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1972-06-13 - Orange Coast Pilot
. DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * *· TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 13, 1972 VOL. 61, HO, 1U. 1 SECTIOHS, U PAO•S • • • Tustin Man Keys Marina Plans Revived .l For Mesa Harbor By L. PETER KRIEG 01 t1tt1 O.Jly P'lltl Slaff Costa l\iesa has begun its march to the 5ea -agam. Revived plans for a 167-acre. $75 million harbor and marina that will con- nect to the Greenville-Banning channel and extend as far north as the proposed Fairview state Park, were unveiled Morr day. The one-heralded Keys l\iarina proj- ect. that fell flat for lack of funds six: ~ars ago. ~·ill be developed by a Costa Mesa marine hardware dealer -who said he dreamed it up 10 years ago -and l'A'O Texas oilmen. Paul L. Snyder, <lwner of Mesa Boat &nd Marine, 1595 Newport Blvd., said he Is buying back the Santa Ana riverfront property from State Mutual Savings for $2.6 million . He said he expec ts little problem get- ting necessary approvals from Costa A ctor's Son Held Captive B y S uspec ts HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Five persons. Including a juvenile, have been arrested on extortion and grand theft charge for allegedly drugging the 45-year-old son of actor John Carradine and holding JUm prisoner for three days in Hol~ywood-ar,ea hotels. Sherifr's deputies said ruchard °"~ radine told them he met two meq at Hollywood Bar late Thursday and, after l!leveral drinks, allowed them to drive him home because they persuaded him he was too drunk to drive. Instead, Carradine said , they toot hlJn to a hotel, where they used one of hl!I credit cards to rent a room , and drugged him. The next day, he said. they drove him to his bank where he withdrew $500. 'tll<n. he said, they moved him to another hotel "'1ere they continued to ply blrn with drugs. Meanwhile, Carradine Bald, they took the $500 and used hi.I credit cards to purchase !t,000 In jewelry and clothing. He told deputies he mana1ed to ete1pe Sunday night when the men guarding him dOzed off. Arrested In the case Sll!lday night and early ~1onday were BUI Gamble, 28, 1Dd G\ty Smith, 21, both or Hollywood; Reginald Lawrence, 11. or Los Angtlts: Uida Mae Grandberry, II, of San Bernardino and 1 17-year-old juvml.Je, whose klentity wa' not disclosed. ... ~lesa city oflicials. He may be right, since less than a yea r ago, Costa Mesa councilmen rejected a proposed residential development on part of the property with then-mayor Robert \Vilson proclaiming, "I still think on that side of the city you're going to see another Fort Lauderdale." Snyder said he and his partners - Newel Hayes and William ~1oroshi, both of El Paso -plan to construct a total of 2,000 slips in the marina, 500 of them in a commercial yacht basin and the rest on a series of fingers adjoining residential lots . Attempts by Snyder to enlarge the proj· ect even more. by including the 40-acre former Newport Beach dump site at the end of 19th Street. apparently were thwarted by Newport Beach councilmen Monday night . They awarded the sale or the property to Leadership Housing Systems for $816.000. even though Keys had stipulated in its bid of $475.000 that it would pay five percent over whatever the highest bid \l.'85. Councilmen said they 'd never heard of such a thing and acting on the advice of City Attorney Dennis O'Neil. who called the percentage proposal "indefinite and (See MARINA, Page !) Israelis Down 2 MIGs in1 Aerial Ba ttle Over Sea TEL AVIV (UPI) -Israel and · Egypt fought th~ir flnit air battJe in almost two years today. A inilitary spokesman said two Egyptian M1G21.s were shot down in the dogfight over the Medlterrane~n St~. An announcemenl sald all of the I.sr..U planes ~ safely from tha "°' counter !5 miles off Uie northern CON! of the Sinai Poninsula In International •Ir space.. , . It WIS the ftnl lir battle of tho ZZ. montl>old ~ Eu~ ~. 'Ibo prev1ous c!Oi'·fl8bl otCwWd July !II, 19'111, when I.sraell pilots raported ~ down four MIG211 without a lou over the Suet canat. . The noon bottle broug)1t lo Ill the num- ber of EiYJ>11an alrttifl reporled downod by Isratlt pllota t1nce the 1187 Middle" East Wu. 1-lo Imai In dosfllbla during tliat period were pul at 17 planes. A mllltsry aource 1ald the 1ar .. u planes were canylng out a 11routlne patrol" of! Sinai when "thooe peopl• the Egyptians) came and the battle lllrled. Jt WIS very Khort.." '"!be EgyplilM dellnitely did not make (S.. MIGs, Pqe II • . I WO Actor Carradine~s Son Held Captive 3 Days - • • • • e • • • • Hurt on 'Coffin Flight' How Blast Oeeurred U~I Ttlfltl'ltft MYSTERY EXPLOS ION-An artist's drawing of an American Airlines jetliner pinpoints the rear area of the DC-10 where a blast ripped open a baggage compartment door of the jetliner shortly after it~ lelt Detroit. A coffin being shipped lo New York, toppled out of the hole and fell 12,000 feet, landing beside a home in Ontario. The pilot made an emer- gency landing at Metropolitan Airport. Explnsion in Airliner Traced w Faulty Door DETROIT (AP ) -Investigators .sald today a malfunctioning cargo door that cpen~ in flight caused a midair incident in which an American Airlines DClO was damaged but managed to make it safely back to Detroit's Metropolitan Airport BOAC Fligli t Bomb Ho ax ROME (UPI) - A BOAC flight from Cairo to L-Ondon made an emergency landing here today when Egyptian authorities warned tt\e captain there might be a wo-man aboard with a bomb 1tn1pped to her waist. Italian police hustled • pretty young Egyptian off the VCIO when· it landed. but later said Karimi . M•'lilfl Amin, 24, Was not carrying a bcinb on her person nor was ~ llll' IUSpeCI material in her .l1flht ..... All ~m were ordered off JU..,i-and police began • search al bogl(e. No bomb wa• round IDd authorities said the warning Wll·•hoe•. Monday night. First reports Indicated the tall section of Ille hage Loo Angele•fo.N"' York plane might have been ripped by an ex- plosive. But the airline quoted the FBI as saying there was no evidence ol an H· plosive device being involved. The 56 pa!Bengers and 11 crew members all escaped serious injury 11 lhe jet ran ol.f a runway duriDg an emergency landing. After hours of investigation by FBI agents, Wayne County sheriff'• officer• and airline personnel, the inc.ident wu blamed on a faulty door which -* In· flig!lt. Capt Bryce E. McCormick, veteran pilot or u.. airliner, 1Rld of his inlllal reacticn, "My first thought wu thlt 1 there bad beal-a midair c:olllsion." Mc(;onntck told .. airport news cm- ftl'fl(ce that after the blast. he had no ntdder control tner h11 craft, one of bis . 'tMM englfles was out and be had no left brake1 as be fought to get tht plane blc.k to Metro from whence tt had taken off for Buffalo and New York. "The ecarest I was when we were-en the ground end the plane wu .rollJni .. ,I thought It wu going to roll right Jnto the termlnal bec•use I could not 1et It blct on the runway," he said. McCormick. dlscusslne-earner tbt<rlts (See PLANE, Pal' l} Co{fin Plunges From Sk y; Lands Near Farm Yard WINDSOR, Ont. (AP} -Slnte Facca was worklng In hll Q.-bed 11 the front of h1a farmhoute whto .a ;metll coffin droPi>ect out of the 1ky 1•s:lll>cled 1bout 200 -feet away. Next be saw a naah of. metal -it turned out to he an lirplone doc>r·hllUng lbe'll'CJUnd. Facca walked over to the oHve-green metal bo1 and 11w two lega sticking out. He said later ht thought it waa a dummy and poked ii with I flick. That was when be ft!lllud It waa a hunw! body and coiled om.lo provincial police. Today, in•tlllgolor• from four agendel were 1tarddng nti&hborq: Sandwich South Towmblp for further wrecuge from ID An>ortcu Airlines DClt thll had 1 door ripped off by a malflttllon. "Finl thin(J hord WU IJlem:(tho cof. fin ind . blptp door) 1plllUlll .. part.'' 1111dhcc11-tt' One end ~ cofflo wu burled eight inclJM 1ntor,.1round. !" T)•; Lig'hu: May Stay On SACRAMENTO (AP} -A. bill on the governor'• de1k loday would J'.equin melorcycle heodllgbt1 to: •t'll'D· o n autom1tically whtn the qine b ttarted. '!'he hill p11111ed the Atsembly SM Mon- day. It woold give mGCorcycU.U unUI J1n. 1, 1975, to comply. Sky Drama Des cribed ByCounti~ By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .... 0.11'1' ~"" ... ,, Durwood Anderson didn't he Rr the d~m pressicn blast that nearly dumped him 11nd 66 others into the dusk sky and eterni.ty at 12,000 feet over Wayne Coun.- ty, Mich., Monday night. ffis ears were plugged up, Andenon, 42, of 13132 Laburnu1n Dr ive Tus!in, and bis execuLive traveling com: pan1on were among 10 persons Injured however, during the bizarre infllght in: cidenl. He ~ffered a dislocaled finger and leR' abrasions while escaping down an evacuation chute after Ameri can Airline! Flight 96 ntiraculously made it back t~ Detroit. Investigators at first believed a saboteur's bomb exploded tn a baggage compartment -aucking a coffi n co~ tain.ing a body -'-ind other cargo out 1 gaping hole in the big jetliner. Investigators have ruled out thi,, theory, saying the loud thump , bump and prolonged whooshing noise resulted from instant decompreS!k>n due to opening of a faulty compartment door. Hurtling earthward like a bomb the 21ilver-color~ steel coffin slammed to earth, narrowly mlS!lng a farm home, followed by the fluttering airplane door. Somehow, a brush with eternity seems less terrifying in retrospect when it is ac- cidental instead of .sinlster and deliberate IS in the CIJe of a bombing. . First told tbls morning ol the cargo door malfunctkm now blamed, Mrs. Doris Anderson upre.ssed relief. "I'd prefer that nither than to have (S.. PASSENGER, Pqe ZI .... .. WeatJuir Low clouds and fog 1ioog the coast wW take credit for slightly cooler lempe!'!lturu In Orange County Wedntaday. Hi&hs upected lo he an>und 70 II tho i>Nch, U inland. Low1 Jn the 80's. INSIDE TODAY . A Ntbrmka nno1paptf' rt"o por.11 that cloud aeeding •%J)fri- ments were conducted fn skit• above Rapid CitJI, S.D .• o short timt b</ort dtvostaring floods, See storv, Page 4. l .M. •t1f I (.tllftrt1i. • t1e11illM Jt..1• CM!lft IS c.......... IJ O..Mil Mtllc"' U •olllNriflt r•M ' •~ttrt••-· ,. ....... , .. ,. .. ., fll'9 lltttH 11 "'"'"''" 14 Aft~ Lt""" 14 Supervisors OK Tentative Budget, Tax Cut 811 JACK BROBACK °' ,_. P<llrt ~"" , .. ,, Orange County 11upef"\•OOrs ioday adopted a tentative 1972-73 budgt-t calling kit a 7.S.ctnl rrdul't\011 In tht propert y tat rate. Final budget bc.IU'i.nga which will dtlennine the exact rate will begui .July IZ. The new budget (·nils for exl)('nd1lure (If $24.1.2 miUlon in general fllnds, up 5.1 ~r· cent over the current spending prograrn but an anUcip.~ 10 ptrttnt i.ncrta1t in assessed valuation will al.Ww the Lax l"UI. Counly Ad.m.lnl1trative Ofnctt, Robert Thoma1, In pretentina: the propo&ed budget, lold 1upuvlsor1 that although the plan CAii> for 1n lncrtue ol 5.1 pu- ~11 or fl l mllHGn, o Yer the ctnTeril ~·ear, he said It contruted sharply wllh the 16.4 percent and J.5.8 percent jump11 for the two prev10UI! ycan. 1'he 5.1 percent represents the lowest percentage increase since 1960-61 when a .1.1 perctt1t jump wa s called for Thcmu cauUoned that the bud8tt does not allow for lncttua in flalarh:s and rrlnge beneflla for the county's !,000.plu.s ~mployes. Board <llalrman Ronald Casper• ol Newport Be9Ch tddtd that, "We're close to salary negotiaUona and an anticipated 5 percent pay i.ocrease will not cause a jump in tile tax rate." Caspers compHmenttd 'Thomas and his Budget Director Tom Corbin on prescn- 1111& "• good bud&et butd on t.argtl pro- Jection1 wtth austenly 1n spending in mind." ·'The recommendations in U1il budget provide for continuaUoo of nuu1datory programs at acteptable level:s or service." Thomas said. "Only Jn those a:ses where the avallabtlity of ~ubstan t!al outside funds (federal and state J ha s been aasured have we recommended new or innovaU ve programs." He .said the offeffil budget v.·as $14.4 million ht.low county department htad re- qUOlll. During tht budgtl bearing• dep&rtment1 wbkh feel they were dealt with too aeYerely lWlU ha\'e t.be1r day before the bolrd membtr•. Thcmu ssJd the e1tlmaled carry-<1ver balance from 1971-72 would be around $1!,5 million which rofltruts with a $6 million surplul wt year. ''The Increase is due primll?'ilY to a $1Z miJUon lfOS!I balance in wellJ?e •i>- propriatkw re1u!ting in $3 million net to the coun ty (75 percent of welfare monies .are provided by the state); $2.5 rnillloo Viet Refugees Attacked Frona P qe J PASSENGE R • • • had a bomb on board," she said. Reds Fire 0 1t 1,000 Fleei ng Figliting at A1iLoc Delails of the crisis at 12,000 feet and the cool command maintained by 28-year- old pilot Capt. B. E. McCormick, until he .stepped ou t onto the runway \\'erf' sketchy to Mrs. Anderson. AN LOC (UPI) -Conununist troops opent>d fire today on a ragged column of J .000 refugees flee.Ing the provincial l'Apltal of An Loe aod killed 12 clvl!Jans 11nd \.\o'OUnded 30. fleJd reports said. Newsmen who reached the scene 11Jhor1ly after the attack said the Com- munists fired a barrage of n1ortars onto Highway 13 ·while the refugees were trying to flee from An Loe, 60 miles north of Saigon. A govemmenl relief force broke through to An Loe Monday, and refugees who had been living there during the siege. bqan ltreamlng southward. They bad ·etcaptd death by 11'Jng In un- derground shelters while thousands of rouodl of &hell.I cruhed overhead. The reports said lhe refugee• -mainly and Chon Thanh, 15 milea to the south. old men, women and children -ran fie said Sout h Vietnamese jet.II began down the highway as the mortars flying overhead u the fleeing refugees screamed into them and the chunks of \\·ere stopped along the highway. shrapnel flew through the air. 11e said the Communists were ap- One old womnn, shrapnel cull acroas parenlly frightened by the planes and her body, died in lhe anm of her young opened fire on the refugees, 1h00Ung granddaughter. the reports aald. some in the beak as they ran. Th ey said a yo ung boy, hit by shrapnel At An Loe. Communist forces stub- in the head, was cradled In the arms of bomly fought the South Vietnamese hh1 parents while a South Vietnamese troops '~1ho closed in on lhe long bes ieged medic tried to stop the bleedlng. city and kept tligh\11ay 13 from being One refugee trying to patch up the ., opened as a relief road into the nearly bleeding leg of his young son said the leveled provincial capital. refugees left An Loe early in the mornlng Military sources said rescue helicopters alter local government offlclals said were able to land occasionally to take out Highway 13 appeared safe. the 1,200 wounded troops and civilians in He said Commun ist troops stopped the the city but that !hellfire made such refugees about hallway between An Loe mercy ope.rations hazardous. * * -k The incident may have become hazy to Capt. T\1cCormick, wbo could only stand be.side the plane murmuring; "Jesus Christ . , . Jesu! Christ .•. " "ll's kind of muddl ed in my mind,'' ~1rs. Anderson said this morning. •·rm sure it \~as quite frightening." "!\.1y husband is fine," she added. "He called from \\'ayne County General llospitai and then again \\"hen he checked inlo a motel." Anderson and his traveling companio111 William Hefferman, 51. of the San Fernando Valley were en route to Buf- falo, N.Y. and Connecticut on a business trip, Mrs . .Anderson said. . B52s, Fig hters Cousins .. Jailed UPI T ....... B er Honor In Paris. \\•here the phrase ··cherchez la femme" origin- ated, Parisians found the \Von1· an they \Yere loo king for - Nicole de llauteclocque. She \Vas elected the Jirsl \voman mayor of Paris. The men are employed in the contracl'I and engineeriog office of the Alr Rite Division of Sargent Industries in El Segundo, requiring two or three business lrip11 ptr month. Occasional difficulties -such as lan· ding during New York's infamous blackout -have plagued A11derson·s travels, his \Vile sai d, but never anything as critical as Monday night 's episode. Get 100, 83 Ye ar s • R ape -Case s tit MODESTO CAP} -Two men convicted in n series or rapes hav e received rninlmum prison Sentences of 100 years and 83 years, respectively. .Stanislaus County Superior Court Judge Francis W. Halley gave the 100- ye.ar sentence Monday to Davi.s Calvin Hodge, 28, Modesto and the 83-year sentence to his cousin, Everett Bobby William.<J or Patterson. The couslnl were convlcted in a series of sexual attacks primarily on young couples. Hod.ie )Vas convicted ifay 23 on 10 rounls of rape, five of robbery, six of kidnap, eight of .stl perversion and one of sodomy. Williams was convicted of seven counts of rape, two of kidnap, seven of se.1 perversion , five for robbery and one of sodomy_ They came to be known u the "green mustang'' rapi.rts because they drove a green Mustang. . . F~ona Page J MIGs . • • • lovable 1lgn," another IOUJ'Ce said. He refused to elaborate. Tht official 1pcke1men• announcement said the two E!J:YpUan pilot.. were aeen parao~.llJ.Uee. _ _ T~ did Mt say 'wOo started firing. Tb4' 1pokesmen allO did not aay how many': planes were involved in the dog.fitht, or disclose other details. Las! Sept. 11. a ground gunner shot dov.·n:an Egyptian MlG buzzing Israeli posill9ns on the Suez Canal in the first in- cident of it.. kind of the ceasefire. Si.l'days later, the Egyptians retaliated by shooting down an Israeli cargo plane, klllinr all 13 aboard. Since then, the air over the Middle East ba.s been quiet except for three May overfUgh!J of IsraeU-held territory by 1.fIG2S alrcralt, reported by Israel to have been piloted by Soviet aviator!!. In all three overflights. Israeli Phan- lom jets ro.se to challenge the infiltrators but no contact was reported. Reti red i'\'larine Dies F rom Page J MARINA. • • uncertain," approved the !Ile lo Leader1hlp tor the "best bid." Attorney Donald R. Price, who represents Keys Marina, argued the point, unsucceufully, before the councll then said Jauf ·he may seek-a writ of mandate to block the sale to Ltader11hlp on the grounds Keys' bid was higher. Keys had allO aaked for credit terms on the property, wbJch councilmen didn't Hke. Leadership offered to pay caah. Snyder noted that the 157-acre pared he owns virtually surrounds the dump site on the west, north and east. He said plans tor the marina can and will go ahead with or without the addJUonal acreage, however. He sald those pl ans call for escrow on the property bought from State Mutual Savings to open thls week and cloae In l50 days. 1-Je said construction will start early ne.tt year and the project \Ylll take "lwo- three years" to complete. Raid Nortli W itli Ne w Protec tio11 SAIGON (UPI ) -U.S. BS2s, taking ad- vantage of new electronic development.s that protects them against mi!siles, bombed targets in North Vietnam today for the sixth consecutive day. Fighter-bombeni, meanwhile, h I t bridges 25 miles from Cnina despite Pe- king warnings the raids threaten China 's :security. M1·s. Callaham, Former Co11rt Clerk, Succun1b s The Pen\agon said the BS1l'I, confined mostly to South Vietnam in the past cl~:~s~ ~:n~a~f~~~aj~d~~j ;~~ because of the missile threa!J, are bomb-Court, died Saturday at the age of 66. inr &be north m an almolt daily ba!lis_ Funeral services for Mrs. Callaham. a "lle's been fl ying for 20 years and tl1is is the first serious incident," said Mrs. Anderson, adding her husband will have at least a one-day layover in Detroit before continuing his trip. She said the cou ple's chil dre n, hfelinda. 16, and Rlchard, 13, are excited about the sensational adventure their father 1\'ill have to tell in detail v.·hen he returns. "And they're E11vfull y thankful it turned out the v.·ay it did," !!!he added. F r o1n P a 9e l PLANE ... The United States hu .increased the num-10-year resident of Corona del Mar. will that an explosion occurred on the plane, her of B52a in Southeast Asia fourfold be held at l p.m. Thursday in Manchester sa id, "To my recollectlon, 1 do not Chapel, Inglewood Cemetery, L os remember telllng the passengers there since the start of. the Communist of-Angeles. Interment will follow. had been an explosion. I told them fenalve on March 30. e11crythlng was to remain on the plane so Mrs. Callaham's husband, Jack Pentagon sources said. the B52a are Callaham, is a pioneer Orange County officials cpuld investigate to determine beinc accompanied Wi th tpeclal planes resident and the former owner and early lhe possibility of any explosion.'' George A. Warde, executive vice pres!· equipped with electronic countermeasure developer of San Juan Capistrano dent and general manager oI the airline, gear capable of jamming the radar Airport. sald in a statenlent issuetl at the com- guldaoce 8)'1ttm of the Soviet-made Mrs. Cailaham lived and worked on the pany's New York headquarters: Orange Coaat from 1956 to 1966 until she ··A tho h · · surface-to-air misliles (SAMl). and her husband moved their residence roug investigation by a com- Tbe •~-on rare occ .. •io•• bavt struck Lo B b d Fall Ci Or pany maintenance and engineering team o..-.... .... to ng eac an s ty, egon . assembledatDetroitMetr o po l i ta n near the Hanoi-Haiphong area but mos t She wu found dead at the wheel of her Airport has detennined that a cargo door of the current rald!I are still jwt north of car after sulfering a heart attack in L<ing in the lower part of the fuselage below the DemilJtll'tzed ZORe and directed Beach. the passenger cabin opened when the against Communist suppUes. Survivors, in addition to her husband, airplane was at about 12,000 feet altitude U.S. military spokesmen reported jets include her brother, Judge William after having left Detroit en route to Buf- from tbe aircraft carrier Midway blew up' Christen.sen of Palm Sprinp, retired, Ialo although signal lights in the cockpit a huge oil storage complex near the port fonner presiding judge of the Harbor indicated the cargo door and all other of Vinh, filling the sky with black smoke Area court. door! were closed and latched normally. and nashts of oran1e names. Air Force She also leaves: a .son, H. R. Griffin , of "Because the alrplane was pressurized, F4 Phantoms carried out the raids near Yucaipa, a daughter, Mrs. John Moon. of a decompression with a loud sound oc- Chlna . El Cajon, four grandchildren and one curred. During the night, we tiave in- The U.S. command sald the F4s knock-great grandchild. spected !he cargo ('()mpartments: of all ed out two railroad bridges and tracks our DC!Os and have foun d them to be running between them on the railway B k c 't' n· functioning properly. American Airlines leading northeastward from Hanoi to the 00 • r l JC ICS and McDonnell Douglass, manufacturers Chlna border -previously the principal 0£ the DCIO, are conducting a thorough overland route for supplie! from China. BOONVILLE, N.Y. (AP ) -Critic Ed-investigation to detennine what caused The command said one brldge was hlt mund Yi'ilson, a leading figw·e on the the malfunction of the door on Flight 96. from ti::: stale in ffimbwiiemept Of bu&inea ln\·totor)' ta1 e1emptioo losses wlllcb waa paid latt, and a balance ot 11l leaat fl mllliall In coolill&tney !Und• wblcb were not 11pent, ·• 1boma1 ei- plained. The oew flgure, barring last minute in- creases by the supervbors during bear· ings, will pll!c:e the <.'Ollnty general f\md la.I r ite at $1.965 per $100 of as&elSed valuation, bringini the reduction of 71t, cents under t~ current S2.04 rat~ . highest in county history. Tht lowered rale means about a *4.20 reduction In taxes to the owner of .11 124,000 home with an assessed value of 16.000. Thomas warned board mernbe.rs tha t this year's tu reduction n1:iy be shorl range. '"\\'e cannot depend on $Ubslantial in· creases in assessed values through economic gro\vth in the long run," the ad- n1111istrative o(ficer .s:.iid. "It Is essential that ta x reforrns be enac ted to relieve the properly la x payer from supporting con- stantly increasing prognms demanded by the public." Ile called attention to the 15 to 30 per- cent annua l increases in health, welfare, medical and law enforcement programs. 'fhe oe\Y budget includes $1.9 million (or co1npletion of the fourth floor of the county's overcr.owded main jail, a long delayed expenditure: $1.l million for the ne\\' Prin1a Desohecha Canyon landfill site north of San Joan Capis trano; $300,000 for air conditioning the Orange <.:aunty hledical Center; the addition ot 301 new employes and a S70,000 iUm for a county lobbyist oUice in Washington, D.C. The tentative budget Includes several "policy" items which the board will ban-- die separately in budget sessions. Head ing the list are completion (lf design for a new medical center at a cost of $1.6 million : $73,276 for the con- troversial Orange County Airport Land Use Commission and $85,803 for a dental care program in schools. Last year supervisors refused a $62 oon request by the land use co mmission ~nd ga11e the agency onl y $500 for operation during the year_ Other budget items include a personnel department management study, $42,000; de_v~lopment of new data system11, $1.3 m1lhon, and hiring of a co mmunity reJa,.. lions coordinator, $18,720. The county has been without a publie r elations man for more than a year and Caspers said it \.\o'as important they fill this gap. Policy items for which no funds h11ve ~n set aside in the tentative budget and \\'Iii be up to a decision of the board m('mbe rs include a much di.scu.ssed coun- l}'\_"i~~ helicopter patrol, $250,()(X); ac· qwsition of Santa Ana River-SantiagCJ Creek gree nbelt property, $1 million· ad· ditioru to the probation department irtaff, ~.~; lS new planning department pos11lons $200,000. and a computerl7.ed med~cal information system for tho medi cal center $310,000. Ca_pital improvements proposed for the com1~ year total $10.-4 million up $5 4 mil!i~ over .~ current y~ar. M~jor pr0j. eels in a~d1ti?n to the Jail completiori and landf11J site are completion of the second phase oC the Fullerton Municipal Court, $1.S million and e:xpanslon of the county's central utility facility, $700 ,000. Theate r to Get Deliverance LIVERPOOL. England (UPI ) - A local sex-film movie theater showing "Don't De\lver Us From Evil " will close down for the next month. When it reopens, It will be a church, Falher Thomas ~fcNe\•in said the tOO-seat theater fitted his con· gregation's needs. ENCINO (AP ) -John Lucian Smi th , 67, a retired Marine Corpii colonel, Medal of Hotlor winner and World War JI air ace, died Friday. Smith won the nation'! highesi a""·ard for valor after com- manding Marine Fighter Squadron 223 in the ballle of Guadalcanal and the ba ttle of the :SOiomon tsalnds. "We're going ahead this time. we 've got the money," Snyder vowed, reflecting on earlier financial failures that left the property and the project bouncing from one developer to another until State ~1utllnl foreclosed on it in 1968. Snyder said the early start on con- struction will be possible because there h::is already been more than '22(),000 worth of engineering work done on the project. near Thanh Mol , 60 miles northeast of Ame rican literary scene for the past half The National Transportation Safety Hanoi and 25 miles frorq, China's Kwangsi i -=•,c;•;;n;;tu~ry;:, d;i~ed;;;;tod;;;;•;;y ~o;;f ;;•;h;ea;r;t~a~tt;•;ck;;;;;;;;;;;;Bo;ar;;d;;a;;lso;;;;;;' ;;in;;•;;••;;l;;ig;•;;tln;g;;;the;;l;;nc;i;;d•;n;;t.;;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Province. The other bridge v.·al'I near Lang Dang. 55 mlles northeast of Hanoi "We have no qualms over the building's previous use," he said. DAILY PILOT Thi Or111G9 CMll DAILY PILOT, wltf'il 'fl'llkll 11 (61\'1&11Nd 1i. Nt -Prni., ii pUbllUltd "' 1111 Or1no-c .. tt l'vllollthlnt Cl"'""Y. ,.,., r1tt <MJ1;o~1 1r1 1111llolllhtd, Mtn1111, lllro• - Frld1y, for c ... 11 M'''· N1W1111rl 811'(11. 111"111n91M •e~ch/Fovn111n v11i.y, L19un1 aMdl, lrvlne/51ddlt•rJ1 1nd $1n Ci.!nlfllt/ $1n JY1n C&pl1lr1M, A t l119l1 r~lonlt ~Jl>tll h publl,~(d llh,nll\>s I nd .S1rl(lfy,, lhe SM"1FKl11<!1 l!Utlll.,.1"1 pt1nt 11 tr JlO .,.,..,, a1~ !ilrttl, '°''' M .. , 0111'9rl\Je, t1•1'. Rob1rt N. W11d ,.,.,1i;1,"1 1r.d l'Vltll.i.1r J1dt It Curl1y Vk t f'r1,H:11n1 Ind °""111 MtMg4r °Til0M 11 IC11yJI Edlttr l)oa""'' A, Mur,hin• M•ntOll'lll Ellli.r C~1 tl•• H. l.001 a1ch1r4 P'. Nell An11t1n1 M•FllDTtlt 111nor1 Qlflo• C11!1 Mtu: lJO w,,~:r Strttt Ntwllorl h id'!: llll H• ._,......,. u..ir-1 .. c11: m ,._t ".,..,.. H""'llnf* a..Cft : 1111S lllK'l'I ....._.,. l&n C'-19: )l$ Hrwrri •• (Mnlnl lltMI Tel1 .. e• f7 14J 641-4U1 Cl....W A4~ 641.flJI PNtll C.at•I AIM. lllrltlo It ........ I Mdl 4tlo442t ,,.. ..... ~ c....,. , .............. _,,It ~'· 1•11, 0r.,... c .. " '"'""'"" .. "' ... """t''• lrti ,,... •!Witt, 111wtrtt""'-• . tNtt« fl" ..,,_,l_tl '*•In fN'f ,... iilllli'Cld 'lt'ltfllul .... r.1 ..,. ....... ~ ......... . - 0. ........ Hlf ti c.t1 MIN. ~--"'r urr• n.u I IP !NII tl.1J "*""''11 ml11hrY ---»Al~- He noted, among other things, that there is a canyon on the property (hat ~'ill be able to hold the four million cubic yarda of fill that wiU be dredged for tbe harbor. and JO miles from the border. Neither had been hit prevlously. Only a few hours earlier, the Chinese Foreign Ministry issued a fonnal .slate- mtnt which said sucll attacks threaten "the security of China," It said lhc United States steadily e1panded the sphere of bombing up to areas ''quJte close to the Sino-Vietnamese borders." Nixon Tells Arms Treaty Details, Urges Approval WASHfNGTON (AP) -Prtlldtnl Nl1- on, disclosing some of the fine print of Anni curb agreements negotiated with the Soviet Union, urged {))ngress today to act "without de lay" in approvina; the ac· COrd!J. A treaty limiting the deployment of an- liballistic mWUes <ABM ) to two 1lte11 in each country WI! sent to the Senate with a request for early r1Ut1c1Uon. Both ho~es of Congns11 were asked to . pass a resolution •pprovin1 1 companion eucullve agreement that \fOU.ld freeze the total nwnbtr or land end -butd orfenalve b11.llistlc missiles in the United States and the Soviet Un.Ion at present levels. While lmnJrig th• _,,,ni. "an lm- port1nt first step lo CheckJn1 the anns race," Nixon told Conartu they "dO not cloae off all aVeoues of 1trateak: com- petltfon.·• He uld JI 11 11t aaenUal that wt carry forward a JOund ttrattalc modernlutlon program to maintain our 1eeurlty and to insure that more pennanent and com- prehensJve arms limitation qrttmtntJ can ~ re1chtd." NllOll revealed that the Unlttd Slalt• fee.ls Jt would have 1 buis f« withdraw· Ing from the ABM treaty if tlghltr curbs on offensive arms •re not negoUated within five yean. Either skte can withdraw on 111-month not.Jee. Tht fine print NllOll 1tnl CbngrtQ dl>closed tbat the Unlttd Stilts and the Sovi et Union nmabl far apart in cao- 1idering the qlM:llloo of modern 1ub- mar1n .. optrated by U.S. alU.. In !be North AUantlc Truly OrglllluUon. The Soviet. Jake the po1Jtlon tbat should the NATO alllH build ldd!Uonal modem aubl, over and above those now operaUonal or under coNttuctlon, '1the Soviet Union will have the rtiht to a cor- rHponding Jnorease In the number of tit 1ubmartna." - Tht United Stat.1 took the poolilon tbal It "dots not mpl lht validity of the OOl\llderatlona" raised by M o a c o w regordlng 1Ubmarinel btlonclnr I<> third countries~ What's My Line ... YOU WON 'T BE FED ANY LINES AT A[DEN'S. WE ARE MORE INTERESTED IN DEVELOPING LOY AL CUSTOMERS THAN MAKING A FAST SALE. NONE OF OUR SALESPEOPLE WILL BOTHER YOU IF. YOU JUST WANT TO BROWSE, BUT WILL BE PLEASED TO ASSIST YOU IF YOU WISH, WITH TRUTHFUL ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS. WHEN WE DISCUSS CARPET LINES, WE WOULD HAVE TO" MODESTLY " ADMIT THAT WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTIONS IN THE AREA. TOP BRANDS SUCH AS: BIGELOW, BERVEN, BEATTIE, MAGEE, MONARCH, BARWICK, MOHAWK, ROXBURY, MILLIKAN, ARMSTRON6. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DR~PES 1663 l'lacfftla Ava. ' COSTA MISA 646-4838 po re in me Da exi Ira tio the pu pr s ha. of hi gai <)01 Ap Si the d tac lik cla s Q) ed .. on ch lea div to co tht ~ re foll mi • She's Going Ape Dominique Green of ~Ialibu models her costume for the new movie ;.The Battle for the Planet of the Apes." ri1 iss Green \Vas the result of an exten· sive search to find the "\\'Orld's mosL beautiful ctpc•' and \vill receive a \vcek's contract for $350 and all the bananas she can eat. Hearing Slated Tonight On Highway Proposals Opinions ranging frorn outspoken sup- port to violent objection over plans to realign or widen Pacific Coast l{igh"·ay in Dana Po int will be aired at a publ ic meeting tonight at the Richard Henry Dana School, auditorium. The 8 p.m. meeting, :sponsored by a coalition of community groups. wi ll in· elude presentations by offici ~ls of thi; Orange County Road Department who ha ve offered several alternative ideas to improve traffic flow on tbe major roadway. Unt il recently, the projected widt h of the road, under any plan. \l'aS 100 feel. but later opinions ;imong department engineers advoc ate 120 feet in \Vidth. One major widening plan would prob-- ebly remove 96 business structures. causing a storm of controversy among 1ome residents and businessmen. One otht:r plan involves the use of the existing highway for one direction of travel and Del Prado for the othe r direc- tion. 11'ould be l'Ondemn('d under· each idt·a. The rationale for the changes in !hr roadway is that by 1982 the volume of traffic on the roadway will have doubled. Tonight 's meeting is part of a long- term study of the issue by the Dana Point Citizens for Action and other i.:ommunity groups. One other current project involves a survey of all affected residents to sample public opin ion on the \\'Jdening-realign- n1f'nl issue. One other pressing matter in the i.:om- n1unity also ll'ill be unveiled tonigh!. !he citizens association's suggestions for im- provements to the Capistrano Valley J\1aster Plan. Any interested person living in the are<1 is welcome to tonight's meeting. associa~ t1on aides stressed. Sentencii1g Set For Riot Fi uurc b A l.aguna Beach man accused on tlr- rcst of assaulting a policeman in .,.,,hat nf. flcers described as a r iot al 1he <Jrphanage restaurant has pleaded nolo contcnderc (neither guilty nor innocent) lo reduced charges in Orange County Superior Court. J udge \Villiam r-.1urray accepted th e plea of Joseph Stephen Longo Jr., 3!, of 750 Rembrandt Drive, to n11sdemeanor charges of unlawfu l assembly. He .,.,,i!l pronounce sentence July 26. Longo was arrested Sept. 5. 1971. following a fracas that erupted when Laguna police tried to quell a disturbance at the Cleo Street-South Coast High .... ·ay location. Tendei·s End Strike SAN DI EGO (AP) -Brick tenders ended their 13-day strike by agret:ing r.1onday night to a $2.04 hourly pay raise by November 1973, boosting their $7.ll salary in six-month increinents. The st rike was called against the Masonry Contractors Association. s DAll Y •tlOT :J l(issinger Under Fire: High Jinks With Belly Dancer Questioned WASHINGTON (UPI) -When Dr. Henry A. Kminger allowed a Pe,,ian belly dancer to perch on his lap during the trip home from the Moscow summlt. did his fondness for frolicking detract Crom lhe dignity of his office? Rep. William J. Scherle (R-lowa), posed the question Monday about Kiss- inger, the \Vhite House "swinger" .,.,.het ts President Nixon's chief advistr on fore ign policy . Scherle, a grain and livestock farmer before he was elected to Congress in 1966. provided his o~·n ans11•er . "I'm no prude," Scher le said, "and I'm no Puritan, but I think a certain amount of dignity ought to correspond to his role. There's a tiinc and a place. Business is bus1nes-.. and ple:isHrf' is pleasure. "If happy llL"11r\' t'on!1nut'S on his Don .Turin p:u·t.v pH ~~" 1111• 1 1 1•11~lrt 1er said, ''tht· lll''t p 1('1lll"t' 11! 111, . .l1,l111i::111shed ex- \l ;u·1;1rd 1,·,i1, ,~,., r:i 1i·r,\ 11l•ll appear i~1!h··,,1"1 l•old ~~·1 •'"" nf Cos111opolitan 111:1~;1 · r·,• 1111!1 , ~t,!11!t· 111 his novel ." !1 1,,1, tl1• '"1'<111d tirni' 111 recent n111111h~ ili1· (P!l.~l'l'\;o\1 1l' ltrpuhlit'an has ··r th:111·d ;il),11r~ .1! llil' \\'h11(' !·louse. l .. 1'!' last \t'<lr he co1np!aincd the ex- •·r1111 1'1' d('j)ar!inl'nl sprnt too much to hui!d ;ind equip a \\'hit e Hnuse exercise rourn /Jr c:illcd 1hr l11you1 a "Rom:Jn I 0111pcr roorn ~clierle l'.trcul11 tcd )115 r1e11s on the lifcsiyle of Kissinger in a newsletter to DUBBED HAPPY HENRY Adviser Kissinger const1tt1rnt s II<· s:i1d tht' \Vh11e lfouse asked for JO copies and added he \vas sure tbt letter would "circ\llate a little higher," obvlOU1l)' rtft.ITlnf &o the Pr-e•i- den t. Schtrle said some constituents told him they did not approve of Klaainttr't ac· tivilits. •·The 1'.'orld prtss caM'ied tnensive reports of his fondneM for frollckinc," Scherle said. "Everyooe likes a little fun . We're llOt opposed to It but 11·e fetl there is a proper place.'' He said that u a representative of the. i · S. government on a serious mission, "}lank should ha•·e curbed his hankerin&: for the birds and the bubbly.'' [)uring a social gathering ln Tehran. lran, belly dancer Nadia Parsi. 23, sat tn Kissinger's lap. Kissingt:r took the in- terlude \~ith good cheer and remarked ht hoped to "make th(' \\'Orld ~aft: for belly dancrrs." S<'herlr :ilso cv1n.1r1H td .:in an inciden t ln !'olanrl "In \\';usa11•. al1 i'r signing !he joint cot11n1un1que-""ith Poli sh officials Prts- ideM N"1 ~·1n had to trl! the former 0Rocke- frllcr f>i·oihers, 'th~ think tank' associate to f]\11t gi1zzling the champagne and to move along lo the nex-t m~ting," Scherle .sairl Ne1r1n1r11 who heard Nixon urge Kiss- \ngrr lo drink up follo\\·ing the Wars1w meet inf.! I\ 1th top Polis h leaders fe lt the Prr!ildent 11·as on ly leasing his senior ad- ,·1ser. Suspect Pleads Innocent Barber A1vaits Trial iii Laguna. Niguel Bank Burglary An unemployed Ohio barber pleaded in- t10eent r-.-londay of allegedly taking part in the $2 1nillion burglary of a Laguna Niguel bank. He was ordered held in lieu of $250.000 bail. Charles A. J\1ulligan. 38, o r Youngsto\vn, entered the plea before U.S. District Judge Matt Byrne in Los Angeles. He "'as ordered to reappear in court next J\1onday so that a date for trial could be set. U.S. Attorney Elgin Ed1vards had asked the judge for $750,000 bail and defense at- torney Ron Minkin had requested a figure of $50,000. Edwards. noting that none of the loot fr o1n the March 25-26 La guna Niguel cri1ne had been recovered. claimed tha t any sum lower than $750,000 would enable the defe ndant to post ba il 1vith part of the stolen funds and escape with the re· mainder . Fede ra l officials allege that Mull igan, along with "five or six" other persons, blasted their way through the conc rete and steel roof of the.l';iult at the United California Bank 1n fl1onarch Bay Plaza. Flag Pageant, Concert Slated A patriotic concert and nag pageant will be presented in Laguna Beach's Irvine Bowl at 7 o'clock \V ednesday in observance of Flag Day. Featured in the hour.Jong program will be the renowned Jst t.1arine Division Band from Camp Pendleto n In a 30- minute concert, followed by a colorful flag pageant by the Sea School of the Marine Recruit Depot at San Diego. In the pageant, Marines dressed in peri od uniforms present the story of Old Glory from England's early flag~ of St . George and St. Andrew to today's 50-star banner. Once inside, Edw ards said in court Mon- day, the gang drilled into over 500 11fe deposit boxes, removing j ewe 1 r y, negotiable aecurities, rare coinl and cash. In addition to the safe depoait box thefts, th e bank Jooit $50,000 cash to the burglars , investigators said . During the hearing , defense attorney Minkin requeated that the suapect, if released on bail, be alloy,·ed to retnm to Ohio to visit his fam!ly . However, Byrne ordered that he remain in the Southern California area if released. Beside1 the Laguna Niguel burglary, Edwards said today authorltlu still btlieve the gang, working with other th ieves , is rea:poruilbte for at le.ut eight other bank burglariea around the~· Mulligan wu arrested Juna J outllde a tavern in Tustin after being tralled to Orange County from Chicago by the FBI. The 1uspect ha1 lwo prior CODTldlotu:, one for rocelvq llolen irvporty 11111 the other IOI' burglary, alltcilll llld. ' · · Engineers Bill Zoan and Hal Krizan are the engi neers who pl an to address the public tonight and the two men a lso will present a map sho1\'ing which properties Complai1it Cites Meter Maid Bite lrvi11e's Sumn1er Rec Plan Opens Witl1 Bus Trip Irvine children and adults may sign up for the city's summer recreation pro- gram v>hich gets under 1vay this weekend 1~ith inauguration of the free bus service to the beach. Vacation Time ... Wagon Time SACRAJ\.fENTO (AP ) -Robert Habra has filed a $27,500 cla im aga inst the city of Sacramento, saying a meter mald bit him. Habra, 36. a supermarket employe. r;aid he was putting a penny in a do1vnto.,..·n parkin,e: meter for a friend on April 3 v.1hen meter maid Frances Simpson struck, bit and clawed him on the face and chest. Mrs . Simpson . 36. told a reporter, ''I deny it wholeheartedly. He definitely at- tacked me. I would never attack someone like that." The City Council will consider the claim. S. Lagunan on Board A South Laguna orthopedic surgeon, Dr . Will iam A. Beck, has been appo inted to the 2>member board of directors of South Coast Comn1unity Hospital. Dr. Beck ill now serving as chief or staff et the hospital. fie has been a mem- ber of the staff since 1966. Carr Appointed New Hospital Administrator ... Bernard F. Carr of Altoona, Pa .. bas bten named administrator of south Coast Community Hospital, South Laguna. He succeedl Daniel Brown who resign- ed earlier this year from the post. ''We are indeed fortunate to welcome an administrator who thrives on challenge, bas demonstrated progressive leadership and has a knowledgeable and diversified a background as Carr brlngs to SOuth Coast CommunJty Hospital,'' commen ted Victor Andrews, chairman or the board of director• of the hospital. Carr will immediately take over opera- tions of lhe 183-bed, private, non-profit ho!pital, said Andrews. A native o! Wilke•BllTt, Pa., Carr received his registered nursing degree, followed by I bachelor of science degrM and a masters degrees in hospital ad- ministration. Carr ii a member of the Amerk:an Colltge of Hospital Administrators and fw served on numberou1 holpltal boards. allied health a850ClatJons, n Ur Ii 0 ( organi:.allons and advisory councils.. Included in the $3 sun1mer recreation program fee is unlimited use of the Pink Bus Lines round trip bus from North Irvine to Newport Beach. via the various recreation program localions a n d .Fashion Island. On Monday, the ''sunshine" playground at University Park elementary school opens at ! p.m. Other parts of the progrt1rn include a travt'Jing tot lot to be avnilable thref' times \\'eeklv: a teen drop-in center at University High Sc~ool : adult programs at UC irl'ine and tennis lessons at the ltacquet Club public courts. Beside the programs paid for with city funds, there are a variety of self-sup- porting classes. Some still ha ve openings on a varying fee schedule basis. 'J'hese in- clude coed slow pitch softball. slim, swim ;ind trim: jogging, arts day camp, and creative dramatics. Unless at least 10 persons register for each of' the self sus- laining classes. they will not be offered, recreation coordinator Brian E. Clar k said. For exact bus or registration in- formation, residents may call Clark at 833-3840. NAMED ADMINISTRATOR krn1rd F. C1rr Colony Park .. • ... IF CONTINENTAL BUILT A STATION WAGON, COLONY PARK WOULD BE IT? Colony Park otters the new look of luxury in station wago111 for 1972. Long the leader in the station wagon field , •• 1eo for yourself the most magnificent collection of better wagon idea s under one roof •.• Test drive one today .. , Mon t ego . • • Vi llager "Car Of The Year" ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL IN A STATION WAGON • ~ • THE HOTI'EST STYLING ON THE ROAD TODAY I e GREAT SELECTION e ALL WITH AIR CONDITIONING "Orange County'1 Family of Fine Cori• I ( Jl 11 , I, I 2S26 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • &40-&e:IO I I ' I I t I I I I I I I I I I ' I " " .. I ' .. I • °' ado1 lor .. , Fl dete JI. ,, $213 c:enl . Al 01"1 I .OOI c·apl snd N• sho1 mm lligl tryi1 nort A thro who si;f de~ rom M a I< H ,, sai< par. T ,, mai dog L: dow posi cid( SI by. kllli Si Eas ove1 MIC hav lo tom but R1 E: 5i, • of I ace, hi gt mai the of t ' ' ' • ' ' • I I ( I .f DAILY PILOT Kid s Get One For the Road SACRAi\1ENTO CALLING: you likely noted in the ney,·s that Asstmbly1nan John T. Knox , the ~mocrat from up in. northern Californla'1 Richmond. is at it again In trying to knock you off your fa vorite tavern st ool and giv e it to some teenager. Knox is author or the 1ncasure !hat would tower the legal age for in1bibing in alcoholic spirit_, to just 18 summers. T<ltldq Junt l.l. 1972 • .· •r •I Vl'I Tt .. PlleM Campaign Gifts Filed But Many Nixon Backers Rerru,tin Secret WASHINGTON (AP) -AJthoucb a president of • oolWrln1t llrm and tht poW.icaJ Mmm.lttee.of the nat1oo'a..lar1est rtock broUrag~ ttrm top the llilt ot publicly reportfd contributors to Pre.si- dent Nixon's re.election campaign , the !dent.it.la of hundreds of we.althy backer& titill re.main secret. Hoffa Fla ys C:o11ditions Of Priso11s \\'1\SH!NGTON (AP ) -After four years and nine mo:iths in a federal prison. former Teamsters President Jim· my Hoffa has told Congress ~ \Vays to irnprove federal penitentiaries . DomUons of $15,000 apiece from PeJ>6i Cola Prelklent Donald M. Kendall and lht-Elttc:ttve-Government Association of Merrllt L~ Pierce, Fenner & S1ollh were lbted iri campaign reports as the larrest Nlxon contributions filed with tJ1e General Accounting Office. The rtporls were the first quarterly .ac· countlng of cootribulions and spending required under a new federal e~ law that went Into effect ~PfU 7. The report•, filed Sstiiid>y but not open for Inspection until Monday. cover the period from April 7 through May 31. They "'ere required of all political com- mittees expecting to &pend or actually spending more than $1,000 in behalf of a candidate for federal office. Kendall and J\.1errill Lynch were among SI donors "'ho gave a total of $409,405 in gifts of $2.500 or more to various Nixon con1mittees. The remainder oI $1.22 million collected since April 7, and listed by the \\lashington-based Finance Co mmittee to Re-ele<:t the President and three •atellite committees. \\'as donated by several thousand contributors in individual swrus of less than $2 ,500 . The four committees ope.rating under the chairmanship of former Secretary of Commerce r.1aurice Stans have collected about $10 million -approximately a third of 1vhat Nixon expects to raise and spend fer hi s bid for the \Vhite House sgain. His II-year-old drinking Jaw squeezed through the Assembly on a vole of 54 to 12, which happened to be the bare !v:o- thi rds majority necessary for it to clear that house. All I ca n figure i~ rhal thi!I means U>tre were only one dozen gu ys who wanted lo prot~t their OY•n bat stools and M others who were asleep, as u.<rual. WOMAN WITH CANE SITS IN FRONT OF RAPIO CITY HOME Fun1r1I Service• Began Today, Expected to Continue Through Week \Vithout elaborating in his testimony prepnred for a Senate subcommittee he:1ring today on prison reform. Hoffa s:iid: .. I ha ve seen useless destn1ction of i:;roperty, maiming of human beings, loss of self.respect, arid inhumane treatment. Forrncr Atty. Gen. John i\1itchell, chief of the t\'i xon re-election drive, said re~l·111 !v th:1t identi1fes of those \vtJo gave sorne S9 rn illi ou before the new law \Vent inlo effect \\•i![ not be made public. ~ Ba!'ir all y the report affir1ned the general specu.Jatlon that the Republicans nre heading into the fall campaign y,•ith their presidential "'ar·chest bulging v.•hile the Deniocrats have been drained by pri1nary spendin g. THE SPEAKER probably yelled at the1n for the vote and their heads nodded ur> and do"'" on their chests. And that \\'SS if. You have a further suspicion 1hat nobody was really awake because not one M.IUI spoke against the Knox measure. \\1ell, there was one lawmaker '\'ho "'all ~wake enough 10 s1>eak in favor of the dr ink·a1-1B prop o s a I , J1e was Assemblyman Robert C. Cline. the Republican from Woodland Hills. 11·ho tried to get the same thing through the Legislatute last year. His bill died in the Senate. Anyway. Cline arose this time tn decl<1re. "If '"e ask young people to put their lives on the line on the batf!efield. thev should be able to buy a btit!!e or bee.r." \. YEAH, \\'ELL. !hat's probably true. Cline's commentary makes me draw up this mental picture of an IS.year-Old kid who swaggers inlo the loca l tavern in his Green Beret uniform. He looks big enough to take on two linebackers from the LA Rams wilh his left hand. He is wearing so many ribbom on his chest that he looks like he was hit by a 00l'l'l of fruit salad. The ltid eases his v.•ay up to the tavern rail and rumbles .at the bartender, "Gim· me a beer." I auppo!e you lhink lhe bartender is going to say. "I'm sorry, sonny.boy. but _you are too juvenile ·lo sop th e suds or th!" rair estnbli'ihment ' . ' .. No \l'ny. brother. NOT ONLY IS he going to get his beer. but he 'll ,R:tl it "'ith extreme rapidity nnd l h~··e is likely to be a stampede Of other patrons \'ylng for the privilege of paying for H. S:1 all Cline and Knox \1·ant to do is n1ake al! !h is pcrfectlv legal. Maybe this lo:. the thing hrc;i use then it will take all the fu n out of it and maybe we'll have f('11·er !8·year-0ld drinkers. 1\nv1\·ar. nil thi.<1 l\nox-C!ine business does1i·t ;eall\' mean that ,·our favorite place is going to be in l"aded .by teeny-bop- pers. Already Asse1n bly ,\.1inority Floor Leader Bob ~lnna~an . th<' Reou hlican frorn Stockton. has declared that he 'll try lo gel lhe v.·holt thing rC'considcrrd. EVEN' lF f\101'\0GAN rails lo a"•aken a111· or the f1~ 1rho dozed the Ir.st litne lhfo ugh. the 1.~.~ue h;is lo clear the State Srnale and thru 11·ln Gov. Reagan 's f;ignature . This nla \" nrlt lie too cun1fortin.1? for the t'l<lerly att.em11tin,g t:1 pre!'erve their 011'n :-;tools in the local taverns. The Senate !hese days ha s prol'ed to be prf'tly sleepy too And Gov. Re:igan .~ecn1s to be signing el'erything lo do \\'ith 18-year-old~ that gets shoved in front of him. Arter all rolks. this is an election year. And I suppose you 've he;ird about whal else the teenaj.!ers c•do. They can vote, you see. Rain Seeding Reported In Area of Rapid City By F. lllClli\JlD CICCO."'-"E RAPID CJ TY, S.D. (AP):---Bur 1;1I ol' Hapid City's flood vieti1ns begins IDdny 111 lhrce cemeteries "'hile survil'or;.; continue the search for the dead. Indiv id ual graveside services will be conducted for the identified victims "'ho died late Friday and early Saturday when r:iin·5\\'ollen Rapid Creek eru pted through thi s city of 43.000 persons in the shadow of the Black }Ji\ls. ''The servi ces will probably go ror al least a week ." said a funeral director. A mass memorial service is scheduled Sun· day at a local high school. Cfvil Defense reported Sund av that the death toll stood St more than 200, but on ~1onclay ii said the toll was 175. Howe ver, new&men counted 161 identified bod ies and 31 unidentified. a lolal of 192. The loll was expected lo climb. Officials Oaim They I-lave Names 111 V co· as Sc hen1c ~ LAS VEGAS \UPI ) -lnvesligators had the na1nes today of suspccls in the "hollow chip" scheme that bilked gambl- ing casinos of at least $300,000. Sheriff Ralph Lamb, said the r ing - which needed the cooperation of casino ernployes to operate apparently pressured gambling workers "'ho were in debt to loan sharks into coopera ti ng. "It \11as strictly a hon1e grown organization with no connections v.·ifh any national crin1e organization,"' s;iicl one in- vestigator . '"but it certainly "'as \\"l.'11 organized " Investi,'lators said they v•ere almost certain who led the ring. Lamb said his departn1enl had the na1nes of 10 casino 1\·orkers involved. Jack Str:il1on, of the Nevada Gam ing Control Board, !'aid slate investi~alors had the nan1cs of at least 25 persons involved. '"\Ve. think il originated through t!K' loa n sharks," Lnn1h said ... \\"(' steir.cd 1n- \'es!ig.1t in~ wh1>n l\\.'O or three i.:11~·11 gul 1n a tough spot and came in to repo rt !hat the muscle \\':1s being put on lhrm." The schen1e is built on a hollo'' alun1inum tube . contoured a nd pa inted on the side to look like a stack or chips. A real chip, usually of $5 or $10 value. is glued on top. Real chips -of the SIOO denomination -can be hidden inside. A spokesn1 an s:iid duplication or rt·ports and co11rusio11 caused erroneous report~. ()!ficials said soine bodies 11·ere rnoved to nearby communities Sundav when three Jtapid City mortuaries ust•d <ls t('mporary n1orgue s b e c a nl e overcrowded . The Oinaha Neb. \\I o r I d . II e r a I d reported in toda y's editions th at l\\'a cloud-seeding cxµcr iment s 11·ere con- ducted F'riday in the Ra pid City area. one of them about.) p.tn .. an hour before th e devastating rains be~an. f he expcrin1 ents v.·err conducted by the Ins titute of Atmos pheric Sciences. Sou!h Dakot.1 School of ;\·lines & Technology "for increasing 1\•at er supp ly t1nd stu· dying the dynamit:s of h<1il produ ct•on .. , the copyright article quot.es an unnarn"d federal official as saying. The ne"'spaper quoted Pro r. Arne1l Dennis. chief of the i n s I i I u t e ' s meteorolog ical analysis group. as saying the experin1en !~ ··had loa!Jy a nd ;iOsolu!cly no!hinµ: lo do 11•ith the storm th.:1l ·hit Rapid Cily. I "·ould slake my Ji!e on that.'' !·le said salt v.•as dropped from a plane, standard practice in tl1e instilute's study for six years. As th e clea nup nnd search CQntinucd at' J{apid lty. aJaj . Gen. Duane L. Coming:, c:)lnrnander of the South Dakota National Guard, said, "Guardsmen have been find· ing bodies all day. It will continue for days and d:iys." 'Who gave McGovern my old speeches 1' Storms Pelt North Plains· "The ca uses are not one.sided, but much or this can be cu red by proper planning and edUC"ation on the part of !he prisoners and the officials of the in- s! :tufion. ·• e Launch Slated CAPE KENNEDY (UPI ) -7he space tige ncy prepared to launch lhe fourth in a series of high-capacity Inte lsat 4 con1· 1nercl al communications satellites today lv serre as a space s\\·itchboard for In. than Ocean nations. IN SHORT. • • I 7he countdown aimed toward an af· ternooo launch of the 3,123·pound space<:raft aboard an Atlas·Centau r rocket as tall as an ll·story build ing. The $13.5 million satellite is owned by the Comsat Corp .. and its ~2 partner na- tions "·hich make up the International Tcleco1nmunications Satellite Consortiuin (Intelsat ). e 1•11i11ti11g1 E'o1111d \\'ORCESTER, i\'lass. (UPI) -· Four 11·ell-known paintings valued at nearly $2 rnillion have been returned to the \\lorcester Art ?¥1useun1 almoat as n1 ys teriously as they disappeared. T\~'O Gauguins, a Rembrandt and a Picnsso. stolen from the museum's walls hlay 17. 1vere found in "reasonably go..1d condition.'' said Poli ce Chief C'reorge D. O'Ne ill f\1 onday . But he declined to re\'eal ho1\ or 1vhere the paintings \\'ere recovered. e General Fi1•11a \VASHINGTON (AP) -The forn1er U.S. air cornn1ander in Vietnan1 , fired for ordering unauthorized air strikes again.~t J\1orfh Vietnamese preparing for attacl!:. says he \\.·ould order the strikes again if he had the opportunity. "If I had it lo do over. I "·ould do the sa me thing," Gen. John 0. Lavelle told a House anned services subcomm ittee. However, he ' said. he \vou/d "check into reporting procedures better" before issu· ing the order. Lavelle was recalled from Vietnam arter reports prepared by officers under his tomrnand 1vere fonvarded lo \Vashlngton indicating fal sel y that the North Vietnamese had undertaken some kind of attack to just ify the retaliatory strikes. McGovern Jl ictor By 5.5 Percent SACRAf\1ENTO (AP \ -Sen. George McGovern's victory margin f or California's 271 wlnner ·take ·al l DemocraUe National C o n v e n t i o n delegates w11 ·175,813 votes. Final unofficial results Monday showed ?.icGovem gamerid 47.2 percent of the Democratic votes, -Ind Sen. }fubert Humphrey ir.7 percent. 111 1\1 e 1r~ 1'11 r·l..- Sen. George ~·Jc Govern, 1\'ilh a high rise apart1nent loon1ing in background, carries h is campaign for delegate support in Ne\v York's pri1nary to resi- dents of Co·op Cily in the B r o n x. 1iicGovern 1nade a strong de(ense of his corn1nit· 111ent lo Israel's independence during the rally. British Ha11<lecl Ireland De1na11<l s By Protestants BELFAST !UPI) atilitant Protestants put rire rJe111anti.s to Unl ai n tod:iy as their pril'e for calling off a threatened sho wclnv.·n \Vith Briti~·n troops th at could spark the worst violence yet in Northern Ireland . 1'hc Irish Repu blican Anny f!RA) stepi:;ed up its bombing campaign today in a resurgence of 1·l<JJence !hat h:Js claimed 12 lives in the pa<>t 1vce k -a total oi 367 in the 1hree years Of strife. U'illian1 \Vhitelaw. the secretary of stale for Northern Ireland, reacted to the increased turmoil by announcing he '"as sending another battalion of 550 Brit is h troops to Northern Ireland lo bring the total there lo n1ore lhan 15,000. \Vhitelaw scheduled a meeting today \\'ith leaders of the P r o t e s I a n t paramilitary Ulster Defense Association t UDAJ to prevent a head-on coll ision bct"·een British forces and LlDA bar- ricade-builders. Thf UDA. which has barricaded Belfa st P rotestant areas temporarily the past five wee ks. had thrc:itened to cre:ite permanent Protestant "no go '' areas th is 1reekend unless Brilish for ces invade the JHA's Londonderry strongholds. \Vhitelaw in his Parliam ent speech warned : "I will lake the sternest measures to slop the spread of that cancer (n~go areas) elsewhere." Al least. $10 mil_lion ~ias been spent by Democratic presidential a s p j r a n t 8 already and two -Sens. Hu bert JI. Hum. phrey of fl.t innesota llnd George S. ~lcC'J()\'ern of South Dakotn -are in debt The Democratic National Commilte~ repor ted only $33.000 in cash on hand a:;; of ~·l ay 31. F'urthern1ore. it says it re- nu11ns n10re than $9 milhon in the red fr.::111 1!)6(1. ~111l't of !he lt·;Jding Den1ocralic hopct uls. wil h the exception or Sen, Jlrnry '-1. J<ick son of \Vashi ngton and A_laban1a C_ov. George. C. \\'allact, disclosed 1naJor catnpai"n donors early in the primnrles. b Nixons Celebrate \\'AS\!11\'GTON ~AP) -Presldent and l\irs. Nixon had a family dinner party aboard the Navy yRcht Sequoia Monday n~ght to celebrate the first wedding a°" n1versary of daughter Tricia and ion-in· Ja1\' Eclward Cox. The menu included steak. shrimp in coconut -.a delicacy served at th~ir \Vhite House wedding - and . a rudge-1c~ .cake that said "Happy Annive.rsary, Tricia and Ed." Rulitags Bala1ace Oact Nixon's Court Continues · Violent Ra.in Co1ite1 1trates • lll Mon! than ,~ million Democratic votes were ~ but write-ins were still being counted'tlf San Francisco County. McGovern's total was l,527,392 com- pared to Humphrey's l ,352, 379. Its-C9nservative Bent' Te111perllll1re1 Mlllll Lew ,r .. ,. . " " ~ 1J 51 M 00 ., ,, " ,. Ii It .3' ~: ll 11 s' ~4 ll I~ 61 •• •• ·" ·" . "• i1 1. ,ll ·~ n ,4 11 II Jg " .. " <ldr'? . " " ~ .m ·" .n II 11 .01 ,. ., >M • 1H R .• ~ " .. . " " " ~ ~ .<rl II " Su .. , ~-. Tlfle• TUllOAY Second 11i.t.-• ..'-••• -.U:12 IJ.."'· .,.1 5tconcl loo# , .,.._,. "· •:OI p.m, 1,1 ft01tllOAY lllral i.w .••..•..••. ,,, •~JS •.rn. •l.1 Flr1! flltlt ,,. ....•• ,, l ;JO,,tn, ... Se<:Otld tl10fl ......•... 12:11 •.11'1. J.1 ~ low . • . . . •:ll ,.,,,. J.J Su~ I I ... J:40 1.m. Itta f;H Jl.lft. MOOO'I lllMt 1;.U •. I'll. lafl 1t:Z7,,"" Monorail Purchase? SACRAMENTO CAP) -tbt ltate 1vould purchas& the private monorail sy.stem at Cal Expo in Sacramento undtt a blU )ntl'olluaed tn tht Ammbly. The bill, wblch wo<iJd appropriate $2.I ml!Uoo for the purchase, wu introd\.Jced Monday by Alaemblyman Walter Powers (D- Sacrame11to). DAILY PILOT ORJVERY SERVICE Ottlvtry of the Dilly P'l .. t b ;u1rantffd MOlllNy.tlllrlclt.,T If "" • Mt Jilt¥1 .,..,,. PtJW b., f !XI p.nt., «ill t tW "°"" Qllltl Wiii ~ m"'9tlr to -,.u.. c.1i. .,.. ... .., ..... 1;» p.rn. ~t11rt1y ef'ICI Svnclt)'I Ir VOii Cle Mt ,_.Ive l'"JI' '1lf'f br • •·""· 5•tvruy • ., t .. "'-~'Y• uill •M • c.,., wn1 M .......,_, .. YOll. Clllt •re ltk'" Wllll N a.m. Teltphonts M""t °"""9 C9vnty lo.l'la •••••••, ......,. Mort11wtt1 HuntlntlOll hldt tlld WISlrnlMlff ........ ••• ••• ,. •1111 .. ft C""-to, c.itlrtN •te0, k n Jw.n Ct111tf,.,., Dtflt '9inl, lollrfl ~ L.-wi Nllwlf ....... WASlllNGTON ,(UPI) -Jn a fiw-ry of oplnkins and orise21 the "Nl:rorl" Supreme Court llas continued to derilonstrai. the CONetvative forces «""work amOog its 'members. But from the 1landpoint of numbers alone, there have beu-.mott deciaions "'PPorll"i Individual Uhertlo! tlian d .. eying thtm. On• Mondoy, the cow:t dtl!'iod an •I- • NEWS ..4NA.LYSIS lort by blacki 1o b,..k la1o, prlvote chlba ind upoodod tbt rtgbt of the politoinan on tho beat l<>HU<h IUSpeCu, ~ the WIMI time, II 1ov1· 1 double wilt to Indigent criminal dtlendants. ainlck a blow for <!"'•umers and r.:t down an officer who ltOpped dlJtrtbut on ol le•O•ts oo • mlll\ai'J bsse. The private cluti case, ln-.oJvlng 11 Mooi10 ,Lod&<i 1n· HtiTlsburg. Pa., was a Supreme Court "flral" The L<>yal Order of Moou specifies white memberahip. The court h11 ruled In the past ngalll!t rldal dlJcrtmination when blacks hive aued to open "prlvate" swimming pools. Still another case lnvolvlng 1 private pool in Sliver Spring, Md ., a suburb of Wsshl~, 1hu been, accepted for review next term. The A100$e lodge 1uit userted the Pennsylvania'• fe'guJ1Uoo of the lodge operation through Jta Uquor license Jaw1 lmpl.Jcated tM atate sufficiently to au~ ject the club to constitutional re- quirements. Only "state action" is covered by the<14tb Amendment, which Js EQuality. Justice William ff. ~hnqulat, a rtetnt Nixon Appointee, on behalf ol the ma· jortty rejected the notion that "the ,..i. wa1 ~· partner er even 1 joint venttnr 1n thii club'a enterprtae.11 ,,,,.. Hheral bol<iovtra from t1ie court's majority under torfuer Chie( Jll!tlce Earl Warnn -JU!tl<es Wllllam n. DouglA!, WllJfam J, Brennan, tnd Thur11ood M1r1h1JJ -dissented frnm thl1 .rultng and from an extension Of l tpollceman's authority to "stop and h11k" susptcta on tht street for dangerous weapons. Thi~ power wa, granted by t1ie hl1ti court In 1963, If clrcumatancts w11Tant even thou~h the Pollet do not 'baff enough ev idence to make an arH1t.. ' / • Avoided Proseeutlon I !Fl( Said to Ha ve 'Fumed' at Leaks LOS ANGELES f AP 1 -ThE> late President John V. Ken· nedy fumed over government news "leaks," says a former assistant secretary of state, but never sought to prosecute the culprits who released data the aide said he considered more stnsilive than the Pen tagon Papers. The reactions of Kennedy lo lea ks on subjects ranging Noise Bill Near Death SACRl\l\lENTO (APt -An airport noise bill one oppone nt i:a!led a "license to pollute" has made \1·ha! \ook.'i like its last echo in the Cal1forn1;1 Legislature. fron1 an i1npen<llng U.!'l.1 General Assembly meeting tc/ the 1962 Cuban missile eris~ 1vere related Monday by a former assistant secretary .of state for public: affairs, Robc:rt l\1anning. no\\' editor or Atlan· tic monthly. . ~1anning't aff1da\'il was f~ed 111 lI.S. District. Court ~re hv attorneys !or D a n i e I ' . Ellsberg and Anthony J. Husso. who face charges or stealing the Pentagon Papers • ' " on the ocigins or U,S. "" Sta lkitag ill "ai11 l'Olvemenl in Vietnam nnd leaking them to ne1vs meJ11a . San Jose Police crept up on a supermarket early to· Their trial is scheduledi lo day expecting 10 flush out robbery suspects '\'ho start June 26. hQld hostages for six hours by locking four employe.s It is one year loday eince in, a refrigerator and tying up two others. But the lhe New York Times prifl led f h t d the first installment of the trjo escaped empty-handed a ter a os age escape secret Pentagon-commiasioned _ __.:,fJ..j•:.:m_t_h_e_co_o_I_e_r_a_n_d_n_o_ti_fi_e_d_p_oI_ir_e_. ______ _ docu ments . Other newspapers later published parts of tbe Jlapers. Ellsberg and Russo claim !hey are being unfairly singled out for prosecution because or their antiwar views. They seek lo sho\v that c l ass fied docu 1nents are r o u t, n'e I y "!e<iked ." LA-area Mayors Request 'Smog Disaster' Labels SACR AMENTO (AP I three year~ by lo11·er hea lth DAILY PILOT 6 Radical Saul Alinsky Dies CAR.AIE.1. .(llPll _ Saul lmml1tated fron1 Rus£1.~ lie "one or the few reall y gre..r · d ·~ •-m H-"owood 111en of lhil ctnlUF\ " Dffid.....-AlNlt)' haCl a simple Krt ua~ uu \JH,, '1utlrJdkal formula for social High School • and ttteived a Ahn.sky atttmpted to mobi l· nform _ u..-1 the power doctoral degree in sociology at iu-3pathet1c aad depressffl ~-•-u · t C Ch1·c go "'h1te communities 1n hi s t-a rl~· iilructurt. luc n1vtrs1 Y o a . l d' d th career, but later said the n11d · "Goad them, confuae lhen1• In l930, Alin sky 5 u ie e die class was brain\\'&shed !1) irritate tbe~~most of all , A~ Capone gang f~nl the 111• hP,lleve thPy i.tlollid "001 111~1..E> m..: .. , thein live bv-tlle:ir O\'m side n! part of hts-doctor:i! -' ed 1 a fuss ." rules~·" said Alinsky, who ~-ose thesis. tie \~·as accept >Y rrom the slums or Chicago to ·Capone 's hen<.:hmen _as a good A group of blacks in ii poor become a tead~ng organizer or Ji.~tenc:r to their stories. section or Chicago onN> corn - Poor communities. During the sarne dccadr. hi· plainM lhey could not gt·t The se I f.pr 0 c I a i Q1 e d organized rur-the CIO ~~ou~ !heir garbagr 1· n JI e l' I" d " ('e···1ona( radical" died Of Wl!h John 1.. [,('Wl!'i, and rollSf(! h('C3 USe !hey h:'.ld 11!\ 111fhH'J11·1· pro -I h Ul citv hall. Al111Sk\ !\lid lhenl heart attack Monday while money or s arct:-roppers 111 . ~alkJng atone in a do\vntown tht south. !ht' NC\\'Sp<1p1·r to picket lhl" home of o!11c1<1I Section of this coastal conl· Cu.ild and !ht• Jn!crna!1n11al in charge at lus 11h1l1· 1111d B d S dleclass neighborhood 'l'i11· .. 1 munity where he wa s \'iSiting riga e 111 'pain t f1<.·ials's neighbor~ t·ui11pl.11til·d h'·, inva11·d ex-wife Jean. who A chunkv. Sl :\.·foote,'.·. ".'". I ,. h ' Al k .1nd the •arba,·•,• .1.1 ... • ' suffers from mu J t i p I e c· ~l~·s~o .... c1 · _ins ) s ·11 tiv1t1es 111 1111• 1950s included lel'tr-d sclerosis. organizing tll :inu-{'unlrnuiu..,1 Anotht'r rrpurt of li1.; !;•I'll('~ A passing physician lritd lo labor un ions 111 lt:i lv uui!i·r <';unc <ti a ~i'l'IJl"l.tn •'l1ll1·~1· re.vive the 63-year-old poverty 1 11 ·1 1 "l•"rf , ,·1udenl<i l'Ulll1>l;1111l'll the cootract to I It· I' h1f"I 11 , fighter Ylith heart massage. 1'.tilan. "·ho la!C'r bel'anic p,,11,. di,riphnP 11·:is ~11 •1rie"t that but Alinsky ~'as pronounced Paul VI. !hi' onh· !hzn~ tl1{·1· 11ere dead at the scene. French philusopher ,J,u·iiu•·" p1·nnitli·d to 1lro 11.1..; rl1r1v · Gum wUI be the weapon." All.Nii~ 51Jd After th• sludents each (•hewed tw~ packs o( gun1 and dropped lt on the sidewalks. school of· f1c::1als agreed to ta.tk abodt the l'UOlplaiot:!I. --- Ahnsky'a fl.Al wife, Helene, died when atlemptine to-save 11 drowning chifd; lit-;. ~as divorced from his !ccond wife, Jean, two years ago. and is ~urv1vt'd by hi:!! third wife, !i·r1 1t-and l\\'o rhlldren fron1 h1~ f11·.;,f marriage, Catherine ilnd llt1\lrl .\irpurt (;1:anl Jailed during the 1940s "'hile Ataritain once called Ah11sh 1 g1un lrying tG or g a n i z e a i------= ~------------....:'1';_----------, Midwestern slum, A I i n s k y l.<JS A.\(;Et.1-:S (AP • -.\ S:! I n11llion granl has been a1\ :1rded 111 Lo<> .\ n .t: f' I f' ~ J111t·rna!1011:1I Airport 1•)1" th .. pll l'<'ha~1· nr L1nr1 1111 \.\ h1rh lf'l 111.slall ;.ill 11t•ath1·r landu1~ S.\ .~tr Ill CC]Utp111~·nl . penned his m a n i f e s lo "Reveille for ltadicals" and gained son1e notable follo1ver s. includioi:: Fann \\'or k e rs Union !i>.adt'r Cecar Ch<1ve:1.. In the pasl t1vo decades. he has criss-crossed the United Slates organizing poor com- n1uni tie.'i to fight for frcedotn :\nd equality in 1vork. educa- lion and living conditions. Enroll Now Fall Semester 1q '.•l"lRAlllJN ~~t ONLY ALL-DAY CLASSES Kindergarten thru 8th Grade • Teaching the 4 R's wit h pho nic s • Door-to·Ooor Bus Service •Be for e and Alter School Car e ·Reasonable Tuition l'l ft)\I'. \~IN I.•' I f 1·~·1 Rron•'"''" •' ••· HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS Keep your children 1n gocxl h~nds. The bill would IH1ve rreatC'd a l\VO-year tno r al 11r1 u n1 aga inst the ltl1ng of 1101.:;e pollution claims a g a i n .~ 1 airports. Its 2·6 \'Ole in !lie Assen1bly J u d 1 c 1 a r 1· Con1- mittee 1\-londay 111<1kr~ 1t almost certain 1t l\'Oll t he heard from again There are now 35 <·ase;; prn· ding against the t:1ty of Los Angeles. hlanning. who filed. an af- f1dal'il because he "'i be out of lhe country and 'pble to 1estify. supported th~ Clerense contention. Born in Chica~o on .Ian. :\0, (7 14 1 962-3312 Five mayors of !he Los cosL~ and the attraction o( new 1909. Alinsk y iva~ the only Angeles air basin are trying lo -~;n~d~u~'~''2Y~· ---------'~h~;~1d'...'.o~f~J~•~w~;~,~h_!'.P'~'~'~"~"~':"h~o~~~~~~~~~~~'-----==========::':=========::::::::.. persuade Gov. Ronald Reagan Ask about our Day C.:im p ind Summer School. $10 The author, Asseinblyn1<111 John 1\ no x (D-Rich rnond 1. contended that his bill 1vould be a moratoriurn only on n1onetary dama,e.cs, anci lh;:it injunction~ could ~!ill !)(.' :-ought for noise allat.en1ent He said that when he ser\•Cd under Kennedy and President Lyndon B. J ohnsott'. he fre- qlientlv "leaked" material h11nseif and termed the State l.>epartinent "as w~e open a~ Yankee Stadiuni." VD :t:du ~a tio11 Bill Protects T eacliers SACRAMl::NTO f AP) \\'ith only one dissenting \'Ott. the Senate has approved a bill ain1ed al stepping up venereal disea~e educa1ion 111 California schools lo combal w h a I Desertion Trial Set LONG BEAClf <U PI 1 Terrv Lvnne Sn1ith. 20. will stand ti·ial on child aban- donment charges in the c·asr of her S-year-0ld l\vins, ll'ho c·ame to nation,11 :ltlcntion aft tr they v.·ere found \~·an dering in 'an alley. Socia l 11·orkers h u n l r cl unsuccessfullv for tnore lhrin l\\'O months for the parents of the cute, blonde but not verv talkative children, Bri:'.ln and Tammy. Muni cipal Court .Judge Ken - neth S:.ithcrland ruled ~·londav that !here 11·a.~ en o u i: h l'\'ldencf' f11r :1 trial. ;ind nrdt'rrd !\liss: ~n111h to appc.1r fo r arraignmenl July 6 1n Superior Court on charges of desertin~ childrrn wi th intrnl !o <1:ha11don and dt'S('r\1ng <'hildrC'n undrr c1rcu1n.i:;!anccs likel y 1.0 lead !o great bodily 111ju r.1'. la11·n1akrrs l'.al l a \' [) epide1n1c. Thr measure-hy Asse n1blvv.•on1an Ala rf.'h Fong . approved JG-I ~londay. 11·ould remove lhf> threat of loss or a teacher's license for giving VJ) 111stru<:t1un without parental pertnission It 1vould do !hat b.v ren101·- ing VI) instruction from the eUucat1on code section govern- ing ."ex education. a subject for wh1f'h a teacher can still lnse a license for instructing v.-11houl parental consent. Those supporting increased ins!ruc1ion in venereal disease prevention in California public schools have argued 1hat teachrr~ ha\'e been afraid to conduct such classes for fear or losing their t e a c h i n g credentials. ~!rs. Fong'.~ bill 1vould still rrquire lhal parents be notified that a v en ere a l di sease class 1vas to be taught and "·ould permit them to '9 !! their children fro1n s1 cla ss. fj J{ea g:'.l!l !;!)..{ \'Car lf'!oed a hill by ~lrs . Fong that l'JOuld have allowed VD <·oursrs lo be taugh t without parcnt;il ~·nnsen!. ~donda1'" l'ote srnt the hill hal'k to ihe i\s.~P1nhl.v for t':\.· peeled rotil inc conrttrrencc 111 Senate a1nrnlhnc111s. to declare a "sinog disaster area·• so that pollution con- trols could be ordered by ex- ecutive edict. 1 The 1nayor'i n1ade the ir presentation rt-1onday . But ,_, Beagan has doub1s whelher he <.:ould legally act in such . a rnanner . He 1vi!J seek an op1n . io11 Jrom th£> attorn e y! general's ofrice. Anio11g their request~ is t~at 1 B£>agan order the ~nv~rs1on of seven rnillion vehi~les 1n the 1 b:isir. lo non-polluting fuels suc h as propane or com- pressed natural ga~ over the I nt'xl two years. The n1ayors said they had 1 "a greal reception·· from Heagan. but the llepublican chiel executive made RO prom-1 ISCS. , One of fteagan's aides, Jim .Jenkins. said the governor would have a statement about JO days after his staff studies the n!:quest . San Bernardino ~1ayor W. R. "Bob" Holcomb •aid J~e~gan appe11Ttd to hav~ some reservations about , the potential $2 bi llion cost of con - vertirig vehicle~ in lhe five air basin counties to nonpolluting fuels. But Holcomb said the cost would be offset within • Hill Would OK <..:oudou1 Sale SACRA~1ENTO (AP) -Thr 1 publ ic sale of prophylactic • devices fr om restroom ven·' ding machines "'ou\d b t' authori7.ed by a bill on its \\'ay lo !he Senate noor. Passed 8-4 ~fonda}' by tht Senalr Finance Com mittee ,/ !he bill requires that the <lcviccs bear an expiration date beyo nd 1vhich they should 1101 be used, and instructions on use and venereal disease. EVERYTHING YOU WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT FACIALS, BUT WERE AFRAID TO ,ASK ! ADRIEN ARPEL. FAC IAL. DEMONSTRATION: THIS WEC:K, TUESDAY ANO WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13 ANO 14 ONLY, JO A•'-1 ANO Z P~I IN Q'HE BEAUTY SALON, WH ETHER; You 've: [VE R HAO A FACIAL OR NOT . YOU MUST SEE T HE ADRIEN ARP EL1S M ETHO~S ANO ~fACH INES. WATCH OUR SPECIALISTS ust THE EUROPEAN FACIAL EQUIPMENT THAT VAPORIZES , BRUSHES , VACUUMS ANO CLEANSES '.TH E SK!N , SEE THE MARVELOUS RESULTS OF THE ORGANIC CREAMS, MASKS ANO FR ESHENERS THAT PURIFY THE SKIN, MAKING IT SUPER -CLEAN ANO GLOWING. NO OBLI GAT!Oti. t.IM ITEO 5EATltiG, MAKC YOU ~ RESERVATION NOW. COMPLIMENTARY GI FT, VALUEO AT $5. CALL OUR BEAUTY SALON NEAREST YOU: GLEtiOALE, BEVERLY HILLS, PASADENA, ANAHE:IM Ol't NEWPORT • BEAUTY SALON • ROBINSON'S NEWPORT • FASHION ISLAND • ' ' 6.(.(,2800 II Say hello to an o ld friend. Its heyday was int he Roa nngTwenlies :ind now it's making a comeback . General Telephone has ju'l added this Candlestick phone tn its dccor"tor line . You can get it in black or rrd.orwhite. And you can gel it simpl y hy calling our IJusiness office. J ust tell them you want lo talk lo an nld friend. (liji~ GEOERALTELEPHDOE • • • • " • -• , •, ,_. " " • , • -~ . . ·-' , . . • a DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Controversial Opinion A ruling by an ap pella te co urt in Los Angele11 County has 1udd enly pre8ented the cou r t.s and legal profession with the passi bili ty that thousa nds ol criminal cases may have lo be retried. The specter of su ch a massive legal ta ngle was raised by a controversial opinion based on the state's Code of Civil Procedure ICCP). The code cal ls for dls- qualiflcation of a judge "when he ha:i: been retained or employed a5 cou nsel for an y party .~ri.t~.in two years prior to the commencement of the acti on. The judge In the Los An geles case had served in the di strict attorney's o!fice Jess than two years before the trial 1n l\'hich the defendant wa s fou nd guilty of a uto thcfl. l'rev1ously th e code had been in terpreted to mean I ha! 1.n!y those new judges who ma~ have been a.ctively enga':l!d on the particular Issue during service with the pros"··utJo n or as private lawyers wouJ d be barred. ~!re tching the conflict-of-interest interpretation be· yo nd this li mited scope couJd have serio us repercussions h er e in Orange Co unty, Y.1here three former prosecut or.! are now on the bench. The appell ate court deci!iion will be revie wed by th e California Supreme Court. where the narrower in· terpr etation appears to be at least li kely. Can Public Be Weaned? A massive screening job to pick six k ey staff mem· bers for the Orange County Transit District fro m 248 applicants has been completed. . Handled by a consultin~ firm. the scree111ng "'ent Into such questions as experience in public and priva te agencies, educational bac kground, goal orientation, pub- lic exposure and leadership ability. The team "ill come together at the beginning of the Sadness in All Populist Movements ~YDNEY J. HARRI0 When the "ordinary people"' get tired of political double·talk, what do you .!IU~ pose they fall for? Politi cal triple-talk. That's the: &adness in all the »<:alled ••populist" movement11. like the George Wallace boomlet we are seeing these davs. The people are quite right. as usual. in resenting and re- jecting the double· latk or the !ltllndard politiciiins of both parties. None-of them ~ really ad· dressing himself to their central prob- lems and conce rns in frank and honest fashion. They are, and ehould be, dis- gusted. BUT BECAUSE tbe ordinary people are much better about knowing what is wrong than abou t knowing how things can be set right, they escape the oily em· brace.!I of the standard politicians only lo fall into !he equally oleaginous clutc hes Cir a populist like Wallace. He expresses many of their frustrations e nd discontents, In 1nuch the same way as Hll ler expressed the frustrations and discontents of the German people after \\'or!d War 1; the mistake the Germa n! niade was In assuming that the man who understood their co mplaints was also the r ight man to re<::tify them . Instead. when he took JXlY.'f'r with lhf'ir prayerful con- r;ent, he worsen~ th~ situa tion fQr everyone in short 1imr. MEN LIKE WALLACE rant agai nst Dear Gloo111y Gus There's a lot of waste space on the primary ballots. Why not m•ke them smaller and .!lave money ·•nd voting boolh epace at lhe same lime? -E.S. Tllhl fNtur• rlflKl1 ''"""' vi.-"" •Ke1wrllr #ltM er 1't1t __.,.,. SeM JM' llff --... t. e""""" ew1, CtUr f'll91 . ••the polllician1," and audltncts art nc:>t shrtwd enough to ncognlzt that this u the oldtlt of political ploys. Since 1nclt nt time!. pcpulist leader• have identified with "the mass," and then once In office have invariably proceeded to M:t up their ov:n per!ONI elite and milk the people for all they are worth. 'l'h~ lragedy in this whole eituation to- day rs that the Clrd lnary min feel s there is no one els!'! he can turn to; and desperate men submit to desptr1te cu res. The phenomenon known 11 '"fascism" in Europe is simply a response lo this dilemma by t~ massn who felt cheated by finance capitalism and were frightened by communi!m. IT JS NO ACCIDENT that Hitler called his party "Natlonal Socialists." lhus 1p- pe1ling both lo the little: man's patriC1tlsm as well as to his desi re for some redistrib ut ion of wealth. In this v.·1y he tried to ·escape through the horns of the dilemma. by attscking the plutocrats en the righ t 11nd the radicst~ on the ltlt at the sa me time. Populism ls not. as r.·lu~kir asserted, an incitement to people'! u·orst emolioru. It 1s, rather. a perverted use of lhelr basic instinct for decency and ju:itlce. But u•hen this in.!ltinct is ignorant. unln· formed . bitter. a.nd betrayed a~ain and aizain. it becomes putty in th e hand! or ;:ill the \Valla ces. ~·ho can triple-talk the doub!e·talkers out of office. Soviets Suffer Neurosis \\"ASlllNGTOf\I -President Nixon chose hls words carefully when he ra1M'd the subject of China wit h Soviet le;:ider Uonld Brezhnev at the t>.1oscov. i;ummi!. In the Soviet, the Presidenl knew, !here was no more sensi· live :irubject. His SCC· ret briefing papers reported, for exam· ple, that the British -.:: h a d round ~oviet Premier Alexie K~ s,vgin '"obsessed" \\'ilh !hf. ChinesP. 111e British coofid· ~d In Washington !hat Kosygin , during hi;i; 1967 visi t to London , had talked about the Chinese '"Tile way Pak!st11n i$ talk about lndi:uu." THE BRITISH HAO ur&ed Kosygin to join them in call ing 1 new Ge neva Confe~nce to Sttk a settlement of the Vietnam War. But the Soviet Premier had objected lh81 the Chlnt$e "would cre:ale di Hicullle~." "There are Chinese troo1>3 in North Vietnam," 11ald KosygJn darkly. He in· dicnted there was also a 1lrong pro- ChlneM! faction In llano!. "I criuld send this suggestion to Hanoi,'' ~ said, "but t am concerned about the clifflculUes." As evldtnce of their neurosill. the Russians began building up their military forte's along the Chinese border. A mllUon Soviet troop! now Une the border, llnd hydrogen-headed soviet missiles hove be"'1 calibrated lo hit Chinese tar· get.t. EVEN MOR! omlnou1 , the Runiaru1 are known to havt conlln11ency plan.!I call· Ins for 1 preemptive 8lrlke 1t Chlna'1 nucfe1t worb . The Ide• would be ti bock out Chfna's nuclear weaponry I (JACK ANDERSON) hefore ii could become a menace to the Soviet Union. The Chine.!le test their nucleat weapons t1l Plop Nor in dt&Olate Slnklans pro- vi nce . Signlflcantly, the Rus.!llans made 1 11ecret offer In New Delhi durlna: the lndia-Paklslan conOlct tliiat, if Chin• entered the war on Pakistan's 1lde, tbt Soviet Union wou ld mo u n t a "diversionary acHon In Slnkiana:." All this background was contained in the 11ecret papers that Nixon broucht with him to Moscow. HE HAD THE delic1t1 milalon of Im· provi!li Soviet-American r t J a t I o n 1 without Jeopardillng his new ropport with Chlnl. AJ he lattr recounted to 1ldt1, he made a firm but carefully wonted appeal to Bruhnev for peaet: between China and Russia. The President . 1ugeai.d lhlt both countries 11hld more land than they could UM in JOO yun" and Iha~ there!on, It would be foolllb tor them to l1cht ovtr the tiny, dlapultd Wanda In the Amur river •blch forma part of thelr bordtr. Then, In precltt langu11ge , he made It clear that he considered peaee between China and Rusala to bt in "the national intere!lt'' of the U.S. FOOTNOTE: White House 1trale8i~t~. who 10meUmes In private havt crlllclr.ed the President's conduct of forelcn afrtlrs, are lavl.!1hl y praisin g his performance In !-ioACOw. "The world 1hc1uld bt 1 11fer 1lla<t It ..... llld ..... "tlwb to Richard 1'1-. • new fi>cal year July 5. Th•lr tuk then will be to help Gordon J. Fleldln1. general manaaer of the authority, launch the di.strlct'' S31.8 million program to provide community and interurban bus transportaUon in the county. Bus service !.< badly need•d by th• elderly, the poo r and all who wouJd like to reduce automobile traf· fie. But "'hether enough of the public can be weaned from automobiles to make bu• •trvice pay Is the big qu esUon. If lt can be done. the rroup t:hosen ap~a.ra well qualifie<l to make it wo rk . McOoskey Owes Apology In a shocking performance for an electe d off icial of the United States 1overnment, Rep. Paul N. ~fcCJoskey (R·Calif.) made a statement on a networ k TV 1how last week that could put the Jives or American prisoners of war (POW) and missin& in action (MI A} in further jeopardy. Mcc loskey said he could foresee the North Vietna· mese flacing one POW in each potential bomb tar1et city o the north. He said that's what he would do if he were General Giap, the Communist defense mini~ter. Mr!. Carole Hanson of El Toro, chairman of the largest POW-MIA group, said, "Jn the five long years as the wife of a missin g-in-action American , I have nevtr heard a more 5hocking st1tement. nor one more danger· ous to my husband .and 1,700 other prisoners and mia· si ng men in Southeast A11ia ." Mrs. Hanson called for a retraction. apology and - U not forthcoming -congressional censure. Apology is the least the controversial a nti-Nixon Republican owes for virtually encouraging -as an offi· clal of the United States government - such mistr eat- ment of the prisoners. His conduct his crossed over the lint from irresponsible to reprehensible. . 'You mean. like my case?' Big Cities Need Directive ota School Buseti Court Has Compounded Confusion WASHINGTON -UnleM the Supreme Court promptly aC"Cepts the Richmond School case for final adjudJcation, it wi ll merely perpetuate the enormous con- fll!ion in every large: city of the country on school integration. Why the Supreme Court has not acled long before !his to Jay out constitution- ally required pa t· tens for school de- 1eg;re-gatlon in large metropolitan area.'l can only be attribu· ted to the legal par. alysis which besets the system. Jn the key decision !O far. the court hall'. merely compounded the confusion. It his failed to provide what President Nl1on pr1ytd for, new definitions which will make some sense and can be urtlfOrmly applied by the lower courts. WHAT IS NEEDED Is a directive en the 11tent of l ccepllble buatns which will fit moat circumstances and a delineation of -· de ll<lo -·Uon end• •lld dt jure 1erres1tion btalnl. The Richmond Schoof caM would setm to f:"OVlde unlimited latitude to a Supreme Cow-t which wished tG ruolve (rucHARD WILSO~ the issues involved. A lo'>'-·er court ruled lhat in Richmond the entire metropolitan area , notw ithstandi ng its e:xtension int() two surbu rban counties. must be con- "idered as a single unit for purposes of school desegregation by massive busing. A similar metropolitan.wide remedy ha~ been held to be needed in the Detroit area, \\-'here there are numerou.!I districts. BY A i ·I DECISION the fourth circuit court of appeals struck down the lower court ruling on the Richmond metropolitan area school11. Thi.!I leaves large cities of the country all locked in the same problem, where they "'tre before -struggling with the: bis demographic fact of the times. that blacks have proliferated in the central cltle11 and whites have moved their acheoJ .. se childrtn to the suburbs. The wbitea have left behind inferior schools in many cases, and the suburbs have been fotced to upand their aupe rior 1ystems to Ltkt eve of the influx. WB4T d A CTn'! Is it merely the geoiraphic <1rea inside the defined ci ty limits. Or is it, in fact and regardless of city, county, .state or district li nes, a definable <1nd interdependent center of pop ulation where nn governn1ent agent,v can deny. or contribute lo denyi ng, the equal protection of the \a\\'S to one and all . lf it is the latter. then to v.1hat exten! can racial concentrations -the de fact() segregation '¥'.'hich is so vi.~l ble -deny t~ one child the highest level of educatJo~ available to another li ving in a dl lferl'nt area of racial concentration ? \ There is no doubt "'here the popular white will lie.!I. It i.!I preponderantly on the side of keeping the blacks in the school systems of their general residency. and keeping the whites in the ir neighborhood schools, wilhout enforced interchanges acro1s ci ty or into the su burbs to achieve any definition of raci al balance. THE GROWING patter n o( "hilt schools and black school.q in the North would th us be perpetuated for as fa r Ahead as can be seen. De jure dc~cgrega. lion of the schools might be ach1rved, but a blind ma n could see that there "'rre now in the North black schools and 11 hil e school.!1, the Constitution a nd Bro"·" v. Board of Educat ion notwithstanding. A Supreme Court wh ich had the resolu- tion in the first pl ace lo rul e that no governm ent agency cou ld ;:iny longer ~u~ tain a .~v.~tem of black :r;chools and whit e :-.chool s ·must nov.· f;ire. the fact that thl" problem has not been ~lved in the greal n1etropol1 tan areas of lhe Norlh. In !he silence of his chambers, 1 Supreme Cour~ justice. appointed by President Nixon or not. v.·ilt have lo con· :l'Ult hi s conscience on !he 1nhercnl justice of !rgahtie~ \vh1ch ha1·e lhe efrect of de· nring lo a bl::u·k child lhr lPvcl or rtlucalio11 .'ll'~ilablr to a ll'h1 !e child because tif 11"he rr 1t is requi red to li ve . A SUPRE\I E COU RT JUSt 1cc ·~ position '" nnt en1 1;:1blc. for there 1s a great deal jo be ~;iid for thr n1ainlenance of nr1~l1borhflQ(J school ~. and grea t realitie.<> lo hr fR rrd 1n lh<' new de1nographic n1 ak o;i11r or liirge population centers: Thcrr ;irr pol itical real ities. too. "'hich \Viii m;ike. President Nixon"s court ap- poinlecs no more cotnfortable in lhetr hour of clec1s1o n. But drc1dc lhe court mu st. And as soon :is possible. so as to wipe away the con- fusion it hcl1>e.d to l'reate in the Sv.·ann v. Charlot tc·il1ecklenburg decision on which tht> to11er and appell 11fe courts differ. In a r ery real scn.<;e, lh e remaking of America's great cllie~ since Brown v. Hoard nf Ed11ca!1on ha" made 11eCf':ssary ne1v dP.f1n1tions of "'hal desegregation of lhe public school~ mean~. A Co~tly, Unread Literary Cesspool By ~nCHAllL D. GREEN l\'ASHINGTON -Tarpayers senerall y may be una\va re of It, but fC1r years they have been su bsidizing dilly publlcatlon of a compend ium of amrted prose and verse which u·ould be rejected outrl1ht by iiny sane: commercial publlahtr ind which no reader in his right mind WOQ!d undertake to comprehend. Not restrained by the commercial necessity to J!18ke a profit, howeve.r, the nstion's la'>'-mlker.!l frtely unload their dally quot• of 1ntl-llterary m1tttr Into the appendix C1f whit la popularly called the C.Ongrt'3elonal Record. Ostensibly a dally dl1est ol what Is Mid and done on the floor• ol the HOUie and Senate, the 1ppe:ndlx ls a nrpo1ltory lor unread but tndlH11ly wordy tributes to evtrythina from loc111l chapters of Gold Star Mothera to tht national brotherhoods ol 1m1l11m1ttd what-evers from their local congreasmtn. At tI40 a pase, this un read literary cmpool COit the taxpayers a nt at $8 million thla ye1r, with California con- areumen dolng more than the-Ir 1har1 of conlrlbutln1 free 1p1ct tor the ag- 1t•ndiummt of conatttuent •sos. CALIFORNIA 'S CONGRESS golden thoucbt1 for posterity. share: th e good news •1th the Nation that some local constituent had made good/been honortdldropped dffd/wrillt.n thtm/ nturned /Jtft-and/or bttn "·rittrn up in a klc1I ne\\•aJ)llper , or otherwise tum a voh~me of extraneous m1tter into co~tly print 1t the hinds of sovemme:nt typeset- t1ra. l\tp. John G. Schmitt. (R-Orange County), spent about $110 in 1s1 fund! to lionlll F'rasJrr the Uon. whose sexual t l· plofls Schmits flnda he•rtening in these d1ys or "maybtra, mutder. hate and freed" Apparently Schmits lt unaware thst P'ra11fet 11 merely a tool ol the criminAI intft'natlonal Communllt ccnsplracy to \':eaktn tht moral fibre of zoo-going chil dren throushout tht land. \\'AKE UP AM!lllCA !!. WA!CE UP SCHMITZ!. Rep Craig ll os mr r. ( R·Long Hf'a thl, offered "A Prayer For The F.arlh" lh~t had P"'rticularly im pressed him 11'hilc liste11ing to !he 1nvoc<1!ion a! ground· break ing ceremonies for "·atcr f;:ic1ory No. 21 of the Orange t oun1y v;n1er Dist rict TAXPAYERS. rrom \\horn a col!ec11on of about 125 \\•ill be taken in return for the privilege of having shared in Hos mer's in;i;pired inserti on in thr. Record , unfortun1 tel y appear lo be omit· led from lhe prayer. \\"hic h asks futilely. "stir rhe heart Bnd minds of ou r political le;:iders v.·ith respon!!ibilily for the future so !ha t we v.•111 take, but replenish, fill, but not de~troy." For those who rn isscd he:1rin1 th•t Pre!ldent Nixon just took a trip to h-1oscow. Rep. John H. Rousselot rR-Calll,) thoughUully broke the story 1n the Congre55ional Record using up nearly two-thirds of a page, or about $90 worth. to reprint an ar11cle from U.S. News and World Report SO LONG as the Nation'• J1 wm1kers did not try to insert anything relevant or Important In the Record, no one seemed !o mind 1hc f'Xpcnsr to lhr taxpa yer$. (;J\'('tl 1he !leW brrrfl nf y oung Congrr:osinen interested 1n serious mat· tri<> ;inrl sorial causes, ho1vrver, thf'rc has been <1 marked increase in the IW of material 1n the 11ecorcl th.iii mig ht be cons trued as having a beari ng on im· porrant problems. Re p. B<'llll Abzug. ( fJ-N Y \, for ex- ;:i mple. recently inSt>rted 136 page'.'\'. ol n1ateriaJ deaung wi th the c-omplex matter of .11bortion at a rost of $18 ,000. Congressional oulr11,::r by anti-abortion la\\'makers \1•as instantaneous. They demanded 11 crackd0 \\11 on co ngressmen inserting lengthy, costly n1a!erial in the Record. '\rell. it 1vas a bully Record for a lif'· C'Onri there. and we all read li ke grubber~. ! And paid for it.J But abo rtion, the 1v11 r in Viet1u11n. et c .. did seem wort h men- tioning along \Vith the achievements of Jlil rs. Opal Christopher Jones and the Qr,11:nge County Waler District. You can't ell"pect the HI ah ON A TYPICAL DAY rectnlly, •ight C.llfomilnl (a modtlt number con· slder\nc tbt state hu JI rtpratntatlves 1"'1t,..1e111ton) nevutlltl• manaat<J t• rock up a bUI al at leut flllO tor the <upoyera to loot Jn sdtr te e!ltr their How to Address Our Lawmakers Congressional Pooh-bah3 In ch11rge of running the inslltution to condone the spending of taxpayers money on serious material. lhough , even when they think noth ing of spending $8 million on totally irre.lev~nt material. OltA"OI COAST BsG••,..•-- Dllr Oearp: vou•w problbly heard thi s q_uts-- tlon a mUUon times befort ~t how do you ret must.trd 11t11N o/r tho telephono? t .o. Deir t. D.: Rub yow-telephone with a 11\ce of onion and 1 dill pi<:kle. In fact, if you a4<1 a bun It wm rully blow the nut ealler's mind. CS.nd your problems to George and Starn the 1ecrtts ut Sideway• Ttllnklng. Ht would Un to find out whal tl>q art.) elld lf1111111trl1t ltt lt!ltn.. Ovrl"! lttl11tll~· M,_ 11Mt Stele c.,n.or, Stue~te. t llf. tM7. lfATI .aUIMaLTMIN •tCIM OlAffl COUNTY ...., I . ·--(1'1tt 01.trlct-!ll. lMt w.tt. clUI' Or,. """'"" .. Mii. nMO. Comn'll""": •lollllrt: l""'lrl'ment tMI fllllremtnt, Wtfw t nll ~lm'lell. commwu .,.. f''*k v1nmn. """' ¥, lt"ltnt 4.uttl Dltlr'ICI -!l), 1"10 Nor1'I Htrbor alYd,. """"""' -.ii. Qlmmfl"9: '"~ •nlf tnwr-IMI, L.Mor RMI~ Md .t\'en\lt Md Te11"'1or!. MM Ctmmlt!M "" l"n'<'l~I Qvetltt.. •flt C!ltfn'Mn, Jl,lnt Commllttt -Atemk Oenio.- f'llllf •nlf INU . ll:tkt-1 "' llll'h (1'!11 OllJl'tlct-lt). 111)1 ltlCf\ llW,, H11tttl119!9\ INCll fMO ,.,,.. mlfttlli IM~l!tln. llkt..... •nlf Corlllll\flltl!M Anllfll~ll lf'MI vice dl•I""'", ''.,'""'''°"" k-"1 C8'T l •fltl Dl1tr1C1-DI, Ml H, l 11tlltl, f'.O. ... OM. A111MIM ..,._ Ctll'lf!'lltttet: IMtl!Ofl, LebW lttlell•nt tllll 11.......wt •llf T.U!IM. Durlne ... letttt¥t m .-.: tt.fe Cellllol. ~ C1llt, '*'· DltAN•I COUffTY aDAaD Of' SUf'l!lVISCltl ,1r1! Diii., ltlMl'1 W. ·~ t.cOllCll 0111., ""'"'"' ..... l lllrf Dlit .. Wlll._111 ""11,. '-"' 0111 .... .,.. .. , .... "'"" ow .. ·-· •. c..-.. ....,,..,.: Or.,. ~ AllllTllNllN!ittl al.,., ltoort1 '°"' flt N. SYumwt. kllll Ana n7'DO. DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wtcd, PubU.Mr ThomM Ketl1il, Editor Albert W. Bott.<1 f:ditorial Page Editor The editl)r1111 J)#I U" or ti-le IJR!ly Pllnt Af'<'k11 lo lnlr1rn1 nnd ii:Umu. IA!~ n'lldrrs by 11rrt;r nlini thi11 nc""'l"ill('f'll opinion' 11.nd (ntn4 m""''"'Y nn tnplOll or lntt'l'f'1l 11M ~IJt_nlfir.1nlt'e, b)' prcwtdir.r • (prum fM lhi': eJCpt't'Ulon of our rr11d,.1'$' nolnic>r11. and hr rrr•rntlnr: the dlvr-f'loC viewpoint• of lnfMmed ~ •M'\'f'1'111 •nd •pokamen on topb or I.ht d•r. . Tuesday, June 13. 1g72 ''Saturday Special'' ... • wttb Only one extra long cigarette has flavor to match the good mood you're in . Winston Super King ... always real and rich tastin~. Warning , The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smokin g Is Dangerous to Your Health. • ! 111 • J . llT~OlO' TOl •tCO COM, •• .,, •1 11110 11 ·1 \~lll , II C 20 mg. "m".1.4 m~ nico1in1 ev. p11 cigarem. FTC Repon APR. 72. Yes, Winston ta11tes ~ad, like a cii'arette shoul . ·--------·-,.-- .,. ' 1 .. ... I• ' 'I ,, f I -· '. l " • a DAILY Pl_L_OT _____ _ L. ltl. 'Bopd Most Gals 'Pet' Witl1 13 Fe llows .... nybody who balbts more U11n onct I ~ tJ tWletr lous. And anybody over 40 who bathes dl»J lit' .,_ ~ ought not. Those bat~ wash lll.'IY the tkll't Ntwr.r '1tf>-l~tion against bacteria. Such is the quot .. cfllM ol on• Dr . John Al. Knox or Baylor Universil.v. ' I DON'T want lo define ··nea~·y peUlftt'' hfr•. T~ bashful. ~lerely want to report the average ~'1' J"1 engages in s.amt with SI ... ltftrt merriagr. That'!! the l8'fll Mat~&e tn this significant matter. ALI. RIGHT. where'• Utt 1'orkt1 largest scale m o d f I r1tfrold? In Carlsbad. N.r.I., U11t'1 Whitt. An exact rtplica of .11.n 1• Mm •Jlne. Q)\tts along 11 two-milf ltltk Wdtr• lng Lakt Carl sbad. QUEft.JEs -Q. "\Vhen do the thinest fartUnt cw-I• makers put !hat tittle slip of pa~r jnto '"' ceoklf. I» for t it's baked or after?'' . A. After. 111e cook ie is baked flal. ~· el ,.,., is put 1n tht. middle while it's still "'arm. Che eookle cooker twlsts it into shape by hand and ,..,.., 11 it cools orr. Q. WHERE did Presiden t Richard Niun ind hit wile Pat go on their honeymoon '.' .. A. Took a drivt' through i\tcx1cn. Q. ''WHICH gro\Y!I faster. eoars,. hair tr On• hllr'" A. Coar~. usually. YOU KNOW lhose antiac:id lablett~ 1'M1t ..i.• rHU- larly peak evtry year just before lhe incomt 111 dtadUM. Rea lly. JN WASHINGTON, O.C. the Linootn ¥ .. ill pit lhree times as many visitors as the Wtfhtqtdn Menu- mtnt. \l.'hy'' A~1 TOLU the National Umbrella Auonlalif,111 open• it!I annual meetings with a prayer for r1Jn. Qeod. PAJN -Say you hurl yourselr. l\la.vbe b\lrn )'91-!r hand nn the stovf'. Or hit your thumb \1•ith a ha'""'•r. Yfl'U ~w how you bite. your lip sometimes 1vhen •htm· "' .-' Tht medicoe~ say tht're·!' a reason. One pain ft Mdtfl another. Your brain pul ~· in the fix autom•t1e11 y. . .. ·t even wait for you to figure ii out. J\.flSTER. how do you stay in shape? Ji"'meri put tht query lo Vlda Blut. he said. "( (I ._ I ftrl around the lake lhe o!her d11y. ·· Try it. YtU1, tte. WHAT'S ALIMONY ? \Valier ~1cDonald ti.r It IJI •·Disinterest , compounded annua!lv." ""'. ffllti Shrintt called it "'A ont man \VAr debt." N 11 lltHt Journal termed it "Time balm."' .Addr.:s! ffl41t to r .. Jlf. Boyd. P. 0 . •q:i· 1176, Ntwport Beath, Calif, 92660. ' Church Takes Poll Ovet -,Harassm ent' SAN FRANCISCO (AP 1 -appealing lh' Nel,i@n, ~UI The Church of Scientology Young said thl ,IJMICmn41fe ~ays it is polling religiou~ is not a raedt ti iltit lfWMt. groups nn whether I h e f'cderal'i/W • ft I f J 1 t ~ lntcrnal Revenue Service is churches · · ~r IJIJf!prttflt harassini church lfOUflS tn-organizar •JHJ for volved in social action pro-lax exenftfbd; ' 1r 11no grams. subsl antiar ii Of UW!Jr llC• The Rev. Vauabn Youn~. tivilies is dft fmtblf prop. Northern CalifonU1 tdilor or aganda . influencing legisla- the Scientology new1pa~r. lion. or actively participatini.: J.'reedom. 1eid he mailtd in political campaigns. 11bout 7,000 questionnaire~ lo Critics contend the phrase • (·hurchea: in No rthr rn •·no subslantial part'' Is ;i ' <;atifornll 1sttn1 about the ir lllOselv worded toot used h\ relations with the IRS. !he IRS to harass groups 1hr Young said he is un-govem1nenl doesn't like. dt>rtakint the survey becaUSt" The IRS says it~ vistl s In , QUEENIE I Phil lnterlc'"dl i1t J:i. t.., • ., !Ir.a.,,, 1., t I •,.•o, , •. , .. .,,., ''So •orry, hut yuu ,Htlil nr dl"r l'd lh t rna nautr. ' U.S. Fight•~r Sc1t1aclrons Will Depart Viet11a111 W A8J llNOTON I Al'I -Th• T'ent11on h11 confirmed that 1 number 'rtf Air Jforce 111<1 M1rlnt 01hter equadron1 will bl ahfllfd from Vitlnam to 1111111nd II pirl or the ('Ur- rtnt ptlaH or I r a a p wlthd11wal1. Thi• wtll en1bl1 U.I. lorce1 to 111 down lo !ht lt,lllJO.mon oliJl1tf .rffrtcl by PrHld<Jll Hl•nn lor July 1, but at !hr Bet there's a bit of - "Huck Finn " In you. 1arne 111nr keep I h, rn avaitah le t11r lllr 1lrjkes lram 111, nf'W bftlfll 111in1t the North Yiet11a1ne1e. Tht<rl!! art' 81 ,900 AfftttiQllRI rern alnin g in Vjet111t111. plu1 nearly C0,000 In Thollanct, aho ul 42,000 otf1hor1 •bolll'O 71h Fleel 1hlp1 ind anethei- i ,000 lo 10,0DO on Ou1m, t~e launch in1 1Jte for many al the Bri2 r11 ids set youre•lf fr11 to t n)oy life with tOU l'!d retlr1m1nt pltnnln; today, W1'v1 1111t gre 1t 1111n1 fer y11 u. Call your nearest Manulife agent, Manll1ilife Tilt> Mn nulacturers Life Insurance Comp.i ny nr a number of complaint.. in i·hurl'.he.~ are "purel y routin<'.'" (•hurch circles that tM ms,,-----------'-===--==-------·----------------1 '·harasses and indirectly in- tin1idates or 1 u presses 1·hurches and other lu-ei:- rmpt groups involved in social action Jll"Oll'aD'l.I." The SclenioJoc!ru lost their f11.x-e.tempt I t It u I aeveral y'ars qo IJkl are currently In1nates Ge ts Flashy Suits I do. Suits me to the letter. "A buoy aecrtllry has to be at the office on time. P1rkif"IQ problems, traf- fic 11ngte1, car breakdowns? I can do without -t tal<• the ATD Extre· C.r. lt'a reliable-rain or shine, the buo lo • ._ lllll'lys on schedule. , "Tlwl tao, I cen l!M the money I -~dclnglht ExtraCar. Ever stop lo llgar9 mw rllllC~ It r eally costs to dr1ve -lncfuding lmuranct', taxes, repairs, ti res, payments and all? About $1 56 a month ! Bu t a 5-zone monthly pass on the ExtraCar is on ly $26, ~nd l ride as often as I please. ThedrHerence? A$130 'rafse in pay.'" I f you'd like complete informalion on RTO routes, time tables, and fares, telephone 747-4455 or write Rapid Transit District, Room500, 1060South Broadway, Los,Angeles, Ca 90015. Frog Jump Jubilee in Jeopardy De1itist Heu Terrn Sliced I AM THI WIDOW C, A *IAHD SERVICEMAN . IS IT TRUE TMAT I AM ;1Nt11LID TO A CI VIL SERVICE PRIFiR&NCE RAflN81 L08 ANO~I.F.S tUPli - Or. Hernard Bender, I! cl•nll•t lnunrt ~11 1 !•·.i of ln1\1lhn1 l.l1'• nP1 "~"'", /ir"ace1 uf1 younc 1rui:r1 ·~ 11•ell1 lo ~elr. !hem e\ ade tl16 <I raft, had ~ 1 p!'.llOn Bentenl'e red uctd Mo n ti a 1 fron1 I& y1ar1 to two )'e1r1. ~y llJflNE 0. BERGERON U,S. Ol!!tlcl Courl J~ ,( Allllrtw ll•uk orllilN tm. flOlfd lh< mulrnum Mii "'°'· oayirl( ao~d•r'• '~lint ''•milfte<t ol .,., .... " Tiit Judie ,.14 ltt !tllucocl lht "'1- tell(l8 M~u,11 • pa)'tltdatrio •••mlilllton of ll<ndfT l!Qn- vlootd }Jjm lht tlenttat WJtJ mf1ti•1i..I by hi• ••1entl• dl1po1ltkm" and •lflCere de1ir• lo ,,_Ip """ 1vnld 1ervln1 in an tmmflr'al war. ' 1'11• .... •••it•••· ' . . Y•I .... tn•lhot. dial'", llUltl'illon or wllattQr, pri nted rlltM ......... -•••••• ""'· 0,1n 1n 1111u11t With w new fh.IMI ,our Ith Awhll'Nry o ........ ,,""' ....,,..., ,..,,., •m•IMI Wltll ,W lllolll Ol 11 ll111i1•.flNI afttek tet•1,., Tt Hd te tit ftttwttltt, wt'rt Ito t lflnt Nift/ 11~ flM.8111 OMM for •t1 le Aii1puio11 and four electric "Char-8-0ues"! Free Photo Checks for sure. And a crack at some exciting prizes. From Centinela Bank , Persona lly yours. '---------Check appropriate boxea, then b I I I I I I I I I I I 0 Yes, I'd Hl<e 200 Pholo Checks, el no charge. Here's my opening depo.sit ($100 minimum please} and the negative of the picture rd lrke printed on them. , 0 Enter ·my name in your Summer Giwi away, please. I coufd use a 10-dey Princess Cruise or en electric "Cher-B-Oue"I ,,,, ____________ ,,, ___ _ 0 Incidentally, Happy Anniwrsary. ll10....,,..••---------------,-- £n)ef now-Thi.!1 11 1 lirntted tlrN oner. DfmlllifiQ Ju\~ 3 1, 1 • WIN A PRINCESS CRUISE! WIN ELECTRIC CHAR·B-QUE! unwind at sea •board rhe plush Princess ~ CleM. quick., plug ·in l<""il ma~es food la1te as «Selifio°lls . 1t11i1 on a len-day crvise 10 Pueno Vall1rta, •a 1~• miss'{, old· .A.I an ·B GllE Aeepulco llnd MazaU1nl Ol1cover 11'141 PIO · -1••.tT•oned barbe · ~ • eantry (I( Mexico on·bOard and on-shore ! cu,s do. Member F,D.LC. • I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Southern California fjX MC':!) RAPID TRANSIT DISTRICT 0 I ~~ 0 :·I I I I I I I I I .. tngtewood Newport 8Nch 'PU1y1 Dil lier ) fttrmool l!ioch I 524 Eatt Nutwood 3333 Wul Co11I Hlghwty 8117 West Manchesler 1103 ,t.vlatlon•Avenue nor.com HW Y. 674-..MO IW&-7121 !23-9281 • , 372-2102 • --------------------O~ONA DEL MA . l LET'S GET ACQUAINTED HERE'S WHO WEARE CALIFORNIA'S FAVORITE DO-IT-YOURSELF HOME IMPROVEMENT CENTERS We contrel eur ow11 IMPORT DIVISION, WHOLISALI and RETAIL OUTLOI,,, eur direct buying ell111lnate1 the 111ld· dle111en a11d their preflt1. Co111eque11tly, Angeli 1ell1 .. , ..... • WE PRACTICE DAY .-IN AND DAY OUT PRICE-SMASHING SEVEN DAYS A WEEK When you buy IUILDING MAnRIALS, PAINT, LUMllR, HARDWARE, PLUMBING, ILIC· TRICAL SUPPLIES fre111 our 1tore1, you are payl111 prices AS LOW a1 these paid by the LARGEST CONTRACTORS, Everything we sell has a money-hack guarantee. •LUMBER DEPARTMENT A CLASSIC EXAMPLE IN MERCHANDISING Our yard• are arranged so a1 te be 90~ SILP SERVI, bulg· ing with bargains In PANEL- ING, ROOPING, PLYWOODS, DIMENSION LUMllR -YOU NAMI IT, Wl'VI GOT IT at prlc .. pu wen't llelleve POS- SllLL coumous SALESMEN ALWAYS ON ·HAHD TO ~ELP WITH YOUR SEUCTIONS SANTA ANA STORE ONLY 1000 UNBILIEYABLE OPENING BARGAIN S THE FIRST 1000 ADULT CUSTOMERS ENTERING THE GATES WILL BE GIVEN A NUMBER. THESE NUMBERS WILL CORRESPOND WITH THE ITEMS BELOW. NUMBERS AND ITEMS WILL BE POSTED SO THAT YOU WILL KNOW WHICH OF THESE ITEMS YOU WILL BE ENTITLED TO PURCHASE WITH YOUR NUMBER. WE HAVE EVERY ITEM IN THE QUANTITIES LISTED BELOW. NOTHING HELD BACK! THEY ALL GO! 9 A.M. THURS. JUNElS "GAS CHAR" ''ROCKWELL" RADIAL AIM SAW MINI-BIKE I ONLY AT THIS l'lllCf GAS BAR·B·Q wrrH l'ATIO IASf 20NLY AT THIS l'•ICE 71~" c11cuiA1 sAW .... 15c 'fl. , •••• "MAUIU"6L LOWYOLTAlll.lllllln I 2 ONLY ATllflS HICI I -....... 11 I 110. 119,99 . flAMED PK111l5 uo. ref 4.tt 200 ONLY AT THIS l'l SO-STAI 11., 14" LAWI MOW& IOOMYAT rMsPWl'CI .... U'·" • -i I I I I • I 1 l l I 1 l I J8 DAILY PILOT . TONIGHT'S TV IDGIIl.JGHT S , I • t KCOP al 7:30 -Dis ney on P•rade. Diiney char· :\ ~ actf.'rs ~tlckey Mouse, Donald Duck, Snow \Vhile, t t Pluto. Goofy and oth ers are the };tars in this hour· ... lonJ! salute U:> the Sports Arena show. CAS D 8:30 -"llawaii Five-0 " Danny \Vil · Iiams (Jan1es A1 acArthur) eoes under cover as a NAvy Corpsman to nush out a drug ring opera ting fron1 a vessel in the U.S. Seventh Fleet. NBC D 8:30 -"!o.fas sacre at Fort Phil Ke1rn y.11 t Ri chard Egan and Robert Fuller portray rival Iron· ~ tier officers wbo c lash. causing traged y. ' i ABC 0 10:00 -"Marcus Welby, M.D." An over· ~ 40 executive takes a ne\V look It life after losing r • his job and suffereing a heart attack. ' KITV m 12:00 -"The Petty Girl." Boh Cum· mings and Joan Caulfield are featured in this 1950 rom antic comedy. Tuesday Evening J UNI l J 1:00D1111 -Jtlr/ °"lhY CD llDll-01111 lllV..., l1J Ill Wiii ....... m1111-m--(jj- Em " ......... IMll Ill_ .. !llDao• ..... CUI _ .. mi,, ...... m ._ .1111 H1wtharn1 mn..- 1:30 0 ....._: (C) 1•1 "'bl111" Put I (ad¥) 'M -St1nlt)' B1•1r, .lad HI~... l/111 *'tblDn, J1mtt .,,. .. ()) Cll ... Witter Cran~• ~ ......... ... m• ._.... •• Q) CM-. ... Ill ...... GI Art ..... "Hn1111 o .... {Rl "''-· I:::= rm c...? 11---lll-£lllol M"'1 It('(~ (lu1) '71 -flobert Connd, Sllelltr Wlllterl, BrN1rkk Cniwtord, 0.111 ltoc~wtll. Ntvlllt Br1nd, A11 l ll·MW "'1il«J tl11llltr 1botrt th1 l•moa ,,..,. 411tcti¥t. ID lllrf 111111 Mllw John 01wid· son, GIOl'11 Gobel, .lot flylUI, C.I Tjld« 11111 Swt1 TolNJ 1111st. •111• ........ "Should ltlt OmleJM MtlOfts Mopt 1 Polley of Uf'ltltlnt &onomlc Growthr COii· duslon If tw Jtrts. a--..... _ . 8) LI C.-. l lstl "4H1 a Tiit YlrJfnls• 1111-· t:IO 8 (I) CU• (R) Jolin R11bt11- ltll11 playa • cult·IYPI l11d•r Wfrost my1tical control owr 1 IHn•t• flrl frifhlens lllr 1Nttnb 1nd brin11 Cl1111011 Into lflftttlr•t•. o ®! m ...... ...., .. Nk11o1. "Thi M1rryln1 Fool" (R) l'flc:llol• h11 mi11d emotlorls •h111 Ruth n · tunu frMn e !rip 1nd lntroduc11 1 stnin11 huiblnd·lo-bt. .,_ .... CJ ......... Jelln rullmer I ,._ HLlfh WU!l1ms llad: .llllt11I n. '"""Sap "A r1mlty W1d· d!n(' (JI) .,_. II ......, ,,.. ....,,.,.... rm T:tO II• ... Wsltlr Cron•il1 (}). e .._ lO:tlO 8 ,._, Georp Pwtn.,n 8 .... • Qscl a rn rn m ... , .. -..,, w.D. Cl) TN8 • C1111•uuct1 "Don't !Jhase Mt ~U" (fl) An owtr· (()....... 40 extcutlvl bk11 1 lllW looli 11 I WW• llJ' u.r Ills foJlowlnr the loa.t ol his fOfl 1 LM a...., 1"1l 1 hu rt 1tt1tk. lll!!!IDI[] _, • ,.,.., ID MIJlt: (IOI *SMl1ecll KlfMtt ~ll"mlil ........ 111117 .., ... klrt.t a..-(rrrys) '44- C#tll tllt 111e mltl tt Ute •• llfW l•sil lltlhbone. Nip! lruu. b tM ..., for ttii. We• om., ltfwt Te Mwmr1 SloryMM .s.cucullr. 111tMJ fl'l'Of• 10 .,.,. Tltettrt iles Mkhp litoule, Doneld DI.let f..tlnl Millllcm ' • Mrs;. o·u~her Sees ~CH s •Pueblo' Drama Whtn theater and the rtal world mttge, the rtsultt eati so1netlmt1 be almoel eerie f'or lht rnembtn of lhe cast o( "Pueblo," currently playing a Wett Coast premier• at South Coast Repertory, that mtrglng has happened ttrict. ''Pueblo" is th~ Stanley R. r.reenberg play whicb traces the developments 1n 1961 of the capture of a U.S. apy ship near North Korea n waters and the incarceration of its of. ficers and men Greenberg, y;h() sp<!nt some two ye::rs on t heproj ec t researching and wa di n g through the volum inou!I press accounts and committee hear· lnp, -from tht bqif>. ...... be lc:Cllral<. So. all ol tht cbaroctm are bued on actual men (he dMln't even cha1"13e thtlr nan..) and all of lhe evenls in the Alie \ltr11lon art tt<telilions cl actual hap- peningw. On two rec::ent evenings dur- ing the "Pueblo" iila at SCR's Third Step Theater in Cost.a Mesa , th' real characters merged with their at age recreations when PoUcarpo P. Garcia, a former Pueblo crew member, and Rose Bucher, wile of Comma nder Ll oyd l\.·I. Bucher of the Pueblo, al· tended the production. "It was, of course, very strange: lot all ol ua," aaid dlr<dor Martin Ben!on. "ffav. "" the ruJ Ill• coonl<rpart• In the audlence witching evenil wb.ich w er e un· doobledlr painful .. them made al of us ur1u11ualJy alert and even tense." According to 8en&00, thfo cast waned with great an- t.cipali on for .a backstage 1neeting f o l lo w Jng the performance "Mr. (:art"1 a was very moved by the production," Benson said. "He commented frequently oo the rttemblance between lhe Kor ean in· telligence ufficer and the actor S p ecia l Session .Set Fo r lrvi11e Theate r The Irvine Communit y • Theater, artisllcally .~uccessfu l but growing short on person- nel , is looking to shore up its human resources. AU membt.-rs and potential members interested in becom- ing a part of the Irvine group are being urged to attend a general mf'mlX'rship mef'ting scheduled for Tuesday, June 20, at 7::10 in the Island House at Fashion Island. Ne1\1XlTt Beflch . "\Ve're entcrin!!' 'Phase I I' of our develo p1nent." ex- plained Bill Da ll:ivo, business manager of the theater group. "We've become an art istic success during our first two ~·ears and nO\Y V.'f'"re hoping tn beco1ne financially succes~ful as well ." t!:i7 J. "lronicO'.llly, 'Salesman' W3! our greatest artistic success. but it proved to be a financial flop." Oallavo said. "But all thi" t'<lll be changed by solic1llng a broader base of mernbership to share the work of producing our plays and getting 1he \\'Ord out to the p11 hlic aboul them." Dalla\'o en1phasized that ac- ting is just one facet or Cltnrncte r theater work. At the June 20 meeting, he noted, IC'l' will be Hank Sorkin plays a seeking talent in th ree oth er comic character role areas -directing, production of a delicatessen owner (lig hting and set construction) in the mystery-comedy and publicity (ticket sales\. "Catch hfe Jf You "\Vc'rc planning lhe su m-Can," giving final per· iner meeling in order to get formances Friday and belier org·anized for our fall and winter program," he Saturday at th e Jlunt· pointed out. ington B e a ch P!ay- Those unable to attend the nouse. lo our pr~ (Mlcbo!d Owens). AppareoQy be round that por1ion "' lhe plJ y almoll too real,'' Bto.son oootlnued. tnter.ted to know tt we had Reservations an taken al &46- coolocted olhlr memhen of __:"'3=. -----~ for Ellen Ketchum. .....ho plays the role of Bucher's wife in "Pueblo," the visit of the real Rose Bucher was un - be\itvHhly tr)'inl. "I knew she was CQm.ing and for the few ·moment.t before t'Urt.1u1, 1 kept wondering -I wonder wha l she'll think, I wonder if rm playing her as she 1.~ -all kind.s of ques- tions.'' The meeting afterward \.\'as co rd ial. "She was pleasant and very the Pueblo crew lo ,.. the show," Miss Ketchum com· mented. "She had obviously be~n through a greiJ t deal and was very wary of publicity. "When I asked her if ~he had brought her two boy:'I, ~lie said that they were terrified or reporters and pbotographer9 13 a resul t of the original events and had decided not to CQ1ne." "Pueblo" will continur lo play Wednesday through Sun- da y al SCR's Third Step Thefl ter. 1827 Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa . through June 24 'Old Maid a11d Thief' Op era Slated Sat 11rday r.i:i n-C:irlo ?lteno!l1's 1941 played by Joyce Harrison and char:it!er opera "Thl' Old the pnrt of Bob v.·iil be played ~'laid and the Th ief" will be by Ed Hrahams. vocal mus1cl--- presented al the Costa Mesa instructor at Costa Mesa lligh iEDWARDS lHEATRES High School Lyceum Theater School. Karl~n Vnn Dyke will Saturday al 8 o'clock. be the accompanist. Under the direction of Mrs. Adm ission for the opera will Marjorie Anderson, past presi-be $1 for adulls and 50 cents dent of the l\.1 usic Educators for students under 17. Sets nnd Na tional Conference, Western lighting are being prepared by Di\·ision, the opera. written the drama production class or expressly for radil)-te\evision, \\"ill feattu·e severa l music Costa Mesa Htgh School under educntnrs in the Newport-the direction of l\.1iss fJonna l\1esA Unified School District. Kristiansen, drama director Mr s. Anderson will also play Further information may be the part of the Old Ma id. obtained by calling the CostA L.eatitia. maid·servant to Miss Todd, will be pla yed by .Joanne Mesa lligh School Fine Arts \Veeks, vi'ife of Del Weeks. _o_r_li_c_e._545-__ 943_1._e_x_t_. 32_. __ I vocal music instructor at Linf'oln School. Miss Pinkerton wlll be EDWARDS )-1 ARBOR I : .. ~':.1 ttA~~ ... a ~" Al "·<~!) .. •.! , ,~·• "' • ••~u~JJ The Irvine Com m u n i I y Theater. DallaYo noted . ha.~ collec ted a total of 11 trophies from the Ri verside To urna· ment of One-acts in its three years of competition, JCT :ilso captured three of the five DAI LY PILOT distingu ished Performance Awards for its "Death of a Salesman" in organizational meeting but 'fra~~~:;~;;::;-11 \Yhn \Yould like to become a JI tr ll illlll!ll!Blf:J~drf parl of the lr.ine C<>mm"nily ~I Df Oil -.---Theater have been asked to ~...!.! . ~ ~ write to the group at P.O. Box 11£WP0JIT BEACH • ott.Ul~' . J MllfJ jQUJK Of SAA OIUIQ TW'{. 3RD AND LAST WllK ---CtNEOOME ?O. .. ~ ·--· t ':".Y .J.:i --CtNEOOME ll ..... ..::.'-.·.:..... l ..!..t .1L• --· -~·· SlAOIUM I ' .. _,, ....... ·~ ---'""' Sf40/UM l ' .. -~··· ~ ---•• fo Sf4UIUM J .. --.... ----,, SlA/llUM f 4446, Irvi ne, or to call Dall.avo at 495-4138. "'WAii: ?l"TWflrN Ml"N • WOMI N" Sllrrt"' J •dt l•rri- lnC "SK IH OAMI." "Ul lHT •UNNING"' • "ANDlllOMEDA STllAIN" T•m Smettl1rs '"Gn TO KNOW vov• ""'''T" & "OMIGA MAN" "TNE LAST rlCTUllll SHOW" • "'THIE ANDl llSON TArliS" ''THI NIOHT COMIJIS" "SOlOll!ll llUI " & "THI Wll O IUNCH" HELD OVER EXCLUSIVE Cha rlton Heston Yvette Mim ieu x "SKYJACKED" Al10 f PG-1 Sai n Connery "THE ANDERSON TAPES" I~ Hlrt>or ., Allam• -(Dll• M••• '4'-)101 Mondey Friday 1:00 pm $•lYrd1y t :OO pm s~lld11 l:OOpm,l:OOpm l :OOP<n,J:OOpm s:oo pm, 1:00 pm ~'°"pm. 1·00 pm t:OO~rn,l l :OOpm 9:00pm ~111cznt runmng· 4 • •t•C" •>.WU •T .. l ll• • 4 ••T co._,, .. w-• ••'" ..,,,.o ..__ •4l ·••O• • "'-'"lH<GTON ..... (; ~-"A VERY FUNNY fllM'" .iV<'-CfNTC .. MllW \fir. t<l~K l l.\lt..'t TA 0 ~ Y..OOOY ..LU"I 11 ···~" .. " ·-"Jll 4" 11 ,,4_.4 1 ... ~ \,..\"'i'' Dis...,•,..,.., Thi s.orts AttlN , ..... Piie Miiier. Ktn .lollts S""' Ne. ........ °"'1 1M 1111ny LI ~ • lstt11tt llVI, .,.., tt "'' " e ,.tpollfrl lO:JO • n. •• , .... ,. !-::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~; 1f alw7t •111 Nik 1M tuneful D Dr. si ... IAdtll "The He1!tr" .. --·~ ..... ·-._ LM Marvin "MONTE WA~SH" AND Ill "THE DEAD ARE ALIVE" 2NO BIG ATTRACTION JAMES·-· COBURN mtmoMI. (R) On. Locke end Stll111 llnd Q)l ,..m .... a.. Wtt-th•m•IWI 11'1 1 Clftfllct ktweln !ht ""' ................... "'"' ptOlld •nceetrll Wl')S " the Amtfl. bJ lellJ ...,.._ e1n hNlf1ns end tM lschnlqua of CC... IJllllll "PDllct.C0.11111· modem mtdicl111. wllln 1n /ndl1n nlty ..,.._.. wcm1n becomn ,,.,n1rrt. Q) ........... •If t.• 11 lwr• ,._.s Tll·lld Qll IW T• (I) At ""' l:lO tJ (l)-C l 11 Ca .... 11 Kin n§S..•flPllWUll -111••""7 -~frJ, Lrn AllOl110n. Jlrry R11d fD ltlt!M h U11tt SIJIMYI and Dom Dtluill suest. H•r3h is 1POtlirhted. 0 m ,_......, "'M1rl el Guilt" m ll S.tlit1lt1 (R) Joe Cartwrllhl find1 1111 tvidtntt CD C.M ff ltlt Wut 1tacktd e11<iut him wlltn ht IK~ O"J Mlwie: "flw lrlts tt Hi ll" trial ror 1111 murder of 1 11 'lth11 wi111 wl!Ol!I he hid I !irht. {E Ctflcit11cil ~1p1ble e MM: (fit) "''""nt " 11:111" i1:00 IJ om mm""""' (dr1) '59 -Rlcllud Todd, B•bJ (}) ({) 0) NtWI D•eke. W11rt n Slrvtns, Hubtrt Lom. 0 OM st., a.,.114 0 (I) (i) fl) T'lll MN S.1114 "No (I) M1rahl Dll1" More Otk l1avn tor Emit Hotl1rnf'' U EYEWITNESS ... fRJ H•nry D•rl'D'll' ind Robert Pint * TONIGHT-DIRECT FROM 1uest in • story of • V'ltlfl1m 't'tl· TH E J OSEPH JENSEN'S 1111111d·co p wtio provo\ts • 1io1. HOME IN SEPULVEDA I() I Dn,. If #lule 8 f:rewlbttu Jlkn m Mlnlell $ Movll: (Z~fl '1twtr m Trutll If C.n"411MllCIS ef LHlltrl" (dr1) 'l9 -B1&i! R1lh· 18 11"4 fittt St1fw b.ont, Boris ll1r1orf. aJ HtNll'ltf; (R) ll§ Netitrlll 5"1r1phic '1h1 M11· ' tery of Anim1I 81h1wiof" 11:30 fJ ()) CIS Lite Mt'll1: (C) "A1'11n• tD Nect11'1 HttMt !flt W1rld Ulldlr Ille S.1" (adv) @ nc ,..,.. Sep ·~1Yid McClllum, Lloyd llrld· Call Theatr• f or Stcorul m~c.r..11 ru. CE,, It A11111e1tr.N Q Iii m , •• ~ RJ C1 , ••• J1 c• 1 -~--i!i!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!;;;:-m MM: (Dir) "''-U l lrl" (dra) 811rn1 1M AYlry Schrelb1r, H1ltn '4 2--.\1111 SfletWlrt, Reneld Ru pn, RMd), 111111 tht Dells iuat. ..... .,. .. u.• (drt) '52 - l :OCI ({) 111111' • tlls ,,_ P1ul ttenrtld, Ktthl"n Huthu. m n. -"" U CIJill 111 M ..... I f'lrry ..._ • Te Tll Ille T,_. LI C:. Jwpil1 C1tMie11 C.111r1I 12:00 m Me;wie: {Cl "'TlM Ptlfy Cir!" (romJ 50-Robert Cummlnp, Jo~n l :JO 1J (J) Htw1ii fue.O (R) D1n11) C1ulfleld. foes undtrtov!r IS • Klvy OITPS· It:• m C.U-llJ Mnlc nme min It l!ulh out s dnir rlnr optlll· in1 from • YIS5tl In Ille U.S. Smllth l:m (}) D fJ Cl) !l§J ,.,.,,. n111. 0 Iii m KIC A<tioo l'lor- "MhSttrt 11 For! ~I ll:t1rny" (JI) Ricll•rf £.a:1n •M Rebert fulttr 1111 u rfvll front ier offictq who dah, e1iaJn1 tra11dJ. l:JO 11 lllM: "llthll IJI" (ldY) '50- Giofl' MOftttomtry, Mule Windsor. ........ -. ., ........ 1..,.r,-•Actlsll ilt AreW.." ., CMr-Ille WltHfTM!" 0 Cil (i) IJ) -.. tlo -1:00 IJ _, --..... Id•) '41- {C) (IOJ "Mwltvra It Mil Ctr· Vlcto1 M1!un, (1hel B•"""'°"' .. _ ..... "' STARTS WED . ~npr~hgq Oil!'-( 411! TEClllltCOl.011" AUO 1•1 Walt Disney's "IN SEARCH OF THE CASTAWAYS" BARGAIN MATINEE WED., 1 P.M. F rM Refreshments Adulll $1.00 Child 7Sc --OP JOIL DIU.NIT"' "KLUTE" "THE HONKERS ,., .•..•. ,, ... ~ .... ..... _ ......... ~ ......... . .... ..... ' ..... ,,.....,.. ''') l"Ju1 AIHt !Jh1,l11t "LOVING" "SUMMER OF '42" With Goor.,. J.tel ' IOTH COLOll f•G Morlo Sehtt IOTH tl l S1111dey Me t\l'IQ 2:00 P.M. • • •• ,, :' 111=====================~!!!!111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111!!!!~ • COAST ~WY AT MACARlH\UI ?lYO .~EWPORT BEA CH " 644·076 "m TEAR'S FIRST llAUY unsn1H. Ill COlllHCIAL AIERICH Fii.i. GIE OF THE IOST IRUUI. AND IOVINI t:llROlllCl.H OF AlllllCAI UFE EYlR DHlllWI WITHIN THE UllTI OF PDPllUR ENnRT~llllIIT." -Vincent Cat!b>'. New York Tlrnt1 ''"THE BDDFATllU' II A llPECTACUUll llOrlf, 0ll£ Of THE ANIST UllllTU lllOWllS OU llAllll" 111, NBC-TV "l'Rl!NCH CONNl!c; r!ON" L:l·--AllD "smlN• fAMIT" Dllt Y -12130-J;JO. 7 & 10 r .M. l ·---AC.l.DIMY "TJll AWA ID J.All' WINN(R l'llmllll ._ .. 119~- 2NO Hir "'THE LEGEND Of NIGGll CNARUl" 1'5) KOCM stereol03~"' the sounds of ~harbor --'~~~~24 hours· a day • ' "' ,, Mo M w ,, ... M p "" 0•' '" , .. '" '" M Death Initiative Drive County Praised • Ill ORANGE COUNTY For The Record tl!3'0 :•t 'h'"tAT' .t .• , 'ri TM :::::!L3 Dissoltitiotis Of Marriage F!ltd M1v 11 G1t11nt~. Rote<> R. "nd P~rnrla R Hon. f.lolnt M . .&ml B•nlem.~ Or~illt Glbb1, Rootr M•rlon •nil Anh" M11 Stl'<!Ol~~I. M1>d 1 A. ""d F.r nle C., Smith. Lindi J, tnCI Q....,gl•s M . Ford. DolOlhv M"!lldo "no M;,1y.n PrtSl<ln tii•, K•lhtrvn Lo"''' 1>nO R1chM<I Allt• M0<>r•, Rob.or! O. "nd 5hfflt• 1 WtlUht tt, Jt"n G. •nC Mllko l 8e<ts•ul. Flovd G"ll "n<! Phyllis RtY So•e. An tonio L. 1nd M,,,;,. £ Rainer, Oonn• Lr• """ Ji'uc Sl •vrn Ktlly, Corinne Ann •nd Milton W••ltv ("!191url, 6dly "nd Ptler IM<IOCt nl B1ldts. P8UI and M"rYtrt1 E. T•lke1u, Ros•lle .J. ftn<l Gene c. flltd MtY lt llre!!. Glori11 Fern <lnd John Jn••o~ Summerlltl<I, Esitlle M<lrit "n d · Charles Eu<>t ne !enlor, Cl•UorU Allen •nd f ord•h" Ann t."'11, Carm A"n and l<on,.l<t '1.!<0ld M•nes" E1thor E . .ind joe E P111•.1n, Goo•Gellt and /;~"""" Bnl<~wav, Lau•a M. and M<1 rlon F PHlnam, I eQnanl llov anit Gin• I~ M"rv B"rwitlt, Mvr n" L. "fl<! W1il•~m H. p ,ncoc>., M~rt11<1 Pea11 a<rn Tnoma, STewa'I Brown, Svi~n l ~nd GJt\O O P~1nt. SloOh<ln'" D, ;rnd Lancr S <;r~vtn" E 1ma t_,,i 1ne rl M(I ~T•••n l IArl,.lo>n, Cvnll>1;i K~Y an~ Oav.1 lv10c'1a~I tior!h, Fted<IY l.e~ ~nd Lindd L•e Flltd M•v 19 Norin, FtecldY lee and Linda Lt• M~nlne1. Paul Oli~tr "na Bronda J11ne Ford, Brenda C. uK:I Jtmt' II. Doniel, Carolvn f . "n<1 (11arlt s L. Boyd, 1111 D"wn and Wllllt m Fredtrlclt Berry, LYia Lcuhe 11no Rotioerr Wlllldm ,, Randolp~. Ricll••O L •nd lrlr.cl• 0. McOonlld, Mdry Cath.,lne ind C•rcl 0·0 ,1 J<>elrcy, Ad• L ~"d e,n[am,n H, C~•lro. Glenn Je•n ;n ,\1l"·d WilU1m1, \llflli r Tom •n<I (lll!f•,nt P. Ov Boi1, Jc/\n nnd E'ln•r ~andtr1, Oc•O'!W Jr~n •~d llv~ti Wc~l•Y Boo~. Btcl;• ~n<I D•vln R lloJro, Lino~ on<! Lo"" 1 P1rmrlte. fl ,,,~~'" Su• ""d Ga•v r.11nan. Grorgla L •n<I Dcu!,las \~ Mar~•· Sh;rl•v A. •nd Rit"••O W&ldron. Florene• ind Gtrold ll. Rall~. Gftaldtint and Richard J , fl r.11on, LlndA /l. •••d C••v L, Sp•ncer. Gtral<11nt (arcl Ir.cl 0111 Jt"• ni11gs Ritt , Ruin F. and Mich1tl J. Mc1n11rt, Mitl11tl Dt nnl1 1"4 L1ura E'Uen M•ldcnaclo, Matii l/!'glnlf 1nd Jull4n "' .!.l<!tn, Donna J •nd V1vl<1 M Ca1anro, (~m•lla l, and An!onv ~01mt<1!. E.iner Y. ~"0 lh«x.io•t P1dg•l~l:a1. Walttr aM v lo11 F, Sloe~. M.cnatl B~IOtl ~no Cnervl lu~h t 8(1dtll, O'nni1 F. ~nd (nleen M. Yb•rr•. M••• En..,lna •nd R<Xlolpno L•'· Marv A.nn and K~nnf!/\ E. C.•rr:c~ BdtD~•a A."n ar.cl AurtliP L•l•nO Htrn•non, Dia11a •nd G1.11<11lu1>e Rcc11a NQOI,, Donn" B. and Richard R (ll•ve1, Ron•ld .I. •nd Lin~• D H ~n!. W>lh~rn Ll'O •nd Chri•!•n• (1rQI Flltd M•t 11 F•nnlng, Lynd" S . .ind G•raro E, McCl••ry, Charle' OwlgM .ar.ci Mary l Ort•int AnOrtwl, M•rtht Q_ •nd l(t!'lt'llth N. Srnt!h, Cllarle• R. •nd Leo11ene Auorev ~ultlil!t. H•rolO •n<1 Normon T. !ol"dow11c+, Al•x•ndtr M. i ncl Myrna KJV Ne..,·man, CvMhll Loul1e i ncl Keith Don Locnmlller, Pamela jfln i nd P/\lllP '1and C•udill, Lorr1ine •n~ Joh11 W~lth•" JuOy PMnDer!on i ncl Fri nk ... Rowan, M6'Y K•v ""d Jaclc C. Erlt~!On. (ll••lt! Eu9et1t l rHl P1lrkl1 Fran<•1 Powell, Donni J. I nd M!ch1el L. Co~•rly, E~n• R~b•n and Din Dalt CawteY, Jcann El.,.btlh uld M.IChttl """ Ve•lal. Virgfni• L and Wlllltm H. (""lov. M1rv Jo and J1me1 J l(raU••· Ka•lllttn .Ann and L1rry RLl\;el1 Dtnntv Willa Mat 1nd George l~<t"10>on Korr. Belly J and 11 S. 5n~o·~. l lnd• J •no Jack E PllllliP•. v1r9;n;a L ~ml Lawr•nce £ lnvlor. P•l•tCi• A.nn an<! 08V•O l l,f!O•d L•ld•nlltlm•r. O~'leoe M. ano C/\arles ' Dealt• Nol ices MOORES R~'' l . Moore>. 1111e 18. of •1s1 K 1n11ll~htr Drlv•, Hunlln111on flt8th. O~lt o! dea!h, June 9, 1917_ SurvlvtO ~y' w1r,, M0tr~: !l()n, Tr1Vlt Leroy; <1au11/\ter, llnit M00<es; mo!ner ar>d 1tepfelht"r, Mr. end M rt , JOI! Chautrol~; ""'P slslttt, Ell11bt!n Jtwell and Merv Jo C/\c!1; lhr" brclh•rs, G•orllt. Ch•rltl t r.cl Vl<TDI' Moortt. Service., W9dneld1y, 10 :30 AM Pff~ F1mily Cclonl1I Funt1r11 Homt . iMALL Htlen H, Smell. Age 71, of 2272 COl"Mil Orlvf, Co1r1 Mei•. 0111 of cltlll\. Jun1 I I, 1972, Survl~«I by husb1/\d, Oonald1 brolhtr. Wiibur H1rrlsc11, Alfadf!nt. S1rvlc~ will bt htkl Wftlne1d1y, 2 PM. e111 8 rotdw1v Ch1p11. 8111 Bro1dw1v Morru.iry, Olr.ctort. •ALT~'RGERON •·UN AL HOME Corona del 11s.N.lt Costa Mesa 141-ZCU BELL BIOADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Cotta Mell u 3-3llS McCORMic\ LAGUNA BEACH idORTUARY 1715 Llgan1 Caayoa R4. 4IHllS PAC!Flt VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Cbapd 3500 Pacfflc View Drive Newport S.1<h, Cllllondo 1«·!700 PEEK ,AMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOJllE ".'IOI Bol11 A\le. Westminster lt345!S By 'l'OM BARLEY 0 1 ""-~fl' ,.,.., '"" SANTA ANA If CaHiornia's deach penalty, ini4 tiative proves to have the number of signatures that will put it on the November ballot, Orange County backers of the movement will ha ve played a big part in the drive to keep the gas chamber in the state's judicial system. "\Ve've had an excellent response in our county," District Attorney Cecil Hicks r.:on1111ented. "\Ve'\'e sen t 12,000 petitions c a r r y i n g any"·here ltom three to IO signatures each for verifica - tion and l'n1 pretty confident that we've rut our target of 85,000 signatures. r• Jlicll, a key worker in the Orangt! County in!Uatlve drive headed by former Anaheim police chief Mark Stephenson, fell that "something like" 1.5 mill ion signatures had been obtaine d statel\:ide in the drive that ended June II. That would be almost one million more than the 520,800 needed to pu t the measure on the November ballot, Hicks said. "But ,.,.e stil1 ha ve to ha \'!2' alt those ~ignatures verified ," Hick3 said, "We'rt bound to lose many of them by the verification process. but we do se-em to have the kind of margin at this JX)int th.at \Vil! ensure inclusion on t h e ballot." Jlicks laude-d the ~·ork of the Orange County volunteers \•:ho racked up a total or 12.000 petitions ''in the very little tin1e that \\'e v.·ere given to ge-l thls initiative effort off !he groWld. Cou11ty W rite-i11 ''Thousands of p e rs o n s statewide have "'orked for thi s in a purely \'olunteer effort ... !licks said. "l think it has been a tren1endous demonstration of the C<lnce rn felt by Cali fornia ns at the abandonment of c a p i t a I punishment in this statr. 11icks said the fina l total of verified signatures should be available by the end of the week. Votes Compiled "But we then have lo see Officer's Assailant Gets Sued Suits Ask $1.6 Million In Blast SANTA ANA -Damages totalling 11.6 million are being claimed by the next of kin of two employe1 who died in an explosion a year ago at a ~ ta Ana toy manulactW"ing plant. The parent! of Linda Joyce Dyer. 19, of SAnta Ana, de- mand a total of $1.1 million in damagea for the death of their daughter foJJowing the blast June II, 1971, al the L.M. Cox Manufacturing Co. plant. The Cox company is named as dtfendant In a $500,000 Orange County Superior Court suit filed by the famlly of Mrs. Margaret Df:lfln, 42, of Santa Ana. Both actions charge the company w I t b negligence leading to the exploalon thtt kllled both women and injured several other employes. San THE NEW WAY TO SAY IT Newly-designed "Love Sall" with dazzllng diamond 80litaire In 14 kanit gold. From $355. Contoured Wedding Ring, $20. Do Something Bautiful. DNldtdPiymentoA- CM .... A<fflllltl lnlflll 11.mtl"kl" ,., .... , 9a"kAIMrklrtl ..... M"ftt' Clll,,.,, .... SLAVICK'S Jewelers Since 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH-644· I 380 SMITHS' ,,TORTUARY 6%7 Mala St. R .. ttngtoo Boec• -Both women died in hoapltal of severe bums eu rtered ln the olast. to Igloo SJ1ow Oi1 Tuesda y KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN Saturdays in The DAILY PILOT • DAJLY ,ILOT JI --.----.:=.--1.EGAL NOTICE !.EGAt NO'l'lt'B-- COH•N. ITOICICI I OWIM 110 ROOOL,O MONTIJAriO At1<>1'11eye •t UW nn N. ar"""""' 1•111 tit l•11t1 A.111, Cellf. 1'2711 111: 111•1 us.1m . ""' ,j IJ J z DAil V PILOT T utUIJy Junt U . 1972 b11 Bil Keane "listen, ~rrry I The ~)'li~d fighting I Should I go ... what Hi9y~• Into?" . \'• ' • Hawaii ~unts Killer Gang HONOLULU (UPI) -A ol April I, Souza,:!&, wu dr1v-record of gambling amst. g<> roundup ol a : ''murder lot illg to v--ort OA the highway ing back for 20 years. hire" pna,beUeved to be con-wbicb cor:inects the windward Chan. who &erVed time for nected •1fith eight ~laytngs in si~ of tbe bland; with selling marijuana, abo had a the normally tranlqull Ulands llonolu!µ. A few minutes later, tong record oC gambling ar4 i.s under way. he w&s found dead in his car rest.!. Police said he ran So far, 11 arrests have been alongside the highway. gambling tours to Laa Vega.a. made and police said last Police were befuddled at his Kang •was the second victim wetk more may be etpected. death--8' ~:·bad, ·-loo un-In the series. His body was Reports drculated that the <lerworld l.XlnnectiCIDlf· and no found on the side of a lonely gang, whlch included inmates record · of arrests. He was stretch of road five days after in Hawaii State Prison, is also known as a good worker at the Souza was slain. reap(l.ASibte .tbr a series or telephone ,company, and as a On April 28, the body of jewel ~ in tlie past six f.ine neighbor "tho minded his prominent Honolulu real estate monthi. ~ arres1ed. six own busi~ess, · broker, Isaiah "Jke" Shon, were ,~ in tile $1~.ooo · Hts death ·~followed by a was found in a concrete Ala Moana.Center jewels theft series of s layings, Two of the cu lvert in a suburban section last month. victims had been k now n of Honolulu. Shon, 54, had no One man, James X. Poklni, Underworl(ffigureS. The}r were known under w or 1 d con· 3S, -bu been charged wf!h JoSeph S. H. "CtiocoUite Joe" nections. Four days before his thr!e counts of first-degree Kang, 43, and l!arold K.""Big· body was found , his car, with and a $100 money dip oo the :1eat. was found .in a 3C'Jlool driveway. Chan's body WU found May 3. On May 21 , Cbarles H. Vena.bit , 21 , was found dead in bed in his friend's room. A shot had been fired through the wall. Pollet uid it wasn't an accident A decomposed body was found June 1,. in the brush area off a road near a shop- ping center. Police received an anonymous tip on discover- ing that bod y. The victim has not yet been identified. The following morning, the body of Vernon C. HaJ I, 48, a retired Air Foree m an, was found alongside a road in a suburb of Honolulu. murder.' gie" Chan , 47. the door open, engine running H8jwailan ~lice ha .,. .. e Kang, f oJice ~aid, ·was/p;-------------------~I tightened security since the unde r fede'ral i'ndict1nent for "o"' r.1,.,,..., o"' r.11o. .-.,,~1 r• ... 1 11...t· What's New at Harbor View 0 11 Su Jocu1ul• Hlllt l'•ff, J1n r ecnr of Moc.Arthur Dl•d. Rc~lstcr now'.''. \VO\\'~ JI~rd «old 1•flsh glv('n a\~·ay \. for Falh<'t's Day. $100, ~50. & :$25. un Sat.. June "" 17th. Rr1:is ter a t 1111y of t)Ur s tiJrl'S, no purchase necessary; winner \\'ill bt: nulifi1>d •• _ 1\n11lht:'I' fun t>Vellt at HARBOR VIEW. Shoppl11g IS fun at THE GUILD DRUG. \\111n n \l(Kxl t11n1•s In thi-1r dl·~·nr hl f'nd \\'ilh th1· frti'ndly :Hrnusphrn·. \Vidl' nis!C's, ~-l'lean sht•h'('S & deliJ.!hlflll 1n1•r 1·h11nch:--f'. Ana<'in tu zori(·S, Anl1riues to Z1n1: ().x1de art• all h1'!'1• fur you to chunse frum ... St·h•.,'JI'.:. out thb wt•"k & CHIL· ,~ OREN UNLIMITE,D are IJ\ll<>Y \\llh huirstyllng for- boys & girls. i\lakf' your appt. 110\\', f'in<' Sl'lt·C'ti011 of su1nirif'r \\'ear too. Grt that C'.xtra S\1'irnsuit to _;. take un vacat1un, .. Ei•fo!'e starling nut on vaca- r oundup began. It probabi_y violaHng_ federal gaming la~s. BONG-1 W ~0-NG · ; ' !.J; :_:' 1 ;; • :ro~ ~: s~~~~~ ~;at~ ~nJ'e si~~t=n~.:da hgea~~m! ... Coelf,. '.Lo$ 1 ·.! .... s::';Lif e ~.,~~:;!f:,~;:~~fc~~ -. · · · · . · .. ,.. lion be sure & stop 11t HARBOR VIEW SHELL 1'heY havf' :;ornetlung n~·11· for su1nn1er saff'ly. BEAR BRAND frunt l'rn1 align111en t for a cnn1fu!'tabli', il'S.~ exr:ienslve .SAFE ride out inl11 th,-. lazy. hazy da_ys -ah1·ad. ·r1'! complt'(l' ynul' :safety tht•y huvr a hi;: tir·· sa!r• f1,r 1111• llt'.\l :10 da~·s unty. 4 Belted ra):on ,1·JJi1r sidl' 11·all tirPs for .'ji9~) a S('\ & up (d1·1K'11d1n.: un size/. MACNAB·IRVINE still needs listin'!:-; & \1·ill \1·clcom(' you1· 1·:111. 'l'IH'Y huve ~1 x nicl' :;ales-, • nicled.-.rllh un derwor ld ._-'."'.,-!,~. r j org,~t{Ons. ; ' On ~ .. rea·!_i> '.. s-*. ··.Day .. ~~~i9~r;:. ~;an~~.~ ~ " and. ~tht results are ... .,_. j -• . '~. , , , , . knowrl,' ' indicated, more From Wire SnvleN _ ~lf••n '1taJ brought to light w'QulCf~ shed on the, rob. Sunday was to have been 8 1 ;~a ·~~qse;Jt .was in berlea,~l;nurders. 'thft.~ dlstrl ... that the The series· of deaths began a AMT.HONY ~cHboi:s· HAHOR CENTER ' !JOO Harbor C•n""" Costo Me••, C<>lllornle Ph. 1714) ,79°2353 SPE(IAl ,.1(1 ··~· NOW Double i"Jt •• ,,J9J 1$9 Silk /rlloho!r •••• , II ts Cooh_,o,. • ,., ... 98 19 Shotlukln , • •, ,, , 1$ •2 Silk Wool •. ., ... 82 89 Sh!rh ........ , •• 10 • plu> po1lo .. I. dul, 7000 fltUSt IMPOlTll WOOlEHS & llOfJllf KNITS •~ Hand l•ll-C..•-M.oo. l ul11, $-1<-, Sl•<b. S~lrl-l. • WI flT ANT llZI • AMT STYLI COl'llO • fREI AlTIRATIONI • IAST PAYMIHTI l!!!!!!!!!I ~ .... ""' great day in the life of %!-year· · , , · "'' with Frfide?iek: r-.t. Souza, a old Gram. M. Bruattls of . biJacbd:·a!K•· nm lan~d. Hawaiian Telephone c 0 .' 1717 s. lrOOkllu"' 51~ 2112 Dupont Dr'IY• • Dull I.I..,._ A.n•h_tim (;•I fUC t For Appe!nlm,nl 15k for Ve1hl(Oppo1l1e O••PlQ• County A!rPOrt Willoughby, Ohio. . •• e3 """'t""'.•· He sur· employe. Ph. 1714) 7i''·SBOO Suitt ,::it w hir.cl Alr poiner inn> --~ 'it:" ., people ff> hel!l you, ,_•i thl'!' for listings or selecting: a lovely JJC'\I' hon11• , • , • Lookin~ for yuu this \\~'l'I> out hcrr at HARBOR view : .... Adios ........ I Ho ~-h I ""°"' IJJ-0211 ShewasOOg&herbachelor •':"'"'r'Y n Du~·u. •; __ N~e~a~r~da~wn:"..'o~n~t~e~mo~rn~ng~llillllllillllllillll!'!llillllllillllllillll!'!!!llillll~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~========================================= of fine art& degree rrom ·Lake ,;~' ' * . ~ , .* , Erie College. ' ··. '<.!"1er·ut~ul 'M... SOolt ~r' bas lleMme;ft byg Her parenta wer:e going to .bi-eerier and says, "I,'1ldm.it announce her eng .. ement to the ·whole thing seems prettf PEOPlE 1lar out." -1 The ·. see'ond American t~ I orbit"tbe earth has launched his \ "bug-breeding r i r m , '-----------' ln"teerated Biological Control William F. Shay-Jr., 22, of Painesville. She had. had her diamond engagemtnt r i n g &ince Wednesday. ~ Col'J!,, in an abandoned cow · ebearnear Santa Paula. carpenter . says he hopes to breed end sell two billion tiny ~1ps, .caU.ed · tricbogramma, by !he end of the year for me In the 'C.ntrol of hannlu I in· ·~·· A speeding car 'struck and killed her as she walked across U.S. 20 near Lane Road In Perry Townshi.P j u a t minutes after mi4Mght Satur~ . • * * * day when the• yo\itig woman Fonner U.S. Chief JusUce and her fiance were _returning -'!larl War'ru Did recent from a party. meei'*"-"-leaders of * * * !\le , . J~ Stal'8, ~Inland Fttderlck W. HaQeman, 49 ~.' · SovJtt R1:1ssla m~ wu r,taced in a fedet'al lockup .b.er.a..-.:'.towa'.rd, ~g wm in A exandria, Va,, 'II! 'COMee-!!tJ.~n .'Pill~-whicb le";'e tion with charges ·tllf he hi· ~,~re ~ 'GD our en- Jacked an Ea~-· . !rlin~ Y__ . 0 "', • • May5andbailed:" '"Hoo-' ·~· Mi.•.......,.,these duru with !30!· ~, : ' '( _ ~~-, an! money. derstandiiir at these nations realize the cannot live efl- Old~· Gun D~~ls 'A Myth' ~ • 1h8t ··' , ;J·of . '~ iaity LOGAN, Ulah , (UPI) Western author Jack Schaefer says the old legend of Western gunfights wher e the two gun - slingers take a long v•alk toward one another and start blasting is simply a myth. He offered $100 to anyone who can prove such a face.to- face duel ever took place, but said nobcxly has taken him up on such an offer before. "Everyone wants the massacre to be a little blood· ier. the Indians a little \vilder 11.nd the exploration a linle more exciting." said Schaefer, author of "Shane ," al a con- ference at Utah SI a I e University. "As writers of fie· tion and history let's not be afraid of myths. but be careful what we do with them." ' '".M_'' Uilif.".)iltnet." f'<Wii\'ei!,iA\d ·diiibic 111'tory .._ 'bePattment graduation ex- ercises at UC Berkeley. * * * Emperor Hirohito's 27-year- old grandson. born in an air raid shelter in Tokyo toward the end of World War JI, mar- ried the daughter of a real estate company owner. Imperial household agency officials said Crown Prince Akihito and Crown Princess Michiko attended the Tokyo wedding of Nobabiko lllgashikunl and Miss Yoshiko Shimada, 28. * * * llarold Wilson, the British Labor Party leader, is visiting Romania. The official Romanian news agency Agerpres reported that lhe former prime mini11ter v.·as \l'e!comed by a number. of nomanian official.! headed by r-.1anea Manescu. secretary of the Ro m a n i a n Communist party's Central Committee. Sµaat 1Juµi !! I • • " ' • Choose ;~ j Special <,. Careers } " ·~ " ' :~ ,,...,.nowrcw ~ j • cNtleneint c,,.., ·. ·• 1 MEDICAL ASSIST· !· ANT,'MEOICAL OFFICE , RECEPTIONIST,°' DENTAL \: ASSISTANTIRECEPTIONIST ift ;· OUf mod.,n f.Olititl. An -'itlble ll'lltl· 'ii I tution und.r1he FEDER.A.LL V INSURED / I STUDENT LOAN PROORAM ind A,,ltOVID fOf VETERANS Ind cfe.,.ndtnb. Tuition 'AYMENT ' ,LANS .-Wtte. Llf~i-EMPLOYMENT REFERRAi. ~ I IE ft VICE ICM 8ddhklnll eott. ACCREDITED .., ... a..lt1"' c.....t. ...... , ... .._,.,.., Al•1•111H etT,.._ llM TlldMlcal ....... .,.,. ...... , .. ,,.. ........ • • I ;, ' ., , " .. ' ,, ' . ....._.. " . •m phot1emmhers\ y , phqne book. e "ti ~· ' 'l!t,~!¥~· '.~ ! "" ' We've packed all sorts of useful infor- mation about your telephone into the front pages of your phone book. For example: ' '.,. ~ .• . . ,.,,f ~,·~' •. ·-· ''•('' ·-~ \ . · · -· Right fm;ufl! the fro~¢efvet.are spapes 'W~en!>yoU ~n·fitli.ln telepltb'1:e'-n~mbers :you' ~~'1!!tld. in an emergencY,i ;· . , · The fastest way tog · :!tlirOugh to these numbers is to dial them you '. ' • N:aturallf;'if you don't have the number/· · %the1>~rator , in an emergency and we'll _ 'elP~tiwith-the call ·-. . • "' ' " ~ ,'I ' Check the Index an~~·n: aJso ,find phone numbers for Directorf-AsSistance (for numbers that aren't in your book), Repair Service (if your phone's out of order), your local Business Office (for other telephone mat- ters)• and other helpful services. .Fmdouthow to place long dist8nce and local calls. Our Operators get a lot of questions about Area Codes and how to make various kinds of long distance calls. But if you're near a phone book, the fastest way to get this information is by looking right in the front pages. You'll find a list of Area Codes for most places in the UiS. and Canada, and also inf or• mation on-how to place long distance calls. For making local calls, there's a section telling which prefixes are in your local calling area. Fmdout howtocall CAiJd a lot of other helpful The front pages o:I' your, phone bbok-ijll you how to · ~!ace.~~ long distance dills. lloW't~:ffigure out timem~you know wi.1.t tiiite;ilis in Nova. ~tia ~-~t's 9 p.m • hete.:~QW ·~Place .a co~ ference cau; llO you can talk lo moi, than one persoil·at the same time. And a lot more. so,·next time you pick up your phone book; just filp throughthe front pages and see all the things we've ·. putthete.Notsoyou'JI memorize it.--Just so yau'll know it's there when you need it. • • \Wftlvre tOhelp. @'Pacific 1elephone , c d • • • e c h " F I c h h h II a! Bare Backs Ride High 'Glamor Not Such a Dirty Word' By MARIAN CHRISTY Designers, still ardenUy promulgating the con- cept of fashion as synonymous with change, insist elegantes are bored with looking like Utile soldiers in "constructed" underwear and outerwear. What women want these days -at least for after-five -are softly-.cut clothes that eliminate bras. It's all part of fa shion's liberation movement. New York-based designer, Charles Kleibacker, whose name isn't exacUy a household word, has gambled a career on bias cut s. halter necks and backless-strapless gowns for years. It certainly didn 't get him everywhere in the 60s while Paris giant Andre Courreges, got millions of women in to thick. we lt-seamed clothes that were more tough than tender. Things are looking up. Today Kleibacker, a 47-year·old Alabama boy, ls being "rediscovered" by the country's most pow- erful stores and dozens of private clients who'll pay $400-$900 for a gown that has that 40s nostalgic bias cut, is backless and makes bra-ditching a real- ity. HARIOR FALSE VIRTUES Charles believes women too often harbor false virtues -like the idea that a bare back automatic- ally announces loose morality. "Currently the fe- male psyche i.5 prepared for body baring," says · Charles. "Bralessness has led to backlessness." But not every_ -client will bare front and back. Most Kleibacktr gowns are made from six-ply crepe or two layeti of jersey so that bralessness, doesn't necessarily piean see-qirou gh. "The psychology is freedom with decency," says the designer. Gharles has gone:ao fal ·as to put sleeves oa backleis gowns fol" over-30 women who suffer from jello-ltke flab that droops the upper arm . ~ ' .. The back dOlln't show age/' says Kleibacker who bas seen quite a few. "Very often mat\tre wozn.. en in. an otherwise, state of physical deterioration can have a smuhing back." Kleibacker hired a custom drissmalter to give him p,rivate lessollJ. Then he t q oi off to Paris .. cold ' -no money, no contacts. The House of Lanvin offered him a job as a ~oom usistanL He u.abbed it. "That's where I learned ho\r to cut on the biu and drape ao thai the 1owfilf and 'nveals at the aune Ume,'' he sayl. ' FULL "GURIS MINIMIZIQ• The designer no"' mallet ....,.. up to size 14 It's surprising, he.oaya, bow,JJocldus blaJ.cut clothes can minimize lull figures. Last week Richard Bonynee, Joan Sutherland's bUJband and mentor, came to see the Kleibacker collection with the idea of buyln1 aome gowns !or bis not-ao-sllm wlte. "Of course, the thing about backless cloth es Is that they require 1upreme confldenct," says Klelbacker. "Life im't p~adlse -Ille woman in backless clothes cannot bO a llouch." Kleihacker uys the elegan\e must sit straight. hold her head high , cross her·legs artfully, dance a lilUe clooe and allow her hips to IW&y aligbtly when Ille walks. '1t's all part of the new idea that glamor isn't such a dlrty word any more." Kleibacker's silk crepe gown, cut on the bias, features backle11neu accented with pearl ropes. • Pageantry WoVen Beauty in 'Sheep's Clothin.g' Callll>t up In •·whirlwind of actlviU.. IW'rOlllldlnc fbt 1llh OMual MW Wool of America Paceant are JO youna women wllo -.II earned a rt11onal Mw Wool U. u •. Amcq contettants l! Miss Sharlene GarlJh, It, ot. c.o.ta Mesa who rtprQenta fbt Calllomla Wool Council. She is tho dauclltor of ~ Barbara si.cy and Stephen Garllh and t. a junior prt-<lental hy1leoe major·af UCLA. The Dnal oelectloa will take pl>c. Fr~ d1y, June 11, in San Ana: do, Tex. when MU. Margie Sharp of Salt Lake Cify co11- dudeo her rtlsn. Included In the weeklonc festivities are lake parties, dlnntrs, formal bel!s, a western . barbecue and danee and a lighted river J)l.rade with the %0 con- tf!lltant1 on decorated barges. l>JHna tho paieant . each hopeful wiD model aeleeted wool fashions from American de,,Janers' fall and Winter co"- IO<llons. Tbt winner will rectlve an aIJ«easioa "ardrobl complttely acceuorlztd , • new au~, at the end of btt reign, a col· Jece liCboW'lhlp and utwlve travtlina . lo major U.S. cilles. II.ti ANIMUON, lhltt.t TINlllY, Ma 11, am ~ .. For the river p•r•Cle each conteatont will ' weer Pendleton en1emble1 of plaid 1ldrt1 or. flared penh, J1lou1e1 end 1we•teiveatl, ( ibove, IHtl. Feminine 9own by Liz s .• nifera i1 1eltcted for the pageant (right). Co1ta Mei• cont•lt•nt, Sharline 6eri1h 11 among the 20 hopeful1. • . ' '') . ' I • -. • • ' ' . t l I I. I I• ' h ,, ,, I l ! • ,. •: ( L· ;f.f OAJLYPiLO; Former Resident To Marry Kalhy Vyrnt N•wton, a _ former resident of Newport Beach, and Gary Kanl ol Ollklllnd are plllllDlhf lo mil' ry Aug, > in St. Mui'• Lutheran Church, H1yward . News o( .the forthcomlnC e\'ent has been announced by ., J1er parents, Mr. and Mn. Kenneth V. Newton or Dresher, Pa. Hls ptrtnta are Mr. and Mrs. 0. R. K.artt of Oakland. l\1i!! Newton is a &radu•te of C-Orona de! Mar Hl1h School, attended Ora.cat C.O.tt C.Ollege and UCJ and rectlved her BA ;n music and teaching credential at California Sllte University, Hayward. Her fianct atlended Chabot College, Hayward and oerved in the U.S. Nal')'. Holly. Tutsct1y, J11nr 13, 1972 Bid for Fair Deals ·Is Lost • 1n DEAR ANN LANDERS: You probably won't print this leiter becauae 1t hu no lolemt tor people. J'ho don't plaY"bridl•, · bn I'm ltimg • dlanee llll)'Wty. Flrst let me tttl you, Ann, I'm e1•ctly yoor oge. I don't think that'• too old lo learn , do you? At any nle I've bem trrlni lo Improve my bridge pme. What botben me ii the "always..ntver'' authorUtes v;ho aay, "AIWl)'I do tbia - and ntver do that." Wben I uk them on whit pace ~ what brldfe book l CID flDd Ille ln!Ol'Dlltlob, they Cllll'l tell mo. After I 10 home 1nd loolc up the points they '"" lnltructlni me on I dicover TREY were wroq apd I wu rllht. By then lt'1 too late to win the arsumtnt. The ne1t time we play tt'I the ume II.or)'. 1'Alw1y1 bid th1s ••• never play tlttt , , . Are all brldge playera naturally ob- noxlOUI, « don the 1ame make them that w1y7 Do cord pmes brlni out the wont in·peop1.e1 Wbat11 ypur experience? -iJ TICKETS TO IRRITATION DEAR U: J'a M uni "°1er M I cu't .,... Ina dfll1iaee, bat, If pl•,.._ -poople .... -· .. 111, I .... ~ tla'ew· la t11e 4ect, lor ..... Yloi......., __ IM umeny1e-. DEAR ANN LANDEJIS: Wby ore porento evil·~? Why do they llWl)'I thlok lbe ~? Here's my story lllld plwe lell mi whit 100 think. Lui nlJht my boyfriend Clllle over lllld my JllHlltl wm watcblnc 101De dumb tbln( on TV. We , decided lo fO lo my lilter'a room and lllten to records~ Well, we were just lyln( on the bed holding hands when my did happened to wtlk by and tee UI. He 1ot very !Did ind told U1 to 1et downollln r1lht 1w1y, He kept mumbl· Ina tblDp under h1I brulh and the ..... he mumbled Ille mtdder he sot. Flnllly, he Aid, "I don~ want lo -!hot IUY aroUnd here any mon." He meant It. What did we do wronc! !J It ,. horrible to hold llandl with...,.... you love?- D.P. Shuffle DEAR D.P.: I'm..,. yoar clad did ool tl>)ecl .. YOUT hollllnc buds. fr Y"' luld beo1 ol!Uq oe tile IOl1 be probably wtald not klve said a word. Wbat be DIDN'T like ••• &he fact tllat you two wm lytJc ll bed to1etbtr. and J 10 a!oog wttb Mm. .ht J do ltope be wlll recon1lder and 90t bar tM IDY lrmt your bout. lo O.• c~e for UU. reveraal, prom.lie to 1tay "t of tlat bedroom aDd nmala vutlc&I, .bd don't tell me If k.1111 wut to do tomttb1n1 they can manage in the kltcbta, the ear, or a phone booth. J',·e Mard all tltou an1wer1 . Uu your smarts aDd don't make troublt for yourse1Vt5. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was married on Thankl&lving eve. The marriage lasted leu Ulan two months. My husband almply walked out one day, said I was boring and that he'd rather live with his folka . 1 w11 in ·a blue funk for wee kl and am juat now bqinning to come back to lilt and tblnk straight. Pleaae tell me what should be done with the wedding gifts? Of course some of the appliances, sheets and towel! have been used. A close friend hinted that perhaps I shoulu return the unused gifts which came from his relatives. Is it ex· peeled? ls it proper? Please advise me. l am -UNINFORMED DEAR U.: It 11 ntlthtr proper nor e>:· pteted that a brldt return the wedding ,Uts If the marrla1e dotsn't stick. Forget tht hint. It'1 a bummtr. Even if drinking is the "in'' thing in your crowd, it needn't crowd you out. Leam the facts from Ann Landers' booklet, "Booze and You -For Teen1ger1 Only." Stnd 35 cents in coin and a long, self. addressed, stamped envelope to the DAILY PILOT w'ith your requeat. DIAMOND Coast Couples Horoscope Scorpio: Get Facts A·RIES (March 21-April 19 l: Crtatlve efforts s u cc e e d • Deeision is due invol ving 1nt1nber of opposite sex . TAURUS (April ro-May 201: What appears to ht-an obstacle will rebound in your favor. CEMlNI (May 21-June 20)· Accent now ls on i:;hort Journeys, reuniting ~·ith fami· Jy mc1nbers. CANCE R (June 21 -July 22)· Spotlight on inoney and ho\Y tu hold on to it Pist.-es person could play key role. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 1· Cy· cle high : take initiative. Make contacts. Dlo\V your own horn. \'IRGO {Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Obstacle in s p e. c i a 1 re!a· lionship, pro ject could cotnc 10 l ight f)on't brood about pasL Now is tune to outline fut ure goal. LIBRA (Sept. 2J.Oct. 22 1: Accent is on ron1a11t ic in· tere sts, unique relationshlps. 1noney fro n1 occupational endea vors. SCORP IO (Oct. 23·No v. 21 1: No1v you get facts on tuble. Those "'ho rnake pro1niscs are fo rced 10 put up or go a1vay. SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): Forces appear scat· tered. You are asked to do many things-too many at once. Sagittarlan is in picture. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19):. Investment p oten t i a 1 should be ana lyzed. Get aid from expert. Dig deep. Reject what is superficial. AQUARIUS tJan. 20-Feb. 18): S potlight is on partnership, joint efforts and marriage. Jf si ngle. you may be asked to commit yourself. If n1arried. mate may make unusua l demand . Married or single, this is time to observe, learn and decide. PISCES (Feb. 19-~tarch 20 ): lv!ake peace at home . Study Aquarius message .. Be dlpolmatic. Improve relations \Yit.h Tauru s. LI b r a in- dividuals. Get essential ta sks out of way early. C.roll • .,.,.,. ,,,,,. "* .............. Hold 1119 _,., ............. .... ..... .,, l .C... ....,. C......*'Mlr .... !l!!l!!. -.... -............ ...... ---D1ft•-...... Vows Exchanged of I •Udr#fl -... KHplh01tmomM•olW9. Thty'lf youfl.J:.!,.,-wflh 1 1ng1111montrlngl1011t Otlllfll 8/0llom. South Co•1t ~lau lri1tol •t ttt. Si n Olat• fwy. Co1ta M111 i40-t0•6 -The tt.re with 11\lelt 9{~4iltt/111tl•11. Ytur 1h•1t• •••ount w•lc1rne. Cl'tktnt btfllnd 1~r1. Awthefttlt, H1IMI M1ii•, lm!l'ertMI ••mlltlll IJI YMrt ..,.,t,111• AIAMS .. --lNUIST HUNTIN•TON HACH • ... uu PIRllAN RUGS KERMAN PERSIAN RUGS fi IMPORTS -.. -Hwy. IAT ~·0~11 -~•1a;1141 INTERIOR DECORATING YOU CAN DO YOURSELF Everything from Coler To Candlelig!1f mag'Ji Cobb ..9nvile:J Yo~ :ho '/jour :J/iinf} And Save mone" to enrol I in her ten hour basic design workshop which includes Maggi Cobb's Key to Interior ·Design Kit and supplies. Introductory price only $30. You will work and learn with the latest exclusive decorator fabrics, furnishings and accessories. ALL MA"' CO .... UClWIM UNI OP PUINllMllMI AND ACC"SO•tll AYAIU.l&.I fO fHI PVILIC. 420.311! St., Newport BHch (Oii Ll49 ,.,lnoul1) CALL TODAY tl4-673·1722 MORNING & A"liNooN SESSIONS IVENINOS ilY APPOfNTMINT CAPOBIANCO. KROENING Fountain Valley \Viii be the future home of Salvatore Frederick Capobianco and his bride, the former Denise Cor- rine Kroening, who exchanged Vows and rings before the Rev. David llarris in First Baptist Church of Santa Ana. Mr. and ?-.1rs. John E. Kroening of Surfside and the Frederick C. Capobiancos, fonnerly of Fountain Valley now residing in Do\vney, are parents of the newly•.veds. Mrs. Hampton Teddt r a 11d Roger Prelesnik 'vere honor attendants and Oar<'i and Dar· ren Degele \\'ere flower girl and ring bearer. The Misses Cassie Kroening. Rose Caix>bianco. Cherie Dyer and C!ndv Martinez ,,·e re brldesmaid.s. .John Kroening, Nicholas Cnpob ianefl, Scott Budd ancl ~lartin Hl.l il ey serv- ed <1s u:.hers. Both the n e \1t l y \Ve d s ~rnduated from Marina lligh School and Orange Coast Qillege. He earned a degree in marketing . at California State College et Fullerton where he was on the Dtan's List. BURFORO-ReCUPIDO St. Bonaventure Catholic Orutth, Huntington Beach was the uttln& for the h1arriage of 'Karen ReCupido and Brian E. Burford. >. •r MRS. CAPOBIANCO maid of honor and bridesmaids v.•ere the Misses Marcie ReCupldo, L i s a Burford and Michelle Baker. David C. Taylor served as best man and ushers were Fred ReCupido, Chris Cartier and Pat Brobeck. Following a Palm Spring9 honeymoon, the newlyweds will reside in Upland. The bride is a graduate of Marina High School a n d Southern California College of Medical and Dental AlsiJ:tants. Her husband also ls 1 graduate of MHS and is a senior at Harvey M u d d Qillege, Claremont. 1be Rev. Robert Vida I directed the vow exchange for the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.1.--.-.-.-•• -.-.-.-.-.-.-,-,-,-,-,-,-.. -,-,c l Fred R. ReCupldo and the son ; SHAMPOO/m o• • of Mr. and Mrt. Harry P. : ILOW WAYI -SI : Burford all of Jtuntlngton • '-"""'rtJ:Mti -1 """ wt•Ylllf • B..ch • • •.---''"""' -•u. • ..... M•..v Picard was tM ! 1 NATIONS C:OlffUID ! ... ~ ..... , CNllV Kwy .. HIWDOl'f ... di. • - • MJ.Ol44 • ••••••••••••••••••••• t Solitary Confinement Helps in Finding Self By ERMA BOMBECK Ever since our cblldren went into their "locked door" svn· dromt, our bou.st haa all iht. charm of e mental huiti tution . The entire house used to be open range. Anyont could graze anywhere and still be in plain sight. Not anymore. The <Jther night I knocked loudl y on the bedroom door. AT WIT'S END listening. I'll call you back." 1'he next one was a toughie. J found hhn behind a locked myself h1 the bathroom whrn a note illd wider the door. It read) "I 11eed a qu;.i rte r. Wbert is your purse?" I wrote back. "I am findin~ myNlf. lf I doo't know "'ho I am, Jt's· a lead pipe cinch 1 don·1 know where my purse is." "Who ls it?" asked a voice. "Jl's Mama." door in the garage playing hls i---------- drun1s . ··Who?" ":YIAMA!" ''Are you sure?" "Yes ." •·what do you want ?'' "Open the door. I want lu talk to you ." ''Did ·he' send you to g~t his records back ?" "No. Unlock this door." The door opened a crack nnd one e:ie peeked out. "Oh, it 's .YO U." "You v.·ere E>'<pccting Donnie Osmond '! t'onie to dinner." The door sllttnnied $hl1t. Follo"'ing a telephone ,~·ire. I traced the next chlld to a locked closet. "I kno"' you lire !n there. The telephone "'ire is warm. Come to dinner." There was silence. Then a whispered \'Oice said, "She's "'Do you hear me~" I shouted . "!l's dinner." "\V ho tGld you twas here?" ''The neighbors." "ls that all you want ?" At dinner r asked thern. "Why do you feel you ha ve to lock yourselves in you r rootns? Surely, we canl'espect one another'! pr ivacy withou1 bolts and chain.1. Getting this group to the dinner table is like t·riu.:king the First Na- li1in:1! Bank of tlanhaHan." ··Look, !\Ion~... they ex- pl;i incd patiently. "\\'e are going through a pli:isC' or our lives \\•hen "'' need pril·acy. \Ve have to have ti1ne to find ourselves ...• to find out n·ho v.·e are. "·hat "'e are and v,·here we are going . Surely you can understand thet." Later that evening, I locked Q ~D _{~ BALLOR-~ft ~ --...... .rJ.,'"l> .,_ The first dny 11r ~ummer is a trip t" 1l1c beach 1\l1t1 a F'lon:n(·e E1~r1nnn bathing suit from !hf' Red Balloon -~~~· 11'• ••ot deUR~lhff7 _,.,.,,, .,t.lldr<n '• ol•<• I• I•• Mnlhlu1J Jlimtlngton Harbour 1710 Mf.1666 Town & Country Orange (710 558-959; NEWPORT IS DIFFERENT! - Low Prices- We Compete! Tremendous Selection - We Excell! FABULOUS KNIT FABRICS FOR THE STYLE CONSCIOUS WOMAN. 6000 sq. ft. of Knit Fabrics -You must see to believe. Imports, basic solids, designer prints, entirt color li nes, •II in blends of Polyestar, linen, Flax, Wool, Alpece, Nylon, Deerskin, P•resuede, Trevire, Diolen , in top n•me brands. OUR EXPERIENCED STAFF PROVIDES GUIDANCE AND ADVICE We la y out patterns 11nd help you select not more fabrics, but the right fabric: for your individu11l ify, NEWPORT STRETCH I. SEW TICHN19UES We teach it in our mod•rn classroom' by skilled professional feachert. You r sewing e•petience becomes self-s atisfying •nd c•n be completed in 'o much less time. FREE DEMONSTRATION SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1:00 P.M. PEASANT ILOUSE-R.S.V.P. NEWPORT BEACH C:tfefc:h~C'eW' . 0 '.I, c o~ABRIC CENTER 2121 We1tcliff Dr. Corn1r 17th & Irvine (Next to Coco's) ..... .. ....... Mtn.•1'11u~. t 1.m. t. It p.m. Jfrl . .Ii Sal. t 1,m. to f p.m. PHONE 645-5120 IBARE9{/~ FOOT GEAR ori~ir.a\ '5oc.\::\e:~~ \et1tkt ... Sl'ltC<ie«t"S +a.,, dGlrl'. b\1.1<l, olive.. ~kTe.\-ic. -sl-loc.. bll.le G11>.cl bY'O uJll'... t'OIJ OfltK ~~Llis&.tf t~t~ 'fol tf 130 @)~a@@)~@_ 7 'a•hlon 1ikmd, n•wport center 6«..5010 • I 1 l l ' ' ' ' ' , • ' ) l ' . DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS YEP! TMl!R!'s MY CURllSlt>NE SrTTERS, WATCMIMG TME DIET SMITM '"""""-FACTORY! ly Chester C..ould ly Tom K. Ryan GASOLINE AWY SALLY IA NANAS Didn't know ljOU ~ in.' l WU? loci<ed in Cit~ Hall but I qot out! iHIS CAI.LS FOR EMER&ENCY MEASURES ! (.-1~ MUTI AND JEFF W\o\AT'RE l'M TEACHING NONO! NO! You K ISSINGER.MY t>o!NG? NEWPET,10 ~*'® "** SPEAK~LIS~ """'H---·.'.' ~-:: "*'~JV-@.' ..... #1'<!. l; ! ... FIGMENTS . ' . ··.If~· .. NANCY -' IF YOU K ID S W ILL MOW MY LAWN l 'L..L G IVE YOU EACH A DOLLAR I UAIL Y CROSSWORD ••• '' '· A. Po;;J "CROSS 1 Prtdatory (l.rJSt t 5 O~t1ipt1~r ttm1 10 "Thete'5 ~ort than oi1t wway lo skin --• -"; 2 worrlo. 14 A ccol111eii1 Cei.,..:>. !Clim 15 Net dead 1~ Apple pll1 17 Certain nrw~· pJ~ units: 2 "''Ords 19 US TitlS\WY •nts: lnfO"mll 20 Cofftt port of B1az11 21 Trln itro!ollltfle 22 Prt ;iosltiM 23 llOJ~~ffPMIQ rn:·y 25 Ca lrndar ahb1t vi1!il)ll 2& OFiice worker: Abbr. 30 U5 pgHt!:at oa1ty: Abbr. 31 Dmigti!er o! 1 ·r.xllas 34 11di!ns0fl'r demands 3~ T11n to for in[orm~iort 3g ·;.restlers' rill:tu )9 :::r>~lsl'! 11Jtho· 2 •ardS 42-A~lts •3 Sctnlc lttl 'l'ts\trd11's Pu11lt So!~ed: of Qu•bec ,. lm!)flUa.JS 4j Cate~ 4/ Sen~ o! ll•¥1ng ~?Sway 50 Sn ~tel 1ke fish ~I Cr•me ef inall- c.nus bi!fnl1111 53 Poles ...,;rtil'!I 9otr holes 55 Ttie •ltar 5!. Most sbblt ltl As SCJOll a~ !.2 Wathy of beU111 ••• 6• L~I hold f,5 Positive t !ectrolie 66 Conlinlll!: -2 WOfd~ t.7 Most rt~enl lt3 Plall'ltt" !.~ Solwc• DOWN 1 Football 0Hicl1ls: lnfamal 2 Clstlnctlvt 111 3 ·-CU/\3in • CQITTmon cootr~Uon 5 Became void ~ In lht 111anner cf: 2 WOl'dS 1 Ht has a w1y wltt. girls: J words S II~ in pro- llfl.11 sports 'for fe;ir that 10 In t xlsttnct ll Se!Ht by conct sslons 12 The p:anet Mars: Prtliw l l Soutllt m stMe: Abbr. ll Unit ol wou "'ii;i t: Bri tish 2• Pit cts or drlf!in11 ict 25 flrglnild ·-· U. S. pa!ntec 26 Scarf 27 Tiiing s i111il ;11 to a cla11 28 Conth~ncrs of lift 2~ Ntv•da: Abbr. l l "Nulf -1": You ate rig/II! Sliii'!g 32 TOii! -: Bait!- ll'IOrt Colts star ;3 A11tlbtock: '~""""' 35 Ac!i:r Gerq - 37 Paras itic h>t .... •ll Hit sh11ply -and swiftly l Spoit tht quilli\y of ~!. Fttl int.!P"lall· ly 199'if~ · ~ Bri¢tl"I' ) 1 Boston er tb11tt Luf Goirdens 52 Sister 53 Voting placr ~ A111aron ttlilctan 55 Btllouin 57 Scolds 58 Nlgtfli!n n•ivt: Vilf. 5' Plu:nllkt lrui l 60 Bt lnclin~ fol Cooling drln ~ ..... ,., -:•1 'l'(K AREYoU TEACrllNG ~IM SWEAR 0+1 WORDS? NO! ), ' I ·- BUT I +1EARDYoU USING SWEAR WORDS I By Al Smith 1'M TEACHING i-llM WHAT NC1T TO ::-SAY! By Dale Hal" ...... ---.,,.-.. GORDO by Ernie Bushmiller ~-------r~ DON'T BELIEVE HIM---HE NEVER KEEPS H IS PROMISES HOW DO YOU KNOW '2 " ·~.~ ........ -· PEANUTS .. .,,._ --4 ,, __ _, ALL R161IT, WllERE 15 SllE ? l'O<NT OUT 1HE~IREO 61RL 10 ~ ... JUDGE PARKER ~ow I UNDERSTAND W HAT YOU MEAN BY REAllSM, MR. 60RG50N ... IT'S ACT ING W l"'fM OUT ANYBODY KNOWING THAT I 'M ACTING! IS TH AT IT? MISS PE ACH KELLY JcHooL DRoSLfJ\\ Cl. I NI C.. ,,.., Boys WITH PIZ o'6 Lf~.S w1TM G IJZl S , -~ ;)o. PERK INS . •; " , ~~ l;J ' ' ; l !-I DO -• ' ~ "' {,1r "' '" "' HE USED TO BE A D E PARTMENT STORE SANTA CLAUS L<.>LE., <,l()(F. ~HEW, l.0011'>,IS A DOU.! -AND FOR SOME Rf.SON, GIRL, DON1T KNOW !'M ALIVE. :t >IEAN, THE.Y JUST C>W 'T SEE Mo FOfl: Dl6T ! l I I / ' . . . ,,, ..... . • ".J Iv Charles M. Schulz By Harold Le Dour TOMORROW, WE'RE G~NG TO MAKE A SCREEN TEST ••• A REALISTIC TEST! CAN YOU GET OFF FROM WORK AND MEET ME AT SEVEN O'CLOCK SHAJll.P ? lHAT'S OUR 8USY HOUR "T T~? RESTAUR ANT ... BUT I'LL TAKt OFF ! WMO SAID TMAT7 G IC:l..S CAN 'T S!E 1'1110? ly MeP WHO'S TALKING? WMAT'f ALL 'Tl'AT O\Kl'? . ,· ... " ly John Miles "' "' '" ~t-.. "' '" ' " D\1L Y PILOT • By Charles Barsotti ----- .· , F<Ytco ~. ~~ ~ By Ferd Johnson By Roger Bollen S!WT" ! I CCOLD HP.\J!O U.~ A FEW M&e Kl'R::/166 ·1:1iGHffS. . '. O.tll V PJ L OT arny ~1ana ge1·'s T ip Gave Cleveland His Shot ~un Devils jlioll Past k lUSC Nine \. :·t OMAHA. Neb. -t.ighti)'·regardcd ,..,mple &C'ls a ctuince tonifil ht to ~top the 'Arizona Stat(' college ba:reball jug- k<?rnaut. The top-ranked Sun D('Vil s blanked 1'1cfending two.lin1c charnpion Soul/lern C4llifornia 3·0 ~l onduy night to becon1r i hc tournflmrnt's onl y Linbt'at en of the lour left from a field of eight "\Vc don't c;ire u·ho we play . \VP hl-lvf! Jo \\'In or it's O\'er:· n1uscd Te1npl c c(»Jc h ,J1n1 lS k.lpJ Wilson aft er hls elub durnpt•d fonne<:licut 7-4 to slay alive. "Our kids are hepped up," c:ontin1111d , Vilson. \1·hose club is 33-11 and !ixth · r an ked . "\Ve feel we can play u·ith th ese teams here. \\'e are not a\ved.'' f If the first-time appearing O\vls ;iren 1, \he rest of the field and fans ha ve been. t A six-hit, nine-!trikeout complete ga1nc y Jim Crawford let the Sun Devil' treak by Southern California (47·13·11, M'hlc h faces Texas in tonight':! othtr Came. .... • DELRAY BEACH. F'la. -Four dog· Cedly determined duffers d r a g gr d themselves off the Bar\\'ick c;olf Club ~londay boasting 91 birdies bct\i·ecn U1e1n. Thtir tattered sco recards al~o recorded 685 pars aud 279 bog I es or worse . HUNTI NGTON BE ACH 'S JAC K BROH AM ER !ABOVE ) FAC ES ANGELS TON IGHT. -Joho Carpent er . Jeff (;reen(·, Bucky Blake and John Stornt said thry h11d j11s1 c:ompleted an unprecedented 419 holes of r-ontinuous golf after 48 hours on lht· links. But glory came at a pr1c1• The mrri lost « balls and Greene lost e1ghl pound s Blake, however. gained a pound and :i )lalf during the 69-mile odyssey. Oil City's Brohamer Almost The old llme record for contu1uou:: [Ounds of golf \vas 24·01 hour~ .... BECKEN HAi\I, Enjil\and -Pancho Conzalez. the No. I seed here 1!esp1te h:s 44 yea rs, whip ped Ken Hirai of .J<tpan 7·:>. 9-7 in the first round or !he l\c:i1 tenrus ch<.1 rnpionsh1p. .... SAN FRANCISCO -One.time (;111nts pitching paragon Juan ~1arichvl was hospira!ized 1\londa,\' 1111/J severe bat:J. pains aner hrs JO!h defeat rnade h1n1 !lu· biJZgt'sl lo:;er in the majors. ~larichal \1•as in traction <.rl St, Luke 1 hvs p1t:1I to rrl1e\·e a sharp p;ll n i11 lhf' Jo 11c1· b;1ck . Or. Eldon C' ~:11l1·r said h1· 11 011lt.I S1<.!V thcrr for ICSIS "n d physiothcraPy up to A week .... l-'L'LL\·1/\N. \\la sh. -ll<1vc (;orrie . 11·ho <..'Oached the University of Callfornia at Santa Barbara lo ils first conference baseball championship in 20 years. ha s been named NCAA Distri ct coach of the year Jor 1972. "" DES PLAI NES. Ill -NCA A champion SI e1'e Hug. Stanlord lJ n i v e rs 1 i .v :-.ophomorc. leads a f1elct ot 11 gymnast!i 111111 !he fina ls of the Un ited States ml'n·._ 01.rmpic TriJls r·riday and Saturcl;i1· 111ghts. A1 sta~1· in lhe rncct at l\"laine \Ve.~! Jli!!h School not only 11·ill be 1ndividl1<l l Olympic berths. but also the chance. tnr !he Cnited States to qualif,v for tean1 lillf' i:ompetition in the Munich Olympiad Aug. 26-Sept. JO Robbi e Thi11l{s Weaver Made Bad Co111111 ents B.·' LTE\-IOR E (AP 1 -The rt•sur g-cnt IJt1l111n11re Or ioles haven't lo.~t 11 )(am(' .~inrr manag!'r f<:a rl \Venver suggested fa st 11 pt·k th:it sonic of the vete r;ins ma y br uvcr !hf hill. It's in,possl blc to dctcrrn inc i f \V~a\·cr 's eomment s act11Al!y fired up the Orioles. Bui even if th e,\' did. Brooks Robin son doe5n't appreciate \Vea1•er's means to nn tnd. ~ ,"I find the rt>mark embarrassing," said tile 35-year-0ld third baseman after <imore de featrd !he Texas Rangers J. I 'Sunday to extend it ~ \1·1nnini.; srrcak to fdur Jlraight. Called It Quits Last Year B1 f'H,\lt ; SHEFF oi Ill• D•Uv P olOI }T•!f i\ year ag11 \()(J :ir Ja('k Brohan1<·r 11•:1~ !hinklng seriously of quitting baseball Toda y, the 22·)'l'<lr'-Old Hunt ington Beach rc!o:tden t is a !rip t::indidate for rookic-of·lhe-yc;ir 111 lh11 Am er i (' n n Le<if(U!' 11e·11 l;e :11 .~i·l·ond base tonight fo r l 'l~·1 l'l;1nd 11h('11 tll(' lnd1;uis t;inglc 1r1 !1i 1ht· C:il1for111:1 \nJ!1·ls ;ii 1'naht•1n1 StadiUHl 111 th•· l1rst of ;r lhrct•-game ~f'l'ICS . \\'i1h \\ 1t'h1t.1 11f !lit• Ar11er1r;1n Associa· t1on lust yi•:t1'. !;rol1<1n1L'J' i·ec;ills thal he and his 1~·ife had J;ilked ::rr1011sl.Y or pack· ing up and lf•:1v1 ng. "·During 1hc !'arl~· p:ir1 ot llH · :-.~·aso11 I \\'ilS used as a u1i li 1y pl :i;.i'r :i nd usuall y only got up ;is a p1nl'h hitter," s:iys th(' e:-o -tlt1n tington BC'ac:h High ba Skt'tb ;dl :ind baseball slandol11 He adds that a kncr injury and a pulled muscle in a leg also got hin1 cto1vn n1e11· tally in the e<irl y J)<lrt of the '71 cam· paign. "When I got over the pulled mus· i·lt•, lhl' first !111)1> I got up to ba.1 I go! h11 111 lhl' clbo11 :ui<I 1h<it k1·p t mr ou l lor ;i 11h:te "It'' rrally no lite to sit on thr bench . so my 1rife anct I deeHlcd thHt if things did n't gC't bt'ltcr by July 15 11·c'd go horne. ·· Bt1t thing s dC'fin nely got better for BrohanH.·r. l-lc got into tht linf'up. starred hitt1ni.: ;.ind ph1 .v111g good dcfrnsf' and 11 :is th~· starting ~V1ch1ta .<;1•cond bascn1;i 11 for th f' second half of the srason. U11! tnaking !he jun1p to tht• bigs 11·;is ::Jill ;1 long 11«1y off when Brohamer '1cnl 10 spring traini ng at Tucson. "I 1hougllt I had a decent t·hanec lo 111:1k1· 1hc elub <1s <1 ulili!y pla yer. but [ do11 '1 1h1nk the club thought that "I 11 :ls onl y given !hree bats and 11•hen I brokc one I had lo go do11•n to the rninor league camp to get seine others. And \\ hrn the guy came around 10 f1l unifo rms. he didn 'l come around to me. 11 \1'as rl'ally drpressing." s ;i y .~ Brohan1cr, UC /1·vine Te1 1n is S tars Po st T1 1·1.p1·ess ive W ins Sp<"4 'ial to the l)AJLY PILOT ATIJE:\'~. <:a -Bandy Sch neider ;ind 1;reg .Ja blonsk i ol UC ltvine ad 1·anrcd to the third round of the NCAA un1v1•rs1 ty dlrisiun tcnni~ charnpion ships being: st.1g('d :it thr L'ruverslly of Georgia 1h1s wek 11·fth J111prcss1 vc victories J\1onday Bob Chaj)pcll , L'Cl's No. I s1nJ!!C$ ~l a r, ,.,.(111 his fir ~\ rn:ilch orer D11 vl<I flu <;k:i 111 J)e J.'<nl! Un11·er.~1 ty. fl.I, 6-1 , b1 1t ft'll to US C's lJirk noh rn~1rdl . ~3. ~4. 1n second round action . Schneider <l r1·11 11 f1J's! rr1u11d hv r. thrn dt'lca!('d .Jn:1qu1rn Ha~};<ld" ;if \[1111111 Univcrsitv. 7-6, 2.fl, 6·4. He rlr;:111'' l iC:l .. <\ ·' No. I pla}rer. Boh l\n·is::. 111 third rounrl 1·0111petltlon todn~ Jablonski dcfc:lt i'd B1'1gharn Ynt111g's No. J plnyer. J\larly l1 c1111rssc~., 6-7 . 7-6. /. fl ;ind ea1nc b.1ek to defea t i\ltch1t;.n11 UniversJty 's Jefr Miller, 6· I. 7-6 Jn the sec- ond r0tmd. He plays Mike Kreis~. Bob's brother and th e No . 3 man at UCLA, in l()(l;ly's third round .iction. The doubles competition gets under wa~ today with Chappell and Schne ider facing Booth and J\losier or ~·le1nphis S111te nflcr both teams rl ra1\' tt fir·sf round '" . IHhlnnsk1 and (;lri111 <"rip~ battle :\·llam1's (jloblSl'.h and Ra~gad,1 in lir~t round con1pel1tion. ··J ablonski really did a JO b in his f\.\'O nta tehes J\·tonday," an elated coach Myron ~·tcNan1ara told th e DAILY PlLO'I' this morni.J1g. "He 11·a s playing !he top man from Brigham Young and the fifth ranked junior p!a ~·er from 1\1ichigan in his two matche!o:. "Sc hnelder did a great job beating that f1•Uow h·ont Miam i. They kind of laughed 1vhrn we look the c0urt but he shO\\'Cd lhen1 who v.·as boss . ~l iam i is one of th,. top rRted teams ln the country and 1ve :ilso get one of their doubles teams toda y. "!t is amazing ho1v 1nany foreign pla.\ cr.s arc involved in the va rious pro-- gr;i1u;;; around the country on both the c1illcgc and university level." McNamara obser\'ed. NCAA U11lyertlfY Dl¥1•1•• Te1111I• T•~IMllf f'l,.I lleu.W S:IMIM 8Gh Crw.ppe11 ruc n def. O.vld a...,,~. 10. P1Yll, ._ 1. 6 L ll:"ndv $(h~tld~r fUCI) dt'.w • bvt Orf<! Joblon•kl (U(fl <It!. Mar11 Htnnou tf ff111<,J~11m YOYl\Q) ~7. '"' '"· St~M e'"'" 11"9111 C.~•Opoll I U(l l le>•! to 01, •o~rN!tdl (UC.ll lt-J, .. ' ~<"~~,,,., (UCll di!, Jotqu•,.· lt •so~ IM••mt) /I, ' ~ ... J~b!0<1•~J !\/(JI !!ti JtU Mlllitt (M l(hiQ•nf •" l·A Hill ::ill !hrn hnpptnC'd bet'orr !he fi rst {'\l11btt1 0 11 g;11ll(' "l1l the second rxhibilion gan1e lhcy put 1ne at 1hi rd base and I 11·ent four.for· l11·c ;igai nst ~1ilwaukce. I singl ed in the lying run and singled in the \1·Jnning run . Af1cr thai r kne"· I had a good chance t11 1n:1kl' the club. ;ih hou.i;h Lhey 1verl' still using me as a util ity player. I didn.! get (u pl<1y scconrl until lht next to las! rx - hihi!ion garnr. Broh~rner 11:1s still rated a.~ a utility in· fie lder ll'hen the season began and sat on the bench n1ost of the time during lhc t1rst five Clev£•land games. Then he u·as given his 1.:hanct' by- 1-nanagcr Ken Aspromon:e and responded \1•ith three hits against Baltimore. tv.·o of them coining off the Orioles' 20-ganie \r1nner Jim Palmer. Ex cept for a six·gan1e span a couple of 11eC'ks ago, Rrohn n1 cr has been the starting second basem <in. "I 1vasn'I hilting \veil right-ha nded. so he (Aspromonte J benched me. But then he decided 10 go 1vith a set lineu p and put rnc back in. That's \vhen I decided to stop h 1t1 111g right·handerl " Brohamer is lirlding nearly f!<J11·!essly lnnl.v three error!i l and hilling .2i5. lie provided the key hi ts last ll'eekend. help- ing thf' Ind ians v.·1n tu·o of three from th(' ;\linnesota Tv.'ins and slay in contention In Ille Amf·1·icri n Le:igur Ea st pennant (•hasc. lie bagged his first and second homers Friday night and drovl' in the lying ru n and scored the winning tally Saturdny. Hitting that first home run wa!'I a hig thrill. says Brohamer -but it wasn't <1ulte. as big a charge as ge lling his first major league hit th e first time he came !0 bat. Thal came in Boston When he got up in the eighth inning after being in.~erted into the lineup in the pre vious frame for defensive purposes. "\Vhen t ca me to bat 1 was shaking ::ill over. But t hit a line shot up the middl e. They stopped the game and gave me the ba ll. I couldn 't reaUy describe the fee ling it was so exeitlng." says Brohamer, \\'hen Brohamer stat1ed I.he season he says his major goal \1•;is lo just sta.v l\'ilh the clu b. But he readily admiLs no\v thot he'd like to be the American League's rookie- of·the-year. And he qu.iekly adds he never wants to see the minor leagues again. "I was drafted 32nd by Cleveland and because there were about 670 players drafted before me I got only $1 .000 for signing. When my wife and I look back over !he past five years. ~'e had to fight ;ill lhe 11•ay. I neve r wan! to go b1ck do~:n.·· St. Louis Ace Stops LA On Just Four Hits, 3-2 Bv GLft~!'\'S WRrrF. Of tfle Oally l'llet 'r•H Sl'. LOUIS Regin•ld L c ! 11 c Cleveland dropped his 6-1 , 195-pound rra1ne onto Ille 1teel •tool in froM of his dressing cubicle and promptly fu mbled about, fa.iling three times before Jin1!!y ignirjng a cigar. And that was one of the r.tre instances !\Ionday night when the 2f-year-old St. Louis Cardinal! pitcher wasn't in full c-ontrol ot the-jilu11tion a5 he handcuffed the Dodgers, 3.2, before 13,059 !'ans at Busch Stadium. Yet Clevel!lnd might not evt n have JVo\~ 11 J un• It Ju~f IJ JYn• lo Dodgers Slate a 'o 51"'~> •11 11;,I U411 ·1<'0Q•" •1 SI. Lou" D ·J~t•! I I St. Lou,~ Qp., 0•1~ 0oPgP'1 It C~tr"•'O , P.<n. ~.~; p.m. ! I ,;<j I m been in Sl. Louis ~londay night it it hadn 't been for the sharp eye or a e&m ival manager who went th rough S\\•ift Current, Sask., Canada and spotted the young pitcher playing summer ball seven year! ago. The man sent a \1·ire to the Cards, i.u1- gesling thl'y di spatch a scout to th e little prairie ·town to see the: talf.nt.! or younjf Cleveli1nd. At that poin l Cle veland admits he never gave a thought, to being a pro. ha v- ing only played at such locales as !\loose J aw, Cold Lake and Swift Current. "But when I signed I figured I'd be in the big leagues the nex t year;" he ~a.vs. llis optimisn1 did not n1ater ialize. ho11·ever. as he spent nearly four lull seasons in !he minors. chalking up ;:i 53·40 record . He came lo St. Louis ror one game in 1909, posted a 9.00 eilrned run a\'erage. cam e back in 1970 for a few g;,i.n1es i nd then t ame to stay last year. po;;ting a 12· 12 record. Cleveland 11dn1its he had ne1·er ieen A major league Q:ame until he joined the parent club in 1969. He wobbled the fi rst three innings Mon- day \Yhen the Dodger s got their rung and four hits. After that he \.\'61S as tough as another Cleveland might have been - Gro-.•er Cle\·ela•d Alexander -a3 he faced only 19 batten, walkine one and dispJsing of the rest in methodical man· 11er. Th at lone 11·:.lk still irked hi m after the game had ended. "\Vatk.o; are my pet peeve -lt seem! every time l walk a hatter . he scores." Cleveland tol d th,. DAILY PI LOT. \Vhat did he do lo turn things around ~o drastically after the third innin&? "f kicked myselr in the rear end ," hf! ~wid, "and I started throwing more fa.•t balls." Cleveland , now 6·4 for the year -hie winner on a staff tha t ineludes pitchini .(rt.It Bob Gibson -!iYS he hi!! ntv,.r lhro\.\'n better thin in those final si1 in- nings. "I wasn't hanging the slider .a nd J got the ball where f \Vanted to," he said. "':\II' changeup has made the heater (fast bal fi a little better." Cardin 11 ls m:tnager Red &hocndien~t 15ays Cleveland would be areat if h"' worked as hard as he did il1ondav ... H,. h;is a loose arm and could thrOw fr.r« e1'er,'' says the St. Loui~ bo ss. Catche r Ted Simmons, who caught Gibson's ne>-hitter last August, iay.• ~!eveland '!! secret to his exteDent pitch- ing of late h11s been increased c:on· c:entration. <l He used to make lols of mistake!! - ha.ng a .slidt r and have • guy hit it out, things like that. But nO\\I :he's moving th• ~all a~ound and ls right on tar1et. J~e'i tnro1v1ng a better fas t bait 11nd he doesn·t \\'alk man''· '·He shoY.'ed me .t lot in the ninth inning "''htn he went 3·1 to Fra11k Robin30n then thrc.\v !wo fast balls by him for !he strl~cout. That 's tough -especially against a guy as good as Frank.'' Bil! Singer, !he ha rd-luck pitcher of th,. Dodf{er~. yie!dtd only six Tiits for the Sf'\'en inn ings he tolled. It ha s been th, r.a.~c in e\·ery game but one he·s pitch ed tn1s .1·tar, !he I>odger.s \\'ere held to thret. runs or less and his record has i>lipped In 3. 7. l oi •~ttln (I) 1•rhr~1 \I. LI V" 01 1•r hr" I 0 l I . , ' . 0 0 " • • I 1 t 1 0 I I J • G ! J 0 0 ~ J ••• l I J I 2 0 •• 1'1111<. \ < 0 & n ''~Ck, 11 M~I•, I! • I 1 I (or1>e, " llyc~'.'"'• 11> • o t 1 1.~.:~r.~t;, rl F ~ocon,.n, •f .) • Q o t~ .... lt v, l~ W.P.ir~tr , <f 1 ~ l o T~rr• ~~ C••~•r. Jb ) & c G Slf'l"M~nl < Sim;, c 1 o e o J,(ry1, ~t V•lt,,1ln1, lit .l t ! O Cr1111ty, 1a Sin~':, .9 1 0 0 I M•~Vll!, si (r•wiord, !Ill 1 O O O Cltv1!1r,d, p l r•Wll, , 0 0 0 & TOl•I• ~0 J I J i&Uls ii , ' • L•• ""~II!• Ool2 000 oeo -2 St, Lov > ~o 110 UI• -J 0,. -St, LOU" I lOI -LO• A~••l•s l. SI. Levi< J. 18 -C•rl>O, v1ltn!int, Mf!t . $1 -l roc• S -C1evel1nd. SF -3immon•. 5ongtr il.l·ll .,~ .... ~· Cr1vrl1nd iw,,.j\ Ill~ -(lt •t l1nd, lt.OJt, I, K " Ill: II SO l •ll l } I 0 0 I 0 • • • 1 ~ ~ J T•M• --I j j, .l.!lt ndJn't f '1•ot11 Astlan1a Attack Fo1·mer Halo s Manage1· Lefty Pl1illips Succrnnbs !Jarold ''Lefty" Philli ps. whose 212 seasons as manager of the California Angels ended last fall in the \vake of in- ternal strife, died r-.tonda y night in Orang~ of an apparent asthma att•ck. He was 53. A \'eteran scout and co11ch for the Brooklyn and Los Angeles Dodgers, he ~'as hired by the Angels in l\.fay of 1969 after California had "·on only 11 or its firs t 39 games that ye ar. Even though tbe le11m achieved a 71-91 record that year, thing." looked bright for the Angels after the 1970 campaign \1'hen they won as games. But internal strift-revolviftg around outfielder Alex J oh11son and a stries of locker room incidt.nts took thtir toll. After Johnson 1vas 1uspended, l\\o·o Angel catchers blasted the rrol'Jt office and disciplinary action made more ne\vs than the results of games. AlVGELS SEND MAY AGAINST INDIA 1VS Optimism such aJ di3played by Del Rice hasn't been heard around An11.heim in years. i\Iaybe never. "The way we're hitting. 1 think v•e can knock out Perry or any othflr pitcher In- side of fou r inn ings," said Rice Mond.ty, an off-day for the Ca lifornia Angels as they prepared to meet Gaylord Perry. Clevelaod's Indians come to town ton!gllt to open a set acalnrt the Anl•l• with thtfr ace, Perry, who Is !IM. Rudy May (1-1) pitchts for the Ansel!. TonJ&ht's: a:arm will be bl"Oldca1t over radio s1at!on KMPC (1101, be(inn!n1 •t I o'clock. By season's end. even though the team had clunbed to fourth in the AI4 \\'est ,1·ith 76 victories, a ma!sive overhaul of the team \Vas made by o.,..•ners Ge:ft t Autry and Robert Reynold~. . Pl1illips \vas. relieved. _He took a. posi. l ~on of scout \'.'tlh the Cali fornia org.tniza. tion. Gf:neral mana1er Dick Walsh wa~ later fir.ed and replaced by Harry Dalton. Ott Rice "'"~ later hired as th• n1anllger. Phillips returned only Sunday from an eight-day scouting tr ip to Salt ·Lake Cit y, the tean1 offici al said. Ji~ visited hi.~ personal physic ian early Monday, th~n went home. lie suffered pains la te that afttrnoon and was rushed to the hospital near his Fullerton home. l{e is survived by a u'ldov; Robe:rta, • son Deu•eyne. a daughter Charleen and four grandchildren. l<"uneral service! are pending. The. mana;i-ing job was Phillips' first •nd in better tha n 21~ seasons with Californ ia he had a recoTd of 222-225. He scouted for lhe Dodgers from 1951 to 1964 and from 1965 to 1963 was the IA~ Anife\es pitching coach. As a scout he ;oi i{Tled such playtrs as pitcher Don Ory1idale and outfielder Ron Fairly. He joined the Angels in Octobe r <If 19M as director or player ~rsonnel. Dodgers mana;er \Vall Alstoft onct "aid ~hillip:=i was "one of the best Jtrateg1st!· 1n the game l.oday." Ptiill ips was a minor league pitcher' who 11ever made It to the majors btfort an arm injury halted hi s o•Neld care er Phllllps had long surfered from ~ severe case of asthma, the club official •aid. and althouch the official caUte <If death was Mt immediately known ptn- cttnc an autopsy. uthma w11 believed the cause. l"I don't rnJoy go1n~ pl:1ces tn ht·:ir pt!>- pk-say l'ni over thi' 111 11. or kn•iw th:1L tlfe y're thu1king 1t .. H:tb111~11r1 ~;iul 1Hobin~on ::!rll gglc cl ~11111~ 11 1th 111,1;1 "I t ~ tr.am · at the plnt1· ;1• the Or111li·~ !i'ftpped under -~ 1a ~1 Tu~·srlay :iffcr l~ing five straight Then h( rumtd around and rapped out eight hi1 ~ and d,l;ove home five run5 1n tht• last four 4mes. Still Thi11ks He Ca11 Wi11 '•sut 1 don't bellt:ve those hib havr alfth.lng to ck> with Earl'li remark." flblnson 11ld. "l don 't feel like he lit an y lis under me ." • obin110n told ba.11ebatl writer Chan th of the BaJUmore Nt"''$·Americ"n: I'll a guy !tels that .,..·3y about lfjnetbing. J'd ralhf'r hf! spokt' to 1nr ' D·to-man. Not that EIII and I h8ven 't -~.Ulks lately. because we h1tYt , But for a corri mcnt lik~ t.h;it to lil:l'I l)n fl9 rwt.rlonal ntWI wires. well , I didn't ip- pN<cblle It:' PEBHJ.E Hf<:ACll (Af'I -tt 'i: thf' 19th U.S. {)pen CQm 1ng up for Arnold Jlalrncr 11nd, if Arnie 's Arn1y has despaired or hls chances of ever winning anothC!r big one, the Silme can 't be iald of Am ie. "t don 't ren1cmb!'r when I've worked hti1rdtr for a lourn11ment -that is . in a ronccnlratl'!d period ." the deepl y-tanncd. fit .rook1ni.: miraclp 1na n of the 1960s ~;:urt tl'lfia~· "l'vr plilytrl 20 <la 1·J nl 11 nl\1' nnw liiinr,. Thur~day w)lrn J 11rr1 vr rl hr rf 1 '1•~ 11layecl Rt le;ist 27 hn!r' ;i d;iy "I'll guarantee you -when I tee up thr ball Th ursday I'll know all that's possible to know about my game. l 'll bt as physically ready as I can be." As for his paycho!oglcal condition, tha l may be so mething tlse. "I haven't really been conrtdtnt In a Jong liln(',f' he added. tlf Ci.n'l C:<&Cl]y put my linger on it. Maybe it's my ngr r-.1aybe l'nl not concentratin~ as 1 :-:llould, Certainly, puttlQTl'iss been 11 prnhil'Ol, •·nu1 I "r ill think T can wJn. If I didn't th ink liO. do you think I'd bt out herr: knocking myself out getting ready·! I've never won at Pebble Beach. fifaybe the odds are with me." The 42-year~ld professional's son £rom Latrobe, Pa .. with career eamlnp of tl,650,000 on the U.S. tour alone, has won only one open -that fn 19'0 at Denver - bul tbrce times he has Ued only to Jose in playoffs. His last major triumph was the J!M4 ~l11s1ers . lf1 1962 he. cut a Unger on his left hand 11 hile closing the trunk of hjs car. yet !led ,J<'lck Nl<'klaus bctorc losing in the playoff. Thf' next year. RI Brookline. M;iss .• hr Josi In a playoff tn Julh1! Boros after 11:n overnight lllne:ss and in 1MI .he bowed to Bill carper 11 sao rta11<bco alter l•Mlinl by .... n thOts with n!no llolu lo play. The rul!ged, thlck·sbollldortd w!nnor of four Mu ter1 and two !Jrlil1h Opens, llllU maintains an tlt<lrlcallJI chu1ed qptal lo 1olf g1llerlea. Playlng lhe piclurlo<JU<, l.t llloyard Pebble Beach link.• Monday wllh dapper Doug Sanders and Glenn J<1hnJon, r•ahnC!r drew a aallcry of tiundreds. After finishlnJ. he stood for clo~t I~ •n hour 1t11:ntnr 1ul0fr1f>hs tor fanJ. • ~ ~ ·u.s., Yugoslavia Polo Teams Clash 8y BOWARD L. RANDY ., .. ~ ........... Yugoslavia'• N1Uonal wit.er poJo Lf:am, defending clwn- pkw in the 1961 Olympic Gamtt at Mezico City. will be featured in two matches with 1 talmted United States na· llonal team 1t Newport Harbor High School's shining new Olympic Swimming Stadium tonight and W~nes day night. The Yug03lav ~am will be amona: the fa vorites to win a11in !in Munich late this rum- mer and is pl.lying four games •1airuit the U.S. squad in California in preparation for the Olympic G•mes. The U.S. team won Sunday's 1ame, t-3, at o.Ama College. Monday the U.S. woo again 10-7. Tonight's attraction tets under way at 7:30 with Wedne!day's game at 1:30. Tht water wa s placed in tht Newport pool on Thursday ind tonight's international water polo attraction i.!! one of the biggest aquatics events ever to be :1taged in the: Newport area, giving the new facility an out.standing baptismal. The Yugoslavs will bring a tJ..man tum to Newport for the games following a pair ol contest! with the same U.S. squad in Northern California. W estrninster Pitcher Heading the list art Olympic veteran$ Mlrko Sandie and 7.oren Jankovic around whom lbe YugOllav hopes of a se<:· ond Olympie v i c t o r y are built. "These are two of the Cine.st '4'&ter pol& players in tilt world loday," coach Bill Barnett at Newport Harbor says. "They do everything well and with four years added uper:.::.nct, will be tough to stop." The Yugoslav delegation is headed by Milan Muskatirovi<.: and Milos Radan. Coach or the visitors is Vlaho Orllc, also a veteran of Olympic com- petition. SPORTS Ala1nitos Racing Entries lo"lghl'> Enl•>t• l'lllST l"OST l :•I l".M. I? EXACT.to ON F1111T llACf I I EXACT AS ON ITH a. tTH 111.t.CIE'J, l'lltlT ltACE . .00 ye,<IS ) yetr 01<11 L up. Cl1lmlt>G, Pur>I 17000. (l1lm· •no prl c1 11.00 ' For Los Alamitos Raeing R esult" I or(t Wtt(fl f ll NJt!r Nolt , !••"'•"· ~{1(~11 Mlt& No otr•!Clltt \l,ll;fM RAC• -.000 Yt ldl. J <lid• C1tl..,!n1 Pu•lt \2'00. MOO! ll:Ol'•I !Allllcn) ""70 'You H11u1 You ILlp1'11"'' ~l•nlhos i.p UC11l1hl) Tl,... 2'0 fl It. '-11<1 •t n -Mtck•V'• tltbber, CedlJ Ii••--·--· A•rtpM, 1_.1 (0<>,, Roa•• 1•.oc~tt fl~ ~-' ~"••cn..i -ee r 1001 .... Mh1 •11 B•r l""l•O to><I Perr Clt l>lltf U 1[11ctt , .._ .. t l1rtl & 1-YMI "°""~ Vw. Niii UJI .•. SlVllEMTM ltACI' -)•• Y••ll• J ~~., ..,10•"' UP ,t..11ow1nct P'u•w ~li40 T'>I ~POl'I<•>'•••, """"DU• (•<l•lrl '® l <"'d (Per...,r! Bmo Aa •efltu1 • !1'1••• l •"ot -H )IV l.O '>-• "' .>.110 r•n -Ii"'"' L ..:t Run I tfH MN:>•''• CoilH n r10 '''~'<"•• EIGHTH JIACI -HO ·~'0' ,r~• vhb •llo,..•n<• Pu"• U!))J '"'Lev Jtop ~~Ip 1nd Ju•np l "'~l\Dt\) Co Ch•<~le Go (,1..a.lr) w"a~ I'd tWtrdl Tl"'~ -u 1110 '-1<~ R•n -Mtll!I i Ch~rg~' ltvl• i,1e.1 l'ltt1 81d, Hano• "''"'"' Muu p.,...,,,, lt!d~ Bu• Go. CO<>~ W~f(~ ~,,.,,._.. "'"'' B•r (,c NINTH RAC~ -:).IO V••<11 1 >•• .,10, ~•"111<> (l~l•r>I"• '"" •· 1.';>r· 1".ICC•n Fly (Smll~I 11~~ '~r l ~I B~nO ('-IJll!) I ~ dn l v11 A•OJI {(ro•111 I dh f'•ctnB•r (Po pno•\ fl,,,t l••,10 Str~Tch<'<I -l o!tno• • nt1 rt • St•v•, L11He 1•· " "~~ Bt r L11c. " ' 1' .. U E•l(la l -l'111 Con ~I• i • lrn B•riO, ttlt l lU.00. T1·•·~·r J l"'ll' })_ l'J/? 5 YEAR/50,000 MILE WaRRanty At No Extra C~arg !! p,,i. & l •D<• "" r• '• PJ•• ' N<'a rlv Listen~ Everyone La11dcr:; lo Fashions One-hitter Other mcn1bers or the tean1 in cludt : Milos ~I ark o vi c, Carlo Stipanic. Ozren Bonacic. Djordje Te r i s i c , Uros Marovic, Ratko Hud1c. Sinica Belan1ar ic, Ronald Lopatny. Ousan Antuno\'ic and Jakov Dzoni. Ou1t•' 15.,, 15oy ((ht•le• !imolh) Bu11ny'1 8111 IFrtd 6ont l KlllllrM'I (00flll!d llm11hl) '" llT ·························································••C Westminster's Mike Tisdale pitched a one.flit shtitout in leadirJ& his teammates to a 1-0 victory over Fullerton to high- light American Ltgiol ba!le- ball pl.ay Sunday. 111 Ct.Mlftl• !O .. ' ' J. Sprl....,rn•"'· ?D Kl"f, 13 • ' • • ' • ' , . '" ' The United States team, selected last ~·ee kend after completion of the Olympic Development League . i s coached by t\-1onte Nit1kowskJ . a resident of Huntington Beach. Nitzkowski was assis- tant coach of the U.S. team at J\1exico City. serving under his cw-rent a ssis tant , Art Lambert of DeAnza S'A•im Club. Gold lrivot 1Cur111 Pe•Md Brte•t Acco11n1 l T1r•y L!pnArn) lllll GrttldlddV !Jon W1T1<>11I Trlp!t A Ottt. (J1m1s D"Vt r! Al1m!I01 Btr It (J Ron•ld Bftnt.•I llitl'111~.,.1! !D1nnt Corlkl1tl Mr. Ptt1 llar /John K1nl1I i~ GOOD fYEAR ~ ~ OHL Y MA•ER Of POLYSTUL•nM• : ln other act.Ion .\fission Viejo was dealt a lf.7 setback at the hands of Los Alamitos at Uni- versity Hip and hoM Garden Grove ripped Fountain Valley, 1~3. Kirk Harris, Bob Nodland and Al Degerihardt K'Ored Westminster's runs as Tisdale ' lreezed to the win. Scott Tolbert was tile batting rtar for Mission Viejo. driving in five runs wit h a trio of single.!. Teammate steve Ash- craft banged out a run-scoring: triple. Sjx ~lTon helped l'OOtribute , to Fountai• VaUey'1 downfall. , Pat Marley had a fourth inn.inc triple for the lo8en , driving in Al Zimmer and Wayne Out- ' Dette. · In other games, San Clt'- mente dropped two, losing 7-6 to Anaheim Ruede and JIH> to Fullerton. A-1 Newport fe lt to host Rancho-PacifiC.1. 12·1. John SpriniIJlan bangtd oul three hlU ln &in Clemente's loss to Rutde while M1rk King had a pair of saff'tj~ jn t~ aelbol:k to Fullertoo. RJdJ DotJclaSS ripped a home run in the Saturday tilt. Newport's lone NI came in Its lat time at bat when Greg Popaduik blllfed out I dooble, ""'""' John Germon who had ringled. M,...... v;.11 (7) l'M, d .. ,"' ,. Alll'l<r1ft, I• TllW'!, n .. ' ' • • ' • . '" • • K.cuoll, 11. p ~l&htn. c. " Wright, cl w1111.~ .... t1 ' • ' • • ' • ' • • •. Sptir19mt ft Jb D0\11111", 11> Niii>..,, p P'1lm1r. c Tot1l1 • • ' . . . ' 0 M 0 A111htlm/l'l ue<1e DOI 004' 000-1 11 o S111 Clt me11t• 010 041 OOG-4 t O St11 Cl•""'°"'' 11> • , " J, S11rl1111m•11, )b king,~ Nlt btl!, 2b kl'O\Jgh, p, tf Scot! Miiito., If l'lt,chtl!. H, c, p Wrleht, Cl. tb 9. S11ri"11mtn. lb T""'ml t&n, )D Dovolt u ho p .'lltvt Mlklo• 11, If McComb, Cl. p GrUt111, rl St1vro. rl Aflt 11, rt Tott l' .. ' • ' • • • ' ' ' ' • • • • ' • • • • . '" • • • • • • • • • • • ' • • • • • • • l'ulltrlon St rt Cltmtlllt DlO 000 ...... o M • CJ.I-JO 1J 2 OOO-o J z .. ; ' ' , • • ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' l •tci!tv, cf Herr/~ 2h Nootll"'ll. If ll!t ktltV, IS o,,.,,h•rd•. 11> E~•llllllt r1 HIJd!IQn, .'lb ,.IHler, C Tl<d1I•, 1 ' ' ,. ' sc.,, tv '""11111 Ttl•!1 . "' ' ' ~ ~ ' . ' ' ' . • • ' ' . ' ; , Wtflmll!Z1tr Fu!!•rlon ' ' 1DOOC1010 -l \ 000 090 000 -0 I "'''"''' 'b G1rdN , c< Y1111t, 111. p .. •m1111 If · l"ON<l!lllr, rl Ht""'' c Lvclo, u . !l Cl11py, 3tt Ltf!llt!OI". p SmltP!, rf New,." 111 .. • • , ' ' ' T•ttll " ic .... '' lotnlrttt ' N ... pllrt OOCI 000 001-I t. rtl • • • • • • ' . ' ' ' . ' . • • • • ' . ' l'ltnc:llo "•clfic.e 101 1(11 03•-11 • • ' ' •• Nit1kowski coached. t h c undefea ted Phillips 6' team tG an g.{) record and placed ei ght players on the U.S. roster. Three are from the Orange Coast aren and include Roy Saari fHuntingt on Harbour). Dean Willeford t La g u n a Beach) and Eric Lindroth (Newport ) . Others include B r u c r Bradley. Stan Cole, Russ Webb, Andy Deguise and Jim Slaton . Balance of th e U.S. squad includes J im Ferguson, Peter Ash . Gary Sheerer. John Parker and Barry Wietzen- burg from DeAnza ; Mike ~fartin from Nl~fA: and Mike Hoggi ns from Concord. Afartin, former UC Irvine s\vimming and 'vater polo star who played for coach Ed Newland's NIMA squad, is the lone member of that team to be selected for the U.S. squad. Martin :is a veteran of £uro- pean competition and was 11 member ol Newland's Pan American Ga m es cham- pionship unit last year. Tickets for the games at Newport will be available at the game tonight . General ad- mission is n and reserved seats are $3. \ECOHD ltACf. no v••dl. ' ¥••• c-tas. Clalmlriv. Pu•10 11100 Cl1i..,il'Q 11rice ~000. Terry Spin IF .. a Bonel 11, JOdipode (I ROl>tfl Ado"\ 111 Grind DKk Too ll•crv Liphtml 117 Rt<l!n•rabber (1 CurH1 Ptrntrl 111 St1fkon o Moon Ber 4Joe M1h11d1I 117 Trul~ Hol P•nl• 1Ron1ld Btnkt) Ill Scorpio Bar fSttvt Trt e111rtl 11S Cu1!om Ar! {John Werdl 111 hlthOGo IJO!Wlloon) 117 MemtMou .. (1 Dt1111yC1rlklr1 ) 1lt THllllD l'IACE . «JO ytrd~. 3 Vtlr olds 1fld 1111. Clafmlriv, ,.11r1• $2300. Cl1lml110 price t1SOO. Jlnoo111 15tevt Tr1a1urel Olal Brandy (00rt1!d l<nlgh!I Mr. Shadv (Ht nrv P•llt ) Pro!.pe•Oll• Girt (Ktn11t!ll H1rtl Cosmic !Dontld Allll<ln) Ski<:lo Poi•• llerry l lphaml F~•I Eddie lJollnWation) S1!1or·1 Cnaru (Joe MAtlvdt l l'DUl!TH l!A('E. J50 Vlr!ll vetr bid,, C•l•I ·Br•d AllOW•llC•. Puri.. "~ Dfltr! l~e !Stevt Tre•sut•) 1:10 p,,, Molly n John W1t1onl 117 Jl«k Elle Let CJt rrv Rich1rdol 117 L• Cre1ct11lt (1Cennt 1h H1rtf ,,, Sllwery Chlct. !John Word) 111 Deep Mlt! !Curtis PerMrl HI DOii Guerro (Robert B1lchtlorl 110 Mill S!rt w Ptrr C2 Terry llphtml 111 Glllld Gr1VH {Donald knl!lhl) 117 c;.t 11 On (1 l'lontld 8'1nk1 117 l'll'TH RAC'E . .tOO ytrd1. l vet r old• L UP. Cl1iml'19. Pur~ S2IOO. Cl1lml119 price SSOOC. Royal TC!> Btr fl(tntl1'1h Ha,H 111 I-IV Slranoer (Do111l<l,knighll 111 Slevt The Vet !Ronaid Bank•) 11• Ht '• A D!1rnona (Ro~rl '-d11rl 111 Tht Coont (Rob<!rl ll~Hel!I 1\1 sur11 ln'• Mil l (Joi Wilton I !Iii l.tdY LOl/tt (L1rrv Wright ) lit SIXTH illACf . St• y1rd1. 1 ve1r old> I. UP. AUow1ncf, Purse Sl..00. For Ot~!d !Curtis Pern1r) 111 11t1ymOllCI Ser 18ov (Henrv P10~1 llt Littlt Mii! Bu• {Do11al(l l(nlQM) 119 Ottp lMlO \Denny C1rdo11I l it M1s•ed lltndll (John W1rd) 1 IS k lll(l'I R1t1111 {Dorl116 Alll1onl 11$ Wt llwllltlr lFr..i Wol<!'ol 11$ Ellt11'1 Poco IJtr.., lt!chtrdsl I 17 G1ol110 IFr•d BOMJ 115 W1tcll Me Tr1v1I CJ1me1 Oniv•rl 117 s•Vt!NTH l'IAC'E. 170 y1r(ls. ] "''' c-td1 a. up. Allow•rtet. Pur1e $»00. S•nd River Wln (CLKlll Pt r11tr l 11t Hommertd Jt~rd (Don•td '-ltl1on) 111 Ml P it (Terry Lh11\.1ml 111 G1Dlrlrt0 l l'red Bonel 171 Gr1ndt Much11<l>o fH1rltV Cro1Dy) 117 S1vt11n11!•s BOV (Llr.., H1rdi'1tl 117 Ida ll:u11 {Joh11 W1honl 116 EtCHTH •ACf. 4llll y1rd1. 3 ve1r ._ ,.., .. ..,.,, rt tcl'tmidt, It White, ,. ll:emmt!. pit 11.,.no1-. c ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' , ' • • • • • ' • • ' ' ' • ' • • Deep Sea Fish Report old& a. up. Atl-•nce. Pu••• s:iooo. l ... O.W.LS. J1!11r1 fDol\lld AltllOtll Big C1nren CS!evt Tre11u•t l Liz ll1br (Joi WU1onl '" '" """""' Pl'l'lllMl"I, P • • ' ···''"· , T9!1!1 • • ,. ' " ,_.. ., , ......... ' . . l .. Al1"'h~ D04 111 °'2--U U J Mlnlln V11l1 200 400 Ml-7 11 3 ,._,.._ V1llW .. ' ?Im-. :Jb l t '· lll«l'll •UI, lb l I ev.ti.ft1, l l l Mffl.,., di • ' ' ...... ,.,.... f ~ 0 . artltit. a.. l 0 H.,.._,, o o C1rr1 11, 11, 1' ' o .... ~llf:(Mil~ ,, • : ~f:::-1, 'rl H 1 I Tffl!t 21 l •c.r• '' '""h1•1 II rill ' . f : ' ' • • ' ' • • • • • • ' . • • ' ' ' .. 1'1'11 v111..,. oet lOI 000 -J 1 ' Ger..,, Gr""' ut tll l2t -lJ I~ o DAMA WHA•I" -79 111Qltrs: 3l1 ct llCt .,.n , 3 barrt cud1, I l'Nlllb<tl . OC•AlfllD• -n •1111ltn: 121 ctlk o btJI, t htllbllt, ~ Ulman. SAN P'IDIO 4S'91"1llftllfllll -'° ':?;•rt : 2 .,..11ow1o u1 :r.u c1llC0 Mu, II r cMI, !U.. I • LMllllOI) -lJ •111 .rt: :r.u collco btu, 2 while ••• ""''· P'Al'IADll• C'OV• -'2 angltro : 7J Ctl~~l.:"~"1tr11.:_Jl~~k 1~! 1& Und ban ....... -' tf'19ltr~ !:5 llM h111, JO roct CM, 50 mtc-Wll, I ~•llto<tl, V•NTUl'IA -II 1"91tn: IG Ctlk:ll MnJ..30 rt<k cod, I MUtlUI, 3 cew ctd. Moll'IO ••Y (Vll'f'• ....... ,,., -n •Mllnj· 20 11"1 cld, 716 ''I" cM. 11111 II"'"" -$1 t"ll.n: 41 ln1 r;9d, Sil , .. k 'I'· ro• HVINIM• -lS onoleri: m c11lc1 lblH . ' h1Jl1Krt, '9 1tnd lbtH , 1' roct elf. MA.LIIV P'llill -l? l "'lllt r\: N' •eek '°"· 14 ht llbul, 1 cow cod, l ttllco ••••• LON• 9 IACH (atl,,..nt P'lt r) -ll •llfl•rs: a ullco H si , 137 rock cOd. ••~ -l.I 11\fltra: 11 llnd bll11, 70 mtcktr... {P'~ LtMIMI -M •1111lt ra : l!l Ct ilco bt1s, J:.J mtck•rfi. ••DONOO -,. •nvltrt: J bonllCI, 2 Nl!tou!. 71f ctllco b111. 2lS rode cod. ...... -u Ullltrl; Ut mtCklrtl, ,,$ r ock cod, NIWP'Ol'IT (Ar1'1 Lt11Cl1111) -o10 tnol•••: is sand btn. 10.wr 1 LICktrl -155 tll91•rs: 1"3 c1lk:o N 1•, l t roek cod. mH 01100 CM1111lclp1! P'ltrl -217 1 t rs: .., ~tllowltll, l t l ct llco 111'11, 1 w t ... biot1, ,. b1rra(ud1, ' bDnlro. I bl•tli llt blu, t hallblll, I bl .... 1111 ,,,.AL ll!ACM -105 t nqltn: S'ltl rte cod, 2 tOW cod. 1.50 Ctllco 1>111. 111 1•nd b.&11. J bl'rr1cud1, 2 lllllbul, .,.,, -•4 •"llltri: uo u na bin, t l\.IUtoul. OXMAl'ID -101 1miltr1: )lJ c1llCO b1H , HO 11nd btU. It 11110 cod, HI ~I/DUI. Ml11 BtrlR Go (1(111nt1h Htrll RMCl 'I Tonto IOOMld 1(111t hl1 Klpty•1 MOOK ((htrlts Smith) CllUl!h' F•lhOm (11:-rt Ad1lrl No Re1lr1l11t (Ttrrv llpht ml "' "' "' "' "' NIMTH ltAC•. l50 yt rd1. l v11r oldJ. Atl-•nct. P'ur1t S7MIO . "' Niii Flight (Ch1rl .. Smith) M111 Of HOl!llr (2 Kt11Mlll Hert) l !S Mlu Ooublt Ltn• (Oon1ld K11lllhll 111 Mr. A~lo ll:ock11 !2 Robtrt Ad•lrl 12'0 N11rll1tion !Dt n"Y Ct rc1011) 111 Olli-'• Dollv f•on1ld ll•n~sl 11' ShtOOW' Son fJ1mt1 Oroytrl 111 Bit Ji.Id 11 S!1vt Trt11urt) Ill Deb'I 0.Ck (1 Ttrry LIP~tm) 111 k lni! Bird (Curtis Ptrnttl 117 ALSO t!LlOllL• G1!11nt Brttlt 11 $11vt Tr111Yrt) 114 llubbl•• L1n1t fl ktnnttll H1rll Sir Ol1rnond1 fl Robert ,t..d1lrl Wt11htrv1ln (1 Ter.., Llpr,1ml "' '" '" Baseball Standings DEAN LEWIS NATIONAL LEAGUE Pilllllur&h New 'York Ollcaao Sl U>ui.s -lrffl Pbllad•lphia Cincinnati !Wcw• -Atlanta Eul Dlrisln 11 L Pet. 32 17 .1.13 33 1& .147 Z7 21 .Ml 23 2t .442 :lOl 211 • 4(11 :lOl 30 .lllO Weit Dlvlllt• 11 19 3021 30 21 Sin Dieto Son Fnn<loco 24 26 17 !4 11 39 .620 .S.15 .177 .410 .:1.13 .!II GB 41> 101> 12 l2% AMERICAN LEAGUE OtLroil BaJUmorc C1•vtland eo.t.n New York Milwaukee Oakland Chlca10 Mtnneoota Aagtll Kan1u City Te:ras Ea1t Dtvlde1 W L Pd. rl 21 .553 26 22 .542 .489 .us .417 .348 22 23· 2\) 24 '° 26 16 30 Wnt Dtvl1lon 33 15 30 IS 26 20 23 27 21 27 21 30 .1181 .625 .515 .MO .438 .412 GB I 3'h • 7 10 3 6 ti 12 131> 1972 TOYOTA CARINA BIG ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS!! '72 TOYOTA COROLLA $1966 $264 DOWN fULL PllCI Ol S48.86 ... MONTH D1fsr'94 ,..,.,. ittke S260t.2t lit. ~ ... Ma.,Rc.& .......... 41 ........... ,.,....... ,... I t.61'11.. s llJMJiJ741 '72 VOLVO ,, Z DOOi SID.AN "'" PllCI Ol $3550 $295 DOWN $92.86 ... MONlH I CUSTOM PCNVER CUSflON TIRE Steel belted tires so tough backs them with a 40,000 mile tread life policy r.ooafiEAR 4(),000 Mle lfecid Life Expectancy Potic,y ... ,_.,. --.I_,.,~~ w ll ""' •I i...r ...-».a..~~ _. ~ -· n .. 1-d-.J C:....:-,,_,.. c.llilm Polrs!aM U-a. Y"N' car. • ,_ ., ... ...., ---wl jii'Vt idoid ,_ _,... ..,~ .,....,ttww-........ , _.w ....... ....;p.i mr -...... a-..a. tbot poljcJ bookh:t t-'lb • •• ..... -s a I to _,. Goody••r S."h;e .... -n..ln-... naa.d St-. -C"AMdil... T\aP.y •Ill si..e J',,. cndil for .nllnp DOt NClhwd an fbe P'fr· rhRa,. nf '"""' Cu.1am Power C..hknt Pot11t•el th•t11, h~1 .. d •)n Good)'e•r'J "rrr.·d•ltrl'll l ft ~d r rlr r f'lr /\d11111mrn1-. A •m•JI .,.,,.Jc:. r.h•l'J' 11'1111 boJ t<idnd. Cqpi,.s ol llio!t polk;J t rr. •v11!1bl11 t i 1,. C tuc1tl wns • ~r ._..lt ...... two i....t-..ClllllPd. lar ~ resiltancr. le impld. mid pawtr-6&. ("To.~,_ Ul'W' ... clemnn1 the ••y -did i.....,_ t.c tt.daDoastrtllion m.stTt11w bow '1oagh lhe 1lttl belt• Nl•OJ lrtl.) Tba. Good,..t mU. U.. klD1! uD ..... u.11 to take, "'1th 1 fltxlbl .. paty.t.,, card body to anl mp dMI-ahocl::1 . --"" = ... -, .. ,[L , • -.,.. 871-14 C71-14 E71-14 ne-14 G78-14 H79-14 F71·1S Gll-t> H71-ll J-71-15 15 iAS-14 6.§.14 7.3~14 1.1 14 .. l .5S-14 7.7 lS ..... • OW 0.. O••• ad Plan ·-a.ve ·- . ······ 3WAYSTO CHARGE polyeslei" cord body ••••••••••••••••••••••••• I • : i • • :Dl•N LIWIS 1t'6 HAllOa ILYD., COSTA MUA 646·fl03 DeMllM ,_, •• , ,,... S47SJ.Jt. I• ...... ta ••.• ~ ....... .......... ............... ,.... 1 '·""· ,., ft6144111Jl7 ·---------------------~ : YOUNG & LAN,E TIRE CO. :; S.Wlee w . ~ fw AH I~ C•n Mo Jlrst'..., S ..... fer .-ir C•n . Oranp Countt•-latlmt DLVoat Ji!Ocluft Toyota and Volvo Doalor °'OVlaW DILIYDT IPICIALIHI ATTENTION VOLVO OWNERS Annlven•ry Specl•lf All CO•tn10MIMa $425 IOI OMLY INSTALLED II I COSTA MESA LAGUNA BEACH Ii '. ll96 NEWl'ORT BLVD. 482 OCEAN AVE. Ii I s4a.9111 494-6666 I- I THEQDORE ROBINS FORD 2060 HARBOR BLVD .• COSTA MESA 642-0010 f ' .. - ----- - -- - - - - - - - - ----Im Ill ' ;i 8 DAlLY PILOf .,J=:l----1111!"'11----~----- ,. .. •• .. • • . ' " .. -.. .. . ~ OVER THE COUNTER NASO l l•tln11• for Frld1y, Juno 9, 1t72 FINANCE ·' ~ Seeurities Salesmen • r ,, .. .. .. .. ... ,,_ ' , ' \ .1 ' ,. " no ., ,- l.11 'Peak' at Ages 31-35 I Its time lo FLY •• Why not boy your ,.-awn airplane and b• your 1wn pilot? LEASE Tho M11d1 Rotary En gine T•kt fffr •lck lr•m lllt ttrntlt !t ""' it4 ~vi tul "'w Lim:•'" tr ........ ., .. ~~ Mtr<uryt ti .,.,,., cMk• Wo t rl •-I• 19 tfttr Y-., tu• twn rn1lnlen1nct ltatt ~nlltrtm ltl~t..i f1I your Pit .. -1 """'' S-"' !II• co11peon '• 11tn1 ••tt"llnv !1•111 g NAME 1 ADDlllEll 1 CIJT , _____ _ rtttlVI our lree t>ooklol 1n1w1t1111 tll yt11• ~utt •~ a11tom0Dllt n·~~l• c~~ ,,, i I '"'''1 nJ /,,,, c~,,· '' We are pleased to announce the appointment of JOHN F. SANDERS as Manager of our New Office in Newport Beach. This. new facility opens in July in AVCO. Financial Center, I Suite 730, ., ""P~~ Newport Center 0-' " Bateman Eichler. Hill Richards --IHCOlll'ClAATlO M.-.. "'"f.a.Mllfkm. 'KlllcCo•i & M1"'*'"1 IJKk llcll•n~r• , 'fCf\ INPQudATION PHONE (71 4)140-1480 • • • C-OMPLET&~W YOBI\ -STOCK LIST ,.. ~'" UIM..) Mlfll "-' ( ... C• _ .. _ .. "" i~ rr. •• l '= l\\lf l~il . 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" . ' . " . . .. " . '. !' • " '" " ~ . ., . '" ,,, ,_ " . ' .. "• " ". 11 ,., ' " ' . " 11 ' I " ' ' M ' -~ l • • J } h1 Light Trading NEW YORK (AP) -Al ter llVe slrll&ht s~s· sions of sharply declunn1 prices, the stock marXot held tbe lme today Trading was barely modeute after a slow start Th1s IS better than last \veek tt commented Bradbu ry K Thurlo11 of Hopping & Wa tsoo Ht said he took courage from "the failure of last week's selling ot carry through " , P1cG1s 1 n Pie Llg 1 61 P~c Pe!rl ·~ P1cPwr 1 •I ,..,~,,~· '""" Pc T&T l?D P~.-T" "'' P.iln" 1 ebb ~:1;, 811b ~; l'1n Am VI ~ re ~01 1 1~ r1~ t "' Par~a 81 r~ I-in 1 O• Pt kPtn 40 p~ (0 ·~( """" C.1!lon P•nn Cent~ Pennev 1 0' Penn DI• 7 Pfnn Ftu t PeC 01 ; :Jlc l>tnnF'I. T 40 P F'I DI I Ml PF'lef l«I PF'1or 110 I' PL of 1 Sil Penn1<I I 20 Pn..,lof li>t! P~n10 I !-0 P1n1l1>f 1 n Ptool Or SS l>eooC• 11~ Pees Co I Pe k!nEI ?1 Per Int 1 ~s Pe! Inc cf I ;:1~,:~1 I ~ Pe •Plr>t l4 Petri pl 1 ,7 PelrC 1~ [!of "' 601 Pll•!P 0 2 10 Ph l1EI I 64 PM IEtor ••• Ph !€Ip! 7 , Ph I El of l PnEI •I l 40 Pnfl DI I lO Pne1 el l &O Ph Sub 1 20 Pn II~/\ I 2• Phil PS.In 14 Ph I Ind pl l PnllP•I I :le PhllVflH .0 Pickwlk lrrll r> !!!NG 1 )C P "'" v I Cl PlonC..O~ I? Plln~v B Iii Pl11 FD 0 ao Pllhlon t<lo P en esrcn Pl•vb<!v n ~oj~,~Yd ~~ Por•I'<; to Por1GE l I) Polll l(h F 1 Pol€1 Pwr l Po!E ot • 0• PoEot ?~ PPGlttd 1 •~ Prt mlnd 0 ,.,,.., or 911 Pree• (,I l , P odil!es 10 Pus Col t 1' PSE&G 1 n P~t:Gpf • t2 "'SEGpf 1 co l'~IEGP" $ O~ P5EG~f 7 CO P1,1S !nd 1 a PubSlpl 3 ' PS!ndpl 1 O'll PS NH1 14-1 P11bl c~r s-Puebl~I 781 PUI !RC 40 Put>tSP 1 '' Pullm~n!n ? Pure~co •c Pu•t~pf 1 ~~ Pvrol1!r U Qu1kOt 1 O• Qu1k01ll'>f 1 Ou1kSOI i7 Ousslor SO • Ne1v Y01•Ji Ups 01ad Downs NEW YORI". tUl'll -Tll• fll tlowlftl u,1 •llow1 "'' •totki tllll ll•~fl ""'" u• I'll• "'°"' 1nd dowtt 1111 mou bt'ad on Pll'C'efll of cl'Wlf• 1n tllt N1w Yer1t Stock f"wtti•P>e• '"'rdlen ot vorumt NI' •NI .,,,c1nt111 cl'l1n11s 111 11\t dlff«cnce btl,,,.tn Yfller41)1 1 c!o5 111 tirlct 1nd todlY ' CIC$h'\' prl,1 ""' ... " ' I ~ ' " ' " ' • " ' ' " '" n ... '" .~. ". ~" 'l" ' . " •• ~i . • l~ 1~ tr· ,, :ti: " '" .. '! . " • 1''• '" • • 12•• • u •• 1t "O •lt o " h • ~ I o l o ~ ;~ : ~ • 11 • l1 • :~·.{,: t!OO 'i• .,. j \ •• • ~· 1 ·~ {(! .. • Cl '14 . "? t4 , I• :-.• ., ' oO ' u 11 l 'Ill 111 1 IT 1 1 ' . O~IL Y ~ILOf ' ~~·:;'' I~ 3~ , Yc~1Dr :)011 O ~~ .Corl I• I !;~1!1 CC<ll-I 1 :~ '~"C o•~ 7;f z.,r~!/\d l '~ ,, ' ' .. ~ "' " '"' " Complete Closing Priees-A1nerica11 Sto el{ Exchange List S~IU Nt l U!llJ , M•tll Ltw Cl•~ cn1 "" Hitll LIW (ll SI Cnt ,.,.. "''' tllth J H t h L1w Cllll Cnt • • • • • • " . II I! 9 • )1 ~" •J " f'O ll ~.>Oo Prove;. u I' v foll~ ICC , P VJ II !I < Pru~~(I ~ n Puo "' t 1 P~ !• !err • 0 ;t~tt,t• I Pu1~1n • iJ l l !fl ""'' 11111 1 H t~ LtW (1111 (ht . ' . ... ' • ' ' • . ' ' • -· . I " '" " ,. ·-·-' ' ' ll i • I JC , " ' It I , 10 I 1 J~ I~ : II lt l 11 1 ~· 5> • 1 j \. 'i I) ' 'J II 16 1 • • • . " ' .. ' " ,, ~ . ' " . " •! p ' " ' ' .. •• • ., ' ' ' ' • •• • s ' • .. " ' " " . 1:J\o "' "' '" " • " ,, ' " i • " • " .. ' . ' " '" ' .. " f;~ " '" " • " '" " '" . • " ' '" . '' ,,_ .,, ,, ' " " ' ,. . • ' " ~ .. • • • . ·-'" •• 11-.+ Ttsorol' "''' •l••IMl (o • Tt~• '' C!o , T ,. I lncorp 0 I l'ICt•lr l.lo tn1lflm ~<1 • t11ktitini ~s "' r!n ln•I • Toi <1pf • : ton •C• •O t:;.~ c~ ... ~o Tortll'•I 10 1 Town C 1'41 • Tr•nJL~ "lii , TWA Wll ' Trtll!IWY ·~ Trl SI Mto•o• T...O Nt~ :u TurllOdyn• Turn•r "'" fV(O ltboll I ~•-'j , 1 1 , UDO I'•((# n . 0 u Jo Co .. i! ~-;li~l~~~· :~ S o Uf'>(oLI 1~1 1 , U" D~ 1rs1 I 0 Un F<><>~l " , 1, Ul!I No I C• lo , U1<1NI of ~ 7 1 UnPOy I• I I , US C! l • 1 •.-, US FllleM::n l U~l••! l•rr ,t o USLQ•" ?) • US Ntf ll!t• ~H•t , U5 •111 um \J.o US lll tv l J• 11 -•\US lllKlucTn • -• U!lllulll lf<I 1'•-~ Unl1•k Corp ,4 •-• U11lt•04• Co u,i.-~Unl"I C o1r 11 Unlit Ccnl 11 l \o ' '• Urltl ld \vh ' • • Ulll S SV\!rn lr ' ' U!tl'I Sgr 10 .:i :-IU\/lnd wh ' .. ' ~'"' ... l~Ca I Hit~ l•• CMoi.e th1 . " ' . ' .. ) ' ... .. " ~· ' t 11 i . ' .. •• " ' ' ' .. ... ··-• .. • " " " " " . l t'o~ . ' ' ,.;,, •• ~. ,.,. •••• 1.,. " " • • !1"1+ I• It.-'• 111?+ 1: 1t\-\o "1 . •• • .,_ ' 2~1'?+ •• 1..it.-1.9 4'• I 1-H .. 11\o 'O • . -' 21 .... " I •-• 10 ~-•• ti•+-~ '• 121)+ • ,,. 17-lo-o ; , ~. ,~.: f : " " '~ . " ., • • • • • + • " ' ' ·-'• l' • ; • ~ • j.-\,. " . t• >--• l~~l+ : I\ • T" 'II "~· I'\-• '"~ ,, 11 1. ,, -.. . ' 111.!1~ '" J.11 +-.... •!.t:-)" ltr ~ 10/o~ ' -. .. ,, .. _.,. J_~•+ • ·;c ·· • + • • •l~ " ~ ·-. !11P. • ' ' . :-:-.'!-.... .!II -f f't l~.t ·· ,,. JH:e ' '"'i': " • •• " . '" 1i~~ "~ !iai-•• ''" 111 ... ~41+. " . .. " " • " .. '• " .. Finance ' I ' • :0 DAIL V PILOT Tut\da1. Junt lJ, 1q1z ______ , ___ .c_ -- Everyone Has Something That Someone Else Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results ,~1_-iiiii ... ii-iiiilllijiifl!~l~-iiiiiiiiii ... -iiiiiiiiii~I~..:. I ....... 1"""" General * * * * * * TAYLOR CO. * * EXCLUSIVE LINDA ISLE · $155,000 Protected patio in this spacio us NE\V 4 bed· room bayfront horne \V /FR. DR, study & 51;,. baths. Second floor offers a la rjle sundeck. High ceilings & many custom features. "Our 27th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realton 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road "Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club" NEWPORT CENTER, N.8. 644-4910 * * * * * Ceneral General ~ U'°'ICJUI: tf()Mf THIS ONE IS DEVELOPED into a sprawling faml y home \vi th 3 bdrms., form al dining, breakfast nook. family room and immense covered patio. Convenient Mesa del Mar loca· tion near schools and shopping. Presented at $33 ,950 VA /fHA. rHONI UNIQUE HOMIS, MISA YlllDI, 546·5990 REALTOR, MULTIPLE LISTING S!RVICE, G•n•r•I ~"""*' ,..~~ '" k _,,, POOL -CAMEO HIGHLANDS- Arehit.ec:t designed -F\c1v ca rpets & dr<1pc s. 4 Bedroo rns, convertible de n. :~ ba.ths, cathe· dral ceilings <-1n d 2 used brick fireplaces. family roo tn . bu ilt-in k1t chrn ~~ H-11-W. 1-'LL'S i\lr'\NY X'fl\.i\S. En tert;,1111 ~r()11nd your 0\1 n POOL $76,500. -VIEW, VIEW. VIEW- BAY , CANYON , CATALI NA Delightful fa1nil y horne. Lovely s late entry, 3 bedrooms. 1·14 bath. F'A 1\'l ll~Y ROOM lo r dining roomJ large go11r111et kitchen \1·ith all the builtins. J•'IREIJLACJ·; pl us rn any othe r nice features. See a nd co1npare ~63.500. -WATERFRONT VIEW- 38' WATERFRO NT and a POOL TOO ' Pier & slip a\·ailabl e. NE\·V DRAPES & ('/\f{. PE'rS. 2 bedroo111 s, 2'~ baths. i\JAfl Bl,J·~ l'~IREPLA C E . bui l11n kitchen 1\'1t/J \VJ~;'I' BA I~. patio overlookin g th e \\'ater. )'ou must see to apprecia te. . ~85.000. -IRVINE TERRACE- j~\ [ -1.... j~ f -f«SM• ! Gene<0I General Gen•r•I Gtneral THE BLUFFS -CONDOMINIUM Jdeal for the hu;;y profe ssinna! or business nian . 4 BR .. 2 bat hs , the \vork is done & the ou tsi de dntl. greenbelt & huildinl'.I 1~ n1a1n- tained by profc;;s. n1a1nte11;111ce <·l"e\1 <)n!y $39.950. 3616 OCEAN BLVD., COM OPEN lJ i\IL\' 1-5 P.!\l O\vner an.xious! 'r rc· n1cn dous ocean vie,,· fron1 al n1ost any \1·in· do11·. F:a sv \Valk lo be;;t beac·hes 1n the arc;i. ('usto1n ho n1 e, eleg:a,ntly detailed -p~us 2 RR. gu est apt. 4 ('ar garage. All of th1 s on Jge., free simple lo t (yo u CJ\l'n it). $128.000 l:(1n~·"ni,.n l f)llrkini::-•'asy to b,. a '"DROP·IN" 11t Bay & Brach Bealty 675-3000 -BAY i BEACJ-1 REALTY ' -,fl•""· '"I ~•Ol':>O Al!4 \"•Cl ,,.. ' ' General General PREST IGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT Corona del Mar "THE HOUSE BEAUTIFUL" ====;;;;! HARBOR VIEW SHARP NEW I This I.'< a hngh! 11ltr11.r 11vr {";\1•llfd rlr'i(MC"r on l.u1ila LISTING hO!l\f' 1n f1ni> • 011dilion with l•lr ~nu1' ,parlous l;rdrooni:. /\ ~nal ··1111.l•·•·J'f"'I' h•H11r·.1 1rl\·ludu1i.: 11v1n 1na.sr1•r suitr 1·QrnrlrTrly llf\J::l'lHll'd, fnu11 · ".1111 f1ri:-111a(·~·. S"par111e .nanl"~ quartPrs. Proli>ss1011 ;olly d1•1·ura !PJ. Forn1al din· ur11 •·uJ'fJ~'t" <111d d1·,1p1·~. 11ddl'd 11'>0(1 1•:inrl111;.: lo illf' nr11· l1gh1 hsturo'.< S••r lhl.~ 111~ r{)(11)1 srparalr<I rron\ 01u• h~·fo1·" 11 ·.~ i;co11r. 4 Brrl l1c•an1 cr1l1n~ l1\·1ng J"()(")f"ll hy llnl1()ur 111ou,ii:h! 1ro11 i::1·i11 Sror!~111a11's drn ""Jth !11·r-. 1 00rl1~ or 1·n11ld Ill' ·: plllll <l•'!l Tty :11 , du11 n, ()lf~·rtd a1 S:!:'l.~JOO µl<ti'r and 11rt ));\r. Pri1·11tr ~ COATS )!atr!I !'on11nun1I.\'. ru'I' and I C & 'llp 11•1" 11,111· h1ggr~I hnat. s•1·1l 1111'•111.C:h 111•• 1 11 a ~s1v1· I W WALLACE 1i.1.irl 1·;1111 ·d ,.11111· d<1!J1~ REALTORS 1111<1 i11~(n11·r l.1ntl~1 l ~lr -546-4141--\!l.J.~ .. ,nll. (Open Evenings ) 11 .:n•et 11,.11 of rn·r1111, ha,v. 1111:111 llizlJI:< ;u1rl f'a1aJ1n11 . 'l'l\f' <'J\1!11"fllH111H'lll fl<lSsih1I 1111·~ arr f'tirllr~~ 111111 l\\O µat1us. JA IOI, outdoo1· \1·r t bar, ;rnd BBQ and a -10 foo l long Jiving ruon1 , Call 675--7225. COLW£LL PROPERTIES, INC REALTORS s11AR1;:-2-1x.1rm.-oornt" !\'o. of Jlwy., R-2 lo1 1v1lh roon1 10 huild 11n1r. t rplt·., patio. ln1s ,.f ch;i1111 .t pnted 10 IC. F. Colesworthy ,,.11 & Co. Realtors Harbor View Homes MORGAN REAL TY J 1·.<t~lblurf <Jtf11 ·1· tl40·00:l0 I ~:3-6642 __ 675-6459 I F.1<1ys11Jc OfJ1<'r 6i!:1-19:10 REDUCED $250() Costa Mesa !'11l1-1·n1u :'l!rxlcl. 4 Jgr. -SPEC-IAL TERMS. 11 1..~rg•' H.1rbor Vi".1;· llon\r,, OCEAN VIEW FROM NO POINTS TO PAY txlr111s.. ran1i!y rm., 2 1 ALL ANGLES LOW, LOW DOWN 11·µl1 ·s .. 111'1 bar. 011·nrr ha~ I Tl!'rti ~t 1 ~k1n~ ;it .nr1ghbor's ASSUME HI -VA LOAN sp<1rrrl no1t11ng 1ndrcorat1n;:I iiHlls <.t~1 yn111 f'yes _on t:astsidr, sparklin,1: i·lf'<Hl, 1h1.-. braul1fLii J10n1r. Call 1o lhr ~parkl111g-hluf' Pacifi c; , HlSpf'rl. S60,t '.i0, !run\ any 11·1ndu1v ''' tll!i; i·u.~to1n built .. BR,'! B1\, CORBIN •'us1on1 Tr1nple I/i ll .~ l1vtng: + dining a r f' a , • 111ani;1011. \\"atch thr IHJn set f1rrplai·r . FA ht. blt1n~. nu shag 1·rptg + drp.~ .• palio, MARTIN hch111d t:atal ina !~land. Buy a rrlrs1·01)('. \\'01·d.~ can't dlil gar.. f('ncrd yd. Only I itrs1T1hr-llif' hra111y, th1.i\ :1 S2il.SOO. 011 nf'r n1ovinl!". REAL TORS 644-7662 hrr!roo 111 lll'l i\ 11 a ll. f'onnal CALL ANYTIME 1 · _ _ rJ1r11 n~ !'ooni. l u~h carpl't~ 646-3928 or Eve. 548-9416 SAN MARCOS 11nd rna!rh1 ng <lrllflf'.<:, \f • ACRE G 11'tll tr·AOr a ~y1h1ng you A E havf' rvi-hi.<: Sf.0.000 1·11.~tlf'. App1,1..;i1nateJy .1:1 11 c r e ~ . You 11 ill <'lg1 r r. Call for 8"-•".<1;1 I•' zonr d, on Santa rr '' r' 1 110111trnr11t. ,01" • 111 tas1 gro11·ing San Lochen my er Realtor G.ner1I Let us sho\v you th is enchanting ho1nc. Atriu1n entry. spacious li v)ng roon1 \vith fire- place . 3 La rge bedrooms· 2 baths. J.,OVEl,Y DI NING ROOJ\il I roon1 to store you r trail· er or boat. .. $62.500. 51 Linda Isle Drive < uston1 4 BR .. 3 1/z ba. ho1ne on Lagoon. i\·!str. l~R . has sit ting area & frplc . \.Vat er(ront fan1 - ily rm. \V/conversation pit around the frplc .; lovely garden. lge. slip $1 89.500. TURTLE ROCK Fee Land \la1 • 0~ llold I o r ap-1 p1 '('(·1at1on nr rlr1·f'lop 1t no11. A:I 11t1]it1r~ To pro/}CrL S l ·13.~;-0(). C WAll<I R /\ II I l'ICTURE PERFECT ABANDONED $24,900! -HARBOR VIEW HOME- soMERSET MODEL -Stretch·out and live in thi s two story 5 bcdroo1TI , 3 bath. P:\Ml l~Y ROOM , DINI NG ROOM . Builtin kitchen. 2 fireplaces. NEW CARPt:TS and DRAPES plus so ma.ny extras _you have to see it to really appreci ate it. FEE LANO. !;;72.500. Sll1\RP'. ;\loori~h tll P lf>)'f't'. t•ormal d1n1 ng. llugr ra1n1ly roon1. Ch1'•'ry i:;11rdrn k1 I· r·hrn Sp<1<"10us tiedroon1~_ 2 1 i:;orl,?f'nu~ rrd b1•1rk pat10~ Sr clud1•d park l1kr ~ard. Qu1\"'I strr-r1. t 'aH no1v -I 114;,..o::o.~. Do you nred sf'pai-ate 1-~R. l'-"• bedrooms, boal gall'. Jr.1i\1ACULATE~ Frr~h p:iirit , yard for adu!I rntrr1aining 111 11·,.11 a! 1·hildren~ play ailc? This v.•inner offf'rs all plus decorator lour.hf'S of shag carpPt, v.'allpaper and paneli nr. Put yoursrH in lhe- picturr wilh all te1·nu;_ Prii-e only SlS.500. CaJ! M7-6010 Now! in and our! Nl'1v floor 1·ovPr- ines thru-ou1'. ~·an1ily roon1. Ovf'rsizPd hf'droon1s. Sunny k!f!·hPn. Laundry room. Park l1kr yard. SupC'r \'lllur! Call fas! -64~030.1. For Complete Information On All Home1 & Lot1, Please Call : BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside .Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 fif~1\LTORS Sli\CJ-: 19'!·1 673-4400 $29,900. MESA VERDE Best huy in the ;irra'. Cozy fan1i ly roo1n 11·/crarkiln1 !trPplacr~ S!'parate mas!e-r bedrm 11·/ba lh'. Don't 1vai!, call for app1. 979-1050. C' -.. TIJI.: RI.:/\L ~ ESTATI.:HS I Oil!. \I I Ol \O\ l'E I / 'rlJ.'\C Gen•r•f BUY IT WHILE YOU CAN So much for so little. 3 BR. plu s fa1TI . l"- dining rm. \l.'i th spectacular ba y vie\.I'. 1n Harbor View I-fills. Asking S59.500. Jim MuUer BAYFRONT PIER & SL IP Rare corner lot, sandy beach , lge. trers: rm . for pool & improve1nents. 4 BR .. 4 baths. '199,000 . Fee. O\vncr n1ay finan ce. Bill Comstock FIVE BEDROOMS Plus drn '' 11·ct bar. din . rn1 .. ~ ! l'plt·:;. Patios off ;:ill roo1ns . F"re r & ca:-;y l1\ 1ng in Univ. Pk. 1\IJJ, ON 1-LE \.'L-~L . ~58.90IJ 1"cdl "Chuck" Le\1'1~ LOVELY TOWNHOUSE NEAR HOAG .Just li sted -hi ghly upgraded & prof. d1·c- orated. 3 Bdrn1s. pool. dbl. g<i r ''ou 11111 :-.l see th is to appreciate the value. S44 ,500. George Grupe SPECTACULAR BAYFRONT. Step right out onto the beach. great cntf'r· tainers home. Sunshine th ruout. Pr1v . cou rt- yard. 2 Fireplaces. $165,000. Triona Bergin SPECIAL WATERFRONTS Via Lido Nord , 4 BR., family rm. fl 1n . fur 70' boat. !285 .000. On Lagoon. Linda Isle. 1Vc\v BR & famil y rm . $300.000 . Eileen 1-ludSon exquisitr ~ LIDO ISLE VILLA-45' LOT Beaut. custom 4 BR .. sep. din. rm. Bi g ki1. & 2 patio~. Super upstairs -rnstr. suite & Jge. adj . ~tudy -hobby room. ,,.,/1• & deck. $129.500. Eugene Vreeland 4 UNITS CORONA DEL MAR Owner \!.'ill carry 1st T.D. on these outstand· ing un its. 2 Units per lot & can be sold as package. Xlnt location. So. of Hwy.llOn ex- clusive Avocado. Marcia Bents OWNERS HAVE MOVED Ready for quick move-in. LaSalle model. lJniv. Pa rk. 4 BR., 2~!! ba . family. forn1al din . 2 Frplcs. On park . (Joo<I privacy. '49,950. Ho,vard Yl tsll s PRIVATE COMM\JNITY & BEACHES 3 BR.. conv . den, 1nai::niflc ent v i e '" . Beamed cathedral ceiJ's., low maint. yard, nr. tennis ell .. pools & park. $84,500. Bob Yorke " 550 NIWPORT CENTER DR., N.8. ~ Cclllhwll ........ IJU700 '44-24JO ~ Jli NIWPORT CENTIR OR., N.I, rt"4t'4-Sfftid 1G--•"_"_'._1 ----FRESH AIR WHILE THY rl1n + r~m rn1. L ike rirw I OlllSI r 01\0\ NE A i TON<: NF:ELI .\IORr: ROO:'II~ General ~Ai.,,,,uAM NEIGHBOR bf'auty 11/l'il'rpl. 11'/w .'hag "?"""I#,......, A~o Assoc:~rrs COUNTRY ~11001,._,: You ,·an piek up !h is 1 --INVESTORS--I «rpl~. hui;,. k1tl"i1. blt1r1 1 ~1.~ 8 nion1h 11·ill bui· thi~ j ".! hr-droorn sleeper. 1"hr• l'f'<i · I r. n , d.<h1\~lu. !rg lol, xln1 Rf Al T 0 RS 1·u1,. Ii rt IP /our hr-dr0:1n1 111 snn 1t 's !iO good J.S tlia1 .v•1u PARADISE lr!~r·pJ! S :; b . '.l ~' 0 . C11!1 nn~ of 1-1unting1on Bi ·<'•·h·~ i 111ay 1•1tl1rr rnjoy th1.o: Large· L::ir>:" R· l Costa !'l·Jrsil Jnl :-;r~r:~ot ·r~ R t, II I. T \' ---__ _ __ 644 7270 .o;rr111 nf'ighlxlrhoocls. Nrar t.ar>:" Pmpl'rty as 11 1.~. or 1\·1th r:...1.•l1ng 12 s1nglr ~lory lllo-l:l.1 . D_UPLEX $27,SOO -~,)o<l i;chool ~. b r 11 ch r ~. build 1ir10ther ~·Uni:~-Nol.h-11n11.'. \\ill t•arry for futuJ"r , l( _, ., i'.asTs1rlP ki('.,, 2 hou~E"S. on~ 2128 EAST COAST HIGHWAY p:.it·ks. shopping, frrr11a.1 :« 1n~ r-lsr 11round l1kP rh1s. ap~rr(·1a1111n. Rooni for ad~ I (;()(11. '. ){}!. -lli ~->: 3.1 t lot. Sho11 s 16 c rf'!urn. CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF . . .. rvf'n ;r <"Oupl" of lntrrior 1111h Firf'plac·r 1n d1 t1onal l'l unit..-. A f{/\l{E Ani lin11~ ,.,..,,1 + 10n.~ l)f .~1 t•Pauliful l1tllf' lakf's arr f.::-.:1·r llrnl ('nndilion. ~27.500. 1·hanc'P fol' unu~ual rrturn. 1 11111"111 sun li;ili1 111s.: + hr1ck i ~ ~1,,. 111lh1n 1raJk1ni;: or biryrl111J.: ("all 646.0J;).), t-:vrnlng~ ()ll'nl'r an\IOll" el -I R·B-Q. i\I"'' 111l'IU<il's 381l 1 1 <': t ·\ J2 J #' General COLUJELL PROPERTIES, INC. REALTORS MOVE IN • PRONTO • Vav1111t. •'Iran ;; h,.dronn1 ha th hon11" 111rh hJg hl!in I k1t1•h in,·l11rl1ng rrr1·1g frrr~ r.r. Lor•;1lrd nn Costa 1\fr~11 1· Goll C'o11rst 11nrl h.'1~ 0011! and trailf'r ~lflf"agr .\ 111·11. ' l\·lnvr in on l"frrl1! api•ro' 11! I unlil rsi·ro11 1 lo~r~. \'/\-NO 1 I Gener•I torlt1y. ;.,.1a-11:.1 10µ.'n •·vi·~.1 • . ~ , HERITAGE , • REALTORS DOii',, """'""'""'!!!!!!!!!!!!""""""!!!!!'!' EVERYONE S2B,500. F~irvitw QUALIFIES lo 11~~un1e tt1is 1011· in- tt·1 rsT 101111 • S247. 1no In· 'l111lt:"~ ta~rs, /\hllOSI 111'\V '\ bf'dl'OOIT1 hon1r on quirt t:.•6·8111 «11l-dr·.~1u·. fully ''a1·pct~d. , all liuiJt .[n~. on hugr.: lo!. l1nyt1mel 011•11f'r 1r11nsferrf'd • S32,500, """""""'"!!!""""'!"""'"'"'I Call 546-842~ (0Pf'n eves.J MODEL HOME I WITH POOL fornirr n'odr-1 horn" 11 ilh ! 1ovrly hf'11 ted & f1ltr·rE-d pool I -~ ad1le1l. o .... ·""r 1 r~n1dcrl"Nl * ME.SA-VEROE* \outh . (-oa st -' 11nd Ill n10ll\•aled. NOii' is tlir VETS NO OOWN linlf' lo buy It. i:ct r11r ly \lf('1Y of golf cour~r. :l Bil., 2 p<>ssei;.sion of lhiit 1 lw-droon1, ho ., l'lrrn'd. patio, rm. for llOOI hornf' Mo th11! lhr kid~ ho11.t. rorner lot. S32,SOO. can swim by the tin1t-sc.·hoo! BALBOA BAY PROP. ls out. C&JI 147-fiOlO for morl' * 642•7491 * Info. "THEGOODL iFE" Walk to i>E-11.<'h, tennis, PoOI. l ·Sty. 2 BR, e(ln11. den. fpl. Nr1v rarp., lrr.~11 ptl lnl In l !-Haf.bor Vi•W Hili-, -1 OUI, ti llparkle~. SJ.1.900. ' NEWPORT REACH CAYWOOD REAL TY di~ra111 ·r. Subjf'(·t 111 ;,\ 6·14-7!11J::. ..$165,000. B1\ bo~;"· hd101·d firs. i1·/1~'] (,.•i..S/ ~ ! "' ""U Fii.\ loen Thi~ hnnu• Cal! .'146·.'J/iRO 10pt'n 'til 9 P:\11 "1'E1'· t u~ H/ !.· <l ~hii~hr . ........ ...... bo;\.~I..-hrav,\· 1·f'dar shakr $2i,!l()(l Call SEY .\10UP. rc aJfJ~ HEAJ.T".,-ll4i-!~21 --:0.. -· .~ , HERITAGE CO LUJ ELL o'flnf. 1~. ha1hs. 1louh!" \'!l.I' JGAragT, rrnr·rd .'arrl. buil1 1 11~. Clf'an ~ ready 111 nioi,.•· I 11110 ..• ('!ill 84?·?.'i:::1. PROPERTIES. INC REALTORS 1-oTHEREAL I ~ l:STATERS '-. ' .. ' "NO MONEY DOWN!!!" '",~:-HERITAGE REALTORS MACNAB IRVINE ~--------""'-------~ Fl N ER HOMES EXCITING Yes. th is large Baycrest hom e Lovel y yard ~'-' $79 .500. ~ HR . 3 bath Ivan Wells is exciting and different. patio. Don't miss it for HARBOR ISLAND SOUTH 6 BR . family home. Pier. slip & sandy beach. 50' lot. Choice location. Land value $275.000. full Price $290,000. WHERE LIVING JS FUN! Popular Portofino steps from park & pool. 2-story 3 BR., FR .. formal DR Separate bonus room & bath for summer guest or teenagers. Call for appl. Loi s Egan 644-6200. BIG CANYON BEST BUYS * l:J3' of Fairway View 14,526 sq. ft. -$52,500 o! Fairway View. Approx. 13,000 ' . " " . " " " "" " " " • " '52,500 * 134' sq, IL " tit De¥er Drtft "42·12JI JM& ... cArthur M4·1200 , • REALTORS L ow_o_OwN-:.1!11 V1sla rlrl Oro I ?\r11port Brach 1\N_D ASSU:O.!I< \'A f.Oi\N -ti\4-Jl.~3 ANYTl~l!-'. Nier 3 hf'dt'fJ()m E11i;ts1dc ---------OCEANFRONT DUPLEX C'hillf'l -typi•: :l Bit + lnfl 11ppr·1". '.! BR., 1 ha. l011·p1·. ~:ai-h 11· r,·pl(" . hit-in~. Xln! !01· . J!OOrl rrnlal t11stor) ~:11~y In 'rr_ S12Q,f)<)() ho111r 11 1\h l:w1(·k f1replarr. S * VACANT ·* HUG ~: y a r r!. \'Ui-dr-.~ac i.,~rr. :l BR + fa1n1ly r~. location. l)rtnchrd <louble • Ha. ParquC't firs., <'OVCI • rd patio. Easts1dr-. S32.950, C<tlJ. fi7~-.161'U fi42-?25J E1 1·~. I associated BROKERS-REAL TORS 2025 W lolboa 67l-J66J TOP HOUSE- TOP LOCATION NE\\i l.l~TING BA Y(T:J-.ST -4 Brrlt'!Y.1111~. rl1n1ng 1'00111 I plus h1q:r lan11ly 1•n.1n1. 1..arg,. 1 .. 1. :; ( ar i.;.1ragr ' ~Sj.000. PETE BARRETT -REALTY- 642·5200 4 ·UNITS v•ith pool &· room to bu tlrl I rnorr un it . ..-overlooking prn- posC'd Nlarinri Kt>ys. /\d- i;:a1·age i1·1th allry r ntra111;r. l~rirr·d nnlv ~21),(\(l(). Ct1ll nn1r for f11rtl 1f'r drl:uls. -,_v-,., HERITAGE ... REALTORS What You See Is What You Get Br<1ul1ful OC"••an \1<'11. Sh·r,.\ to i;rrrr1 va1 l•Jt 11 11h pano· ran11l' v11'1r nf Par1fi1• O(·f'<ln. lligh in 1111' !111)~ l)f f'o. L.fi. J::U!lil 13f'il ('h. J:u1l r! vo11r 011·11 1101111• and i;;1v" ~. For n1orr informa11on. 1·all 67:i·8550. 4 BDRM, 2 BATH double car j:i!r&.gr. rovrr· f>rl patio, good East:si(I\~ Jocarion. $26,950. OitionA I land a vail. Roy McCardle Realtor FOR All I lSlO NC\\'0011 Bh·11.. C.;\'f. ""'~ AREAS 5q.7729 Bayfront Conda 3 Br, 2 Ba, pool, pier & sli1t Delightful Si9.500 EMERALD BAY Immaculalf' 3 Br + lam rm. Ocean side of hwy. Vie\v, r.fusl 11er'. $149.000 Ted .Hubert & Assoc. 3471 Via Lido 67&-8500 VACANl'-1..0T 60 x 300 R·2 J Bcdtm 2 bslh 2 ~tory hornr in Nf':t1·1>0rt \Ves!. \Valk to bea<'h. l -Julifso-2~stoliY- :i Bedroon1.~ . 2 Bat h.~ Qu1rr ~ 1rrrs $34,500 FllA IVJ\ * Corona df'l J\1ar duplex \Valk 10 hf'ach. 011ly S63.500. Cl-IUCI\ CAROTH'ERS REAL ESTAT!' TREASURES 1831 \\lest:!Hr, N.B. 64t5152 OWNER ANXIOUS •nd ready to de•I on thi1 3 bedroom, 2. bath home. Submit"' any reason•ble of· fu, Ag•nl $4M555. * 4-PLliX * Deluxe units. 3 BR. 2 •Ba. lrplc., blt-ln.t:' hellV)' Make roof. A.at. M.>U. 8ay1hore1 --GEM1-- 1610 11'. Coa~r !hi'.\ .. :\.B. r:EALTOns 642-4€23 -*-MODEL-HOME * L<i~I hon1r 1:1 C1111ntry Club :'\fanor. Era111. 111·1v of ~ant11 An;1 Cn11nl1y ('h1l:i. Cpl.~. rlrps. lnds1·pd. hl k 1\.'all. 6,...ci 111frrf'st. Ol)f'n S;11 & Sun. 1.17 Thr 1\la.~r,,r;; Cirri,.. C.f.'f. ~,\O.:J.l!)fl or 644-8fi16. --A:f11AR.\1J;\'(;_* __ :YIESA VERDE 4 Br. :I Ba, 2600 sq. fl. 1,ii:r. l-;1t., 2 frplr, i;('p. <l1nu1~ & ra1nil~· rm. Al,:: c'Qrnrr loL S.)8.:;(:(), JW-6.'Jo>l:.'. 1\lES;\°V,..rdr -3-Er -2 Bit & Fan1. Nrar park. 15Chlll, .i;hopp in ~. Ne1v l y rr-drooratrd & shag cArpet. 12x2-I aluminun1 rin off bck -1~'89 Con:ica Ph1ce. By Oll'ner. $46-:M51. --··--· ----MESA VERDE-POOL Lovely 2 sly, 4 br , 21h ba, rll'n, din rn1 + gay bITakf~t erra. flower~. pvt yard 1·on1plimrnt Anlhony pool. $·19,0CIO By ownt-1·. 2004 Balrarir Dr, Cl\! .146-6511. 0 \VNEK, J Bdm1, 1iJiVim. !-i11nnn, Kil. din, cpl ~. drp~. fncd yrl. gar, S18.500. $3.000. r!n. BaJ i ~;,. &1::..2:13S. 4 BR, Condo. Near Orange> Coa~t $23,500. Swim pool dbl garag~. C111t11, d r a p e 1 , 551-333.3. 546-1760. Ent Bluff ' 180' B•ck B1y Vl•wl Blurts 3·2~ bayC.ronl condo. w/beaut. unobstructed i>fcy· view. · Sttlucled cul.<J~aac Joe. Upgraded ,,,./l'lt\v crpt11, wall paper, flxturl"t I; paint. Owner $54. 750. 644-8441. ~I To~~ • • 88., ~ BA, cpts. drp~. Ire patio, 1&:e pool-site lot tncloltd by block wall, close lo xlnt 1choo l1, markelll. nevi ma I J. ntfmnabl1:. 8 l 7 . l 7 5 3. 494-2116 alt 3:~ A: wk-ends. ~ RR or ~2 &: Conv. drn • * S41-1290 * ~lodf'L ho111r r on d it lo n · 1 H~ some'lhinr you want 10 Quil'k 1w•cup11flt"~1• Ai1k 1n~ llrll? Cla.~~lllf"(t •rl.!I do ttl ~~~~ , $52,:-,00, /\.£rnl 67:-:.-722~1 v.·rll -CA.II NO\V 642-tl$73. J. RED CARPET REALTORS • !"162· 7771 • 3 BR, 2 BA. dng. r1n., cu8t rrpt/11h111lt r1 & d°rpJ. F.:Jec kit. ~w l..st'hold, 6i5'-0840 Vacancies C08t---mone,v! R.ent your hou~r. 81J1., tlort bldg., e-tc. lhru a Dally Pilot Chls11ifiC'fl Ad. Any do\)I 11 the BEST DAY to run an ad ~ Oon•t ~lay .. call todAy &fZ.6671. • NOW! NEW! PILOT PENNY PINCHER CL-ASSIFIED ADS WITH A NEW-LOW-RATE 3 LINES 2 TIMES $ ITEM OR LESS e EACH ITEM MUST BE PRICED e e Combin•d Total of Items Not To Exceed $SO • e No Copy Changes • No Abbreviations. e e No Commercial Firm• • CALL 642-5678 ASK FOR YOUR DAILY PILOT AD· VISOR ' AND YOU MAY CHARGE IT! • DAil Y PILOT 2 / l1 _ .... l~I -. .... I~[ -~-I~ 1_-iiii_iiii I Fountain V•ReY Fount•ln ValLey Hunttngton 8elrch I r Ylne l l .S Income Property '" DECORATOR'S l 81. 2 S.. f'Xlr•1, upgnaJt'd shai <'rpl, drpir, trplc, patio. B y Owner. $35.l:oo 962-3.l:ll. l';r~nbrookt. ~Sr, 2600 IQ ft ho11 . .,,. AH:Ul& $200!> JeSI than ldrtct Pri«. Auum· 11ble ti'~ loan. Swim Ob. Onr trans. 968-0781. ----------lsPEC_ Price lor quk-k Nlc. 2 1 / l ACRE Story. < BR, 3 BA Toni• • POOL • Bdrnl-, lor a.pp1 . 10 ,;rf', 833-:l92:1. Iii' ' ~1' Jlr;itrrl k f1l!r1rd CONT EM PO-•e•'i·- L.AGUNA HIL LS I INCOME HOMES Pro~ie adult coinn1~ni!y I /'\E\V DUPLEXES S48,950 4 Br + Lrg Bonus Room Convenient to Fy,·ys, IIy lo!. .$34,000. 847-1<157, BY owner. • BR CONDO. 2 SA. dbl car zar, li" pvt pane. Loan a a s m b J t . 968-1764. pool, large roverrd pall{! 4 Leguna Be•ch B"droom, 2 bll.!h, 4" shag REMODELED r at"pf"tfl thruout. c'Onver~a adJacc.nt to Le~~urt' \I orld. t\E\V TRIPU:XLS $67 950 Beaut s11rrounchn):~. all Jux· • Now und"r roni.tl'U('lJoll a 1 111"')' Rp(IOinTmmt•. Thrra· pt.•u!JC" pool. <;anna.~. ~·rii. " l ~l 1-:, Bay st., Co!ila Mr:u . ' c L A 5 5 I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 O\VNER lea vinc . Spaniah I deliJ:n, archways, elr"zant entry hall, J separate bll.ths, 4 bedroonu, larie rooms thruout. 3 ear £'arage, Brk, $29,950, 842-6691 . O\\'NER despt"rale, assume 6'., loan, lo1v monthly pllyn1ent.s, J bedrooms. c!ron. fan11ly roo1n, tine quali1y CO 11 Sll'UCllOO lhroUj"haUt, ropper plun1b1nf , Brk, SZ7.500. 962-a566. HuntinAton Beach tion p lt, \1·pl b&r. fltt>p!&.!'f, 1 Udrn1. 2 hath'. f111p\,,,1' fonnaJ dinifll:', Q~'ntr ITA.11~· drek.<t, hull! IU lill<'h•'!!, <'Hiil fern!(! -All tf'rms, • t 'ALL pltt~!y rt1nodrlt'd tr-un1 top 847-8507 * In bocton1 , 1n~ndf" & out 'lt'all< ru r11r"rylh1n~. ~j.1,jOO .AO tan b1lll1ird tables. ;'II U i._' If t'omplctr Ji.;!y. 61~. ~hlt:i·;• rnJ.PLEX-Ta.1: !'f'hf'f • 'Vkll &:e tn r "A11'81'd • '\inninc" l"\C"h;:ing,. lor largc1· un11 f'Utnishf'd model homes 0:--J ,·1111111!•'-'· ('lirn! 11hlr to ~r!t1 SALE THIS \\"EE1'. S"l,(I COO \_·•·h r111! \lr 8.10-3900 or R3Q.7!(JO Rlttck. ·i rr-1112•1, ~·i'h Coa~t l >ClU Al.E 1111lf' ~·11unll':.:•• J:r.d 1t1I' _ ----- rn n b i I ' h 11 111 r 11 .i "-• Triplr\-1\\• fll1 11rr. 'l Rr, REAL ESTATE ro1·rrv111111~ :--rt Ill• •1 i .-1 .. rlo!•' ~dl•I :.::ar ~Cf'• -11'~) l 1ll'nnr~rr :'t I fan1 ]\park Pf'~ ilh !'~I() I HI .ll .tr. -51.• .. iOO uflrr \\'ALh'. TO BEACH • ~ 8r. G I l'Jli : !Hfl.O.:lh ,.Jl-"inl _' . I' 1;··t • l•r, C \t form! din a.rea . _,.~,t~ ~I: --MYST IC-HILLS-tiRI. i1 'Ir ll" ,,-1'.11J.1 drps h.,.,.d Dr!. $25,9.lO. 1•1 l .irluJ1 rrr. ii r II .11 I d-t -. ,-p-rt 161 or 'rHA IPrms. ('a 110<'1"11.n 11r11' ·I Bclrn1' .' ba.1 nus r1 e rope v 0 I • I Ft i10.:~10 ~;: ~. ·, SE y :'II 0 L' P. RL.\LTY o·ran 'u·11 II in~ ...: I 1111111:: J 11iiliiill••·---· 847-1221. rn\~. 1.i;:1• lr,·•·I \,1nl . rnnrn for llQo •I :\lnl n1•11.:hl •ll'h1>od. • \l-1 t '01~:'\FP. .. I \\ 1'h ol1\f'1' h•"l•f Pl .n1r FREE !::~IRA SI-lARP-4 -+ rt 11 !'nl ~unsh1n~ and ~;ind , ~·losr to + big. big fam rm + '! 81\. Oe<H'h and ~hoppini:. ~~I F'ir~pl, blt1n R/0 .. area, <1\1 trnn~. (i\.ll !or in-<l~ln\'shr. Nirr ly lndM·prL Cd close ro ~··hQo)l' '1•1 :.00. ),,,.;i11on. Cn•'.1 \lr,.1 I R,;al [!t•1t, ' ~",11'11111 \l.111 111 I',,. •1 • -1·1'.1-::i;oo , I c,n,••I j·::ris..~11. .;; ____ ;._,;,,;;.,; i.1 1-i"f.ti~ "I "1.:-~'l · 1 forination. buy al S33.JOO. Ca 11 STEAL SEYMOUR P. l-~ A LTY ...:ii.;.1l!l..S .~1 Com merc ia l '11lu~ ;,,,, \I ' l""r>"r1• ••' · .-P roperty J58 r1or •alt ·1 1i 111.· I'll•• · • ..... ·· -------.....-~ ..... \:~·.:,oo I' 1· ,1''" 1,()o11!"' no f)e'n1tlty ro p11y·Bf'au11 ful ~ _347-IZZl, _ A""'e.Mo ~ . .,,....,r..... -I CONVENIENC E ,,.,~ !O ;i)I 11rr11 il~'. l'in l '>l~l'd ()1 ,01 ·•r-l•1r1'\\'.l \" l'lf l ~roorn 2 ba th hon1t:, lo'v I OSE TO BEACH Lido Isle do~·n pi:1yn1!, ~ubm1f your CL SAL ESMAN SHOPPING .o11.I f'ill r.11 111111111 to,. 11itl11n COMPLEX , 1 11!)(·1i~ ""'' r1111hr1· 1ntnr !('l~lEAse OPTION • $2700 DOWN \\'(' h11vr 111\ np(''Hll:.0: r •r II VACANT Ii\ d.r"lightful 3 bed. 'l.lialh.~n high t'ahb1r. •l1,ol11 .•. ,·, 11•01.l1nn, 1'1".i"· 'lll l!;al 5th YEAR-1.oon11~ 11111• LArgf" :": brdroon1. formal qtlif'l cul-de-sa1· sL :\U a Pf'l'SOn. 1·11p;11i;, "~ dro1l111:: NO VACANCY Eckhoff & Anoe., Inc. sharp erpts l.: <lrp~. lrg fl'Vlll in h1ghr1 1w1, 1·cl 1""1"'111•« dining ttn<l f;u111l\• roon1 I h 1 .,,1 b'g ,.,, l! IH•~ '" h,-. ii =nn ' -· nn w c rery ir.·,. , " · home. I-' utl blt1n~ anrl one of d -" dbl ,,.,. howOAb l ow son Jsa. nrr 01 r i' l: i.,-,,, Ht-~r.:1 '' \jj.:JTirl . . . ch a n over.;1leu .,,, . lhe l"i t"nnl'.'st 1n t ounta1n . SZl 500 p t• !?''-i:rcol<o • ., 11 , _, h ' Price . ayn1 "• -·•J· Va.lit')'. Pavmls of only S26J. 1j 3.416 Vii. l.111() i;, •. 1,1;~ ,\\ .,.~•·1! CALi. 540-S."i."i.'1 ro1·cr;; a . (:.ti I;• Lot• for Sale 170 I IT * REDU CED * SHERWeeo REAL TY I A Nord ittrata Co1nr1· :i I-lh-:,.t.~I 1=4 R ~'·I ··t <· V Jn1 r~1111r11! I •11 1.•;1Jn "'" 1.,.,n iu.~ · r · · Custont bll., .: Bg. 2 ha. :\Ll\'T hu1ld111"° ,.,,,. \l't'h ,l'htlc u • .rrr 11r11 J\h,1 Vista :i1•r.-1 n! l.11gun11 Purrha,.,Nl IOI' ~10.200, 11'111 ~t"ll for ~9.:.00 r~ch 1)1~1210 I -·-----1 SJl·SIOI l :;::1 S31·5100 ~•t.iOO -MOVE IN LIDO REAL TY *CORNER-LOT-* ;-;~<7 \'11t L1dn. '\ 1: " pays <Ill othror PO~!.'. S20:Z. per mo inrludr.s every- 111ing. l BP... 2 BA, features bltin RIO. 11•/1v rrp!~. drp~. hug" brick f1rrpl, FA ht. patio. Vacanr . Ex<'ellr nt lo-I ration. I' 1ll:ige Re;i l Est;i te tU-4471 t ::::. I 546-1103 DESERTED FARi\f HOUSE Laguna Beach 50 ;\. l I.~ C-~ i".():>-L '2 F1rep[Rt·es. lar;:::r 1·ounlt)' * 673 -7300 * kitchen, family room, formal --d----- dining roorn, :: la rge bed· Mesa Ver • rooms. :\ f'al' gar, 11.nd you J BR. 1BA . l\ry,• t'pls & <!rps. One of la.st <lo11'n1n11 n parl't'IS can 11·a\k !o thf' bf'al'.h: Only Lg. ~·nrd Clran~ By o11•n-.>r. for devf'lopn1rn1 . S,12.:ilO, S32,!Jjlf :u0-1 ~!\~ n1· lil.'1-ii,.:~ * 8~7-85.::I * -----E. 17th St., Co sta Mesa the Re•I Estate Mart Mission Viejo I AA.\ TenHn1 .. ~ll.111011 tiu. ----SOLD LA Pa ,,·1'11~ ·"'I 11 , I hi ! ha. Cn,;h ~rrnd;.t~k • r·111111 · fa m rn1 li:,r kth hrn i;:1 rr n f::f'alonon11r", J:1i1· o.;;, i,~OQ Mountain, D•&erl, Resort 174 :! Lo ts, llf!C!Udl"d $'2,4;i() i\!oonridge cebin $15.730 Lakcsidr ca hin $35,000 C11 1l S!-ih-1641 cir wrltl"; ~p~n1·t>r flr11l 1::~1atr, P . 0 Rox 28'.!", Bi~ Bear Lake, Calif. All my hsllngs. Need homes · . · ____ _ to advf"rtise and sPll, For shag, 1l11·uoii1. ~ln 111'" Int. C ORONA DEL MAR Real Estate Wanted 114 profrssional, etfic1en! scr· S39.000. S~2 \0 o , ('011~1 H,11 fL.,111a.i,:r :! "I;.>. not rar f1'0m ocP.an. A !1tl!t BldJil' .. 2 noo '"l a!! .\:lnt I\\' AN T~: fl Condotn1n1un1 \'II'(' ' run <lo11·n but has <'harming Call June Blair 968_7833 NewPort Bea ch ln,';i !u,11 lu1 r•'LH I ... 1 .. 1. ,,,. P refr"r Cf>~'" \lr~a. Nf'll-'p<')rt f"xU·as includ1nt:" <·eramir !Irr~. ~ ...... 111.1 ·h••r•. ,.,c, B('ach fir " l Hl-t. "'.! BA. Ln11 tile, custont <:Rhine!~ and ];) yrs in Real Eslalr Sales REDUCTION t;.: 2 <lo c 120 OOJ RED CARPF.T REALTORS 1 f'1111.11L' 'vn -no nl'rl' · remOOelcd ranrh kitchen 962.7771 Tha t·s right, uu.~ 1 u~tn111 ORANGE COA ST Pnnr1r;ili. onl\ C: a 11 a.nd bRTh. A ro~.v fu'f"fllacl'.'. ---~~==~ built 4 hcdi·oom honir h"· REAL ESTATE ;.16-:i7l0 afl('r ti I' :'II. "' gi\·cs lhi~ home loRds or REPOSSESSIONS ju1<! hr"Cn rrdu('ril lor 1hr 644-484' """krnd~ pQtrntial. B!\R 962-;,:,ii. For inforn1ation and location 11r ru11rl 1in1r :-=o" •11111 - -. \\:-1\NTl-.ll t" hu,' lron1 n"n"1 MR. BIG! f /11vr 11·,. i;o1 R home ror you~ I Lr~ 5 BR, '.l BA, prof rlrr. l'OOJTI for boat or trlr, Closr I to bc-11.rh. Only a~kins;:-S45.500 "GINNY" MORRISON ~L,i-4130 REALTOR 540-2286 O\rNER n1usl SF.It. As~un1r ;;~~ ~. loan, lo1v nionth!y pa,vn1rnts. 4 b ,, n r 0" m s ' family room \1•1th its O\vn natural brick fireplarr, f111! ti inin& rooni, brk, J::l.000. >IB-0001. 0 \VNER saenf1ct. Only '.l year~ old. La.rge fan1\ly hom", 4 nt:droon1s, fa:nily roon1, dt"n. xt·ri\ fir"place, xtra barh~. lu.....,u r ious in· tcrior. Brk. S J .f ,950. 842-2j61. O\VNER l r" n 1 f e r" d . 3 Bedroom & d"n, entry hall, built-in r11ngt> k oven + <li~hy,·a~h"r. huge firP.placr, park like irrounds. prime location. Brk. S 2 6 . 7.) 0 . !'\62-117:' •. O\\TNER 11 nxiou 1 . ~I &<!room~ & d""· Pntry h:.!J, popul11.r r"ntral floor plan, line quality bu ill in~. finish· I cd Ji:arai C perfect I o r parties, n111urRI 'vood panrt. 1ni;:, ~fltJ!1lul yard, rovt"r••d patio. S29.500. Bkr, 962-8~. :'ITUST SELL~ S3Jl & tak,. Ol"er my pymnL~ -™'"ds 1\-:>rk. 2 Br. 2 Ba . frpl, h1-nhsr . nr bch. S:C--1103, ~9i"J4. of the,;e Fl-IA&: VA homes, S52,9!J;, & 1h1~ 011·nrr 11 ant.s Condomliniums 160 .~ F:!~ honir n1-..r 1r,111r . conlart -to n101·p' This ;-.;r11 pnr1 I for sa • Tu~11 11 nr ~-A. h\1111 Cl,,, lu KASABIAN !3'r<H'h hnmr 1n('\111lr~ 11 r.1111 1 BR TOWNHOUSE-univ . or p9st. A~.sun1r ln;-,11 1\y roo1n. <l1111n~ 1uo1 n, f..· ;-, \\.ilk 111 h('ll :,<::G-:!l!l..""1 714:622-2i!l3 P. 0. Box 3\li. Real Estate 847-9604 sparkhnM hrated k fii lPH'd Balboa Isle. GOV,-T-.-0-W--NED-pool , plus n1Rny inot·r Ira Duplexes/Unit& 162 PRIVA~T=c~· -pa-t1y.,--w-.,-:,-,-::l -:oc:-r4. Rerosse~srd homr~. Ltnv do11·n. Government pays t·lo~ing r·osts. CRll XS·.f441. lures, Call 646--7171. sale Rr home . Buy lar c:a1h * Crest Realty I 0 TIII.; RJ :,'\L \~ ESTAT I.:RS SAVE 11.000 EASTBLUFF ~.11 or lfase ~.BR. Conrlo. EXECUTIVE ESTATE Nc~w <:p l~. Xlnt r on d • S20 500 Qy,:ner 968-96-11 · Unbelievable halJ acre 1v/5l 5J&.,i298 ' ' trtts SUTTOunding the pre!· ' · tiest ya rd you'll r vrr ~""· 5 Irvin. BR, J BA, 2100 sq ft. \\'hat more can we say'. By app'I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I only -Call 979-1050 . 2:x>O Sq. rt., charming 2·sly. ft/' NEW LISTING Ontu hon1e. just !lrp~ to major ~"'21 grt"rnbell. 4 Bdrm ~ .. incl. huge mstr. suite \\'/frplr.; scp. dining rm .. fam ily rm.1----.PQQL Lr! us makP ll11 app'I, for you to ~r~ this horn" no,1·. INCLUDING TJI E LAND. lrlral hon1P in pnmt !larlx<r S.:>4 ,900. Highlandll. 4 i;paciou~ BR .. ''fl11li I 11,lld , ---'I I "111!11r "SINCE 1946" family rrn., 211 bet h~. Sf'p. launrlry l"l11. r.;:1:,·11("11 bltnll., cpt/d rp~. t.· fl spnl'kling 1 heatrd pool. $·14.000 ' CALL @ •4•·2 4 !4 1 '11~A~~,,,_ I 14) 2 Bi·. 1 Ba h'l1nrs. xlnt Hany fllJ-1129 wkdya 1-5; rond, ~ep. enrJ pfltio.~ 8.· r.,J l\lknd1 641-2312. g;:ira..::r~ SG(J .. j()I), 011 ne r l ~~~~~~~~~~~ J 1~-96fr1 I: -S6-M-ANNUAL j'-1 N.R. Dupll'x, 3 U1· uµ S1. !lo11 n. finantW ~ SGR.~iXl. Prinr· only, 6of2.lJ3 1 or 646-074'..'. Income Property 166 TIRED OF MANANGEMENT? If fighl1ng 1vith your f('nanls ha~ 11·0111 you rln"·n. prrha.ps C'oill'r!I r an solvr ~-'our prn h- lrm!!. \\'e are a full -"rr1•1re m 11.nagement, or perhap.~ 11·r rould ~f'll your proprrly for ,\nU. rir !radio you 111!0 11 har you u1ant. Bf'l!l~ R 11111jor niortcai;:r ron1n:in~· 11·r ~houlrl .i!so br ahl,. !o 1111 prOI'(' your financing I ion. Call 6i:>-i22J. sltua- COLWELL PROPERTIES. INC. REALTORS Business Opportunity AVAILABLE NOW 200 Lar~~ Corporation rles1 r ,.s re.!lpon~1hlr 1lf'rson to d1s- tr1bulr ·rr~co \A Division ol Coea·Colat COF FEE PRODUCTS. Can >.Tar r rull nr p11tl 'Ill)(' f5-ID hrs. prr wk.) Con1pany r-.stahh~lirs hu.!Li ness lot dis· tril111Tor~. NO SELLING! Go lish1ni:: or spend more t1m~ 1v1lh your favorite hohby nnll !rt th" machine age rnrn ~·1111 monry. CAS!f REQUJP,LD S21~. Secured. 1st \\"estern B~nk Dldg. Uni~·ersity Park, lrvinr Days 552·7000 Ni9hts N r • r N r •Po r I Po 1 I 0 f fit ' liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil PANORAMIC-Vfe w - Ll:'lllTED OPPORTUNTIT \\'r11e no11· f(lr 1nform11.t1on, 1ncluflr phone numbrr . 7-HOUSES Beaut. maintained home I THESJ:: ARE 2 Bedl'OOm.!l &: large family FJXERUPPERS SMASHING VALUE rn1. Pool. 364,500. h 1 1 < T':Llll-HRE\V f'ORPORATION SA\'8 £ASH! S14.000 . I Bl' ?'oltXlaJlion Con· rio, all bltn~. rebig., f'ncl p11.tio, pool, quiet. $1000 dn .• Ji;! TD S3900 51,~ i;Q bal. 71h"0 2nd TD. 61~. . G w·11 · Uf proc U«e x nt 1n.-'(ln1r . A rom!y, hv11oblr 3 bdrn1. eorge 1 1am1on t . h 11 -2 B" & '·l B" ho · U · ., p k R It a.'i s e er . ..1 •• -"· mr in n1vr N<1 y ar . . . ea or do hi J 7- S,'\3 -:'"10 herr's I ·hrrr you S48-6S70 64S.1.S64 home~ on II u e ot. S8 :i. et ·,'he ;;o.st for vo~r mone . - . --monthly ~nl"om:. -$10.00J gi.. ec1· h y f DR Salt' by 01\'nl"r, Upper do11-n . i\sktni;; Si!J,::.00. P h: . . r ·11 Bay, 4 BR, 3 BA, fam r m .. 642.liTI. . REALTY I ;~~~;~~c~:f;~~l c~)ntu~21 1001 !101\·ard A\'P.llU " Mn 1'la1ro. Ca. q4401 FREF. Lanc·r lnte r inr drocorator 1v1sht":' to shatf' ,n1dio. samplr. c:atalogl'I A· ''I<' 1\·ith Mme. Classifi"d r.d No. '.177, Daily P llot, P . 0 . Box 1560. Costa Mesa, Calif. 9:l626. '2 Story La Cuesta homf". 4 BR. 3 BA. fun rm., shar crpt11 thruout, bltru, nr tchools & beach. 968-6003 Like to tr1de'! Our Tnr.der'm j Paradise column Is for you! Uni\'. Park Cent"r, l rvinc THROUGH A Call Anytin1e, A33·0820 Nry,• lisling o ~-1-'' SALE LIQUOR UC Holland Bus. Sales S lint!'!, 5 da ys for S buck~. Qffic. hoon 8 AM lo 8 PM DAILY PILOT S©ll4UlA-& £tf S8 The Puu/e with th• Buiff./n Chuck!• I MUBIE · I I' I I I· VA KEN • ~ch wol~er's comment: ."Nobody con squeei• more VO R GE H , 1 oul of a-than oh•.~~-· 0 Compl1t• th• <hutkl• quol•d I I I I r .by flllinQ ln the l"'luln; word • _ • • _ • YoU d..,.lop from lflp No. 3 below. I I I I A PRINT NUMB £Rf0 l£llf15 IN W' THESE SQUARES I' r I' I' I' r I 6 UNSCRAMBlE Ai6VE llllUI TO GET A.NSWEI I I I I I I I SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 700 WANT AD CALL 642-5678 TRIPLEX. ra. 2 B R . iv/patios. Nr. stores. S45,900. 675·01-44 Agl'nt 64&-7414 ''Thl' Broker with Empathy" ITI6 Orange Ave., C.M. 645-4.170 540-0608 ev~. ~ STAR GAZEK1<~ 1'"'=".,"-':m':T---Br CI.A Y :t. PQLLANl---..----1 ,..flJ ":'A~. l l l:j. Y-Doi'fy Mi,,;ty ewd'• ~ A ,.,,,_ " J.cc•rcli119 to fl•• Storr. , 11 -16-18-To ~lop messoge for Wi!dl m,y-, ¢: 4 5Ul read words C01Ttspending to n.nbers of yo,ir Zodiac birth sign. , l (IOlr. J l 1 .... a1~1· 2U1<1 J2To J "°"' .:>J aa~;.,. A E<'t.)>I J l 0oo. t !I Yo... •e J S Mo" 6Pt•~! 360vollfit~ 7 Ptv"" J 7 Mvth" 1 1 (.,.,..., :1SS<r>Q:t Q E•'""" .\9 P~"od 10-v....... ..ioy,,., 11 M.d-"llllring '41 It 12 MonJ.d "2 N1'9J.rt 1l I~• ..i)~'"" 14 And •40f 1S Y-lf A)A!l.,..P l ,11 "'T°' 17 Y..ur "'""""' 1ST"'w ~AA l9 Pl'ftlll)e "'1Yo./•1 200--.•C ~~ 21 R.........,., !i1 Due 22 Rtctr.-t•. ~2 ,...... 2JA ~y- :i'4 l:le !l• t..r.Ql<"O :25 Fo< ~\ Covttt>Qf '.s~~~-l •160.. ~ ~ f ,,,., ~, .......... 2sr~ ~r(/lf 29 IM ,SQ '" SI,,.. Jl 30 .,,_l"f ~Should ~~ ""®Good @Adm.e ., °""' '10. cJ ra•or: 6• ~-.i 65 You "''""" li1 Mo•~ i8 ~l"O'nd·Nt 6? AllW't~'"V 70 ,, ,1 ......... 72 1• 7.l p"Y 7'' 7~ ()If 761"4' nc1o1""1g ''"""' 7"Gr~1et 80 Al'd 81 Too 82 l""1Mh ., .... "~ (').,..~ I) Mwc.1'1 116 Fltc09"ltlcirl '"~"==:--' 87~"at r as Fo11;...-...1;,.,g ,.w.11o,. .,,,._ f) &11 f N~tnl s • I I 1 • • l 1 I , • ti DAILY PILOI ·-·-~unity Schools and This variety of. fine schools could introduce you to a new tomorrow. NEED CA.91! Sli<KIO. Or up to $3,000. $10,000 and more. Ste Avco Thrln for a Real EstA!e Loan. Upon ap. Instructions For further inform•tion re91rdin9 th• 01ily Pilot s~hools •nd Instruct ion Directory CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325 proval, U!l.e lhe money however you like. Al~ askdr------------------., r--......... ~"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""~ about our u ni ecu r e ~1·&0nal loan.~. AV C 0 THRlFT. 6al Ne\\·port Ch'. Dr., Suite IOI. Ne'A'pOl't Beac:h. Ph. 3.J3..3440. RESTAURA1''T -STORE PLUS 1NC0:\1E U N I T ~ Choi<-'f' Balboa location! Va- cant and ttady hi go. Don't miss this rare opportunity. Call nov: -Jo-orest 01,sc,n Rf' al tor!' 64;,...-0'1.,()3. --.~--11 AftOC . Advertising PR-~!anage•, Orange County O ff ice-ne w bu~ifM"&li welcomlng se.rviao. ~.fodest BaJary + 50':0 profit. Call :\Ir. Dt>long 673-8120 t~REE LancP I nte r i'o r decotator Yiis~s to iha.N ~tudio, sample, catalogs It etc Y>'ith same. Clas5ilit'd ad No. 377, Daily P ilot, P. 0 . Box 1$(), Co5ta Mesa, Cali!. 92626. LAWN .route .for sale. Nf't ·profit .$8X!. pPr mon. Encl. a ll equipl. V\V Bu~ and trainillg. Full prioe $3.),000. IF-4™· I z • W8i"'k cdur~ on mail 1 order-k .;mporting. call I 846-967 -for inlorma tion, COIN Laundr y, 1882' * .Hewllort Air Associates flight SchOol & F~ing Club LEARN TO FLY $500. IA11M1t.f Awoll•I•) FAA APPROVED Course lnckldn: * 35 Hours fli9ht time in Ces1n• ISO's with 20 hours dual instruction. Club memb.rship. 3 Month's free dues. lndividu•I instruction, tailored to YOUR ability. 10 AIRCRAF! AVAILABLE AT LOWEST RA.TES IN ORANGE COUNTY Le•rn to fly now - -•nd hive fun I * Fly Mexico & Canada * Special Rat•s for Commerci•I or Instrument Students. For Compl1t1 Details Call NOW ''Mo1nn1y, a11ytl1i11g I to Interested In A Real Estate Career? 1. PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM IN FOUR WEEKS LICENSING PREPARATION FOR • Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers • Sales Success Training • Employment Placement For Graduates • Day And Evening Classes For Information-Brochure Free Guest Lecture Newport, 325 Old No. Np•t. Blvd., 548-1192 EDMOND F. JACKSON Real Estate Edu r at ion Since 1964 " Mo via, C.M. $3500. full :1J!1Ce. 9-364 1. 979-1155 It happens every Summer .•• ACADEMY REAL ESTATE CONTRACTING & INSURANCE SCHOOLS ....,,.--J;:~---==:r-JZZ-.o -------. MOney to Lun HOMEOWNERS! 140 Kids are ou t of school and out of things to do. Suggestion: 'fhis Surn1n er, send them back to school. BORROW $1000. $10,000 Up LOW MONTHLY SUNFLOWER EARLY ACHIEVEMENT CENTER are worth training for PAYMENTS LOAZ\S on ANY HO:-.tE, PAID FOR or NOT C0~1PARE OUR C 0 S T S Our ~pec1al S11n1n1er tlasses run fron1 June 19th through Seplcn1bcr 8th (three \YCek se ssion s) lo fit in \\ ilh your vacation plans. • TRAVEL :\ny child aged 2·1 1 r an :1t1c11d. • ADVANCEMENT • SECURITY f'IRST! FIRESIDE LOAN GUARAN· TEE: In addition \\"e of fer separate s"'im lessons, balle1 and 1nodcr11 dance an d a nc\v program specifica lly designed t o introdu ce t'\igiblc children enter ing kin dergarten to the fund amentaJ structure and requirements of the public sc hool system. This 1s taught by a public school kindergarten teacher -2 davs a \veek . If you can get tht SAME LOAN trom any OTHER LENDER in California at RAT~ LESS THAN \\'E OFFER, return fht' MONEY \vithin 15 day~. and YOUR UJAN \\·ith US i~ FREE! R.C. \\'ERNER Pre5ident Our fun filled program will be divided into four sessions and your child can enroll in one or all, 1st Session 2nd Session 3rd Session 4tli Session 6119.) 17 7/10-7/28 7/31. 8/18 8121 . 9/8 Literature & Orama (Childrens Theatre 7/7) Science & Nature (Sc ience Fair 7/28) Creative Art (Art Show 8/18 ) AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACIFIC ONE SMILE-A-WHILE DAY CAMPER Music/Body Movement (Music Festival 9/81 FIRESIDE Thrift 1328 Harbor Bl .. C.M.645-1000 R19 N. Ma in, S.A. 547~ 1st TD Loans 6'!4 % INTEREST 2nd. TD loans ,OR HAVING TOO MUCH FUN! \Vhere: 14~2 Bea<'h Boulev3rd \Vhy: Swim Schon!,. Sports .. Crafts Cookouts .. T rip .. Overnigh!s \Vho: Boys & Girls 4-14 Regardless . , .Of sthool placement \Vhen: Your Choice: By Day, Week, ~1onl.h or \Vhole Summer Si>eci.al Education Children Wclcom~ Cont ultin9 child p1ychologi1t , pedi.,tricitt n, 1peech th..!rapis t "rid bu\ terv ice, Afternoon rec.re<!ltionr!ll <1 c.fivit>e1 include: PHOTOGRAPHY COOKING POTTERY J.carn tl O\I' ''ou Can Qualify Call 543-6655 610 E. 17th St., Sant• Ana Con)puter Reservations Training 'For Quali· fi ed Graduates .A.t Los 1\ngeles International .A.irport. By Lo\v~st tat'e!I Orange Co. POft REWARD & INFORMATION "WE BUY TD'S" 194-2313-CALL-53 .. 3240 4'nd <!!II el<'ci tin q things that your c.hild woul d wa nt. CONTINENTAL AIRLINES Sattler Mt51. Co. !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 642·2171 545-0611 .1' Scr\•in1: flarbor area 21 y.u .. 1 1.-------,,~ 1 Money Wanted 250 Houtnforftent n::J . ~----~ Houses for Rent Houses for Ret11 NEED $30,000 l ~t T.D. mnney, C-2 pro p. lmp. Can· 305------1 Houses Unfurn, 305 , HOUHS Un;urn, ncry Vjllage. \Viii pay 8.5 Hous1s Unfurn. lnt. Xlnt rf'fS., assets. Gen•r•I 647-7671. Hown for Rent Hou11s Furnished 305 Hou111 Unfurn. 305 Cost• Mesa e FA ~llLY \Van!f'rl -2 Br. Costa Mesa SPANISH tyf)(' older hou~. SISO. :VJaturC' persons only. (.all 6-16-1809. fnrrl yrrl, r.ncl g<H', kid~/ 11rt ~. s1<10. Huntington Beach ALA Rentals e 645-3900 • \\'ALt\ \n BP;H·h -1 Br • N rl ;\l , ,., .. ., ,, I h1rn. l..:ul." ~111] pt>l. Sl 1:i. 1 er 1 01 r r.ooin .. ,-,r, ALA R I e 645 3900 I hni:e lm ·d \Trl \;ids rirt ~. enta S • Balboa Peninsula 433 w.1 111h COSTA MESA · · • I ---c--=:-:.-..,--~-1 --I S20fl. 1 • RARF: find! 2 Br. fnrrl BALBOA Pt>n1n ch11nrw1 · $!20 _ INCLl:LllNt; l llil _ ALA Rentals . 645-3900 yrrl. kid~i fK'!~ nk. SJ35. Sun1mt:'r rental. Bayfront. 5 1 Br: 1 · 1 E:'\F:r1 rrrv~;-11n~11-~-FOR ALA Renta ls e 645-3900 br .. ba, l2e float .~ pier. " •tnvf', re rig, rpll --.~-----~-~ Cr.ptd. 1st class. 673-2039. dri,~. tot pet ok. LEASE i11 !h J .\paei,,u.< •\VE have a large :ielection h"rlrnon1 s, ~~rl('d 11·1 1h ,..,_ of 3 and 4 bedroom hOmf'S Huntin51ton S.ach Sl 40 -COZY 2 Br. CqrtaJ..-:f', rr.i •. nn a l:in::r frn(·rd lot that can be mo\·ed into '"':'i. 1 BR. Medallion Condo. 'ncl gar, fncd for childi pe1. 11·11h oran~f' 1n>f's. Prrst1gf1' almost immediately on our ~ ]{)('. 1n NP\1·p0rt Hc1g-h!s R t O t · I All bltn~. rt'. trig .• encl patio. 111 __ NEll'PORT en • P ion P a n . t ~ I !"ts 2 School arC'a . 33.13. f}('r n10. SHER\''0 00 R E A L T y pool. Quiet, no p e 1 . · " .. ., " , 6T.;-::il.34. BR, w1gar. S1o~·r. rrfrig, C11.!I agent. :14&--4141 540-BSSS rpl drp~. rn cd yrd lor ehild SPACIOUS, 11rc1Jeratr J BR, 2 L ido Isle & per. B11, crpt/drps. dish1vshr, 4 BR. No pets. AvRil July , , -, -., 3 BL', 2 Ba . F.lec . bit.in r11.11.gf' & oven. ForrP.d air hf'iil, Cti>I~. 60x100 ft'ncl'<l lot. Db Irvine 3 BR., 2 ha., fam. rm ..• S:J2.i l BR .• 2 baths ........... s::?.:i ' 4 BR., 71 ~ ba., fan1 rn1 S.17C! .; BR .. 2 llH .. ll-Hll. fill s;;::in \r1-: JtAVL o·n11~r:s 1.lnf11\•llil, ' '11 II ---.cu or '"SINCE J964 "' 1:-;t \\.'rstrrn ank Blr111:. Unl\'('rsi1y P fl rk. Il\111l<' Oays 552·7000 Nights CHOICF: Tl'vinc propcr1y-3 Rr, 2 BA. crpts/rlrp~. Aln1oi;t 11('\1·. All h!fns. $260 mo llJ nm or \\ill !<ell. 83.'.-1103, 83~3.SP.6. \\1dy or mo. Avail &-'Pl. or $19a -SINGL!'.:s or ran11l,v \Vinlf'r. \\'kJy.$200. l\lo-SSOO. :; Br, 2 B<1 . rncrl yrd. gar, \\'inter S::iJO mo. 644-1893. [X'I ok. (fi ~f)Os l. frplc, dhl gar. encl yard. Cl1ildITn ok. $260/1110. 546·0161'1 or 5J7.J04t "l gar, land.~rapcd. vacant -Laguna Beach movt' in today. S215 n1Q. Newport Beach S230 -Ff:LSll t.· Clean 2 Br. l·fl-00._Ba:....c-h•-lo-r-•l-Cbe-•-c'"h.-,:ou":'.H C~L\f. ~rpt~/drps, stovP, l"f'· kitchen. Yearly. frig, util r><I. $175 • 1 Br, util pd. Ne;il & - Qean. Garaie. • • LAN DUJRDS! Do you h;ivr $200·1 Br, \Va1ertront. Coml a vacancy? \\1c ran fill it. furn. Lrg ))81io. J\.lany ~~siral~lc trnl\nl~ on S:iOO Summer or ~lj() U f'. :I our 1ra1t1ng 11~!. Ab~olu1rly Br. 2 Ba }!omf' Bayrrr~L NO CHAP.GE. NU-VIEW RENTALS BEACON RENTALS 61l-4030 or ·191-32'8 * 645-0111 * BA YSHORES, p r i com· Anaheim munity \\'/l{arden gale, pri ---------beach 4 BR 3 BA July 1. $300-~2 K a It-11 A (;it Sept. 's. s:nOe: Co~rtesy lo Brooktiur:t l, Anaheinl. J brokers. 642-5211. huge ~Rs. 2 dlx hath!, 5 ton au·. Super cle a n. BY Own4!r, on upJ)f'r Nwpt Lndscpd. 2 yr lea~r ok. Va· Bay, 4 BR, pool, beaut furn. cant. Agl 21 hr. 9:;&.2500. Rental thrn Sept ~ at $300 i p« wk. 714: 633-9393 ext 188 ~oron1 del Mar or 646-3103. * * OU'Pt.EX B R A N D LIDO Jsle-4 BR. 2 BA, 1.1 blk NE\V. llugr rllx on11er's hiAii jirlv beach/dub. An-unit. 3 BR.. ~ 8 A . (JM) or by mo. 67l-9159. Firepla~. bltins. 1800 sq. ft. ! ti.r11111 1Unfurn. 305 + 3 d£'t'k!I wlview or hay. ocean, & h!lls. \Valk to heh . _.. • ~ shopping. 1 yr. 1 ... 142.1. Jtds, rtquirt'd. 673--0960, ~f ORDSI 4 BR. 2 Ba Harbor Vi•w "' tn Newport Home 28' fam rm., din rm., 9elcb e O... de1 Mar e trple. $450. Incl pool prlv k .( ,.,.,.,..,~ta1 Ser-gankner. &14-1385 eve11. W. 11 FREE to You! Try Open Sal & Sun. Nii:V\IWf -~ BELO\V h~'Y. xtra lit l SR. 2 I ..,_VllW RENTALS BA, !irepi. Avail Ju"" 261h. , • m324S $300/Mo. 644-7Z70. 3 Br. 2 i:la. fan1. frp!<", on C(lr lo! in quif'I tracl. ~27:) nio. !"l'Jj l.iarrl f'L l-J87r-35.% Tt1f"!¥-Thurs: 9 i 9 -7 4 1 2 1rknd!'. 1 BR·n1atul"f' aclu!u.-no fl"IS- Clean. CloSt> !o ~hopping. S97.~il n10. 4l21f Hamilton St.. C.M. Agf'nt. 962.4471 or 546-810.~. S150-Ut il pd . U 11 i q u e , BY Owner-S<ile or L.~r. 3 Br., l3.•:hr.J1,r. 2 ?lk~ oce;in. P riv 2 &.. lg fam r m . . !P,;,,t10B. '"on kitchen. ·,,, lk 1vorkshop, fruit tl'f'f'.~. \Y1r & 1 · ,..., r. VC'.r gar: a '? trash pd .. $275. 638-ll.13 aft I beach~ lov.n. Chil~/pct ok. s pm. ~3648 anytinlf'. 1 ,$17.1N. End Beaut Vt('1v. Lrg 1 1 Br. apt. , , , * RENT OPTION $225 4 BR + 0f'n El 'foro 2 Bdrm, 2 Ba, firt!placr. fi•plc, Jov('ly ,i:artlen, , , ' NeRI' Adam~ & Brookhurst. \ S230-Delux" 2 Br. :z Ba . * 2 BR, J B;. To1vnhousc. $173. 8.1.".-1103 or f><l6-97~l Oc-t-11.n Vlt'W apt. All Patio/gar/P90l /1\·~hr . dr)•f"'r hookun. . s2o.s. Child ok. I 3 !,,'r"1-' Os., 'ran'",,CT1: •. '1'"',,;, Pm"o'. lr11turcs. POOL ,. 'U , .; ,,., $32..'i . 3 Bt. 2 Ba h11e. \Vhite $7.8400. &15-4:>83. \Vatr1· Vie1\·. Frpl. 1 BR M'parate house ll/j(iu ·, \Valk to Beach, sngls, tam· NU-VIEW RENTALS 1\lature Adult only, no ~ts. ilil'!I', 2 BR $l50. Kids/pets 673-4030 or 494-3248 Sl20. Roy i\<t c C a r d 1 r ' Rent-A-House 97'"8430 Realtor, 548-7729. 4 BR Con<lo. Near Orange Coast College. S1"itn pool, Dbl garAge, $240. CrpL~, drapei;;, 551-3333, 5-IB-4760. • 3 Bn. dbl car J:ar, SJiO/Jno. Childn>11 ok. Call Dennis Baum, 962-j.)Sj . $135 - 2 Or Home, gar. Va. cant. J<ids/pet~ ok. Rent-A-HouH 979·800 3 BR, apt/drp. fncd yrd .. gar, .Patio. W /mo. ~ Na tional. 67>1827, 613-61.67. 3 BR Wt.lk to Weerellft & all ~ho0h1, lg tned yd . Ave.11. July l. $225. 557-4,167. e QUIET Retrtftt - 1 Br nr 8tore,, NICE! $90. ALA R1nt1l1 e 645-3900 2 Br Condo, util pd, crpts, clrps, pnol, refrig, wgh/dryr, frpJ, $210, 548-1405, 537.5385, 2 BDR.~ .• 2 BA. bltns, $195. Irvine 536-6$4 a.fler 5 4 BR., 2~\ bt.tha •.••.••• $365 3 BR., 21.i 6aths •• , ••• S.ViO 3 BR .. 2 bath11 ••••.••• S.150 (ired ftill REALTY Univ. P t1.rk Ct.nter, Irvi ne Call Anytime 833-0820 Office: hot1n 8 AM to 8 PM \Valk to 'Beach -2 Br home, crpts/drp!IL, 1'rplc, fncd. Ront·A·HouH 979-8430 Laguna Hills NEW World duplex. 3 BR, 2 BA, ahag cpt~. drps, a ir. d'\vasher, 11tovt' ,t.t. pvl. pialio. Adultt;. Av3iJ. 6/1.l. $280 mo. 213 : 831-1762. Mesi Verde MESA Verde 3 & home . $235 mo. w/lease. 549-3112 Newport 811CI\ $17$-2 Br. 2 Bn, ovtr gar. Private &: Nict! $175 2 Br. Frplc-llome. 1,~ · blk bay, 11, blk beach. yearly. ,ltll-lll:INT Walk l.o Btach. U!il pd. Has e PRIVACY Aasu1·erl -1 rer t yt:t ~All ~pel11. tvrrythini. l & 2 BR. RR., tum . All Ufll in<'I Slf'(l, ~ ior a.to11s .,,,. 11'-M30 Rmt·A·HouH 979-1430 ALA Rtnlol1 e 645-3900 NE\V 3 BR. 2~' bA. Comm. rool &:. fK, center. tu;, Le:11~. 833-0300 ()sys, A8k for J ack. S».-923> Evt~ . $400 • :i Br, 2 Ba, rlplx 1\·ate-rfront. Spac & tlf'lu~f'. NU-VIEW RENTALS 67l-4030 Qr 494-324~ A n1ember of the V. S. Financial Group I ~ e Mfflt•I A.11bta11' • Dent11I Asshta11t • lnhalatlo11 Th•r•py Tech1'1it l1111 • E1"..-1•11ty Medkol TMhflkl1111 e EKG Techniclo11 e Medl<•I tle<eptlo11i1t BY A RECENT ACQUISITION OF NEWPORT BUSI· NESS SCHOOL, CALIFORN IA PROFESSIONAL COL· LEGE NOW OFFERS: e TyplnlJ e lo11kkeepin' • Sltorth11nd e L•t•I Secretory prep11r1111io11 DAY AND EVENING CLASSES ENROLL NOW FOR SPRING SEMESTER California Professional College 1801 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA, CALIF. 714/64S·2922 Houses for Rtnt Houses Unfurn. 305 Newport Be•Ch Singles -wa.lk to beach, l Br $1.25. Also 2 BR. Rent·A·HOUH 979.1430 Senta Ana Heights S BR, l BA W/ FRPLC Bit.ins, carpet:-, draflt"'!!:, gar· nge, ya.rd, patio. Childrrn &: pch1 \Vt'lron1r . S375 or i·an rent furni~hrd . NU-VIEW RENTALS 673-4030 or 494·32'1R Houses Furn. or .... Unfum. 310 * FREE • RENT AL SERVICE RED CAR PF.T REALTORS • 962-7771 * Huntington Beech St•cteltt raylMltt ,.__., ..... PJK.-itt A11hhHKll OwM & o,.,otH ~ Met11ben of , ... rrot...1011 Coll er Wrft.~ far ftft Cafolot ------- -.,,,.._. J~ [. ApmOMott!or-lf!l I •P'rtOMottf"-Jltl ~......,;~· l ~~~I Townhous• Unfurn. 335 Apts. Furn. 360 Apts. Furn. :a6I For lease or rent. 2 BR, l 1,~ ba, 1ownhouse, in Huntin~· ton Beach, $185 mo, call -499-1490. Eut Bluff J BDRM, 2~ BA, lam rm . 2 cR.r g11r. Pool & r~. facilitit s. $3.10. mo. 640-0!JCl8 or !ZlJ) 82."-JG()). ~·~----~--· Balboo hl•M \ieneral iiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiii ! YEARLY-Studio apt w/fUU A kitchen. Avail June 15th. Bold New Concept 1 -61-5-607_4 _.,,._~ __ 1'10_. -- , " Bol .... Ponlitoulo f URNITURE HOO AL BA YFRONT llEN'U!. 301 Edgewater, c o rn 11 -r .... P.lonlh to P.lonth Coronado. rurn. 3 BR, 2 * tOO'i'o Purchase OpUon '-~th Pri be -• 0 I F 345 .,.. !i, garage. v . &<.;u. up exes urn. • \Vide SelecHon-AYail. July lat. If r . Style-Color. Robinson Newport Beach * U Hour Dellvfry DAVIS REAL.TY 642--11XX> BAY VIEW e 125 WK & UP-On Oew> 4 BR, 2 BA, 1tppt'r. Comrl (':!( ->J.l e furn. Rlkfec. 2 blk11 to l iC'I £ !!;;) Lovely Bacl'l--1 &r. -Rooma OC(I M • 441h Sr. t«X>/mo yrs I --Maid Servioe,Pool·Util·Pd. lsr. Ava!\ 6/15, Day~ e C·'J 6~ •740 e 833-8480 Ev~ 832·9478 517 \V. 19th, CM $48-™1 1 --~"-m~-"~~~C,,---. · I •ms!ii' i!!N!!i,!!!M!!!eJ!!!n !!iis!!IA !!!!!!!!54!17-0!ii3J!i' I TIME FOR Duplex•• Unfurn. 350 1 ! ~-•-d-•l_M_•_r __ CLASSIFIED ADS ~~~1,~~~S~ 2 BR, 2 811. W11lk In beach. DAIL y PILOT 3 BR. l'( b,., sr..; mo. 2 rAr Fn>I<. w/w co·pt" dl°f", '"''I FOR ACTION ••• r11r. crpt.,, drapes, tll'Hr pRtio. Aclull5. I ~ml pet ok, WANT AD h<"h & srhl! & go!! rour•" I S l l 51 m o . Yrly. 21C; CALL 642-56 78 642•5678 1!~2912. hlarguerllr, 612--~20. f .. ~ • • • :! • • • . ·' l'ueMar J11nr 13, iqn DAIL'/ PIL9f 13 Schools and 'l'hi s variety of fine schoo ls could introduce you to a new tomorrow. Apt. Ullfvrn. Ml HuntintlOft leech Instructions For furt~•r in#orm•tion r•9ardin9 th• Oi1 ily Schools i1nd Instruction Oir•i:iory e ~E\V IJ'I. 2 BR, unturn. •Pl. ''ard. \\'alk te Hunt· 1nston Plaza. i1&0/me. Call 714: :J27--3144. CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325 "·----------------------------------, ,.. ................................. ~=== ... =-=~ * 'BR. "11JDJOS . NEW . VERY OEL1}~T,! .4.dult.. ;; : • ~ -. ,• ,• • • DOC ~ OBEDIENCE SCHOO~_,___ PRIVATE TRAINING & CLASSES FOR ALL BREEDS Novice Thru Utility Al10, Schooling For Dog Tr•iners MARTINCREST KENNELS 20061 Cypress Santa Ana Call 546-0989 --------------.. ---- Anna's Pre-School Kinderg•rten, 1st & 2nd Grad• REGISTER NOW For Summer Session · A91 s 2 thru 2nd Gr•dt e Full L••rning Program • Phonics Stressed • Arts & Cr•fts • Music • Re•cf ing • Sports Activiti•s 2110 Thurin Ava., Costa Mes• Ph: ~ ... 1444 . _........,,-==-=-~=- * * * * BABYSITTING FOR 4th of JULY HOLIDAY ! * * * * THE BLUFFS SUMMER CAMP Childr•n •SI•• S-12 years. 3 Balanced Me als. Supervised Day & Night. S\\'imming·Hiking, Field trips-Beach. $60 pe-r w11k-pe-r child. --Summer Camp -- will be OPENING July 10th. Call 645-4302 for Information & Reservations. ---........ Ap11lmtntl fot Rent ~ ~. ~ . ' Anthony Schools Expert License Preparation for • REAL ESTATE Sales & Brokers • CONTRACTING GENERAL IUILDING, ENGINEERING, ALL SPECIALTY CLASSIFICATIONS • OUR STUDENTS ARE PREPARING FOR TOMORROW. TODAY. In f•ct, tens of thousends do annually. Although Anthony School1 pr•p•r•l more people for voc•tion•I c•re•rs (more th•n any oth•r prlv•te scheol ht California).,. to us, the individu1I is im porta nt. HEU ARE WAYS WE TRY TO SHOW IT ' I . Our Reol Estate i1nd Contrecting course mclteria l is coni.t•ntly up·da te4'. And for good rt•son. Stete e xam1 a re ev er.cha ngin g a nd th• student should b• pr•p•red to meet the ch•nges 1ucc•11fu!ly. 2. Our Instructors •r• profess ional. A nd we're proud of it. It's e n ••tra velu• ••ch 1t11d•nf rece iv•s wh•n he 1tudi•s el Anthony. ). All Anthony Schooh cour1e1 ore •pproved by the C elifornie Dept. of Edu· cetion, Bureau ol School Approve ls. That's •n e dded protection. Cenwh1c• younetf. Call 1714) 979-2353 for a : FUE GUEST L!SSON FUE CAREER KIT Like all of our studnts, you should prepare for t~morrow. HARIOR CENTER-2300 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA ... ONE OF 44 CALIFORNIA LOCATIONS Apt. Unturn. ------ / 9' J [ Apartm.rrts !or""' 11 ~ J ~ c__ _ ___, General Ap.H l mtnt~ for Rent ON THE BEACH! Apt1. Furn • 360 Huntington Be•ch T BR. Furn. & t:nrt1rn. FROM ONLY $19S OCEAN QUEEN Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. UnllJm. 365 Gener•I Gen•r•I * POOL SIDE. 1 BR. l'Qn1 -1830 E. Ocean [J\·11. plPtely !urn apl l\l u11111u111 4 1 Lone: Belich <21::1 ~~-5,1;4·, I V ILLA MARSEILLES nio"' lr11 ~1' 842·24·!!; .\rt 10 j l\lng'd by \\ 1!ha1n \\'allel'~ Cn I SPACI OUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APT. A~l. 1 Balboa Peninsul• Furnished & Unfurnished Lagun• Be•ch , Adult Living z BR. 1 1 ~ba . patio, ba!('On.1.1 Dish\vasher color coordinated appl i ance~. * STUDIO APT. * ::Ii L. Bay. 32:::0 monthly on Plush shag carpet. n1irror1:d \Vardrobe doors-r~r1ly furn Otran ~1dr ()f yrly lea:.!". lnqu1rP a t Apt indirect lighting in kitchen • breakfast bar . 111')'. 1\·i1 h pa lh ll'ading l<J <". 67.1--1.)21 or J.1&-7771. I huge pri\•ate fen ced patio • plush Jandscap- 1 brarh$. l~~f ~Q~lTH , C-oron• del Mar ing • brick Bar-be-Ques -la rge heated pools iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio j & I anai. Air conditioni n~. l nr!udi ni.: t,t1 li11t's [ 3101 S B I S '.\llSSION REALTY 1~4.071 1 o. ri1to t., Sant• Ana 557.8200 rs. c;;.,._ :!__ COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. AT Crescent Bny. ~l b!k 10 beach. color TV. $40. per wk. 494-2.508; 6r:r4367 1 BR, nr hlzh JJChl, vic1v & garden. Sl70, util prl. lst, last. 3JO dcp. 499-2593. 1 BR nr. high !IC00.-.1. vie w & garden. Sl70. Util. pd. ls!, IMt. S;'i) df:l>. 499--259;). NewPOrt &.ach * SEPARATE cur:s;T l touse, $125. Include~ ut il., riishes, furn. By 11pp!. nn!y, &12-5020. BACH apt sublet Prk Nwp1. J uly-Sept. sm mo. iocl spa membtrship & rec fac:il 644-8873. ~ MANAGING AGENT ON TEN AQ!Es Apt. Unlum. 365-Apl. Unlurn. 365 1 • 2 BR. Fum 1: linturn. Cost• Mesa Fireplace1 I Prtv. patlol. ---0-E_L_U_X_E __ _ Pools Tenni1 Contnt'I Didst. APARTMENTS 900 Sta Lan., CdM 6«-2611 {l\facArthur nr Coast H\.\•y) 2 Br. I ba + furnished ;:-uc!'ll rm 1v/b11. L'rpt~. drp.':. \Valk to b<!ach. Nr ~hopi;. Choice loc<ition & parking. $300 mo. Call 8.11-1101 ~: v l's : 962-2210 Avail July 1. Air Cond -f"rpl c's . 3 :-iwin1· ming Pools -Jle;rl!h Spa · Tcnnii'i Courts. . (.1an1c anri I Hilliard Room. I BEOR00'.11 f''RO i\I S16:i MED ITERRANEAN VILLAGE 21(),J Harbor Blvd .. C . .'.11. j714) 5.57-8020 RENTAL OITICF: Costa Mes• HARBOR GREENS Furnished & Unfurnished From $120 to $215 mo Bachelors e 1 Bdrms 2 Bdrms e 3 Bdrms I Y:z or 2 Full B•ths Apts. Furn. 3'!0 Apts. Furn. :;;.i.c.;.-,..,.--.-.. -Mo--,-...._.. c.,,. Mo•• OCEANFRONJ' Beauti!uJ 4 BR, 3 BA. Compl. furn. Avail St>pt. 645-0628. $13>-Nicely tum1bed 2 Br FURN. 8lch. male. $110 ~ inC!I. uttt, no cook. Furn. 1 .i Br. $165 lncl uti!. No ptt}. '~ C75-CT37. -------- trailtr, aWltJ, no pets. $ll5-Util pd. Small apl near 645-4530. 132 ~, Wilson. CM. 15th & Nt\\•port. SinKle Sl-IARP & clean 4 Bedroon1, 21,j bath 'valk to beach. r·an1ily pre!eJTed. l\fonth 10 month. $390 pr month Call 1\.ir. Bailey. 673-8550. IAgt.) 2 DR, bltlns, pool. \Va\Jc to beach. $200-up. 0 range Coast Real Estate, 644-4S48. 2 BR. Coro Lido. Apt. Adults. pool, no pets. 4250 E . Coa~I Hwy. -:""J46.-4924. OPEN 10 Al\! to 6 P':\1 Park-Like Surr ounding QUIET · DELUXE 2 ! 3 BR AP'I'S 1-fasler size bedrooms 1v/ hi;:h bean1 ceiling•. large Jivini:; roon1 '"/ges or '''OOd burning fi replace. Conven ient laundry area off ki tchrn. Enclosed pa· tios. 2 ~'''imming pools, sauna. 1·ecreation faelll- ties. Security i:Utrd. FUR.i"'f. Apt. $U>-Util P~. 1Ai block to ocean. No •. 2:AlO Seavieu., Cd~1. Cnt• Mo10 * i1t WEEK & UP * " e Studio It J Bit Apti; e TV Ill At&id Servict Av11.ll • Phone Servi~l-ltd Pool 1,;-·e Children I: Pet !ltrtion :..., 2376 Nfl\\'PClrt Blvd, 0.1 ~or 64~7 * $115 • Btu<llo Apto.. I Br. $12.1. Older t dult1. No pelt '13! Dtfl'I. Mar. Apt. 6. ATTMCfTVE...2 Br Studio, 2 b&\h, p.r., new c~1. * lil5/mo. 842-5117 * 1 'Ar:.. Trailtr. Baclwlor only. $kl/mo. + util. 64&--1809. ht! fa stest dra1v 1n 1~ \Vt13t .•. e 0•11y Pi~t Cla1111lllt'd Ar!. fi.4~·:.fi1~ adult. 642--558.1. Prv. petioe + Htd Pools Nr abor'g * Adulll on17 H;;;";;"::;tl;;n;;t;;lon;::::::;Be;::::o;;ch;::::;;;;;:, j J UNE L) • August 28. Pr1. bch .. dock, Jennie & patio. 962-5374 affer :l. "'i"W1'NTERRL~:m=A~L~S~. l2,l,.4 Bfl. Rell('rve No\v~ ! ABBEY REALT\' &12-38.'.() ~LPS 6---l!pcnd t~ :\ummel· on lilt ocea n. <:toM! to t?Vf!t'ylhing. 6'14-:~1.{)j, L•QUINTA Hl!RMOSA Spanish Country Elita!~ T.\v. inf: & SparJous Apts. 'f<'r- ratt d pool; sunkrn J::a s BBQ. Unbcllevablr Living - Only 2 BR, Shag ReJ/rn~. lrpl. S'lOO. yr-I~. No ~l/chilri. 431 Iris, Sn. H111y. n-\.\-4340 Martinique Apts. 1m Santa Ana Ave., C.l\I. Mod•l1 Optn 'Ill 9 pm. 2700 P•t•r&on W•y, CM 1 BR · FURN. $171 Al.L llflLlTJ.ES PAJD 14 blk.s S. ot St.rt Pitiao f"rl\'Y ort Bt:aeh, 1 blk W. on Holt to 1821J Pa.rbldf La.ne.) (714) 8'7-0441 $1'3 • $115 8Achtlor & 1 sn. patio:i:, frplc 't. prlv. & a r a K e~. Dlv!df'd bath • 10111 ot tlostl~. Rte h&I!, 1iool .\ pool lahlt:~. ~11\lna baths. SC4' for )'OUr:iJelf! 17))1 T.\rcl'>On Ln. 'I blk' \\'. "' B":t.<'h. 1 Olk K (If Sll'll l'r1. ~!~'-iQ1( San Ctement• $130. FURN. OCEAN VU Apts. 3 JJ: rm1. I Bdrm. Ptrkifla:, Adults. 492-1209. Cost• Mes• 2 Bft !>Pl. SI:>.">. Crp!'rl k <irps, ~tove/rrfrig, pool. lndl')' faci\. Childrn ok. l\fgr. Apt. 11.l flfi6·554!? * * $170 * * ~ Br. l ' ~ 811. 111'1\'ly painted Rt1111ii, ('rpttdrps. enrl palio. Nr i11·hlll .t: shop'g. Chlld1·('n nk'. no pl'I.!>. 880 CrntC''r SL. Cl\1. 61 2-8.140 or 548·2882. nr H1rbor Blvd & Adams 546-5025 SPAC. 2 k 3 Br. Apt $140 up. 646·81~l3. ~f ESA VERDE a.rca.·Lux. :: Pool, l'pi/drps, bltn11• kids L!lG. 3 Br .. 2 Ba, no pet~. Bn. gar., lrplc, beau!. ok. Children ok. Nr achls !-p.1 rio, likt Priva.te home. 1~ \l 1 N 1 <>o ••1• /\cl 1 i 2G3 5fi&.40 :r.N • up e o. . .,..~ _, shopg. $170/mo. 545-8991. u tJ. . ' lG. 2 Br. Adults, oo pet11. * 2 BR, 1 Ba Townhouse .. 2BR. 2BA, 1165. 2 Kids, no BAY ?-ttADO\VS APTS. South Logun• Patio /1ar11.1tfpool. $205-pets. bltlnt, C/O. \V/O. :87 \\'. Bay St. 01 6'16-0073 P1UVAT! studio apt w/d4ck i 225. Child ok. SS7-8400. :~\i pat~ri'aqe, 18l·H OELLi XE l br. frplc. patio . It. oct&n v1ew. rtdv.'d It N·E\V 'l DR .. 2 l\A, $!85. Kn -~',-•:::',-· .....:...:.:...:.:·___ $130 mo. Utll incl'd. 26l2 tMe•. unt. me. $1jj, 1 peu. No chlldrr,n. 2293-B DF.LU>..'t.'. 3 BR. 2 BA Oranae "''#. &4~774. ptnon. Rtfs. DAYS 494-1·1!).) Forrlhl'lm, 543-61.JS f'\'('~. home-11pt. Patio. bllln-. ~E~,~T~lt::.h~h--;!.-2:-B~,--.~t "•;c-=a.-.-nr Alt June 11. l BR, 2 BA . d~luxe om;;.":~ <'r•ttdrp. dbl rar. Adutt15 occ. Csrr11:ll't. l.ndry fa ct!. Put e littl, "IMt' 111 yoiir uni1 In hi plrx. $27.~/mo Sl50. :l49-li __ 598_.____ ;\11 ft(",1'. $1!:i0. ~1&-S.'1~1. Uvl11 . ,~,.JI tl\i)~f' ha11 hl,.• for F.a.~lsidr_:,._ C1'1l~2-~72 V /,('Ai\:T. ~p1u~k>u11 B11 chclor 'i J-l~r-11--;;\"unr11.r11-1v/;lnv~ "hur k•". C11ll Ct1-•if1,,d ! F'nr Iha! lttm Unrtf"t" -S:-..0. flJ'll . Nr. t:olletl'S A Sbop'JI:. Adll.~-11<1 1)1'1 ~. F.11"1 f'rnu·r st, r.12_-,;:~. 1 ~r, lh,. P<'nn.1' Pinrhrr 1 II'. r-1 11'.l.O. !l79.-<il;l1 , ('\f fi:f.•.:;Q ~Q . TOMORROW AN AMAZING OPPORTUNITY Y~)fla is l'un~ Hha nui [)l>\•I !left) And Kalida!'! ha,·e taughl over .Ji(J students \\'ho ravr about fl"elirig h<'l!rr. ~111 ·1''''·~ 1n life, pf'r~onal f ulfil]n)!"!ll &. rr· 1:1\lll<..: lur 11\P fir·~1 liml" in yt'ar~. Onl y 1'1! Yo!!;a ('rntrr rlo ynu 1-[Pt both IlAJA k }!ATHA \'OGA ~ I Week Classes Stort Tomerrow At 9,30 AM I 7,00 PM 2 Blk;i from Oct-•n. Call alt .>:~. 962-3065 -WALK toBeodt 2 Br, tTpt!l, dl'pl!, dtb\vhr. 709 Palm. * U1·3:951. L•1un• Beach 1-BR. ~ <lf'n. Uniquf' l.agurta C11st:e, 111d,. ocean vie-"'''· Atrf'~ of g11rden~. Close to ,,hvf;p1,1;:: Pa.i1ially turn. S200 :'.lo. incl. uti\. Mature aclult:--only. -194-4653. ------,---' * NE\V :? Bf{ . hlk lo beach. Specta<'ular 1'1f'\1". $2t0 up. ~338:: Qr ~~:?:;.:\~ Lido Isle DELUXF. :l Br. :' Fl . .\. Yf'1n·!.v Lra.'>t'. s::oo ~Jo. REALTOR 673-3663 M•s• Verde DELUXI-: :J k 3 Br. 2/Ba . en<"l .rar. $1 ;)3 up. F'~nta.J Otc. :~5 l\Iace Ave . , ~10:.:~. Newport Be•ch PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS on the bay P'hon• Or Ce'"e larlyl P'len Now Te Att•n•ll Ye91 Ce"ter 445 f . 17th St. Luxury apa.r1n1t>nt ll\·inr O\•· Coltl Meta '46-1211 erlool;ing !ht" '\'at~r. [nj<)y ~~~~;-~~-:-~-::=~:z;-:-~~-::-~-::-i:::::::~j $7;)(),0QO ht>alth sr>11, 7 !\\'Im· I -----~ ----1ni11;;: pools, 1 li.rht~d ten- SMALL WORLD PRE-SCHOOL NOW OPEN AGES l THRU 6 Open All Y•a. 6,JO A.M. to 6,00 P .M. FULL AND 11, DAY . 1TATE LICENSID CREATIVE EDUCATIONAL I PLAY PROGRAMS HOT LUNCH & TWO SNACKS CERTIFICATED TEACHERS Reservations For Fall OAY OR EVENING Now Being Ta ken K fnderg_•rt•n "! 549-3877 H•W aAltTHQU,lll(f 5.l'I aUl~OIN C'O 2950 McClintock W•y, Cost• Mesa SW Cer11•r •f l•lier &. felrview nis 1·01u·!s, plus nlile~ of b11·yc!e trails. putting:, shuf. fieb..-.ard , <'rocJUf't . Junior}'~ fron1 $1ti4.;-iJ monthly; also 1 and ~-b~droon1 plans and 2·slory town houses. Eltc- tric kitchens, privatf! patio.a: or ~lconieii, c:arprtina, dr•· per1r.~ .. '-'uhtelT&nt!an p&rk· ing 11·1 th »ll':vatori;_ Optional Jll.airf .~ ... rvice. J Ulif north Of 1•ash1on Ji;tand at Jamborte and :-iAn Joaquin Hills Road. Tf'lf'!Jhone tn4l S.4-1900 for rental information Bf.:.\UTTPUL t"Xtr11 l•rlf' Br .. 11 pt. 11·ith b11y vif!'\I'. tn Perk l'\t111)0rt. 32~ month . 6 nio~. lf'A~f' or IOngt'l', ii tieFirrrL Exp!'nsiv!' n" 11· turn111 11'f' in kfll. rost $.1750. n ~#rl ~ month!'.. Fnr ~l'lle-at ~'.!ijO. til4-4::~3: 641-1::47. I YEAR·AROUND ~ BEDP...:\11-2 B A T H S . builtlns, ne1v earpet. 11 1i blocks to beach, •xo per month. CALL ~ 1 a r v.· i n . !lSM<OO. · wi~Tct1 .. ~ CAP'RI 1700 \VestcUtr Dr. Adult Llvina;-No p~t• Dl':luxe 2 Br. Pool. Apt. Unfurn. Carport. Furn. or Unr. 6-1~·6274 Adult,.Condo· W ••+c li/I riiil :! br-p.atio-1v/D·r•ft:r·frpl Im· ~ n1ed. pol!!, S280/mo, Qrlen- Cost• Mes• ';;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~I Sat-Slln·2-5 pm. I N•tion1I Servfc11 Co. 3'S Realtor . 546-0811 -645-4331 . AN! THEN THERE . WERE NONE! Apt. Unfurn. That's thr story each limt' Huntingtor Beach OCEANFRONT, N~u,,ort·~ 11·~ have an apartment t"inesl, 2,000 sq. 'fL 1 BR, ;r\·:iilablr, \Voo.\h -Som('· ON BEACH! Ir~. p\'I. liUndeck. Sharp °''r 1\'ant,;; 1° n1ovc·in and sing)r pref'cl. S400 mo/)'Tly. v tii:!-7629. i;tart enjoying life hf're · ----~=~ ~pnt·ious :'. bedrooin un its ... z BF:. ~ BA Un f. ~-r. S277 ~£\\'PORT -BAY!-"FlONT- ~ Or{. Furn. Vr. S388 APT. living rtJQm ,1·ith lirephH·e. pn vatf' patio. .\'our 011·n AD1:JLTS 01;!LY '.! Br, 2 ba. 1'~or details I a u nil r y _11.Qrkshop 11.nd , Fur niture Av&Jlabl~ call 838-97.f7, 642-:1Ji. garag!". All st:l in • iardtn C ar P ett-<lral>@!-41.IRh\vas.her A 1\·i1h h;g trtrs 11.nd potil, h::;edr=~~~u:i::s p~~·;n. er Unfurn. 370 A !u:~uriou~ all adull rnvi· 1-ontn cnt. Don't "'ail : FAIRWAY VILLA APARTMENTS 2fll22 Santa Ana AvP. 546-82\S LOVELY ::BR. 1 1~ Sarhs. Spacious. Carpeted. N ie~ kitchen. Brick ~r.ark tiar. Ralcony. R~'arona blr Tt:nl. Ch11Urtn & ~mall prt~ l\'el come. 3.Jl Victoril1.. Apt :t pat!os-amplto parkini Security Guarcls. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC 711 OCE.-'\N AVB .. Jf.B. ( 714) 536--t fi87 Ofc: optn 10 am-6 pm Dally \VlLLIA)I \\'ALTERS CO. Costa Maaa Summer Rentals PALM MESA AP'TS. J\ffNLi'TES TO NPT. SCH. FURN. OR UNFURN. Un~lievabty larre apts .. huge pool, JaC'U:ttl eleC'I bit-in.~. shag crptl, drp!;, BE ONE OF THE !-"TRST !1a11n11 etc. Adults, no pets. TO LIVE tN THJS SINGLES ··"·-. •. From $133 J UST COMPLETEO 1 BEDR" .•....... Froml140 e Lu.xury l hr ar.ii. 2 BEOR?rT .•••••• From i160 e Adult You'r~, r.;:ht.. !hf:y'~ un. DF:l.U}\'}~ '2 Bi'., 11, ha • Disl11vasht.rs ~er-priced l.56l l\-1e1a Or. ~l urlio. Crpt,.. <lrp~. pool, 1 blks from Ne•........., ftlvd ) built-ins and p..-t. patios • Choice of '.! color lichernes " • .,.,. ' · s1 :=.o. l child ok, no pets. •Custom carpetinr ___ _;!146-;.;:._::.::::.:._ ___ I r;..$--0 l!l6. e Jtcuzzi 1 & ~ BR fUl'l1 or unfurn NEWLY DECORAT-f.D-e Htated pool Children's Rction. Pool. • Dead-boll Jock.'I $140 Up. £l....¥1 GAiu>ENs 1 BR 1r/gar. $140, fncd yrd APTS 1n E 22nd St CM I ' .....,.. e Only $140 per niri. • • • ·• • ii·/patio. \Vtr pc. ~~ BAHIA PUEllTO 642-=3S43"""·-· ------I Placentia Ave IH ). Call :- bhin 11: S, 636--4120. 2810 171h St., 1t.B. 536..C815 2 BDR:'\'f., fenctd Yl('d, ldd1 >!ESA Verde, 2 BR-u-,-,.-,., SEA AIR APTS. $11$ OK • .,. pet" l618 C 0..,,,. Aw. 5f.5..185T. newly dee., bltn~. crpts, Lr1. 2 BR. Crpti, drpa, bltM.1,.,--..,...--'--~-',....--1 drps, no pats. 1 Child OK. 1 blk N. ot Adami oU Beach Hu;ntlnft9n ...... . n;,i. 5'0-7562 ;is.02n Bl,. 129 No. s uuca. NIW ..... 5 .... N· .Dfl,.. ;;... ** B!'Al.111FUL 1 & 2 BR. 536-2796 OJ' !')36-7070 "' . . r5" Co G I A t . . Early bird tpeejol•l Sii nteniporary an: en P •· 3 BR. I ¥~ ba, pra.ge. Qu1i't from iUl. 2 BR. train Sll5 Patios,' frplc., pool. Sl5S. deadl'nd st. $J7j. TI01 EIJis -..~umtun•--I ...i.. ..... a:... SliO. Call :>46-3163. " •wu .,..., ~ ""' ~pt D. sc~ mgr at 1731 tcrkirt. pool.' JiCUJd. mart!. *--;-eorlCh1.1-Br-.• -2-el.'. f,llt.~. Apt 0 or call O\\·ner 3081 Holl&lld DriTe . J!lm. hltn,:. pool , i; I h h 'I,. • 6~2--0430 t'VC k 1vket1d!<!. tington Beact\._ u_7-S. kid11/p!''ts Ok. S:.!Jj. :;.-1:,...jZ70. 'J BR. 2 8A, crpt~. C:rp~. " 5"6-37JO. rh·h11hl'. •, blk ~111.r<ly PArk.. New,,rt h~ 2 BR IO\\TlhOU ~f. $17j. '1 bt· $165/Pf!'r mo. Aft 4. 848-5371 OAK~: GARDIN apt $160. Osh\\'hr, ~hl\i, self-·"-!"T""'i~ clean ovtn. patio. bltns. 317 'l Br .• atudlo •OI, tll AP•ftniiiftfl • II :•n """" l'lt>ctric. crpt, drapei. (ft~llOrt U:Ttnc .. ftlr \V. \V Atlll .. H~.J. $1.il) i\k'!. 5Ji-i90-a •ft -4:}() Ad!.iltl C>rd)r} EHi Bluff 2 Bn Apl C!ostd t•r Crp11. NEWPoRT 'J!t/.Ot · lltll at ~ e DELUXE e drpe. Child ~. ""· pet ok. 613-00ltl or . -TI> 3 BR. 2 BA Apt for ltue.1 ~1~115~.~M~T·~-~·~~~~~l !~~~~~~~;~J tncld .11ptc. maater l\llt•. din 2 BR. nr bt,ach, ntw rpts k rm & dbl a:a.raa•: auto doO't' d 11 so / ~ opener avaU. Pool I. l ',6.-7479 or 340-62~3. ittmlllli ,-rp~. cran.re. mo . [ I .. RccreaUonal •rt•. J . e $275 e S15:J. 2 BR 2 BA , tl•h""hr. It;:) Arntaos \V1ty. l'\B f)OOI. Jor:IOS OK. 2 l 2 0 '.\1Anat!!ll by FLORIDA . .\.16-31!)1 RMmt \•:11.LtA :\1 \VALiF.n.-. C-0. JIOU ~F: 1-tunnnt" \\ 111<·h ll'rf' 11Pf·'.~ 1-IOU~f' r-ol•1n111 NF.\\' DELUX~ PR IV. 1 !IR. R.'I fOr rent. lite ca1ldna, C-rp•~. drp•. bl ln•, D'\' ))Ath, adult OYtt lt. $83. $23 · -; :" · • 21n :: r' 1"•· ··1 1; ,.i.~;'. 6~6-S·l'4. •• ' • ;· I ' ' ! I ' I I • I l ,, ~;1 DAILY PILOT I !~~~~~~~/~~~~ I [ ---l~ [.__'-_·-·~][fl) [ ._,... l[Il) I L........ ][11]1 '----_ ..... _ .... ·~)[Ill 1~!1 7 5 I )[g] !--.. -]~ ....... ..... _ ..... Rent•ls Want.cl 4'° LNI UJ L:-ntr•ctor Job Wantocl, fomolo 702 Help Wonted, M & F 710 oiolp Wontocl, MI F 711 Help Wontod, M & f 710 LOST v~, or Bui.ha.rd • ROO~I Atld!!lon.•, [1·1matt1, Bf..:AUTICIA/\'S 121 N~ CUSTODIAN. $2.ti& pt'r hr. + • Roonu for Jlf'nt SIS 1111( "- Up. 1 J blot'k ()c(1u 1. Z-.A>J S<'&\'llW, CcJ\I. NEEDED RESPONSIBLE WORKING COUPLE lh11niJ1.,n am111Jl, 'k 1 n n y bl;il'k &-111;11 1 o~. An•. lo j pl•M l l11vou1. 11fli(l~ nr 2 11tory. LT. Colllitruc-Uun. C'o\J.I . Rick' Spttta.!12lnt 4 1f'a.n1n!;: tlioon & 1111n..Jo>,1,i., Yoor ho11'1f' vr ptac-e -01 hu&lnes11. RlU. C11.il for t'~t. fi{2-2122. "GOV!o:R."\t:SS" (Ir Dom1··t1C Sec r f' tal'). Plurf'~,.iu"'1l f";amll). E~~llf'nt Itel. ·reip Sala.ry. Plt'a.w \\'r itr; 10 lalte (J\rf'r ,. x I. t I n r r!ienlt'I" lm ri,.c!l.&tf'l)'. WU! cu11.rn \Ip lo $91 per ll'k to r11!'.ht Pf'l'!!On, Call ~g...9919, B~~AU"fICIAXS n!!~d. ToP hair styl i.~t11 only. '.\ta.I~ or f('malc. Santi Cr:ih Jlair ll"~i6 n11. 963-3433, 11.B. f-mkkeept'r n\fht 11hift differential, ltlll ri.tn~. pmn. p<M1iH0111. 7 a.m- BDR.\t·w/1y c:rp•. .., 11rdrohe rlOSt'I. SJUU't' HJ1 11 1 $7j, mo. ~1T/11'kill.l ti16-:.l()I! ' nt·•-d Ollt' "' 1110 tx1troon1 Loi:). Call 968-.1)10 Rrf. l ~1-1311. pm. iACK Tau I 11 nt•-r.l'r•111r E. D1!gf'r: l5 f"'~lm Av,.., LoA Gatos, Ca.hf. 9.Al:O J: 3IJ pm & ll pin.-1: 30 an1. SERVK:ES*'AGEl\CY Expf'r. requ~. PerllCln~I OU1 ce, Soulh Co<1st Coni-1 •:x1"1· Sr1•re1a1')' Jo SROO h()11~1' 11·l!h lrirf:<' ff'l)('f'd ---5 - TO ~lW"t' Jr:i: lu.\ury how;;,• H ;--.·R. T'1 11. i ui. & 1,,,f11 r nrd I for two VEltY 1Vf:l.L LOST (JUt \O,'lflllerful po1 Jri .. h Sl>Hrr al C.xt/ , i\<!11 rnA &: r.mo<l .. aclr!i t, 20 rr'. ~\p. Llc'd, My \\'ay Co. 547-()(X'Jl. '.\U::SA Cle11111ni:. Carpets, \\'il'lf.!O\\"!i, (lo tl t ~ r.tc, r.t'!!ldfcon1'l. j J 7 -6 7 ot:?. :rl8-ll 11. Nt;En-1J;1P8fhome~ \\~ have Aldes • Nur.~l'l! • Jlou.s('kprs • Co1npanin11 ... • 11 om <'Jnaker!>-Up.fiJhn 5-i7-&Sl. munity JJO!lp. Sciuth Laguna. Otil~·t" l\fl!;r/\\'l'lll'I' lo $800 499-1311 , An ~ual op-1':11t-row Oerk/Notc11 Deeds TRA!Ntl) ~) Sl50 moi'lt. ll arhnr. C'h lld r•n Electrical \'it : lw\\\'ttn l!ith & Vlr 101'111 hf'1l.11hrOkl'n' 11•1, .. '~:: "" portunity ,.1nplO)'l"r. E.~~Tu\\ Nv!t·.~/r><·•·1 I~ . fTr.i --c-_ ----T1 a\'rl Aiii•'Y i\lg1• StiOO + ti 1.>-31 t :. ROO:\IS $15 \\'k •rp 11lk\•, ~:'.O 11 k up A~1 ~. :J'.:i6 2\t•\\ i.Ol B~vd, C.\I :.is-~T...:i -ln('at \\'.Bay St.I COST.\ ~lES \. 5'18·7881/aft 6 p.n1. choker collar. :ll8-4Cr2i. --7 _, f: L t:CTilJCIA ,~. :tN!nM"d, bonded. Small job~. ma.int. 09dl~•ted Cle•nlng DECJ.:J-IA'.'\/I, _1 r -rour1.1 •. ~1 .... r,·r,.lal'le~ tu S!iOO ~~rt 1•1~1· ... r ;,,, 111 ~1 .ii.:.. I'~ -iiEAlITJ("IA/'iS __ _ ' \VHlTF: J'ox Tl'rTll'r ''.: tilk I.· f'('pa!rs . .>48-.'.120:. *" \VE 00 Jo:VERYTHING * Re.Iii. Jo"rl:'e ~I. 646-2839 Jobs W'-o-nt"'o~ci-, M=& F 70-4 .,..., ()IC :\l~r Sf'1Trl<t!'y 10 """' ~le~11·,., J1a1 ,. 1 1 ~tunt. "'·l''I, ~c'y/H,.re pttOl\l<ct Opf'n Ml) ftml. Vic $t11.\,4!'W Av,.. \\'A:'\'fEO to rt'nl -0 r lea!'t., no la1er 1ha11 ~ .. pt. 1st. 2 Br """"' '" Silvt'rado, ~J<)d. ---Guest Home 415 -.____.. ..... ~--Cd:\!. Rev."Ud! 673-49"0. Pledsr call 1 ll.ECTRICAI. \VORJ\. All l.1111ls. Blg or &mall L\c'd & Jn~. }"rPf' .. ~r. :»6--0211. HOUSE Ot' C1.Jo~ Floon, crpt11, v.·inclo11' &.· \\'Ill/,,;. 5 )I'~. llll"f'~. 612-6S24 BAY_•_lk111rh Jani1orial. I APT. or '101~] ;\la11.1~~·.-~. ~ Co u p I ,. I f'.:.-:µtrit'nl't'cl. Rf'ferences. &t'.?-3030. Spa.toe For ~n1 s:io \\'el!kly s1z.-0&.11 able to 11vil. !<Jn:;: hrJ>., Cvu-\Jf'n'/ Oft' Comrn'I Jn~ OIH!n fa ('! f-:1·1·'. daY~: (21 ;:J p3yroll Clerk S3CXI + r·un Chargl!', e:-:~r u~rou~h 498-2jl2/Afl 6·::0 t' v es : *PRIVATE ROOM* jt'slr;:,,. TrahuM Art"d. Ca111LoST Jun,. 8, J\ttpaake " ' I 1--' Jtec·ept/Typlsl lo S450 .Kl'!nera ."""'ger. J\'rii·pr;rt ~71~\ 6T.:-S!i16. A/P, Pavrnll 10 $500 fnr ambulatory pPr,5011. l:ood food. nicl! cheerful surruund· .11n 6 pm-jj8....m3 f'x! 207 II l'llng band · S50 IlF.\\'ARJ 1 . :;ardenlng Help W•nted.-M-& ~F71Q Center Offret. P r opt' r ! y -,-"O" ---------, •.. l\lanageinl!nt f''\j)Cr prrf"d. DENT A L P.P<:l!pl\On1s t, P.ITSf 0Pf'l'ator to S500 Vlr: e, • r h. m an!'I ple&!'f' lea\'t numb-er r-: t'\\'pot"l ing.~. V>ilh Ofll'rat-Or. 673-00'll. QUALITY GARDENING C1-pts/1\·inc!o11 ll/OOor ~ etc. nesitlfC-on1m '1. 6-16-1401. Pr0f.-Carpet-Cle•ninf s a I a,. y Orwn. \\"rill' capable I.· e\pPr. 11~ all tl~n-AC'rount!n:;: t:l .. rk 10 $.',()() Cla~sified id No. 316 rM.ily ta! ~re. pr04·~u1·e!I ~lud1n:; c;irl t'riday 10 15'X> --* Call ~-47:..1 * Summer R-9~t;1,--42i) 6/11/72-2 E:n;.:li~h i;rtter~. 1 blk &. ll'hl uHlf·r orarn f' & 5 Yr~ C\pt'r. '" area. P.r-1 1~1 1 · \' ~ '1 , I pl .n1rng. haul 111·a_v, genrral ,\l"'l "'in1l1l\\ ~ l.: nonr rar ... A Betlt>r Trmporary Position Pilot P . o. Box 1::60 Coi1ta chairs1dt' & :\:-ray. Ne111>0rl <J f'rk Typ1sf lo S4Z3 .\JeS.:. Cahf. 926'.:G. ' Cc..,ir,.r, bl l-002'.!. ~·1·rf' k f('" Po~111on:\ OF.LUXE ,1·;11Prlron1 ho11\I'. Furn. I Bl:. on 88' (·ha nn£1 Clo!iE' IJC'.a, J1 2 ho 1 ,1,Ji~. \'ru·.+1 1,111 1\•1~ 1-.'it·r· l. Ht•nt !o loi~hl ,\' ff'n)!ll· 1111 'r.,'f'(I 1• >I'\) :\•> fll.''~ ''' ~n1:i.Jl ('hlll'rt'11 .. ~ 1200. ()11 Jt<'r. I 11:11 1n,::1un I l11rhl1ur 11' \HP P"I'") tt· .ail 1 ' ,. : • l1n•l.~rr1pe n1:Un!enancc. ';;;;;;;;~~·~1 7°'-'-""~'---•7"."_"_1?i. Fr1>r e~tin1at,.~. C;1U Dut1'h 5J7-1~ 24 hr~ F:XPf:f:T OA \"\\'OP.K- • &1C--OS!(l • URGENTLY NEEDED ----~si; i,;. 17r h tat 11;u1r) CM liOOKl\l::l-~l'r:it~rOuniS DENTAL r<'Ct'ptioni81. r.:.\p, 642-1470 c:t:STO.\l l·:\f'•·. F0r111.\/ 3 Br, 2 C.'1, henur. furn. En1PI 01'('r \\'ale1-. Pirie,., foun- tai n.~. )l('arrrt IJ(..()l. 011·f1f'1· f.UM~. JuM 1~:-;c p!. $.4~. Con111. furn. 962-1267 ----BAY VIE\V 2 l>l"dr1-;,r,n1, sleeps 4 con1 pleteJy furnio;h- l!'rt. Avall June 1-0 !'ept. $;;)() pr mon1h. Adulls only e~rnt. 675-i930. V •catiOn-Rent•ls--425 _______ w_r_ BIG BEAR Leke-Lo\'('h• 3 J'\r '.? RR Callin. o ~~-t\\'k. S(},,)/!!42-S220. 71 l/5K"\--:ti7G. R!tntatl tOshare--430 ~1ALE. 4i, 11·i'h cx:c.~sionitl drinking problr'rn 11ould lik" lo shA r'-' rrn!al in hP:i.eh arML Ohjtcl to ~1ay sober & !llH·r mo ri e y. \\'rite Cias!'ii fircl Ari No. --12-l, Daily Pilot, P.O. Bf>'> Jj(){), Cos:11 J\tr.sa. Ca. 92G26. I 1'.IOl!Tly Uobf'nn11n 111al" pup. 54~7873 or 444-9076 Personals Sl(.. Tall 1·!ipp<'rl. ~:a 1·.~ 001, \'11·. -. ... ---Virfori11 I< J'a1·11t1', (.',\I. 1 Al.'~ G.AR1J1'.-:\'l/'i,·r.m, a I I s~ .. "i.l />f'r hour Ironing GF:Ri\IA:-: d1\·or"""· 4.'l. no 540·191" i ''r ~arr.1•t11n: & dep pleA ~ant pPt~on;il11y, --7 '_· -----~-J;111d;r«µ1n;: Sl"l'\"iCP.!=, call doc. 'I Mn1ok .. "(){)(J CO!:k ~.11\Ll·: Sin•l\<''" 1··1 1. """'' ;-,10-.il98 ~\'€'•. s ,.rv in: e IJ!O"\J'>:(;. hon~~nia.kf'r_ L;ke" In rrni~r'. C.~l1!ro Vi1 .. 1· .-:.-·hriol. :.! )"('Jl'' \'f'11·por"f, ('J'L f'nsta :\lesa, e Al.TJ·:r:ATJO,'\,;; e tv r nanciall•r s f' cu r" old. fn7-1~'(\. 01)\'er Short's, \\lr~!rl!ff. :\Ty homC'. c·n ll !l-7, .itl'.:!-1 !13 _ I . -___ ., __ 7 gcn1Jeman. ')e a ff 11. Ir 1 PP.Ot'E.S.~lfJNAI. trf'r 11·01·1.:. Landscaping & tC'~U.~ t'I Oa11.•1flt!d Ad lflllruction ;. )(prayln~. s p r i n k l " r ~ . I TOP SO IL -540-0~97 ~C'kf'rs, plt>11•, !Y'nrl photo I I ~ pr u n l n g, tr i nl n1 1 n ;:i-, ···"',,----w - No. 41 ~~1! 01ily Pilot, i:ndsc;ipin~. ; Ir an up· 1 ~a11·.n n('n1•1\·al, flotoTJl1 P . O. 8'Jx l:lll, Costa l\-Ir.~n . (,rorge 616-J~9.,. Painting & SP!RrTilAL :\Tedium & Carel Schools & -*~NEW-LAWNS-. 1 Paperhanging Flt'adings by ;\trs. \Villian1~. instructions 575 ~id . Strilon!>. !'iC'('•ling. Y11rrl . . . ,., A1!1·ht'~ in a!! proh!em~ or I rrmflrlt'ling. State Lic'cl. 'f'.~F: HA'.'\f,:'-IF::-..:. up to 20 ,. lifr ~o prohlcin so grc/11 ,<:;\\'l\I le~-on~ 111 pri1,111· pnol 5.~4--4Q'.!1. '.11~r., n1a1 .~ 1~11!_>1~, 111obllc Iha! canoo1 t.11!' ~h·('d. FrE'C' from f'>:pr•r1rni·rd I! i r I ~rorr. Call .>lo -.iS.16 or hn1·1>fitoN' re;ul1 n~.~ g i\·cn !f'ac•her. Sl.:?:1 r a. half l111u r. AL'S f.anil~capln:?. Tr,.e 816-21~'.!. G,1_ .. ,,,1 c,,,,11 rr1111)y1\. Y:i rd ren10l'lc11ng-. i·ou, 1•·i!h f'a rh readinS?. 711: ~ "' ~ Tra~h h:i.ulin"'. lot r]r'lnrin. ~ .,upply !11 .. P.1in l. P.1n.q: 527-3-!06, 10831 ~ach Bl1·d.. painted $10 f'.J ll\'I! Al~o. <".\:-P.rn:i 1r ~rrinklf'r~. s1:;-111:;:;, • Stnnton. I ]~ _ --lf'ri<'ir. Refs. JO Yr~. c~per. .. " • J''""~ La11·n Sl'n'lC"' ""' -,"16. *FULLY LICEi\'SED• rv ... n ind apaif1 "'""1"".,. _ :\!1)11 , ~;,Jg,. &· Vacu um. ----c"°'~-----r.eno11'nf'd JI indu Spiritua.lii;t. "Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;,;iiiim I S ni ,, 1 1 _ 1 1 ,. 1 "-" -tlran-up. /\o \\a• an" Sn;ntunl R,;i!in':s g-i1·e11 1 * WALLPAPER * . .,,. •~n cla il)'. 10 A.\1-lOP:\t. AdviCf' J•iJYll ing ~~-~---U'hen )'Oil eall "f.Iac" g i\·rn on all n1attrrs. 1 can J .o\l'AX!".S f'; Gard r n er · !',48-1(.1.! Si6-171J RA YSITI.'IXG_ -:'lly h '~ n1. ~ · C.;111plet,. Yard1rork & he:o you. \V l J I k I · •P1i-1:-..iffNG-P-.\Pr",J''", 31:? N. El Camino Rf'al OU I I ~ ~Ir ~ a~r"<. .... -ti 35 r1 .. ·1n-1·p. Free Estirnatl!:'i, r... '' S:i.n Clemenlt' p I 11. Y nl at P " f{lr rny l!l'.?.-~10'.!. rlauf{'htr rs. Xlnt rPfs, Loving ---~---~- 49?.,-!llZG or 492-903-i honie & r 11 111 1 \ y en-I EXPl'.:RT Ja~ri_;~" Gardener Pl!OP,LF.:\'f Prf'gnAncy. Con-\·i ron111,.nt. ~lol niea:~. fcnc-* 6 l.>-l i96 * fide11l, sympalhe!ic prt"~an-eel y11rd. Pl11yho11~e. lot~ of C:\J or r-:B area lntrrior Exterior Lie. Jn,._ Gu:iranteed Call Harri" 6~2-4.S.:.S ~---PT{QFESSfOi\'AJ. P11i11ter. Tlont>s! 1\·ork. rea.~. Lie/Ins. lnt/F:-.:t. free r.~l. flefs. Secretaries & Typists lri!Prvi"'" Hour~ 9 an1-l l an1 & t pin--4 r1n \\'ork \\'hPn & where you 11 ant! Interim Personnel Service 771 W. 20th, C.M. 647,7573 54'52592 Acl'.''!-Con!>lruct1on l 12K Sales ~fanager.~ 0)>C'n Prod. i\l~·\\'elcJing ~900. Dl•;;ii:rn Draftsman l iOO. A1P·Construction :ti7j. Keypunch 0pPralor :o;;l5(J. \''rittr'Ofr-. i\fgr. Opo>n i\-lgn1f TrA inef' lo S500. NEWPORT Personnel Agency I l l Cover Dr., N.B. 642<1170 ADVERTISING nousr:- \VIVES -Sparr time in- roml'!-No srlling required. Call i\tr \\/right at 557-6266. BOYS Age 10-14 to rle ln?r Pd!"'I'~ in !.he Dana Poin!. San Cle- men1r-a rea!!. DAILY PILOT -BROILER-MAN- Sl•a rp IJr(Ji!er n111n needed for nl!\V stl!ak hous~. Apply, ~lon-\\"ed, lL\i\1-3P~I 2121 Coa~T H111•. NB. !\tr. H~drick in 1r.sur.ancf', col~rc!ic;n-;, I.· appo101 n1•·u1'. }\1l! rune. &>1~! re~u1n,. t salnrv r"'<· peclrd. \\"n:r Cla~'i [r. d Ad No. 1.i'.:. ',. l)nily P1lo!. P .O. Box !JOO. c·,,~ta 2\fc~a. Calf!. E.'l;pt'rien"" preft>rrrd, w111t' ge,\·ini;: k11011·ledgt>. !'\le!" sur- roundin~. Ci'I\\ n Cle11 nrr.~. Fashion Island. Call tor 11p- poinhnent. 644--2512. DUNCAN ASSEMBLY TRAINEES 1'\o t'~perience requiJ·l!d. i\l in- 1n1un1 6 n1onlh!I Or;111gr C(Juoty rf'~idr-ney & son1e local 11-ork hisrory. Clt'an, plea-:ant 1\·-0rking roncli1 i0ns. Con1pany p;1ld h"nllh in.~ur anc<'. Call 5-l5-82f11 for inlrr- vie1r. F;qual opporluni1y r111ploy"r. JA:'\ITOH -\latur«" .~. dt'pl"n- d;,hl• \]('•,, V('rrl!! Cnn- v;1l1·~• "Ill \111~11.d, ~6 1 Cr11 trr ;-;1., r . "1 ..• t'l--.1 i.'\.1 Jr. Clerk Trainee• rr1trll()'.'\ !'Ll l!T~:JL"'. N11·pi J\1·h. $1.iJ hr & 1]1f'rl! incr. f''a1111J1i1 1' II \0 l\1·y 11r/dtr. Pass simplP 81'1fh. tr.~!_ r i tilnl" only. :llu.~1 br attrac- 111-.. & nt'li1. Cal! Bel'erly 6·1:, .·iSoo. KEYPUNCH Dey Shift Available Now 6 11onllr,<; 11ctual work "'<Pf'f. on f'1thrr a kt>ypunch, kt>y!apc or k<"Y disc devi~. ,\f .. "0 Day shift until move to Newport In Septemb•r then swing 4-12 PM. Sr-hool rrain i11~ nrr·rss. ~lllC' \\ork e.xper. hf'lpful. NEED ott1er girl or g irls to i1luu·e .... ,, br fall . Age 20- 23. 646-6496 l'lft 5 pm. G•r•11•1 for •. Rent-435 cy counSl!ling. Aborlion & toys, lovr & fun. $2(1 irk. Off EXPER JapAnese Ga.rcl('!11!1' Adortion ttf. APCARE. AdAn1<1 hetl\'l!en B"~hard "-O>n1r!ete yd servic""· Nf'al 61~-IZ:i. _r-.Jl\~noli>1,~9G8--0S.3.1. _ & Relia. }~ree :s~~:89. cflV6R-CE :lla111rr dept'ncv1.blf'. '\'kdys PROF"ESSIO:\'A!. 5-IS-'.?i j9. PAl~TING . Jlonest, t·!ean, guarantrt'd \l'Ot"k. Licensed & insurt>d. tii.Kii•IO. ------------ADULT nel'<lt'fl for ('hild car<'. 10 & 1 )TS., from 8 to 4. 4 days a \\'k, n1y homf', ~Iis;oion Viejo, SJi-7741 after .(pm. -----1 Experienced 1 Cooks Dishwashers 11\TERVIE\\°J'.\'G Do it yoursf'!f. m.v honlP, Tlrf•. Fencd yd. JRpane.~e Gardl'!ning &r\'iC" SrNGLE G.1ra";P. Nr. Costa.. Nr\\·rxn1, C-0.~1a i'.I~~a ho! !unch. 51.->--lOGi. rree E101. *" &l&-0019 & Busboys I ,\p)lly in PrriiQr1 :'1!0n l.r. Tuf':<: 9 a.m-2 pm \\"eel thru Fri 9 11n1-l:? p1n o:-: r-.tf'~R City 11,.11. Stor"'.tf' on-i i\f:"lilll~C'mrnt Corp 67::-J IGG RA-BYSJTrI:-.'G:--N.Ll. ;irr-11. a;>r.lPLETE 1. a 'A' n t.: ly, 518-8007 or 83-t-~ZS'.J. '/\'[CE looking-bacl~lor -l5 In my homf'. ,\n,v ag". \\":dy Gardening servi~. llauling «O rf'Cl!nlly d ivorced. o 1v n 1 or hrly. Call 67.)...3'.!:'J'. !· clean-up. J im 548--0105. Z71.f:? OrlPXO lh,r. I San Juan Capistrano __ EXP Only. Clothing-n1ar-h1'1r 1 O(X'rators. }'ull !1n'". Ii:':~ I '1onro\·ia A\'e. Bl\·J S, C.\!. I 6::>-7'.?j:!_ SIT[ or 01 ·r.. :-.£\V Bt:ILDl.\'G homl" \\'ish .. s lo mttt iii-:arpet S•rvlc9 T R EE SERVl(E- tr11Mh·r ~11 1 for dales &•i•--w------- frir'11l<:hio. 5~6.20.i4. JOHN'S Carll"! & Uphnls1Pry Cleaner~. f.!\t r a Dri -;.:;hn1111.-'° fi·pp S::oteh- Trlmmin::;, Prunin3' & Cll!an· up. 64'.!-5196 or 842-8442. J01-tNso~s-=---GA RDENTNG Tr-Y OURS! PACIFIC MUTUAL FA~ll!O:\' ISLA:\IJ fCom('r Santa CnJT. & /\'r11·po rl Crn!er Dri1"' l\lridcrn orficc spat·P air/ rand, Co11la /\lcsa. 5 offi('Pc;. Tola! l'.!00 IQ fl. All or na1·t. l>c per .!CT ft. N .. ·1r Brikt'r & r airvit>11·. 518-5:>.it 8 1n1- ' rm . I A1.co1·101.1c.-: Anonymouo;. Phnn" ~:.1-7'21 7 or \1-rite P.O. r.ll\ 12'2~. C:i.~ta :\tc.~a. "tznrrl ,~.,il r.r1.inla11t~1 . YRrd i\taintenanc<', P!a!1!inz 1:\1 " :T:!JIATF: PLACEl\tc:-..:r .!'OR: E~T'~ p1·:nTP<l ,.;rru:1 i;.,rr? phoro t.lUC"iJ up :i: rl,;. nr .. drd. ili-4·18:? for inter•·~·~. • Cl ~,,0~-Pr:.01-·. painting, ~l~o roofs, f ire insurance ti::p_ * l'P.l·'.I·', ,,1·1,. h u, IX~rea.~f~'ll & all color eanup!': =---,,,, ", Fl\°n YOU R~f'l .F hrr~h!rner.~ k JO n1i~1ut ti SPRINKLER REPAIR ~~~~~. fC:~~~· c ~~1_11~~~~~~: Call for appointnienf e FIGURE CLERK f:·~:.\1ALF:. ~;-P r r a ii<l7', lr;insporlation tor 11·ork In -----* EXf.CUTJVr '* AIRPORT OF"F'JCE-: f,\' ~()'f?:°fl'.\'F: f:LSE. hle11ch for \l'hii r-c:1rpe ts. Nl!\I' Sv,!'t!"lll'I * 5'16--~.l:".i -~-MARINER pickup & d!'lil'f'ry. J.::c r~p-L-Of An'?c1e.; uni.I n101·e to Dl c,~y..-n f'"Oll clean -& 11c~1 p·1·n11'n•, Thes job · d "' PN!stlge e..:cc111f1·t' ofC:ct'~ Lora!l!d A! airoort 11<'Ar • '1 ,., Save your 1no11Cy h.1· .o;.a1·ing * L •NDSC•P.,ING_*_ "' " .. SAVINGS e s •re v•r1e Jn~. c;o.: ... 1 rhon .. po•r·~,)nnl r ty.1 r--..·('11·ricrt, SfopL '-· DICCOVERY "' "' interior or extrrior &. l'eas. & chall ' I ,. k •!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ____ "'"'"""' • me l';i;!r11 r1·1ps. \Vill elt~1n eng1ng 11011-.~mo ·er. ;\lu ~! rh·i1·r, rri:l;111 r,i nt.~ !· San Diego ~··co~-'I'/~~-... ,,~ "'e1v IO\\'llS, Sprinklf'r~. cfrc·k~. , .. , •• o,., "68 "6' ,,,,, \rPslrlirr o•;v• If • ood I n 11· .i·l'J~' -.. ·''' "" · livin:? 1·111., 1linin:? n11. & " "'·'· .. • ·· . .,,1 "'· "· · ' •• , you re g w num· full t in1e. Pern11n1"11!. .~!.ij r111.:r:r i;--only-o n t' h.111 s1.·i. Any r1n. $7..:0, cleaniin. Stf!te lir.'rl._~~{6.122:,· r ,\lNTJKr;, int &. r "t. rcas. i'\t>ii·porl near·h ber1 & can type • little per l1r. lufer\·ie1\l~ 6-14. LADIES Fl"\1·y. S3:!--c~3cO_.t _____ F .. \\"l'i?lit" ,,.,.1y to ~Pl " ('Ouch $10. Chair S."i. J.-1 )TS. E:'\P. ll111\·:i11;in Ganlf"l1('r 1·1Hl'S, 11•ork bllarnt!l. LocaJ -APPRAISER / you may qualify, ~~:•: ! to !'1. \\'111d011· \l'a.nt lo e<J ru f'Xlra money frn111 yn11r hon1c? Call for i111(1r111;1!ion. :;..m.0!128. 11!•:"lh -·oa•r· .:,\;:i!:-•'lr-S50 rno. Will pr .. vid~ fur,.:• ·re: at $,l mo. Ane1r,.rinr; ~el'l-ri"t' :1v11.~lablc. ~'>2 Forr~I Ave, fllH"~1 <>P. Try it, you'll Jikr l'>:IJ. i.~ 11·hal c<iunt", not C'on1plrt(' gan:lenint:: Sf'l'\!ice rrf'~ Jir-. Phi!, '1!14-!'691. LO•N TR•INEE ....... ~:.;:ns, 3i3i Birch. t\\\'pl 11~ 1'~3--2100. n1r-rhod. l do \\'1/'k 1ny~ell. J\;in1;ilani, l).16-46i6. Pi.ster, P•tch, R~-peir r., ... ,."" "" • GENERAL &i>. --L1\IJ\' 1'.fD. J.'e\v hr:i; "'k, >..lnt --Good rrf -~"1--0101 I .. '" opporl\n1ity. f':p;iJ FOO I \"_\:\"TT·'.f) lo nir"' 11rot"rr --... -_· Gen•ral Services J::slatt' f'Xpcl', desirablP.. I CLERICAL D WAITER !t~l;iry .. neplil'!I .ron r .•. 'rri11' C"ll. for r-:'rn~h,,. fort>il;n Thrifty C arp•t Cle•ner * PATC!f PLASTF:P.ll'\G (;ill :'l!is~O.-..:lev , • E"'PlT. 01·rr 2!, Long hair ' Cl i1«.~1f11"rl Ad :-;1). •J.! "'l -h!M· ... 1;,,,., in '7l &1:1.;:7R7. An.v s17.f' lil'in::: room 38.95. REPATF:S or 1" ni P 0 r 11 r" All 1 ~P"~· F'irr ,.,, ntafe~ i'.?1 ::) 6;0--01~i0 Good typing & insurenc•, ok. but nf'a! :ip J"lE';lt', 1 l)a1iy Pllfll, TYi Ro.-: lJGO. BAY VIEW OFFICES D\scvunt ;idrlirivnal roon1~. help, hn'Tlr "r hrt~l'lf'Sll \.v l a.II .l:0-()821 I oxpe h I f I b 1 t Appl\ l\fo \r r 11 ., C,,··fa :'ltr~:i (;ihr De!u.'lr-. ll il'·COtl'lr!ionr fl . b h ~'1 00 11 J•:r!11al Opprir. Em pl1•yPr r. e p u , u no . ", ~ 11-r r. An1-.. pn1 · · · . · . __ _ .~t-011'11 11uanli111: 11vail;ib!I!, J0 or r. -· mtn., ,.,_ Plumbing "REFYOU---nec•ss. Positions •veil.I 2121 r oas! '.'"_')', NB Legal Sec•ola•y Redrrol'ated. Lido arrrr. r J[g] r.tikP. 8-17-0'.:•17, "' ('(llll/llPr(•i;i l /l.f'l'0\1111~ in\·i!-I,, '·'EE-D 01' I for Jr. & Sr. skills. . _P.Jr. llP_ur1ek z_ Top. ~lull.~. Loral nr11tonon1i"~. B';r, 57;,.6700 I lost aod FOW'ld ... 1. Ori!-n :.J-6 i\lon. lhru Sat. TOT,\L SF.P.VICF.S co. S...vt -On honle repair~ - * AIR"ORT A"l'A * '"~.n~,.R,, Pl'll>>hz ln'l,'ll'-, _ C·,rn..·">I"". rrr ('· , p Ull1 Ulg, pain, ,, ·' ------~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;,~~ I' 1 I b ·I 1· .. ''TP.,,\ l".'Co;11·.· I FRY COOK, EXPER C-:11l l.11rr;iin" r ,, ·. "' '""" 1_1 " ·: · ·' ',, .. ·-·,' r~,tall.11,ons '-'.".·.' 00 r,,<1 Full o' part linH". C-oll lo• Call .i4~-7-'.1J \\ ESTCl.IF'r' i\dj. Airpol'!Pr ltott'I. D"luxr " ;>-\lo; ,,-T~R\•Jrll' ~ S50 ST~:A.\f (\irprt Clranrr-;. ·. l'C' rtpAirs, cemc-n wcr >. inre-rvie\\·. 96S-:ll 64. . r. r. IN•, GE ___ L Prr<onllf'I A:;o>nry 1-:?·l roon1 .c:ulles. LQ\\'F.ST Found lfrff •dsl prnf. 111 lo"es' prrC'f's. 300 lilf~!~09. I)Llii\1BING REPAIR :\Ion &: Tut's~ Ml·2 rm :'\El~A OHicP, Cl<>ri,.a.1. 2013 \\"i ~iclrrr ni· .. 1".B. r.,\TES. 218:! r>uPonl Dr.. -~q 1f S?<l 9. 'l(i"-{Y.'·•i No job l-00 small A .~1ni!r Is r.~{'~~ary. \\'r \Yed thru f'ri 3 am-U pni C:t~hi?rint:. f'i"lE' l-1<l:e~ 645 2170 roon1 8. S.13-ZIJ IO. FND. Brittan\· s ... ~nitl hrol\1l ..:..__..:__:... :·' '1· • -"'·· TIIJ:\GS B~· ~e: f'encr. * 64::'-:'.12.~ • nfed a gal \\"ho Jilcr~ ro hr C!othi'l;:: .c:tor ... Pc1111nnf'n!. • ___ 7 Of.\r;: . .,a,.,. 11,., llRble S.""1 & 11•hi'e male. Scrm~ lr:iin-.arpenl•r ;::en. crp! repair. ap'I! in~t ln. -ii·ith rrier.dly P<·Uple. Our O'.\' :-.·o ph.-.11<> c1l:• .<rl! ·''~r. Ll--(; . .\t, ~""rrr:i~·. supP r Pfl. Bet1•;ccnC'1:n n1tn l.:91h -----·--.---Fire . p\umh. !ilr. :,32-S!l l!l. COLE PLUMBING I' . B:i<'k.··1,.,-Pt, ,,., l'••hion •. -h.•r·p. ,,,11, ._ .. m• ~. l, 11re;i in GarJen l";1·vv1·. "' "' , • If St'l\ 1,.,. · ·1• 11 1 -1 1 !~l;:inrl. 1'\r11 ....... rt. '· ,,11,.,,.,.1,._ 1 1 ~ ,,,10, ,_,,_ mo. \\'iU prol'irl!" furn1t11rr L•RGE OR SM•LL l'JJ 1 !i i" ll6I c;i<u<i ·Y 1 n.~ur:i1x-,. l\~"11<'.'> "IT!~ nr-n11r: ,, .. , • .~r 111 $5 n10. An~,1·e . =., .. .c:l'r\'it"" Haul ng --w------c·an 11.~P Ill sm1 <' 1 ~Ou NE\\' Bl"ILOl\'G ..., • "' ·~~· ·1 hi 7"" ~.~1-::G:i'.I. IA!I 'l'~l"'s \\,wk: L'ut <loc\r.-:,, I Roofing k 11 · h .-, -----'"""'.''' "'"-,.,, po•I A\"11 '.I e. 1 ,,,;, F',(.':•r·l1 f'l:1·d. 11'•1\' -~Ille 11n~ 11 nu I :fRL f"i·iclit)' f.<.f'<\,-.\, "" \n ,. ,. r ,. , -----p·1•wl 1'f''!1'•·'rl r I n 1 s h ~-~. ------------~ " C l-ln11t il'~1nn f;r;irli 6!'' ·~'.'1 F \'J). ~1r•i··rl loin':-h:11r":J 1' ' · ' 'r · Tl!FE &· lr,2' p!,nr rr1'1.1\·;tl .- T r. l';ll u:g ,{· r-nd<•l"""lllC'lll.-. PACIFIC ::o. 'lu~t Or stohlr . No bi~ir ""!<'!' offl·r. fill-6100 -11,.,.r-r k l'"n 11·r'1r1n~ 11·hilr nnnr. rr pa. r~. c('L ' y .. rd t· !r;l'·i1 ,.)r'1~-11ri · •\ly llaufi n~. l)r-,il .\lu~1 hr ~.P'l<I l y p i~t , MUTUAL bu "inP ,~ JifO"''''''"·'-[_,~ J.l\'f:-!.'\ '.Inn-~·,,_ r••I cm C-(}t?O.\'.\ rll'l ll:ir. flr:uxr · · , ~,;~-l'.1;1, , .,.·.., . "·) .. : D1r1·rt. / 1ln n~y <i1111 11ork. "'Slrf•I \ l"i!.A'.\'IJ . • • r. l!•i 0ri11 .• , 1 ,1.,,0 11d. n.-a r nll:•r 1·10·. l!C'I. ,i·--_ _ _I J{o.n11 .. >11~.1~10~1 n ... _-1ru (l,~1 firi-Zi~O ~4s_9.!lO hrn1·f1 I,;'! You hf'I~ Think !(nroPr !'ifin!;i Crnr & t1·pin::. ![1,.,,1,11.11 <.111., Ap-11·/T.V. :\l ·n;i:;r hninr fnr 1:,.1. :ind S!i.'(I. 67."Hi~lfll. ,....,.\\'land Ill~ ~~;~D lii. l•i.i ll '11:-.;n1~ 11"111'' 11 '1'>11 1·:-.. l'h1n1· 11 .,. .i Ion flnt tl·J111p. 1 rl11y, 21 --·" · J · ::ir1111 i1, Cttll \Ir~. /li\ll(fy, t\riipor! Cr-ntC'J' Dl'h.,.) i•'.y hii11·11 1:;;0 1,_. ;,, ."i ll 1inrkinz !)Arcn!o. 2 clnl<lrrn. \\'hr,.!i:-r Cr,, 111:. h111£ -0·;11·111•n1 0.v -1•a1n1i11g hr. C;i~I J1.~-.-,~~;::. Sev1ing/A lt•ra.1on1 1'1ii----Or.'rl in H1111ti11-:;lnn Ech. ·"uprrjr.r, ,\'pt f;r·:i. li-1.1-'.:!IJO L;:r r•110l-.'11'.!' J.: 1·ou,<;Piir,rk. ~~ _R_._"_1_•_1_, cc_: Fl\'n. a.bri111 Ii :1111~ ni!l r·1t • 1~.'.:.•.fl>\:,:. c· '11 ;,in-~i.•:_n __ 1 LOC Ai .. ~IO\P~. h ~~ D ~~s tcr~1:::-f.':~11; --ASSEMBLERS * F f:EI·: 1!.lll) hu~ troi n.~pnr· GlllL Fl'itl'-1;., ,IC1lH1>: ;ir. \YCl:l'~ll '1()..(1'1. Ir I I n ~. o~-~'J('I ;_ ~!Ol'I', n1·'r !'l''pr :' !r1 \\·i:h \\hill' ~1r i(lf'-. \",,, Cement, Concrtte <'lf':tl\llfl, F,\p ,. f\ I Jr g f' 11·n1111•<!, ::!U Jl'~. P\p., nP1~· 111 El('•'ll~>nli·. ~111" sulrlPring ralion for \\lll"k in l.£1~ An· 1r;i rl1\·". ,,,lf ~1:1 ril'I. '•:r ~~'.:-:?Q)1 p.,,, <)~f!i• ... ·l·ri ~q fl. G·,oi! 'I"" a \r " r i!" · 1I>!l 2 CF,!F'.\'T l\"Of:K 1 II ~turl<'nt. Lrg lruek. r.c!':. l !11nli11-::ron HPar-h. !)('~.;..(lj'.;ll f'\)>C'ric11r r hel pful. iz-e!f'~ nnt1I 1110\·r to Nell'J>lll1, 01·if'n!Pd. 1\('r.1'·n ~n ri::ica ! ri •·1\111:: Sl ?u ~!(111111 'l:1•l11i:a"r r ~l. ;,r ,---<r.::;. · ·· · · 110 10 '.ti\(i "•"4-l~Jfi. · --Elpar-ln1·, ·"•'p!. '7'.!. Jn~trunirnt.' . .;·.;..:r1o. LOAN ESCROW OFCR -<111111. 1·r11'"1lJ1 1l". ~l·" '" Alter•tions -'41-5845 n.. · • ·1 bl (ii h.lnl l:l'r1ll,1 i;~fi-2!1 t "'I \l L . 1 ··11 , ,__ 1\G,",1 Von ;.;:arn1an, ·~~~--... -... -..,,.Jw--,-vSJ!,(!n~ avn1 a ,. In .i;e\·eral -· .. ?'f('E'll p.ir·" '1'1• J•:slin1. 11. ~!11 11:.1 .. :i l~-~.;1-,, )'ARD i .1r 11-I!' rlrannp.~. Jl;cn1, ;ic-cura lc. 20 yenrs !'.'\fl. -llELP \\',\NTr.;o of our of1 H·r~ f'lr :E:~C'TO\I' Sll'11' t:oo· ~ll•1-:'<'rr ::~o· ,.,..i ~··,1! 'I(' l'r"rl ,t: --------. 1. 11 ... ·111'" s:::>-lil7. Ceshier~Count•r Girl \ra·r r e k b ,, , ' ,,, 111_,1_,11,,. ,.,1,0. ,_ .. ,10 ,., .. ,1,,_ •. ,_·, 1 ~'..."''''·, "-,···h. JOll:\'S l'<i t1•i~ I.· ntock r.er.i_ o\·r lre<'c. < r!. 1'"Y. Television Repair ''' '"''"' 0 PP 0 "" n; 1 y ? 1 Pss ;:;, r:()fl·~. ui;..,.,ys « Officrrs 11/a m in. of l -5 · ·-' '" ... " " ..,.,. ' ' I \' kin I oa cl er backhoe I ., '' oi·pr -L Apply in person only, riish11·a.~hrr.~. E.'\fl. a: must. /\' ,1 nl\'d, (' \1. 046_i;41, '1"'.0lO'' '\'or .>. An ;i.-.:oc. n 11r1 ·" :-. _ • • ---r ptnlo;,·t'r Dt>li Sher. Brookhurst & ~T.~. l'\f'('r. In con1·f'nl1on11.I 1 ' -· Land;:;(';t.pln'! c.,1. ,_·:::.ft'..".11 8!1-2€JG. I * BLA!i\'E'S TV * ~--,,,.,,=--oo=,,--Adam-:, 11.B. Agr.c: 18-:;0. Apph· h1 rierson loan~. :\h1FI bl' c11p:rhl .. of TI\"0 kr.v~ on nn'! in fl1 i1lrllP --- -------S£>r.·lcini:-All Br;inr!s A.'""T. Cl;ST. s~··r:v. 11 nyt imf' 111 llOUS'! o f ha.r~l ln!l O'-'n tle,,k S.1.lary ; Of'f"ICI:"-","-' :;:::;-,s,z,s,.s,s"s''F''F, ol of1s•1. nmn~h11r~1 •. C'11I-PATIOS \\:tlk.'\, tlr11c. ir.~tn!I YAP.D I... Garage <.1cai,un. A I' . _ .. ~. RJL HIRING Pif'-~110 l'\n1oort DI .• ,,. 8 "w .. , " .-, "' nc\\· 1;111·11c .~;1\1 hrc.ik,j frel! e•t. 7 da.·;s. Ca.II r· u 11'Jr11,._,, I' n,i;:na,·o:-.. CASUAL LABORERS ·'~" ~-~u··!'·. con1n1ensur:t!C' "·/r-:pcr. soo ."i1. rr. 1:-..r•!'STPJAL 11 :-:~,.k. Jlu n!in!:!on &:.u;h. ~l~·c,.,,~,· . -,~ .,,~, \1101\'n fr·rhonci;ty M(l.4:1.; w d I u I llEL.P to \'.·orl; p1r' Ii"\(' in l Ca!J ~Ir. E:r'1i.~nn, .J iG--1~. Sl/01' ;ii i Aut". r.~r.-21::0. X~-OS~2. '"1110'-~··1 ·~'~" ·•r "'1· anrtinit>, -~·•-..v:. · Til• 10 me~ ;;'begin rgent Y Needed Jt:U:a n rl"!i. \\'!"',rill r r~i:"". CALIFORNIA ~tr"ia!Rf!ntel -•so o'r:'\ ~!'rl f<'li;t',. r-~! * * I '. d ' I ' 1· ~lust hil.\'C lran~portation '.'l!·J~lbr n1n l1tTT'-a.pplyl009 11 FEDERAL SAVINGS ~ • __..._. 1• /tnn~ hHtr _ ln11ncl ,.;~. i* "Jiit' * * CF.RA :'llJC Till", 1...:it"h;,;; wor11 s~~te .~ifotr Y· & tel cphon". lt1rhor Bll'd, ('"\!. ==========::::::o:/ COSTA MESA T1 "1111 & 1,:h. C . 1\1 . 1 Calh.~. F:ntr_r.~. r u ~to n1 Interim --.---. ~-1 '""•, .. , .. ,, l'l'e"3• 11'1 n II {'l•r ' $154 WK p IS . HELP.Barma1Jo1rr . .il .,, . · " '''1 , --;r.• . . ----------------------, 01· ( tasor1<1 1 r. • "'. -• • er1onnf: erv1ce r bl 1 bab -ci ,,. .....,. :. l·.\n~~11;:[:rt~,;~.'.1'~:;::->-j Fc1UNn 111Co1'<'>-11-,-,-l,.l-1\_Jo_r 1" 5-18-726.~. ' 'FOR l~TERVI E\V CALL •)·-778 \\'. 20111, C.i\I. ;;:.1~ ~p~l.v ,;"Th~ ·1pi~c;.1.1 ,·1•· . ..,r .lasn1111e /\_1·". 1111 ·1 T d 1 CF:f:,\"\llC--1 1 1~,:-& I Lil 7-0:i14 9 TO :i fi4.·1.1?.'l S4f>-2592 zcoo \\'. &:boa, N.D.:__ __ .. f\r. K11pt f"1"\\",I' I.· S ll. Fr11·y1 Fn11r1h ~I.~ p,t·l'.V fl'm l;i'. ra er 's Paradi se rrn1od~I. 1'~rrr r:;t. SnlJll -FAUDIO-VISUAL---:!!l~l Crn•·" 1.n. 1•·li. al•t 9 •1·k:-1olt1, 1;1 1.1:'()1 ,ioh.<t 11·rl("<l1n(' . .j.)3-'.!l'.!b. REP A IRMAN CO UPLES llOU SEt\:7';El'f:r.. (l'lm· (SrJ. or B;ik,.r. F., or 1'.t11·v11 11 -Start •,,,,_.,.,,,,, ... 1·11 ,.,,,. 0,,.,, panion. Pa.rt tinir. :\ln~j f:r:ll.J·:-~trir.lf'd ma.If' I; tt ~" FOl..i.'llTAl :-.1 VAL.!.J:'i' ' '~ !\lit nr;wr~1·11tnl1\'1' lllf'l'l' 11· ne s hOt\1(' & \l"Ol'k togethrr. drivt'. Ko sn1oki11i:-or drink-9 lllll ·lZ rir.1.n _ II fir''! collar_ ~lad•'lra /\1 r [ 1rm SC HOOL DISTRirT --l-J• if l'\nt11r:.i.l pro t! 11 c 1 ~ by In;'.!. !:J2 .. i:.-~. 17141 !179-4•1::4 nr ~j~l ·l'i!I ~r,.?'\\1 [mplz'>"""_' __ t"1111d'!d 'Jndcr ~'cdtr11l F:mer· SJJA'' E s .. . •• . ----• _ 0e·1t•y J~n1plO)'mrnt Act Pro-r\L E ii·i U IP! yon !(l'oivr HOU.;:El\EEPr-i't--r,.l irf-1 1 ;\fodrrr-;-:._p,.inklrd~lllJt!=:;::-FXT'. )'Olin?, mrd ~i1r h11111" t S "' 11·11h!" 1i :;1C'!<! F1•H or ~ -, ~ • • . · I I " c I . I me \'ision: i\lust ht' Virl Nani ()t p/11 ,-I . . ' C··'I day~ \\',;:. p3~I; Lulv Con1· non J>.'1 fl ., S2'\:, 1w-r 1,10. r1n~" 110'". Ol'<ltllt t r ntl". ree r1t1n1ng. '" C • 1 '"2-o"t' ribf'r.·la.\.~ o~. ~·rar n .il;rr ~l:ir. 673-j7'.:~._ ----I J w t . M I 700 ".<:f)t'.ciri l"' \•l'IC'rAn. ~l\ISI ~°>-l't-:52,')J anytiin~. ~ ~~--~-:::7 ___ 7 -d 11 °' an~~·----~-~-----hav!' lo10\\·leclgf' or Auclio-1. Fairvi('ll', C,,,, 5~s.s.::..;1 10 ~pr.I hik<'. :'llr11'ii nl'. F~>· 0 ars SCRA MF-L E T -S Visual ('Cfuipn1rnt mf\inten-i:::OCKTAILWAITRESS liOUSEKEEPER·fOT oldf'r II 11.111 . 4 pn1. Di~;!'O r·r,.f'1\8Y "' r.1+.,101. I . . Sham, )'Oun,•, allrac. 1z. ex· man \\"/KmRll girl . Ag!'! 6. I • llJl(.'C' & principlf'!I of tlf'r· ... """ .,.,..,., 540 '"'""'i. -576to 6~000 Sq Ft--C::'\11 .i."17-9G~q lo 1,1,.nri f~·. Ironies. SG20·Sr.J4. M a jor JX'f, for ne\1• 11!eak house. is~~ ~----- 4001 Air,·h. N.B. ~1 n.:lll:':'.! Ft)U;\'tl :-: 1!11r.1,1 v r.11 ~'t' t 1 ~,"-:'.'."----"'."-----------...,.-1 ANSWE RS ~ledical '[)pntnJ ben"fit~. Ap. Apply. liton--\rf'cl. lJam-~pm HOSTESS _ 7 _ _ 11.,,,., ,.,.,.,,,-11,. ·11.,•ni·• "/' J,\J~f·; your 011·11 lr.l.r on ;io IS Ar-. ITemel , rrlee~ 2121 Coa.•I fin~. NB F U . \l' kd ·· u. " • "' 40 ,.1 11 1 · ply in l)N'~n at: •I Light· J u hme ee ay1 NF:\\' DELUXE \1-1 lliii1.,, 3 ro 1 • 1 1112_.6-.9 ur 1!.C'r('~ Al 1~r1, • ~ry 1·la11.<;e .... ii or par! or In· liTr. TTeclrlt:k I . p r.l,ll ,irr.~. ' . ;; · s~·o t 'I d V I 12'" 000 Din1i1y -ln1but' -h:nave -hou.<:f' Lane f(flnlt>r of 7111-App Y Ill t!'Yln ph. po11·f'r. 17:'.:1 ~lnnr11·i1' , -,--,----, 11-j" Jll'HlJZq, •·l II<' I'd ( I r. n'Jlll" or l:in . a. .o, , .. _I • N I di I' I . -S C 0 -Colony Kltchtn j.J;t..:;1 1:,: R.'.li·979S ,.1.r~. ~ "11111 f' t"l'I po.nlrr • ;r ·~a Tr;11!r fn r h'f' tir i1i.~1111'". ,.,1 ~:!00.000. The Doyle Co. Go1•i:•.1·n -lill\INI ,,,_.r 1 C'll' an . oun a1n CON TRU Tl N -----J~l'lnd Al fl'•Ty land1n.:: Ii s1rh,. l)(Jylf' ('f}, l ~ltr~. :il\·1 :1;' 1: ·11.or,;. 5~"-llli.S. B('ll('h 11·:iteh(•1·'s con1111enl : VnHty, 00 ll!l ltr 1h11n JUllf' LOAN OFF ICE R ::211 Itarb-Or Blvd .• c.t Rentel1 WAntttd 460 1('\'('l r.i;,.~ii'.!I. -• ------":\"ohu<ly l'an sQu('(';;f' n101·r 1r.rh . Xlnt opoor. for 1triprai··cr In r NT E-RloR ne:..ratoi"l. ____ . __ ,._ _ ___ QL'Afl. \' .. JI>')' Cv: 1 1y Cl11b N .. \~-:?l.r r:iohtlt:> ho1nc, :?I 1----"' WANTED ~--Ol':'\D B:i"~C'I 1!1J11'1rl \'tt'ln1-1v:l •·an1 101, nr . .-:u))h11t• ·"· 11·\rlf'. At ~le:ukl~·~. 14~il out of ll BlKii\'J th1111 sh(' AUTOMOTIVE "'~irl'f'nllril (.'(ln~lruetlon dt<r:· C11rjlC.s, d r A Per i t ~ k I ,1 I • <I 1 II \' II 0' I 1·nn." \''11nt('1! heav--u duly mrchsnic. In C11~'n 1\1('~:1. Requll't'!I a f11rnit11rl' lllll~. ~:-.ncr. ~ev.· Youn• 1·ouplti 1~·otdcl likr fl) Y · 11".!;m 1.i · n rr. uni· :ll. , .,J: r, r. \\":iut ,j,• ~l ',\' J:rl. h ·vlnr r::inch. J • J -ll I k · I'd A n1ln. of 2 yr~ l!:>:~r. in a ~ i1t-0r'". (7141 6:.·,..oss ~. l'(fnl2BRunfurnl~h"'dhou~C' ln~·ton J3f'nr·h. ~·1i-r.~.'lll. l1tr n1odrl ,\J 1 ,·c·1·d1·~ r~--111 TJ111'pf<•rr ·np ,r ty11tl'l<1r.h ot>1,l•ntea,.=emele702 uc e:;n(r. pre -uto ~ ,____ --' • ••2 ,~·A " tr11nll1n. sr1tciali51. P_ r.-il11ing n•.~ldenfhLl Ii 1n11tll -INVE-ST-iN--"'llh 1arngc In C~I. Ur to I '.\!ALF: Be1t::-1,. lo.•t in v'r1nH1,· ~1:.:__: __ .,_ .. ~ .• ., --• (II' ... (h.11r 1· . .:.l .~ llA 9-'"ff.I -Go' OD TY Pl-ST-income unit~ '"'~om~ con- mo. VVU\_/ re ~. ot lfo.1g 1-losri, ilAI coll ,. THAD!:: 11.nall u 11ir~ f•)r {)[rl"I' Cadlllnf" ''VIII ''"'Ci!on lcndln" preferohle. YO UR FUTURE loy~ •• ,,~, "'"'' • do your typin11 ., l.12.'j l larbor, c~.J ... o;. . LUHRS BOAT CO, No1v 1-firini EXPERIENCED FINISH CARPENTERS A nply In P!!rson 8~!1 \\". 1~th St., Co~1R l\11"~ll ~IA !TnE·o•; -Cnp1.-A1,iSt i\tgr, firlll c\R.<:!O resta:ura.nt. Or Co. Rf'.~UmP : Cl&Yliied Ad ?\o. 4fi0, Dnlly Pilot. P. 0 . Box Jjjj('I, Cosl,1 ~'""· Calif., 92626. --~~--I l\IALE Colle~ S1udtnt nttd- ,.d 1t.11 draflsm11n Ir drivcr for bu.•y interior Jesi&'n fir111. Pn:t lfrne plus. t1tu11 hA,.,. iOOd drivln~ tl"c<>rd & bt' 11 at I.· bufinf't~·ll'ke in r r>P<"aronre-. ~.ir1 -Hmokrl'. Cl.II ror lnlrrvit'\Y ari- flClln\mcnt, 8:30 lo j Da Uy, !:79-lSIO. Altt""V'l'l\'lent Opportunltl('g: 1150 r ,,_, I llolh I C:\UEr.. BUICT\ emp tv."" · .;uJ a 1 • iclt'ntil.v 6·1:>-7189 or :il"-"""2. llll'SI:('!' unilR, r<1111ty to n[ti~ tro!lt dt"1'ds • T lil• position I nclude~ Jon.n 0 "l.J ,. her home, Wiii rlc;;up Co ntiict i\f)'. J ohn l\Iallhev.·11 * FltE J;: • -. .--$10,000. Cllr nt 11h1,. lu :r.1lj11~1 f·~r t'qulty in ho1n,.. 979•2500 .<Wllcll11tkln Ir. builder con- RENTAi, SERVJCF: ~"MALL grty kitrtn. Vif' 2.,rcl, equl!i!"I!'.. Ph: !\Ir. B!ark, f'.r-'I •nd deliver loca H.B., --=~=~ tnct i\tu.~I hn,·e arpr11illf'd f ull or pt llmo HEAL TH FOODS BE YOUR OWN BOSSI Con1plc'.e kno\\•lcdV"C nf vita. Ju:t> CARPE'T REALTORS l.t. Santa Ana Ave . Gl6-02l 9. !ltl-11424 South C'o11~t Jll 1 r~. 4~-1-72C/J. F .V., Weist, 7Sc per PO· B_A_B_Y-SJTTER, M'\' HO'll.tE v.·l!h a fl Mnci1l ln~t!tution. * 962.-ml • lost 55S 1.lkl!' to tr.n<il"~ Our ·r .. ,.,., r'• ~ 1,1{GF·. LOT-IN HLS"PErt· or will work by hour ONL ,._ l\lon thru Thurs 9 to Call l\Ir. o~~l'oon. 34;;..1:>oo. FA.\IU.Y neem home. Sch!11, 1h0f"J)lni; n,r,. Cnll Bill Pr.rktr, A'·t111 !t."JG.!!.~«l. Small ('Al\('() Ca t, ttm:ilt . Vic. Blu,. Dtllphui. l.1du. • 67~j98.) + coll 947,3095, • 5,30, F.t 9 lo 1. 3 Cl1Ud«o c•LIFORNIA PR.r11t11~ column I~ for )•>u' IA, 111ilhtc1, nr·;t to bc11.ut. • 6 10 11 -~S-81 '2 "' 5 ltnr r.'\'lf'i'".~. p· 1·k . 1ro1r m111-iir. tLJ-~,\1'1 Xli-l i1~v-hi .~ ''."'I ~:;t>s . ' . ;) Ii. FEDERAL SAVINGS 5 tl i: c; r .. ~,··· for ··rr. \';,Jn, ll"Allt-r f)f'f't\ n•11)'. 11.B. Al'i>A, C11ll nAu·;srrrr;n ncct1 .. rl niy CO~METOLOGIST- for 5 bu1·k~. or~. l'il : j~O-S::fJ. 5."-;.r~o1 :'I f! :t 11• k d y ~, hor t', o~·n lrnn"., J'B Prf'e, f'a.'!f. 5:13111 J:'Al lo IUl,.i..~t O\\',,-'°·' .;,11,. 11 ~ .••• ,, i\l -F. !>5~-G~16 aft 6:."'Jl (till. 1 ,,, I T I ~ ---er o ntw uull)' .. on. np + The-.. ,-.,llow-Pa~s" or -1. ;rooll \\'A nf ad rs • ~ ! '.'11\JJLO• +. J• Co'" For !l:lir ,.• •c ' I"' ~ ~, I I"~' •• \\"A.'fTED I J l1>£" to 1'C?nt for It LO::.r, Sa l. ~~'-'r1 torto1~t lfOti'\p. SQ:I. or dbl. Coi;t1 f\n1.lt .~11!'~1t ,.,.rck I: Sam11.r, * ,._ ... •I ')I ':.,~ •')!~ r.~1. ·,1r,~7Ci ' * * * * -. --. - M•n er Women ' min111 6 tnort 111111>r1lemcnl,s Lenis A Yellow T•x1 Cab C:i.11 lrrr A1nt 545-1311 ···-~ ,, .. ,_ nrct>•~I')'. T-7cf. t"J>f_rienet In O\'rr lhe counlt r u.les. 979-!!t'l!'i tk·r;,'11 !ti &-S, I t'~ l!ll\\nyt 11·,. n~r !!me l 11h•··1y1 rlw rt<>hl ploc-t if )' 1'',nt RF.SUtT '! C"lll ti~2-.i6il It r>111c-e lhitt ad " T ........ .i. .. 13, l!n DAJL y PILOT ts '-...... _ .... _. ~l[Il]~J I '--I _ ...... _,• .. __,l[Il]I ...... , )~1tm .. 1J 1 'FI ;'; . 11J1j ,~ .. d~,~. ~1~~1~1 ~ .. ~ •. ~, ~~~,~, .. ~ .. ~n .~_. ~I~~. "~C~--~ ... ~~~l~~,~T_~. ~. s~7"."~r.~1 Help Wom.d, M & F 710 Help Wanlod. M & F 710 Help WllllllTl.M U nt .... W-.M & f 7lO !;,..,.,...,,.;~~::~l~ll~l~Mi-~~1~a.;n~1i;011~:~l~ll TV, R..tlo, Hll'I, Dog> · 154 Cycleo, -. ---------IPOSl'-AL ~ Dellwr SICRVJCll! •lAtion e •e ~ St.reo 136 -.::...-------1 Scoot.r1 ftS MAN -tMiy A.\f MWfP<iptr NOW hl.rll1C rot dil'tlA.ibt.n )'Ollt own UU. o:.ta MtM. ~· Ailo Tow · tNck OR.£SSINO table w/~ STEREO: Uod.amwd 1'12 ---------BEAtrn:n!L 1tUb Stttt.t _;,;.;..;;.;.;.:. ___ ...;,;;,:.I dtll\ltry. East Bluff area. ~ butii>o)'S . .u ' over. F,qu&J llunt. &.11., ·~ Vly. drtVt.t. Exp. pttl. Top Pf'.)' &op, DtlS Ol .• bltn IU Curard Sy1tem. AUIOma llc MARANTZ .150 wall AM/rM J>uP11. cop a.bo11t' q uahl)'. 3 '71 YAMAHA zo £nre.-.., Xlot route open. Apprux. Employment employn -ltowe .... i wi ~d. ~. &: binlt beottJta. •m ~ I: own S 3 5 . tumtab&e, alt .ua:penalons 1t,.reo-plut noo Garrard n_-,nuu . AAt·r J p 111 , mUtti. SB>. '10 NorUI 150 $210. mo. le 1• hn/wk. Cocoa Rt-1t,auran1, 1555 W. San Clem C96-W03 alt 3 Shell Sl&tion. l?th A hvlDI. (0'Ktek). 5 pe 9f!il"tioN.I, •ptekt'n with Cl'CltlOWr frH with purcha..tt or OOlt 962-4 14!> Commando. liamRt C'hrtdl, 962-4633 Adan1~. Co:ita M ' .1 a , pm. NB. COft $1XIO. uktnc $DJ. All IYrltm AM/FM/}.fPX r•dkJ pair of ]f..."'·ay J>lol"IM'r Ah.'C Ct-iillil..n Skwp Fe /JUIJ~. ~700 orig. m i. $985. '41-tl96. MANAGER TRAINEE ~()..9672 Apply in prnnn. Real Estate Ci-r SEWING. Sample Maker. !11 ... ~. cond. M&-UU or ~ t~ ~~~.~~~.braSondld 'Pf'aktrs. U.S.A. S te r " 11 U or 1111de. Sbol.'I, wo ro1· lfODAKA 100-Super din bikfo W F h i •• NEEDED ·-v..r.MXI"' ...... •nu •--~ E11tnp. \VatthouM-, li9 E _ _. 3 -· I" Stud N •--~-~ omens 11 ons New or ~rlenced, .... ln tht Sportswear ; Swimwear. for•""".%. Pav off 0 _10_, IC'\1. u1V Ou. M'l'V, ew r-xpu.ns111111 ,_.,DI,.,,,.,. I .. " ti II & T Off" GI I -.-IY t'ORCED to Mil. lltdH ~ " ~ ,....... li th ~t.. Co&la M e ~ a , avail. 897-7~. A.nol uw;ny rT¥>n-.ll ll'W!. $32) ,.._...,... llll 11 ral' · "'" wo 1ee r I Company that' a g:rowlng. II . Expd. ot Sl 'l!I.~ or take ov~r snia\J 6-1~2+.ri plcaiw.11t \\'omun lo learn 1 you do mt have a Ucentt, Call o.n at ~ill velvt't eota, ~•at, maple monthly payments. USA AKC Silkies 2 m&lea, 4 nK>1$. _°'::.."""::.:..:·".:...:0~1f-er:~·~&~,.,..:...:~to'I:.::.. __ nur JocuJ operation•, Amill-fllust be 2S and able to drivt check on our TELEPHONE Salea.. T0p IOIA, 2 lit' lamp1, Medlt Stereo Equlp \\:arehoust>, 179 SP!-.:AKE'R 1)11tcm11 . .shipping all &Mi.. Pet stock. Rt'll.5 ., ·11 U..'\A ~ru (~Md.·uu. s.,;; tlon more important than -AJ>PLY -$49 cocktail, beltqoo, aq com-E 17 h St COil tl11.n1age t'O boxes le packl.ni;: 838-1149 .rt 1 pn1. Nf'w na~ i>a 1nt llUJ?lll.c exper. Part tin\t' considered 186 E. 16th St .. c.r-.t ctimmiuk>ln "'aodbebonua. Ap. modta, pict:utt. Pvt ply. &is...2~ ·• ta t.ft-.sa, only. 6" 1-wny to 15" 3-"·ay H·-- 856 ~. firm. &1 1-z;&I. to start. foOr introcluclory Off" S. G ! ply JlftlOll tween 9.00 ~79. ,-=o:::.:;:c~·-------flit' suapension 11 y 1 t e nl" . ""-· ;-- 10 ll!ind;-t)I)-Sc_r_am_bl_M'_ lnl-·'-w •PP'· "·II M•. ice iperv. l50 r t'()"' rtg Roil Estate and 12:00 noon at 8381 Bolaa n~-"'b• C' and lxS Cutt--' pla"or m to• "-"t. oU -• -·••'I 5 "•"-._, ,..., ....., ' "'ater distric t rK>eds com-1_ C Ave nue u1..t-... Cl"' .:Jl...Ll.Ln 04'>, ,__ 1 '""' u JU ,,, .,. · ·~·· ' ~ ""' QUARTERITORSE Gt:l..0-wfltt!irf"'I ,t· ~i-.... m.u.ou&l \Yhltney 778-1700. f"x t. 1211. 1 petent to manage licena.... our•• • ......... -.r .,,. Pi&no. Orlen. rup, Span. 11""&\)' ~1; approx. HhdO' IUAf'Rnttt. 892-1191. lNG wm i 0 v ER 1,000 $-IOO. s..&-1 7 1) 6_ '"'l' t.tATURE Lady 10 "'~1other b f~rson . Full a.lea tralnin& program Tire Servlcem.n din. rm let w/6 chn., q . rnl!-up tron ~ & tracks: STEREO M1u·s of ti•ti.ir'lut}:. i\ l.1t•a11t1· • --------- ait " 'olo·hilt baehl. son l,<; Iii g::r t~~~k :::~~~~~ -... "'w11""""tl·· "'.·~e.~en~.~ Ret1ll s.1.1men oil J*intlna•. antiq's hall JS ~ '-,•,·hitc e.andy II.ripe Complete ayatt-ms, 20 lo 40 ''<• lul fl.llllll;\] r.-.r f•UI .... S~!lfl Mobile Honit5 ru k '" h k N' "--1 d po ...-. ,.. "" ".... J-s Tl•• S.-1-tbla. -•--~,, -ui· p, • awn ng : ' cnu nlt-r. ?.·hhe "'U -1·" ,. k T k 1 1 • •I ,., \lo'Qr . .,.., r. 11• . · . .......,. a l\no~1!edge ot 11,•att"r ll!trict ....... •... ... .. .... v • ., uy -... 1 1 1 8 1 ., ·-•·re....._ .,pea er S)'S· 1 1tr n ~1 "' '" •' .... ,. r>OUHt.r: vi11\r f-'lainl"'""' Jone! for lnlormatlon •I ,._, & co c p Id •-m•••h -·-. -• ~·. orm ea op: t. rountt-r, • ..,, .. rite!a area. 546-8199. tius. helpful bu t n ot ~ mm, o. a "X'llt'-"'-,...,..,.. OJ•~"" tt-m~. J5 lo 50•·:, 11!f re>~ t•'r~•· 111 \'-11!•f•"'k :-;,._ 111 in 0 h 1 I ,. h 0 nl r JI a ~ 842-5581. f l! A 1 •• • ...,... no lop; 1 It. lam. nu ple MATUHl: a11Sistant 11,·anted nl'Nssary. For furtJ1er in-1 s. pp.,. ut ~n. """" SJ:l.1MONS beauty rest kin& chop top sandwich table retail. 78().1 \\'eaffnlns!rr lrvii ll" .~1ah!.~ on I 'a• 1f1r evt'r~ lhini:. So•I up 1n nk.'i" tor busy owl'lt'r in Uf'ach lo!'n1a11on. please c a 11 Tarb911 Reoltors !!arbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. size bt'<l • Pert. Cond. Incl. ornamt-nlal iron lAblt', ~ Avr-., \Vestmlns ter, !t92·7952 (\,;i,t l11i.;ll1\ 1~ C.11t ,1, ,111 la.m i!} purl... ~·t~ ol>. $.s:lOO area Beauty Salon. Ph 831-2.'JOO bl'\\n &1m & 11 arn. REAL ESTATE TOOL· le pilkm'I, ihe-c.'U, pad, & aqua gl&Sll top; 2 9 tt. ornamental STEREO [)('luxf', 6 -(.\1n.~1Ji. ('url1•\. "'\l"'r. Gl-1-1. l:" -53.1-L:Y.l-1 673--6860. J'BX · ,,. 1· vekluraprnd.Also.lrrahq iron dra ..... hf'aders • 10 spkr. A.\1/F\I JM 11ut1~. 111?(~:-;\;11,-~i11:t::'l·Z:1 1o . 1.d. Motor Home•-••• MEOIANJ C, t'Xper!encl"d. i;~v~;;:ieri~~e!l &v \~::i : PROFESSIONAL DIE MAKER crpt. 49f-6583, 646-0n5. tra""'I"M' ;,<ls: 673-7340. Ga1Tard <'hangt-r.1~·~ ~pd HC'l.h1,~11.1 :-1:i1tlo'"· :.:u:J ,6 __.:::::_ tuner, Triuniph, Peul{t'OI, ~lorv hrs U de!ired. Costa Salesmt>n. & brok~rs? The For Maintenance OfESTS Ii: chaln!, floor SfEREOS Nr"'· ~tu.st .s<•ll! S ! .l 9, lJH!11 n;i C,\1' l .. 1t;. &h. BRAND NEW good pay plan. Good Nl ,\!f'sa nrea. Call 5'12-1164. opportu~1 1y Is here. You are Of Intr icate progressive dies JXllisher, dining tbl A: 1972 Garrard, l)'Stemized, 97S-6!);1J. .;:+\-~J\.'. 1972 M I benefits. 8 111 E-n s I e }' PROF'ESSJONAL needed immedlntely Jor our Xln'l co. benetlts including chain, maple buffet. Bo8ton fully automatic thangf.-, ST1'_;f{E0 Co 111 h i 11,1 I 1~ i .\ll)Vl~l; ,\\:11.o' IH..'.SI "llt•r e man 547--0764. rapidly expanding Re al · 1 in · k l rocker " ml.le. Make otter. AM/Dl/~IPX radio, I.lea!· A ~l /r.\1 , o!«lu\1' n u d 1 ,, for \\'1 bh :\1ou11l.u!n p.i n}. 13 MINI Motor Home FRITZ WARREN'S RES1'AURANT & HOTEL E-1•1• division Positive op-pension Pan, 1'' sic eave "'"'3195. --' ,,·, .... ,~··lo" 'l"'••k·-v ''' · I II' .... ,, I 1,,,,, 1-J II 6'"", ,,~ . ..._. ''""'> f II Er-.IPLOYr.1 ENT AGENCY ~ ". ' etc. l;IQ(I"" n. '"'" "'"' " "" ~"' ~-s n, nice, !HUS "1' ..i·• 1 "· " '" "'-'/'\· ... ..,. DodJ.te cha.s.s1s SIN 'f!I Ci. u ) Sport Car Center lluurly En1ployl'f'S Benefit ~~1unHy for advancenienl. 4 Day 40 l{R \Vork \V~ek s· Sofa,,_ matching love Mat, plus tape deck. Still brand ~941. -1\l areu~. j\ IL scU i'l)pt1uru•:1, e ORANGP. COUNTY'S fly l.Alw Fl'('~ \taone, Apply in Per.son ne ver used, both SUiO and new & guaranteed. \Vas JJ u .\l 1~: 1 ~ p ,. ,1 , j' k ~ 11:\lllt':.!U'."i:..'9Aa'i'I LARr r sT ,, e.o 0 ~ SHUR LOK CORP velvet Jiv!-nn. set. Priv, lf'ft unclaimed. Orlg inA.lly I k & 11 ~ PRICED TO SELL lloE 1 SI "s'·"·A 541 ~r.1: ;1nagers ...... ~ary pen 1300E ,N nd P.I ..... ..,...._~7910. priced at over $300. Nov.· "r '"',·'"rs . i i.ii .11111' I Boa1,1111d .Jf . st ... , . ...,,, ~ Good oppry w/lrg Corp ~" • orm1 y . J'<U •.r $I05. Cash or 1 ma I I _.~~·.·,.6~1~,r;~-c.:0~1 ~11 ~1 • ~··ti Mo1rin•Equipm1t1t 1'. 900 OEACLOERA'SsCTOST 1 1 METAL MAN-~sst. ~-lanftgt'1·s .•••. $750. mo ?WZ7•J'lll S1nta Ana 8' SOFA &: }eve aeat. Never paymtnt.11, Ctt<lit 0 e P t . ~.>, .,. _ ~as! ~ood r-.1gr ..•.. $600. mo ~ Equal Oppor. Employer used. Both $150. Sewina: 714/893--0501. r n1t Sall", 23'' ,..;U\1 1'1111\1· \\'orked for r.1obile lfome Co.'! ,\Ja.-;tcr Chf'! .....•• $1100. n10 Real E1tate S1le1 mach. $25. pr 1-Pt Y ·1---'-"''-'-:.:C'------hlnc:k l.:. i1·h11f' TV iorh,,\~· General Yoder e :«per. prcr. Nt't'd Split .Fre n eal Estate Ofc needs TYPIST 968-7910. * AUCTION * $!0. 1.:· h:.11• 11-tu~h11.(.} lrLY A~k- imm{'(]. Top $$. Xtrn long 2nd Cook ........... $25. shift salesmen, \\'e covt-r all Fast, accurate typist needt'd HOUSEFUL of Furniture Fine Furniture a.ls..-OWI :t!T 6 pn1 111~ ~1:110. 111 lit"~! nfri"r AU IMPORTS lenn. Pan.try 1'1an .••..•• $27. shift phases or real mate. Nr to type ~ddresses. Full time. A ?<.liacellaneou1 ]terns A Appliances PANASONIC a ni/fn,--.-<1-,-,.,-~1 r, 'lf1 tr;q_._o:_<> __ _ _ Irvine ........ 540-4450 Tratnee Cook •... $2. lo SJ. hr Beaut Hunt. Harbour . Apply 1n perron, Ptnny-e e -t92-3898 e e AuctioM Ftiday. 7,30 p.m. NEVER A FF.f. AT TE'lpo v.;J prolf'sS1on11\ n1n11 c I J!' \111111. l.io.il K :. J1p 11.••tl\r, I • • ' \\'a Hers ............. $1.65 hr Tobi'" Really ""3371 saver, 1545 Newport Blvd., w· d ' . B TEMPO " ~ DANISH Walnut ~uer, 1n y s Auction arn turnt&blr &· 2 11pr"kc rs. ,, ~-1 .1. Temporary Help \~~:1rseh~~=-F~i"&"C~:~a~ RECEPT /SE~T'Y ~;;;~aSs, EXPER. mim>r, tiight stand, Sl15. '.m5% Newport, or~ ~trul RI SIOO! !l1Q--44).~ l <";.ill . :,c,_":..'·-·--1000-1200 \\'. l'aciMC' Cs!. lhry. Nl!:'l11iort H<-nch (7141 &fl.-0400 NEEDED A~sist3nt to Ke!Jy Hostess & Asst 01gr •..• Open Ground floor opp I) for Not uiider 71 _ No P hone Sota $30. ~. Behind Tony'1 Bldg r.fat'I TV port8ble ZENITH hlk .1.: Boat'/ Marine Tl.'mpleton v.•ilh opportunity I Bar!rnd~r •.. .'. Kno"·le_dge _of lrainee wi~h top office skills. calls. Aru"·er in person, * * IDDE-A-BEDS, dining !IAVE '\'edding guv,.ns-erig 1'·h1!r 18''· Super Mu~. S:'.J. Equip. ~)~ 1----- lo ~come stylist. J\l us! Polynesian drinks ... ~25. shift Top SS. Xtra Jong 1ern1. Surf & Sirloin 5930 \V. room chairs, etc. Call price $250. siz 10, '2. Brides 5-19-3-IO.i. !--'-~,-11-11-.-,-,1-'>-.,---0 I h a v e Ca I I f o r n I a FEB . Irvine ....... , 540-4450 Coast J-l"'Y· Ne"'°i>ort Bch. ~tor into. .. maids outfits, sz ll & S. ZENITH <'ircuJ.ar !'i o u n <l 904 ..Bll_J, \\Jl l1'LJDGJ:~" SUNSET MOTORS Ro y\L SER\'lC" ACE'"CY PO ~ !SH 0 k e.u· •· T h · S.\HA S \l,\ltl'.\"J-: :-i.\L\.'A(;i:.; Cosmt'tologist 11 c en s t'. / · r. " Nl::VER A FEE AT TEr-.t \\'AlTR.ESS d d ... ~ ..,,.AN a queeneize ..,..... mg now et .x:rra r ift rl<'rto. Xlnt \'RhlC'. ~h1 s1 net' e must u...-Ya1 ·l11 .Junl.. ~hip .\ruff &lz.-019-l . San1e /\grncv -Ne1\• Office TEMPO .' bdrm set, complete, $300. shop. 113 ?.fain St. Jlun-seU. $65. S34-?H5 8 to 4:30. · Ol'•r 71 Apply '" -r"'n Uv•,I ,,\1•r11·~ t.111111i1 1\1i11 T belt ' I · ... -"" · 545-5160. tington Beach. 536-62i0, ... " 1lHA\'(;L <~iPNTr 1,()(',\'l'ION ELDORADO Mini MOTOR HOME ··,'l•k• Room >'or D•<I-0 :o-i·rvr you . er. Tempor•ry He P 3046 Bristo! Loves Barbe--60111 harr.N.·an:. 4Ll-~th ~1 " " 3!!1f( Campu~ Dr1\'<' ' Aton thnJ Frl 10am-2pm. d y' •, • c I ea n our the Suite JJ!l. Nrll·flOrl Beach REC E PT IONJSf: How 1,c•-"'-·=--------Belg'" Frieze hide-a.-btd. I I!' NB. 67>-4684. Karage .. your !rRsh i!'I CAS!I 557_2800 l\'Ou\d you_ like to \\'Ork for a \\'ANTED fen1ale collegl' Good Cone!. $50. HOUSEFUL . __ ._'"_'_'v_'"--~ ~oats, Power v.'ith a DAILY PlWf 1-----------fast growing ~al e9tate k student to live in for sum-~ of -. 906 ljCjjl""jji'jj";j'djii';j'i· iiiiiiiiiillii\\i~iiiiiileiiif.iiilr;;ipihi;oniiliiiDiiimjje-ij;Ajj-Lj,ii;ne investment co? Y o ung mer. Walk to bt-ach. Room l)fXX>RATNE corner bed 3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.00 '.Z.l' flllt l." l'ltAJ-"I' <:.1b 1n II modern co-worker11. $400. k board + $70. per mo. ln &rrllJ!i'ement. Good cond. FURNITURE Cruisf'r. ·r11 111 !1-, h . p . $6448 •••••••••••••••••••• Call llelen llayes, 5'1CHi055, exchange tor daytime child Sir¥Jle Canopy bed. 644-8676. 1110 misc. Items 1nar111<." r ni.;. f·~\Jlly <'quip. !-'l'Ll.Y ~~:LF ('ONT/\INElJ Coastal Agency, 2790 care tor (irl 13 & boy 11. Houseful of furnitur• 675-7191 P UREBRED Coonhounds. $l500. 7i6--fi05:t Iii-I). & rr·s BltANn N'E\V I Harbor Bl at Adams. CM. Own room w J de 11 k, also mjsc item• 675-7898 BABY bathlnette, swing, car Terr I er ID 11 xi ,. mix. Boats, Rent/Char1'r 908 :-;rr_ #'l1320i RELIABLE "-oman over ~ t)'pE'\\.Titer &-s ewing betf, baby clothe!, Johnny Qualified h o m f' !'I. \\"a!ch-Phone 645-6677 for li te fac tory work. Call machine. \Veek~nd &-eves G•r•ve Sele 112 Jump Up, flrepl. screen, dogs I pets. 5 4 5-4 ~ 2 2, 27• AUX. SLOOP 1970 Harbor Blvd. S.1&-Z162. !rte. Must have car. Non FRI. Sat. Sun, Moving, Mutt hamster cqe, bird c~, _54_8s-08 __ 13_. _______ , l 'r rr1~t:t for i1 Pc·k•'t1d ,.ruisl'i; Costa Mes• RETAIL turn store needs gal 6 11moker. <714J 644-3X>5 after Mil! 8ll5 E Port Dr. 9'x12' ntg, accordi.&n-12) FEM. spayed dej:, h11s !o:hO!!'I. to La!ithna. Fully l>quipped.1---.:..:.:.:,::...:c:..:c:.:: __ _ pm. ""·~-___, C ndo bau-$50 Call 557--8245 )" I I h cl \" SS r R(\111, IU)F', .'-lrf·ps i;ix. 1972 Tl-:HRV :Friday, Exp. 8/r, book-..,w '"'""" o ( N f!ar · · 1c. exce . 11·a c oi:::. ·rl)' TRA\.'F.I, 1'ki\IL£H keeping. Paysel .sy11em. \VANTED, ":elder-mechanic. Beach & Atlanta!. 5.16-3229. 2S GALLON, all &las• auectlonat,. &· 1\unrlrrlul ji'2" h•·.itl1'(Yl111 . r~•ni ptrl<' ,1 U ~ ~ I Send repli<• " CIM•"'-' I hild ,. I "''''''· Cl11>• ''''·' l •ls of _:· (.' :-;,,,r.., CLAR.I\!. Cnll 9-10 am p e a s e . "' ~ GARAGE •ale 2312 Santa Aquarium. Fully ~ip. 2 \lo' c ren. ""t'I-" n,.. 11 .. ..... 1 Ad No 343 c/o tM n.ny 1 .. .i..-.. _ "A" ,.,..3 1,,.,,,·,,". Co ll 1,,, 'onlo. Tani uni 1\hl'f'I tr11il<'r. full y 642-ro50. · µci,.u Ana-CM Sat-Sun. Furn., ........... "' ti.ah &: 1tand. Like •oume . ..rt<>""VJJ, • " ... t Pilot p O Box 1560 Co!lA SSi-~fi nft . 6::\0. i;rl ··~1ta1n1 •d, TV . .t,.nicn-SALES ' · · • dis.hes, clolhlne, ete. new $65. or btst oUer. FREE 1'1oney. 11,·p 11·ill );!\{' -11n. (,t1,~,El"'·tr1,. N'frig. i OPPORTUNITY ~!e«a. j;;;;flry--';;..,--~lf1~5iJ ,~548-':.1200~~·-------1 you a dollar if you \\•iU 1ak" Boats, Sail 9&J IJurnt'r stuv(' &· o\'f'n. lo~ 0 Cn. sales oppor. for \Yatt~man, zhtpplng le ewe ry Ml1cell1neou1 our fuzzy blck/wht. kitten. air furna~ au-rond1b1orwiii. range · rectiving, general mdse, DIAMONDS-B W 842-8510. • * ::2· Colu1nb1a Racl n.: a zelf starter w/exp, m 1 _.. Bid E Lo uy Dlttct 1ntecl l20 c:c.:...:.:.c.:.:_ _____ ~ 'I Sl 4 $ l~-,0 7 du&J sink , , • Ii :o~eflt'r graphics, ad ~ency or exp ntc. ~... i gan, * WHOLESALE PRICES *1 • ..;..;:;;..;.;;. ____ ..::;: 6 1'.IONTII old r e m 11. I e -"' nnp. • ps · · · · · 1'': <JD6989) printing. Guarantet> pl us Of. Dana Diamond• 496-JO!IO USED GARBENSTANGEL ah~ p herd, I o ,, ab I c , ;.;: ~i:_l_l·l~i .. _ -------1 13"811 .,_ commi!l!ion. Op,eortunity to WOMEff1S FASHIONS Ma hlne 11, Must . have right-handed houRbroken, all M1 0 t 11 • VENTUHE 17 S.a i lb 11 a 1 encu l'flW lllll1iN gross Sl 2-S15K ]st yr. National CO • J~ad6 1n its C ry 7.0tmtift wlUJ power ~ip-54~ ..n 5. w/trlJ', Sips '4, he11d, pulpit, "' " _,,I ~ F'ee Paid/Also Ft-e Jobs field has part A full time Air Comprt11or·2 hp poleck, Would accept earJ,,yl·::..=rorc.::~E.:...:h~e~•~ll-h_y _k_i-0-,-,.-.-11e1v attdliai-y,•·nev bottom Service Center Agency openings in your area for 60 gal tank 9G2--09S0 model with battery Op@l'ated Trained & weanef!. pll inl. V('I)' CleRn. $1750. 6555 '84'.!erj!. ~anf 4262 Campu5 Dr .• NB No. B-4 several v.·omen to help In ' P J d d I e bottom . Write: ll lf.--1176, bus. {213J 3.57~3:21 1 Huntinabi Be•ch Ml•cell•neou1 Ill Cl•••l"ed ad No. 111, DAI· 6-15--0268 eves I "I' (Il4) •M -He\t".n Schaffer 557-2TI1 conducting !uhlon ahows. " "' · "c'-·-------l--:c,..;.::;::....:~:;;.=::__-- For an ed in Woman's World Call Mary Both 642-5678, ext 330 Salad-Cool Skim I New Doi~ Delights I I, '~ ' No uper. ffiltllred. For in-LY PILOT, P .O. Box 1560, Free happy healthy kit H'11.~. :Ti"-· -Ya\i·!-CM-r1t•r t!Pceati{'d. u......:. p- Sales troductory interview appt. NEEDED Coti!a Mesa, CA 92626. 8 wk.s. weaned & lrau1t1d. Un.1" • ~l!HIO:\O ext. 181 *nMlnuMICI* 1 School' a Out·Wh1t Now? Call ?<.fr. Whitney, 778-1700, RESPONSIBLE ALUMINUM CORRUGATED _54:.:::_8-~46"15~--------fGaH1r~t or 111 686-m J Teacher!! i!Utnmtr t-mpJoy-ext 1111. WORKING COUPLE ROOFING, USED. CALL: BLACK long haired, fc mn.lr, eve/11·knds. Moflr ffallls ... (. l , ... •' . : ., '" -. , -:'"'. :.., .. , ~ '· ' ... --· . ~ , ' &. • ·~i\ ... ;:f4(;_, ' " ?.'. , ., : 0 j i ~ ! I ~ .... ,. ·,. h ,. r:::'; I~~ "t, ;;, ' • 0 • . -. ti ~ ~ ..... , ' J'i-: JI· .. ,.,·,·!. t\. ·-~ /H ·--~ : .• , .. '· -... ,' ·S.tl ..... ;>,,,. .. • • Ir • \' ~ ,-, ~'f,'l;/~ . . . ' ' 1' I ' ,. ' ',' l 9195 SIZES 8.18 "" 11f ...,; .... 1{f "";' ... SJ0?<.1MrNG LINES ba,...!y touch you anyv.tiere in this swinger. Yoke h11!1 n aea.Iloped curve above Jov.·- \\'aist hn.nd ! th11.t suggl'st 11 bell. Printed Patlcrn 919:'.1: NEW ~tlsses · Sizes 8. 10, 12, l•I. 16, 18. Size 12 (!Just .Yll takt>s t 5/8 yArds 60-inch. SEVENTY·FIVF. CENTS for each pe.ttern -add 25 cents for each patlern for Air Mail a nd Special Han<iJ. Ing: othcrwilie lhird-cla111 d1?1ivery will take three •<eeks or more. Send to Marian Martin, the DAILY PILOT. 442, Pattern Dept.. 232 We!!l lBth St., N!!w York N.Y. 10011. Print NAME. ADDRl':SS \\' i th ZIP, SIZE llnd STYLE NlmfBER. SEE MORE Sp r i n g F uhlon1 ontl ('h<lll~ one pallem free tron1 new Spring-Summer Cataloe. All 1lte1! Only 50<:. INSTANT SEWING BOOK lltW lodA,y. wear tomorrow. 11. IN S TA N T FASJ-TION DOOK -l lundrcds o I fashion l11 c1~. St. non·t e ive up the ship! "U s!" It In ciassUltd. Ship to Shor? Rew.l!s! 6'12--5678 .,: .. - 7362 ·······~~·~········· • men!. For_ the rnost respect-\VO:\fEN demomtrale skin-NEED one or ti\'O bedroom (213) nz-3415 AFTER 6 7 wks old, free to good hon1c <'d educat1ona\ 11·ork outside care Ii: makeup. Earn house w I th large fenced PM. 979-7959. KITE # 133. Safes e lan*als of school. f or inten•ie1v ge'llel'OUA comm. Traininf, yard (for tv.-o VERY \\'ELLic300'=="'=SQ=-. ~Ft=-. -,~,~al~ia-n-m-,.-~ -.~EcA_RS..:,:c.,,"-1-,.-,-,-1.-2-,.,..--0~1d, \\'lfli fTAiler $450. 675-8135. ._. phone or "Tile. R. C. Petty, suppltea A ne.t'l advertisinz. TRAINED dogs) Sl50 most. ti!~ $nl. Pottffs ~i$i5. with ground a nc-hof!I. Gd KTTE No. 1014. Allll cond., 558-3222 540-9582, P.O. Box 4815, N.B. &15-0852. VI~: between 19th Ir Vlc· g Ft. dinghy $60. 833--04?5. rond. 846-9205. near ne1\-_ $800/offl'r. 1411 S. V\Jlaa-Way, S.A. 92fi6o. lor1a -(near \V. Bay st.)1,.;...:.::..:::.::'-'::'....::::::..=...::c:=:_ --* 6T.>-3'>61 * SALESMEN XLNT Oppor. Nat'l Concem COSTA MESA. 548-7881/a.ft. Muslc1l ln1trument1 l22 LOVEABLE male cat part =~~'-'"-''-'-'--- has openinp for route 6 Penian, whlte/belftt', wants NF.Y.'PORT 16 Kf'rf sloop. salesmen 1n C.M. 962--0416. ~~p •. m~. ~.,.,..,....,,..,...1 11-tUST St'll Standel Artist qulet home. 8J3.-1515. Sleeps 2 !n fllhin. Good DANISH Modem li 1..... Amp., warts pk. 140·• $:cnJ. Jo"'REE male 1 .,,. old Poodle. cond. Asking SJ29'j. 675-58-l6. : • Co.~ta Mr!ln . Rent W•1her1/ Dryers $2. Wk. FuU ma.int. • 639-UYJ • NE\V dtlux dl')'tr. Tak• over 110 mo ...,,..,,... Call aft 11 am 983-994!. v .... room Vox Jaguar Organ S50 .,. group. lncludt1 110fa, chair , Shutt mike & ~land $50. Housebroken. Loves kids & Boat1, Sllp1/0ockt 910 lamp t11ble and cof!tt> table. ~72'19 · cats. ~217fi, Pri ply. All for $75. c'---.=·------EN " 11 DOCK w/bu.lhroom up to 5ll-729t OJNN trumpet. Good cond. 4 KITT S ""'eek~ 111 ' 26' Si5/mo. No. 2 Balboa "I ' ' I 0 C . Llk Long hair. Call attc...-5 pn1. Co NB 675-4~'! WEAVING looma & equjp. 11 · uitar. e ntw-$50. 846--0248. vea, · · ..>.> • 13C1 llarbor, Garden GZ'Uft men!. $140. 1-48'' Ir ].J6".j ~&l;2-98,;::c24:::._· ~-~---17' Schlada SK with 110 l BUt. So, ot G.G. Frwy. llandle maker & ahuttJei. F1NE antiqu~ Em er 1 on * 2 YOUNG FEt.1ALE RAB-Mere OB. Canvas cover, 636-2333 ~•1<••. upr'•h! piaoo. $175. BITS, \VJTIJ JI U T C II . Sllilrp' $1750. 962-3894 .. .,...... """ .. ~""' ,...,26 rnEE. 846-9001 . ==='-~c ___ :..:.:_:_ Motor Home Rental• OFFICE tile cabinet fO x Zl ...... ........,, CllOJCF: slips in ne'" Marina A\';\ilAhlr for daily, \veckly x 16. Comb. 3 dnt\\"er Office Fumlt\lre/ Sl\IOKEY -rrt-y, fem. kir-for :T.1-iO ff, boa111. or n1nn1hty OOsi!. '21', zr. W/.rtol'age $35. 1513 "--Equip. 124 ten w/wht paws. Abt 9 wks 6TI-6600 __ . ____ 1 and 25' sell contal nf'<.I Mo-....... ._,. old. Lovet: to eat. 641-7201. Ave., c.r..f. 642--5666. BLACK & chrome metal SAIL BOAT SLIPS tor llome!!, a ll cquipt wi th COM·PLETE 25 . 1•11 on dtllk. ~" w/dk walnot Ncv.'JX)rt Bt-arh 548-725.J gcn<'rator, root a.Ir. .and aqu .... •Um _... \Vooden dog formlca to". : :'Je dra'olo-r• ~, ~ -~ ,~ ~ I I~ mnny uUlf'r t:xtrns. AU •-110 Lo $10 ... "' rwu -Conches RN.' 1972 models. •ou\181? • ve .eat · &. centtt lock dra\\"er. Blk • I ll •J i-:c;;,~~:~:::;.;::::,~--I 54• 26f.6 1 ;;;;;;;;~~~ p!rn~ call ll19-9560. a-· dJromp steno ch a i r ,' Trwportation BELL -· 1 •-•-642-~• _ TEST DRIVE mo • ., ... ,,c e ·~uet, ........,, I aso ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ •·rul<. alu 714. 125. p Pots, Genera THE MIDAS MINI "''"" ~-l1nos/Or1•n1 126 MOTOR HOME ~00 COCKATElLS 125 pr. Pan· CamDOrs, Salo/Roni 920 keeta SJ.SO ti.eh. P lumhead Distributed by FREE "64 r.1etro Van·Good ronrl. Ken Ctrut ProduCU Parrot $15. Roller Pl&:eoni J\1ichelln !Ir es, make a gd CREVIER MOTORS Sl tach. 968-083.1. camper. $485_ 54.t}.2374. 108 W. l st st., $f..nte Ana DOG arxl Cat Ownen! Freah IU-3171 meat 17c lb, Fret-}fame '66 V\V Camper. "'"builll ~==~;::~;_:--- Del!very. 1o-9 pm. 835-7753. <'flgine. 675-69i0 or 491-1518 F.XPLORER 197f)...2)'. 2 air afte r 6. cond., forced air. 5KW gen. C•tt 852 Cycle rack, lra iler-hllch, '6G Ford * Ton pickup, reblt FM tape stereo, btrt. Cfli., o'head can1per, but811(• tank!, s.leept 6. Excel cond. 11tv/ref, $18."J(J. 644-6768. $9250. Call from Mon '65 Ford PU, 8" Camper, 1Jps on--545--0411. - AKC. snow. USED BlcYCLJ;S 310 lb. leAd wt'iJhfJI, 35 lb. POODLES, 8 1vks.. xln'f All type1, lJJp Mlect\onl her + ht:nch l dumb Nils pedla:rtt. 1 ~,alt', Z fem. • 442-1272 Brt.nd new. $85. 673"4381 alt Rea1. M&-524.2. ~J :\8.i. Don't t:lve up the ah!pl S:30. I-,-·n--,~--'----A-K-C ..-o•--.uvR pups, $50. . "Lisi'' ll In c.lusmed, !hJp HOUSE lluntlngl Watch lht ct;.bl~ n1 throwl "i eold lo ~ Resulllt t«Wrf7t OPEN HOUSE cGJ.umn. labt. Mf-51l1 . ... V-8. overdriw, tlir concl. ~R~.~.-,~A_Mo_to_r_H_o_m_o_I xlnt cond. $1900. 646-7631 for your V•c•tlon CyclH, BikH, * 8l9s4301 * Scooters '25 • NEW 23· • 25" '""""' '70 YAMAHA 350. EXCf'I M. 1:1. Air, loaded! Sett n,t,m Cond. Lugg&g!' rack, Roll pouible. Pvt pty 968-l397. bar. S500 or ~t oUer. ''72 WINNEBAGO 71'. !lttp15 833-85.12. 6. alr/C"Ond. Delu:x. Reserve now. 83.l-8070. VF:J.OCE"JTE Thnixton, 196711--'--"-'-:.:..C"-----I \•l nfagc, better than new i~ •n Sbuta J\lotor home tor !lrlr and out, $1095, Rudi rent. si ps 6, self rant. Pvt. fl;iNltlelski, 5J6...43il>. pty. 491-2384 •ft 6, wbnd1. ni.:1 .. 1. motor~ .. )'r1t whl!C', 9ILr i\f $25. MS ---~546-«:::..::..":._ ___ 1 Auto Service, P•rh ,., SUZUKI~ l.!kf' """' $165. jj)-1294 VW l»clno-llll w/bls ~ KH, c&m·l'leedth, 2 ~I , ""'· $2!9. 64 >-36115. ' I T ..... -13, 1972 ............. "' :..---~ -----· Ut..i ,,. A-. U- 198 atEVY Oub Cou~. ALFA ROMEO RENAULT CtfEYlOLEf MUSTANG PX!. ~ ~"":; '67 AKa Spyder ~~,.::__::::.:;=-.c:__,ff=2 5 Spd, AM/ft.t Rtt.dlO. Ila.rd '6 7 Mercedes 250 S Sedan 'Ill R-ID, 1 -· x1nt cond. thruout. Must see lo ap- prttW.~ $1)). 191-1186 &ft 6. '71 l lllck Riviera Luxuriow hardtop coupe v.•lth factory a.tr cond., full power lncludln& door Jocks, vinyl top, tilt wbff~ stereo inultl· plu, strato aeau. •port v.·heel/J, etc., etc. Very Jow, lvw 1ulle.. (i07CPMJ. '68 ll!!Pala Castom ·es Mld~ convertRll@, V-8. ' """ ttick. s;25. 6'6--031l aft 4 pm. -* WANTED * Clean late model Chevy %. T, 4 wheel drive PU, long brd, au lo. MAY seU or trade my •n Chevy l,~ T, auto, disc brak", clt'an, 542-IT'A eve5 and \o'.'eekenda. '71 Dodqe 112 Ton PTCKUP. Slant ~Ix, 35 speed. I: Solt Topi11, lvtml34J, $1 595 COAS T IMPORTS 100'.).1200 \V. Pacific Cs!. •fwy. Newport Be11ch (71-4 ) 642-0406 -ASTON MARTIN AS'"T_O_N_MA __ R_T_l_N_ OBS-V8, \\'(1lge"M·ood blue. drk bl u inler. 4800 mi, $20,0CMJ. Ne1v \Varr. transfer- rable. Pvt Pty (2l31 592-1062 lllunt llrbrl. Exquls!te sand beige \\'Ith full leather interior, factory air conditioning, a u t o . trans.. pov.·cr steering, po\\'f!'r dlJc bntkf:S,• A...\1/FM radio, radial white 1Jlde \\'all t1res, local bf!auty that sho"M·1 impeccable C'att in- side and out. f'IV.'J978). $3555 • '6 7 Mercedes 230 SL TOYOTA m ••"'" ~" 111\m Teyota • J quar O.aler Authorized Sales A Serv1ct 900 s. Caul: JU&hway Laguna Beach 540-3100 '70 TOYOTA WAGON $1495 SANTA ANA TOYOTA Service Dept. open 7:30 am 'ti! 9 pni l\1on·Fri. 54().5212. .f.17 \V, Warner, Santa Ana. '11 Toyota CoroUa., new. 3,00J mi. Unc.ler warTaI1ty. Radio, hl'ater. $169.S. 646-9i9! $4999 .ai, Cadillac U Nabers 2600 HARBOR BL., rosrA MESA 540-9100 Open Sunday 2 door hardtop, Radio, heater. power ateering, tactory air, extra dean. WBJ367 1J.29'j. Tommy A)'l'H Oievrolet. 946 S. Cout H'l!1y., l.:lgtma. Beach, 494·77441546-9967. Hl66 CHEVY, ,.1tite, blue in· terior. Xlnt eh.ape, $795. or best otfer, 495-5625. COMET * '62 Memrry, 6 cyl MAKE OFFER! CADILLAC • eau 5.1&--0us * YOUR ONLY DODGE AJrHoRt~ED '66 WAGON Dodge Monaro. 9 passenger, CADILLAC Automatic, factory atr condi· DEALER tlonlng, po"''er steering, '69 GRANDE, g~en w/l'inyl top. Low nulea.ge, many xtras, xlnt rond. 642-7182. OLDS MOBILE 1970 Toronado. Comfortation • a lr rond. A...\1 /F'.\1 i;terco radio & tapt> dec.k. t~uu JJY.·r equip, Til t v.·~J and Vinyl top. $3600. P.·h·. Gray days M0-989'1 J:.'ves 642-3203. PINTO '71 PI NTO Aulomatic, r;idio. heHtC'r, tinted glaM. f404CIE J. $16Q dlr. 836-6535, PLYMOUTH -·-------- stiarp! r18468l11 s2195. Tom·l ---~B~M~W--- my Ayres Chevrolet, 946 S. Luxurious Cpe./Rdstr. F~l lnjeC'1Lon, aulo. tr an 15 . , po11('r 5ll'l'ring, p .... T. disc. brakes, full !C'ather Interior, A.\1/f''.\I S\\' rad l o. Beautiful lnlC'rior & shows n1t•ticulous car@ inside £: out. (735BEJI. $4888 TRIUMPH Lari::est select.ion of C&dl.l· radio, heater. <RUC337). '65 PLYMOUTH lacs in Orange County. SlOOJ. dlr. 836-6535. SATELLITE Sales-Leaaing. Look for our ·.,-,-0>-,..-,,.-,-D-lx_S_t_a_W_a_g_ Auto Trans. V-8, Power Steer· full page ads every Wed . Caul 1-fwy., Lai;:una Beach. 4M-7744/546-9967. 1953 FORD %-ton pickup. with 1961 motor. Runs great. Needs battery, $l75. Phol'l(' 642-7847 before 4 p.m. '66 GMC TRUCK Radio, heater, <•V581391. $175. dlr. 8J6.<;5.15. 964 Try our lease experta for Savina:• • Sattd.t.ctlor:I • Su -· WE LEASE AU. FOPULAR 1972 MAKES AT COMPETI- TIVE RATES. Call Malrolm ~Id for further det.alh1. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 20Cll Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 642-0010 Autos Wanted 968 REWARD WILL PAY OVER Kelley Blue Book For late model, clean, low m il eage dome•· tics, lmport1 , t ruck1 or campers. Call and ask for Buyer DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 24'0 H•rbor Blvd. c •••• ~.. 546-8017 WE PAY TOP CASH for 1IMd CUI A IJucU, Jull eaII Us b' free Httmates. GROTH CHEVROLET I.JI). tor Sal• Manaa:er 1!2ll Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach IC7.al8'1 Kl 9-mt WE buy all makes of clean ~ apora ca.rs, paid for or not. Please drive in for tree ftppralsal . NEWPORT IMPORTS 3.100 w. Coast •lwy., Newport Beach 642-94-0:,5 __ _ -*-WANT ED * Clean lalc nuxle! Chfl\)' -~ T, 4 wheel dri\'e PU, long bed, auto. MAY sell or trade my •n Chevy ~~ T, auto, disc brakes, Clean. 542-1734 ('ves and weekends. WE PAY TOP 001..LAR FOR TOP USED CARS U your car is extra clean, see us first. BAUER BUYCK 2925 Harbor Bl\'d. 979-2500 IMPORTS W AN'l'EO C>ran&e Counties TOP J BUYER Bn.J... MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blvd. R. Bee.ell. ~ 847...85& WIU.. Buy your car paid for or not. Call Ralph Gordon 673--0900 -445 E. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach. Autos, Imported 970 ALFA ROMEO Alfo Romoo NOW ON DISPLAY Sa1n Serv\ce Pam Body Shop COAST IMPORTS IOQ0.12>11 w. Cou1 """· ".....,.i Beach W-00 , ...... -< TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642·5678 , ... ~ IMMEDIATE DELIVERY SEE US AH<>t.rr Overseas Delivery CREVIER MOTORS ~ \\'. 1 ~1 SI ('·1nt11 Ana I -""'"-,-835-3171 c-~ VisJt our nt"\' hon1e! & ROY CARVER, Inc. 234 E. 17th SL CITROEN Citroen Sports Maserati • Nabers Cadillac 2600 !·!ARBOR BL .. COSTA l\1 ESA :H0-~100 Open Sunday '70 Mercedes 280 S Sedan 4 Dr, Pov.·er Steering, Power Brakes, Auto Trans, Factory Air Cond , Al\1 /FM Stereo, J>ower Windows, (5RIAEHl All the lu."ury you "'ill ever deslre. $5495 COAST IMPORTS *TRIUMPHS* '71 CLOSEOUT SPITFIRES AS LOW AS $2399 GT-6 SAVE $500 FRITZ \VARREN'S Sport Car Center ORANGE COUNTY 'S LARGEST 710 E. 1st, S.A. 547~7&1 VOLKSWAGEN &. Friday for our specla.la. \ViU sell or trade for !ale ing, Bucket Sca ts, Goo! model VW bus. $3900. Air, Tires, Nu Trans. J\1ust Sell. many Extras. Call early Private Party. 847-3095, ~Nabers U Cadillac 2600 HARBOR BL., AM. 833-3344• --"'p"o:....Nc:.T.:.l.:.A_c--'- 1969 Dodge ca.,..., good -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= condition. $1295.\or trade for • convertible c a r , "'9--0>.10. MUST SELL! 1968 GTO, Factory air, lnnds of extras, Jo1v mil:igc, Sl.1.10. or best oiler. P hone ,l(:l6-l'.!!)(i. COSTA MESA 540--9100 Open Sunday ·n CAD Cp DeVille, v.·hl., blue IDp &: inter. F ully l'qu.ip, $5600, Pvt. Ply, Days 540--0636, eves, 586-2517. 1971 Ford LTD C Sq. 10 """"""""""""""",..._""" paS.11. Air, roof rac~ trailer 1966 Pontiac Vl'ntura , 4 /)r, '61 V\V Bug, good tor buggy. CAD '69 Convertible, low tni\"'"". pk". 429 e g. U>w N · & h f t nd il llk all u .. ., .., V-8, AT, PS, PB, Air Coud., 1 o engine as ron f' m es, e new, extru. mi. 962-7~2 aft 6 ·pm & Low JO\V miles, Clean inside damaged. Rest oJ body i.!i SJlm, 673-0083. \vknds. & out, l\.lust good. Good trans. $100. or c HEVROLET 841 best cash of!er. l\1ust !ell 1930 P.IODEL A FORD ·3095. this weekend. Landlord is Body & l\.1otor '68 FlREBTRD 400 ('011\'I, forcing me to u\1.548-5..180. '70 NOVA SS In Very Goorl Shape xtras, sh n r p, rle~ignr1·'s '66 vw Bug, itlnt col'KI. -4 new Coupe, 350 VS, Vinyl top, 1 • ..::*.:*:c*..::.:":.:'.:·°"::.:::'..::*:c*.:.*..::-1 pleasure car. SI e p h c 11 tires, new brakes, less than brown iv/beige vinyl bucket '70 Ford \Vgn -Xlnt cond. l-'6'--15-'-14!:.:·.:_2.:>.:l&./\:..::9.:_2Sc.. __ _ 100 mile on new rings & seats. Automatic (Uoor shif't) 28,00J m i., radio, ro air, 1967 F irehird ( Po 11 1 ) '\'alve job, ne\\' muffier, irr ron!IOte, factory guages, 962-1687 aft 5 pm. air/cond. P/S, P /B. (;OOI! terior xlnt. Must See to ap. poy,•er disc brks, exterior '67 Ford LTD, full p:>wer air , Conrl. Best offer ol'er Sl200. preciate $1!50 or be.!it offer. chrome. TOP SllAPE~ $165 stereo, tmmac cond! $1100 .. ':.'-'"~':c"'::':.· ---,--- Orange County hearlqunrtt·rs . for Joc<i ! & Eu r 0 pea n 1~-1200 ..V. Paciflc Cst . lfl1'Y. 548-5380. Below Book. J\fust Sf'U! \\'ill One o\l.•ner. 494-7081. 'EH GTO 389, Tri-P11r. 1nags, '70 vw \Ve.!itpha.lia Camper ·""-.,•"c:'c:'k~·-C~a'"ll~>J"'°'l-"'171'"87.__ •65 1\-lustang 6, stick, Good l~urst, Glas5 Pacs. Br-st of·' delivery. Newport Beach (n4) 642-0406 J im Sl emons Imports 546-4529 pop-lop, sink. ice box, '65 IMPALA cond. fer. 64&-8012. 2201 So. l\lnin, San!a Ana 557-5242 Op1•n Sun. DATSUN '71 Datsun 2-IOZ, .!iilver. Xlnl cond. Loaclrd. !>lust Sell. Call 968-7903. -Ir '66 DATSUN \VAC()N Ai\1/1'-l\1 radio, 4 spd stick, $320 • iH2-6.il29 FIAT '69 Fiat 124 Sport Coupe ~ Spd, Radio, !!cater {YZN· 070), $1395 COAST IMPORTS 1000-1200 \V. Pacific Cst. !fwy. Ne1\•port B('ach (TI4) 642-0406 546-4529 '71 Fiat 124 Spyder Ma~ \Vhrl'l"! w/ncw Radials. 4 Spd, J\ot ust Be Seen (880· ONQJ. $2590 COAST IMPORTS 1000-1200 \\".Pacific Cs!. !hvy. Ne\\·porl Bcact. <714) 642·0406 ~46-4529 ~~-~ 'ii F1:it i;·{l Spy!ler. ron<l .. Sl:i! & Take payments. 892...ffil5. JAGUAR '69 Jaguar road~ttr, ml. Excellent cone!. 49'J....l334. 30.lXXI s=. KARMANN GHIA '64 KARMANN Ghia Euro- pean J\lodcl 1600. 20CXl milf"s on ne1v rnginc, New lit'('S. SllOO. Call 642-9220 aft 5:30 11·kdays, anytime \\'cekcnds. MAZDA ROTARY'S Immed iate Deli very HUNTINGTON BEACll "1 ... '· ~ 17331 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH ' ' .. ' ' . ... <>h "' 0 42 . 6 666 Al\1/FM new 9xl2 Coleman 545-4554 aft 5:30 '59 Pontiac. Very rlean, Oasis tent. Tires, ball. 2 DR. H.T. G Runs ,1,e!I. $100. Or.1n9e County's L.:1 rge st Sf'lf>ct1o n New & U ~ed Merced"'. Benz 1962 FORD SI' A \VA . t une-up. $2100. 546-1919. Automatic, factory air con· G-l-1-52W d" 1 · in Power -Gd. tra.nsp. car. l -~'-'"'~7'"7'--c-- Jim Slemons Imps. W.:1rner & fJlain St. Santa Ana 546-41 14 50 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY NOW lease New Mercedes $11 8.71 Mon thly HOUSE OF IMPORTS 6862 Manche5ter, Buena Pk 523-7250 on Santa Ana Frwy, MGB '67 MGBGT, lo mi's, wtre whl.!i. Best otter. * 646-6670 aft 6 pm * MGB, '64, gd cond, wire y,•hls, new lop & paint. '8()0. 673-G350. OPEL '71 Opel 1900 Cpe Auto Trans, Radio, Heater, Low l\1iles, Fully Factory Equipped (388CT0) $1850 COAST IM PORTS '70 VW Squareback, Ii hilt, 27 ,000 mi. & Orig (IWner, xlnt MS-6111. stick R/H. rond '61' VW station 1v a g o n radio/heater. Good con- dition 76,oo:l miles. Call 962-3822. '67 V\V, sunroof, beautiful cthdition, new paint & tns, $900. 492 .. 3879. '68 7 Passenger Bus. Sunroof, Iuggqe rack, chairu, xln't cond. $1695/oftl'r. 536-~. '68 VW-$650/trade for Van. C all 5 5 7-691 1 (Earthen\\1att). '64 Bus, '66 rblt erw, many xll'as, A-1 rond, Best ofter or trade for squbck. 644-1486 '61 vw • Good U>nd. $.150. ?\lust Sell. 615-'887 '70 VW F ASI'BACK 11.ulo, a.ir, Private Party. • 968.Q'723 * '67 BUS, $1100. '6 7 FASTBACK $600. Both xlnt cone!. Offer. 54()-.4013. '65 V\V Conv. New top, guocl cond. 1 owner, must sell, make offer. 6-15-2243. '61 vw Van. Good cond. S385. 675-8058 or aft 3 : 3 0 . ~90W. 1966 Sundlal Camptr 1000-1200 \\'. PacUic Cst. Hwy. Good rond., $15..'iO or offer. NeY.'P(lrl Beach (714) 642-0406 Call 644-7777. ~529 l©--V\~V~B-ug~R~um--gre-a-t-. Goo<l~ PEUGEOT """ • body. ~195. "°''355 1312 Cambridge Lane, NB. * PEUGEOT * V\V '69 B"g. U>w mil•. Xlnt rond. New tires. SI.XK>. Pr. As tow as $2.299. (No. 55-45) FRIT'": \V ARREN'S Sport Car Center e ORANGE COUN TY'S LARGEST 710 E. 1st St., S.A. 547-0764 PORSCHE '66 Porsche 912 4 S1K.I. AJ\l /FM Radio, Like New, 26,00) mllC11, IYLU546) '66 Porsche 912 5 Spcl, At\1/}'J\I. Real Sharp ITYX'.11.11. COAST IMPORTS l!ro·lX>O \V. Pacilic Cst. Hwy. Newport Beach (714) "2-0406 '70 Porsch• 91 IT Stereo, !\lags, Prtvat• Party, Oay.11 839-9560, aft 6 - 833-315.5. '69 911-T 5 spttd, AMIFM. Koni lihock!I, $4:!00 or best ofler. 979-1623 da y s , 495-4145 eves. RENAULT pty. Aft. 6 pm. 548-5196. 1965 vw Sedan. Ex«1 cond. Needs paint. $5'j'j. 646-€789 '68 VW Fastback, xlnt cond., new motor. Sl.000, 645-5013. '71 V\V Bus. 7 pass. 17,000 mi. Very clean. ANXIOUS!!! Orig o,.·ner ~7307. VOLVO 1972 VOLVO Lease Today et S.1t Rates $11.74 Por Mo. O.A.C. AM/FM, Auto. tram., disc brakes, 38 rm. For LHll"ll or buyl"I Autos, Ulld '62 PONTIAC Ca t ali n a Wagon, lit• rreen. ru111 well, beaut. cond. Sell for 1215. or trade tor van. ~ '63 Corvair van, nHdl work $95. 194-!lm. 1289 ... c..i. R "d0.rungh, pmvu h~leer g. $195. Ph: 644-7438. fi7 1''irebird-lo n1ilrs. a 10, eater, w ite wall Exttl concl . ilt ust !>C'll. tires, tinted &:lass. (NQY895) 1963 Ford Van. Must see to 979-1332 $600. dlr. 8J6.65J5. appreciate. ~~-~~ 536-3761 aft 6:00 1965 Le r.1ans V-8. 2 dr ]963 Chevy 11 Wagon, 6 cyl. Sl'de.n. C\{'nn! Sa.s-0 or hes! Auto. Rfl-1. Th ird seat, *'69 FORD BRONCO* orfrr. S-18-52SS. poy,·er rear windav." J 673-4898 '6!1 Grand Pri.'(, air l'Ond., 01\'ner. i.i15. 546-4283. JEEPS p1\T. steering, pY.T brake~. '6G -4 dr Squ~. RI•!. auto, P"T v.·indO\\"S. &14-0>.1~. xlnt trans. Make otter. Pvt Pty. M9-2048. '59 CHEVY WAGON Good transportation SJ 75. * 615-8909 * '68 O\evy Malibu-2 door. P/S, air, excel cond. Call aft 6 pm-«i7-3W. 1963 International Scout 2 wheE'l. Good all around. $500. Call 53&-6424 MERCURY '66 Colony Park wagon. Full power &: air Olnd. Make of· fer. ~1960. Autot, Ulod 990 Autot, UMd 990 VEGA '71 VEGA Automatic, P~·er S!t•erinJ:, Tinted Glass. Only 49001 miles (;nBDLNJ $19i5 dlr. 1 83&<>35. Autos, Utod 990 I THE Important Difference ! This Shield Means That We Are Yow· Only Factory Authorized Cadillac Dealership Four •nd o n•-ha lf •c res of fotel euthoriied Cadill1c facilities desi9ned fo be tter sell ind service Cadilla c a utomobiles. 80 (wor k stalls) a nd 45 fa~fory fra ined f•chnicians. Largest Selection of late model Cadilla cs and other Luxury cars in Orange County! '71 COUPE DE VILLE Vinyl top, lt1tht r intt rio r, f1o1U powt r, f1ctory 1ir, tilt whotl., AM/FM 1t1r10 r1dio with i•pt , powtr cloor loc:lu , twilight 11nt .. toc1I I own er. Sold I 11...,.ictcl by 1o11 !61 7CXVI '69 COUPE DE VILLE Vlnyl top, t1p11try I lo1011r lt1torior, f1o1ll pow• or f1ctory 1ir, AM/FM r1dio, pow1r door lockt, tilt-te l• wht 1I, low mil1190, loc:1I I ewnl r cir. fYY Al511 '68 COUPE DE VILLE F1dory 1lr coMitionin!, f1o1ll power, 111 l11thot tl•or lock1, ..-i...,I top, 11 tfltr ll'ltori or. AM/FM 1f1r10 m1o1ltlpl1x. Show1 mttlc:ulou1 c1r1 thro1o1gh· 01o1t. (-4037761 '71 ELDORADO Full pow1r, f1ctory •ir contl., t.11-tllt wft11I, 4•or loc:kt, ..-it1yl top, l11tfier il'lt1rlor. AM/fM St1r10 1t11o1ftlpl1,-. Show1 m1ti11o1lo1o11 c•r• throughout. 14037761 '70 ELDORADO leok• & rul'll like tli• 41y fint 10141 F1o1ll pow1r, f11tory elr coM,. ft lt•tllt 1t1erlitt, .loor locki, crvlt• 1ol'ltr1I, ..-lnyl t.p, f1o1ll l•efMt lnt.rltir, I 109AQCI. No w w1w tlr11, AM/fM ... ,. •• '70 COUl'E DE VIW Yl"'tl .. , le1thor 1 ...... ,.,, full pric1, fec .. ry elr, tllt wk.I, ,._,.. AM/f M retll._, p•••r' '"' leclis, cr11l" nfltr.I, twillt ltt """--'· ,. •• , '"'11k .,. ... r. local I eW'llor ke11ty. flllACAl $5777 SALE PRICE SALE PRICE $6888 SALE PRICE $5222 SALE PRICI $4333 SALE l'lllCE '69 i\ferorde1 600, 3 pa~s R :o---1-------Hwy., Apt. 101. I.....-. Sdn., Xl,000 ml. silvtr, blk •n•u t Sa'91 I S.rvfct Beach. Davld. NABERS inter. Ab!IOlutely tlf'w cond. lor over a ~n~· ln ~ 1 ..:=:::..:l;;:U;::l:.,C~K,,..--- Nrw COil $32,000. Asking v S Serv. Dept. O~n tD I p.m. I ----_,.-,..--~· -·-··-· tS.500. Pvt. Pty. (713) MondQ mo Buick cultom Le Satre rm-1062 (Hunt. Hrbr). ,... ,_ ~-aJr Jim Slemor$ ~t w ...,, ...,.... __,.~ l.Jke to tradet OUr Trader's :tY!t So. Malo, Sant.a Ana cond ., new Michelin radiab. Paradbe column is for you! 1 blk. north of Warner 23,000 milts., $3,000, Vuy 5 Jines, S days for S bucks. Sc'>rvlce Department s.6-Cllt clean bronze. 133-U4S. "~:ake Room For Dad-Sain Depanment 557-520 From "Chrtttmu Neckdt1" d y ' • •• c: I ea n out the Vaca.ncJes C09t mone)'I Renl to outgrown Lnil -)'OU can praft .. )'OUT trash ii CASH your houle, apt., aton tum "trash to euh" In a with a DAILY PILOT bid&' .• etc. thnl a Dally Pllot DAILY PILOT c1ant.Dtd Id ClMStit'd ad. Cta.~11!Hrd Ad. -call '4.l-S678 . . . ' ·I• 2600 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 540-9100 u c I y t B '· E p ' p d Sa (;Jemen1e Capist~ano VOL 65, NO. 165, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES . . . EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN IA Teday's Final N.Y. Stocks TUESDAY, JUNE 13, 1972 TEN CENTS Capistrano Referendum Election Set Aug. 22 By PATRICK 80\'LE Of tH Dlllr ~1 .. 1 '"'" San J uan Capistrano city councilmt'n Monday set Aug . 22 as the date for a refe rendum election to decide if the cily will establish Its ov.11 public safety department. In addition, voters y.•ill again be asked to approve a ta.1--0verride mea!ure for development <1f parks in the city. A similar measure, calling for a 20-cent vote hilte, was defeated by 24 votes In the April 11 municipal elec tion. The measure at the Aug . 22 special election will be for Patient 'Escapes' only 15 cents, councllmen decided. The election will cost an estimated $1 ,500, city manager Don Weidner told the cowicil Moncliy. He said he had in- vestigated the posalbility of delaying the election until the November general ele<:· tion, but that suc h a move was not feasi· ble. Besides falling past the deadline re-- quired when referendum petitions call for an election, Weidner said the Novembtr date would require the county to print special ballots for the city of San Juan Capistrano. County officials had been $1 Million Eyed In Hospital Suit An Orange County Superio r Court jury \li'as asked today to a"'·ard more than $1 milLion in damages to a woman patient who escaped from Dr. Harold E. Day 's Capistrano By the Sea Hospital while undergoing electric shock treatments . Santa Ana attorney Dudley Wright charged Day and his asaociates at the Dana Point p1ychiatric facility with gross negligence in their treatment of :Alary Estelle Crowell of Santa Ana a.s he opeil- td what is expected to be a tw~week civil trial in Judge Ronald Crookshank 's courtroom. Wright told the jury that Mrs . Crowell, Israelis Down 2 MIGs in Aerial Ba ttle Over Sea TEL AVIV (UPI) -Tsrael and Egypt fought their first air battle in almost two years today. An Israeli spokesman said two Egyptian MIG2 ls were shot down in the dogfight over the Mediterranean Sea. But Egypt. in turn. claimed its pla nes s'1ot do\\-11 two lsr.11eli fighters over .11n Egyptian seaside resort . An announcement s.11id all of the lsraell planes returned safely from the en· counter 25 mil~ off the northern coast of the Sinai Peninsula in international air lip:tce. It was the first air battle of the 22· month-old Middle East ceasefire. The previous dOJ!'.·fi,:!"ht occurred July 30, 1~70, when Israeli pilots reported shooting down four MIG2ls without a loss over lhe Suez Canal. •The noon battle broug ht to 114 the num- ber of Egyptian aircraft reported downed by Israeli pilots since lhe 1967 ~tiddle East War. Losse3 to Isreal in dogfights during that perkid were put at 17 planes. A military source said the Israeli planes were carrying out a "routine patrol" off Sinai when "Ume people the Egyplians) came and the battle started. n was very short." "The Egyptians definitely did not make 1 lovable aign," another source :!laid. He refused to elaborate. The official spokesmens announcement a.id the two Egyptian pilots were seen J)arachulln3 Into the sea. They did not say who started firing. The spokesmen also did not say haw many planes were involved in the dogllght, or dbclose other details. Cousi.ns "confused and semi-conscious'' after one of ten electric shock treatments prescrib- ed for her. escaped from the ho spital Ju-i> 23, 1969. and was not found until 23 hours later. He accused Day and his associates - Dr. George Prastka was identified as the attending physician -of failing to mount an adequate search for the missing pa· tient who was found next day just 75 feet from the hospital. Wright said Mrs. Crowell, "badly sun· burned, covered with cactus thorns and her body a mass of cuts and bruises," was found at the bottom of a ID-foot fire break wi thin sight of the hospital. "She was discovered by her sister and brother·in·law just 15 minutes after they arrived at the hospital," Wright said. "She was clearly visible from the back porch of the hospital." Wright angrily condemned the manner in which the unconscious woman was returned by the staff to her hospital room. He said no stretcher was available and Mrs. Crowell was "doubled up, put in a box and carried back to the hospital on the back of a tractor." \Vright told the jury, who will be (See DAMAGES, Page 2) Developers Set New Bid to Win High Rise Favor The developers of a proposed high rise complex of medical suites across the street Crom San Clemente General Hospital will start anew in their efforts to win city approval Wednesday. The Japatul Corporation of central Orange County will ask planning com- missioners to approve a request for a zone change to a heavy~merclal , high-rise designation for the property at 669-671 Camino de Jos Mares. Originally, the firm had Wed the city for a variance to allow the incrtMe tn allowable height of the building from three to five stories, but city officials ruJed that variance:i should only be granted in cases of proven hardship. The case of the medical tower revolves around maximlz.injt' use of ocean views, but no actual hardships are lnvolvl'd. Wednesday's function before the com- rniss:ioo involYes a public hearing and the (See mGH RISE, Po .. !) Jailed Get 100, 83 Years • in Rape Cases MODESl'O (AP) -Two men convicted In a series of rapes have recel.,.i minimum prison ......... ol !Ge y-V. ond as yean, resp<ctlvely.. ' .. less than enthusiastic'' about such a possibility. he said. The election is being beld as a result or public protest to a council action of April 24 establishing a public safety depart· ment to replace Poli ce servi ces now pro- vided by the Orange County Sheriff's Of. lice. Following that decision. a group calling itself the ·San Juan Citizens for Action was organized to fight the pr~ posals. The group charged that the public saf"" ty concept was "nol feasible" and that a city police department would be "too ex- pensive." Group members began cirtulating referendum petitions, asking that the matter be put to a vot' of lh' people. On '-lay 17, 40 peUtions bearing 811 signatures were submitted to \\'eidner. The city manager told the council ~ton day that at least 111 of the signatures - representing 10 perte.nt of lbe electorate -had been verilled and that the council either had to call for an election or res· clnd the ordlnance establishing a publie safety department. By law, the election must be held at least 60 but less than 75 ame days following verification of the peti· Uooa. The only T'Uesday dates availahl' in that period are Aug. 15 and 22 and lhr council chose the latt er. Police proteclion services OO\\' pro\'1dt'd by the sheriff cost the city $140,000 during fiscal 1971·72, The cost next fiscal y'ar is expected to climb to $180,000. Public Safety Director Joseph McKeown h:1.s estimated that a city department \1·ilJ co.st $298,000 the first year, primarily for equipment and facility purchasP . Weidner, in asking the colUlcil to ap. on MYSTERY INCIDENT -An artist's. drawing of an American Airlines jetliner pinpoints the r'eal"' area of the DC-10' where something opened a baggage compartment door of the jetliner shortly after it U,lf ........ left Deb'olt. A coffin being shipped to New York, loppled out of the hole and fell 12,000 feet, landing be~ide a .borne in Ontario. The pilot made an emer- gency landing at Metropolitan Airport. County Man Passenger On Bizarre Jet Flight Coffin Plunges From Sky; Lancls Near Farm Yard By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of -.. D•fl'r' .. li.t !l•tf Durwood Anderson didn't hear the decompression blast that nearly dumped him and 66 others into the dusk sky and eternity at 12,000 feet oVer Wayne Coun· ly. Mich., Monday night. fl is ears were plugged up. Anderson. 42, of 13132 Laburnum Dri ve, Tustin, and his executive traveling com~ panion were among 10 persons injured, however, during the bizarre inflight in- cident. He suffered a diskM:ated finger and leg abratlons while escapine down an evaOlation chute after American Airlines Fliglft 96 miraculously made it back to Detroit. 1n,estigators · at first believed a saboteur's bomb explod~ in a baggage compartment -sucking . a coffin coo- talning a body -end other cargo out a gaping hole in the big jet!lner. . Investigators have ruled out thi8 tbeory, saying the loud thump, bump and pfolonged whooshing noise resulted from instant decompression due to opening of a faulty compartment door. Hurtling earthward like a bomb, the sllver-rolored steel coffin slammed to earth, narrowly missing a farm home, followed by the fluttering airplane door. Scnnebow, 1 brush with eternity aetm.9 tw terrifying in retrospect when it is ac- cidental Instead of sinister and deliberate as In the case of a bonjbing. Finl told thJa monjng ol the cargo door mallunction now Warned, Mn . Doris Anderaon expressed relief. ';I'd prefer that ra~r than to have had a bomb on board ," ahe uid. 'Ibo lJlcldent may ve become hazy to William Hefferman, SI , of the San Fernando. Valley were en route to Bul· falo, N.Y. and Connecticut 00 ·1 bu!liness trip, Mrs. Ander30n said. The men are employed in the contracts and engineering office of the Air Rite Division of Sargent Industries .in El Segundo, requiring two or three business trips per month. Occasional difficulties -such as lan- ding during New York's infamous blackout -have plagued Anderson'• travels, his wife said. but never anything as critical as Monday nJght'1 episode. "He's been flying for 20 years and this is th e first serious incident," said Mrs. Anderson, adding her husband will have at lea.st a one-day layover in Detroit before contin11ing his trip. She said the couple's children , Melinda, 16, and Richard, 13, are excited about the sensational adventure their ftther will ha•·• to tell In detail when be returns. "And they're a..tully thankful it IDrnod out the w1y,lt did," she added. WINDSOR, Ont. (AP) -Sante Facca was working in his flower bed at the front of his fannhouse when 1 metal coffin dropped out of the sky and landed about 200 feet away. Next he aaw a flash of metal -it turned out to be a airplatte door-hitting the ground. Facca walked over to the olive-green metal box and 11w two legs sticking out. He said lattr he thought It was 1 dummy and poked It with a 1tick. That was when he realized Jt was a human body and caJled Ontario provincial police. Today, invesUgator1 from four agencies were 1earching neJghboring SaOOwich South Townshlv for lurlher wreckage from an American Airlines DCto that had a door ripped off by a malfunction. "First thing I hem! wu them (the cof-rm and bauage door) splitUng apart," :!laid F-acca,·'3. One end of the colfin wu hurlod eight Inches lnlo the gmind. Pregnant Prisoner Gets Off er of Aid-From Judge Judge William Murr1y. the Oninco County SUperlor Court judge who bu hit the headlines for rulings that include orderlnc a f1ocglng, ii at it again. He beclme known u "Clptoin Bligh" and "Bill !!>< Blr)>er" (or two of his prevlOUJ court rulings. ''ny the Chrlstlln opproodl, Mr. Bovee," commented Judce Murray With I helm In the dlrectlOn ol the p..u bolr. "It rubo me the '"""' WIY to have -_.-thlt the tupoyen poy !Or thea UU. .. put me -right now for o II OllOltributlon." Stanislaus C.UOty SUperior Court Jud(e Frlncll W. Holley P" the 196- year ,..tenet Mondly Jo Davlo CoMn llocJ&e, '8, ~ and 0. 13-jbr oentence to his coualn, Ever.tt Bobby WDJlum o1 P11'"""1. The cousins we'" convicted in o ......, of llXllll attack& prlmarilJ' <ii Detaill of the crisis at 12,oao feet and the cool command maintained by ZS.year· old pllot Clpl 8. E. !lcC«mlck, until he stepped out onto the 111Dway were li<etcby to Mrs. r!-. Clpl llCConnlci, oould only lland -balde the plalle lll'lllllrlnc: "~ • Chrlol ••• Jau:: .. " C.Urtroom ptnonnel added .. good Samorlton" to . the 1111 Monday alter Jlldao MlJrroj offertd lo chip In $2 lo o funcl'tlllf..W boll' clotbes for 1 pregnant ..-i-.. M"""'1 made the oiler hnmtdl1t<ly ofter Dtputyl'ubllc Dofmdor Joba 11ovee pointed oul lhlt Mn. Tbereit Lcbhar Is live months J>l'tlllllll incl Is ropidly oul,!row)rw Jbe nrdrol>e oho brought will> hu to Orqe Ccully Jill. 'Judie Mumy'1 $2 will not be neodod. Court reportor Eolher Rmllct ......... BOvee tho! .!he wiO buy moterl&la for Mn. !Abhor who Will tbetl llllb her own l!lltemlty ·-In the county fall . young couplta. _ Hodge was convlcfed Moy 23 on 10 counta ol rape, live of robbery, Ii.I o1 kidnap, eight of 16 perversion ond -ol IOdomy. Williams was coovlcted of NVtn counU of rape, two of kidnap, Men of •1 perversion, five for robbery and one of sodomy. They came to be known u the ••green must.ma" r apists becallle they drove 1 ~ Mllllans. . ' u1t11 ·1dad al ' ln my mind.'' Mrs. -... llld morning. "I'm ..,. 11 wu~ lrlghtenlllf!." ""MJ·lnalband ll /' she added. "Ke coiled ~ Wo Counly General H08pltil ind tlim ''" when be cbe<kod Into • motel.~' Andtrloo lllClbJ lnv.U. ~ ' Mn. !Abhor, :II, ....,... with her hus- bond of the l!lt murder ol 1 Sanl& Ana oecnlaly, &OOI m lrlol Dell mooth. I "That lllY JUI! C.n1 wld;" I depuly comtntnted. "He orders 1 fioalng and the sheriff lloj)I him, he a-1long with the balrcutllng bit and the llll' ncapes ::ind now he can't evm cJve his money away." Judge Murray has yet a n o t h e r nickname toclay-"tbe born low." ' \ prove the est ablisilment of the depart· ment in Apri l. said the cily ('OUld afford it because .an estimati·d Sl82 ,000 surplus 11·ould be on hand at !ht.• end uf this fiscal year, On the park iS.SUf', lht.' V{ltcrs wi ll hr· 3skrd lo approve a 15 eenl assessmcnt per $100 vuluation on rral pruperty. The tax 11·ould generate ft bout $30 .000 per yP:n· and the funds wou ld ht-usPd to deve lo1) the city'.s 14 acres of fal101v park land. According to city pl Ann1ng offic1als, full de velopment will l;ikr sev<'ral yea rs because it 11•ill cost about $65.000 an ac-rr to improve the land for rct r('ational use oor FBI Fin ds No Evid en ce Of Bomb DETROIT (AP) -Investigators 11aid today a malfunctioning c.argo door tha t CJpened in flig ht caused a n1idair incident in which an American Airlines DCIO v.•:is damaged but managed 10 n1;ikc it safcl.v ba ck to Detroit's l-.1etropolitan Airport l\1onday night. First reports indicated the tail SE"<'lion a! th' huge Los Ange les·tcrNew York plane might have been ripped by an ex· plosive. But the alr11ne quQted the FBI as _saying there was no 'vidence of an ex· plO&ive devlco. belnJ involved. The M -ert and 11 °"" member• aJf eiclped 1erious injury as the jet ran off a runway during an emergency landing. Alter hours of investigation by FDr .1gents. Wayne County sheriff's officcrs and airline personnel. the incident was bla med on a fau lty door wh ich opened in fli~ht. Capt. Bryce E. r-.-tcCormick, veteran pilot of the airliner, sa id of his initial reaction. "My fir st thought was that there had been a midair collision.'' McC.onnick told an airport news con· ference that after the blMt. he had no rudder con trol over his craft. one of his three engines was out and he had no left brakes as he fought to get the plane back to Metro from whence it had ta ken off for Buffalo and New York. "The scaredest I "'as y.·hcn "'C were on the grolUld and~ plane was rolling ... l thought it was going to roll right into the terminal because J could not get it back on t-he runway," he said. McCormick, di scussing earl ier theories that an explosion occurred on the plane, said, "To my recolt~tion . I do not remember telling the passengers thera h6.d been an explosion. I told them everything wa s to remain on the plane so officials could investigate to detenninc the possibility of any explosion." Lights May Stay On SACl!AMENTO (AP) - A bill on the governor's desk today ·would require motorcycle headlights to turn o ri automatically when the engine ls 1tarted. The bill paasod the Assembly SU Mon- d1y. It would 1lve motorcyclists until Jan. I, 11175, to comply. ...... Low <louds ond fog •long the coast wtll lake credit for slightly cooler temper1tum in Orange Counly Wednetdoy. Hlgbs expected to be •round 70 at the beac:b, 82 Inland. Lows to the IO's. I NS mE TODA.\' A. Nfbrmka MWipnper re· porta that Cloud H<dfng· <Zp<rl- tnentl io1re conducted in 1kit1 abovt Rapid Cj&y, S.D., u thort tim<I before devaslaHng flcodt. s .. 1torv, Page f . L.M. ~ I ---.. can..,.. I ....... .._ " C ... 1m.; .... Nt!IMll' """ • "-"' a .._ ....... " ......... lrl'fl• "-'• .. DMll Metlcet " ,_., M>l P l•llJwltl ..... • se.11Mm1 ... .... '""" .. __ ' .. Ttlt¥'1e'-.. ,.._. ... ,, ........ II ,., .. 11:-.1 " ·-· • ... _ ~ ~1 ........ »-1• ... .._. ...... _ • I I DAllY PILOT SC Rock Firm -• Decision Overturned Ctty councilmen hlonday overturned a planning commission dtt~ion and ullvw- td tht consolidated flock Produc.1s Co1n- pany (Conroclt) to k.ttp iL~ plant in San Juan Caplltrano for aoother two years. The firm , which uperatts a ready-mix optNJtion adja<-ent tG City Jf11TI, won its appeal on a onanimouJ vtltt of the C'Ouncil after a spokesman prombed the firm wou ld find a new si\(' uut of lhe t'Jty before Lhr. two-year ptriod enc.ls. 1'bt planning commission. In M!\'lewlng the firm'J lahd ~permit for renewal on ~fay 2, granted an e;rtension for only nine months after hearing protest! from nearby residents a bout lbe no I s e i:enerated by the concrete operation. The comm~sion said the company would ho\'e unuJ the end of the year lo move the npe ral ion. The co1npa ny leases property which is 1.oned for commercial uses and has been located oo tho site since 1964. Mo.11 of the protests about the noise came from residents of San Juan Mobile Estates, v.·hich opened In 1969. Residents of the mobile home park claim that cement trucks begin leaving C-Onrock shortly a(ter 6 a.m., causing a disturbance to their sleep, llowever, councilman Josh Gammell told one o' the park residents that he had personally driven to tht area one morn· jng berort 6 a.m. to liaten to the alleged disturbance. Gammel] claimed the nC>iMll level was not high enoogh to cause "noise pollution." Asked why he had moved to the area near th,. plant, park resident Glen Nichols said he lhOught the operation had been rlosed down. He got this impression, he added , because he came to look the area over and make his decision to move in on a S.:.lurday and Sunday, when the plant was closed. In asking for two year extension of the use permit. Conrock planning conrultant John E. Roberts said the firm employed 15 men and accounted for $14,518 city ln· come in sales taxes during 1971. He noted t hat although the 1aod is 200ed for com- merrial uses, it would not be suitable ror business location or home construction because of airport noise and the prox- imity of a stable and a vent from the aewage treatment plant. Roberta noted that the city has no land wned for lnduslrlal operations al')d sug- gesetd that auch a problem be examined in light of the problem racing Conrock of finding a new location. "We do feel the plant is compatible with adjacent uses of the land," Roberts told the council, "whether they are permltted or whether they now exist." Bodies of Man. , Son, 5, in Lake BIG BEAR CITY (AP) -The bodies of a 34-year-old Lakewood man end his $-- year-old son were found floating in Big Bear Lake nine. days after they were reported missing. A fisherman saw the body of Michael Schlffier about 200 yards off the norLh shore Monday afternoon. fie called authoritieJ, who later discovered the body of Michael's father. Richard L. Schiffler, about 300 yards away. Boy on Bike KilJed; Police Hold Driver A. 15-year-<ild boy bicyclist was struck dov.'Tl and killed Monday night by an automobile. The drlver \vas jailed on felony manslaughter c harges. Santa Ana police reported. Jeffery Hopper. of 1602 N. King St., Santa Ana. died at 10:40 p.m. in Rive rview Hospital following the ID p.m. accident on Fairv iew Avenue and the Sri nta Ana rtiver hridge. Police idrntified lhe. car driver as Andr'w McTA,1tgarl. 35. DAILY PILOT lht Ori,,.. Ctn ! DAILY P'I LOT , wllh ..... ICl'I \1 combl11tO ltit Nt'#1·P•••" 11 p,,ibllol\111 w SM O••t!O• Co111 ru,1 1.i.1,.. (o"'4'1!"r. $•pt· r1!1 tOltilln• trt P<Jblhhlel, Mond1y tl'•ough ,.r~1y, !Or COiii Mt i.. "'•wpO•I llttCPI, 11\lfl!lnt lon lt-.:hlFOl>ni.ln Vtllty, LIOllr\ll ... (/\, ll'YIM/$a.clclltlllclt Ind $In ((l'ffttn!1f .S111 Jutn C:t o»1t1no. A, slf!Oll rt OIDMI ~clllion h Pllblllll~ S1lu•01yl •rd Sund•V" Tn1 pr lnclP•I puOl11llln1 Pl•"' 11 11 llO W~1t ll•r SUH!, Cotll M111, Ct ll/Qrnlt , ,;-., •. Rob11t N . w •• ~ p,,,.a1nt •nO PW•l•llt• Jt(~ R. Curl1v \lk.t 1'rt1"111nl 1"11 G1n1r1t Mtn1g1r lllom11 K111il flli!or Tllom11 A. Murpllin1 Mtt1.1flr>t E11;111f Ck1rl1s H. laot Ric~1 rJ '· Ni ll ,t.111111n1 M-olnt f o110r1 S-c 1,_.._ Offlc• lOS ~lo1tli El C1111ino ~11 1, ,2672 Ottier Otrtc." Cotll Mttao: ))0 Wt'1 ••v Sl•MI Nt'W91rt lttcll: )J)J HtWpo<"I lloult Y•,11 Hllll!lf!OlOn Btf(fl: 11111 Bttt h llo11ft Ylfl1 ~ BUC:l'll 2n f'ernl .AYll'rllil , ........ lll4J '42-4))1 CW.m.tl AlhertW"t 641·1671 S. ci. ... t.t A• hp•1t•11tt: , ••• , •••• 491-4411 CfPt'!111'1t, Jt72, Oi'Wtgt Coast ~l!fllllll'llncl C.,....n,, Ho -'!Will lllu1tf•lltr>t, .. 1.,111 l\'Wl\tr er 11hottlltt"""11; l'ltrt ln ''"' .. r"'""1Vf.cl Wl"""I tPKltl •· 1"11~ .. CW't'f'ltl'll ·-· ....... CY .. "'9$llOI Nill 111 c.-11 Mttt, Ct lffitrrl' t.lltMcrll'llOrl 1:1'1' ftrrltr 11.U """""'"' "" -u u .11 -111iv, ..,uif,,, I ...,.., ... 11,..S mllflll'lty, ' TIHSdty, June U, 1972 ·-~ Cwmenw BOAC Flig 1it Bornb Hoax Nixon Economist· Students Sees 'Recovery' ROME (UPI) -A llO.l.C lll&bl (rom Cairo .. Lmdao ...... .. •111<11f'l<l' landlog bore toda}' \\'hen Egyptian au~rlUts warned tbe captain there migltt be a 11•0 1n an aboard with a bom b Jlrnpped to her waist. Win Honors UP'I T9!ttfl0fe H er Honor Jn Paris, \Vbere the phrase "cher('hez la fem me" or igin· ated, Paris ians f ou11d the \Vorn · an they were looking for - Nirolc de iiauteclocque. She \Vas elected the firs t woman mayor or Paris. By JOA•'NF. REYNOLllS ~ ""° OtlJ., PIM It.ff "Tiitre's no questioo but t h a t Ullmlployment w\11 be coming dOYl n by lht end of ~ year and be corrung down very rapidly." That's tht forecast of Marvin 11 . Kosters, Assistant director of plann ing and analysis for President Nixon's Cost uf Liv ing Council. Kost.er• was in Anaheim today to speak to a meeting of the National Association ()f Plwnbing, lleating and Cooling Con· tractors. In an interview with the DAILY PILOT, Ko.sters said the recovery of the economy ''looks healthy and strong.·· Fonnerly a1\ econ0mist with the Rand Corporation in Sanl.a 1'.fonica, Kosters, a Republican. ha~ spent the last thrtt yean In Washington as senior staff eronomlst with the Council of Economic Advisors antl the n as head of planning for Phase II. "11aving designed 1t , r n0 \11 spend a lot County Budget Includes Cut in Property Taljes 8'' .!ACK BROBACK which v.·cre not spent.'' 'Thomas ex- 01 th• 010~ .. 1101 11111 plained. Orange County su pervisors lo<lay The new figure, barring last minute in· adopted a tenl.ative 1972-73 budget calling creases by the supervisors during hear· for a 7.f>.cent reduction In the property ings, ·will place the county general fund tax rate. tax rate al fl.965 per $100 of assessed 1'"'inal budget hearings which will vaJuation, bringing the reduction of 71h determine the exact rate will begin July cent..5 under the current fl!.04 rate, 12. highest in county history. The new budget calls for expenditure of The lowered rate means about a $4.20 $2-1,J,2 million in general funds , up 5.1 per~ reduction in taxes to the owner of a cent over the current spending program $24,000 home with an assessed value of but an anticipated 10 percent increase in $6,000. assessed valuation will allow the t.ax cut. Thomas warned board members that County Administrative Officer. Robert this year's tax reduction may be short 'l'homas, in presenting the proposed range. budget, told supervisors that although "We cannot depend Jon substantial ln- the plan calls for a n increase of 5.1 per· creases in assessea values through cent. or $11 million, over the current economic growth ln the long run," the ad- year, he said lt COlllrasted sharply with rninistrative officer said. "It is essential th e 16,4 percent and 15.8 percent jump..'I that tax reforms be enacted to relieve the for the two previous years. property tax payer from supporting con- The 5.1 percent represents the lowest stanUy increasing programs demanded percentage increase since 1960-61 when a by the public." 3.9 percent jump was called for. He called attention to the 15 lo 30 per- Thomas cautioned that the budget does cent annual increases in health, welfart, not allow for increases in salaries and medical and Jaw enl'orcement programs. fringe benefits for the county's 8,000.plus The new budget includes $1.9 million en;::}~~Js.Olairman Ron:tld Caspers of for completion of the fourth floor of the county's overcrowded main j11il. a tong Newport Beach added that. "\\'e're close delayed expenditure; $1.1 million for the to salary negotiations and an anticipated flew Prima [)e,ohecha Canyon landfill 5 peret:nt pay increase \Viii not cause a site north of San J uan Capistrano: jump in the tax rate." Caspers complimented Thomas and his $300,000 for air conditioning the Orange Budget Director Tom Corbin on presen-County Medical Center; the addition o( ting "a good budget based on target pr~~ 301 new employes and a $70,000 item for je<:tions with austerity in spending in a county lobbyist office in Washington. mind." . DC. "The recommendations in this budget The tentative budget includes several provide for contin uation of mandatory "policy" items which the board will han- programs al acceptable levels 0 f die separattly in budget sessions. service." Thomas said. "Only in those fleading the llst are completion or cases where the availability or substan-design for a new medical center at a cost lia l outs ide funds (federal and state) has of $1.6 million : $73,276 for the con- been assured have we recommended new troversial Orange County Airport Land Use Commission and $8.5,803 for a dental or innovativ' programs.'' He said the orfercd budget was $14.4 care program in schools. million below county department 'head re-Last year l!Upervisors refused a $62,000 quests. During the budget hearings request by the land use commission and departments v.·hich feel they were dealt gave the ag,ncy only $500 for operation \Vit h too severely wll l have their day during the year. before the board members. Other budget items Include a personnel Thomas said the estimated carry-over department management study, $42,000 ; balance from 1971 -72 woold be 11round development (lf new data systems, $1.3 $!3 ~1 nll ll ion \vhich rontrasts with a $6 million, and hiring (If a community rela· mi llion surplus last year. lions coordlnator, $16,720. "The 1nrrease is due primarily to a $12 The county has been without a public million gross balance in welfare 3p-re.lation.s man for more than a year and proprlalions resulting in $3 mill ion net to Caspers said it was important they fill the rounty 175 percent of welfare monies this gap. are provided by the state); $2.5 million Poli cy items for which no funds have from the state in reimbursement (lf been set aside in the tentative budget and business inventory tax exemption Jos.'!es will be op to a decision of the board which was pa id /ate, and a balance of at members include a much discussed coun- Jeast $2 mill ion In contingency funds • tywide helicopter patrol, $250,000 ; ac- Fron• Page 1 HIGH RISE. • • only specific matter will be the concept or ndd ing Ure "hig h·risc"1 label to the ex- isting heavy commercial zoning. Oite expected kink in the plans involves the problem of adequate fire protection \\"hlrh could be ()ffcrcd by the city's fire department to such a tall s tructure. San Clemente's department has no ('qu lpm.cnt which rould reach the topt wo floors of such a building in case of fire. f..ommlssioners already haVI!! been m;ide aware ()f the pr(lblem in a memo fro1n t he depar\mcnl prepared when the \1ariancc Issue came up f(lr COn5ideratlon. Othrr matters (In the commission 's busy agcndR Wednesday include: -An application by Peggy ci.nd John L.andell for permission to use two residential lots recently purchased ne.ar their new rcataurant tll off street parking fo, the business. The Jots and restaurant i\re at the lntersection of West Con1clio and El Camlno Real. -An application by the MacDonald's Corporation for a ust pennit to allow the constructkm of a hamberger stand near San Cl<m•nlt lligh School. Th• p1r<el lie11 at 650 Avenlda Pleo In an arts zoned for mp.nulacturing. -A lot aubdlvlakl'n request by Byron '11albew1 affecting tbt ltind where the MacDonald's Orm plans Its constructkm. Mathews seeks subdiivlsion of the entlH parctl from 600 to 660 Avenkta Pico, 1U on the liOUth slde of the roadway. , quisition of Santa Ana R lver-SanUago Creek greenbelt property, $1 million; ad- ditions to the probation department !'llaff, $6SO,OOO; 15 new planning department JX)SitionR $200,000, 11nd a computerized medical lnformalion system for the medical center $310,000. Capital improvements: proposed for the coming year total $10.4 million, up $5.4 1nillicm over the ctuTent year, Major proj- ects in addition to the jail complttkln and landfill !lte are completion of the !!econd phase of the Fullerton Municipal Cot.Ir!, $1.5 million and expansion of the county's central utility facility, $700.000, Jaycees Endorse Employes' Cause The South Coast Jaycees have officially endorsed efforts by San Clemente public l'&fety employes to gain higher wages and bentflu, Jaycee spokesman Jamts Straus aald lh< untnlmous •ctlon by the group membtrshJp 1t 1 ttetnt meeting e11l1 for lncreuea ln salarlce and benefit& "e- quivalent to UKllt of leading 1gencle1 In Orange CO\Jnty." The endorament ls the flr!t fonnal support by any communlty p<up for !he current requeatl made by the employe1, who have pointed out that San Clemente'• wages and btoefits an the )Owest in the county. or tllTle watching the be-.auty of its optra· uon," ht-quipped. Kosters dt.'CUned to speculate when the Phase 11 restrictions would be lifted but he was optlmlstlc about the continued success ot the wage-price freeze. "Wages have gone up at tw lee the arr nual rate that prices have gone up since U1e beginning of the freeze ," he said. lie denied that consumers havt' less money to spend as food prices rise. ··nie average wage earner can buy 1110re (or each hour·s y,·ork since the freeze," clalmed Koster. "Wages have r is en an average of six percent while prices have only gone up an average. of three percent." . lfe acknowledged that the figures he quoted for price increases included the entire spectrum of consumer goods and ~ervlces. Kosters pointed out thnt the only po int at which food prices are Mt controll ed are at the "raw level.'' v.·here the farmer ;,ells to a food prt>eesser. He said he doubtrd rontrols v.•ould ht.: imposed on farm prices "in the lm- med1ate future but we will continue to Hludy that area for any ma}or changes ." Kosters said the institution of a Phase III (which will be the lifting of economic restraints) depends on the continued suc- cess of Phase JI. "l wouldn't want to gues:s when that \\•ill be, but Y."e are seeing a more vigorous expansion and inOalion is going dov.·n more surely and rapidly," he said. \\'hat about higher food prices? "\Veil, prices are increasing less rapidly. And people have become more sensitive to prices since the freeze. But it appears we 're beginning to see some con- trol of this cost.push inflation,'' he said. Mrs. Callaham, Former Co11rt Clerk, S11ccumhs Mrs. Diana Grirrin Callaham, former clerk ol the Harbor Area Judicial District Court, Wed Saturday at lbe age of 66. Funeral services for Mrs. Callaham, a 1D-ye8J' resident of Corona de1 Mar, will be tie.ld 81 1 p.m. Thursday in Manchester Chapel, Inglewood Cemetery, Los Angeles. Interment will follow. Mrs. Callaham's husband, Jack Callaham, is a pioneer Orange County resident and tbe former owner and early developer of San Juan Capistrano Airport. Mrs. Ca llaham lived and v.·orked on the Orange Coast from 1956 to 1966 until she and her husband moved their residence to Long Beach and Falla City, Orq:on.' She was found dead at the whee) of her car after suffering a heart attack in Long Beach. Survivors, in addition to hrr husband, include her brother, Judge \Villiam Christensen of Palm Springs. retired, former presidlng judge of the Harbor Area court. She also leaves a son, Ji. R. Griffin. of Yucaipa. a daughter, Mrs. John Moon, of El Cajon, four grandchildren and one great grandchild. Retired Ma1·ine Dies ENCINO (i\P) -John Lucian Smith, 57. a retired Marine Corps colonel, Medal of Honor winner and World War JI air ace, died Friday. Smith won the nation's highest av.•ard for valor after com- manding Marine Fighter Squadron 223 in t he battle or Guadalcanal and the battle of the Solomon Isalnds. Italian poUce hustled a pretty young Egyptian oil the VCIO when it landed, but later said Karima Mustafa Amin. 24, was not carrying a bomb on her person nor was there any atopect material in her Oigbt bq. All pasu.ngers were ordered of( the plane and police began a sea.rcti of baggage. No bomb wits found and authorities said the \1·arning was a hoaJ. B52s , Figliters Raid Nort11, With Neiv Protection SAIGO N (UPI I -V.S. B52s. taking ad· vantage of ne1v electronic developments that protects them against missiles. bombed targets in North Vietnam today for the sixth consecutive day. Fighter-bombers. meanwhile, hi l bridges 25 mlles from China despite Pe- king warnings the raids threaten China's security. The Pentagon said the B52.'I, confined mostly to South Vietna m in the past because of the missile threats. are bomb- ing the north on an almost daily basis, The United States has increased the num- ber of BS2s in Southeast Asia fourfold since the start of the Communist of- fenslve on March JO, Pentagon sources said the B52s are being accompanied with special planes equipped \Vith electronic countermeasure gear capable of jamming the radar guidance system of the Soviet-made surface-to-air missiles (SAMs). The 852s on rare occasions have struck near the Hanoi.Haiphong area but most of the current rai<b are still just north of the Demilitarized Zone and directed against Communist supplies. U.S. military spokesmen reported jets from the aircraft carrier Midway blew up a huge oil storage complex near the port o[ Vinh, filling the sky witb black smoke and flashes o! orange flames. Air Force r~4 Phantoms carried out the raids near China. The U.S. command said the F4s knock- ed out two railroad brjdges and tracks running between them on the railway leading Mrtheastward from Hanoi to the China border -previously the principal overland route for supplies from China. The command said one bridge was hit near Thanh Moi , 60 miles northeast of Hanoi and 25 miles from China 'a Kwangsi Province. The other bridge was ne.ar Lang Dang, 55 miles northeast of Hanoi and 30 miles rrom the border. Neither had been hit previously. Only a few hours earlier, the Chinese Foreign Ministry issued a ronnal state- ment which said such attack.!l: threaten "the security of China ." It said the United Slates steadily expanded the sphere of bombing up lo areas "quite close to the Sin~Vietnamese borders." Capistrano's Curfew Reset to 10 PM Youngsters in S~ Juan Capistrano can nov.• stay Clut a s long as their peers in other Orange Coast cities -10 p.m. The council Monday approved an ordinance moving the beginning hour of curfew rrom 9:30 p.m. to ID p.m. to bring the city into C<Jnformity with neighboring communities. Curfew s till ends for juveniles at 6 a.m. Th' presentation of a 1peclal en- vironmental award by President Ntx.on to six San Clemente Jfigh Scht'Jol students may bnve copped much of the attention at a recent awards IS!embly at S...n Cltmtnl• llli!b Schoof. bu! ror lOO othtr studelttl. lbe day was JU!Jt as spectaru- lor. School dJ strict o!!l.cials commended all 200 or 1nore at the annual rites -a record number ol scholarshlp credits for any &inglt graduating class in dis trict history. A.t least 10 of !he students won three or more separate scOOlarships. The seniors winning the largest share ()! awards were.: -Afexandra Bank, honors at entrance to Cal State Fullerton, a Scholarship J."'wld Association Award and a C.S.F. Seal Bearer. -Ch ristine Burton, a Bank or America Certificote. a California State Scholarshlµ and sc holar s hi p s lo California \Yester n Unive rsit y and Loa11 Mounta in College. -Suzanne Curre y, the Capistrano Unified School District Education Award. a schola rship to Chapman College, the Delta Kappa Gamma Society Award Girls' League Award, and honors at~: trance al Cal State Fullerton. -Cynthia Sue Johnson. an American Legion Av.·ard, a Bank or America Certificate, the San Clemente Jaycees Junior ~tiss Av.•ard, a Rotary Club Award and a scholarship to the University (lf Southern California. -Donald King, a Bank of America Certificate, a Governor's A.ward, honors at entrance to UCI with a scholarship and a Scholarship's Fund Association Award. -Jane Knoess, a Ban of America plaque .• ~ California State Scholarship, a Soroplun1st Award and a scholarship to Southern California College. -Mary Shepard, a Callfoi'nia State Scholarship, the Daughters o( the American Revolution Goad Citizenshl1• Award, a Girls' League Award and honors at entrance to Cal State Fullerton. -Jodine Tyson, a California State Sc holarship, an Elk's Club Award, honors al entrance lo USC, a Rotary CJuO Award, scholarships to USC and the Uni\·ersity of San Francisco and a Sorop- timist Youth Citizen Award. -h1ichae.I Young, a California State Scholarship, an Elk's Club award, a Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps scholarship to Oregon State University and a Soropllmist Youth Citizen Award. -Leslie Jordan, AcademJc distinction, Bank (If America plaque, Bank of America certificate, Ca 11 for n i a Scholarship Federation seal bearer, Governor's award, Betty Crocker award and Scholarships Fund Assoc J at ion Award. From Pagel DAMAGES ... transported to the hospital to view the site, that no ointment was available ID treat Mrs. CrClwell 's injuries and bm'ns and the family was told to go out and buy some. The family was also told that 7-Up would be better than water for treatment of her "dehydralioo," Wright .said. "And they were also told that there wall none in the hospital and they should go out and buy some." ~trs. Crowell names Day, Prastka and doctors Alexander Renna and Harry B. Quick as defendants in her $1.2 million action. Day and tils wife wert idenll!ltd today as principal stockholders in the Capistrano By the Sea Ho spital C«pora· lion. What's My Line ... YOU WON 'T BE FED ANY LINES AT A[DEN'S, we AllE MORE INTERESTED IN DEVELOPING LOY AL CUSTOMERS THAN MAKING A FAST SALE. NONE OF OUR SALESPEOPLE WILL BOTHER YOU IF YOU JUST WAW TO BROWSE, BUT WILL BE PLEASED TO ASSIST YOU IF YOU WISH, WITH TRUTHFUL ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS. WHEN WE DISCUSS CAllPET LINES, WE WOULD HAVE TO .. MODESTL y .. ADMIT THAT we HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTIONS IN THE AREA. TOP BRANDS SUCH AS: BIGELOW, BERVEN, BEAme, MAGEE, MONARCH, BARWICK, MOHAWK, ROXBU11Y, MIUJKAN, ARMSTRONG. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPIS 1663 Placetltla Ave. COSTA MISA 646-4838 • • l I I I • " . ' r , I . . ,, l .,. .. " ., " • • ' • JB DAIL V PILOT SC Tuttdfl June ll, 1972 • ' " l i ' " . :, " n . ,, .,. ., ,. • . , .. OVER THE COUNTER NASO Listings. for Monday. June 121 1972 FINANCE Securities Salesmen 'Peak' at Ages 31-35 ,I EllEtAl I VIATIN fllSllT 'EllTEt olht• l~e unl~u1 Hrt1C• o4 an 1~1111on tu con1ull1nt 101 11!u1H ~•In ,.., 1n 1111111r fU '''rtn• lllf~l l111fKll9t For information on thf' slack of Toyo Togyo Co. 155 ·1.60 June 7 Aot1•110• 1••••• "~"I • ••l111u1c1 Cnll Roy Bartholoml'\V Grf'at J>acit1c Securities l 7291 Irvine Blvd, Tusun 714 -832-8000 • MOllL Jtt'llCU 011ng1 Coun1'f AlrpOfl 1 Mobil auinorlna llOlllL llt•ltr 19531 Al!pOrt Wq So!rlfl llC Al111011 •~or11 ~0-"30 Op111 aalty • 111 I LEASE or BUY .. --• lt72 CONTINENTAL OR T•kt Yff• .ic11 ,,.,., tht ctmtl91t 1-91 ha11Htvl """ Llltctl" er Mffawyl II l'Mf' <"91n, '#1 '" 1l116 .. 11111' ~ ltlr f .. I mll"!t!IUKt !-. t"'r1m 1111.,.N 111 ~11r IN"' ..... llM<h '-----•;FREE IOOKLET ,_ ill tlll <W,.., 19 "°'''"' t•r Ir .. l*tt r .. trll!"' 1Htl11t Ill ~~lonwllll9, HAMii ADDlllSS 'CITY ' We are pleased to announce the appointment of JOHN F. SANDERS ·as Manager of our New Office. in NeWpOrt Beach . This new facility opens in July in AVCO Financial Center, Suite 7~ • €20 Newport Center Drive Bateman Behler. Hill Richards INOO"l'OMTlO Me rnblrt Ntw Yo~ A111t1lc1n, ,Kiii~ Co"I & Uldwffl 11oct £>.(ll•n1111 FOR INFORW.TION, PHONE (71 4} -1460 COMPLETE-NEW -YORK-STO(l( UST " ,., " " ' " " "' ' Oil ' o;\. l7"o )' b. ,. U , II , It oO JI , JI •1 • • • )I 1• I I I' •I ' : o I l o 11 , •i I , I• , ~ ( . ' l. " • !O , I 14 ' '' ' ,, il • ' • ' ·~. j • ' !I ,' I~'. I' 1 .. ' ''' 'I '' 'I I ' • " .. 'I , I . , . ,, ),!.__ ]J •• _,, . ,. ' " . ' ' I '' ' !1 'I • " "' ., ". ,, . " " it; ,r 1F ,f::i! ~::-;-~~ ~; .. ~ Ito ""' ~~ •• •j$0 II llM IUl'J i1•t.i w lol•l'• ,1 ...r~ l )"I'; 41"o-•·· .,, " n'\' " •• ' ""' )l\lio lfl't-1 •I ~ 21't 1J~ • ·,•, ~ J<l\o i-11·. • I 1'1.<1\ot 11) IU -'• ,. "'· )Sl~ "'. " tr \J'<o J~ « I • 1610 *j'• 1)0S s1 ! ' ,,,~ ll\~ ,,,...__ • • ll'o JP• '"1.,.., -1: J!2. '• s1•.1 • 1• l'"' 11 • 7Uo S. l)\o 11'1 Ill-, !! ~'.: ;. > ~ ': ) ''"" .... ··~--. 10 n , n • ,,i..-•• 16 IP• Ii'• 1~ •• , ,, )l't ,,,, ,,., I ,} 0 11\o lllo-~ "" ll • Jill. ... Q ,qia_ ' u•, /'·' 0 .. ~ • 4 -I II f) • l o .>S•o .. I 1 I I, l l I lo 2lh 1llo ... ·~. 71•, 'H'· t • 0 ?! • 16. ,, ... '• 1 1 11 ~,,,,,.,, ' ) . t1'• ll'>-/\ ' • 0 J\lo .. l• •• ,,, '"· .-• ·~)1•,J ...... "I'' 11q 1.0 . ., ., ' " ' .. " ' " ' ' ., ' • • " • ' .. . ! t I I ' ' • ' " " _, '· • ' J ,., ,, I ~1 , " ' ., . f~'· ... ~ .. In ' • • •• ~·. .ll •• " '• ' I ~ ... )i •••• '" •• •,j ' }j •• 19•, . .. .U.S., Yugoslavia Polo Teams Clash 11J llOWAllD I. RANDY ... ""'•l ....... Yugotll.vla'a National water polo leam, defending <ham- piooJ In th< 11161 Olympic Games at Medco City, will be futured in two ma lcbtl with a talented UnHtd States na· Uona.I tt:am at N t w port Harbor lliah School'• ahlnlng ·new Olympic Swimm inc ~'Wllum i..lil>t and Wedn<a- day nlpt. The YU1oelav team wHI bt amoug ~ favorite.! to win •l•in in Munich late lbia 1Um· mer and ii playing four games a1ainat the U.S. aqu.ad in Callfomia in preparation for tho Olympic Games. The U.S. tt:am won Sunday's aame, t-3. at DeAlua College. fl.1onday tbe U.S. won again JG-7. Tonlghl's at1r11ctlon gets under way at 7:30 w1d1 Wednelda y'a gan1e at 1:30. The water wa• placed in the Newport pooJ on Thursday and tonlghl'1 international water polo attraction i! ooe ot lhe bl1ge.st aqua1ics !'!vents ever to be staged in the Newport area. giving the MW facility an outstanding baplismal. The Yugo1lav1 w!U brin g 11 t~man team to Newport for the garnet following a pair of conteat.!I with the .!lame U.S. aqwid in Northern California. !leading tho list are Olympic \elcrani Mirko Sandie and 7..orcn Jankovic .around whom the Yugoslav hopes of a 1ec- v11d Olympic v 1 c I or y are built '"ftlesc :i re tw o of the finest ~·all'r polo playe r!! in the world today, ' coach Bill Ban1ett at Newport Harbor s<i ys. "'They do everything well and with four year1 added experience. "'Ill he tough to stop ,. The Yugoslav Urlegation is headed by r-.11\an r.tus katirovlc and t.1ilos Radan. Coach of tM. visit-0rs is Vlaho (}r!ic, also a vrteran of 01} nipic com- petit ion. SPORTS Alamitos Racing E11trie s W estrninster Pitcher Other 111em t>ers nf the team include : f..1ilos }11 a rk o vi c, Carlo St1panlc. (!1,ren Bonacic, Ojordje Te r 1 s 1 c , Uros Marovic. Ralko Rudie, Sinica Belamar!c, Ronald f.()patny . Du.s;in Antunovie and J11kov lhoni. Fashions One-hitter Wntmimter's Mlke Tisdale pftched a one-hit shutout in leadi:ni bls teammates to a J.-0 vld<ley "'" Fullerton to high· lial>t American Lelioo base- ball ploy &mday. In other action Minion Viejo ... dalt a 1 .. 7 Htbacl; at the hmJdl of Loe: Alarrutos at Uni- v.slty miii •nd hoat Garden GroYe ripped Foontain Valley. IW. Kirt Harm, Bob Nodland , and Al De-genhardt scored Westmintter'1 runs aa Tisdale lreeud ro the win. Scott Tofbert was the batting ~tar for Miaaion Viejo, driving in five rum wit h a trio or 11ngles. Teammate Steve A!h- craft banted out a run-!COrina: lrlple. SJ1: error& helped contribute : to l"OODlllJo Valley'• downfall. 'Pat Morley had a fourlb Inning triple for tbe looen, drivin g . in Al Zimmer ud Wa)11e Oue- . 11.Ue. In other games, San CJ~ mente dropped two, lOfllng 7-6 to Anaheim Ruede and 10-0 to Fullerton. ARd Newport fell to bolt Randlo-Pacifica, 12-l . Jobn SprinJman banged out three hJt.s in Sin Clemente's loa to Ruede while Marie King hid a pair of 111fetits in lhe llOfbaci to Fullerton. Rich Oouglaas ripped a home run in the Saturday lilt. Newport'• Jone rua came in 113 Jut time at bat when Greg Pop1duik btnied out a double , J00rtn1 John German who had •lnl}ed. Ml .. 1911 Y\91• 11) .. , ... ('f lltff, ,. Aol'lc,..,,, I& Ttlttrl. •s 1111.~.rf SchMlfl, II Wltltt, ,. 1111 ... ,,, ... '" llty ... hll•· <: °"''""· c .. .,.11 ..... ' ••rrtoi. ' T~tll ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' • • • • • ' • • • ' II rtol • • • ' ' ' • ' • • • ' • " ' ' • • ' • • • • • ' ' . . L., Altml!M. 00. 101 C6)-1~ '6 l Mli.ltn Ylt!o 20t 490 Oii-1 11 J """''Ill \Ol lleY .. ' ~llll'l'ltr 3b 3 1 . J1~~1. l b ~ ~ 1ri.v. c1 • > •' .~,~~~.', ~ . ~~w.. o I Clrr9tl, SI, 1' ' i• ~ctP\MJ., rr ! f.i t.flf n , II 7 0 "'"· •· ,, I ' ·~ ' J k.,I ., illftlft" 11 rel ' . f : ' ' ; ? : ~ • • ' . ' ~ ' .. ''"' V•tl•v ooo :ioo eoo -l 1 • .. ,"°" Gre~• 100 01i no-JJ ll o \•11 (1tmt111t U l ,, ~ ,., ' ' J . SJ'"""''"· 10 1(!"41, u It"'°""'"' II, P "'''"..,· t, II WrloM, '' Wl'lll1ler, '' a . Sp1ln;mtn lb Oovgl•H, I& Ni,IHn, p P1!m1r. c tohl1 ' ' ' • • ' ' • ' • • ' . ' . • • • • • • • • ' " . . ' . " . An1ri.1m1•u-clt 001 ~ 000-7 n o Si n Clt..,.nre 010 1141 000-4 f o $t11 Clt mtMt \ti J. Sorlnom•n, 1b Kln11, •~ Nltll~n. 1b KIOIJ9/>, p, II Stoll Ml~!Ot, If ••tc"•"· JI, c, " WrlQhl, cl, 11> fl. Sprlno m'"" 3e ""°"'''°"· )ti Doutl1J1 lb p SltVt Ml~lof 1. fl McComb, Cl, p Grlfl'ln, r l Sl1vra, ,, Alltn, ,, 'l0!1l1 ,, ' ' ' • • • • • • ' • • • • ' • • ' . ~ . 1n11lnt1 II r&i • • • • • • • ' • • • • • • • ' , • • • • • ' • • • ' • • • ' • Full1rl011 Jin Cltrntnle 010 000 .. "' . " . 05-l-IG U 1 Ol)e_ 0 ' l .. • ' ' • ' • • ' ' ' • • ' ' . " ' lctrt •1 l11~1111t II r•l ' ' . ' ' ' ' . ' ' ' ' . ' . ' • • ' ' W11!mlMltr Fulltrto11 ' " 100 001 01~-l Fl rrtll, 'ft G1rcr1t, cl Yott, lit. s 0••"1•~, JI ,....,.crulk, d Ht n"•' c L...:111, 11, 1> Ctt1pr. Jb L"'dllOft, p ~Ml1h, •l To1tl1 000 000 000 -0 ' " ' ' • • ' • • • • • ' ' • • • ' ' ' ' • • ' ' ' N•w11cr1 000 0<00 Olll -l 1111r1C.110 l'•t•llc1 101 '°' 0)•-IJ ' • ' • ' • • • • • ' " . ' . •• The United :'itates team. :selected last \\'eekend afler co mpletion of lhe Olyrnpie Development League, rs coached by P.1ontc Nit zko1.1.•sk1. a resident of Huntington Beach. Nitzkowsk i v:as assis- tant coach of the U.S. team at Mexico City , serving under his current assi s tant , Art Lambert of DeAnza S11t'im Club. Nitzkowski coached t h r. undefeated Phillips 66 team to an 8--0 record and placed eight players on the U.S. roster. Three are from the Or11nge Coast area and include Hoy Saari I Hunt1ng1 on Harbour! . Dean \\lilleford 1 La g 11 n a Beach) and Erie Lindroth !Newport 1. Others includf' B r u c r Bradlev. Stan <:Ole, Russ \Vebb, ·Andy Deguise and Jim Slaton. Ba lance -0f the U.S. squad includes Jim Ferguson, Peter Ash, Gary Sheerer, John Parker and Barry Wiet1.en· biirg fr om OeAnza; t-.1!ke Martin fro rn NIMA: and Mike Hoggins fro m Concord. Martin. former UC lrvine s\l•imming and \1•a1er polo star 11·ho played for conch Ed Newland '3 NlMA squad, is the lone member of that team to be selected for the U.S. squad. ~1artin is a veter<in o( Euro- pean con1pelition and was a member of Ne1\·Jand's Pan American G a m es cham- pionship unit last year. Tickets for the games at Newport will be available al lhe p;ame tonight. General ad- mission is $2 and reserved seats are $3. Deep Sea Fish Report Baseball Standings DEAN LEWIS NATIONAL LEAGUE Plltabur;h Ntw York O!Jcl(O St. Louis M«itrtaJ Phll1dtlphi1 Cincinnati Dod1tr1 HoUlton AUanU 1:11t Division W L Pct. 32 17 .163 33 II .&47 't7 21 .5&1 23 29 .44.2 20 29 .... 20 30 .400 West Ol\11lo11 31 19 30 22 I '° 22 24 28 Sin DJtto San Fran cilCO 17 34 18 39 .820 .sas .577 .480 .3.\1 .316 •' GB 41\ IO I\ 12 121\ AME RICAN LEAGUe East Division Ott.roil Baltimore Cl eveland BoslDn New York Milwaukee lV J, Prt. ?1 21 .563 26 22 .5-42 22 23 .489 20 24 .45.'i 20 28 .41 7 16 30 .348 West Dll'ision Oakland Chicago ~finn~tR An1els Kan!aS City tex11.s Mt"lll r '1 D"•olt 1. MlnnttOT• 1 lt••• 7, Mllwtu~~, I ll1!tlmort ), Dt-11"11 O OftlY t•mH 1C1t11u1111. 33 15 30 18 21i 20 23 27 21 27 21 '° liltlUlU TM..,'1 Gl""I ·"" .625 .565 .460 .4.\1 .112 GB l 3~ ' 7 10 J 6 11 12 131~ Klftf•\ Clt1 CSstlflortl •·•) If lotlfn l"lll'ln "" (~lctto !Woed t••I ti Nt w Ytrk /Jto!!lt mV'I J.7J Otrrt lt (Tll'M'ltf""'n '"4) 11 Mlnn.toott IPtrlY ... Mllwt uklt (leckwoed ~") ti Tt~ll Ultobfo'I ... flltll\tnert Cltwl1rld tCutl\1r 5·51 11 01k!1ncl !Odam J.H fP1rry 10.t t 11 A~ttl1 {Mi r 1"'1 WMMMt'l"t GtlMI ll•l!lmor~ 11 Otklll'ICI, 11i.~1 c....,.11nc1 1t -'""tt. ni.•u Ot!rill ti olllll\llotlO,., rolfl'll Mllwl uk"t I t TttlO. l'lltM Chkfto tt Ntw Y•rll, n(fht 1(111u1 Clly 1! hllon, nltl>' DEAN LEWIS 1966 HAllOI ILYD., COSTA MESA 646-9303 SorvlM lftOI l'artl for All Imported Cars Mod'"' lletly Shop for All Can • 'Onap Oounty'1 Lusett and l!Olt Modern Toyot.o and Volvo Dealer WIUlil DILIVHY UICIALllTS 1972 TOYOTA CARINA BIG ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS!! '72 TOYOTA COROLIA FULL Pl I Cl $1966 OR $264 DOWN $48.86 ... MONTH Def.,,_.. ,_.,,,,.., 11rit.• \2609.JI I•· cl... tu, lk. & IMW9ft ,., 41 !Mllfttl. A1t111 .. I !Nft.••,.._ rete 12.66 "Y•. #KIJOOlfJ741 '72 VOLVO 2 DOOl SIDAN $3550 0 ' $295 PULL Pal ti DOWN ... $92.86 MONTH D ... n .. ,_,iw1 ,,kt> 54712.JI. I•· ...... ,.. • fie. ......... ,_ 41 ........... ,.._,.,.,.. 'J.U''JCi. f 1426J4UllJl1 ATTENTION VOLVO OWNERS Anniven•rv Spec.lal1 All COMDnlOMIM• $425 POI ONLY !NSTALLEDll "' "' '" "' '" "' "' • I I I I .. For Los Alamltos Racing R es ult,s Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers CUSTOM POWER CUSHION TIRE Steel belted tires so tough backs them with a 4 0,000 mile tread life exp policy GOOD/YEAR 40,000 Mile Tread Life Expectancy Policy Mdt ~ --' nor-' ~ J10m wifl Jl!I sf ... «lrtilDI --al ~ -,_ -· l\n.t-dM1 1:-lma ~ c..laicia ~-ti-. -~ ...,-. If 70fl etc."\ -Cl.IXll mil. -wt poorioMd ,_ ~ .. m.-.. ...,... of 0-ft'"-q ~ .,. sTill cm lb. ~ --brial .... 6-: ..... -~ booklf!t !trith ~ ~ ~ to •oT r.oodre•r s""ic• ..... -~ .. a. lJQiMd st.U. .. c:.-1... Tb~7 'Will ,ift ,,,_ uedil JIM' znile1te not rees.i..! Cllb tbe pu,. r..b11e of new CutOlll Power Co.thioo 'Pol11tnl tirl'IS. h11l'!d on Good1•1 r'• "Prf!'-d.,tcr111i••d Prie r lor Ad1n1-1-. A ..., .JI ..,.;t:9 eh91'p rM1J lie .JdP.d . l:C,pi"I of tlti~, l)O!i.r.y --e ••t iU.bl" 11 •II Gtin.i· r~1 lo·t~111ona. C'..oodJftr hllUdl H with fMJ blfts of...., card lar '°"W_,,.•tUJg ~isl.nee 10 imj)llct ..ct~ £Yot1 wooldoi rm~ •l•I cle••ars the w1 y -did bete-1* 1'1-~ iMmtnlll'l!ll bow lcJOth the sleel belts N!lllJ nw..) ,,,_Good,.. ~ e. '°°I mu..p: NSJ to l•kt, wHh I neidb1e po~ omd body to e-1 wp tbs Jlboc::kl. MftlftU -.. A71-1J B1S-14 C18-14 E78-14 G7S-14 H11-14 f?l.IS • 15 H71-15 J.Jl.15 l71-15 ----1.86 2.0S 2.10 $2.32 2.39 2.ss 3.22 ... "' 3WAYSTO CHARGE • ow o.. cc•111a-r er.-"'"" ·-a... ...... ... d . polyester cord body ---------------------YOUNG & LAN·E TIRE CO., COSTA MESA 1596 NIWPORT llLVD. 548-9383 THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 HARBOR BL VD. LAGUNA BEACH 482 OCEAN AVE. 494·6666 e COSTA MESA 642·0010 .. I '~ -.._ ' ~--------------------~· I I' ,, '" i: ,, ,, ,, P~i ... '" .. "' •• ... '" '" .. ... ••• ,..~ "" , . "" ' " . ' ., ' ,, "" "" '" ••• ''" ''" f:P< ... '" ... '" Pro! ,,, ~ .. , ,, ••• P hi '" Pl\.I "' "' "'' "'' ""' '"' ''"' ...,,, ,.,.;1 l"ti' """ "'" "'" ""' P1t\ "" P1 11 r i~n 'I'° '" ,.,,, P1l! '" PUr '"' ~·· ~\~ ~: , .. '" ··~ " P t•S PSF. at •• -·~ • •r:d l • ' • t ·~ It " " !l " ~ l1 ~~ " , •• w " ' Tut dJ~ June l ~ '"72 !C DAll Y Pl LOT IP Tuesday~s ~Josi11g Prices-Complete New York Sto(•I\ Exrha11 ge List f-fln lllflf • Mai·ket T1·ading Ge11erally Mixed NEW YORK fA P)-ln Tuesdays stock market prices \Yere generally n11)(ed and registered onl y n11n or changes Trading \\as at a mddJ y 1noderate pace as 1t \vas 1ifonday loss dav Broke1s reported that after last \\eek s sharp and the n1arket's uncertain performance h1on investors Y.ere reluctant to make commitments ----_,_ -_,,,~ II 2.l'• " ' I I 10 " ' '~. • •I 1 • • ~ " -<>•-•i 6J I •s :it • It !t -··- '" ' " " " "" '" ' ···-" . " . •l • ~ 1 ... " - 67 •1:1\l 001, ..oi, ~ ~ . "' ..... IMJ.I Mllll L.. .. Cltl1 .. ... •• ,.,. u H '7 • I l ~ it•. 11 .. .it w u 1• ,, " , 11'1 " ,, .,.. .... It.I IC"l lS U\o " . " ~~~\. 61 ~ '* J .,,.. 11 ~ 1• lf'o It\.. I U • l! ,, 1J1: IJ • • ,. • f't ' \lt o l ) JS •1 • "'t \M 't ' o•, 1)tl1 •l' ' ' 1st II t 1?6'1 u " lU '11~ .. 0. .. " ' .. ~i 1r " ) . .i> 1r1 . ' . 11 JI ' II '\' ' " . B , .. . " •i 11 I ' " . " ' '" 11 l• ' •J•o ' " u 11 • ' " 111. •lh " ••• " ... 10)1... "~ •• l )l. " . " " . .... " . " . ,. ,. •}I• ' " • \I t I• l I I •I • !' 1 , 11 1•17 •" !' ) lO > ~.: u .. 1, ,._ " .. -..... ,, ,, • + ... :i )-1) n~· l. " ' " • ., • "lo .._ • ., . ' .. •• • . ·-'" ·~ ~' .. .. ' " l • ' • " •• " .. • , . • • ooCa I• 'I ""' (> vo~tO irn It "'l)fO ' 17aw • Corn 1•v•e Cn " z ~n ffl ll ! •0 l<J " nd ll ,_, ___ t Jl J •J , .. ..., HU I 10 h i 1•1 t 120 Ill " I. 'I ,?5 ,. • t ... m· . E ... UJ ~ ...... .nl~'L~· ~=~n:: ~ !ftJ:j; ••36 l f'o lt • 11' 1t1 1r>, 11 •-'II • Ito t'r'1 t i.a t \.'t_, \o ' ., •1 • •1\,,--j • 1 ,. ,., :-9 u •J u ll '4 •P o •• _) JC, ,..~ lit " • --, I 4' 4 .., •1 1'S1 o 1 o17 t ?Ol fJU tJ ~ ~; ~ ~~ ! ;1,!.!P . ,,.. 111 ... 'JI 111 t ,,, •.• ,l '' U 1''J21 ••-l1 u 111 • • !• 1>4P f1' ,, -·· ,,.,,.1, 1') J' .. S lS ~ 11 50 ,,. I 0 I • 10 I ,,, •• 1• u . ui, -Xl'l - ' ' ·~ ?I " • " " • • .. " ·~ ' " " • •• • • ,. • 71• 27 71 I) ,,... 16 JG 1! 11 1 l 6 5" I/ l l 11 o )6 9 9 > ?61 I l l • " . " " • ' Co1nplete Closing Prices-A111erica11 Sto<·I~ Excha11ge List " "' ~311 36 1 I IJ I ' ' ' ( ' ' ' •76 )},) ,,. pr (rl 11 VORIC' (UP ) Fe cw n~ 1 •1 int Amrr t i n Slot~ E•ck1no• '"' " ' ' . '" J~ 79 J( I 11 11 11 l: :; ! • •-0 ,1,,1,11: C11rp S• 11 7l 2! \ ~teE Mrl•~ 1•: ": 0 '! '! ~ ,I,~ P~I ol 6J 11 '1 • 11 • '~~:.:..: Hp•,'!'~ 16 ll"\o 1'•1 1'1o-~' ACll11n ln1111 61 51 "' S! • 51 •-•\ Ad•m• Rusi ll ll~.\ 111/t ll•o+ 'o A<lmllnll AO ,. ll n I n 0 ~. Al!°O Flo :ia 2 •I '> O lo •P o Ae oLtl SC. I ~p, 52 • 52 •-"Ae one• Inc 1 '$ •l ,5 -\~ Ae olOI Tt<: l l 7 , 1• 1.+ At rovot CP 171 11 -, 71 1 71 , * •, AllllCIP I !! l Ill• 1110 1111 <-o Alfi CIP WI 5 61 41 u All Hos• Xl " " • " ' " ' " " • " " " • " " ' ,. "' " " " '" ,. " ' " " " -· ~ ... ~ ' " • ' " ll> :ia l6-A rbo n• F :ll)l 20 o 1'0 ll ffP.t~E 10 11>.. !711 11 Alrwcli Ind 15 l• 0 I' At1nNSI IO 69 &9 ~Q Altskl A/" J1\ 3' l? Alb.I WI dn 11 11 u Alclan Indus 20 20 1 Alhon 2 IJd n , l1 I~ All Am 11\du '''• ' ·~· ~I ::~coAI;;: l C ·~ 4~ Al~I Al WI 51 5 S o-A l~AWI n 11 7' 2' Alll T re 60 S6 S! ~ -l-Al led A•!l•I 21 '•1 ;1 ,...... '' Al d (o !rol .Ul o .. .u•1+ fl A/p~I lndul 1' 8 1 11>-~1Allml CP l9o JS , JS -1 Allee Co P IS . s. JS\').-t, Allee CP w 31 JI J7 ,_ ~ AlllCPI .0C 6 6 1 610+ o A t1rFll1 iO 371 '](04 J7 + \'o A l;Cll pt 3\ JI l7 JI •-•• A ~mSpc • l) ~ 11\i t 1 Amco Inds 1 o 11' 1 0 AmHeu wl1 11 I 111, I .. ll Am Ag onPl'I to aov, so\ -'h Am.t.utV 20 ri:, 1\o I • Ame t t tO 111') 11 11 •-, Am eoe• s t-_ lt\I> l9•t :Fl~~ w1 j"{d ,,, ' • 91._ A Fletc~ W• J1 o ll>'lo 17 AmlnllP c Jl)lo lO 't JO o--A Ii t i l!d 6 , 16 !t ,.._ AMI uA ll •l oll U + AM1 1eB Jl J; , lt l'I o+ A M!o 1 '!<! l&l• 18 II Am M11!1nn I , 17 !I , Am Pe H<I lJ JJ J:I ,__ ' Am P11n 10 i. ••~ U • 1 1~,.;_ ~ l<m Pree"°" 11 1~ 16 • u • +-Amll:llV .C<1 360 l1 Jl JI' .;_ Am RltY Wl 1 9 9 9 -..-Am RecG o SI U 0 4J -~A 51letY JI<. S O lo 10 Am Techn.:! ,J: 11 11 11 A.mt1 01P5! '. 16 16 16 ,1,MICCP O• 11 11 11 Anoel c• 1 111 ' I• I 14l o AllQ oCo Lt<! 1S 1' • U\r,, 1• -Ansul Co 6 I I • 1 ' ll~ •::;: 't AnlhOfW Ind 1fl !;.,. 1!i .... + ·: :!11~"" !~~ • li11 ' 191 1'11 + ,I.pp e-d 0 • \t 11 • 16-1• 11 ~ + Aoull1n Ud ll U ' l • 1' -A l:COl Ln<I ~~ !f ' ~,: ~f'!+ A le Btl 2.4<1 21 '. 16'. :~ 0... :~.;-,_:GE l~ 't! ~l ! ~l: 16\: A undlCP Sk 1 7 ,1,,1 ._ArwoadCo •lo I I Atam•A CP 9) 61' 61 6i ~-t AlhldOlt C1 1JI ' H 4 _ A5PllO 7~ 5 11 lS o 15, A18•DYS 60 S! 95 9J 1 9( o 1 Anol'd~ 70 1•1 1~, 11• 11' ~-1, AsM o 7!ld n n 11 17l~-t l o A1 .. o Prd •o •S SS s.\ 5~ i-, A~! !J tnr &C :t.1 31 l.'n ._., ,l..l1 l1n I (p 7J 1 • u 17 _ ·~ Atco Chen O )6 15 75>-,A!coF ~ !1 lf'.I • '• 431, •4 t •o AtlcoM g WI JI 38 l U 3Vo+ 1 All lllCP! WI• I 7! iMo i6 -~~ AtrCMn lid j ll J& o J.l.'o-1 Al 11(1> Wll 15 5• S•) S• i-o 1lvg1I ln<P. 4 O 9 > 9 1-\oAUll •I 0 ll • o H 1• , Autom ll dQ I I 11 • 11 21 Auto lll1d lo ! ! o;6i... SO Auto Svc 70 16 6S , 65 65 Auro5w lGd 1"' s • s 5 A V C Co P S7 3'1 l l o XI +-Avt mco o 10. "' ,, ,, 1 • I I lill'• 16 •-.; llaclQer 70d s 112" 1 ~ 1 1 ' llalld•d 4(1 • 71 o ?I 11 ll11dw n 60o} ~ ;; . ~.: i :7 ; t:,!i:p 1:: 4(1~~ 1• • 6l ;; •-• B•nls~r en s1 ~~: ~~ ~·._ •!!"~ !~ 1:i ~·: ~: ~··~ ~ !:~n~l~E~~ 1 r_.. ~~! 17 B1 v 'I J• 111 711' 7 > 1 •-"lie 1-1 Mt<1 & ? 0 70 1 11 '"; ~111Mh.5p ?I ~I It , 6'1• 6 + 0 Ba IOn II n• • ?ll n 1 ;1 • !11rtor1S Ci'd ••J 13 1J.'o l "'o Ila u<h Ft1ll 31>• 9 9 ' , B1 "'c~ Ind I J J• 1 J• 8a1 n Pel I ;,7 •7 o(6>o 11 B B I Inc<> 161 ~J '' , 41 ll•co In 5Cid 0 91 t,l ~6 ~ Beh~vlor R •I •8 B~t" nQ Co ' l l l l 4 Btll !>dull 3• 78 ?I 79 '-•'o Bt sto lll, I 1 11 -\'> BtnlSI I 10 II ' • J Btnt lS!ll l><S •1 ) 17 • 11 ' • Ben vs Cp l~ lf 0 If I 10 ._ •• Bt a Entlnc 40'• 39 • )9 •-1 llt gen Oolr 1 9 J8 o ll'o llo Bt(lntll lS 10 lH1 1! 11 ~ It Bt n1om•I "' .. " " ., " ·~· ,. "' ., " '" • • " " ' "' 'I 1l ll ll flp f 8 (O p '*:i.;, ~ 9'I ~1 '• Bt ven CP• SO 49 SO 61!1\( P IO'o ~1 '!. 5(1 ' so~.-' llt v••'r '"' • , ""• 40>0-, llt vHI l cp 6'• ;, _ l Blc Pen )6d 6'I ., 5',. '°~' 1 \V1 lllo llr l id •1~'> ",,~• •~lo'otl Bio v Supe 13 1] 1 \ ll nnvS I OI Uh 7"" 11 + lllo Ovn1mc ~' f \1 1&,u, lllllf!Dlrd In 0 • !f.. •J~ • ..., ll!!Jtblrd wt :: 11 , 11 !-!lad n A~rr 1' ~ !9>1 19 1"'-'I !lot.IC-(p ;)I\, JO ; 311'".+-, Bait Btrn1~ H ., lj • 11 0., llao!ntc 1o; ll~t ] :i,. ll~t II-VI I 10 ?6 'l ;6 '' _ ,., llowm11 Ins JI , 31 , l7V. .i.-•..-Bown. C 4 a Id R101n New Y 01·J~ Ups attd Dow1is 8 Id Comp! llr1nchl ~ er1nlff A lll II 1nlfl wt1 llr11ct_n 19 er1unEn .o NEW YORK !UPI\ -The IOI owlnt U1t t l\o'fltt moil ind clown tn~ mo11 bftled on Ptrtenl ol E...:hlnlfl '"'rd!tn ol vo umt lM S!ot~1 lh•I h•v, •ant UP !ht BretJt Corp change on ll'WI Ntw Yet-S!ock lrao. rt Ind llrlldv St1!1 Nt 1...t 11trceni.11t cri1ngt1 1rt lhe dlltfr,nc• t r'ltf !odtY S clOllllf IU Cl bttween ~tsHrd•r t clotl!l9 P•ltl !•kt l"tr 1G rownCo w! llr ForB ~ llrwnFl>f ~ ,. '" " ,. ,. '" '" '" ,. " '" ,. " " " ,. uo ,. uo uo " '" " " uo 'l' 1 Mt~tl& T rl 1 9 7 LI'!> VI nd 10' ~ Ml'J//JW lO 10 1 ~MEI (1rp 10.0 5 Su11trGt'1 20 t I ' $td l(cl,.,,,n ' I 1 wnue Motor I I Ou!le!C IS 1' ' 0tso101n ao IJ 10VCA C• IO " I' oe•""' 1od 11 2 Vft,l"kC Mii 7 1 ll Sl'lfilt11 2• • ' 14 l<llledl"Mt ) I U Stmrn .. ..i; I 5 U t.WrrllL[ n ,,1rw.,11Mc so 'j !I l"leS$1't' 12 4 It Nlllto!'n Ud 41' 20 .S.,. Oii 1 IO I 11 litlbY' Mc:N I ! t 1J Cleve & Pitt 5 > 2J Clltdbr" Inc 'J ,.. C1n ldof to S 2S F1r W1! Fl" \' 110 :ioll ' .... r••ts , .. I ... ,Jin. ~ d•. 1 111 I :0 111 !O d•I• r. 01 ~0 lt lO IO Oi i• ll S' o I·~· !"' T Ml 1 111 Off ~olT8 Corp Off 13 TU En1fnt Off 7.. uel!llr Cf, Qlf 7.1 undYC1 1t Orf 't lluroeu 1!'1d Off St Burnt Int AO Olf s I l urr JP OScl Off H 1ullt• Avl-• °'' } 1 1111• (ill §ii j: !:~~(' l }d Ott J G 11c1et 15"-0lf 't •1 ("'1'1plr Ott , I t ll"ICtm I &: • ~ 1twrt bt "" 2!! ._i =:in c11l: -· ! l 1m•l11 •" J dn 11 I i m: l.t ~ :'"''::. ff 11 1ntn~ 1.18 01 " M4 OM &;l j f 11 s:;•r~ INW1 r ,,t1 !~ ~ ,~ ig1 I~! M~+n '!i;' Oil 4"1\\ /11 1 ~!? .. ~"° • W' -.+ ~ I~~ l\ ,,,, v, 11llt'Wf ~· ..,_ I 16 • \i lvl!ren o IV Cr t en! Siie Cl 1n1ry1n '4 tr'llJM (I t'l'lfOll (t PlldM II olO 111,,,.H l& ,, UIJ 140 1 "' '° t11 , ... 1•1 l ~lJ:!OW PIMI~ 1"11'1 -··-' ' jJ ~ I ~· ~l • • ' ' IC9 ]i ' ' . "". ' ' . ' " ' " ' . M 111, ' . t 16\o 11 16 .., s 10 ' ? Jtl, " . 'l I o I Sit " ' II 21 • ' .. ' .. ,~~ ~ . 1 ,, • ' l't•. lf 1J ~ ' ' • • '1 • "'~ ' .. 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"~-• ,,, ' . ., ... )] 17 11:\' 17 1 IJ l lV1 1' ~ ]4 ,._ >1 I 11 I) 11 , 17 1. 1 1 ) 1< 11 I i I •0 • , ! • ·-I 0 ~ 0 l l~ ?I 'I J . '~ 1~.,_ ~ 1 l... -11 J • 1.. l 1t ).~\· lf' l~ •i J l • l J.lo • ' ' ~ ' • • 6' -~ 10 )J ll J)~ ~ 15 ~ 1S -)I 11, I , T , I 16 16 o l6lo- •I ] Vt J-, 0 )1.,,.,_ It l o ,., ~-\ 19 o I"• 1••-, • 5 ,, ,~ 7 61 ' \ ' • • s u ···-'t ' "· !1 1.11•. 11 • 1' 1 > 1 I I S S S'• ; I t ' ' ' ' • • ' . . " 17 16 • It Ii l'• )'• . ' . • • • •• 17 ., 1, 16 ll 1 I • ' ' • ' 11 . ,,., 17 '7-'t ) IY,1 I) ~,!'70 .I.-~· 1/'' 11~W. l1~~-+, 't ~• 11 IM!o 1~+ \ 0 S'~ ''' , .. _ • 7 16 • S l oll o->-\ __ : y z':._ 6 • t 16 II O o I 1 1~ ••• 1 l I J l J ~ ... ," •. ,,,,_..,..,,,,., .... ~ Fina11ce Briefs e /lll/lc1· 1~n1r1ed LOS ANGE i ES -Paul A ?l.11Jler has been n a med cha ir man or the board of Pacific Lighting Corp 1'1111ler who J01 ned the f1rn1 In 1948 w11J be succeeded as president by Joseph R Ren~h 11 director of Pacific L1~ht1ng since March 1970 Mdler has been a Pactflc L1Rhtmg director alnce 1162 and served as v1~ pr.eindtnt and treasurer before being nllmtd president Tuesday by the Ctnht f>olrd or d1rector1 •R•ach S•lc TUCSON Arlz -John R Norton lll of Phoenix uys,.hl ho-pet to re:ellie 1 profit on lbe sale of the Buenos Aires C.Cllt Co ranch near Sasabe The elder Norton retu,,J to d15do,. the actual sale Fico but said he hoped the sale "ould make a profit on the ~ mUllon his rroup paid fort r1nch ln 1967 N9rton s pitrtnus art J R Norton HI and A ~ Clemenl• of Blythe Calif 'rhe r111och one of the state ~ oldest Md larae.,t WAS sold't& Pettr G Wra y and H W1yne Pru ell ' DAILY ~ILOT Everyone He1 Somethin g Thet Someone El1IW en+. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Tr edo It With e Went Ad ·The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642 -5678 for Fast Results G•ner•I * * * * * * TAYLOR CO. * * "THE HOUSE BEAUTIFUL" I SHARP NEW {'asual r ll'Uanre on L 1nd11 I LISTING I !._1 ,. ~·our i;par iou!l hfodroon111 A gri'at "fllilf'<'re!lt '' hom,., 1n.·ludlni.: h1 In m a:i1rr .~ullf' 1-0111plrtely upgradffi , Ii-om 1111h f1r•rpla1·r. St·paratr nf'11 • 11r~tli a n•I ,1, ... p .. 1. 111.11c1 '11 uiu'lt•r s Prole!l~ion· add~1 11·ood panl'hllJ.:, 1<1 1hr HARBOR VIEW Ttus i~ • brl&hl anrat·tr.11' homr In llnl' 1·ondifi.on w1!h a areal Ytew of ocean, ba.y. night 11xhti; and Catalina. Thf' cnlf'r ta1nmC'11l po!s1bil· 11!<'~ art' entlh•s:i 111rh 1110 p11.l10~. pool, QUldoor "f'I bar. 11nd BBQ a nd a 40 loor lonr living roo1n . (all ti7>7?15. EXCLUSIVE LIND,O, ISLE· $15S,OOO Protected patio 111 th is ~pac1ous NE\V 4 bed· room bayfront bon1 e \1 fR. DR. study & 51'1 balhi. Second floor offers a larg:e sundecJ,. Hi&h ceilin gs & many custorn features. "Our 27th Y ••r'' THE BLUFFS -CONDOMINIUM POOL .all_\ •l<'•'<llJll"d, Forinal r1in-!lf'11· light f1><!ufc>5. Sf>p !h15 •11>.: 1\.11.l•!l ~f'l)dt'&1 rll fruin onf' brforc rt "s gonr 4 Brd hrJ1n1 1·r11ing h\1 ng roonl by l'Uonus <ir "~lld l:w .1 plu11 iinltqur 11ri1u.1;:h1 iron i;:rill ftrn ·rrv .J'. 1hi11 n U!/eif>d ·'fll"il"l<;/llilll ·._ (tl•O II 1th rl fl'· II! s:..19,'Jl)(l COLIJJ£ll WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO .. Realtors -CAMEO HIGHLANDS- ldeat for the busy prnre~sio nal or business tnan . 4 BR .. 2 bath s. the 11"ork is done & the 11utside (i ncl. greenbelt & 1)11Llcl in ~I 1s n1a1n· taincd by prolcss. ma 1ntenanc·e r·re11. ()nly !3~.950. pla1·r a ntt 11 r1 bar P riv;iTr ~ CO&ATS i,:i;trd 1·ri1111 nur11ly. P1rr and \ ~!ip for )11t1r tuggf'~I bo;it PROPERTIES. INC REALTORS 2111 S•n Joaquin Hills Road "Overlooking Big C•nyon Country Club" NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 6«-4910 * * * * * * .&. Ui'll'ICllI li(Mf THIS ONE IS DEVELOPED into a spra11,ling famly home \vith 3 bdrms .. formal dining, breakfast nook. family room and im1nense covered patio. Convenient Mesa del fi1ar loc~· tion near schools and shopping . Presented at $33,960 VA /FHA. PHONI UN19UI HOMIS, MISA WllDI. 546·S,f0 REAL TOR , MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE. PICTURE PERFECT ABANDONED $24.900! ,1\rth1tct·t designed -Ne\v t·arpets & drapes. 4 Bcdroo1ns. cori ve1'\1blc den. 3 bath s, catl1c- dr<d ceilings and 2 used brick fireplace:-.. t;unil v r1ion1, hu1 lt-in kitchen & B-B-Q. PLl TS 1\1.\NY .\'l'R . .\S. l·:ntcrt<11n around your own j l(J()\_. $76,500, -VIEW, VIEW, VIEW- BAY, CANYO N, CATALINA f)c·l 11.:htful fa n1ily hon1e . Love ly slate ent ry, 3 b<:droonis, I :1 l)<dli , f'~Afl'llL Y fiOOi\I lor dining rn o rn) l:irg1· gour n1et kitchen \\"llh ~dl the bu i!tin ~. J;IH JO:l'J,/l('E plus 1nany other nice fealurt!i ~t·f• and t'OlTipare .. $6;J,500. -WATERFRONT VIEW- ~s· \\IJ\'J"J·:Hl·'l(f):\']' i.Hld a POOL TOO '. Pier & sllp a\;11l<1hlr .\/·:\\' llf1APES & ('AJ{. JJ!·:·r:-i ~ hl·druon1 :-. :.!1 ~ baths, ~fA RBLf_; }<'IRl·:J•[..\f 1: liu1H1 n kitchrn 1vith \.\IE'!' rl 1\rf. pu r10 fr1 ·1·rlo<1k1n;..: the 11ater. You must :_,(•(' j(J ;1p p1 t'l"l,1!t $8.i.000. -IRVINE TERRACE- 1.r1 11s sli(il\ 1·ou 1111..; enchanti ng: hon1e. J\lr1un1 1·1 111 v ~Jlill"1ollS living roon1 \\1ith firf·· plaCf'. :l J..:1 1 J.:f' brdrou1 11s 2 baths. l,Q \i ELY D INl1\<(; J{(J(J .\I 1no1n to storC' your trail- er or boat. S62.500. ,-:11-p thrP1H:ll 1111· 1na~,11 ,, WALLACE I h11111I r'1111rd rntr•v door~, REALTORS I SlfAHP, 2 bdrn1. homt" No. .itul th.~ r11 1·r J.111d:1 l ~lr -546-4141 -l)I lh1·y., R-2 lo.t 111th room SltiS ·.uo (On.n E • . J lo build 11 n11. r rpl1·., patll), 3616 OCEAN BLVD ., CDM Ol'~:N UJ\IJ.\' t-.5 P.f\\. 011·ner an .1.:10 lL"' 'l're-11 ., I C .... F. Coleswo-hy !"'"~ v n1ng1 I '.o.,.'1'1·. of t·t1arn1 .t: i>ncf'd ro niendnus ocean view frorn al n1ost an :v 11·in· & H b y· H MORGAN REALTY dow. F:asv walk lo best beadies In I he area. ' ' Co. Realtors ar or 1ew omes 673-6642 675-6459 ('usto1n J\01ne , eleganlly tletailed -plu s :l ~.ti stbluff Off 10'" &IO·OO'lO 1 - Bit. J.!UC!i t apl. 4 ('ar garage All of 1his on BaysidrOffwr-li75·49.10 REDUCED S2SOO Coata M•s• l.ae., free strnple lot ()"OU U\l'll it l, $128.000 SPECIAL TERMS L._.rgf' llii rOOi· Vif'i, llonir ,J OCEAN VIEW FROM .., · Pa l11·1110 .\lodPI.'" 4 1:;:1'. 675 3000 I NO POINTS TO PAY I'd''"", fa moh· nn. ' ALL ANGLES (\,,11,.ni1 ·nt ra rkirn;-('a~y 10 bl' a "rJHUl'-IN" lit Bay & Be11.c h !{('ally • LOW, LOW DOWN frplr~ .. 11('! bar: 01i r)('r ha;, Tired ol look111i.: 111 nr1ghbor's ASSUME HI .VA LOAN "parf'd lll)thing 1n c!t'corating l 11 all.~'.' Cas t your t'yf's on Gene ral General clJnJa PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOME S SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT S1 Lind• Isle Drive f"usto111 4 BR .. 31/2 ba. hon1e on Lagoon . i\l str. l~R. has sitting area & frp!c. \.Yaterfront fam· il.v rn1. \\'/conv ersation pit around the fr p!c.: lciv cl y garden. lge. sli p . $189.500. Easlsiclr , ~riarkling l"lean, lhis tw auti lut homr. Ca ll ro l 1hr sparli..ltng blue Pacific i·us!oui huill 3 BR, 2 BA. inspec t. $60,·l.11. fron1 any '' 1ndow of !his livmg + duung 11.rc>n, CORBIN-rus1on1 Ten1p!r !tills n1an~1on. IVA1ch !hr sun st'\ f1rtpla1'f'. ~·A h1 , bltinll, nu behind Catalina Island. Buy ~h;i.g 1•rp1K + fl rp1'., pa1 10. MARTIN rl hl g,ir., rrn('rll yd. On ly 11 lt lrscoJJf'. \Vords (·an't S28.~. (l\\'rlf'r nioving. I 1.Jrl'Cribr the hf:auty, thill :l CALL ANYTIME REAL TORS 644-7662 bc>droom has it all. Fo1mal -----rl1nin,g roon1, lu1>h <'!lrpet11 646.3928 or Ev•. s.41-9416 and n111t ching dra,,.s. \Vt SAN MARCOS Lachenmyer Re.:altor TURTLEROCK Fee Land I Sll ARP ~ ~Toor1sh t1IP loyr r. ACR GE 11•1ll trade anything you EA liavr for hill $60,000 <:8.llllf'. Approximately .'.:.} A c r t ,; . r sta!r 10nt'cl. on Santa Fr You will agrf'<'. Ca!J for AP- .., po1ntn1ent. ••Oa(I. ln ra~·1 ~rowing San ;\THITO~. 11\Jlrl r (\ r 3[)-1 Prf'C1at1on 01' dr\'f"IOJ> ii nQ\\". All ut ilil1l's to pro1icr1. Sl43,.'i00 . C Wll ll<fll & 111 r:.c;1l!or!t. 54;,..-()465 Opi"n Ev!'s Do you nt-rd 11epAratr FR. )II.fie bf"drooms. boHI gall'. yard lor artull l'ntrrtaining •~ \llf'll •·" rhildrPn.~ play !llf''." Th is winnf'r offrrs all plus decorator tou1·hes of ,. llhag carpt>t , y.·allpapPr and paneling. Put yout !lt'lf in lhe picture with all term~. Prirl' only $28.~. Call 847·6010 Now! !1\1i\l 1\C ULATI::~ f'r<'~li p,11nt 111 end oot' iVr1v rJoor 1'11\,..r· in.1:.~ lhru·oul! ~·ami)y roon1. Oversized hrdroom~. Sunny k!trhen. Laundry 1·001n. Park like yard. Suprr valuP! Call fast -645-0003. -HARBOR VIEW HOME- soMERSI-:T MODEL -Stretch·oul and li1r in this two story 5 bcQroom . 3 bath. FAJ\l lLY ROOf\'I. Dl.\J ING R.OOJ\IL Builtin kitchen. ~ fireplaces. NEW CAHPETS and DHA PES plus .. 'iO many extras you have to sec it to really app reciate lL F'EE LA ND. $72.500. For Compl•te Information On All Hom•s & Lots, Pleaae Call : BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 8ay1id• Or., Suit• l , N.B. 67S.616J I Fo111tt1I d1n1ng. l!U!Zf' ran11ly rrion1. Chr1•ry gardrn ki!- 1 1·h<'n. Spatious bcdroo 1ns . 2 izorJl:f'OUs red bn<'k pat10~. N'cludrd park like yard. Qu1rl .~1rr1·!. Ca!! no11• 6•15-030J REALTORS Sl/l.'CE 19-11 673-4400 $29,900. MESA VERDE 8 f'st buy in !he area! Cozy I family room 1v/cracklln1 lirrplacf'~ Scparall' ma~ttt bedrn1 \1·/bR!h! Don't y.·a1t, t:all for appt. 9m-IOJO. 'o /THl: Hf:AI. '"\i J:STATERS . ' IOHI \I I Ol\11\ J. ' "1 • I Gen•r•I BUY IT WHILE YOU CAN So much for so little. 3 BR. plus fam. & dining rm. with spectacular bay view . in Harbor Vie\V !·!ills. Asking $59.500. Jim Muller BAYFRONT PIER & SLIP Rare corne r lot, sandy beach. lgr lrc·es: rm. for pool & improvements. 4 Bl~ . 4 baths. $199.000. r·e£'. Owner may finance. Bill Con1stock FIVE BEDROOMS Plus den \\'/"·et ba r. din. rn1 .. 2 frplc-s. Patios off all roo ms. Free & easy liY lng in Univ . Pk. ALL ON I-LEVEL. $58.000. Call "Chuck" Le,,•is LOVELY TOWNHOUSE NEAR HOAG .Just listed -high ly upgraded & prof. dei:· orated. 3 Bdrrns. pool. db l. gar ''ou n1u~t see tins to apprecia te the value. $44.500. t~corge Clrupe SPECTACULAR BAYFRONT S1rp ri ght olll onto the beach. great entcr- latncrs ho1ne . Sunshin e thruout. llriv. cour1- yard. 2 1-.. ireplaces. $165.000 . Triona Bergin SPECIAL WATERFRONTS \li a T~ido Nord. 4 BR ., family rm. Rm for 70' boa l. S285.000 . On I.agoon. I.i nda Isle !\e1v BR. & fa111ily r1n. ~00,000 . Eileen I lud son exquisite 5 LIDO ISLE VILLA-65' LOT Beaut. custoni 4 BR .. seµ. din . rn1 , Big kit. & 2 patios. Su per upstairs -mstr. suite & lge. adj. study -hobby roon1 . !·'.P. & rlcc k. $129,500. t::ugcnr Vreeland 4 UNITS CORONA DEL MAR Owner 'viii carry 1st T.D. on these outstand· ing un its. 2 Units per lot & can be sold as package. Xlnt location, So . of }J\vy. on ex- clusi ve Avocado. Marcia Bents OWNERS HAVE MOVED Ready for quick mo ve-in . LaSalle model. Univ. Park . 4 BR .. 21z ba,, ramllv. for1nal din. 2 1< .. rplc!>. On park. Good pr1vaCv. $49.950. lfo1vard Well~ · PRIVATE COMMUNITY & BEACHES 3 BR., conv. den. magnificent v i e w . Beamed cathedral ccil's., low maint. yard, nr. tennis cts., pools & park. $64,500. Bob Yorke 550 NIWPORT CENTER OR,. N.B. ISJ.0700 --Coldwell,Banlcer 644-200 ~ JSO NEWPORT CENTIR 011., N.B. ~ AM'D ASSOC!~!ES REALTORS 644-7270 2121 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. I OKI\ I I. Ol \fl\ 111<1/'LJ I.' General ' G•neral \ I l\EED :\10RE ROO:\l? 5 + FRESH AIR I WHILE THY I d m < ''"' cm. L'ke '"" NEIGHBOR hcauly 11·/rirepl, "'/w .~ha~ COUNTRY I s1ll!Vzc-.'. You r an p1t·k up 1hl~ 1 INVESTORS 1·rpt ~. h11gr klfrh. b!r1n .~1~0 a rnon1h 11111 huy 1his 2 hrd1·oom slrrpcr. Tur l'Pa R 0. dsh1<shr, !ri;: lot. \lnl 1 111" 11!1\r four hrtlroon1 1n ,.nn 11"s so good Is 1hal you PARADISE ldF-~'PR \ :l Ii . !I ~ 0 . {';ill n1w or I lunt1ngto11 Bf'IH'h'F-j 111ay r 1thrr rn.ioy th1.~ LargP· 11.a ri;:r R-·1 ('n~1a .l\lrsn !nl SEY ~!()LJ ft f: !:: A I.T Y --.! ____ . ~ --- 1 1111-1 i21. -DUPLEX '27 500 ~"1"1•;1 1 11r1gh borhood~. /\Ptir l !.arg,. l'ropcr 1y as I! 1". n1· 11 1th f'\ISl1 ng I:.! s111glr ~lory ~ • gn(l1/ ~{'hool.~. b r 11 1• h r~, hullU 11 n•1lhrr :>·Units. Nolh· 11111 1 ~. \Viii , <PT:V ror ru 1un•' , .. , .. l·:a~i :oirlr Inc-. '1 hnu~. onr pill k.', i.hopp1ng, rrt'f'\\l(li~ in>: r lM· a1'ol11l(I like lhl:<. A)lprr,·1aT 1P11. floon1 frw ;id-COOi.. f ()()]. -lli "< .,,1 I lo!. ShOI\~ lli' r i'l'!Urn. r 1rn II t'Ollplf' nf ln1Prln r 111lh Flrrpl111·r in rt 11ional l!l lllllL• A HAI~~: I Alllhon: poul + Ions or .• ht•nu!1(ul l11t ll' l11k•·~ ai·<> t:xrrJIPnl Condition. $27,500 1·!1a11cf' fur Hnti.~ual r!"rurn. 1•-:1r 111 sun b111h1ng t hr1ck ~· (f,._,. \1 ilh1 n 11alki11~ nr b1eycling Call 646·0-5a."i, .Evrn1ng~ 011·ner 11n><1ous nl -H·B-Q. Al"<l in,·ludf'S :lBR 2 [.r-,,:,•( ·. '•.·,"J3&['7\lu c t~Tanr·" .SuuJ er•t to 5·, ' · crpts. bllln R/U &· dsh1,shr. I G.n.r.1 I • ' 644-100.'.. $165 000 B,.\ ho1nf'. !irJ11d r1r~. 11 /11 I' FHA loan ... ·nus hon1 r Call 546·5!180 10 prn '!ii 9 P.\!) S:!i.!IOO. Call .5£Y.\1QUR ---------''TOP OF THE ooastl! h('avy cc<tar shakr . ·"' realty WORLD •• ronf. 1~. barh~. douhl(' i·ar P.EALTY 847-1221. ->.,:. INCOME PROPERTY gara~r. fencf'd yard, built· LOW DOWN 211 1 Vista <il'I Oro -VA TE:::RMS \"1rw ll from the housl' or i n~ Clean & rpad,v tn movr L\r\\'porr Bea<'h • .~--__ __ A~D ASSlJ1\lt; \"A 1.0/\N -61 '11"1 \"YTl\JE e Jlavf' you 111\'f'~l r .. r rr I d I o ''''" ... ,.,II '''·' •.. ~~'·. ..... .~ 1 " •· inany 1r1n 01\·~. f.: or1 u.~ ..,... /\"1tt :l bertrnon1 Easts1de \IOUsly 1111h your \'A E! hrrath!aking unoh~trurled ''NO MONEY OCEANFRONT --*-VACANT_*_ 'b hon1r ,,jth brrc·k r1rt'pla1·(', 1g1 ihty" 1 lf'll' ahrAy~ ar }"OUr rom· DOWN!!!'' DUPLEX Sharp J BR + family rm. k I JJ UG F: y Ar d. l"Ul·df'·!iaC: e Do you no11• )1•11 in;iy niand. Tori 1t .:irr 11 1th four Ch;ilf'f ·lypr: :l AH. ,... loll 1 ~~ Ba. PArqurt nrs .. rovrr· I p lo1·at1on. [){'f;ii"hed double !!-t1!1 be 1':J1i;:-1h r tn 11r ta rnf' hf'drooo1s , :1 bath~. a !I for thr vr lcran. or !hf' 011 nrr up)lPr. 2 AP.., 1 h11. lo11•rr-. . rrt JlAllo. Eas!;o;idr. SJ2.950. • • fN ... Ra n1gf' 11•11 h a llry r ntranc t'.' e ""}"(Ill kntl\\! )"Oii llHl.V r•n j I f ,. I I 1 "·' I I I Pric!"d only $26.000. Call ----'""Al!f' Al 1A ·· ··lrctri·· kl l<'hrn and a f(lm· 1 1\·111 hrlr !inanr-e the pur-r::ti·h 11 !rph , blf.Jn~ '.'\!111 GEM ilv rooni 11·1lh h·i'h 01 wo SEE Cj)UICK 1·1asf'o HlS ovry . uurrn, <w , ):;()(J(! l'l'n!A ll~ltll",\, f f '" I I 1 1610 1 C I 1 "' . 1"11111· or ui· er tr a1 ~. I' .. oa.~t 1111·)., N.B. f•)' !!lt'Oln r prOfll'I 1 11 1 Ii~ <'Ill , rdll1" S n;it ,.. for f;untly 1'r>0n1 ho mP. Cul·rlf'· Ea~~· to .~r·o• S l~lfl.000 ' ,. ,h NO llfl\\'\'·· " ,. I ~~lfi-~~'Wl roprn r·:1f'«.1 n ~:At.lons 642·4623 .1our "· 111 lar1<•' f)lx il 111 profr.~.~ionally l...A~1of 1 hf' rhrapir ~·· ~Ard· ~11~· !01 anrl 11 a lking dt~la ncr Call 67.: .~b!1t 61:! 2:.!:1.i Evf'~ 'e -"'"'' th•·~r .1 l"nll Aj1<1J'1 l.uul~eajll'•I i1:1rrl. l 'ndrr 1no1n ~ h;il!i. 11 1! btnl1111~.1 In ~1/i.ool.s a nd ~hrippin.I.' I *MODEL-HOME* j nirnl~ 11111-1·11 111 onl~· Si.'J.'100. ('all 1lot1lilr s;~r11gr. f'\J r11 ~Tor IX!n"! 11 a1l!' Ca ll no11 L;1.~1 1101111· 1n l "ounlry Club ,• 1'110 2 H•·d1•,.•111 th1r 1 fiTI·:il~i:,o for uppoint nirnl AJ::.r, Cond11. ()nly $20,!lj(I Ji4:1:!:i.::J 1\!11.nor Brau!. vir 11·ot S11nta I Bf'ilnl!l11 1. Hurr.I' _ _ __ ·-__ Ana Country Clli b. Cpl~. • S·11 ,f]0() Call ~140.1 1:1 1 lf)pf'!l f'1·r~ \ I I What You See <lrp.~. lndsr·pd, blk \\"All. sr;:. e Call hhi·0.1:1:1. I 11•r11ng~ intl'rro.I. O~n ~al & Sun. n44.100;1. j 1 --~~=·::::=::::::::::: Is What You Get 1~7 Th•· 11t11str ri: Cu"Clc , c .M --------- 1 lfavC" sornf'lh1ng JOU \\'ant to TOP HOUSE Bf'll uT1f11J 01•r1u1 \ 1P11·. Slrrr1 5'10·5j.'~~ or 644.Sl\lb NEW, NEW It'll'.' Cla ssified ads do \I I -!fl ~!l"rl't 1:!1' 101 11•11h 1H1no-• Ol,\R\H\('; ~ 1...,,... .... ,..,,..,,..,,..,,..,,..,,.. "·e ll -r:i!I NO\V 642-j(i'iS. TOP LOCATION r:111111 v1r11· ur f\11 ·1fir• Oi•ran, ~lE~A VEHDE •1 ~!' .. 1 ~A . LISTING I"' High Ill 1l1r hills or ~o. La · 2'"'"" f I k ' COLWELL PROPERTIES, INC. REALTORS I T1t1~ i hf'fif'l'lf>lll hHm l' '~ Gener•I G•neral :...i ~:\1· LISTJ:--:1; BllY<..!~f.'l!' "'"' ~. r. e:r ·t , ~ trplr , -4 BrrlrMni ~. r1.111ng !'()f)rll .. .. 1 i;:11n11. 8rarl1 Ru1ld your n1111 ~"P· dinin<> &· !amilv ,.m. ,_ MOVE IN • PRONTO • \'a.t·Anl i Iran .1 hr droun1 2 j ba1h hon1f' 1• 11h hie hll1n I kitch. in••lurhni:: rrrni;: lrrrt· I r r. Lo1·11trd 011 ( "o.•ta .\lr~11 1 1:orr Co111'~P And ha.~ m 11 1 I u11cl frail1•r ~rnt ai.:i· \1l!d J ;\fn\'r in on 1'r1•d11 A!lfl;"Ov11J I 11nt1I t>St'r01\' <'lf)\C'~. \'A·i\0 \lr~.I \'<'t"d" I\ nr 11·ly pll1nrrd 111~1.ir, h11.~ nr11• Corn111g rnng·· it nd nr11 k1!1'h<>n rar· pr! \\nodrrl h11rk yarrl i.~ • on1plr!r 11·11 h our door 11hul· llrl111Rr<I. All ror S:"\2.:){)(J. Ca ll hKlll,1 '.l40·tJjJ lOpf'n ('\'i'S. • ·":t. -HERITAGE REALTORS MACNAB IRVINE _________ .,, _______ _ hnn1<> and ~avr S For inarr B:i.: crirnrr to1 S"-0 .~. plu~ Jarcr fan11ly roon1. ~""" inrorn1<i t1on. rail ti7;! .. ~;ij(l_ ·~1" "~·!" L11rJ?" 101. ~ , a r ji;'.Rra!;i' ·• ~ i . i ll:>.(l(Xl ~\I ESt\Vf'rrtP:-.l~Br -2B""'A'~ PETE BARRETT r 11.1n NrAr park. !(Chi ~. 1.h opp in g. N ey,·Jv rrderor~!cd & sh111:; c11rpei. 12x21 alun1inun1 m1 olf hc:k -1.l89 Corsica PIAct . By 0..\"Jlf'r. 546-34.ll. -REALTY- 642-5200 4. UNITS 4 BDRM, 2 BATH doublt' ear garri.gr. 1-ovf'r· r11 PA tio, l:"ood Eai>t.sirle 1111.:alion. --------:'ll~SA VERD~-POOL IXl\\'N. "'!!""'"""''!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""" $2B,500. EVERYONE Fl N ER HOMES 11 ilh pool /,,. roon1 10 h11rlol n1or,. u111!.' uvf'rl .. okinli!; pro. po:ol'd ,\1arin<1 J.;ry~. Ad- d itional lane! a v111J. $26,950. Roy McC•rdle Realtor 1810 Nt'.'\I port Bl vd .. C.ill. 541-7729 Ltivr-ly 2 sty, 4 hr, 21J ha , d r n. din rin + i:-ay brtakflll ar('a. 1101\·cr.~. pvt yard ron1pl1mt'.'n1 Ant hony pool. S·l!l.!!00 By 01~·rtt'f.. 2004 BalcRric Dr. CM ~)1 1. OWNER, 1 Bdrn1, Ii liv rin. Sunnn, Kit, dln, rpts, rlrps, lncd yd, gr.r, $18.500. $3,COO. dn. Bal 7~0. 645-2.Ull. EXCITING QUALIFIES N•wport 10 811FUJll(' lhii; 1011' ln- lrl"['i.( lokn • S247. nio in- ··ludf'S ra.xes. Almo.~t nt'1v F•irview .1 hf'droom ho1ne on quirt 646-111 l ··uJ.1lr-sar. ~·ully r arpeled, •• \··e.~. this large 3 BR . 3 balll Ivan \.Veils Baycrest home is exciting a nd different. Lovely yRrd & patio. Don 't miss it for JUMBO 2:sTORY ~ Bed rooins . 2 Baths ~79.500. HARBOR ISLAND SOUTH -Boyfrant Cando Quirl . '"" 1'4.500 »HAIVA ti" Corona del il"ial" rluplf'X fi BR. family ho1ne. Pier, sl ip ·& sandy .1 Br, 2 Ba, pool, pier&. 11l1n. \Valk to twach. Only $63.JOO. 4 BP.., Condo. Near Orange Coa11t S2J.500. Swlm pool dbl iaragf'. c:rpt1. dr1pe 1 , 5.'JI-3333, 546-4760. Hll buill·in~. on hugp lol. (anytime} I ()1vnr-r transferrrd • S.12,500. :""""""""'""'""'"""""""' Clll! f>46-S42~ (0f'('n eves.) beach. 50' Jot. Choice location. Land value Delighlful $79.~ CHUCK CAROTIIERS $275,000. Full Price $290,000. EMERALD BAY REAL EST,O,TE MODEL HOME I WITH POOL F111•1nf'l' n1od('I hon11• 111lh I lovrly hrAlrd &.. filrrrf'd pool addf><i. 011 nrr 1 tfln~rrrrt'd and i~ n1oriva1r1!. No1v 1~ !hr tinie lo buy & ji!f'I Pfl.J"ly po&M!.Uion o! lhi~ 4 brrlroom. pool hOmr so that lhl' kid" can 1wlm by thf' lime AChool 111 oul. Call ~7-6010 for mort Info. \o /THE REAL .'.'\( r:STATERS ....... l , •• ,,.,1, .. 1 ... • I-Harbor View Hllli""° NE\VPORT RBAC.ll :l BR or 12 k Conv. dcnl Modt'I hon1I' co n(i I I Inn . Qul<'k (1('1 ·ur~1l<',\/. A!dtlna: S52.~.00 A~rn1 li7~722:1. WHERE LIVING IS FUN! T1nn1Rculate :l Rr + !an1 rm . TREASURES Ocean ~icJc of hwy. VliiY.'. 183 1 \Vfslcliff. N.B. 646-515'2 Popular Portofino steps frorn park & pool. l'Tust art'! s14'.l.OOO -owN-ER-AN-XTOUS- 2-story 3 BR. FH .. formal DR. Separote T d H b I & A ' • u •r asoc. and r•ady to d••I bonu s roon1 & bath for summer 0 uest or ... ,, vr LI" ,,-0~ _ ----~--~ ·"' 8 1'0 ~-~ onthit3b•droom,2 * MESA VERDE * teenagers. Ca ll for appt. Lois Egan 644-6200. VACANT LOT I bath home. Subm;t VETS NO DOWN BJG CANYON llEST BUYS any 1Htonable of- "'"" 0' •011 cou,.,.., 3 BH .. 2 * 133' of Fairway View 14.526 sq. fl . 60 X 300 f ,o, u•1555 hn , A·m'd. p11.tio, nn, !or •r. e•nt J"'9V" • \outh , (. oast . - Eatl Bluff 1ao• Back Bay Viewl Blurt" f ·21, b8yh"Qnt l'Ondo. w/be:MJI. onobsll'U('lf'd bay- vie1v. Seclurlro cuJ.cJe-sac lor. Upgraded "'/!lf'W crpts, \VAil paPf'r, fiXIUl'NI .. pain!. 0 11•ner ~. 750. 64'1·8 .. 9. li0a1, 11lrner lot. $32.500. -$52.,500 R·2 * 4-PLEX * BALBOA BAY PROP. * 134' of Fairway View. Approx. 13,000 Wt of lht bli one1. A11kin& Delu;11e unils, :l BR. 2 Ba. El Toro * 642.7491 * !iq. fl ............ · · ..... · · · · · · · · · $52,500 $24.500, In CoAl11 Mesa trplc., bll-in11; he1tvy :shake __ ...,.. _____ _ -,,THE-GOOD LIFE" Stt It. Olli 646-717t roof. Agt, 54f>.8625. 3 BR. ~ BA, cpta:. drpA, lie pe.t!o, Ire paol-1i.ie lot \Vlllk to be.ach. teMl.1, pool. [ lrvl I I Bayshoraa enclo~ by block wall, I-Sty. 2 BR., conv, den, fpl. na Mtcn1•·TMM RelftyCOmpl"f closr lo xlnt 1 c h o o I 1, N,w carp., freAh palnl In 4 . . . 3 BR, 2 BA. dnJi:. nn,, ru.1il rnal"ket.s. l)(l'w ma 11 , 1J11t. fi s1H1.rlcle11. '33.900. SUPER SHARP t'ri)t/;o;hulftr!'I & drp~. E lec Rf'ASOnAhlt. g 3 7 . 175 3, CAYWOOD REALTY IDI DoWrDrlve '41·1211 l Bt>drm 2 bAth 2 itory oom,. kit. Low L.~hold, 6i5-0840 ~?4-2116 aft 5::JO & \O."k--f!nd~. * 54f.l290 * ''" M•cArthur .. ,·1100 In Ne\1'J>Orl Wt'11t. \Valk lo Vnca nC'if'~ C'OStffion~Y°!Rl'nt I Any dayi~ 1~ ei::sT DA y I n Jf,.11e 10m(!'lhlng you w;nt'"lo he11ch. I your hou!!t'. 11op!.. ~!Ort' J1:rJI? Cl1.ssUll'r1 11ds do ttl ~~~~~N~ew~po~r~l~IM ... ,Callfornla IHIS RED CARPF.T REALTORS bid.( .. r tr . lhru A Daily P ilot l nin n ri ~fl! DI) n' 1 """11 -c111l NO\V 64~5678. l. ~~~~~~ ___ e_!lt;:i'-7771 e ~ _:111 ~•1fi,.d Ari _) ~th!)~ .t'll l~ 1orl11y 'i12-3!.i7B. 7 ' I v lod 0 in da ba M of pl plo sa plo rne lhe em •g ao bla flig pil , .. the Fi da the an be pie qw an an \ or 1 ne1 rai. A' hik wit rno re the Vot de ha dr t!t' Se De Jn • • Lag1111a Beaeh EDIT.ION Today's Fbtal N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 65, NO. 165, 2 SECTIONS. 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JUNE ll, 1972 TEN CENTS oar eca Bomb Blast Ruled Out 011 Airliner ... DETROIT (AP) -In vestigators said today a malfunctioning cargo door that ()pened in flight caused a midair incident in which an American Airlines DCIO \Vas damaged but managed to make it safely back to Detroit's Metropolitan Airport )1onday night. First reports indicated the tail section ol the huge Los Angeles-to-New York plane might have been ripped by an ex- plosive. But the airline quoted the FBI as saying there was no evidence of an ex· plosive device being involved . The 56 passengers and 11 crew men1bers all escaped serious injury as the jet ran off a runway during an emergency land ing. After hour s of invesligalion by FDI ag~nts . \Vayne County !'iheriff's officers and airline personnel. the in('ident was blamed on a faulty door which opened in flight. Capt. Bryce E. 1'.1cCormick, veteran pilot or the airliner, said of his initial reaction. "ri.1y first thought ·was that there had been a n1ida ir collision.'' McCormick told an airport ne\\'S con- feren ce that after the blast. he had no rudder control over his craft, one <lf his three engines was out and he had no Jef~ brakes as h'e fought to get the plane back to ri1etro from whence it had taken off !or Buffalo and New York. "The scaredest I v:as "'hen we \\'ere on (See l't.ANE, J>age ZJ Work Completed On $17.6 Billio11 Welfare Measure WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate F inance C<lmmillee completed work to- day on a $17.6-bill ion measure containing the greatest expansions of Social Security Bnd "·elfare in history. The bill \\·ould raise Social Security bt'>nefits IO percent for 27 .8 million reci· pients. imposed strong new work re- quirements on many \\'elfare recipien!s and make many changes in !he Med icare and Medicaid heal!h programs. Winding up 11 mont hs of considerat ion of the monumental bill. the panel adopted 11e\v Social Security payroll tax schedules raising the levies for the 96 million Americans ,,.ho pay them . The new schedules would mean a tax hike of $113.40 next year, as compared wilh 1972, for persons earni ng $10.200 or more in 1973. Chairman Russell R. Long tD-L.1.), reported that his panel fin ished \\'Ork on the measure but did not take the rinal Vote, ordering it to the Senate floor for debate. This \\'ill come after the members have bad a chance to take a look at the final draft of the legislation, he said. Long said it would be ilnpossible to It.art the floor debate until after the Senate resumes work foll owing the Democratic National Convenlion which meets July 10 in Miami Beach. Orange Coan l.ow clouds and fog along the coast will take credit for sUghtly cooler temperatures in Orange County Wednesday. Highs exi>«i.d to be around 70 •t the beach, 82 inland. Lom in the 60's. INSIDE TODAY A Ntbnuko mw1paptr Tt· poru th<it cloud teedfng erperi- mtnts were conducted in 1k1es above Rapid Cit11, S.D., o tllorf ....... time before cWwtatinq flood.I. See story, Pt'J(Jt 4. L.M, ...,,, I C•llfwnl• ' Cl.l111n• Jlo1' C•'"lcl 11 Ctts.-.1 11 O..fll M•tltfl II lllllltwl'Wlt ''" • ll111ff11l-I 11 1'111•--1 .. 1. hi' .. It_. II .._.... '' A!lfl L•..._, 14 .. .. • " .. s-h , .. 1, ltwtl ~I'll ... 1•1' ,.......... 11 TIIMten 11 ·-. .._.,...,Mm 1>14 W.,.., Mewt I UPI Tel••htlt MYSTERY INCIDENT -An artist's dra~·ing of an .i\me rican Airlines jetliner pinpoints the rear area of the DC·lO \\'here something opened a baggage <:01npart1ncnt door of the jetliner shortly after it left Detroit. A coffin being shipped to New York, toppled out of the hole and fell 12,000 feet, landing besi de a home in Ontario. The pilot made an emer- gency landing at ~1etrop6litan Airport. County Man Passenger On Bizarre Jet Flight Coffin Plunges From Sky; Lands Near Farm Yard By ARmUR R. VINSEL 01 lhe 01ilY Piiot Sl•ll Durwood Anderson didn 't hear the dce-0mpression blast that nearly dum~ hin1 and 66 others into the dusk sky and eternity at 12,000 feet over Wayne Coun- ly, Mich., Monday night. His ears were plugged up. Anderson. 42, of 13132 Laburnum Drivt, Tustin, aud his execut ive traveling com· panion were among 10 per sons injured, hO\\'ever, during the bizarre inflight in- cident. lie suffered a dislocated finger and leg abrasions "·hile escaping down an e\'acuation chute after !.merican Airlines Fl ight 96 miraculously made it back 10 Detroit. Investigators al fir st belleved a ~abo1eur's bomb explo<lcd in ii hHggage compartment -sucking: a coffin con- t~ining a body -and other cargo out a gaping hole in the big jetliner. Investigators ha ve rul ed out thi~ th eory, saying the loud thun1p, bump and prolonged whooshing noise resulted (ron1 instant deco1Tipression due tQ opening <lf a faulty compart1nent door. Hurtling earthward like a bomb. the silver-colored steel coffi n slammed to earth. narrowly missing a farm home , folto1vecl by the nuttering airplane door . SomehO\\'. a brush with eternity seems less terrifyi ng in retrospect when it is ac- cidental instead of sinister and deliberate as in the case of a bombing. First told this morn ing of the cargo door malfunction now blamed, Mrs. Doris Anderson expressed relief. "f'd prefer that rather than to ha \'e had a bomb on board." she said. Details of the crisis at 12.000 feet and the cool command maintained by 28-year· old pilot Capt. B. E. McCormic k. until he stepped out onto the runway were sketchy to Mrs. Anderson. The incident may have become hazy to Capt. McCormick, who could only stand beside the plane murmuring: "Jesus Christ, .. Jesus Christ ... " "It's kind of muddled In my mind,'' Mrs. Anderson said this morning. "I'm sure it was quite frightening." "My husband is firle," she added. ''He called lrom Wayne C<lunty General Hospital and then again when he che-:ked Into •·motel." Anderson and bis lraveling companion, Ashcraft ,Clainis Suir 'Disi'orted'" SAN ' DIEGO (AP) -James II. Ashcraft, cleared by tht district attorney of fraudulent campaign spending during 'hb" bid ""for the-V6th Ammbly Dbtrict --seat-Jast-febl'Uary ,· st1ys the Demoerat who outpolled him knew the accusatlons weren't true. ' "They won the race on a distortion," A.shcraft told newsmen Monday, rerer. ring to assemblyman Bob WU.m and his polltical associates. It was one of Wilson's associate!', Attorney G. Dennl!I Adams, who riled the formal lraud charge. \Villiam fleffennan, SI, of the San r~ernando Valley were en route to Buf- falo, N.Y. and Connecticut on a business trip, Mrs. Anderson said. The men are employed in the contracts and engineering office or the Air Rile Divi.siof\ of Sargent Industries in El Scgw1do, requiring two or three business trips per month. Occasional difficulties -such as lan- ding during New York's infamous blackout -have plagued Anderson's travels. his wife said. but never anything as critical as Monday night's episode. "He's been flying for 20 years and this is the first serious incident." said Mrs. Anderson, adding her husband will have at least a one-day layover in Detroit before continuing his trip. She said the couple's children, 1.1elinda, 16. and Richard, 13. are excited about the .sensational adventure their father will have to tell in detail when he returns. "And they're awfully thankful it turned out the way il did," she added. Tapes Too ~Blah' WINDSOR. Ont. (AP) -Sante Facca was working in his flower bed at the front of his farmhouse when a_metal coffin dropped out of the sky and landed about 200 feet away. -~ext he saw a nash or metal -it turned out to be a airplane door-hitting the ground. F'acca walked over to the olive-green metal box and saw two legs sticking out. I-le sa id later he thought it was a dummy and poked it with a stick. That was when he realized it "·as a human body and called Ontario provincial police. Today, investigators from four agencies were searching neighboring Sandwich South Townshiµ for further wreckage from an American Airlines DCJO that had a door ripped off by a malfunction. "F'irst lhing I heard was them (the cof- fin and baggage door) splitting apart ,'' said Facca, 6.1. One end of the coffin was buried eight inches into the ground. Souncl of Mu sic Debated By Art Festival Members By BARBARA KREIBICH Of tM C.lty Plitt ll•tf As befits !he governing body or a cultural organii.ation, the board o! direc- tors of Laguiia's Festival of Arts turned its attention Afonday night lo matters of music and sculpture -with inconclusive results. Director Hal Akins brought up the question of music on the festival grounds during the summer show. The artists, he noted, had complained about the quality of the taped music broadcast over the area. Also, what had become of a pro. posal for strolling musicians on the grounds? "I suggest you don 't get too involved with music," grinned ex officio member Cousins ~1ayor Richard Goldberg. harking back to the City Council's recent dilemma over choice of an official city song. Strolling musicians might break the monoto.ny o! the tapes, suggested board president 0. E. ''Bud'' Schroeder. Director Helen Keeley reminded him that the artists themselves had objected to the strolling musician idea because many felt it would di stract visitors who should be looking at their pictures. "They even object to the Sunday on the Green programs for the same reason," she added. The artiats, aaid Akins. got awfully !ired of listening to the tapes all day and (See FESTIVAL. P1se Z) Jailed Get 100, 83 Years in. Rap~ Cases MODESTO (AP) -Two men coavicted ln a. aeries of rapes have received miOlmum priaon tentences of JOO yun and 13 ye an, respectively. Stanislaus County Superior Collrt Judge Francis W. Halley gave the JOO- ,.year_ltllleDCO VDnc!ay,J<> Davia Calvlo Uodgo. 21. Mod<>to...and tl>e 83-year tentence ~·~ autin, .Everett Bobby Williams -0r Patterson. The cousM!t were convicted in 11 1erl~s or 11exuaf attacks primarily on young couplet.. , llodi• wu Cll'Vlc;1'd May 23 on 10 rounts of rape. five ol robbery, six or kidnap, e13ht ol fer wver:sion and one Qf sodomy. Wllllamsi!was conv'tcted of seven counll of rape, lwo of kidnap, seven of RX pervrrUon, five for robbery and one of sodomy. They c.ine to be known at the "green mustan1'' rapllls becau.st they drove a gtetrl Mustang . .-• ' .. ' I , : Support of Policy Cl1ange Prompts Pare11t Agitatio11 'By FRF.DEHl('K ~f 'll OE \l~;llt. 0 1 lh• Dill• PUo! ''°!! Threat:; of rl·e;11l ;u ·\1110 ag<11n:-1 truslc~s \\'hf\ 11upp1.1rt a pol1c·y cl1a111;l' 1111 top adrnin1Slt'<l lt\l' <'Ontrat·t~ 11'('rr n1adf' before the L:igun;i Ut•i.J t'h Hu.1rd of Educa lion ~tonday r11gh1 In an angry :.l,ltell1l'lll lo lllr hoard, PTA Council prl·s1dt·n1 Lt1<·1 llr \\'h11.1kr r said she \1•ould resign fn1rn her pnst, 1f necessarv, lo v.·or k for !hr rrC".111. Furtht"r threats Or rl!c:i ll action \1·rrr madr hy respresentati\'CS of Concerned Citi zens for Schools and \\'t're appla111tf'd by the 200 persons confrontinJ:: the school board. Despite oposilion from bol!rd members Jane Boyd and Norrn<in llrO\\'ll , <·011- servative trustees \Villlam TI1oma~. Patricia Gillette and Gerald Llnke in- sisted the proposed policy be moved to second reading and adOption at nex t " Angry Crowd In Skirrriis1i With Triistee The people \vant ed 1«5" hea r <ind I.IC' heard at t-.1 onday night ·, n1ecting of the Laguna Beach school boartl. Board Presidenl \Vilhan1 'l'homu s ap. peared to think other\\·ise. Despile the fact that n1orc than 200 persons jammed into every available space at the district board room designed to accommodate 71 persons, Thomas repeatedly rerused to move the meeting to a Jarge:r facility. For 20 mJnutea the angry cro,vd argued with Thomas on the questlon. Thon1a~ finally gave i11 to the demands, just <is Laguna Beach Fire Marshal Jim Presson appeared on !hoe scene to order the meeting moved. During the 21J..minute exchange, former board president Larry Taylor stalked up to the board table to demand that the meeting be moved. When Trustee Gerald Linke protested. Taylor shot back angrily. "Shut up. The people want lo be heard, Let them be heard!'' "This is an affront lo the public," claimed John Stevenson, 425 Bl uebird Canyon Drive. "We've got a long agenda. There's not lime to move. Those people who didn 't get seats will have to wait outside," responded Thomas. Instead of moving out.side, the citizens pressed in closer and surrounded the boa rd table. At that point, Thomas agreed to move lo the high school cafeteria, over the protests of Linke and t-.1rs. Patricia Gillette. Once at the high school , the crowd con- tinued to punctuate the meeting with ap- plause, catcalls and statements despite freq uent raps of the gavel and ad· monitions to calm down by Thomas. At one point, Llnk said, ''if you peo. pie don't ztop this, I'm going to disappear from this meeting." The crowd applauded loudl y. Linke re. mained. Turs(l:1y night's re::ul,1r n1et·L1nt.: or !hC' tXJ,ll'il 1'hr pr11riosed pol 1l'Y· lillC'd frorn Si·rtl nn ~l:IB u1 lhc state Educ:tl t11n Cotlt'. 11uuld J1l luw th(' board to dl·lav a11 ~1tt1 011 11n rt ·h1r1ng Supt. Will1;J111 L'tlu111 anti ;1 .. :-.1•;. t:1nt :-u pt·rintendcn!s Charil';; lh•<;s .11111 HohC'rt Hceves uut1 I ,l;in 1 l'n•.,cn t po!Lt·,\ rt<quircs a dl't1S1on b) Jul\' I -- lt·s~ lhan three \\'eek s a\\'<l~. ThC' l!t'W polity 111uuld also ~11·r !hi" hn:ird j)U Wer to hire a sup..·nntench•nt fur up tu four years. Adn1i11is1ra11vr <'on· tra cts nO\Y are let for l'NO ye1:1rs , \\'llh !hi? contra(' ls renewed or terminated a ) r:i r licrore lhey expire. l•'or example, an ad- n1in1str:itor's contrac·t terrninated on .Jt1ly I of tlu s year means he 1routd leave the district by July I of next year. Recalling the thinking of the boa rd several years ago when the present p:llicy y,·as adopted. !\1r.!'i. Boyd tnid the 111\t'nl \\';JS to preve nt !hr si~ ' 'I n 1n y,•hich a school bo~1 rd fl·ll ;1 l d'C'd tn {'hangr top ndn1in1s1raf')r" hut 10 do so 1t '1'ou!d '1:1ve to "b11v 11p'' the b.1l:1n{'C of a fuu r-ye:1r contr:H·1 "The Laguna Bl'~1rh [.M1;u·(!," $:'lt\I ~l r11 Bo}<L "1n:ide a ~t tul ~ fur !tw1 <l id no~ fl'l'l t! 1\';1s right and pnipl'I' 11• ·..,;1tld l1" :t futur1..• board with \lus pruli ll'nl It dt'v1 c;- ,.d th1· policy of (\\'O·)'t:ilr <JS~IJ.:lllll l'l)IS btit LJddL'<I a security l1·a1urc of the not ice hy July 1st each }'l':1r. Uy \h t~ 111cthfld. lh superintendent and !ht• LM1a rd 11i ·re 1)£'\'f'r obligated past a (1\'l>'-}ear µt•r1vd · "If the poHey is ch;u1~l·d. rutur c bo;ird, will once again be lhrown 11110 !hr four· \'l'ar contract condition whic h <':tn he ~letri mental to the control so needt·d bv th is and future fi ve-mt!Illbe.r boa ttls ·• v.·arned Mrs. Boyd. MrJ. Gilletle, who requested the polJcy change, maintained "the valldity oC this <:hange ha s nothln g to do w J t h J)(lrso11allties .• , "No business allows a man to conUnu 1• \vo rking one year after his contrnc! 1s 1C'rn1inated. This can create mar.iii• prob- lems." she said. Her ren1;1rk~ wt>rP. follo1ved by "boo:." :ind <'al c.1 !1s fro1n th~ 200 persons janimerl 1nlo the tug h schoo l cafeteria. "'\Ve will have 110 recourse but lo ,.r.~ peat to the communi ty for for1n:1I :l e-· ti{ln," warned Tom Ca.~sidy of CQnccrnl'fl C1t1 zens for Schools. 1r the policy change is adopted without sunult aneous renew~! of the contracts of Dr~. Ullon1. !l ess and Reevts. "We feel tha! such action by thr. board would be complclc!y unacccpt<iblc to the commun it y " Approval of thl• 1xihcy y,·ithoul rency,•;il or the C<lntracts, ~:ud C;1ssidy, 138 f\.1cAulay Place. ··1·e11rcsc n1 s a lin~ac h nf faith on the part of the board. and will only lend to further procrastinntion on a matter of vital concern to the district." "I nm joining wi!h the Concerned Citizens for Sc hools 1ri :iny action for reC':lll lhat lhC'y m;1y 1n11lalr and v.·111 resign as the nc1v PTA Co uncil president so that I may invest rny tin1e In !his DC· tion." pledged Mrs. \.\'hitaker. reading fro m a prepared staten1ent. "The present policy seems lo be 11dr- quate and gives both sides a reasonable length of time to work out differC'nces,'" she told those at the meeling. A request by teacher reprcsenlalivr In !he board Jonl Nelson for the polll'Y !St• PQUCY, Page IJ Board Not Contemplating Firing of Superintendent The Laguna Beach Board of Education Is not contemplating the firing of Supt. William Ullom or his top assiJlants "at thia time," a statement released Monday night by bo•nl presldtnt William Thomas aald. "It II tbe unanimoua oplnloo of the board that no firlng of adm.inlstraUve staff ls contemplated 11 thlt Ume, '' stated the two-paa:e memorandum writ. ten by Thoma11 and trustee Patrlcia GUlette 11nd eridorsed by each member of. lhe board. A atancllJli.ovatloo byAhe 200 penons lhat jammed the high school cafoterla came as Thomas read the ltattment. '1The boa.rd wants to reassurt people of Laguna Beach that there will be no drastic challie ln prpgrama at eny of our schools," the statement read. Some a<f.. Justments are necuaary from time to time, but no major $&zlg's are fortlttfl. "The board f1von lnnovattd (nlrllTIJ wh<fl lhey upgrade preoent educationaf ,. programs, such as team teaching. modular scheduling, grade levtl and range level programs and mtnl-«>urxs. •• it stated. Federal projects which offer equal educational opportunlU.. to all students. lhe high school trlmette<, plan, lmpMVe<t high school CWTICillum, in- crtased re11erve aceounts, Ire at e·r tuchor fringe ben<!its and foimoUon of 1 community fact finding committee each are supported by lhe board, lbe statement noted. "New ways of meeting educaUanal gonls and objecti\•es must always be dealt-witb, b)'-Jn.dopth lludia •nd analysl3 so Ulnt we can proceed on well founded facts for good mults. We will C'Olltinue to use ttus direction to new proj· ects WJder comldt-ration In UUs district.'' Referring to a bumper .sticker 11ylng "Laguna Sthools -l.ove 'nltJll or U..e 'lbem," the position statement concludes: "This is an inaccurate 1Latanent. Wt will not lost our schools ! I I Our ctmtt ts to 'love them and improve tbtm.' n -DAILV PI LQT LB D.etRctives More lob•? Nixon Asks Seek Pair Nixon Economist BOAC Fliglit Bomb Hoa x Congress • In Robber y Sees 'Recovery' ROME (UPI) -A BOAC Olgbt from caJn> to Landon mode .. '"'"'l"""Y ~ here today when Egyptian 1uthorilles WAmed the captain there ·might be a 'vo 1nan aboard with a b o mb strapped to her waist, OK Curbs Ugun:i Beach drtrct!vrs hnve ~· quested photagraphi; of tius pects "·hofl:e past melhod or operatio n lits !hat used by the gunman :ind his 11ccon1plice '~1ho robbed the White J-louse llestaurant at gunpoint Monday morni ng. A revised loss deter1nination was 11\M n1ade by police who said th at $3 .200 rather than $3,500 as first thought wa$ taken from the re~taurant at 330 S. Coaist JJ i1,-nway. Detectives said Ille bandits overlooked part. of the weekend rct:r1pts which police found in deb ris on the uff1t e f\0i·1r "I y,·as surprised at lhe conlidcnl'c those ty,·o gu ys had .'' said !)ftec t1ve Alex Jimenez in noting that neither of the men wore any kind of disguise. The officia1 description of lhe two n1en eonflicta slightly with statements made by witnesses shortly after the armed rob- bery. The gunman Is described as about 5-4 t all and 125 pounds with his medium bro\\-11 hair cut in a ''normal" fashion. Jle wore brown shirt and checked pants. lier f1011or rn Pa ris, \l'herc l hP phrase "c:herchez la fe 1n1ne'' origin· ated, Parisians found the wom- an the y were loo king for - Nic ole de-11auteclocque . Sh e \Vas elected the first \\'on1 an niayor of Paris. By JOANNE REYNOLDS ot -. INllJ Ll'llff t l•ff "There's no question but t ha t unemployment will be coming down by the end of Uie ye11r and be (.'Qnung down very rapidly." That's the. forecast of Marvin IL Koster1, Assistant direetor of planning and analy!liS for President N1xun's Cost of Living Council. Kosters was in Anahei1n !Oday 11J speak to a meeti ng of the Nat iona l As!lociation of Plumb1ng. Ueaung and Cooling Con- tractors. In an in terview 1vith the DA ILY Jl JLOT, Kosters said the re('OV(ry of the econom y "'looks heallhy and ~trong " Formerly an eeonomist with the Rand Corporation in Santa Moni ca , Kosters. a Republican, has spent the last three years in Washington as senior staf( economist with the Council of Economic Advisors and t.hen as head of planning for J>hase JI. "Havi ng designed it, 1 now spend a lol The accomplice is described as about :-r. 8 tall with long straggly light hair and a moustache. No description cf this man's clothing is given. Police said that -the men were very careful in handling items in the restaurant, but a cash box has been fingerprinted. Employes of the restaurant have been ques tioned by officers in an attempt to determine how the robbers seemed to know where the receipts would be kept. Pregnant Priso11er Gets Off e1· of Aid-From J11dge The bandits wasted no time searching for the money. but directed the restaurant operator, Kory Saruwatari to the -0£fice and forced him to open the safe. They then collected loot from behind bar. Saruwatari's wife, Gladys and Dan 1"1lkels, an emp!oye of the restaurant were locked in a storeroom for ab-Out 15 minutes whi le the men collected ihe restaurant's money. Later. all three victims were lied to the pedestals of restaurant tables while the men secured the money and left the business. Judge \Villiam Murray. the Orange County Superior Court judge who has .hit the headlines for rulings that include -0rdering a flogging, is at it again. lfe became kno\vn as "Captain Bligh" and "Bill the Barber" for t'vo of his previous court rulings. Courtroom personnel added "good Samaritan" to the list :r-.itonday after Judge r-.1urray offered to chip in $2 to a fund that will buy clothes for a pregnant prisoner. ~1urray inade the (Jffer immediately after Deputy Public Defender John Bovee poi nted out that Airs. Theresa Lebhar is County Budget Includes Cut in Property Taxes By JACK BROBACK 01 "'-01111 PIM! tlltt Orange County supervisors today adopted a tentative 1972·73 budget calling for a 7.5-cent reduction in the property tax rate. Final budget hearings which will determine the exact rate will begin July 12. The new budget calls for expenditure of iuiJ.2 million in general funds. up 5.1 per· cent over the current spending program but an anticipated JO percent increase in a ssessed valu ation \•:ill allow the tax cut. County Adminislrative Offic~r. Robert Thomas_, in presenting the proposed budget. told supervisors that although the plan c11Jls for an increase of 5.1 per- c"'enl, or $11 1nil lion, over the current year. he said it contrasted sharply "'Ith the 16.4 percent and 15.8 percent jumps for the l"'O previous years. The 5.1 percent represents the lowest percentage increase since 1960-{)1 when a :l.9 percent jump was called for. Thomas cautioned that the budgrt doe~ not allo"'"· for increases in salaries and fringe benefits for the county's 8,()()(}plus c rnp!oyes. Board Chainnnn Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach added that. "\Ve're close to salary negotiations and an anticipated 5 percent pa y increase will not cause a j ump in the tax rate." Caspers complimented Thomas and his Budget Director Tom Cor bin on presen· l1n,11" ··a li?ood bud~et based on tar,l!"et pr~ ' - OU.H•I COAST LI DAILY PILOT JI!• Or•no• C:Ol•I DAILY PtLOT, will! Wiilen ;, combiMIS 1111 Ntw.,Fr.,•, 1~ Pllblith«I by Ill• Qfangt Co.•f P1111llt.11lnt co~nr, Stpt• r11t M iiion' •ott P11b1l•llftl, MOfld1y th,...,_ Frlclly, lor C°'l8 Mt1•, N•wPOrl t .. d ,, H11n!lt19l'On 8 c8'" ~OllnM1n V•llry, L•gvn • te1ch. ft•tnt1S1dd1..ti..01 """ .S•n Clt "'tn!t S•n Jllotn C11>l•l••no Jo. ••ngl1 roolon•I l'dltlon ll P11t:>ll1htd S1lllfd1y1 11'1d $vf'd1y1, TM prll'lcfl)ll1 PIJbllJMng pl•nl !1 11 llll W ... t l!ory S!r1t1, Cotl1 Ml:\•, C1tllo.r"lt, tlO,_. Rob1d N, w ,,d f'tes lOtnt •r.a PublO\hrr J et\: R. Curley Vitt Pfnld.,, •rid G-•I M•n•v•r Thorn•t k11 vil , Ed!lor Thom11 A. Murphint Mtnf9lflll l:dltot" Che rlet H. loo• IUch1rd '· Nall Auls'-! M""llnO Edi ..... l..t•M ..... Offttt 222 For11t Ave1111t Meili11t AJ.ire11! ,,o. ••• •••. 92652 ...... °""" (o,te Mu.ai l1e Wtat 1111}' .'ltrttt •:=a...dl: Jui H..,._., Boult¥v"lf Mvnl '°"&NCI\: 1ms a .. c11 t0\llev1rd Jen ( Ir. JOS N"'11'\ II C•lfllr.o ltHI T .. 1p•rn1 ll14-• '4Mlll---- C.lsal""4 A'"'1fWt M2·1i71 Miew ..... A• hpa1wm: T•l•p• I Al 4t4-t46' C..,,,.._f, 1t72, Clr-11111t (.Nil Puti!hfrl1 .. COlt'IJl9llY. No ,_, trerlell, lf...,.tr11ioM,, •1totlll -tttr oir ,....,...,+.t!Nnll 111r•lll lflfY llt ,..-eduefd Wll!levt ..-ci.I J«• ""'""". ~-t .,.._, l«*'lf c:• ............. I I (tUI Mtwl. ~-""*""""" w c1rrltf a • ..s '-"""! W IMll U.11. "°*"ll"J ll'llllflry *'llM+ ... UM !NlllllY. jeclions with austerity in spending in 1nind ." "The recommendations in this budget provide for continuation of mandatory programs at acceptable levels o t service," Thomas said. "Only in those cases where the availability -0f tiubstan- tial outside funds (federal and state) has been assured have we recommended new or innovative programs." He said the offered budget was $14,4 mlllion below county department 'head re- quests. During the budget hearing s departments which feel they were dealt v•i th too severely \Viii have their day before the board members. Thomas said the estimated carry-over balance from 1971-72 would be around $1 3.5 million ,1,hich contrasts '\'ith n $6 n1lllion ,rplus last year. "The 1 crease is due pr_i marily to a $12 million ross balance 1n 'velfare 11ir propriations resulting in $3 million net lo the county (75 percent of welfare monies :ire provided by the state); $2,5 million from 1he stale in reimbursement or hu~iness inventory tax exemption losses 11'hi ch v.·as paid late. and a balance of at least $2 million in contln~ency fund s \1·hich \1•cre not spent," Thom as ex· pl11ined. 'rhe Ill'\\. figure. barring last minute in- t'feascs by the supervisors during hear· ings. will place the cou11 ty genera.I fu nd t;.-ix: r.,I(' at $1.965 per $100 cif assessed '~l uat ion. bringing the reduction of 1 1.1 cents under the current $2.04 r'1le, highr st in county history. Th e Jou·ered rate means about a $4 .20 rcdurlion in laxes to the owner of a $24.000 home 1Yith an assessed value of $6.000. Thon1as warned board members that this year's tax: reducti on may be short ranRe. "\Ve cannot depend on substantial in· creases in assessed values through economic gro1vth in the lon,g run." tl1t 11d- n1in i!'i trnti ve officer said. "IL jg es:iential that tax reforms be enacted to relieve the property tnx payer from supporting con- stantly increasing programs demanded by the public," !-!(' c:illt'd attention to the 15 lo 30 per· cent annual increases in health . welfare, inedical and Jaw enforcement programs. The new budget include5 $1.9 milHon for completion or the fourth noor of the county's overcrowded main jail. a long delayed e:tpenditure; $1.1 mllHon for the 11ew Prima Desohecha Canyon land!ill :;ite north or San Juan Capistrano: $300,000 for air co nditioning the Orange County r..1edica l Center; the addition of JOI new employes and a $70,000 item for a county lobbyist office In Washington, D.C. The tentative budget Includes several "JlOllC " item• >yllich J he bo•rd ~Ill h•n· are·sepa.ra(ely in budget sessions. lfcadlng the list are completion or design for a new medical center at a cost of $L6 million; $73,271 for the con· trovtnial Orange County Airport Land Use Commission And $85,803 for a dental care program in acbools. Last year supervisors refuud a $82,000 request by the land use commlSflon and gave the agency only $500 for operation during the year. - five months pregnant and is rapidly outgrowing the wardrobe she broughl \1·ith her to Orange County Jail. Mrs. Lebhar, 24, accused with her hus- band of the 1969 murder of a Santa Ana secretary, goes on trial next monUl, ··rry the Christian approach, Mr. Bovee," commented J udge Murray with a beam in the direction of the press box. ··1t rubs me the wrong \\'ay to have anyone suggest that the taxpayers pay for these things so put me down rfght 1101.,. for a $2 contribution." Judge f\1urray 's $2 \viii not be needed . Court reporter Esther Resni ck assured Bovee that she 1\'ill buy materials for Mrs. Lebhar who will then make her own nlaternity wardrobe in the county jail. "That guy just can't win," a deputy commeated. "He orders a flogging and the sheriff stops him, he goes along with the haircutting bit and the guy escapes and now he can't even give his money away." J udge Murray has yet a not her nickname today-"the born loser." Fro1nPa9el FESTIVAL .•. would like "a little more 'now' type music." Business manager BOO Leppert agreed that the taped music wa s "pretty blah" but explained that the eight hour tapes were purchased for $129 each. "The trou· ble is," said Leppert, "you have to take eight hours of Polynesian, or eight hours of country \Vestern and so forth. We turn the tapes off every 15 minute!: so it won 't get too monotonous. He had even taped some of his o'vn records lo break the monotony, Leppert added. Director PaiJl Griem, commented "we're not here to please the artists'. we 're here to please the public, to bring people onto the grounds so they 'll look at the pi ctures a11d buv them I've never head -0f a con1plain"t aboui the . n1usic fron1 a 1nember of the pu blic." The artists have to listen to t he 1nusic ;ill day and evening . Akins ren1inded him. "Well, J ror one am 11ot going to ~land for any hard rock music on these grounds." snapped (;riem. "There's plenty of good contemporary music that isn't hard rock." Akins retorted. "I knew this v:ou\d happen when they got into m usic," murmured the mayor. The question of strolling musicians was referred to the grounds committee and tape matter faded away as the board m-0ved on to view models -0! entries in the contest for a sculpture design for the Festival entry. After a screening vote or 50 entries, \Vhich has been displayed at the art gallery, the board now had to choose from among a dozen design proposals, models of which were carried into the board room. A purchase prize of $1 ,000 will be a1Yarded the winning design for a piece of sculpture to replace the Venus originally placed on the entry pylon. "l don't like any of them,'' commented one director. "Are we obliged to build the design we choose?" There was oo obligation to build it, just to give the prl.t.t, be was assured. As one model after another was eliminated by a show Of hands a clear rift between traditional a n d con- temporary taate was revealed, along wlth acute concern over possibilities or vair dellsm. One dulgn looked too •lllY for kids to cli mb; another had projecting pieces that could be broken off too easily. In the al>Mnce cf directors \Vllliam Martin and David Youna. the seven board members pre,.nl decided to halt tll•lr illnll"iiillOn vO{e Wl>tn · lWO models re- mained and conclude the fttltcUon later. The two finalists, one modern in style, the other tradltlonAI, sparked further controversy aroong dlrectoni of opposing tastea. As the meeting broke up. Goldberg said cheerfully, "after you plck up )'Our sculpture. I hope you'll all come down to the councll and htlp us choo!e our eong " of time \\'atching the bc:iu!y of i13 opera-- lion," h~ quipped. Kosters declined to speculate "·hen the l'hase fl rtstrictions would be lifted but he was optimistic about the t:ontinued ~utcess of the wage-price fre(z.e, "\Vages ha ve gone up at t"•ice the an· 11ua l rate that pricts ha\'e go ne up since the beginning of the Cteeie:," he said. I le denied tl1at consumers ha\'c less money to sJ)('nd as food prices rise. "The average \.\'age earnf'r can ~uy rn ore for ench hour 's \vork si n1.:e 1!1c freeze," cla11ned Koster. "\\'ages ha\'e r isen an :iverage of six percent "'hile pricC:'s ha ve only gone up an <.1vcrage of three percent." lie a('knowledged that the figures he quoted for price increases included the entire spectrum -0! consumer goods and services. Kosters pointed out that the only point at which food prices are not controlled are at the "raw level ," \\-"here the farmer 11ells to a food processer. He said he doubted controls would be ln1posed on fann prices "in the im· 1nediate future but we will continue to study that area for any major changes." Kosters said the 'institution of a Phase I l l (which will be the lifting of economic restraints) depends on the continued suc· cess of Phase IL "J wouldn 't "''ant to guess when that V.'ill be, but "'e are seeing a more vigorous expansion and inflatio n is going down more surely and rapidly," he said. What about higher food prices? "Well, prices a.re i~easing less rapidly. And people have become more sensitive to prices since t he freeze. But it appears we 're begin ning to see some con- trol oft.his cost-push inflation," he said. I sraelis Do\~'n 2 MIGs i11 Aerial Battle Over Sea TEL AVIV (UPI ~ -lsrael and Egypt fought their first air battle in almost two years today. An lsraeli spokesman said two Egyptian MIG21 s were shot down in the dog fight over the r-.-tediterranean Sea, But Egypt. in turn, claimed its planes shot clot.1•n t 11·0 Israeli fi ghters over an Egyptian seaside resort. An announcement said all of the lsraell planes returned safely from the en· counter 25 miles off the northern coast -0f the Sinai Peninsula in international air space. It was the first air battle of the 22· month-old Middle East ceasefire. The previous dog-right occurred July 30, 1970, "'hen Israeli pilots reported shooting down four MIG2ls without a loss over the Suez Canal. The noon battle brought to 114 the num· her of Egyptian aircraft reported downed by Israeli pilots since the 1967 Middle East '\lar. Losses to Isreal in dogfights during that period were put at 17 planes. A military source said the Israel! planes were carrying out a "routine patrol" off Sinai when "those people the Egyptians) ca.me and the battle started. ]t v:as very short." "The Egyptians definitely did not make a lovable sign,'' another source said. He refused to elaborate. The official spokesmens announcement said the two Egyptia11 pilots were seen parachutinJ into the sea. They did not say \\'ho started firing. The spokesmen also did not say how many planes were involved in the dogfight, or disclose other details. Italian pol ice hustled a pretty young E[l-'Pllan off the VCIO whtn it landed. but later said Karima f\1ustafa Amin, 24, was not carrying a bomb oo her ptrson nor was there any suspect material in her flight bag. AJ I passengers \.\'ere ordered off the plane and police began a ~arch of baggage. No bom b \1•as fou11d and authoritie!I said the 1Yarning 11•as a hoax. Co11s ume rs Urae 0 Democrats Take Antitrust Stancl SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Consumer and coMervatlon advocates are deman- ding that the 1972 Democratic national platfonn call for control of the economJc power concentrated in the nation's big· gest corporations. A steady barrage of attacks before a l.S·member Democratic platfonn com- mittee panel Monday urged that the plat· form pledge effective antitrust en· forcement a nd closing of tax loopholes benefiting big business. The panel heard 90 witnesses in a marathon session that ra1 until 11 p.m .. one of a series of grassrool!J hearings across the country developing facts and feelings to guide the national convention's platfonn drafters. "The war to control the abuse or cor· porate power in the United States is being lost mainly because the Ni:zon ad· ministration has made a consc ious decisi on not to vdn it," said San Fran. .:isco Mayor Joseph L. Alioto. Nixon's policies "'have clearly ravored the corporate establishment over the "'orking man," he declared . Frank C. Damrell Jr., Modesto at- tomey and president of the Consumer Federation of California, said: "Jt is no secret that within the last decade the people of this country have grown suspicious or both their govern· ment and the corporate sector. "What the consumer groups of this t•ountry demand is a 'public interest' political party. The Democratic party can be tbat kind of party if it effectively and honestly faces the challenge of the cor· porate sector." Fro111Pa9e l PLANE ••. lhe ground and the plane was rolling ... T thought it was going to roll right into the terminal because I could not get it back on the runwa y," be t aid. McCormick, discussing earlier theories th~t an explo.sion occurred on the plane, said, "To my recollection, I do not remember telling the passengers there had been an explosion. I told them everything was to remain on the plane so ~fficials could Investigate to detennine the possibility of any ei:ploslon." George A. Warde, executive vice presi· dent and general manager ol the airline said in a statement issued at the com: pany's New York headquarters: "A thorough investigation by a com· pany maintenance and e ngineering team assembled at Detroit M et ro po IJ tan Airport has determined that a cargo door in the lower part of the fuselage. below the passenger cabin opened when the airplane was at about 12,000 feet altitude a fter having left Detroit en route. to Buf· falo although signal Jights in the cockpit indirated the cargo door and all other doors were closed and latched normally. WAll lUNGTON iAPl -President Nlz· on, disclosing 301ne cl the fine print of arms curb agreemtnts negotiated with the Soviet Union, urged Cong ress todey to aet ''\l'ithout dt!ay" in approving the ac· cords. A treaty limiting the deployment of an- t1ball\s li c missiles (ABh-t ) to two sites 1n r :1cl1 country wu sent lo the Senate with 11 request for early ra1 ific11t ion. Hot h hotLSl's <Jf Congress were asked to pass a f'P~1hit11111 :1pprovi ng a companion 1·Xl'('l1t1\'1' a)o(r1•1•111\·11t that \\'Ould frttz~ l hl' IOll'll 111n11bt>r of land and sea-based 0Hcns 1v1• bnJJ1s1ic r11iss 1les in the Un ited !-it<iles <ind tl11,: So\ 1ct Union at prt.sent lei cl,, · \\"hile terming the agreements ''an im· portant first s tep in checking the ann.~ 1·acc," Ni . ..-:on told (;(ingress they ·•do not l'l O~~ off all a venues of .strategic com· pet111on," He said it is "essent.ial that we carry for1-1·ard a sound strategic modernization program to maintain our security and to insure that more permanent and com· prehensive arms limitation agreements can be reached." Nixon revealed that the United States feels it \\'Ould have a basis fo r \Vithdra"'· ing fron1 the AB;\1 treaty if tighter curb! on offensive anns are not negotiated \Yilhin five years, Either side can "'ilhdraw on six-month notice. The fine print Nixon sent Co ngres! disclosed that the United States and the Soviet Union remain far apart in con- s idering the question of modern 1ub- marines -Operated by U.S. allie.s in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. The Soviets take the position that should the NATO allies build additional modem subs, over and above those now operational or under construction, "the Soviet Union will have the right to a cor· respondin g increase in the number of its submarines." The United States took the position that it "does not accept the validity of t.he considerations" raised by Moscow regarding submarines belonging to third CC'Untries. An1erican negotiators wanted to rest r i ct land-mobile intercontinental ballistic missile (lCBfo.I) launchers a& part of the agreement on offensive arms but deferred the topic to speed an agree- ment in ti.me for Nixon's summit visit to ~1oscow last month. Ho\vever, the United Slates has served notice it would regard the deployment of such launchers "as inconalltent w1th the objectives" of the exP<'Utlve agreement. The Soviets expressed no view on tbe subject. FromPqel POLICY ••• change matter to be discussed between the board and the Professional Educalon Council in closed meet and confer sessions 'vas first turned down by Thomas, Mrs. Gillette and Linke. Under further pressure from Mt!. Nelson, the board finally agrted to check ,.,.ith the county counsel's office and see if the policy change was a suitable lClpic for meet and confer sessions. Mrs. NelJon noted the executive board of PEC bas voted to oppose the poUcy change in its present form . Sensing that the conservative trio of Thomas, Mrs. Gillette and Linke would not drop the policy change, both Mrs. Boyd and Dr. Browne of re red amendments lo the proposal. Neither waa accepted. Mrs. &yd requested a clause be in- cluded requiring any superintendent to hold a valid teaching credential. Dr. Browne requested a tw~year muimum time period be put on contracts. What's My Line ... YOU WON'T BE FED ANY LINES AT ALDEN'S. WE ARE MORE INTERESTED IN DEVELOPING LOY AL CUSTOMERS THAN MAKING A FAST SALE. NONE OF OUR SALESPEOPLE WILL BOTHER YOU IF YOU JUST WANT TO BROWSE, BUT WILL BE PLEASED TO ASSIST YOU IF YOU WISH, WITH TRUTHFUL ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS. WHEN WE DISCUSS CARPET LINES, WE WOULD HAVE TO "M 0 DEST LY" ADMIT THAT WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTIONS IN THE AREA. TOP BRANDS SUCH AS: 116ELOW, IERVEN, BEA me, MAGEE, MONARCH, BARWICK, MOHAWK, ROXBURY, MILLIKAN, ARMSTRONG • ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia A vt. COSTA MUA 646-4838 7 I 0 • I ~ w v ~ or: ~ ~ I~ •1~ ni1 I wl D of to ni te II Saddleha~k Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL 65, NO. 165, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JUNE 13, 1972 TEN CENTS Plane Blast Laid to Faulty Door, Not Bomb DETROIT (AP) -Investigators said today a malfunctioning cargo door that opened in flight caused a midair incident in which an American Airlines DCIO wa s damaged but managed to make it safely back to Detroit's Metropolitan Airport Monday night. First reports indicated the tail section of the huge lA"i Angeles-to-New York plane might have been ripped by an ex- plosive. But the airline quoted the FBI as saying there was no evidence of an ex- plosive device being involved, The 56 passe.ngers and 11 crew members all escaped setious injury as the jet ran o!f a rw1way during an t!n1ergenry landing. After hours of investigation by FOi agents, 'Vayne County sheriff's uffi l'l'I -. and airline personnel. !he incident 11 ,1~ blamed cin a fault y door \Vhirh opcnl'rl 1n flight. Capt Bryce E. ~1cCorm 1t·k. ve\t>ran pilot or the airliner, said of his in1l1al reaction, "~ly first thought was that there had been a midalr collision." McCormick told an airport news con- (erence that after the blast, he had no rudder cont rol over hls craft, one or J1is !11 ,. engines v.·as oul and he had no left h1t1k•·~ a ~ J1e f!1t1ght lo get the plane b<i<:k 'ri ,\ti 1ru fn•rn \1henc e 1! had t11ken off fur B11ff:i ln :111<1 \Je11• York. ''Thr !iC<Jredest I was \\"hen \'le v.·t>re on tli1' i:;rr•und and !hl· plane v.·as rolling I th!1ugh1 it .,., as going to roll r ight into tile Planning Help Due- council Backs $59,000 for Agency By CANDACE PEAR.~ON ot t1M D•ll'f P'll•I lllff The Irvine City ())uncil 1.1onday night added $59 ,000 to the proposed planning department expenses in the 1972·73 budget, designating most of the extra fun4& for consultant "'ork on the general plan. Jn other sections or the $1.4 million budget, the counc il cut $13,000, of which $2,000 represented a reduclion in the salary of the administrative se rvices director. That salary had been set at $20,000. The other $11 ,000 cut was in temporary employment classifications, which City ritanager William \Voollett, Jr. said were Couples Hooked~ Fishless Lake Prpmpts El Toro Suit Eight Orange County couples who cltim the promise of a well stocked Jake ""' among the offers that led them to in- veet in the El Toro &n!a have sued the dei.relopers for more than $150,000 in " Orange C.Oontf-Superlor Court. ·They want $30,000 each plt.11 an average of $1,500 in special damages for each cou- ple in a lawsuit that names Stanley SWartz Company, Swartz -Linkletter Company. Occidental P 'e tr o I e um Corporation and National Community Builders as defendants. The prime bait, the couples claim , was the promise by the defendants that the lake at Canada and Toledo would be well 1tocked with fish when they were ready to m·ove into the area. Also, the lawsuit states, the couples would have the use of a clubhouse and HCTf.8.tiooal facilities and the lake would be reserved for use by their own boats. The action alleges that the lake is fish!ess, there is no clubhouse and recreational facilities and they have had to rent boats. The eight couples claim the developers told them when contracts were signed in July. 1971, that the Veterans Ad· miRistration Division would provide fi- nancing for the El Toro project. That statement was false. the com- plaint states. It alleges that Veterans administration did not appraise the prop- erty and would not provide the needed financing. Named as plaintiffs in the acUon arc Thomas G. and Bonnie Wahner, Cipriano and Evelyn Torres, Ronald J. and Susan Gardiner , Howard and Nancy Nil kin, Thomas A. and Judith Walc:r.ak. Lawrence C. and Jeanette Black, Edwin and Bobby Ann Hermann and Richard and Phyllis Cottingham. Tustin Board Adopt s New Dress Code; Mustaches 01( Boys in the Tustin Union ftigh Schoo• District can stop worrying about shaving oft their !llmmer-grown mustaches when the J972·73 school year arrives, acrording to a revised dress code adopttd Monday night by district trustees. . Beards are not acceptable and !he riiustaches "may not extend past or ~" the corners of the mouth ." The code, first reviewed by Superin· tendent William Zogg '1 orflce, a student braelis Down 2 MIGs in Aerial Battle Over Sea "TEL AVIV (UPI) -Israel and Egypt fO!Jihl their first air battle In almost two yeara today. An Israeli spokesman said tw0 Egyptian MlG211 were shot down in U,. dogfight over the Medlternnean Sea. Bil Egypt, tn tum, claimed its planes "9t down two Inell tighten over an Ei'Ptian teaide resort. An announr-... -nent 11kt all of the Israeli pllnes returned safely from the en- •tri' 15 miles off tht northern coa!t of ttie Sinai Peninsul• In lntematlonal air a)lfct, "Jt wu the first air battle of the 22- ~d Middle Ea•t ctosellre. The jfrJv10u.o doll·light occumd )uly 30, 11179. ~ lsroell ptlotl reported shooting -~1~ Ml9~• !'lthoul_a_lolS oyer 11'< ain Cano!. 'l'he noon battle broulht to 114 the num- £,f of EiJlpllan aln:raft reported downed by 1 ..... 11 pilots since 1ho 11117 Mlddle ht War. Loa<s to llreal In dolflghts ""'"111 that period ,..,..·put at 17 planes, ·A military 10111''" aid the lsrttll Jtlants W!l'I& ~arrylng out I '1routJne polrol" off Slnol when "tine people the QYptllns) came Md the battle ltarted. II WU very lhort." • "The Egyptians defin itely did not man i> lovable llin." -i..r oource l&ld. lie r.iu.il lo elaborate. 1' I interschool council. teachers and parents, allows musta ches for the fi rst time. The Tustin dist rict includes ti.1issioo Viejo High School and University lUgh School in Irvine. Hairstyles can also be a li ttle longer next year. The new code reads that only hair th.at "extends below the bottom of the back of a dress shirt collar or the top of a T-shirt" is unacceptable. The 1971·72 code had a hair demarca- tion line of the top or the collar of a r egular dress shirt. The difference is about two inches of growth. The girls dress code is basically the same, but the language reflects the times. Instead of -speaking of "dress length,'' 0 sundresses" and "midriff blouses" as In the 1971·72 code, the new rules say "garment" and "any top." The ban on shorts Is gone . The code still carries the kicker that the rules shoutd not be "construed to restrict the right of the administration to Impose more stringent rtquirements upon studentJ who wish to participate In athletic programs." RULES f'OR BOYS Not Acceptable' -Excessive tldtbums. SJdebum& m.ay not extend below the bottom of ·the ear. Hair may not extend below tbe shirt col- lar. -E:rcessive mustaches, or any beards. -Tank tops, sleeveless apparel. -Sloppy appearance. · -"'1J<.ltem. bearln& an Insignia not meeting district guidelines. _..,,.,.,.._ -Bare led. RULES FOR GIRLS Not Acceptableo -Garment revealing tops of atockinp or uodergannenl3. -Gann<nt with low n«k, loW back ,.. llJJlllh<!tl straps. -sheer or midriH blouses or 1ny top tblt reveal the 1bdomen. -Remaining rults are the wne a1 the llnal !oar llated !or boyl. I I needed for spe<.>jal projects or substitu- tions when regular employes are sick. The $13,000 reduction affected two departments. Administrative services "'as cut to $37,950 from $4.3,950 and the ci- ty manager's office was cut to $42,700 from $49,700. Mayor William Fischbach said the $11 ,000 would probably reappear later un- der one non-departmental classification. Councilman Henry Quigley presented his alternate $1.1 million budget incl ud ing a total $300 ,000 of budget cuts. But he then moved to adopt the $59,000 planning department addition proposed by the Planning Commission. increasing its total spending limit to $197,980. The addition, explained by commission chairman Wayne Clark, would be $6,000 for one more clerk-typist, $3,000 for general plan printing and $50.000 for con· sultant fee s in land use planning north and south of the Santa An.a Freeway and in transportation and seismic elements. The vote was 3 to 1 in favor of the ad- dition, with Councilman E. Ray ·Quigley Jr. voting against the motion and Coun~ cilman John Burton absent. 'There was !till some que s t ion, however, whether the council would at another session reduce a proposed $25,000 a year salary for the planning director. How much city employes should be paid was debated throughout the evening with litUe resolve. l!enry Quigley said that the city was "going way over in the salaries suggested. we pay," calling them "fat" compared to the jobs and to private business. r..tayor F ischbach and Councilman Gabrielle Pryor clashed slightly when Henry Quigley next criticized the paying of $20.000 and more to department heads "and the next person in the department makes onl y $9,000 or less.'' ''That 's because they're secretaries, l·lenry," Fisc hbach said. "That's because they're women ," Councilman Pryor answered . She proposed a salary cap of $18,000 for all departments, which could be ex- panded tQ a range of $1 5,000 to $20.000 with council approval for reason. t·ischbach then told the council that if he "had to choose between staffing the city with a bunch of incompetent boobs or maintaining the tax rate. I "·ould opt for the higher tax rate." ColUlcilman Pryor said she didn't equate $18,000 a year salaries with .. in- competent boobs ." Later. during a break, Fischbach told the press he hadn't meant to imply that people earning less than $20,000 a year were 0 boobs." Woollell sald that if the council decides $18,000 is the average, he can "work backwards" and Ulen establish a range with step salary increases. The council said that su ch salary in-- creases and temporary employes possibly could come out of a "salary savings ac- count." Some department personnel, Woollett eiplained, might not actually be hired un-- til A~t or September, although their yearly salaries would be figured from Ju-ly. . The monthly salaries during th.at one or tw~month period could be put in the pro- posed salary "savings account." The city attorney's $50,600 budget, with $36,000 in salaries, $14,000 in litigation fees and $600 in !Upplles, was heavlly criticized. Fischbach, an attorney, said the $3,000 a month retainer fee i! equlv11lent to two weeks work and ques;Uoned whether the city was using that much. Henry Quigley said he didn't think the city would be involved In $14,000 worth o( lltlgallen. Woollett said the Santa Ana an- tl·lnoorporation lawsuit hu cost Irvine more than $18,000. 'lll~ council passed Ray Quigley'• mo- tlon to authorlu: the city managt:r to =.,1111e the rel&lner by the July 1 · and to uk the law firm to sug- 1ell priority acUvllle•. 'Ibe council wW dllcu8s budgets for h u m a n enhancement. envlronment31 pruervatloo, nooolepartmental Item s and the capl\al Improvement program Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the city hall annex of Irvine Town Center. Discussion of the 112.100 clty council budget wu dtftrred until all nve couocU members art present. terminal because I could not get it back on the runway,'' be said. ti.1cCormick, discussing ea rlier theories that an explosion occurred on the plane. said, "To my recollc1:tio11. I do not remember telling the ra~sengi:'~i> th ere h<::d been an explosion. I told them everything was to remain on the plane ~o officials could investigate to detem1ine the possihiljty of any explosion." George A. Warde. exe<:utive vice presi· dent and general manager of the airline, sakt in a statement issurd ,1\ !ht• coni· pany's Ne w York heaclqu[lr lt'I .. "A thorough 1nvest1gat1on llJ ;i ('Olll· pan.v maintenauce .:uid cnglnrt'r1ng tt>an1 assen1b!ed at l)('troit ,\J e I r o po I ! t ti n Airp:irt has detcrrnined thnt a cargo cloor in the lO"'t'I pnrt of the fuselage belO\V the passenger cabin optncd \Yhcn the ai rplane \\'HS al aOOu t 12.000 fet't altitude after having lefl Detroi! en route to Bu f· falo Althou,::h signal lights 1n the cockpit ind icated the cargo door ru1d till utht·r d\")j:>rs \.\'ere closed and latched 11<>rmatly ··Bt"('ause the alrplan(' 1v:is pressurized a tlet·o1npre ssion w11h a lnud sound 1X-: t.·urred. During the 11J~ht. "'c• J1ave 1n· spe,·tl'd the cargo con1partrnents of all our DCJOs and have found tllern to llf' func tioning properly. AnH't'icnn Alrltne!I and i\ll'Donnell Douglass. n1unuf;1cturer!I uf tile DC IO, are conducting a thorough 1111·vsti,io:ntion to determine what causC'd the malfunction of the door on Ftil{ht 96. "!'hr National 'I'ransportntion Safet y J\11:ird also is investigaling the incident." MYSTERY INCIDENT -An artist's drawing ol an American Airlines jetliner pinpoints the rear area of the DC-10 where something opened a baggage compartment door of the jetliner shortly after it left Detroi t. A coffin being shipped to Ne\v York, toppled out of the hole and fell 12,000 feet, landing beside a hon1e in Ontario. The pilot made an cn1cr· gency landing at 11etropolitan Airporl. Coffin Plunges From Sky; Lands Near Farm Yard County Man Passenger On Bizarre Jet Flight WINDSOR, Ont. (AP) -Sante Facca was working in his flo wer bed at the front of his farmhouse when a ·metal coffin dropped out of the sky and landed about 200 feet away. .!\'ext he saw a flash of metal - it turned out "to be a airplaJte door-hitting the ground. Facca walked over to tbe oli ve-green metal box and saw two legs !licking out. lie said later he thought it was a dummy and poked it with a stick. That was when he realized it was a human body and called Ontario provincial police. Today. investigators from four agencies were searching neighboring Sandwich South Tow.nshil-o for further wreckage from an Amer ican Airlines DCIO that had a doo r ripped off by a malfunction. "F'irs t lhing I heard was them (the cof- fin and baggage door) splitting apart." said Facca, 63. One end of the coffin was buried tight inches into the ground. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Df lttt o.ur ,.,..., si." Durwood Anderson didn't hear the decompression blast that nearly dumped him and 66 others into the dusk sky and eternity at 12,000 feet over Wayne· Coun- ty, Mich., Monday night.. His ear1 were plugged up. Anderson, 42, of 13132 Laburnum Drive, Tustin,. and his executive traveli ng com- panion were amon g 10 persons Injured, howe ver, du ring the bizarre lnfl ight in· cident. 11e suffered a dislocated finger and leg abrasions wh ile esca ping down an evacuation chute after American Airlines flight 96 miraculousl y made it back to Detro.it. investiga tors at flrsl believed a saboteur's bomb exploded In a baggage compartment -sucking a coffin con- taining a body -and other cargo out a gaping hole ln the big jetliner. Investigators ha ve ruled out this Irvine-Mesa Police l tan to Be Considered By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Oii ... ~ ............ The city of Irvine may have its own police force by July I but it will be staffed by officers from Costa Mesa, A proposal to provide Irvine residents with police protection through a $345,000 per year inter<ity contract is bdng viewed favorably by Costa Mesa city councilmen who mJy give their approval thl~ week. The rubject wa1 raised Monday night during a budget ltudy aesston of the C<>sla Mesa City CouncU. Although the appraisal of the propolled contract was positive, no actlon was taken. Already approved by Irvine, the pro- posal i• likely to be endoried by the Co.!la Mesa councll during a special session scheduled for C:-30 p.m. Thunday. "We're baaloally all In lavor qt II and bell•• II'• the right thing lo do," com- mented Councilman Alvin Pinkley this momlng, "We'r~ a!•d l"!J. .aoked. U. In preference to anytiOOy-elle." - A "Yes" vote by Costa Mw coun· Lights May Stay On SACRAMENTO (AP ) - A bill on the governor's deli: today would require motorcyc~ headlights to tum on automatically when lhe engine is 1torted, The blll passed till> Auemb\Y SU M°"" day. It -l!Te lllotoreyCllats until Jan. 1, lrli, lo -pq. cllmen Tburaday nlgllt could mean that Irvine would hive Us own 10.--man aquad by Jwy t. On that day the Oranse County Sheriff 's Office will termlnete its service to Irvine. Councilman Ptnklty said that Costa Mesa Police Chief Rogtr Neth pictured the contract '• mutualJy btnefkial &Ince c.oata Mesa could draw on tbe 10 men as rt:tenes dwiDg 111 emergency. Under tho proposal. Irvine 1lrtetr would be patrolled on a 24-bour bosi• by tW. police •cato. Helicopter patrol may u!Hmatrly allo be Included In the bargain but the Irvine coun<ll lllU appem dlvtd· ed Oft• {hat IUbject. Local identity of the police otncors .. m be malnt11n<d through ,..,...., lnlne Pollce shoulder patches and 1Uci:.an einbiem1 ori the black-and-white can, PinkJey sakt . . ''!be p!'OpoRd •gretment betritn the two cltJ .. wu not reflected 11 the •tu mQI~ budll'I requested• by <loola -· City Manager Fred SOruabal !or the lf72..72 f.llcal year. ·Included In the budget •re requests hr sis additional police olfi<•rs lo help curtall the local crimt rate. Approv al of 1h'.e Costa Mua•lrvlne ~ntract means thal C.osta Mtsa would have to hire acf.. dltlonal officers end lease mori patrol cart. The budget ltsell wu dlscuued without controvttay Monday Nght 1nd I.I ti· peeled 1A1 be passed u printed 'l'hunda1 nighl • 1 theory, saying the loud thump, bump and prolonged whooshing noise resulted from ins tant decompression due to opening of a faulty compartment door. lfurtling earth ward like 1 bomb, the silver-colOred steel coflin slammed to earth, narrowly missing a farm home, followed by the fluttering airplane door. Somehow, a brush with eternity seems less terrifying in retrospect when it is ac- cidental instead of sinister and deliberate as in the case or a bombing. First told this mornJng of the cargo door malfunction now bl&:med, Mn. Doril Anderson expressed relief. "f"d prefer that rather than to ha ve had a bomb on board." she said. Details of the crisis at 12.000 feet and the cool command ma intained by 23-year· old pilot Capt. B. E. McCormick. until he stepped out onto the runway were sketchy to Mrs. Anderson. The lnci~ent may ha ve become ha:zy to Capt. McCormick, who could only Stand beside the plane murmuring; "Juus Christ ... Jesus Chrl!t ... " "Jt'11 kind of muddled In my mind,'' Mrs. Anderson said this morning. "I'm sure it was quite frightening.'' "My husband is fine,'' 11he added. "He called from Wayne County General Hrui:pltal and then again when he checked into 1 motel." Anderson and 1h11 traveling companion. WU11Am Hefferman, It, or the San Fernando Valley were m.route to...BuC· falo, N.Y. and Connecticut on a buaineu trip, Mrs. Anderson aald, ....... 1fe•t•1r Low cloudl ad !or Uoni lhl.- coast will take cndlt !w allgbtly cooler temperaturtt In 0r..,. County Wedlleadq. flilbo ~ lo be around 70 al 'the beac!J. 12 Inland. Low. In the ~·.: ~smt:TODAY A Nabnuko M""J"IPOI' ,.._ ports tlla:' c~ ~iilf'W _ c:iptrl. ments were conaMcted '" 1ktt1 obovt Rapid 1dit11, is:o., a .short timt Wf<m dmllloHog floods. s .. •torv. l'OQf •• -.. ............ 11 --. 0...C..... II --" ....,. , .. ,, --.,.... •tt -" --" -. ....,......_,,.. .. --. I I' r ' • ;.:::D:Al:l:::Y:P:ll=O~T ===JS~:::::::::::::::;-r'--"-' "'""· _1 ... _.;.13.;. • .;;.Im __ Jobless Cut~ BOAC Fliglt.t Bomb Hoax ROME (UPll -A BOAC Oigbt IND Calro to Umdoo m&de an -ncy landing ti.re 1od<y when Egyptian :iuthorlties \Yarntd the Cllpta1n 1/11·rt 1night bt· <1 worn 3 n nbo11rtl v.i\11 a bomb ltTapptid to her v.·alst. Italian pohce hustlrd a pretty young Egyptian uff the VCJO \1 hen It landed, but tattr said Karima Mustafa Amin , 24, v.'as not carrying a bomb <Jn her person nor '"ns lhcre any suspect maierial ln her fllihl bag. All pas.sengtN "'ere ordered off the plane and pollce bt:gan a search of baggage. No bomh \\'ilS found and authorities said 1he 1varning was a hoax. Reds Attack Viet Refugees Fleeing An Loe AN LOC (UPI) -Communist troops opened fir e today on a ragged column of 1,000 refugees neeing the provincial capital of An Loe and kiUed 12 civilians and wounded 30, field reports said. Newsmen who reached the scene shortly after the attack said the Com· munist1 fired a barrage of mortars onto Jfighway 13 whlle lhe refugees were trying to flee from An Loe, 60 miles north of Saigon. A goverrunent relief force broke through to An Loe :h-1onday, and refugees \1·ho had been livlng there during the siege began 1treaming southward. They had escaped death by living in urr derground shelters while thousands of rounds of shells crashed overhead. The reports said the refugees -mainly old men, women and children -ran down the highway as the mortars screamed into them and the chlillks of shrapnel flew through the air. One old woman, shrapnel cuts across her body, died in the arms of her young granddaughter, the reports said. They said a young boy, hit by shrapnel In the head, was cradled in the arms of his parents while a South Vietnamese medic tried to stop the bleeding. One refugef trying to patch up the bteedlng leg of his young son said the refugees left An Loe early in the mornin g after local governn1ent officials said Highway 13 appeared safe. He said Communlst troops stopped the refugees about halfway between An Loe and Chon Thanh, 15 miles to the south . He said South Vietnamese jets began flying nverhead as the fleeing refugees \\'ere stopped along the highway. He said the Communists were ap- parently frightened by the planes and opened fi re on the refugees, shooting some in the beak as they ran. At An Loe, Communi.!lt forces stub- bornly fought the South Vietnamese troops who closed in on the long besieged city and kept Highway 13 from belng opened as a relief road into the nearly leveled provincial capital . ~tilitary sources said re!cue helicopters '~'ere able to land occasionally to take out the 1,200 wounded troops and civilians in the city but that shellfire made such mercy operations hazardous. Bodies of Man, So11, 5, in Lake BIG BEAR CITY (AP) -The bodies of 11 34·year-old Lakewood man and his 5- year-o ld son were found floating in Big Bear L11ke nine days after they were reported missing. A fisherman saw the body of Michael Schiffler about 200 yards off the north shore Monday afternoon. I-le called :iuthorities. who later discovered the body of Michael's father. Richard L. Schifner. about 300 yards away. OU.NII COAST " DAILY PILOT TM Or•no• CO.JI DAILY ~ILOT. Wlll'I <fllhk lr. Ii <Ombl"ld fh• Ht,.1·,-r~a. II PUOll!lh-1 bl' lh• O••no• C0111t Put11!"'1l110 compa11v, Sipe. flllt edl!iori. ••t PVbll•fl«I, MOfldl y tllrWlll'I frlclar. HK CO•!• Mlt•, NtWl>Of"I ltclCl'I. H11nt1rtt'9!! ••~tt./FOIJl'ltlin V•t'-v. 1 •cwn.t IMCll, lf'\lf/lf1$1"cllt~(k •~d $111 (t.m.nl1/ S." JVl fl C•Pi•l•lllO. A. ~i"Olt rt0lo,_.! 9'dlllon it 1>t1ttUthed S.!11r111yJ 1"11 $\lncl~)'I. fl>e ptlMi~I pullll1lll11t pl1nl ;, It )J(I Wt1I lhV lr,...i, Co.!1 MeM, C1ttlornl1, tl6,f. ll:obtrl N. W11d Pr .. ia..n1 •ncl ,.U'llll.t11r J•<k R. C11rl1.., Yin Prnldf'fl• Ind G-••I Mtlll>~·· lhe11111 Kt•vil 1<1111« lhoM1 t A. Murphiri• M-tllll l!Ollor Ch1,l11 H. Looi Rid11til P. Ni ll Aul111111 Ml,...lng Edllor• Offkn C:otla Mft1: 3)0 Witt 8•Y S!r..,1 HIWP9ft Sikh' »U Ntwporl lloulilv1rc1 l. .. -8MCll: m ,_, A,,_ Hlntlr!ei... ael'(ll: H•1s 8tkh lovltYt•d .... ci-1.i .JU Horth El C..mlM. ltffl TO!.,._ 1714) '4Mlll C5-HW AbMlll .. 641·1671 1n ca. ..... •• t.,•,,..-.: t ......... 4t2'44JO C..,...lottl, 1t12. ~ (ot1t ".-rllllfrlt C-..nf. Ne Mwt '*'*"• tltvstr1tlof'l1, ....,.., rNllltl" .. -'"""~'"'"'' -·In '11t1 Ill ~9' WlfflWI Mlltllfl lllf" ,....... • CWtfWll _,, ._..., cleu -. Hit 11 Colt• .-v. c.flfenl{t . "*"''"'""' " nrrlllr n.u 1Mfd911YJ "' Mtll ..,.,. "*'lhh't mlll!MV ............. ,,.,,.1.,. Cost Oflicial Optimistic By JOANNE REVNOLDl!I CH ttM o.lb' PllJll li.fll Advilo<1 and tben u head ol plann!Dg ">r Phate II. "Thtrt'1 no qutaUon but l hat unemployment will be comin1 down b~ the ..-nd (}f !hf' year and be coming down very rapidly." "Hawlnf delllDod it, I DOW rpood I lot of Ume watcbiog I.he beauty of Ill opua- llon,'1 he quippEd. Kosters declined to speculate "'hen the Phase fl restrictions would be Hfted but he was optimistic about the continued .success nf the wage·price freeze . That's the forecast of Marvin H. Kosters, Assi~tllnt directo_r of planning and analy~is for Ptcsident Nixon's Cost or Living Council. "\\'ages have gone up at twice the an- nual rate that prices have gone up since the beginning of the freeze," he said. Kosters Y!'&s in An:thelni today to speak to a metling of the NationaJ A.!!IOCiation of Plunlblng, Jleattng and Cooling Con· tractors. Jn an lnlervie>lf \\'ilh the DAIL)' PJLOT. Kosters SiJid the recovery of the economy "look! healthy <ind strong." 1',orrnerly an economist \\•lth the Rand Corporation in Santa h-fonica, Koste.rs. a Hepublican. has spent the last three years in \Vashington as senior staff economist wit h the Council of Economic B52s , Figliters Raid North With N e·w Protectio1i SAIGON (UPll -U.S. 852s, taking ad- vantage of new electronic developments that protects them agaimt mlssile1 bombed targets in North Vietnam today for the sixth consecutive day. Fighter·bombers, meanwhile, h i t bridges 25 miles from China de!iplte Pt" king warnings the raids threaten China's security. The Pentagon said the &ls, confined mostly to South Vietnam in the past because of the missile threats, are boml> ing the north on an almost dally basis. The United States has increased the num· her of B52s in Southeast Asia fourfold since the start of the Communist of- fensive on March 30. Pentagon sources said the B52s are being acC-Ompanied with special planes equipped with electronic countenneasure gear capable of jamming the radar guidance system of the Soviet·made surface·t~air missiles (SA Ms ). The B52s on rare occasions have struck near the Hanoi·Haiphong area but most of the current raids are still jusl north of the Demilitarized Z.One and directed against Communist .supplies. U .S, mllltary spokesmen reported jets from the aircraft carrier Midway blew up a huge oil storage complex near the port of Vlnh, filling the sky "·ith black 8moke and flashes of orange flames . Air Force F4 Phantoms carried out the raids near China. The U.S. command said the F4s knock- ed out t"'O railroad bridges and tracks running between them on the railway leading northeastward from lfanoi to the China border -previously the principal overland route for supplies from China. The comntand said one bridge was hit near Thanh ~1oi, 60 miles northeast 0£ Jtanoi and 25 miles from China's Kwangsi l)rovin ce. The ()!her bridge was near Lang Dang, 55 miles northeast of •lanoi and 30 miles from the border. Neither had been hit previously. Only a few hours earlier. the Chinese Foreign Ministry issued a formal state· ment which sa!d such attacks threaten ''the security of China." It said the United States steadily expanded the ~phere of bombing up to area11 "quite close to the Sin~Vietnamese borders." He denied that consumers have leu money to spend as food prices rise. "The avtrage wage earner can buy n1ore for each hour 's "'·ork since the freeze." claimed Kosttr. "\\'ages have risen an average of six percent while prices have only gone up an a\'erage of three percent." lie acknowledged that the figures he quoted for price increases included the entlre spectrum ol consumer goods and services. Kosters pointed out that the only point at which food prices are not controlled are at the "raw 1evel." where the farmer sells to a food processer. He said he doubted controls would be Imposed on farm prices "in the im· ntediate future but 1,1,·e will continue to 1tudy that area for any major changes." Kosters said the institution of a Phase Ill (which will be the lifting of economic restraJnU) depends on the continued suc· cess of Phase IL "I wouJdn't want lo guess when that wlll be, but we are seeing a more vigorous expansion and infiation is going down mo re surely and rapidly ," he said. What about higher food prices? ''Well, prices are i11creasing less rapidly. And people have beCCJme more sensitive to prices since the freeze . But it appears we're beginning to see some con· trot of this cost·push inflation," he said. Work Completed On $17.6 Billion Welfare Measure WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate Finance Committee completed work to. day on a $1 7.6-billion measure containing the greatest expansions of Social Security and welfare in history. The bill would raise Social Security benefits 10 percent for 27.8 million reci· pients, imposed strong new ~'ork rt-· quirements on many welfare recipients and make many ch11nges in the l\1edicare and Medicaid health programs. \\'inding up ti months of consideration o( the monumental bill, the panel adopted new Social Security payroll tax schedules raising the levies !or the 96 million Americaru: who pay them. The new schedules would mean a tax hike of $113.40 next year, as compared with 1972, for per11ons earning $10,200 or more in 1973. Chairman Russell B. Long (0-La.), reported that his panel finished work on the measure but did not take the final vote, ordering it to the Senate noor for de ba te . This will come after the members have had a chance to take a look at the final draft of the legisll1t!on, he said . Leng said it would be impossible to start the floor debate until after the Senate resumes \\'Ork following the Democratic National Conventlon ,1,.hich meets July to in lltlami Beach. County Budget Includes Cut in Property Taxes By JACK BROBACK 01 !h• 01111 ,-1i.1 1111! Or:ingc County ~upcrvisOr~ today adop!ed a tentative 1972·73 budget calting for a 7.5-ccn t reduction in the property tnx rate. Final budget hcnrings 1vhich \Viii dctennine the exact rate \\'ill begin July 12. TI1e nev.1 budget calls for expenditu re of $243.2 million in general funds, up ~.I per· cent over the current spending program but an anticipat ed 10 percent increase in assessed valuation will allow the tax cut. County Administrative Officer, Robtrt Thomas. in presenting the proP<>fied budget, told supervisors that although the pla.n c•lls for an increue of 5.1 ptt· cent, or $1 1 million. over the current yC>ar. he said It contrasted sharply with lhe 16.4 percent and 15.8 percent jumps for the two previous years. The 5.1 percent represents the lowest percentage increase since 1960-31 when a J.9 percent jump was called for. Thomas cautioned that the bud~et doe s no. allow for increases In salaries and fringe benefits for the county's 8,000.plus employes. Board Chainnan Ronald C81pers of Newport Beach added that, "We're close t() salary negotiations and an anticipated 5 percent pay Increase will not cause a jump in the tax rate." Caspers compllmented 11w>mu and hia Budget Director Tom Corbin on presen· ling "• good budget based on ltrgtt pr .. jectlons with awterlty In 1pt11dlng In mind.'' "The reoommendaUons In thla budget provide for c:ooUnU1Uon of mandatory programs at acceptable levels of 1ervlce," Thomas said. '40nly tn tb>M c11e1 where the avatlabWty ol tub1tan- tlll ouLllde lundl (federal and state) bl• bten &11ured hive we rtcommended new er tnnovatlve programs." ' v Ht said the offered budget was $14.4 million below county department !head re-- quests. During the budget hearings departments which fee l lhey were dealt with too severely will have their day before the board members. Thomas said the estimated carry-over balance from 1971·71 would be around $13.S million which contrasts with a ~ mi llion surplus last year. "The increase is due primarily to a $12 1nillion gross balance in welfare ap- propriations resulting in $3 million net to the county (75 percent of welfare monies are provided by the state); $2.5 million from the state Jn reimbursement of buslneas inventory tax exemption losses which was paid late, and a balance of at least $2 million in contingency funds \\'hlch were not spent," ntomas tK· plained. Tbe ntw figure, ba.rring last minute in· creases by the supervisors during hear· ing1, will place the county aeneral !und tax r11te 11t $l.NS pr •100 of autlStd valuatiOn, brlnglng lll~ rtducUon of 7\) cents under the current $2.04 rate, hlghOlt In county hlolory. The lowered rate means about a $4.20 reduction ln taxes to the owner of a $24,000 home with an asHSnd value of fe,000 . Thom11 warned bolNI memben that tbi1 year's lax reduction may be short range. "We cannot depend on substantial In· creaaes in a11essed values through econonllc arowth. In the Joni run," the ad· mJniltrative officer Wet "ll ii essential th.It tu refomu be enacted to relieve the proptrty t11 poyer rrom suJ>PC>11ll>c con- atantly incre .. lng p<Olrlllll demanded by tht pt1bllc." Ht called atW>Uon to tile 15.14 30 per- eent annual lncreue1 1n health. welfare, medical and law eolorc:emoot _...,,.. Her llonf>r Jn Paris, where the phrase "chcrchez la femme'' origin- ated. Parisians found the wom- an they 'vere looking for - Nicole de HautecJocque. She 'vas elected the first woman n1ayor of PariS. President: Act Witl1out Delay On Arms Accord WASHINGTON I AP I -President Nix· on. disclosing son1e or the fine print o( arms curb agreements negotiated with the Soviet Union. urged Congress today to act "w ithout delay" in approving the ac:· CDrds. A treaty limiting the deployment of an- tiba\listic missiJes ( AB'.\1 ) to two sites in each country was sent to the Senate with a request for early ratiricalion. Both houses of Congress were asked to pass a resolulion approving a companion executive agreement that v.;ould fr eeze the total number of land and sea-based offensive ballistic missiles in the United States and the Soviet Union at present levels. \Vhile terming the .lgreements "an i1n- pOrtant first step in checking the arm s race," Nixon told Congress they "do not close off all avenues of strategic com- petition.'' He said il is "essential that we carry forn·ard a sound strategic modernization program to maintain our security and to insure that more permanent and com· prehensive arms limitation agreements can be reached." Nixon revealed that the United States feel s it would have a basis for withdraw- ing fro1n the ABM treaty if tighter curbs on offensive arms are not negotiated \vithin five years. Either side can \vi thdraw on six-month J]Qtice. The fine print Nixon sent O:lngress disclosed thnt the United States and the Soviet Union remain far apart in con- sidering the question of modern sutr- marines operated by U.S. allies in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. The Soviets take the position thnt should the NATO allies build additional modem subs. over and above those now operational or under construction. "the Soviet Union will have the right to a cor- rf'sponding increase in the T1umber of its submarines .'' The United States toek the position that it "does not accept the valid ity of the considerations'' ralsed by Moscow regarding submarines belonging to third CC'untries. Ameri can negotiators wanted to res tr i c t land-mobile intercontinental ba llistic missile (ICBM) launchers as part of the agreement on offensive anns but deferred the topic to speed an agree· ment in time for Nixon's summit vlsit to Moscow last month. , P en1aits Considered Proposal Would Limit Stations Jr\'iue city councthnen toni ght will con· sider a rcconunendation that the city control gasoline station building by means -0f conditional use perrnits. Since the end or the building Ireeze, May 28, Irvine has regu lated service sta· tions by means of a conditional uae permit. That device v.·as cn,ployed as an urgcn· cy n1easure to allow mOrl' time to prepare a permanent ordinance. The pern1anent law "'as 10 be based on a seven·page suggested draft prepartd over a period of a month by city staff and council members of the city's service sta. lion committee. Councilmen will consider a recom- rnendation by assistant city attorney flrentice A. Fish during their meeting at 7:30 o'clock tonight in city hall annex, Irvine Town Ctnfer, 4201 Campus Drive. Fish suggests that councilmen adopt as city policy the committee's suggested se\'en-page requirements covering such il cins :is signing, screening and lot coverage. By requiring approval of a CCJnditional use permit, the city could then measure a proposed gas station against the design policy, prlor to issuing the permit Fish ~id. • In the event a proposed service stalion n1eets al! the pol!cy requirements and still is objectionable, the permit still might be denied. Fish suggests that if the seven.page committee recommendation \Vere enacted as the. law governing service station design -without the con· ilitlonal u.e permit. ntecbanism -some objectiona bl e stations might nece!Stn·il y iutvc to be approved. Adoption of the ordinance requiriq U&e pe_rmlts would appear to end months ol con cern on the part ol councilmen and planning commissioner~ over t h e pcssibility some parcels in the city no\v zoned lo allow gas stations might yield gas stations ''jUSI like those found anywhere in Amerlca." Other cities along the Orange Coast similarly require conditional use permits prior to building service stations . Newport Beach is one example ol a city that regulate.a: gas stations this \vay. Other matters facing Irvine councilmen tonight include : -The University Park planned com· munity zone changes that add two school sites and three public parks while lower· Ing the density of the 9~acre ultimate village. The rezoning was questioned by planning commissioners who attached four llt'\V conditions the counci l y.rill r evie\V. -Consi deration of the Design Review Board recommendation on the stamped concrete iinitatlon tUe plaMed by the Irvlne Con1pany as part of the entry st reetscape at Moulton Parkway and Yale Avenue in \Y alnut Village. -Receipt of ihe arts and culture ad - visory committee recon1mend ations on the location of a future county library system branch in Irvine. Pregnant Prisoner Gets Off er of Aid-From Judge Judge \Villian1 !lturray. the Orange County Superior Court judge who has hit the. headlines for rulings that include ordering a flogging, is at it again. 1-fe became kno"·n as "Captain Bligh" and "Bill the Barber" for two of his 500 Men Fight Sequoia Blaze; 220 Acres Gone PORTER\1ILLE (AP) -Fire officials said today they hoped t.o have a stubborn brush and timber fire in an isolated area of the Sequoia National Forest contained by tonight. The fire burned over 220 acres and is being fought by nearly 500 men. Forest Service spokesman Ste"f: Beck said it was hoped the fire would be c<m-- tained today but that regional weather forecasts have predicted tem~ratures 10 degrees hotter than Monday's 80-plus \veather. Lower humidity levels and th e posslbi llty of isolated thunderstorms - and their resultant errat.ic winds -are also of concern lo the firefighters, Beck said. At nightfall h1onday, fire fighter s were att t!mpting to complete thf' remaining ZS percent of a fire line around the (X'rimeter of the blaze, Beck sajd. Erupting shortly before noon Sunday, the fire has swept across some 270 acres of valua ble watershed near the tiny !og· ging community of Johnsondale, about 30 miles east of Porterville. No injuries have been reported. Cause of the fire is believed to have been a neglected campfire, Beck said. previous court rulings. Courtroom personnel added ''good Samaritan" to the list ~tonday after Judge Murray offered to chip in $2 to a fund that will buy clothes for a pregnant prisoner. t-.1urray made the offer immediately after Deputy Public Defender John Bovee pointed out that Mrs . 1'heresa Lebhar i!I five months pregnant and is rapidly outgrowing the wardrobe she brought 'rilh her to Orange County Jail. t-.lrs. Lebhar, 24, accused with her hus- band of the 1969 murder or a Santa Ana secretary, goes on trial next month. "Try the Christian approach, Mr. Bovee ," commented Judge Murray with a beam in !he direction of the pres.s box. "It rubs rr:e the wrong way to have anyone suggest that the taxpayers p~y for these things so put me down right now for a $2 contribution." Judge Murray's $2 wll l not be needed. Court reporter Esther Resnick as aured Bovee that she will buy materials for Mrs. Lebhar who will then make her own maternity wardrobe in the couaty jail. "That guy just can't \\'in." a deputy commented. "He orders a flogging and 'the sheriff stops him , he goes along with the haircutting bit and the guy escapes and now he can't even give his money away ." J udge l'olurray has yet an o the r nickname today-''the born loser." Book Critic Dies BOON\/ILLE , N.Y. (AP ) -CriUc Ed· mund \Vilson. a leadlng figure on the American literary scene for the paat half a century, died Monday of a heart attack. What's My Line ... ' YOU WON'T BE FED ANY LINES AT ALDEN'S. WE ARE MORE INTERESTED IN DEVELOPING LOY AL CUSTOMERS THAN MAKING A FAST SALE. NONE OF OUR SALESPEOPLE WILL BOTHER YOU IF YOU JUST WANT TO BROWSE, BUT WILL BE PLEASED TO ASSIST YOU IF YOU WISH, WITH TRUTHFUL ANS\l'"~S TO YOUR QUESTIONS. WHEN WE DISCUSS CARPET LINES, WE WOULD HAVE TO "MODESTLY" AD~T THAT WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTIONS IN THE ~- TOP BRANDS SUCH AS: BIGELOW, SERVEN, BEAmE, MAGEE, MONARCH, BARWICK, MOHAWK, ROXBURY, MILLIKAN, ARMSTRONG. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 l'lacentla Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 '· I I I I I I ' ~ • u ' -i Ii b I Ni ' :B I~ ye (W th Bu s Eg pl• co the sp 1 mo pr wh do1 Su ti. by Ea d pl• . II! on, a the act oor A Ii .. ci ··~ P<• ~~ ~ t clo• ~ ':< I s ~· ~:N ..., tng on wil Huntington Bea~h Fo11ntain Valley VOL. 65 , NO. 165 , 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • . .._ -- Today's Final N.Y.'Steeb TUESDAY, JUNE 13 , 1972 TEN CENTS Hun·tington Budget Hearing Lasts Four Hours By TERR Y COVILLE Of Ille O.ltr ~1 .. 1 i111l City officials expected the J!untington Seach budget bearing to end less than 1wo hours after 11 began . Instead, it stretched for nearly four hours Monday night as Planning Com- missioner JI.tare Porter took one hour himself to complain about Increased i;alary costs reflected in the budget. Porter's chief complaint was that many of the automatic (step) increases added up to more than 10 percent. "The salaries of city e1nployes in- Compromise creased ts pereent over the past two years. My own compaay froz.e salaries tlne year. then gave a three cent increase the next," Porter, an executive with a <..'Omputer firm , said. "This "'hole thing is incons istent with what happens in the outside world." Despite Porter's attack on sa laries. councilmen gave unanimous approval to the $19,284,974 budget ror fisca l 1972-73, That figure includes: -$14.201,512 for the general fund . -$42.640 for the redemption of the 1955 \\iater bonds. -$4-0,000 for the capi tal outlay fund. 4-cent Oil Tax Given Approval A lou r-cent per barrel oil tax was ap- proved by •funtington .Beach councilmen !IIonday night in a 5 to 2 vote. The four cents was a compromise figure reached afte r councilmen defeated by a 4 to 3 vote a proposal lo raise the oil ta.1 (currently 2.5 cents ) to five cents. Israelis Down 2 MIGs in Aerial Battle Over Sea TEL AVIV <UPI) -Israel and Egypt rought their first air battle in almost two years today. An Israeli spokesman said lwo Egyptian MIG21s were shot down in the dogfight over the Mediterranean Sea. But Egypt, in turn, claimed its planes shot down ty:o Israeli fighters over an Egyp tian seaside resort. An announcemen t said all or the lsraell planes returned safely from the en· counter 25 miles off the northern coast of lhe Sinai Peninsula in international air space. JI was the first air battle of !ht 22· month-old l-.Hddle East ceasefire. The previous dog -Ug ht occurred ,July 30 . 1970, '"'hen Israeli pilots reported shooting down four MIG2Js \Vllhout a loss over the Suez Canal. The noon battle brought to 114 the nu1n· ber or Egyptian aircraft reported downed by Israeli pilots since the 1967 l\1iddle East War. Losses to Isreal in dogfights during that period were put at 17 planes. A military source said the Israel! planes were carrying out a "routine (Ste !\UGs, Page !) Councilmen l-Ienry Duke, D o n a I d Shipley and Norma Gibbs fought for the higher tax but lost \Vhen the proposal was lowered to four cents, Councilmen Jerry r-.tatney and Jack Green joined the other three in supporting it. The two holdoulS were Mayor Al Coen and Ted Bartlett, who both refused to su pport anything above 3.5 cents per bar· reL They said 3.S cents is all that is need· ed for the budget. A half-penny per barrel will raise about $83.150 according to city offi cia ls. That and any other excess mooey raised by the oil tax was -earmarked for a SfX!cial fund which can only be spent with specific city council approval. All seven councilmen supported tho special fund idea proposed by r-.tatney. Duke and Gibbs both said they want to see such excess funds spent for park ac· quisition, especially in the third phase of the Huntington Beach central park, Spokesmen for the oil industry argued that a higher oil tax Yias not needed, because the city was underestimating the amount of oil now produced by the major companies. "We aie now producing 45,000 barrels per day and our annual output should be 16 million Darrels." Bill Woods of SignaJ Oil Co. tol d the council. He estimated. that combined "'i lh the operations or other major producers, lhe annual oil field oulpul should be 21.5 million barrels. Woods said the increased producti on comes from a new water rlushing system which helps the con1panics pump oil fa ster. The city finance department estimared ;i 16.6 mill ion barrel production for 1972· 73. which would raise $665,200 under a l See TAXES, Page Z I Nixon Tells Arm s Treaty Details, Urges Approval withdraw on six-month notice. TI1e fine print Nixon .sent Congress disclosed that the United Stales and the WASffiNGTON (AP ) -President Nix- on, disclosing so me of the fine print of arms curb agreemenls negotiated with the Soviet Union, urged Congre!S tod ay to act ''without delay" in approving the ac· Soviet Union remain far apart tn con· cords. sidering the question of modern sub- A treaty 1imiting the deployment of an· matines operated by U.S. allies in the tlballlstic missiles (ABM ) to two sites in North AUantic Treaty Org.aniT.ation. eecb country was sent to U>e Sena te with The Soviets take the position that a.request for early ratification. should the NATO allies build additional Both houses of Congress were asked to mbdem subs, over and above those now PISS a resoluUon approving a com1>3nion operational or under co11.1tn.1ctlon, "the ej'ecutive agreement that would freeie Soviet Union will have the right to a cor- tbe tot.al number of land and sea-based respanding increase in the number of Its offensive ballistic missiles 1n the United .submarines." Slates IDd the Soviel Union at present Tile Unll«I Stai.s toot the position that IOYels. It "does not accept the valid ity of the While termiDg \he agreements "an Im· considerations" raised by Mo 1 cow portant first step in chec.kmg the arms regarding submarines belonging to third race," Nixon told Conkrw they "do not C<'Untrles. cloae off all avenues of strateglc com-American negotietors wented t o petition .'' re s t r J c t land-mobile intercontinental " said it Is 11enentia1 that we caJTy balU1tJc m11.tile (ICBM) launchers ., forward a sound strategic modemlutlon part of the a.grtttnent on ofrensive anns program lo maintain our oecurlty and. to bill deferred the topic lo speed an agree- Insure that more pennantnt .aad...c:om.-.-.m.i.t.in.Uilfe for Ni.Jon's summlt visit to ))fthenslve arms limitation agreements Moscow last month. tan be reached." However, the United States bas served .. ;Nl.100 revealed that lht United States noUce It wouJd rtgard the deployment of lttts lt would have a balls for withdraw-tuch launchers "as inconsl!tent with the 1llg from tbe ABM treaty If tighter curb1 objeetlves" of tbt: t.1~ullve agrtement. Oft offtnslve arms are not ntgotllted The SovJN e.rpresst<I no view on the within Ove years. Either side can subject. -$586,726 for the library fund. -$l38,573 for the music and promotion fund. ~$1 .862.429 for the parks and recreation fund . -$2,413,094 for lhe waler utility fund. The resol ution approved ti1onday does not include an additiona l $4,565.867, for the civic center bonds. park bonds and other specia l funds which have received prior council ap proval. The total 1972-73 budget for 11untington Beac.•h (general fund plus fixed costs/ is $24,850,IHJ . C11y Administrator David Rowland s sa td today that next year's budget will be prepared 1n a simp!er form, to reflect the total bud&,.et at one time. Councillben approved e v e r y t h i n g Ho"•lands asked for , including the restoration of $848,000 worth of programs the administrator had cut from the first budget estima le. To raise the revenue for those pro-- grams, counc.llmen increased the city's oil lax from 2.5 Ct1nts per barrel to four <·ents per barrel. Additional revenue will also come from several state sources nowlands said. ame • Some of the programs restored in· cluded seven additional palrolrneu for the police department, !ht> l'hildren·~ afler school recreation progra1n. and the public works departmeu['s stl't\!l ln·e replace· ment program. Councilmen rebuffed J>orter's salarv complaint by po1n11ng oul that state Jai.,, makes it 1nandalorv for 1he citv to negotiate with Its r1r1plo)'es 111 good ·faith each year. "Some ot these s~1lary ln crt'a ses are because or pron1otions and we're filling vacancle~ that weren't filled before ," 011 MYSTERY INCIDENT -An artist's drawing of an American Airlines jetliner pinpoints the r ear area of the DC·lO where something opened a baggage compartment door of the jetliner shortly after it left Detroit. A coffin being shipped to New York. toppled out of the hole and fell 12.000 feel. landin g beside a home· in Ontario. The pilot made an emer· gency .Jandlng at Metropolitan Airport. • County Man Passenger On Bizarre Jet Flight Coffin Plunges From Sky; Lands Near Farm Yard By ARTHUR R. VINS EL 01 !tie 0~111' Piiot Sl1H Durwood Anderson didn"t hear the decompression blast that nearly dumped hiin and 66 others into the dusk sky and eternity at 12.000 feet over \Vayne Coun· ly, Mich ,. Monday night. llis ears were plugged up. Anderson, 42, of 13132 Laburnum Dr ive, Tu stin, and his executive traveling com· panion were among JO persons injured, however , during the bizarre inflight in· cidcnt. lie suffered a dislocaled finger and leg abrasions .... -hile escaping down an evacuation chute after J.merican Airllnes Flight 96 miraculously made it back to Detro ii. Investigators at Urst belieYed a saboteur's bomb exploded in a baggage compartment - sucki ng a' COJfin con· faining a body -and other cpigo out a gaping hole in the big jetliner: Investigators have ruled out th is theory, saying the loud thump. bump and prolonged whooshing noise resulted from instant decompression due to opening or a fau lty compartment door. Hurtling earthward like a bomb. the silver-co lored steel coffi n slammed to earth , narrowly missing a farm home, followed by the fl uttering airplane door. Somehow, a brush with eternity seem~ less terrifyi ng in retrospect when ll is ac- cidental instead or sinister and deliberate as in the case of a bombing. First told this morning of the cargo door malfunction now blamed. Mrs. Doris AnderlOn expressed relief. 11l'd prefer that rather than to have had a bomb on board," she 1aid. Details of the crisis at 12,000 feet and the cool command maintained by 28-ytar· old pilot Capt. 8. E. McCorm ick, untll he .stepped out on to the runway were sketchy to Mrs. Ander~n. The Incident may ha•1t become hazy to Capt. McCormick, who could only stand be.aide the plane murmuring: "Jesus cmvt . . . J tsus Christ . . .'' •Jt'1 kind of muddled in my mind," Mrs. Ander... said thb morning. "J'm sure it was quite trtghtenlng." "My huaband 11 !Int!," she •dded. "lie calltd from Wayne County General H01J>lil1 •nd theil·lf ain when he che<ktd Into a motel." Andtrson and hlJ: traveling comp.anion, J \Villiam Hefferman. 51. of the San F'rrnando Valtev were en route to Buf· fato, N.Y. and Connecticut on a busine ss trip, Mrs. Anderson said. The men are employed in the contracts and engineering ofrice of the Air Rite 11ivision of Sargent Industries in El Segundo. requiring tv•o or lh ree business trips per month. Occasional difficulties -such as Ian· ding during New York's infamous blackout -have plagued Anderson"s travels, his wife said, but never anything as critical as Monday night's episode. "lie's been flying for 20 years and this is the first serious incident,'' said Mrs. Anderson , adding her husband will ha ve at least a one-day layover in Detroit before continui ng his trip. She said the cou ple's children, Meli nd a, 16, and Richard, 13, are excited about the sen&11tionel adventure their father wW have to tell In detail w~n he returns. "And they're aw!Ully thankful It turntd out the way it did,11 she added. \YINOSOR, Ont. (AP) -Sante Facca was working in his flower bed at the front of hls (annhouse \11hen a metal coffin dropped out of the sky and landed about 200 feet away. Next he sa w e nash or met:il -il turned out to be a airplane door-hi!tlng the ground . Facca walked over to the olive-green metal box and saw two legs sticking out. lie sai d later he thought it was a dummy and po ked it with a st ick. That was when he realized it was a human body and called Ontario provincial police. Today, investigators from four agencies were searching neighboring Sandwich South , Townshi!J for furthtr v.·rec kage from an American Airline s DClO that had a door ripped off by a malfunction. . "First tbing I heard was them (the cof· ftn_ and baggege door) splitting apart,'' said Facca, 53. One end of the coffin was buried "ei&ht Inches Into the ground. Pregnant Prisoner Gets Off er of Aid~From Judge Judge William Murray, the Orange County Superio r Court judge who ha& .hit the he!:adlines for ruUnga that include ordering • lloQln(, is 11 ~ apln. 11e becam e known a5 "Captain BUgh'' and "Bill the Barber" !or two of his previOU! c:ourt rulings. Courtroom petaOMel addtd "good Samaritan" lo the u.t Monday alter Judge Murray of!ered lo chip In '2 to a fund that will bey clothes for a prepant prisoner. Murray made the offer immediately after Deputy Public Defender John.Bovee po.toted out that Mra.. 'I'her81 JAbhar is fi ve months pregnant and ii rapidly outgrowing the wardrobe &he broucht wilh her to Orange County Jail. ~trs. Lebhlr, 24. •ca.med with· ber hus· band Of the 1969 murder of I $anta Ana secretary, goes on trt1I nest month. l "Tty the Chrt1U.n approach , Mr. Bovee," commented Judge Murray wllh a beam In the dir<ctloo of the P"'* bor. ult rubl me the wrung way to hive anyone sugge1t that the tupaym pay for these thfnp IO pul lllO doWD rtC)lt now fer a '2 ·contribution." Judge Murray's '2 will DOt be needed. Court reporter Esther llesnlct a-td Bovee that she will bur materlala for Mrs. Lebbar who wtll then make her own maternity wardrobe In the .,...nty jall. '"lbat.-py jUlt caalt-wltt.-'4-doput7 commenttd. "lie order& a Ooqlng and the sbtrtrr 1top1 him. he ..., alon; wltb the halrcultlng bit and the 1111 '*'8pei end now be ca n't evtn atve bls money 8W3y." Judge Murray has yet 1 n o t h e r nickname today-"the born loer." Councilman Jerry J\.fatney added." ··we just can't continue 10 e1C'ee(f our income," Porter co1npla1ned. "There must be some realisni 10 the city budgtl. .. l:le \\'OUnd up his rriticism by s.:iyinJ:" the city ought to al leas t 1.,.ork harder at attracting 1nore industry for a better IRX base . 0111~ f(lllr other fl'S1di:nt"' spoke on the lntdJ'.!,tl :ind most of !!11·1r questions wrro ;111::,>1 ~·1 ··d \1 hen 1l \!, ,,, p111ntetl out the (·1- 11· liLJd rf~tored S8-lil,()l)O worth .ir pr't'l'h1u~I\ cut progra111s. oor FBI Finds No Evidence Of Bomb • DETROIT (API -lnvestigntors said today a malfunctioning cargo door that opened in flight caused n n1idnir Incident in which an Am erican Airlines DCIO wa1 damaged but managed to make ii safely back to Detroit"s i\-1etropolitan Airport f\londay night. First reports indicated the lnil section of the huge Los Angeles-to-New York plane n1ight have been ripped by an ex· plosive. But the airline quoted the FBI as saying there was no evidence o( an ex· plosive device being involved. The S6 paasengers and 11 o-ew members all escaped serioUI injury u the jet ran off a runway during an emergency landing. After hour s ot 1nvestig1lion by FBI ngi!nfs. Wayne C.ounty sheriff's office rs and airline personnel, the Incident was blamed on a faulty door which opened in fl ight. Capt. Bryce E. l\·lcCormick, veteran pilot of the airliner, said or his initial reaction, "My first lhought was that there had been a midair collislon. ·• f\fcCormick told tin airport news con· ference that after the blast. he ha d no rudder control over his craft, one of his three engines wa s out and he had no le ft brakes as be (ought to get the plane back to Metro from whence It had taken off for Buffalo and New York. ''The scaredest I was when we were oo the ground and th~ plane was rolling ... l thought it was going to roll right Into the terminal because I could not get it back on the runway," he !ald. McCormick. discussing earlie r theorie."I that an explosion occurred on the plane. said, "To my recollection, I do not rcme1nber telling the passengers there ht.d been an explosion. I told them ev~rything was .to remain on the plane so off1clals _could investigate to detennine the pos!ibiLity of any explosion.'" George A. Warde, executive vice pr~si· dent and general mana ger ol the airline said in a statement issued at the com: pany's New York headquarters: "A tiw:ough investigation by a com· pany mamtenance and englneerinf team assembled at Detroit Metro po I t an Airport ha& cletermlned that a cargo door In the lower pert of the fuselage below the pa....,er cabin opened when the airplane was 11 about 12,000 !eel altitude (See PLANE, Pop 11 ....... I I ' i DAILY PILOT H DAILY l>llOT Iliff,.....,. Vatedlctorio11 Edison l·J i g h School :;enior Stan Jlcterson wilifdeliver grad· uation rc1narks at Edi son l·ligh School 's cerernonlrs ·rnursday at 7 p.m. The straight 'A' stu- dent will speak on 'The Re- spansibility of the Individual in a Mechanized Society," in the school amphitheater. B52s, Figliters Raid North Witli. New Prot,ection SAf(;QN (UPll-U.S. B52s. faking ad· \13111.Jge o( /lCW C!CC!ronic developments that protects them against missiles bombed targets in North Vietnani today for the sixth consecuti ve day. Fighter-bombers. meanwhile, hit bridges 25 miles from China despite Pf- king warnings the raid.s threaten China's 1ecurlty. The Pentagon said the B52s, confin~ mostly to South Vietnam in the past because or the missile threats, are born!> ing the north on an almost daily basis. The United States ha! increased the num· ber of B52s in Southeast Asia fourfold l'iince the start of the Communist of- fensive on March 30. Pentagon sources said the B52s are being accompanied, with special planes equipped with electronic countermeasure gear capable of jamming the radar guidance system of the Soviet-made surface·tc~alr mWil~ (SAMs). The B52s on rare occaSlons have s!ruck near the Hanoi-Haiphong area but most of the current raids are still jwt north of the Demilitarized Zone and directed against Communist supplies. U.S. military spokesmen reported jets fronrthe alrcraft carrier Midway blew up <i huge oil storage complex near the port of Vinh, filling the sky "ilh black smoke and flashes of orange names. Air Force F'4 Phantoms carried out the raids near China The U.S. command said the Fts knock- ed out t~·o railroad bridges and tracks running between them on the railway leading nor1heastward from Hanoi 10 the China border -previously the principal over18nd route for supplies from China. The command said one bridge was hit nenr Thanh Mo i, 60 miles northeast of 1-lanoi and 25 miles from China's Ky,·angsl Prov ince. The other bridge \vas near La ng Dang. 55 miles northeasl of J{anoi :ind 3-0 miles fron1 !he border. Neither had been hit previously. Only a fev,o hours earlier. the Chinese F'oreign ~11nistry issued a formal slate· mt>nl "·hich said such attacks threaten ''the security o{ China.'' It said the liniled States steadily expanded lhe sphere of bombing up lo areas "qu ite close to the Sino-V1elnornese borders." DAILY PILOT Tiie Or•t101 CO.ti OAILY ,ILOT wt"' Wt\lch .. ('Omll!n'd Tiit N"""'·Prn&, Ii llubllthl"d by !ti• Oranoe CD•11 1'11bll1hll'llJ com11<1nv, S•iw· A l• lfdlllor" •t• p111>1l1hed, Mondtv lh•Oll!lh Fdt11y, for C11111 M11•. ,...e.,.J>Orl 8e1ch, Hu"'lnelon llt•ch1f.-ountal11 Vell•y, Ltgun• •~. lrvlntl.\oo:llll11Mc~ •lld Sin C~menre1 .Sin J11111 C~pi1!rano. A 1lnQ le r~IOn•I MOion 11 J>tJbll1ll1<1 S1h1rd•Y• •od Sundoy" l~ p!"lnclp1 I P11bll1hlrtq 01.tnr r1 11 no w.,, 81r Slrnl, C0111 MIU, C1tllPrni1, t1il•. Rob11t N, W11d P rt sldenl Ind Pu11!111.,.r J1clt R. Curley Vici l'Taldtnr 1114 Gtn1r1J Mln911Cr 11ro1T111 k11•ll EdllOI" Tliom1t A. Murpki"' M4Mglrwf Edl!or Cli1rl1t H. Looi kic~1rJ P. N•ll AAlll•~I M1n.olng Ed!tor1 'T t try Covillo W•I Or•Plff C--.1y Editor H•..-,,.. Inc• OHke 17175 l11c~ l o11l1•1rd M•lt.•t A4clr1u: P.O. 101 790, 92l41 .._ Offk .. ~ affcft· 222 Fora! AYrl'lllt QMll Mtt•; U0 WHt l1y Sit"! N....,.n 1t-1ttt: am "'"""'°'' 1ov:1.,,,, S.lt (..,.,.....le; >ell NMlll II Cimino ""' , ... , •••• t7141 •42·4lJ1 tf•HIM A4"rtl1S., l42.1Jl71 ,,_ .... Or .... C-•r c.m-11~ 140·1220 °"""""''• 1'7t, or.,... C111.1! ,lltllt1ll""' :::::r· Ml "''" '~''-'· Hkntr1t*'1• _.,.,. II' lclVl'l'lhl-lt ""''"' IN'f .. ~ •l"*'I IPte .. I fllf· ......._ .. ~--· = ...... _, ..... Id .t Cetll MIM, .__,.., "*""'i.tt9!1 tll' t•,,ltr n ,-.i •'""""'··· .. -_ .. "lJ l"WMll .. ; ITll!lltt¥ ....... • 12M ,,_1111•. '""""· -)}, ~'72 R•gged Line Red Shells Hit Viet Refugees AN L0C <L'Pl } -C:Ommun.ist ttOOP! opened fire today on a ra.l(ged colun1n of l ,000 refugees fleeing lht• provincial caplt.al of An Loe and killed 12 clvUians and wounded 30, field reporla said . shortly after the :11t:i.ck said the Com- n1unists fired a barrage of rnort;irs onto ll ighv.·ay 13 whil e the refugees 11erc trying 10 nee fron1 An Loe, 6<I nule:i north of Saigon. Nt"·amen "'ho reached the scene A go\·emment relief force broke t hrou~h to An Loe Monday. and refuJ;('•·c: 11hiJ had been living th<•rl' during the :.1ege began streaming south11ard. MIGs ... patrol" off Sinai "'hen "those people the Egyptiaru J came and the battle starte<I. Jt was very short." They had escaped dealh by ln•ing 1n un- derground shelters \1•hile thou~ands or rotrnds of shells crashed O\'erhead. The reports said lhe refugees -ma inly old men. women and children -ran down the high\vay as the morta r~ SC'reamed into !hem and lhe chunks 0£ ~hrapnel flew through the a ir. "The Egyptians definitely did not ma.kc a lovable sign.'' another source ~aid . Jfe refused to elaborate. 'fhe official spokesmens announcement said the two Egyptian pilots were ~een parachutlnJ into the 5ea. One old woman, shrapnel cuts across her body, died jn the arms of her young granddaughter, the reports said. Th<'Y said a young boy. hit by shrapnel in the head, \Vas tradled in the arms of his parents \\'hilc a South Vtctnarnesc. n1edic tried to stop the b!cedinJ?: They did not say who started firing. 'fhe lipokesmen also did not sny ho11' many planes \Vere invo lved in lhe dogfigh t. or disclose other details. Last Sept. I I, a ground gunner shot down an Egyptian MIG buzzing Israeli positions on the Suez Canal In the first in· cident or it~ kind or the ceasefire. Six days later, the Egyptians retaliated by shooti ng down an Israeli cargo plan e. killing all 13 aboard. Since then, the air over the 1'.1iddle East has been quiet except tor three l\1ay overflights of Jsraell-held territory by l\11G23 aircraft, reported by Israel to have been piloted by Soviet aviators. In all three overflig hts, Israeli Phan- tom jets rose to challenge the Infiltrators but no contact was reported. 'Biggest Parade Yet' Expected In Huntington JC quantity is a measure of quality, this year's Fourth of July parade in llun- tington Beach should be dazzling. More than 200 trophies will be awarded, according to parade sponsors. the Hun- tington Beach Jaycees .. ff they were stacked end to end, they would be as high a~ a 20-story building. "That's not as high as il sounds," ad- mits Jack Taham of the Jaycees, "A 30- story building I!! only 300 feet tall. With 200 trophies varying in hei ght from 12 in· ches to four feet, Jt doesn't tBke that long for them to add up." But any way you look at it, he says, "we expect the parade thl!! year to be file bigge.rt and best ever." He said there "·ould be more than 3,500 participants, in- cluding l.485 musicians. The Huntington Beach Fourth ot July parade dates back tu 1904 , Tatham said. and is now considered one of the biggest of its kind in the nation. lie expects 200.000 spectators this year. Valley's Mayor Ne,v TV Chief Fountain Valley l\1ayor Al Holl lnde.n ha.~ been elec ted chairman of the board ,)f directors of lhe Publlc Cable Television Authority (PC'TA ). The PCTA is JI joint powers organiza- lion between the ci ! ies of Costa Mesa, l-,ountain Valley, l-l untington Beach, .Ne"·port Beach and \Vestmin!lter. Tht! authority is currently drawing up technica l plans for a proposed. cable lelevision system in the five com· n1unities. Tl is also developing a program to educate the communities' citizens of the technical. fiscal and legal aspeets o( the cable comrrumicalions system, Bodies of Man, Son, 5, in Lake One refugee tryi ng to patch up 1hf· bleeding leg of his young son said the refugees left An Loe early in the morn ing after local government officials sa id Jligh\vay 13 appeared safe. ~le said Communist 1roops stopped the refugees about half1vay be!\l:ee n An Loe and Chon Thanh, 15 n1Hes lo the south. He said South Vi etnamese jets began flying overhead as the fleeing refugees \Vere stopped along the high\1•ay. He said the C:Omrnunists were ap. parently frightened by the planes and opened fire <ln the refugees, shooting some in the beak as they ran. At An Loe, Communist forces stul> bornly fought the South Vietn.11.mese troops who closed in on the long besieged city and kept Highway 13 from being opened as a relief road into the nearly leveled provincial capital. Military sources said rescue helicopters were able to land occasionally to take out the J,200 wounded troops and civilians in the city but that shellfire made such mercy operations hazardous. Matney to Shoot Rapids in Raft, Pay for Victory One day this summer. Huntington Beach Councilman Jerry Matney is going lo shoot the Colorado River rnpids in ;1 rubber raft. It's the price a paHUcian has to pay for re-election. At least in Matney's case, it 's the price he has to pay for victory in the April J l t·ity counci l election. Because Matney's campaign cost $1 .563 more than he collected to run it, he had to sell raffle ti ckets on himself to raise the money, with the ~·inner getting his s~rvic:es for :1. day. for an ything legal 1. The "·inner turned out to be Jerry·s i:;ister-in·la\\', Glenda ~1atney, 32, Santa Ana . 1vho held the winning number Fri- day night. She 1\•ants him to join her in a bum py cruise down the roaring Colorado River. .Jerry has taken the trip before , so h(' isn't too worried. In fact. the raffle itself gave him more trouble lhan the river r ide mi ght. First. District Attorney Cecil Hicks in- formed him it would be against the law to sell raffle tickets. so Matney had to give them a\vay and hope for donat ions. Then . ~1atney c11ncel!'d a "Las \'ef!as Ni~ht'' scheduled Friday along l\'i th lhe raffle. because of potential legal prob- len1s. And Cinally. t1atnry decided to al101v f \\'O winners 1rhen his sister-i n-Jaw \\'On the raffle Friday. Just to keep everythinR straight, he drew a second ticket, "·hich \\'1lS held by Dr. Ralph Bauer, president of the Huntington BeBch Union High School District Board of Trustees. Dr. Bauer "'asn"t su re what he \1-°0Uld ask of the councilman. The raffle did raise $435 to help pay ofr the campaign debt, and another $360 in contribulions has cut Matney'.s debt. Matney isn't sure yet how he'll raise the rest or the money. After th.is summer he might offer himself as a guide on the C:Olorado Ri \'er. BIG BEAR CITY (APl -The bodies of a 34-year-old Lakewood man and his S.. year-old son were found floating in Big Bear Lake nine days after they were reporte<I missing . A fi sherrnan sa \Y the bod,v of Michael Schiffler about 200 yards off the north shore ~1onday afternoon. lie called authoritiH. who liter di~vered the body of Michael's father. Richard L. Schiffler, about 300 yards away. Book Critic Die8 Cousins BOONVILLE, N.Y. (AP) -Critic Ed· mund Wilson . a leading figure on lhe American literary sctne for the past half a century, died Monday of a heart attack. Jailed Get 100, 83 Years in Rape Cases l\fODESTO (AP) -Two men convicted ln a series of rapes have received minimum priaon aentences of 100 years and 13 years, respectively. Stanislaus County Superior Court Judge Francis W. llalley gave the 100. year fflllAl>ce Mondly '° Davia C.lvln llodge, 28, Modeato and the 83-year sentence to hl1 cousin, Everett Bobby WlllJ.am1 of Patterson. The coualna were convicted in • aeries of aexual attacks primarily on young eoupl.,, Hodge waa convicted May 23 on 10 muntt of rapt, flve of robbery, all of kidnap, eight of sex pervenlon ll1d ooe of oodomy. Wllllam.1 waa convicted of MVen comill of rapt, two of kidnap, seven of sex perverskm. five for robbery and one of IOdomy. They came to be known 11 the ••green mustang'' raplsl5 bec1uae they drov l!i a green Mustang . Ot.IL Y "ILOT Sl11/ "lltM Top l' alley Scliolars J.arry Reid (Jefl) and ~lark Schil dhauer are valedictorians or the J•'ou ntJ111 Valley High School class of 1972 with perfect straight A averages. Reid also \Vas captain of the varsity cross country tea1n \\1hilc Schildhauer \vas student body vice president. Co11t1~0J of Corporatio11s U1·ged i11 Pa1~ty Platform S1\t\ FH,\.\'CISCO (,\Pl -Consun1er i1nd conser\'ntion n!h'01:ates are deman- fting th;1t the 1972 Den1ocratic national platforn1 call for control cif !he economic poy,•er concentrated in the nation's big- ges t corporations. A steady barrage of atlacks before a IS-men1ber Democratic platform com- mittee panel Monday urged that the plat- form pledge effective antitrust en- forcement and closing of lax loopholes benefiting big business. ·r11e panel heard 90 '\'itnesses in a marathon session that ran until 11 p.m. one of a series of grassroots hearings across th e country developing facts and feelings lo guide the national convention 's platform drafters. "The war to control the abuse of cor- porate power in the United States is Five Ocean Vie'v Scl1ools to Get New Principals 1:ive Ocean View schools will be having 11t1\' print'ipa!s next {all, officials of the Ocean View School District announced this morning. "We Irie<! to make these assignments In acco rdance y,•ith "'ishes of lhe prin· ci p[]ls involved." said Superintendent rlarence 1-Inll. "Some \Vanted to face a new challenge v.·hile others were looking for educational situations not available in lheir present sc hools." The new assignments are : -Spring Viev.• School will be gelling J>at ~·lonahan , u·ho is now serving his sixth year as principal of Rancho View. -Rancho View School will have Bill C..erhardt . \\'ho opened Hope View afler its ded ication in 1968. -!lope View will have Charles Arnold , 1,·ho ope ned Lark View seven years ago. -Lark View School will have Stan Bur- rill. principal nt Robinwood for the past five years. J\'lendow \'iew School. whose current principal r.1 illard .Hamel is leaving the cllstriet, "'ill have ns its new principal l.t•nn l!nus r . principal at Spring View for J/JC' past right years. /\ new princl pa.I for Robiny,·ood School has ycl to be selected. officials said. being los t mainly because the Nixon ad- ministratlon has made a conscious decision not to "'in it.'' said San Fran- cisco f\.1ayor J oseph L. Alioto. Nixon's poliries "have clearly favored the corp<1 rale establishment ·over the working man ," he declared. Judicial Look; So1ne Batli.i1ig In Nude Okay SAN FnANCJSCO (AP) -Nude sun- bathing on an isolated bench is not criminal indecent exposur e. t h e California Supreme Court ruled today. The ruling \\•as lim ited to isolated beaches and did not foreclose possible prosecution for nude sunbathing in a more populated area. A state la\Y prohihit.s indecent exposure !hat i! committed "wilfully and lewdly '' 'vith a purpose of sexual arousal, the court's unanimous decision said. The court struck down the 1970 con· viction of Chad Merrill Smith in San Diego O:iunty. Smith went sunbaUting on an isolated beach. He removed his clothes, Jay on his t.'.lck on a towel and fell asleep. Later a few pe<iple arrived, notified police , and Smith was arrested. Officials Gather For CA TV Meet City and school officials from five Orange C:Oast communities will gather at the Costa 11esa city council chambers tonight for a progress report on Com· munity Antenna Television (CATV). John Bateman. adrninislN1tor of the new CATV Authority, will outline prog· ress on the proposed five-city cable television network at 7:30 p.m. The public is invited. The authority is composed of the cities of Costa Mesa , l-luntington Beach, Newport Beach and \Vestminster. along ·with the Orange Coast Community College District. What's My Line ... four centJ ptr barrel Lu. Woods argued lhat hi. productlon estimate {11.!i mWlon blrrels ) would raloe ..,,_.WWI I -cent tu, 101DO aoo.a mon !ban -..i. "Thls secondary recovery mf'thod 11~ increases the property l'alue for ad· dH lonul taxeil, ·• Wood! added. ltoger Slate!!, president of the Cha1nhrr ol Commerce, supported Woods ton· tention thnt the city 1s underestlmatln,t its potential revenue both in terms of ()ii lax 1noney and properly t11 xes. A Cha rnber letter to the c.·ouncil urged councilmen to adopt "no new taxes." Duke, in supJ¥1rting lht higher oil taJ", s~ud , "\Ve're looking loo much at balan- cing the budget inste.ad of looking ahead (for l:ind acquisition >. \'lr have 10 ~tart Sornet in'e '' ··r·m fur !hC' h•L'.hcr lax If the morK'y g·~s for parks." Slupley chipped in "I will ndherl' '" lhf' phJ!osophy of onlv increasing re vl·nue if the need i~ oli- vious ," Coen r xpl:iined, while oppo.!1ng anyth ing above 3.5 cents. "It appears ~·c 1vill have more thsn the projected revenue." Work Completed On $17.6 Billion Welfare Measure \VAS!f!NC TO:-.S fA PI -The Senate Finance Committee completed "'ork to- day on a $17.6-billion measure contain.in~ lhe greatest e:-.pansions of Social Security and 'o\'t"ifare in history. The bill '1·ould raise Social Security benefits 10 percent for 27.8 million reci - pients, in1posed strong new work rf'- quirements on many welfare rec ipients and make many changes in the 1tedicare a nd ?>.iedicaid health program!!. Winding up 11 months of consideration <lf the monumenta l bill, the panel adopted ne\Y Social Security payroll tax schedule~ raising the levies for the 96 mil lion Americans \l'ho pay them. The new schedules \vould mean a tax hike of $113 .40 next year, as compared l\'llh 1972. for persons earning $10,200 or mol'e in 1973. Chairinan Russel l B. Long (D-La.), reported that his panel finished. \York on the measure but did not take the fina l vote, ordering it to the Senate floor for debate. This will come after the members have had a chance to take a look at the final draft of lhe legislation, he said. Long said it ~'ould be impossible lo start the floor debate until after the Senate resumes work following the Democratic National Convention which 1neets July IO in ~1iami Beach. Fro1n Page l PLANE •.. after having left Detroit en route to Buf- falo although si gnal lights in the cockpit indicated the cargo door and all other doors were closed and latched normally, "Because the airplane was pressurized, a decompression with a loud sound oc- curred. During the night, we have in- spected the cargo compartments of all our DCIOs and ha~ found them to be functioning properly. American Airlines and 1'-lcDonnell Douglass. manufacturers <lf the DCJO, are conducting a thorough investigation to determine wh.at caused the malfunction of the door on Flight 96. The National Transportation Safety Board also is Investigating the incident." fnvestigat.or s said that when the door opened, some of the cargo -including a coffin -twnb!ed out. Eleven persons aboard the 220- passenger-capacity aircraft s u f f ere d minor injuries -most while sliding down emergency exit chutes after the landing. Several passengers hit by debris while airborne were treated at local hospital s and released. YOU WON'T BE FED ANY LINES AT ALDEN'S. WE ARE MORE INTERESTED IN DEVELOPING t OYAL CUSTOMERS THAN MAKING A FAST SALE. NONE OF OUR SALESPEOPLE WILL BOTHER YOU IF YOU JUST WANT TO BROWSE, BUT WILL BE PLEASED TO ASSIST YOU IF YOU WISH, WITH TRUTHFUL ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS. WHEN WE DISCUSS CARPET LINES, WE WOULD HAVE TO "M 0 DEST LY" ADMIT THAT WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTIONS IN THE AREA. TOP BRANDS SUCH AS: BIGELOW, BERVEN, BEAmE, MAGEE, MONARCH, BARWICK, MOHAWK, ROXBURY, MILLIKAN, ARMSTRONG. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES t 663 l'lacentla Ave. COSTA MESA 64&.4838 t I v K •• 0 t or " p y • A p of ti p he SU n lh m m fr ri pr qu en .. •t .,. se m •• JI " ce ·wi " ~ do ra .. :. or ~ fro ' cri Tuttda1. June ll, 1972 H DA IL v PILOT I i Supervisor·s OK Tentative Budget, Ta x Cut By JACK llROBACK Oil .... f'li.t le.II' Oranie Counly supervi!Ors today adopted a tentative lfn-73 budget calling for a 7.>cent reductioo in the proptrty tax rate. F inal budget hearings wttich v.-i ll determine the exact rate will begin J ul y 12. The new budget calls for expenditure of $lt3.2 milllon in general funds. up 5.1 per· 'cent over the current spending program but an anticipated 10 percent incrtase in assessed valuation will allow the tax cut. County Administralive Officer, Rober1 Thomas, in preJenting the pro~ed budget, lold supervLSOrs thal although the plan calls for an increase of 5.1 per- cent, or Si l million. over lhe current year, he .said it contrasted sharply with lhe 16.4 percent and 15.8 percent jumps for the two previous years. The 5.1 percent represents the lowest percentage lncrease since 1960-61 when a Jobl ess Cut ·Predi cted Before '73 By JOANNE REYNOLDS Ot !flt Dt llY f'li.t '"" "There 's no question but I ha t .unemployment will be coming down by the end of the year and be coming dO"'n very rapidly.'' That's the forecast of t-.1 arvin 11. Kosters, Assistant director of planning 'a nd analysis for President Nixon 's Collt of Living Council. Kosters wao in Anaheim today to speak to a met.ting of the National Associtition of Plumbing. !feating and Cooling Con- tractors. Jn an interview with lhe DAIL \' PILOT, Kosters said the recovery of the economy "looks healthy and strong.·· Formerly an economist with the Rand ·Corporation in Santa Monica. Kosters. a Republican. has spent the last three years in Washington as senior staff economist with the Council of Economic.: *Adv isors and then a11 head of pl anning for Phase II. "Having designed it. I now spend a lot of time watching the beauty of its opera- tion," he quipped. Kosters declined to speculate when the Phase II restrictions would be lift~ but he was optimistic about the continued success of the wage-price freeze. "Wages have gone up at twice the an- nual rate that prices have gone up since the beginning of the freeze," he said. He denied that consumers have less money to spend as food prices rise. "The average wage earner can buy more for each 00ur·s work since the freeze,'' claimed Koater. "Wages have risen an average of six percent while prices have only xone up an average of three percent." He acknowledged that the figures he quoted for price increases included the entire spectrum of consumer goods and services. Kosters poinled out that the only point at which food prices are not controlled are at the "raw level," where the farmer sells to a food processer. He said he doubted conlrols would be Imposed on farm prices "in the im- mediate future but we v.·ill continue to £tudy that area for any major changes." Kosters said the Instit uti on of a PhaS<' 111 (wh ich will be the lifting of econom ic r estraints) depends on the continued suc· cess of Phase II. "f wouldn't want to guess ""hen th11t Y.'ill be, but we are seeing a more vigorous expansion and inflation is go ing · down more surely and rapidly."' he said. \Vhat about higher food prices? "Well, prices are increasing less rapidly. And people have become more sensitive to price! since the freeze. But it appean we're beKinning to see some co~ trol of thts <mt-push inflation," he said. J .9 percent jump was calied for . Thomu cautiooed that the budlet dou no\ allow for tncreues in ••larles and fringe benefits {or the county's l,OOl).plus emplotea. Board Chairm•n Ronald Caspers of Newp&rl Beach added that, "We're close to salary neg<N iatioo1 and an antlcipa.t~ 5 percent pay Increase will not cause a jump in the tu rate." Caspers compllmtnted 'I'homu and his Budget Director Tom Corbin on presen- ting "a good budget ~a~ on targ~t P~ jections with austerity 1n spending 1n mind." "The recommendations in this budget provide for continuation of mandatory programs al acceptable levels o f service," Thomas said. "Only in those cases where the availability of .substan- tial outside funds {federal and slate) has been assured have we recommended new or innovative programs." He said the offered budget wa s $14.4 million below county department head re- quests. During the budget hearings Her Honor In Paris. where the phrase "cherchez la femme" origin- ated. Parisians found the worn· an they \vere looking for - Nicole de Hauteclocque. She 1vas elected the first woman n1ayor of Paris. Voit Executive Denies Rum ors Of Firm Layoffs Rumors that the Santa Ana-based AMF-Voit firm would lay off rubber workers because it had been beaten oul of a Cilntract by a Japanese firm were declared ''absolutely untrue" today by Jim Norris. executive vice president. "\Ve still have our Cilnlract with Wilson Sporting Goods and are running their products here right now," he said. The rumor, he explained, may have been started when Wilson contracted with a Japanese firm £or the manufacture of red, white and blue basketballs. "We make them here but the trend to multi«>lored balls is so strong that they need more than we can make," said Nor- ris. "No one is being laid ofL Wilson doesn 't even like to go to Japan because the yen has been revalued and dock strikes have made the supply of balls uncertain.'' he added. "We hope to get our production up to meet their demands.·· Tenders End Strike SAN DIEGO ! AP I -Brick tenders ended their 13-day strike by agrteing f\1onday night lo a $2.04 hourly pay raise by November l!fl3, boosting their $7.ll salary in six·month increment1. The strike wa s called against the Ma sonry Contractors Association. Suspect Pleads Innocent In Niguel Bank Heist An unemployed Ohio barber pleaded In· • nocent Monday of allegedly taklnc ~rt in the '2 million burllarY of a Lllgwa '. Niguel bank. He wa.s~ ordered held in lieu • of $250,000 bail. Charles A. Mulligan, 38, of :-Youngstown. entered the pita before U.S. • District Judge Matt Bymt Jn ~ Anielts. Re was ordered to ruppear ln : court nut Monday so thlt a date for trial : could be Mt. U.S. Attorney Elgin Edwards had 8'ked : the judge for mo.ooo bill 'nd defense ·~ :· Iomey Ron Minkin had requested a flgu ;. of ll0.000. • Edwards, noting th•l none of I.he loot • from the March 25--:M Laguna Nlgutl ' crime had betn reoovtttd, claimed tha( ·. any 1um lower then '750,000 would enable · the defendant to pott ball with part of I.he • stolen funds and escape with the rt m•inde.r. Federal officials alle1• that Mulllaan, along with ••nvt or six" other persont, : blasted their way through the t'Oncrtte ·and stttl roof of the vault at 1ht United California Bank in Monarch Bay Plaza. Once ina:ide, Edwards said In court Mon- day, the gang drilled into over 500 .te depollit boxes, removing j ewe Ir y. negotiable securities, rare coins •nd ash. 1n addition to the safe deposit box theft.I, the bani: loat l!0,000 cub to the J?ur1I1rs, lnvutlg:ators said. During the hearing, defense attorney Mlnk in reque1ted tl\8t the suspect, tr released on ball, be allowed to return to Ohio to vlsJt hb famUy. However, Byrne ordered that he rtm•ln in the Southern California are1 If released. S..Jdes the Ligun• Niguel buralory, Edwards said today authotltles s&lll believe the gang, working with other thieves, is respo111lble for al lta!t eight other bank burglaries around the country • MulU1an was arrested June 2 oytalde a tavern in Tu1Un after belnc til'Jed to 0rlll(e C<>\mly from Cblca10 by .tlle FBI. '1bt au1pect has two prh>r convlctk>nw, one for receivlnc stolen property and the other for burglary, officials tald. departments wtticb ftt.I they wen: dull with Loo aavuel7 will Mv• thdr da y before the board memben. 1bomu sald the estimated carry-over balance from 1971-71 would be around SI3.S million wblch contrasts with a $6 million surplus last year. .. The increase ls due primarily to a $12 million gross balance in welf&rt ap. lll'OPriatlans resulting in $3 millioll net tu the i...'OUnly (75 percent of welfare monies are provided by the state): $2.5 nlilHon from the state in reimbursement of busi ness in,1entory tax exemption loS!e~ \11hich "·as paid la te. and i'l balance of "I least $2 million in C'OnlLn~ency fund" which were not spent," Thomas Cl · plained. The ne~· figure. barring last minute ln· creases by the supervoors dwing hear- ings, will place the county general fund tax rate at $1.965 per $100 of assessed valuation. bringing tlle reduC'tlon of 71 ~ cents under the current $2.04 rate. bJibeSI Jn t'Ollllly history. The lowtttd nu: means about 1 $tJO reducUon In lalt$ to tbe owner of a $24,000 home with an ~ value of 14,000. Thom1s warned board membtn that t.hiJ year's tax reduction may be 1bort range. , "We cannot depend on substantial in- creases in assessed valu~ through economic growth in the long run," the ad- mini.strative offlcer said ... It is essenUaJ that tax reforms be enacted to reUeve the property tax payer from s.upparting con- stantly increasing programs demanded by the public." He called attention to the 15 to 30 per- cent annual iocteaJes m health, welfare, medical and law enforet?ment programs. The-new budget includes $1.9 million for compJetion of the fourth floor of the tounty's overcrowded main jail. a long delayed expenditure: $1.l million for the ri e1v Prima Desohecha Canyon landfill site nort h of San Juan Ca pistrano ; $300,000 for air conditioning the Orange County M«llcal C..ter; lhe additlon or l01 oew employa and • S70.000 item for a county lobbyilt office in Wash.inaton, D.C. ,The tentative bud1et includes several "r.'llcy" Jtema whJch the board wUI ban· de 1eparalely ln budget stSslon.s. Heading the ltst are completion or design for a new medical cent~ at a cost of $1.6 million : $73,276 for the con· troverslal Orange County Airport Land Use CommiS.!iion and $85,!Kl3 for a dental cart program in schools . La.st year supervisors refused a $62.000 ~uest by the land use commission and J{B\"e the agency only $SOO for o~ra!lon during the yea r Other budget items includt-a personnt•I departn1ent management study. $12 .000 development of ntw dst<a svstrms. $1 ·; million, and hiring of .1 C'C11n"1un1tv rt>h1 tions coordinat0r. $16,720 • The county has been \1 llhout a pu b!1,· relations man fllr rnore than a vear :1 nrl Caspers said 11 11·:is un purtant ·they 1111 this gap. Polley Ji.ms for which ao fuoda baYO • be<o1 ,.t ulde in tho t"'<atlve bu4pl ond ~·111 be up to a declslc:.i d lhe board ntcmbers Include a much cl1lcumed coun-- tywlde heUcopttr pitrol, '250.GOO; ac- qulslt1on of S&na• ADI Rlver...s.ntLa'i:o Crttk gr«nbelt prolll'll', fl million · H· di11on.s to the probl.UOD department ._fr, ~.000 ; 1$ new ph1nnln& department pos1tlons $200,000, and a compultrized n1edical 1nforma t1un system for the medical center $.JI 0,000. Ca pital 1mpro~·eml!nts propo.Jed for thf' coming year 101<1.I $H1 4 million, up $$.4 1n11!1on ovt-r _the <:u rr!'nt yrar. M$1Jor proi· t'<'ls 111 :iddttion h> 1ne 1a1\ comp~t1vn .1n1I landfill site :irt' 1·on,p!etion of the S<'•'Ond phase of thf' Fullrrton Munkipal L'ourl. $1 5 m11l1on :incl t>lpan~1on of thr cvunt y's 1'Clllral utlhty lacilll}". $700,000 500 Battle Raging Fire l(issinger Under Fire 111 Seq1~oia s Hig h J i nks With Belly Da11ce r Q uestio11ed PORTERVILLE (APJ -Fire 0H1c1.1l s.11d ioda .... thry hoped to have a stubborn hrush .ind ti1nber firl' 1n :in isolated area 1•f the Sl>quoia Nat11uu1 ! Fores! conta ined by toni,ghr WASHINGTON (U PI J -\Vhen Dr. Henry A. Kissinger allo\ved a Persian belly dancer to perch on his lap during the trip home from the Moscow sum1niL did his fondness for frolicking detract from the dignity of his office? Rep. William J. Scherle fR-Iowa ). posed the question Monday about Kiss- inger. the White House "swinger" who Is President Nixon's chief adviser on foreign po licy. Scherle. a grain and livestock farmer before he was elected to Congress in 1966 provided his own answer. "I'm no prude,'' Scherle said. "and 1'111 no Puritan, but I thin k a certain amount of dignity ought to correspond to his role. There's a time and a place. Business is business, and pleasure is pleasure. "If happy Henry continues on his Don Juan party pass," the newsletter said, "the next picture of the distinguished ex- llarvard pro fessor may ver} well appear in the center fold spread of Cosmopolitan 1nagai.ine -with a staple in his navel ."' It \\'as the second time in recent months the Cilnservative Republican has criticized affairs at the Wh.ite House. I.ate last year he complained the ex- ecutive department spent too mu ch to build and equip a White House exercisr room. He called the layout a "Roman romper room." Scherle circulated his views on the lifestyle or K!salnger in a newsletter to DU BBED HAPPY HENRY Adviser Ki1singer constituents. J1c said the \Vhile House asked for 10 copies and added he was sure the Je11cr 11 uuld · ('!r('ul<ilC' " t1t1 ll' higher," obviouslv rf'l~·rring to 1hf' Presi- dent. Scherlr sa1 c.J son11· 1·1111sl1lln•u!s told h1n1 they did not ;1ppro11• ul K1ss1n1o:('r's al.'- tivities. ,... '"The \\'Oriti pri ·.~s rarrii'<! t'X!('nsi1·f' reports of lus f11nc!nrs::. for frol 1e k1n,::." Scherle said. "Everyone lik es a little fun. \\fe'rc not opposed to it but we feel there is a proper place." He said that as a rrpresentauvc of the U.S. go ver11mcn! on a serious niission. •·Hank should have curbed his hankerin"' Cor the bi rd~ and the bubbly ·• " During a social gathering in Tehran. Iran, belly dancer Nadia f>arsi. 23. sat in Kissinger'.s lap. Kissinger took the in· terlude with good cheer and remarked he hoped to "make the "·orld safe for belly dancers." Scherle also commented on an incident in Poland . "In Warsaw .• 1ftcr si gn ing the joint communique with Polish 0Hlc1als. Pres+ ident Nixon had io trll !he forn1er Hoc ke- feller Brothers, '!he think tank' associa lf' to quit guzzling lhr ch<1mpagne and to niovc along to the nex t rnet'ting," Scher!(' said. Ne\\'smen \1·ho heard Ni.J:on urge Kiss- inger to drink up fol!o\ving the Warsaw meeting with top Polish leaders felt the President WllS only teasing his senio r ad· viser. The fire burned over 220 acres and is be ing fought by ne nrly 500 men. For<>st Service spokesman Steve Beck said 1t was hoped the fire \l/Ould be con- ta11'lfil. today but that regional weather forecasts have prrdicted temperaturf.'I 10 degrees hotter than ~!onday's 11()..plus weather. Lo\li·er humidity levels and the possiblllty of isolated thunderstorms - and their resultant erratic winds -are also of concern to !he firefighters, Beck ~a id. Al ni~hlfall Monday, fire fighters were al!empting to complete the remaining Z5 percent of a fire line around the perimeter oC the blaze. Beck said. lloy on Bike Killed; Police Hold Driver A lf>.year-ald boy bicyclist was !!nick dO\.\'n and killed ~1ond11y nighl by an automobile. Thr driver WAS jailed on ff'lony manslaughter charges, Santa Ana police reported. Jr ffcry Hop per . of 1602 N. King St., Santa Ana. died at 1():40 p.m. in Riverview Ho!!pital foll owing the 10 p.m. accident on Fairview Avenue and the Santa Ana River bridge. Police ident1tlld the cir driver 11 Andre'v McTauart, 36. Vacation Time ... Wagon Time Colony Park .. • ..• IF CONTINENT AL BUILT A STATION WAGON, COLONY PARK WOULD BE IT! Montego. • • Villager "Ca r Of The Year" ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL IN A STATION WAGON ..• THE HO'M'EST STYLING ON THE ROAD TODAY ! e GR EAT SELECTION e ALL WITH AIR CONDITIONING 2929 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 540"'1lll . ' ( • - I • I I I -I I • / ' ~· 'If DAIL V PILOT t ~ With Tt.m pltine ,, ., .• ... ' .. Kids Get One For the Road SACR:ut.ENTO CALLING : you likely ooted in the nev.•s that Assemblymnn John T. Knox, the Democrat from up in north.em California's Richmond , is at ll again in trying to knock you off your favorite tavern stool and give il to so n1e teenager. Knox is author of the measure that would icwer the legal age for imbibing 1n alcoholic spi rits to just 18 summers. His 18-year-old drinking Jaw squeezed through the Assembly on a vote of 54 to JZ, which happened to be the bare two· thirds majoritv necessary for it lo clear that house. All I can figure is that this means there were only one dozen gu ys who wanted to protect their own bar ~t~ls aod 54 ot~rs who were asleep, as usual. TllE SPEAK ER probably yelled al them for the vote and their heads nodded up and down on their chests. And that W3ii ii. You have a further suspicion that nobody was really awake because no t one 11oul spo ke against the Knox measure. Well. there was one lawmaker who was awake enough to speak in favor of l11e drink-at-18 pro p o s a I . He "'as Assemblyman Robert C. Cline. the Republican from Woodland Hills. who tried to get the same thing through the Legislature last year. •lis bill died in 1he Senate. Anyy,1ay. Cline arose this llme to declare, "If Yt'e ask young people to put their lives on the line on the battlefield. they should be able to buy a bottle of beer ." YEAll. \\'ELL. that's probably !rue. Cline 's commentary makes me draw up thi,; mental picture of an 18-yea r-old kid who swaggers into the local tavern in his Gree n Beret uniform. He loo ks big enough to take on two linebackers from the LA Rams with his left hand. He is wearing so many ribbons on his chegt that he looks like he was hit by a bo"'\ of fruit 'salad. The kid eases his "'ay up to the t<1vern rail and rumbles at the bartender. "Gim· me a beer." I suppose you think the bartender is going to say, ''l'1n sorry. sonny.lJ:.i,v. bu! you are too juvenile to sop the suds or this fair establishment ... " No way, brother. NOT ONLY JS he goinR to get his beer. but he'll ~et it with extreme rapidity and there is likely to be a stampede of other pa trons vying for the privilege of p:i)·ing for it. So al l Cline and Knox 11·ant lo do is make all this perfectl y lega l. fl1 aybe this ls the thinR because then it wi!J tnl;e alt the fun out or ii and mavbe y,·e'll have fewer J&-year-o!d drinkers: Anyway, all this Knox-Cl ine business doesn't reully mean tha t your fav orite place ls going to be invaded by teeny-bop- pers. Already Asseinbly Minority Floor leader Bob Monagan. the Republican fro1n Stockton. has declared that he'll try to get the y,•hole thing recon sidered. EVEN IF ~fONOG AN fails In a\\111ken any of the 54 who dozed the: Inst tin1e lhrough, lhe issue has to cleAr the St;-ite: Senate and then 11·in Gov. Re:agan's f.ignature. This n1av n0t be too rnmfortin l'.!. tor the elderly att'emJ'l!in.c; to preserve !heir 01vn 5lools in the loc:il t!lverns. The &>nate these days has proved to he pretty sleepy too. And Gov. Rea j:!an Sf'CJTIS to be .~ig1,int( everything to do 'rifh lfl·year·olds that gets shoved in rront or hirn. After all folks . this i~ an election year. And t suppose you've heard about what else the teenagers can do. They can vote, you see. U,.t Ttlt ,11111 WOMAN WITH CAN E SITS IN FRONT OF RAPID CIT Y HOME Funeral Services Began Toda y, Expected to Continue Through Wffk Rain Seedin g· Reported In Area o f Rapid City By F. RICHARD CICCONE RAPID CITY, S.D. !AP 1 -Burial uf Rapid City 's flood victin1s bt•gins toda.v Jn three cemeteries while survivors continue the search fo r the dead . Individua l graveside services '"'ill be condu cted for the identified victims wh n died late Friday and early Saturday \Vhcn r:iin-swollen Rapid Creek erupted through thi s city of 43.000 persons in the shad :iw of lhe Black Hills. "The services wj]I probably go for at least a 'vcek," said a funeral direct PJr. 1\ mass memorial service is sched uled Sun· day at a local high school. Civil Defense reported Sunday that the death toll stood at more than 200, but on Monday it said the toll was 175.'4io\vever. newsmen counted 161 identified OO<lles and 31 unidentified, a total of 192. The toll was expected to climb. Officia ls Claim TJ1ey Have Nan1es In Vegas Scl1en 1c LAS \11'.:GAS (UPI ) -Investigators had the nan1es loday <l ( susrccts in the "hollow chip " scheine that bilked gambl· ing casinos or at \rast $300.000. Sheriff H.al ph La1nb, said the ring - which needed the cooperation o( casino employc s to operate -apparently pressured gambl ing workers \Vho were in debt to loan sharks into cooperating. "It was strictl y a hon1t• grO\\'n organization "'ilh no connections with any national crime organization,'' sail! 011e in- vestigator, ··but lt certainly 1ras 1\'cll organized." Investigators said they l\'ere almost certain \\'ho led the ring. Lainb said his departrnent had the nan1rs ol 10 casino 1\'orkers involved. Jack S!ratlQn, of the l'\cvada Gan1 ini.: Control Board, s!11d s!a!e investigators had the nan1es of at le.'.ls1 2:1 pt•rsons involved. "\\'e think ii originated !h rour,h lht' \0<111 sl1<1rks," Lan1b said.•·\\'(• slartetl 111- vcs tigating \Vhen t11·0 or three ~uys got in a tough spot and can1e in to report !ha t the muscle was beinR put on thcn1." The scheme is built on a hollo11 alu1ninwn tube. contoured and painlt'd on the side to look like a stack of t'hips. A real chip, usually of $5 or $10 va lue. is glued on top. Real chips -of thP $100 denomination -can be hidden inslclc. A spokesman said duplication of reports and confusion caused erroneou s reJlOrts. Officials said some bodies were moved lo nearby communitles Sundav when three Rapid City niortuaries 11se'r1 as temporary morgues be c am e overcrowded. The Omaha Neb. W or Id -He r a l d reported in today'.!! edil1ons lh<:t t\VJ cloud-seeding ('Xp>.:iments were con- ducted Friday in the Rapid City area, one of them about 5 p.m .. <1n hour before the devasta ting rains began. ihe experiments 1\·erc con<luctedbv the Institute of At mospheric Sciences. South Dakota School of Mines & Technology "for increasing water supply and stu- dying the dynamics of hail production.'' the eopyright artitle quotes an unnamed federal official as sayi ng . The newspaper quott'd Pror. Arnett Dennis. chief of the i n s t i t u t e ' s rn ctcorological analysis group. as saying the experiments "had t::ially a n d absolutely nothing to do with the stnrm tha l hit Rapid City. I 'vould stake my life on that." I-le .said salt \\'as dropped from a pJ.rine, standard practice in the institute's study for sill: years. As the cleanup and search continued at Rapid ity. Maj . Gen. Duane L. Coming, commander of the South Dakota National Guard. said. "Guardsmen have been find- ing bodies al! day_ It will co!ltinue for days and da ys." \l'icJ<S 'Who gave McGovern my old speeches?" Storms Pelt North Plains Violent Ra.in Conce ntra tes Tenapern111re• :~ " " " "' "' ( \ I IA1tflllA..et9CO '\-. " '-P'9 ,,._..-µ_, \ • • lJt • Upper llli1iois Area N,~,. llld Okltl"'°"' N.0,, Wit tllt b'I' ... .. -~'°''" wmri , .. Md In ' 'I foHy for • ~ Of low•, ~ nnnot1 •nd ~ ~ .. "'!t.,,torm. • .... :s.r;-··-''Iii. Gull t i.ii. S1o. " tlW .... ., .. ,, ......... '"'" 1'1irr11tt,•fllns be lll'f OIWll ,.,,.. fl'om 6J 11 MltMt\11, M.Y .. "fl ft l ty!llt, C111t. C•lllornl• LOS ANGELES (API -Cool •t• 11,HJll NCklcl IMIOl'I 1W 'Q61rln1 cte«rt ''"'.-r11uf.t 1r1 c11dlltd wnn kMICkln• down • mlnl-JUlll .... ! WI Vf. A 11"..iktn tl dt11•llt I" l o. Ant1'41• t11hMI I~ m1terl11ltl MOtl([tY ti 100-c:liEl'lt '"dlntt In 1111 ~ti trHl«t I fmM ~lllont ltlll llr~l'lt '"" m1t n1 ~ en•P'IOI'" fh.I Nllloillt Wl'ln'Ji ~r:. :..'."~ MondlY Ill ~ ,.,,,." r"" • iot ef n ""P«'ed or Ind 1 WtdMlldll lm1'1 '°""' Ith 1ttd "'°""lfltl IOw C 6Udl Incl toe ne•r tllf CNSI. EIHWll-rl In Scxillltrll r;1lttornlll cller tt"" •"4 ••nn wulhlt' 1r1 toraut •itt~f for tofl'll lto!119d ~I In lfll ltllltlot, .cou~ w-i11er Mil'( ...... 11'11 ttdly. LltrM ¥1rl1llle wlndl """" Ind "'°"''"' "'°"" blCO!ft-lfll M ltef'I'!' 11 i. 11 kl!Oll In 1ltt"' 'IOOfll lodlf i nd WtdlllMll'f, Hltft toc11y 10. C111tf1I ""'1P1•1l11rM r111t11 from SI !ti n. lnllftd ltlrnptrt l\11'11 r1nee ·,,..,,, tO to 11 W•l•r ~r1!\ltt1 u. S••• Moon, Thin -. TU•IM Y StcW Ill ... ., ......... ll:ll p.m, ._1 .S«llnO Jft ............ J:Ol p,m, 2.1 " WID.,•IDAY l'lnt low ..... ~ f:l$1 .. m. ·l.t l'lr.t llftri ., .......... l:lll,,.171. •.O '9c:ond 111oti •••• ., ...... n 1011.m. "·' S.COl'ld ~ . -•••..•. f:ln "·""· 2.1 Sun 1111"" J:'*I 1,m, Ith l:Mit.rfl. "'-•1111 11 .. 1.m. ,_ lO:U p.rn. '·~. Campaign Gift s Filed B ut Many Nixon B <ickers Remain Secret WASlll!IGTON JAPJ -Although a president ol a soft-drink firm and the political coinmlttee of the nation's largest stock brokerage firm top th~ list or publicly rtported contributors to Presi- dent Nixon's re-election campaign, the ldentitiea of hundreds of wealthy back.er• atill remain secret. Ho ff a Flays Con ditions Of Prisons \\1 ASH!NGTON (A P 1 -After four years and nine mo:1ths in a federal prison. former Tean1sters President J im- my Hoffa has told Congress 26 ways to improve federal penitentiaries. \Vithout elaborating in his testimony prepared for a Senate subcomm ittee hearing l.od.<1y on prison refonn, Hoffa i;aid: "I have seen useless destruction of property, maiming of human beings, 1D£s of self.respect, a11d inhumane treatment. "The causes are not one·sided, but n1u ch of this ca n be cured by proper planning and educatio n on the part of the prisoners and the officials of the in- s'.il 11tion . '' e Lnuu"h S lated CAPE KENNEDY (UP IJ -The space Bgency prepared to launch the fourt h in a series or hi gh-capacity Intelsat 4 com· mcrcial communications satellites today f'.J serve as a space switchboard for Irr dian Ocean nilt lons. Il'V SHORT ••• I 'The coun1do1vn aimed 1Ci\V:Jrd an o:r.- tcrnoo n laun~h of the 3. !23-pcund spacec raft nboard an AU :i~-Centaur rocket as tall as en 11-story building. The $13 .5 million satellite is -01\•ned by the Comsal Corp .. and its 52 partner na· tions which 1n<1ke up the Internatii:'nn l Telecommunications Satellite Cons crtiurn (Intelsat). e Pnh1li119s F o1n1d \VORCESTER. Mass. tUPI ~ -Fotir \Veil-known paintings valued at nearly S2 million have been returned to the \Vorce ster Art flluseum almo st as m1·stcriou sly as they disappeared. Two Gauguins. a Rembrandt and a Picrt sso. stolen from the museum 's \\':Ills fl1ay 17. were found in ''reasonably gc)d condi tion," sa id Police Chief George D. O'Neill l\londay. But he declined to re\'ra! ho1v or \\'here the paintings · were recovered. e 6e11e rnl F lr111 \VASH INGTON ~AP) -The for1ner U.S. air commander in \'ietnam, fired for ordering unauthorized air stri kes against North Vietnamese preparing for attack. says he would order the strikes again if he had the op(Xlrtunity. "If I had it to do over. I l\'OU!d do th e same thing," Gen . John D. Lavelle told a House anned .services subcommittee. However, he said, he would "check into reporting procedures be tter" before issu- ing the order. Lavelle was recalled from Vietn:im after reports )X'epared by officers under his command -were foN·arded t o Washington indicating falsel y that !he North Vietna mese had undertaken some kind ()f attack to justify the retaliatory strikes. McGover 1i Vi ctor By 5.5 Percent SACRAMENTO (AP ) -Sen. George McGovern's victory margin f o r California's 271 w i n n e r-t ake -a 11 Democratic National C o n v en t i o n delegates was 175,013 votes. Final unofficial results Monday showed McGovern garnered 47 .2 percent <Jf the Democratic ·votes, and Sen. Hubert Humphref 41.7 percent. • More than thrte mlllkin Democratic vote·s were ca.st, but write·ins "·ere still being counted in San Franci~ County. McGovern's total was t.527,39'2 com· pa.red to Humphrey's 1,352, 379. l\fonor a il P w·chase? SACRAMENTO (AP) -the state would purchase the private monorail system at Cal Expo in Sacramento under a bill introduced in the Assembly. The bill, which would appropriate $2.1 million for the purclul!e, was introduced Monday by Assemblyman Walter Powers ([). Sacramento). DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dellw ry of UM Dally Piiot ts vuu antffll ~.,.,.1 1dty1 11 ¥°" dlt llOf ,._.,. '/OVf'I" ,.Ofl' llY $1)(1 p,m,, till Ind \'Wt eop'f will be 11n:.ucrn1 Ui 'fOVo Coll• 1tt1 i.-en 11111~ I 1:• P,11\. S1tvniey 11\d Sutld1Y: " 'fOll Piie not 1'11telw 'f9Ur QllP'J' 11y t 1.tn. a.n.m.,, .,. • •·"'-\ S\llld..,, ctll '"" • CotlY •Ill be b'°"ll'll ti 'l'Oll. CIUt ll't ltklft tll'llll 10 •·"'· Ttltpf'IOrrt's Most Orl"'fl ,,Coulltv A"''' ..•.•.•. t04l'1 Nor111-I M111111r,....,. Ihle• .rid Wintmlntltf' .... • .. . . .......... ltll • J in (ltmlflM, ~!flfll I Mdl, ' S1111 JUI" (1pltl,1110, 0.111 Pt.lllf, Joulll LlfUM, UQ\1111 NI0\111 •. ., ~ Donations or $15.000 apiece from Pepsi Cola President Donald r-.1 . Kendall and the ElfecUve Government Associ11.tion of MerTlll LyBCh, Pierce, Fenner & Smith were listed in campaign reports as the largest Nixon contributions filed with Jhe General Accounting Office. The reports we.re the first quarterly ac- Ul'I Ttll'Pht!I 111 Nem Yo ri< Sen. George McGovern, with a high rise apartment looming in background. carries h i s campaign for delegate su pport iri "New York's primary to resi· dents· of Co-op City in the B r on x. l\1cGovern made a strong defense or h is rommit- ment to Israel's independence during the r ally. Br itisl1 Ha11ded Ireland Dem a nd s By Protesta11ts BELi' AST 1UPl l t-.1 i ! i I a n t fl rntc;;tants put fi\'(' deniand;; !o Britai n loday as their price for C<'lliing off a threatened shoy,·do1\•n v,iit h British troops 1hat could spa rk the 'vorst violence yet in Northern Ireland. The Irish Republican Army (lfiA) stepped up its bombing can1paign toda y Jn a resurgence of violence that h;is claimed 12 lives in the past week -a tota l of 367 in the three years of strife. \~illiam Whitcla1v, the secretary of state for Northern 1reland, reacted to the increased turmoil by announcini;t" he was sending anot her battalion of 550 British troops to Northern Ireland to bring the total there to more than 15.000. \\1hitelaw scheduled a meeting today with leaders of the P rot e s tant paramilitary Ulster Defense Association (VOA ) to prevent a head--0n collision between British forces and L'DA bar. ricade-bui!ders. The UDA, "'hich has barricaded Belfast Pro~estant areas ten1porarily the past live y,·eeks, had threatened to creatt': permanent Protestant "no go" areas tl1 is 1veekend unless British lorccs invade the JRA 's Lon<io nde rry strongholds. \Vhitf'law in his Parliament spee ch 'rarned: "I 1v iJI take the sternest measures to stop the spread of that cancer (no-go areas) elsewhere." counting of contributions and spending required under a new federal elections Jaw that went into effect April 7. 1'he repo!U, filed Saturday but oot Optn for inspeclion until Monday, covtr the period from April 7 through May 31. They \Vere requ ired of all political com· mittee.s expecting to spend or actually spending more than $1,000 in behalf o.I a eandidale for federal office. Kendall and Merrill Lynch wert a1nong SI donors who gave a total of $409,405 in girts of $2.SOO or more to various Nixon l'ommlttees. The remainder of $1.22 million collected since April 7, and listed by the \\'ashington-based Finance Comn1itlee to Re-elec t the Presiden t and three satellite committees, was donated by several thousand con tributors in individual sums or less than $2.500. The lour coinmittees operating under the ch<i lrmanship of former Secretary of C-Omn1erce ~1aurice Stans have collected :1bout SIO n1il!ion -approximateiy a third of y,·hat Nixon expects to raise and spend for his bid for the Y.'hite House again. Forrner .Ally. Gen. John ?\fitche\I, chirf or the Ni.xo11 re-election drive, said r~·::'ent!\' that identities of thoSe who gave soine $9 tnillion before the new law went i11to effect ~-ill not be made public. Basically the report affirmed the general spect!lation that the Republican~ arc. head1n:; in_to the fa ll cum paign v.·ith their presidential \var-chest bulging while th~ Democrat~ have been drained by prunary spending. At least. $10 mil.lion has been spent by Democratic presidential a s p i r a n ts already and two -Sens. Hubert H. Hum- phrey of Minnesota and George s. McGovern of South Dakota -are in debt. The Democratic National Committee refK)rted only $33,000 in cash (Jn hand as of ~1ay 31. Furthermore, it says it re-- mains more than $9 mill ion in the red fron1 1968. i\-1ost of . the leading Democratic hopefuls. with lhe ex ception of Sen. Henry r..t. Jackson of \Vashington and Alabama Gov. George C Wallace Cisclosed major campaign do~rs early u; tl1e primaries. N ixous Celebrate \VASll!NGTON tAP ) -President and ~trs. Nixon had a family dinner party a~lnard the Navy yacht Sequoia Monday night to C'€lcbrate th e first ""edding an· nivcrsary of daughter Tricia and son-in- Jaw Edward Cox. The menu included steak. shrin1p in coconut -a delicacy scr\'ed <it their \Vhite House \\1edding - and a fudge·iced cake that said "Happy Anni versary) Tricia ancl Ed.'' H11lings Balance 011t Nixon's Court Conti11ues Its Conservative Bent WASHINGTON (UPll -Jn a flurry of opinions and orders the ''Nixon'' Supreme Court has continued to demonstra~ lhe consen•ative forces at work among Jts members. But from the standpoint or numbers al one, tl:Jcre have been more decisions supporting individual liberties than de- nying them. On Monday, the court defeated an er~ 'NEWS A.NALYSIS I rorl by'blac:ko lo break into private clubs and expanded Uie right of the policeman on the beat to st•rch suspects. At the same time, It gave a double uslll lo Indigent crinJioal defeQdantsi struck a blow for consumers aM" pu down an dlflcor who stopped distribution o( leaOets on a military base. Thefc·vate club cue. Involvi ng a Moose ge In Harrlablµ'g , Pa., was a Supre Court 1'flr1l." The Loyal order ol Ill-opecifies whllt membership. The court has ruled in the past against racial dlscrimjn111Uon when blacks have -•lled lo open "private'' swimmlna: pools. Still another case involving 1 private pool in Sliver Spring, Md., a suburb ot Washington, has been accepted for review next term. The fl.loose lodge suil asserted the PcMsyJvania 's re~lation of the lod ge operation through 11.! liquor Ucense laws Implicated the stale sufficiently to sul> ject the club to constitutional re- quirements. Only "state action',-1i cov_ered by the 14th Amendment, which la Equality. Justice WUlifun H. Rehnquist, a rtC<nl Nixon appointee, on behalf of the roar jorlty rejected the notion that the llate \fas "a partner or even a jofut venturer in the club's enterprise." ~ Three liberal holdovers from th8 court's majority under formtr Chiet Justice Earl Warren -Justices Willian\ ,)). Douglas, William J. BreMan and IThurgood Marshall -dissented rroin this ruling and from an extension ot r polleeman's authority t.o "stop and frlsk suspect.. on the SVtet for dangerpus weapons. - This JlOWet WaJ &ranted by the high court In 1963, If circumstanci!1 warrant, even though the poUce do not Mve enough evidence to make an arrest. I f 'f I t ) • n F d J er m lo ti Su B th d tn ., ' of ar vi di! ati "' an th ca m It th • be co Orange Coast Today's F l•al N.Y. Stoelui VOL. 65, NO. 165, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGo/COUNTY , CALIFORNIA > TUESDAY, JUNE 13, 1972 N TEN CENTS Plan for Mesa Harbor, l(eys Marina Revived By L. PETER KRI EG Of IH O.lly P'llel 5t1tl Costa Mesa has begun its march to the liea -again. Revived plans for a 167-acre, f75 mil lion harbor and marina that will con- nect to the Greenville-Banning channel and exte~ as far north as the proposed Fairview State Park, were unveiled Mon- day. The one-heralded Keys Marina proj- ect, that fell flat for lack o[ funds six e years ago, will be developed by a Costa ?i.fesa marine hardware dealer -who said he dreamed it up 10 years ago -and two Texas oilmen. Paul L. Snyder, owner of P.1esa Boat and h-tarine, 1595 Newport Blvd., said he is buying back the Santa Ana riverfront property from State MutuaJ Slvlngs for $2.6 million. He said he expects Uttle problem get- ting necessary approvals from Costa l\1esa city officials. Wage Settleln~ts Police Will Get 5.4% Pay Boost By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Ot Th• D•il~ ~11or sratt Newport Beach police "~:ill gel a 5.4 per<:ent aC'l'Oss-the·board pay hike for 1972-73, significantly more than the in- crt ases granted other city employes. Board Gets Bay B erth Area· S tudy A new system designed to eliminate many small offshore mooring areas in lower Newport H11rbor through applica- tion of a "Bay Berths" plan offered by Supervisor Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach was approved for study today by the Board of Supervisors. Caspers said his proposal would in- clude construction or the offshore berth- ing facilities. would create much more area for recreational boating. ''This could result in approximat ely 300 boats v•hich now occupy a to tal area of 30 acres being consolidated into an area of about seven acres." the super· visor said, "The result \.\'OUld be 23 ad- dit ional a cres made available for recre- a tional nav igalion. ·• Other advantages cited by Caspers ~·ould be the i1nprove1nent flf sanitary and trash disposal collection thereby im- proving the bay poll ution problems and the elimination of unsafe conditions caused by b o a t s now sailing through moo ring areas and resulting in accidents. Caspers also said his plan ""ould make It more convenient for boaters to get to their vessels through the prov isions or :s h or e boat taxi service and would help provide better security for boats by control Of access. City ttanager Robert L. \\'ynn today announced wage settlements with all three employe organizations which give firemen a one percent hike and general office v.·orkers a 4.85 petcent boost. While firefighters got the small raise in pay. they did get a reduction in their "'ork v.·eek from 61 hours this year to 58 next year and to 56 in 1973-74. Wynn said the tot.al salary and fr inge benefit package will cost $385,000 of which $275,000 will go for salaries. Mari ne safety workers, which include the city's lifeguards, will receive an average pay boost of 4.4 percent with the largest single pay increase -7.5 percent -going to the lifeguard captain. Depart- ment boat operators will get no raise at c:JI. Department directors and assistants will get raises averaging 4.4 percent. The highest of these will be the 15 percent i~ crease for the assistant marine safety director. Wynn said the salat) increases represent an average of 4.36 percent above the figu res cited In the city's preliminary budget. Total salary costs for 1972·73 will be more than $7.3 million. The fringe beJJefit increases will br ing tot.al personnel rosts up 4.75 percent over CStt SALARIES, Page 11 NO COMMENT ON BUDGET Not a single person spoke at a public hearing on the Newpo rt Beach budge1 J\1onday night. City councilmen. "'ithout comment. continued the hearing on the proposed $13.3 million spending package until June 26. "We intend to adopt the budget that night," declared Mayor Donald A. Mcin- nis. Newport Council Action lfe re in brier are major actions taken by Newport Beach councilmen ll.1onday night: PARK BONDS -Directed parks, beaches and recreation commission to determine the best way to bring new ve rsion ol parks and bike trails bond ill· sue to another vote, perhaps as early as October. LIBRARY -Approved plans to buy the Ayres Sales office on West Coast Highway for a children'• library. COAST FR 0 EEWAY -Voted to send 11as many councilmen as passible" to the June 19 Senate Transportation Committee hearing on the bill by As-. semblyman Robert Badbam ttiat would kill lhe Newport leg of the Coast Free- way. NEWPORT FREEWAY -Authorized Mayor Donald A. Mclnnis Lo appear before the state Highway Commission June 21 to protest plans to terminate the Newport Freeway at Coast HJghway. TRtrl'H JN SWJNG -Ordered draft of ordioarice requirin& sel lers to notify prospe<:~ real estate purchasers ol all zoOing variances or illegal uses or Illegal subd!vi.slonJ of property. . MARINES -Instructed pe-.iet office to find out U any Marines it El Toro want part-time jobs 11 janitors In 'the pollce mtlon becaUJe of the lack cl 1ni11 ... lo do clean-up task!. llECREATION -Ordered program 1Uowtni Newport Beach m ldents lo "pre-reglster" I~ summer propms and clasatl. Set date tor June 23, the day bofore rtgular algnups, PARKING BAN -Adopted onllnan<e bennlnf ....-nl1ht llretl parkJne of commercial vehlclff more than 20 feet long. BE~CR PARKING -RaJstd the rates for parking II Corona del Mar Slate Beach from $1 lo $1.50 weekdays and $Lil0 lo $2 on weekends. BED TAX HIKE -Set public heartnl for June 26 on proposed lncrtase In bed tax from five to 111 percenl DUMP SITE -Approved $411,000 cller by 1 .. adersh lp llou.1lng S)'ll<mt for the 41Hcr< former dump olte at the eod of lllh Street In Colla M ... ""' though adjacent developer claimed he offered five perct.nt more because be wantJ It for Costa Mesa harbor development ' ~le may be righl , since less than a yea r ago, Costa to.fesa councilmen rejected a proposed residential development on part or the property with then-mayor Robert Wilson proclaiming, "I still think on that side of the city you're going to see another Fort Lauderdale." Snyder said he and his partners - Newel Hayes and William Moroshi. both of El Paso -plan to construct a total of 2.000 slips in the marina, 500 of them in a commercial yacht basin and the rest on a series of ringers adjoining residential lots. Attempts by Snyder to enlarge the proj- ect even mort. by including the 40-acre former Newport Beach dump .s.ite at the end or 19th Stree-1, apparenUy were thwarted by Newport Beach councilmen Monda y night. They awarded the sale of the property to Leadership Housing Systems for $616.000. even though Keys had stipulated in Its bid ol $475,000 lhat it would pay five ame percent over "'hatever thr highest bid was. Councilmen sa.:d lhev'd never ht>::ird of such a thing and al'Llrig on the ad\'lre of City A!lorney Dennis O'Neil. who called the percentage proposal "indefinite and unce rtain," approved lht' sale t o Leadership for !hf' "be~t bid" Attorney Donalci H PriC't', \l'ho represents Keys ~lar111u. ~rgut"d 1he point, unsuccess fully . hef11rr the counril lhen said later he may .seek J writ of on MYSTERY INCIDENT -An artist's drawing of an American Airlines jetliner pinpoints the' rear area of the DC-10 where something opened a baggage compartment door of the jetl iner shortly after it "'' T.-.. ... left Detroit. A coffin being shipped to New York. toppled out of the bole and fell 12,000 feet, landing beside a h ome in Ontario. The pilot made an emer· gency landing at Metropolitan Airport. County Man Passenger On Bizarre Jet Flight \ By ARTHUR R, VINSEL 01 It!• D1llv Piiot '"" Durwood Anderson didn 't hear the decompression blast that nearly dumped him and 66 others into the dusk sky and eternity at 12,000 feet over Waynr Coun· ty. l\1ich .. Monday night. flis ears were plugged up. Anderson, 42, of 13132 Laburnum Drive, Tustin, and his executive traveling ('Om- panion were among IO persons injured, however, during the bizarre inflight in· cident. lie suffered a dislocated finger and leg abrasions while escaping down an evacuation ch ute alter l.merican Airlines Flight 96 miraculously made it back lo Detroit. Investigators at first believed a saboteur's bomb explod ed ln a baggage compartment -tlucking a coffin con- taining a body -and other cargo out a gaping hole in the big jetliner. Investigators have ruled out this th eory, saying the loud thump, bump and prolonged whooshing noise resulted from instant decompression due to opening of a faulty compartment door. Hurtling earthward like a bomb, the sil ver.colored steel coff in slammed to earth, narrov.•ly missing a farm home, fnllo wed by the fluttering airplane door. Somehow, a brush with eternity seems less terrifying in retrospect when it iJ ac- cidental instead of sinister and deliberate as in the case of a bombing. f"irst told this morning or the cargo door malfunc tion now blamed, Mrs. Doris Anderson expressed relief. "I'd prefer that rather than to ha ve had a bomb on board," she said. Details of the crisis at 12,000 feet and the cool command maintained by 28-year· old pilot Capt. B. E. McCormick, until he stepped out onto the runway were sketchy to Mrs. Anderson . The incident may have become hazy to Capt. McCormic k, who could only stand beside the plane murmuring: "Jesus Christ ... Jesus Christ ... " "It's kind of muddled in my mind," Mrs. Anderson said this morni ng. ''I'm sure it was quite frightening ." ··~iy husband is fine," she added. "He called from Wayne County General Hospital and then again when he checked into a motel." Anderson and his traveling c:ompanion, \Vil liam Heflennan, 51 , ol lbe San Fernando Valley were en route to Bui· falo, N. Y. and C.Onnect..icut on a bus iness (Stt PASSENGER, P1ge %) Bonds Ba~k on Coffin Plunges From Sk y, Lands Near Farm Yard WINDSOR, Ont. (AP) -Sante Facca v.•as working in his flower bed at the fron t of his farmhouse when a metal coffin dropped out of the sky and landed about 200 ft'tt away. Next he saw a flash of metal -it turned out to be a airplane door-hitting the ground. Facca walked over to the olive-green me tal box and sow two legs sticking out lie said later he thought lt v.•as a dummy and poked it with a stick. That was when he realized It was a human body and called Ontario provincial police. Today, investigators from four agencies \\'ere searching neighboring Sandwich South Townshil' for further wreckage Crom an American Airlines OClO that had a door ripped off by a malfunctlon. "First thing I heard was them (the cof- fin and baggage door) splitting apart,'1 said Facca, &3. Man, 19, Ge ts Life SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP ) -Robert Chantal, 19, of Nashua, N.H .• wes 1en-- tence<I Monda y to life in prison on his plea <lf. gull ty to first-d~ree murder in the ehootlng of a 74-year"'°Jd caretaker 18!1 Thanksgiving. Ballot Cou1icilme1i A sk Best Time to Vote on Park Issu e The Newport Beach park bonds are going b>ck on the ballot -maybo In Nove mber, maybe in a spe<:ial election before « 1lter the presidential voting. Councilmen Monday night directed the Parks, Beaches and Recreation Com~ mlS81on lo tell them when they should go be!Of• .. 1ers again -ond how much !My should osk for this time. The proposed_ #.I park ond bike trail bond measutti failed to get the nect:l8lr)' two-thirds vote last week. Col.lnc.Umen indicated that whenever the measure is resubmitted to the elec- tonte, It will be in the form or only one questk>n, rather than the three that were on the June I ballot. Councllmtn said um time they'll lake a • more ectlve role In the campaign. So wUI Board of SUpervtsors Chalnnan Rona ld W. Ca!pers. Cupen, a Lido Isle resident. Monday night offered to serve on a campaign commlttot and offered lo donate 11,000 ol hls own moaey lo help Onance the drive. Councilman Carl Kymta. who urged that IM bond3 be put on the ballot again "' soon •• f'Ol'lble. said he thought the city should seek only the moneys , from Propoaltlon F -$3.5 million for land ac· qu lsltlon. He 1tl110 noted that to get the question back on the ballot ln 'November, it would require a petition campt1ign to obtain !!lgnature! of 15 percent of the vottt1 - 3.225 signatures representing 15 percent of the 21.47& who voted in the llu1t gubernatorial elteUon. • Mrs. Margot Sldlling, an active bMd campaljpler, urged that the boodJ be put on a spec:lal election M.llot, noting that far more people wlll bo vctlng In the NoYmlbor praldenllll elections. She •Ill· celled k would bo more difficult t• aet the lwo-thlrdl "yH" .. teal that tlm<. "Perhaps you could carry It over lo the April school election." Mrs. Skilling said. Kymla said he ls worried tha t If the proposed "Wat&on Amendment'' passes the city could not •fiord to aell the bond•. That measure, bea4ed for a 1pot on the November ballot. would abarply Umit local property tax rates. Robert Shelton. former city manager ind a l.orml!!:r ~nt:llman, suggested tbe lSee BONDS, l'a1e %J 1nandate lo blotk the .salt lo Leadership on the grounds Kt'ys' bid was higher. Krys had also askC'd for rretht term:.; on the property, which counf'1l111en didn't hke Leadership Otft'.'r1-d to pav cash. Snyder noted th:n 1111" 167-;ic:re p;irrel he o"•ns virlual\y !>Urn1und 1: the c!111Y11• site oo the west, nnrth :1n<t l'a~I. He su11! plans ror the m:1 r111,'1 ~·.10 llnd 'A'lll J.:!1 t1hea<l 1v1th or 1v1lho1u th1· ndd11Jon11I (See l\lARINA, f'agr ?J oor FBI Fii1ds No Evidence Of Bomb DETitOIT (AP1 -lnvcstigatori .!lald today a ma lfunction1n~ cargo door that opened in fl ight caused a midair incident in which an American Airlines DCIO wai damaged but managed to make it safely back to Detroit's r..·tetropolitan Airport li'londay night. First reports indicated the tail section of the huge Los Angeles-to-New York plane might havr been ripped by an ex- plosive. But the airline quoted the FRI as saying there was no evidence of an C'X· plosive device being involved. The 56 passengers and 1 l crew members all esciij>ed serious in jury as the jet ran off a runway during ·an emergency landing. Alter hours of illvesUgatlon by FB l agents. Wayne C-Ounty sherUl's office rs ,1nd airline personnel, the incident wu!!: blamed on a faulty door which opened in Di~ht. Capt. Bryce E. l\1cCorm1ck. veteran pilot of the airliner, said of his ini tial reaction, "My fir st thought was that there had been a midair collision.·· l\fcCormick told an airpo rt news con- ference that alter the blast, he had no rudder control over his craft, one ol his three engines was out and he had no left brakes as he fought to get the plane back to Metro from whence it had taken oft for Buffalo and New York . ''The scaredest I was "'hen we wert on the ground and the plane was rolling ... I thought it was going to roll right into tbe tenninal because I could not get it back on the run way," he 11aid. McCorm ick, discussing earUer lheorlet that an explosion occurred on the plane, said, "To my recollection, I do not remember telling the passen~ers there (Ste PLANE, Page %) A pa rtn1e n l Pro j ccl Ge ls Council Dela y A pubUc hearing on proposal to expand the controversial Versaill es on the Bluffs apartment project by adding 738 units was oontiJJueJ by Newport Beach coun- cilmen Monday night. Repreaent.atlvea of lbe developer asked for the delay, until July JO, 90 It could be heard by all .even councilmen. Vice Mayor Ho•ard Rogers and Coun- cilmen Paul Ryckoff did not attend Mon- day night'• meeting. ..... .. C:.ea Low clouds and foe along the ooaot wlll lake aedlt for slightly cooler tempentures in Oranp County Wemesday. llllhs expected lo bo lll1lWld 10 at the boach. a Inland. ~ In IM IO's. I NS llllE TODAY A Nt brask4 tulDIJJCIPa ,,.. portt that cloud 1ttdlna t %J)tri· nunu were conducted In 11dt1 abo11< Rapid Ci lfl, S.D., o •h011 time hr/on dnoslattng floods. See 1to111, Paot 4. • LM....,. I C1ll""""' I c .... Hf.. INt CM!ltt lJ c,..,._.. 11 DH!tl ~ ti ,,....,.., ,... . •·twt~ ,. "'""" , . ., ,., ......... 11 "'---14 4119 w..... 14 • ., -- ~ Otll V PILOT N T....,, Juoo 13, 19n 2 1•JIGs Downed? Committ'ee - Israel, Egypt Battle in Air Plans Vote On Freeway TEL AVIV (UPI) -Israel and Egypt fought their first air battle In aJmolit two )'ears today. An l!Taeli spokesman said two EgypUan MJG21J wue shot down Jn tbe do&flgbt ovtr the Mediterranean Sea. But El)'pt, in turn, claimed it1 plant! shot down tv.·o Israeli fighters over 11n Egyptian sea&1de resort. during thal period were put at 17 planes. A military source 1ald the Israeli planes were eai:rying ou t a "routi.ne pa!rol" off Sinai when "thost people the Eg)·plian11 ) came and the battle t tarted. ft \\.'EIS very short." ''The Egyptians deOnlttly did not make a lovab!f' sign ." anoth~r s-0urce ~ald . The California Senate Trer!.!iportat!on Committet will conduct a hearing and probabl y a v-0te on Assemblyman J{(Jbert E. Badham's bill to kill the Newporl Heat'h leg of the adopted Pacific Coast F reeway Route i\fonday afttrnoon. Newport Beach v:ill be representtd at the session. An announcement said all or the lsraeil planes relurned safely from the en· counter 25 miles off the northern coast of the Slna.1 Peninrula in international air 1pace. I fe refused to elabor11tt". 'rhe ofrl<:lal llpokesn1ens announcen1enl said the two Egyp!ian plJots \Yere sten parac:hul1n 3 into the tea. They dld n-0t say who started !iring. The spoke!lmen also did not say h-0w many plant!! were Involved in the dogfight , or disclose other details. The California Jl igh11'ay Cornmissi\ln \.\.'I ll discuss what to do about ending U1e Newport Freeway -if the coa.~t freeway ls killed -at a hearing June 21 111 Sacramento. lt Wil the first air battle of the 22- monlh-old Middle Eut ce.auflre. The previous dog·Oght occurred July 30, 1970, when Jaraeli pilota reported l!hooting down four MIG2ls without a loss over the Suez Canal. L:1st Sept. I I. a ground gunner shot do"'.n an Egyptian ~JJG buzzing Israeli posltions on the Suez Cana l in the first in- cident of 11~ kind or the ceasefire. Newport representatives y,•ill be there too. Councllm en Monday vowed to get all of their numbers they can to attend the 1:30 p.m. committee hearing Monday and aulhorlzed Mayor Donald A. Mclnn ts to appear at the commission hearing Wednesday. The noon battle brought to 114 the oum- ber of Egyptian aircraft reported downed by Jsraeli pllots since the 1967 Middle East War. Losses to Isreal in dogfights $1:<.da ys later , the Egyptians retaliated IJy shooting (]own an J ~raeli cargo plane. kilhng <ill 13 aboard . It was this sanH' srnale panel thal dealt a death blow tu 11 .s11nilar nieasure .sponsored by Badhan1 \Yi'O years ago. 'Protected' B-52s Strike Red Targ·ets SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. B521, taking ad· vantage of new electronic developments lf&at protects them against misslles ~ ta rgets in North Vietnam today ...,,. .. 1lxth consecutive day. rtghttr-bombtrs, mean"·hile, h ] t f..ltdges 25 nliles from China despite Pe- king warning& the raids threaten China 's security. The Pentagon said the B52s, confined mostly to South Vielnam in the past because of the miss ile threa~. are bomb- ing the north on an almost dally basis, The United States has increased the num- ber of B62a in Southeast Asia fourfold since the atart of the Communilt of- f enslve on March 30. Pentagon sources said the B52s are belni accompanied with special planes equipped with electronlc countermeasure 1ear capable of jamming the radar 1uldance S)'ltem of the Soviet·made 1urface-to-air missiles (SAMs). The B52s on rare occasions have struck near the Hanoi-Haiphong area but most of the current raids are stUI just north of the Demilitarized Zone and directed 1galn1t Communist aupplles. U.S. military 1pokeamen reported jets from the aircraft carrier Midway blew up a hu1e oil storage comPleJ: near the port of Vlnh, fllllng the sky with black smoke and nashes of orange flames. Air Foree F4 Phantoms carried out the raids near China. Tbe U.S. command said the F4s knock· tel out two railroad bridges and tracks running between them on the railway leadln1 northeastward Crom Hanoi to the Chinl border -previously the principal overland route for 1upplles from China. The command sai d one bridge was hit near Thanh Mol. 60 miles northeut of Hanoi and 25 miles from Chlna'a Kwangsi Province. The other bridge was near Lane Dang. 65 miles northeast of Hanoi and 30 miles from the border. Neither had bten hit previously. Only a few hours earlier. the Chinese Foreign Ministry ·issued a formal state- ment wh.lch said such attacks threaten "the security of China ." It said the United States steadily expanded the sphere of bombing up to areas "quite close to the Sino-Vietnamese borders." Book Critic Dies BOONVILLE, N.Y. (AP) -Ctltlc Ed· mund Wilson. a leading figur e on the American literary scene for the past ha!( a century, died Monday of a htart attack. OIAN•I COAST " DAILY PILOT nr. Clnl'llt: Cots! DAIL V l'ILOT. wilt! Mlle!! k eornllt119111 'Ille """' ~rn1, 1.5 P!JOllwi.cl tiv tn• o"""" Co.ti "90>111111,... com1111nv. hfi•· r•lt odfl1-art puolllhftl, MONl•Y 111raw~ f'rld•Y· k>r CM.It M""· H•WJ10•I Be•c~. Hr.1t1tl"'9..., !tK111''ount8•n \11nev. L11un1 •..di. ,,.,IM/Hddlt!Nck ~nd Siii cltm ... 1•/ Ion Jvon C111bt,,.,_ A ,;"91~ "!l•on•I Mfll9n ,, Plltll"1Mill htuNl•YI ~ ..... s~n1My>. , ... p rll'IClpal ,.....i1ett111t p1111! II t1 JJO Writ It)' StrMi, COllll Mt.,, Ctll'Oml•, 'M1 .. l• .. ort N, W11d ,.,...'°"" Ind Pvbllllltr Jeck I. Cvrlty V)elc '"'ld«ll ft ~ti MlrwtOW n."''' K .... a Edllw TII•"''' A. Mvrphin• Metlltlnt •dlfto' L P1t1r Kri11 H...,.,., lleell CUy l"dl!or ....... ,. IMtlt C>H'- lJJ) N1w,ort l o11l1v1ril M•ilitt AM,.,,, l'.O. loc 1111, !2661 -Ofllo.. C.-. MIM1 m W..I hV Sf!'"' \.ofllllll -..ct11 m ...,..., Awn111 """'""""' 9Mdll 1n1s IHctl 9'\lllYIWI .. C._.1 .. """" fl Gtl'lllM lllMI 1 ........ 17141 ....... , a ..... Moocrl II & HJ-1671 Since then , the air over the fo;liddle East has been quiet except for three t-;fay overflights of Israeli-held territory by MIG23 aircraft, repcrted by Israel to ha ve been piloted by Soviet aviators. Chances of a re~'t>rs<il of opinion are projected as good Jioy,·eve r. since the con1mittee has approved a bill to delete the Long Beach leg of the route . Bt1dham·s bill cleared the assembly las t month on a 62 to l vote and if it gets a favorable report from the Senate com- n1ittee it is expected to pass !he upper house. ln at! three overflights. Israeli Phan- lon1 Jets rose to challenge the infiltrators but no contact was reported. FrotnPage 1 PLANE •.. had been an explosion. I told them everything was to remain on the plane so officials co uld investigate to determine the posalblllty of any explosion ." George A. Warde, executive vice presi· dent and general manager of the airline, said in a atatement issued at the com~ pany's New York headquarters: "A thoro ugh investigation by a com- pany maintenance and engineering team assembled at Detroit Metro po Ii tan Airport has determined that a cargo door in the lower part of the fuselage below the passenger cabin opened when the airplane was at about 12,000 feet altitude after havlng left Detrolt en route to Buf· falo although signal lights in the cockpit indicated the cargo door and all other doors were cloaed and latched normally. "Because the airplane was pressurized, a deco mpression with a loud sound oc- curred. During the night, we have in- spected the cargo compartments of all our DCIOs and have found them to be functioning properly. American Airline s and McDonnell Douglass, m!nufacturers or the DC!O, are conducting a thorough investigation to detennlne wtlat caused the malfuncti-On of the door on Ftlght 96. The National Transportation Safety Board also is inv~sligating the incldtnt." Investigators said that when the door opened , some of the cargo -including a coffin -twnbled out. Eleven persons aboard the 22j} passenger-capacity aircraft s ~ f. f e re d minor injuriell -most while sliding down emergency exit chutes after the landi ng. Several passengers hit by debris ":'hi!e airborne were treated at local hospitals and released. Fro11• Page 1 SALA RIES ... preliminary estimates to a rlgure 1n ex· t'ess of $8.5 million . \Vynn said the negotiated salary and fringe benefit increases can be handled by the budget .;is oullined because of ~urplus rrvenues gen erated by each de- pnrtincnt. The police pay hike means thaf. the starting salary for a patrolman in the department will go from SI0,22 4 to $!0.776. On the average, a startin6 fireman can eicpect to get about $120 per year more than las t year -from $9,334 to •9.504. Lifeguards y,•ill receive raises averag- ing '540 per year which increases the ;iverage starting pay for a senior guard fro1n $9.240 to $9.780 pet year. Oepartn1ent directors and ai;sistants \Viii receive an average pay inc:rea~e of more th.an Si.000 per year, but officials ~tressed !hat wme \Viii be higher 11nri !Ome lo\ver than that figure. State Aid Sought For Ne,vport's Ne'v Policemen Ne\vport Beach Is going to try to get the state to pay for aeven new J>Olicemen. rat her than adding the men in the city budget right now. City Councilmen Monday reversed an tarller decision ta hlre more ofllcera and then hope !he ltale would boolt man. power even more. Clly Manager Robert L. Wynn polnltd out that it would cost nearly ,90,000 in salarlet and fringe benefits and equlp- ment If the force i5 txpand~ as re· que1ttd by Police Chit! B. James Glavas. O..plle objt<Uons by Glavat, who oaid the State-paid men could be used for traf- fic control only, councilmen deckled to take the chance on the grant, which, Wynn 1ald, NtWport Beach "!J 90 pert<nt" 1\11'8 ol fetllllf. Councilmen did or<ler !50.000 be put In the contlnpnty flJnd In cue the snnt f1U1 .through. If It dotlll'I, t1-funda cM be used for other J>Ul'POIH. Controversy over the NewJX>rt Free\vay terminus flared 11\'() months ago 'vhcn a developer proposed to construct a con· domlnium in the path or one of the alternate routes for the proposed Newport Freeway extension. That freeway. orglnally e1pected to in- terchange with the coastal freeway, could now extend directly to tbe Coast Highway, swing ea.!rt to Newport Boulevard or west to • proposed ex- tension of Balboa Boulevard. From Pagel BONDS ... posslbility -0f having the special election in October. Councilmen instructed City Altorney Dennis O'Neil tom if there is time to do that. That, too, would require a petition drive since cities are prohibited from routinely rescheduling bond elections within si x months of an unsuccessful election. Mrs. Ginger Page, who served as chairman of the Citizens' Park Bond Team. which Jed the June campaign. said .she would be v.'llling lo help circulate petitions if necessary. Caspers, in his appearance, told coun- cilmen that wh ile he has worked hard for county regional parks, "I have overlook· ed !he need for local parks in Nc\\'port Beach. "It's not too late." he said, offering help for city·county coordination. .. If we're going to have open space. we niust have it now, there 's no tomorro\v," he sald. Caspers suggested the city consider in- stituting a park fund by requiring developers to either donate land -Or money for park sites as a condition for approval of projects. He noted that Anaheim has made $383,000 In just such a fund already this calendar year. "But we can 't put all the burden on the bu!lder. they'll just tack it on the prices of their houses. We can't make newcomers pay for our past shortcom- ings." Caspers said. He encouraged applications for federal and sta te opeo space grants and urged quick resubmission of the bond measures. "rll donate $1,000 to thi.. committee," Caspers said, "to help get the messa.((e over that if there is no action no\v, there'll be no-0pen space in the future . "You have your office get in touch with mine,'' ~1 clnnis said. "I'd sure llke to take you up on lhl!L" From Pagel PASSENGER • • • trip, Mrs. Anderson said. The men are employed in the contracts · and engineering office of the Air Rite Division of Sargent Industries Jn El Segundo, requiring t"·o or three business trips ptr month. Occask>nal difficulties -such as Ian· ding during New York'a infamous bla ckoot -have pltigutd Ander son's travels, his v.'ife said, but never anything as critical as Monday night's episode. "He's been flying for 20 years and this ta the firat seriOUJ incident," eald Mrs. Anderson, adding her hu sband will have at least a one-day layover in Del.roil before <'Ollllnulllf h!J trip. She sai d the couple's chlldren, Melinda, 16, and Richard, 13. are excited about the sensatiooal ad venlurt! ·their father wlll bave to tell In detail when he returns. "And they'te aw!Ully lhlnltluI it !urned out the way it did," she added. NAACP Suit Upheld SAN BERNARDIN.:> (AP) -The San Bernar<llno City Unlfltd School Dl•trict hi• !•lied Jn l!J 111ampt to quash a suit filed by the National A1socl1tlon for the Adv.anctment of Colored People seeking racial balance In the 9Chool1 by ~I>' !ember. Suporlor Court Judi• Paul Egly dmled 1 motion Mond1y for dlsm!ml flied by Bert Levitt a scllool dlatrlct •~ t<irney, ilho ergtled thal 1ltp1 towar<I rtdaJ balance bad been taken and were continuing. Tlieawr to Get Delivera1ice LIVERPOOL. Eni!and \UPI) - A Joea! 1ex·mm movie lholl4r 1howln1 "Don't Dellvtr Uo From Evil'' will clo1t down for the next month. When Jt reopens, it will be a chureh. Father Thomas McNevin said the 100.seat theater filled his corr grtgaUon's needs. "We have nu qualms -0ver the building 's previous use," he said. Nix on Urges Fast Passage Of Arn1s Curb \\'ASl ll.\'G1'0N (AP J -President Nix- on . disclosing so me of the fine print of arms curb agreements negotiated with the Soviet Union. urged C.Ongress today to act "y,·ithout delay'• in approvi.ng the ac- cords . A treaty Jtmiting the deploy1nent of an- lihHll istic missiles (ABM J to two sites in •~uch cvuntry was sent to the Senate wilh :.i request fo r early ratification. Both houses of Congress were asked llJ pass a resol ution approving a com panion executive agreement that w-0uld free ze the to tal number -0f la nd and sea-based offensive baJlJ5tic 1nissile!'I in the United States and 1 he Soviet Union at present levels. \Yhilc tcrn1ing the agrl•ements "an ln1· portant first step in checking the arms race," Nixon told C-Ongress they "do not close off all avenues of strategic com- petition." He said it ls "essential that we carry !orward a sound strategic modernization program to maintain our security and to insure that more pennanent and com- prehensive arms limitation agreements can be reached." Nixon revealed that the United States fee.ls it would have a basis for withdraw- ing from the ABM treaty if tighter curbs on offensive arms are not negotiated within five years. Either side can withdraw on six-month notice. The fine print Nixon sent Congress disclosed that the United States and the Soviet Union remain far apart in con- sidering the question of modern sub- marlne.s operated by U.S . allles in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. The Soviets take the pasJUon that should the NATO allies build additional modern subs, over and above those now operational -Or under construction, "the Soviet Union will have the right to a cor- responding increase in the number -0f its submarines.'' 1'he United States took the position that lt .. docs not accept the validity of the consideratioru" raised by Moscow regarding submarines belonging to third crunlries. Amer ican negotiators wanted I o res tr i c I lilnd·mobile intercontinental ballistic missile (JCB~f ) launchers as part of the agreement on offensi\'e arms l>ut deferred the topic to speed an agree· ment in time for Nixon's summit visit to ]\foscow last month. However. the Uni ted States has served notice it would regard the dept-0yment of :;uch launchers "as inconsistent with the objectives" of the e1PCutive agreement. The Soviets expressed no view on the subject. The exact ti ming of congressional hear- ings cin the treaty and the agreement is still uncertain. Chairman J . Williams Fulbright (0- Ark .). of the Senate Foreign Relations C.Ommittee and Chairman John Stennis (D-Miss.), of the Senate Armed Services Committee have indicated they favor a~ prov:il of the accords. After Republican congressional chiefs incl 'o\'ith Nixon this momif1g. House COP chief Gerald Ford of Michigan forecast "rapid. th orough and favorable treat· ment. '' What's Mesa Eyii1g Police Aid For Irvi11e By RUDI Nl£0ZIELSKI Of 1111 D1Ur ~l .. 1 St1H Thr city of Irvine rnay have its 01~·n police force by July 1 but it will be ::;taffed Uy flffic:ers from Costa 1\1csa A proposal to provide Irvine res1denl!1 w1lh police protection through a $345,000 1)(.·r year inter-('ily c;ontract is being v1ew('d favfirabl y by Cosua A1e.'ia l'Jt.J' cOtHtcilmen who rnay give their approv;il this week . The subject was ra!s('d Monday night Uuring a budget ::>tudy ses~aJ11 -0{ the <.:Osta Mesa City Council. Although the appraisal of the proposed contract was Positive, no action was taken. Already approved by Irvine. the pro- posal is likely to be endorsed by the Costa Mesa CClUncil during a special session scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Thursday. "\Ve're basically all in favor of it and belive it's the right thing to do,'' con1- mented Councilman Alvin Pinkley th i~ morning. "'We're glad they asked us 111 preference to anybody else ." A "Yes'' vote by Costa Mesa eoun· cilmen Thursday night could mean that Irvine would have its own !j}man squad by Ju1 y I. On that day the Orange County Sheriff's Ofrice \\'ill tern1inate its service to Irvine . Councilman Pinkley said that Cosla Meia Police Chief Roger Neth pictured the contract as mutually beneficial since Costa Mesa could draw on the IO nten as r eserves during an emergency. Under the proposal, Irvine streets would be patrolled on a 24·hour basis by two police cars. He licopter patrol may ultimatel y also be included In the bargain but the Irvine council still appears divid· ed on that subject. Loca l identity of the police officers \\'ill be mainta ined througt: snap-on Jr,ine Police shoulder patches and slick-on emblems on the black-and-white cars, Pinkley said. The propased agreement bet"•een the ty,·o citles \\'as not reflected in the $10 .6 million budget requested by Costa 1\Ies:1 City Manage r Fred Sorasabal for the 1972-73 fiscal year. Included in the budget ere requests (or si x additional police officers to help curtail the local crime rate. Approval or the Costa Mesa.Irvine contract mean~ that Costa Mesa would have to hire ad· ditlonal officers and lease more patrol car!!. The budget ltaelf was discussed withciut controver!Y Monday night and is ex- pected to be passed as printed Thursday night. From Pagel MARINA ... acreage. however. He said those plans call for escrow on the property bought from State Mutual Savings to open this week and close in 60 days. He said construction will start early next year and the project will take "two- three years" to complete. "We're going ahead this time, we've got the money," Snyder vowed, reflecting on earlier financial faUuns that left the property and the project bouncing from one developer to aoothe.r until State Mutu&l foreclosed on it in 1968. Snyder said the early start on eon~ struction will be po11sible becausf" there has already been more than $220.000 worth of engineering 'vork done on the project. lie noted. among other things, that there i., a canyon on the property thal 'vl!I be: able to hold the four million cubu: yards or fill that will be dredged for the harbor . 1'11sl~. 1,11sk It's bankruplcy for the "1'ooth Fairy" if Big '!'om ever decide! to put. onC' o( those massive tusks under his pillO\\' for a rt'· 1vard. 1'1lr gianl cleph3nt is a :-;t~1r \\'1th the 1\rnro11 Grotto c1rt·11.~ \v hi c h JS playing in Zanf·svillc, Ohio "" MrlS. Callaha1n , , Former Court Clerk, Succ1m1bs ~·lrs. Dlana f:riffin Coll;iham. f-0rtner CJC'rk of the ~!arbor Area Judicial Dislrh:t Court. died Saturday at the ag(' of 66. ru11t1ral services for t-.Irs. Callaha1n, a H~ye.'.lr rc.-;ldent of Corona Uel Nlar, \lill be held at I p.111. Thursday in :\fancht'strr Chapel. lngle11·ood Ceincl<'ry, Los Angeles. lnter1ne11t \\'ill foJ!o1v. t-.lrs. Call:iham's husband, J at k Cal l:'l h:irn, is <1 ploneer Orange Cou111.v resident and tht' ror111cr 01vncr <ind early {h:1·eloper of San Juan Capistrano Airport. Mrs . Caliaham lived and worked on the Orange C-0ast from 1956 to 1966 until she and her husband inoved their residence to Long Beach and Falls City, Oregon. She \\'as found dead at the \\'hee l of her car after suffering a heart attack tn Long Beach . Survivors, in addition to her husband, include her brother, .Judge William Christensen of Palm Springs. retired, fonncr presiding judge o( the Harbor Area court. She also leavC's a son. II. H. Griffin , <lr Yuca ipa. a daughter. A1rs . .John Moon, ur El Cajon, four grandchildren and one Ercat grandchild . Dog Res triction Beg ins Tl1ursday Newport Beach's summer ban on dog!! on beaches, the ocean front sidewalk and parks frequented by ch!ldren will go into effect Thursday. From that day until Sept. 15. all Animals ~ including those on leashes - are prohibited access to these areas. Dogs are banned year-round from Newport b:iy front beaches . During the remainder of the year. a~ cording to the law, dogs are banned from !~.e l<:,-::-<>ation areas between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. All othf"r times. they may be taken onto oceanfront beaches if leashed. The Cit y C-0uncil is experted to rev ic1v the clty-.s. controversial dog law sometime 1h!s !'lummer. My Line ... YOU WON'T BE FED ANY LINES AT ALDEN'S. WE ARE MORE INTERESTED IN DEVELOPING LOY AL CUSTOMERS THAN MAKING A FAST SALE. NONE OF OUR SALESPEOPLE WILL BOTHER YOU IF YOU JUST WANT TO BROWSE, BUT WILL BE PLEASED TO ASSIST YOU IF YOU WISH, WITH TRUTHFUL ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS. WHEN WE DISCUSS CARPET LINES, WE WOULD HAVE TO "M 0 DEST LY" ADMIT THAT WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTIONS IN THE AREA. TOP BRANDS SUCH AS : BIGELOW, SERVEN, BEATTIE, MAGEE, MONARCH, BARWICK, MOHAWK, ROXBURY, MILLIKAN, ARMSTRONG •. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 l'lac•ntla Av•. COSTA MESA 646-4838 • l I r I -·-• Orange Coast EDITION Today's F ln•I N.Y. Stoeks ' VOL 65, NO. 165, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JUNE 13, 1972 c TEN CENTS l Plan for Mesa Harbor, l(eys Marina Revived I By L. PETER KRIEG C>I Ill• D•llY l'lltt Sl•lf Costa Mesa has begun its march to the sea -again. Revived plans for a 167-acre, $75 million harbor and marina that will con- nect to the Greenville-Banning channel and extend as far north as the proposed Fairvie\v State Park , were unveiled Mon- day_ 'fhe on e-heralded Keys Marina proj- ect, that fell flat for lack of funds six lti Irv ine years ago, will be developed by a Costa Mesa marine hardware dealer -who said he dreamed it up 10 years ago -and two Texas oilmen. Paul L. Snyder, awner of Mesa Boat and Marine, 1595 Newport Blvd., said he is buying back the Santa Ana riverfront property from State Mutual Savings for $2.6 million. He said he expects little problem get· ting necessary approvals Crom Costa Mesa city officials. Mesa Mulls Bid For Police Aid By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of It!• 0.11"1' ~UOf Stiff The C"ity 0£ Irvine may have its own police force by July I but it will be staffed by officers from Costa Mesa . A proposal to provide Irvine residents Israelis Down 2 MIGs in Aerial Battle Over Sea TEL AVIV (UPI) -Israel and Egypt fought their first air battle in almost two years today. An l!t'aeli spokesman said two Egyptian MJG2ls were shot down in the dogfight over the Mediterranean Sea. But Egypt. in turn, claimed its planes shot down two Israeli fighters over an Egyptian seaside resort. An announcement said all af the Israeli planes returned safely from the en- coun ter 25 miles off the northern co11st ?f the Sinai Peninsula in international arr ipace. Jt was th e first air battle or the 22· month-old Midd le East C"easefire. The previous dog-fight occurred July 30, 1~70, when Israeli pilots reported shootrng down four MlG2ls without a loss over the Suez Canal. The noon battle brooght to 114 the num - ber of Egyptian aircraft reported do'_'-'11ed by Israeli pilol.s since the 1967 Middle East War. Losses to Isreal in dogfights during that period ~·ere put at 17 planes. A military source said the .. lsr3:ell planes were carrying out a routine patrol" off Sinai when "those people the Egyptians ) came and the battle started. Jt was very short." "The Egyptians definitely did not .make a lovable sign," another source said. He refused to elaborate. The official spokesmens announcement said the two Egyptian pilots were seen paracbutinJ into the sea. . . They did not say who started frr1ng. The apokesmen also did not say how many planes were involved in the dogfight, or disclose other details. with police proteetion through a $345,000 per year inter-city C"ontract is being viewed favorably by Costa Mesa city cooncilmen who may give their approval this week. The subject was raised Monday night during a budget study session of the Costa Mesa City Council. Although the appraisal 0£ the proposed contract was positive, no action was taken. Already approved by Irvine, the pr<r posal is likely to be endorsed by the Costa Mesa council during a special session scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Thursday. "We're basically -all in favor of it and belive it's the right thing to do," com- mented C.Ouncilman Alvin Pinkley this morning. "We're glad they asked us in preference to anybody else." A "Yes" vote by Costa Mesa coun- cilmen Thursday night could mean that Irvine would have its own 10-man squad by Ju1y 1. On that day the Orange County Sheriff's Office will terminate its service to Irvine. Councilman Plnkley said that (',osta Mesa Police Chief Roger Neth pictured the contract as mutually beneficial since Costa Mesa could draw on the 10 men as reserves during an emergency. Under tbe proposal, Irvine streets would be patrolled on a 24--hour basis by two police cars. Helicopter patrol may ultimately also be included in the bargain but the Irvine council still appe ars divid· ed on that subject Local identity of the police officers will be maintained through snap-on Irvine Police shoulder pBtches and stick-on emblems on the black-and-white cars, Pinkley said. The proposed agreement between the two cities was not reflected b1 the $10 .6 milljon budget requested by Costa Mesa City Manager Fred Sorasabal for the 1972-73 fiscal year. In cluded ln the budget ere requests for six additional police officers to help curtail the local crime rate. Approval of the C:Osta Mesa-Irvine contraC"t means that C.Osta Mesa would have to hire ad- ditional officers end lease more patrol cars. The bud get itself was discussed without controversy Monday night and is ex- pected to be passed as printed Thursday night. Coast Lawmen Nab Pair In Kidnap , Rape Case Clues including a novel ring bearing. the word . LOVE, with a diamond set tn the letter O, have led Ort1nge Coast lawmen to capture two suspects la the kidnap, npe and robbery of a young woman ~t .... k. The pair accused or abductlng the ~ ~year-old woman at gunp01!11"from Costa Mftl'S South Coast Plll!A Wedllffday a1JO are lmpllcated In 11 leut one oilier umed robbery. Ccmplainls charging Jimmy Lucky , II, and Rubtn Spencer, 19, both of 15721 McFadden Ave .• Santa Ana. were being 10Ught today !11>111 the Orance County D1strlct Attorney's otttce. Lucky and Spencer were initially ar- ,.sted Thursday by Tllltin (l!lllce called l>y a frightened woman llquor llGtt clerk wM suspected she was about to be held up. Recovery of a .22 caliber revolver: and a .45 caliber automatic pi!tol canitd by ; ll>e pair led police to llJSPfCI Ibey pulled :a 1150 Sanls Ana liquor store robbery WI Tbllrsday nl&ht. ' I The stickup et Canale Llquor Store. 1619 S, Standard St., included then, of the .:ti caliber weapon and the gold ring In- laid with a dllJDlJlld inside tbe word LOVE, police said. Lucky and Spencer also clooely fit the descrtptlon or two young blac~ men ~bt •lnct the Costa M.,. kidnap being investlpted by detecllV6 George Wilaoo and Linda Gelller. The pair who abducted. a young llouoeWlle jlll! ,.ttllllih>lo her w alter a lllloppln( trip Ind !or<ed her to drive to a Loo Angel• motel where she ••• .-ulted wm believed to ttve around McF1dden Avenue. ' Costa -Police llet«tive capt. Ed J.ascow noltd at the Ume or the kidnap by a lont man that be ordered the victim 'IO i!ilve to an 1patlnient white bis pal was picked up. Knowing of C..ta M,..., manhun~ Santa Ana dei.otivts matched the description or LD<ty 111c1 Spmcer, 1eedln1 (Stt TWO, Pap I) He may be right, since less than a year ago, C.Osta Mesa councilmen rejec ted a proposed residential deve1opment on part of the property with then-mayor Robert Wilson proclaiming, "I still think on that side of the city you 're going to see another Fort Lauderdale." Snyder said he and his partners - Newel Hayes and William Moroshi , both of El Paso -plan to construct a total of 2,000 slips in the marina, 500 of them in a conunercial yacht basin and the rest on a series of lingers adjoining residential lots. Attempts by Snyder to enlarge the proj- ect even more, by including the 40-acre form er Newport Beach dump site at the end of 19th Slreet, apparently wer e thwarted by Newport Beach councilmen Monday night. They awarded the sale of the property to Leadership Housing Systems for $616.000, even though Keys had stipuJated in its bid of $475,000 that it would pay five ame percent over whatever the highest bid was. Councilmen said they 'd never heard of such a thing and acting on the ad vice of City Attorney Dennis O'Neil, who called the percentage proposal "indefinite and uncertain," approved the sale to Leadership for the .. best bid." Attorney Donald R. Price, ll'ho represents Keys r..1arina. argued lhe point, unsuccessfully, before the rounci! then said later he may seek a \vrit of on MYSTERY INCIDENT -An artist's drawing of an American Airlines jeUiner pinpoints the rear area of the DC.10 where something opened a ba,ggage compartment door of the jetliner shortly after it \lllf Ti ...... left Detroit. A coffin being shipped to New York, toppled out of the hole and fell 12,000 feet, landing beside a home in Ontario. The pilot made an emer· gency landing at Metropolitan Airport. Count y Man Pas senge r On Bizarre Jet Flig ht By ARTHUR R . VINSEL 01 1111 DlitY PllGI Siii! Durwood Anderson didn't hear i he decompression blast that nearly dumped him and 66 others into the dusk sky and eternity at 12,000 feet over Wayne Coun- ty, Mich., Monday night. His ears were plugged up. Anderson, 42, of 13132 Laburnum Drive, Tustin, and his executive traveling con1- panion were .among JO persons injured . however, during the bizarre infllght in- cident. He suffered a dislocated finger and leg abrasions while escaping down an evacuation chute efter American Airl ines Flig~t 96 miraculously made it back to Detroit. Investigators at first -believed a saboteur's bomb exploded in a baggage compartment. -sucking a coffin con- taining a body -and other cargo out a gaping bole in the big jetliner. \.\'illiam Hefferman, 51 , of the San Fernando Valley were en route to Buf- falo, N.Y. and CoMecticut on a business trip, Mrs. Ail~erson said. The men are employed in the contracts and engineering office of the .Air Rite Dlvision of Sargent Industries in El Segundo, requiring two or three business trips per month. Occasiona l dif ficulties -such aS lan- ding during Ne w York's infamous blackout -have plagued Anderson 's travels, his wife said, but never anything as critical as Monday night 's episode. "He's been flying for 20 years and this is the first serious incident," said Mrs. Anderson, adding her husband will have at least a ·One-day layover in Detroit before continuing his trip. She said the couple's children, Melinda, 18, and Richard, J3, are e:xcited about the sensa tional adventure their father will have to tell in detail when be retum1. "And they're awfully thankful it turned out the way It dld," &he added. Coffin Plunges From Sky, Lands Near Farm Yard WINDSOR, Ont. (AP) -Sante Facca was working in hls flower bed at the fro nt of his farmhouse when a metal coffin dropped out of the sky and landed about 200 feet away. Next he saw a flash of metal -it turned out to be a airpla11e door-hitting tJ1e ground. Fac:ca walked over to the olive-.green metal box-and saw two legs sticking out. He said later he thought it was a dummy and poked it with a stick. That was when he realized it was a human body and called Ontario provincial police. Today, inveatigator1 from four agencies were searching neighboring Sandwich South Townshlv for further wrockage from an American Airlines DCIO that had a ctoOr ripped off by a mallunction. "First thing I beard was them (the cof· fin and baggage door) 1plltt1ng apart,'' said Facca, 6.1. One end Df the coffin waa buried eight inches into the ground. Investigators have ruled out tbi! theory, saying the loud thump, bump and prolonged whooshing noise resulted from instant decompression due to opening of a faulty compartment door. HurtJing earthward like a bomb, the silver-colored steel coffin slammed to earth, narrowly missing a farm home, follow~ by the fluttering airplane door. Somehow, a brush wlt.h eternity seems Jw terrltying in retrospect when it is a.c- cidental instead of sinister and deliberate as in the case of 1 bombing. Pregnant Prisoner Gets Off er of Aid-From Judge First .told this morning or the cargo door malfunctJon now blamed, Mrs. Doris Anderaon opressed relief. ••rd prefer that rather tht1n to ha ve bad 1 bomb on board," she said. Details or the crisis at 12,000 lee! and tHe CbOl command maintained by 2'-ye1r.- oljf pilot capt. B. E. McCormick, unUI be attpped out onto the ninway were sketchy to Mrs. Ander10n. The Incident llUIY, have become hazy to capt. McCormick. ·who could only stand beskl9 the plam murmuring: .. Jesus Cbrilt ••• Juus Christ ••• " "It's kind of muddled In my mind," MJ'I. Anderson said this mornin~. "I'm iilre It Was qulti frightening:." '113. husband. iJ fine," she added. "He cantd from Wayne County General HOl)lital and then again when he checked Into • motel." Andmon and hls tnvtllng companion, r Judge William Murray, the Orange Cowty Superior Court judge who hu hit the headlines for rulings that include ordering a·llogging, is 1111 again. He beeame_known 1s ••captain Bligh" and HBlU the Blirber" for two of bis previou" court nilinp. Courtroom, perlClmel added "good Samaritan" lo the llst Monday after Judge Mw;ay, oU!'f'ed to chip .In 12 to a fund.that,wU! buy clothes lot'a pregnant prisoner. Murray made the offer immediately after Deputy Public Defender John Bovee , pointed out that Ml'JS, Tbema Ltbbar is five months pregnant and is rapidly outgrowing the wardrobe ahe brought with her to Orange County JaU. Mrs. LtbhAr, 24, accused with her ho.. band of the 11169 murder of 1 Santa Ana a«retary, soea on trial -month. r 1'Try -the Christian approach, Mr. Bov~." commented Judge Murray with a beam In lbe direction of the pr<SS hoz. "lt rubl me the wrong way to baYe anyone suggest that the taxpayers pay ror tbtse things so put me down right now for a ta contribution." Jlldie Murray's 12 will not he needed. Court reportu Esther Jle!nick assured Bovee · that she will· buy 'materials !or Mrs. Ltbbar who wlll then ma~e her own m1temlty wardrObO In the county jail. "That guy iuat can't -win." 1 deputy commented. "He orders a Ooglng and the sberUf 1topo bin>. he· goes along with the haircutting bit and the guy ISCIP<> and now he can't evtn give hit ~moaey away ." Judge P.1urray bu yet 3 n o t h t.J' ructname today-"tbe born loser." n1andalt· IQ block the sale to Leadership on the grounds Keys' bid was hig her. Keys had also asked for credit tenns on the property, which cou11c1.Jinen didn 't like. Leadership ottered to pay cash. Snyder nolt'd that the 167-aere parrcl he 01\·ns \·1r rually surrounds Lhe dump site on the \.l'esl, nort h and east. ~re said plans fur. the marin;i can and will go ahead '111h or without tht• additional ~ttreage, tH11vcver. oor FBI Finds No Evidence Of Bom b DETROIT (AP) -In ves tigators said today a malfunctioning cargo door that opened Jn flight caused a midair incident in which an American Airlines DCIO was damag ed but managed to make it safely back to Detrolt't A1etropolitan Airport Monday night. ' First reports Indica ted the tail section of the huge Los Angeles-t<rNew York plane might have been ripped by an ex- plosive. But the airline quoted the FBI a~ !laying there was oo evidence of an ex.· plosive device being lnYOlved. The 56 paasenge:rs and 11 atw member& all escaped Mrklua injury u the jet ran off a runw1y during an emergency llnding. After hours of lnvestlgatJon by FBI agents. Wayne County shtrUI'! offictrs and airline personnel, the lncldent wa~ blamed on 1 faulty door which opened in flight. Capt. Bryce E. tt1cCormick, vete ran pilot of the alrllner, said of his initi al reaction, "My first thought was that U1ere had been a midair collision." McCormick told an airport news con· ference that alter the blast, he had no rudder control over his craft, one of bJs three engines was out and he had no left brakes as he lought to get the plane back to Metro from whence it had taken off for Buffalo and New York. "The scaredest I was when we \Yere on the ground and the plane was rolling ... l thought it was going to roll right into the temtlnal because I could not get It back on the runway,'' he sa id. McCormick, discussing earlier theories that an explmlon occurred on the. plane, said, "To my recollection, I do not remember telling the passengers there had been an exploslon. I told them everythlng was to remain on the plane so officials co uld investiga te to determine the possibility o( any explosion." George A. Warde , executi ve vice presi· denL and general manager of the airline, said in a statement Issued at the com- pany's New York headquarters: "A thorough investigation by a com~ pany maintenance and engineering team assembled at Detroit M et r o p o I i t a n Airport his determined that a cargo door in lhe lower part-of the luaeia!ie below tbe pa88tng.,. cabin opened wben the airplane wu at about 12,000 feet alUtude after bavlng Jett Deyoi~ ·en route to Buf· lalo althouah llgnal llJ!hls In the cockpit indicated the cargo cfoor and all other (Ste PLANE, Pap I ) .. ... Low clouds and log along 1111 coast will take credJI for sligbtlY cooler tomperatum in Orange County Wedneoday. lli8bs eipeded to be lll'OUl1d 70 II lbe beach, 81 inland, Low1 In lbe' IO'!. INSIOE TODAY A Ntbrosko !ltWipap<r r .. porn lfuit·cloud· seeding e:rp<rio TMnt.t wtre oonducttd In skie1 obovt Rapid Clflf, S.D .. a •hort Hmc b•Jon dcvcsloting Jlood.J . See .ttory, Pagt 4. LM. ._... I M1'WM1 11 C.tllfln.. f ,....., ,._,. 11 Cl1N.IA.. .... ... 1'11111 NfWJ 4 C-k• lS °""'" tw""" H c;,..,_... '' "'""' """'-,. Dla111 81fkft: --11 .,,.. , .. ,, ••1t1rte1 ..... .. s..a: ~ lt•tt t11llr1tlliMMflt ,, 'tlfin1·-,. ,lilil~--, .. .,f -~~ 'tf f'•r ,.. •~ n .,, .. ,,.. 4 ,..,.Mtllltl ,. ~· ,....., Allll UMlrs II .. .,... ......, • r I DAIL y ~!LDT c Committee Plans Vote On Freeway The Caltfornla Senate Transportation C.Ommlttee wlll conduct a hearing and problbly a vote on A11tn1blyman Robtrt E. Badh1m'5 bill to kill the Newport Beach ltJ of tho adopted Pacmc Cout Freeway Route Monday afternoon. Newport Beach will be represtntt>d lit the session. The Cali[ornia llighway Comm1S!1on will dllo.w whit to do about ending the Newport Freeway -if the coast free"·ay ts killed -at a hea.ring Junt 21 In Sacramento. Newport rrprest:ntatlve1 wlll he there too. Councilmen Monday vowed to get all of their nwnber1 they c1n to attend the 1 :30 p.m. committee hearing Mo~ay and aulhorlr.ed Mayor Donald A. Mclnn11 to appear at the commistdon bearing Wednesday. It was this same senate panel that deall a death blow to a similar meuure sponsored by Badham t"'o years a10. Chancel of a reversal of opinion an.' projected u good however, since the committee has approved a bill to del ete t he Lon& Buch leg of the route. Badham's bill cleared the assembly last month on a 12 to 1 vole and if it gets a favorable report from the Senate com· mittee it iJ expected to pass the upper house. Controvert)' over the Newport Fm•·ay terminus flared two monlhl qo when a developer proposed to con1truct • con- dominium in the path of one or the alternate route1 for the proposed Newport Freeway extension . That freeway, orglnally e1peeted to In· terchan1e with the coastal freeway, could oow extend directly to the Coast Highway, swing east to Newport Boulevard or we st to a /ropoaed el· tension of Balboa Boulevar . Board Approves Study of New Bert.l1ing Plan A new 1y1tem deslsned to eliminate m1ny 1m11l offlhore mooring 1rea1 in ]CJWeT Newport Harbor through appllca· tlm of a "Bay Bertha" plan offered by Supervisor Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach was approved for study today by the Boan! Of Supervil«s. Caiper1 1ald hi• proposat would in- clude coostiuct.lon of the olfshoro berth- ing facllltlea, would create much more arH for recreatlot1al boating. "ThJJ could rerult in approsirnately SOO boata which now occupy a tot.II area of 30 acres being consolidated into an area ot about seven acres," the super· vltor said . "The result would be 2S ad- ditional acres made 1v1Uab1.e for recre· atlonal navlg1tlon ." Other 1dvanta1es cited by Caspers would be the lmprovemtnt of 11nltAry and traah d1Jpo1al colleeUon thereby lm· proving the hay pollution problems and the ellmln1tion of una:afe condltlOM c1uaed by b o a t 1 now sallln& through mooring 1reu and resulUn1 In accidents. Caspers also said his plan would make tt more convenient for boaters to 1et to their vessels through the provisions of s ho re bo1t tul service and would help provide better security for boats by control or access. Student!! Have Beef With Dorm Burglar BERKELEY (UPIJ -Thieve& stole tbe main cour1e for a weekend "beef stroeanoff" dinner at a University of Callfomla dormitory, police reported. Students had lo settle for leftovers Sun- day night after discovering that 275 pounds of beef and 30 pounds or sour cream were missing. 01.AN•I COAIT CM DAILY PILOT Tll• On,,.. C.11 DAil'!' P'ILOT, wlflil wllldl i. c:om11111M IM N_P',..1, 11 ,ublllllef W.. "'• C)f'"I" C-at Pui.llltllnl Ct"lplllY. k$>t• ''"' ..rHlllM •rw ~llMll, M.,...1y "'""""' l<rld1y, l'W Co.le Mne, N1Wp0rl •"ell. H~ l.-cll/l'wnt1l11 veu..,, Lttwie lludi, lrv!Mt'Sffdi-.ck •rid Sin C~lt/ Sin JllM c1111.ir-A .11no11 r11klt\.ll , .i!llltlt i. puDl~llN lehl<WIYJ. •lld !.11nd1y1. Th• prlrlcl,_I ..... 11'111119 '4-1111 I• 11 lll Wt'll 81y St"'9t, C..I• M-, C1Ufor'nl•, t»lt. Re~ert N. w •• J ,., .. ~ •1'1111 P'uciu ...... J11k •· c,,1,., Vb ~I aM 0.-.\ MlnefN' The"''' keevll .. ,..,. l1i•l'lltl A. Mwphf11e Ml~ l•lw Cherie• H. Leet l lc'-1r.J P. Nill AN .. ltl'tl MIMtilll Mllwl .._ __ JJt Wett ley Street M1m"f A.114,.,,, t .O. ha 1161, t2616 --"""'11'tletefil I JJll .. .....,. ... 1"""4 ~ te.cli1 m l'tt•I' AWl'lll' M-""ifr ""'91t \117t hKtl ......,_,. 1 -C...._.I JtJ .....,.,, 11 Ctll'llM -~ , ........ 11141 641 .... 111 •a '"'"1 U.oi,.uls a Hl·lf11 if.£~~·11=r~ "'MYW't ............ "''-~"!! --,.... ......... --. ~ ~M~l'c!1; ":.b ;"'.,-;;i"U:_i• .....,,,.,.,, ......, llM """""''. Seats Too Narr01v? An unidenti.lied \Voman fills out a <1uestionnaire after she took a tc:a1it ride on the "metro" in 11clsinki, Finland. Part of the metro, \I h1m- viill open officially in 1973, \Vas tested for a festival. Wilson, Jordan Atwnd U.S. Mayors Conference Jack Hammett, mayor of Costa A-1esa since April, will miss his first opportunity to attend the U.S. Conference of ltfayors scheduled Saturday through June 21 in New Orleans. Instead he ls &ending Vice Mayor \Villard Jordan and fonner mayor Robert Wil.9on to the conferenct which will be at· tended by the repreuntatlves of 800 cities throughout the nation. Wilson, the city's representative to the League Of Callfomla Cities and the mayors' conference since 1962, will be in New Orleans to push for adoption of hi.! controversial Vietnam "win" resolution. Work Completed On $17.6 Billion Welfare Measure WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senote Finance Commlttee completed work to- day on a $17 .6-billion measure containing the &realest expansions of Social Security and welfare in history. The bill would raise Social Security benefilll 10 percent for 27 .8 million reci· plents, Imposed strong new wo~k. re-- quirements on many we.lfare ret1p1en ts and make many changes in the lt1edicarc and J\1edicaid health programs. Winding up 11 month'!! or consideration of the monumental bill, the panel adopted new Social Security payroll tax schedules raising the levies for the 96 million Americans who pay them . The new schedules would mean a tax hike of $113.40 next year, as co1nparcd \\'ith 1972. for persons earning $10,200 or more in 197J. Chairman Russell B. l.ong (0-La .), reported that his panel finished y.•ork. on the measure but did not take the fln11I vote, ordering it to the Senate floor lor debate. f'rotn Pagfl J TWO HELD. • • Detective \\1ilson to enter the in· vestigation over the weekend. A search warrant allowing a probe of 1heir apa rtment Jed to recovery or a .32 caliber revolver believed used in the kid- nnp six days ago. Cnpt. Glasgow said to- day. The victim lost her voter registration papers lo the kidnap rapists. \\•ho used the fact they had her address as a grim \varnlng not to report the c1se. lnvesllgators at the time noted she .,,,·11s threatened with death if the nbductors learned she had gone Lo polic e. No beating or other physical harn1 aside from the sexual attack• "''' in· flicted an the victim. who Capt . Glas1ow said ls 1tlll ln a state of semi-shock fron1 the ordeal. Mesa Won1au SeeM Burgla1· in the Act A Costa Mesa womon came home to her 1~rtmenl Monday night 11nd almnst caught a burglar Jn the net, but he slammed the window through which be entered and fled with Ill.I <Alh. Mlrryl\J Merln , ol Ml Hamilton St., told poUce she caught a gllmpae al tht man Oeetna: at 9 p.m., but g1v1 no definite cle.ocrlpllon. lnves t1111tor1 ••Id ft 1ppeartd nothlna: but hrr cash was missi ng. The resolution. adopted earlier Lhis year by the Costa Mesa City Council. requests Preside11t Nixon to change the current "no win" war poticy to one of winning. Wilson described the mayors' con· rerence as "the third house of Congress" since resolutions adopted by the mayors are generally forwarded to Congress and President Nixon. "This year there are 48 resolutions on the agenda," said \Vilson. "and most of them center on the war. Ours is number three on the agenda." Both Wilson and Jordan expect to meet .-ill the presidenti.111 candidates during their five-day conference. Expenses for their trips will be paid by the city and it is estimated that the cos!, including plane fare, meals and lodging will be aroWld $500 per person. Expenses will not be paid for the wives of the tlYO Costa 1'.tesa representatives to the conference. Mrs. Callaham, Former Court Oerk, Succun1hs lt-1rs Diana Griffin Callaham. former clerk of the Harbor Area Judicial District Court, died Saturday at the age or 66 Funeral services for Mrs. Callaharn, :i TO.year resident of Corona del Mnr , \1·ill be held at I p.m. Thursday in Manchester Chapel, lngle11'ood Ce metery, Lo s Angeles. Interment "'Ill follow. J\lrs. Callaham·s husband. J a c k1*. Callaham. is a pioneer Orange Coun1y resident and the fonner O\vner and early developer of l san Juan Capistrano Airport. Mrs. Callaha m lived and worked on lhe Orange Coast from 1956 to 1966 until she and her husband moved their residence lo Long Beach and Falls City, Oregon . She was found dead at the Y.'heel of her car after suffering a heart attack in L<Jng Beach. Survivors, in addition to her husband, include her brother, Judge Willlam Christensen er Palm Springs, retired, foriner presiding judge of the flarbor Area court . She also leaves a son. H. R. Griffin. or Yucaipa. a daughter, ,,.lrs. John Moon, of El Cajon. four grandchildren and one great grandchild. From Pagfl .l PLANE ... doors were closed and latched normally . "Bec1u1e the airplane was pressurlted, a decompression with a loud aound oc- curred. During the night, we have in- spected the cargo compartments cf all our DCI01 and hive found them to be functkming properly. American AlrHnes and McDonnell Douala.ss, manuracturers of the OC10, ire conducting • thorough invutlgatlon to detennlne what caused the melfuncUon of the door on Flight 96. The Nt1tlonal Tran.,part11t!on S1tfety Board also is investigating tht. Incident." lnve1tigators said that when the door opened, 10me of the c1rgo -lncludln1 a coffin -tumbled aut. Eleven persons ahoJrd the 220- pasaen.e_r~apaclty aircraft 1 u f f e r e d minor injuries -most while 1Udlna down emer1ency ult chultl after the landing. Several pwengon hit by debrl1 while airborne we11 treated at local hot~• and released. Panel Okays Budget • U.S. Proposed California Bid Highest in SACRAMENTO (APJ -A $7.96 bi.lllon a:t.lte budget tbal would make Califon1la tile nation 's biggest spending state was uruuuniously approved by a bipartisan budget L'Onlmlttce today and sent to both 1hr Assen1bly and &in.ate. 'f"h1· budget proposal is $343 million 1nur1• th;o1 c:ov. Ronald Heagan asked for 111 his Jan 12 budget proposal. If approved as drafted by the budget f'(H11m11t~. it would C'alapult California h,.1c-k 11llo first place ah ead of New York liy 80 n11l!i11n as the n:ition's biggest ~pt.·ndu1:.: siatt·. Ll'i;"l;1ll\ c leader~ ~:11<l they r~pectcd 30 lJ' oai11ded l.o take the budget bill kl a Hnat vote In the Assem bly \Vednelday morning and in the Sen;ite Wednesday afternoon. 'lllat would send the bill back to tov Reagan. who ha s final item-by~item veto ilUthority, a few hours ahead of the 'I'hursday rnidnight cons t it u t ion a l deadline for budget approval. The two f{epublltans on the budget committee, who represent the mioority in each house, said they w9t1ld recommend appr'O'o'al of the budget bill, which they described as a "reasonable" C'On1· promise. The spendlll£ bill wa.s praised highly by the Oe-moc·r;itlC' 1naJur11y ltadrr~ 1111 ilir comn1jtte<' 'rhe budget c(u11a1ns a S2GJ 1110 1\1'111 1'' \j percent , increase 111 .~t;i!e supp._!! \d local !k:hoolli: Sen. Ha11dvlph Collu·r t·ti:11nn:i11 "1 till' budget con11uill el', s.iHI thr U11d.:rt t 1-.alancecl <ind ro11t;11ns <• ~1·1!;·111 :1111 ·1' surpl~. 'f1Jat 1, U.!illlg up :iU11Ut t11 0-1h1 nh oC lhe anticipated $~58.rn1!11nn ~urplus l.lw Republica11 governor 's l1 11;1nlc .:11<111 reported last month. P;irty leaders al '>fl s;111J '"rnt· .,f !h• 111~! 1·untru1t1rs1:1! 1t1·1nl'o 111 r.1l'l·•T lli :itt ut !ht budget ha11· 1>1.·1·11 t'1111111rl'l1 •t'd A propo!U!I to l·ut l<l'puhh1·a11 l. 11"1 l·:d llcinet·ke's persona! .stcoff I.JV :111 P"'1 1·t'nl y.•as reduced to 15 1>1·1\·t'.111 l 1Jllh ::.aid. Com1nunists Hit Viets J>c1nOC'r<1t-barked pro po~.:ils ru\1111,., lh" .auditl!r staff nf ~he F1nanC'e !Jl•par11ncnl and U1e legal staff ol tht \\elf are l~ri:1rt · rnent were also 111oc\if11•rl tu n1rct (:01' 11bjectlons. . \Vitl1 Mo1·tars, 12 I\.illed A $26 n1illion rid1·r lo 1·l1 n1111a tr tu1!1<111 ;it tile Universitv of C.:.1lll un11a 11 ,ts .il\o ~pproved in the finnl budget rrport. The fin:.il budge! rr1)(lrt LS $1~2 1n1!l10 11 morl' th:111 tl1c budget ;1p1ir·11vl'd la:-t n1onth hv 1hc &-11:1te :ind .S7i rnil11u11 1nort· th:ln 1ht· Asscn1 bly autlllil'lZed 111 ·• n11111ths ago. A 1~ I.Ill' 1L Pl 1 -C11rn1nun1st troop:\ opened fire toda y on a ragged eo!ttmn of J .000 rl•fugl·es flreing the provinti:i l c;1p1tal uf 1\11 Lo{' and killed 12 civilians llnd \l'Ounded JO, field re pur!s said. Nc\\·smrn '''ho reached the scrne !'hortl y ;:if1e r the allnC'k said thr Com· n1unists fired a barr3gc of n1ortars onto I ligh11·:"1y 1:1 white the refugees \\'ere trying to flee from An LOC'. 60 , miles north of Saigon. A government rellef force broke through to An Loe lt1onday. and refugees "'ho had been llving there during the siege began streaming southward. They had escaped death by living in un· dcrground shelters .,,,.hile thousands of rounds of shells crashed overhead. The reports said the refugees -mainly o!d n1en. \vomen and children -ran down the highway as the mortars screamed into them and the chunks of shrapnel flew through the .air. One old woman, shrapnel cuts across her body, died in the arnu of her young granddaughter, the reports said. They said a young boy, hit by shrapnel in the head, was cradled in the arlll.!I of his parents v.·hile a South Vietnamese medic tried to stop the bleeding. One refugee trying to patch up the bleeding leg ol his young son said the refugees left An Loe early in the morning :1frer locnl government official-:; said J1 1ghwa y IJ appeared safe. He said Communist troops stopped the refugees about half,,.11ay bP.tween An Loe ;:ind Chon Thanh , 15 miles to the south. lie said South Vietnamese jets began fl ying overhead as the fleeing refugees "ere stopped along the highway. I le said the Communists were .ap- parently frightened by the planes and opened fire on the refugees, shooting some 111 the beak as they ran . At An Loe . Con1munist forces stub- bornly fought the South Vietnamese troops who closed in on the long besieged NAACP Suit Upheld SAN BERNARDIN,) (APJ -The San Ilernardino City Unified School District has fa iled in its attempt to quash a suit filed by !he National Association for the Advancen1ent of Colored People seeking racia l !Jalanct' in the schools by Sep- t.11111hcr. Superior Court Judge Paul Egly de111cd a rnot1on r-.fonday for dismissal filed by Bert Levitt, a srhoo! district al· torncy, who .argued ihat steps toward racial balance had been taken and were t·onlinuing. city and kept llighway ·13 from being opened as a relief road into the nearly leveled provincial capitMJ. lttUllary sources said rescue helicopter' "·ere able to land occasionally to take Out the 1,200 \l.'Ounded troopa and civilians in the ci!y but that shellfire made such 1nercy opcratlons hazardous. President: Act "WitJ1out Delay' On Arms Accord \\'ASliINGTON (APl -President Nix· on. di sclosing some or the fine print of <1rms curb agreements negotiated with the Soviet Union. urged Congress today to act ""•ithout delay" in approving the ac- cords. A treaty limiting the deployment of an- tiballistic missiles (ABM) to two sites in each country was sent to the Senate with a request for early ratification. Both houses of Congress were asked to pass a re9Cllutlon approving a companion executive agreement that would freeze the total nwnber of land and sea-based offensive ba.Uistic missiles in the United Slates and the Soviet Union at present levels. While terming the agreements "an im· portant first step in checking the arms race," Nil:on told Congrus they ''do not close off all avenues of strategic C(lm· petition ." He said 1t ls '1essential that we carry forward a aound strategic modernization program to malnl.&ln our security and to insure that more permanent and com· prehenslve arms limitation agreements can be reached." Nixon reYealed that the United States feels lt would have a basis for withdraw- ing from the AB~1 treaty if tighter curbs on offensive arms .are not negotiated within five years. Either 3ide can withdraw on slx·month notice. 'The fine print Nixon sent Congress disclosed that the United States and the Soviet Union remaln far apart in con- slderlng the question of modern sub- marines operated by U.S. allies in the North AUantic Treaty Organization. The Soviets take the pos ition that should the NATO allies build add itional modern subs, over and above those now operational or under construction, "the Sovlet Union will have the right to a cor· re sponding increase in the number of its submarines.'' The United States took the position that lt "does not accept the validity of the consideratioM'' raised by Aro scow regarding submarines belonging to third cC'untries. 'P rotected' B-52s Strike Red Tar g·ets SAIGON {UPI) -U.S. B52s, takirig atl· vantage of new electronic developmen!s that protects them against missiles bombed targets in North Vietnam today for the sixth consecutive dn y. Fighter-bombt'rs. n1e;inwhile , h ! L bridges 25 miles from China despite Pe· king warnings the raids threaten China':! serurit.v. The Pentagon said the B52s. confined n1oslly to South Vietnam in the past because of the missile threats, are bomb- ing the north on an almost daily basi~. The United States has increased the num. ber of B52s in Southeast Asia fourfold since 1he start of the Communist or. fensive on l\la rch JO. Pentagon sources said the B52s are being accompanied with special planes equipped \vith electronic countermeasu re gear capable of jamming the radar guidance systent or the Soviet.made surface-to-air missiles (SAMs). The B52s on rare occasions have struck near the J!anoi-Haiphong area but most of the current raids are still just north of the Demilitarized Zone and directed against Communisl supplies. U.S. military spokesn1en. reported jets from the aircraft carrier ~tid1vay blew up a huge cil storage complex near !he port of Vinh, filling the sky with black smoke and flashes or orange flames. Air Foree F4 Phantoms carried out lhe raids near China. The U.S. command said the F4s knock· ed out two railroad bridges and tracks running between them on the railway leading northeastward from llanoi to the China border -previously the principal overland route for supplies from China. The command said one bridge was hit near Thanh Moi, 60 mlles northeast o[ Hanoi and 25 miles fron1 China's Kwangsi Province. The other bridge was near Lang Dang, 55 miles northeast of Hanoi and JO miles from the border. Neither had been hit previously. Only a few hours earlier, tl1e Chinese Foreign Ministry issued a formal state-- ment y.·hich said such attacks threaten "the security of China ." It said the United States steadlly expanded the sphere of bombing up lo areas "quite close lo the Sino-Vietnamese borders." -- What's My Line ... YOU WON 'T BE FED ANY LINES AT ALDEN'S. WE ARE MORE INTERESTED IN DEVELOPING LOY A~ CUSTOMERS THAN MAKING A FAST SALE. NONE OF OUR SALESPEOPLE WILL BOTHER YOU IF YOU JUST WANT TO BROWSE, BUT WILL BE PLEASED TO ASSIST YOU IF YOU WISH, WITH TRUTHFUL ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS. WHEN WE DISCUSS CARPET LINES, WE WOULD HAVE TO "M 0 DEST LY" ADMIT THAT WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTIONS IN THE AREA. TOP BRANDS SUCH AS : BIGELOW, SERVEN, BEATTIE, MAGEE, MONARCH, BARWICK, MOHAWK, ROXBURY, MILLIKAN, ARMSTRONG. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 l'locentla Ave. / COSTA MESA 646-4131 I £. ' 7 f ; ! I D