ur1• $1000, Cl1J,..,,,..~ ""~• s.JOO() (nic~ Pe! 11n I I J Wll•onf .lq10 V11I Tw•t! IS. Tte11urt \ Sour Oe<:I< 4C Petne•I (hk ~elong (( ~m .. ~1 Pr•l!v lndlon !l l lpheM)
Vlnd1 Lino• 1 JR .6d1 irl
W•• Llmlh IG Pre1t•iogel 1-<tn~ .. /\l~lf I tR. 8•n-Jl llnvlh"' Mi n IF 8on~)
l vnne Moon ~1~.E.:.:.l11~~~)
l'•Qnlon Ch•• l !II 8•n~$) ~cent Ot lime I {R .-.nelrl Cl~henvo 4 F Welch I 1'1
THIRO RACE -l.IO ve•dl l V•'' .. 101 & UP Flll•e1 & M•••• Cl1lm•nq pur1e l1600 \l•lmono pr;ce '4000 P~ov MO(ll! IH CtOlhV) Hi Menn• .. IA Ao•I•) Minnie R">el (L Wd11ht)
S1~re Guin~•••e IT l i1>h1"'! Moo•e Chfnt (II l\~nk•l
lr!Je Grl! IC Put•nt•l Em'• Ao•<f>P ll•t>e {F l!iontl FOUATN II.ACE -llll Vttd\ olo• & uo Cl•lmln9 Pur5~ (!aim ing ptlct 11100. fi r• .. L•nd 1 I TP"V Ll<>~Ai'nl C8lllO•"'' S•n<:I• 1 !C Per""rl I'"<"'' llP•I,.. IC Sn'lll~l Moon Di•! (0 C•r!lol•l
R irnc~e! llnc••I ID 11,lll~onl r.llTy G•&nd IR Bonk\)
DeckA''"" IG "Po!IA<•I
01ml wa•c" ~1 .oD£'ir,~~:.
Bii 0' B•• !J WAll<>nl T•ul• e ... I (l l •<>hA,.,,1
"o' Ov•d r re P1•n't1 GVD F.,, IL . Wroqnn
"' ' " ' " " ' "' " ' '" , ....
"'"' "' '" '" '" " ' "' '" " '
'" '" '" '" FIFTH R.t.CIE' -3.lO vt •d• ! V~tr nld• & "" Cl•im•"G P ur11 1))00 Cla1mino prit~ $1500 Burke•• p;~1nl (J M~lsuda) 111 Rn•n Circt IH C•o•b•l '1~ Plunde• {L Wd gh!l 111
Wa!cfl Ell (A """") 1)1 Nillv Nol~ fC Ptrnf •l 111 S1.,ldnnon IM B lck~l l Ill l\ob'1 Ila• Eno (T L ID~tml 1'1 U...cl• Pf!~• CS Tcfa,urf } lit R~~•e• Mit~ II' Bonel 111
SIXTH RAC E -tOO ""'di l VP8' 01~1 (l••mfno. Pun' IXlOO. C!t •<ning
""'' l?l-00 'VN• Hu .. • You 11 l lnna"'! Maktv• Cltl>be' p;i .-.d&i•l Mo•t llov•• ! O Ill!••<>" I Montena Moon IS T•ta1ut•f ,..,rooo• rl! l•nl<1I Tom'• Copv <J l\•oo••l
.-.ramllo< SlfD !O l(nog~!J l;toc•et BrA,k•I ID Caroo1a)
T oo Shtt! (R jtlf~tl\ A ... IE'llt lbl•
" ' '" "' "' " ' "' '" '" '" 8ar Tootf• 1 IC Smit~) 111 M"' Bal Bar 1 IJ WarOI 111 Jerico 1 (C s,.,11~1 "I
Porr Cltl>lwr t IJ Wan•l 17(1 SEVENTll 51ACE ~ St>i va•d• l vel•
01<:11 & "" 11,110..,,,nce Pu•1• llJOO T"' S1>0r!Ca1te" l!pg•f!\ fJ W•t•on! !\old .l<lvtnlure llt H•"l
V•n&ou• !II Ad~l•I lei> ll u11 (F l\on•I Aue !'~rt• 11 Lio~~..,1 Moon'I (o!leen U OrtY•rl
"' '" "' "' ". '" Tl.IO Toll<! IC Pecnt rl I I~ IE'IGHTll llt:ACf -l\O ~•r<:IJ 1 v•a• ~~:11:.~·c_~"'= 4jht11~:n1onl
Tculv Tr!"' !l. loDt>•ml Fle~r !\Id 1 10 Co•dO/tl Ju11!~t P~ IJ. Wa<dl HO<> S~ID And J umo IJ W•t~on\ G~ C~•r~ie Gt1 IR Adfitl Honor PA"U'" I( P•rn'tl
Mud Puo1>v IC 5m•tnl l ad• BuG Go t O l<f'•OM! (ODY Wl lth (F l\O"t ) .-.1io Ell•lbl•
'" '" '" "' " . '" '" '" "' "' AfUrf 9•• Gn I (0 (8t0<>1~1 171) ttlNfH R.-.CE -l.IO vt•d• l \'tit Oldl & UD (l1lm1 .. , P u•1e ,,,100
Clt lmlng prl(t 11000
M• Sue II•' 111 l\an~•l Lo11one (F onel
Rn,.dn<> llOC~P! (J Wtl~nl Ori llv Sieve (D K1110Ml T•uf Con Flv !C Smllh!
I'm e1rio !A. A<:if"/
Lo1t11'°" IH (•Olb• lleln Di•! (I;[ v au9nn! P~c an II•• 10 C1roo11I
e uo fv• t ! ~1;;1~ll•>1>l e
l ""• l e• .6nnie IJ ll lcherd1l
0" The B•am (J 0't Vt ')
L• v ...,u. e ... Luc IS It•••~''' li;h!1>11>e ll•llOt IJ W1•D
Ba se ball
Leaders
"' "' '" "' '" "' '" "' '"
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tOOAY'S MAJOI! LEAGU E lliAOl!l5
"on. U} S•ngvlll,n, l>th. lJI; I.A
EIAf TING 100 .i b8!\ -5t~llnf'lt.
l>(;oh J}S. S11n1u•ll•n. Pot>, lll; M
AIOI.I. S1l • .J.JS; Torr!, srL. llS; Ct
tl•n~. Hin, J?I. Bu<knt r. LA. l lJ
ll UNS -Mn•~I'"· (If', •0; 8<lnCIJ, 51'
ll , lOIAn. (In, JV, Bene~. (If', lo\;
W~hon. H•"· l.I llUNS B"lTEO IN '1•r9ell, P<>~
to. !\enc~. Cln. t4: l(onQm&n. SI', lll :
ft Oliver, P11h. JI; SIMmon\, Stl, l5
HITS -8 r11<t . Sll, 67; A Ot'v•t,
Pg~. /t6 ; Tnrre. Sil. 6t ; A Ollv••. P11n.
M. Torre, SIL. 6"; A Oliver. Pgt>, M;
Tnrrt . Sil, ~•; ~""9"!11en, P9h, '3:
l11l~11. (in, 6l OOUl\LE~ -l\f'ntl•. SI'. H : Futn!t\.
SF, 1); "!It•, NV, 1'; MonltnflJ, Phll.
11 Toll'f', (ift. n: Mad<lo,, SF, 11 :
Soelf •, SF. 11 TRIPLES -8r>w•· f'~I, SI CarO•nl l.
Chi, ,, St•""•"· Poh. •; 1 •0<~. sit . 'r
Tf'I•"· (In, 4
HOME A:VNS -l\tnch, (I,,, 151
s10,ae11, Poh, 11: l<lnom~n. Sf . 1•:
Colbf rt. SO, 11 H. "••nn, All, 101
Woh""· H1'> 10
STOLEN BASE S -MM9an. C1n, 11.
9'<Kk. Sil. II; Toi•"· (111, 11: C~•no. 1-<1~. H ; 9.,,...,,, SF, 11.
PflCl-<ING rs Otcl\lon11 -Nol•"·
Cln. 1·1, .lilt. 1.1'.SuM<>"· LA, l·I, .IP. 11~11. Pon. 1·1. ,l lS, 111 J. Rtv, Hin.
1·1. .1}$, 5.11 e. Mlllt • Pgh. 4·1 .. IOO. /.AotlA(~, NV, ~.7, .lJ(I, 7.lt Sttve•, NY,
1.1, n1 . l .18 H•nll•. Ch!. ,.,, .n•. , sc
Sllltl(EOUTS -Ct rlton ,.,,I, 11':
S~•vtr. NV. 14: McOOWftl, SI', 71: S11I·
Ion, LA, 66; GlbllOll, SI\., 6-1; Splnk1,
SIL , 6-1 • .t.Mf!•ICAH lf!AOUE
e.-.rTING 100 t i blh-Plnlen1. ICC .
. 1'11: D. Alltn, Chi, .l'1: Rudi, 011i , . .»•: c . M••· Chi, .J ll ; Alom1r. '"·
.JI)
IUNS -H1r~r. 9 111, :U: Tovt r.
Min, ll: pJ,,1e111, tlC. ll: Rudi, 0 1k,
l 11 0 "llt". (I'll,)),• C. M1y, Chi, ](I
RUN1 l\.t.TTEO IH -0 ... U1ft, Ch(,
«!: •. Jltkton. Oali, '51 C. M1y, C~I.
JO: DullCan, 01111:, 1t: O•rwin, Min, ll
HllS -A!omtr, Cl !. IJJ Pl11l1!11.
KC. •21 llt11dl. Ott. o\01 0 , Allt1>, CM,
5': C. M1v. Chi, 5•. DOUl\LES -Rud!, 0-'<, H ; D • .-.iltn.
(hl. 11 : p1,,r1n1. ICC, 11 1 ll•lldle, Tt i .
11. "Ollrl(io. 91n, 10: Hlt'pff. t•n, 10
p~ttk. I((, 10 : 1. Jt <kl<I"· o n . 10.
TRIPLES -Mt(r1w, Cit, I : RUiii.
Otli,. II 811lr, 9AI, J; f lit, 11•. J,
Tov•r, Min, l HOME RUNS -R. Jl dllOfl, 01~. 11. o A111n, c111, "' c11~. 0.1, 1~: o"'' t•"· O•k, IG; H•r0tr, lhn. 11 1!111!rl•
Qfl~. I.
STOLEN 8ASES -D. NllMlf', Tt•.
,,, 1'. K•llv, (hi, U; MlddOI , l111. 1)
Ctm1>1nt•l1, O.~. 11J Wl'tl~. NY, 10
PITCHIHG (S Dtcl1!<11'1) -l(,A!
Ml~. 1·1. .t l S, 1.U Fl"""• Oak, i.1,
l lJ, 1.15 LH. lltn, fol, .ll)O. l 11
l ur1m1te,, K(, '·'· ,ll)O, J.Sl lrflll'Y c~1. ,,,, n1, 1"' ~letN-rt, '''" f.J, 11· 3 n f'tf'!l(ltt!I, Ml!. l •L J"-l Jt
Wrllllll, C,i. t-J. tSO, 1,JQ,
&T lll lKEOUTS -Lolldl 0.1, M G ,.,,,v, Ci•, 111 l •lldi.v, Chi. 11
C11l1m1n, 0.1, 7•1 l lv f9vrn. Ml•. II
Deep Sea
Report
Two Mesans Battle for E lims Lead
A pair of Costa \les;i
res1den1s banle lt out for thf
l'ad 1on1glit as flit \\'ei;t ('n:'I!(!
OCWAJiS IOlf -\Of •"•I••" , N•·
r•euo1, lfJ k•tP 1>o11. 1 ~.,,out '1 Matrh 1.arnf' E l imina non~
M•Cktfll
SANTA MONICA _ " •nvt•": .,3 resun1e al Kona Lanes lfl
f(1c ~ coo. 11 ... ,,., Nu •• ,... -• Costa ~1esa
D°"° JO'ln-Lll<IO ll•~h
J"" 'o\ ~· I•. G.o• CW o
' G-" 5-•· P a. 11, ... ,. • 0•·· "'on" ... , .....
' "-" .... 11 ........ G o <tl*~• • !loo ''"P~•• I.OH~ lh•<n ' ;,,,, 0 N• II lo""""• " (hrll L owr• ll1vPrl•OP o ...... " l •l•n ""'"""""'" ........ , 1 ~,, " C•v<:I~ ~·<"••
"~
"' '~· ~ •O•
'"' ... ,.,
'"' 1 '" ((OS'O
D•"•
Po 1>1 1 17• " """' It"'" ....... ,,,..""'
l•or : ... " . .. , . ~ 1r"<'f"n••1<:i•r .. ll•cbo"
!(114•• ........ .... " ,,., ... ,,,,,. 1 fj> ~ tr.-. ... ........ 1 .... , .. • ... " '~ '~· l!ttr• , :11 ! ... ~ .. " I \j' ,, ''"<' S•·o~l't rco••• \l•t•' "" " Dwav,,. •1•r•• OM uonn "''"'"' 1 J)). M !(. ..... '" -' ................. ! ·~· n (11 ..
W•llOA 1FD<in1&!n V•ll•YI , "'~· ~ "' "'~ ~····"'°" C'W•11!non1l1•l '·'"
f!A\l f ROSS J>ONllAC S
EICCl USI Yi N(W CA P
OAll Y PILOT
~"::'.!~i" ... ..., b•11• ~ •oc• too. 111 Charli e S11'1Llhng currently/I r-.;;-. ____ _, _________ ;;,._,;;.;;;;;;;;,. ____ ~
'""" 1"10•0 ttiM H••'"' L•""'"'1 liold!! tlie lead 1n the 12th an-
-!JI .... 1 .. 1: .. , (I ~ ti.ow.. l I ~ 1· I ·1h 2 520 M t th M h•llttui. 3, 11..,, be~ •l "'"'"'""' fillet v<)W lflC f!Ven WI . ee e an
1s,..-111.ii1,..1 '"° •nQt••1 1 pins, bu t tlnnther M('san -
5 YEAR/50,000 MILE
WaRRan ty
~;:1~::·1~.! ri .. ••<u"•· ''' c111co "'"'' Fred Dougherty -is Just t1\lol Behind the
1M,1•1.lL lf.t.CH -~ 1nu1.,., 1 pins ba('k .
bo.o• .. 7S bonilf) j(I ~·Ip ban . .II Action begins at 9 o'clock Safeco Sm'1le. ve11ow11n. n roe• u111
OANA WHA., -~ 1ngle•• II} Sih1!11ng . a 19-year·old fO'J\.:11'
c1llco bAu. 5 11a .. 1cu<:11, ' 1>0111>111. Jl• lo the tourney. re<>orded )!fl 881 I
rock coe. • m•<•••PI ~('fl('li la.-;t week In jump from
HUl<tT IHOlOfoj lllACN -t1 111oler1. I :JOJ ,,..., ""'s !hi" r\o 16 .-;pot lo first place.
LOHG llE'.lCll (111,....nl '•tll -Ill
o nele,., 1 vt •rnwt"''• ~ n1.,ec"°1 l6a To• It 10.,!1•• I
c111tco 1>•11 t i } •{IO"k con ltrtl -100 P t l G1m1 Tol•l•I
•n•'•'•· ·~ "''~ ""'' l'l•r"l11t Lon Po1. 1 owle' Hom• Town "'"'
d1n•1 18~ e •<>l~r;: ),HJ tellto ""'~· I (f>M l>I ~•nilling . Co•ll M''lll 1 Sl01
9S rn"~'""' 1 r.-a Dnu~l\ff!Y, (0111 NIP\I l .lll RIE'OONDO -Ill anGlt".' "81 conco,-p;. ____________ _,
b•"· I noi.1>ut 1 on •oc• <(1(1 l•r~••11 -3~• •nt!P,., •28 rne.c•er~I. l .S.O rock
,~
HEW,ORT !Art'• LlnQiftl l -Ile
l l!!l<lP'I 191 <ll•CO b•" II ..,,.,~.,fl
[OIVIY '• l0<••rl -lU 1ntllro,] ....
roc1><111. IQ bcnol<>. tao c••«o ntu. 1
VPllow!ill, 1!t meck,rt!
SEAL IEAC H -19' 11•01•'" JOO
'"l•to l>t n . ' ~tllDul. • l>•U•tva,., 1701
·~~ c(l(I l•rto -llS •nQlt•J, )l)OI
b•'•· 9 hlllt>ul. l1 m1cktttl
WE MOVED
TO 100 FAIR DRIVE
Acrt11 '"'m C.M. Pollet U•l1on
Fo1lrground1 Golf Ro1n91
l'trm1rly Co111 M1>.I Goll R1n91
Sl IUCKn OF IALLS 50c
WUh Ad Oller Goocl Unifi 4-J0.'11
e AUTO e HOME e YACHT e INDUSTR IAL e COMMER CIAL e BONDS
~
SAFECO
INSURANCE
BOB PALEY
& "•>O<•lltf, Inc
4 74 E. 17TH STREET
CO STA MESA
642-6500 -54 6-3205
Sail Boat Show
1'1ie,'< {11 r II f.lt~I/ -
J11ne 13 19
1 ....... '" ••• , .. ;, 9•••'
(.oll1tlooll or .11 ly~·· of ••I botl•-•nd th•n 1•! vnur
co~"• for • fun 1urnMtr'
de,ole" c oll Tom McC•o"•
5]9 ,8168 to b1 1nducl1 d ,
H un•1nqlo" C e nlo• 11 81 .. ch
& Ed:t>9 •r •• s,., 0'"1 "
F,,,.,•v. H unt1n9tnn B•~·;, Read th(' D .\ILY P[J,OT
spe
•
A four year hitch in Armor, Artillery or Infantry will do it. It's
a special enlistment that demands a special man . A man the Army.is
now able to give more to get. $1500 more .
~ -r~ 8 If you've got what it takes, you
· " ... ~ · ·~· may qualify for this bonus, paid w~e ~
> you successfully complete your tra1 rung.
The bonus is over and above1the
Army's new starting salary of $288
,,
t
' ~ .
I '
a month . Over and above the Army 's
many benefits. Like free me al s,,free
housing, free medical and dental· care;
and 30 days paid vacation each year.
This special enlistment in Armor,
Artillery or Inf an try offers other
advantages, too .. Like your choice of unit ,
or your choice of location in the States ·
·~--or abroad . And the choice is guaranteed .
We'll put it in writing for you befo re you enlist.
Find out if you're the s·pecial kind of man we'll pay a special
'bonus to get. Talk it ove.r with your nearest Army Representative.
Local quotas are limited, and this off er may be in effect for only a
short time depe~ding on Army Aa• llJ
COSTA MESA
542 West 19th Street
645-1163
.jOll.
HU NTINGTON BEAC H
18530 Beach Boulevard
962-8821
CHAMPIONSHIP START -Lido-14s gel off to a
bunched start Sunda y in the fleet •I championship
held at Balboa Yacht Clu b. Top finis heri; in the re-
gatta qualiiie d for the first international cha mpi on-
ship regatta for the class to be held in Mexico next
November.
June 23 iff11tch
\
Ficl{e1~, Hood Protago11ist s
111Calif01·11ia Cup Series
By AL,\10N LOCK AB EY
DI 1111 D1lrt Pilot Siii!
Two sailing
Ame:rira's Cup
l'klpf)frS l)f
fame will
tangle in a match rare series
for California YRl'ht Club 's
Cali fornia Cup June 2!2'4·15
off Marina del Rey.
The protagonist.~ will 1970
Arnerica's Cup . defe nder Bill
Ficker from Newport Btach
and famed Bos!on sailm11krr
and fnnner An1rrica ·s Cup
trial 11kipper . Ted ll nnd .
Cali forn ia Yach! Club com-
modore J ack We ber <in·
nounced thls week tha! Ficker
and l~ood would be m<ltched 1n
the new Ericson-46 sloop built
in Costa Mesa .
Hood, wh o resides 1 n
Marblehead. Mass. 1~ a
renowned bl ue-wa ter racer,
having won line honors in
many Atlantic offshore events
BOATING
and "'as the overall winner 1n
a recent Southern Ocean Rac-
ing Circuit in Florida,
All of Hood's boat s have
been named Robin, including
{;r {;r fl {:. {;r {;r
Robin West Scores
Overton Race Win
Robin \V esl. Ted Hood's
Ericson-35 sloop skippert d by
John Fields nf CalHornia
Ya cht Club w11s the overa ll
winner nf CYC's Pt. Dume
Trans-Bay Race. the final
fe;:ature of the Overton Series.
Robin \Vest finished the 52·
mile race at 6 :~2 pm. Sarur·
dav afte r a nQ<ln start in a
goOd westerly breezf' !hat held
over the entire coursr.
Second overall was .John
Linskey·.o; Yankee.JO s 1 n n p
lndf'pe nd ence f ro n1 \Vind·
jammers Yach! C'lub 11nrl th1rrl
"·as Rill Lr\\'i.~' Eri csnn·32
Blue r..1.i1 x of \VY('
Blue MRX \.l'Ound ur ;i~ 1hr
n1·rra!l v•inner of thp <h·prtnn
Serie~ and Jnde[){'ndence as
runner·up
FinAI re.~11J1~. Pt Oun1e.
Transbay race
CLASS A -1l1 Rnh1n \\"e~1 .
12 1 Borba. ~l1ckr.1· Colich,
CYC, 13 1 Defiant :\1ck Smith
11r. eve.
CLASS B -(11 Ma mi e. Mrlt
Smith. CVC: 121 Aquavit,
C'hri.~ Hansen. CYC: 13)
Xanalyn, Bub Shank. CYC.
CLASS C -fl I Cheetah.
Dick Pennington. KH,'C; i2)
Quicksilver. Pa I m I e r i &
f;us.~ian. \VYC: (J \ Viva,
(;orham (.;etchall, \VYC 1 sub-
j(•rt lo protest ).
CLASS 0 -11 l lndepen-
denl'r : 121 Rlue Max; i.11 Sun
M;1id, <_;ene Sofen. NYC.
~10R F 1ri.tatt WaJ.q h Series l
-111 Sudy II!. Andy Locktnn,
C:\'C; I 21 PILrn1 Nuts. Br11d
Go<ifrey . KHYl '; 4J1 f'4>!l1na
~1A ri P. Tnm Colr~. CYC : 141
GrPml111 II. Hasty Arnold,
PM\'C
l'IJHF·A -
Chuck Fnv•l£>r,
Nin1blr L11~s.
\\'Y('; 131 liili.
CYC.
11 1 Antigua .
KHYC : 121
.Jack Brink
Fred Shorr,
Pl!Rf" H -! I 1 ./im Pat I!.
.lnhn f.llrn11•nn<l. PVYC. 121
1.:tr'i'. Bndditey £.: F1nrh,
l\HYC 1.11 Fiesta. Rufu~
Rohcr ts. SMYC; 14 1 Windfall,
R11.lph \\-'i!son , PMYC.
the F:riC'son-48 Robin \Vrst th at
he had built especilllly for
We.!'lt Coast competition this
year. He was overall hand icap
winner ln l..os Angeles Yacht
Club's Whitney &ries this
year and is standing high in
California Yacht CI u b 's
Overton Seri es.
Hood is equally W('!l·known
throug hout 1he coun try 11~ a
s11ilmakrr . h11ving huil! sails
fnr ;:ill of the An1crica 's Cup
winners du ring the ! a s t
decRde . He a l~o maintRi ns a
sa il loft in Costa Mesa.
Ficker i!'I still b;1 sking in the
glory of his 1970 An1rrica's
Cup 1vin and i.~ 11lsn prrp;irin~
for his role of skipper in a nr1v
boat being huilt for the 1974
Cup can1pnign .
He recently sailed in Long
Re.:t ch Y11rht Club's
Congr<'ssinnri! Cup Senr~ The
Cal1f0rnia Cup will he his se-
1·011d tune·up for 1974.
F'icker "'on the California
Cup in 1970 sailin.li( Pat
Dou.li(an 's t2-me!f'r Cnlumh i;1
t1~11in1;t the 12-meter Endle.~s
Summer 1ex. Dam r Pa!tif'1
Ficker said recently he was
i mpres.,ed 1•:ith the
responsiveness of the new
Ericson·46_ The yacht t s
characterized flush d e c k
la~·o11t and po"'erful double
he Ad rig.
lotnn1ndore \Veber s a ! d
California Yacht Club is using
fhe event as a highlight of it.~
g n 1 den anniversary. eve
rnen1bers have ta ken a leading
role in promoting y;icht riir ing
in Sou1hern California s1nrc
1922.
1'he M1d\.1·1n!1>r Rei;:iit1R. lhP
\Vo rld's larges! sailing el'en!.
undrr the ~pon~orship of
Sou1 hf'rn Ctilifomia Yach!ini;:
1\~.~oc1:ition, was nriginated by
CYC 11! its early Los Angeles
har'bor elubhnusr.
Jn !9.'12 C\'C members built
borh six and Pigh!-mc!er
~·11chts ro C'o mpe le in thr.
Olympics. 01\·en Churchill \\'On
a gold medal Jn his Angelita. Star Lo gs
Catalina
Triumph
Beet• Can ~lat~lt
Brigh1 Si ar. skippered by W.
T PasC'Of' nf NP"'porl H.:irbor
Ya cht Club y,•as th e O\'era ll
and Cla~s A winnrr nf
Ntwport Harbor \'acht Club's
Catali na V.'est End & Hrturn
Race Satu rday and Sunday.
Thf' race \\'as a nrw fe<tture
of NH\'C's Ahmanson Series.
The two leRs of the course
~·ere scnrrd -a.~ nnr race. The
flee t sailed rrom Ne"'JXJrt tn
Hoy,·Jand's La nding. Catali na
Jsland on &it urdav and after
an overnight layQve r sailed
borne on Sundn.v. G oo d
westerly winds prevailed for
both legs of !hr course.
Tribute, the ColumbiR·fi2
skippered b.v Oick Blnll crman
of Balboa Y1tcht Club was fir~t
to finish bot h 1£>~s hut failed to
save her lime. f inal results:
OVERAl .. L--1 1 J Brij.!ht Siar:
(1 ! Coun!erpoinl. Dick De:i\·tr
& Bill He11dden, BYC; (a!
Tribute.
CI,ASS A-! t 1 BriRhl Sta r:
(2 1 Tribute: fJ) And,11!e, Tom
Yoder, LB\'C.
Balboa Club Race Slated
Thr Rccr Can Srr\r~. Ralboa
Yncht Club'11 annual midwerk
s u m m er t i me n1;1dness,
laughingly called 11 yachl race
but more appropr iately knol'.•n
as 1111 insu rance underwrit er's
nig htrnare. ·will get under y,·ay
ne xi Thursday night.
In the June Brrr Ct1 r1 1-icrics
and the July Thi r.~ty Thu rsday
Series. yacht.~ up 10 50 fe£>t
race on Ill boat-for·boot h~sis
y,·i thin 1he narrow confi nPs or
Newporl Harbor starting at 6
p.m. every Thursda)".
In recent years 11n August
sr.ries has her,n in.11u gurated
c11 Hed the Champagne Cup.
AIJan Seeks
J)11t cln11a11 Bid
The rtice or"igi nated more
than a dccn de ago whrn two
O\.l'ncrs of large boats berthed
at the Newport Harbor Yacht
Landing got to arguing about
the merits of th eir lndi\'idua!
yachts and proposed a rape -
complete y,•ith a size;rble
"·ager -through the. harbor,
around the enlranct bell ·buoy
and back.
\V ithin a few weeks other
01,.ners or large yachts issued
challenges and the Thursday
night race grew to fantastic
proportions, providing thrills
galore for the cocktail crowd
aboard their moored yach~
and at waterfront homes.
After the second year BVC
took over the runni nl{ or the
race in an effort to establish
some rules And add a
semblance of sanify to the af·
fa ir.
Lido Title
l 'aptnre<l
By Vll n1<11i
D.<1 ve l;l!m.:in nf Rnlboii
\'11 cht Club y,•nn the Ne \.l'pnrl
Harbor Fl!'C'l I champinnsh1p
or the Lido· I~ Class Sttnday in
a fiv e r11ce rega tt a sailed out
of Balboa Yacht Club.
As !he winner, Ullman top-
ped a list of 10 qu al ifiers for
!he first internat ional cha m·
pionsh1p for the class which
will be held at LH ke Valle de
Brava ne ar Mexico City in
November.
A special trophy wa.~ nward-
ed to Fred Toef)('l nf BYC as
lhe !np Class B finisher in !he
fl eet f'hampionship. He finish·
ed 14!h in the fleet.
Balbo a Ya ch t Cl u b
dominated the cham pionship,
pl11cing nine of the top 10.
Summarv:
(I 1 D.11\·e U!lnian. 8 \'(': (21
.Jai:k ~\1cCl;ir1\', BYC: 131 A!rin
Oleson, BYC :.141 Bill McCord ,
BYC; ~51 (;ared Smith . BYf';
1fi 1 Jin1 Tyler. 8 '{(': 171 ('had
Ty,·ichell, L!Yl'; IRI Bruci::
Orsborn, RYC: 191 Oon
Stoughton. RYf': (1 01 Ro11'l11nd
U:l/)mAn, BYC.
CONSOLATION t'L!l ;HT -
(JI John Coulter. B\'C; 121
Han k Humann. BYC: 131 Jim
Kerrigan, BYC',
PHRF Tit1e
Collected
By Pleiadcs
Pl eiades. skippered by Ran-
d,\' and Dick Sm ,v1h nf Cabrillo
Re11ch Yacht Club \\'a.~ the
P/I RF' winner in Huntingt<Jn
Harbour Yacht Club's .June
ln\·itationRI Regatta S111urdav a~Sundav . •
Trophy '\'t'inne rs in a I J
cla~ses :
f"/IHF·A -1J1 l'le1 ades: 121
\\'anderer, Dick Danie Is,
llHYf': 1~1 Le11>chen. Bob
1-lelfer. lll lYC.
PHRF'·R -(!I Red Barron,
Cill Harljiit', 1-!HYC: 1 2 I
l}eluder, f.fax Warnl'r . LRY C:
1.11 O'Bef', Bob O'Brien. HH·
YC.
<:aJ·20 -1 [I Nix, Nick Con·
do:i; .. SI FI YC: 121 Hanlii Up,
Stevt Levinr. ABYC; r31 Low-
Cal, Don Michae lis, AB''C,
Race Crown
To Tabasco
<:enrge Griffith's Ca 1-J 9
Tabasco was the \Vinner of Los
Angeles Yacht Club 's Stag
Cruise to Hnwland's Landing,
Calalina lsland Sal urd,11y 11nd
Hug h Roger s' Cal·36 Wh imsey
JI was the win ner of the
retur n race on Sunday.
The race v.'a! sailed in a
brisk nor 'wesler that 'tOOk th e
fl eet fro m the S11n Pedro
Lighthouse to Howland's on
one tack.
Winners in the PH R P
division ·were Bill Hoskins'
Windhover on Saturday •nd
Ray Wallact 's Sea Nymph on
Sunday.
Gardiner Wins
lnvilalioual
•
Bases to Serve Air Needs?
County Use of Militur y Air[JOrt.o; Pos .o;ible Remedy
By ARNOLD FRI EDMAN
and
THOMA S O. ELIAS
S1t~l11 M ftle D•tLY 'ILOT
M1ht11ry ba.~es may becomt
the :solution to the incre11~1ngly
crillcal prohlem of where 10
put future airport" in Sotllhern
Callfornia.
I NEWS ANAI,YSIS J
use public nUll'iance as a bas is
in the ir comphunts 01'£>r je:t
J)l)JSe, fun)es and \'ibrations
An airport lmpacl study just
e-0mpleted for the ctry nf
N~wport Beach found noi:i:c
from planes at Orangf' Count )
Airport has become '1zn·
10Jerable" for area re:sidents.
1')lat study, prepared by an
Arcadia cr.insuJt1ng firm at a
$42 .000 cost , also ad\ ised the
city to push for a combined
{'JI il1an·n1il1tary airport at E!
·rort• as a partial solution
A regional air transportat11on
sLudy by the So u th e r n
Cahforn1<1 A.!lsoc1at1on of
Governn1cnts, due fnr release
next month, r£>por1edly wil l
recumn1end the same 1h1ng
That s!udv "·di say that El
Toro shnuld-~ in Jo1'n! use hv
1985. \\'illiarn L_ Dochnahl.
sc1ir ;·s assistant a v i a 1 1 n n
planning coordinator. said u1
an 1nter1·1ew .
() R A r\' r. E C () U ~ l' Y
AIRPO RT, hoy,·ever, would re·
n1a1n open as a commuttr
airport under SCAG 's pro-
jection.
DochnHhl added that he
'"" ... ' r ':__. .1 -.;:..~~ ~"">1 -'
'
bf!!Je\'es Orange C o u n t y 's
superv1~ors and other officials
mav ht makln~ a big pitcl1
lo\1,-ard \Amp Pendleton ln
hope~ that the f.1Rr 1nes will
rn11n1.-r lly letting ~rl of El
Tnrn go .
Thert 1s precedrnl A
ontt1n1t Air t~Orce ba~t' In the
se.aport city or B;ini;:or , Me. i~
now a ma jor stopping pnin1 for
comml'rcial plRnPs refue ling
before Lrans-Atl<1nt1c flights ,
If local gol'emments in
Sou!hern California push hard
enough. a n1il1!ary site l1erl!I
might be pried loose . too.
"':!'. 'Wt.., Z
Proposal~ ha ve been m;:ide
for a major co1Tirnrrc1al Jf't.
pnrt on the Camp Pendletnn
~\arine (_'orp!' base tu !'.er1 e
llrange and San Diego l'oun-
t1es and for use of the atn1n·
doned ()xnard Air fore£> B:i~e
site 1n Ventu ra Counrv ns a
.srnall airport.
Other suggestions include
<"OOl'ersinn of lht El Toro
r.-tarine Air St ation near Santa
Ana ;ind the Point .\1ugu Nav<1l
Air St:i11nn nl'ar l l~nard intn
combination m!l1!ary-c1l'i!ian
n1rfil'ld s.
Me11 in Service ,,
' •
tlRA1''GE C 0 U !\TY OF·
f lCTALS. plagued by Jt't nn1~e
prnhlem s at Orange ('011nry
Air1xirt . have their eye rin ;in
undf'vf'lopl'd 2.500-acre coasta l
rorrion of C;in1p Pendleton
straddling the San Diego
Freew;i~· just north o (
Oc!'anside.
\1Pntu111 County officials,
feeling they \\'ill eventually
need a large commercial
airport , have long wanted
Po int ~1ugu, providing they
can conl'ince the Navy to ac-
cept joint use.
In !he 1neantin1e Ventura
County offic1<1ls are 111atching
as the city nf Camarillo and
Pepperdine Un iversity push
their plan to convert the 7i0-
acre Ox na rd base into a co m-
bination tra nsportation scl1not
and general aviatil)n Rirporl.
The sill' is on !hr outs kirt s of
Camarillo.
Pepperdinl' bf!can1e involl'ed
in its sc.'heduled ·mol'e in the
fall from downtown Los
Angeles In its new MA iibu
c11rnpus nesir the Ven1ura·l.os
Angeles <'Oun!y line
These effcins lo runvert
mili!trr.v prnpl'rt y rire arising
beel!U~I' it's hard to find R si1e
in the Snuthliind hig enough
/nr an airport and isol;1!ed
ennu,gh tn be immune frnm
suits 01'er jct nnise_
A.\10N<; THE 0 ;\ILY plriees
lert any1vhere near IRrgf'
f"'lpulrilion centers are rhe
1nilitary bases close to the
ntean.
Bui thf' p r o po .'i a I s for
transforming military bases
are likelv to throw the local
officials ·involved inlo clashes
v.·ith t he mili t ary
es<'!tblishmenl. \\'hich rarely
_2ives up property without a Ct11°gf) Da11ger
fighL
The Pendleton proposal has
dra"'n he.at frnm the base
commar.der. Maj. c; r n .
Herman Pogge rneyer, \VhQ
r.~sued 11 starement opposing
fl ny .~nrt of civilian jet airport
on !he base a.~ a possible hin·
drance In training.
!\s for the !'<Jint Mug11 pro·
posal. Charles Winger. chief of
thr .:iirports division fnr !he
WPstern region of !he Federal
.South Viet name se sol·
diers at My C'h a n h
transport weapons of
varying degrees of dan-
ger to th e battle si tes.
.A. hove. shells carried
by hand and bel ow a
load of barbed \Vire to
reinforce the ARVN
positio n.
l.
Coa~t Guard Fireman Ap-
pren11c·e James S. Di~man~.
hu sband of 1he f\lrn1er !\11ss
l.1·1111 \1 Andersu11 1.f '.1072
T\ler \\'a v. ('nst.:i i\1Psa. has r~lur·ned 1·0 .'11'.~l tle 'Ahoard rhe
('~1;1s l (;uard (·11 11t•r '.\ior1h1\111ct
[1dlow1ng :~ s1x·rnon1h rlppln y.
rnf'nt 1\·11h n1r '.'\ :i 1· y · r.
A111.·u·c·t1c· Supro1rt Forl'r .
Coast <:uard St':inl<'ln Larry
E. Bryant. snn nf rvlr and
'.\1r·s. C. E. Hr;,ant 11[ 618
Ada1ns , and h11.~h;ind 11f the
forrner .'\l1~s ('arol A Hudd of
Daren Circle . .:ill nf lhHH 1ngt\ln
BeaC'h. has re!urncd tn Seat1le
;ibu;ird 1he Cn:1sl !;uard Curte r
Nor1hw1nd fol1111r1ng il SIX·
n1n111h dep]t)~·1nt'n! y,·1th the
l\a1·.1•s Antarct1r Su fl port
r·orce. ---
Armv 1\'arrant orficcr t«in·
didate ·aurti~ W. Vr r Haar Ill,
\\•hose parents live at 8562
T_)Qn11!d Ii r c 1 £>. Hun!ln,gton
Be;rr'h. rec("n!I ~· con1ple1ed a
20-11crk hrl1i:opl!'r pilot enur.~i?
<it rhe l'.S Ar1n 1· Prin111ry
lle!1cflptcr S•·h00J. FL i\'nltrrs,
Tex
!\-lrinnf' Pfc Ral ph r:. ~p!'tr.
son nf illr A.iron fl Sperr nf
J.1401 \'1f'rnri;i Lani' Hun·
tin,gton Br<'lrh. hR~ cnn1ple!cd
t11·0 11eek~ nf sr:if'rial <Hll·
ph1b1011s opl'r<it1on.~ 11· t ! h
Brazilian and \"enc7urlan
~1arines \n the ruerto Ri can
i~land of VieqUf'S,
Navy t:nsign Tho rna~ C.
Bov.'ard . son of Cnlonel and
i\lrs .!ohn D. Ho1v;irrl nf 740
A1nigos \\'a.v, Ne\.l·port Rr;rrh .
has begun adv11nr'erl fl ight
trainin.11: at Corpus Chri~ti .
Airman Gary E. ~ullon, son
or Mr . and r.1rs. MR;i; F,, Sul-
ton nf fi351 Alhena Dr 11·r. IJ11n·
!ington Beach. hRs ron1plr!ed
his U.S. Air F'nrce hisic
training 11t the Air l"r:i inini;i:
Command's Lackland AFB.
Tex. He has been assiRned lo
Sheppard AfB. Te': . fnr
training as a medical service~
specialist.
i\larine Pv! Aroolrf R.
Jark~on son of Mr and ~frs .
Corn!!'! Stinson of 72.1\ 21lth SL ,
Weslmins!er, gradualed from
basic training at I.he J\1arine
Corps Recruit Depot in
Ditgo.
San
.himcs R. lfngue. son of ~fr.
11nd ,\frs. H11rry Hogue of 9902
\\lesthav e n Circlt',
\\'estmlnster. has accepted an
appo1ntn1ent In the U.S. Air
Force Academy.
He i.~ scheduled to report to
!hf' academy fnr six v:eeks of
!ni sir cade! trHininR preceding
the ~I art of !he academic year
in August.
{ lpon l'Olllplrtion o[ a four·
year course nf study and
rnili!ar.v !ra ining. he will be
~rriduated in 1976 wi!h 11
b:rchelnr of science degree and
\1·11! receil'e a regul ar com-
mission as an Air Force se.
cnnd l1etenant.
l' S Air Force Sergeant
ll nbrrl F, Tobia~. snn of Mrs,
Ber\'I A TnbiRI'. 2191 Harbor, Ct).~i<t 1\1esa , has arrived fnr
cl11tv .:t i Da vis-Monthan AFB ,
Ariz.
1-icrg!;int Tobias. an 11ircrafl
mninrenance ~pecialist. i 5
a~s1,1?ned !o a tJnit nf the Tac-
!leal Air Command \\-'hich pro-
\'irle~ comhnt unit.'i for air Sllp-
pt'lrl nf U S. ground forces . He
prl'l'lnusly ~erved at Kadena
AB. OkinAwa
f;;ir\· H. Grant. snn of ~f r .
;ind ~fl's _ Emmet! H. Gr-ant
JI'. 4590 Dog"'orxi A\·e .. Se-al
Brach , v.·ill receive his seconrl
\1eutf'[1Hn! commis.~ion and
BS. df'grre upon graduat ion
from the U.S. Air f orce
Academ1 .
The r·adr!. \1·hn has heen
~elrc1ed fnr nal'igator trairung
Al ;>..father AFB. majored in
ps yc hology. H£> rec e i 1• e d
~peci11 ! recngnition t h 1 s
seme.-:ter b~· being namf'd lo
the Dean·,, Li~t fnr academic
e-:cellence.
!iirn1an Mergte L. Renn,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
Ed\\·ard B_ Renn Jr. of 218
Amher~t Road, Co~tll Mesa,
has complet ed her U.S. Air
Force basic rrain1ng af the Air
Training Command's Lac kland
AFB, Tex . She ha.~ ~t'n
ass!~nf'd 10 J..oy,Ty AFB. Colo ,
fnr training as a purchasing
speci111i~ Airman Renn is a
~raduate of Costa ~esa High
School.
Avi a1 1nn /ld1n1n1stration, said ~._.....------~--------~~
he is certain the Navy won't
relinquish any of Point Mug u
unless airport planners can
r0n v1nce the Pentagon that
Joint u~f' is "compatible with
For the Re~ord
~--==---...~----...-...-..-,..---.-..~-...-i .... lhf' 1nilirary mission."
The Oxnard Air f orce Base
prnposa!. unli ke the ot he rs, is
bein,g vii;:orously pursued hy
the C<imarill o-Pepperdine cnn-
tingenL The cit y and the
university ha ve filed an ap-
plication with the federal
G ener al S ervi c e"
Administration for developing
the surplus fac ility.
Dissolutions
Of Marriage
O•~l 1on, Cry1T•I Loul11 1 nd JoitPh
EO'wt rd
•"t•rff MI V ll Aodrr111n, J•coutllnt o •~n '.'/•Iii•.., H, JunQ-1!1, Lon811't 1nd Onn~1., A.ldr!c~. (hrl11I"• El•~ &n" Jlr1nur Wt vn•
l11rn''I lcul11 0 . 1nd Don•l!I I. 0 • y, 11, Ht nrv I'. t n" Joan M Peu~trt, Molly Jo1nn1 &nd Wdl11rn JO!tllh
Wtt1h, Donni Mtt i nd (ll•rle• (&•I Ttvlor. lillllll1n" 1nd l.trln O..e Mortlt1, l:lch1rd Ind Ooro!hv LO"~'"' &rt n!lt, 01 vld H1rry t nd OTnn~ Lou<1t Tyt , Jlldllh Ann t nd Gr&M EuQent
s11m111<1, Gus t nd Elkt Marie M!lt1, Sl'l!tltV l. •"II Kovn• L Sml!h, C!wtlt • l. t nd Ktr@n S
M~:~io lil lch•rd llloM <t and J•nef
M1nn1. Liod1 1n0' Hen•v S,on, Fr1nc1s Tht l..,1 l"d l'r1 ~~ N
Gu11,,.. llovd II J, •~O' Vl•olnl1 A.
l<K~hl rl, Dorl• "'"" 1no J ee~ r1rv1n Nl,hel10.,, $t•oh1nv Lin" Ind RM• "'"''" ICt adlt , Ro~<! Iii •nd J1ne .t.nn• Sowden, John .t, 1nd Jul!ellt
8!11. EOw1•d Scon 1nd Ju1n1!1 Sl119le111n. M1•;1n1 1nd R4td L
Morain, 81vtrlv St l1n1 1nd How1•d -~'
ltul" Lu111 1nd 01n!11 H•bi!rt. J e1" M, t "!I Robert F'1 t•l<k C•rl10f!, Rcttt•I J1mt1 1n<1 C:llhfrlhl TH~ APPLICATION CALLS H111, Tr1vl1 i nd Ju1ntt1 C. l'cclu!on, lillllh H. 1nd Joh"
2tnitnok. lhnnie1 A, tnd l.v,.,.,1 G. H.,.,..11, Joyce A 1nd Go,oon W.
(umrrdrn:u, !fir• E. i nd Mt r!o-n Wt•!~•lv, Mt l1"!1 1nd AAleh~e1 Smh~. Vl•olnl1 Ru!ll 1nd ICennttll G1~1 lnne1, Phvlll1 Orene i nd J1m11 W0011m1r '.' .' '• • -· <••••!" ' Rtllt •tTFI, Etrl lttvmono '"" M .... , for converting the property in· ,,~.. v nt ' ..... n •· JCJtflFll ... A nd••~on, Ht l•n Loul1e tnd Frink R•ll!on. Jeinnt Mt••t •"d Oo"1ld lo a sma ll-plane airport, a city A•cnd~1con E!hwtirth
F1111r, P1lm@r Ltrov Jr •n<:I B1•b1•1 ' ' ''' , ''' _ -• (• , P"k. and a branch campus of· 111 m,n, ~ • ,,.,.,~ ..... "'' •• Rllltlnn Htnrv f e r j n g a transportation C:h1pl'll1"• Oo•li Annt end Wllll•m ~''"'~0'11 . M•ra1••' M 1nd oon110 G. · I Alld'tw Ltl'o m1n, Jen! W1vn1 ~nd Glende Gi ll management (' U r r 1 C u Um Mclt•n. f.!1rold Edw1rd •P'ld Oorl)t~v conm'(' c:1r~ i.vnn ,~11 w111.,.,, Reid
lead ing to a master's degree. -;~,r'-"-----------'-"'-"-· -'-"-"-'-· '-"-'-'-'-~_,,_,_. __ The 11irport would be managed i.?.
by Pepperdlne wlth the city as
the 01\'ner.
The j o i n t. city-university
plan follows a succes~fu l effort
by a cit izens group, lhe Com·
mittee against Camaril]()
Airport. at stopping the coun·
ty's hopes to devel op the !011g·
closed Oxnard base into a
commercial jet airport. The
inevitable jet noise was a mR~
jor factor in dumping thoae
plans.
Orange County's interest In
Camp Pendleton also !items
from jet noise. Oran.11:e County
Airport Iii besieged hy $.10
milli on in d.i1mage claims fi led
by 920 Newport B e a c h
hom'<!w ners who contend the
noise from jets using tht fieJd
is 11 publle nuisanct.
Fnmll11 Circus ~II Bii Kenne
'!!.
h.tlltl~
Tllo"'D•o-n-l erov 1nd Jovc1 Ann H11w1rlf, Thom1s !lent"" ""d .. ,...,.,, "' llu•~t. P~1r1c+1 Lvn" t od Jo/In Wlllll ,.,, Ou!r, llnx• Edw1r1~ 1nd Denl1e P. We~k1 . Lto C:. •nd Heltn IC.
Th11mM.,,,, Vlrolnl1 Ltt IP\d Cll1rlt~ v;"c.,,I l:~ndololl. P1!•ld1 A. t nd J•ck C
Hubbe•O'. Mollv I nd l'rt~k Cll1r!11 Wllll&m
T•·c~t<. Mlt'V Vjr11lnl1 1nll Gtnl S!IT!nt r. A~" k , 111d M1r•ll1ll A_ De]g;:o. Su11n1 M'rlt 1nd M1ro1r1lo
ll••~n•rw", Ca"•'•n-c• •. i nd Sh~wn M, C"rdt!I, Pllvlllt E. 1...r Gl•n O. WM!1n, Gl,1!1 1"0' Alltler! Jr. WrleM, Jlol•"I G. ind F1rrlt l Oii' l obDlll. B&bbl• G,.,. l!nd "ot>trl !v•nt. Mltfl1•! J. ~nit C1rrl1
Ovtrl(ln, (111'111 W. •l'ld l•rl!•tl O. It<.... l1ttv J••" 1nd J11vmond M~•m1" V1n1trem. C1>rt I!:, 1nd J 1"l1 L. 8~""'· M1ry A"" I"" Jlr"ll lH "Ord, Wltll•,,; lol, •'Id S ... ry! l . .H•m"""""', Wiiii• II:. t rwl 1.l!u•ll !'. o ·•rv-•n. ltt!V M. ind Al'(lll• w.
M111t11, V1l'Ofl!t1t Vici"'!" PM I M Jftlllt r .. ~. D!tlt J• .. l<t •nd Robert l H
Ghlf,,•v. Ml•lltlt AITl0!11ttt1 •""' C:F11•1tt Cnrllt
Emmon1. "•l1(ltl1 "'"" tlld 1111!'1 G"f!r11
Ctnlct•o~, 11:,,.11!1 ind J,,.
ICt•fof\, IC&r•11 IC. 1"11 Htrot\f I!,
J1m11. Glllfy1 M1r!1> i nd J11.w Do•u!lf fll"~•n. JU"l!tfl ICIY Pnll lord JOtl•r
i1<1hl11t.,, 0~11111 1"11 J1m11 •· S.
Ofl!•Ofl, Jiii Ellttl)9!1'o l fld ,tnl14
Jl lClll •d
G•11ton. Nt fl(V J. ~ .. d l dw!" c.
MIYf, Jlov A, Ind M••v J t"41
Cll•bollclv, llobl•l 81rn1rd Ill(! H1!ttt litlt1
!r¥l11. Gi(i'r1l1 H. l!nd I UIV I , A!~1nl0fl, 01w" M1rl1 t"lf Jt-
Sll1rm1n
CLASS 8---(11 Rtd Roostor.
John Calley. CYC: i2t Blue
Streak, 011ry Myers, NHYC.
CLASS C-j j ! Trend, Jim
Llndtnnan. BYC.
CLASS D-11> Counterpoint:
fl) l<lclty Cbanct. Bromley &
Leitch, BCYC : 131 America
Jw, Ceor1• Tooby. N!IYC.
Scott All an, fnrmt.rly or
Newport Beach 11nd now 11 the
U.S. N1v.11l Ac1dem y, An-
n1polis, Md .. will reprtsr.nl
Lo.~ Angele11 Yacht Clu b in the
Flyi ng Outc hman Olympic
tn11ls which got under way t~
day al Buffalo. N.Y.
Allan w11~ U.S. national
cha mpion in the class last
year and has not been be'1ten
by .an American FD sailor ln
the pa st two yean.
BYC established a limit of
50 fer t for participating yacht8
and 1et up • tehtdule of
el.11s~ th11t would 11tart at I().
minute i n t e r v 11 I ~, Thi8
elimlnatr.d lhf' h ~z 1 rd o u s
starting lint crush. but by the
ti me all claMes are und er way
they still create • sptct•cular
never tqu1tlled ln other
yachti ng are11.
Aud <:i:irdiner. two-time na-
lional champion In the Cal ·20
Clas!J, won Kin& Harbor Yacht
Club's C it 1 • 2 0 Invitational
Regatta Stlturday •nd Sunday.
Therfl were 12 entrles in
Saturday's race and 10 on Sun-
day. Trophy winners:
( 11 Bravu ra . Bud Gardiner,
KHYC: (IJ Crlc k•l. B i 11
\Vait~. SOYC; (l J ColJeen, Ed
f or CBYC: (41 Sugar Ba be,
Sam Gibso n. HHVC: (SJ Mary
S. 11, Bud l..e1&, KHYC.
THE NEWPORT BEACH
clai ms 11nd tb_e $4 billion worth
of suits pendlng against Los
Angeles Inttrnational Airport
wt re given new credence Jn
April when the CAlllomla
Supreme Court ruled that
property cwners suing Santa
Monica MunJclpal Airport may
.!I
16.,/' \~
<IP
"Daddy I Do I have to go to bed now?"
ll ru,..on, Jn """ •"" l •tdlord t W!W'fl, Ltl lfll'l lt1rl 11111>11
Hoffm•"· Jlldltll 1<1v tnd J 1m11
'•ll<ltrlrt
l tll, 8t11V 0 111 1111f Wi ller 1.t•n•
l 1lllOW1-y, Olm V. •nd M1rv L.
J11r111,, M1rtt11 J1111 11'111 J Dll" L• ill-
Dvtr, lltuut!I I . '"d !nt II:. ,.. lltlft!'"' Mtrc:t ll1 tPllt Outd•llJft llmflflt. a111 e •l'l!f L1"Wrtfltt 111
Cllesslt. Dtl\t Lft ~ DOfltl!I '".,
MtCUllO('ll, "'"! A. t l'Plf M6wtr~ J, au11n., ,...,,,. . t f'lf M'lt r!rt' •~
110!11, (httlt t T, IMI 81rN•t J,
l'l'M!l'llA, t..olt l lt lllt 11'16 lltedtr1t:t. lo!~Wlf'f ,.
"
' • '
,
,
1 •
• •
• '
-. ·~· ~IL~!.._H
Everyone Hos
Someth ing Th at
Som eo ne Else Wants
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
. ~
You Can Sell It, 1
Find It, Trade It
With 11 W 11 nt Ad The Biggest Ma'rketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
1~-,.,~ l~ [ _,.... I~ [ _, .. u. I~ I _, .. u.
Generi111 General General
"The House
Beautiful"
POOL AND
JEWEL firri I a.g e
Co f fec lio11
Ca!ua! e1egancr-on Lu1 d11 lmmarulate 1~ the 1\·orc1.
Is!!" Four ! p 11 c 1 ri u s ' This J BR r-.1eu '*'rd'" pool I
hrrli·mms lfl,..lll'1!rl.': t11·1n I home has n1any n"' 111
n1:i~lr1· sudP 11 1!h Jirtplace. fe-atures 1nclurlirt£ rloub!t"
N>f"ll'll!f' n1a1d 's 'l lld.l'ftr~. ovFn, dishwasher 11 n d I
l'rnf,...~s1onall.11 r!P1'nralrrl garagf' door opener. En)uy
Furn1al d1t11n.w: rol) in 1h.-fRm 1l.v room 1r11h g-rrat I VA TERMS SPpRr<11ed frnm ~am cr iJ. ht1ilf-1n h11.r. ~trri out into
HARBOR VIEW HILLS-$55,750
l,o\vest priced "l.usk '' home in beautiful
Harbor \ te\v J·lills . There are 3 .<:racious
bdrms .. 2 haths. f<1rnily rn1 plus an1ple din-
i ng area , c·arpets & drapes incl. One of the
largest lots in area , 72x 160. \\'ant to see it?
Convenient parking-easy tn bP
a "DROl'-J:-J'• at Bay & BC'ach fll"alty 675-3000
Sparkling .f br-droom, family 1n.w: ll\'lll;'! room hy &1111que !hr lovPly cn1•rred pallo
l'flOlll, Jll' x 111' ~rrPenPd 11' r o u g h 1 iron grill, 11long:i;ide the h E' '1 u 1 l f 11 l
alum1nu1n l1U1al, l1rrrlaC'r . Spnri~man ·s rlen 11· 1 1 h Antl1nny Pnnl ~J.Q,OI)') takes
lull hu11t1 ns 1 n c I u d 1 n :i;: flI'rp!A re and 11f'I bar. i! all. Red Carpel Realtors.
rl1~l111.<1.:<1hl"r, nr11• all vinyl Pri1·a1P g<1tf"d rrimn1un11~·. 546--8&40.
floor 1n kit ,II,, fam ily rrn -P1Pr anrl slip for .vour b1i;::-
Oflrrf'r1 1v1fh Fl-IA nr no )::l'~t boat . Step throu.i;h the
do11·n \"A 1erm~ nr 1·r111rse. n111~~l\'f' hand rar\'erl entry INVESTORS rloor.~ nnrJ dtsco\'er Linda
Isle ~16/l.300.
PARADISE C. F. Colesworthy
U'n1ts is Costa l\lt'sa .,,, & C R I
l;irgP Int. Po1rn11al io builrl 0. ea tors
19 adrlirional units. Check Ea~thluH Office 6~0--0020
th i~ out 11.t $165,000. Hi1y:<!1rl,, nrrwe fii5-49:io
BARGAIN OF
THE DAY /aiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiO-ii-ii-ii-iiiiiiiiii~iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii./~c!,~~~o~Da~ T~~~l~o~~
be<lroom 2 b11.th 011·nprs un i!
IS THIS
YOUR
PRE STIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
J Linda Isle Drive
plus t1rrJ-2 bedroon1 rtntal~. NEXT HOME?
T11 ~ ~h'Pl'lrs youn~. -You Ch1trmi11g, Provincial style in
can I Pat this prtrlr-{1/-immHctilale c 0 n d 1 t 1 o n
Oll'nrr~hip" loeation, i~ liar-throu;:h0 ut . Ff'il tures 3 BR.
bor lilgh Srhf'IOl d1st r1t!. f;;imil v l"'Y'm. 2 bllth~, roun-BA YCREST, N.B. try k;tchen \1 11h used brick
Over 2000 Bq ft of luxury in ;i tircplacr. formal rlining
3 bedroom, 21 7 bath. family roon1. Clni;r !Q ht'ach,
and dining arf'<I. Bonus of i<chnols, <1nfl shopping.
a spArk!ing pnol 11nd Jnw Pr1rl', $~.~.90fl. f'or ad-
n1aintenan ce 75' x 110' yard. rlitil:ina l ant! appn1ntment.
All the 11sual B11yC'rP~! plr1-t:"!e phone 546-2313.
OnJ,\ $23,500. E A ST S ! D E
COST A :'>IF.SA. 2 Bedroom , 1
;;;h1ngle Rool. .\!1nut!'s to '
Shopping, Schools an rl I
Churche~. Do ~·our~l"lr 11
good turn .11nd Ca ll 6-16--0555.
Evenings 646-5226. I
COLWELL B~auti fu l ne \v 5 BR . 41,2 Ba . ho1ne . \Vater-
front liYlng rm. & formal dining. Handsome
oak paneled fam. r111., frplc., '"-'et bar. Large
m aster suite ha!' frplc. & cozy lo unge area.
\iiew of Bay & the mountains. . $179 ,500.
For Complete Information
On All Homes & Lots, Please Call:
PROPERTIES, INC .
REALTORS
Dreamy Modern
For sophisticated aiiulls 13
this custom1zPd 2 Beclroom,
I
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bayside Dr ., Su ite I, N.B. 675-6161
ff'alurt>s. Full price $64,950.
anr1 ;in l'!Ssumablf' loan of
i!pproxtmatrly S50,()()(). Just
!1~ted -hurry.
540-11.'il IOprn E1·rs.I EVERYONE
QUALIFIES
G en er a l IG __ •_n_•_'"_'-------I _ to assume thi s ]011· 1n-I -HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
SUPE R SHAR p •-o;:e;:;:jj;°ii()N-j:"'-'[~!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!i!!!iii!!ii!!il terest loan '· S24i, mo 1n-3 Bt'rlrm 2 h11th 2 ~10r;v h'lnir OCEANFRONT eludes taxes Almost ne1~
2 bath h'lme in the Bluff~.
Air cnndlltoned. expen511'e
can1\ry yelJO\\' shag carpels
a.nd custom drapes. Perfect
in every detail. A must get>
at only S38.0flO. Call !or I
sho1ving. 673-SjjO_
in ~r11·port \Yest. \l"alk to HALECREST 3 brdr01Jm home on quip! beach , 4 sn .. frpl c., dining rm . On ruJ.de-saC'. Fully carpeted.
40 Ir. Int in hr.~t lor. nrar CHARMER RED CARP[T nEALTORS all hu11!-1ns, on hu ge lot. I ~'il.Ch t rluh. Call for app't, o I I $32 e !'62-;';il e 3 PLUS RUMPUS 11-nrr trans errer . ,500. -===========C7:c=---::cc------In SPP, Sl00,000. Call w 8424 ;n ' I WANTED II TREES -TREES 'c,11, 673·366.J 642->2'1 '-''" ROOM ~· ""'""" ••
Por•"". Coll"' Par'. 3 BR.. TENDER LOVING Crea! corner lor11t1on on 2 b!ll, hnn1P. ~r'v o·Arpets & CARE q 111Pt tree Jinr rl street. 2 hig cui,tom rlrilf"!"-"· Q1u"1 Street. h·th·.. lo·c•" •1• h•·o. I I ·' h d 1 " ~ , 11 " , ~" rom a amuy "' o estres o MESA VERDE I h11rrh1oorl floor!, Built-in hve 1n a good neighborhood,
3 BR .. 2 bath pool home. k1trhen. ,1·azber & dryer in· e xcellent sc h o o 1 ', eon-
Room for ca1npC'r. t-.tr. """'"""'""'""'""'""""""""'/ ('llld<'rl. Large en c ! o s e d LIKE Vf'nit'Tlt to n1ark l"tS anrl
schools j fnr tha r item unrl f'r $.'iO. rumpu.~ room. N e w J y S V R E? !ree11·ay, cul--de--sac. cloF>e
FORT!r>.', RraJrnr 642-3000 try flie Penny Pincher painled -owner ... 11·11! listen ME A E D tn )tesa Verde Country
I
Gener•! 'General In all orfers -ALL Terms. If sn, then check this big 3 Club-3 Bedrooms + family
11••••••••••11~~~~~~"~'' Thi ... rine l\'on't la-;\' Red lJf'rlroom plus family room room, 2 baths, rovererl Carpet Realtors. 546-8640. bo111e \\'Jth electric builtin$. patio. Pricer! at only S30.9'99.
lar~P c11vered patio llnrl Call 545-2313.
Houaalfots.I• ,~, HoulM for s.l• l~ [ Hot.-a far.· S.le !~1 HolR&torSlle ]~
Gtner1I Gentrtl
POOL
-CAMEO HIGHLANDS-
Arch1tect .designed -Nev.· carpets & drape.;.
4 Bedroon1s. con,·ertible den . :l hat h:. r;ithr-
dral ceilings and 2 used brick ftrep!acei;_
familv room . built-in kitchen & 8-8-Q. PLL'S
1v!AN\' XTR.i\S . Entertain around your o,,.n
POOL s;6,.IOO
-VIEW, VIEW, VIEW-
BAY , CANYON . CATALI NA
Delightful fan1ily hon1e . Ln\·ely slaff' entry.
3 bedroon1s, 1 3 ~ ba th. F.-\.\llL'' R00:'11 !nt·
dining room) large gourn1et k1tcl1en 1\ 1th all
the bu iltins. FIR EPLACE plus n1any ot ht'r
nice fea tures. See and con1pare .. S63.500 .
-WATERFRONT VIEW-
38 ' WATE RFRONT and a POOL TOO' Pier
& slip available. :\EIV DRAPES &. r AR·
PETS. 2 bedrooms, 21-1 baths. ~JAR BLE
FIREPLACE. bu illin kitchen with WET
BAR . patio o,·erlookin g the t1.1ater. You must
see to app reciate. $85,000.
-IRVINE TERRACE-
Let us sho\v you th is encha nt.in_g home.
.-\tr1um entry. sp acious living roon1 1~·1th fire-
place. 3 Large bedrooms 2 baths . L0 \1EL 't'
Dfi\11NG ROO l\l + roo1n to storE> you r frail -
e r or boat. , . . . . 862 .500
-HARBOR VIEW HOME-
s oMERSET MODEL -Stretch-out and \" e
in this two story 5 bedroo1n, 3 bath. FAJ\llL''
ROOM , DINI NG ROOM . Builtin kitchen. 2
fireplaces, NEW CARPETS and DRA PES
pl us so man y ext ras you have to see it lo
r eally apprecia te it. FEE LA ND. S72 500.
~ AHO ASSoc-IAT£S
REALTORS
644-7270
2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF.
General Gent rat
* * * * * * * TAYLOR CO. * EXCL US IVE LI NOA ISLE . SISS,000
Prfltecierl patin in th is spac iou s. \"E\\i" 4 bed·
ro0n1 bl!yfrnnr hnn1e \\:FR . DR . ;,r11d\' & ,'j 1')
haths. ,..,Pcri nrl flnnr offers. r1 larc1;> ~u ndeck .
ll!,t:h rr dings & 1na11v custon1 feature~.
''Our 27th Yea r"
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
211 1 S11n J oaquin Hills Roed
"Over looking Big Canyon Country Clu b''
NEWPORT CENT ER , N.B. 644-49 10
* * * * * *
REDUCED $2500 R·l f"-e In t in ~e1\'J'!Orl:I
Largl" H.trb<">r \r1e1~· Home. Shnt'"~ nr.1v .'i2'1JW1 I
· Palf'Tmo :O.lfYie!." 4 \gl'. -S IL L GRUNDY I
hrirm;, ra1n1lr r111 . 2 Realtor 675.6161
Irr-Ir.•. 11·rr h.1r Q11n£"r has / :Hl Bily~1rl,., :"pt, Be&ch
.-.rart>ri nothin;; 111 c!Pror11t1ng
th1' bf'.'l1Jt1ful horn<". C11J! to I
ln~pl'('I .'i60.450.
CORBIN -
MARTIN
REAL TORS 644-7662
TRIPLEX WITH
GOLF COURSE
VIEW
.. ·-·-
4 BDRM, 2 BATH
doubl~ car raragl". coYer-
ed patio, good Ea.5tside
location.
$26,950.
Roy Mccardle Re•ltor
IP.IO !\'e11·port Blvd ., C.M.
549.7729
Bayshores
\-f'D., n('a' &: • lr.:i.n, 2 3 BR, 2 RA. ring_ rn1 .• cust
hPrll"'ll>n1 lirime. 1 hr<lnxim crpt ~hutt,,r.~ & rlrp~. Elec
11n1t Ol'"r t:ilril,?<" ,(. Am rher kit Ltl1\' L:-"h()lrl. lii.)...()S40
1 ht'drf.l()m unil "" ;z:round Corona del Mir
flO(lr All \JkP -'•p;irate i----------hn11£"~ Cornf-1" !nt !rlral tor WHY WAIT?
rrtir"rl o'n11p!" 11atltlng
hnu~r 11nrl !nrnm .. ~~i.9:xl
(.'!JI h-lft-7J7J f(I ~Pf'
1-i>I THE REAL \'"'\l ESTATERS
'-•)I•( fl lJNTl l 4 PM
SAN MARCOS
ACREAGE
Approximately 35 a c re 1 ,
e~tate zontct on Santa Fe
Road , lJl fa&t !fl'O\l»lllj San
'\T'trl'O< Hnlrl f n r 8)>-
prrc1;:it1on nr (fo>1·elflp 11 now.
All ll l:lit.t.; ln proper!.
Sl43.~.
Tht!'. lovo>lv hnn1,, 11. hranrl
n,,,, 11.orJ h~~ 11o>vrr h""n l1v -
,,.i 11'1 Jr ~1l~ l"ln th" trip ri! a
hdl 01':\( ff\ !hf> l'\f>"'
;;;p\;:l~~!-aro>~ hut lhi~
btauty 1~ readY no11" The
view from all moms 1:
spectacular. C.U' tod11.y anti
&ee thit p:ipular 'T.1Jk. built
home. 675-7225.
COLWELL
PROP ERTIF S IN C
REALTORS
hlnr·k v.·all frncing. \ralk lo
sLore~. banks and C111t'ma
Theatre. 10,..,r Do\\'n pay-
ment 11·tll h11.ndle. Price only
$31.9.50.
l-Qj THE REAL
\"'1I:STATERS General Jentral
LARG E 2 BR Home '"IPool
& V1~~·· l\P\~' carpets &
rlra!)t's. Pnc,.rl f(}r 1mmed-
1111e sale~ Pr1ncipail only
please 644-15.16.
BUY IT WHILE YOU CAN
So much for so little . 3 BR. plus fa m. &
dining r m. \ri th spectacul a r bay view, in
Harbor Vie w Hills. Asking $59,500 . Jim
Mulle r
BAYFRONT PIER & SLIP
Ra re corner lot, sandy beach. lge. trees:
rm. for pool & improt·ements. 4 BR .. 4
ba ths . $199.000. Fee. O\t'ner may finan ce.
Bill Comstock
FIVE BEDROOMS
Plus den ,..,,,,,et bar, din. rm .. 2 frp lcs.
Pa1ios off all rooms . Free & easy living in
Univ . Pk. ALL 0:-1 I-LEVEL. $58.900. Call
"Chuck" Le\t'iS
ROOM r ' so· BOAT
2 'Yr. old 2-sty., 4 or 5 BR. Dock at yo ur
door . Vie.tv of ocean. too. Custom buil t for
owner '''ho \vants quic k sale . Call George
Grupe
SPECTACULAR BAYFRONT
Step right out onto the beach. great enter·
tainers home. Sunshi ne thruout. Priv. court·
yard. 2 Fireplaces . $165,000. Triana Bergin
SPECIAL WATERFRONTS
Via Lid o No rd. 4 BR., fa mil y r m. Rm. for
10· boat. $285,000 .
On Lagoon, Linda Isle. New
BR. & family rm. $300.000.
Eil een Hu dson
exquisite 5
LIDO ISLE VILLA-6S' LOT
Beau t. custom 4 BR .. sep . di n. rm. Bi~ kit.
& 2 patios~ .Super upstairs -ms tr. swte &
lge. adj . study -hobby room, F .P . & deck.
$129,500. Eugene Vreeland
4 UNITS CORONA DEL MAR
Owne r will carry 1st T.D. on these outstand·
ing units. 2 Units per lot & can be sold as
package. Xlnt location. So. of Hwy . on ex-
clusive Avocado, Marcia Bents
OWNERS HAVE MOVED
Ready fo r qu ick move·in. LaSalle model.
Univ. Pa rk. 4 BR.. 21> ba .. famil y, formal
din. 2 F rplcs. On park. Good privacy. $49.-
950. Howard Well s
PRIVATE COMMUNITY & BEACHES
3 BR ., coqv. den, magnificent view .
Beamed cathedral ceil's .. low meint. yatd ,
nr . tennis els .. pools & pa rk. $84,500. Bob
Yorke
550 NEWPORT CENTER D~ .• N.B.
;ca,. co:Ts
~WALLACE
MOVE IN REAL TORS
-546-4141-
'->< I < "• T , l'rr
Eastslde Custom
v, •. :., ~~~~T"'~'"'~' 2 (Open Evenings)
1 bath home "'"" big bllm THIS OLD HOUSE k1tch 1nc!11rl1ng refri.1; frl"f'Z· ~ rl 1 1 h 1 h h 1
Large 2 bedroom and den.
custom buil! on corner lot.
t\1ce Eastsid e location.
features large rooms. par-
quet floors. 2 ceranuc ttle
b11ths anrl much more.
$28.950. PH: 642-.lm.
9:r21 er. Locatrd on Co~ta l\.lesa · f'P s 01 0 e P ut t e n-
Gol! Cour~e anrl has br'At ('a!mn is grea!. So. of tlif li1~li1,·;iy in a rhrnce Coron;i
rl!'l .\lAr Joc11t1()n, 2 ~tor;.• on
th,, rPar o/ Jo~. Come anrf
!'i<'P !hi:<!. Price has been r>:"·
r!UC'f'rl $25fl0 for qu1<:k sale.
i\n11' S47,:,()(l_ 67,1-8.1.Xt
and tra1l!'r ~iorage ~·arrl.
r.1ovE" in nn rro>rl1! approv11I
until escro111 rinses. VA-:-:O
OOV.'N ,
$28 ,500.
Newport
•I
Fairview
6-16-8811
-* Speculators *
ASSUME VA LOAN
(1nytlmt) E:i.stsirle, sparkltnR clean.
custom built :l R. 2 A, ~L!!l'!'V'!'!E!!'!D"'!'I N~A".""!"L'!'!I T~T~L~E!"-' I I i\'I ng + din 1 ng I\ r l' a '
BUT LOVED A LOT hrtp!ace. FA ht. blt1ns .. ne . . shag crptg + rlr p!., patio.
This single r::tory st~cco, 3 dbl gar.. fe'llced yd. Only ,
bedroom home hus iust the $28.~. Q\\·ner movinJl . I
CREATIVENESS·
VERSATILITY·
SENSITIVITY
j All of thf'!>e are par a.mount 1n
thl~ spaciou s family horn!".
Custom d r a p e g anrl
~autilul shag carpe ting
t hroughout. Immaculate
yards 1~·1th sprinklers both
front and rear. Very good
huy at $42.493. Cal! r igh t
no\v to see 546-2313.
!O THEREAL
\'"'-ESTAT ERS space you need at a pr.ice CALL ANYTIME I
you can af!ord. 2 sparkllng 646-3928 or Eve. 645.4375
baths, all you nerrl al a "'"""°"""''='""'="'"=~~ price you can arlord. 2 INCOME OR INLAW 2 Separate Homes on One sparkling bath~. an t>lectric Parcel. Near Do1\'1'1tov•n kitchen, carpet5 and drapes Costa Mesa. Large 4 thruou t. Double garage. Bedroom. 2 Bath Home and
Only 21) years olrl and pric-=:===~==:==;~= 2 Bedroom Home, separ.lted
W 81 S32.900. FHA and GI Only S 1,450 Down 1 by lots or Green Gras~.
buyers welconw>. C3 1J N D T G I PoS11ible lo arid ~fore Unlls. o own o .. Very Good J nve' t m e n t
$35,000. Call 646-0555, Even-
in&"• 646-~226. Realtortc 545-9494
Open Eves
NEED MORE ROOM ? ' + din + fRm rm . Like rte\\.'
beauty \\·/flr?pl. w/w shag
crpUi, huge. kitch, bltin
RIO, dshwshr. Jrg lot, xlnt
Jdgcpg. $36 ,9 50, Ca.J I
SEYMOU R RE AL TY
847-1221.
COLWELL
PROPE RTI ES. IN C
REALTORS
Lovf'ly cornPr lot, 3 largl"
brdroom!, built-ins, 11ermra!f' I
utility room, fireplace in
huge living room. shakt' 1
roof. lots of brick 111ork and
a lovely country dfmo1phetl". I
Only $29,000. Call 847-GCllO
for more information. I
1
--4-.-U-N-IT_S_
with pool It. room to build
mort units overlooking pro-
posed Marina KE"ys. Ad-
IO THE R EAL
\'"'-ESTATI:Rs
'' • ' • r
ditional la.nd av&..!).
A U"'IClUf tiC.+il:
PICTURE YOURSELF wo rkin g with Unique
.Homes: Th e most tal ked abou t and aggres-
sive real estate firm in Southern California
now has open ings for tal ented sa lespeople.
Unique is unique! Why not join us?
PHONE JIM WOOD, UNIQUE HOMES,
CORONA DEL MAR , 675·6000.
REALTOR, MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE.
Daily Pilot Classified Ads
for Action ••• Call 642-5678
MACNAB
IRVINE _______ ... _______ _
Fl N ER HOMES
SOMETHING SPECIAL FOR $43,500
3 BR. FR + pool. Light. airy . bea m ceil-
ing. FR w/stepdo wn wet bar & fireplace.
Cl ose to schools & shopping -shows beau-
tifully.
TURTLEROCK -PRESIDENT HOMEll
I BR, FR, Su per VIEW : : Excell ent con-
dition:! ONLY $73.950, the VIEW is free ::
For appt. call Laszlo Shark any 644-6200
LIDO PENINSULA BAYFRONT
Pool. yacht sli p, 3 BR's. 2 ba ths -fir e·
place. $84 .500. frank Peralta 642-8235.
DOVER SHORES
Spectacula r upper ba y view . Exquisite 4
BR -3 bath home. Formal DR -spaci-
Jus FR. Dramatic 2-sto ry entry w/1ky·
fig ht. Large patio and ga rden. ~112 .500.
Irvine M1cn1 b· lrvlne "telty Com p1 "Y
IOI Dover Ortve 142·1231
1'4' MacArthur t«•l200 .
Newport luch,C.llforal112111
REALTORS
SINCE 1~4
673-4400
Units! Units!-
NEWPORT
BA'YSIDE DRIVE DUPLEX
unrler 1·onsrruct1on, 2 BR. 2
BA ,,ach un11. E.ach ,..-/pr1l'
i;;undeck & Bay VJ "!111, f OT
into t all 714 :645-1460.
Co1ta Mesa
PRD.1E DE~iA.'l.'D REN-
TALS! 1 hlO<'.'.k tn hay or $29,900.
ocean. l<leal locat1on. Clog!' MESA VERDE
ro e\·eryth1ni . Anractive I B t b . h .tnd all 2 bedroom unit . Call es . uy in t e a.rea~ Cozy
no"· 643-0303. f~mily room w/cracklinr
I om,., I Ol \O\
Jl[A ,'r!#',
Home + Income
Cream Puff
From q1iaint front porch to
lu&h ghag carpet~-super!
Huge living room. Giant
bedrooms . Chef's kitchen.
IA undry mom. PLUS renta.1
, uni!. ON LY $26,500 call
M\\.'-64?>--0303.
IOl!l.\I I Ol\O\
,. ! ,, • (' ,.
NEWl'ORT
HEIGHTS
VACANT -2 Bedrooms and
den, remodeled and at-
tractivE". Excellent loca-
tion ..... , ..•••••••.• $33,(X)O.
PETE BARRETT
-REALTY-
642·5200
JUMBO 2·STORY
!i Bedrooms -2 Bath~
Quiet · trees $34,S>O FHA N A
• Corona dt l Mu duplex
I \Valk to btach. Only S63.S>O.
CHUCK CAROTHERS
REAL ESTATE
TREASURES
1831 \~fitcllff. N.B. 645-5152 * MESA VERDE * VETS NO DOWN
View of golt COUt!,.. l BR .. 2
1 ha . M'm'd patio, rm. for I boat, cl'lrner lot $.12.~.
BALBOA BAY PROP. I * 642.1•91 *
"THE GOOD LI FE"
\\'a.lk to beach, lf!Ml.!l. pon\.
ftreplace! Separate master
bedrm w/bath~ Don't wait
Cilll !!"Jr <ippt. 973--1050. '
DUPLEX $27,500
EasUide kic., 2 hotaft,
lot. Shows 16"",, return.
2414 Vista de! Oro
Newport Bea.ch
O#-t.ll3 ANYTIME
NOT FANCY-.
JUST HOMEY .
3 BR & family rm .. 2 ?I. x.,:.
corner lot. $29,500. FHA/VA
--'GEMM--
1610 W. Coelt Hwy., N.11.
RJ:'1.TORS -
• BR, Condo. Near ~
Coast $23.500. Swim pool dbl
rara_re, crptl, d r 1 p e 1 1 '51-3.133. 5*-4760.
MESA V~ ... 3 Br ... 2 Ba 6'
Fam. Near Ptrk. i.ehls.
sho pp tni. Ne wl y
rtdecorated 4 ah&& ca.rpet.
12!'<24 aluminum rm oft bek
-1M9 Corslc11. Pt1et •. B;y
awn.r.~5~
MESA--VEllOJ;..POOL
Lovely 2 sty, 4 br, 2~ be.
den. din rm + p,y brt4kttl
ii n"a. flowers, pvt yard
compltmfl nt Anthony JJOOI.
S49.900 By cwht'r. 2004
B.a!ear1e Or, CM 546-&SU. ·
O\\'NER. I Bdnn, 1f Uv rm.
5unrm. Kit, din . cpls, dip.,
tnrt'I yd . , .. r. $18.tiro. $3.000-.
dn B&J 7~. 6-IS..2l38.
l·Jty. 2 BR. C<lnv. lf"n. fpl ":O.I11kt Room tor --o~·
Nf'w CATP .• treJ.h p1 lnt in & 1 d y' ·, . c I ea n Ottt
out II Jparkle~. $32 &00. a:~r~ .• your tr11h \i CA
CAYWOOD REAL TY "'" • DAILY l'ltOr * 543-1290 * c1 .. sft•d 1d. ' •
I
Monda)', J111lf 12, 2q7z
~ [ _._ .. ]~/[ -··•• ]~J I _,,_ I~ I ~:i~ J ~1 [ r--w J!iJ I '"N"'"' J~,11..-[ __ ..... ___,]~1;;;;;;.[ -iiiiiiiiiiiiii'"""*
I,.!;.._, 1~·1 ;;;u;;;11;;;1 ;;;;;;;;;;:;;~ Hunt<naton Boodl I II ;;;;--~~ I I 1-.---~I H u f
_.,,_
.._ ----===----I Irvin• Mobo'lo Home1 Income P,......,,.rt; 16' Business u___ r-ou••• n urn. · --mymsy to Loan 240 Houses Unfurn. 30S
*MODEL HOME* FREE ----f For Sale I" TRIPLEX, "'•· 2 Bl~.1 Oppartunfty 200 "::~:::::_..:.:11 ~~;;!!~'.'.::.-......:~11 ~Hhu;;nrtiti~n~g~ton~~Bo~odl~==1
Lut hott'I l ~un~h1~ 11.nd 1J1nr1. r'lo~ ti') TOP VALUE! DOUB' 0 ... d, f'l·-·-~I 11, p.i;ilOI. Nr ~1 ,.,,., S4..l 00:> -----------General
t n CounlfY CJul:! twa.1"h and i hopp1na:. bt:tt TURTLE ROCK mob~e -h,,me ..... J't~·; 6n-ll1"4 Ax('nr Ms.-7.tJ4 A ONE-MAN 110~1t:O\•/NERS! 1----------·IS.l.iO-t.XEl' Home. 4 + ~ ~ c:•ut. viewoJSanhi at?a, all tt"rms. Cal! !or In Prime IVC"1111on. >18Ut1n£ dts· BUSINESS BORROW J.\f~l..\Cl'LATL · I ... ior\ 1 J/11;:!' J)()O], 11l1<ll'. d1vln;:
-
ntry Club. Cpl~. torn1a11011 lam·p 1n ,..IPrn. 9, h<ln!. 2, evtt)'thing. ~t up In nlee 12 UNITS $2,000 INVESTMENT bdrm 2 ba!h hot1'" 1<1fh din· hot1M ~'r1<' 11nklr rlHp 1
• • lnd&cpd. blk wall, 6r: STEAL suiry 4 Bf!. 3 rtil.J.. ~!hR fa111Uy park PCI& OK. $ASO(J. E . COSTA MESA $IOOO $IO U in.': room and l&n11ty room rrpt r urnHure A11aiJ. Ag1.
trite.rest. Open Sat & Sun no Pf."f'lllty to pay-Be.autilul 4 plua 3 <'ar i:llIAi:r PRIDE !i.1!-7~. JOE FORTIER RLTY LOW .MON,OOOTHLYP Kik ·hrn b1h-1n~. Ya rrt e n<
1
t \1.:f .... ~.iOC!. · UT The M11ter1 Ctrt"le., c f\f e (Can Start Part T ime ) 1 5t6-S558 or 6«·R6l6 bfflroom 2 bath IY.lmP. low OF n~'NERSlllP ~Hl::l:.-r. DBL .,.1de rnofnlt-hnme. 646--3410 I PAYMENTS pal10 complrlrly Pll('..,..•'! --. JlJ::NT O PT~
rlown IUJYml. 1ubm1t your PrU"l'fl llf'l.u"' 1111) nr1<, 11n adul! crt, 111r f'flll<f. lluni. Ind 1 p Jusl """ m!ll' fl'l 1111 f)l"'f'itn "J. Jl<t 2 n f J laCL..
Ee1t Bluff U:rnu.. lrl'l l""""'""t 4 HR ,.1 .. n <lF-B. $10.:i!O. Sli-!t817. ! _ustr •I __ !~i_:f-~_ Iii '. Light, pll'11.'1!nl, E~TRF:MI-'.-LOANS on ANY HOM E. and :"°\c14p.:i1·t &arh 1n Ill.In . 1111, "· Jit.,
190• 8"ck Boy Vlewl
BluU.t 3.2-., baytrnn! r·ond<i
w/be.aut. 1inob15!ru1·tNI ha)
"1e.\.\•, Sc-cludpd rul-dc·lla"
loc. Upgr&df'd .,../nf'w crpr!.,
wall pa()f>r, f1x!ure~ &. pain!.
LEASE OPTION •
VACANT
FE:Rf.!) FOH ()N°l.Y S4.Q.7'".Jl * :\1-1 ('QRNf.R * · I ngr on r;ic l • .01.l ..., IW'f ... , . 54fi...97'>'1 LY Pl<i)~ll'ABLf'." Jll 'Sl·1 f'AJJJ~U/1.orN{)"f I B I s·~iw• !\1.tr \du!111>& f1l'1ukhurs1 .
JNCl~UD ING TllE I.AND'! \\11th olrlt'r houM", Pr1mf' !\'ES$ ~rn•1r1nl: ll'lt.·al 8tnro>~. COMPARI': OUR COSTS month. -N,, fl('lS pl<'a:.r. $\1 ,1. ~.iJ-!10.lnr. , ,·.
U.rgf': 3 h<'dr•)f)lll. form~I
rl1n1ng 11 nrt f;i mily rnnm
hnmf'. FuU hlfln~ Bnrl ofle nf
lhf' rlr11nrii;I in Fnunlllln
Owner $54.750. 6«·11449 ValJty Pa »mt~ of 'ln!y $26.'l. !-:;;-:=-------·--{"ALL ~R;1~l1 I
El Toro [ SHERWee D REAL TY I
3 BR, 2 BA, cpt11. drp~. lgr 1119&1 Rr•w)khur~t . r V
pa.Ho, lgf' pool-stze Joi ilE:-1-:RTf'.J°l~-AR\1)1/11 ·.<.::~. encJo~d hy h!ock v.a l! r ntll filr lron1 nl'Pan J\ J1ttlr
cl~ lo xln! 11 ch o ri I A. n1n dfl1•·n hut hiiF , h11rm 1nj!
"I l11 h ·r 11'11i1.
---'Tl.1·11il11r
"SINCE 1946"
1111 \\'es!rm R11nk Bldg.
Un11•rr<11ty f'111k, Irvin,.
Oay1 5S2·7000 N ights
Ra•I f•l.11te,
Gener•l
ltM·fllfr,n, c.·n~tll .\h'"t. "tr, \>Hh a NATIONALLY FIHST! P horw 5-lfi...:l6AA. 11·,.\1.1..: 11, O'·can. 2 JlR. Fire .II ('orhin·t.1ftr!in Heiilfl•r' Jo"A,\l<JL'S Ii() YEAR OLfl FlHl::SlDE JJ)/l.N Gt..'Allt\N· d I M plar•·. ~.1r. kids w1.~. OK. ~'()()L) prolLH·t "'-hh 'h is A 1·r1·> Corona e ar Rent.A.House 979-8430 6-14-7662 ..... 6-IW~9
--------/!{JUSE:llOL!l \\"(lRD JN If )'OU can get rhe l'iAME *. DUPLEX n fl.,\ .... n :lHr~ :! l\,~fru·d ~·rrt, pre!
Acreage for sale 150 ii 2 plus lh rf'll LVl·2 prorwrty Ai\l~:HTCA , I~ •·on11umrd hy L01\:-.' ft'(lrn Any OTHEI{ !\f'.\\', llui.:r rl!x o11nj·r·~ '''111 pl'· or J1u nil.1-. $250 mo
----------for snlr )ll Orlln~r. rn~·f' !he 11l<l11SAND~ DAILY 1n l.ENnF:R 1n C11!1forn1a at uni!. ,i RR, l A ,\ l,\.r-l.1<(\.
1 1 ~ Acrr~ nf'ar Palm Spr1n2~.
uill a< rrpt 5JO /or $:Z;'/J "q
RaJ SJi;!lf). S20 mn ~:\f,...!1:11 . -------
Busines1 Property IS4
S ~2.500 rwr ai·r·· •ffl! _,.1•. this cnmm11n1t\. anrt rnlnvs HATl-~S LES." Tll.'\N \\'!·. F trrplar·P. hll in~ l'i,IJO '!J Ir ---~~~~
I I 1.r~-~'TJ~tERE::rE1\TAt"SJ . oJ--~"Jo:R. rf'f11rn Thi' + .• <l·•·k·. ,,,,.,.,, ,,, ,,,,,, 11 fllllf'•n ht'al"h·2BR,Sl41). 1 1·,c; h• 11 I r,.,,1, ;i1·~. Pro-·' ·' ,. r~•"'•·d Ornnt:r ~·rr•••iai 01 , '.':ESS. \!l).'\f-:Y 111!h1n J~ rtu.1c;. ::tn<I ()(·t»ul f,, hills. \\";ill. '" h. 11 h ••!•, .'>tl~I·'~ nk,
11nrt nn r,11 11 r 11 11 1.,.111,ti n YO\"H lllAN "1rh l "S 1~ & i:tonPpinJ:? I ;.r. 1~" S4:.!J. Rent-A·Ho~e-979·84~ z hi·~;,,~. f,.r 1ir•J .. r inf"r NO SELLING/ I-RF}-' P.C. \l'f-:R.'\E/t Rrfs.requ1rrr1.tii.'l,.-{Y.lti0. 1 Ht C•1u1ln, ull l ["Ill, crpls.
l'rt'\ldo·nT ------I f h ~ ~ •11;11."11 11 ·•· ~.11 11 .• 1 I BR 2 Ra H<1rhnr \·1,." d111"'.r•Y1 ,rrn}1'.,Y.~ riry,, ALL THIS AND UNUSUAL !J•llt< '" rr{nn1·CT 1HH:i;1-:c-r f'IR E.ft;IDE J!•)m~ 21':' 1,1111 n 11 , 111n ,.111 , tp111 s210 54111405. 57:1-5.1R5.
A PARK Too .I OPPORTUNITY Ecknoff & Assoc., Inc . \.\\TJ-: I.'\' f'OOf> i'\'ll! s Tlirift lcple, $4:'!0. 1n•I ~.-,t p ri\ .\·Irvine
market.<;, l'lt"\\ 111 a J l. ..x1ra11 1tk·lut1 1nc r"filn11r /
Reasonahlr. 11 .1 7 . J 7 5 l . hi" cu•lflnJ C'11h1nr1 ~ antf
494-2116 art ~.30 Ii 11'k-nd~ r"rnrvlf'IN! ra11,.h k1!1·t11•n
Fountain Valley -8nd h1i1 h A Mt;, t1rr'Plft1·,.
P:l\'f'S lhl :1 hornP lrmd~ of
JT.llPnt1aL BKR 962.-5..'i!L
I 'I EY • J.t: P!"'!:f'.'. S<ll.!> T!lf!l c ... rnrr lo•. ~fl r in k t" r .l'l . Thl>t f llf' ' ,, !11 !1'" r' ' I J· \I' \\ 1-,~,!~ -~;1·.: 4:7 '!j](J ~ ·' l"f'.:"SI\'}-; /\.'\[) ("0\'TI.\ 2'1" JJ ,i rhnr Bl'<.: .\1 Fi-i~l-1000 g;.ir<lt"n<'r, i'~11 1",lt) I \I~ I
rlrr'flr.i1.,r ra t"f""'• A· r!r.•fl"~. I hurld H•J.: 1111 ~ I•~'"' .. r ·'1 I 1.. t :11! ·~ /d >r~:P.1'1 S !~t; fl\/ f.!19~ ~1,1111, S A. M7.flfiS4 ~J>f'" Sar _.i ~111 . -;;;;;';;;;";;;;;;;:_;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;,;;,_ I
t°"Ur ~·1h'(){Jfll~ ~· t111nll) I ilPlrt I~" l:!f'lt! l·u ol1<1n h•r 'I'\" r:AD!O \!,\l;Az1:-.;r s f\\I·: h;iv<' 11 nf'Ni rnr 1nron1<' 2 _RR+ n:n Blr~l kH1/1t'll 111; .; hJ' r .• m. r in ... 5 ;~~
LOOKING FOR
YOUR FIRST
HOME?
-"BRAND-NEW '' 1
r.i-.au11ful 4 ))(-dronm ho1,,r
\1·0h 11!1 !hr lt1xur1r.~ 1n
Th1rk ~h.'1(; rn1 rr~ rhfo f\f)(lr~
An'1 ruslnm rtr;iprr1r ., m 1•pr
th,. .,.1ndn1,~. It's air 1lln j
r•"orl1 ~1P11I !hi~ hr;1111;. frir ;:in;v,,nr 1r1 :.r1\ 111·;11,,1, 1.\I••· )~ \"l\\'SrAl'l-"HS 1-'T(' ll!""rt1w 111~ l'H'llllt'tlil's th:1t (,ar;.i;(1'. t\1ds 1lh. li Hr,,_lut h~ ........... s ... ,
$')1,j:ll 1r11·lud1ng J II n rl ' r.j \\HI k Th•· 11r .. ,r pl,1!1 ' L ___ "_"'_'_'_"_' _~ • JI ! 1\11'1\ ..... y
0
•• l'H;l!lt "(:.r $.l'JI hf'll\f'f'I! 11l-HW) lhflu~;ir1d Rent-A .H ouse 979-8430 I 111;' ~I~ li:t' f.orl .nTI $~~
6!t;-71il. flr.\1bl1• ;inrl 1111• 1''"''1'''1"1\ ,<.;_\t.J.;>; I' J'(''"S'i CJ)' 1, l1n0 111'1b . J)o111n r1av111rn1 ~ 1 . .,,,1-.1 n,. ,,.1,1, , .. ,.,", ,1,1 1BI. • h11 f.iill lnl. $.~
' •• '"··· 2 " '>'··· ~·' -'*'··" · ...... ,,, ,_, · \\!·!!\VF t J111~·ns
\Va.Shl'r, rtryer, &. refri~ in·
rludrrt. :I Lri;. BR's. 1~. 1\
nn (01il-rlt'-sae 11trf'Pf. Lllrgr
)<)\ nr Sl"hl!', pi• rk k !hop-
ping. Ell.I!)' 11c1·e15s to ffv•ys.
$31,500
I' 1llage Real Estate
d11111nrd. rh,. v.1ndows 111• ---ii.-oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
11urr.1tn1P(J. plus tiiP ratio 1~ 1 Away From The Noise
1n. comp!rtl'd \v11h DBQ I H••l;1~ !n !h i~ o&-flmr 3
r-.fu.~I see -842-2:135. I h<lrn1.. 2 h11. tnv.·ohnusf'_
Q111f'r lora!1<1n. Sre 11 roclay!
SJLfll.WJ. ~-o· THE REAL ~ESTATERS 531·51DD C ::::J 531·5800
Gree.nbrooke, 5 Br, 2600 i;q II
hoo11e. A.l'lking $:K>OO JP~'
than Mrk! Prlcr. As11um-
' I • • l•"f
MR. BIGI
I/ave we gol a home
for you~
(ired hill
REALTY
able 6%r0 Joan. Swim Clb. Lrg 5 BR, 3 BA. prof rlrc, Univ. Park C<'ntrr, Irvin!!
Onr trans. g&;.OTijl. I room for boa! or rr!r. Clos" Call AnyttmP', 113.l--0820
To hf'arh. Only 11sk1 ng S45.500 Off1« hnur11 RA.\f to I! P:O.f
BY owl!f'r. 4 BR CONDO, 2 1 ''GINNY" MORRISON I "'!!!!!!!!!!!! .... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'
'1lA, dbl car gar, lge pv! 557-4130 REALTOR 54o.m6 Laguna Beach
patio. l...oa.n ass m bl e .
968-1764. \l'ALK TO BEAC/f .. 1 BR . I
lorml rl1n areu. rrpTs & I BIG VIEW t.1esa drl i\111r, 4 RR , 2 BA,
Assumable .)~ 7'> or ConvPnl.
$35.000. Owner. 545-7!!8.>
r!rps, hy,rJ fi r.~. S25,950, GI 3 Br!r111~.. 21 ~ b a I h 11 ;
nr fHA !<'1'ms. C 11 11
SEYMOL"rt REALT''
0\VNER !ravi ng. Sp11ni~h 8·17-1221.
de.sign, 11rchw11y:i;, f'leg;inr I
f"nl ry hall. 3 scparatc. balhs, I EXTRA Sl!AltP-4 + rl in rm I
4 bedroom.~. large rooms + t11g. big fam r tTI + 2 BA.
lhruou!. 3 r11 r garAge, Brk. Firepl. bltin R/0 +
OWNER desperatt>, assumr buy 111 S33,51)(1. CA 11
p;1nnr11m1c sou rh roast
v 1 r '" .~. SPpar~rr rhn1n~
ITJf11TI U)t~ of 11•rou,i::ht iron
& Spanish !lie. $611.9;)().
AO tan
REAL ESTATE
1 ·n P11r~ 11 11h 11 _i:u.11 ;1n1<•f'd Hll.1.)IJ;"IJ !W>LJ,/\JtS A0 Sil uld !1f' in thr -:.l 1 -... 1 • ·'lti\t>. r••fn:.:, l:r·<[,•,·pralod · · •
rrnuol nf $•1ff, ;i 1n1.n1l1 "f'I•<' \l',\1.1.Y • ('()~.'ilSTS nr ral!\.:f', and !'-fll'nrl ;1hl" rrt11 rn Orran.,idr....fi7.l-:r;11~
duplrx 111 b11t·k "r 1!11• ap;1r1-Lots for Sale 170 COLl.!·;("T!'\!. J-~Oll \fFR ~hnuld hr nrnunr! Ill' •. II 1•r -, -,-----;----;1 )llrnt ll[l~t;.ur~ \U •i!lrl lllllkf' I I C!l/\Xnrsi-: .'if>l.11 /\NI""\ n~· cn1iirl lwlp yn11 [lfll'<' .\n11r 11.F·.LO\\ hi1 y, .\lr;i I~ ,l Bli . -1~ob"~1i·llil. I
---llPuliu1·
ll rl r r·onnn111.1,j hotlH' for rhr Xl .. "1/'J' h11ilrhng l'l!P \1·1rl11 Pi J."NJ~'ll , . , , 1 '. prnp1•r1v to 111 1h1s nrdl'r, J~I\. l1rrpl. i\1"111r .Junr 2ii1h. h < I .•.. ~ INC, IN\ l'.:NTOH't . , . ' . -' $1:.0/J\lo 6-11-1200 nr11 owi}f'r. Call t:'i7.'J.i22·1 \\ I e 11·;11"r \"1e11 . A la REQUfRJ-.. \Jl-;,..,·Ts lr! s 111lk. Call 67;,•122;,, · · · V1 ~1 a Rr<'a ol l,;i~na. Costa Mesa
COLWELL
PROPERTIES. INC.
REALTORS
:\hi~! Ri;ptl'P In P11rrl111s"d fnr $10,:ZOO. v.•itl 1-----------1 "SINCE 19&1"' srl!for S9,500ra ~h.r.1~1110. INCOME OF FREE !! 1 ~1 \\'rstrrn 11.nk Bli'lg.
Mountai:i, Desert,
Res o r t 174
$300 WEEK UP r landlords·Owners t rn111·r~!l1 Pf'lrk, lr.11~'"
\\,; 11·11.1 rf:'ff'r !Pnants ,., you O.ayi 552•7000 Night•
h ----------! f RF.l-. of 1·hn.ri::r ,,. :'ll11n.1 l;==========i 11\"P srrviC'r11hlr c11.r. ~TART M W led 250 <ll'sirablr u,,arHs on our Commercial
P r operty l:'lli\1F:DIATEL'' if 11r1·rpTed oney a n 1 158 2 l..cils, !>ecludrti S2,45(1 111111111).! isl. 1 BR., 2 hath.~ ........• S:IOO and HAVE !hf' nrcessary 1---c'.-,-------ALA R t I e 64S JCXIO t.1oonritig:P c11 bin S15,7,j() S2.000 fri r !nvf:'nrory NO\V i~ i--R 0 !\·! Piii. Prv., . en as · 3 AR., 21i harh& , ,. ... $1'0 • CONVENIENCE Lakeside cabin $1"1,000 the bank. S·l{)....$50,000. \Vill ~cure .,.,.;,h • DOLLllOUSE-<:07.v 1 Br. 3 BR., 2 ba1hs ... , $350/365
SHO PING C•ll 866-4&11 °' ,~;,,, J TD ·1 . • (i) d h p Spencer Real Esta.le, P. 0., . . Ill. on comm income. i·Jo~e lo shop~. only S90. . . . re e COMPLEX Box 2828, Blg Bear l...ake, for IN'al 1ntrnrir11·, include Ph. 6-12-6560. ALA Rentals e 645·39-00 ., . _: I
Calif. ~'ear c11r. s[l('c1 r1c· time ldur· Sth YEAR-Ing: hus1nrss hoursf NO\V ~ • lflt)E·A·\\'AY 1 Br furn, ····
No VACANCY Real Estate Wanted 184 ava!l;ih!e 10 srrvirr 81.. Ho\lns forR.n t ) nr slorrs. 1111 u11I inc S120. U p RkEACLTY
ALA Rentals • 645-3900 niv. iii" rn!rr, Tn ·ine I rounts, anrl phnne nun1hrr. '.:;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.,;,;;;;iiiiii;I Call Anytimf' R13·082!}.,.:;,i~
I! has to bf' a goorl l()(';i(1on' \\'A~ l' E 0 Con<!om1n1un1. \\"ri1r Cl11ss1f1rrl Arl 1134!"1, • e OLD \\"Qrld Ch;irni·I Ar, Olf1re hours 8 Ar..t 10 g E'f!l
111'1 OVE'r 11.-v,, hf>!orr fif'h! I rrrfPr Cnii-111 Ml'~ll. Nrv.'1)f)rr . (' 0 fhe D;iily f'ilor. r. 0 . Housel Furnished 300 ftpl, hu,;r fncrl ~rd. pc-rs. ;~~·1!~ Ask1ni;i: fl n ! y ~{''llt·h nr ~ 2 BH. 2 BA . l..n1v Box 1560, Cos!;t Jl;lr.~a. Util inr! Sl:l.'i. CllOlCJ.: Jr'\·ine pl"opt'rly-l
J •· · ,""11 -not nvf'r S2ll,OftO. FREE Lance r n r r r i or Balboa Peninsula ALA Rentals e 645-3900 HP., 2 RA. rrpls/rll')).'I.
Call Tl<':<: or John l nn(·1pnls n11Jy. Ca I I dPCOCalnr ""i~tic 1 1 J\Jn1osl nrll'. All hltns. $200 714-;~6-1600 j :i.11)..:1710 al1rr 6 P.:'11. or 1 ~tudin ~anipir s .. 11°1 s iar: RALROA Prn1n r·han1w'1 . • RARE Onr! :2 Br. lnnl nl(I In 1110 nr '-''Ill liel.l ..
Tn11 t'sln1rnl Di\·isinn 11 £'rkrn~.~-~Ir \1•1,!h.s;imf'. °Cl~s;~,7::; a~ Summ('r ren!al. Bayfront. 5 .vrd. £'ncl ,i.:ar, k1ds/prt~. 8.13-110.l 1!.1.1-3.~~~-·
PRIVATE p;1r!~· 11·anrs 3or 4 No .. 177. Daily Pilo1, P.O. hr, 'I ba. !,i.:(' fin.at & p1!!r. $140. ">"\\',BR " b C
ALA R I • ,.5 3900 .~ . ·' . _ 2 a. omm. Ar homr. R11y for rash Bnx 1.)6(), Costa l\1esa, Calif. Crptd. ]st r!;iss. 673-w.l<J. enta s lr't • pnol &: I""'"· N'nrPr. $.l:I.'!. ·
trvlay. llarry 83.1-1129 11kdys 92626. Costa M esa • S!ll"Y Cl Lr;.i,r. li.,1.1-0:IOO 011,·s, Asl<
SZ9.950. 842·66'.'ll. I rlsh\\'Shr. /\'1cr ly lndscprt. Grl
6'10 loan, low mon1hly SEY\10UR R E A LTY 1190 Glmrwyrf'
payments, J bedrooms, drn. 1142-12'21.
1
494-9'17.l ~19--0."!16 Laguna Beach
family room, fine qualily 0\VNER niust .'It'll. Assutflf' -EXCEPTIONAL BUY-I 50 X ll:I ~-2 Z?N r. co n sll'UCl1on lhroughoui, 5, ,.. 1 1 hl _ Onr of !11sf rto\\ nfo\\n parcels
l-.·1: 1-5 \\'kn<ls &12-2112. NE"D CASI! . 1' r ;:i n -2 1lr, r I k ,_.~ n'>'ltl E r, · " 51.000. Or up rp1/rtrp~. r hil'1/sml pr! or · ar · "·1"'·'~~v \'t'!i.
Business
Opportunity
to S.1.000, SI0.000 ;:ind morr. * 2 BR. 1 Ba To11•nhousl' $l6:'1. Laguna Beach
200 Sf>e A\"c('J Thrift fnr a Rr.1r Patio/,:?ar pnnl 1v.·shr · dryrr ALA R t I e 64S 3900 ----------·I
Estate Ln11n. Lpon ap. hnokup. $205. Ch ild nk. en as • Sl'-O-U!1l pd. t; n 1 q u e . co r lumb1n Brk. ,., '" oan, ow monr Y Appmx. !!JM F 1. of fam ily for df'velopmt'nr. s2f~ r. g, pay~1en1~.4bl'drn om .,,1 1Jv1 ni::: bit-i n~. ~rp. rl 1ntni:: AVAILABLE
NOW
prova!. usr thr ninn"v 5.'17·8400. e i\IORf; Rnt:1 n1' :I Ar. 2 R11 . l~rhrlor. 2 hlk.~ ocran. Prn• .
.. · !l6 5566. f11m1Jy r~m \1·1th llll own I rm , rlrn; h:;r. h1"1ng T"n1. E . 17t h St. Costa Mesa
DECORATOR'S :I Br. 2 811 , na!ural brick f1ff'pl111·r. full 11 /frpli· · 3 f'.~11·a J.i:-r
1
\A\ T ' 11 1. 000
hn,\·rvrr .vou l1kr. Also nsk Huntington Beach ki<t.~/pP!s/~int!lf"'<. 1'1\. $Jjfl. p.1r1•1, lull k1!rhrn, ,
tihr'lu! our 11nsI'1• u r"' <I ALA Rentals e 645.3900 Sl:il Br. O\•'r ).!ar. \\'a!k to
I d d h I d. b k .,1 000 · 1 , 1 Pnanf. :i, Dn, 1 _ C . r x ra&, upgra I! 11 ag crp, 1n1ng room, r , ..., , , h rJ r rn :i;, C ~mp r rel .v ('a~h sprnd;ibJe rrturn ...... rgr orporat1nn drslrl'~ prrson11I loans. AVC O 4 BR-2 BA-POOL 1648 Newport Blvd., CM IW'111·h .~· Tll11n. Ch1lrl/rw1 nk.
THRIFT. li20 Nev.')"lOrl Ct~. 2500 SCJ. ft. homc Frplr, :-.;"r11 9 H R---1-e $17~.--. En•I Brau! \Iii'.,..', Ll1; drp:i;, frplc, palio. By li.46-00'H. h1nd.'<·np•-l"I ~U"'' p;il1n nrf':ii , Rr 1 Rk 6_5 6_00 t'f'Sllfln~ih!r person '" <l1s-
Owne.r. $35.000 962-1'121. O\\'Nf.R SAC'tifice. Onl.1' ,1 I n r r n n 1• 1 f' 11· . r. on rt • a on('Jffil<"s, r. __ i • .:_ ~ triburl' TENCO (a n1v1s1on Dr, Suite 101. Ne"·porr furn1turr. B/'aut. lnrlsrprl. Ome enta 5 1 Br. 11pt .• , ,
Bt>Ach . Ph. St~-.1440. vard P;.itill G 11 r a~ c. $27.-> 4 Bl! + Drn El Toro .•
A!isoc. Advertising I Chi!~ prt ok.· l 111 i. Ocean I.) J Bt-.:DRM·2 RAT!!: hu rll frplf', lll\·r ly J:"<lrd"n •.•
4 Br+ Lrg Bonus Room yea~ old. iAiri:?e f11 mit,v nr1ghhorhoo<I. clo~e 1 o CORONA DEL MAR of Cora·ColaJ COFFEE
Convenient 10 Fwy!, lrg Jot. homP, 4 herlronm.~. fa;-111fy SC'hools. S !l.~.'ft Co;i~r ~fli y. lrnnta~ ... Z..~ry PRODUCTS.
rR-;\Ianagrr Orange CnunT"' 1 $.~;,{). 111 lllo11e & telrig. Rtujl nr 52.)(1...Dr•l u:i.•· 2 Br. 2 ~
Ofric('-n°rw bu~rnl'~·s l N U .VIEW RENTALS tr11 1ler .~toragr. r!h! ,i.:.ir 0 1·ran \1r1\ Apt. All
•~A ooo 847 3957 mom, den, xtra fiN'plarr, I • 499-281"X.l • Bld,i.:., 2,000 :i;q, alt. Xlr11 ..,..., · ·• ·· · IQc1111on for N>!•!I .~loc•. of.
1
Ciin st11rt full nr p11rt timl"
Xlra bath.•. lU\"Urll)U.~ Ill· •···. ~~~ '-11·rl1"om in£ !'-l'r.·if'P. f11odcst 67:\.4():10 nr 491·.~24/l SumnH•rt1n1r rrnlal ok. f";ilurr ~. rm!.
salary ~ :.0', profit. $\Jj. l BR. i\lrrlallion Condo. No kiri.~ · nn prls. S:t.!."1 · 3 Br. 2 R11 h5e. whitt
Huntington Beach rprior. Brk, S 3 4 , 9 5 0 • ·-Q~ ! LL\:£ u...w.u--a..i. f1lf'~. hPauty shop. rtr. !5·10 hr~. prr 1\·k.J Company
-· ~~--n~ Parking. PS!ahlishes business lor dis· EXECUTIVE 1142-2:'161. ,.....;..... ~<..:0<17
S ---~so. Q;\4.ST ~-. ORANGE COAST tr1bulors. Call .\Ir. Drfnng All hlrn.~. rrfrig., encl pai io. $225/MO. \\"11 lrr V1r11 . F'rpl. .. ,, PE.CIAL O\VNER transfererl. 3 !IOUIHl.Ar........._u.u; REAL ESTATE
for this super b 3 bedroom Bedroon1 & drn, rn1ry hall , -11ooo~c.-NO .'iELLING! ti7:'r-.11120 pnol. Qiuet, no pet s . --NU-VIEW RENTALS
home nestled among 1ree11 buil!-in range & O\Jl'n + Lido Isle ~848 Gn !1.~h1ng: or spcnd mnre Neiv lisrini:: 67.'.-!il J.1. 2.) l BEDR;v1.2 BATH : hrrl · 67?.~Kl:IO nr 4!}4.....3248
GIFT Sl·tor Lido l!ile "'"'d fir. _gd rrp~, bii;:-Laguna Hills and sh11Jb11. Sparkling CJURli· rtishv.·a ~hl'r, huge firrphtcl'. DOUBLE \\'IDE, $8500. Sall" lin1e wllh your 1avoritc
ty tor tine f'nrer!aining. park like .i;:rounrl.~. prime COMJ'LETELY rrmodeled & hy Owner. \V il! trade it hobby and let the machine Holland Bus. Sales yard. 124;,. on !ease, mo.1------------
Lush derp pile rnrpc!ing locarinn, Brk, S 2 6, 7 5 O., rerlf'C'Of, tr11d1t ion11I home. 3 po!i-sih!r. ~l;:iny x tr as. age rarn you n1nncy. CASH
\\•ith custnm m 11. t chin;:: 9fi2·137~. Rrlnns., dtn. rm.. <lrn ~:16-il\·12 REQUIRED $2498. Secured.
'"Th" Rrnkrr 11·1th En1p11!hy"
1716 Orange A\'r. C'.i\f.
4 BR. No pct$. Avail July r-;o (>('!ll. NE\\' \.\'orld duplex. 3 BR, 2
11•kly or mo. Avail Sept. or --RI\, .~h11.i;: cp1s, dr~. aJ.r,
drapes, All rll'ctric kitchen O\\"NER an x Io us 4 i1·/11rt har. l..1rJ?P corner C~on~d~o-m_i_n~i-u_m_s ___ _
.,..ilh all thP trimmings. fan. 0 _ _, & d . · h II lot, Easr rnd. $99,500. f I Llt.11TEn OPPORTUNITY ~·RF.E , _""~ f n , •• , ••
61~1ti0 :.40-06()li. ('\"PS. \\lintf:'r. \\lkly·S200. i\10-$800. 3.) 4 REDRM·2 RATH rnrnrr t!'11 a ~hrr. ~love-& p\1 .
\\linlrr S:iol> mo. &14-4R95. home, frre shar!rrf hip; p11!10. A'1u\r~. AvA!I . 6n5 .
y;ird. Jl:e11·l.v drc & ne.,.· S2:tl tnn. 21;1: R31-1i62.
Newport Beach <.Tp1g. S245 mn.
,.,.·11rnom!i rn. f'ntry 11 • or s a • 160 \Vrite no11· for informaflon ,. .......... ,.-.. • ._.'
lall!ic 1 tirep1Acr39. ~\lhllt11 a popular Cl'nfral floor pl11n. howOR~ loweorl jsi. -0-:::-0--:::o::cc-'."."°.'::".'""~ include phone number, ' Ort;TJrator v.·ishes to sharr
sllo"''fl 8Ce for S ,.ivv! Se l'r fine qu11 1ity buillinJO. finish· Rcal.W. I BR TOWNHOUSE studio. samplr, ca!alf}g.~ & Newport Beach
Is prepared tnr GI And FHA f'd gar11i;:r pl'rlect f n r .l416 Via Lrdo 675-4562 \\'alk to heh. ~6·2Hl,i .REDr·RRE\V r rc v.·ith ~me. Classifird 11rl SIOO-Bachelor 11! beach. Full trrms now·~ the timf' Call kitchen. Yearly. F:rl Riddle Rra!Jor fi4fi-AAI\ $17:..2 Br, 2 B:i, o\"er gar. • · · · rarllf's, natural \\'ood panf'I. REDUCED Duplexes/Units CORPORATION l\"n. 3i7. Da ily P 1lnt, P . o. ing, bPa ut1 ful ya rd, eovrrrrJ * * 3001 llo\1•ard Av('nue Bnx 1500. Costa l\1esa, Calif. $175 . ] Br, utll pd. l\"ea1 & l\tES..\ DEL :'\fAR :I bftil'O'lm rr1v111r f..· Nirr' l::WAlilfH /\If!
Realtors 545-0465
Open Eve~.
THE BIG HOME! * 5 Bt'<lroom~ * J Bath.!! * f"or mnl Dinini:-
• Atr1un1
• 2 Pat105 * :I Car G~r11,1;P
patio, S2!J.500. Bkr, !'.162-1186."i. CA Norrth1s1r~ta CRoc2nebr sale 162 San fllatro, Ci!. 94101 92626. CJr;:in. G;ir11i.::r. . • home \1·1th <'llrprt~. dr<1~ Sh2lki5 h2 Br. Frplr Hom". 1"
u.•rom L. ·' B . a. 4 2 B B S200·1 Br. \\'a!rrfrnnt. Comt 11n<! h1i:: m1·rf"f'rl p;:i!i n ay, l 1i blk brac.h,
$74.500 ( ) <l r. 1 a hnnirs, xlni CANDY SUPPLY RO\iTE ILLNE."iS forcrs ~le n! ~UC· furn. Lrg r;1t1n. ran1iltrs nnh . Gardenrr ;n. vr11d,\.
All my )1s11ngs. l\r£'rl homf's 1 LIDO REALTY i'<'irJ' .~•·p. f'n~·I fllll lO!i f,;, lj\'.Q SF.Ll.1\G INVOLVl-:Ol <"f'S~ful laiinmnv.·~ ~hop in S.lOO SurTimt'r or S4!il Lsr . 3 PludC'd at si7~i. prr month. $400 · .1 Rr. 2 B11, rlplx
10 11dvl'r!15e 11nrl sf'll. rnr 3Ji7 \'1a L1rtn. NH, o;ar!lt?"f'~ S&'l .. 'fl}. n"'" n e r l PART OR FUL!.. Tl:'lf r. C'nst;i ;11rsa. AL.SO rock Br. 2 R.1 l!nn1r Ra.\rrr~! Call A~,,nt. ~~&-41•1!. 11;.ilrrhVJrH Spar f..· rtrluxe.
professional, rtr1c1rn1 srr-~-*= 613·1300 * ~1~~~· Nil\\' lll"llllllhlf' 1n Oran;:r shor a\';iil Call DA:-.;JA NU-VIEW RENTALS .. --N U.VIEW RENTALS
"'''". CM··· Verde $6 M ANNUA_L__ Cnunly l'lnrt s11 rrnu11d•ni:: l1F.ALTY co. &12...fi.160. 6''10'" ,.. .tn• ~,,,, • r,\([QUS. Sf"/11lf;!lf' 3 RR. 2 li7H071 -An• ·~As '· 1.,,..... ·""' .,r ~,,.,-., '" B;:i. rrr1/drp~. d 1~hw~hr, -·-· __ '•· ,,,.....,..,., Coll Jun B ia Ir 968 7833 NB. DuplPx. :I hr up f.t rlDll'n . arras. 'l"ou n)ay kr<'n ~·our 2 \\'EEh: cnursf"" fin m;i\t o I • r BY 01\nrr, nn Uf'IJlf'r N1\·pt l11~1Y1sl. frplc. 1!hl f!;ir, r ne1 • n ThP \Va!rr -llugf' 1 Br, !j yrs in Real Estatr Sa!r.~ I ~RH, 2f"IA. Nr,11 i·p!~ !,. drps. SG~.500_ Prine only, 642·1.l~I pr•r.~rll P0~111"11• All )or1· nrdrr !:: 1rnfl0rl1nc. Call I Ch I f SI I · nr fi116-0i42. !inns Ar" i·nnHl1f'rrraJ or 1 ,,1<967, f•c .'"''"m•li"". Ray, 4 BR, pool. hraut furn. )ar·r · 1 <!rrn nk SYt/1110. 11rn .. P~ ·. t\1ri~ nk. S200. RED CARPET REALTORS I Li.: .vorrl. Clr.1n' By 01\'TI•'r.1 ~--~------1 ,,.. ,. " , .. "" R 1 I lh o . 1 ' 1 .,,(V\ "-A" 016'1 •·7 !f<ll ALAR I I e "5 3-r111·1or.v furn1s hrd hv 11s -rn ll n1 ·"""fl A ..... ~~, .,.,.,. ' · or ,JJ • · ·. en a s ""' -TIIU
9fo2·77il $:lz.:ri0 fl."\7-'1·1!12 nr r,.r.,..77.~R. Income Property 166 Q11al1f1rd rirrson ·iv i 11 Money to Loan 240 fl''r 11k. 714: 63..1-9393 <'Xt l&S :>.fESA Vrrrtr-4-br 2 h;i ,.
SOLD
• Only S-16.500
• Prrfrc! hon1e lur
f.i m1!y
=~=---I M~ -=--v· · 'I" '10~ · • . ..:::11·rs to Brn··h-2 Br, frplr., I O\rNER must srll' ~ nR. li;:r 1ss1on 1•10 hrco111c dislnhutnr f'1r <'111" I nr ......... , ·· n1~ti ... ·11sh,.r. J.ra~r $2i.l. I I s101·f'/rrfr. rpt/drp~. S:tiO. · Argf' l!v rm. 1mm11r.' Ne .... v./1• 1 AP .19111 11 4 h 2 h ~..._,-n91 t";indy q\lounll.•, /\Jn1 nnd lsf TD L LTOOislr-1 HR 2 BA 1~ hlk :12\R Orr£on />.11'. ALAR 1 I rrpt, rl111.<: . .\l;in11 rln11rrs .t· i .il . I .<:qk 1• h r, a , -....UU.0'9 .lr.1. R11h.v fl. u r h . But-oa ns from prrv bl'a
0
l'h/clu
0
1:!.· An· AVAIL July J.~L 4 RR, ,\Jrsa -enta s • 645-3900
trrrs 11r11r .•tipPi.: p11rk &· nni rni. i:r 1 r en, grrrn INCOME HOMES lrrfinl:'<'r, r\"r.<:tl<'~. Planrrr~. nual nr by mo. 673-91:'19. V•·de, "' ,11 •. "hi·. !cpl•. I RIJJ{L\f hf)Usl' 11/pool. 2 * C11ll 847-6ll0 Tnrl11y'
\O /THEREAL ·:_)( ~§!A.T~~~
· . ' sh11~ thruout. On ,·1ew lot. N'EW DUPL ~· " ., ·'' ·' • k ' pt1h!1r_ &. (";i1tinl1 r ~eh()f)I~. l.l,,91Jfl, •. ~2.107_ EXES 548.950 Tnnrs1f' Roll<. P11y Day, 63.4% INTEREST H U f 305 1 rl bl ' "'""" <: lrl'r rrnt for 1ra I~"" C II f ,,.,... i\'E\V TR IPLEXES !67,950 Milk Our!.<:, """~~, p~~""f 2 d TD L ousts n urn. crp s, rp~. rn.~. iiar"r prl11rn1Pnls t , k I • . "'·· · ·'· a nr app!. ' •· ',.,.,.. pa1rt. $300/mo. 6iJ...1i06 ar1 " "0 r n g Cnurlt'SI' In h rn ke r g ' Newport Beach Nn1v unrter ronstrurllon at Buttrr Cup -11r1\•£'rfl~f'd 1111· n oans General 6 ~Ingle n111n nr \\'11lllln. No .
%11-14:•1. J.">l J..::. Bay st., Cns!a t.1esa. •1onal!y on T .V. rlcf. \\le pm. p!"I ~. ("all (;ror;ir &l&-70JJ. EASTBLUFF Complete July. 642-490:'i. I lllY' A no1inn11.I rompanv. Lo\vest rates Orange Co. 4 BR Condo. :"jPar Ora11ge t:"t:E or 0~ ., -------1/J ACRE
POOL • POOL • POOL TRI : P.LEX
47" Aluminum rovl'.rt'rl Jlllt\O INF.\\ 1
y,·irh B-B-Q. 16" x 32' pt"IOI J cloSf' to hf'11~·h. shopp1~~ &
I\ llh rtrrs~1n;: r()f)m, 4 BR 2 fnv~·s. i\sk1ng S 4 7C, J OLQL.
RA . .i·· ~h;i<-Cll r pP I~ l\"/lO': r!O\\ll. I\ .. 1147.)li.11.
thn.1ou1 . Convrrsallon pll the Reel E1tate Mart ..,-1111 \\Cf h.1r & f1rer1lacr,
EXECUTIVE ESTATE
Unht'l1£'1·ablr hA!r arre \\' 152
lrers ~IJ1Toun<l1ng lhl! pref·
t1rst yarrl ynu"ll ever llCI'. 5
BR, 3 BA, 2100 sq ft. \\'hat
morP t'lln 1\"f' say? By App't
only -(',11J 979--1050,
loemof '1'"'"' A '"'1 hm REPOSSESSIONS I hnme' f'r1cr r f' c1 11 r r rl ,. , 9=r21 S·M,9?'11. All t erni~. * CALL I For in fnrmation 11nrl loc11tion 847-~;()7 "* of fhf'~C f'I·IA & \IA hon1e11,
U .S. AFFI L IATED COlllA.l'I -I
-"~'" HEA!.T_Y -KASABIAN I
1 Real Estate 847-9604 POOL FOUR BEDROOM
ranch hou~r. cu rvrrl
r!rivrway, rtversi7."rt rlbl .1t11r,
11hAkP mol. lrtsrpd. In:
k1lch-fiim rm romhn. b1s: IJ...,
rm "·/f1N"p!, upl:rllrif'r1
\\'/W rrpts & r1rp~. h!!1n
RIO, d~h""'hr, ('111·0 pii.t lfl.
1 aprinklerl'I fronl 4t rear.
Prieto rtducerl It> $27,950. for
(flll<:k Yfe,
I' illw e Real Est,1te ..
t6Z-4471 ( =i 544-1103
BUY A PARK
tnd we will lhrov.· In thls
~ly 4 tw-<tmom, ftimlly
room hom~. F. norm o u 111
rooms Ir! hou~ lhf' l11rgr~t
of f11m llles, plu~ 1 "rP):(ula-
tiort-sl.te "' football field for
a baek;ya.M. 0..JI today, 1{'15
J>tlcfll to gel! 842-25.t"i.
'O THE REAL
"\. I:STATERS ,., .. , ..
ATTENTION Gl's
No rlo11•n psiymr n! Ancf only
S.10. rlo~ing <'IJSls. ~ Brr!rm
+ rtrn. 2 hnth.~. blttn~. rrpt,o;.
drps. $245. mn, PR.v~ All,
• '47·.\J.11 *
the Real Estate Mart
ldr11I hnmr In primP Harbor
H1.i;:hl11ndl1. 4 Sfl'l<'lot115 BR ,
family nn., 2' J b11th~. sep
laundry rm. Kitchrn hl!ns.,
!'flt/rlrps, '"' ~ 1parkling:
, he'11lcd pool. $44.000.
I CALL Ci>. '"'•241•
GOV'T. OWNED I 9'~1..111.
RrposscssPd homes. Ltiw • R E AL TY
r1ov.•n, Governmen! pay~ Nt1r Nt•part P•1I orrlct
clo~!ng costs. Call 968·'4·11. PANORAMIC VIEW * Crest Realty
SAVE Sl,t»J
&U or lease 3 BR, Cnndn. N'""· cpts. }..1nl con rt .
SXl.500. Ov.'llf'r, 968-9641 ;
•1"-<298.
$14,IXX> • I Br Mf'rlallion Con.
rlo, all hllm, relr ig., ('ncl
p11tlo, pool, quicl, $1000 rln ..
l~t TO S8900 51 ~";. bl1l,
71,t~ 2nt1 TD. fi7:.-:i().'lol
2 Slory La ClJl'~l11. hon1r,
4 BR, 3 BA , fam rn1., ~Mg
erp~ thron•1l. tiltn~. nr
1cholJI~ r,, bt'11.rh ~~-i;· •. ·~
Rraut. ml\lnlalned home
2 BerlroomA A large family
m i. Pool. $64.500.
Georg• Wllllam1on
Realtor
541-4570 645-1564
FOR S!Ut" by awner, Upper
R.<!y, ·I BR. 3 BA. f11m rm.,
11rt har, din rm & beaut.
111.nrl~rnplnJt. Ca!/ 633-22.\1.
S1nt1 An•
~ BDR~!. 21li BA, liv rm, d in
rm, fa m rm, p.ati('J kitchf'n,
Z--n:12· bonu1 rm ffinlahf'd1.
l r11r Rar. S4t500. 549-'0T.l.
I
\'rry hi~h inrnn1r po!ent1a.I, 11 WE QUY TD 'S" Coast Collrg(', Sv.·im pool . p. ~q. rt. 4 Br. * Triplex-By o ... ·n<'r. 2 Rr. ,.nu niust havf' 2-8 hrs. ""!" Dbl gar;:igr, S240. Crpts: SJ9,,. 2204 Donnie . Rd, NB
large yani~. g"' rag r 5 . .,. Sattler Mtg. Co. r1ra""s 551_1~.ll "' '"6ll haC'k bay. Av11il 6/26,
10-2!}3 cfn $45.500/offrr. \\'Cl'k ~pare rime (days or 642·2171 545-0611 i~·' ' ~ • .,....,......, · Kti.3Hi4.
~,. R"lg•c• 0 , C.•'· eve.~.! .,._ . H ho 21 2 BR, crpt, nu pain!, r ncl -,,.,,;no:;=:7e;;;;:-,.,--r ~~"' ... ~ ·1 I I 7~ TIEQ . ..,.·rving: or r area yrs. I 1 YEAR lrase 4 BR home l. 5.i7-&400. ' • w UIRED
1
gar. Nn ]Y'ls , Pr1. pa!in. "''
For mor'(' information write: $135 Bab k t!M· p Rlull~. Pool. nrw shopping
al\\'ay8 the right place If "ROUTE DEPARTMENT FOR ACTION. • • '433 W.11th COSTA MESA · .Y" -:i omona. ,ir., sctm111. Laundry U.Crf."
you want RESULTS! Call N 2., -$135 -VACANT 2 Br, gar· 11v111J. 640-16S9 n, ,, .. , P. 0 . Boy 1739 , K 'd / 1
642-5678 & place I.hat ad c CALL 642-5678 SOO -FURN. 1 BR Cotr11ge. !':"<'. 1 s pr s. SINGLf
'
""•>"· ovinA, CAiif. 91722 Trl'es &: gar<len. Ideal for 1. Rent-A-House 979-8430 , . .:s ~r fa n1ilies. 3 B '"' Tnc-ludr Phone No. "''/everything. \Valk to OOb.
S@~~1A-.lt£trs·
Thtt Punlt> with the Bui/I-In Chuckle
O Reortonge le!lftrs ef the
fovr scrombled words be-
low to form four simple words.
Eastbluff Rent.A-House 979-UlO.
LOVELY Blufl h nu s f' Santa An• Heights
ovrrlookding h·g J;r('rnbf'lt S BR l :
$140-PRIVATF: 2 Ar !!nmr, .1Br,3 Ba. lrg pa nf'l1·r1 run1 : 1 , • BA W/ FRPL;(Z
gar, fn cd yrrl, kids/fl<'l ok. pus rm, yr l!W \V/np!ion !n B l·ins. <'a rpe!.s, draJlf's, Riii"
buy. Chvner 499-20.i,i. agr, ya~rt. pallo. Chllrlren &
$180 -SUPER Nice J Br, 2 Huntinnton Beech ~is, ,v.·f'l~omh '1· S37~ or tab
B I. f ·1 I 1· • '' n 1111115 l'< a. pe to, 11m1 Y. sng 11 1nc. NU VIEW R. • " *WE have a large selection • ENTALS .
S2.'JO -STEPS tr, Ocean 2 ol 3 and C bedroom homes 67J.-40.10 or 494·3248
Br. 2 B11. frplc. shag crpt!, that ean be mo\'ed Into Houses Furn. or
for child & pet, E/~ide.
$135 ·-FRPLC + 1 BR. fncd
' . .. l 1 (iN1~lr1·I aingle11 ok. Almost Immediately on our Unfum. ii
-.....1 Ren t -0 p I Io n p I a n , ;::----~----...::..:.::{
LANDlJJRDS! Do you have SHERWOOD RE A L T y G•,,.ral •, ~ •
" vacancy? \Ve <'Rn fill ii. S40-l555 ·1---..,--=,,,_____ ' I KENA L I 1' . I I I I' .
I FELBAI! . . Dumb maiden: S~e was I I I Ii asked if :she liked codfish
bolls. ..J don't know, .. she
/ .. ,--8-A-Y_T_O_N~~j so;d, 1'1 naver -to-;_,,
I
I
1 1
j '
1
8 Complete the chuckl• qvoftd
hy filling lri 1he mlulng "'°'d•
you d~elop from 1te1> No. 3 below.
PRINT NUMBERED lEI'JERS
IN THfSf SQUARES
6 ~~~c:~~[~ l!ll!RS I I I I 110 I I I I
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 700
* FREE * t.-11ny ~cslrable len1tnt11 on 3 Br, 2 Ba . Elec, bit-in range RENTAL SERVICE
our wailing Hiii. Absolutely &. oven. Forced air hl'al RED CARPF:r REALTORS
NO CHARGE. C......, 60x100 t ed I ' 96'm BEACON RENTALS • .,.w, enc ot. Db * ""' 1 * ,·
* .1. .. 1: ") l l * l gar, . landscaped, vacant· Huntington Beadl
--move 1n tnday. S22S mo. • ~ •:
LANDLORDS! Aaent. 962·"n °' 5'16-Rlro. 3 BR. 1 ~ n. .. sm mo. 2
NH. Golden l't'egt & Edinger. Rar, crpt~. drape1, "*1-, , We Specialize 1n N~
Beach e Corona del Afa.r e
A: Laguna. Our RentAI Sfor-
vlc• Is FREE lo You! Try
Nu-Vlew!
3 Br, 2 Ba. Sharp, aharp! hf'11ch .\ 1eh.la • aoU • 1•
Niee yard. Vac11nt.Sl45 mo 84&-2912. --, • !
to mo or will ~ell. P riv prly . N ewport &.•ch ~of•
8.13-1 103, Rt1--3886.
NU-VllEW RENTALS Like-10 trade? Our Tr1dcr'a
673-4030 or 494·3248 ParadiM'! column is tor you! * BAYFRONT *'-:.
F'ro Ch S lints, 5 day.I! for 5 buck'.111 3 BR .. a>nv. &!n, 31,i '-·
m " rlslmaA Neckties" "l\:ake Room ror r)~d-G11.rt1en It sandy bftf!h.• ~
to outl7'0wn Lev\11 -you ean d y • ' . c I ea n out the Av11l. summer or yearly: ·•
turn "tra1h to CA~h " In II r11rt1te. ~your tra.ah i.a CASH' Ask for I ' ' t
DAJLY PILOT classi!IM ad with a DAJ LY PILOT Paul Quick or Carol Titun:
... call 642-5673 Clustift! i d. AGENTS "44-2UO ;, , :t
I
L s
(
•
L
M
1 •
I
~~~~:----... "----"_ ... -;;---'-... -y 1~1 ~ .... ~.~-~ ... -~,~(!]~' ~-;;;;· -~b~=-~r~~~;, [ ..... --....... J[!J ._r _ ... _,...~,~~
1
1 ..... --
OAfl Y PILOT %~
F .. ·te11M or n:nt. 2 BR 1~.
0
Ap._ts_._F_u_•_•_· ____ uo_ Apt. Unfurn. 3'S Afat. Urtrurn. 345 Apts., Buslneti Rental 445 I Found (free M1J 550 Eleetric•I Pla1ttr,. P•tch, R....i.s
~ townhou&f', 111 Hu~l!fllt NewPOrt Be•ch Gen1r•I G-r•I Furn. or Unfurn. 370 o.,·r·rc1-:, •I.On'. nr. N'pL ---------. \Ori Bf'aeh, SJ~ mo. c-al! ---,.-------I Post Ofh<'f'. ofM Sq, It.. Good f"N[)..SbttpdOc -male--ICfY'Y EL t-:('TitlCIAN. !IC'f'nA:t'd , 1t PATCJI Pl...ASTE'itJNQr
.f'!-1<00. St.PS fr.SJM'nd UM> summer f iiiiiiiiiiii!iiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Cost• Met• parkuix. lll'.l 1nonrh 11nd whhr, 2 1·01111r1 Ouf' hOl'l(!f'(f. Sm111l job~. m.~tn1 AJJ ty}M's. f'nof' "~tlmate.
"11! •1··" on ihe oct11 n. C1<>Ae to VILLA MARSEILLES <;r"h1101 Rt-ally 64&--14\~ n .. a. VM:. E-. 201h, C" ).1 . 4. r,.ii11 1r:s. ~&-~. Call ~ ~ a un l Ir 2 BR turn or uufu111 64" -I kd fl 6 PVeryth1ng. G44 -5.'l07. SPACIOUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APT. Childttn'a atetXln, Pool. SHOP 1:w· $100. SIQI~ JJ1i· ......ua • "'' •Y• i:i -
1
·-~:L~<..9J'RICAL \\!ORf< All Plumbing
J Sbll'\i, 211 BA , I.am rm. 2 1 Br., Channel tronl, Furnished & Unfurnished 1140 Up. ELM GARDENS l!V. JJ 1.1r11.tfie l'()\lnt , :'MO \\'lllTF.: Poodlf' vie Schr1lfill"I' k11M.l$. B1i or 1m11 !J l.!1 tl &. ----------
' c11r ,itftr. PtYl] k rtt sa~. month. '{early Adult living APTS. 1n E. 2'lnd St, C .. \1. Np! Blvd. c.~f. 646-2:'14~. I Sc-hool. w .. ~lrlli~'(ll'r, C11ll 111~. ft't't' f'~!. ~6--0211 &lw on ho~ rt+tpain
i f~.c1.lit1f'5. $300. mo. 6ro--O!U 673-2.171 Dis hwasher colot coordinated appliances • 642-3645. !>111-8:\:tt 894-1166 .-rt. 6 P .. 1. ;:iardenfng rn·,. , .. ~1. pluml)1na. ritint.
nr 1113 ~ 823-3600. I San Clement• Plush shag carpet -mirrored '''ardrobe doors-Huntington S.•ch • Of'f!CE-600 !kf fl .,.I now. lt1AL.E '"elmarllllt'f rnunlll-----------ln11rallat101a 8JS.-0.172
IP,:;-u_p_l•_•_•,_•.,F,..u_r_n_. ___ :us..; Sl.lO. FURN. OCEAN vu ~nudi~e~~il~~~i~:n~~dki~~~~n _· p~~~h~~~td~,; NEW SANDPIPER ~t>:1~\'t·~~.N:.;J'.~.IAL ~~(~•.n~2 ~;;~kh11r~1 I \\11t G2~~~~~~G J'L~.~~:~oo !~:i~rR
Newport Beach Apr~. J Jg rms. l Brlrm. ing -b.rick Bar·!Je..Q ues . large heated pools Ettrly bird &pt'cla.111-l BR lndu1trlel Rental 450 ~·r1nalf' rPd f"1111l •'1 Balh<H1 ~ ~·1'( •\tf•·1 in i11til . J:r * fM1 Jl2X *
'•·· BAY VIEW
Parkin g, Arlull5. 492-1200. & lanai. Air conditionin,I?:. trom S\2:'1, 2 BR from $155 ----------Jslll.n(l flt l;'1Ty l11nd111g 6·S plunt111):, li!lu! 1111;i,.., 11:1·n,.,rnl COLE PLUMBING
South Lagun• 3101 So. Bristol St., Santa Anl 557-1200 Furn/Unfum, C'OOI color In. COSTA MESA (f'VP! 67>5521. l ani!~··i..~"' nuiint"1111n1
·"· ~.i l1r. 11·rvir"· MS-1161 C BJ'.t. 2 BA, UPJlf'r. Comp! f\irln. Rt·der;. 2 bik!!' 10
·Oc-tan · 441h St. $400 /mo vrs
Is~. Al'a1I 6115_ o8ys
.8Sl·&480, EvP~ 1132 947ll,
COLDWELL I I 144() & '"""' · !t t '1·1•r t'~l•Jn 8!4'~.
PR/VAT" d. , BANKER & CO. !Pr or~, poo. J11('t1Z7.i, mol"f'. I .. """" :)(j · ~'1.ALL vrf'~ k1trtn. Vir 2:Jrd. 140-7873 '46-9076 "' ~l u JO apr 11./d .. C'k C "IN>-K~'l'S-" , r MANAGING AGENT 8081 }lolland Drl\'e, }fun--,A., · 1 MA '"· ~ & Sarlfll Ana A•·t . ""''--0219. _____ 0 __ _
& oce11n v1e11., rl'rl11rl ,t, 1 ~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!~i!!!~~!i!!!!i~!!i~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ ~ -I
_
1
lingron BE'ach. 847-9595. flBf:RGLASS Lost SSS AL'!" L;AHUf-:Nl~l; • ·r. Cuy Roofing. Dt-..U
Roofing
rPf'!<, ut1 , 1n1·. $1.. 1 per.~on. Rers. Da.\'~
1
Apt. Unfurn. 365 I Apt. Unfurn. 365 Newport Beach '.'lr. N1.1·pt Jo'rwy & S.D. r1..,1y for g11r1!1'1'1 1 11~ & ~ n1 fl J ! !l1n'I ! I oio.J tll) own v.'Urk .
Cclron• d1I Mar -"-'-c--:---~--3 BR, 2 BA, rlrps, 1.1·/1.1'.
frplc, sml patio. \\'a)\.; to
. bf.11eh . Arlult'. "'1 pets.
S.2'2j/mo. YParl,1·. 642-8.12(),
air June II I . :i!l.11 t:ra'."" Lt~. S!J.VF'.R J:f'l'.i· 1n11lf' pr.oil!•• l11nd:<1·n11111g ser\ it•r~. ""II ~;,_!;SI). 54S-9590,
365
. Cost• M•sa HuntingtOf' B•aeh OAKWOOD GARDEN \Sti, 01 Hakf'I', •~.or fttlr\'itw \'11·11 11 1> ~ 11n r 1,, 11 .. 1· .t ~..ff)..'d11:< ,.,.,.,, s .. r 1· 111 •: Sewing /A~,-,,-r-.-;-,0-n-,--
Apt. Unfurn.
2
HH , nr bf'a"h. nr\v cpts & Apar tments 11 1\1 11.Hrprr11e11ra1ive !h,.tf'I Flliri i;.11. \)J . li-"1111 ,1 ~.1 ;~ ('.'r111.knr l '+I\!, ~·n,1a \11"~8 . ........ • _ ;0,-e-n_e_r_a~I -------DELUXE 2 Br., 1 1 ~ btt lResurl Lii ini.: for ~ 11.111 11 noon. I Sxn HHrlll"t ('ir, l'u~i 1 ~It•':< Jlo1 "I' "h•.+•". \\ r~t1 l1fl. IJ I< SI t: '\' J< It~ t: umf'W'8n
stur11o. Crpti::., '1rp•. p<1ot , ilrps. g11ragf'. S 1 fi 0 I n1 o , {7 !4 1 '17'1 ~4 '4 or ll7~-11 I I .. :i.'6--·1"'4 :..tfl.--i.r. Adul1i:: Qnl~l ".. j ~l.'H1:1.~l. 1·1:i •!·l"-""lil'\\j 11'1·•· l\HTlt, ru111···· ·'1'!' l'\P !lf'W 1n
ON THE BEACH! hu1Jt-in~ fLJ1<1 J>l'I, pal i<\S I ' nr ·--"-J\F:\YPORT RJ::ACll ~1 I s kl t -111111111<1:!1>01 l\1•,,,l1 ~--07:1!1.
Sf.•"
1
•hilif •I<. 1_ ~.1,. I 1 Ot 1·r11 pr1n t( 11111·r111111.~ ... I ),T(l"CI) l ~ihri 1111111 111 ,1,. 1,11 1' !' r 11 11 1 11 ~ I ' I nl 111 1 11 i.: .
"' , " ~· , .. · ~1 ·:, 2 1<1~ 2 H,O,. d.~l111,l1r llilh al Jr\'inr '>'MV\ fl '''' ' I • I ' -~ -~ ~"'"I"·,_ ~~vu -'Q • ,, J>"!' 1111• T1111i 111\ •11 r~ 11·>1 \ , '!'•:•· ·I' r 111 .. "1 ' · A terat1ons -642-5145 •~iu-v-'" !•"I l\IJ;::.-; \Jh'. 7.Z:.:OU frl:r-0."1.'lO or 642-lllirl '-'I I k • • J r--_ _ ___ r 1 lf'rg11,s n ,N,.1<r hi.~1·r 1 ,11 '11 .~1·.1,1 '" !• '• • 1'8 1111 1• l\,'11l,;1,·,,11·.1t1· ~~l1 1•ar~Pxp.
''"" ~ · "'r.~-) Rrt. furn & t Tnfum. NEl\'!.Y J\].'('(1J~\TI 11 lt.11r:1 1~'\ ',~f, 11!11 f.· ~·lt1r1·1,.11, ('.,1, !;·ls :,:,:11 I '" fe levi s1on Repair ApartrntnhfDfR~nf 1 FROMONLY'l9S 2/'ft / Sil I ~ ) 11 .o:ar ~1 l•;1·d '1 • . 1:1:. ! • i. ... i.;a1:i1:.•· (..,1111,,_
11
,_.
1
1 ~,S,,71 6
_
1
,01,
6
.,
11000
. Sq Ft -
t ,,,,t. !I· • ,. ,,,
• NE W LAW NS* ----._-"'._ I OCF:A,\' Ql'EE~ w/pol1'11• II Ir rd '.".!'.''il d1 • • .,/1•11rt ,.,, $Jj: •. 7701 Ell1!1
JS30 E . Ocean flvrl Pl<1('r11l 1a A1e 1B1. C11ll Apl IJ. St·•~ rn1o:r fl l 7j:l1 fl:tntilt
A, pt · F Lo•g 0 ·• I ilfl 1'" b I ' • 6'" «• I 4001 R1rl'11, N II. .,41 ,.11.11 •· urn. 360 1 " ,.,.. .. 1·1 . I 4,5 . .,,,45 111n "':1,_-~_1:u. Ellis. Ap t Il or• 1;all u1.1nf'r I • I • ~ ' -'' I ,., \I
r+.1ng'ri by \\'1ll111m \\'Rlrrrs Co. a1ESA l/erdr, 2 BR upper, 642--04.'W f'\'f' &· \\'kf'llll~-R1ntal1 Want•d 460
B Ibo -Rooms 400 ··;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Schools & ' \: I 1 , 1, l\111111 11
a a Peninsula fH>\.\'IY de('., blln~. crpt.~. I SEA AIR APTS. $115 •
iiiiiiiiiiiiiii di'?s,. ri<i 1.:>t'r~. 1 ~h~d OK . Lrg, 2 RH. ("rpts, <!rps, bl!ns. FURN, rnor)1, fem11.ll' onli , I NEEDED
I 2 ~R·~ l 1iba · fl.;i!io. bA lron~. I $150. J-11}-7:ifi2 548-:i22i. ] blk N, o/ Ada1ns off Beach 11\i'nl 1,_"f1!11'~e studrnl, ;tr RESPONSIBLE
f ile
' 3l:i F. Bay. $2.iO monlhly on ' ** BEAUTIF1JL 1 & 2 BR. Blv. 7~ No, 6 lJtl,·a. lX.(', U1iJ pd. s7;1hno. WORKING COUPLE
N C }riv lr11~P !,.,.., 1 A lnterest•d In .1.1P,\,l· .. <1·. t.•ri1 1•n f'r. Halli,, ~:nii·i~ f'u~in rn
, f. nr 548-7771 p .
1 1
·,
1 11
•. I 1 A R I E l '+Hnp li•I•• 'I iinl"ut·k .-:, \\\1r\.; H•11•~111111hl1'. Gl<'n, IW oncept c ·6.l-1521 ... ,Ulff' II p! I Contr'lnpora,.,, Garden Apl~. 536·2796 01' s:l6·70j0 -<-8520. I 11f'f•rl one or \11'0 bf'ih'(>Om " ;---'~7~:::_::_-c~·--allos, rpc., poo , ;:i:>-2 BH 2 BA <'rpts drps • Hoonis lnr H;-nt $\1! \.\k .~. 1nuse 1111!1 llt.l'Kt fenrE>d tta Staft "-,4~ -,~ .. t ~FURNITURE RENTAL Corona del Mar i $170. CaJJ 546-5163. rlstn1·hr, i~ blk Muni;. f'Hri.: l.'p. •1 block Ocean. 2:i00 yard (for 111·0 VERY \VF:t.r. Career? ~t·~~~1:;;/,~!1. r·1·t~· l"~t1111n1t'.~. <.:-:,-~,;~·,;lt·;--,,-,,--,"-,-,,--k
1 Br apl unfurn w/.~tove. $165 pr r !l)O, Aft 4, 846·5.17j ~a 1 it'll". c~l\L TllAINt:f) 1log!<;I s1:-,o mo~t.
' -t ·.Month to Month
~ .J,®% Purchase Option t; ·~e Selectlon.
'' · Et)'!e-Color.
A I 8 I Vic: hrt11·f'en J9th &. Vii·tori11. l•:Xl'~:I: .1 ~p111w~r l;11rd1i1i'f ren1t11ltl. Frrr• "~1 Small
-c~·~;o;-;s. 20CpnterST. 2 Br., slud10 apt, all 11 PVTri:>0mforftmult•1nlLB. -lnrar\V.BaySt,~('OITT'/\ :'\<'II Pl' "'l"'l'lf'll('f'<l (~•llll•t•·t•' 1ol .~t'l'\'i,·1•. N1,at johs11'f'it'OllH' ~·'.':fi-2·12fi .
.. Y • · electriC', crpt, drapC'S, kilchf'n, l11und r.1· & pool ~fF.SA. 548·7881 /afl £ p,rn ~·ut l or p<1rl nnH' & 11 .. 1111. ~I'"" «~I. frl:.?~:ik9. jjiiiliiiiiiiiiiriillliiiiiiiiiii n., .r«• 2 RR apt, $15.1. Crpt'd & $1fil f\1o. 5.17-7904 <1{! <1:30 pri1•iieK1>S. 842-8472. L1 Cf'i1.~111g f't't'}l. Foi r ---l'!(tW}.;:-;;J(),\:i\I . 0------~
drps, stnve/refrig, pool, Laguna Beach
1
BDHM-1v/1v crp!, wardrobe WANTED .l111111ni'.~•· C111·d•·11111i.: S1'r\'irt E~yment )[ i ~
ON TEN AOl.ES ln<lry facil. Chldrn ok . l'losC'I, Share Ba 11 1, $75. Young roupte 1vould likl! lo • H. t:. Sl~ill & Hkrs l"r"<' ~:~1. * li4ti-0619. f 64~15.1. 1-RR. & de.o. Unique l;i.R'tJna n1o. f'\'P/ll'knrl 646-2042. rent 2 Bil unfurnished hou~e • Salf'~ Su1·f'r.~~ Tn1.in1n11: ('l\·.\ll 'l.J~-.-in•c_·~T;-;::;:"'"i!~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;
1 4 2 BR. Fun!. 4 Unlum. * Cond 3 B 2 B Casile 1.1•1rle ocean 1·le1.1's I · 1 · • PlaCPtllPnt A~~t for gr<1 rl' -:· r L fl 11 11 & Firepla~•; priv, ... Uoa. * 0 r., .a., A ' 'f d Cf ·· RMforrent.lite('i:-:iking,pvt l 11'111 i;:aragi> ln CM. Up 10 1:;1nir11111i.: .Sf'n11·f'. Jliiul ingJob W•nted, Mali 700
• · 2' Hour Deli\•ery
r-bltns. pool. c I b h fie , errs_ o gar Pni::, oi::e lo b l , • ' $150 nl<l. Good ref!!:, Both • Dfly & Evf" llfl.~.~"~ Pools Tenn!• Contnl'I Bldst. i::hoppini::. Partially furn . ath,.adu t 01er 38. S8:i. $2:J , , • T · · R .. P\<1 n ,{. "ll'11n ·11p . .lirn ~8-0405. 900 Sea I ~K-. cdM ""2611 kids/pe1s ok. $235. 545--5270, s~ " I I -cl1'an1ng chrg. 64&-84&4. I {'mplO)'ed. 557·9.'lOS aft" PM. UlllOl'1 Pl!T\<J, SCR·AM-LETS ....,ic .,..... 546-3710. ON ,,,o. nc · ut1!. Mature -TREES-ERVICE-
517 W. 19th, CM 548-3481 (MacArlhur nr Co111'f Hwy)
2
adulls only. 494--46J3. 1'0 share lrg luxury houM> in * PRF.fi: * For Jnfonn11 l1on Rrol'hUl'C 'J'rinlrlllllg, Pruning & Clf'an· l~ztl&~~·Nj.~Mi!•~i~n!!!!S~A""'~"'!!!!7-~03~1'4 BR townhouse $175. 2 br * NE\\1 2 BR b!k 1 hf' h N.R. Priv. rm. & bl1 1h. i RF:N'l'AL s~:RVICF: (714 ) 541-1192 up. 647·5196 or ~41·R442. ANSWERS j 2 • apl Sl~l Osh11·hr. shag, i;elf-' '. o ar · !;.F '143 I RF.D ('AH PET Rf-:AL't'ORS
Br. I h11 + furni.~tird guest clean oven, pAl io, hltns. 377 S(.l{'«l11eular Vll'\Y. S:r.il up. I .r,, . . * ~2-7771 * 'b Fre: G111e.~1 t..Prru~ .JOllNSONS' GARDF'.NING .. J'l?io• Island rm 11/ba. Crpts, rlrps. \'v'11.lk \\i. \\'ili;on . 5-18---3(,0~. 494<1:18.1 or 494-2119 Guest Hom• 415 1 , , :12.1 Old i\•• ."'i r 11 r'1T'! RI :"JR Ynrd a-taln11·nnn(•r, f'l<1nling Wanton _ Ankl" _ Fahlt-_
R . to hr'ar h. Nr ~hop~. Chnlf'e • I !+AMII.\ nrl'd.~ IKlmP. S<-hl~. Edmond F. Jack•on . .,1 'l .~ ....
' ARLY-Sturiio apt i1·/full lor11lion 8t p11rk1ng. f300 mo. SPPAC. 2 !.· 3 Rr. flpl $1 40 1_1p. Linda Isle I *PRIVATE ROOM* 'hoppini:; RPf'~. C<1ll Bil! I H.J::. _f:o\,,. :111 .. n ~•tH'r l!-•I l Jr111111p.~ !\1 •• -_0.\.1 &~~111;~-h-\I F.N 1 10 ONE rr=;4 o~~;~,;,·,'"_r Jjth. C;i!I R.Tl---110:!, E \'es: ool , •p1/d!'p~. bl !n~. kid.~ JJELUXF: 3 RR 2 BA for 1unbt1!:1l11ry pt•rson Uou(I r~rkf'f". A£t>lll 9~1&-2500. I SPRINKLER REPAIR nuiidf'n: Shf' \\'11.8 962 22·,o A,-,11 J·•I"1 nk. I ,. 1 l · · 1 1 h 1 1 · d d .-. •. ,1. s1 ~1,.11 ,. , .-.1.; ,_.,_.,_,._, 11'(k1'd 1r i;111· lili"d •'nrlhsh -",, . ear y .CflSt'. 1:~ !11o. ooc. nice C t-('r u surroun · Aca emy · ' I II "t
S.T. flio• Pt~rnsula . SHARP & clean 4 Beriroom, ]99!l'\1;iple "~· 1· 6-12-.lR'.3 RF.Al.TOR fi73-.'lf>63 ings. Real Estate -*-LANDSCAPING * ~~1~ 1~· .. 1 \~111.1~·,'.r k~~~,~~ 5~~
BAY FRONT RENTAL 211~ hath 1\•a!k fri hPath. * FREE Mos Rent on yrs_ Mes• Verde * Cal\ 5t~·4'?J'.1 * Person1l1 ll'tJt )I Contracting & N•••v la11n!<, Spnnk!t·r~. d•'•·ks, ONI+.."
3Q1 Edr.wRter. c
0
r n er Family pr~ferrcd. Month to l~e. 2 Br, den, trpl, pn Summer R•ntals 420 . Insurance Schools i·lr,.nup. Sti't1P lw'd, :i:\li 1225. ~~--------~--n•do. F .. -.
3
BR.
2
n1onth. $390 pr month Call par!o, <'pt/ilrp. r{'drr. A.fl . DELUXE 2 & 3 Br. 21B11. SJQ IGI appNJvrtl, \. l/l'. R<•AI f'XP 1-1,,~.::,1 , -1. 1,,·1;: Job ~.Yant1a, rtmale 702 ., -.. M B I 611° 5 ••• 0"1 713 592 5227 cus~0\1 c~ p I " . ~. I ill •HI'! ,r -----th!, i arage. Pril·. beach. C'on1plr 1r 1-!1'1'di•ninK si·rl'lce GOOD TYPIST t-r. at f'y, .. ,,550, IAgl.) I , """""°""' or : -encl <"· 1155 up. Rental '' . ....;..f'c. Formal :'1 ersone s -
VftH. July lst. ~i r . 2 BR, bltins. pool. \\'alk to LRG. 2 BR, S150. Ne1,1.· crpt., Olt:. .1095 Mace Ave ·• Br, 2 &, beaut . furn. F.nlE>r l;F:RMAN rlii· ·. 45 l\:i111 1t111111, &1!~\lor, "oh>'"~n.. · f rl d ~1031 01£'r wat~·r. Pinr.~. fnuii·I · Ollt"t', · .00 ____ ,W ill do your typing at
r'I. """" hf>ach. S200"1Jfl. 0 r 11 n ~ e priv patio. nc yr " no ' · 1._,1.1,_._ 11,111.,1 1,,-,1_ 0 ,,.,,,.,. <!rp, pli'a,<;1111! 1:wrsonal 1I~" I J ~ G -J S · L h 0AV15 REAl.T\' Coa."t P.eal E."late 644-l8·1R. J>E'fs. 783-B V.'. Wilwn, N B h ~ ,. ' .. ., .. 1 1 Servicn .1nd Rep,1ir1 enl!'ra ervices n er ome, Will pickup 1-~''----------"~~2-_7~000= , ewport eac 1-:urnpr. Ju11f' 1 ~ ... s1'pl, s·r~. l '"~'."n ,i;mn.:f'. )(OtM t'<llic . d d 1· cor ona del Mar Costa Mesa 673-7li~. <.:01111~. rui_·n. ~2-12<i0 I !ion11·11u1\;f'r. l.ikl" to l'l'llllll'· 1:1· /'1\ll~" ow I •. Ill pt! I'll r y an e 1ver loca l H.B.,
• $1~0 • 2 ch1lrlrrn oK. 3 RR , PARK NEWPORT ry l1ntt111'1al l) .~ t I' 11 r ~ l:Sabysitling 11,.lp 11 .. 1111• 1,1 l•11-:1110·~~ h~, F .V., W est, 75c per pg .
c"'()MPLETE Bflch . Apt.,
2
t ' 1.14 BA, lndry, C'rpt/di'Jls. APARTMENTS BAY \IJF:\V 2 l)('1lroo111, ~"ntlrnui,11 , r-.i,1 Hr r" i 1. 1 .. i. .. 1 In· :t~ 011 11 11 11, c·;111 I or will work by hour
tiU11 Big Corona. 1 Arlult. nn HARBOR GREENS d~h11·shr, no Jl''I~. ~f}..32Jfi. slefp~ 4 coniplf'lr!y furni~h· ~,·,.krrs, p!ra::f'. s~111d 11tK1lo llAYSl1vrlNC _ \.l.i h 111111, ~Iii"' :-,.r; 11:~1 .. c a ll 847 ·3095.
"'-1 l l30 til pd On the bay etl. Avall June to S!'pt. Si :il) & !'"~11111!" lt1 ''la,_s1 f1111I Ail 1 k ' I I • I ---Nl'l'I) I I _I ___ _ .,..,.. u , yrly., Nf'l\'2 BI' 2B'llR"> N" '-\\'oultl i e "1 1'1~1"'"'· ,1~1.~··11 :-.:1 .-; : .. \1,.,,..,.. 1·1•111-.·.' "" u·ri tit w•n\r '.• "'~ • '• '' · · " pr n1onlh. Ad ults 011Jy ., ., .,., ~5211 ~ti::. No C"liildrt'n. 'l'~l·B Luxury 11par!n1{'1l! living ov· 6_a-493 No. 41-1 C'/O lht' D111ly Pifr•L p I 11 y 111 n I,. 11 r .. r 111,1 ~ .. n. , 1 pl rt'pku', ~'l'l•I 111~1111, hAI'•~ Aidl'IS e Nur~r.o; e
rlfl'tN. Apt. $l3S.Ut il Paid. Furnished & Fl'.!rdham. 6i7r3439 f'v;s·." rrlooking lhe '"'11!er. Enjoy agent. 4 O. P. 0. Box Elli(), Coslti. M .. ~u. da11i,.'11lf'rs, Xl111 re!,., lA11·111~ '""", 1il11111b, 1111-. • .-.~-1j9<1!,. llousrkpr1 • Compan1rins
',(; ~.lock to ~811. No !"'I!. Unfurnished $750,000 health !!pll, 7 s11•in1 · OCEAN l"ront-2 R dupll''!. ,t;J>JRITUAL Mf"<l iuin & Card hon1t" ,¥, f fl Ill I I y e1t• -;rd1'AL SERVIC1-:s ~ ro. • II 0 m ernakt;r&-Upjohn ~ ,Sf.8vie1.1·, CcL\f. B;:r:M~~~l~.\.I.~ ~~S. n1ing JXlO)~. 7 l1glrtr<I ff'11· Orang<" Co. $2'15 wk Au~. Reading11 by Mr11. WiUiama. vironrnt'n!. llo! n1,.al1, ft'n1.-'-Plumbg lMtall'..CarPf'n!ry S47-(i681,
C
From $120 to $215 mo nls courts, p!u.~ mites ol St 7:i "'k July. Sip.'! 6. Crprs. Advi.,es in 1111 problems or Pd yard. Plllyhou.o;f', 10111 of Eire 1t-a!r • 646-_"'"!'1'c=r=.f=:m'"'1=N~G~·=1·a~d-"-h-,-,-,1-,,-,
o. st• Mesa 387 W. Ray St. CM 64&-0073 b' I 2!'\'~S4-3J.lt l 0 ., ~"' , 1cycle trails, put!iog, shuf· · · 1• · · · Jir,.. No problen1 so g1'f'a1 loy~. nvi> & fun. S20 \.\'k. tr ~1{TPU)AOF·n ,. 1 Of>l'!l only. H.B. llJ't'a. Cal! :i;"-·io WE EK & UP * Bachelors e 1 Bdrm I 12 BR apt unfurn-childrrn ok flt>boRrd. C'roquet. Junior l '.s Rentals to Shari 430 th11t cani>0! be' solvrd. t'rei> Adaini hell1'<'f'n fl11~h:1nl k · · "111 0
r 5.'IG-680l ft 5
•
" 2 Bdrms • 3 Bdrmo . tlO pets. ~ Monte Vistfl fn1n1 Sl64.·.'" ">0"1111)--. of.•"] j I 1· . Magnoli• HB 968 ~3.l. 11 ilh••ul opt'r1dnr a '\.\' k d y s • Studio & l BR Apts A1·f'. "'" " .... SI ioroscope rP!li u1~.~ g1vf'n , '"V" Cnll ~~1!'1-~l!~l] llnytlme wknds. e:n' & ~!air! Service Avflil 11/2 or 2 Full Baths and 2·bcdrooru plans and • 1111'1' <1pt. Pool & rrplc" A~r 11i1h l'a rh l'P11ding, 714 : VACAT ION MOTllJ.:n <'R'''' ---___ I-'---------
•: P1:;6ne Servlce-lftd Pool DELUXE 1 br, frplr, Pf11io. 2-slory low n hOUlif'i::. Elr!'· :!5-:).). \\'orking girl. Charai'. 527-.1'1()11, 10831 Bf'ACh Slvd., for your honit" & child rrn Hauling Help W•nted, MI F 710
e 'Oiildrl!n & Pet t.t'ction hlaster size bPdrooms \VI $150 mo. Ul1 l inl'l'rl . 2fil2 trl<; klleliP11s, private pa11cs r.•f, HPas rrnt. 847.fi.~Sil. StH11ton. while you \'ttCti1ion. Xln t ':(j;c;iJ,'M,;;:::;:-h,;";;-Ji:;;-;~1 ;:=0:::;;;::;;;:;;;;;.i;mo;;;;;;.;.:1
2'. 111 Ne1,1.•port Blvrl. CM high beam ceilings, JarJ!e OrArigf' Avr. 64\-6774 . or baleonieli, <'arpe1ing, dra· Offic• Rental 440 *FULLY LICENSED* r<'rs. IJependablt, drjv{'!<;. LOCAL Mov1·~. h R IJ J Ing,
Y Jiving room 1v/ga.~ or ----------jlf'riC's 51 b!erra k rlt>nnup. J-:.\p •' o J I e g e Ar•r·o1Jntant Degrrr S12K
.. ~9755 or &45-3967 ,,.nod burning fir1>plAf'r. EXTRA lfl:. 2 Br. 1 1~ Ba. nr -· J nean par · Mod Ui · I Rtnov.•flf'd ilindu Spiritualist. 645---0574. studen!. Lrg truck. RtA. <:on~rruclion B8rkground
•·,· *Sl15 * C 1 I d OCC. Carpors. Lndry· fa('il. ing ivilh elevator.~. Op1ionfll em o ce space a ir o;:,~iri tual Readinr« given 1 -WE--c---K~L-Y-------oftn~~~c~~~. ~·~~r~{ed a;~ No JX'1_.o;. SIW. S4&-8.i94. n1aid scrvicr. Just north of l'ond, Coi::ta Mesa, 5 oHices. d'::uy. 10 AM·lOPM. Advie"f' r;, 5.'!4-1846. Prod Mgr/wrlding exp $90()
t los. 2 sivimming pools, Fashion Island a l Jamhoree Total 1200 sq ff. Al! or part. gi\'en 011 a!l mfltters. 1 can child rare, ovf'r 5 yi>,.r,, YAHD, g.iirai.rt' "lranups. "'rilrr·Ofc Mgr .Jopen titudio Apls., 1 Br. $125,
OldPr adull!!'. No pe!s
1"!3:; Eldl"n. M~r. Apt . 6.
sauna. recreation facili-VACANT. Spacious Bacht-lor and San Joaquin II ills Road. 25c pt>r !IQ fl. Nrar Baker help you. po o I!! -park -h" IL,. h , RP move lrl'P!I', dirr. Ivy, Tra.vel Agf>nt $600
ties. Security guard, Apl . Nr . Colle11:{'s & SOOp'g. Trlephone (714/ 644·1900 & F'aiNie11'. 548·5551 8 am-312 N. F.l Camino Reill Pttular11>0, C.M. ~96S6. 8 kip l ()ad' r • bflC~, 5f>c Y·M1trkr11ni::; $650
2 &. .Duplex, Lrg fn<rl pA tio,
vecy.pvl, nr g!nrP~. N1re,
klul~. no pets. 642-~392.
ilRGE. sunny, partly furn 2
br nr fa irgrounds. Sl:ifl. No
Pf.ts. 1 inJa nt OK 64~216.
Models Open 'ti! 9 pm.
2700 Peterson Way, CM
nr Harbor Blvd &
Adams
Util pd. $130. 979-01~4. for rental inrormaUon 4 pn1 . ~laturl' <lC"""'ndablf'. \\!kd_v~ 847-2666. Mflnaizrmcnr Trne to $500 -~~====---San Clemi>n1e ,... Sf'(Te!f!rlr!! MOO
ATTiiACTIVE-2 Br Studio, 2
be th, gAr., !'lell' f'BTJ)('I.
t S175/mo. 642-5297 *
546-5025
P.S.
LRG .. ~ Br., 2 811 , nu pets.
Ch ildren t;ik. Nr l!Ch!s k
shopg. $170/mo. 545--8!!91.
* 2 BR. 1 Bit To"'nhous~.
P<1rio/garaj!:e/ponl. $205-
$225. Child ok. 5.77-8400.
East Bluff
• DELUXE • $11!4-J-40. Lovely 1 BR . Fur
Ne&r, StoT'f'~. QuiP t. 1985
Po'!2~8 . cr.1 54&-012s.
Huntington Btach
PEACE A0D SECURITY
Your!'! to come home to! Htr~s i;:a.rrlen·hv1ng st Its I
3 BR. 2 RA Apt for lt11..<;e.
Incld spar. ma111er 11uilf'. din
rm & dbl JiMRge ; fl Ulo door
opener avail. Pool &
Recrf'A!io11al 11rr11.
be.~!:
l•QUINTA HERMOSA * small, 1vell·m1111ai:ed lwc· 1
Spaffi$h Cnuntry E.~tate Liv·. ury apt. unit5 !or adults in
U,. & Spacious Apt8. Ter· a ronvenient, estabhsb.ed
raced pool : 8unken gas "-l'f'A.
BBQ. Unbl!!ievable Living -• Big lrces, grrat pool, op·
oiiry posite a golf roursf',
1 BR · FURN. $175 * Thn-e bedrooms. )I'll
.ALL UTJLJTlES PAJD ba.ths, Jl("rsonaJ patio, IRun-
r• bllt! S. of San Diego Frwy
oq B1"11ch, 1 hlk W. on Holt
tc>l82ll Parkside Lane.)
(71<11 847-5441
dry·workshop, spacious Jiv-
ing room with Iirep\11.ce.
P.S. The price v.'ili surprise
you'.
• 1145 _ ,16; FAIRWAY VILLA
l!a<heJor • I BR. palio" APARTMENTS
frplt1i:, pril'. i A r • g f! s · 3'122 SAnta An,. Ave.5'!fr.GZ15
oMdid bath A: lol8 of cl~fr. Rtt h11.ll, pool 1z DELUXE
pO:il t11bl''· sauna. bath~. APARTMENTS
See. . tor yourself! 17301 Air Cond · Frplc's •. 3 Swim·
Kf'lsiin Ln. {l blk \V, of m ini<! Pool!!' -Healt.h Sp11 ·
Btach, 1 blk N. nf Slater). Tennis Courts · Game and
: ? ~42-7841! Billiflrrf Ronm.
* ~L SJDF:. I BR, com· l BEDROOM ,.-VU FROM $165
pleWy furn apl. Mlnimom < ''EDITERRANEAN ~·lease. 8-42·2446 Aft 10 IVl AJ.t': ' VILLAGE
L:'JfJ'~• Be1c11. 2400 Jlarhor Blvd., C.M. cn41 ss1-so:.o
*-STUDIO APT. * RENTAL OFFICE
Piftiy turn, Ocean side o! OPEN 10 AM lo 6 PM
H.,Y. with path ltadlnt to ~=~=~~-_c_.:.:__ ~ h R f' MESA VERDE arta·Lux. 3 ....,.c . {' II. rtt), .$140 MONTH BR. a:11r., frplc, be'llut.
{_!ncludlrlf Utililies patio, like prlv~ll" homt.
MJ~ON REALTY 494-0731 Adul!s. $265. ~16.
A'I\ ()'tacent Bay. ~ bJk k:I ZBR. 2BA, $163. 2 Kids. no
bftch, coklr 1'V, $40. per pe:ls, bltins, C/0. W/O.
.. .,.. ¥J\ll ,~ ""7 hkup, pa.tio, garagt, 181-H Wai,._~_,,,; ,.,....,'Kl ~'\. Del Mar. 54&-81n'I.
N..,.,..rt Be1ch P•rk-Llko Surrounding
BACH 1pt ·sublet Prk Nwpl. QUl ET • DELUXE
Ju1y:-Sept. rn5 mci. incl •Pfl 2 &. 3 BR AM'S
mtmbenhip A nic tacil Prv. 1111Hos * Hid Feola
Mf--8873. Nr 1hor'sr * Adult~ Only
' OCEANFRONT Martinique Apts.
Be1utlful 4 br, 3 ba. Avail 1rn •· A A c M ..,..nta na w ., .•
s.pt . .1. ~0628, MQT. Apt. 113 6'6-55<2
• $275 •
865 Amigos \\'ay, NB
!\1anRged by
\VILLJAM WALTERS CO.
Huntington Beach
ON BEACH!
2 BR. 2 BA Unf. Fr. Sm
2 BR. Furn. fr. $388
ADULTS ONLY
Furniture Availttble
C a r p ets.drapew-rlishwa!hl!'r
heated pool-u.unu-tennla
rec room-0eean views
pati09-ample parkinc
Security Guards.
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
1U OCEAN AVE .. H.B.
(TI4) 536-1•87
Ofc open 10 am-6 pm Dally
WILLIAM WALTERS CO.
BE ONE OF THE FIRST
TO LIVE JN Tl-TlS
JUST COMPLETED
• Luxury l br apt.
• Adult
• Ol!ihwuher1
• Choice of 2 color schemes
• Custom c1.rptlina:
• Jacuu:I e H~ated pool
• Dead-bolt lockl
• Only Sl40 ptr Tl'lf',
BAHIA PUERTO
2810 17th St., 11.B. 536-4815
* 2 BR. STUDIOS • NEW ·
VERY DELUXE! Adults.
2 Blk1 from Ocea.n,
Call •.ft 5: ~. 96l--l)65
2 BR Apt. Clot1ed car. Crpts,
drp11, Ollld & ll"Yl. pet ok.
$145. M7-2940.
WALK to Beach
2 Br, crpt1, drpa. d1hwhr. n P•lm. • 8'1·~7. e , WTNTER RENTALS e
1.2,3;.C BR. lteM!rvt Now!.t
AB8Ei ' REALTY 6<12-:vJ~
HOUSE Hunlin~! W11teh
OPEi" J.l()t1St rolumn
the Ollly PUOI Wa Adi have
I ~11.rg1t ln1 18.10 .
I
• EXECUTIVE * 492-9136 or <192-90.'« my home. R"'·"· Fencd y'1. YARD Ii Garage Cltanup. NEWPORT
YEAR AROUND AIRPORT OFFICES hot lunch. 54~r1007. FrPe e~t. 7 dayi. CaJ! • · PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con--Personn•I Agency
3 BEORM-2 BAT J.11', I Prestigr executive officf's Iiden!, sympathetic p!'C"ga~ BABY~ITTTNG. N.R. ari>R . flllyllmf', 548-50.11. 833 D huilt in~. nP1v carJ)E'T. 11, Localed at airport neflr cy counseling. Abortion & In niy hOmP. Any ai::;e, Wkly HouHcli•nlng over Or., N .B.
blocks tn he1tch . $300 pf'r rei::taur<1nls & San Die~ Adoption ref. APCARE. fir hr!y, Call fi75--.123.11 .-:;;:s;-o;:;,;~:--C:;;;;~:l ;====64=l~-~l~&=7~0===1il
month, CALL 1 8 r win, Fn1')" 8.'l:l-~:!03. 642-4436. Carpet Service :\1F'.SA Cle11n1n11:. Ca[ll"ts,
968-4405. D&5K l'lp&ce a vaUable $".><I 0~1 v=o~R~c=e~--11·i11do1,1.·1. f ! nor" etc. A fkot1rr 'fl"mpnrary
Pn,t;i!ion
WESTCLIF,,-
CAPRI
li()() \\'t'sfr!iff Dr.
Arlult L1v1ng-No Pt'IS
Drluxr 1 & 2 Br. p,..,...I,
Carpor1. rum. or Uni,
642-6714
Adulf,.Condo. We,fcl!ff
2 hr·patio-1.1•/D·rert'r-frpl lm-
mf'd, po,i::. S2l«l/mo, 0(1E'n-
SRT·Sun·2-:i p111 ,
National Services Co.
Reahor . 54G·OS11 . &15·4332
NEWPORT· BA YFRONT
APT.
2 Br, 2 ba. For details
call 838-9i47, 642-Zll2.
mo. Will provide furniture Hridrl/eom'L :i 5 7-6 7 ' 2 , Do ii your11elL JOHN 'S Carpet & Upholl!trry 51, 'Ill
at SS mo. An!!'werlng service c 1 •a o, r,. Ex f , , --~-~~-..--· -:--.=--.--1 Ne~·port, Co!lta l\1{'s11 "' available. 222 Fore!!'! Ave, \! C rr J)rl-Shampoo fr•• .e-_ kh· Dedicat•d Cl1•ning '-B h < a1111grn1Pnl f'l'P 67~· 111]1] ·~-" ._..,guna l"ac · 94-94_6'__ gu111'11 jSoil R{'!ardant.~\. * \\'E DO EVF.R'f11·0NG *
BAY VIEW OFFICES NICE looking baC'helnr .15 Tl f F I:H>grf'a.o;rr1 & 1111 rolnr ".~. f l'" ~f. 616"2339
!Jrluxf', fl 1r·cunrlitioned rri·rnlly rlivorced, n ..,,, 1111 brightenPra & JO m inult llOUSF. n~· CLf:AN
n I I L hrunr 11,·j~IJP~ to mPf'\ Al · I hi I I h' rr f'f'Ora!f'c. 1do arl'a, ea1 · 1 or "' ite r<1rprti::, Floor1, <'f/)I~. 11•uxto11·~ It
n 1 · Bk !nu·1h·e gi'll for d<all;'i:: & C'r\ onomlC'l!, r. 6i5·6700 Save your mon{'y hy l!Utving 1,1.•all-. ~1 ~r.q , 11ri>~. fi42-6824
* AffiPORT AREA *
Adj. Airpor!er llotel. Deluxe
l-2-3 roon1 ~uitt's. f~OWESf
RATES. 2182 DuPont Dr.,
room R. 8.13--2840.
OF.SK !pace available $50
mo. Will providl! furniture
at SS mo. AnsweN:i& service
available. 17875 Beach Blvd.
}lt1ntlngton Beach. 642-4321
Have 110melhini;: you want lo
.ell'.' Classified ads do it
1.1•ell -call NOW 642-567$1.
lrH'tHlship, ~6-2054 . 1ne extra trip,. Will clean , ' --
Al.COllOLICS Anonymou1. living rm., dining rm. &-BA'\ & . HrR ('h Janitorial.
Phone 542-7217 or write hall $15. A11v rm. S7.SO, Crp~"l 11'1 nrlo1~·~/llonr11 etc.
P .O. Box 12'23. O>.~IR Me1a. rouch $10. Ch~!r $5. 15 yr11. Re~id/Comm L 646-140!.
FIND YOURSELF f'xp. 18 wh11t counts, not Ironing ~ EON~ ELSE method. I do work myst-lf.1-----------IN ~M , r. , • e JRONINC e
DISCOVER Goo<l rel. 531--0101. e ALTERATIONS e
DISCOVERY Thrifty C•rpet Cle•n•r My homf', cnll 9-7, 1142-111'.\
714/R.1.l-68&5 213/:Y!7·:1:l93 Any 11i1:e Jiving room Sl!.95. L nd l
Di111rount adriflion"I room,, a •c•p "9 TIIFmE jit only o n e
"Wrillhl'' WRY to (el ll
m11siAge. Try it. you'll like
H~ 8.1.1-ZlOO.
8('fllf'h guflnfinK 11.v11il8hlr, TOP SOIL_ 540-0097
oommerl'.'ial ••count• in\'it· f'd . Open 9·6 Mon. thru Sat. I.a1.1·n Rl"mov11l, Rototill
968·0367. P•intlng &
URGENTLY
NEEDED
Secretaries
& Typists
Jn1l'rvif'1~· 1-lnurs
9 11.m·ll 11m k 1 pm-4 pm
Work 1.1·hen &. where
you \\'nn1 !
Interim
Personnel Service
771 W. 20th, C .M.
642-7523 546-25'1
Acrountlng C1eriral
l+~ee Paid
2 BR, 2 BA. 4·Plex apt ..
crpti::. tlrp~. bltin1'. D\V. Nr.
llo11.g H~. Adlt111 , no pets.
SlRO/Mo. Ph: &42-0596. * * * * * C•rptnttr P•p•rh•nging Girl FridRy to $500
DELUXE upper 3 Br, 2 B~. *
crpt/drps, bltn 11.ppliances,
sundecks. View. I blk My &
beach. $215/mo. 545--7098.
LARGE OR SMALL TiiE HANGMEN, up to~% Rttt>ption,.i1t to $450 di t &: I bo mobU App 1cant Pays Ftt r--------------------.,,jAll Tyiw• Work: Cut door-. 81~~'. m~11.JI ~i~~ 0~ Bookk~per (F/C) S600
panel, remodel, r In I 11 h , 84&-JISt. A/Pay11ble ssoo
YEARLY ocranfront. Lrg 1 T d frATTli', re Pa Ir 11, ect. Sf'CN!tary to S550
Br. Fine~t in N'pl. 1 or 2 1 ra er's Paradise 962-1961. YO~ !-lu pply t he Pllint. Rmit Ordf'.r OPsk to $42S
adults only. S 4 0 0 Imo . MTNOR homt' n'pll.iT!I. Plum· pe.1.nttd SIO 4'8 11vg. Al90, f!'X· Jnvoic-e Clerk $500
673-7629. blnr _ C'&f'l)f'n!ry _ painting lf'r1or. Ref8, 30 Yr.!, e.xper. Billing Clerk S4SO
SPACIOUS 2 Br apt w / Ii nes -roofing. Call 540-5.";,60. 54()..
1046· l-::Xtt. Seereluy ta 1'100
frplc, Encl glll'8ge Newport Cement, Concrete No Wunne NCR Machint (P'/C) mi
1fl"ight!1. S1R.5. 5<18-969.5. I * WALLPAPER * Receptionist .$425 t I' mes ------.----Wben you cal! "Mac" 'T'ypi•t to $C0 Apts., CEMENT WORK, no job too 5"·1444 64i-171l Dictaphone Stt'y $Sll
Furn. or Unfurn. 370 sm•.11, reaMinable. f'n·e X-Rlly Tf!t"hnlclan
I dollars E11tlm, 1r. St uf!iC'k, 548·11615. Pl\JNTtNG • HOT!elt, clean, r·ree j. 1·~ Poslliom:
&.Ibo.I Peninsula JOHN'S Patlo!I Ii Block gu,.rllnt~ wqrk. Ucenaert RUTH RYAN AGENCY
work. An a8M>C. of V11n 't1 Ii lnsul"f'd . 675--5740• 179:\ Ne.........,.t, CM •~ •-•
2 BR lovely apt. Tl7 W. Bay. I .. ~. -Adult8 only. Inquire within "'-------------------"" LRnd~plng C.M. 833-0291 Proff'11ional P"lnting 71931 BeAch, HB 847-9817
$250. <19'.l-0491 or S75-S853. · MAl:\E your own 111.ke on .10 TRADE Bii Bear home new PATIOS, walkll, drive, \n!ltttll lnlf'l'/t'XIE>r . Quallty v"ork. i"''""""~~"!'"!''""'""••I
or 40 sr rf'I at Newberry :i hr, TV, d1hwt, fli>l, slPf'pit new Ja 111,,m:, s11.w break, R«-1111. ~7-7455 aftt't 5PM APPRAISER/
Colt• M.s• Sprin&ll, $750 ac val. Cle,.r . 17 !or l'K"~an nr blly front ttmovf!. !WMl668 fo'r f'!ll. F.XT. painting, •~ eitl, LOAN TRAINEE
Tr&de for h~e or inrmne. hornf' 2.4 wk• autnmer. Ch'I C Jtea111! Li<''d. Gunr. You pick CArt!tr opportunity. Real Summer Rentals
PALM MESA APTS.
rhe Ooylt-Co. RU N!, 5'8· l 168 c()mµar, rent (21l) 264 -3200. 1 d ar.• roklr-\\'t" II do l'l'!!L 642-8~12). E!lt11.te exper. dtsin11ble.
m Ac . l!t'met, rtleast' I l.JCENSJ+:D Cllll.D CARE WALLPAPER HUNG C~~·~I~~:~ MlNllrF.S TO NM'. BCll. QUAIL Valley Connlry Cluh
F1JRN. OR UNFURN. v11<·Rnl Int, nr. clubhoUl!f'.
Unbtlle\/Ably hnye 1tpl11., V111 I. $4,000: rlf'nr. Wan!
111.le m!'Xlrt f\1{'rctdMI Ben;i; hugt pool, J1u:u7.7.I t'l&el or . ? fi.42.3R5Q.
blt-inli, 1ha1t crpta, drp1, I cc___:..c....:_:.:,:_ ___ _
1111un11 .-le, Adult!!, no Pf'l!I. IJke In trfl.de? Our TrAder'1;
SINGl .. 1':.S .••••• , •• From SL'l5 Paradl!!fl' rolumn is for you~
1 Bf:DRM .•..•.•. , F'romll-41) ~ 1\nP
2 BEDRM, ...... fl'(lm $160 S rlay11
Yo11'tt riaht, lhf'y're un· f(lr 5 bucks.
der-prittd 1511 Mt•a Or.
(5 blk1 from Newport Blvd.I * ~-* *
r lau8f'!I, All or p1trl l<!r in· BY TEACllER, Alff'!I :1·5. Cart Rrbko 646-2449 ._. l O ,. I .
1 ·' V I ~""" 000 i ' p • S ... qua ppor. ..mp oyer rome or 1;1.nr); It . ., .... .,, , , . /\M·5 M . .,4 .00 d11y (. · PltQF. l"'hi!l ng, 81!'0 roofl'l, -----
rq $200,00J. nir Doyle Co, llunllngton Jkh) 963·3252. llCCOU•. t'l'il., lnter/PXlfl'r. . AS~EMILIRS Rral!or~. S'A·ll~. Contractor l.ic/Jn.~. Jo'tte t'l'll. &45-:,\91. f .li>elron1c. !.ome 10lderiis . 2 exPf'-Titfil'f' helplul.
NEW 2 hr mobile homf', 4 ROO ddll" E tl rOR <'lf'an & neat painting. F.lflAC' Inf'
widr. Al Mea.dow1. 1'851 M A "'""· 1 mf\tt&, lntrrlor or t'Xlrrlor At rt'as r. ' • Jtlfrey Rd, Irvine Ranch. I 1)l11t111 &-layout. 11\nKle or 2 rfllt!t Dick 9$8·406.1\ ' \RG!Jl VonK1tm111n.
Tre(! .. for property 111 hf'llf'h I 1111'.!ry. L.T. Oinztruction. · · ' · ii-..·1~ ll.1.J..lnT. or~ Owner. 113/ltA 9 . .w.-i R47-1 ~11 . PAINTING, Int A ext. rr1111 Anf'Qualopportuntty
J Ac K Tau I a. ne-RPpair ratt'.~. v.'r!rk auamtd. Loc11l c•~m-'-pl_o~y"-'-----~-* rmiod .. 16d!t 20 yn exp. ref's hi". Phil, '~~\. Have IOMetl\1111 ~rwu-t M
Ue'd. My \\lay ((I, 547.()036. Otme-A-Llne MJ..66'71 sell! Oucifte4 W • , * * -------------
-·
•
:Z.f . DAILY PILOT MOftdlJ, Junt 12. 11172
lllll ;;;I ;;;;;;;;;-';;;;;;;;;;'-· ;;l[jJ]~J I [ iiiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiiiiii, ... ~][jJ]~IJ, ;.;;I iiiiiiiiiiiCr;'Ojiiiiiiiiiiioo•• ,.;;][j]}~•·, [ ~~~I~~~~ l[f l ~ _,....,_ .... ~J(IlJ fL..-~-···___,· J[fi] I.___-_· __,· llllJ I ~··-ll§l IL -11 • ..., ....
Hoi, w.-, M & F 71 , Holp Wontocl, M & f 710 Holp Wanted, Ml F 710 Help Wonted, M & f' 71t H.,p Wanled, M & F 710 Help W•nt.d, Ml F 710
Holp Wonted, M & F 710 Holp Wanted, Ml F 710 Appli onors
-------.-!SECRETARY $Sl0 -----..,...-1
POSTAl. Ca.mrn.. Deliver Thr l"l"&ionaJ ul a ~tale-'A'1<k> OVER 200 .,.,,uheni, clf')lt:n.
,.rwr ov.·n atta. Cotta M~~. Q.l'lCana&tion DO\I' k.Cali..\1 in rt'frtttra!Drs from $39.9."i.
Al>VDl'l'IS!NG • HOUSJ'C.
WM:s • St>tate ume tn
cortH!'-No lf!lllnc M!'Qllittd
Call ~tr Wright 11t ~7"'6366
BABYS!TT'ER, A.JV llOA-fY-
ONLV. ~fon thru Tbun 9 to
S:ll, f'rl 9 to 1 l Childttn
~ 6, 1(1, 11. 548-8782.
BABYSl'ITER net'ded --;;;y
home, o"·n trara., lfll IUl'a.
Al-Jo~. 962-6816 ah 6::JO pm.
BOOKK..t! !::P Elt Thru ti. L. 6:
PA,)'!"011 1&.'<f'I Abo, lypina:
" phone ata'll rnn~. One a:ui
oftlct" with 1m!UI IP"OWln&
lliht m•nulat.'.lurlng oom-
pa.ny. f{tquirf's 11 l'Olnpt't~nt
lake ch11.rge pt>t'tlDn. Send
re1wne lo C.1a.ullretl Ad No,
t23. Dally Pllot. P, 0 . a0x
I.J6l), COlilJ. !>lci.J. Calif.
!'2626.
Dl:::NTAL n-aipllonlst. Exp.
lll Jnwra~. evll.ecilonl, It
appolntrnenta. ruu llnlf'.
Stnd J'l'i;urne & Wary t'll:·
pl"Ctt'il. \\'r1tt' ClauifieJ A.d
No. <15.l ', llally PUot. P.O
Box lj6(), Co~ta ~teu. Calli.
OISH\\'ASHF:n · Apply Oier.
Dfllma.n's Real.. 801 E.
< .. 111 R!, Hal.
LI.DY ltD. Few hn wk, Xh1t
q)&r)' Repllf'9' t'Of'lf. Write.
C.11..uilied Ad No 4$2 ~lo
DI.tty PllOI, PO Box 1560,
O~ta Afeia, Calli.
e e NEEDED
Two OffK. Olrl1
t.Juat be 2S an3 able IO dnYt
-APPLY -
JIW]I. Bch., ~tn. Vl)'. SewpoM llH.1•11 ne-etlt 41 s.c.--O?aJ. ~ooai~':' ~s1m ~j pleasant akd.led 111ri u,i-.::;F<~;=9=;d=,~;-,.-,E~l-.-,-O.-ry-,•-r-** Al teration lady needt'<I,
dry cleaning e1tabl.i&hment. LEGAL Secretary: fllll rtrne.
Young, xln'I typist, dic-
l8fi E. U:tb St.. C.M. assii;t one of their t'X· • Like ne\1'. 962·0950. '*
pm . ecuth·es. Great btnrfits. ~IOltE \\'W\ht>r $65 .• MS--4381.
AS.';'r. CU~, SERV.
RJL HIRING
We need
I 0 rnen to begin
work immecl l•tely!
Start et $15~. WK.
8 AB Y S I T f EH I h~kpr,
!Ive-In. l\Iul!t rnjoy ehll•tr .. n.
Re f req & turn. i,31-3i7 1
)
BROILER MAN
Sharp broUer nUUl needed for
llt'IV steak hou.lf'.
------
taphoue. &1·1-0023, N"·pl Oflice ' No fee
Ctnll"r.
1
• S.Cretarl.a
L.JVl=:-IN l\ton-J•r1. J>vr rn1 e Clerk Typist&
\vrr.v. l'\1anage home for • Acc:ountlnv Clerk1
wurk!ng parents. 2 children. e Ffexowri ter Op r.
Lite cooking & ~ .... ·ork. e Statlttlc•I Clerks
Won1n.11 40-6(), I r v l n e .
833-282'.l. I These positions are "'llh !he
PRINTJ!\G, Of~t pruirlns Great opportunity. This ftne 1
pre11 opr, ""IA.B. Dick ~ cq, pays let'. Al~ fl~ JOh!. \\lestlnghQW!f' ""8!ther $60.
elti1>er. llnmt!(.!. openi1ie. Ex· <.:all 'Nall(')' ~IA)', .)4()....Q)jfl IJotpo1111 clt>el. dryt-r $411
l''i.Jliu11a! upµr. \1/i;ruwu11: COO.St<iJ Agrne), i7:iU l;uar and Ocl 5'tfi-!Hi'12.
nat'J co. Perm. Xlnt \\'Ork· !£arbor Bl at Adfli11s, C!\1. f:LEC."1'111C 11·11sher & Dryer
ing t,'Q11ds. & outstan<l\ng Secretary. to $600-\\lhi!t". e~cel!ent cornfltiOn.
benef1111. No. An1er. Cor-N 1 d t 1 , 1 Pr1vn!f' parly 979-2500 or
n:sponderx't' &:hools, :HOI 0 ~~lg U:J:;,·1r1eM.a 979-72-lj aMk for Casey.
Btrch St., N.B. ~Irs. ~Jiles, \\'ES'TCLIFF :\IA YTAC 1't'p1:tu-n1an ha.~
FOR J.'\JTER\"IE\r CAI.I.
BEAUTICIA."JS 111 Nred~
to ta.Ju over ex l1 1ing
clientele inune<liately. \\'ill
gu.ani up to $80 Pf'r \\'k to
right pt~n. Call ~S-9919.
BJ-:Al.rf'ICIANS needed. Top
hair :tryJi.fl,11 only. ,\tale or
temalt . Sand Crnh !lair
IX-signs, ~i,ll4l3, 11.B.
Bookk<'('pcr
Apply, t-.fon-\\'ed, 11Ar-.1-3P~!
2121 Coa1! 11 .... ,., l\'B.
Driver • Kennelman
For animal il1elter. Excf'!
Opportunity & beMtits, Nrat
appetlring I. pe rliOnabJe. Ap-
ply a t ~12 l...aguna Canyo11
Rd., Laguna Beach. LOAN ESCROW OFCR
home offi<"e ol a major 1n-
1urance (.'Ompany .loctttrtl in
LA., bUI nK)vin& to new
bldg In Newport Beach In
fall. F ree rommuling Iron1
Huntington Center-Anahe111t
I: Ne"·por1 Beach by 1Ju5 lo
L.A. untll nl()Vt' is t'Oul~lete.
Lunches vrovitled al 111"'
t'OSI. l>ood salary & lri.Jige
be11Pfit5. Fl't' pa id h y
employer . Jnten ·1e11• & test
daily.
546-7360. PerM>nnel Ageney . 1o.·a~ht'rs S'.l:1. to $100, Can
Lil 7-0914 9 TO S {\1r. llNhick Real Estate !?0-13 \\'es!c.:IHf l>r .• NB <leli1•f'r w/l rr cunrn.
Automotive C•1hler
Exprrirnccd, rxe~Jlent slart·
ln1'; 1111lr1ry, ":1:1·rllent eom-
pnny bP11etlh1. C:1 U r.loiJ) CAN'T FIND
THE
DRY CLEANING
I t~;~~~v p~~~~ !~u·
M>...,·in~ kno11·li'ilgr NiCf' J;ur-
roundin.11,11. Clcn1n Cl1·aners.
fashion lsln.nd. C1Jl for ap-
poin1111en1. 644-2512.
f\lsl!ion1 available in M"Veral
llf our olticei tor E scro1v
Officers 11·/a min. ()I 2-5
)I'~. t".l:per. ln corivent\onal
loan.~. ,\Just bt <'ap:ih!t ol
h111111l 1nir: o"·n dt>~k. Sa1Jir.)-I
co rnniensurnte w/r.xper.
CaJl )Ir. l'~tch1son, ;;.JG.-1.'.iOO.
Profeulonal Rt"al Estatl' 64.S..1770 c'c::1g...'-'-17-'7's·.~~-=--
Salesn1en &: brokrrs~ Thf' <>L'E OU!l 'D' '"'l)':lt R W h /D .:;oL " "''' r. ent as ers ryera opportuni!y is her('! You art 0 1 ',''!'.' ~·.•·,• l' l\'k ,. II ·• "'-'"' ·''-"''' •. • u mu.hw, n('edi>d imrnet.liatt•ly tor our OPl-'fl l{'l'UNl1'lf:S * 6:!!!-1202 •
rapidly t.'<pantlliij;;: ft ea J "A ON E-~IAN BUSl1"F:S."i """ WILSON FORD
1~25.:i Bea{'h Bh d.
J Ju11tlngton Rea eh
fl 4:2-66l 1
-~-~--BE.\t'1'rc·1 ', ...
:".1~r" t "r r:i 111 .s::o ,,.,., kly ld2 rl'll JOB YOU W ANT 7 ' --Ex per ienc:.d __ _
Cooks
TRY OURS!
CALIFORNIA
FEDERAL SAVINGS
Estate division. Posih1•e t)Jr SZ,OOO INVJ-:,C.,J;\ll-:i\T"
portunity for advanC'elllt'nt.
f'or appointmenl phone Hick
:\F:\\' delu.x 1h1er. Taki' O\'f'r
.SlO tno pa.)-1111."l'll~. Call at1
11 am 968-9'J.IS.
ltoeKner.
tCan Start Part Tunf'I
110 SEA..\ISTHESS. dry cleanuu: furniture
alterauon n>µau-s exp. Call
for appt. 64~2."il:Z. 1----------FISCllF.R Baby Gr a o <1
Auto Mech•nic
8\1\\' Experlencl', Should
have Cl~ss A Licf'ni;f', Gnod
\\'orkin,i: conrl11lon11, Set•
~Jr, J/rin1 ar
f1 1ll Ch!l fll:t'. '"fl'f 1101••11,:!1
~t•fif"l"ltl ]P1h:• I' ~· ,\ /W"IJ 1
Centt'r Of/l1't'. Pr() 11 r r r y
~Tanagen1rnl r.;111 r 11rrf'tl.
Sa \ u r y (l1}(1rl. \\'1·1tf'
C\r1s~die11 :id '.'\o 3iG [Jal!}
Pilnt. P. O. P,n.'t 1.Ai(l, (.'u.,!a
:\lP!>a. Calif. !)21;21:.
0001\J{f:f:J'J~lt : P:11'! 11111".
F'or !ht' u:nl \\1th rh1ld1·1•n 111
school loca l g:1'<111·!ni;c AC·
<'(lUntiJ!~ firr11. flexi/Jl(' hour~
tor skillf'<I perJ;Qn. ~1 ar1 $.1
ht. Cati Nancy r>I a y.
Dishwashers
& Bu1Jboy1
I Apply in Person
271·12 Or!ego H11•y.
li\1~110:1)!/iTE f'l.ACJ<:;\IE;\T Si1n Juan C1tp~1ra110
re IH 1 l~XI' Only, Clothing machin"
npf·rritut"s. i.·uu 1in11'. 17:i:;
LUHRS BOAT CO.
No1v !firing
FINISH
BOAT CARPENTER
ASSEMBLERS
lllJhP..t Dr.
lrrilie• IJJ.11'5
(Behind A1rporll:'r Inn)
~!Zi~~~I •• SECH ~:TAltY •• 0 . '•• Piano. nen. n11.::~. "l"'n.
Fo1· 11·est coast l'cg-ional .~ale~ 11u1. i•ni st:i \.\ /6 chr!r., orii.:.
~ff1cf'. l\lu~t . ha1·l' 1natu1"· o11 JHIJnlulg-s, anliq's, hall
JudgmC'lll, ah:l1ty to dritl 111 1 llJ).;, niin'Ors, f'rpll' equip, L
Re•I Eat•t• Career phonl', type 70 11·pn1 & 1..,ke iniii ·h nioJ'I'. Cl'i,"i--\·l:i:i.
NC'w or experienced, join the shorthand. Prl!\ 1ou.~ ~al<'s ·----CREVIER
MOTORS
208 \\'. l-"'t St., Siunti
835-3171
,\na
• FIGURE CLERK I "?"""\'' ''''· Bini S, C'\I 61.>--72.1 •. Thea• Jobs . are v•rled ----,:ooD_W_A_l_T_E_R __
& c:h•ll•ng1ng I I . If you're good w/num· Exper. U\'er :.!I , Long hair
CARPENTER
HELPERS
Con1pany that's gro1ving. If o!tice e:-.:p<>r prcf. For a ,Cjll-~S1·s t. . t:hair s, ,lloor
you do not have a license, pointaietll e:il! <1!13-1:.03. r~)Ji_sher, dining tbl &
chC'ck on our J'otlt-'r & Brunifield Division chairs, 1naplc buffet, Bos1on
AUTOMOTi~VE~-S-W-6055. Costa! Ai::rnc·y.
, ok, but neat appear. ber1 & can ty~ • little I Apply, t>lo ti-Wed, llam-3pm I
you may qualify. 2111 Coast I-Ill.')', NB I
Apply in Pl'rson
849 \V. lllth SL
Costa J\lesa
Office Supel'l'iscu· Gn)\l'illi'.:
\vater dis!rict needs rorn-
petent person to man,1gC'
busy ot!lce. J\lust pos~s~
good typing & shrthnd skills.
Knowledge of v.•a te r district
bus. helpful bu! no I
nE'Ct'ssa1'Y. For lurther in-
fo1·malion, plt'ase c a 11
831-2.100 b!\l'n 8an1 & 1 I am.
0 RN A i\I ENT A L IRON
fabricator. experienced, for
p:>sillon. Call bet 9 & 12,
49-Hi.376.
$49 A:\1f Jnoorpornled rocker & 111illt.'. J\Iake off~.
26\lll Ave. Aeropuerro 1 ..::96K-~':..::_31~9~5.-----~-
R I E t t San J uan Capistrano, 926ir1 8' SOFA .i:. IOl'f' seat. Nt"l:er
L. ea_ 'c• • An equal oppor <'l11pl 1\1/~' used. fk•th S150. Sf'y,lfl~ \\lanted heaV)I duly mechanir.
Buick exper, pref'd. Auto
lrant;n1. ,11peclalii;t.
Z790 J.larbor Bl. al AdainH, I t>lr. 1-ledrick C.M • GENERAL
BOYS FRY COOf., EXPER
1cen11ng ours• SERVICE Si lo P . . ni1teh. S:lj, pr I -pt y Full sales training program ·. at n:. os1 t1ons 96S-i910. '
-no COil!. Management op· open f/tcn1e .. Dr Ii• f! I~'~ Y ----------o BAUER BUICK
2925 lfnrbor. C~1
Contac& ~1r. John ~lalthe11•s
979-2500
Age 10-14 to deliver pa.per11 I CLERICAL Call 5"8-2253
1n the Dana Poin!, San Cle· Good typing&. insurance ) F ry Cook, Bxp \Vhcc!man
mente areu. 1 exper. helpful, but not 1 e BLUE DOLPHIN e
LUNCH l·loslf'.~s: Tlfon-F1·i.
I.a Cave Rcsiaurant, 1693
ll'\'ine Ave. C.\1. Apply of-
fice 2nd floor.
porlunities. Ask for i\trs. ~alesman I hie nil',.hanicnl. JIOUSEl-~UL of F\:mitw-e
Jone-s for tnlormalion al r.1ust hav~ exper. Gd. rarn. & ~l1S(~lt11flf"Qus ltrmiJ
8•12·~1. ing potential. Apply l -4 pin e e 492·J.'19S e I
T b II R It only. Jerry Parhatn, l\lesa BEER TAP EQUIP.
BABYSt'M'ER w a n t e d : DAILY PILOT l n1ce1a. Poaltlons •v•il. 3355 Via Lido, ··.o. \1ALE College Student need-
ed a.~ draftsman & driver
for busy ln!C'rior dl"S ign
Jirm. Part time plus. r.fust
have g<Xld d riving ~cord &
bf neat & business-like in
ar e eG On Verde Shell Sl:'rv, 3131 * * 673_31&3 * *
Mature &: patirnt. my home,
perm. Mon-Fri. 7:45 to S:JO.
Girl 5 yr~. hoy 16 m~.
Own transp. Vie CuJ verdale
in lrvlnt'. Call l.i2-7522 atr
5: 30.
492-4420
Don 't give up lhe ship!
''Lisi" it in classified, Ship
to Shore Results! 642-5678
for Jr. & Sr. tkllls. GENERAL OFi-·tcF.: T his
1:0-.'TERVIF:\\"ING
?>Ion & Tltf'" 9 a m-2 pn1
\\"ed 1hru T'ri 9 am-12 pn1
ney,• ofliet" need!! your
talrnts & personality for l1tf'
clerical dutie~. A great
g-rou p to 11·ork 1,•ith. 'T1) $404.
Call Lind a Ra y, ;).10-0'.'.ri."1,
Co:1slal J\g('ncy, :! 7 9 O
l1arbol' Bl 11t A<lan1s. C~I.
appraranrr, Non-smoker.
ORTI-IODONTIC office: Ex-
p e r i en c e d receplionlst
"'·/maturity. Top salary.
Fashion I sland. 6-l-1-1406.
PART time llelp "·anted.
Eves after '.) pm. i\1alc
over 21. Apply 111 person.
Me & Ed's Pizza Pnrlor, 410
E. 17th SI., C.~1.
Real Est•te S•les Harbor Bl, Costa )Jei;a.
I nvest men I Di vision SERVICE station e \' e 8' Sofa, ~: Co rlee tAb~;
Beach/Southern Co u n t Y managt'r. Also To"' t11.1ck v•rought iron base. ~:
area. Enjoy the High in-driver. Exp. pref. Top pay Da~11sh \\alnul bdrm 'et,
coine, & prei;tige of a sales & fringe benefils. Apply . S\IJ. &1 2-fini.
career in thr in1'estment Shell Sta!ion. 17 th & J1 ... ·ir1e. Sofa, b1u1o,·n, tulte<I l'Utile<I ('s ll tor intervie"· ap-dil·ision o! COL \VE LL NB. ha1'k, Provlneifll tyJ>f', $'..!>. •••••••••••••••••••• ON
• ...::JTF. o~· our:
/\'E\r BUILDINC:
--GF:NEltAL ALL a 1· o u n <1
point1ne11t, fl ::JO to j Daily,
~179-lfl.lfl. J~HOP-.JNC. An outst:.r.nding STATION All"" 1, l . . ti42-G!J2;1. . f I 1·1· I ~ .. t,n, r.~p<i·l---===~---opportunlly or I _ie qua 1 Lt.'< preferred. Hour:; 0 pen , • * IJOUSErUL of b°UTTl l·
PACIFIC MUTUAL
Jo'ASHION ISLAND
Jlandy 1nan. Full time. Sf .. ~1f!
Replies to Classified ad 378
c/o Da ily Pllot, P.O. Box
1560, Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626.
r>1 i\N or 11·-0111a n lo 1rork in
Donut Shop afternoon. No
phone calls please. \Vin-
ciit'U's, ~17 lla rbor Bl, Cr>-1.
success o r I l' n f e d 962--160? flll'f', din rm, lamp:;, brcl,
sales1ne11 to join an exciting .c.:.=..c=.c·~· -------
growth company, Call Li11dci. SECRETARY, full I l me, etc. Call 49-1-3701.
\Vright a t (714) 833-12&t shrthnd a n1usl. Call I.arson * VELVET quilterl ~la.
"A sUhsldiary of the Colwell Enterprises lnc. 557-5220. n<'vrr l!l'Cd $130. f.l fltehing
A CONVl"NlfNT SHOPP!JofC ANO
SEWING GUIDE FDA THE
lCorner Santa Cniz I.
Newpor1 Center Drive) GIRL, live-in, N ew po rt
Beach home. Mother'i;
helper for summ er.
64 2·9000,
Management Opportunities:
HEAL TH FOODS
Complete knoy,•ledge of vita·
n1ins I. t011cl supplements
necessary. Pref C'Xfl'l.'rienf'e .
in ovcr !hr ('O!l nlf'r sa.lrs. 1
PBX ans\l'Cring s c r v i c 1· .
grav~yard Tl1es & \\'<'rt.
?iilore hrs if desired. Cost11
Mesa area. CaJJ ~2-ll&t
PERSONNEL MANAGER:
X1nt opty for qualified nian.
E.'<pc riencC'fl "'ith prorir
sharing ner. Th i.~ posit ion
has a high salary potc11 rial.
J\lust ha\'e rC'sUnic a\'/\ll.
Co." TELEPHONE Sales. Top loveseat 580. 968--7910.
cc.nunis11iora and bonus. Ap. Garage Sale .an CAL ON THE CO, * FREE daily bus lrfln.'lpor·
t..itlon tor \\'flrk in Uls An·
t:"elcs until n11Jve to Nc11•port,
Srpt. '72.
COLUJELL ply in person behveen 9.001 ----------
and 12:00 noon 111 RWl Bolsa GAHAG~~ s11lr 2312 Santa,
Avenue. 1.:lidway City. 1\na..C:\I ~.1t·S11n. f urn.,
.,,.,.~ ---=-!!!I
For •n ad in Woman's World 1·11'.:LP \VANTt.:D
\\'ailressr~. l"ooks. busboys &
fl1sh11·a.~llen;, f.:..p. a n111,;L
A.gf's lS-30. Appl y in pt'rson
anytimf' II! 1-IOUS(' 0 [
Pies-3110 Ne11·port Blvd .. N.B.
PROPERTIES, INC
REALTORS fh · lu ·~. 1·lulh1r1i::. t'\l'.
Call M.,.y Both 642-5671, ext 330
Crochet Wrap Up Summer! C•shier:Coun.ter Girl
O\ler 21. Apply 111 person only,
Deli Sher. Brookhurst &.
Adame, H.B.
979-!W!l.l tw111·n 10 k ;i ___ , ~plit fer.
~!AN -F.arly A~t nf'11.,;p;iper . FF:F;
<lt'li\·rry. East Bluff a1·ea. I ROYAL SERVICE AGENC:\'
Xlnt r'1Uh' open. Appro.'<. Same Agenry -Nl'1\· Orficr-
Tire Servicemen
R. i::. S.1lr s Retail Salesmen Jewelry 115
WANTED Jones Tire Servic:• 1--0-1-"-10-,-.0-.-0--.--
l Land Salcsnien \\"ith pro-S~I & Con1m ._Co. Paid BPne· * \\'.JIOL.ES~LE ~R?cu;~' *
73 57
Doublr yC1ur impart 11·1th
thi!I li!!;hl , '/uir k-croch••I i;r!!
Strike 11 ma!c·h -11·t11p 11p
p1I1e.1pp!I' h<"11clban1! and
t'Vt"rylh1ng. Crochrt in cool
lacy "~hrink.. lo lop off
t\·rrylhini.:. Crochf't iri -c<JOl
pastel~ or ~UIL~lnl<'k "hO!s".
PA11rrn i:lJ7; !l"izes ~HI in--
clud{'(I,
s t:\'1';ST\'.m"E CE~TS
for f'nrh pattrrn -11clcl Zi
cen18 for each pat!t>m for
Air J\11111 Rnrl Sl)f'einl Handl·
Ing: othCl"\\'i!le 1hircl-f'la!~
clc)j\·rry 11·11! takr !hz•toe
\\'t'Ck~ ()I' lTIO(P. Sl'nd to
Alicr B")(ik, ll1•· OAil,Y
PILOT, 10;1, 7\rordlecr:i fr
DepL, Box 11;;1, ()\rl Chrlsr;i.
Stauon. Nr w r 1-.rk, NY.
10011. Pr in! Na1nP, Addre1111,
Zip, l,1ttr.rn N11n1ber.
NE EDLF.CnAFT'i2!
O'Ocher, knit, eic. Free
dlrecHona:. 50c
NE\\'! lnMtanl l\larra11.e.
Ba,11ic, fancy knots, pat-
tem.'!:. S1 '
Eu7 Art et Ha i rpin
Qol.ehel -o,·er 26 dt .signs to
mAke. $1.
lntul Crooltet ft&ot -
learn by plClurta! Patterl1$,
$1.
Complete lntA•t (lift llno)I:
-more than 100 gift. .• $1.
Oompleflt AJrtie• &o• -fL
II llff1 Rq Bookt -50c.
SOC*' el 1J Prtse Afpau,
IOc.
Qallt a.at l -15 Pllltma.
"°"· 111.....a q.Ht '** • -50<.
q.11111 ... 'l'YMlaJ''1 LITI .. -
15 btauttf\ll pattema. 50c.
914.> '
SIZES IO:.l-20 Y2
,,,, 1Tf ,..; .... 1ff ,..-r~
\\'r11p up busy <lays bright·
ly '\'ilh this quickie b.<tck-
\1Tap char mingly r in1n1cd
,\"ith ruffles. ~ c:omfor tahle,
f'ASY to ;ie"" thrifty, make
~rvcrnl.
Printed P attern 9145: NE\\'
llalf Sizes 1012, J:21,, 14~1 .
16\~. J8 1't. 201.~. Size J41~
(h11st 31l IJikti:: 2 1/8 yd11.
Gll-i11. fabr i<".
SEVENTl. · ffi'E CF.!l.'TS
for each p11Uern -tuld 2!"1
c1'n\5 fnr each p11llCl7! for
Air Alail and Special llandl·
ing; olhcrwise lhircl-class
delivery y,·HI take three
\\·eeks or n\Of'E'. St!nd to
MRrian J\Tartin, the DAILY
PILOT, 442 Pattem Dept.,
232 \Vest 181h St., New York,
N. Y, lOOll, Print NAl\fE.
A.DD RES.~ wilh ZlP, SlLE
COUPLES ~E PERSONNEL
Star! a businrss in your 011·n Cl:D\IV"ES•.Arr•iry hon1f' & \~'Ork togethe r. JU\)'I'\,. nitJU....._
l\'aiural prod u e I s !1y Qffi cr Mgr/\\1rlter to S800
Sl-IAKLEE 1vil/ lei you gro1v Escl'OI\' Cl<'rk/Notes Dt>eds 11·/the lfn1r~~ ~,u ll n r Esrro11' Notes/Of'cd:; S7i:i
p/1lnH'. Ft·ec ll'rtining~ Call Trllvel Agcy Jl·Igr SHOil -1
3111-a2.·J3 anyli111r. Secl'C'laries lo .SGOO
CLF:llI<. p/l!n1e lor pipe & 'Otc Mgr Se('retary to 5."J51)
tohaeco sllop. Prefrr oldcr Sec'y/Receptionist Open
man 1vho stnokrs pipe. Hrs Gen'! Ole Ct)n11n·1 Iris Open
5 pm & 9 pin Turs/l"ri & Sat Payroll Clerk $500 +
nite. Ple11se ronlact Harold, RecepVTypis1 to $450
493 E. 17th St . C!'.1. A/P, Payroll lo S500
Cash1er-Sa.lc
Full tlme posi!ion. r>Tust h11.1·e
Prt'\'ious ca~hicr exf)f'r. Ap-
ply l\lnna.ger -01n 1s -
South Coast Pl117,.1.
COCKTAIL w·~A~IT~R~E~S~S
Sharp, youn~. a111·11<'. & ex-
!'.!TST Operator lo $500
Accounting Cle rk to $500
Girl Friday In .S:;cxJ
Clerk Typist to .S425
Free &: Jo,~ Positions
488 E. 17th 1111 Jrvin<'l c:i1
642-1470
pcr. for new !lleak house. INVEST IN
Apply. "0"·11'"1· "'"'~Jpm I YOUR FUTURE 2!2 1 Coa!l"I Jh1·v NB I
J\lr. Jlr!lri;·k Full or p/timc.
-C~O~NSTRUCTION BE YOUR OWN BOSS I
LOAN OFFICER Men or Women
Xlnt oppnr. for ;ipprfli.o;('r ln
r rsir!cntial rons1J11etion rtep!
in Co~lll tvlc~:i. fuoq(1 ir.-:-11 .
m in. flf 2 yr.~ t'XPf'r, \n ar-/
prnho;ing rc"Sidential & smn!J I
inco1nr unit~ 11>/SOml' «in·
sr111et[on lf'rxllni::-prefrrahlr.
Leete A Yellow
Taxi C•b
Call for Appl
546-1 311
Thi.~ poliilion 1nelurirs loan Ask for Herman
solicilulion & builder eon-.,..,==::.:-.:.::,.:.:::.:::::::.,.._
t:ic1. i\1usl havf' appraised JANITOR -,\tatu~ & 1t("pen-
"'·irh 11 financial lnstl!ulion. dahle, i\Iesa Vertlt> 01n·
Call r.tr. D11.\\·&1n. S.l(i-1500. valescent Hos ital, 6 6 I
CALIFORNIA Center St .. c .r.1. 5'1S-5.ill:;
FEDERAL SAVINGS
COOKS-Over 18. no exper
neces!I. Apply bet\\'Jl 2 & !i
pn1 , Snack Shop Res!aurant.
2305 E . Coa.~I H11')', Cd)1
Bq\1RI Oppor. F.mployer.
KEYPUNCH
$210. mo. & 14 hrs/11·k. To serve you belier~
962-4633 l84X Campus Drivr
Mana9er /Sales
Sales; experience necessary to
m anage Ne11·port Beach lo-
cation of nation'!\" leading
fii::urr ('{)n!rol salon. r.'lus1
br ll'J!ll, at1 raclivc. maturr
& rnjoy WOl'king" ll'ith lhe
pllhlic. Salary plu~ oon11nis·
sion. f or intervie1v <.•all
(2JJ) gn9.1:i11.
GLORIA MARSHALL
Figure Control Salon
MANAGER TRAINEE
Suite U9. Ne1vport Be11ch
557-2800
PR01'~~SSJONAL
RESTAURANT & HOTEL
El\!PLOYl\lENT AGENCY
Hourly Employt'f's Brnefll
By Loll' Fl'Ci;
l\1anai;:ers , • , ... Sahu)' Ojll•n
Goof! oppty 1v/Jrg Corp
Asst. l\1anugers •. , •• $7:;(), mo
Fast Food J\1gr ..... SGOO. n10
~lasttir Che( ....... SllOO. mo
2nd Cook ........... $25. shift
Broiler 1t1an , ....... $!;,(). 11k
1·r11 e.'<(X'r. Plen ty of lends. fits. Apply in Pt>rson. 2049 Dnn D . d 496--3000
\rhotrsale acrrnge-a!l sizes. lfarhor BJ\'d., Costa ~-Jcsa. a i<imon s
Call (714l 77&-J.KKJ TYPIST .. ~... 1,_, h . Mi1c:ell•neou1 111
. ....... • .. ... p ysi:r=•=;;;;;;;:;•=•=•I Bct "·een l(}am-12pm cian.'I oil~. in.~u rance f'.'f-
or 2-tprn only perir ncf! prt'fPrred. 5-l6--023l. NEEDED
RESEARCH LAB WA IT RESS, EXPER.'"° RESPONSIBLE
ASSISTANTS /\'ur undcr 21. No Phonl' WORKING COUPLE e::dJ~. • n~1''"' ,·" ~''""''· /\'~:El) 0111• or l\10 1Jcdl'oon1 tNo E.l\pcr. Nl'(·r:-:sl " ~ ' " 1~ "'' Si.;rf & Sir!1,1i11, :-~.'lO \V. hull~!' 1v i I II l11ri::e frnred
I I. Coas1 H11..,, Ne"·po,., Belo . )'arrl llllr 1110 VEHY \\'EIJ. U:Jra 1rn1s devt>loping ne1v "
I h I 11.,,,.T''D I I THAl~Er) clot;s) $150 n1ost. fllYll. uc.:ts can use your c p. " L e1na e rollr~t' ·
Xlu't t1~inporary assignn1ents .s!udent ro live in for surn-Vtr: bctll'f't'n 191h & Vic-
ava il. inuucd. Good 11·orking mer. \\'a/k lo bear-h. Room toria -(ncar \V, Bay St.)
conds & pay_ No Fef'. &. board + $70. Pt'r' nio. 111 COSTA r.1ESA. 548·788 1/.aft.
Womens Fashions
I need an aHraclivc &
pl easant 1vrnnan fo learn
our local operation.~. An1bi·
lion more important than
expcr. Part litne considered
to start, For intro<iuctory
in!C'rvie1v nppt, Call 1.lr,
\VhilnC'y 71!1-liOO. ex!. 1211,
T_r~11tt Cook .•.. $2. to 5~. ht' I
\\·ruters • , , •••.•••.•• Sl.M hr '1-'r: ·d "'' .. ""' .... J·y1 .,.., ... IJl.lltS
exchange for daythne ch i!di .,,6~•~"~"~· ,..,_..,..,.,...,~.!
cart' for girl ll &· boy 11. I:', • . -
°"·n room 11. I cl e s k ·•XJ Casl<•1·rd plat!or1n foi·
fYJl(-\1Ti1er & s e 11 ; n ~ hf'i\I')' loads. approx. lCl:'ITO' \\"aitl'f's.se~ .......... $1.65 hr l (Behind Airportcr Inn! ma.1:hine. \\'eek-end & ri·es riil~-UJ> iron door It track.'!:
fret'. ~lust hr1i·c <'ar N · 18 red & 11·\111c c-.1n<ly sl?..ipe. All shifts-Food & COC'k!ail
Hostess ................ $2. hr
Hostess & Asst l\tgr •... Open
Bartender .•... Kooy,•IE'flge ol
Polynesian drinks ... $25. shift
' • 1 on a11·nin"' 12' 1 hi R ECE P T IONIST: How sn1oker. 171 4) &1-1-2005 afl<'r ... : (Y•llfl er, w ,le
'il'Ould you like to 11·ork for a 6 pm. forml('a lop: fl ft , counf!or,
fast growing real estate & \\'ANTED, irelder-mechani ~lop; 1 II. l;~.n1. n1aple in\'e~llnent CO~ )• O II n g o;; • • C. C fl IOp Sllnd"lch table, FEE
ROYAL SERVICE AGENCY I t.IATURE as!'i.;tant '''anted
· .,end rt>phe~ to Cla!>s.1f1ed ornanif'ntal 1mn tablt' no moilcrn CO·"·orker!'. 5460. Ad ?\o ::43 I ll D 1 ' Cal! Helen llayf'!> 540--60:~~ l . e o -ie ai Y g lass top: 29 f! or-nan1entaJ
C I A " 2 • 9J;J, P 1 ot. P. O. Box 1560, Costa u~1n drK/11' headers: &: f()r bui;y 01vner in Ben<'h Same Agency -New Orlice
area Benuty Sitlon. P h To S('n:e you heller!
67J--6?.60. 3848 Campus Drive
>J""l""IC . Su11e 119, l\'"ey,·por1 Beach 1 ,....._ 11u" _. e}(penencerl, 557-:21l00
tunC'r, Tr111rnph, Pf'Ug('(li, I
;:-ood pay plan. Good co. Reel Estate
!lf'nrf1t.~. Bill En SI r y
;11--0164. . RESIDENTIAL
rnr rz ll'ARREN'S REAL ESTATE SDort Car Center
e ORANr.F. COUNTY'S
l.ARGF.ST
110 £_ 1st s r .. s.A. 547--0764
i\1ECt·IANIC AssiJ<tant for
i;rolf course. Call for in-
tei;rn<, i\1on-Fri, 644--0502.
NEED 3 Stylist!!, Clientelc
pref'd, but not essen. Top
earning!!. Shopping Ctr loca-
tion. Ask for D a v i d ,
540-8888. So. Cst Plaza, 3333
Brls!ol, Of.
Ikcause of ne"· t continuing
c*'•e!opn1enl a.c!ivilic:r; in-
cluding Big Canyon ,
Promontory Bay & future
coastal developn1t'nls, i\lac-
nab-lrvine Rea lty Compe.ny
has the f ollo1.11ing op-
portunities available to in-
dividuals 1vith local ~sideo
tial real estate experienct'.
General Man•g•r
oas!a gency, 1 0 l\!esa
Jh1rbor Bl 11! Arla1ns, CM. . · _12:111 ri'SC'_ mds: 673-73-lO. \\are~io_ui;enu1.n, shipping & Flll·:NCll /'ro1'. soft & chair. . RECEPTIO~IST receiving, general md5e, Also Garrard Lab 80 ~e"'IXl':' ~ac~ fl~ _secks e.-:p nee. 1281 Bldg E Logan, lurnlhl·Erric r reeii·i·r, 2 ~·eeep11on1st 11•1th mp•
1
n1mum C.\I. , honir tniHlf" .Ii pe a k f' r
·' years. <'xper... i-asant WOMEN 'S FASHION-S I f'a 1111rt:; c11~·1i 11· I I '· · • pcrson11l11y & nh1li ly lo han-. ., dll' husy desk. TYPING iO N~r1onal co & leadt'r in it~ Crn~rn ~Pf'rikcrs & each
11-.p.in. -+ Xlnl's l'>Orking field ha$ part & full 1in1r w I 11. 1 r ho r 11. \V a t I' r
conrlftlnns. & ro. benefils. opcningg ill your 11re11 for fl\ll'l!ll'r·Tral'f'! iur Air f'Ond,
Call Mra. Smoot several "·omen 10 hel11 i11 '$.I\ C'hl'1·y (1ffrr:-. 557-67&.g.
Mnducting fashion shO\\'S. 644-3251 No rxper, rrqtiired. For in-D.•\N [!;.11 ~TO<l<'rn lil'1n1e ~m
:rod lm'Up. lncJudrs sofa, t"liair,
RELIABLE \.\Oman o\ler 30 t uctory interview appl. l<1n1p labte a1KI ('Qfft'E" !able.
for lit' factory "'ork. Call CalllZUhtr. \\lhitney, 77S-J700. f'r1 pty. All for $75.
546-2762. ·-'~'~'~·,c...~· -------1 531-72'J I. \\'Ot.1EN. Eleelron11· -. ;"ic~.~.~~. -.,.,,.---. Sale~ assembly tra.intes on dclo.y ACl'..'TYLF.NF.. "·eldnig ou1~1t
School's Out-What Now? liner; a, pu1r;e tmnsformf'~. tanks. 2 ~ts gaug~11 ·and
Teachers summer employ. Pleasant surrounding 1642 largt' and sma.U cutting and
ment. For the most respect-Kaiser Ave., Sa.nra A;~. 11·~'.d~ni.::-_ heflds &: ,,tips ~11();
ed ffiucaUonal work ootsi<k , An lift Jack $10. 8:~115T. . . \\i O~iEN dernofllllrate skin-
COS.\JF:'l'IC S1\LES: If you
llke make-up & indil'idual
lnshl's &: you \\'ant to get In.
lo fl glamorous ftt'!d w/a
naf'I cosmetic ro. \Ve \l'ill
trnin, Sfl.lf!1 exper. necess,
Co !>n1 et lci 11nB li~-ense
needr.,J. P art or f/lin1e .
Sa.lacy + comnl. Benefits at
all J, \V. Robinson's.
D•y Shift
Avail•ble Now
6 htonths actual ~'Ork exper.
on either a keypunch,
kc ytapc or key disc device.
NEEDED Asslatant to Kelly
Templelon \\'ilh opportunity
to become s!ylisl. Must
ha ve Cal l forn J a
& Assistant To Pres.
Duties \\'ill include develop-
n1ent I. administration of
effective 59Je1 &: listings
program. Position requires
extensive Jocal real estate
background Ir experience
or rlemonstratfd interest
le. ability in real estate sales
management. Excellent saJ-
Al'Y. incentive &: corp. bene·
lits.
of .schoo!. For 1nlerv1ew care & k E WEAVING looms & e~ip!
phone or write. R. C. Petty, g-rou• _mma eup'I'l'. . ~_am m~nt. $140. 1-48" & J.,a6"
"'"9582 PO Bo •075 N """" ,_v m. 111nu1g, II -"I . "'"'' , · · x ~ , .B. supplies & rwit 'I d 1. . O.uu ~ m11ker & shuttles,
92660, 645--0852. a ver 1S1ng. I ~8~94-:','1~5M:C,.. --~----1
SALESMEN \VORKING mothrr 11ecds re· Moving-Tl1ust U'll·Sears J\'lh.t:
644-2800, ext 326
C OSMETOLOGIST
Fast, 11harp gal lo assist ow.1-
er or new busy aalon, Top
ulary +. Ja Co's For Jtalr.
646-134.'i.
ALSO
D•y shift untll move to
Newport in S.ptember
tMn swln9 4-12 PM,
School training~ Some
¥.'Ork txper. hclptul.
Cosn1elologisl J l c en s e.
&12--019-1. I
NEW FACTORY
EXPANSION
$5Gt-$450 Per Mo
full Tim•
Need men who are ready to liable assistance l -7 p.ni. d~f'r, Excel ed.-EJec. ed~.
learn the car busineu and <'Xcept Sun., $1.25 hr. p\\r mO'il-'f'r11, 110fa, bed, clmt
are willing to train. Mull l 496-3729 hassock.All reas. 8J0..4219.,
have good per!IOnality, be XLNT Oppor N l'l C WEAVING ioom11 Ir ~
Interested ln a future, dttu has ope"'"·-' 1 OllCf!rn men!. $'1 40. 1-43'' Ii 1-¥.·~· __ 1 ,....,ig., or route H 1 .,...~.
well, ... esminded. Benelltll: salesmen in C.M. 96Z-OU6. and~~ maker • •hu~.· Demo.. group Ins.. high 894-1534 •
Sales
commialons. Unlimlted In-DIVORCE. Muat tell .All
come. Apply ill Penon. , Jl~ j household f1u-niture I '
MOBILE, 2850 lfarbor Blvd.,
aiirl STYLE NUMBER. I ·cu=sro=~D~l~A~N~. ~12~.66~pe-r ~hr-.-+-
SEE MORE Spring Faah-n!&ht ahl!I d ifferential. fuU
INTERVIEWING
Pi.ton 6: Tues 9 am-2 pm
Wed Um.1 Fri 9 am.ll pm
ON
Young me~mechanlcal 1p-
tltude helptuJ, but not req'd.
P.tust be 19 or over. Able to
1tart work1 lmmed .. ll ac-
c:epled, For job lnfonna·
lion -
RepreMntativea
\Ve stek 3 ttt:nsentatlves
to ll•t I: u ll I'Hiclentia.I
properttt'I in the Newport-
t..aauna·lrvine &l"tU. Po-
lftJons f'lf'qUire n:&l est.te
lleenae I: iiucttuM Joct;I
R.E. v:ptrle~. Commit·
lion • btntnta..
UN IVER S IT Y OLDS. ~-;-----.::;V;'·;i.:pliilaras;:~·=64:>-5~725f::. ::~~r.
Co!Jla r.teiJA. R DI "'~-"
SALESLADY, exper. Io r Ant'-• IGO O ftCI .......... '
dre11 1hop. Pleaae Ae.Dd OLDEST known 0 r i 1 t n a 1 Tickets -Ions Md choose one pal1ern lime, perm. positions, 7 am-
frtt from new SprinA:·Sum· 3:30 pm 6. 11 pm.-7:30 am.
mtr Catalog. All alzesl Only Exper. ftq\llred, Pef80nll('I ~N';!.1:n-SE\VING BOOK Ottlct, South Coast Com·
11e:w toda,y, \\.'ear tomorrnw, niunlty Hosp. South La,cuna.
n. <port~lfillt Ao I equal op.
INST ANT FASIOON BOOK un y empoyer.
lluncirM& of faah.ion fact.L D E N TA L J'tectpUonl•t.
$1. capable A: aper. In all den-
taJ ofc p~ures tncludln& QUICK CASH chi!lhld< • x.....,.. Newport
THROUGH A c..ittr, &W-0922.
Put a HUit "loot' ln your DAIL y PILOT Levlt ... u il>ore btlubl" tor
WANT AD ~;:;:· cau ci.,.1fie.i
SITE OF OUR
~'E\V BUJLOINC
PACIFIC MUTUAL
FASHION ISLAND
(Corntl' Senta Crut ..
Jllewport Center Drlvt)
* FREE d&IJy b u I
tranqiortaUon tor work tn
Loi Angdf"1 unti.l mow lo
Newport, Sept. '12.
Call Tun. 9nm-lpm
77"'551
NO\V hlrlf\R" for d!1hwuhers
&: busboy1, U: It: over. Equal
EmplaynMtnt t'mpioyn -
COCO!! Reatauranl, 1555 W.
Achun1, Cotta M e a a ,
5-t0-9672 Apply fn penon.
NURSE, pa.rt time. for be.ck
otnct, 2~ days/wk, R.N.
pref., atable penon only,
1alary nt~Uable. \Vrl!C'
Claa1Uled Ad No. 431, Oa.lly
Pilot. P. O. Box 1560, CoA:ta
httaa,Callt ~.
Thtte are perrnantnl Cll~
oppottunlUe.11. .All lnqulrlea
held In rtrtct confidence. If
)'CKI qualify p1ea8f! attbmlt
letter or resume by mail on-
ly ho ...
Mocnob-lrvlM Roolty
~/o The Irvine Co
ttsunK' P. 0 . Box 1623. Norman Rockwell <"OVtr 4 for June 13th, 1'.leit.
Newport Btacb, Ca 92660. painting on the marktt. 21 x San DltlO Sport1 Art111
2i In orlgtnal frame. Abo Best taM offer . ,f
SECRETARIES 0<1 I, 1921 ;""" ol Th< Cali 642-364.l ••.
The Irvine Company ha• Im· Saturday Even Ina: p o a t ofi.,,,.',.' 30~l~o!!!!"' 30~p~m~O~Nt..,;.;!Y;..;!I mtdlnte openil!ill'• Io r same. Best offer ovtrl::-........_
leC'l't!tarlE• with minimum $28,000. Write O au\fied Ad USED DtCYCLF.S
of 3-6 yn. t~r. In any of No. 432. Da.Yy Piiot. P. o . All types, large 1'1!.lectlona
the lollowlnr btlclq,row>tl>' box l;ro, Costa 11!.,., CAUL . e 612-1212 : ;\•
1-tgJI or m a r k e t t n r 92626. GOOD Wit(j commorc:lat ~l
retearch, typing 70 ~.pm. Fabul0u1 Allan Mtltacta · I: rubber pad. 3n7 N9· ·~
11]1 90 w.p.m ., ctvU tl'llU'lett'-Eleph11.nt chalr $175 Hand Birch, N.B. 543-1310, -~ . -
Ina or klan J>l"OCt•lnr I: engrav~ Celadon china tor e~, typing 70 w.p.m. ll, $200. Bronze Buda heads, For that Item und~ $50. Xln t co._btndUa A wotklna C rvtd .1 .... _ ..., try fhfl Penny PlncMr . •, tondttlofle: A II Ver• 1vvr)' l'A-'01\i, If · 5 $250. Cambodian temple rub-·~ tomethlng you wa'n<'
••••••••••••••••••• The "Yenow Paae1.. or
clus\tled ..• '4J..S67!
' • W ht It Elflphant." over-
ninnln&' your house! Turn
the m ln!O "'CA.!Jl'" -tell
ltW!m lb.tu Dall7 P t I o I call • w~ • 64.l-5671
550 Newport Center Dr
Newport Beach Ca, 92660
Attn: Penonntl .De:pt
C•ll Mrt. moot blf111:. Rtlumlna' to Aili itcll'!' Claulfled ads ct;,• -jt ~ 1<7.4689, a. ""U -call NOW W-5611; ·
\ I I
,
'
< '
p
"
'.
• •
•
I .... ... 1§1 I l§l !
tillond•1. Junt 12, l'.172
ti 1 7
]§] [
"'"""f"'z .. "'""· ...... ---1 I r ,. ~' _ ..... _ ..... ~
940 Trucka 9'2 Autoa, Imported 970 Autoa, lmpemd 970 l utoa, lrr.port-9 HJ -
BRAND NEVr' * WANTED * 1 ASTON MARTIN I MERCEDES BENZ --R-E-'N-A -U-LT--
ll}!scellonoou& 111 TV, Rodlo, HiFI, Eta, ,_
STEREO; Uncla!med is72 Stereo 136 36' GRAND BANKS. $36,!D'.l.
Motor Home.t
~CJmtrd 5Y1tem Automar 1<' Xlnt. COlldUJon.. Dana Ptllnt. ~table, alr auspeona:)()l\I ~SP:;;;:EAc:':'.KE:::-,Rc-,-,..-,-,-m-s,-ahl-p7p-lnJ Privalfo. n4; 492-Ji67.
•aker1 \O.'Llh crossovl'r damage to lxnrts It packinf I ~Bo~ot~a7,~R"e7ft51~/~C~h7a7rt'~r~90I=
'radio and tapt deck. Still only. 6" 1-"'"'Y to 15" J..11.·ay ---------
• )'' t' m A.\i/fM/71-1PX a.lr suspvaJon • y & t e ms . 27' AUX. SLOOP
radio and l&Pf!' detk. ShJJ 503 off N'g. retail, • Year
VOLKSWAMM
1972 M I
Oran late model Chevy " T. _ · --------1
e man • wh .. 1 dnv. PU, 1o.,. bed:I ASTON MARTIN I '67 Mercedes Ran•ult s.1 •• " S.rvlco 'fl vw -pd ........ MINI Motor Home auto t.lAY 1tll or trade my DBS·\'8. \\'~ewood h!uf'
250
S S d tor over a dtt.ade lll Orange NG~-• bu lr'oM. f!Dd
Dodie cha"JI, Steers 6. fully 'i1 Chevy ~ T. aulo, dl.!ir I <lrk blu triter. ~ mi. • an County d.l.mqed. ft.est of body b
br nd ~ Perltct !or "''ee.kend cruisf'g _a ~w 11.nrl gu&rant~. guaranlt-e. 89Z-ll9L
&ell contained, hrakPs. clean. 542·1734 e\~.!i I S20,000 ;-\t'A' W1.1T. tran!lrr E\qu1s1te .!i&nd t"it1;;e 11 \lh ~rv. ~I. Open ttl S p.m. rood-Good trans. SMl8.. or
(B31Bf2U52$&5;l and 'A"eekend1. r11.h['°· P\1 Pty (ZlJt ~2-1062 full lf'Filht'r 1n!11nnr. factnry f\fonday ~I ca~ otfa'. M\15l ..U
'71 Dod 1/ T I <Hun! Hrbr1. i 111r r-.1nrf1t1 ... ning. 11 •t 1 n J1m Slemon& Renault th1S M!e.kend. Landk!rd b Siild for l""'ll no p to Catallna. f'ully ~uipptd .m._ ~~. .11y 011 STEREO Ba.lance ol Sl'9.95 or rake SS radio, RDF, a!eep.s &IX PRICED TO SELL qe > on "''"' "'"" """"'· m1 So. Maln. san" ,,,. forronr ""' 1o •• . ......,.,
II Complete system~. 2.0 to 40o/, 6'2" ht'adroom, romplele over sma monthl y ff paymenu. USA S le re 0 ° reg, retail, Spe<Lker sys-galley, Club ralrs. Lois of
DEAL ER'S COST PICKUP. Slant 11x , J:, sr,.ed. BMW \Yl11,..r' dis!' brakr~. A'.'>f/r\! l b!k norlh ot \\l&rnt>r '68 vw, (rd. ('Oftd., nu ttru.
COAST gharp' r7g468Hl S21fl~ Tnm. radio. ri4rlt1il '.11\!lr 1o1rlP v.all ~<vice ~partment 54&-4ll4 valve )ob • hrad•rt .
, rqu1p Wll!'thouse, 179 E trm!, 35 to 50'1. oil tl!'g. parkin,11:'. CaU tor Info.
ret 11.JJ. 7S04 \~· .. ,on11n•••r 551 ~~ all 6· 31)
n1y AYT'f's Chevrol<'r , !}46 S IMMEDIATE tirl"s. Jl'lcal ne11uty thllt Sales Department !1574 .;2.U Custom pa.int, rtru. llQ95.
'C'oast H\\y .• Laguna Bf>arh DELIVERY sho1rs \mpf'ccablf' c11re in-SAAB or best otr., C•orc•,
IMPORTS 1 .:~;~~r~;~~:~-F 100 v.s. s1rlt> and $t)sj55J37~1 496-1136.
•oto ""'" r/h Yoor 0 . '70 SAAB 99E VOLVO
11t SL, Costa t.1 es a, A ~ ."""'° · · · ''' , \\'t>11tm1ni;ter, R92-7962. '4 ui2. Boats, s.n 1-~-"""ST°'E°'R°'E°'O=s~--r I PANASONIC am /Im stf'n'll
11:n1 Garrard, systemized. "I pmfl'S5tnnaI mo r1 e I • • 32' Columbia Racuig
I turnt11blP & 2 s-•k•r•. A Sloop Sips 4 '·'""" 714 .Y au om11 llc chafliE.-. "' < • ' ";>,JV. · A'.\1 /nT/~fPX radio, geal-steal 11.t $100' 830-l4AA. =>16-34=='=5·~~~---mr>nrv·s worth •t $395 '67 Mercedes l!:"s;;~'.:gr:r ·f.1 '11.1r. 1972 Y01.• ::..i.~ss. ru
~d a ir g1Jspension 5~aker5 Curris ~!11th1s 21"' color \'F.:-ln1Rf. 17 S a 1 lb o a I
ph.la ta~ deck. Still brand TV. Pm\·ll1C"1al \\' 11 Jn u. t \1/trlr. Slps 4. htad, pulpit.
ntw & guar11.n!erd. \\las $~/nllPr. ?G98 Redlands nP"" ll U.'l:ih.try. new bottom
1000.1200 \V. Paci.tic Cst. H"Y
Ne..,,'port &ach (n4i &l.2·0406
546-4529
·'BILL \\'l!ITLIDI.~
19;0 FORD Truck nm 350 SEE us ABOUT 230 SL $1999
"' '"' 11.ur..... P/'f.. PfB, Overseas Deltvery 1 L•••• T-.y et . CREVIE R MOTORS Luxunous Cpe !Rd!tr. f ut" @ •-•t R•~ <, port• •u•-m shl-11 '"dm"""r · o 0 ~ ••• ... •v ~ ,,... I 2re 11\}f'ctlon. au o. r a n s Xlnt con<!. 493-!JJjf , \\'. 1~1 St .. S.•nta Ana po11er slf"l'rifii:, p~-r th~·· ft $11.74 Ptr M-. le.II unclaimed. Originally ~~D~r.~C~.\~J~. ~~~~~~I paint, Vt!ry Cltan. $17:,0. :.priced at over $JOO. No"'' S46-J4'm, bus. 12131 357-3211
$105. Cash or , m .t 11 ext . :244.
'"Pll'Ymenls. Credit De pt . '::-:-:
7
''"-.,'',..'=',.u __ ll I =3l~'~Y~a7•~•1.~o..~""7'-,-"""-a.ed~.
"56 Forrl Pick Up. 292 Pn· ___ IJ5:31 ~1 brakt!. full le11r ht-r 1rrer1or .. ~ ~ O.A.C. Ml/F~1 . Auto. trans..
•'"'· '""c "'~' good. 1"'1l I '70 BMW 2500 A.'1 1f\I S\\' "d,, 0 dlo;c bral<OI. "mo. or trarlP. 54fi·50l3. ~a u11tul rntf'r ~nr " ~h()1•~ t ~S For Leasing or buyl"I
SUNSET MOTORS
'04/893--0501. . Days -54&-8030 ext. 181 ; * AUCTION * 3 L;n.,, 2 Timas, $2,00 <G"n") or llJ 68&-7723
OR.ANGE CO UNTY
LOCATION
ELDORADO 1 ... :..:. r' ) 2-fnn pic .. ,11\ utnma11c. a ! Tin's. I out. t7l)BEJ I ... JI cw"' '" 'ORI , . ,? A R dal meuculou~ c11re :r.~.r!e k A~"~ ':OW:ll..,:I
Fine Furniture
& Appl!ances
Auctions Friday, 7 30 p.m.
eve/wknds. ~lini 11·ilh 196l molar. Runs (N'.at I A.\1"/F"~t Radio. one 011·ner S4!88 ,., r. c---o H,,.,. -YQLUft \'Peds batte~. $37.i. Phont-jl..)3BQ\\"l ~~ .... ""' , ,tW
Boat&, Sllps/Dcickt 910
. Windy1s Auction Barn ~~!,, Newport. Cl\f 646-8686
. , ~hind Tony"s Bldg Met'!
Free happy ht'allhy kittens.
8 11·ks. "'taned & tTainf'd .
M8·461 i
Hou,efut of Furniture
also misc items =· _...__
BLACK Inn~ h;iired. female.
7 wks l)ltl, lree to good home
979--7!1~9.
MOT$06R44H80ME &l,·1'17 l»lm·• ' p.m. CREVIER Kr.11·rnnT BEACll
ONLY a few slips available, Auto Leasing 964 MOTORS • Nabers 67~1'1'"1111 Ext 5:~~ 1966 Harbor. C.M.
20', 25· & 38' in Back Bay. 208 \\'. lst St. Sanla Ana 1=n'°'l'"oc"'°S'.•::.m~<l:::'''-''--7 Autos, UMd De Anza Bayside Village Ftn.J..Y SELF CONTAJ1''ED ~ Cadillac
300E.Cst.Hwy.,Npt.Bch. &.IT"S BRAND NE\\': ~ ~~~~835-3171 2600HARBOR R!.. TOYOTA '62 POITTl.A.C Catal i na
OOCK w;hai/uwm up Jo S.r. •213201 I '7 2 BMW_3_0-Coupe COST lf'S W•i<>O. 11" "'""· run., HA VE wedd ing go\vns-or1g
~pjice $230, siz 10. 2. Bride~
: .i;n,11ids outfits, sz l2 & 5.
,c:if:fiing 00"' at Srrr:i Thr1rt
shop, 113 r.ta1n St, llun-
-titlgton Bear·h. 5.'IB--6270
1'10n tt\ru fr1 l0am·2pm . ·
25 -: GALLON, ;ill glass
·}$lllarium. Fully equip. 2
I.atge fl5h & star1d. Like
.~QI $65. or best offer.
&-1290.
ELL n1otottycle ~
'('White., lize. 7\i. $25, '
,_ 546-4478
,, OOL table. antirtue. style..
'4xS &!aft'. $325. \Vill deliver
~ ~· R.36-8102.
!·"i'tOUSEFUL of Furniture
'·•
1 &: Miscella.nrous ltrms • * 49Z-3898 * •
D new Sear11 belt
i.sager. Co5t $100 -lieU
lf!/1. 644-1732. ~ ' I*-
1 MEMBERSHIP 1n a
i@ed!ng N.B. pvl. MX:ta.l club
-:1or sale. 645-3500.
BANDI T /, gang must go.
SmHIJ, 11\"C'ly. all-American
pups. &12-~.
2 beautiful klHrns,
"'"aned, box trained
R wk~ old. 557-6833
I ,.t, and Suppin I~
Pets, General 850
21:)', 57Jlnlo. No. 2 Ra.looa Phone 645-6677 Try _our leas~ e~rts tor ' .>tfl-!ltOO A ~~1;'~1111rl;i~ '70 TOYOTA II ;-;~: 0~~de.~.v~ ~: Qi\"P~. N.B. 67!">-4331. I 1970 Harbor Blvd. ~c~gs -Sat1stact1on. Ser. I 2(X() nides, Stork •27 '70 MercedH 4 .-.perd,s '1'"51''9· 9'7~iCll\V, '63 Corvair van. l"loP;f!dS v.iork
17' .'c:'hlada SK with 110 Costa Mesa \\'E LEASE ALL POPULAR j CREVIER $95. 494-0076. 1.289 So Cat "~~:~p~8S1~~v~~~:· *Marvin Pearce* ~'~iis~TaJ~lPETI-MOTORS 4 nr~~o~Pr5~,,.~r~n~a1~'1 "r @ ~"?ch. ;:~~.101• Lq\ma
CHOICE sl!pg in ne w ~farina Cali l\1alcolm Re!d tor 20S \\'. J.-.r St .. Santa Ana Brakrs. Auro Tran• F;ir 1nn. ft ~ BUICK
tor 25-70 ft. boats. Motor Homes turther details. 835-3171 Air Cl'lnrl A~t F~ 1\i r r..., '\t~
673-6606. THEODORE Visit our ne\\· home.! Pn11Pr \V1ndo..,,~ (.11<:1,\~ 111 sO ·,-7~1--17 •• -,_-L-R-ivf __ _
SAIL BOAT SLIPS I Sales • Rentals ROBINS FORD & All fhe Ii""''''~" "'II '"' ~ ~ ...... era I I 20CiO Hubor Bl\•d. dr~ire, 'I\ ' Luxurlow hardtop coupe with
Newporl B'8eh 54g.72;3 558rJ222 . Co.I• Mesa 642.oolO $5495 Ii'~,~,, !aetory air cond., !ull ~
Boats, Speed & Ski 911 1411 s. Village \Vay, S.A. Autos Wanted 968 ' iDCiudma: door locks, vmyl
ROY CARVER, Inc. COAST 143 E. coa.i H•"Y· '°p1~,til',::1' !,":,' i::; 13' BOSfON Whaler, SHXXI.
w/33 Evinrude k 25
Johnson. $800 \••II eng.
673-6518. REWARD NE\vPORT BEACH 234 E; 17th St. 673•0900 Ex!. 5.J.S4 whff\s, etc., etc. Very low.
Cos!a !11esa 546-4444 IMPORTS !Open Sunday) low mlles54. (~M),
·72 2002, $SOO. Sa vi n a: , TTT
AMIDI. Mkhelio XAS ~ ll•" .. :"' ti Cedlllac rarll11J llrt's, &unroof. t.X· • , ....
Will PAY OYER nor. 11nd Cat Owners! Fresh I ~iiiiijiiiiijiiiiijiiiiijiiiiijiiiiij!'!iiiiij~
ni r11 17c lb. Fr('r Home I l!rlil ] Tr1nsport•tiort llrl1\"rry. 10-9 pm. 8.15-7753. '-------7'
LC'arlhratrr Cockatoo. pink &.
11•h11e. rarr. lame, talks.
Best Off Pr. );47.33()1:. Ca111oer1. Sele/ Rent 920
Kelley Blue Book
13621 Harbor, Garden Grove
1 Blk. So. ot G G. Frwy. I Far la te model, clean,
Cf'Jlcnt oond llion. Used on 1000·1200 \\'.Pacific C~t. J{U')'. m~.... Nabers
tnp around oo nt t r Ne.v.·porl BcRc-h (714) 642"0406 ., ••
I u ry o 546·4;"" 2600 HARBOR BL., t:i,000 carC'fu 1n i 1 £' i;. "'"'"' Toyota. & Jai;uar Oe.al l!f' COSTA MESA
492-806'.l. Authonzerl Sales & Servi~ M0-9100 opeii S\mday
900 S. Co11§t 1-!Ji;:h11·ay
CITROEN Lquna Be.ch '10·3100 CADILLAC
'70 TOYOTA W AGON
636-2333 low mileage domes· I
Dogs 854 Emergency sale· 'f:li Doclce TEST DRIVE . tics, imports, trucks or
---------1 camper v11.n. Pop top/camp· THE MIDAS MINI I campers. ----------~IARTINCREST KP n n e I er Pqwpped. auto, S1550. MOTOR HOME Call anrl Ask !or Buyer Citroen Sports Mi1sere11
proudly pN?sents a J1t1er of 645-<4~. DAYE ROSS Orange County headquarters $1495 Distributert by I I SANTA ANA TOYOTA FACTOR Y
YOUR ONLY
GPrn1an Shortha ir puppif'5, '65 Ford UP, s· Camper, sl!>~ Kf'n Craft Product!! for oca & E urop ean
Rllck'""'und ol fo~<l & ·h~·.. A v o •-'" .• nd rle livery. I Sf'ryl,·p Drpi "rrn AUTHORIZED .,,,~ ., un .,, -c, OV 1u11Vt.._Bu CO • CREVIER MOTORS PONTIAC I rh11mp1ons & ln\'f' .._ top >.lnt rond. $1900. 646-7631 I 208 \\' ls1 St S t An J im Siemens Imports . ~ ;11 a_111 ·111 ~ r1111 CADILLAC
IPmfl('r11m eni & markings. S\IALL8' ramper Stnve S.. • 835 :il71an a a I I 220!So.Main,Sant.a Ana SO USED MERCEOE S r.tnn·l-r1 . :.#152l 2 417 W. DEALER 5'1fi--09~. I ~ven . SJOO lirrn. &i&-2i23 aft EXPLORER .19-0-l>' 2 2480 Harbor Blvd. 557-5242 Open Sun. ON DISPLAY NOW \\·;irnrr. San1a Ana t.arv;est selection of Cadil-
AKC German Shep Fe. pups. 6 pm. I d 1 _, ' .K~V a.tr Costa Mesa 546-8017 DATSUN Lease New Me rcedes TRIUMPH lacs In Or&na;it County. Sell d con .. orc.-u arr. ;,i '' gen. Sal Le i Look f ' or tra e. Shols. "'tlrm· ** GMC O~n Road CyclP r;ick, tralll'T hi!rh. WE PAY TOP ,11 $118.71 Monthly t.S· una:. or our
120 ~ .. 3 mo okl. Stud ser.-. v.·alk-thru, sell contained nt ta,_ stert'O, Ext ra Datsun 2.WZ. :!.ih·rr. Xln1 HOUSE OF IMPORTS * TRIUMPHS * full pap ads every Wrd. Ii~,_ ______ .:.:.; avitll 897-7560 XI "" CASH ron<l . Loa<led . :'-lust Sell. A f'rlday tor our •PKials . ., SEO GARBENSTANGEL · · · c-amprr. S4JOO. nt con-t11nk~. sletps 6. Excel cond Cell 9S8-790:t. 61162 l\1anchestcr, Burn;i l'k '71 CLOSEOUT
AKC Silky Tl'rrier pup dllion. CaU 213: 59l3267 all $9210. Call trom Mon . 523·7250 on Santa An;i Fn\,v. SrTTFir.£S AS Wir AS 52399 •t5 11'ftlst h & Ve rlght-hande<l Fem. 3 mo old. hsebroke.n. v.·eekend. on-545--0411. t-"66 DATSUN WAGON .69 MercMf's 600. 5 PR~~ GT-6 . .Ji !l _ SA)IE $500 ~ •
\f.'r"I stilt \Vtth· pov.·er dip· Shots, $100. 644-256q '&4 M~tfuJ;;. V--111.GOQd rond. '72 WINNEBAGO 21', "'erp• tor w.ed car. I: truclt.I, jurt A:i.f/F?lof radio, 4 spd stick, Sdn., W.000 mi. r;1lver hlk rn.rrz WARREN'S ' ~ fnfi eek. \Voulrl accept earlv .. " .. '"all "· f ~-ti J 13~ • 0 ·1° "29 ' f"·· ~ AKC Silkies 2 maJes, 4 -. M' h II ..,_ -'· d 6 · I nd ~1 a. .. ~ ti' uri:: es ma es. ~Y er,,......,, · ! Ab ! ! I rl S rt C "' C f :lllOO II., 'tt!odel "'llh battery opr111.ted ""'.. 1C e n\..'.::_ei;. m1U1e II: g . 8.IT co . '"""ux • ...,serve GROTH CHEVROLET 1n rr. Ml u r .\" n('\\' Mil . po ar en ., c y.u!SA ~,P 1 ~ d 1 e. b 0 1 1 0 m . Write: all ~hors. Pet 11tock. Reas.. ca.mper. ~. 5'19-2374. no,,,•, 833-8070. FIAT New cost $32,000 . Asking 0 RANGE c 0 u ;-.: Ty • s 540-gioo , ~,__1 Sanday "'Oa~ifled ad No. 174. DAI· 83!!-U49 iitt 1 pm . Cycles, Bikes, 'Tl Sha!!l.a l\1o!or home for Sl8.500. Pvl. Pry. (2131 LARGEST .;i;:= ~'y -_PILOT, P.O. Bnx 1560, SCHNAUZER pups. stud Scooters 9l5 rent, slps 6. self cont. Pvt. Mk for Sale.1 Manql!I" '69 flat 124 592-1062 <Hunt. HrbrJ. no E. l!t, s.~. · 5-17-()764 19~;'~ ~-• .,eou:u~ ~ost11 MeSS1. CA 92626. ;;~~~ groomu1g, terms. 'iO YMtAJ.tA 350. Exal ply. 497-2384 aft 6, "'krnd~. ~~tin~~~~~~ Sport Coupe MGI VOLKSWAGEN tires. 1; .unrool. w/Mly "1..U:0.1TNU~ CORRUGATED =-c=~~~-~--7 Cond. Lugga.;:e rark. Roll Trailers, Travel 945 847.ros7 KI 9-3.131 4 Spd, Radio. Heater (YZN· 8,500 miles. Le.avll'\I COUtl· 'ROOFING, USED. CALL. POCIDLF.S. 8 11·ks.. xln 't O?O ). 1966 MGB. $895. \\'ire whl!!, "66 V\V Bua;. xlnl (Vind. 4 new try. Sacrlt1ee! Ovl!'T SI.OM ~) 322-3415 AFIER 6 ped1grrr. 1 ~!alP. 2 fem . bar .• $j()() or be~t oUe.r.' e ARISTOCRATS \VE buy all makes ot clean · new tins, hi prer. eng. Ton-ttres, ne.v.• brakes. IPS:!. than window llleker at S75CO. No
>.: M: R<>as . 54&-!l2~2. ~1.JSl:i. I S:\3-8532· e NE\VPORTS used sports can:, paid for $1395 ne.au . 494-9354. 100 miJf!'g on flE'"' n r111 &: trades. 646-0231 d&ysW:f,
'SQ. Ft Italian qt1"""" AKC loy poodle pup hot [ 1970 36()cc YAi\tAHA. All !hr • AlJTO.MATES or not. Plea.se drlvt! ln for COAST '67 MGBGT. lo m!'s, v!live job, nt\V muffler, in-VERY elean bnmJe 1971'l
-·, hl••k "' ,,.1, .• ,, '·,'1 s, goods for dirt or stree.I. Xln! Also, several used $395 & up tree nppraisal. ff lttt~ '$))). Patten "'heel S75.
1
,
1
., . ·~ m e or rond. $600 or be5t o!ter. 'WORSHAM TRAILER SALES "'ire 11·hl!!. Be.st o er. terior xJnt. :'-lusr Yoe to a~ Buick euitom Le Sabre
· · f t. dinghy $60. 8ll--047S. em11 e. $7;i. K."l!-8910. Day. &12--45"6: e\"e G?5-&'.Jl9. 2709 W. 17th Street * 646-6670 alt 6 pm * pr~111.te $850 or bPst otter. w/tan top. Stereo, air ~u,ical Instruments 122 SILKY Terrif'r pupp1e! AKC. \'ELOCETfE Thruxton, 1967 Santa Ana <n4) 531-2595 IM PORTS 1'.fGB, '64, rd cond, wire whl!, 548·53BO. contf .• new Michelin ram.Js. show qu:il. $100 fl'l $125 or new top & p•int. $800. V\V bus campE'r l'.'fil. Excel 23.000 miles. $3 ,0tlO .
. ST sell StMCle.! Arlilit mitke offf'r. 962-70.i?. vintage, better tha~ .. newR odn-673-6350. cond, Lo milragP. New 833-11 43. ~ ·· . liirle itnd out, $\tr.1.1. u 111 l§l · I bltln =~=~~~-=--1 \v~p., J:~':r pkOr~~~· s:: ~AIAKLCF. Ytuor1kshire . Ter:~er. i\'iedzielski. ~1&-4.lffi. Au1osforS1le Q 3100 \V. Coast Hwy., lfl00.l200 W, p,,,·fi· C•J . H"'Y· OPEL :;;~· ~~:n'; ~x~:~~m$l600. ·~ ~~l~e.rOe, :~.:., AlJ e::·
,...._. , :o; r Sot.rvlcf'. .•ion ,. • ._._ bl . . Ne\\'port Bt>ach ... .. n Call kd • , ~ ~lL .,
'>YlllN' mike. & ~tand $50. thru Fri 10 to 3. 645--0404 . I <0 Honrla. 350 .xnim f"!". 642-9405 i\'e"port B~~~·h451297l~l 642·0.fDG I '71Opel1900 Cpe w sy~ !1-'t. II~ Ne11.· ttre:s. Shu}>. r.f~ lell .
.3l$-72'29. LABRADOR pups, S:il'l. AKC . v.·/helmet & shop manual. * WANTED * ~ '68 VW -A·l cond. 645-2475.
NN tnimpet. Good conrl. ra"abll' of thro11·1ng gold $400. 64ft--l706. Antiques/Classics 953 rl IC T '71Ft"at124 Spyder Autn Tran~. Radio, Hratcr. S!l.'il. 1 ~,7517C~A~D~C~p~D~e,..V~ill~e7,7wh~L.
0, Guitar. Like ne11.•-$50. ,. 067 Triumph Bt.111nevU!e CIE"an latr nin r hf'\')' i..4 • U>11· Mile~. fully Factory 573.3i;1i: o>\'Pl, blue. inp &: inter. 1'ully
Z-9324 . lah~. 6-11;.-5.J.1i. Chromr fron1 Pnd. Racing ig· 1969 Cord Roadster. Air con· 4 whcC'I rlnvr PU, lnn~ bt'rl, J\ilag \\'het'l~ "' new Radials, EIJ\llrJW"d t .11\~Dl .61 BF.AUTJFUL r h ~ aurri. :'.llAY 10;(')1nr1rarlc my 4 Spd V\\', :!.11nroof, heautltul equip. $5600. Pvt. Pty, Deya ri.~ · tier nition 97~2!19 evr~. d1t1oning P n '" e r brake!!. · 1\1ust Be &en ( 830· $ 1850 CQnrlllion, t'l",1. paint & tirei, 50-0636, eve.a. 516-2517. Pup~. top ~hou· qu11.ltty. 3 J>O"'"r 1;teer1ng and Win· "il Che\'Y ~ T. auto, disc DP<QJ. s~ ''' WO 824 m<lTilh~. Afh•r 3 1971 f-londa o~ 350. Loi\" d'"''~. hrakPs. Cirlln. 542·1734 t.VC'S COAST ,,..,. -~1~· -----CAD '69 Convertible, low Pm ' mile~. ExcE'I Conrl. Xtra~. u.... $2590 '' l'" all
111'! E . 962-4145 BEST OFFER. Rn'1 1<·rekrnrl~. 'fili V\\1 ~talion 11 ag o n mul!I. IJ\e new, extras.
i• x~c. Typewr1t&-4Ic. I T 0 p .,,1 ~31 fl 6 COAS ... "' "'' a . T r;irl t'l/11P~IPr, (--;r•nd con-sru. 673-0083. w/Carbon ribbon. Sell or Horses 856 Call 842-3788 IM PORTS \VANTED
ftaae for atr rond. 342--1212. ---------7 BELL motorcycle helmet, Or1U1ge Counries IMPORTS ~~o .. ",1;1276/illl ni1lP!, Call '69 El Dorado, F'ully
PTanos/Or gan1 826 ~~~R~,~~0'ii5~ ERG~~~ 'ihite, siz~4$7:;-o~~ ~~~K. erLZ~~AI.:YUY~~OTA IMPORTS "i;;,. \\f'!ilphalis Camper equ~~wner. '," FREE hnur;oi nf tritining. A bEoituti. t9fi9 HONDA 1T."'IC'c. lo mi.. * 645--3fi66 *" 18881 Beach Blvd. pop-top. ~ink, lCP bax, CHEVROLET
' Starting \\"eek o{ June. 19
. ~-.ORANGE COAST
'i""MMOND STUDIOS
·.~· ;. offers
l ,Adult Eve.nina: Classe1 · · tt ·Beginners .1 • Inte.rmedial• ; ... ,. Theory '!>~·Workshop
y , can for intonnatiori
.~. 644-8930
• •~ E . Coitst Hwy, CdM
BUY PIANOS-ORGANS
NY OWSLEY-Stanton
Beach Blvd. 892--3314
·li:Jtil 10-9 Sal/Sun 'Ill 5
ATE PARTY WAN S
BUY PIANO FOR
. SJ:;.2278.
plitoo.
or of·
ful an im al for nnly $4()(). [ clean. $375. or best oUe.r . 1948 CHEVY Club Cou~. H. Beach. P~. M7-8555 lCOl-1200 \V, Pl'lcl1ic est. I-fwy. A~1/F.\1 nPw 9x 12 Cole.man
Tack also for sale. SE'P 646·2792 nr 646-2537. S200. Good condition. \\'ILL Buy your car paid for 100').1200 '''· Pacific Cst. Hv.')". Ne.wpart Beach !n4J &12-0406 Oas\s lf'nl. T1rPs, batt. l--,
7
7
0
-7N_O __ V_A __ S_S._
horse in p.i1ddock No. 1~1 SUZUKI 50cc * 839.4728 * or not. Call Ralph Gordon Newport Bearh (114) 642-0406 ~s..4529 tunr-up. $Zi~. 546-19l9 •
Irvtne s.tabl E"! on Pacif1r Like ne"· Sl6.5. D 8 • ,56 6n 0900 _ 445 E. Coast Hwy. 546-4529 PEUGEOT ·70 vw Squareback, stick Coupe.. 350 VS. Vinyl lop,
Coast H1ghv.·ay. C.all Jean !ill-7'294 une ugg•es Ne\l'pclrt Beach. ·n Fiat RIO ~pider &hilt. 27,000 m1. & R/H. brown w/be:1ae. vinyl bucket
Curley, O\vner. 644--1742. Sl50CI. Exc~I Corid. On,11: o"-ne.r, xlnt rond teats. Automatic (floor lhift)
1966 Hond• 160, Exoel rnnd. ,72 SPECIAL WE PAY TOP DOLLAR &18-596!1 * PEUGEOT * 5'JH;lll. ''""ole, laolory JIUAPI, $2'25. Leaving for Europe.. FOR TOP USED CARS power dlac brk&, aterior
Mu'1 ""· 675-3195, DUNE BUGGY II your '" ;, exlra "'""· KARMANN GHIA '68 7 p.,,.,,., Bu" Swuoa!, dlrom•. TOP SHAPE! mo
935 see us f!r5 t. A& low u $2.299. CNo. 5545) ltJiia&e rack, chains, xlJft
Mobile Hom•• radio, & top. 209EOJ. C FRIT": WARREN'S _,, fl~/ 11 ~·" .. CNt Btlow Book. Mu.t,Sell! WUl
--"--------$1599 BA UE:R BUI K •54 KAH.MANN Ghia Euro-u.n ..... "''"'" o f!r. J.JOrv.->U•· 10 quick. CalJ'SJl.uia.
DOUBLE wide Flamingo 2925 Harbor Blvd. pean r.tQrlel HiOO. 2000 miles Sport Car Center '~ VW-$650/trade for Van.
900 mo bl I e. h o me . H as Costa Mesa 979-2500 •O"""GE COUNTY'S Ca 11 55 7-69 8 1
I~
General on new rng1ne. New tires. "-"l~
----------everything. Set up In n\~ Autos, Imported 970 Sl !OO. Call 642-9220 afl 5,31) UR.GEST CEarthf!nWarel . ll' Kite w-highway trlt. Ask· f ·1 k p J k ·-am1 Y par · e.' 0 · ..........,. wkd11vs. anytime weekends. TIO E. 1st St., S.A. 547-()764 '64 Bus, ·66 rblt e.ng, ma.ti" 2 door hudtop. RadSo, bel.tt!r,
'68 Impala Cust ..
Ing J6JIO, or be•! otter. Afi 531-72'<. ALFA ROMEO , , erirlr I 5,30 919--0261. Mo--tor Homoa 940 MAZDA PORSCHE xlru, A·l rond, Ile•! otter power ale .. :..~air,
ll' FIBERGl.<SS B 0 AT '6 7 Alf S d or Jr.de foe "fllbck. 644-14811 ;""" d ean. 'Q'"' ~
w/outhoard engiM" k 1972 TERRY a PY er '66 Porsche 912 ·n vw Bus. 1p.u.s.17.000 ml. s~~i-: evrolit,.
tralleT. $250. Eves: 673--9352. TRAVEL TRAILER L ...J 5 Spd, AM I Fl\f Radio, Hard ROTA RY'S 4 Sprl, AM /FM Radio, Like Vf'~ clean. Askins an.xlollll. &ach $n~~
ll' AJum. boat A 5 hp moror, 2:r CUSTOM CLASSIC "\J• & Solt Tops. fVDT834J , New, 216.000 mUe!, IYLU546• Or1g O\\'nrr 646-7307. ' :L .
llOO, Tandum wh .. I 1'allec, fUlly «SE. Co8'! H~. $1595 '66 Porsche 912 '61 vw . Good Corn!. !JM, n '~~ •• ~ CIU 54&-0175 self-contained . T.V. Ante.n· .. # f.fust Sfll . ... ... ., car • ._. ~
na, Gu/Ele.ctrtc ~fr\a:. 4 NEWPORT BEACH COAST 5 Spd. Al\1/F1>f. Real Silitrp 675--5887 lnfo: 5"-1210
loets/ MerlM
Equip.
673.oo90 Ext. 53·54 (TYXJ1 3
121 1 -~~~~~~-NOW OPEi<
SJltlGER Touth and Sew, $59. SAR.A'S MARIN£ SALVAG!:
burner stove. Ii: oven. forced (0J)ft1 Sunday) c· 'o· AST '70 vw FASTBACK '86 4 dr SqulN, R/R. l.Dllo, 1~~~·:~~1~i::;:; Trucks 962 IMPORTS IMPORTS 6;um,B::.~~.,~~7 ~~.:==~Pvt
Eina. open um $129. Vlklna Yacht Junk. Ship Stuff ffa·Za& $<9. 213 , 4~ U•rd Muin< Eqlllprn'1>1
Store, lte1t•urant, Bott hardware. 411-.'.l)th SI.
BEACll CITY DODGE F ASIBACK Sf,00. Soth :dnt
1000.1200 w. PaeU.lc Cst. Hwy. cond. Ofter. 540-4013. ·n c.oattnuital Mart m. lb'
ll•r P2 NB. 6~. ~ Beach Boulev•rd f,,,..,,_,..,,__,.,..,--= Bo.ts, Power 906 Hunttnaton Be~eh
~· deep !at ,,,..,, G/S 17141 ~:l660
• -ne:w r&nJt> top. XLNT &kl or ti1h. 16\ti ' Motor Hom• R•nt•I• ·,. 841-0053 f/glA.i Le.p.-sttake hull. 6.'i 1• h M IR I k Available for dally, wee.lcl y 'fY~ Ri1dlo, HIJ!i, H~D. 4· ~~· ~~8 A~~ni~ or monthly ba1i1. 71'. l:f,
!\16tereo U6 mlMI cond. S1<t95. Con1;idflr And 25' •e.U containfll Mo--if'A~NTZ 1M"watt-AAfiTM Cll.f on 1r11.de . 5'49-t7(}t tor Homes, a ll e.qulpt wlth '62 FORD ~ ton PU. Mr. ~us $100 Garrard 1i70 WINNER Barll.lltt Mark KeQut.tor, roof alr, and Helwig Springs. new thock1.
m.tJ\Y other Ut:ru. All new ttar 1ire1;. Cle&.n. ~ with purchAH of one IV 18' Cabin Cru!Jler. 8.'i Coache11 are 1972 model1, Nffd1; va.h~ V.'Ork. m . ~1'·1r of 14-way Plonttr Johnaon o.h. w/trlr, canvas pleue call &39-9660. &;o..m)5
~km U.S.A. Stereo oover &. r-.111iopy • .A.bout 80 -';;;--'7-.-==-o=::-::--1.C::::".:=::.·------
. p. Warehouse, 179 E. hra. Uke new. $314IO. or best Rent A Motor Home
~~ St., Costa M • • 1 , otftr. 866-MlS; 861--67 for your Vacation
~2'12 M' CHltlS CRAFT Cabin * 139-001 *
ITH clrtular sou n d Cruller. Twin 95 h , p., .. NEW 23' 4 2:'1' luxury
1te1'fl0. Xlnt value. '.\.f11~· mar\M ton1 . F\Jll1.1 ~!p. M. ff, Air, l!>adM! Bt.sl rAlt>~
stll. $6~. 8J4.-2SL~ 8 to 4 3"l .Sl~ 77f:-#'~ 1714 f'W'!&llbl•. Pvt pt~·~~-.~
It's al1t1yl fre n1h1 time &
always the f'\a'ht p13C@ H
y ·· Wllnt R.ESULTS! Call
&42-SEi71 • place that ad
lf'Yl~'·'
Newport Beach CTI 4) 642-0406 lm)..1* w. Pscillc Cat. Hwy. '65 V\V Coriv. New top. good OWMt. n4: ... lMfi
546412' Newport llooh 17141 642-04116 rond. 1 ""'"''· "'"'1 ffll.1----,c=Ol="y'°':1'°' .. ="--
Alfi1 Rom.o ~4529 make offer. 645--2'243. "'"'
l'O\Y ON DISPLAY
S3.le• Service
Para.-&tly Shop
COAST IMPORTS
1000·1200 \\'. (Mii H1vy.
t'le.wport Beach 642-0406
Daily Pilol Walt Adi ba~
ti•rlit1ns a:11kn.
MERCEDES-1964 c o n v .
22()SE . Auto, full pwr. Ab',
Pe.rtlli radia.11;, mlnl eond.
673-81118.
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
-p h 911T '68 V\V With a little work•,--------
, V" orsc • rr,uld he gre.itt. $600. Eves: 61 Sta. Wac. f Sfd tram. Ste.l'f'O, Mags, ?rival• Party, 6.,93.,1 B ucket 1 ea11 . &d
Day1 839-9560, aft 5 -,.,... · · paint-motor, anti roll ban.,
833-3155. * • '65 V\\. Varie.nt S Sqbck, $350. Call CT3400f aft 5pm.
.69 911_T 5 •J>ff<I. A.\l/F:\l. 70CW1 nu on rtblt E'fll ·· Rood DOD'°'I
Kon! &hocks, $4!!00 or beat rond. 83().-9)89. W
olftr. · 9'19-1623 days, 1966 Sundl•I C~mper ·72 Coron•t ots Sta. Wac.
•~1•5 eves. C.ood c11nd., SIMO hnn. Call Will &f!ll or b'ide ftJf la•
RENAULT "'0 7!7. ~1 vw b1!1. SJll(ll). Afr,
'64 V\\' Bntc. 4.oOO mi\e1; many f;xlr••· C&ll earl)'
'69 ft.10. 1 owner. xlnt O"ontl on l'f'h111l! f'ngu"tt. S300 AM , 3J3.33t4,. 1
thruout. Must &tto tn 11r 6i3-7707 A~k f'lr £'1 Ul69 Oodre ~ JDOCi
prtel1te.. 191-17'@6 "" 6 61 V\\' v"n (',()O(J rond 1385. condiuon. S\215. or ttMe Fr
tr 1 al~1 the fit:ht 11 1• i.167~ or •fl l J (I l"Onwrtlble •~ te 0 ~
Cla .. tned. SU-.'Ai7S. MS-9020 ~~--------~
<:
Monc&i,J, June 12.. l ·•·
-·-l§J I _.... I§! I ....... -l§l I ........... l§J I, -..... l§l I _,__ 1§1 I -..... ~
990 Auto., UMd 990 Autos, Used
W.rt:EP. V& Fut I: atron&:·
Worth $2400. Take $1800 or
l!eat otter. 613--10J9.
FALCON
1964 F•lcon Sprint Conv. In
Excel Cond. $700 or ~at of.
fer.~.
FORD
'89 LTD Ranch Wqon, 6
pee, r/h, auto. fac alr, Jug.
~ rack. Ex~! family
car. Pvt pry. !J.t9-XMS
Tmn W'IUlfd ttema into quick A iood want ad ii a aood House HunMg'? Watch the
cub, call 60-587I 1nve1trnen1 OPEN HOUSE column.
Motor 'HOl'n09I 940 Motor Hom.s 940 Motor Homes 4HO
'72 CONTINENTAL 20' Motor Home
FORD
·n Pinto Runabout
Llke Brand new, only 5,0CO
actual miles. Custom Inter-
ior, cw1om exterior, 4
.11peed, mag wheels, radio,
heat~r. 864EON.
$23'5
~" 415 E . Coast H1\'Y,
NE\VPOH.T BEACll
673-0900 Ext. 53-~
990 Autot, UMCI 990 Auhlo,UMCI
MUSTANG
'ti& Mu.tana. Cleen-FuUy
lotlded, a.ir cond-P/S. diac
brake1. Call aft &.64>-0269.
OLDSMOBILE
1970 Torone.do. Comlortation
-air cond. Al'tf/FM .11tereo
radio & tape' deck. Full p .... ·r
equip. Tilt wlw!'el and Vinyl
top. $3600. Mr. Gruy days
540-9892 Eves 642-3203.
PONTIAC
'62 Pontiac C&talina. Good
engme, needs tires, $150.
Call 536-3361 after 4 pm.
'59 Pootiat'. Very clean.
Rwu Yiell. $100.
PONTIAC
Ml/ST SEU!
1968 GTO, Fat'tory air, loads
ol em-a.1, low mllage, $1350.
or beat otter. Phone 826-1256.
'69 Grand Prix, air cond ..
pwr. steenng, pwr brakes,
pwr \.\indow.11. &W-5.579.
'68 .Fl.REBffiD 400 convl,
xlras, sharp , designer's
plea&J~ t'ar. Stephen
6~1442 :>Hi-8928.
1967 f'i~bird I Po n t )
all'/cond. PIS, P/B. Good
Cond. Best otter O\ler $1200.
&«-1583.
PONTIAC
"4 GTO 389. Tr~Pwr. map,
Hunt, Glas.s Pacs. Best of·
fer. 6'a6-8>11.
PLYMOUTH
'65 Plymouth
Satellite
Auto Trans, V-8, Power Steer·
ing, Bucket Seats, Good
Tirl's, Nu Trans. J\1ust Sell.
Private Party. $699. 847-3095
RAMBLER
'&1 Rambler Amen('an,
Daily Pilot 'Vant Ada have Dr., Radio, heal, autornaHc
&«-5265 1971 f''ord LTD Cntry Sq. 101 -,--,...-~--,----~-,= bargain! galore. 586-5819 alt fi pm.
970 Autos, Imported
•
Equipment Includes Power Steering, Automatic Trans., Power Brakes,
Radio, Refrigerator. (E lectric or Butane), 30 Gallon Water Tank, 40
Gallons Gas, SIHps 6, Trailer Hitch, Order Yours Now Only $8979.95.
DANMAR
MOTOR HOMES
SALES -SERVICE -RENTALS
13801 HARBOR, GARDEN GROVE
Next to G. G. Detsun 839-7000
mported utos, mport
pa.~s. Air, roof rat'k, trailer
to\.\'Jn"' pk.e:. 42'J eng. Low
mi. !'162-7~2 a!t 6 pm &
wknds. =-,,-7'cc---oo-,-----, I '70 F'ord \Vgn -Xlnt cond. I
28,000 1ni., radio, oo air,
962-l6S7 aft 5 pn1.
'67 F'orcl LTIJ, full po11·er air.
sren:o, tn1n1ac cond! SLIOO.
One owner. 494-7081.
1963 Ford Van. Must st•e to
uppre1·latl'. 5."\6-376 1 af1 6:00.
MUSTANG
'6J SQ back-blue w/white
vinyl lop. Ai r/t'ond, P /B,
P/B $795 /548-1651.
'66 ?.lUSTANG, mint t'Ond.
Ivy grttn, auto trans, orig
owner. &14-5524.
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2600 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 540-9100
I •
17
l
1 7
San f;lemente
Capistrano EDITION N.Y. Steeb
VOL. 65, NO. 164, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES
2 Coast Police
A hair-raising serie5 of acroba1ic stunts
including one power dive to rooftop level
over four Orange Coast cities led to the
arrest of a pilot pursued by t"·o police
helicopters early today.
Richard B. Loomis, 24, or Arcadia, was
taken into custody at Orange County
Airport shortly after midnight along with
one of his three passengers.
Loomis was arrested by crewmen of
the Costa Mesa police helicopter Eagle II
and booked into jail on suspicion or
violating section 21407.S of the Publ i~
Utilities Code.
Officers Randy Nutt and David Brooks
charged Loomis under the PUC Code
"'·ilh operating a plane while under the in·
fluence of an intoxicant.
Incidents were cited over Newport
Beach. Huntington Beach, Costa ?\1esa
and Irvine.
One passenger, Tom F. D'Angelo, 23, of
ll31,2 Turquoise Ave., Balboa Island. was
also arrested on swpicion of being drunk
ace
1-e~t Increase
Bed Tax Studied
To Aid Chamber
By JOHN VAL TERZA
01 llM Dtlllr P'llilt "'"
San Clemente City Councilman Paul
Presley -the head of the largest hotel in
the clty -has advocated a one-cent in-
crease in the transient occupancy ta1. to
compensate the chamber of commerce
dip is the lack or a visit by President Nix·
on for the past six month.1.
Because of the large amount of lodging
required for the Presidential entourage,
primarily at Presley's San Clemente Inn.
such visits have a direct effect on city
bed tax revenue.
for its tourist promotion activities. 'S __ .] F • k'
Pretley, ollerin& the solution-at a c:oun· ton,, -CUff1 ' ·Fli!
cil •.tu"'~· oo_the em~-r . .
Friday night, !aid that the increase p Exte-•.l ... .]
would raise an estimated $<,000 or more OWer UUt::U ·
the Orst year, which would mean that the
city could probably acoept a recent By High Court
chamber contract calling for $18,l500 to
offse t promotion costs.
The 110lution wouJd follow • trend aloog
the Orange Coast where most cities have
contemplated an increase.
San Clemente's current rate for rooms
and short-term rentals is five percent.
Laguna Beach already has agreed to
raise its tax from live to six per cent.
Newport Beach plan~ to do the same.
The proposal will be discussed further
at the council's J une 21 regular session.
lt would form a major way out for the
council, which has been hard pressed to
find the extra funds to accommodate the
chamber request.
Under an existing policy the city pays
$9,700 a year to the chamber for pro--
motion and advertising.
Chamber officials, who have pointed
out that the organization is in the midst
of a financial squeeze, proposed an
$18,600 annua1 subvention.
Presley stressed that despite his direct
involvement with the bed ta1. he would
not be at all opposed to increasing the
allocation . But ...lrces within the Apartment,
Hotel·Motel Assoc iation ln San Clemente,
oftimes 1 powerful presl!ure group in the
city, have sa.ld that such an increase
would draw a protest from many owner•
of teurlst·""1tal lacllltiel In tbe ctty.
AJ proposed, the new increase in the
tax would take effect weH after the Labor
Day weekend, thus in entire year's new
revenue would not be received.
"I thlnlt tbat il the chamber'• alloca·
tion were raised and they carry out their
promise to do more advertising with the
increase In money, the city income from
thetas: will go up as well," Presley said.
Projections show that this fi scal year '11
take from the tourists will be about
$40,000, . . ' Tbe sum is abOut f51(M)O less than e1,.
peeled and ·One slgnHlcant r<a!On for the
Batlif3rs Avoid
Numbing Wate rs
'!'be WlrDl IUD tbal 11111 &olilb Cout
resldenla flockin« to the btacber over tho
wttkend failed to ~·rm tho chilly woler
and Sin a.mente 11feguards reyort<d no
serlout lncldtnll.
The watit i;oth day1 hovered around IO
deiree•. officials reJlorled, and the clouds
Salllrdoy· morning kept many siln !overt
from • ...,,. wnlurlnc to tho-'beadl.
Lifeguards tsllmaled that ll,llOO peroo111
wen oo the ell,)' and ,<OUDtJ beech Satur-
day, while..,,. 25,llOO turned GOil oa Sun-
d•Y· Llfegurdt llkl few lell1llsb. which
have be<n lnlllcllnC stlnp on 1W1mmen
In ncelll weokr, were "P)rl<d off the
beacbel ..... the--·
W ASlllNGTON (UP!) -By a 5-3
Jiberat-conservalive split, tbe Sui:reme
Court extended today the power of police
to "stop 8nd frisk .. !usptd.s on the atreet
for dangerous weapom.
"We reject the argument that
reasonable cause for a stoP anQ fr isk can
only be based on the officer's penonal
observation, rather than on information
supplied by another person," the court
held.
''Informants' lip!, like all other clue!
and evi dence coming to a policeman on
the scene, may vary greatly In their
value and reliability. One simple rule will
not cover every situation."
The opinion in a Connecticut ~se was
written by Justice William H. Rehnquist,
who is emerging as the most law-and·
order member or the C.Ourt.
Justice Thurgood Marshall said in
dissent that the decision "invokes the
spectre of a society in which innocent
citizens may be stopped, searched and
arrested at the whim of police ofricers
who have only the slightest suspicion of
improper conduct."
Also dissenting were Justices William
J . Brennan Jr. and Willlam O. Douglas.
The case b a 11equel to an important
1968 ruJlng that policemen under proper
cirCWll!tances may stop and friJt a
person llUJ])e<ted ol criminal acllvlty
even though they do not have enoucJ1
prior evidence lo make an arrest.
3 Nig uel Homes
Hit by Burglars
Furniture and furnishings valued at
more than $1,000 were taken during the
v.·eekend by lnlnlders wbo forced ·their
wa1 into three model homes iD tho
La8IN NilUel ..... Or-Cowity
•berlfl'a offloel> oald.
Tablaa, .... lamp, draperies and •
televlalon al l'*'U1 valuod.-'t 41•
were talcen h'am ...,., at •I, -.
and lllOI can. Joea, The -~ ~ llol.. ... part ol the st'aod-
lll'CI Pacific °"11Cn1Jon'1 Own Port tract. '
DeputJ~ said u.. buralarl 1111111lied
windows at the rNr of tht homes to pin
entry to Ille premJoes. It Is believed they
IJled 1 truck to haul ,..., tho fllmiturt.
Sea Life Talk Set
An Illustrated !!Ilk~•• "Liie In the Ocean ' 1rilf lie _prtsenteci at the Niguel·
C.piltrano V111oJa Lloas Club noon
moojlilc 'l'llanda1 at llaffy'1 Restaurant
lo San J..U~-
The speaker Is Norman H. Cole, a S.d-
dlebacl< Collep IDltructor. .
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1972 TEN CENTS
Copters Cl1ase 'Stunt' Pilot
In public.
Investigators who said they confiscated
a half.gallon jug of wine from the cockpit
of the red -and-white Cessna aircraft in-
volved in the aerial escapade alleged all
four OC'C'Upants had been drinking.
Only Loomis, who had no pilot's Hcense
in his possession, and D'Angelo had ap-
parently consumed enough to warrant
their arrests, according to investigating
,officers.
Officers Brooks and Nutt said they fif st
Hav e A Nice Day
spotted the plane flying erraticall y in the
area of the Santa Ana River, between
Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach.
They charged that Loomis, a utility
company employe, went into a steep
power dive and only pulled out 100 fett
above ground level.
Giving chase, they were joined by the
Newport Beach police helicopter and
claimed they saw Loomis go into a steep
climb over UC Irvine before nearly stal·
ling.
'fhe plane then made a sharp . 100.
degree turn and headed back ov er
Newport Beach, at tim es zooming as lo w
as 500 feet over residential areas.
Shepherding the zig-zagging plane ba ck
toward Orange County Airport, arresting
officers in tht he liropler said Loomis
barely missed crashing into • 40-foot
glide slope indicator tower while landing.
lie was stopped at midfield by airport
1ecurity officers "'ho ordered the flier to
It was a good day for sailing at Dana Harbor Sun-
day. It was also a goo d day for just si tting in the sun
and watching others work with their sailboats and
other craft. The air sparkled after the recent rains.
High Com·t Gives
Lawyer 'Right'
To Defendants
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme
Court today granted all defendant s "'ho
face a po.'lsi ble jail tenn the right to be
represented by a lawyer.
The 7 to 2 decision delivered by Justice
William 0 . Douglas, guarantees a
Jawyer 'a help to millions of poor people
who are prosecuted fO( petty offenses and
m.isdemeanora.
Leu than half the states supply free
laWyen to clefendoots in all trials that
could lead to a Jail term. The historic rul-
ing, an e~ o1 put Si1th Amend·
ment dee-. will necessarlly change
trial practices in t~ state!.
Chief Justlce Warren E. Burger, who
went along, said be was confident the
legal proreaion would meet the "large
new burdens" placed upcn it.
Ju!tices Lewis F. Powell and William
H. Rehnquist, the court 's freshman mem·
bers, objected to • the sweep or the
declslon although they did not dissent in a
teclmlcal stnse. 'J1)ey said the court
ahould hive ruled there ;., a right to a
lawyer only when °necesaary to uaure a
fair trial."
Jn 1111 a case known u Gideon V. Walinn1&ht laid .the principle that a man •'trial for .. ltrloua offenses" hat the
rftbt to a tapyer and that If he cannot al·
--Iii at.tie muat aippiy -L Until tllen, • the SIIth Amendmoot bad
baen lnlerpreted as neceullat!na lawyers
oalY In capital oue,,... -when there
-a chance of a death .. ni.nce.
SUbsequently, the court granted the
rlghtto-.·ir.. lawyer wbeitbe Jail term
could be tit months or !llDl'e,
TOO.y'1 cleclaion wipes wt the dlsti no-
tlon betweeo feloolel and misdemeanors
for pet(J oa ....... far u ihl1 right la
conctrDod. Uwea a~ 11nowtngI1
and tiittlll&eiilfy walftf 1 iiwyer'a help,
be c:annol be sent to prtloo "for any of· renae, wbelher ~ u petty, misde-ineanor If felaoy, 11111... he ,..
r~nted by COUDRI at hi1 trial1" Dol"1Uwrole.
'
A rmed Pair Ne t $3 ,500
At Laguna R estaurant
By JACK CHAPPELL
01 ''"' 01i1Y P'lltl l llH
Two men, one brandi shing a snub.nosed
revolver, held up Laguna Beach's famous
White House restaurant shortly after 3
a.m. today, taking at least $3,500 in
weekend receipts.
Kory Saruwatari, operator of the
restaurant, at 330 S. Coast Highway, his
wife Glady1 and Dan Mikels, an employe,
were tied and left unharmed aa the two
men Jeft the establi!bment.
Saruwatarl said he was working behind
the restaurant bar when be looted up and
saw a man with a gun facing him.
The gunman, described 11 of medium
height, with a slender build and dark
hair, ordered him to call the other
employes out.
Dan Mikels, working in the men'a rest
room stepped out and faced the gunmari.
"What a thing to happen, and I've got
only three more days left." Snruwatari
said, explaining that on Wednesday, he
would end his lease of the Laguna
restaurant which he has operated since
1967. The business was established in
1918.
After taking all the money from the or-
flce, the gwunan and his aecompllce
went Ip the bar arta and c:olleded more
money thfre.
Mrs. Saruwatarl and Mlktll wett then
freed from the locked ltoreroom •nd,
with Sanrwatari, tied to the pedestala of
the restaarant table!,
0 'I'm sorry I have to tie you up like
(See WHITE HOUSE, Pap Z)
Dohen y Fire Hou se Shows
Rare $9,000 Safety Unit
A unique rescue truck paid for primari-
ly through private donat~ns wu un"lled
by the Doheny Volunteer Fire Depart-
ment this morning. The '9,000 rig will
provide a broad range of wvlce 1n •!1
fonna of rescue calls, including dl1asttr1.
Fifth District Supervi4or Ro n a 1 d
C&spers spent more than an hour stu-
dying the new rig afltr handlng over a
$3,000 check from the counly covering the
cost for the rig above the sum donated by
the cltlzens themsclYes.
The truck, built in Norwalk. b1 capable
of carrying five victims at a time as well
as a full rescue squad.
Designing, planning and moat of the
funding all were undertaken by the
volunteers themselves.
The rig carries 168 separate -piece1 of
major equipment. In cluding pcwtr saws
I
and other heavy aqulpment wed to !rte
trapped per,..., pluJ sear for medicaJ.
•ld calls and even minor &et.
Volunteer Olie! Mel Plm:e aid tho
truck already h•• seen tenlce along the
South Oranae Co•at aince it •rived at
the ataUoo In May.
Tbua far the machine his been used on
nine calla "and it work! like. a charm,''
he said.
One direct benefit or the r1g, he sald., is
to (unction as an emergency ambulanct,
taking care o( 1 chronic deficiency in the
area in private ambulance eervice.
The closest regular 10Urcts for private
ambuhmce oervict art in the Saddiebact
V1Uey and in Laguna Beach.
At the acenes of nuijor traffic ac-
cidenta, Pierce said, tht rig can fu.rnlsh
(See l\ESCIJE, Page II
taxi to'"·ard the \o~·er building, whtrt he
""1.'I to nittt Investigating officers.
Police sa id Loomis' plane finally halted
only one foot rro1n the building and near·
ly collided with l\\'O ro¥.'S <>f parked
aircraft as the weaving Cessna pulled up
to a hall.
'fhe suspect was held 111 lieu of $250 bail
lh i.'1 morning, ~'h1le police forwarded a
report of the incident to the Federal
Aviat ion Admini stration for possible 11d-
dlti-0nal legal action.
Ruling Goes
6-5 Against
Bl ack Guest
WASHINGTON (API -The Supremo
Court today upheld the right. of private
(\ubs to exclude Negores as guests.
The 6 to 3 decision was delivered by
freshman Justice William H. Rehnq uil!t.
It went against a bl ack brought as a
guest to the Moose Lodge in Harrisburg,
Pa.
The black, Leroy Jrvis, the majority
leader of the Pennsylvania House, con-
tended that because the club held a liquor
licen se from the state It could not ex.Jude
blaci<a u meml>era or "f ~II·
Today'• decision dealt dlrectl¥ with tho
01elll.lion of blac:Q u guesta -and not
with tllolr .. c1ua1on u members. RobJ>.
quill aold Irfli ""'114 not ~ Ille
Lodp'• aD·Ylllle m<mberablp polJey
becallli be had Dn'tr applJed for
membership, but had only been brought
to the club 1s • guest.
RehnquJst said the club's refusal (()
serve Negorea does not violate the 14th
Amendment even though the Moose
Lodge gets its liquor license through the
atate.
"Since state-furnished service! include
su ch necessities of life as electricity.
water, and police and fire protection,
such a holding would utterly emasculate
the distinction between private 15
di~ti nguished from stale conduct,'' he
said.
Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and
Justices Harry A. Blackmun and Lewia
F. Powell, the three other Nixon ad-
m..inistraUon appointees. lined up with
Rehnquist, a former a11lltant attorney
generar. Justtcu Potter ·si.wert and
Byron R. White 11.90 were in the ~
jorily.
Diasenting were Justices William O.
Dougl as, William J. BreMan Jr., and
Thurgood Marshall. the court's only
Negro member.
Brennan said Pennsylvania 'a liquor
regulations plainly intertwined the state
with the operation of the: lodge's bar in a
significant way and lent the state's
authority "to the sordid business of racial
discrimination.''
The ruling reversea a three-jud~e
federal court In Harrisburg which held 1n
1170 that the -Lodge coold not keep
both its liquor liceose and Ila racially ex-
duslve policy,
The lode• II -the -!nim tho Penn.tylvanla Stale .. CopttoL lrvls, an
Allepeny coanty -·~ bad been broogbt to H·IGr·-·and ~ bJ a
white member.
1fullier
Now you can wllb the car. Tbe
weotherlacty iMI ~ aumblno m
tho horlml for 'l'ilt~J -and
the"'alltt. Hlil».lf 7' apecfal al
the beadlel, ........ -I.owl tn lha-
INSIDB ftD.4,Y
O,..ge COilolf tilr •offldolJ,
plague<! br~-' P'ff"""
ot the •Oll!lii idrport, !law l/lclr
e11es on 1'dUCarv baN• .,... ,...
1fbl< rollllion to U.. erlllcal
quttti07' oJ tMert: to pett ~_,,..
oirporu. s ..... to,,, ,,. JO.
L.M. .. ,. M
hail"" • ""..,.,.,. . <~ ......
a.Min It ,,..._, n
o.tti "".... • Et!Jotflll P'-• .. .., ......... ti .,....._. Molt
•111111 II .... .._, ,. ,.,. .... ...,... .. ,.
....... ,. -.. --. --. ·--" ....,, ,,. .. ..... ,.,..., .. ,,
T........ 11 -" -.. =-= ... l
•
,
..
Dead Over
Flood Area
RAPID CITY, 5.0. (UPI) -S.art-h
c.:rew1 USifli dogs worked through the
night to uncover bod~ from the muddy
ruins of ttie n:itkin'li worst Oood in 35
yeart.
AulhorUJ" oald 14day more than 200 w.,.. known dead from the flood l'rlday
night and Saturday caused when a rain--
swollen dam burst and cascaded billion,s
of galloM or water into Rapid City and
other communiUtJ In South Dakota'•
Black Hills.
Pat Dixon. coordlnatln& disaster tn·
ror~k>n. uld there JNY have h«n
duplications In the death count .
··w1 know it'1 ovtr 200," be ukl. "ft
could be 29 over or 30 over. No one knows
right no~·."
Sen. George McGovern (0-S.D.). sai<l it
was "a scene of incredible destruction
.and devutat.Qt." 'nte p r es idtn Ii a I
hopo!W 11ow 11Vm Wubingloll aiocs.y ID toar tho lloodlands by helicopter.
Don Barnette, Ra pld City's 29-year-<Jld
mayor, said, "I would estimate a com·
bined death total of 300 for I.he whole
tragedy,"
Gov. JUchard Kneip 11Jd, 11We have ln
excess of 200 deaths and there's a long
way to go yet. It's belleved many bodies
are below the mud and tht mire. That
part ,, bid ...
Search crew11 concentraled on a
virtually deva stated five-block wide area
Blong Rapid Creek . the stream \rhich
cul.I tbnlu&h UM cily.
tt turned IUddtnly 1nto a swollen, rag-
ing killer wbla C..nyon Lake Dam bur1t
under ~ P'INW'I of 1 foot of rain late
l"rlday lllCJll, otncllnc a lour-loot wall ol
water lhwldartnc down from the hllii. n. flood caused an estimated t IOO
million da1mage, destroying 500 houses
and luvma: thouaaod.s or peraona
homdea.
AutborUIH r~at oald about 1,1\00
per'IOM were unaccounted for, but later
sa Id they could not make an accur at" guUI on Iha numblr mlulng.
Llttlo had been det.rmlned aboul what
happened Jn more ltoliited communl tl1s
In tha ~ -partlcularly ID Iha hun-
dradl, perhapa thouaaoda of touriat.
belitwd ID bava batn camping In the
arq dOM by Ml Rlllhmore.
The Agrlcultura Department announced
In Wuhlniloll &unday that the flood ar11
wu eUa16le for 1m1r11ncy free food
stampt. R.pruentlUvu of 1lmost every
federal 11ency thet coold bt Involved
met to make recovery and aS8islanc1
pla111.
Rlpid City water aupplia were <'Ur·
\ailed for f e a r of cmtamlnation and
· 18" FLOODING, PalO II
3 Ship Jumpers
Taken in Denver
DENVER IAP) -Thr .. AWOL
servicemen, lncludlna two who jumped
ship in Sa n Diego. have been arrested by
rederal marsbala at Our Lady or
Gu1dalupe Church, endln1 their 1Yiy Jn
~nncluary that be11n laat Monda y.
Take n into cuslocty were Robert Bland
Jr., 22, Warren, Ohio, and Michael Haye1,
ll, Colorado Sprln11, C<Jlo., both sallor1.
and Eu1ene Berryhill, 20, ~11nol, N.D., an
Army priv1lt.
Blind ind H1yes aald they jwnped ship
several weeks a~o at San Die10. They
said their ship, lhe U.S. Entl1nd, wa s
bound for Vietnam.
OtAN•I COAIT IC
DAILY PILOT
TN Orffllit c ... t DAIL V l'ILOT, wlftrl wflldl
1. (H'l~llltd 11\t ... ~.,, ...... •11tt1• Jly
tl'lt O•Mlt• CN•I P.-llilllftl CM1Nt1Y. s_.
r•lt H lllon1 •r• PUl>ll~W, M8ndty ll'rOtnll
Prlll•Y, Ill' Co'!• Mt1•, ~twPtll ~•·c-,
Huoift"lt.11 lh8Cll/,_ltln V8Ht'f, Ll ...... t
llHch, l•vl1Ml~•dlllll4~;, t ntl Stn ci.men141
St1t J11t11 C•Phl•t n.. A •ll'OI• ••~Ponti
l'dlllo11 11 rt11bll1llM lthrrtlt'fl •rd Sur>llty,.
Tiit O<lt'lcl,.I jllji.!11~1"1 •ltlll h •I ~JO Wt1I
lltY St1"r, Ctl18 Mii•, Ctlllcornlt , t l1U.
k•bt rf N. W114
P111!4ltnl t nrl PllCll!lohtl'
J1c.k Ill. Curley
Vkt Prfti.1111 •M °""'•I M1111tt•
Th•M•• Ktt¥11 ...... n•1111•1 A. M1rr,hl1111
MtMlltlt h ill!'
Ch 1rlt1 H. l101 A!c.h•rtl ,, Nill AMlttlftt M""fll'll l•1i.r1 s-c1 ... ..,. OMc:e
JOI N•rtti II C•M i•• •••I, 91672 °""-C..ft ~I )Jt W"t l t y tl,fll "'""'°" I Mdll *' "''~ l""l1v••• HIJl!llftll*'I IMOll 11111 811(11 ltwLt~•r4 1.tf\11\t l#tll; m Pttt .i AY..,119 "'1.,._ 17141 '41·011
c ............ ,., '4J·l671 s.ac-•a.., ... _,
T11t1l1•• 4t1-44H =""'· ,.,. ....... C..11 ~111111111 ~r. Nt ...-~-'" lllon•r•liw. i.1 ...... ., ..... ,lltmllltJ lltrtlll ~, ... ,....,.... Wl"*'t tllMlil .... ........ .....,....,.
~~-"1r .. Cl'=~ ,.......,, '";;:r, .... ...,,,, IMfl'-1¥1 ~ .. ,.!Wt. "'" ,,....,,.,..,
FLOOD AT BATTLE CREEK CR OWDED HOUSE S OFF FOUNDATIONS
Keystone, South Dakota, Hit When Da m Gave Way-300 Feared De•d
Red Cl1iI1a Cites 'Threat' _j
Of U.S. Bombing Attacks
TOKYO (AP) -Communll'i! Chins sald
today U.S. alr 8trikes Jn Norlh Vietnan\
nfa r the Chine~ border threu ttn its
:security.
It charred th1t "theae frenzied acts or
aggruakin" are not only "new war
crimea" aaalrut North Vietnam but also
'"grave provocationa" against China.
A Forclin Mlnlltry 1tatement, in Pe-
kin& uid, "The Chinese 1overnment and
people e1~ss their reaolute n1pport" ror
a North Vietnamese 1tatement issued
Saturday coodemning the United Statts
Fron• Page l
WHITE HOUSE
thlt,' the guy said to me/' Mr1.
Saruwatari 11Jd. She •till had w1Il1 on
her wrl1t1 where her bond.II been tlahten-
cd.
",[ juat atood there. walling for someone
to NY Something and thl1 guy stuck his
gun in my stomsch and told me 'move
over there.' " Mikels recounted following
thr. robbery.
l\trs. Saruv.•a tari. \\·orkini:: in th(' k1tch·
1•11, v.·as called 0111 into !ht• n•slaurant
<i rl'a ond then ~ht· and j\llkels, were
lotked in a slorl·roon1,
The gunman then lorc.·ed ~RruwRtar l to
the office and 111adc lun1 OPl'll the safe.
The other 11i:111 scooped up 1h(' n1011e~.
bundling it up in hi s shirt \\'luch ht• h:1d
untucked from hl.!1 tro us er.s.
'"The guy hnld ln1: 1he gun seemed
::ig 1t:itcd. he krpt saying 'hurry up. don't
bother v. ith 111<' <·hct·ks (If tlit• !'1n<1ll
:-.luff.' " Saru>1";1t;lr1 .~:ud.
"lie didri'I Ile int' \t'l"Y 11•f'l1." l\·l1k('l:-:
5ai rl. lie said that he had \l'Orkt'd his way
frre, but wn!I \Ylli!lng for thll man f(l
lra,·c before gr.t1t11g up.
"/ COldd1l't sec 1!1ern, !Jut lillt'f' 1\01)·
called out to me a11d said, 'ho1v :ire you
Danny?'
"One of the men i.:alled bai.:k , ·what \1·1.1s
lh&t?'" Mikels satd.
Shortly af1erw"rd, Saruwat ari jumj"lfd
up and ran lo the telephone ;ind called
police.
All three viclin1s agreed that th1! man
with the gun ~·as the boss. The other
man , described as aOOut 5 foot , 10 Inches
tall with a fair complex ion and light hair,
Ju.st did as he was told, they said.
1'1 wasn't scared at all ; they we.re JU!t
not the type to be 11cared of,'' r-.1r:t
Sa ruwatarl said.
l)clcclivcs belicvr' lhe bnnd ils tnll·n·d
through the rear rest;iurnnl door opt·11 u1f..(
011 Hnrnona Avcn\,le.
Construction workers on the llf'\'I
L:i1una Beach County Llbrury hn·
media tely behind the rusntur:tnt wt>rc
questioned by officers. but nppi\rC'n1 !y the
gunrnan and his acco mplice Ifft un-
noticed.
Police believe tht robbers wrre
fan1il inr v.·ith the layout nl lhf restaurant
and with the areas mont'!y y,·as norn1a lly
kept.
"He 1eemed to know jUlt where lo jO,"
S:iru1~a1ar1 said.
Tho '3.500 lou 11 not covered by in·
surance •~ the companiea req uire their
1·!1r.nts to be protected by alarms, wnd the
\\'hitc Jl ouse \Va!I not .
The Saruwata rls were plunnlnQ nn n
I rip In Japan Rrter he left the buaincsa on
Wedncsduy.
Mlkeltt , 24, is ,. graduate atudent at Ct1I
Slate Fullerton and '°" of Jackie Mlke l1.
realaurant booikeef>@r who opena tho
re11taur1nt every day but Mond11y.
1'hfi Whltr. ilou1e re111ur11nt Is
Ltlguna'1 old111t havtna been founded In
1918 by a couplt! named Bird .
A 1\1n procl1lmlna, "EAt ~llh the
Btrda ." uaed to 1do111 the fron t or the
e·' ·r-y j(no1YP1up11 nd down the Cfl~tl .
for further dispat ching many planes for
ruids tiga in-'>t 1he Jlenoi suburbs,
lhtiphong and other area!.
The statement \V8S broadcast by Pe-
king's New China News Agency.
Last week, U.S. Air Force jell swept to
within 20 miles of China and wrecked a
big North Vietnamese railrold marshal-
ling yard and highway bridge c:nly 40
seconds flying time from the China-Viet-
nam border.
The raids were reported the clo111t to
the border since the 196WS bombln1
campaign against North Vietnam.
China sald lhe United States "1hould
know th1t the heroic people• of Vietnam
and the other Indochlnete countrle1 art
by no meana alone in their •trua1le,
It did not elaborate on this polnt.
"For over a monlh, U.S. imperlalllm In
defiance ol the strong condemnation 11nd
opposition of the people throuihout the
world, had continued to e1calat1 it1 war
agalnat the Democratic Republlc of Vlei·
nam," tht statement 1dded.
"ll not only has mined and blockaded
the por!J of Northern Vietnam and dally
sent out large number• of airplanes and
u·arsh!ps to make frantic raids on many
cities. villages and coastal center s, but
hns steadily expanded the s p her r of
hon1bi ng up to areas close to the Sino-
Vietnamese borders, threateninf tho
srcurity of China,
"The se frf'n1lf'd acts of agrea1lon on
the par t of U.S. imperialilm are new war
1·r1n1es commiUed against the Viet·
namesc people, and at the same time
i;r:ive provocations against the Chinese
1~ple." ·rne stl'llernent relteratt.d Peking's
"rl'SO)utr"' supporl of the Vietnamese and
111hr r Indochinese pc-0ples until con1plcte vlt·tury .. ,
POW s Conceruecl
About Wallace
Politics, Peace
From Wire Service•
NEW YORK - A handful of American
r ows held captive In Hanoi ere ttn•
l.'t!rned about Gov. George Wallace's
recovery, Sen. George McGovern'• c:1m-
palgn and other U.S. pollUcll matter1 ln-
i.:tuding peace proerams.
The eight fllera ahot down In Southea1t
Asia, lncludlna an El Toro Marine C4rps
Air Station-based jet pilot, were In·
trrvlewed M111y 25 by American antiwar
;1{'11vists.
/I t:it>e record ing ·was made at the
:-l'~~1nn in llanoi and played for newsmen
hy Paul Mayer, one of lhe deleaation in-
'l!td to visit North Vietnam.
~layPr 3aid Lt. Co. Edlson W. Miller, ot
l·:I Toro MCAS, and the other seven
<1vh1 tors including two San Diego Navy
Pil ots asked about various things includ-
ing Y<>Wli voter rqtltratloa.
The amen al.Jo quesUoned whit
\ongress is doing to end the Vietnam
\\'ri r and claimed they are receiving good
treatment •• lndetermlnate suuta of the
lf11nol government.
The Department ol Defenao aald 1Q !ht
mtn were listed 11 prteonan ot w1r.
In oddltton lo tho quNUON aboul
Wellaee and MeC'.ovtm, lbt pr110ner1
~sked l he visiting Am..-ican1 about peace
demort1tratlon9, 1nUwar court eaH1 and
young voter regl1trallon.
Navy Cmdr. David Holtman ur~ 1n-
!Jw11r l{roupt In thtl U.8. to unit. 11t1 the
~ovcmm•ll! underolandt It ta really all
Ille peopla and nol jull dlaald.,l 1roufll"
who t1ppo11 the war.
"Th ere is another r,wvf\11 tool lhal
c1n be u1ed and th1I s the JOWtr fJI the
vote, '1 said Navy Lt. Horrll A. a.tlt1
Jr , who urged aupport for ~pl'llldtnllal
t1ndldat" oonimltlld ID '"4llll tho ..,..
nict.
I
Coalition Panel .Eyed
20 Named to Fight Pacific Coast Freeway
A aroup of 20 well-known CO•
vlronmentalllt1 and freeway fighlers
frorn six Southern California coastal
communities Saturday were appointed to
a ateertn& commltlee ol the newly form·
ed Coastal Communities Coalition formed.
to fight the proposed Pacific Coast
}'reeway.
Jl1gh way Commission."
It ls critical of the SLalt 0111:.1011 u(
Jllghways land acquisition progr;im
H says land has been pure.hued and
held "wllhuu l juslification and for un--
necew.ry reasons" aud uya the result
''is an w1told loss or lax revenue as \1·e\I
as personal losses to private landowners
adjacent to IDd in the immediate vicinity
of righl·Of way purchased by lhe slatr ''
Koth tl11s n1or111nx desi.:r1bed the ntlf'
t:Oa/111on <1s "'t•nthusinstir .. toward II(
go.w l and predicted ils 1nember11hlp 1.1dll
expand even more at 11 u 1· c· e e d I n I
lneeUflis.
lie said th<' panrl will nice! again Ju,,.
21 at the ho1ne of Councilman Stor~ In
Corona <iel i\1ar.
The pone! lncludea two Newport B<ach
councilmen and the leadel'I (lf various
citizem' comnii tlees in Laguna Beach,
&-a l Beach. Long Beac.h, San Juan
Capistrano and Laguna Niguel.
_Vnfque Treat1tient
Newport Beach Vice Mayor How1rd
Roger• and Counclltnan John Store are
on the panel aolng with Arnold llano, a
member of 'the Board or Zoning Ad·
justment in Lajuna Beach: \Yllllam
Leak, chairman of VIiiage Laguna ;
Jtichard E. S1nlth, president, Good
Government Group of Seal Beach ind
Robert C. McCollum, chairman, Alliance
of Homeowner•' AssoclaUont of San Juan
Capistrano.
Countian Using Baboon's
Liver in Filte1~ing Blood
Other ateerini committee member• ire
J an llall, chalrman, Pacific Coast
1''reeway Op(Xlsition Committee of Long
Bca<lh ; William Agee, Newport Beach
planning co mmissioner: Michael A.
Schley. president, Citizens' Town Plan·
nlni A11sociation, Laguna Beach; Mildred
B. Hannum, a member of the Lasuna
Beach Open Space Committee and Bea
Whittl esey, vice president or Lacun iol
Greenbelt. Inc.
Also on the panel are ~·la rgot Skill ing,
co-c hairrnan of the !!arbor Arca Freeway
J-'ighters' Citizens' Coordin ating Con1·
mittee; Earl lJardage, a member o! the
Lido Isle Community Association; Carroll
Beek a member of Newport Residents Unit~; E. Perclvll Chae, chairman of
the Laguna NlcueJ Homeownen' .U-la-
lion: SuzaMt Rudd, eecretary of the
Harbor Area CCC: former Newport
Beach mayor Paul J. Gruber; M1r1hall
D"uffleld, chairman of the Harbor Area
Freeway Fighter• and Frances Roblnaon,
a member of Friends of Newport B1y.
Walttr J. Koch, CCC chairman, w1s
selected •s chairman of the new coali-
tion.
Schley and McCollum were 1ppolnted
vice chalrmen. Ch11e was elected
treasurer: Mrs. Hall was selected
recording secretary and Mrs. Rudd, cor.
responding aecretary.
As expected, ll lia lint action, tho
group 1dopted • reJOluUon callln& on
area Jeglalaton to actively puah ant14
freeway leglll1tion 1n Sacramento.
The rtaolutlon polnta ool lhat prtvl.,..
deletions of the propoaed auperhlshway
"mate it extremely questlonablt that thla
freeway will ever become the rqional
type of frt:eway whk:b wu envialoned
when tt wu 1pproved by the Strite
From Patel
RESCUE ...
banks of fioodll1ht1 to a11ilt In reacue
lunctlona and at flrea , the unit llso can
bathe the area in valuable light.
Ca1per1, durlna h11 tour of the fa cllltles
In Capistrano, Bea~h, said he "."'s ."very
impre1aed by the r11. It looks like 1t very
well could be a prototype for other COUllly
slalions."
Pie rce and last year's: chief of
volunteers Leo Buck q:reed that th~
truck ls tmlque and 11 the product of
many months' touring of other fire 1l1·
lions in the state to borrow design ideas.
"About the closest thing to ours that
we 've seen" 11id Buck, "i1 in the city of
Ontar1o, but we thlnk oun ls better.
"It's completely ta ilored to the need!!
v•c have seen in our area and it's goina to
\1•ork just gre at," he added.
Minuteman Launched
From Wire SUvlces
AUGUSTA, Ga. lleJplte a
reaplratory complication, a Buena Park
woman suffering advanced liver disease
is responding here today to a unique
Marine Stabbed;
Suspect Held
111 Santa Ana
A young El Toro Marine Corl>' Air Sta·
tion enlisted man died Sunday morning
after being stabbed through the heart at
a Santa Ana apartment and falling out a
.second story window.
111s alleged slayer wa s arrested ahort1y
afterward on suapiclon of murder.
Rudolph B. T1m1yo1 47, of 322 W. Third
St., was questioned by police combing the
area around 200 N. Broadway after they
found bl oodstai na on his clot hing.
He is suspected of fatally stabbing
Andrew H. Nelson, 18, whose body was
found about & a.m. by a pa1serby in an
alley behind !he North Broad,\'ay ad4
dress.
lnve1tigators claim Nelson wa.s visiting
Tamayo's .apartment when a quarrel
started, leading to the fatal stabbin&.
Coroner's deputi es 1ald de1lh w11 due
to the fleart 'llt'Ound. It was not determln·
ed whet.her the Marine would have been
seriously tnjured in falHng out the win·
dow.
Court Rejects
Repossessions
Without Notice
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme
Court today barTed creditor• from
repo ssesslnj merchandise without aiv!ng
the buyer adv11nce notice and a heermg
before "a neutral or!lclal."
The 4 to 3 decl1lon struck down Jaws in
Florida and Penruylvanla ind rould hive
a nationwide Impa ct because most If.ates
authorlie the au tomatic .telrure or 1oods
when the purch1ser falls behind in the
pa yments. .
The dissenters oredicted that aa a
re11ul t tt may becoine more difficult for
C(lntumer11 to buy merchandile on cre~lt.
JU!tice Potter Stewart baaed his opln·
ion for the majority ()0 the 14th Amend·
ment 1uarwntee that no state shall
deprive a peraon of property without
"due process ot law."
One case concerned • Miami woman,
Mrs. Margarita Fuentes , who1e stove and
steroophonlc phono sraph were repoa1es,..
VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE ed when she tell behlnd in her paym!nts.
(AP) -A Minute-man Ill lntercon-The woman, a factory worker, claimed
tlnental Balll1Uc Missile was launched the stove waa detective.
do1vn the \Vestem Tt!t Ran11 over the The other case concerned a group of
lreatment in ,o,rhich her blood Is filtered
through a baboon's liver.
Officials at the Medical Colle5e cf
Georgia said Mrs. Linda Greenaway, 32,
is doing \VCll roJ!o\ving five hours Of !he
lCC'hnique kno\\'n as perfusion.
F.ric Jacobsrn , assistant adminis trator
or 1'alniadge 1\1 erno rial lf{).'Jpltal whert
t.1rs . Greenawa y v.·as fl own la.st Thursday
from Orange County, said the treatment
developed Uy Dr. George Abouna is not
the aole ans wer.
The avanc('d deterioration of fo,Jrs.
\.1•eennway's hepatitis-ravaged liver in-
diC'atcs Or. Abouna and his tea1n may
have lo alleinpt .a human liver
transplant.
He has pioneered that concept and his
two surviving liver tran1plant patients to
his credlt 10 far.
By filtering her blood through lho ba-
boon's liver, Dr. Abouna can assist Mr:r.
Greenaw1y '1 own organ to rest and
regenerate, at least ao some dearee.
Team! of doctors working to save the
mother of four 'vant to strengthen her
enough to \vil h.stand the strain of a
tr;insplant operation after use of the ba·
boon organ.
1'he liver now belnR used was removed
fron1 a ea.pound baboon captured in
Kenya, cleansed of Its 01vn blood 11upply
:ind refrigerated until being hooked into
J.lrs. c:rcenay,·ay"s systcn1.
A relat.ively new concept, the treatment
deve loped by Dr. Abouna , 1 liver disease
expert, perfusion is similar to mechanical
dlalysi3 used on kidney failure vlctlms.
The perfusion technique was scheduled
to start Saturday but was delayed due to
a reapiratory infecUon which Mra.
Greenaway developed.
She lapsed into a coma at one point
before her condlUon improved enough to
begin U.!ling the baboon liver to take the
strain off her own dlseaaed or11n.
2 Teen Marines
Killed in Crash
On Irvine Road
A hlgh·•Pf!ed crash Into • dead.end
street embankment early Sund1y in
Irvine kllltd two teenaged Marines and
injured a third , accord.Ina to the
California flighway Patrol.
The accident on Jamboree Boulevard
al Main Street left Pfc. Robtrt T. Ba11,
19. dead at the scene, accordlns to co,.
oner's deputle•.
The driver, Pvt. Michael 0 . Kearn1, lt,
was taken lo Tustin Community HOlpltal
nfler th e 2:30 a.m. accident 1nd be died
there I Va hours later.
A third victim, Pfc. Douala• A.
Sullivan, 18, w1s treated at UM! hoaplt1I
for minor in ju ries 1nd released, CHP ln-
vest11alor1 said.
The enlisted men were all 1t1Uoned at
the Santa Ana M1rine Corps Air Station.
Sunday 's fatalitie1 brouaht Orana:e
County'• traffic accident toll for lt72 lG
11 4, compared to only 98 at th.ii time last Pacific Ocean Sund1y, the Air Force Philadelphia people whose purchasu
said. No other dtYIUa were q11et;oaed;::;·...,.-_:w,:er:,:•:_:r:_:•:;;po:;';;,.:;';;';ed;..:u::nd:;:•::r..:lhe~.;•l;;•~le~·1~l1;:w;:.=~::::=:::==:::::::::::::::::::::::;::::;::::;--
Selling Out Overstock
ONE CARAT DIAMONDS s479 Only With This Ad
TltUMI'
FULL SIZE
CLAHICAL
GUITARS
s2100
OUT 01' PAWN
WATCHES °"'' 100
l'oprular •••""" To ci.-l',.m
YACHTSMAN
BINOCULARS
IUSHNILL bJO
WATERPROOI', SHOCK·
l'ROOI', l>UIT l'ROOF
THl!Y
FLOAT
CAMERAS
' .•. .....,,,.._,,
"i--~-
j r -,_
"-'""'' ltaw I .. DJ\. 1.4 ... ... _
·-.......
'-" .. fl.I ... --
-TOCHOOll
l'llOM
s1'!.
COITA M!~~,.~!!~~~~!, & LOAN ···~111wi
1131 NIWPOltT l~YD. PHONI 646-7741
DOW'~Wll COITA MIU .... lotw-~ l .. , ... .,
t
•
... 'I DAIL V PILOT
-~ --------
LEG AL NOTICE
"'CTIT!OUl •uin .. lll
li•JU lf&flMIHl I n~ IOllO•I ... .,..,_ " "°',_ tou1f""'"' u
't'IST& $Vlt,.LUI. ~ W. lti11 t l.,
C .. t• Mha, C•I. ~1
N•na' "-••••· to$ W. 1 ... Sr C•l• ""-C•llf t11i1'
Jnl• Du•lfttt 11 w1~1 <-...C!IHI ~ .,, l/'ICIJY~
Nancy kow••d
""h ,,. .. 11\9,,t lllH w!"' i,.. ffY!< ....
Clw• at °"'•""' (...,,,,, "" J,.,.. 1. lt lJ
I r lltvOtli' J, M-•. 0•..,lr 1.0U<>l'I' C!tr~.
""lll•1llad Ort ""'• C"OO>I O•llY J .. ,, • .t.. 11. n. 2• 1ti2
LEGAL NOTICE
FICTIT!OUI I VllNI''
HAMii lTllT •MIHT
Tl)• toll<)wl"t """"' ••• dom1 .... 1,..11 ••
FUll.(llt(lE, lltllJlt l•• l"tr~ (Ir•
Cit, lfYln. 11"4
O•Yld ~oiomon • .J11)) lUll Or'
L11111nt ·~
1111111 V Jor•tn11n, lt11 8110.1 St , StMI -.1u
l!O••ro T Solomon. l:i.l Sa Crtllon
"~', ltto:1 le"41
T11 l1 i,u,1.,.,, 11 b1111t tonducr911 •• •
l 1mltH l't rlntrMlll!
01>1\d SolomOft
r111! lltlwneM Ill•• "''"' •nt (111M1
r "" of Ort not (<Hint. °" Junt 7 ltl1
t Y lt¥trl1 J , MtCldo.o Ol•u l~ COUA!Y
(ltf~
,, 11111
l"110l.•he<1 O••AH Cot ti Otll\o "Uul Jwn~ •. u. n, 21. "n 1ot-n
"
LEGAL NOTICE
,.IC TITIOUI I UllK•Jl
H.t.Mlt ST.t.TIMENT
1110 tallOWl"9 ,.,Mn II Oolrll busll'ltH
NEW,.OltT ll!ACH lllOING CLU8,
lOUI At•d • St . S•nl• An1 Ht ll!lh
AU<t M "lndley, lf:U l"url 8l1hop Pl ,
Ntwpart ar1t11,
lhlt bu1lne11 " bllnt cunduc:!ld by 1 llmllld l"1'1ner1111,
"'Uct M FlndllY
Thi• ll•twmtnl !\ltd woll\ tM Ceunly
C!erll of Or1A" County on• J11111 !, lf1!
llv ...... ri... J Ml ddOK 0.Ulll't County (l~·k " u,.. Pu~l 1t>td
June 5, 17.
Drano• Co1s1 Ot llv Pllor, "· 1•. nn 1',s.12
LEGAL NOl'ICE
L•eAL HDTICI
NOTICI! IS Nli.ltl!l't' OIVEN ll'lt f !ht
!ollowi111 lltm1 ol loulld or 1tv~d p•OH•l't
"'""' tiMn llt lct by Th• Pullet DIP•••m1n! of ll'ld City of C•lt MIMI tur 1 Pt•IOO In
t1«:•11 ef nlnt tr Ctlll NYt
Ont bllHI bftrclt
NOTICE II rrultTNl:lt GIVEN """ It
"0 OWlltr lll'Htrl f lllil l tOlltl ll!t _,,.,.91'\lp 9' the IH'9MrfY within t tvon
111 ••Y• ftllnllnt lllt ~lllc1tlot1 tf !Ills
Nofl<a, the tllla IMrtlO 11'1111 ,,_II In
ll'lt flndor, If 1t1tr1 M -· w 111 tN City
_, C•I• Mt11. In wflldt <IN tM •raportv
\llall M MW 11 M ii< 1uc.lldll at • llm1 .,... .... to -fl'lftllll'all. OATIO: JuM IJ, lt71. It ... NITN
Cl\ltf 11 l"otlc1t
Pulltlthfd Ortntl C:cttl 0 111y ~1101,
June 12, 1111 '''1·1l
LEGAL NOl'ICE
l"ICT!flOUI IUll!rtlll
NAM• l fATllM•NT
Tiit lollowln• •1r1011 !1 do!mt bu\lflt•'
'' REIO'S MAltlNA YACHT S"LEI, l'm l"t<llk r oa1t 11W)' .• N11ntlnt !011
8 11c11, <• '""'· Jo An"• Ctch. )G( Vlt N1va10. l"tlos
V...Wt E'""'· Ct !0314
SC MOl\d.,, Ju11t 12. 19n ---
Banli Start
In Newport
Constroctloa .... will llart
on The Bank or t.:al11orrua
budd.ine, a .s!J.-story office
complex located w I t h 1 n
Newport Place, the-S 2 0 O
million pl1nn~ community fur
buslntts located netir Ora11g~
County Airport
The structure: Is ooe of
several NewJ)Jrl Place of(k·1·
fecilltlts. It ls suited 10 a ll
typc!s of ust . rang ing !ro1n tl1l·
single occupant professional
firm to multl·bulldln& cur·
porate htadquarters org11niz1:1-
tions.
A full ttrvict B:ink of
California branch will inltia lly
occupy about 8000 sq ft of tht'
ground floo: space. feRlurmg
drive-up banking, the bra nch
wilt be lht seeond Orange
County location for tht bank.
Also 'scheduled to occupy a
portion of the far1hty 1s the
Sou th c r n California head-
quarters for John50n :ind
Mapt Construction Company
and Mape Jndustries, the
building owners.
'Dredging'
Gear Eyed
At Meet
Nev,.Jy-designed equipment
and engineering rtports \.\111
be presented to \Vorld Dretlg-
mg Assoc1at1on members and
guests at an annual meeting
Thursday
The all-day st ssions \Y1ll
btgln at 8 30 o'clock at the
Newporter Inn.
US. Navy englnttrs 1vdl
present in the morning session
"Dredge and Undersea Equ11>-
mtnt Research and Develop..
mcnt Rtport" from the Naval
Civil Engineering Laboratory.
Afternoon topics I n c t u o t
"Englnetrlng and Con!-ilrUC.·
lion of Modtrn Shipyard"''
LEGAL NOTICE
1111' butlMtl 1, Mlflt tond~ctf<I e, 1n 1---------------IAdovldu•I.
JO ANNE Cl!CH
Tllll 1!1temt nl fllld with lho ct1mlY
'tt rll ol Ortno. (ounly "' Junt '· \f11.
11 11.,.rt1 J. M1ddol!, Dtpuly Covnly c1 ... 11..
LEGAL NCITICE
ComP.ar.e Benefits
Of Health Groups
Hy SYl.VIA PORTER
1'hl· t1r-.10 -the medlcal
#;lroup ofrer111~ you a wide
ru ng (' o! hc.nlth services ln
return tor 1:1 !lat annual fee -
1!1 def1n!ttly the trend today,
f.lOZL·ns are already Jn Clpera-
11u11, nutny 1norc are In the
pl11nn111~ or development
.!itagl'S
Let's sav. thl'refore. that a
local medical group, hospit al,
university or othtr orgaruzi4
11on is ~et
ung up au
llMO. Or tht·
Blul' t.:ro:.s
p I an ! o
\1hich y u u
.subscribe 1s
offering an
II M 0 -lype
plan as an
l"ORTER a I I ernat1ve
to yo ur re~ular <.:overage
Costs and coveragts vary all
over !he pla ce -but costs
easily can run $400 to $GOO or
more a yea r for 11 farn1I>.
Should you join an HMO under
these circumstances? 11011 can
you tell "'helher or not it 1s a
b.'.lri::a1n for you? Jtere's your
guide
~ Read \\'Ith utmost ca re all
!he literature on !he plan.
\vhat '!-i cuvered and not. how
tong the coverage last s for,
.say, hosp it a 11 z at ton,
psychotherapy.
.i Check the mo n t h I y
premiums and the tXlra costs
you'll be miulred to pay for
non-included Items, deduct-
ibles, etc. Often excluded or
Included only at e-xtra cost arc
blood. dental care, eytglasscs
and hearing aids, mattrnity
<:.'.!re, psychotherapy, out--0f-
hospi!al drugs, cos m ct I c
sui gcry.
"' Con1parc these totals 11 Ith
tbe amounts you've betn
paying in heal th insurance
prern1ums. doctor b!lts. out--Of·
pocket cash, costs of strvice!'l
not covered or onlv partially
covered 1n your present 1n.
surance.
'Custo1-nizing' Cars
Dangerous Practice?
By CARL CA RSTENSEN
01 11\t Dally Plltl S!all
A Ge neral Mo to rs
automotive safety engineer
has warned against car
"customizing'" practices and
iostall1tlon of certain ac-
cessories or novtllv items that
alter ve hlcl ts from their "as
built" condilion .
"Jn many cases, these prac-
tices are off11ettmg the safety
design improvements made by
t ht manufacturtr1," ac-
cording to Wiiton D. Nelson,
senior project engineer In
GM 's Safely Restarch and
Developmtnt Laboratory.
FOR EXAMPL E, his N?port
pointed out that the potential
benefit or entrgy abaorbing
sttering columns 1s being
nulllfitd by people who attach
tachometers. traller brake
controls. or evtn stereo tape
decks to !hem. These simple
attachments ha ve Interfered
i,1•ith the normal compression
ot the steering column under
c-olllslon Impacts and in-
creased chtst lnjurits have
ft ~ *
Robins Sets
Celebration
resulted, he said.
COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK UST
-'
..
TONIGHT'S
TV IDGlillGHTS
ABC 0 8:00 -''HollY\l'OOd Dream Factory."
All about the Hollywood th at used to be -sel
against the sound of the auctioneer's gavel as it
fal)s ove~ the unused trappings of 1-Jollywood 's
ll!.Ofl ~30llf era.
~C D 8:30--"The Six Wives of Henry Vlll.tt
Tbls highly .acclaimed six-part series is repeated by
KNBC. Tonight, "Catherine of Aragon" \\'ith Ann·
ette Crosbie. Keith AU chell won an Emmy for his
portrayal of King Henry.
KCET m 8:00 -"Peter Grimes." Benjamin
Britton's modern opera classic of a fisherman
doomed by pride and ambition.
. . CBS II 10:00-Sonny and Cher. George Burns ~ J?Jns the Bonos for an hour of fun, along 'vit h .n singer David Clayton·Thomas.
~ KHJ 0 11 :00 -"Violet Road." Brian Keith rk~,~~;:~o::::;~~!,~~8 dr~.~:·. ~ ~
Monday
Evening
JUNE 12
1:00 tJ lit 1'lws Jeuy Dunphy 00 1111 Hldiy llltport D ~ m MljOf L111u1 lntbtll
(cont'lll lrorn 5PM) Detroit Tiaers 11
Mlnnaott Twl111. 0"'111'"" U lttwl Blftll, Schubetl rJ (I) WIW WIW Wat m n.. n1ntdlllln
IDDnW IM11t
tJll Jl(l ""'°"" ti tk 30'• m-"'"" m w.t1c11 ... l4 OJI Ml)'bttry lfD
€11) Pftplltt UIW Alea J1cinto m Jl"'5 Jim H1wthcrn1 m Tint Stoo111
l :JO 0 Mfril: (C) (90) .,A Stud1 In
ltrTO(' (mys) '66 -.lohn Heville,
Oon1ld Housten. John F11ser, An·
tllon, Q111y\1. When J1ck lht Rlpper
ttrrorlzu the Whlt1.ch1pet 1r111 ot
London, !llerlock Holmes 1nd D1
Wlbon 1r1 ttlltd upon to aolve 1br .....
:]) CU Jkilll W11t1r Cronkite
m"' n,"'"" flil ll)a Aln C.OU ''EU Rolls" aa,..Mm cm ,,... ~11ci11
IE ~ Elliot Mini?
l(elth Michell, t n Emmy fM h!s ~I·
lormanct 11 Kini Henry, [Ith Dlaf
will locus on one ol Henry \'Ill's
wives IS th• cent11I fi1ure. Tonirhf1
uament has Kini Henry m1rry1nr
Cath1rint of Ar11on when he at·
sumes !tie lhM)ne at the 111 ct IS.
Thtlr JS f9 1rl cl mard111 1r1 fol•
IOlfltd in this 90 m!nu!e Pf!Unt•·
tlon. Annrit1 Crosbie plays Catherine
cl Araron.
CD lrl•" Crllfl• Show tI;) Movll: "U111brtll11 If Chtr-
bciur('
9:00 IJ (l) Htrt'1 tucy (R) Robert Cum·
minis ruesl1 11 1 d1ulln1 and
chlrmln1 buf unprlncipltd wolf who
aims lo 1dd Lucy to his list ol con•
quests.
E foru111 lo1ln1
f}J (]·, 00 Q) ABC Mollt!IJ MD¥it:
(2hr) "Cu11e of tilt Fir" (hor) '6~
Bn;m Oonl tV)', Carole G111, Geo1~1
Baku. Michael Graham. A d1iJlin1
Ule ol wehd sc1intifk e~iierlm,nts
dealint with 1eleport1tion and lht
fourth dimens!on.
@) ~lovie; (Cl (2hr) "Toy Tirer"
(com) '56--Jelf Chandte1. Larair.e
Daye, nm Hovty.
mon1net
€1)Do·R .. MI
~Thi Vlritniln Q!l Novtl1
!:30 6 (J) Dort1 Day (Rl Do1ls excitedly
organlns 1 surpris1 ba by shower IOf
Angie, not r11lizing thll Anti• It
e~pedin1 1 litter of pups for her St
1:00 fl CIS ftnrs Walter Cronkite Bun11d ind not a ! ·'·1 of ~er own.
CI) AIC Nh'l Smith, Reasoner l:) m Nt"1 IJ Mowl1: (Zltr) .. Intent to Kill'' @II Aventu11
(dr1l '59 -Rictltnl Todd. Bels} fl) R1cin1 rro m Ho:1y ... cod Park
Dr1kt, Wauen Stevens-, Herbfrt Lonl 10:00 B ®Sonny alld C~11 Comtd1
Cl) Truth tr C.rl1tqu1nc11 Haur (R) Geo111 Burm and David
Cl) Dttfnet Claytel\-Thomas gu~st.
0 Wtiars M1 Unt? 0 I IPICIAL I Which Wty, A11erk a! m I Lowe L11ey (R) The J1t1 Whitney Yo11n1Jr.11 tht
Q) I Dru11 el J11n111t focus of thb film thtt dtt!s with th1
flll Hltbl)t111 civil rlahts leader's ideas on n tl1I
€D VIII Pllpril 11111 C.Mlfll prejudice, pow rty, the m r11I cues· 9 Al•: '1Ws Wot11111 Is Dlnl'r· tion ol dv!I wronf alld what tach cl
ous" us must do to help stet/ !ht 1l&ht m Rtv. llty ~Ulf/0 COU/lt for AmeriCI.
7 Om Nm :30 II St.Ind Up 1nd Chetr Della Reese 6 Covndl Debit. Jttk Rourke
1ue1b. (!) T1 Till thl Trutll ffi Slf•ri lo Advellt11rt
(JJI DrNM of .lt1nlllt a!) RlllCOll Arpn\ll'le
fJ Mlh $ Mo.It: (fit) "l tell ffi Lt ltJ*I·• llfolflll
lor ld1111'" (dr1) '4S-John Hodiak, 10:30 g Georp l'lltn••'s T1lk·l1ck
Gen1 TierMJ, Wt!ll1m Bendix. m BIR Co1bJ IMw m Hopn'a Herott (i3) M11ttr,i.c. TI1e1trt
(!)Cl) Drtpe1 tr) Fll111 Odyssey "Min ol Arin" (R)
Qj) In tht Spottisht A 1934 documentary.~ Robert Fl•· tD Cltyw1tc:h1u A visit to the ci\f· herty tboLlt 11m1H fish1n11sl1nd olf
run Ftirlex Senior Ciriltns Cenltc. the cots! of Ireland.
(Ii) Ml(ltflfto V1ldez Sllow '1) LI S.tanlu
(rl lllCIJ 500 Hi&hMfhb ~ Mo,it: (C) "The k M0111 or tht ffi ~vie: "It's lovt 1'111 After'' lonle"
(com) '37 -Leslie Howud, Bttlt {D Condtndt Culpable
Divis, Ol1vi1 De Havilland. 11:00 0 IJ) fII Newi
O @J IDNewt
1:001J Cl) C1n1moli1 "The Noose" (R) O Good News Cemo; Sha~~riJn
Ch1r1cta1 ac1or Tom Skerritt plays 1 (il Miis.htl Dillon
man wllo r11u1ns lo Dodge Cily alter D (31 m NtWI
15 ye111 to settle a sco11 and ttkt 0 Movie: ''Vlol1nt Road" {dlil) '5&
his ven1t111C1. -Bri1n Keith. Dick Foran.
0 ~ (S NfWI m Truth or Con~q1Hnct1 0 (1) (!) al Monda1 Ni&ht Spt· ffi David frast Show
citl "Hollywood Dretm Ftcfory" (R) ~Book ltll
Program about the Hollywood lhtl EE Heid1hop (R)
ostd le b&:-set .•r1inst the. sound ll:JO D (II CBS lit• Movit: (C) "I LOYI
ol !ht 1uct1onee1 s ra~tl 11 II 1111! Mtlvin" (mus) 'SJ-Donald O'Con·
ovtl !ht unused t11pp1n1s of Holly· 0 bb" R Id
d, , nor, e 1e eyno s. woo 1 most eJot1c era. ~ ""'Ill Joh ,_ G m Jhe Motlll · L WI '™' · nny -rso~ eO!fl 6J p Ml ets·ln· •• Carlin, Oawld Cassidy, S.11 V1u1h1n fil)~:'o1 ·t11t Wetk "Peter iuesL
\
OAJLY f'ILOT Stiff ,.Mi.
Best Ttvo Out of Tlaree?
Alan Levy (top) gives \\/alter Dudek an impromptu 'vrestling lesson as John
fJhillips "referec5" in a '1«·111• from the Irvine Cornmunity Theater comedy
··You Can't 'J'ake It \\'ll h \ !111 ·• 'J'he revival continues for t\VO 1nore \'.'eekends,
F'riday.; and Saturd.1 , '· u1 !lit· L1< 1 l!umanities Hall Playhouse.
Musicia11s
Auditioning
For 'Lady'
Orchestra auditions for the
Santa Ana College theater a!'1s
dcpartn1ent production of "r-.1v
Fair Lady" will be conducted
tonight from 7 to 9 o'clock.
The auditions are open to all
college and advanced high
school students.
SAC Band Director Ben
C!ov er, 'vho will direct the
auditions, annou nced that two
units of college credit will be
available to those \vho are ac·
ccpted for the performance
and who complete the
rehearsal scbedule.
Rehr;irsHls \11ill be held from
7 to 10 p.ni. Tuesdays and
Thursd;iys lni111 ./unc 19 to Ju-
ly 30. Ful'!hcr 111forination un
the audition and rchcars;o l
i,;chedu!es c;in be obtained by
calling 547-9~6!. C':<t. 243.
i \ I I \
~:;i:"':!:J
EDWARDS CINEMA
H•rbor •I Ad•mt -(01ta MtW
5•,.J101
MQndav Fr"Uy
1,00 pm
Se1ur<1~y 9:00 pm Sundt'( I :00 pm. l:OO pm J ;00 pm, 3:00 pm
5:00 pm, 7;00 pm ;\:00 Pm, 1:00 pm
t ,OCJpm,ll:OO pm 9,oopm
'Ma11 of La Ma11clia'
Really F,.01·n Lo1ido11
\\'hen John \Vood becornes The t a l ! . a n g u 1 a r
the .. M,1n of La il'lancha" Fri-Englishma n fits \\'Cll into the
d:ty in Full11rlo n Civic Light p.:irt of Don Quixote as he did
Oper;i's production, one might inlo the ro!c of Prcfessor
detect a slighl British accent. Henry Higgins i11 the Downey
1r ·s real. \Vood recalls that Community Theater's pro-
whcn he \1·as a stna!l boy .his duction o[ ''t\'ly Fair Larly"
mother work ed backstage at last year. He has remained
the Old Vic Theater when Sir active in theater an d recently
Lawrence Olivier and Vivian appeared in Long Beach Civic
Le igh performed there. During Light Opera's "Man of La
the London Blitz, he was one Mancha" as Carrasco.
of the many c h i Id r en Plummer Auditorium in
evacuated to the country. Fullerton. Chapman at Lemon
After serving two years \\'ith Street will house ''Man o[ La
the Royal Air Force, he Mancha," FCLO's second pro--
studied at !he Portsmouth duction of its premiere season·
College of art and then went There will be s ev en
on to London Polyte chnic to performances. June 16, 17, 23,
concl•ntrate on drtima.
I . d l 24 . 30 and July 1 at 8:30 p.m. I le a1er emigrate o with a matinee on Sunday,
ca_n?da \\'ith his \\life. former June 25 at 2:30 p.m. For
British actr('!:S. June Rnmsr.v ticket s call 87~1732
\\·here he stayed for eight ilfrii~-~-~=~~;~:~111 years beforr corning t o
So"rhern c,,r;rorni:o. _ _ fih)D!OI}!
Aho Playl119
"LOVING
With Geor91 s.iior '
iva Mari• Saint
S11111doy Marl._ 2:00 f'.M,
N(WPORT 8 £.A CH • OR.3-8350
Charlton Heston
"SKYJACKED"
ALSO IPGJ
Sean Connery
"THE ANDERSON
TAPES"
Lee Marvin
"MONTE WALSH"
ALSO IR)
Alex Cord
Samantha Eggar
"THE DEAD ARE
ALIVE "
"KLUTE "
Plus
Coll Theatrir
for$1cond IOTH COLOR
IOTH (IJ
lirimes" (21hhr) (R) Ben)1min Bnt lJH ~obtrt IK. Do1n1~ Sl!ow D1Yid
t . od 1 . 1 1.~ 1rnsrue1s. ons m tfltOPUI CIS$1C c 1 tSn· O W@ Cl)Dkk Cavttl 1-------------------------1
t
t.rrrllft doomed bJ prldt Ind 1mbl· m To Ttfl tflt Trvtk ••• 8) ll ltaifidt 12:00 m Movie: "Nny Wiit• (corn) '56-
&l httdon C.ntrtl Join Btnnttf, G1ry Merrill.
1%:30 0 Movlt: '1111 StHI Htln1tt" (dr1 )
1:30 '51-Gint Evi ns. Sltvt Broclit.
Q The Six Wives of 0) Co1111tty MM TI111 * Henry Vlll. Superb u" iJJ 0 0 CJ)~ Ntn Dramatic Series,
Starrinc Emmy-Award·
Winner Keith Michell
D D(BU"f '" Iii W'l\'tl If 1(1111
Hmry Yin ·•etthtrlne ol A11aon"
P1rt I KNSC p~n\1 tad! of tht
six pl1ys fn this hl1h11 1cd1lmea
1:30 IJ Merit: "Cvtst If the U11clt1cl"'
(llOrJ '59-E•ic r1emln1. Kt thlten
Crowley.
J;DO fJ Mowil: (C) "Honl Kon(' (1dv)
'51-Ron1ld Rearrn, Rhand1 flem·
in1.
BBC StrleS wttich won for Its Siu, 4:30 tJ Jkn
_ ..... ~ •• "POSSHSION 0,
JOIL tDIUNIY"
l)J-"""' AM• II.I
"IUFH"-t MllNDS"
DAILY PILOT J ;~
'TV Weekend
Sports, Music> Reign
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
NEW YORK iAP) -Spo11s
fans and music lovers got
most of the programming
break!S over the weekend on
television.
-There was baseball, golf aOO
horse r acing, among other
sports. And there was Sunday
night's rtmarkable "Portrait
of Stravinsky" on the public
broadcasting stations f o r
another cro.,vd.
the composer was talking in
hi.! Beverly Hills home about
everything from the ~asso
caricature of himself as a
yonger man to a long anecdote
about Jean Cocteau's three at-
tempts to write a JibrelLo !or
Stravin!iky's music. He :1P9ke
of music with the entbll!i.Mm
of a boy. Jn another he was
working with Pierre Boulez
correcting an error Boulez had
foun~ in one piece of printed
music .
A wise, amused old man,
Igor Stravinsky was seen
rehearsing an o rch e st r a.
discussi ng a ballet, ansv,rering
questions of an intervie1-1·er.
Often the lighting \\'as poor,
the sound was fuzzy and, rr.ost
shots or Pre\'ln, his wtre and
the.Ir twins at their country
borne outside London. Prev 1n
blamed the telev1!lion series.
"Peyton Place" -"a piece of
unspe'akahle nonsense...-" for
malung tt so d1fticuit for hirn
and his wife to achieve a
private Ji!e because in three
ye ars on the series, Mia had
become so well known.
~1ost interesting porlion.
however. showed Previn in
slacks and sneakers con·
l.lucting a rehearsal or the
shirt·sleeved orches tra.
··1t never (ails lo surpn .. r•
me that f lift an baton -i nd
lhey play," he said.
The hour program was film·
eel six and seven years ago
when the composer. who died
last year. was 83 and 84. It
was done in cinema verite
style, most fJf the time with
the people involved seemingly
unaware of camera_ And
seem ed to have been handled
casually. In some segmen!s diffitult, t h e tonversationh--------::==
'Fi£ltl l er'
New Cha111 1>
NE\\' 't'OT{K (UPI I -
.. Fiddler on the Roof,"
!he musical nbout ;i Rus·
si.'.ln Je11• 1vho prevails
despite the 1vorld's best
effort s to \\'C:it' him do1vn.
preva iled in another sen~t·
Saturday by becon1ing the
longest run ning sho1v 011
Broru:hvay.
\\ :!S ;1
f(•a\urc on Andre !'rrvin :ind
hi~ actress-wife. !\li.'.1 Farro\\'. I
1111 CBS. "60 \l1 ntli t'~. f'rl'I 111 1
is a furmer J;l~Z pi:.1n1~t and
composer of ll olly\VOud f1\111
scores \\'hO recently 1ras given
:1nr.thcr fO!ll" -1·c;1r conlrae!'
11 ith the London Srrnphony I
Orchestra. lie v;~s described !
by n a r r r ator-intervie1ver
Richard Dimbteby as
··England's Leonard Bern-By unoffic ia l count. th e
curtain fell for the 3.225th
time on "Fiddler" Satur-
day night, one more tiine
than "Life wi th Father"
in the 1940s.
stein." !~~~~~~~~~~~~ There were some interesting
Russians Hail ~EDWARDS
'I'HEATRES "Fiddler" already holds
the record for the longesl-
running musical, having
surpassed ''Hello, Dol!y"
last year.
Pianist Clil1u1·n ..,,,.=,,....,,=:;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;::::::;
But "fiddler" mav not
be much \on~er ror the
Great \Vhite \Vfly. Variety,
the weekly show business
ne\\'soaper \vh ich already
has chronicled ;i 900 uer-
cent·nlus profit for ''Fid·
dler," reports the ~hov,r
has been losing money in
recent months and n1ay
close soon.
MOSCOW (AP) -~1oscow
music lovers treated
American pianist Van Cliburn
to "lengthy applause and
showers of spring flo\vers"
Friday night at the close of his
fare\\-'ell conC'ert, the official
JJC\l'S agency Tn1>.-; l"lT•nrted.
Cliburn said ''Th:ink you for
everythint:" serer;'!J tint(•:; i11
I{ussian. Tass noted. fie \\'as
completing an eight-concert
tour in Leningrad and Moscow.
OPENING TONIGHT
THE SHOW. BIZ SENSATION
SINGER-GUITARIST
JOHN
McCORMICK
Direct From
Las Vegas And
Palm Springs
SAN CLEMENTE INN
125 AVENIDA ESPLANDIAN
SAN CLEMENTE 492-6103
,.. -. -!1ll1Ci SIADIUM·'l ,','I,
• --'l.""""C-ll"t~
., - -1. SIAD/UM!
• ~!!_I__.W:, ~
''WAI. IETWEEN MEN ~WOMEN "
511rrlnt
Jae' Lt mmon Ind "$1(1N GAME"
Ex<:lv,lvt Orange Covnr,
Rt .. rv.a Sut E~tmt11I
Noml"•!e<:I tor I Academy Aw.•r<1u
"ll'IODLE'R ON TliE ll OOF"
''llLENf 1.UNNING" • "ANDROMEDA STl.AIN'"
Tom SmorhtrS
"GET TO KNOW YOU R ltABBIT"
& "OMEGA MAN"
"THI U ST PICTUlll( lHOW" • "THI AN DEi.SON TAPES"
"THE NIGHT COMEI S"
"SOLDIEll BLUE" a "THE WILO BUNCH"
WORlO PREMIERE ·
MOC &.nflCltl• lttMWJ
.... ,,1;;i}~"i .... '"Ww•.t:!'...,.....-'"~ ,....,....
"' Df811JE RfYNOlDS-JAME! GAll:NE~
"NOW SWiil tT IS" Pi
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'"f-LA'Y If A£Al1'1.
SA~"
2NO BIG ATTRACTION
!AMES--COBURN .
"THE • ~,., .... , ............... . --.,.._._ . ..,, ......... . -..... '"' ....... ~.. ''')
···. .. • COAST lfWY. MT MACAllTtNlt llvD'. •
~EWPORT BEACH • 644·076
DAILY · 12:J0.31J0.7 & 10 P.M.
Mllrlv11
Br•ndu
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Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchan ge List
Stock Gain Melts
111 Ligl1t T1·ading
. J\'EW YORK (AP) -Alter five strai&ht "'"
. s1ons of sharply declining price1, the stock market
held the line loday. Trading was barely moderate
after a slon1 start.
"This is better than last week," commented
Bradbury K. Thurlow, of Hopping & Watson. Ho
said he took cot1rage from "the failure or last week's
;oiling ot carry through."
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llEW YORK fUPIJ -Tne lolloWl'l!I 11!1 1ho\I/\
l"lO.t ~1'11 <lowo thp molt lletrG Clfl Pl'l"(•P! cl
f•CfM'l'J~ <e<ia•!llt~ of volum,. Nt' ~n!I Pttctnt~~t ,~ .. 11e11 lrt 1111 dit11renc1
•ti(! lad•Y'~ (IOllnt Ol1(t.
1 M~cO..,..l<I ~ Std Kolllm" J Nt Stel'!d .1.'i ' Levl11 Furri J wn1Fry .OU
j Cn $IH I .41)
1 Pl1n ltt'.J' I ATO 1!K I
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1~ MOST ACTIVE lTOCK5 "II Ii•! Mii "' ' l"I llEW YORK !U P11 -ln• IS ,~· .tv•!I l'lifll .. ,., .ft ~~""e ,1M\I tr&ded on 111t New York ~h1v,11r ., ... 11•,
!>!Mk E••~Nle Mondw~ .... n MllCrt ..... lOt,
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Complete Closing Prices-American Stoel( Exrhangc List
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J 8 DAILY PILOT
"And now for a little number I wrote mvself which
quite by accident has my phone number in it ... :.
L. M. Boyd
Old lndia11 Cl1i ef
Had Sex Appeal
Those scientists who make a study of Uquor troubles
say the human OOdy is least able t.o cope with alcohol at
noon, best able around 8 o'clock in the evening. A drink at
lunch, they aver, kicks a Jot harder lhan a dinnertime nip.
Remember that.
ATLAm!C CITY'S boardwalk was not so named be-
leap.
cause it was made of boards. Started
out as Boardman's Walk, the brain-
chi!d or « railroad conductor named
Alexander Boardman. Time shortened
it.
FACT THE law in North Carolina
requires twin beds in motels to be
at least two feet apart was reported.
What wasn't reported is this legal dis-
tance is .t8enerally referred to by al·
torneys thereabouts now as the lover's
QUERIES -Q. "Who said, 'Bachelors' wives and old
maidA' children are always perfect'?"
A. That was Nicholas Chamfort, the Frenchman. He
also said, "A woman is like your shadow -follow her,
she flies; ny from her, she follows."
Q, "JUST about all a woman doctor's patients are
likewise women, right?"
A. Nowhere near all. Three out of 10 are men. Aver-
age.
SEX APPEAL, that was the characteristic common
lo most American lndian chiefs. Not courage, necessarily.
Nor physical strenglh. Nor brains, even. The historians
who make this fascinating claims try to prove it with lhe
contention that most of said chiefs were selected by the
women of their tribes, not the men.
GOLD -Maybe you didn't know your hair. if any,
contains gold. Just 430 parts per billion, to be exact.
.HOW MUCH can a working wile actually expect to
clear after laxes, transportation, extra dresses, lun ches,
so on? Just about 40 percent of her paycheck, that's all.
MORE mAN hair the souls who walk into small Joan
companies to apply for quick cash get turned down, the sta-
lislics show.
ANY YOUNG lady who wants to inspire her gentle-
man friend to propose matrimony might consider this. The
experts on C"Oior psychology contend she ciught to wear
something red. if the old boy is particularly shy, but some-
Uting white, if she's especially aggressive.
AM ASKED to name the country's first circus. That
was Rickell 's, probably. In Philadelphia. In 1792. Or so It
states in the record book at hand. Wasn 't that the outfit
whereat a trapeze artist introduced tights by putting on a
performance in his red flannel underwear after his uniform
failed to show up from the cleaners? Believe so.
Address ma il to L. J\.1. Boyd. P. 0. Box l875, f•leiv·
port Beach, Calif. 92860.
TUESDAY &
WEDNESDAY
ONLY!
• , ... _...iL._., ___ ,.,..,._ ••• .-_,_.._ ~-.n-'''
SUBMARINE SANDWICHES
3 FOR
Chucked full of assorted luncheon meats, lettuce &
dressing. One's a meal.
I'
' ,.
" '
ALL THE
SPAGHETTI
YOU CAN EAT
With meat sauce and parm~
san cheese, crisp coleslaw,
roll & butter.
c
DAILY 10·1 0, SUNDAY 10-7
1 •
'' •
• • i
t
COCONUT BON BOHS
2/1.00
• •
Delicious 1 lb. package of coconu t
hon bons. A real treat f-or the whole
family,
QEU~'tt::::S&@e;g::g1 ftG9Ut!iO:fd!&fS§J4 'Mt &!@/M\l§@k2%*W#!iMl!S#F MttM'at@RN?iiJt! ii1 %Hl&fJit!liMUajikrilJSff&l ; IM m
. /
. . . . . CHARGE IT! . · ·.
'
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TUBEROUS BEGONIA
2.3'
Beautiful begonias for hani:;·
ing boskc't, rose fol"m. Dou ·
bles a.nd singles. Corne in as•
sorted colors.
'.
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ENVELOPES
28'
Box or 100 ct. envelof)('.~-
3''{ x 6%" size. Shop and
.saveo!
' "
MARVEL THE MUSTANG
$5.00
•
Push-Pull drive: r.1arvel gallops ""ithout
motor or battery. Shop and ~ave at this
low Kmart price •
'
MEN 'S HARNESS BOOTS
REW. 7.f7 $4g71
JO"' bro'''" vinyl boots «'Ith side 2\ppef'
and bucklt'd harnl'SS effect for added
style. SuPf'r-comfortable to wear. Styl-
i.sh below flared slacks. 7-12.
'---------------------•~·, .. ~·~.1':.~~:~nr~~lf';'.~D.:.""'* .. ""'~~~~-.~~~~~~·'£>'~il' }if: .. ~ ":.~,"""""""'""'" r:
Burly Ex-Navyman
Joins Meter Maids
'I j
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The unaccustomed to seeing a
newest nieter maid In town male meter maid.
NOW!
complained a man swung back
a fist in anger when a ticket
was pinned on his car.
"He would have been wear-
ing that scooter if he hit me."
said George Allen. referring to
his police tratfic 8COOter.
A S-foot-4, 210-pound retired
Navy man, he has joined San
Dh!igo's all-girl force of meter
maids because it was too con·
fining tnslde as a city police
ditpotcher.
Allen' and the seven girls
bMd. out $2 citations for cars
~ 1t expired meters and
$4 Uctets for overtime park-
la(.
. Wl»le. the girls wear a skirt
and bloUle on the job, he's
allowed to work in his slacks,
whlle .idrt alld tic.
i;..ille &iymcak, supervillng meter maid+ said a apt<:lal ti-
tle of_ ...... control officer
-~ Au.. ~ ... "we dlclnl llilak aMler maid suited hizD.H ' • I .~' Joi> ..ulta him, uys ~ 'a<epl !Cir the OC•
ealiliiill' cotealls oncf lll'C<ic eom11!0111r 11 t e "hello, ....U.• from p atrer.sb y
In July, more men are e1-
pected to be hired and then
everybody will be known as a
parking control officer.
2nd Tribe
Due Share
REDWOOD HANGING LOG PLANTER
LH.IJ -llx7
Disco1111/ Price
REDWOOD
STAIN
97'•J.L SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
The Yurek Indians shouJd
share equally with the Hoopas
in the $1 million-a-year This btautiful redwood hanging planter 'Wil( idd ch.arm A hlahly penetratinc wood
revenue from timber-cutting •nd ~aury to any patio. Buy several ~t thi1 price •lain with natural redwood on the 12-square-mile Hoopa color.
2 DAYS
ONLY 1.99
Kodak'• MW Super 8 ftlm S1lM1 you brighter, aha,.,...,_,,..
cotorful home -ovies than ...,. t>.forel Svper t has 50%
More pkture area than NSIWw a,.,. RIM. Th••'• no threod-
lftg, no ·flip-o¥W; Super I comes It• factorr-loaded ICodopot
~. carlridsr-that toad lMtantly-let yov shoot a fl.di 50
fMt of oction wtthout stopping.
Valley Indian Reservetk>n, aJ!::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::;:;:;:;;:::::::;:;;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: U.S. Court of Claims trlaJ
commissioner has ruled. t ~E~~:~:~.~1~:r:r:: USE YO.UR Kmart Charge or Bankamericard
andlssubjectOOre~ewby the~---............................................................................................. -.. ......................................................... ,
~:i:;,memtie. cour t or PATIO HOURS: NOW OPEN 10 to 10 DAILY. 10 to 7 SUNDAY
William Wunsch, attorney
for tht Yureks, uld that 1lnce
1951 ebout ft4 million has been
paid to 1.200 Hoopu alld that
3,IGO Yurtl tlldlans should be
tr1tllled to share equally In the
timbtr-<"Utting revenue.
-· --. -· --. --.
2200 HARBOR BL VD. ~;7::~· 0~~ COST A MESA
' ~ Harbur
17
17
Lag1•••a Beaeh
EDITION
T ... y's Fbud
N. Y. Steeb
VOL. 65 , NO. 16", J SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY; JUNE 12, 19n TEN CENTS
Pilot Held Over Coast Stunt Flying
A hair-raising st ries of acrobatic stunts
including ont powtr di\'t' to rooftop level
over four Orange Coast cilie! led to the
arrest or a pilot pursued by l\vO police
JJehcopters early today.
J{ichard B. Loomis, 24, of Arcadia, v.•as
taken in to custody at Orange County
Airport shortl y allt·r midnight along 'ft'ith
one of his three passengers.
Loomis was arrested by C'rev.•men or
the Costa Mesa police helicopter Eagle II
and booked into jail on suspicion of
vio lating section 21407 .5 of the Publi~
Utilities Code.
Officers Randy Nutt and David Brooks
charged Loomis under t~ PUC Code
"'ilh operating a plane while under the in·
fluence of an intoxicant.
Incidents were cited over Nev.·port
Beach, Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa
and Irvine.
One passenger. Tom F. D'Angelo, 23 , or
I 131h Turquoise Ave., Balboa Island, was
also arrested on swpicion of being drunk
in public.
Investigators \i:ho said they confiscated
a half-gallon jug of vt'ine from the coc kpil
of the red-and-white Cessna aircraft in-
volved in the aerial escapade alleged all
four occupants had been drinking.
Only Loomis , who had no pilot's license
in his possession, and D'Angelo had ap-
parently consumed enou gh to warrant
thei r arrests, according to invesLiKaling
officers.
Officers Brooks and Nutt said they first
spotted !he plane flying erratically in the
area of lhe Santa Ana ruver, between
Costa ~1esa and H4Dlington Beach.
They charged th at Loomis, a utility
com pany employe, went into a stetp
power di ve and only pulled out 100 feet
above ground level.
Giving chase, the y were joined by the
Newport Beach police helicopter and
claimed they saw Loomis go into a steep
climb over UC Irvin e before nearly stal·
!ing.
The plane then made a sharp, 100.
degree turn and headed back over
Newport Beach, at times ioon1ing as low
as 500 feet over residential art:as.
Shepherding tht: zig-iagging plane back
toward Orange County Airport, arresting
officers in the hellcopter said Loomis
barely missed crashing into a 4()..foot
glide slope Indicator tower while landing.
He was stopped at midfield by airport
security officers who ordered the flier to
)
ouse avern
Petitions Set
Group Opposes
Hillside Project
Organized oppositicm. ro a. plan to
de\'elop seven acres of hillside property
abo\'e Laguna 's city hatl corupl ex wilh
:!00 senior citizen apartments \\.'as
Cliristine Du.e
At Awards Fete
TransseXUal Otrlltine Jorgemen
and actor Jay North of "Dennis the
Menace" fame w.tll be guests at
tonight's Laguna Beach HI g h
School drama department awards
program.
Drama In st r u ct or Jerry
McCullough said Mi.!ls Jorgensen,
who recently moved to Laguna
Niguel, will be asked lo "say a few
\l.'Ords" lo those attending the
awards presentation. Actor North
also is expected to speak to the
gathering.
The presentation v.·111 take place
at the Festival of Arts Forum
Theater at 7:30 p.m. Outstanding
drama students wiU be honored at
the event.
High Court Gives
Lawyer 'Right'
To Defendants
WAS•IINGTON (AP ) -The Su preme
Court today granted all defendants who
face a possible jail term the right to be
represented by a lawyer.
The 7 to 2 d~ision delivered by Justice
William O. Douglas, guarantees a
lawyer's help to millions of poor people
who sre prosecuted for petty offenses and
miJdemeanon.
Less than half the 1tatn supply free
·lawyers to defendants in all trials that
could lead to a jall term. The hlstorl.c rul·
ing, an e.xpansioo of ~t Six~ Amend·
ment decisions, will neceuarily change
trial practices in &hose alfl.t~.
Chief Justice· Warren E. Burger, who
went along, said he was confident the
legal profession would meet the "large
new burdens" placed upon It.
Justices Lewis F, Powell and William
11. Rehnquist, the court's lreshman mem·
bers objected to the sweep or tbe dec~ion althoucb they did not dissent in a
technical senoe. Tiiey aid the court
should have ruled'then ii 1 right 1o a
ta wyer only when 11neceaacy to assure a
ia1r tilal'."
In llllS· I .... !mown u Gwi-v.
WlinWright lold the principle that 1 mon
on trial for "lerioul off~" bu tbe rifJ>I to I ilwYer ud 11111 U be cam>ol af·
ford ... lbe state iilulllulil>lt COlilsel.
Until tbea, the Sb<th Amendment bod
b<en int.rpnled u oeceuUaUog ilwyen
oolY 'In capitol offe..., -when tbete
we I chance of a d:eath teoteoce.
Subsequel)lly, the court granted the
right to a· Im l•WYer """" the Jall tenn
could, be sl:I months or mort.
Toclay:a "dedllon wipes Olll the dlatino-
tion between felonlea and mlademeanon
for petty off..-ao for u thll rliht ta
concerned. Unle1t • defendant lmowlnll1
and lnt.W,ent11 woi-a lnyer'1 helJ>,
he CllllGI be 1f!111 14 prloao "for ony of·
f ..... wllllller. dulllled .. petty, -.,...... or felont, unlea he wu
r'fPl'tttnled by COUDKl at his lrta1 ,''
~wn>le.
launched Sunday by a group of Mystic
Hills homeowners.
They agreed to form a fact.finding
committee and circulate petitions pro-
testing the variance builder-developer
John Elden will seek at a Planning Com-
mission hearing June 19.
He will ask the commission to rezone
the land from R-1 (single residential) to
&3 (mllltiple rWdenll4!>. • , ·· •
Elden's plan is far pedeatrlJD-Orlented
homing for retlr..t, low-in<omo persons,
wtth access to the clofvntown area by an
inclined outdoor· ele•ator.
If city approval were grant.Id, be would
seek a low-i nterest construction loan
from federal funds eannarked for 5enior
citizens housing, to permit building of the
complex at a cost permitting reasonable
rentals, Elden .!laid.
Following the Sunday mteling. 38
signatures were obtained on the petitions
of protest .
Appointed to the fact-finding committee
\\'ere Roger Dennls, 430 Blumont St ..
Mrs. Marguerite DeLoach, 425 Blumont
St.. Irving Johnson, 620 Mystic Way.
William B. Stearn. 480 Blumont St. and
Philip E. Pold, 622 Mystic Way.
The petitions list seven reasons for the
homeowners' opposition to Elden's plan·
ned development or "any apartment
units" on the hi!Wde property. They are:
-Tremendously increased burden on
our .already overloaded mun I c Ip a I
services, without corresponding increases '
in tax revenue.
--Poor access in case of fire .
-Stability of th is ground is highly
question able.
-Federal financing will usur p ci ty con·
trol.
-No apparent control over .1r provision
against re-sale or sub-leasing, leading lo
influx of possibly undesirable tenants at
low rental s.
-No assurance or guarantee the com-
plex will be restricted to senior citizens.
-Granting Of this variance would
downgrade the entire character of this
area as now regulated by city ordinance
and surrounded by a large concentratJon
of u~sive and valuable 1.ingle family
residences.
Following the meeting, opokesmon
William B. Stearn urled Interested prop-
erty owners to attencl the Jmie 19 P1ur
ning Commission hearing, or, if tmable to
attend, to file letters protesting the
variance applic1tlon.
Gown Modeling
Set at Chapel
Weddlog gowns worn throua boul the
YWI In Sl Mary's Epilc:opol diurtb ond
will bo ·moclefod·Tulldoy evening • ,.....,.. to bo Jlftl<llled 11 the
by Iii Lqmlo Beach COmmunlly
lllltorical ~.
Slidel ol the londmlrk chepel, -to be dlanlnlled Ind ralored, oloo wUl be
shOlm ll>d Yestry ~ Joon Bedell wm · . d!SCUJs tlforls being mode to
reconstruct the !tit bUlldlng, whidl 1111
been condemned·u 1trudurill1 unsafe.
lnlormol tours of the clllrch ind
chapel area will begin 11? p.m .. followed
by a -ram,ld the Guild Hall al 7:4$
p.rg., along with rtfree.hments and muslc.
lntert'st.ed rtsktents are Invited to at-
tend.
Persian R~ Vanishes
A l'enlon ru& volued at 1135 dlop-
poored S!m41y liun the Rug Shop, 1217
S. Colll 81"""1, P.O.. 11ld the 41by7·
foot rug 1pponoUy wu taken while the
cJ<rt WU busJ'.
O.-ILY ,!LOT ,. ..... W LM ''l'M
A Heavy Bear to Cross
' Actually, Bruno, who played Gentle Ben, was just
that as he joined members of the First Baptist
Church of Costa Mesa at Sunday Sc hool. Led by
trainer Ren Oxley, of Saugus, Bruno appears to be
just another face in the crowd after Sunday seniice.
Newest honorary Sbnda'y SChool member to receive
certificate from Rev, James 0 . Combs (ushering
Bruno along behinij ti'a!nerJ Is not without humon
weakness. Bruno's rice I• .addiction to jellybean..
Lifeguards Log
Quiet W eekcnd
On Area Beacl1es
Despite balmy weather and fairly large
beach crowds, Laguna Beach lifeguards
logged a "quiet" weekend, with no
rescues.
Moderate surf and low tides during the
peak beacbgoing periods Saturday and
SUnday cmtributed to the peaceful ac:ene.
Jelljfish, Which have plagued swim ..
mm in recent weeks , were still around,
but are dimlnisblng in numbers, auards
reported.
With air temperatures arouod. 74 and
water warming up to 64 degrees, Stind ay
crowds on city and adjacent county
beaches numbered an estimated 40,000.
On Saturday, when overcast did not Hrt
till after midday, crowds did not exceed
25.000.
The 18 man lifeguard force will begin
Its full summer cov.erage, Saturday, with
II guar~ manning 21 llleguord statlo ...
two emergency vehicles and the reecue
boat aeven days a week. Skeleton, guard
crews man the beacbel ·cturini-fall,
winter and IJlring months •
Seniors
Court Gives Clubs OK
To Bar Negro Guests
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme
Court today upheld the r ig ht of private
clubs to exclude Negroes as guest!.
The 6 to 3 decis ion was delivered by
freshman Justice William H: Rehnquist.
II went againlt a black brought u a
guest to the Moose LOdge in Hani1burg,
Pa.
The black, U!roy Irvis, the majorlly
leader of the Pennsylvania Hou11e, con-
tended that because the club held a liquor
license from the state it could not exlude
black! as members or as guests.
Today 's decision deaJt directly with the
exclusion of blacks as guests -and not
with their exclusion a.!I members. Rehn·
quist said lrvi.!I could not challenge the
Lodge's all·while membership policy
because he: had never applied ror
membership, but had only been brought
to the club as a guest.
Rehnqul st said the club's refusal to
l!OTV< Negroes does not violate the llfh
Awarded
Amendment even lhough the l\.foose
Lodge gets its liquor license through the
a tale.
"Since state.furnished oervlcea Include
such necea1ities of life as electricity,
water, 1od police ind fire protecllon,
such • holding would utterly omuculote
the dlatlnction between private as
dlstingulsbtd from ll1te conduct," he
11ld.
Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and
Justices Harry A. Blackmun and Lewil
F. Powell, the three other Nixon 1d·
ministration appointees, lined up with
Rehnquist, a former assistant attorney
general. Justices Potter Stewart and
Byron R. White allO were In the ma·
jorlty.
Dls>enling were Justlc<t Wlllilm O.
JlouilH, WlUllm J, Brennan Jr., and
11Blrlood Manhall, the oour\'1 oaly
Negro member.
$66,225
3 V aledictoriaris Lead Class irt Laguna Assembly
. By FREDERICK SCllOEMEHL
OI tlle oallr ,.... .....
Led by trl-nledlctoran Wllllnm Bird,
Jane RethleltOD and Krlllin ThleM. lt%
Laguna Beod1 llllh School oenlors
walked olf with •.flS in awards al the
11111u1I 1wardl a-.bly this mornin«.
Bini, Mlll•Ilethle!oen IDd Mis> Thlene
Ud1 maintained 4.t (straight A) grade
point ,...._ clurift& their fOlr yeon oL
high ocbool Eich •u presented •
special award fro1n Principal Donald
I-I aught.
Studcnta and members of the com·
munity packed the high school boys'
gymnaalum to watch the graduates
rec::elve the cash and scholarship vaJues,
aome f2:5,000 greater than the total
1mount preanted last year.
, Jllldlng the cash scholarships was
..... praented by the Laguna Buch
F'estlv1l of Arts to 21 graduates.
'
Other slteable 1rants Included 18,000
from the Thur11ton Foundation to 24
students and $3,000 fron1 the Ebell Club
to 111 1tudenl3 ond $3,000 from the Ebell
Club to 11J: students.
Winners 1nnounced 11 the ,,..mbly
and. the awarcb rea:lved are u followa :
~· \=c: a?.~T;!~~/~·•11""-~ ,~':':., ~t9f' Awtrfl; Clllf'I
(Set AWARDS, P11t II
taxi IO\lt'ard the tower building , whtrt be
was to meet in\'estigatlng officers.
Police said Loomis' plant: finally halted
only one foot from the building and near-
ly co llided with two rows of parktd
aircraft as tM weaving Cessna pulled up
to a halt.
The suspect was held ln lieu or $250 bail
this morning. while pohce forwarded a
report of the incident to the Federl'l l
Aviation Admi nistration for pos.!lible ad·
ditional legal action.
Restaurant
Loot Set
At $3,500
By JACK CHAPPELL
01 Ill• OlllY ~1 .. 1 111ft
Two men, nne brandishing a !nub-nosed
revol ver, held up Laguna Beach's fam ous
\Vhite House restaurant shortly after 8
a.m. today, tak ing al least $3,:SOO in
week end receipts.
Kory Saruwatari, operator of the
restaurant, at 330 S. Coast lligh"''ay, his
wife Gladys and Dan ~1ikc\s, an employf,
were tied and left unhannttl 8.!I the two
men )eft the eatabllahment.
Saruwat.ar\ said ht was working behind
the restaur•t bar wben he looked up and
11w a-man with a run faclnl bim.
Tllo 1111m11"' ~ u al Jllldlum heJllil, wUJi, a titlender build ind dart>
hair, Ortlericl . Jiiin to coll the other
tmploye1 out.
Dan Mikel1, work.Ing In tht men'1 rest
room ttepped out and faced lhe gunma•.
"What a th ing to happen , and I've got
only three more days left." Saruwatari
said, explaining that on Wednesday, he
would end his lease of the Laguna
retit.aurant which he has operated since
1961. The business was establi.!lhed in
191!.
After taking all the money from the of-
fice, tbe gunman and his· accompliCll
went to the bar area and collected more.
money the re,
Mrs. Saruwatarl and l\.1ikels were then
freed from the locked storeroom and.
with Saruwatari, tied to the pedestala of
the re1taurant tables.
" 'I'm sorry I have lo tie you up like
thi,,' the guy 1aid to me,'' Mrs.
Sannratari Aid. Siie llJII hod ftlll or/
her wrists where her bondl been ~
ed.
"I just stood there, waiting for someone
to say something and this guy stuck his
gun in my stomach and told me 'move
over there,' " Mikels recounted following
the robbery.
I
~1rs. Saruwatari. working ln the kitch--
en, was called out into the rutaucant
area and then she and Mikels, were
locked In ~ storeroom. '
1be gunman then forced Saruwatari to 1 the office and made him open the aafe.
1be other man scooped up the money.
l>mdllng ti up In hi• 1hlrt wblcll be bid
wmicked from hlo lroalerl. .
"The 111Y boldlnl the CUD aeemed
qltated, lie kepi N:Yllw 'limy up, don'I.
bother with tlio diocb ot the omoll
1tuff,' " Saruwallfl uld. · ·
"He dktni ue_ me Yery wtll," Ml.tell
(See WHITE llOVS&, P ... II ...... c ....
Now )'Oii ,., """' Ille cor. Tiie w.11hetlody -,.... ._..en
the 11ori.m tw ,,_.Y -...i
therealler. mp. al 'Ill ezpoded 11
the be-. ..... lo 1$ -Lon In lllo Wit -
INSDtli:.ToD.t.Y ·-
L.M. leYt ,, ...... .
Ctllftnoi.. I
Clltt.•U'.. ..1'
C....lt• II c.......... ,,
..... NoltkH I
111•1twt.1 .... • . ..,.. ...... ,.
,1_.. 1 .. 1. ......... ,.
AMa....... 1• ~ .............
... ........ " -.. Ii ........... ._c...., ' • .,.~ ...... \4
'""" llo'lt J'9dl ........... , • T........._ 11
-u -. .............. " --. •
•
•
•
• i • ' .
' I "
'
OAllV PILOT $1•11 Ph•I•
VIEW FROM ABOVE SHOWS CTPA MODEL OF FESTIVAL OF ARTS AREA IN LAGUNA CA NYON
Plan Calls for Undergrounding Portion of ROl!d and Creation of Additional Parking
General Telephon e Ci1t s
Amount Sought in Hike
General Telephone Company of
California, serving orange Co a s t
subscribers in lbe Laguna Beach and
Huntington Beach areas, hat reduced its
current rate increase application from
$21.4 million to $10.1 million annually.
The amended application, it was stated,
resulted from a recent California Publi('
Utilities c.ommis.!ion ruling regarding a
rate increase for Pacific Telephone, as a
result of which General Telephone ex-
pects to receive fll millioo additional
revenue annually from PacUlc Telephone
sallemeoy, ~
Public bearings on General's rate in-
crease 1pplication are scheduled to begin
t o d a y in the State Building, 197 So.
Broadw1y, Los Angeles. Public witnesses
are to testify on June 19.
Qianges are proposed in basic rates for
both residence and business customers,
serrice c o n n e c t i o n s , non-published
listtnp and customer-requel!'.ted phone
number Changes.
Tbe utility is requesting a S-cent
monthly increase for reside n ti al
customers, 15 cents a month for business
customers and 20 cents per month for
PBX trunb.
A 25-cent per month cl'iarge for each
non-published phone Dumber, a $5 charge
to change a residence phone and $10 to
Laguna to Hold '
Unique Campaign
For Boys' Club
The Boys' Club or Laguna Beach _Is
launching a unique Back-a-Boy fund~ra1s
ing drive to help ease its current finan·
cial problems,
Individual~ and organizations are in-
vited to back one boY for one year at lhe
club, at a cost of $80.
This is the amount, says executive
director Neal Hopkins. needed to give one
boy use of the club fa cilities for a year,
including building maintenance. person·
ncl, shop and sports equipment and other
recreational and educational services.
"t present the cl ub is serving 36S
youthful members. who pay an .annual
membership fee of $1.50, and the goal, U
the Back·a-Boy drive is successful, is a
membership of about 500.
A check for $80 made payable to the
Boys' Clu b will guarantee at lea st one
boy a full year's use of the fa cility, says
Hopkins.
OIAN•I COAST L•
DAILY PILOT
Tiie Ofanl't COQI 1:¥.ll.Y PILOT. wtltl .....,.kh
b cornblntd tlMI N-..rr.u., ,. publllhtd b'f
t!I• Or~ c-1 ,_,.,...,..,, C'ofnpariy, s~
nte .clltion\ llr. Pllbll)flfd, Morld•Y ttl~ll
Frid1y, 191" Co.la Me1a, .. .-wp:irl tlffdl,
11.ntlrl;ton &tl<h!Fouritaln Valley, Utvn•
tlttch, INlf!e/Stddltiblcll •l'ld 5,,. C1tmfflftf
Sall J 11111 Ctpbtrano. A sf"91• rt11lon•I
~!liOOI I• pvb!Jslltd Sltvnltys •rid Svnchf'.
Ti,e prlnc:IHI PIJbllsll"" """' h al U) Ww,I
&1y S!rltl, Co.ta Mftf, C•Ufomit, n.N.
Ro1t1rt N. Wted
Prnkle<W •rid P1obllsllet
J1ck R, Curl1y
Viet Pf"t:slG""I tl1d 0-tl Ml""'91'
lhorn•c K11 ,if
E<1i10r
Thoma1 A. Murpf.!ftt
MtMfolfnt EdlfW"
Ch•rl11 H. Looi R;c!.tr4 '· N•ll ~lttMI M"'"1!9 Edllon
IAtn• .._. Offtff
221 Fo1t,t Av•nu•
M•lll11 AJJrt••: P.O. 111 66'. f1612
-~ CMlf Maa: no wm .. ., 3trwt ·=Mdu »33 l<t...-t hl.lleYl'N H1111! Ifft ... (fl: 17'7S l•dl '°'11...,.nf 1911 C 19> • ....,_ RI CtrnlN 11:•1
'"•••••• 1n~11 MJ ... 121 C1m"'"1 .._.,.,, .. , I 6-41..JIJI
...,_..._.Al!!..,a1..m:
T 111•111 4t4-M66
~·· 1911, o..,.. C..11 ~llblllflllt c.m,.,...,, Ne """" '"""'· '""""''*-·
change a business phone are included .
'The original $21 .4: million rate increase
request was filed in February to offset
increased labor costs.
From Pagel
AWARDS. • •
Diving, Photo Gear
Worth $2,000 Taken
'
Plan11ers to See
Festival Plaza
Details Tonight
A detailed proposal for creation of a
Festival Plaza will be presented to the
Laguna Beach Planning Commission at
7:30 o'clock tonight by the Citizens' Town
Planning Association.
A model, photographs and a brochure
will be used to illustrate the plan to turn
the road area in front of the Festival of
Arts grounds into a pedestrian plaza with
parking for 1,125 cars underground and in
nearby structures .
The plan, under stOOy for three years,
envisions creation of a major plaza area
by diverting the existing Canyon Road to
the base of the hills opposite the festival
grounds, then tak ing it underground ad·
jacent to City Hall to connect with
Broadway lo the beach.
Minor plazas, joined by stairways to
the major plaza, would be created next to
City Hall and between the Playhouse,
Festival of Arts and a new School of Arts
building.
Euralyptus groves would be establlshed
around the existing sewage treatment
plant, between the playhouse plaza and
the festival and on the plaza borders.
Opposite the playhouse there would be
space for a 1,2000-seat auditorium for the
presentation of ballets, symphonies and
operas, which cou.ld be funded by private
funds and a public grant.
The festival exhibiUon areas would be
enlarged threefold. The work would be in
increments. No cost estimates have been
given.
An integrated transportation .system,
with a monorail depot for connection with
Santa Ana and coastal communities, local
and interurban bus deix>t and tram depot,
would qu alify with twop priority for a
Federal transix>rtation grant, says the
report.
The plaza system. says the CTPA,
"should produce a handsome net return
for the ci ty" through parking ihc:omes.
kiosk and exhibit area incomes, private
investments in adjacent areas. municipal
ground leases and rentals aod increased
sa les tax revenue .
Froni Page 1
WHITE HOUSE
~:-iid. lie said that he had work ed his \Vay
free, but was \Va iting for the man to
leave before getting up.
"I coul dn't see !hem, but onCi! Kory
1,_·al!cd out to me and said, 'how are you
Oanny?'
''One of the men called back, 'what was
that?'" Mikels said.
Shortly afterward, Saruwatari jumped
tip and ran to the telephone 11nd called
police.
All lhree victims agreed that the man
wi th the gun was the boss. The other
man, described as about 5 foot, 10 Inches
tall with a fair complexion and light hair,
just did as be was told, they aaid.
"I wasn't scared at all; they were just
not the type to be scared of," Mrs.
Saruwatari said.
Detectives believe the bandits entered
through the rear restaurant door opening
on Ramona Avenue.
Construction workers on the new
Laguna Beach County Library im-
mediately behind the resaturant were
questioned by officers, but apparently the
gunman and his accomptlce left un-
noticed.
Police believe the robbers were
fAmili <i r v.·ll h the layout of the restaurant
and with the areas money was normally
kept .
"He aeemed to know just where to ro.•
Saruwatarl said.
The $3,500 loss ts not covered by ln-
surnnce as the compani es require their
clients to be protected by alanm, and the
White House was not.
The Saruwataris were planning on a
trip to Japan after he lcfl the business on
Wednesday.
Mikels, 2-4, is a graduate student at Cal
State Fullerton and son of Jacl:le Mikels,
restaurant bookkeeper who opens the
r~taurant every day but Monday. ••toriM ...,,.. w ...... , .......... ,, """"' ---!..::""'' .. ~ wlltlwf .... la! .... ,... " .,,..,.,, """"'. -
Diving gear and u n de rw ate r
photographic ~ui~nt valued at more
t.h8n $2 ooo wtte t rttd stolen from a
locked car parked a ong the 100 block O[
Anita Street Friday. The White Route t'elllurant I s
Laguna's oldest having been founded In
1918 by a couplo named Bini. '..,.; ........... •Jd II C ... a ,....,
le.II.... ~IM IW e.rrlw tu.S
-"!ilbWI tlr Mall U,IL INllfllirl MU11WJ ~ ......... .,.., ltltlllhlY.
J.,.ph Luithly, 26, of Sepulve<la
rtporled the daylight bw'glary. Police
said that the 1utomoblle'1 wind wi ng was
popped ORe• to pin access.
A sign proclaiming, "Eat with the
'Birds.',' u<ed to adorn tho front ol tho
eatery known up and down Ibo COOll.
Coalition Panel Eyed
20 Named to Fight Pacific Coast Freeway
A group of 20 weU-known en-
vtroomentallsls and freeway fighters
from six Southern Califllrnla coast3l
communities Saturday were appointed to
a steering commJllee of the newly forn1-
ed Coastal Communities Coalition formed
to fight the proposed Pacific Coast
Freeway.
The panel includes two NtWPort Beach
councilmen and the leaders of various
citizens' con1mittees in Lagw1a Beach,
!-ieal Beach. Long Beach. :lnn Juan
Capistrano and Laguna Ni~ucl.
Ne"'port 13each Vice fi..fayor llown rd
Rogers and Count•ilman John Store are
on the panel. aolng with Arnold fl nno, a
1nember of the Board of zOning Ad-
justment in Laguna Beach: William
Leak, chairman of Village Laguna:
\Valter J. Koc h, CCC chairman, \\'as
ulec ted as chairman of the new coali-
tion .
Schley and McCollum v.·ere appointed
vice chairmen. Chase was elected
treasurer; Mrs. !!all was selected
recording secretary and Mrs. Rudd, cor-
respond ing secretary,
_<\s expec ted, in Its first action. the
group adopted a resolution calling on
area legislators to actively push anti-
freewtty legislation in Sacramento.
1'he reso lution po ints out that previou ~
<leletions of the proposed superhighway
"11u1ke ii extr~n1ely questionable that this
fr eeway will ever become the region::il
type of freeY:ay which was envisioned
when it l\'as approved by the Stale
Aid Chamber
Highv.·ay Commiss ion.,;
It ls trHical ol the State Division (If
Highways land acquisition program.
It isays land has been purchased and
lield "without justification and for un·
necessary reasons" and says the result
•·is an untold loss of lax revenue as ¥:ell
as personal losses to pri vate landowner"
arljacent to and in the im medjate vicinity
of r1g ht-0f·way purchased by the state."
l\r)t'h this 1norning described the Jlf'\f
t:Oa!it 1on as ''l'rllhU.~J:tStie" IO\Vard ll,
~onl and predi('ll·d its inembership ll'Jtl
t•x pand eve n rnorf' at s lJ c ~" e d i n •
1neetings.
Ile said the panel Will mf!et again June.
24 at the hon1e of Council1nan Store Ill
Corona del JI.t ar,
Richard E. Smith. president, Good
G<ivemment Group of SeaJ Beach and
Robert C. McCollum, chairman, AJliance
of llomeowners' AMociaUoru: of San Juan
Capistrano.
Other steering committee members are
Jan llatl, chairman, Pacific Coast
Freeway Opposition Committee of Lonf!
Beach: \Vi!Jiam Agee, Newport Beach
planning commissioner; Michael A.
Schley. president , Citizens' Town Plan·
ning Associat ion. IJaguna Beach : Mildred
B. Hannum, a me1nber of lhe Laguna
Reach Open Space Committee and Bea
\Vhittlesey, \'ice president of Laguna
Greenbelt , Int.
Official-Hotelman Urges
Occupancy Tax Increase
Also on the panel are Margot Skilling,
co-thairinan of the !!arbor Area Freev•ay
Fig hters' Citizens' Coordinating Cont·
n11 ttee; Earl llardage. a me1nber of the
J,ido Isle Community Association : Carroll
Bee k, a member of Ne11;port Residents
United; E. Percival Chase, chairman of
the Laguna Niguel Homeowners' Associa-.
tion: Suzanne Rudd, .secretary of the
Harbor Area CCC; former Newport
Beach mayor Paul J. Gruber; Marshall
Duffield, chairman of the Harbor Area
Freeway 1',ighters and Frances Robinson,
a member of Friends or NeWJX>rt Bay.
All-night Party
For Laguna Higli
Grads Scheduled
Minutes after receiving their dip1omas:
Thursday night, Laguna Beach High
School graduates will be back up at their
alma mater for a Mexican Fiesta.
The all-night party, l!poll!Ored annually
by parents of graduating seniors will in-
clude a casino, booths, prizes, movies,
Mexican food, a mariachi band and the
rock group, "Honk."
The party will run lrom 10: 30 p.m. to $
a.m. Friday.
The parent committee .sponsoring the
event asks residents living near the high
school to grin and bear the noise that
may be generated during the wee hours.
Arrangements have been made to keep
the sound level 8! low as possible.
Seniors may purchase tickets to the
part for $6 at the hlgh school activities
office through Thursday.
Parents wishing to preview the fiesta
site may do so between 6 and 1 p.m.
Thursday evening. Donations toward the
party are still being accepted by Mrs.
Norman Browne, 420 El Camino de! Mar,
Laguna Beach.
3 Ship Jumpers
Taken in Denyer
DENVER (AP ) -Three AWOL
se rv icemen, including two who jumped
ship in San Diego. have been arrested by
federal marshals at Our Lady of
c;uadalupe Church, ending their stay in
sanctuary that began last Monda y.
Taken into custody were Robert Bland
Jr., 22, Warren. Ohio, and Michael Hayes,
2L Colorado Springs. Colo., both sailors,
and Eugene Berryhill, 20, Minot, N.D., an
Army private. ====
By JOHN VALTERZA
01 fllt Pally Pli.t Stall
San Clemente City Councilman Paul
Presley -the head of the largest hotel in
the city -has advocated a one-<:ent in-
crease in the transient occupancy tax to
compensate the chamber of commerce
for its tourist promotion activities.
Presley, offering the solution at a coun-
cil study session on the embattled budget
Friday night. said that the increase
\\'ould raise an estimated $4,000 or more
the first year, which would mean that the
city rould probably accept a recent
charnber contract calling for $18 ,600 to
offset promotio n 1,_·osls.
1'he so lution \\'Ould follo\v a trend along
the Orange Coast \'.;her(' 1nost cities have
conternplatcd an increase.
San Clemente's ~urrcnt rate for rooms
and short-term rentals is five percen t.
Laguna Beach already has agreed to
raise its tax front live io six: per cent.
Newport Beach plans to do the same.
The proposal \Viii be discussed further
at the council's June 21 regular session.
It would form a major way out for the
council, which has been hard pressed to
find the extra funds to accommodate the
chamber request.
Under an exjsting Policy the city pays
$9,700 a year to the chamber for pro-
motion and advertising.
Chamber officials, who have pointed
out that the organization is in the midst
nf a financial squeeze. proposed an
$18,600 annual subvention.
Presley stressed that despite his direct
involvement with the bed tax he would
not be at all opposed to increasing the
allocation.
But sources within the Apartment,
Jlotel-Motel Associa tion in San Clemente,
oftimes a Powerful pressure group in the
city, have said that such an increase
\VOu.ld draw a protest from many owners
T om·ist Queries
To Be Answered
Laguna Beach ci ty councilmen have
authorized the placement of a temporary
information booth for the summer at the
J\1ain Beach Park adjacent lo the
IUeguard tower.
The booth which belongs to the
l\·fermaids, Women 's Division of the
Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerc(',
will be moved from its usual spot at the
f'estival of. Arts entry and will be staffed
by the Mermaids.
Plans call for one paid employee and
volunteer workers to answer the ques-
tions of perplexed tourists.
The city had declined to fund con·
struction of a temporary information
booth noting that it would not be
economically feasible.
of tourisl·renta! (ac!li!i<'s in the. city.
As proposed , the new increase in the
lax \11ould take effect \veil after the Labor
f)ay \veekend, thus an entire year's ne1'/
rt•venue would not be received.
"1 think that if the cllamber's alloca-
tion were raised and they carry out their
promise to do more advertising with the
increase in money, the city income from
the tax will go up as well," Presley said.
Projections show that this fiscal year's
take from the tourists will be about
$40,000,
The smn is about $5,000 Jess than ex-
pected and one signi fi cant reason for the
dip is the lack ot a visit by President Nix-
on for the past six. months.
Because of the large amount of lodging
required for the Presidential entourage,
primarily at Presley's San Clemente Inn .
such visits have a direct effect on city
bed tax revenue.
Laguna Accepts
Bid for Beach
Food Operation
The Laguna Beach City council ha!
accepted a bid from Correra Concessions
for operation tf two mobile food con-
cessions at the Main Beach Park this
summer.
The bid submitted by Larry Vaughn
and William White orfers the city a pay-
ment of 17 percent of thei r monthly gros1
for the four-month period.
Four other bidders offered from 7 per-
cent to 15 percent of monthly gross.
Marine Envirorunent Director Skip
Conner said all the bids were of hlgh
quality, but tha t of Correra ConcessioM
met-top requirements as to financial
status. supply Of labor. conces1ion ap-
pearance, menu selection, experience and
percentage.
It was agreed there would be a large
concession in the central area of the
beach, near the lifeguard tower and a
smaller one at the north end of the beach.
Tables and umbrellas wou ld be supplied
at the larger facility .
A representative of the finn 1aid
"typical" beach take-0ut fare would be
offered. !long with such specialities as
n1ighl be in demand.
Sea Life Talk Set
An il lustrated talk on "Life in the
Ocean;• 1v!ll he presented at the Niguel·
Capistrano Valleys Lions Club noon
meeting Thursday at Buffy's Restaurant
in San Juan Capistrano.
The speaker is Norman Ji. Cole, 1 Sad.
d1eback College instructor.
Selling Out Overstock
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17
17
Saddlehaek
VOL 65, NO. 16'4, l SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 12, 19n TIN CENTS
Pilot Held Over Coast Stunt Flying
A hair·raislng series or acrobatic stunts
including one po9.'er dive to rooflop le vel
over four Orange Coast cities led to the
arresl of a pilot pursued by 1"1'0 police
helicopters early today.
Richard B. Loomis, 24, of Arcadia , was
taken into custody at Orange County
Airport shortly after midnight along with
one of h1s three passengers.
Loomis was arrested by crewmen of
the Costa Mesa police helicopter Eagle JI
and booked Into ]ail on suspicion of
violating section 21407.S of the Publlc
Utilities Code.
Officers Randy Nutt and David Broolu
charged Loomis under the PUC Code
with operating a plane while under the in-
fluence or an intoxlcaht.
Incidents were cited over Newport
Be(!:Ch, l!untington Beach, Costa Mesa
and Irvine.
One passenger, Tom F. D'Angelo, 23, of
113lh Turquoise Ave., Balboa Island, was
also arrested on suspicion of being drunk
in public.
lavestigators who said they conf1scated
a half-gallon jug or wine from the cockpit
of the red-and-white Cessna alrcralt in-
volved in the aerial escapade alleged all
four occupants had been drinking, 0nW Loomis, who had no pilot's license
In his possession, and D' Angelo bad ap.
parently C<lnsumed enough to warrant
their arrests, aCcording to investigating
officers.
Officen Brooks and Nutt said they flfst
spotted the plane flying trTatically in the
area of the Santa Ana RJvu, between
Cost.a Mesa. and Huntington ~ach.
Tbey charlled that LoonW. a utility
company employe, went into a stetp
power dive and only pulled out 100 fett
above ground level.
Giving chue, the y were joined by the
Newport Beach police helicopter and
claimed they saw Loomis go into a stetp
climb over UC Irvine before nearly stal·
ling.
The p!a.oe then made a sharp, 100..
degree turn and beadtd back over
Newport Beach, at times xoomlng 11 low
aa 500 feet over residential areas.
Shepherding the 1ig-z.agging plane back:
toward Orange County Airport, arresting
officers in the helicopter said Loomis
barely missed crashing into a 4()..foot
illde &lope Indicator tower while landing.
He was stopped at midfield by airport
ltt'Urity OfiietTS who Ordered the nier lo
taxi toward ~ tower buildin(, wbert be
wa1 to meet lnvesUgatlng officers.
PoUce Wd Loom is' plane finally halted
only one foot from the building and ntar-
ly collided with two rows or parked
aircraft as the weaving Cessna pulled.up
to a halt.
The suspect was held in lieu of '250 t>.11
this morning, while police forwarded a
report of the incident lo the Feder•!
A\•iatlon Administration for possible ad-
ditional legal action.
Race Ban Upheld
Court Ru"le s Against B lac k Guest
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tbe Supreme
Court today upheld the right of private
clubs to exclude Negroes as guests.
The 6 to 3 decision was delivered by
freshman Justice William H. Rehnquist.
It went against a black brollght as a
guest to the Moose Lodge in Harrisburg,
Pa.
The black, Leroy lrvis, the majority
leader of the Pennsylvania House . C<ln-
tended that beca use the club held a liquor
license from the state it could not e.xludt
blacks as members or as gue sts.
Today 's decision dealt directly with tbe
exclusion of black.a as guests -and not
with their exclwilon as members . Rehn-
quist said Irvis could nol challenge the
l..<>dge'1 all-white membership policy
because he had never applied for
memberihip, but had only been brought
to the club as a guest.
Rehnqui st said the club"s refusal to
serve Negroes does not violate the 14th
Amendment even though the 11oos•
Organizational MeetiI1gs
Slated for New Districts
Organizational meetings for the newly all of University Park; Dean Olson of the
, ctl!>led !<Vin• ilj~ MiMi_on y~jo IJnllled ·. ~h. and Norman Giluburg of Turtle
• ~l Dltlrtct lfOiud. o!•ed'll!:atlori bav~ · lloci. >
A Heav y Bear to Cross
A<tulilly. Bruno, who played Gen tle Ben, was just
that as he jOined members of the F.irst Baptist
Cl!llrch of Costa Mesa at Sunday School. Led by
trainer Ron Oxley, of Saugus, Bruno appears to be
jllst another face in the crowd after Sunday service.
Newest hooorar,Y SUnday ~hObl member to receive
certificate from Rev. James 0. Combs (ushering
Bruno along behind {rainer) is not without human
weakness. Bruno's vice is addiction to jellybeans.
' .
High Court Gives
Lawyer 'Ri ght'
To Defendants
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Su preme
Court today granted all defendants who
face a possibl.e jail tern1 the right lo be
represented by a lawyer.
The 7 to 2 decision delivered by Justice
William O. Douglas, guarantees a
lawyer's help to millions of poor people
who are pr04feuted for petty offenses and
misdemeanors.
Less than half the states supply free
lawyers to defendants in all lrials that
could lead to a jail term. The historic rul-
ing, an expansion of past Sixth Am end·
ment decisions. will necessarily cha nge
trial practices in those states.
Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, who
went along, said be was cortfKlent the
legal profession wOOld meet the "large
new bardena" placed upoD it.
Justtces LewU F. Powell and WUllam
H. Rehnquist, the coort~s freshman mem·
bers, objected to the sweep of the
dettsion although theydld not dissent in a
technical sense. · 'Ibey · said the co'urt
should have ruled Ulere is a rl.gbt to a
l~WW only.,wljen '"necessary to assure a
fair trial~' ;..
U.S. 'New Towns·' Se t
For Confab in Ir vine
A symposium involving representatives
or nearly all major U.S. "new towns"' wit\
be held June 23 and 24 on the UC Irvine
campu s.
lrvine Tomorrow, the Saddleback Area
Coordinating CoWlcil (SACC ) and UCl
Extension are sponsoring the "citizen
oriented " gathering of residents of
Irvine Business
Loses Equipment
Business equipment valued at 1355 was
taken during the weekend by intruders
who may have had a duplicate key to the
offices of an Irvine firm, Oruge Count1
sheriff's of'ficers said. '
Jonatban. Minnesota; Columbia. Md .;
Reston. Va ., Irvine and Mission Viejo.
Irvine ?.1ayor William .Fisrhbach will
welcome participants during the 7:30 to
10 p.m. program set for Friday, June 23,
in Science Lecture Hall. That session is
open to the public.
Dr. Randy Hamilton, executive director
of the lnstitute for Local GOvernments in
Berkeley, will disc uss the meaning of the
new town movement, its history, op.
portunities and problems common to new
towns.
New towns are master planned C<lm·
munities being developed in formerly
unurbanized arees.
To date, onl)' Irvine enjoys a locally
elected municipal government. Other new
towns are generally controlled by the
dtvelopment finna and eo mm u n l t y
·usoclatiom:.
Deputies said an electric typewriter, The character:is~s;of:the vlU'IQus new
o{fice records and maps 'ftl"e taken from tOWM · will be ·discussed» by. Dr: Royce
the offices of Inland Investment Services, Hanson, director of the .. Vil r 1 In i a
2212 Dupont St. Polyte'Chnic Jnsutute's ·center for · new
Two bicycles and tools jOin\Jy valued at towns studies. at. Re.st6n, iva Hanlon'•
$185 were also taken during the w~ktl:MI • · profess tonal interest centers · on the pl an-
rrom the horile or l:larvey Emmor ~e1, ning, development and governance of new
4.J.92 Belvedere Road. · communi\ies.
..:...._ ~ .._ ·~ ,,_ __ ,.,~.Do .... -. .Mla!lo~ Vlejo INllJ.U ·art: Chester G.
--., --· ...... ~-, .--1!11ijitr\of 2S311 ~m;· . ' -ment of Education far two nJillla iieit Vl!ltt.Demb SmJth ol· -Lu llolsas
week. .. st::-tiiuna Hills; George of 14401
IrviJle· Unlfted trustees will be sworn ln · Macedo, Mission Viejo: V i n c e n t
and elect officers: during a.meetin& called McCullou&h of 22891 Loumont Dri ve, El
fpr 7:30 p.m. TUesday, Jyne 20, Jn the Toro. and Joseph PeterBOn Jr. of 24311
multipurpost room of Univenlty Park Gl'w St., El Toro.
Elementary School. 4172 Sandbur1Way. During the CGminl ·ocbool year. the
'Mission Viejo Unified trustees will be unified achooJ boards wW ndt directly ad-
Installed ·at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, June ~. ml.ntster education · of pupU. in area
in the , mu1Upurpose room of La Paz acboola. Ratbl!l', ~the ·MW trils1ees will
lhlertnediate School, '25151 Pndera prepare for the July J, 197' takeover of
Drive, Mission V\ejo. the scbooJJ now operated by the Tustin
Next Ju1y l, the new districts approved High and San Joaquin and Trabuco
by a 3 lo 1 favorable vote of Tustin Union Elementary district.. ·
l;ligh district residents on June 8, will The first meeting qendas include a
take over the .education of pupils in dllcuaion of the ate:p1 to be taken in hir·
grades kindergarten to 12 in each or the Ing diJtrlct supmntendenta. County
communities. ~hools office staff will 1wear in the new
Elected to the Irvine Unlfied board boards and guide them through their
are : Charles Boulanger, Mrs. Sharon a.rganiiational meeting and election of of·
SirceJJo and Mrs . Elizabeth "Lee" Slcoll, ficer.s.
Armed Pair Net $3,500
A t Laguna Restaurant
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of .. C..lr ""' ,,..,
Two men, one brandishing 11nub-nosed
revolver, held up Laguna Beach's famous
White House restaurant shortly after 8
a.m. today, taking at 1 ... t 13,:;oo in
weekend rectipta.
Koiiy Saruwatart, opentor of the
r~taurant, al S30 S. Cout Htgb,way, hll
wlfe.Gladya and Dan MikeJa, an employe,
were tied and left unbanned as the two
men left the establishmeot.
Saruwatart aald he wu worklnl behind
the restaurant bar •be!! he k>oked. up and
saw a man with a gun facing him.
Tbe aunman. clffcrlbed 11 ol ·medllDD
height, with a slender build and dark
b~lr. oraered him to call the other
employes out .
Dan Mikels. work.Ing in the men's rest
room atepped out and facod the IUOJDI•.
, "What a thln&.to happen .. and I've 1ot
only three more days left," Saruwatari
uld, explainln( that on Wednelday, he
wwld end hla 1W. of 1ho IAguna
rt.ttaurant which he bu operated 1lnce
1967. The busineu was established in
1111.
,In L9IS a cQe lcnown a1 Gideon V. Wainwr~t laJd 'the principle that a. man
on trial for ':serttus offensesn has the
rlaht'to a lal!)l,er'apd Ibo! U be cannot af-
ford...,. the -~pply counsel. Ufttl~ then. the SIIllt Amendment had
been1inw-preted uiJlecessitatlng lawyers
only •U\' Oipital offense> -when there wU a ctiance qr a death sentence.
'.sulloeqiiently, the court granted the
rli;hl• to I frte faW,W wllao the jall tenn
cOUid be 11% -or matt.
UCI Se,nate B.acks W.omen
Aller taking all the money from the of.
nee. tbe fllDllllll and hl• aocompllce
went to U.-bar arera IDd coDeoted more
money there.
Mn. Sannrltarl 1DC1 lllte1a ....,. then
freed. from the locked stonroom and.
with Sal"ll'tfatarl, tied to the pede1tala ol
lbe r.staurant tablea.
Y>unty to Serve
I rvi,ne for Year
The coun!y wtll continue to provide fire
and rucue aervi<:es to the city of Irvine
dm1~1ho .,...q· fllcol YMt.
City cooncUmen voted Friday to have,
the county fire department provide lhe
eervl<el iiother-than to ·establish a
dop<-ant-wltltln lbe city.
UQder ~DIM. ~lty homeownen will
be aoomed·tl «1'li per •too of wested
valua\klft dl\Libtir rial properly to fl81
far.the *'""'"" ·
•
Faculty Urges E:e male Jr!iring, Special Stud y Funds
' . .
The UC lrVine:Acidemlc .-wets
to dev1te tbe llatulJof 1Wvmen OD cam-
pus.
Matt ,..,... prof ...... aliould be bind
and more eml>bull should be made on
W'Ol'Oen'• , studies courses, urge anate
members. ,
Funda abould be made avallable Im·
mediately for the deve~ent of
womM'11thldJet <'OUnel -within already
~sllof Cllllplll clepartmenta, ltllate
members voled Tbuntlay.
Grant monies lhould al!o be awarded
for research into "conlrtbutions of
""""" to ciYnllatlon and knowledge."
a«OldlJlll.to a report mada by the senate
eommltt.. on -Uoaal poUcy and
puaed by the -
I
Tbe facully tiiemberl alao -lved.UU.t
"a greater number o! quallfled WOlllOD
lllUll bencrulled and hired.'"
The only dlscuulon by the .Hlllle
loUowlO( the report made by com-
paraUV. culhn il'or-Jay Martin,
chairman of lbe policy llOlllllllllH. wil to
t:hange a granl-rev~ • qwmltlff'a
name to the "Vlce Ctiancellor's Com-
mlttoa for Olrrl<ullun, o! Womtn'•
Studies."
It had been reltrred to In Mm1in's
report u the "vlce Chanctllor'1 Women's
Committee for CUrrlculwn Development."
Mat11n reportOcl the pollcy committee
lludiad Ibo ' ~· of 'romeo'a studltt
counes for oJ;i.t, m o • th 1 . ll coo-
cludetl lltat --alop1111tlb !IJ!D> . '
he said, bot that !hoy ahoufd not be fn I
teparat.e Women'• Studits Prosram.
llUrlng !hot atudy, a JS.part ques.
tlollllAlre was sent to.departmant Uk!!\(
thtlr views on women's 1tud1e1.
Ill Mart in'• ,report, En'CJlilt prof.-
Mary Key summartied ID writlnc that
"department he ado ...... · ID general
agreement that the focu• should be on tho
diJclpUne rather than on the 111."
Lm than .... third ol the department
chairmen contacted responded, uld
PrOfeuor Key, who added, "ptrhlpa It
has not been emphulzed enough that tho
l.UUff of women are alao the iwea of
men."
Of the aboot !II tenate membert wtllic
for Illa -tlona, liva nrl·-
r
" 'l'm aorry· 1 bave to tJe JOU up like
thl1,' the guy 1ald to me," Mrs .
-Nld. Siie ltill bad -... (loo "81TE llOOIE, P ... I)
Tustin Trustees
To Meet Tonig ht
' 1be nm moetJnc, ot tbe Tullln Union
!Dp· SChool Bean! tiln<e the Jmie ' lllli-.
ncauoo cle<\lona wlll otahE! l<>nlf!>t afl:ll"o'cloct af'llul!ii HI School.
9lnce uo!llcation po-1 onloo high
-board wtli bt diiiOl.od II tbe tnd
ol the Jm.1S -,..... Blclt on 1tudent loolton at.•Mlalon Vi-
ejo High School, an _..,. GI tlle eom-
pltllon dale on lrviM'• Uttlnrslty High
11c11oo1 J100i and the •1m.n ~......, ......-..................
r
Lodge eets its liquor license through the
.state.
"'Since 1tate-furnlshed 1ervice• include
auch necessities of life as electricity,
water, and police and fire protecUoo.
such a holding would utterly lllW<:Ulate
the distinction between private as
distinguished from state conduct," he
said.
Chief Justice \Varren E. Burger and
Justices Harrv A. Blackmun and Lewis
(Set .RULING, Pase %)
Irvine Official
Airs Alter1iate .
Budget Proposnl
An Irvine city councilman, calling the
city 's propa8ed $1.4 mi.lllon budget "a hlid
way to do it,'' bu introduced. his own
alternative 1pendln& plan calling for a· 3S
cent tu rate.
Cooncllman Henry Qur,Jey, a n
ecooom1'1, told the council Friday night
that the SS ceDts per $100 of auessed
valuation would be Jn keeping with his
campaign pledge to hold property taxea
al the level they were prior to in-
co rporation.
J!~ aald .he was unable to distribute
cop~I of his proposal, but would have
theriJ available · for councilmen and
resifSents at tonight's budget study
)!est$on, scheduled for 7:30 o'clock in city
half 1"1J1eX on the &round fioor of the
lrvlnt Town Ctoter.
QqlJl<y '-lld he developed I h 1
altemaUve 0048et because be had "1rave
conctnll about tbe whole direction of the
(p~) budget'" recommended by C~
ty Manqer William Woollett. The coun-
cilman aaid he believed it was wrong to
first w~k out a spending program and.
then decide how high a tax rate waa
needed lo pa,y for that program.
lMtead, be said the tax rate should bo
aet first at a deairable level end tbtn a
program of expenditures worked out that
the city cou1d afford.
In contrast to Woollett'.s proposed •1.t
million ($1 ,445,957 ) budget, Quigley said
with hls ta1 rate of 33 c~l.!, the city wlll
only ha ve about $1.1 million ($1,151,200)
to pay the bllls. This money would come,
ht explained from the following 10urces:
-Based on an estimated assessed
valuation of the city of S80 million, the 33-
cent U1 assesmnent would raise about
$214.000. .
-An additional $50,000 would be takm
in by the city ID planning and wnlng fees
charlled devela!'en.
--About •• -.Id come by charg-
ing bu-Ucepae '--on a achedub
worked Olli by Quicley -to tho
merchanta and ~ ID Irvine.
-Tho --.ii ...... front
(lloe llUDGl:T, Pip It ......
.
Now you can ·Wiill,O,, eor. Tha
weatherlldy ................ en
tho """""" liii' 'TUaidoy -.... tberealttr. lllPo ttll Bpodad at
the be-. ..... lo • IDlucL
Lows Jn Ille WL "
INSIDB TeDAY ~
......... " _... .
Cal""""9 t
CltultlM »H C-~t II
CN1~...il 'tJ
DNTl'I """""' • lllh:M'lail ......
h•if! ' u "~nc• •u "'"""'" " APL.....,_ W ,., "" .........
\
:-..:-..... : --.
--I --.. -""' • ............ u ·-" -" -. ::::=·':..:"" '"'l
(
•
• OAJLV PILOT IS ~.-U.1'12
OA1LY f'tl01' Slllf f'l!Olt
Dave A Nice Day
lt was a good day for sailing at Dana Harbor Sun·
day. It was also a good day for just sitting in th e sun
and watching others 'vork \Vith their sailboats and
other craft. 'fhe .air sparkled after the recent rains.
llnique Treat ment
Countian Using Baboon's
Li ver in Filtering Blood
From Wire Strvleet
AUGUSTA, Ga. Deapli< a
respiratory compllcatlon, a Buena Park
Woman auf!ering advanced liver disease
Is· responding here today to a unique
treatmtnt in which her blood 11 filtered
through a baboon's Uver.
Officials at the Medical College of
Gtorgia aald Afr a. Lindi: Greenaway, 32,
is doing well followlna; fife hours of the
technique known as perfusion.
Erle Jacobsen, assistant administrator
of Talmadge Memorial HOlpital where
Atrs. Greenaway was nown last Thuraday
from Orange County, aaid the treatment
developed by Dr. Gtorge Abouna I.I not
the sole answtr.
The al'anced deterlor1tkm of :P.1r1.
Creenaw1y'1 hepatlt11-rav11ed liver in-
cttc1t.e1 Dr. Abouna and hl1 team may
hive to attempt a bum.an liver
transpl1nt.
He haa plonetred tbat concept and bas
Marine Stabbed;
Suspect Held ..
In Santa Ana
•A young El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta-
Gon enll&t.ed man died Sunday morning
ftter being 1tabbed through the heart 1t
f, Santa Ana 1p1rtment and fallln1 out a
second story wlndow.
Hl1 1Ueged 1l1yer w11 arreated shortly
alterward on ruaplcion of murder.
Rudolph B. Tamayo, 47, of 322 W. Third
~t.. "-'BS questioned by police comblfli the
area around 200 N. Broadway aft.er they
!ound bloodslalna on his clothing.
. He is •UJPeCled of fatally stabbing
indrew H. Nelson, 11, wboae body was
f:ound about S a.m. by a passerby ln an
9Uey behlnd the North Broadway 1d-
dress. ~Investigators clalm Nelson was vl1IUng
1·amayo'1 apartment when a quarrel
ftarted, leadln1 to the fatal 1tabblna:.
1 Coronf'.r'• deputlu said death was due
50 the heart wound. It was not determin-ed whet.her the Marine would have been
t~~usly injured Jn falling out the win-
OIAN•I COAST 11
DAILY PILOT
two surviving liver transplan t patients to
his credit so far.
By filtering her blood through the ba-
boon's liver, Dr. Abouna can assist Mrs.
Greenaway's own organ to rest and
regenerate, at least so some degree.
Team_. of doctors work ing to save the
mother of four want to strengthen her
enough to withstand the strain of a
transplant operation after use Of the ba-
boon organ.
The liver now being used was removed
from a 60-pcund baboon captu red in
Kenya, cleansed of its own blood supply
and refrigerated Wllil being booked into
1trs. Greenaway's system.
A relatively new concept, the treatment
developed by Dr. Abouna , a liver disease
expert, perfusion is &imilar to mechanical
dialysis used on kidney failure vlctlms.
The perfwilon technique was scheduled
to &tart Saturday but was delayed due to
a respiratory Infection which Mrs.
Greenaway developed.
She lapsed into a coma at one point
before her condiUon Improved enough to
begin using the baboon liver to take th e
straJn off her own diseased organ.
F rom Pagel
BUDGE T ...
various taxes -ga801lne, cigarette,
motel -charged by the state and refund-
ed I<> !he city.
Quigley pointed out that the 33 cent tax
rate would be In addition to the 37 cents
per $100 of .assessed \'aluatlon to be
levl~ by the county for the provision of
fire and rescue services to the new city.
By law, the city ma y set the tax rate as
high as $1 without a vote of the residents.
The councilman . in explaining his pro-
posal. said he did not feel the cit y's
surplus for next fiscal year of $380.000
should be Included in the general fund to
pay for expenses that would be recurring.
"There ls a tendency to bul!d 11p a leve l
of expenditures "''hich ""'e nrc not going 10
be able to maintain next yenr." he :;n1d.
The $380,000, he felt , should go for par ks
acqu isition, for the development of a
general plan for the city and for the
renovation of offices and purcha se of of-
fice equipme nt for the city. fn addit ion,
he said $100,000 or the money should be
put into a reserve fund for future needs.
City manager Wool\ett said he agreed
that the "windf&ll" should not be used to
meet on-going expenses and that l:s \\1hy
he had proposed thet the money be used
for such uses as Quigley had enume.rated.
Court Rejects
Repossessions
Without Notice
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme
Court today batted creditor1 from
repoaseuing merchandl1e without giving
the buyer advance notJce and a hearing
before "a neutral offlclal."
The '4 to 3 declJlon 1truck down Jaw1 In
Florida and PeMl)'lvania and could have
a nationwide impact bec1UM most states
authorize the au tomatic seizure or goods
when the purchaser falls behind in the
paymenll.
The dJ111tnter1 predicted that a1 •
result it may bea>me more difficult for
consumen to buy merchandlae. on credit.
JuJtlet Potter Stewart bastd his opin-
ion for the majority on the 14th Amend·
ment auarantet that no at.ate shall
deprJve a perlOh of property without
"due proceu of J1w."
One cau coacerntd a Miami wom1n,
Mra. Ma.rcar:tta Fuente., when stove and
1tereophonic r,honoaraph were repo1se1 ..
ed when 1ht ell behind In her payment•.
The woman, a factory worker, claimed
the Rove wu defective.
The othv cue coocorntd a "®P of
Philadelphia people w-pun:bua
were repoqeued \Uldtr tbt ttlt1'1 ltw.
Frona Pagel
WHITE HOUSE
her l'.'Tists \Vhere her bon~ been tighten--
Cd .
"!just stood there, waiting for someone
to say something and this guy stuck his
gun in my stomach and told me 'move
over there,' " 1'.tlkels recounted following
the robbery.
Mrs. Saruwatari, working in the kitch-
en, was calle-d out into the reslaurant
area and then she and ]\.1ikels, were
locked in a storeroom.
The gunman then forced Saruwatari to
the office and made him open the safe.
The other man scoo ped up the money.
bundling it up in his shirt which he had
untucked from his trousers.
"The guy holdi ng the 1un seemed
agitated, he kept saying 'hurry up, don't
bother ·with the checks or the small
:stuff,' •· Saruv.·atari said.
''He didn't tie me very well," ]\.tlkel1
said. He said that he had worked his way
free, but \vas waiting for the man 10
Jcave before getting up.
"I couldn'l see lhem, but once Kory
called out to me and said, 'how are you
Danny?'
"One or the men called back, 'what wa.s
that?'" Mikels said.
Shortly afterward, Saruwatarl jumpM
up and ran to the telephone and called
police.
All three victims agreed that the man
wllh the gun was the boss. The other
1nan, described as about 5 foot, 10 inches
!all with a falr complex.Jon and light halr,
just did as he was told , they aa id.
"I wasn't scared at all; they were ju1t
not the type to be scared of," Mrs.
Saruwatari said.
Detectives belie\'e the bandits entered
through the rear restaurant door openina;
on Ramona Avenue.
Construction workers on the new
Laguna Beach County Library im-
mediately behind the resaturant were
questioned by officers, but apparently the
gunman and his accomplice left un·
noticed.
Police believe the robbers \\·ere
familiar \\"ith the layout or the rest aur<int
ilnd "'·Hh the areas money v.•as normally
kept.
"He seemed to know just where to go,"
S;iru1\·atari said.
'!'he $3 .~00 Joss is nol covered by in-
surance as 1he con1panies require their
clients to be protected by alarms, and the
White House \Yas not.
The ~an1v:ataris were planning on a
lri p to Japan after he left the business on
\Vedne sday.
Mikels. 24 ; is a graduate student at Cal
State Fullerton and son of Jackie Mikels,
restaurant bookkeeper who open! the
restaurant every day but Monday.
The \Vhlte House restaurant I 1
Laguna's oldPst having been founded in
J918 by a couple named Blrd.
A sign proclaiming, "Eat with the
Bir~." used to adorn the front o( l.be
eatery known up and down the coast.
Irvine Panels
To Meet Jointly
The Irvine parks and open space and
recreation advl:sory committees wUI meet
together et 7:30 o'clock this even!~ in
Crawford Hall on the UC Irvine campus.
Other citizen advisory groups meeting
this week are:
l-Iighway1 aod transporation: 7:JO p.m.
\Yedn uday In room 175 of the aocl1l
science tower at UCI.
lloustng: 7:30 p.m., Wednnday, in the
lnterfaHb loUllie, second floor, Irvine
Town Ce:nttr.
Public Education: 7:30 p.m. T!tundoy,
In the Unlverrlty Community Auoclotlon
Clubhouoe, 45!0 Sandburg Way.
All advltory commUtee meetlngs are
open to the public.
Minuteman Launched
V ANDENBl!:RG AIR FORCE BASE
(AP) -A Mlnute-mon Ill Inter-.
Unenlal BolllJUc Mlulle WU launcbtd
down tbe Western Test Rance over the
P1cu1e Oceon SUnday, u.. Air r ....
11ld. No other dtlalll ...,.. di-
•
Crews Hunt
Dead Over
Flood Area
RAPID CITY. S.D. (IJP]) -Search
crews using dogs worked through the
night to uncover bodies from the mudd y
ruins Of the nation's \V OrSf Oood in 35
ye ars.
Authorities said today more: than 200
were known dead from the flood Friday
night and Saturday caused when a rain-
s\\·ollen dan1 burst and cascaded billions
of 1allons of water into Rapid City and
other communities in Sooth Dakota's
Black tlills.
Pat DiJon, coordinaling disaster in·
formation, said the.re may have been
dupllcatlo111 in the death count.
"We know it's over 200," he said. "It
could be 29 over or 30 over. No one knows
right no"'',"
Sen. George McGovern (0-S.D.), said it
v.•as "a scene of incredible destruction
and devastation." The presid ent i e I
hopeful flew from Waahlngton Sunday to
tour the: floodlanda by helicopter,
Don Barnette, Rapid City's 29-year-old
mayor, aald, "I would estimate a com·
bined death total of ~ for the whole
tregedy."
Gov. Richard Kneip !laid, "We have in
cxces!I of 200 deaths and there's a long
way to go yet. It'• believed many bodies
are below the mud and the mire. That
part i.. bod."
Search crews concentrated on a
virtually devastated fJve-block wide area
11long Rapid Creek, the stream which
cul! through the city.
lt turned suddenly into a swollen, rag-
ing killer when Canyon Lake Dam burst
under the pressure of a foot of rain late
Friday night, aendlng a four-foot wall of
water thunde.ring down from the hills.
The flood cau.sed an es:tlmated •100
mllllon damage, destroying 500 houses
and leaving thou.aand:s of ptr90M
homeless.
Authorities firrt 11id about 1,500
persons were unaccounted for, but later
said they could not make an accurate
guess on the number missing.
Little had been determined about what
happened in more isolated communities
in the hills -partlcuJarly to the bun.
dreds, perhaps thousands of tourists
believed to have been camping in the
area close by Mt. Rushmore,
From P a ge l
RULI NG ...
F. Powell, the three other Nixon ad-
ministration appointees, lined up with
Jtehnquisl. a former assistant attornev
general. Justices Potter Ste"'·art and
Byron R. \Yhite also were in the ma·
jorily.
Dissenting \\'ere Justices \Villi am o.
Douglas, \Villlam J. Brennan Jr., and
Thurgood Marshall, the court's only
Negro member.
Brennan S&.id PenMylvanla's liq uor
regulations plainly lntertwined the state
with the operation of the lodge's bar in a
sign ifican t \vay and lent the state's
authori ty •·to the sordid business of racial
discrimination .''
The ruling reverses a three-judge
reder&I court in Harrisburg which held in
1970 that the Aioose Lodge could not keep
both Its liquor license and !ta racl&lly ex-
clwive policy.
•sign De1·e ~
Pupils Get Work Contract
!y CANDACE PEARSON
Of lft4I O.lfr r lttt U•tl
A contract is a b\Ddlng agreement . en·
forceable by Jaw.
School teachers have long been govern.
t>d by contracts which specify their length ur employment.
Now this business arrangement also
h1t.~ been applied to students, with \\'hal
ticerns to be positive ttsults.
"I. Johnny, promlle to complete six
wor~heets by Friday,'' one aucb con-
tract might read et AUso School In El
Toro.
Four classeg of Aliso rourth graders
sign almost weekly contracts during the
year to du a de!lgnated amount of ext ra
"·ork alter they complete their regular
assignments .
For some or the sludents. the sii: to J().
page worksheets ere "enrlchments" and
£or others, are "review and rein·
forcement," said teacher Aaron ~fatira _
The worksheets are geared to in-
d1 vlrlunl ability and for math Include
loglc puzzles, mazes, problems in algebra
and geometry and map reading.
Reading worksheets have jpe\llng list$.
story tapes and special subjectll, like
oceanography, for extra reading.
The students mu1t plan the.tr own time
and then evaluate their work each week.
After the sclf-1iradlD1, the pa~rs are
judged by the teacher and then by th•
parents.
·reacher Becky Weber said the two-
year-old program i! good ror giving
students "insight Into their own working
habits.··
Two davs a week, the student~
partici pate.in n1ath lab, where they hal"e
10 do so me thing mathematical with their
hands.
'l'his usually in,•olves \\"Ork \\'ith com·
p:.ts!St'S, rulers, gcornetrieal string dra\1·
1ngs or buying " things out of catsloguu.
Points are accumulated for rail the con-
lract work and students use those point~
10 bid on sn1all items at occasional claM
auctions.
Pencils, candy and jello are common
items purchased by the teachers for bid·
ding.
The sludent s are finishing their last
1·ontracts of the year. Teachers plan to
continu e the progran1 next year.
"The children Jove it," Mazira said.
"Tl's on the honor system -they chfek
their 01Yn papers. They're able to see ex-
actly what they are doing."
Red China Cites 'Tlrreat'
Of U.S. Bombing Attacks
TOKYO (AP) -Communist China said
today U.S. air :strikes in North Vietnam
near the Chinese border threaten its
security.
It charged that "these frem.ied acts of
aggression" are not only "new war
crimes" against North Vietnam but alJo
"grave provocations" against China.
A Foreign ~tlnlstry statement, in Pe-
king said, "The Chinese government and
people express their resolute support" for
a North Vietnamese statement luued
Saturday condemning the United States
for further dispatching many planes for
raids against the Hanoi 1 u burbs,
Haiphong and other areas.
The statement was broadcast by Pe-
king's New China News Agency,
Last week, U.S. Air Force jet:s swept to
within 20 miles of China and wrecked a
big North Vietnamese rallroad marshal-
ling yard and highway bridge only 40
second!! fiy lng time from the China-Viet~
nam border.
The raids were reported tht closeat to
the border since the 1~ bombing
campaign against North Vietnam.
China said the United States .. should
know that the heroic peoples of Vietnam
11nd the other Indochinese countries are
by no me11ns alone in their !ltruggle.
Jt did not elabo rate on this point.
"For over a month, U.S. imperialism in
de fiance of the strong condemnation and
opposition of the people throughout the
world, had continued to escalate its war
against the Democratic Republic of Viet-
nam ," the statement added.
"It not only has mined and blockaded
Suspect Seized
After Shooting
A quarrel between lwo men over one's
cx·wlfe left each ln separate Orange
County facilities today -the county jail
and the county medical center.
John J . Castle, of 113 N. Bewley St.. is
listed in stable condition ~·ith a gunshot
\\'Ound in the back of the head after being
hit Sunday.
t ie was shot by a .22 caliber slug fired
from a passing car in front of a cafe at
504 N. Euclld St., according to Santa Ana
police.
Ralph Acosta. 37, of 901 s. Harbot'
Blvd .. Santa Ana , was subsequently ar·
rested and booked on suspicion of assault
\l."ilh Intent to commit murder.
A .22 caliber revolver was confiscated
as evidence in the case.
the ports or Northern Vietn1m and dally
sent out large numbers of alrplanel and
warships to make frantic raids on many
cities, villages and coastal centers, but
has steadily expanded the 1 p h er e of
bombing up to areaa close to the stno-
Vletnemese borden, threatening the
security of China.
"These frenzied actl of qreulon m
the part of U.S. tmperia!Jsm are MW war
crimes committed against the Viet-
namese people, and at the same time
grave provocations aga!Mt the Chinese
people."
The st1tement reiterated Petlng'&
Hresolute" 11upport of the Vletnamue and
other Indochinese peoples Wllil complete
victory."
' 'Stop and Frisk'
Power Extended
By High Co urt
WASHINGTON (UPll -By a g.3
liberal--con!ervatJve split. the Supreme
Court extended today the power of police
to "stop and frl!!k" auspecll on lhe street
for dangerous weapons.
"We reject the argument th 1 t
reasonable cause for a stop and frisk can
only be b&sed on the officer's personal
observation, rather than on information
supplled -y another person," the court
held.
"Informants' tips, like all other cluts
and evidence coming to a policeman on
!he scene, may vary greatly in their
value and reliablUty. One slmple rule will
not cover every situation ."
The opinion in a CoMecticut caae: wit
\\"ritten by Jw:Uce Willi am H. Rehnquist,
\l"ho is emerging as the most law-and·
orde r member of the Court.
Justice Thurgood Marshalt said In
dissent that the decision "invoke• the
spectre of a society in wh ich Innocent
citizens ma y be stopped, :searched and
arrested at the whim of police officers
""ho have only the slig htest auapiclon of
improper conduct."
Also dissenting were Justices William
J. Brennan Jr. and William O. Douglas.
The ca!le is a sequel to an important
.1968 ruling that policemen under proper
circumstances may stop and frisk a
person 11uspected of criminal activity
even though they do not have enou1b
prior evidence to make an arrest.
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Huntington_ B~a~h -r\
Fountain \'"'alley
r •
Today's Flnal
N.Y. Steeks
VOL 65, NO. 164, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAS.ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1972 TEN CENTS
Citizens Will Get Chance at Budget T onight
By TERRY COV ILLE
Oi ~ Deftr P'llllf lltH
The public wlll have its chance to speak
tonight on the propo.sed $13.7 million Hun·
tington Beach 1972.-73 o~rating budget,
during a public hearing before the city
council.
. Tbe hearing begins at 7 o'clock. Coun-
cilmen will be asked to adopt the budget
following the hearing.
City Adminbtrator David Rowlands is
also asking C()UJ]Cilmen to add $843,764 in
Pilot H eld
For Stunts
Over Coast
A hair·roising series of acrobatic stunt:i1
Including one power dive to rooftop level
over four Orange Coast cities led to the
arrest of a pilot pursued by two pollce
helicopters early today.
Richard B. Loomis, 24, of Arcadia, was
t aken lnto custody at Orange County
Airport shortly after midnight along with
one of his tbrtt pas.se.ngers.
Loomis was arrested by crewmen of
the Co,,ta Mesa police helicopter Eagle II
and booked into jail on suspicion or
violating section 21407.S of the Publi.:
Utilities Code.
Officers Randy Nutt and David Brooks
charged Loomis under the PUC Code
with operating a plane while under the in·
fiuence of an intoxicant.
Incidents were cittd over Newport
Beach. Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa
and lfvlllt.
One passenger, Tom F. D'Angelo, 23, of
1131h Turquoise Ave., BalbQa L!land, was
also arrested on suspk:ion cJI. being drunk
in )'.llblic.
Investtg1tqn who nld they conlisc•t.d
a haU.gaJlon jug of wine lrom the cockpit
of the red·and-whlte Cessna aircraft in·
volved In the aerial e9capade alleged all
four occupants had been drinking.
Only Loomb1, who had no pUot 's license
fn hls possesaion, and D' Angelo had ap-
parently consumed enough to warrant
their arrests, actording to investigating
officers.
Officers Brooks and Nutt said they first
spotted the plane flying erratically in the
area of the Santa Ana River, between
Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach.
They charged that Loomis, a utility
compa:ny employe, went into a steep
power dive and only pulled aut 100 feet
above grwnd level.
Giving chase, they were joineiJ, by the
Newport Beach police helicopter and
claimed they saw Loomis go into a steep
climb aver UC Irvine before nearly stal·
!ing-.
The plane then made a sharp, 100-
degree· turn and headed back over
Newport Beach, at times 200ming as low
as 500 feet over residential areas.
Shepherding the tig~zagging plane back
toward Orange Caunty Airport, arresting
officers in the helicopter said Loomis
bartly missed crashlng inta a 41).foot
1lidi! alope lndlcator tower while landing.
He was stopped at midfield by airport
security afficen who ordertd the mer to
tarl taWard the tower building, whe~ he
was to meet inYelti«ati~ .officers.
Police Ale! 1-nli' plane finally halted
onl,)' ane foot from the building and near·
Jy coHlded with two rows of parked
airtnfl u the wavio1 Cessna _pulled up
lo 1 bait. ,
The IUipecl .... htld In lieu of mo bail
this momJnlr' trblle~poUct forwarded a
report of llit lileldeilt to · Ulo F«leral
Avlalloo Admlnlllnllm far ponible 1d-
dltlonal lqll --
Hayward Man Dro.wn s ,_
PES:ADERO (A{') -A ~Id
HOfWl1d nwi; li:K,.;E IUchords, cltflwned Wlllle. • )l•l!Je Pacific
OCOIJlnw hire~. lhertfl'1 of. 11<» Wd llltlllhli' ..... <llllcbl In .. ........... ;--·.··. -,·.-:·
•
-1' ~ Jle'tonatrons -. ' • • • R jinew-Fears . . . . .. ----
programs to the proposed $13 .735,027
budget already prepared.
His additions would restare ,rograms
"'hich he cut from the budget himseU in
order to balance it with no new revenue.
The city's tax rate of $1.82 per $100
assessed vaJuation, reflecting no change
over 1971~72, will remain the same even if
the additional programs are approved.
Rowlands ha• oUWhed several methods
by which an additiolial $904,450 can be
raised for the added prosrams. Coun·
eilrnen indicated durlng a budget study
session last week that tbey are likely to
approve the additional programs and
revenue.
One of the revenue raising methods
suggested by Rowlands includes an in-
crease iR the oil tax from 2.5 cents per
barrel to four cents per barrel.
While most councilmen apparently
agree to that much of a raise , some want
to go even higher, and tonight's session
could be stormy with councilmen battling
Across the Tracks
A very brave dUck has buil t her home and laid her eggs in the middle
of a Helsinki railroad yard. Tbere's ·not a blade of grass in the area,
so she made the nest of feathers. The rails are used several times
each day-in which case, I suppose .. the duck ducks.
Bicycli ~t Assist s Police
In Capt ure of Suspect s
A lluntinglon Beach collegian who
chased a pair of burglary suspects on his
bicycle as they fled in a car was in-
strumental in their arrest early otday.
Investigators credited Ken Lewis with
obtaining license tittmbeni or the car
traced to a local address where the pair,
both from Duarte, were staylng.
Patrick J. Heatherington. 19, WS'S book-
ed on suspicion of bUrglary, while his
companion, Ronald P. Hickey, 21, was
booked on suspicion of burgalry aocl
su11,icion , of pouesaing narcotics and
narmtics paraphernalia.
Police. picked up Heatherington and
Hi~ey !-l 8182 Parker Circle, wher~ they
were staying.wttb a friend, after tracing
a .license , nufDbflr lhroµgh the Depart·
ment of Motor Yelllcla.
The pair are accused or stealing a
cigarette cartan containing about $30 in
cash from the Jack-in-the-Boz takeout at
201 Pacific Coast Highway, Huntington
Beach.
Hickey allegedly entered the ham-
burger stand about 11 p.m. and asked
empl.oye Michael Venham for a cigarette,
then l!MltcheJI the money when the clerk
turned his back.
lnvestigatora were told Venham's wife
Luann saw it and· grabbed Hickey's arm
causiQI him to drop part of the cash
before he ran to a car driven-by Heather-
jngton.
Lewis, meanwhile, 98.W the commotion
and followed the getaway car on his bicy·
cle.
each other over how much to raise the all
The increase to four cents would rais'e
$2.S9,450 in new money. The re.st of the
$904,450 would come from additional state
funds and savings in local programs.
Throughout his talks on the budget,
Rowlands has emphasized his point that
property taxes will not be raised. He has
steadfastly avoided recommend ing in-
creased property taxes as a method for
gaining more money to run the city.
'Stop
The $13.7 million budget 1$14.58 million
if the additions are apprO\'ed 1 pays for-
the annual operati on of the city. It
represents a somewhat nex1ble figure
whi ch can be increasl.'d or decrtiasrd by
\'arious amounts.
Tl1e total lltu111ngton Beach budget for
1972-73 !s $2~.2·12.529. 1'his 1nrludes the
repayment for \ arious bonds used by the
city for special projects. The bond repay·
me nt -h;lnd !ed over as Ion~ as 25 Yt ar•
-is a cost above th(' $13.7 million
operating btidget and is not flex ible. '
and
Bonds for Y"h1ch lhc city pays soma
monf"y each yea r, and the tnta l amount
ll\\ ed on each bond arP
-P.:irking aul horil\' b•"nd~. $2,205 .000
-i'llb!iC fjH'ili'\ I «l'i'I' I 'fl h0!1!!~ (J f
the i:i\ ii: cenll·1 ~ 11hl 111M1
-1'he 1955w:tlt'f i~ lid .:.:11'1 IM~I
-1'he 1963 ~.1!1 r 11 ····~1 uc .1• 1111 ,
$3.360.000.
-The 1970 park IJnnu .. 1for II!·· ·~·t•' 1,
park and other open s1>acc). .~j.i7j 11"10.
High Court E xte nds Police P owers
WASmNGTON (UPI) -By a 6-3
li beral-0'.)nservative split, the Supreme
Court ex tended today the power of police
to "stop and fr isk" suspects on the street
for dangerous wea pons.
"We reject tne argument t ha t
reasonable cause for a stop and frisk can
only be based on the officer's personal
abservation, rather than on information
supplied by anot her person," the court
held.
"Informants' tips, like all other clues
Five Killed
In Ireland
S.treet Rows
BEIJ' AST !uPi) -One ol Northern
Treland'1 worst weekendJ of violence took:
at least five lives in street .batUea in
which Protestanlll battled Rom.a n
Catholics and · the British Army fought
both in attempts to restore order.
There were new bombings today and
terror in the streets.
A British 80ldier wounded in a 12-hour
gun battle in Northern Belfast Sunday
died today.
He was the 7lth British soldier killed in
nearJy three }'tars or strike between
Protest.ant$ and mioority Ro m a n
Catllofics.
The violence has taken 376 lives, 12 hi
the past six days.
The heaviest battle of the weekend waS"
In North Belrast where the fighting lasted
all Sunday afternoon and night.
Hundreds of men, women and children
streamed out of the area today and took
refuge in west and east Belfast. 1be
British army evacuated 40 families Sun·
day.
Three gunbattles broke out in the hours
after midnight when the illegal Irish
Republican Army mounted an intensive-
attack agaimt sandbagged army posts in
L<lndonderry. firing 200 rounds of higll
velocity rine fire and h e a v y
machineguns. There were no casualties in
this incident.
It was the la st major battle or the
weekend which saw the worst fighting
since last August.
By midmorning, the battles seemed 'to
have given way to the isolated bombings
which have become a Way of life in
northern Ireland.
P ress Honors Spiro
OMAHA , Neb. (UPI) -Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew , a frequent critic of
newsmen, baa a conference room in the
Omaha Press Club named in his honor.
Attending the dedication ceremonies:
Saturday, Agnew said, "I don't get press
rooma dedicated to me too often. In aome
places I'm not even allowed in."
and evidence comin g to a policeman on
the scene , may vary greatly in lhe.ir
value and reliability. One simple rule will
not cover every situation."
The opinion in a Connecticut case was
\Vritten by J us tice \Vi\l iam H. Rehnquist,
who is c111erging as the n1ost law·and·
order me1nber of the Court.
Justice Thurgood J\larshall said in
dissen t that !he decision "invokes the
spectre of a society in v.'hich innocent
citizens may be stopped. searched and
arrested at the "'him of police officers
'''ho have only thr slightest suspicion o(
Improper conduc t.''
Also dissenting were Justices William
J . Brennan Jr. and William 0 . Douglas.
The case is a sec1uel to an in1portant
1968 ruling tllnt policen1en under proper
circu mstances n1ay stop and fris k a
person suspected of cr iminal act ivity
even though they do nol have enough
prior evidence to make an arrest.
.ff.ore Thati 200 De ad
Work Crews, Do gs Se arch
, For Bodies in Flood Aflea
• .lW'lP eil'Y, S.D. CUP!) -Search crew1 using· dog! WOr\Mlhroiigh ·the
.nJght to uncover bodies from the rriuddy
ruins af Uie nation '.s worst flood in 36
years.
Authorities said today more than 200
were known dead from the flood Friday
night and Saturday caused when a rain-
swollen dam burst and cascaded billions
of gallons of water .into Rapid City and
other communities Jn South Dakota's
Black Hills.
Pat Dixon, coordinating disaster fn.
formation, said there may have been
duplications in the death count.
"We know It's over 200," he said. "It
could be 29 over or 30 over. No one knows
rigllt DOW ,"
Sen. George McGovern (0-S.D.), said it
wa.s "a scene af incredible destructJon
· and devastation." The pr e 1 l d e n t i a l
hopeful flew from Washington Sunday to
tour the floodland1 by helicopter.
Don Barnette, Rapid City's 29-year..()ld
mayor, said, "I woukl estimate a com·
blned death total or 300 for the whole
tragedy.''
Gov. Richard Kneip said, "We have in
excess of 200 deaths and there's a long
way to go yet. It'• believed many bodies
are below the mud and the mire. 1\at
part Is bad."
Search crews concentrated on a
virtually devastated flve-bl<lCk wide area
aloog Rapid Cr<ek, the stream whleh
cula through. the elty. 1
1t turned auddenly lnio a .,..Ilea, rot-
ing lciller "ben'O..yon Liiie. Dmn ~
under the ~e .of a foot of rain late
Friday nigh~ seoolng a lour-loot wall ol
water thundering down from the hills.
The flood caused an estimated $100
million da mage. destroying 500 houses
and leaving thousands or perS()ns
homeless.
Authorities first said about l ,*
per.t011.1 were unaccounted for, but later
said they could not make an accurate
guess on the number missing.
Little had been determined. about what
happened in more isolated communitiet
in the hills -particu1arty to the huft.
dreds, perhaps thouarids of touri!tl
believed to have been camping in the
area close by Mt. Rushmore.
11ie Agriculture Department announced
In Washingt on Sunday that the flood area
was eligible for emergency free food
stamps. Representatives a( almo!t fff11Y
federal agency that ·could be involft!I
met to make recovery and assbi.nc-
plans.
Rapid City water supplies were cur-
tailed (or f ea r of contamination and
some residents look to robbing motel
swimming pools of \Yater.
Free typhoid shats were given to
anyone who asked in hopes of beading oU
the danger of epidemic.
More than 4,000 townspeople and Na·
tional Guardsmen pulled more than 50
bodiea from the nibble Sunday.
Reacue.rs said they found bodies all
aloag tbe Rapid er.et eoune -ih
bUl'ments of 1!!/IDu which had ~n
swept away, btiiUth pilu ijf rubble, 1n
can. One Y~•bodJ WU draped in""'•
trtt. •
The nooct.,._.lhe 111t1on'1 worst sinee
11107, whelf• -tlit 'Milllolippl llld Oit
Rivers took .. llves. • · J
..
" ...
3,-160 Will Graduate
' . on Thursday ............ I
Now you con wall tile car. 'l1lo
wealberlady -!non p1111hJne on I
tbt -lw TuOlday -Ind I tbereellor.' Hlaho ol 111 expeeted at 1 • Bl' "MICllAD. OOODRICH ..,.._.......,n.ts ...
More than aillJO. oenlora In tile Hun-
U/igtoft Jleidi """'.High School District ril ... ~ •• llld ....,,., 'lbunday ni&ht tO tUe port In an aid tredltloa -
gndultloo. .
.Thia: Yeat'I claa ls the larRtlt fill!' to
)lltlldpel'e 1n illitrltt 1 r 1 d u . .;11 o a ...m.omu. ' ~ll'fO ol tM~f\to ·--l'cuntlln v111ey ml·~ -·.,ru 1rlduate the
larPI! .. ~ 'lti.ilWlr lihl«T .while \Vestmiooter Win .-t ~ooiJ.byo lo lti ieo-
ond ~~clau.
"AntlclP.UOn" 11' ·t6e theme for the
ninth Rnlor claa. 1to a:r:aduate from
Marina Hill> -· The ceremony IOI' ISO oenlor1 will IJqln •t 1:30 p.m. In the
odloot'• alllJlh!theat... Th< Prlne1pal spener "111 be DI'. L. Donald Shields,
president of Col Stale Fullerton.
Sbawn Millbw:n, will ·deliver the senior
1peoch while the Marinir valedielodal!I.
Loeielle l!elller, Judith Doui!lus Ud
Tr1th wai,rs-will 'llvt • Joint ~
tltioo 00 eootrib\ltlllc to ~ lulllrt.
. 'l'rultee Gtorce Lopn 'lilll "'prueat
the achool'boanl 1t the _, whU1
Assiltanl &I~' Gllltll· ...... •• ' .... ,. ....... ,
former Mlrlnl :1, will npruent dlltrl.ct·Wnlld~
Ceremonies lilr ~m ·, CUq
ela" from WeS\ft'l-lllsb, will
begin al 7 p.m. lti1 !lie ICtiool lootb1i1
stadium. The ISO ....... 'ilnlorl will
be el<Orted by, a• illrl lam IUlnf from
tile junior claas dUrlng their pro<osslonal
m1rch. ,
V1ledlc:torl1n Gill Kenworthy and
salul.ltorlan Michael Stevenson will
d.Uver rr•-ion lddr-. Robert
>
Martin, a.ssi.stant 1upervlAor for business
and flnanclal affairs. will represent the
dlltrlct admlolstratk>n.
F.dlaon HIP ScbooJ will &rldulte Ila
third clus •I 7 P•m. ·In the odlool mn-
pllltbeater. Sb~ -will bur llJIOIChes from ..iedietodaa s t • n
Petenon 111'1, -spealoer Ohlrles Price. Soc:ill 1tudlel . te1cber-KomdJI
Amm1M allo .. ui lddres.t tile l"lduatintf
1tnlor1.
Superinltndent J1cl< Roper wru deliver
hia "Super,lntendeut's Remar~" and
president of tht ,bolrd of trullots Dr.
Ralph anuer will 1llo Like part tn tile
ctremony.
The. six!Ji ·graduating clps1 from Foun--
lain Volley High Sc:hool wlll bqin Ila pro-
cHSlon Into tht school amphitheater at 1
p.m. The n5 gradu1ting Banm .. 1u be
1ddreued by their two ... 1..-11pukm.
I
Rol>in Dodge and Deboreh WU.On.
Trustee Dellllil Man&en wW repreatnt
tbe lcbool bolrd It ""' Fountlln V1lley
CtJ'OlllOllll while Dr. Joy Seltle, uaillant
1111pe<lntendent Jor puptl pmonnd, will
be on hind for the dlltrlct ad-
mlhlltrpllon.
Ctnmooles for tho 11th :_l"_lldltattng
c:l111 of lluotington Belch H1CJ1 School
"IU bella 1t 7:IO p.m. In lhe lcllool loot-
. bill 1tldlum. V1ledictorlans ·\l •-v Id
Anderson; Stiton CoWAn aha Jama .lOm·
. meb WU! deliver 1pteehes -tQ.the ·ci.,. of
· 540 seniors. Salutatorlan Patricia Patch
1110 will •peak.
Trustee John Bentley will represent tile
school boord •t the otlers' &radulltlon
and Dr. Jolln Hunt. a"r,tlnt superin-
tendent for edueatlon1I Mrvlett and
relellcb, will be preient for tile district
adrnlnlsfk1Uon.
"the be .... mm, to 15 --Lo.WI In tbt ••1.
INSIP~ 1,'0DA y I • Orcinge 'COO@!fp air o/ficlols, '
pla~d )I; jCI *"'" probf<m.r t
GI llli aifa!ll. olfJ!Qffo ..... th1ir I
eyes rm ~~but• u a pos·
siblt tof•l/Oft r;) "tlu critical
question o/· taller• to put mort
oil'J)Orlf, Stt tlory1 l'oge :ro .
L.M. lf'tf lf ... ttae •
C.llltr.ia i Cllttllltll .. ,.
c.itll(.1 It
C.......... 11
OMtll •1tet I
l;dlfw'-1 ..... ' ..._,.. •0111 II
Pi..c. 14-IJ ...... ,.. .. _,_ M ,. ..........
'
•I '
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•
••
-r DAILY PILDT II Mondi)', Junt 12. 1'972
8 Comm1111ities
Foes of Freeway
Band Together
A IJ"OUP of 20 well·known en-
.tronmentalist.11 and freeway fighters
from six Southern California coastal
communllln Saturday were appointed to
a steertni commJttee of the newly form-
ed C:O.st.al CommuniUea CoaUUon formed
to fight the proposed Pacific Coast
Freeway.
The pane.l inc.ludea: two Newport Buch
councilmen and the leader• of various
~.ltiz.ens' commUtttt in Lagmia Buch,
s.aJ Beach, Long Beach, San Juan
Capistrano and Laguna Niguel.
Newport Beach Vlce Mayor Jloward
Rogen and CouncUman John Store are
on the panel, aolng with Arnold Hano, a
member of the Board of zoning Ad·
jus1ment in Laguna Beach: \Yilliam
Leak, chairman of Village Laguna:
Richard E. Smith, president, Good
Government Group of Seal Beach and
Robert C. McCollum, chairman. Alliance
oJ Homeo\\'ners' Associations of San Juan
Capistrano.
Other steering committee members are
Jan Hall , chairman, Paclflc Coart
Freeway Opposition Committee of Long
Beach ; William Agee, Newport Beach
planning commissioner; Michael A.
Schley, president, Citizens' Town Plan·
ning Association. Laguna Beach; Mildred
B. Hannum, a member of the Laguna
Beach Open Space Comm.Htee and Bea
Wbittleaey, vice pre1ldtnt of Laguna
Gr~enbelt, Inc.
Also on the ranel are Margot Skilling,
co-chairman o the Harbor Area Freew1y
Mickey Mouse,
Donald Rescue
Lamb Students
Donald Duck, Mickey Mouse and Com-
pany have returned what thieves look
1way.
Two weekends ago the school safe 1t
Lamb School in lluntington Beach vras
llurll•rhed to the tune of l80 and It
tick.ta to Grad Nl1ht 11?2 at D!Jneyland.
"It wu awful," recalled principal Stan
Thompson. "Suddenly our eighth graders
faced the prospect of spending grad night
at home ."
But Donald Duck came to the rescue.
'h\omp!On put In a call to the Magic
Kingdom and explained to Disney of·
ficlala how the eighth graders had raised
money for crad nlahl tbn>uch a don1Uon·
fr•wlD1, bul !hit their efforts had been
nullified by lh!evu.
"D!Jneyland ptople were jU1! crut
about It," 1bomP10n uld. "They aarttd
lo replace admission tickets for the 40
ltudent1 Involved, and also to 11ve them
tlckell for five rtdea."
·ni1t still ten the eighth graden short
tick.ell for their 11 chaperones and also
p.ve rides abort of the number they had
pch ortalnally purdwed. But Thoolpeon
piy1 he· fia1 an aif'eement from the Lamb
lchool PTO to make up the Uckets for h chaperones and he hu put out a plea
ll> the community for e1tra ride ticket.s to
le dlatributed equally among the
lraduate1. Anyone wishing to make a
fnlrlbutlon con ell! 912-1139.
l
Jluntington Trustees
~
Set Budget Hearing
' :,.,! $6.1 mJll!on tentative budget for tfle
»''"·73 school year ill scheduled for di!-son Tuesday night by trustees of the
· lngton Beach Clty (elementary)
I District.
"' Balancing the budget coo!d requ ire
~rty tat increases as high u nine
cents per $100 assessed valuation to off-
lrtt. costs of new employe benefit pro-
JP"&ms required by the state, achoo! of-
ficials have aald. The meet.Ina: la sched-
)lled for 7,30 p.m. in the library o/ Dwytr
~tenned iate School.
Fighlert' Cllilens' Coon:llnatlng Com-
mittee; Earl llardage, a 1nernbtir or the
Lido Isle Con1munity Associatlo11 ; C<1rrull
Beek. a member of Nt~wport Hesidenis
United ; E. Percival Cbaae, chalrrnan of
the Laguna Niguel Homeowners' Associa-
tion ; Suzanne Rudd, setrelary of lhe
lfarbor Area CCC; former Newport
Beach mayor Paul J. Gruber : r..tarshall
Duffield, chairman of the fl arbor Area
Freeway Flgblera and Frances ltobinson,
a member of Friends of Nl.'wport Bay.
\Valier J . Koch. CCC: <'hll1rmnn, "'a!
selected as chairman of !he 11tw coali-
tion.
Schley and f11fcCollun1 v.•ere appointed
vice chairmen. Chase was elected
treasurer; Mrs . Jiall "'as selected
recording secretary and i\1rs. Rudd, cor·
responding secretary.
A'! expected, in its first action , lh('
group adopted a resolution ca!hnf:( on
.area legislators to actively push anti·
freeway legislation in Sacrarncnto.
The resolution points uut tliat prl'I ir111~
deletions of the proposed supe.rh1g/1w av
"make it extremely question;iblc that thlS
freeway will ever become the region::il
type of freeway which was envisioned
when it was approved by the State
Highway Commission ."
It is critical of the Slate Division of
Highways land acquisition prograin.
It says land has been purehased and
held "without justification and for un-
necessary reasons" and says the resul t
"is an untold loss of tax revenue as 1vell
as personal losses to pri va te landowners
adjacent to and in the imn1ediate 11icinily
of rlght-<>fo;1:ay..,purchased by the stale."
Koch this morning described the new
coalition as "enthusiastic" toward its
goa l and predicted Its membership will
expand even more at succeeding
meetings.
He said the panel will meet again June
24 at the home of Councllman Store in
Corona del Mar.
POW s Concerned
About Wallace
Politics, Peace
From \\lire Services
NEW YORK -A handful of American
POWs held captive in !lanai ere CQn·
cemed about Gov. George Wallace'!
recovery. Sen. George McGovern's cam-
paign and other U.S. polilical matters ln-
cluding peace programs.
The eight filers shot down fn Southeast
Alla, including an El Toro Marine Corps
>Jr Station-based jet pilot, were in·
tervlewed May 25 by American antlwar
activist,,.
A tape recording was made at the
1eulon in Hanol and played for newsmen
by Paul Mayer, one of the delegation in-
vJted to visit North Vietnam.
Mayer said Lt. Co. Edison w. Miller. or
El Toro MCAS, and the other teven
avlaton Including two San Diego Navy
~Iota uked about various things includ-
mg young voter registration.
The airmen also ques tioned what
Congreu is doing to end the Vietnam
War and claimed they are receiving good
treatment as indeterminate guests of the
Hanoi government.
The De-parlment of Defense said all the
men were listed as prisoners of "'ar.
Jn addition to the questions about
Wallace and McGovern. the prisoners
asked the visiting Americans about peace
demonatraUons, antiwar court cases and
young voter registrnlion .,
~Navy Cmdr. David 11offmnn urged zin-
t1war group,1 in the U.S. to unite "so the
government understands it is really al l
the people and not just dissident groups''
who oppose the war.
"There is another pov.·erful tool that
can be used and that is the power of the
\'Ote," sald Navy Lt . Norris A. Charles
Jr., who urged support. for presidential
candidates commltted to ending the con-
fl ict.
1
i
·--~ ,,./~/~~ ...
DAil Y PILOT 1"11011 bT Lff l'I YM
CountywUle
Panel Eyed
B y Boards
Orange County Su per~i.W"s and mayor."
have l!Hken the first lormal step to"•ard
furn1:lt1011 of a l'OlHllY" Ide Council of
(:overnrnents lCOC: I
Gn:inunously endorsing a Supervi!!ors
:ind Mayors Confertnce tSAJ\1CO J com-
mittee report, the elected off icials Salur·
dav orde red the com1nlttee to de velop 11 .~t1:.11·hy·~tep pl1:1n for the nrw re~lonal
l 'Hlitlt"il
Alll1ou~h dl·C1s1ons of COG l\Ould be ad·
\ 1~or) uHI\ 11 1vould concern itself "'ilh
n1;;illers ot rnutu11t , and sometimes con·
1rovers1al eoncern of city and county
~overnment.
Included In the committee recom·
1nendatio11 for subjects lo be revi e"•ed by
the ne\\' organization "'ere Jong range
plannu1g, h1ghv•:.iy p!nnning. health and
!'iafety , land use. parks. recreation, en·
''ironmenta l enhancemenl. transportation
.<Jnd highways.
rt Heavy Bear to Cross
The SAMCO cominittee. neaded bv
c<luncilman Don Smith of Orange. warned
th:il soine 1ype of for1nnl coun ty regiona l
t)l'J.,:anization is necegsary to prevent
threatened sta le governrnent in tru sio n in·
10 n1atters of local concern. lnclulkd
in the commjttee's adopted recom·
n1endations were : Actually, Bruno, \Vho played Gentle Ben, was just
that as he joined members of the First Baptist
Church of c·osta !\1csa at Sunday School. Led by
trainer Ron Oxley, of Saugus. Bruno appears to be
just another face in the crowd after Sunday service.
Newest honorary Sunday School member to receive
certificate from Rev. James 0. Combs (ushering
Bruno along behind trainer) is not without h uman
weakness. Bruno's vice is addiction to jellybeans.
-Calling of :i general meeting of all
elected mayors. councilmen and
supervisors as early as next fall to get
lhe COG plan off the ground.
-Initially the new leve l of goverrunent
\\"Ould include only county and city
elected offi cials. but other agencies such
d S school and .special districts coul d be
added later. UCI Senate Backs Women -There should be a paid executive
director \\'ilh rnember agencies con·
lr ibuting staff members as needed.
Faculty Urges Fe1nale Hiring, Special Stu dy Funds
-A single joint powers agreement
should be written and adopted Jn order to
provide finBncing.
The committee was ordered to im·
plrment its suggestioru and lo include
coordination wlth the Southern California
Assoc iation of Governmenls (SCAG).
The UC Irvine Academic Senate wants
to elevate the status of women on cam-
pus.
More women professors should be hired
and more emphasis should be made on
v.·ornen's studies courses, urge senate
members.
Funds should be made available im-
mediately for the development of
1\'omen's studies courses within a!readv
existing campus departments, senatC
members voted Thursday.
Grant monies should also be a"'arded
for research into "contributions of
1vomen_ to civi!i'Ultion and knowledge,"
according to a report made by the senate
committee on educational poli cy and
passed by the senate.
The faculty members also resolved that
';a greater number or qualilied wOmen
must be recruited and hired."
The only discussion by the senate
ro!Jowing the report made by com-
par~tive culture professor Jay Martin,
chattman of the policy comntittee, was to
change a grant-reviewing conunittee's
name to the "Vice Chancellor's Com-
miltee for Curriculum of Women's
Studies.''
It had been referred to in Martin's
report as the "vice Chancellor's Women's
Cominittec for Curriculum Development."
i\1artin reported the policy conunlttee
studied the idea or women 's studies
courses for eight months . It con-
cluded that they were a top priority item,
he said, but that they should not be in a
separate Women's Studies Program.
During that study, a 13-part ques-
tionnaire was sent to department asking
their views on \\'Omen's studies.
Supervisor David L. Baker or Garden
Grove noted the coun ty already ha! more
regiona l organizations than most in the
stale including countywide health, sanlta·
lion. refuse di sposa l. water and highway
construction agencies.
"But. .. Baker "'arned. "if the propoged
Council of Governments is going to work
all of the cities and the CQunty itself will
ha\•e to sincerely want it lo succeed and
be "·illing lo put forth seriou.s effort,,."
General Telephone Cuts
Amount Sought in Hike
ln ~tartin's report, English professor
f\.-lary Key summarized in writing that
"deparlment heads seem in general
agreement that the focus should be on tbe
discipline rather than on the sex,"
Less than one-third of the deparbnent
chairmen contacted responded, said
Professor Key, who added, "perhaps it
has not been emphasized enough that the
issues of women are also the issues of
men."
Of the about 30 senate members voting
for the resolutions, five were women.
The Saturday meeting of SAMCO, the
sixth in a series beginning in 1971, also
involved discussion! of uni form bicycle
theft laws and billboard restrictions. No
action was taken on either subject pm--
ding further study.
Those attending did endorse a propoaed
92-acre site on Rosecrans Ave nue in
Buena Park, the so-called Los Coyotes
park site and the 27,000-acre Chino Hill!
Wilderness Park.
On the latter pl-Opo!al those attending
agreed that due to its tremendous size It
should be multi-county, state or federal In
~ncept.
General Telephone Company or
California. serving Orange Co a s t
subscribers in the Laguna Beach and
lluntington Beach areas, ha.! reduced its
current rate increase application from
$21.4 million to $10.l million annually.
The amended application. it was stated.
resulted from a recent California Public
Utilities Comntission ruling regarding a
3 Ship Jtrmpers
Taken in Denver
rate increase for Pacific Telephone. as a
result of which General Telephone ex-
pects to receive $11 million additiona l
revenu e annually from Pacific Telephone
settlements.
Du1ica1i Sister's
Se rvices Toda y Public hearings on C.cneral's rate in-
crease application are scheduled to begin
t o d a y in the State Building. 197 So.
Talbert Ducks
Won't Be Killed
Broadway, Los Angeles. Public vi'ilnesses LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Fune r a 1
are lo test'.fy on June 19_ services for one of two surviving Th d k . T lbert Lak H 1 m-bc I h Du S. e uc s 1n a e, unt n11-..
Changes are proposed in basic rates £or mem rs 0 t e ncan isters singing Beach, are not going to be slaughtered.
both residence and business customers, trio are set for today in the Church of the c· . 11· . I .d ,.,_ Flo"·r-rs, r~orest Lav"n J\·!emorial-Park. 11y recreation o 1c1a s sa1 uQ morn--service conner ti on s. non-publ 1sh<"<I Glendale. Ing they were shocked to receive phone
listings and customer-requested phone ,\Irs. Eve lyn A. McClelland died Thurs-calls from some residents who said the1
number changes. day at a Bellflower hos_Pilal after an ex-heard the ducks still remaining in the
1'hr utility is reQuesting a !>·cent !ended illness. She "'as 79. lake "'ere going to be killed.
DENVER (AP) _ Three A\VOL n1onthly in crease for r cs 1 d c n ti a I She toured the "'CS!ern states during an The lake has been closed off for con-
servicemen , including two \\'ho jum ped <:ustonicrs. 15 cents a month for business after '\'orld \Var J "'ilh her sisters Rosel· struction on the 207-acre central park. l'USton1ers ;ind 20 cents per monlh for 1 d v· · th D SI t Norm Worthy city parks and recre.a-. ship in San Diego. have bE'en arrested by a nn 1v1an as e uncan . s ers. · rnx trunks. She leaves her sister, Vivian Herman of lion director, has previously explained
federal marshals at Our Lady of A 25-ccn! per month charge for each nurlingnm e. three dau ghters. Vi vian that the ducks are being transferred to
Guadalupe Church, end ing their stB y in non·pulJlished phone nun1ber. a $5 charg" (;iJmore of Jlunlington Bench, Rosetta other city parks. taken to 30tne boys
.sanctuary that began last Monday. to change a reslrlence phone and ~10 to Jlazan of \Vashinglon, and Barbara clubs and ranches, or given to resldenls.
Taken into custody were Robert Bland change a bu.!iness phone are included. Boehm of North ~lollywood : two sons, Only a few ducks sUU remain in the
Jr .. 22, \Yarren. Ohio, and Michael Haye s, The original 121.4 million rate increase Dunca n McClelland of Mountain Vit\.\·, lake at Golden West Street and Talbert
request W8.!l filed in February to offset and Stewart McClelland of Woodside and Avenue. They will be removed to other
21 . Colorado Springs, Colo., both sailors, increased labor cost.s. a brother, Harold Duncan of Los Angeles. locations, not killed, Worthy said.
and Eugene Berryhill, 20, Minot, N.D., an J-::::::::::===========--=:'.:=-::=======::=:=====:::=c:=='::==============~ Army private.
OIAN•I COAST HI
DAILY PILOT Ousted General Admits Selling Out Overstock
ONE CARAT DIAMONDS s479 Only With
This Ad
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12M ~.
Unauthorized Strikes
WASHINGTON (AP) -An ou!ted U.S.
commander in Vietnam confirmed to
congressmen today that he ordered
J)OMibly unauthorized nlr strikes against
the North Vlelnamete for the aafety oC
his pilots "and 1t the wne time trying to
stop the bulldup" that led to lh'e lncunlon
into South Vietnam.
But retirM Alr Force Lt. Gen. John D.
Lavelle aaid he orde~ the atrlkea ha lted
>.tarch IO when he learned three repom
of the 1lrikes had been falslfled, and
there appeared to be no way to continue
them without filing false report1 .
Gen. John 0. Ryan, Al r Force chief of
staff, told the aubcommJttee be flred
Lavelle aa commander of the 7th Air
Force tn Indochina when h~ learned of
what be 1ald were 24 unaulhortled air
str1ke1 into North Vietnam involving U7
planes.
.Lavelle aald he thought there were lus
than 20 11uch mJ1slon1.
L.avellt sald his pilots saw and
photographed maulve bulldu ps of North
Vietnamese: plane1 , tanks, artillery and
supplies near the Dtmllltarlied Zone and
aatd that when he rcque~ted permission
to strike them ht did not receive it but
neither did he receive a denial.
c
Lavelle said he could understand
Ryan's viewpoint from Wa.!hington that
"l had exceeded my authority.''
But he added : "At that time as the
commander on the spot concerned wit h
the aarety of the crews and at the tame
time trying to stop the buildup that was
going on. I fe lt that these were justifiable
actions."
Lavelle said thal he judged. lhat under
the rule.! prohibiting au but "protective
reaction" alr strikes into North Vietnam
in line with the 1968 bombing halt he had
tbe authority &.! the conunander oo lhe
rpot to order the alt strikes.
Bul he aaid that when an lnveatlg1tor
•howed blm the thrtt ralle reporto on the
atrlke1, "'I couldn't believe thtm." He
said he halted the atrlkes becauae he and
hit naff could not find MY way to pre-
vent fu rther such inaccurate reports.
Hla and Ryan'• testimony indicated
that tilt flllslncatlon Involved t<portlng
that unit! had taken some ltlnd of
mllltary action jU8tlfylni "protective
reaction'' rttalla!ory strikes.
He referred to rules of engagement
that at that tlme prohibited U.S. air
strikes Into North Vietnam tn line wttb
th< 1968 bombing halt exctpl for "prol..,.
tlve reaction" rttallatory strUi:es .
f
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Mond11, Junt 12, 1912 H DAIL v 'lLllf I
s. Viet Troops Liberate Loe'
Court Ruling
Clubs Get Okay
To Ban Negroes
\YASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme
Court today upheld the right of privalt
clubs to exclude Negroes as guests.
The 6 to 3 decision was delivered by
fresh1nan Justice Willia~ H. Rehnqu ist.
IL went against a black brought as a
i.:uest to the ti.ioose Lodge in ~larrisburg,
Pa.
The blurk. L€roy Jrvis, the 1najority
leader of the Pennsylvania House , con-
tended thaL because the club held a liquor
license from the stale it coulcl nol exlude
blacks as meinbcrs or as guests.
Today's {IC'cision dealt dlrcclly \Vith the
<'!l:clusion of blacks a~ guests -and not
\Vilh their ex cl usion as members . Rehn-
<1uist said lrvis could not challenge the
Lodge's all-white membership policy
because he had never applied for
1nembe rship, but had only been brought
to the club as a guest.
Rehnquist said the club's refusal to
serve Negroes does not violate the 14th
Amendment even though the ~1oose
* * *
Court Grants
Aid to All
~acing Jail
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreml'!
Court l od~y granted all defendants who
face a possible jail term the right to be
represented by a lawyer.
The 7 to 2 decision delivered by Justice
\Villiam O. Douglas. guarantee;; a
lawyer's help to mil lions of poor pkple
who a re prosecu ted for petty offenses and
misdemeanors.
Less than half the states supply free
Ja\\'yers to defendants in all trials that
i.:ould lead to a jail term. The historic rul-
ing, an expansion of past Sixth Amend·
ment decisions, \V iti necessarily change
trial practices in those !'ltatcs.
Chief Justit'i: \Varren E. Burger, who
'vent along. said he wu confident the
legal profes!'lion v•ould meet the "large
ne\v burdens'' placed upon it.
Justices Lewis F. Powell and William
11. Rehnquist. the court's freshman mem·
hers. objected to lhe s weep of t he
decision although they did not dissent in a
technical sense. They said the C<lurt
should have ruled there is a rlght to a
lawyer only when "necessary to a1Jsure a
fa ir trial."
In 1963 a case knov.·n as Gideon V.
\Vainwright laid the Jlrlnciple that a man
on trial fo r "serious offenses" has the
right to a la\\'Yer and that if he cannot af-
ford one the state must supply counsel.
Until then. the Sixth Amendment hid
been Interpreted as necessitating lawyers
only in capi tal offenses -when there
u·as a chance of a death sentence.
Su bsequently, the court grant~ the
right to a free lawyer when the jail term
could be six months or more.
Lodge gets it! liquor lictnse Utroua:h the
s tate.
"Since state-furnished service. Include
such necessities of life 1s electricity,
water, and police and fire protection,
such a holding v..-ould utterly emasculate
the dislinction between private &!I
distinguished from !'ltate conduct,'' be
said.
Chief Ju!tice \Varren E. Burger and
Justices Harry A. Blackmun and Lewis
Jo'. Powell, the three other 'Niion ad·
ministration appointee!, lined up with
Rehnquist, a former assistant attorney
general. Justices Potter Stewart and
Byron R. White also were in the ma·
jority.
Dissenting were. JU5tlces William 0 .
Dougla!, William J. Brennan Jr., and
Thurgood · Marshall, the court's only
Negro member.
Brennan Kid Pennl!lylvania's liquor
regulations plainly intertwlned the stale
with the operation of the lodge's bar ln a
significant way and lent the slate's
authority "to the sordid bu!lness of racial
discrimination.''
The ruling reverse! a three-judge
federal court in Harrilburg which held in
1970 that the Moose Lodge could not keep
both ill liquor license and ib raciaJly e1-
clusive policy.
The lodge is acroslJ the street from the
Pennsylvania State Capitol. Irvis, an
Allegheny county Democrat. had betn
brought to it for dinner and drinks by a
white member.
The Constitution that govern! all Moose
lodges provides that membership "be
composed of male per&0IU1 of the
Caucasian or whlte racu above the age
of 21 years, and not married to someone
other than the Caucasian or white race .,
Marine Stabbed;
Suspect Held
In Santa Ana
A young El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta-
tion enlisted man died Sunday morning
after being stabbed through the heart 11t
a Santa Ana apartment and falling out a
second story window.
His alleged slayer was arrested shortly
afterward on SU1plcion of murder.
Rudolph B. Tamayo, 47, of 322 W.1'11rd
St.. was question~ by police combing the
area around 200 N. Broadway after they
found bloodstains on his clothlng.
He is llU.!peeted of fatally stabbing
Andrew H. Nelson, 18, whose body was
found about S a.m. by a passerby in an
alley behind the North Broadway ad4
dre!IS.
Investigators claim Nel.11on wu visiting
Tamayo's apartment wbtn a quarrel
.11tarted, leading to the fatal 1tabblng.
coroner's deputies said dulh wai; due
to the heart wound. It was not determin-
ed whether the Marine would have been
seriously injured in falling out tbe win·
dow.
13 Breaks Evel
Evel Knievel, the motorcycle daredevil, hoped it wou1d be the other
way around Sunday when he agreed to jump over 13 cars at At·
lanta's Lakewood Park. But a miscalculation during a practice jump
the day before brought him a compression fracture or the back and
injuries to both hands. Undaunted by injuries, he sho\ved up any,vay
on Sunday and did three 60 mph "wheelies."
Red China Cites 'Threat'
Of U.S. Bombing Attacl{s
TOKYO (AP) -Communist China said
today U.S. air strikes in North Vietnam
near the Chinese border threaten its
security.
It charged that "these frenzied acts of
aggression" are not only "new war
crimes" against North Vietnam but also
••grave provocatioll!'l'' against China.
A Foreign Ministry 3tatement, in Pe-
king said, "The Chinese government and
people exprus their re90lute 3Upport" for
a North Vietname.se statement issued
Saturday C<lndemning the United States
for further dispatching many planes for
raids against the Hanoi a u bu r b s ,
Haiphong and other areas.
The statement was broadcast by P~
king's New China News Agency.
Last week. U.S. Air For~ jets swept to
within 20 miles of China and wreck.ed a
big North Vietnamese railroad marshal·
ling yard and hi.gbway brktie only 40
!'leconds flying time from the China-Viet-
nam border.
The raids we.re reported the clO!est to
the border since the 1965-68 bombing
campaign against North Vietnam.
China said the United Slal"' "should
know that the heroic peoples of Vietnam
and the other Indochinese countrita are
by no means alone in their struggle.
It did not elaborate on this point.
"For over a month, U.S. imperialism in
defiance of the strong condemnation and
opposition or the people throughout the
world, had continued to escalate its war
against the Democratic Republic of Viet-
nam," the s tatement added.
''It not only has mined and blockaded
the ports of Northern Vietnam and daily
sent out large numbers oi airplanes and
warships to make frantic raids on many
cities, villages and C<lastal centers, but
has steadily e1pa.nded the s p h e r e of
bombing up to areas close to the Sino-
Vietnamese borders, threatening the
security of China.
llake
Father> Da
Communists Flee
Provincial City
SAIGON (UPfl -South Vietnamese
armored oolumn!'I and lruckloads of sup-
plies broke through today to An Loe and
all but lifted the siege of the provincial
capital 60 miles north of Saigon -the
fourth major tu"'" to ix-lltx>rated s ince
the Con1munist offtns1vc began on )1arrh
30.
A few snij)('rs remained in the hi"·n and
Highway 13 from Saigon \\KS. ni>t t'Oll·
sidered .. saft '
Ape's Liver
Aith Pcttie1it
Fror11 Coiinty
t>~rom Wirt' ~t'r\·icts
AUGUSTA, G11 J:>espite a
respiratory C'utnplicat1on. a Buena Park
""'Oman suffC'ru1g advanced 11\·('r <li.c;;ca!'le
is responding here today to a unique
treatment in whieh her blood is fillered
throu~h a baboon 's liver.
Offici11ls at the ~l edicAl t:ol!ege ot
(;eorgia said Mrs. Linda Grc-enawav. 32,
is doing well folluwlng fivr hour.~ Or th!"
technique known as perfusion.
Eric Jacobsen, assistant administrator
of Talmadge Memorial Hospital where
~·lrs. Greenaway was fl ou•n last Thursdav
from Orangl' County, said the trea1n1erit
developed by Dr. George Abouna i!'I not
the sole ans1ver.
The avanced deterioration of r..1rs.
Greena,vay's hep atit!s·ravaged liver in·
dicates Dr. Abouna and llis team may
have to attempt a human liver
tran!'lplant.
He ha!'I pioneered that concept and has
two surv iving liver transplant patients to
his credit so far.
By fHlerinR her blood lhrough the ba·
boon's li\'er, Dr. AOOuna can assist '.\1rs.
Greenaway's 01-•:n organ to rest and
regenerate. at least~ some degree.
Teams of doctors y.·orking to save the
mother of fou r 'vant to strengthen he r
enough to \.•:\thstand the strain of a
transplant operation after use of the ba-
boon organ.
The liver now being used Wa.IJ removed
from a 60-pound baboon captured In
Kenya, clean/Jed of its own blood supply
and refrigerated until being hooked into
Mrs. Greenaway'! system.
But most of the North Viet name~ at·,,.
IJrJ..ers were r~ported to have withdrawn
111 C:1111bod1a and the remaining 7th and'
~Hh Uinununist O\vts1ons were described
.1:-. • del·1 n1ated ' or so badly cut up they
Jost their co111bat effecti\'eness.
~!any ;..;orth \'1f'tnamese attackers.
\1 ere killed by mass1\ c 852 st rikes and
b~ fighter-bombers
1·ne emphasis t)n thf' air war todav was
'\'Orth Vietnam "here B52s struck for lhc
1lfth conseculivt"' clay while fighter·
1..KJ1nbers hiltin~ th" llanot·Ha1p hong·
a.reas played ha voc u ith ~orlh Vietnam·•
\l'ilr transportation,
'l'ht> Saigon con1n'!1nd in reporting 280
~trike~ 1n Nor th V1clnan1 during the 2~
!tours rndlng ill 5 p.m. Sunday also
reported that F4 Phantoms fro m the cnr•
r1er Coral Sea shot down two 1'1 1Gl7 1
Sunday 25 miles south of Hanoi witll
n11ssi\es and wilhoul suffering any losse!I'.·
!heruselves.
U.S pl anes using "s1nart bombs" guid4
ro by laser beams and television hav•
knocked out scores of railway bridgu
leading from China to the J1anoi area.
And in doing so they left about liOO
heavily laden rt1llcars stranded in the
open like sitting duck!'!.
1\lany of those have been prime targets
and the U.S. Command reported that 60
cars were hit during the la.st 24 hours.
Pilots on bomb in g raids against
railroad cars 60 miles northeast of Hanoi
nea r the Ch i n a border caused larae
secondary explosions with a bright
orange fireball 500 yards Jn diameter-a
sure sign that ammunitlor. exploded.
U.S. 7th Fleet ships also have joined
the bombardn1ent or North Vietnam,
:-;helling the coastal road and canal
network .
'fhe command said the destroyer USS
Bau~ell, while shelling the Than Hoa
region 80 miles southwest of Hanoi. WI!
hit by shrapnel on June 10 ·and slightly
damaged. No injuries were reported.
Air !oases were mounting. The U.S.
command said one American was killed ~nd six missing in four ~eparate ail
crashes today and Sunday, includlng twd
rnen lost in the north. An F4 Phantom
was shot down by a missile but the tw~
n1an crew parachuted into lhe South
China Sea and we.re rescued.
The other crashes and helicopter losse~
\Vere in South Vietnam. Four men were
reported. missing in two chopper crashes.
A U.S. Army·OH5 Loach chopper "114
1bol. !!own locl>Y near • Bill el . '
crewman wu: reported killed -tbt tlllrdl
Loach sbol down n .. r Hue in Ibo wl two
days.
Armed Pair Net $3,500 Fal er>
Yeat
Bnck to School?
Summer's· fun is over a!Jd it's
back to school 1!1'1• in Auitr1·
lia for lovely Robin Evins, 17.
She has. the figures (38-24-35)
to add new dimensions to m1th
-or any other subject, for
lhal matter.
• At Laguna Restaurant
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of .. o.ltr ...... t•ff
Two men, one lrandilhlna a anut>-noltd
revolver, held up Laguna Beach's famous
Willie BOOM nstaurant lborlly alter I
a.m. today, taJdni al !wt '3,IOO In
weeteoci recelpll;
Kozy Sannratar:I, operator of the
rtltaurant, at 3IO S. Coast lllabway, bis
wile Glad)'l and Dan Mikel•, an tmploye,
were tied and left unharmed u the two
men ~ the est1bllahme.nt.
Saruwatari said he wa.11 worklnc behlnd
the restaurant bar when ht looked up and
saw a man wJtb 1 &wt facing him.
The (llllllllll, del<libed u ol medium
height, wllh 1 lllendtr build and duk
hair, ordmd him lo call the olber
employu out.
Dan Mikels, -kins In the men•1 rut
room .gd·oot·llld ,_the .....,u. "~J·™oiM jieppeD, and l 'vo 1ot ooly mii'aiin Jell," Sannrotarl
aald, eqiltnq Illa! on W-lday, he
_,Id end Illa 1we of the Laguna
rerlluranl "dlch he hu ope.riled alnce
19'1. The tialmess w11 e1labli1bed in
1918. ~
Alter tlllnj an the money from the of·
flee, the pnman ind hlo acoompllce
wont ~ the bar ana and coDected men
-then. lllr1. ~1llrl and Mlkelo were then
freed from the loclttd 1tortroom ind,
wllh Sannoallrl, tied lo the Jl"le•lall of
Ille" ntllatllll tab1"'.
u 'I'm eorry 1 havt to tie you up Hke
this,' the IUY aald to me," Mrs.
5"r11wllarl said. Sile 11111 bad ... 11.o oo
her wrl•I• where her bonds be<n Uahttn-
ed.
"I Jul\ stood lbere, woitJnc for ,.rneono
lo say oomethinl ind thlo 1uy stuck his
aun in D1J stom•ch •nd told me 'move
over there,'" Mikels recounted following
the robbery.
Mn. Saruwatari, working In the kitcb-
ID, wu called out into the restaurant
area and then ahe and Mltela, were
locked hi • atore1 OOID.
The (Unman then forced Sannntarl lo
the office and made him open the safe.
The other man scooped up the money,
bundling it up in his shirt which he had
untucted. from hil trouser!.
"The (Uy holdin( the gun seemed
aaltated, he kept saying 'hurry up, don't
bother with the cheeks or the small
stuff,' "Saruwatari said.
"He didn't tle me very well," Mikell
said. He uid that he had worked his way
free, but wu waiting for the man to
leeve before getting up.
"I couldn't see them. but once Kory
called out to me and a.aid, 'how are you
Danny?'
.. One of the· men called beck, 'what wu
that?' " Mlkell lald.
Sl>orll1 afterword , Saruwatarl jumped
up Ind ran lo the ttiephooe and coiled
police.
All three vlctl.ms agl'ffd that the man)
with lhe (Un was the boll. The other
men, cltlcrlbed u about 5 loot, 10 incb.1
tall wt th a l1ir complulon and light hair, Jul\ clld U be WU told, they Nld.
"1 w11n't scared at all; I.be)' were just
not the type lo be scared ol," Mn.
Saruwatarl said.
• DetecUvea believe the banclltl entered
through the rear rtltlurant door opentns
en RaJDGOll· A•enue.
Cc:Ntruclkln wcxbrt on the ne"
Laauna ~ County !Jbrary Im·
mediately blhlnd the renturanl were
qurltlontd by olllcor1, but apparenUy the
iunm•n and bis acc:omplice left un·
noticed.
Seldom can you give what he
needs and what he wants. Flor-
shelm Shoes are Ideal, They
delight the first day and all
through months and years of
pleasure in the look and feel of
quality. Size is no problem. Just
use a gift-boxed Florsheim Gift
Certificate. Makes it real easy I
fJTJ..1..;.. (!J;'Cl»ft ,, _,, ___ .. __
-----·-· o•
26.95
Black.Brown
JI.ts
lll•ck-lrown
W • Carry Siu1 fo I .f
Width1 from AA to EEE
54 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT CENTER • 644-4223
UM Yevr M••ttr C"-rg• e lankAmerlcarl
e Hftl'lpfllll Ch1r1•
' '
'
4 oAi\.y PILOT
,, .. , ~
Coe•t ing ,'!!"J
Th e Things
Oqe Learn s . • •
BA~WRITIS DEPT. -Ah yes, the
little woman has ned to a vacation in
beauliful 1iiexico and so far during her
short absence 1 have enjoyed a learning
experience. For example, I have learned :
-You cannot make up for not watering
the plants for several days by watering
them heavily all at once. The water runs
straight through the pots. You sti!l have
dry plants but lots of water every place
else.
-It is possible to overdo chi cken. You
can make a Col. Sanders golden brown
turn into a study in black in just the
amount of time you took to hunt up a
couple of new Jee cubes.
-WlI EN YOU TOSS away t he
charcoal-colored chicken.·make sure you
have tossed it all the way away.
Otherwise the cats will find it. Cats are
good in finding chicken, charcoal-colored
or otherwise.
When cats find chicken. they strew the
pieces across the living room rug.
-It is unco mfortable to walk across
the living room rug in your bare feet in
quest of the morning papers when said
r ug has been strewn with chicken pieces.
It is also not good for your early morning
disposition.
-The dishwasher is really a recycling
machine and must be run full bore, day
and night, or you will never keep up with
dish consun1p tion. The demand for
dish...,·are aJways exceeds the supply.
-DO NOT GET trapped lnto loading
and starting the dishwasher without
checking every room in the house .• You
wil l find three glasses and a cookie plate
under daughter's bed. Dirty spoon in the
bathroom. Cup that held milkshake
betv.·een two books in 'on's room. Cat
dish inside dog dish pushed under
v.·astebasket.
-In addition to causing you to run
dishy,·asher ·with only a partial loa d, fln·
ding all these things after dishwasher has
been started is a lso bad for your disposi·
t ion, like the earlier chicken pieces on
living room rug.
MonckJ, Junt 12, l97Z .
Farm Truck
Hits Pickup
l{illing 12
Al.EXANDRIA. La. I AP ) -A tractor·
trailer truck loaded with wheat smashed
into the back of a pickup truck carrying
14 persons on a awimming outing1 kill ing
12 and critically injuring another.
The big truck hit the slow-moving
pickup Sunday as It was preparing to
make a tum from U.S. 165 about 20 miles
south of here to a road leadlng to the
Shady Nook swimming hole, State Police
reported.
The truck climbed on the bed ()f the
pickup. powering it 275 feet and pounding
it into a pine tree with such a thrust that
the cab was crunched lnlo about a two.
fuot area, officers said.
Eleven victims were aged I to 18. The
12th was identified as the pickup driver,
30-year-old Martha Maeux of Woodworth.
All but one victim y,·as fro m
\\'oochvo rth, a small community ne11r
Alexandria. The other was fro rn !\ew
Orleans.
The tractor-trailer driver, Identified :is
24-year-old Gus Wiley of Deville, La .. wa s
hospitalized in shock.
Satte Trooper Robert J . Rigby said that
no charges had been filed in the case.
fo.lost of the victims were related.
The side or the 30-foot van on the lari::e
truck broke , spilling wheat on the ground.
Rigby said bodies of three victims v.·ere
found under the wheat.
Death Vigil Bea tings, Deatl1
Probed in Vegas
'Cheatina Rin a '
1ilr. and l\lrs. Emil Bearshield 'rait in a Behrens morgue to identify
a missing frlend Sunday. A flash flood struck Rapid City, South Da·
kota this weekend, kiJling more than 200 persons. Hun dreds are
still missi ng,
~ ~
LAS VEGAS. Nev. (UPI / -Caslno
v.·orkers may have been terrorlzed by
beatings and murders into cooperating
with a ring or gambling cheats that has
bilked casinos of at least $300,000 using a
clever ''hollow chip stack."
Candidate Sees [(e nnedy
As Choice of Democrats
"We are t rying to identify the people
involved, to fmd ()Ut "'ho organized the .
ring and how they recruit some of the WASHINGTON (UPI) -lf Sen. George
participants," Phtl Hannifin, chairman of S. McGovern falls to win a first ballot
the Nevada Gaming Control Board, said victory at the Democratic National
Sunday. Convention nex.t month he will be denied
Some sources said that the ring had the presidential ·nominalion, ·says Rep.
Wilbur D. ldills. The party then may turn siphoned off as much as S3 million from to-Sen. Edwari:i M. KeMedy.
the gambling tables, and that as niany as Mills, inf1uential chairman of the House
150 casi_~ wo~kers may be involvec,t. , wa·ys ·and'M'eanS committee and hi mself
Hanruhn 1a1d that was an e1:a&ger~t1on.
lhl\I ~bout 20-30 pefSOllS were Involved. Jn· .
the past month the ~ has W:tlm12;td at
least half a dozen casinos, defrauding
them ot $300,000 to $400,000, Hannifin
said. . . . ......
.. :
!alls yet seen in the market.
-Speculators st:r ambling to grab profits
have now cut back the metal's price by
'8 an· ounce since ii peaked at $67 last
Thursday.
· 1'he rush to ·sell put· dealel"'S ofr lo a
l}ectic st;ut as the slide wiped; out all the
~ig price gains bUilt up since the start of
tpls . month and followed sizeable falls
Thuf~ay and Fiiday after tbe $G'T peak .
started to tempt sellers to take profits.
Some operators could see a profit of up to
SJJ)et~nt over a period or a few months,
W-'!'agton Flood
Snowpack Melts;
300 Flee Homes
SEA'J'l'L!, Wub. (UPI) -Flood
waters 1'0M: today along the Okanogan
Rlvt:r of Northeast Washington where
more than 300 per!Ons were forced from
lhtlr homes lu t week.
W1ters were expected to crest at 22 .3
reet late tonight, only .2 feet less than the
previous flood crest that caused nearly
$15 million damage to a stretch of towns
iiod orchard!.
Four persons were missing, meanwhile ,
along Northcentral Washington's Entiat
River, where flash flood ripped down
PresUln Creek Saturday.
Civil Defense director Jack llarrington
* * * R ed Cross F11nds
Nearly Depleted
Due to Flooding
\VASl~lNGTON (UPI) -Due to recent
disasters in several states including the
flood in Rapid City, S.D., the American
Red Cross is under considerable financial
strain, according to a top Red Cross of·
ficial.
Robert Shea. Red Cross vice president
for disaster relief. announced Sunday the
!led Cross is initiating a nationwide cam·
paign to raise $5 million to help disaster
vi ctims.
Shea said a critical financial situation
has developed within the Red Cross
because of its assistance to flood victims
in Texas. Kentucky, Washington. \Vest
Virginia and South Dakota; as ":ell as
victims of numerous tornadoes.
"\Ve ask the American public to re·
spond to our campaign by donating fund s
for disaster relief to their local chapter of
the American Hed Cross.'' Shea said in a
statement released from the Red Cross
headquarters.
DAILY PILOT
DELI VERY SERVICE
Otlivery of tht Dally Piiot
is guaranlttd
MMday-J'rld~y: If you dci not have veur Pi!~ bY .J:lO p.m., cell ~n.d your COilY .. m
be brOuQfi"l 1CI you. Call• l te INtn 11111!/
1:.111 p.m.
$at11raay 1116 Sund1y: It you do ..01 rK1lve
yo11r cOIJ't' by 9 1.m. S11urU.y, er I 1.m.
Sul\day, cell Ind e COi'Y will ~ brOllghl ta you. C..11• 1r1 11~111 un!lr ta 1.m.
Ttltphonts
Mo$! Or111111 County Aria• ........ io-4121
Norlh-1 Huntln11on llt•ch
and WttlmlNltr ................. S*-1221
San Ci.rtwnlt , C1phtr1ne Btltll,
San J uen C1pll!r&t1C, 0.111 Pcii11t,
SaWh LAQl.Hlfl, L•g11n1 Nlgu1I .. 4t2·442t
said U1e Entiat was black with mud today
as it ate away banks, and began washing
into previously untouched houses and ap--
ple orchards.
lie said chances were slim of findinC
Steve Laughery, '2, and bis wife, Bttty.
49, or Moses Creek, and an unidentified
couple y,·hose cabins were swept into th~
Entiat.
Twenty-one persons were evacuated by
helicopter Sunday from the Cottonwood
camping area of the Enliat. Chelan Coun·
ty Sheriff's deputy Larry 11ivley said t he
scene was 'ipretty much of a mess."
''People are lrying to sandbag and dike
around their houses, but from what I
saw, their efforts were pretty futile." he
reported. ''Water was still coming in
around the bags and into the home area ."
The new threat to the Okanogan Valley
\Yas lessened by repair work to dikes
done since the last (]ood crest, the Arn1y
Co rps of Engineers said Sunday. The
Corps said it didn't think any further
evacuation would be necessary.
The Okanogan area was declared a
disaster area aSturdar by Presidewt Nix·
on after the fast melting snowpack of the
Cascade ~1ountains caused extensive
flood damage to homes a nd businesses.
W oodstock-sty le
Wallace 'Party'
Held in Florida
LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) -A pair or
donkeys draped in bright campaign ban4
ners con1peted with country and Wester-it
stars for the atlention of George Wallace
fans Sunday at ''\Vallace's Woodstock."
The. day-long fund raising jamboree fo1' ,
the Y.'OWlded Alabama governor was ·the ,
\vol'k of Dewey Smi th , who admits he got
the idea from "the liberals."
Smith was Polk County campaign
coordinator for \Vallace"s successful bid
in Florida 's ~larch 14 Democratic
presidenlial primary. \\'allace was shot
by a would-be assassin in ?.·larylaod last
1nonth and is still in the hospital there.
"\Vatching television about six week.!!
ago I got the idea." said Smith. "Barbra
Streisand and some or the other big name
show business people were putting on a
shindig for GeOrge 1\1cGovern.
. ''If the liberals can do it, we can. too ."
lie grinned. "And here it is -'Wallace'•
\Voodstock.' "
-A.NOTllER WASlllNG machine is
located in the laundry room. This one is
for clothes. You do not have to wa\ch the
washing machine vuy close1y. Walch the
dryer, however. Be first to get to the
dryer. Otherwise, you wi ll not tiave any
T-shirts. Your sons will have all the T·
shirts. They wil l suggest It was only your
jmagination that you had any T-shirts in
the wash. You will then notice d uring the
coming days that they have plenty of
clean ones and you seem to be wearing
something that lvas used to clean off the
car engine.
"The Murphy CMe turned us..cm to it ...
•aid Chief Deputy Sherif! R>y Gubser,
referring to the death of Robert Lee
~1u rphy. \\'ho \vas shot Jn a brawl with a
ca.sine executive last month. One of the
"hollow chip cups" used by the ring was
found in Murphy's home after his death.
a 'Democratic . presid~niial •'Candidate,
made the assessment Sunday. The
Arkansas Democrat also said that if the
convention were to draft Kennedy. he
would consider accepting the vice
presidential _nomination. FORD, CHEVY, PLYMOUTH OWNERS
-Mop the kitchen floor regularly. lf you
do not. it becomes sticky. This doesn't
r eally injure your bare fe et but only
mea ns you have to wash them some.
Later. however, beach sand gets mixed in
with the kitchen floor stickies. This tums
the floor into sandpaper. This indeed is
not good for your bare feet. Better mop
It.
ACiUALLY, THE life of a bachelor
with three kids is real bliss. You ju st
have lo keep on your toes and continue
thr learning experience.
Only one thing really continues to wor· rr you :
'''hat ·will you learn tomorrow?
A ppcal Turned Down
\\'ASI-llNGTON r AP l -The Supreme
Court today unanimously turned down an
appeal by John Patler from Jiis con-
viction in the 1967 sn iper gJ aying of
George Lincoln Rockwell, commander of
the American Nazi Party. Patler, 33, was
sentenced lo 20 years in prison. The ap-
peal centered mostly on the identification
of him first from a new s pa per
photograph and later in the hallway of a
police station.
An unusual number of assault and
strong-arm incidents have occurred since
then. with many o( the victims being
casino or hotel workers. Several have
mysteriously disappeared, and a rash of
kUlings broke out the week after fo.1urphy
"'as slain.
H1k ks
Talk that Hubert Humphrey
is two faC8cl. is ridiculous!
e More Massacres?
NEW YORK (AP') -A Newsweek I
magaz.iDe correspondent reports ~ "stag.
gering number" of Vietnamese civilians
were killed by u .s. forces in a pacifica--
tion program in 1968 that "made the My I
Lai massacre look trilling by com-
parison." .
Kevin P . Buckley reported In this
week's issue ()f Newsweek that one of· I
ficial estimated 5,000 civilians died in the
5ix-month-long operation code-named
'"SPf'edY Express.'' which v.'as carried out
in ~he ~tekong Delta.
e J11p11n Vislto1' I
TOKYO (AP) -P resident Nixon lias
invited Emperor Hirohlto to vi.sit the
United States, presidential adviser Henry I
A. Kissinger anoounced today as his
weekend visit to mend relations between
the Nixon administration and J apan drew
to a close. I Kissinger told a news conference he
delivered the invitation to Prime Minister
Eisaku Sato Saturday. Sato said "an a~
propriate time v.·ould be worked out
through normal diplomatic chaMels'' for I
the visit.
e Gold Plunges
LONDON IUPJ) -Tiie price ol gold I
plunged $3.75 an ounce In nrly ll"ff
market trading today. retreating tO S5t
dollars an ounce in one of. the. biggelt,
Fair Skies I • Ill East, W es~t · .....
I ,
..
.. AllONA\ WllolNI SIMKlfOllCAll .. ,U .s1 , ... •·n·
30.00 2 ,,
• •l"Wt R"NC'I .. ~
\ .~ ~~~~ .• '-;J;!t;lllli!:;
JQOO
IOWll1 l lM"U.fVn1?9'.77 ,.
PRE-4th SALE
"Tut.Int ... ,,...,."
prt.::1• l)lu. l t.75 to
S2.4S F...i. EL l t •
l)ar 11,., ~nchJ>g
""' •Ila..
S14.95' was $22.00
8.25--1 4 & 15 $22-00' was $30.00/$31.00
8.55-14 ... $23.00' w1aS32,50
. '·
General Jet•
4-PLY
NYLON CORD
•Tough Duragen•rreact
Ru bber
• Famous Dua l Tread
Design
'
7
,,
7
J
--~---... l': _,
&range Coast
EDITlON
T oday'8 Ft.al
N.Y. Stocks
..
VOL 65, NO. 164, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAG ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1972 N TEN CENTS
• Pilot Held Over Coast . Stunt Flying
A hair-raising series of acrobatic stunts
including ooe power dive to rooftop leve l
ov er four Orange Coast cities led to the
arrest of a pilot pursued by two police
helicopters early today. ·
Richard B. Loomis, 24, of Arcadia . was
taken into custody at Orange County
Airport shortly after midnight along with
one of his three passengers.
Loomis w.as arrested by crewmen of
the Costa Mesa police helicopter Eagle J
snd booked into jail on suspicion of
violating section 21407 .5 or Lhe Publi~
Utilities Code.
Officers Randy Nutt and David Brooks
charged Loomis under the PUC Code
with operating a plane v.·hile under the in-
fluence of an intoxicant.
Incidents were cited over Newport
Beach. Huntington Beach. Qista Mesa
and Irvine.
One passenger, Tom F. D'Angelo, 2.1, of
1131.h Turquoise Ave .. Balboa Island, was
also ai-rested on sll3picion of being drunk
in public.
Investigators \\'ho said they con fiscated
a half-gallon jug of wine from the cockpit
(lf the red·and·white Cessna aircraft in-
volved in the aerial escapade alleged all
four occupants had been drink.ing_
Only Loomis, who had no pilot's license
in his possession, and D' Angelo had ap-
parently consumed enough to warrant
thii.r arrests, according to investigating
officers.
Officers Brooks and Null said they fir st
A Heavy Bear to Cross
Actually, Bruno, who played Gentle Ben, was just
that as he joined members of the First Baptist
Church of Costa Mesa at Sunday School. Led by
trainer Ron Oxley, of Saugus, Bruno appears to be
just another face in the crowd after Sunday service.
Newest honorary Sunday School member to receive
certificate from Rev. James 0. Combs (ushering
Bruno along behind trainer) is not without human
weakness. Bruno's vice is addiction to jellybeans.
Su tt Brings Out
100,000 Su nday •
On Newport Sart<l
Sunny Sunday skies boosted weekend
beach attendance to more than 100 .000 in
Newport Beach as lifeguards readied for
the expected end·of-school rush starting
this week.
Drab, overcast wea ther in the morning
kept attendance to only about 25 .000
Saturda y but BJ.000 nocked to the sands
Sunday to escape soa ring inland tern·
peratures.
Cold water, aboul 61 degrees, kept
most people -0n shore.
"We only had five rescues total," a
lifeguard spokesman said today. ''We had
good wealhtr but there wasn't much
aurf." .
tJleguards treated more than 120
minor injuries, most or .which were pain-
ful 1tings lrom the jellyll.!b lhal continue
to plague the beaches. •
"They are· sun bere,IJUt I thb)k people
are getting used to them and keeping -0n
the lookout now," the spokesman said.
Ora••• Crnst
. w .. t1aer
Public Hearing Scheduled
Tonight on City Budget
Ne wport Beach councilmen tonight will
find out what taxpayers thlnk about the
taxes they are paying next year.
The council will conduct a public hear-
ing on the proposed $13 .! million city
budget that they. themselves. ha ve
already indicated ma y be increased to
cover additional spending proposals.
One of these is a requested increase in
the size of the police f-0rcc . adding seven
uniformed personnel and one clerk,
equipment for them to use and additional
capital items, including a tape reciirding
system, aU costing nearly $120,000.
Councilmen have also indicated their
concern about the low budgeted figure for
capital improvements, primarily. the
amount -$223,000 -proposed for street
paving.
Public Works Director Joseph T. Devlin
said at least $300,000 1hould be spent to
keep the street.I In decent repair.
Other than lbt police department and
the paving program, t~ proposed spen-
ding document for 1972-73 has been
virtually free of controversy.
C<>uncilmen are going to have to look
toward new sources -0( revenues to fund
the various projects and tonight are con
sidering an increase in the bed tax from
five to six percent that would bring in an
additional $47,000.
The spending increases are being con-
(See TAXES, Page ZJ
Boost Pro pc .. ~cl
In Beach Parking
A proposal to hike the daily and
weekend fees at the..COrona del Mar State
Beach parking Joi will be conaldered
tonight by Newport Beach oouncilmen.
Weekday rates would go from $l to
$1.50 and weekend rates would go from
$1.f>O to $2. all on a per-day basis. under
the ~ndatlon from City Manager
Robert L. Wynn.
The rate for busel would be hilted from
SS to 17 .50 per day .
\Vynn does not propose increasing tbe
fees at the Balboa ParkJng k>t because
''of an implied commitment with
businessmen that there would bt no
changes in the fees this sum mer season,"
Wynn .said.
'Tralfic Worsening'
spotted the plane flying erratically in the
area of the Santa Ana River, bet\\·een
Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach.
They charged that Loomis, a utility
company empl-0ye, went into a steep
power dive and only pulled -0ut 100 feet
above ground level.
Giving chase, the y were joined by the
Newport Beach police helicopter and
claimed they saw Loomis g-0 into a steep
climb over UC Irvine before nearly stal-
ling.
'Stop
The plane then made !!I sharp, JOO.
degree turn and headed bark -0ver
Ney,·port Beach. at times iooming as IO\\'
as 500 fttl -0ver reside ntial areas.
Shepherding the zig-zagging plane b::ick
toward Orange County Airport, arresting
-0fficers in the helicopter !laid Loomis
barely mi ssed crashing into a 4-0·foot
glide !!l<ipe indicator tO\\'er l\'hile landing.
He was stopped at midfield by airport
security officers 'vho ordered the nier to
taxi toward the toy,·er build ing, where he
and
\\JS to 1neet in\'esttgating officers.
l'ohce said Loon1is' pla ne finall y halted
only one f1..10t fr om 1he building and nea r-
ly collided with l\1•0 ro.,..·s of parkrd
t1ircraft as the we:lving Ccssnn pulled up
to a halt .
The suspect was hel d in llru or $250 ha il
this 1norning , wh ile police fnr1\'arded :i
report or tbe incidrnt to 1he r ede r:it
Aviation Administrat ion (nr noss1ble ad
ditionsl legal action .
High Court Extends Police P owers
WASHINGTON (UPI) -By a 6-3
liberal-conservative split, the Supreme
Court extended today the power cf police
to "stop and frisk" suspects on the street
for dangerous weapons.
"We reject the argument l h s t
reasonable cause for a stop and frisk can
only be based on the officer's personal
observation, rather than on information
supplled by another person," the court
held.
"Informants' tips, like all other clues
13 Hopefuls
Seek Sc hool
Board Seats
/\ 1'llal o! ~ candi~ ~!ll face
Newport-Mesa !Choo! district wt.rs Aug.
8 h1 a rpeclal election to fill two vacant
1ohool -... ts. The race !or the '11-ustee Area SI! post va~ated by Sellin "Bud" Franklin, ap-
pomted recently to the municipal court
bench, promises to be the hottest of the
two. Eight candidates have filed for the
job.
Five candidates will compete for the
Trustee Area Five seat to be left vacant
by the retirement or Trustee Donald
Strauss, who has served for more than Ht
years.
Area Six hopefuls are Robert C.
Sangster, 23()4 Cliff Drive, Newport
Beach, an attorney: Arthur J . Sorce, 285
Robin Hood Lane, Coma Mesa, buslnes&-
man: David H. Krueger, 441 Tustin Ave.,
Newport Beach, college professc:ir. and
Thomas MacKinnon, 1 8 7 2 Mariners
Drive, Nev.1>0rt Beach, a dentist.
Also, Rita K. White, 310 Ro&in Hood
Lane, Costa Mesa, hclusewife; Joe Cefali,
620 Michael Place, Newport Beach,
engineer; Joe Duffy. 277 Ogle St., Costa
Mesa, newspaperman and Thomas W.
Henderson Jr., 461 E. 2Qth St., C<>sta
/\.1esa, attorney.
Area Five candidates are Michael J.
Ashe, 106 Via Xanthe, manager -0f educa·
tion systems for lBM ; James G. Ensign,
224 2oth St., attorney; Bruce Chandler,
215 Crystal St., Balboa Island, attorney ;
Walter Lazar, 308 36th St., pr-0fessional
educator and Arthur F. TI>ompson, 67
Balboa Cove, physician.
Franklin's Area Si.J encompasses an
area bounded along Pacific C<>ast
Highway to 21st Street and Newport
Boulevard to Dover Drive. A small por-
tion lies in C<>sta Mesa and the rf:!t in
Newport Beach.
Area Five take.s in all the Newport
Beach area from the Santa Ana River to
the Newport Beach jetty south <if Pacific
C-Oast Highway. This includes Ba Ibo a
Island, Lido Isle and the Balboa Penin-
9ula .
All registered voters residing In the
Newport-Mesa school district will be
eligible to cast ballots in the special elec·
lion.
a11d evidence ('(1Jn1ng to a policeman on
the scene, may vary greatly in their
value and reliability. One silnple rule will
not cover every situation.''
The opinion in a Connecticut case was
written by Juslice William H. Rehnqu ist,
who ls emerging as the most law·and-
order member of the Court.
Justice Thurgood Marshall said in
dissent that th e decision "invokes the
spectre of a socie ty in which innocent
citizens may be stopped, !earched and
rrrrcsted at the y,•hin1 -0! police -Officers
"ho have only the slightest suspicion -0(
improper conduct."
Also dissenting were Justices William
J . BreMan Jr. and William 0 . Douglas.
The caae ts a sequel to an important
1968 n1Hng that policemen under proper
t:1rcumstances 1nay slop and fr isk a
person suspected or criminal activity
even though th ey do not have enougll
prior evidence to make an arrest.
More Tha•a 200 De ad
W or l{ Crews, Dog s Se ar ch
For Bodies it1 Flood Area
RAPID CITY. S.D. (\JP!) -Search
crews using dogs worked through the
ni&ht to UDCGTer bodiea ~ Ibo IJlllll<IY
rullli ol tilt nation's want llOOd Iii II
years.
Authorities 1aid today more than 200
were known dead from the nood Friday
night and Saturday caused when a rain-
swollen dam burst and cascaded billions
of gallons of water into Rapid City and
other communities in South Dalrota 's
Black Hills.
Pat Dii:on, coordinating disaster in-
formation, Baid there may have been
dupli cations in !he death count.
"We know It's over 200," be said. "It
could be 29 over or 30 over. No -0ne knows
right now."
Sen. George McGovern (D-S.0 .), aaid it
was "a Jee.rte <if incredible deStrucUon
and. devutallon." The preaid en ti a I
hopeful flew from Washington Sunday to
tour the fioodlands by helicopter.
Don Barnette~ Rapid City's 29-year~ld
mayor, said, "I woukl estimate a com·
bined death total of 300 for the whole
lragedy. ''
Gov. Richard Kneip said, "We have In
excess of 200 deaths and there's a Iona
way to lo yet. It's believed many bodies
are below the mud and the mire. Tua\
part is bad.''
Search crews concentrated en a
virtually devastated five-block wide area
along Rapid Creek, the stream which
cuts through the city.
tt turned suddenly lnt,o a awollen, ra,.
(See FLOODING, P11e Z)
Coast Free'way Cri tics
Meet, Elect L eaders
A group of 20 well·k.nown en-
vironmentalist& and freew1y fighters
from sir Southern Caillomia coastal
communities Saturday were appointed to
a 1teering committee of the newly fon:n·
ed Coastal C<>mmunitiea Coalition fonned
to fight the proposed Pacific Coast
Freeway.
The panel includes two Newport Beach
councilmen and the leaders <if varlous
citizens' committees in Laguna Beach,
Seal Beach , Long Beach. San Juan
Capistrano and Laguna Niguel.
lion: Suzanne Rudd , secretary of the
Harbor Atta CCC; former Newport
Beach mayor P1ul J. Gruber; "'1arshall
Duffield, chllrmao of the Harbor Area
Freeway FJ1bten and Frances Robinson,
a member of Flieods of Newport Bay.
Waller J. Koch, CCC chairman, wa,
selected as chairman of the new coali·
ti on.
Schley and MCCollum were appointed.
vice chairmen. Chase wa.s elected
treasurer; Mra. 'Hall was selected'
recording secretary and Mn. Rudd, cOflo
responding secretary.
t Now·)'ilt can wUli the car. The
•eatberlady -more silnshine oa
tbe •ftorlao ·!«·~ -and
QierWler. 'llllN ol "111 e.pecled al the beeCbtl, rl.!q to 15 '4nllnd. tows. In Ibo ......
Sn~r·l ·ci,ted by Merchants
Newport Beach Vice May-0r Jloward
Rogers and Councilman John Store are
on the panel, aolng with Arnold Hano, a
member of the Board ar Zoning Ad-
justment In Laeuna Beach: Wllllam
Leak. chairman ol VllJaie Lqana:
Richard E. Smith, j)r'elldtnt, Good
Government Group ol Seal lleaCb and
Robert C. McCollum, cholrman, -of Homeowoen' Aaocl1t1or. of Su Juan
Clplatnna.
As expected, In 111 li(lt action, u,.-
group adopted a resolution calling on
ar.. leglslatora lo acifvely push antJ,.
lreeway leglalatJon In S.Uamento. 1
The resolution pointl out !hat pnvlooil
deletlOllll of' tbe Jl<Opooed 111perhlgbw1)'
"make It utremcly queotlonahle lhat lhiil
lreeway wW nw beco-Ille reJ(ioojl
type of freeway wlildt"'!U enviilomll
when It Wll 1pp:oved · by the statit
Highway Commlaalan."
• c •
' • INSIDE TODAY . '· ' Pf'OfJO• , C"!'•lr air of/lclll1', p!oourd:'bt/ jtl. nal.. µrobl<m.s
at the countv airport, have their '!If' on mUiiarv bale• aa a poi·
iibl< 1ol•tlo!i to the crlttcal
qutttion~ of where to put more
airports. See starv. Pao• 20.
l..M1 Mn 1t ... ,,. ,.
~ .. ,!
Ctllla tt -" .,... ......
~"-' ........... ,. !"1111911 , •••
:::
I P l If .._ " ""°" .. ._..L. ..
Tile Irvine Company's "'1f 111.J!ce· In
oppoiitlon to ' 1 !Uture Paclllc· Cout
F!Hw.•Y NIUle tbroucb · Nrwport Buch
drew .a ml.led rtac\lon today from
Fuhloo hland merchantl al the oom·
pany-developed Newport Center.
Most of the bullne>amen did teem In
agreement. however, lhat 10t11ethlng
must be done to IOlve lraflic conaeatlon
problems.
"Something Is ·badly n«ded lo solve
this traffic aoarl, or pretty IOon
every1Joc11 Is ping lo It! hurt," nld
Albert Weinert ol Weinert"• Fin< Jewel.!,
former president ol the Fallhlon Island
·Morcblntl' "-latlon.
"I pel'IDOllly don't earo from 1
~·· paint ol view, lltboltch IL '
..
might llloct our businell," be aaid.
"Bui from 1 former p-·· paint ol
vie" (Weinert -11,v e 1 In LI~
Beach), it Is really getting ba\l Yau can't
gel from one side of town to the other-In
a reasonable amowlt or lbne," Wt.Inert
said.
The Irvine Company, In atatlng Ill new
position to the Newport Beloh City Coun·
ell. said some solution to infhc la needed
but that !he cout freeway -bble had
done nollting but tie up voluablo land .
William Pbillppldos, aan•I pr.,ldenl
of the merchant.I group and an ezecutlve
at the Broadway deplrtmenl store, had
na comm<nl 111 1111 lnlne 'Company 1c-
tlon.
"I will wilhhold llf1 Clll1llltlll IMltll our
lnJUP ... ·had a chance to look al the
statement incl discuss It," he said.
Richard Stienecke. presldent~lect of
the merchants and a Buflums executive,
a!Jo preferred not to comment in detail
until he aaw the new policy. But .be did
give tome persona.I views.
"As a buslncssmnn in business for a
profit, this could hurt the area," he said.
"From a business standpoinl, this action
Is no11oJnc to help at all."
''But from !ht standpclnt of the people
In the 1rea, I can see why the Jrv iDe
Company felt it nctded to aet on the
bandwqon," Stienecke uid .
"The tt:nter Is doi'l'lg well ind will con·
IS.. MERCHAHnl, ..... I)
•
Otller lleerlng commfttte members .,..
Jan Hill, cbaJrman. Paclflc Coast
Fneway Qppooltlon Committee of Long
Beach : wlfilam Ag,., Newport Belch
plannln& cammllsloncr: Michael A.-
Schley, president, Citizens' Town Pl1n-
nlng A.!IOClatlon, Laguna Beach : Mlldnid
B. Hannum, a member of the Laguna
Beach Open Space Committee and Bea
Whittlesey, vice president of Laguna
Greenbelt, tnc .
Also on the panel are Margot Skilling,
c»<:halrman <if the Harbor Area Freeway
Fighters' Cltlze:na' (',o(lrdinatlrig Com·
mlttee ; Earl Hardage, a member ot the
Lido Isle C.Ommunity Association; Carroll
Beek, 1 member of Newport Reaktent.I
United: E. Percival Cbue, chalnnsn ol
the Laguna Niguel Homeownen' Asoacla·
t
II is critical ol U... Stole Division -ti
Highways land· i<qulllllon J"'OVll'L •
II AYO land hu -~ lllll beld "without Juotlllcatloa and !or Iii>'
necessary reaton111 and aays tbe . l'f:N.lt
.. is an 1Dltold loll of lu nvtn11e 1s ....
as personal losses lo private landownerw
adjacent to and in the lrnmodlote vklrtl!li
of rlght-of~way purcbl.sed by tM·ttlte.:"'1
Koch lhi1 morning descrlbOCJ the tti'ft
coalition as "tnthuslaatlc'' towud~la
goal and predkled ill membenhlp w1I!,
expand even more 1l 1ucc1tedlnJ
meetings.
He 11id the pond 'd inl!il In JllDI
it at the home of ~ Store ID
COrona del Mar •
I
I
• •
•
·countywide
Ptyiel Eyed
By Boards
~ ~ s.pa.ioon am! mayoni
have taken the first formal step toward
formation of a <'Ollntywick Counell of
Governmenll ({X}Gt.
UnanimOOllJ ~ a Sbpl:nilrs
a nd Mayors Contereire (SAMCO) co.
'm itltt report. the elected of[icials Satur·
day ordered lhr cQOJP\itiu to dtveLop a
slep-by·•"P plan Is Ux ..., r.pioal
council.
Allbou&h d<ciaiool a( ax; would bt ad-
visory only it would c:oaurn i1aell with
matters of mutual , and tometimes con-
lrovenial ooocem oi city and countJ
eovemment.
lncluded in tht «mmittee rtcem--
mendatloo lor aub)o<ll .. bt rmewed by
the new organization ll'!ft lone ranee
planning, highway planning , health and
safety, Jand UM:, parks, recreation, en-
vironmental enha ncem ent, transportation
and highwey1.
The SAMCO commltt.H, neaMd by
councilman Don Smith ol Orange, warntd
t hat some type of fonnal county regklnlll
o rganization is necessary _to p~ev~nt
t hreat ened slate government 1ntrus1on in·
to matters of local concern. lncluded
in the committee's adopted recom-
mendationa: were :
-Calling of a gmeral meeting of 11n
elected mayors. councilmen a n d
aupuv1lor1 u early at next fa.ll to 1et
the COG plan oil tho ground.
-lnltlally the new level of government
would include only county and dty
elected ofllclall, but otMr agencia: IUCb
21 school and 1pecial dlalrictl could be
:added later. ~There should be a peicl a.ecutlve
director with member agencies con-
tributing staff member• u needed.
-A alngle joint power• agreement
should be wrltlen and adopted in order to
provide financing.
The committee was ordered to im-
plement its suggestions and to include
coordina tion with the Southern California
Association of Governments (SCAG ).
Supervisor David L. Bake r of Garden
Grove noted the coumy already has more
rt1lon1l organluUOna than most in the
slate including countywkle health, 41nita-
tion, refuse disposal. water and highway
canstruction agencies.
Former Official
Frank Burchfield
. Dies at Age 80
Funersl services will be held Wedn<S-
dJy for Frank Burc:bflt1d, former
Riverside County asse1111or, who died
Saturday in Newport Beach.
Mr. Burchfield died in Hoag Memorial
Hoa:plta.l following a brief illness. He waa
SJ years old .
A re11ident or Corona del Mar. Mr.
Jturcbfleld first came to the lfarbor area
fe~owing hla: retirement in 19S8.
He wu born in Miuourl In 1992 and he
up in that state. Foliowlng service
the Army A!r Corp!! during World
l, he moved to Riverside County.
,Jn 1934, be joined the asses-'Or'll staff a!
a deputy and in 1941 was appointed
.,esaor. He aerved four tmns untll his
ntlrement.
tMr. Burchfield served as prt11ident or
the State As!OC.latlon of County .M11tssors
at'ld "''B S twtce pre11ident Of the Souther n
Californi a Association of Co u n t y
Assessors. lie was al so a ntember of the
cOmmittee on per!Onal property taxatio n
df the state Chamber of Commerce.
8Services vdll be held nt 10.30 a..m.
\fednesday ;it Pacific View Mortua ry.
9lie is survi\·ed by a son, }'rank
i rchfield, also of Corona de! Mar, and a
ughter. ~trs. Betty Sanchez and three
and.children, all of 'Torrance.
The family .sugge11ts memorial con·
Ulbutions to the American Cancer Socie--
ty or the Heart Fund.
OIAN•I COAST Jt
DAILY PILOT
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a.on JllM C1pl•lr-A 11"111 f'lllloNI
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lty '''"'• c1111 M1N, c1n1om11, nA».
11to~1rt N. w.~
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-.-U.1972
DAILY ,ILOT Ntw1 Ml•
CITY OFFICIALS PONDER ODD-SHAPED LOTS E AND F
Qu•1tion1 Rai1ed Ove r Promontory Point Development
Oddball Lot Gets Council
Scrutiny at Meet Tonight
What do you do wilh a piece of
waterfront land more tha n 300 feet long
and about three feet wide?
Newport Beach councilmen will con-
front that oddity and nther quest ions
about the Irvine Company's Promontory
Bay develnpment at their rneetlng
tonight.
The lot in question -called Lclt F -
border• the west aide of a JOO.foot-wide
channel planned as the entrance to
Promontory Bay's manmade lagoon. It
was first noticed on the tract maps by ci-
ty planning commillsloners at a recent
meeting.
..I just couldn't figure out why they
wanted such an oddball lot." said Plan·
ning Comm111;oner William Hazewinkel.
"It sttmed to me that they jtl.!l wanted
to keep that strip or land -not good for
n\uch of anything -to kttp •ll but Irvine
Company tenant! out of the channel," he
added.
Since tbt Um• the lot wa.s noticed,
Ordinance Eyed
On Real Estate
Newport Beach councilmen tonight will
consider a recommendation by City At-
tomeY Dennl! O'Nell to adopt a "truth in
real estate salu" ordinance.
It would allow the city to require
sellers to infonn any prospective
purchaser or the legal restriction! on the
property.
''By means of the '"'port or residential
building record!. a city can furnish to the
purcha!trs an indication of a property's
conformance with existtr11 codes and a
record of a building's u.w , condition, lega l
statu11 and a delineation of any zoning
measures re11tricllng the uses permitted
for the property," O'Neil said.
"This type of ordinance could be ('~
tremely valuable to the city in com-
batting the problems. of illeg~I r~ntal
units and lllegal Jot sp\Lts," O'Neil said.
Newport Beach officials managed to get
the Irvine Com pany to dedicate the lan d
!o the city.
Irvine Company officials said today the
company originall y \va nted to keep the
strip because it \\las afraid the city might
one day want to cut a ne\V channel
through fron1 the Balboa Yacht basin to
Promontory .Ba y's access channel.
"Our channel i11 only 100 feet wide and
designed to serve t he residentll of the
development," a spokesman s a i d .
.. Balboa Yacht Basin tralfic Is much
heavier and they already have good bay
access.··
_The spokesman said lot F waa always
intended only for landscaping and
bulkheading. "It wa s put under city con-
trol with the condition no channel would
ever be cut;• tbe spokesman said.
The land immediately adjacent to Lot
F to the ¥1est ill owned by the city,
master-leased to the Joseph Beek family,
:iu b-leased to the Irvine Company and
again sublet to tht Balboa Yacht Basin.
The master lease expires in about 17
years, after which time, the city may
1·eappraise its use of the land.
ln addition to Lot F, the Irvine Com-
pany ha s dedicated the lot immedia tely
above it to the city. Designated Lot E .
the parcel is at the end of old Bayside
Drive, which will be dead-ended at the
channel.
Bayside Drive ~·ill be relocated on the
north shore of the lagoon.
Current plans fo r the lot are to
land 11cape it as a small view park at the
end of the road thus providing public ac·
ces11 to the water at that point.
Several people have suggested the
possibility of a boat launching ramp there
instead.
''One lot such as this ls not enough for
a large launching facility,'' s a Id clly
lfarbors and Tidelands Commissioner
George Dawes. "There is 1lmply no
available off-11treet parking for boat
trailers."
.. It could be a hand launching site but
that would be tokenism since we have
al ready opened 47 stree t ends in the city
!or that kind of use,'' he added ..
Ousted General Admits
Vnaut1wrized Strikes
WASHINGTON (AP) -An oUlted U.S.
commander in Vietnam confirmed to
congres11men today that he ordered
po111lbly unauthorized air strlkes against
the North Vietname1e fer the safety of
his pilots "and at the same time trying to
stop the buildup" that led to the Incursion
into South Vietnam.
But retired Air Force Lt. Gen. John D.
Lavelle aald he ordered the strlkea halted
M1rch JO when be learned three reports
of the 1trlltts had been falslfled, and
thtre appeaffii to be no way to continue
tbtm without rutng false ,.port>,
Gen. John D. Ryu, Air Fon:e chief of
staff, told tilt subcommittee ht fir.<!
Lavelle as commander or the 7th Alr
Fon:e In Indochina .,.hen he learned o!
what he aald were 21 WllUthoriied air
1trtke1 Into North Vlelnlm lnvolvln1 147
pll.ne1.
Lavtlle II.Id he thought there wue leH
than 20 such mlalona.
Lavelle aald hit pilot• saw and
Photocr•phed muslve bulldupt ol North
Vletnameae planes, tanb, artlllery and
supplles near the De:mlllta.rlzed Zone and
aald that when he requested permlsalon
to strike them he did not receive Jt but
neither did ht receiv e a denial.
Lavelle sa.ld he could understand
Ryan'• viewpoint from Wuhlngton that
''I had e1C"ffded my authority."
But he added , "At that time 11 the
commander on tht spot concerned with
the ufety ol the ere~ and at the same
time trying lo atop the buildup that wu
going on, I felt that these were justlfl1ble
actions."
Lavelle said that he judged that under
the rulea prohibiting all but 1'protecUve
reaction" alr 1trlkes Into North Vietnam
in line with the 1968 bombing hslt he had
lhe authority as the commander on the
spot to order the air strikes.
But he said that when an lnve11 tigator
~ho"'·ed him the three false report! on the
s trike!, "l couldn't believe them." Jte
said he halted the strikea btcawe he and
hi. 1lalf could DOI !Ind any way to pre-
vent further llUCb lnlccunte ttporta.
His and Ryu'r tettlmony lndle1ted
that the falsification involved reportina
that units had taken some kind of
military action JUll!fytng "pnitectlvo
ruction" retaliatory atrlku.
FnmP•fel
MERCHANTS • I •
tlnue to do ao as Jona 11 people keep
comlng Into the area," he 11ld.
Weinert 11ld the men:hanta' board of
dlrector1 has alwaya favored the f!'ffway
a1 a needed facility for the people and
!or Fuhlon l1land .
"I am 10mewhat dlaappolnted In the
Irvine ComPID1'• stand m the Pacific
Cout Freeway, but ~ bu to bt
done no matttr what It ls," be II.id.
City Jobs
Eliminated
In Newport
When Newport Beach hired Robert L.
Wynn to be city manager 10 month,, ago,
he too k a glance at the municipal budget
and blllrted out something to the t-l fec t
that the ci ty is significa ntly O\'erstaffed.
l ie matter-tjf.factly declared -before
he "'as even on the job -that he "'a~
going to do ~Hnething about 11.
lie h:i s.
\\'ynn ha~ t-hmlnated an even dozen 1.·i-}
ty Jobs si nce he came last August -most
of them through atl rition -at a cost sav4
ings in salaries alone o( $123.670. Add in
the fringe benefits and the cutbacks "·ere
\ot·orth more than $160,000.
One of the first job vacancie11 thnt
never got filled was In Wynn's O\\'n off ice .
Adm inistrative intern Gino Gaudio quit
to take an administrative assistant's job
in Seal Beach and Wynn put an analyst
hired with Public Employment Program
(PEP) money at hill desk.
\Vhen Fire Chief R. J . "Jan" Briscoe
retired the first of lhe year, he promoted
h1.~ depu ty, Leo Love. but abolished the
<issistant's p:>st.
l le decided he didn't need t"·o top-l!'1·el
people in the persnnnel office. Director
Darlene Raat decided not to compete
\\'ll h her assistant. Frank Ivins. for the
ne1\', combined job as administrative
:1ssistant to the city manager for person-
nel. Ivins got the job and the city banked
the $15,375 she was making.
In a similar move. \Vyn n decided
Newport Beach didn't need a who le
liarbor and Tidelands Department and,
in the only instance so far where filled
positions were eliminated, he gave assis-
tant Don Sandford and secretary-cler k
Darlene Bechtold six months to find new
jobs. They did so without delay.
Meanwhile, department di re c I o r
George Dawes was given a newly-created
position in the Community Development
Department called env i r on m e.n ta I
coordinator.
But Da..,;es announced last month that
he is leaving to take a job back in
Virginia, Wynn wasted no time in lopping
l h;lt line item out ef the budget, too. He
assigned the duties to one or the
de partment's assi11tant planners.
The Marine Safety D epa r I m en I
(lifeguards ) are handling pier permit in-
spections previously done by Dawes' of-
fice.
~mong the other jobs that have been or
"'·in be axed by the start of the new fiscal
year, July 1, are that nf parking lot
supervisor which supervised parking in
the city's one major and two or thrte
sman parking lots, a fireman, a gardener,
a General Services Department inspector
and the clerk in tbe Marinapark office.
And, during the course of Wynn's ad-
minilltration, there will be more reduc-
tions.
.. We've 11till got too many people," he
said. "There'• no question about it, and
we'll be cutting back more."
He said he's not going to go around and
tlo any hell-raising house cleaning but
almos t as often as not, when a \'acancy
occurs, it \von't get filled. * * ·/;( Frona Page l
TAXES • • •
sidered de11pite the councirs O\vn
budgetary guidelines - under 9'/hic h
\Vynn prepared hiJ recommended budget
-that call for no increase in the level o[
services provided by the city.
Poli ce Chief B. James Glaves had
argued at a recent study session on the
budget that the seven-man increase
"'ould merely maintain the esta blished
ratio of JX>lice personnel per population
(llVO per 1.000 ).
Councilmen must act to adopt the
budget by June 30, but have until late in
August to set a tax rate.
Part of their instructions to Wynn y,.·ere
to hold the pre11ent tl.20 clty tax rate,
\Vhlch. to the average $50.000 house in
Newport Beach, places a tax of $150 an-
nually.
FLOOD AT BATTLE CREEK CROWDED HOUSES OFF FOUNDATIONS
Keystone, South Dakota, Hit When Dam Ga\le Way-JOO Ftared Dead
Newport Council
Will Consider
Major Matters
Developers of Versailles on the Bluffs
apartments overlooking \Vest Newport
tonight will ask Newport Beach coun-
cilmen lo overturn planning commission
rejection of a maior c;ii:pansion of the
project.
The appeal Is one of several major
items on the agenda for cou ncilmen
beginning at 7:30 p.m. in City ~tall.
They \\'ill also consider:
-An increase in the city's bed tax Crom
liv e to six percent.
-Proposed funding !or a branch
library in \Yest Newport.
-Regulations to prohibit overnight
street parking for commerciaJ veh.icles.
-Approving the sale of the 40-aare
former dump site ;it the end of 191.h
Street lo Leadership !·lousing Systems for
;i singlc-f;imily tract. They bid $6 16.000
for the parcel, $120 .000 more than the clty
figured it would get.
-A budget amendment of $51.000 to
construct two law n bowling greens in San
Joaqui n Hilts Park.
-Permlls for hvo condominiums. one
of 49 units 011 E:ist B:iy Avenue .1t
Fernando Street and one of 18 units 011
Lido Park Drive.
Pla nning Commissioners denied the use
permit for the controversial Versailles
extension after hearin~ complaints about
the density and looks or lhc project.
Developers 1vantcd to add 738 units on
20 acres, claiming t he planned com-
munity ordinance for the project allows
this densi ty and the ci ty ha s no right to
reject the request.
Clty 11anager H.obert L. \Vynn is pro-
posing the city hike its uniform transient
occupancy (bed) tax from five to six per-
cent. estimating it will produ ce $47,000
additional revenue next year, The tax
earned $235,000 this year. \'t'ynn said.
\Vynn a lso reported today tha t the only
site a vailable for a West Nev;port library
is the forn1cr Ayres Sales office on \\'est
Coast llighv•ay that !he city could buy for
.:ibout $45,000.
An additional $13.000 \VOUld be needed
for furnishings and equipment. Books
\\·ould be transferred from o t h e r
libraries, he said.
Fro111Pagel
FLOOD ...
ing killer when Canyon Lake Dam bunt
under th e pres.sure of a foot of rain late
Jo'riday night. sending a four-foot wall of
y,·ater thundering dov.·n from the hills.
The fl ood cnused an estimated tIOO
million dan1age. destroy ing 500 hou11e11
and leaving thotJsa nds of persons
homeless.
Authorities first 11aid about 1.500
persons were unaccounted for. but later
said they could not m8ke an accurate
guess on the num ber missing.
Little had been determined about what
happened in more isolated communities
in the hills -particularly to the burr
dreds, perhaps thousands of tourists
believed to have been camping in the
area close by Mt. Rushmore.
The Agriculture Department announced
in Wa shington Sunday that the flood area
was eligible for emergency free food
stamps. Representatives of almost every
fed eral agency that could be involved
met to make recovery and as11lst.ance
plans.
Caspers to Talli
011 County Park
Plans Tonight
Orange Cnunty Hoard of Su pervisors
Chairman Ronald Caspers will attend
tonight's Ney,·port Beach City Council
meeling to speak on l'Ountywide aea
quisition of parks and open spa~.
"The super"isor decided to speak to the
council on the county·s park efforts
following the raBure of Newport Beach·s
three park bond measures in the rtCent
election." said Tom Fuent es, Caspers'
administrative assistant.
"lie requf'sled the opportunity to tell
lt1f' council of the C()Unly".s t-ffortll to ob·
tain park sites and encourage the county
<ind tl1e city to go forward together in
~ecur ing open space and parks," Fuentes
snid.
Casper~. :i Jliey,.·port Beach resident.
has long prornoted a regio,.,:il approach to
go\'ernment 1n the ··.1unly and an end to
divided control of "uthor ity among the
many county cities.
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17
Orange Coast
EDIIION N.Y. Steeb
VO[ 65, NO. 11>4, 3 SECTIONS, 11> PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAllFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1972 c TEN CENTS
Pilot Held Over Coast Stunt Flying
A balr-raising serie.s of acrobatic stunts
including one po\ver dive to rooftop level
.,, over fou r Orange Coast cities led to lite
arrest or a pilot pursued by lv.'o pol ice
helicopters early today.
Ri'chard B. Loomis, 24, of Arcadia . "'as
taken lnto custody at Orange County
Airport Wortly after midnight along with
one o[ hi1. three passeagcrs.
Loomis wu arrested by crewmen or
the Conta Mesa police helicopter Eagle 11
and booked into jail on a;uspiclon of
\'iolating section 21 407.5 of the Publi~
Utilities Code.
Officers Randy Nutt and David Brooks
charged Loomis under the PUC C.ode
Y.'ith operating a plane while under the in-
fluence of an intoxicant.
Incidents were ci ted over Newport
Beach, Huntington Beach, Costa i\lesa
and Irvine.
~~ F. D'Angelo, 2l, of
113\1'.i Turquoise Ave., Balboa Island, was
cilso arrested on suspicion of being drunk
A Beav11 Bear to Cross
in public~
lnvesligators who said they confiscated
a half-gallon jug of wine lron1 the cockpit
or the red-and-white Cessna aircraft in-
volved in the aerial escapade alleged all
four occllpants had been drinking.
Only Loomis, who had no piklt's li cense
in his pos!ession, and D' Angelo had ap.
parently consurpai enough to ·warrant
their arrests, according to inve!tigating
officers.
Officers Brooks and Nutt said they first
.. . . ~
• < ,, . -
,
1
.,
1
DAil. Y PILOT>~" .., LAI ,,.,,..
Actually, Bruno, who played Gentle Ben, was just
that as he joined members of the First Baptist
Church of Costa Mesa at Sunday School. Led by
trainer Ron Oxley, of Saugus, Bruno appears to be
just another face in the crowd after Sunday service.
Newest honorary Sunday·Scllool member to receive
cf!rtificate from Rev. James 0. Combs (ushering
Bruno along behind trainer) is not without human
weakness. Bruno's vice is addiction to jellybeans.
Lower Drink Age
La'v Squeaks By
State Assembly
SACRA.r.fENTO (AP) -Lcgislal ion
lowering the .drinking age to 18 in
California squeaked through l h c
Assembly without a vote to spare today .
But the measure was held in the
Assembly -al least for one day -
because of a consideration mot ion by
minority floor leader Bob J\lonagan ,
Monagan, (R-Trac)'l. voted for th('
measure on an early ballot, but changed
his vote to no before the close of the final
roll call.
The proposed amendment to the state
Constitution wa5 approved 54-12 by the
Msembly after stalling 49-10 on an ea rly
roll call. It required M votes, a two-thirds
margin of the 80-seat lower house. for
passage to the Senate.
A ct1mpanlon measure. which required
only a 41-vote margin . passed on a 4>-13
vote, but was held up, too, until a final
vote on the constitutional amendment.
Assemblyman John · Kno:r (O-rucJt..
mond ), author of both measures, said
they were nothing more than "a logical
e:ii:tension" of the 1971 law granting
adulthood at 18 ror all other purposes.
"Ne'W York has had this for years wit h
no particular problem." he added.
Coast Freew.ay Critics
Meet, Elect Leaders
A group or 20 well-known en·
vironmentalist:'! and freeway fighters
from six Southern California coastal
communities Saturday were appoi nted to
a steering committee of the nev.·ly fom1-
ed Coasta l Olmmunities CoalitiDn formed
to fight the proposed Pacific Coast
r~reev.·ay.
The pane l includes two Newport Beac h
councilmen and the leaders of various
cilizens' committees in Laguna Beach,
Sea l Beach, Long Beach, San Juan
Cap istrano and Laguna Niguel.
Newport Beach Vice Mayor Howard
Rogers and Councilman John Store are
on the panel, aolng with Arnokl Hano, a
member or the Board of Zoning Ad-
jwitment in Llguna Beach : Wiffiam
Leak, chairman of vwaa:, Laaw-;
Richard E. Smith, president, Good
Government Group ot Seal Beach and
Robert C. McCollum , chairman, AJlianct
of Homeowners' Associations or San Juan
Capistrano.
grou p adopted a resolution calling on
area legi slators to actively push anti-
freeway legislation in Sacramento.
The resolution poin ts out that previous
deletjons of the proposed superhighway
''make it extremely queslionable that this
freeway will ever become the regiona l
type of freeway 1,>,·hich was envisioned
when it was .approved by the State
fli ghway Comm ission.''
Jt is critical of the State Division of
Highways land acquisition program.
Jt says land has been purchased and
held ''without j~tillcation and for un-
necessary reasons" and says the result
"is an WJtold loss of tax revenue as well
M ~rsonal losses to private landowners
adjacent to and in the immediate vkinity
of rigtil .. f-way purchased by the state."
·Koch tbls morning described tbe new
coalition as "'enthusiastic!! toward Us
goal and predicted its membership will
expand even more at s ucceeding
meetings.
He said the panel will meet a.gain June
24 at the home of Councilman Store in
Corona del Mar.
'No C:ontroversfl'
spotted th e. plane flying erratically in the
area or the Santa Ana River, betv.'een
Costa Mesa and Hun11ngton Beach.
They charged that Loomis. a utllity
company employe. went into a steep
power dive and only pulled out 100 feet
above grol.lnd level.
Giving chase, they "·ere joined by the
Newport Beach police helicopter and
claimed they saw Loomis go into a steep
climb over UC Irvine before nearly stal-
ling.
'Stop
The plane then 1nade 1 sharp, 100.
degree turn and headed back over
Newport Beach, at times zooming a~ low
as 500 feet over residential areas.
Shepherding the z\g-r.agging plane back
toward Orange County Airport, arre91in~
officers in the hetiCQpter said Loomr~
barely missed crashing into a '10·f1)0l
glide slo pe Indicato r to"·er while land ini.:.
He was stopped al midfitld by airport
security offlctr9 "'ho ordered the f\1t1 to
taxi toward the to"·tr build ing, ~·htrt' he
I\ AS to r'neet investigating office rs.
Police said Looni15' plane hnally halt ed
11fll>' unt-foot frotn 1ht> building aod near·
!\ <:oll1dcd with !Yu1 rov.•s of parked
;11/'cralt ~s the V.t'.•\lng Ces~n;i pul!l·d up
to a hall
The sus pect wa~ held In lil'll 01 S250 bail
this rnorning, ll.'h1le p11hC't> 11 r"arded a
re port of the incid('nt t,, 11\<' Vcderal
Aviation Administration fu~ po~~1b\e 11d·
cl1tional legal ac tion.
and Frisl{'
High Court Extends Police Powers .
WASHINGTON (UPI) -By a 6-3
liberal-conservative split, the Supreme
Court extended today the power of police
to "stop and frisk" suspect! on the street
for dangerous weapons.
"We reject the argument that
reasonable cause for a stop and frisk can
only be based on the officer's personal
observation, rather than on information
supplied by another person ," the court
held.
"Infonnants' tips. like all other clues
13 Hope fuls
Seek School
Board Seats
A. total or 13 candidates will face
N-1-~ l<:P.t dislflo! ... lt!J Alli·
5 li'i spel:tal eliC:tlon to !Ill two ••cant
Jchoot bolfd ff1ts.
The 'race for the Trustee Area Six post
vacated bf Selim "Bud" Frlnilln, ip.
pointed recently to~ the lllUriiclpal court
bench, promise! to be the hottest of the
two. Eight candidates have fiJed for the
job.
Five candidates will compete for tht
Trustee Area Five seat to be left vacant
by the retirement of Trustee Donald
Strauss, who has served for more than 10
years.
Area Si.J hopefuls are Robert C.
Sangster, 2304 Cliff Drive, Newpor t
Beach, an att1>mey; Arthur J. Sorce, 285
Robin flood Lane, C.OSta Mesa, busineu-
man; David H. Krueger. 441 Tustin Ave.,
Newport Beach, college professor, and
Thomas MacKinnoo. 1 812 Marlnen
Drive, Newport Beach, a dentist,
Also, Rita K. White, 310 Robin Hood
Lane, Costa Mesa, housewlfe; Joe Cefali,
620 Michael Place, Newport Beach,
engineer ; Joe Duffy, 277 Ogle St., Costa
Mesa , newspaperman and Thomas W.
Henderson Jr .. 461 E. 2Qtb St., Costa
A-fesa, al!orncy.
Ar ea Five candidates are Michael J.
Ashe, 106 Via Xanthe. manager of educa·
Lion sys tems for JBfl-f; James G. Ensign,
224 20th St. attorney: Bruce Chandler,
21 5 Crystal St., Balboa 1sland, attorney:
Walter Lazar, 308 36th St.. profes sional
ed ucator and Arthur F. Thompson, 67
Balboa Cove, physician.
Franklin's Area Six en compasses an
area bounded along Pacific Cout
Highway to 21st Street and Newpon:
Boulevard to Dover Drive. A small por·
tion lies in Cost• Mesa and the reat in
Newpcrt Beach.
Area Five taka 1n all the Newport
Beach area from the Santa Ana River to
the Newpc.rt Beach jetty south of P•clflc
Coast Highway. This includes Balboa
Island, Lido Isle and the Balboa Penln·
sula.
All regislertd voters re.siding in tht
Newpart-Mesa school dis trict will be
eligible to cast ballot! in the special elec·
tion .
and evidence coming to a policeman on
the scene, may vary gr eatly in th eir
value and reliability. One simple rule will
not cover every situation."
The opinion in a Connecticut case wa9
written by Justice Wllliam H. Rehnquist,
who is emerging as the most law-and·
order member or the Court.
Justice Thurgood Marshall sai d in
dissent that the decision "invokes the
spectre of a society tn \\'hich innocent
citizens may bt> stopped . searched ancl
arrested at the whim of police officers
v.·ho have only the slightest suspicion o(
improper conduct."
Also dissenting were Justices William
J, Brennan Jr. and William 0. Douglu.
The ca.se is a aeQuel to an important
1968 ruling that policemen under proper
ci rcu mstances may stop and frisk a
person suspected of criminal activity
even though they do not have enougb
prior evidence to make an arrest.
Mo1•e Tha1a 200 Dead
Work Crews, Dog s Search
For Bodies in Flood Area
·RAPm Cl'l'Y, S.D. (UPI) -Search
C...ws using dop worked lhrou&)l tbe
night to llllCOVer bodies fmn lbe muddy
rulnl of tht nation'• 1'01'81 fiood In 35
ye1rt.
Aulhorlllt! said today more than 200
were known dead from the flood Friday
night and Saturday caused when a rain·
!WOiien dam burst and cascaded billions
or gallons of water into Rapid City and
olher communities in South Dakota's
Black Hills.
Pat Dixon, coordinating disaster in -
formation, said thert may have been
duplications in the death count.
"We ki>ow it'a over 200," be said. "It
could be 29 over or .so over. No one knows
right now."
Sen. George McGovern (0.S.D.), said it
was "a tctne of incredible destruction
and devastation." 1'Je pres J d e n t I a I
hopeful Dew from Washington Sund&y to
tour the flood.lands by helicopter.
Don Barnette, Rapid City's 29-year-old
mayor, said, "I would estimate a com-
bined death total of 300 tor the whole
tragedy."
Gov. Richard Kneip said. "We have In
excess of 200 dea ths and there 's a long
way to go yet. lt's believed many i;:ldles
are bel ow lhe mud and the mire. That
pa rt is bad."
Search crews concentrated on a
virtually devastated fi ve-block wide area
along Rapid Creek, the stream which
cut.9 through the city.
tt turned suddenly into a swollen, rag·
Ing killer when Canyon Lake Dam burst
under the pressure of a foot of rain late
Friday night, aending a four-foot wall of
water thundering down from the hUb1.
The flood cause!! an estimated 111111
mJJIJon damage, destroying 500 houses
and leaving thousand! of persOrui
homeles!.
Authorities first said about 1.500
persons were unaccounted for, but later
said they could not make an accurate
guess on the number miuirig.
Little had been determined about what
happened In more isolated communities
in the hills -particularly lo the hun-.
dredJ, perha ps thousands of tourists
believed to have been camping in the
area close by Mt. Rushmore.
The Agriculture Departmen t announced
in Washington Sunda y that the flood area
\vas el..lglble for emergency free food
stamps. Representatives of al most every
federal agency that could be involved
met lo make recovery and assistance
plans.
Rapid City "'liter supplies \\'ere cur-
tailed for f e a r of conlarnination and
some residents took to robbing mote l
swimming pools or water.
Free typhoid shots were given to
anyone who asked in hopes of heading o!I
the danger of epidemic.
More than 4,000 townspeople and Na~
ti onaJ Guardsmen pulled more than 50
bodies from the rubble Sunday.
Reacuers said they found bodies all
alonr the Rapid Creek course -in
basements of homes which had been
5Wept away, beneath piles of rubble, in
cars. One vlctlm's body wu draped in a
tree.
The flood was the ,nation's .worst since
1937, when the Mlaslssippi and Obie>
Rivers took 250 Jives.
w .. dler
"T feel if we can as k the young people
to put their lives on the Hne, we can allow
them to drink st 18," said Assemblyman
R<ll>ert Cline (Jl.Canotla Park) in lhc
brkl noor -i..
·Dero,natioJUJ
Renew Fears
Other steering committtt members are
Jan Hall . chairman. Pacific Coast
FTeeway Opposition Committee of Lon g
Beach; William Agee. NewpQrt Beach
planning commissioner: t.1ichael A.
Schley. president, CiUzens' Town Plan·
nlng Association, Laguna Beach; Mildred
B. Hannum, a member of the Laguna
Beach Open Space Committee and Bea
WhitU...y, vlco president of Laguna
Greenbelt, jnc.
Abo on 1'"' panel ..... Margot Skilling,
ce><halrman of the Barbor Atta Freeway
FIC!lm' ~· Q:iardlnailng Com·
mlltee: l!arl',lllrd,i8', • mtmJ>er oLtlle
Udo Isle W.-ty Aaoc{itlon; c.iiiii1l
Beet, 1 member.of Newport -
United ;· E. ~t· Cbue, chaimlan of
1be Laguna,Nl~l llo""'!~' A.toocla-
Uoo;. Sozatine \ftudd, aOcritky ol !lie
Harbor Area CCC: l<>rmer Newptyt
Beach rnrJar Paul J. Gruber; MarWll
Duffield, chalnnan ol the Harbor Ar ..
Freeway Flghten and France• Robinlon,
a member of Frl!ndl of NewpQJt Bay.
Mesa Budget to Be Aired
Now you can wash tbe car. The
weatberlady Itel more aunahine on
tbe llortmn lot ~ -ard
therealler. ltllhl of 70 exj)tded .. 1
the bea4'oo, rlllnc to ~ Inland.
Lows In Git.Ill'&
'rl\ANG BANG, Vietnam (UPI)
-The controlled explosion of C>J>
tured baJ>d grtnodes thundered
1hrollgh th!.< village today, toucblng
off new panic among rqldenta AliU
~hocked from lasl week'5 1 c-
ckle:ntal napalm b o m b I n g that
~Ultd a child and five 10ldiers and
•-OUnded eight other ptrtons.
Crowds in the market pllce ran
for cover and ont wc:man sc.'r'Um-
ed, "They're doinc lt again."
Tod1111 t.Xplo$\on WIJ only I
cache_ ol capltred lfOnlcles b<ing
carefu!IJ detonai.d.
Walter J. Koch, CCC chairman, wu
selected as chnlrman of the new coali·
Uon.
Schley and McCollWP wero appointed
vice cbaJrmtn. CJJ111 waa elected
trusurtr; Mrs. H.111 w1s selected
recordi~ secrfta:ry and Mn. Rudd , cor-
reapondq oecretary,
M ezpected, In Its lint acllon , tbe
By Ill.ID! NlEll7JELSKI
Of .. o.11' , ..........
The $10.1 mUllon bud(et ProPooec1 •by
City Manager Fred Soraailal !or tho 1m. n !\acal 7w •lli receive Iha aquUey of
the Costa Mesa City Councll tonight.
But ntllhtt controversy nor budcet
slashes are predicted durtna: the 7:30
a'clack study session In the ·flftb noor
conference room at city hall,
"1 don 'I fo......, any dffflcolfy wllb It
but we have a new man on the council
(Dorn Raciti) who has n e v e r been
through I city budget before~ tt'lfAl11
lo mal<e certain Ile. uodtillili• all"the
deio.11$.'' u id Councilman Alvin Pinkley.
No act ion .. m be i.ltec on the ~page
document tonight. However, tbe council
may adopt tbe budget durtn1 1 special
-km al 1:30 p.m. Thunday.
Soi:sabal'i budget pl'oposes a U ,....
etnt or $14.3,rn lncrtase· In expenditures
over last year. The current $1.52 per $100
of assessed valuation·t•x rate will remain
at IL! present level, accordlna: lO fbe city
manager.
Much of tht Increase will be tak.tn up
by salarleti for 15 new rJty hafl employes
whlch include .sl:r add itional policemen.
Salary improvemen~ for e x I s t 1 n g
employts are not included in the budget
and will have lo be taken out of ca.'\h
surplus <lr reserves, If they are
negotiated.
The budget also includta several
nun11ement reorganl~Uona, a mo n g
them "Sorsa bal's deciston to combint the
fonner parks, reerutlon and goll·course
depa.rtment5 under the admJnlltration of
a single department head supplying a
function tenned · "ltlsure· activity ad-
ministration."
"Tb• Pllr(lOse of Ibis propooal ls lo
bring together several f 11 n c t I o n a 11 y
related actlvltlt! for better un of person-
nel , aharing of equlpment Ind facil it\e!I
and Improved administration." said
Sorsab&I. The dtpartmenta: will continue
to exist as Individual departments for
budget purpoaes.
To date. cooncilmen have not namt<f
anyone to take over lhe Leisure Acti vity
Admlnl.rtraition.
lnlerdepartmental reshufning proposed
!Set BUDGET, Pqc II
' INSIDE TODA "Y
Ornngt Coimtr air offielols,
plag"'d bv je noili probltma
ot tilt count¥ clrj>or~ lt4w l~•fl'
e11t 1 on mUita.rv ~.bcua oi o pos-
si ble .solutin to. tM critical
qiu:1tion of tohcn to put more
airport!. Ste 1Corv, Pope 20.
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h•llM 1' c1n~ s Cl•ull!W »H
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Bleod1 Svtaday
Ireland Street
Clashes Kill 5
BELFAST (UPO -One of Northern
Ireland's worst weekend!! of violence took
at least fi ve live$ in stretl battles In
which Protesiants battled R o m a n
Catholics and the British Anny fought
both in attemptl to restore order.
There "'ere new bon1bings today and
terror in !ht> streets.
A British soldier wounded in a 12-hour
gun battle in Nort.htm Belfast Sunday
died today.
He was the 17th Britlah aoldier killed in
nearly three years or atrike between
Protestants and mioority Rom an
Catholics.
The: violence baa taktn 376 lives, 12 in
lbe put 11J: days.
The buviest battle ot tht week~d v.·a,
In Norlh Beilul where the ligbtlng luted
all Sunday afternoon and nlgbl.
Hundreds of men, women and children
1treamed out of the area today and took
refuge in west and east Be!fa!ll. 'fhc
British army evacuated 40 families Sun·
Sttspect Seized
After Shooting
A quarrel between two men over one 's
et·wife left each ln se parate Orange
County facilities today -the county jail
and the county medical center.
John J. Cuti•, of 113 N. B<wl•Y St .. ls
lilled In llllble condition with a gtllll!hot
wmmd Jn the back of the he.ad after being
hit Sunday.
He was shot by a .%2 caliber slug fired
from a passing car in front of a cafe it
SOf N. Euclld St., according to Santi Ana
pollee.
Ralph Acosta. 37, of 901 S. Harbor
Blvd .. Santa Ana, was su bsequently ar·
rested and booked on suspicion of assault
\vith intent to commit murder.
A .22 caliber re volver v.·as confiscated
e evidence in the case.
day.
Thrt'e gunbattles broke out in the hou rs
aft e.r midnight when the Hltgal Irish
flepublican 1\rrny mounted an lnteniuve
attack ajta1ns! sandbagged army po11ts in
L11ndonderry. hrin11t 200 rounds of high
1·elocit y rifle fir' and hea vy
rn;:ich1ne~un!, There wert" no ca~ualtie5 in
tlus l!ltidc-nt.
It was tht la!! major battle of the
v.•eekend which saw the worst fighting
i;ince last August.
By midmorning, the batlles seemed to
have given way to the isolated bombings
which have become a way or life in
northern Ireland.
2 Teen Marines
Killed in Crasl1
011 Irvine l{oad
A high-speed crash into a dead-t!nd
stret'l en1bankment early Sunday in
lrvlne killed l\\'O teenagcd fl·Jarines and
injured a third. acco rding to the
California flighwa y Patrol. .,
The accident on Janiboree Boulevard
at Main Street left Pfc. Robert T. Bass,
J9, dead at the scene, according to cor·
oner's deputies.
The driver, Pvt. Michael D. Kearns, 19,
wu taken to Tuatln Community Hospital
after the 2:30 a.m. accident and he died
there 1 ~ hours later,
A third victim, Pfc. Douglas A.
Sullivan, 18, was treated at the hospital
for minor injuries and released, CHP in·
vestiga tors sald.
The enli.!lted men were all stationed at
the Santa Ana Marine Corps Air Station.
Sunday's fatalities brought Orange
County 'a traffic accident to!! for 1972 lo
114, compared to only 98 at this time la ~t
year.
pus1.1c s1>FE1~
35.71'
INTERNAL SERVICE S
11 .4%
\
PIECES OF BUDGET PIE INDICATE WHERE THE MONE Y GOES IN COSTA MESA
Cauncllm•n Looking at PropoHd $10.6 Million Municip1I Spending Program
Ousted General Admits
Unauthorized Strikes
WASHINGTON (AP) -An ousted U.S.
commander in Vietnam confirmed to
congressmen today that he ordered
poalbly unauthorized air strikes against
the North Vietnamese for the 1afety of
his piloll "and al the "me tlm• trying to
stop the buildup" that led to the incursion
into South Vietnam.
But retired Air Force Lt. Gen. John D.
Lavelle said he ordered the strikes halted
l\farch IO when he learned three reports
of the strikes had been ralsified, and
there appeared to be no way to continue
them ivithout filing false report s.
Gen. John D. Ryan, Air Force chief of
staff, told the subcommittee he (ired
Lavelle as coqimander of the 7th Air
Force in Indochina when he learned of
what he aaid were 28 unauthorized air
strikes Inf<> North Vlellllll'l lnvolvlnl 117
planes.
Lavelle said he thought the.re were less
than 20 auch missions.
Lavelle said hia pilots saw and
photographed massive buildups of North
Vietnamese planes, tanks, artille ry and
supplies near the Demilitarized Zone and
said that y,•hen he requested pennission
to strike them he did not receive it but
nei ther did he receive a denial .
f 'ro111 Page 1
BUDGET ...
by Sorsabal \vill result in the loss or two
positions . The civil defense functi on will
be assumed by the police department
with the elimination of the assistant civil
defense director's pasilion. The weed con·
trot tunction will be take.n over by the
fire department with the consequent
elimination of a maintenance man.
Former Official
Frank Burchfield
Dies at Age 80
U CI Senate .Backs Women
Lavelle said he could understan'd
Ryan's viewpaint from Washington that
''I had txceeded my authority."
Funeral services will be held Wednes-
day for Frank Burchfield, former
Riverside County asse-ssor, who died
Saturday in Newport Beach.
Mr. Burchfield died in Hoag Memorial
Hospital following a brief illness. He was
80 years old.
A resident of Corona del Mar, fl.fr .
Countyu)ide
Panel Eyed
"By Boards
Or:tngc Cvunly Supervi~!i arid 01ay(lr<
have taken the lirst formal .step to "·ard
Jor1nat1on of ;i cou11lyw1cle Council 11!
< i11vcrn1nc111s (COG~.
lln:i nimously endorsi ng a ~uper\•jsor!'
and 1\·\avors Conft'rence ISAMCO) com· ' 111illl't> rcµorL lhc elcclcd 11fflc1~ls Sal.Ur·
d;1\' order1·d tht' torn111111ce to develoµ "
.sl<'p-by·Sll'p 1>lari for the new re-gional
t'OlJOr;i!.
Although de1.:is101is of COG \\IOu!d be 11d·
\·1sory only it n•ou!d concern itsel! with
n1atters or mutual. and sometimes con·
trove rs1al concern uf clly and t:ounty
government.
Included 111 the cornmi t!ee recotn·
tnendatlon for subJl'<~t!i to be reviewed by
tJ1e new crgani~a!Jon 11·err long rang r.
p!unn1ng, h1gh1\·ay pl:inn1ng. hralth and
!';ifet y, land !ISf', p;irks, re treativn. r n·
\ iron1uenlal enh<1nceme11t, transportation
;111d !ughway~.
The SAt>.1CO fommit!ee. 11eaded b,1'
l'.OUllCil1nan Don Srni th of Orange, warned
\11at some type of formal county regional
organizat ion is 11ecessary to prevenL
threatened state government intrusion in·
to matters of local concern. Included
in the coinmittee's adopted recom·
mendations 1vere :
-Calling of a general meeting of all
elected mayors, councilmen a n d
supervisors as early as next fall to 1et
the COG plan off the ground.
-In.i Ually the new Jevel or government
would include only county and city
elected officials, but other agencies mch
as school and speci al districts could be
added later.
-There should be 11 paid executive
director with member agenciu: con-
tributing staff members as needed.
-A single joint powers agreement
should be written and adopted in order to
provide financing.
The committee was ordered to im~
plement its suggestions and to include
coordination with the Southern California
Association of Governments (SCAG ).
Faculty Urges Fe1nale Hiring, Special Study Funds
But he added: "At that time u the
commander on the spat coacemed with
the safety of the crews and at the same
time trying to stop the buildup that was
going on, 1 felt that theae were justifiable
actions."
Lavelle aaid that be judged tbal under
the rules prohlbltlng all but "protective
r eaction'' air 1trlke1 into North Vietnam
in line with the 1968 bombing halt he had
the authority as the commander on the
spat to order the air strikes.
Burchfield first came to the Harbor area
followlng his retirement in 1958.
He was born in Missouri in um and he
grew up ln that 1tate. Following service
with the Army Air Corps during World
Warr. he moved to Riverside County.
Supervisor David L. Baker of Garden
Grove noted the county already has more
regional organizations than most In the
state including countywide health, aanlta·
tion, refuse disposal, water and highW"IJ,
construction agencies.
"But," Baker warned, ''If the propoeed
Council of Governments 11 going to work
all of the cities and the county il3eli will
have to sincerely want it to succeed and
be willing to put forth ser~ efforts." The UC Irvine Academic Senate wants
to elevate the 1tatua of women on cam-
pus.
: Mori women profeuors should be hlrtd
and more emphasis should be made on
Women'• 1tudles cour1e1, urge 1en1te
members.
· Funds should be made avall1ble im·
rpec:Uately for the development of .
women '• ltudieJ courses within already
ailt.lng campus departments, 1enate
members voted Thursday.
Gr1nt monlea should alao be awarded
for research into "oontrtbutlo111 or
'omen lo civilization and knowledge,"
iccording to a report made by the senate
eommlttee on education1l poUcy and r
Trim to Rhythm
Course Offered
An eight·week Trim to Rhythm course
will be offered on Tuesdays and Thure-
days by the Costa Mesa Recreation De-
partment.
• Designed to improve muscle tone
through daflCe movements and music, the
Olass \viii meet from 9:30 A.m. lo 10:30
a:.m. both days at Da\·is Intermediate
School. lOSO Arlington Drive, beginning
J une 27.
· The fet is $5 per person, payable dur-
tna: registration. Regillration will be htld
from 6 p. m. to 8 p.m. June 22, and from
t a.m. to 1 p.m. June 23 and 24 at the
Costa Mesa Civic Center
CM
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passed by the aenate.
The fa culty members also resolved that
••a greater number of quaHlled women
must be. recruited and hired."
'i1>e only dllcu111lon by the senate
following the report made by com·
parative culture professor Jay Martfn,
chalrman of the policy committee, was to
change a arant-revJewlng committee's
name to the "Vice Chancellor's Com-
mittee for Curriculum of Women's
Stud.Ju."
It had been referred to in Martin 's
report as the "vice Chancellor's Women's
Committee for CUrriculum Development."
Martin reported the policy committee
studied the idea of women's studies
courses for eight m o n t h s . It con-
cluded that they were a top priority item,
he 11ld , but that they Mould not be 1n a
separate Women 's Studies Program.
During that study, 11 13-part ques·
tlonnalre was aent to deparbnent asking
their views on women's studies.
Jn Martln'11 re-port, English profesaor
Mary Key 11ummarlzed In writing that
Alvan H. Goodell
School Honors
Harbor A.i·ea Man
Dedication ceremonies are scheduled
Saturday at Fairview State Hospital to
re-name the facility's school building in
memory of Its former prlnclpal, a
pioneer in tducatlng the mentally retard·
ed.
The school will be the Alvan H. Goodell
Educational Center following the 10:3-0
a .m. ceremony.
A rormrr Harbor Area resident, Mr.
Good~ll . "·ho died April 19 in Sacramento,
ro1e from a job II! attendant at P1clflc
State Hospital to director of Com-
pensatory Education for the Department
of Mental Hygiene.
He bfg1n working with the retarded In
1947 and was eventually principal at
Paciric Slate Hospi tal's school. shifting to
Fairview in 1959 as principal when it was
opened.
f{e developed many Innovat ions in the
teaching training of the retarded at
Fairview, leadlnc w his 1967 stattwidt
appointment.
lte Is survived by his wife. a son ata4
tioned at' Travis Air Force Base and a
daughter who teaches in the Garden
Grove School Dlslrlct.
Doctor Will .Discuss
Schizophrenia Cases
Dr. Arthur Robll!IOn, biology pt'Ol .. sor
at lhe lJC.St•nford -•rclt C.n!tr, wtll
&peak on ortho-molecular PIYthlatry to-
nJalll at 7:!0 o'clock at the li:sllncla High
School Forum in Costa Mtu.
Robbtaon'1 appearance, free to the pub-
lic, Ii sponsored by the Orsngt Coonly
Schliophrtnla As90elatlon.
His talk wm lncludt the blologlcsl ...
P«tJ of sdllsophronla, commonly known
., a spill peramalily.
"department heads seem in general
agremient that the focua 1bould be on the
discipline rather than on the aex."
Less than one-third of the department
chairmen contacted responded , llld
Professor Key, who added, "perhapa it
has not been emphasized enough that the
issues of women are also Ule i1sues of
men."
Of the about 30 senate membu1 voting
for the resolutions, five were women.
Court Rej ects
Repossessions
Without Notice
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Suprtme
Court today barred credltora from
repossessing merchandise wlthOut giving
the buyer advance notice and a hearing
before "a neutral official."
The 4 to 3 decision atruck down laws In
Florida and Pennsy lvania and could hive
a natlonwlde impact because most states
authorize the automatic ttelzure of goods
when the purchaser falls behind in the
pAymen ts.
The dissenters predicted that as a
result It may become more dlfficult for
consumer~ to buy merchandise on credit,
Justice Potter Stewart based hit opln-
ioo for the majority on lhe 14th Amend-
ment guarantee that no state Mall
deprive a person of property without
"due procesa of law."
One case concerned a Mlaml womm,
Mrs . Margarita Fuentes. whose stove and
stereophonlc phonogr1ph were repouua.
ed when sho lell behind In her paymtnll.
The woman, a factory worker, claimed
the stove was defeetlve.
The other c1ae concerned a group of
Philadelphia people whose purchasu
were repoue1sed under lhe ltat1'1 law.
Taverns, Liqi1or
Stores Kick I n
$3 0,839 to Mesa
Tavern and liquor ltot'9 OW'ftll'I toasted
Costa Mesons wlth '30,839 thla month -
tile city's s!J:-montb share of spedal
lees paid by holden ol lkollollc btwrl&'I'
liet"'flltl. •
The pe,yment WU madt w Colla M-lhroup Ibo lllalt Deptrtmtnt of, AJco.
ho!Jc Btver11e Control whlcb allbcMtl
90 percent of all Uc8H foe "'°':i;... btcll w lndlvldu1l cltl" and <OUlltl" ._
is ustd to heh> off!tl tases. The remain-
ing JO percen! , ... Into the mte'1 ...,.
en!I fund .
Oranp County as a whalt, ln<llldlol
unincorporated are•s, .....tved fOl,ss?
for the alx-montb period ended Ftb. JI:·
A peckage store bter and wino llc<n1ti
"""" lh• ...,,.. l!O will! a ymtf-.J
f .. of '21. A general on·"lt la..,,· 11:' """'" ...... ...ooo ·=•111, wllh • 1nnu1t rtnfl'Wal fee ot , wtdJe a bile
and wine only uvom llctDJt -ia PIO,
ron...,.bl• far flll8,
But he a id that when an invesU,ator
showed him the tbrtti false report• on the
strlkei, "f couldn't belJeve them." He
said he halted the 1trikea becaUJe he and
his staff could not find any way to pre·
vent further such inaccurate reports.
His and Ryan's testimony indicated
that the falsification involved reporting
I hat units had taken some kind of
military action justifying "protective
reaction'' retaliatory strikes.
3 Ship Jumpers
Taken in Denver
DENVER (AP) -Three AWOL
servicemen, Including two who jumped
ship ln San Diego, have been arrested by
federal marshals st Our Lady of
Guadalupe Church, ending thelr stay in
sanctuary that began last Monda y.
Taken Into custody were Robert Bland
Jr .. 22. Warren , Ohio, and Michael Haye!,
21 , Colorado Springs, Colo., both sailors.
and Eugene Berryhill, 20, Minot, N.D., an
Army private.
In 1934, he joined the assessor's staff as
a deputy and in 1941 was appo inted
assessor. Ile served four terms until his
retirement.
·Mr. Burchfield served as president of
the State Assoclation of County AsseSS<Jrs
and was twice president of the Southern
California Association of County
Assessors. fie 1vns also a member of the
commi ttee on personal propert y taxation
of the state Chamber of Co mmerce.
Services will be held at 10:3D 11 .m.
Wednesday at Pacific Vie\v ?t1ortuary.
!·le is survived by a son , Frank
Burchfie ld, also of Corona del Mar. end a
<'laughter. l\1rs. Betty Sanchez and three
grandchildren, all of Torrance.
The family suggests memorial con·
lributions to the American Cancer Socie.
ty or the Heart Fund.
ChamlJer Directors
Will Meet Friday
Directors of the Costa ,\.1esa Chamber
of Commt'rce have scheduled a board
meeting for noon Friday in the banquet
room of the Coral Reef Restaurant , 2615
Harbor Blvd.
Reservations must be made before
noon Thursday with the Chamber 64&-
0636. '
The Saturday meeting of SAMOO, tM
sixth in a series beginning in 1971, also
involved discussions of uniform bicycle
theft laws and bllltxiard restrictions. No
action was taken on either a:ubjtct pen-
ding further study. '
OCC's Sunimer
Registration
Begins Tuesday
Open registration for !tlrnmer school it
Orange Coast College will begin Tuesday.
Registration by appaintment for con-
tinuing day and evening college studen~
will be held Monday from 9 a.m. to S
p.m., and 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Open registration will be held Tuesd11
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.rn. and 6 p.m. to I
p.m.: \Vednesday from noon to 3 p.m.
and 6-8 p.m.: Thursday from noon to 3
p.m : and June 19 and 20 from 8 a.m. to I
j),nl .
Registration \\'ill be in the OCC gym
June l2-14 . and in the Admission Buildtnc
thereafter_
Summer school will start June 19 and
cont inue through Aug. 11.
Persons wishing additional information
should call 83._6880.
Se lling Out Ove rstock
ONE CARAT DIAMONDS $479 Only With
This Ad
TR UMP
FUL L SIZE
CLASSI CAL
GUITARS
OUT OF PAWN
WATCHES
Over 100
Papul1 r Br,nd1
To Choo•• From
YACH TSMA N
.BINOCULARS
BUSHNELL tx30
WATERPROOF, SHOCK·
PROOF, DUST PROOF
THEY
FLOAT
COITA MUA JEWELRY & LOI '"'J
'
CAMERAS
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